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ICG~a

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Cavaliers edge Magic

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DMSJOtfl
CLEVELAND tAP) Befure the game. James
ldkoa Junes ~ 11 was asked about Orlando's
klet 3-pQinter witli 41.4 chances. in the poslsea.Soo .
....._ left and adlttd two ·Although the Magic am~'t
fae ~ws with S.7 sec- mentioned as oftea as the
~ to &amp;e as the Ckvellllld Cavaliers and Celtics.
'"•~ i.mpoved to 30-1 James blows. better tban to
il bomr: with 11 97-93 win overlook. them.
OYet' lbe Odudo Magic oa
~voo can't loot past any
~ aigbt.
team in the ~ayoffs. periWith Cle-veland trailing od,» James said. ~lt ~ 't
?3-92 ma game soaked in matter if they're the eighth
playoff inteiiSity, . James, seed oc the No. I. You've
wearing green and white got to win 16 games to win
N'lltes to celebate St. it all."
Pabid's Day, pulled up in
Orlando toot a 7~ late
&amp;oat .of Orlando's bench in the th.ird period. but
a.1 coldly tnoded down James. sensing his IHm was
1m3. Magk center Dwight in deep trouble. ma&amp; two
· Howard was called fN a 3- jumpers and then ended the
sec:Qild · vioJatioa
on quarter by rushing down the
Orlando's. nelll trip. giving flooc for a layup Ill the hom
die ball bad: to Cleveland. to pull Cleveland wilhill 75,.
lames was then fouled 72.
·
wbilc sboOOng IU1d made
It was just the fifth time
DIVISION II
1m two free throws as the this seasoo the Cavs trailed
crowd serenaded him with going into the fourtll qua.r~1&amp; of "MVP.»
ter.
· Rasbard Lewis. missed a
Notes~ . Cavs. F WaJly
1-Jioinler with 2:5 s«MdS Szclerbillk sptained his. left
felt for the Magic. who knee in the thinl period lllld
came in with the Eastern did not return.... Ja.meS may
Conference's best road slip filling out an NCAA
ttcon~. but couldn't send tournament sheet this year.
the Cavs to their second '"I think I'm just going to
home loss.
watch the games and be 11
_ James. added 12: rebounds fan, Fillillg out those brack~ . eight assists. Mo e~ is very. very hard. This
Williams added . 2:! pomts year it's open to anybol!r.~
for Cleveland, whtch held He does have · a favorne
the Magic_to 18 points in team, though. "Akron U.
the fourtll quarter.
But it's going to be tough
Howard had !3 points. 15 .fOI' those c s." James is
rebounds and Slll block.s for sure if he
attended his
the Magic. But Orlando's hometown school - where .
big man atte~pted just eight high school teammates
shots., none tn the fourth Romeo Travis and Dru
quarter as the Magic chose Joyce went - the Zips
to attad: from outstde.
· could have competed fot a
Orlando tool. its last lead national title. "We would
wh~n Courtney Lee drove. h11ve be11ten up on the
for !1. layup with I :2:~ MAC." he said. ... Cavs.
. reQ1111nmg. On Cleveland s coach Mike Brown who
nellt ~session •. Delonte hilS been ejected tWi~ this
West mtssed a 3-potnter, but season and has sill techniCavs. forwatd Anderson crus. has promised not to get
":~Jao g.ot the . reoound. another one this. season. "I
gmng the Cavs another want our guys to underchance·
stand, we control our own
• James made the most of destiny," he said. ''We don't
11. .
.
want . to ~et to the point
Dribbhng a few feet from where we re blaming offiMagtc coach Stan Va_n cials. I've blamed the offiG~dy, James surve~ed h!s cials enou8h."
opttoas before shootmg hts
b1g 3-pointer - a shot that
~ent the .Quicken Loans
Crowd into a frenzy. After
Howard was called for 3 ·
seconds, James faked Lee
into .the air and drew a questionable foul on the rookie .
; James then stepped to the
line. where he has had problems in the past. and made
!loth attempts.
Cleveland's defense made
it impossible for the Magic
~get a clean look on its last
trip. and when Lewis
iniSsed. the Cavs had sur.
Wved one of their toughest
tests at home.
.The temperature outside
feJt like June and the heat
inside the building matched
playoff levels. Both teams
wanted this one, not just for
postseason seeding, but for
a psycholo~i~al edge in case
they meet IR playoffs.
. The Magic had won three
straight in Cleveland and
"""" . · tl
........
had beaten the Cavs in
--..="""-llo
....,.,
.,._.
,_,..~
seven of their pust nine
meetings. Orlando also
:.........~-·
.,
i:ame in with road wins over
Boston, the Los Angeles
Lakers.
San Antonio.
Ponland, Dallas and Utah.
t Orlando carried a three·
point lead into the fourth
period and had a chance to
ppen a four-point lead late
jn the quarter. But Rafer
f\lston missed a jumper and
...
Williams made Orlando pay
by drilling u 3-pointer from
ihe right wing with I :59 left
lo put the Cavaliers up 92-

ODNR forester holds
.p nmiqg workshop, A3

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'

~~ llada ~e~ as 22nc1

:QioMs.B al~

SouthemFFA
Equine Team, A6

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)iee._al. :,

Bv BEtH SERGENT
SSERGEI'IT@MYOAILYSENTII'IEL.COM

POMEROY - -Yes. they meant to do that" is the sentiment of the Ohio Department. of Transportation when asked
about u c hllllk of the old Pomeroy Mason Bridge that came
down Tuesdav afternoon.
·
Da,·id Rose. spokesperson lor ODOT's Distril;t 10, s&amp;id
there are l2 approach sp&lt;ms on the West Virginia side of the
Ohto Rtvt;r and contractor CJ Mahan are taking those out
one by one.
As of yesterda)i. two approach spuns had been brought
down. The first approach. ~pan to drop was attach~ to the
,-enter spun so workers .wtll now go back wards lrom the
center span to the road. taking out the remaining segments.
A ~e 1s doc·ked alongside the West Virginia side of the
Oh10 R1ver to L'&lt;IITJI away debris. .
·
·
.None of the approach span debris will go inlo the Ohio
R1ver .though the center span will be dropped there with
e.11.plos1ves at u Iuter dnte to be announced. Rose did say
u blasting plan has been approved by the US Coast
Guard and US Army. Corps of Engineers. As for how
,,
long t~is dismantling of the approach spuns and lightentng of the old bndge wtll lake. Rose estimated around
four to six weeks.
. Rose added that it would probably tal;e at least one week
.
.Stall phGio to set the ellplosives which will bring the center span down
Notice 1nything missing? Workers have begun removing the t 2 approach spans that orig- and into the Ohio River. .ODOT then has only 24 hours to
·
inally lad to lha old Pomeroy Mason Bridge's canter span on lha Wast Virginia side. The clear the channel f~r tmffic .
center span will eventually be brought down with explosive charges.
PI lSI Ill Brldp. AS

,.

OBnuARIFB ·
~PaaeAS

... Frances Dickens, 46

Officials
remark on
bridge
dedication

~ Ruth E: Gotthardt, 87
•

.

INsiDE

STAFF REPORT

Attention Business Owners

MOSNEWSOMV!lolllVSENTII'IEL.COM

Fr.ee· on-line business·
Listings
.
on

, POMEROY - Officials
from both Ohio and West
Virginia recently released
official remarks on the for·
mal dedication of the Bridge
of Honor slated for 10 a.m ..
Monday in Pomeroy near
the Pool Peoplj: store on the
old Ohio 833.
The
remarks
were
relensed yesterday by the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportution and includes
statements from Ohio Gov.
Ted
Stricklimd. West
. Virginia Gov. Joo Manchin
Ill und ·ODOT Oistrict l0
Deputr Dire•·tor Lurry
Woodford.
· :·The Bridge of Honor
stands as a testament to the
strength. · will and dedication of all servicemen and
women who continue to
mal;e the sel!Tess sacrifices ·
to protect our freedom."

.

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(11 . . . . . . .

_...
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--_
--

Ple,n 111 Dedication. AS

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Ohio
fromPageBl

.
. lone Division III representa.

tive from our area. posting a
double-double average of
15 .7 points and 14.3
rebounds per game while
leading the Lady Raiders to
a 13-9 overall record - the
best for the pro~ram .since
the turn of the mtllennium.
Eastern junior Audrionna
Pullins - who led EHS in
both scoring (10.4) and
rebounding (6.1) this.season
- was also a D-4 honorable
mention selection after
helping the Lady Eagles
(10-12) capture their founh
co~utive sectional title .
Wolfe. Howard, Troester,
Marcum and Pullins were
all second-team all-district
selections this winter.

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7 40-992-2155

The Daily· Sentinel
111 .Court Street., Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

.
of
the 90th
of
of
the American Legion, members of
Drew Webster Post 39 und its
Ladies Auxiliary held a party at the
post
in the old Salisbury

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was served at tables
Pillrlck's Day theme.
Post Commander Tom· Anderson
con!lucted a recognition service
which included announcement of th\l
Legionnaire of the Year - Norman
L. Price of Pomeroy. unable ..
.
due to illness. ·
·

and Joe

George

· QHII18on ..... AI

Williams. Bob Chapman,

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INDEX
.,,
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' .a ~llt110NSta PAGIS
'

Sentences

· A3

imposed in

d.1"'i&amp;rs
.. ,,

A3

Classifieds

83-4

indictments

,f .·'

l;-

M,nie's Mailbox
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QPmi~
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.Etlitorials.
.

8. 5

'•

A4
As

Sports

8 Section

.

..

Obitl~~es
.
'·
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Weather
•

A6

BY BRIAN

J. REED

llREEDOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - AnAthens
County woman was sentenced to 18 months .in
prison for burglary earlier
this weel\ , Three others
indicted on crimrnul charges
were
also
sentenced.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen. S. Williams said.
Maria Hunter 39, The
Plains. entered a guilty plea
to burglary in January. She
and . Phillip Simms were

PbiH -

,

. concluded with ~;,
~=·=~,'~~;~~=}~~~~1:~~:~~~~~;'
· with Sonny

Also ;.~

S1ntenns. AS

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Brush fires reported
This weak at least three
brush fires have bean
reported, Including this
one about one mila out
on Ohio 143 where a
barn was destroyed. The
Pomeroy and Middleport
Fire ~partments were
on the scene as was
Syracuse's Squad 33.
~starday, the Pomeroy
and Middleport Fire
~partmants and
Syracuse's Squat.! 33
responded to a brush
fire on Blake Hill Road
and the Racine Fire
. ~partmant was called
to the scan&amp; of a brush
· fire on MitChell Road.
Stllft photo

PUCO approves
modified ESP,· .
rate increases
forAEP
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILVSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS ·- The
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio Wednesday modi-.
fied .and approved an electric
security plan for American
Electric Power-Ohio. ·
The ESP will be in effect
through 20 II. and includes
rate hikes for euch year
through 20 II for customers
of both Columbus Southern
Power and Ohio Power.
~lowever, the PUCO said
yesterLiuy. the company's
rates will remain the lowesti '
in Ohio.
The PUCO said rute '
increuses will allow AEP to
improve service and help
· customers reduce . their
overall electricity costs.
"We are aware of the com·
puny's service reliability
1ssues and our ex.pectation is
that signifkant improvements will be made to 'the
infrastructure thut AEP-Ohio
. , ...., ... Rate. As

�•

. The Daily Sentinel

•

ACROSS THE .N ATION

Page.A2

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

·the Daily Sentinel

Thlii'SIIay, Mareh 19, zoog

Thursday, Mardt 19~ 2009

Community Calendar
MIDDLEPORT A
pruning workshop was
be.ld
recently
for
Mtddleport village street
e!fiployees with an emphaSIS on proper can: fpc the
. s ~etscape trees in the histone busmess district.
· The
village's · Tree
.Authority Board requested ·
the adv tee and expertise of
.. Ann Bonner. an Urban
. Forester with the Ohio
P~partment of . Natural
Resources ' Division ·of
. Forestry in Athens. She held
.the workshop which includ. ed demonstrating to village
~;:mployees the professional
techniques which can be
~sed to kee.p the trees look. mg attractive and remain
,structurally sound.
. It was noted that the
trees should not be topped
. or rounded over, as this
eliminates the flower buds
and compromises tree
and
structural
health
integrity over time. Tree
,topping destroys a tree's
natural structure and shortens a tree's service life.
· ;lccording to Bonner. She
\ldded tha~ tree topping is
. rarely recommended hy
· professional
arborists
. ~cause it is stressful to
tree health . detrimental to
.a tree's long tenn stability,
and unsightly.
. The Cleveland Select pear
trees wen: planted in
Middleport in 2004 and
: bave been maintained by
•village employees, volun. teers and business owners.
'
'

-·'

Public meetinr:;

Clubs and
"tions
orgamza

. .

.

Submit-' photo

~nn Bonner, an urban forester with the Ohio Department of Natural Resourses. instructs
v1llage employees in proper techniques for trimming the streetscape trees in Middleport's
downtown historic business district.
·

They' not only represent a dealing with · trees · and
si.gnificant investment to the shrubs within street right of
v1llage. and add color and ways; parks and public·
character to the downtown. places around the village.
while cleaning tile air. While inactive for several
absorbing storm water, min- years. Mayor Mike Gerlach
imizing n()ise and providing recently reactivated the
shade, according to the Tree Board which consists of
five members serving three
Authority Board . .
The Board. established in year terms.
1991, by village ordinance. · While there are many
has the responsibility o!' examples in the village of

trees that have been damaged by. topping . ihe Board
says the strectscape trees
will be treated . to proper
pruning in the form of stmple crown raising and crown
thinning .
·.
"Proper pruning." advised
Bonner, " ts like a good hair
cut in that you can't really
tell anything has been
done ."

·Meigs FFA chapter participates in skills event

POM~ROY
- A team. of
. students from the Metgs
FFA chapter .went to the
Buckeye
Htlls
Career
on
to par. hctpate. 1~
agncullure
. mechantc ~k11ls.
.
. The day mciuded workmg
·on tractors, cuttmg and
.welding metal. and 1dent1fy-

&lt;;e~ter

~arch I~

fo~ ~engine.

ing parts
The
team cons1sttng of Cody
Htll, Jesse Pullins. Kelsey
Sauters.
and
Adam
Lllvender as an. alternate
placed second whrch allows
the team to go to the state
contest.
On March 12 the chapter
member took. a trip to

Winterplac.e Ski Resort in
West V1rgmta where they
enjoyed skiing and tubing.
At the resort first skiers
·Were offered a beginner's
class for safety precautiuns. Students paid their
way by selling fruit earlier
in the year.
.
On Apirl 25 the Meigs

Do you hll'le qu•tlona lbout
your p•nalon b~lllltll'l
" Receive penalon counseling from the Ohio
Pension Rights Project a ser.ice of Pro SeniOrs,
Inc. at no cturge. If you ere an Ohio reeldent
Of wor~ed In Ohio and have queelons regarding
a penelon Of oller retirement benefl~. call
1·800o488ol070 b~ 8:30 a.m.8f\d 4:30 ·
p.m. Monc;tay-Frlday toechedule a free telephone
appointment with one of our attorneya.
The Ohio Penelon Rights Projectle funded
by the U.$.Agency on Aging.

Chatles Smalling, MD
·Dermatologist e!rDermatologic Surgeon
Board Certified~ American Board of Denn.atology
Fellow, American Academy of Dermatology

HOLZER
CLINIC

treatment
cancer
&amp; precancers including Melanoma, Basal Cell &amp;
SquaQtous Cell Cancer and Actinic Keratoses
Outpatient S1.U''gery for removal of Cysts, Lipomas,
andMoles
·
.
Dermatology care provided for patients of all ages .
including treatment for Acne, Psorl~is, Warts,
Dermatitis, and Eczema

off

Dear Annie: Hats
to
all those women who wrote
about what little choice we
Dear Annie: I have been
seniors have in purchasing
married 'to my husband for
new clothes. When I shop
20 years. Unfortunately. I
with friends ;' I often come
had to have a colostomy last
home with nothing but a
year and now use a colostonew turtleneck, a T-shirt or
my bag. Prior to my surgery,
some other basic item that
I was having trouble with
at least ·doesn't reveal my
: regard to our sexual frenavel.
: quency. My menopause
Though I am older than
years were horrible, and I
the baby boomers (I'm 76),
. couldn't take honnones due
a lot of us are in good
to a strong family history of 800-!!26-0826.
health. still enjoy traveling
breast cancer.
Dear Annie: I sent a. bar and doing fun things. and
Now I have a terrible mitzvah invitation to a would like to have a few
. bQdy image and can't even cousin in California. He not cute outfits to do them in.
. think about sex. My hus- only didn't RSVP or call to Please be our advocate and
· band, however, has a strong wish us congratulations, appeal to manufacturers to
.libido and has been finding but he gave his mother .a get some clothes out there
. ·Qther outlets. I know he has check to send along ·with for the age 55-80 set. We
· :·visitt.-d several porn sites on hers . When I deposited the will love you for it. :;our ,computer, and 1 found a check, it was returned for Barbara in Memphis.
;·stash of hard-core porn insufficient · funds. which Tenn.
~:~ ideos' in our home. 1 also cost me $15.
.
Dear Barbara: We hope
~:eame across some sexually
Please tell me the correct designers and manufact\lr:· ;lixplicit e-mails to women I way to handle this delicate ers can comprehend the
: ·Ooq't know, but who )think situation.- Marilyn
economic upstde of creal: :11n: co-workers .
Dear Marilyn: There's ing affordable, · decent
. :. Haven't · 1 already been nothing you can do without clothing for women over
::through . enough without all be in~ equally rude. Your 40 who have nu interest in
: ·t'his'&gt; If the tables were cousm sounds etiquette competing with teenage
· tw·ned and he had to have challenged. He will learn girls. but still want to look
: his testicles removed due to from his bank that the check good·, And are willing to
: cancer. I would not be doing was returned for insufficient spend the money to get
: the things he is doing funds and can ihen choose there.
: hehind my buck . He refuses to re:place it or not. But
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
: wunseling. He reads your we're afraid you're out the ·ten by Kathy Mitchell and
. column and 1 would appn:- $15 · Sorry.
·
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
: ciate a response. - Had
: Enough
Deur Had Enough: We
: wouldn 't exw,:lly compare a
: colostomy to having a
; mun's testicles removed,
: : ~ut we unde1-stand ~our dis. :tress. Still. you cun t expect
; :iour husba.nd w be less
, · utterested m sex s1mply
: : becuus~ you are. For. the
· :s·ake . of your marriage, we
: :lhink you should make the
:'effort 'lo get back m the
: :~ame.
.
·: • Here's some information
: ;tind advice from the Mayo
\londa .\ , \larch 2.\. 200ll
: •Clinic:
::: ·'If you feel less attractive
at \kigs High School \uditorium ·
·:with your ostomy. take your
: •'-:tum to intimacy slowly.
: :Take steps tn feel more con112 East Main St.
SWISHER
: : (ident. Empty and clean
• :~our ostomy pouch. Chec~
Pomeroy
&amp; LOHSE
!· e seal . to make sun: it's
:;tight. Use an opaque pouch
992-2955
www. Reh•n••g4U.com
· •Or try . a pouch cover.
l : ~ingerie and cummerbunds
••
•• •

Stop by and
see our booth at the

taste of home magazine
. Co9king School
"Spring Sen.sations"

•

,------·--------------------,
! March is full of good I
luck for NEW clients

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1 DRAW FRf1,f JACKSON HEwtrr'S POT oF GOLD 1
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tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
boxcomcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box JJ8190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creatots Syndicate Web
page atwww.creators.com.

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Gallipolis, Ohio . 1828 Eastern Avenue
Pomeroy, Ohio
214 1/l Main Street
Chesapeake, Ohio 407 Third Avenue
Pt. Pleasant, WV 328 Main Street

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Please clip &amp; bring ad In to participating locations. ·

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L-~---~----------~--------~

Wholllo Goorg• Wushlnglon, Teddy Roos•veil,

·And Your Grandfather Have In Common'!
Thoy Were All Freema.Ons, Are You?

Middleport Lodge 363
Z90 N. znd Ave. Middleport, OH

OpeaHouse
Saturday, March 11·, 1009
8:00

a.•. · 11:00 P•••

All interested are urged to attend

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•

I,

1

I
I
I

Try to get back ,into the game
made to conceal a pouch or
hold it in l,llace an: available
from spec1alt'y retailers. You
might find that some sexual
positions put pressure on
your ostomy and an:
uncomfortable. Experiment
with new positions, such as
lying on your side."
You can get more in formation and lind a supJ,&gt;Ort
group through the Umted
Ostomy Associations of
America (uoaa .org) at 1-

Youth events

I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL

Church events

FFA Chapter will sponsor
a donkey .basketball show
in the Meigs High School
gym. The show will begin 1
at 7 p.m. Advance tickets · 1
are $6.00 and tickets at the 1
door are $8. To purchase I
tickets
contact
Mick I
Weber or Ronald Vlasak at I
992- 215&amp;.
I

•

AND MARCY SUGAR

about the fraternity and visitors will be able to tour the
lodge hall. Refreshments.
Mooday, Marcb 23
Call Randy Smith at 508RACINE Southern
Local School Board. regular 0816.
SALEM CENTER meeting. 8 p.m .. high school
Star Grange #778 and Star
media room.
Junior Grange #878 will
hold fun night with potluck
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall. followed by fl\fl night activi. ties and set up for soup dinner to be held on Sunday.
Thunday, Man:b 19
Sunday, Man:h 22
POMEROY - American
SALEM CENTER Cancer Society Meigs Star Grange #778 will host
County Advisory Board a soup dinner from n a.m .
meeting, noon, basement unti I 2 p.m. at the hall on
conten:nce room Pomeroy C.R. I. three miles north of
Library.
Salem Center. Membership
REEDSVILLE
awards
, presented .
Riverview Garden Club Entertainment.
Public
7:30 p.m. at the home of invited.
Nancv Wachter.
Monday, Man:h 2J
POMEROY ·~ Meigs
Meigs
POMEROY County Retired Teachers to County Library' Board. regmeet at noon. Wild horse ular meeting. 3:30 p.m ..
Cafe. Speaker. West Area Pomeroy Library.
Vice President of the Ohio
Retired
Teachers
Association
discussing
health care and pension
· Thursday, Marth 19
funds.
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
Saturday, Man:h 21
United
Methodist Church .
RACINE
Special
free
community
dinner. 4meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
6:30
p.m
.
·
·.
Masonic Lodge 164, 8 a.m.
Breakfust at 7 a.m. Degree
work in the Entered ·
Apprentice degree : Open
House from 10 a.m. to I
Saturday, March 21
p.m. Anyone interested in
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
the Masonic Lodge or the Youth League. sign ups, 9
Eastern Star is invited to a.m. - noon. Syracuse Fire
attend. Members will be Station. call 992~5564 for
present to answer question more info.

•

�•

. The Daily Sentinel

•

ACROSS THE .N ATION

Page.A2

PageA3

BYTHEBEND

·the Daily Sentinel

Thlii'SIIay, Mareh 19, zoog

Thursday, Mardt 19~ 2009

Community Calendar
MIDDLEPORT A
pruning workshop was
be.ld
recently
for
Mtddleport village street
e!fiployees with an emphaSIS on proper can: fpc the
. s ~etscape trees in the histone busmess district.
· The
village's · Tree
.Authority Board requested ·
the adv tee and expertise of
.. Ann Bonner. an Urban
. Forester with the Ohio
P~partment of . Natural
Resources ' Division ·of
. Forestry in Athens. She held
.the workshop which includ. ed demonstrating to village
~;:mployees the professional
techniques which can be
~sed to kee.p the trees look. mg attractive and remain
,structurally sound.
. It was noted that the
trees should not be topped
. or rounded over, as this
eliminates the flower buds
and compromises tree
and
structural
health
integrity over time. Tree
,topping destroys a tree's
natural structure and shortens a tree's service life.
· ;lccording to Bonner. She
\ldded tha~ tree topping is
. rarely recommended hy
· professional
arborists
. ~cause it is stressful to
tree health . detrimental to
.a tree's long tenn stability,
and unsightly.
. The Cleveland Select pear
trees wen: planted in
Middleport in 2004 and
: bave been maintained by
•village employees, volun. teers and business owners.
'
'

-·'

Public meetinr:;

Clubs and
"tions
orgamza

. .

.

Submit-' photo

~nn Bonner, an urban forester with the Ohio Department of Natural Resourses. instructs
v1llage employees in proper techniques for trimming the streetscape trees in Middleport's
downtown historic business district.
·

They' not only represent a dealing with · trees · and
si.gnificant investment to the shrubs within street right of
v1llage. and add color and ways; parks and public·
character to the downtown. places around the village.
while cleaning tile air. While inactive for several
absorbing storm water, min- years. Mayor Mike Gerlach
imizing n()ise and providing recently reactivated the
shade, according to the Tree Board which consists of
five members serving three
Authority Board . .
The Board. established in year terms.
1991, by village ordinance. · While there are many
has the responsibility o!' examples in the village of

trees that have been damaged by. topping . ihe Board
says the strectscape trees
will be treated . to proper
pruning in the form of stmple crown raising and crown
thinning .
·.
"Proper pruning." advised
Bonner, " ts like a good hair
cut in that you can't really
tell anything has been
done ."

·Meigs FFA chapter participates in skills event

POM~ROY
- A team. of
. students from the Metgs
FFA chapter .went to the
Buckeye
Htlls
Career
on
to par. hctpate. 1~
agncullure
. mechantc ~k11ls.
.
. The day mciuded workmg
·on tractors, cuttmg and
.welding metal. and 1dent1fy-

&lt;;e~ter

~arch I~

fo~ ~engine.

ing parts
The
team cons1sttng of Cody
Htll, Jesse Pullins. Kelsey
Sauters.
and
Adam
Lllvender as an. alternate
placed second whrch allows
the team to go to the state
contest.
On March 12 the chapter
member took. a trip to

Winterplac.e Ski Resort in
West V1rgmta where they
enjoyed skiing and tubing.
At the resort first skiers
·Were offered a beginner's
class for safety precautiuns. Students paid their
way by selling fruit earlier
in the year.
.
On Apirl 25 the Meigs

Do you hll'le qu•tlona lbout
your p•nalon b~lllltll'l
" Receive penalon counseling from the Ohio
Pension Rights Project a ser.ice of Pro SeniOrs,
Inc. at no cturge. If you ere an Ohio reeldent
Of wor~ed In Ohio and have queelons regarding
a penelon Of oller retirement benefl~. call
1·800o488ol070 b~ 8:30 a.m.8f\d 4:30 ·
p.m. Monc;tay-Frlday toechedule a free telephone
appointment with one of our attorneya.
The Ohio Penelon Rights Projectle funded
by the U.$.Agency on Aging.

Chatles Smalling, MD
·Dermatologist e!rDermatologic Surgeon
Board Certified~ American Board of Denn.atology
Fellow, American Academy of Dermatology

HOLZER
CLINIC

treatment
cancer
&amp; precancers including Melanoma, Basal Cell &amp;
SquaQtous Cell Cancer and Actinic Keratoses
Outpatient S1.U''gery for removal of Cysts, Lipomas,
andMoles
·
.
Dermatology care provided for patients of all ages .
including treatment for Acne, Psorl~is, Warts,
Dermatitis, and Eczema

off

Dear Annie: Hats
to
all those women who wrote
about what little choice we
Dear Annie: I have been
seniors have in purchasing
married 'to my husband for
new clothes. When I shop
20 years. Unfortunately. I
with friends ;' I often come
had to have a colostomy last
home with nothing but a
year and now use a colostonew turtleneck, a T-shirt or
my bag. Prior to my surgery,
some other basic item that
I was having trouble with
at least ·doesn't reveal my
: regard to our sexual frenavel.
: quency. My menopause
Though I am older than
years were horrible, and I
the baby boomers (I'm 76),
. couldn't take honnones due
a lot of us are in good
to a strong family history of 800-!!26-0826.
health. still enjoy traveling
breast cancer.
Dear Annie: I sent a. bar and doing fun things. and
Now I have a terrible mitzvah invitation to a would like to have a few
. bQdy image and can't even cousin in California. He not cute outfits to do them in.
. think about sex. My hus- only didn't RSVP or call to Please be our advocate and
· band, however, has a strong wish us congratulations, appeal to manufacturers to
.libido and has been finding but he gave his mother .a get some clothes out there
. ·Qther outlets. I know he has check to send along ·with for the age 55-80 set. We
· :·visitt.-d several porn sites on hers . When I deposited the will love you for it. :;our ,computer, and 1 found a check, it was returned for Barbara in Memphis.
;·stash of hard-core porn insufficient · funds. which Tenn.
~:~ ideos' in our home. 1 also cost me $15.
.
Dear Barbara: We hope
~:eame across some sexually
Please tell me the correct designers and manufact\lr:· ;lixplicit e-mails to women I way to handle this delicate ers can comprehend the
: ·Ooq't know, but who )think situation.- Marilyn
economic upstde of creal: :11n: co-workers .
Dear Marilyn: There's ing affordable, · decent
. :. Haven't · 1 already been nothing you can do without clothing for women over
::through . enough without all be in~ equally rude. Your 40 who have nu interest in
: ·t'his'&gt; If the tables were cousm sounds etiquette competing with teenage
· tw·ned and he had to have challenged. He will learn girls. but still want to look
: his testicles removed due to from his bank that the check good·, And are willing to
: cancer. I would not be doing was returned for insufficient spend the money to get
: the things he is doing funds and can ihen choose there.
: hehind my buck . He refuses to re:place it or not. But
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
: wunseling. He reads your we're afraid you're out the ·ten by Kathy Mitchell and
. column and 1 would appn:- $15 · Sorry.
·
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
: ciate a response. - Had
: Enough
Deur Had Enough: We
: wouldn 't exw,:lly compare a
: colostomy to having a
; mun's testicles removed,
: : ~ut we unde1-stand ~our dis. :tress. Still. you cun t expect
; :iour husba.nd w be less
, · utterested m sex s1mply
: : becuus~ you are. For. the
· :s·ake . of your marriage, we
: :lhink you should make the
:'effort 'lo get back m the
: :~ame.
.
·: • Here's some information
: ;tind advice from the Mayo
\londa .\ , \larch 2.\. 200ll
: •Clinic:
::: ·'If you feel less attractive
at \kigs High School \uditorium ·
·:with your ostomy. take your
: •'-:tum to intimacy slowly.
: :Take steps tn feel more con112 East Main St.
SWISHER
: : (ident. Empty and clean
• :~our ostomy pouch. Chec~
Pomeroy
&amp; LOHSE
!· e seal . to make sun: it's
:;tight. Use an opaque pouch
992-2955
www. Reh•n••g4U.com
· •Or try . a pouch cover.
l : ~ingerie and cummerbunds
••
•• •

Stop by and
see our booth at the

taste of home magazine
. Co9king School
"Spring Sen.sations"

•

,------·--------------------,
! March is full of good I
luck for NEW clients

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1 DRAW FRf1,f JACKSON HEwtrr'S POT oF GOLD 1
1

tors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesmail·
boxcomcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box JJ8190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
and cartoonists, visit the
Creatots Syndicate Web
page atwww.creators.com.

I

AND YOIJ COULD WIN: •
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Participating·offices:

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Gallipolis, Ohio . 1828 Eastern Avenue
Pomeroy, Ohio
214 1/l Main Street
Chesapeake, Ohio 407 Third Avenue
Pt. Pleasant, WV 328 Main Street

I

Please clip &amp; bring ad In to participating locations. ·

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L-~---~----------~--------~

Wholllo Goorg• Wushlnglon, Teddy Roos•veil,

·And Your Grandfather Have In Common'!
Thoy Were All Freema.Ons, Are You?

Middleport Lodge 363
Z90 N. znd Ave. Middleport, OH

OpeaHouse
Saturday, March 11·, 1009
8:00

a.•. · 11:00 P•••

All interested are urged to attend

.

•

I,

1

I
I
I

Try to get back ,into the game
made to conceal a pouch or
hold it in l,llace an: available
from spec1alt'y retailers. You
might find that some sexual
positions put pressure on
your ostomy and an:
uncomfortable. Experiment
with new positions, such as
lying on your side."
You can get more in formation and lind a supJ,&gt;Ort
group through the Umted
Ostomy Associations of
America (uoaa .org) at 1-

Youth events

I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

BY KATHY MITCHELL

Church events

FFA Chapter will sponsor
a donkey .basketball show
in the Meigs High School
gym. The show will begin 1
at 7 p.m. Advance tickets · 1
are $6.00 and tickets at the 1
door are $8. To purchase I
tickets
contact
Mick I
Weber or Ronald Vlasak at I
992- 215&amp;.
I

•

AND MARCY SUGAR

about the fraternity and visitors will be able to tour the
lodge hall. Refreshments.
Mooday, Marcb 23
Call Randy Smith at 508RACINE Southern
Local School Board. regular 0816.
SALEM CENTER meeting. 8 p.m .. high school
Star Grange #778 and Star
media room.
Junior Grange #878 will
hold fun night with potluck
at 6:30 p.m. at the hall. followed by fl\fl night activi. ties and set up for soup dinner to be held on Sunday.
Thunday, Man:b 19
Sunday, Man:h 22
POMEROY - American
SALEM CENTER Cancer Society Meigs Star Grange #778 will host
County Advisory Board a soup dinner from n a.m .
meeting, noon, basement unti I 2 p.m. at the hall on
conten:nce room Pomeroy C.R. I. three miles north of
Library.
Salem Center. Membership
REEDSVILLE
awards
, presented .
Riverview Garden Club Entertainment.
Public
7:30 p.m. at the home of invited.
Nancv Wachter.
Monday, Man:h 2J
POMEROY ·~ Meigs
Meigs
POMEROY County Retired Teachers to County Library' Board. regmeet at noon. Wild horse ular meeting. 3:30 p.m ..
Cafe. Speaker. West Area Pomeroy Library.
Vice President of the Ohio
Retired
Teachers
Association
discussing
health care and pension
· Thursday, Marth 19
funds.
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
Saturday, Man:h 21
United
Methodist Church .
RACINE
Special
free
community
dinner. 4meeting of Pomeroy/Racine
6:30
p.m
.
·
·.
Masonic Lodge 164, 8 a.m.
Breakfust at 7 a.m. Degree
work in the Entered ·
Apprentice degree : Open
House from 10 a.m. to I
Saturday, March 21
p.m. Anyone interested in
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
the Masonic Lodge or the Youth League. sign ups, 9
Eastern Star is invited to a.m. - noon. Syracuse Fire
attend. Members will be Station. call 992~5564 for
present to answer question more info.

•

�)

•

PageA4

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Much 19,2009

..

Analysis.·
U'hite
l-;louse,
Dems
backpedaling
on
AIG
The Daily Sentinel
E~
tionof~
BY DAVID

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

· Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall makt no laav rtsptcting an
tstablishmtnt of religion, or prohibiting the .
fret txtrcist thrn:ofi or abridging theji"ftdom of
spttch, or of the pl't'ss; or the right of tht people peauably to assmable, and to petition the
. Gowrnmtnt for a l't'lirtss ofgritvancts.~
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

.Problem?.
.Tr'!ffic doesn't bear out speed limit
Dear Editor:
In regards to the speed limit in Pomeroy. the town should
look ;1t the speed limit in other towns like Vienna. W.Va .
The speed is 40 mph . There is a lot more traiTil' there but
they don't lower the speed limit.
If Pomeroy was going to limit the numh\!r of speed
changes.lthink. 35 mph would have been more appropriate
not 25 mph . Look at Mason W.Va. It"s 35 mph. they don't
seem to have any trouble.
Where did common sense go? The tratlic flow in
Pomeroy does not justify a reduced speed like 25 mph
Anyone who drives through Po~1eroy in the morning will
tell you thlll this is true : There is not that much traffic. 0nly
people going to work .
.
l know this letter won't change anything. The Pomeroy
Council won't admit that they made a mistake and fix the
problem
.
David Ball
Racine . .

two weeks ago."
economic recovery .
new plantoOOilout
That would be when the
Critkism that Obarna and the fmancial indus!f&gt;' was
Treasury Department decid- Democr.lls are embarking widely panned. and his 001!WASHINGTON - For ed to make an additional on a new era of tax-and- firmatioo was held up earhthe tirst time since last fall's $30 billion available to spend is undercut by the er when it was disciQsed he
election. Democrats and the American
lntt:mational tack of a budteet alternative had .paid $34.000 in back
Obama administration are Group Inc .• the huge insur- · from Repubhcans - the taxes :
backpedaling furiously on anl-e conglomerate deemed. party that presided over a
Obama himself has been
an issue easilv understood too big to fai~by two admin- historic run-up in the feder- vocal on the need to do
by linancially "str~P.ped tax- istrations.
al debt earlier this decade everything po-ssible to
payers: $165 m1l1ion in
Which goes to the crux of when it controlled both the recoup the money paid out
bonuses ·paid out at bailed- the Democrats· current White House- and Congress. in bonuses. and so far. no
out AIG.
political problem.
less than 100 days into Demonats in Congress
Republicaru;. struggling to
Gone are the days when · the Obama administration. . have tried to hold him to
regain their political foot- they could merely bludgeon polls have brought little · account .
.
mg. are content to let the Bush adminisuation and good news to Republicans .
But
the
Treasury
Democrats try to dig their promise- to seek bipartisan
While a recent Pew sur- Department isn't immune.
way out of this mess on · solutions to the nation's vey found some slipl"lge in even from Democrats.
thetr own.
economic problems.
Obama 's support. tt also
··rm outraged by this;·
Professing shock at the
Now. in conlfl)l of the registered only 28 percent said Bau;;us in a statement.
bonus payments. Democrats White House and Congress . . approval for the job beino "At one point the Treasury
have embarked on a bimy- they are struggling to come done by GOP congress ion.:'~ was in a position to stop
up etl'ort to impose what up with an ellplanation for leaders. the lowest in nearly these bonuses. Those were
amounts to confiscatory what no one in either party · 14 years. And a separate the terms of TARP. terms
survey by CNN and that I helped dralt."
taxes on the bonuses. a seems moved to defend.
Senate
_Maj9rity
Lead~r
Opinion
Research Corp. p~1t
But ·talk of legislation
maneuver that almost surely
will be' tested in the courts. Harry Re1d. D-Nev .• satd support for the president s only leads to . more uncomTreasury
Secretary AIG stands as a symbol of handling of the economy at fortable questions for
Timothy Geithner won a "greed and perhaps corrup- nearly 60 percent.
Democrats.
Against this backdrop.
Sen. Olympia Snowe. R·
strong vote of conlidence tion ."
Sen. M&amp;\ Baucus. D- White House press secre- Maine. and Ron Wyden, DWednesday from President
Burack Obama. whose Mont.. scoffed at AIG's tary Robert Gibbs sought to Ore .. won passage of a provision earher. this year that
administraiion has been daim that the m\lney repre- explain AIG.
He told reporters that they said would have prestruggling with the contro- sents retention pay. "There
versy since the weekend.
are enough bright people in Geithner "last week engllged vented the type of payments
But the mood is less char-· this c~'untry th&lt;tt would do . with the CEO of AIG to now at the center of a storm.
It was dro!'ped without
iti1ble among l'Oilgressional the job for an honest salary. communicate what we
Demo&lt;.:rats.
And and enough honest tll~pay - thought were outrageous •md ellplanation tn . the final
R~publicans have · made
ers demanding that we put unn&lt;:ceptable bo.nuses;' and com!'romise on the ecoGeithner their top target. not an end to this stuff. You can "received a commitment to nom1c stimulus measure.
surprising given Obama\ bet I'll ·make mre justice is . lessen sum~: of tqe bonuses replaced by a less restrictive
continued hrgh llpproval mt- served," he said.
for senior executives."
set of'conditions backed by
mgs.
But the bonus payments
Asl..ed directly if Obama Sen. Christopher Dodd. D"It\ shoding that they occurred on the Democrats' is satisfied that he found out Conn .. and accepted by the
would - the administration watch. and for Republicans. about the bonuses in a time- White House.
would come to us now and AIG seems politically prov- ly htshion. Gibbs said: "Yes.
"The president goes out
the president is satisfied."
and says this is not acceptact surprised about these. idential.
contmcts," said Sen. Mitch
Their
overwhelming
The .president "has .:om- able and then some backMcConnell. R-Ky.. the opposition to last month's plete confidence" i.n . his room deal gets cut to let
Senatt' GOP leader. "This stimulus bill appeared to be Tn:asury secretary. Gibbs . these things get paid out
administration could have · gaining little traction us addt&gt;d. although Geithner's anyway." said Wyden.
and shou.ld have ... prevent- Democrats showcase every early tenure has been any(Dal'icl Esr1o is AP 's chiej
ed this from happening. shovelfuf of dirt thm is thing but smooth. The congressiomll correspon,
They .had a lot of leverage turned ~ all in the name of Cab)net official's introduc- dent).
~&lt;P SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

SOMEONE

The Daily Sentinel

w- . :... . . .

•

[ :~: . ~

BONUSES.

I

Otlicials tout success of·Ohio tourism.spending
COLUMBUS (AP) - Lt.
Gov. Lee Fisher said
Wednesday the state ·s
investment into promoting
tourism is paying otl and
cites a study to bock the
administration·s request to
increase tourism funding.
. But it comes during austere ~ when the state is
looking to trim iJeP.utnnental budgets.
.
A state- funded Sludy performed by an outside
research group foond that for
every $1 the Slate spent to
mark.et tourism, it received
$12 in state and local tax
revenue. Fisher said.
1lte ili-~th campaign
began in May and brought
in $31 millioo in tax rev-

enue - Sl3.S million in
local taxes lind S17.4 millioo in state taxes.
The campaign. called
-Too Much Fun for Just
One Day." generated about
$437 million in new visitor
spending. Fisher said. The
campaign encourages: visi·
tors from nei~hboring cities
such as Pittsburgh. Detroit
and Indianapolis. as well as
Obio's major cities. to make
three-day getaways to Obio
·.
·
destinalions.
GOv. Ted Strickland has
~ a IIIQCiest increase
m Ohio's $8.5 •· million
tourism budget in the next
two-year budget plan.
'"It's COIIllterintuitive but I
wQuld actually suggest that

in these difficult economic
times I bc!,lieve that your
industry may end up doing
better than other industries." Fisher told a. gathering of tourism industry profes&amp;ionals.
Spending 011 tourism marketing in the current fiscal
year. which ends June 30. is
$6.2 million. The governor's next two-year budget
proposal funds tourism at
$6.8 millioo. a 10 percent
increase.
The proposed increase
comes at a time when some
state agencies fa..-e significant cuts.
The Department of Aging,
for example, would see a 4 ·
percent cut from the current

fiscal yetr to the next fiscal
year. while the ~nt of
Development - which oversees tourism· spending _would see a 5 pen:ent l"Ut.lollowed by an II pet~.-ent cut.
Fisher said the hi~h
return on investme-nt of
tourism dollars justified an
increase in tourism funding
in a tight budget.
. "llte governor and I have
proposed a. I0 percent ·
mcrease in tourism because
we think this is now a time
to invest in an industry that
... can do pretty well, even
in a tough economy:·
Fisher said. "But in the end
it will all be up to the
Legislature. whether they
agree witb our proposal.~ .

Dedication mm PageAl

Strickland said. ~In addi- · and has given thf: region pie. government nod busitioo, the Bridge of Honor another sustainable route for nesses for future' growth. It is
will provide a vital trans- day-to-day travel. commerce .exciting to provide the essenponation link between and growth for the states of tial resoun:es the area needs
REYNOLDSBURG - Ruth E. Gotthardt . age 87. went Pomeroy and Mason and it West Virginia and Ohio:·
for ~"Oiltinued enrichment
to. be ~ith the Lord on Sunday March 15, 2009 at Wesley will foster a-onomic growth
"The replacement of the and development." . .
. Rtdge m Reynoldsburg after a long ~nle with dementia.
in the ~-ommunities."
original 1928 bridge illusThe bridge's dedication
Manchin also echoed . tr.ttes ODOT's continued ceremony will also posthu~h.e was born June 26,1921. in Meigs County. to the late
Wtlh~ and Gladys (Jociam) Morgan. She was also pre- Strickland's sentiments on focus on advancing Ohio's. mously recognize the eiTorts
. ceded m death by husband Ronald L. Gotthardt in 1995.
IM;moring the sacrifiee.of ser- infr.tStructure to ensure the of three local veterans. Stall'
Ruth was a retired Medlclll Transcriptionist at Mercy vice men · and women. safety of evel1' citizen as well Sgt. Jimmy G. Stewart forHospital for 20 years. and was a volunteer for 1lte American including the sacrifices as max1m1zmg economtc merly of West Columbia.
Red Cross. She is survived by ~ son Bruce {Michelle) made by the three honorees. development lor the region," W.Va. and Gen. James V.
. Gotthardt. Carroll; grandchildren Ross, Daniel and Emily Manchin also stated: ''I am affirmed Larry Woodford, Hartinger and Cpl. Edward
. Gotthardt; great-granddaughter Abbigail Snyder; brother pleased that the construction district I 0 deputy director of A. Bennett bOth formerly of
' Roger (Mary) Morgan. Athens; niece Kathy (Robert) of the new Pomeroy-Mason ODOT. "These two commu- · Middleport. The three men
Moore. Newark; nephew R. Keith Morgan, Utah; great Bridge has been completed nities rely he~vily on its peo- have been named as hon, niece and nephew Lindsey and Ryan; and many dear friends
Friends may visit Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. at the
Deayne R. Spence Funeral Home, 550 Hill Rd. North (St.
Page At
Rt . l256), Pickerington. Ohio 43147 where funeral service
will follow at 7 p.m. Rev. R. Robert Kimes officiating.
uvuilable federal funding as
Graveside service and interment will be II a.m. Thursday employs to service its cus- eight percent in 2011.
tomers,"
the
PUCO
said
in
a
The
effective
dllte
of
the
we believe the technolo~ty
at Riverview Cemetery. Middleport, Ohio. In lieu of flowpress
release.
new
genemtion
rates
is
Jan.
associated with smart gnd
ers. donations may be made to Wesley Ridge or the
In
approving
the
ESP,
the
.1.
2009.
AEP-Ohio
will
be
can
provide sig_nil'il'unt
Alzheimer's-Dementia Association in her memory. Online
Commission
said
it
is
able
to
collect
the
difference
benefits
to the company's
condolences available at www.spencefuneralhome.com.
incenting AEP-Ohio to of rates charged since Jan. customers which include
implement programs that I. 2009 and rates authorized managing energy usage and
give customers.tools to save by the PUCO yesterday.
energy oosts.''
, ·
on their electricity costs and
The .Commission alSo
The company will collect
imr.rove service reliability.
the ditlerence m rates from approved the enhanced veg. • We believe that it is customers through the end etation management proessential for Ohioans to of 2009.
gram proposed in AEP· ·
have tools available to them
The Commission approved Ohio's ESP application.
MIDDLEPORT - The Tiny Tech Preschool is now to lower their energy costs," AEP-Ohio 's gridSMART Under the program. AEP·
enrolling new students.
·
PUCO Chairman Alan R. program thitt will enable the Ohio will move to a four·
The preschool features extended morning and afternoon Schriber said. "Our expecta- company to improve reliabil- year cycle-bused vegetation
hours, flexible scheduling, individualized help for children tion is that the rites we are ity, reduce costs and allow management program.
2 l/2 to 5 years old; Both Ohio and West Virgmia vouchers approving today will go customers to better control
The company will also
are accepted .
toward that initiative.
their electric bills through employ additional resources
AEP-Ohio will phase-in advanced meterin~ technolo- · and increase the level of
The school will work with families on a tuition package
that meets the needs of both the schedule and the .family . authorized increases to cus- gy. AEP-Ohio wtll recover vegetation · management
budget. For more infonnation contact Mindy Chancey, . tomers' generation rates. the costs of implementing the work performed. The compreschool administrator, 740-922-free. The preschool ts For Columbus Southern program over the three-year pany will recover the costs
Power customers. these ESP plan.
located at 873 South third Av., Middleport. .
associated with this pro·
·
annual increases will be
"The federal stimulus bill gram.
cap!)Cd at seven percent in provides federal matching
Initially the company will
2009 and siK percent in funds for 'smart grid pro- recover only the costs assoand 2011.
• jects like the one proposed ciated with the pro~rum.
POMEROY - Entertainment has been scheduled for six 2010
Ohio
Power
customers
by AEP-Ohio," Cha1rman The program costs will be
· evenings in April. The entertainers include Johnny Rawls
will
have
increases
capped
on April3, Patrick Sweany on Aprill8, Eddie Shaw and the at eight percent in . 2009, Schriber said . . "We are subject to an annual review
directing the company to and reconciliation by the
Wofe Ganson April 10, Blackberry Jam on April 18, Bill'
Lupkin anp the Chicago Blues Coalition &lt;in April 24, and seven percent in 20 l 0 and take steps to apply for Commission.
NF1. Draft Party ori ,April 25.
.

·Rulh E. Ciotlluudi

orees of the new structure.
The dedication will teature
remarks
from
both
Strickland and Manchin.
Also in attendance · will be
ODOrs
Director
or
Transportation. Jolene M .
Molitoris. and West Virginia
Secretary of Transportation.
P..tu I Mattox. Jr. The Feeney-.
Bennett Post 128. American
Legion Color Guard from
Middleport will be conducting the 21-gun salute and the
River Blend . Barbershop
Quartet will be singing tho:
National :Anthem. · ,

Rate rrom

·Local Briefs·

l

EnroUment under way

UTI_

Entertainment scheduled

Will these (education'presidents ever learn?

H

ere we go again:
Another administration. another education president. The United
States has no other kind. At
least since the 1983 study
"A Nation at Risk.'' every
administration has declared
its determination to save
school children from what it
called "a rising tide of
mediocrity that threatens
our very future as a natmn
LETTERS TO THE
and a people ."
To hear President Bamck
EDITOR
Obama tell it. mediocrity 's
. Letters ro rile editor art' welcome. They should be less winning. Recently. he spoke
:rhan 300 "'oms. All lerters are .mbjeetto.editill/i, must he to the U.S . Hispanic
;signed. and illcillde address and telephone mmiber. No Chamber of Commerce.
:unsigned letters will be jmblishecl. Letters should be in Sadly. he informed them
· good taste, addressing i.1sues. 1101 personalities. Leiters of "that despite resources that
· thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- are unmatched anywhere in
the world, we've let our
ed for publiwtion.
grades slip, our schools
.. ~--------------------------~~
crumble. our teacher 4uality
fall short and other nations
outpace us . Let me give you
a few statistics . .In eighth: Reader Services
(usPs 213·960)
grade math . we've fallen to
Correction !Ioiiey ,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ninth place. Singapore 's
Our main concern in all stories Is to ~ubli~hed every mornmg . Monday
middle-schoolers
Olltperthrough Fnday, 111 Court Street,
• be accurate. If you know o1 an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class pestaQe
form ours 3 to I, Just a third
... in a story, can the n.ewsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
•
of our 13- and 14-year-olds
: 992-2 156. ·
Member: The Associated Press and
can read as well as they
the Ohio Newspapet Association.
should .... (A) stubborn gap
Poatm..ter: Send address correc·
Our main number Is
persists between how well
tions to The Daily Sentinel. P.O. BoK
(740) 992·2156.
white
students ai·e doing
729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
.Dep1rtment extensions ere:
compared to their African·
Subscription Rates
American ami Latino classBy
carrier
or
motor
route
mates .. .. What's m stake is
News
4
.'11.30
nothing less than the
Editor: Charlene HoefliCh. Ext. 12
52 weeks ........... .'128.85
American
Dream ."
• Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Deily ...................50'
• Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext 13
Permit me a sigh. This
Senior Citizen rates
26 weeks ............ .'59.61
·'American Dream" busi52 weeks ......... . . .'116.90
ness comes up whenever
A~vertising
Subscribers should remit in advance
politicians find themselves
Outalde Sales: Dave Harris , EKI . 15 clrect to The Da~ Senflnel. No sub·
at
serious odds with reality.
, Outside Sateo: Brenda Davis, EX! 16 scnpl1on by mail permitted in areas
It
's
harmless enough insofar
where
home
carrier
serviCe
Is
available.
Clau.!Cire.: Judy Clark . Ext 10
as it declares our common
Malt Subscription
hope to provide our childnm
lnalde Molga County
General Manager
with greater opportunities.
12 Weeks . .......... . .'35.26
Charlene Hoelllch, Ewt t2
It can be.come downright
26 Weeks , . .... . .. . ... '70.70
pemicious. however, when
52 Weeks . , . .. . . ... , .'140.11.
E·mell:
those dreams are illusions.
mdsnews C my~ailysentl nel . com
Outalde Melga County
To any skeptic who's fol12 Weeks .. .. ..... . . . .'56.55
lowed educational refom1s
26 Weeks ... ,, ... .. .. .'113.60
Web :
since
the Reagan adminis·
52 Weeks . . ........ .. '227.21
.com
L___www.mydaitysen11nel
_ _ __ _
tration, two things . should

~

I I

.POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Frances D. ~Frannie"
Dickens. 46, uf Point Pleasant. W.Va.. died after a short illness at Haber Medical Center.
· She was a grilll'OOic for Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born Jan. 19. 1963 in Fr.mklin County. a daughter of~ lat': Frank D.·and Betty lou Loc'as. Dickens.
~ IS SUIVIVed by her k&gt;vin~ family and her special com~011. Wendell Barber of Pomt Pleasant; soo and daughte~·m-law. R~ K . Landers of Point Pleasant; daughter.
Mtehel~ (Kurtts) Allen of Racine: grandchildren: Rachel.
Nathii;Riel. Skyra. Kade111.-e and lsabela. and Charles Smith
of J&gt;oint ~asant, Shelia (Darrin) Warth. Joshua DickeR\.
Frankie Di~ens and Locy ~ckens. all of Pomeroy, and ·
. JOllllthan Dickens of Galhpo!IS; brothers and sisters: Rena
and ~alph Day of Pomeroy. Shelia Dickens of Middleport.
De~.te Monson of Point Pleasant and Faith (Charlie)
Pemungtoo of Pomeroy.
Funeral will be at II am. Friday, March 20.2009.at Deal
. Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Pastor Carl Swisher
.: offidating. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens in
· Pomeroy.
·
Friends may call 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home .
Condolences may be e-mailed to dealfuneral@suddenlinbnail.com.

ITII

I

.BROll6HT UP
THE Al6

TODAY IN HISTORY

·-------------------------------

'

WERE: WHEN

·

Today is Thursday. March 19., the 78th day of 2009.
There are 287 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On March 19. 1979. the U.S. House of Representatives
began televising its.day-to-day business.
. On th1s date:
In 1859. the opera "Faust" by Cl{arles Got~ nod premiered
in Paris.
In 1917. the Supreme Court , in Wilson v. New. upheld
the eight-hour work day for railroud workers .
In 1918. Congress approved daylight saving time.
· In 1920, the S~:nate' rejected. for a second time, the .Treaty
·of Versailles by '49 to 35. falling short of the two-thirds
majority needed for approval.
In 1931. Nevada Gov. Fred B. Balzar signed a measure
legalizing casino gambling.
In 1945. during World War II. 724 people were killed
:when a Japanese dive bomber attacked the carrier USS
Jirank.lin off Ja11an: the ship, however. was saved. Adolf
:Hitler issued h1s so.called ''Nero Decree." ordering the
destruction of German facilities that could fall into Allied
hands .
Thought for Today: "History is principally the inaccurate
narration lif events which ought not to have happened." Ernest Albert Hooten. American aflthropologist ( 1887. 1954).
.

..

.,-

THIS IS
WHERE THEY

The D~y Sentinel • Pap As

www~atinel.com

· Arizona scholar Gemld the actual world, none has
Bracey. author · of a fine . been proven to work.
Everybody wants kids to
book
called
Reudin~
Edwmionul Re,earch: How do their best; imposing artito
Al'llid
Gelling ficially high achievement
Stutistimllr
Snookered . standards, however. is like
Gene
Those dis1i1al reading lev- standing on that metaphori Lyons
els? Bracey cites studies cal beach commanding the
showing that "were kids in tide. Awhile buck, Los
other countries to sit for our Angeles decided to require
NAEP
(National all high school graduates to
be clear: Despite Obama 's Assessment of Educational pass Algebra; the result was
dropout
ra1es.
doom-·saying. there's been ~rogress) exams. NO coun- higher
try
would
have
a
majot'ity
of
Period.
genuine.
measurable
Charter schools are the
progress in American public students proficient in reading
using
NAEP
achievelatest
version of the
schools. Second, fads.
ment
levels."
.
"Talented
and Gifted" craze.
panaceas and miracle cures
Most troubling were (Years ag\). I won an arguare as common as infallible
Obama
's
comparisons ment wi1h my wife by cllalbetting systems at the racethe
states.
It's true len~ing her to name a single
among
track. Most have exactly the
Missi ssippi lags behind wh1te kid in our neighborsame utility.
Wyoming
in reading Scores. hood who hadn't been
It's simply false that
Also
that
more
than half of . declared a budding genius.
American kids have " fallen" to ninth place in math . Mississippi public school A lon~ moment passed.
African- ·•somenmes I hate yqu," she
are
They've actun!ly risen to students
American.
More
than
two- said.) That is. they're a sop
tllm status from 23rd among
thirds
qualify
for
free
or to striving middle-class par41 nations taking pan in
that same study in 1995 . By reduced-price · lunches. ents like the Obamas. Like
2003. the United Stuies Furthermore, notes Bob religious schools', some do
run ked I 5th. However Somerby, in the Deep Sollth well as long as they· re able
much sense it makes to 'Torced illiteracy was offi- to cut highly motivated kids
compare the United States cial staie policy. t'nr several from the .herd.
Alas, studies show the
to rich. culturally homo~e­ · centuries, for what is nnw
(M
ississipfi
's)
largest
stu·
bigger
charter schools get,
neous
countnes
hke
dent
racia
group
...
it
was
the smaller their advan·
Sweden and Finland that set
the curve. it's doubtful com. against the law .. : tn teach tages. ·
Then there 's me.rit pay.
pnrisons to Malaysia mean black children how to read."
Yet
the
good
news
is
that.
Wam your kid's school to
anything Ill all.
Singupore 's . kids otltper- again contrary to Obama, resemble 'The Office." or
form America's 3-to- I at racial achi evement gaps the Dilbert emilie strip'/
whal'.1Ohama didn 't·suy. All hHve . steadily narrowed Introduce pay increases
of them'' Or just lhos~ sim:e the 1970s. (Check this based on student perforse Icc ted into a "college from the National Center mance. Who 'II want to teach
prep" curriculum'? Almost for Edu~ational . Statistics if those underachievers then?
doubt
me:
.certainly the latter. As atl you
Maybe . some Mother
admirably skeptical article http :// nee s .e d·.gov /nation· Teresa will opt:n a charter
buried in the B section of sreportcnrd/ltt/results2004/s school.
the Washington Post point- . ub-reading-race .asp)
Otherwise.
they're
So what's going on? screwed.
ed nut: "The United States
remains at the top of the · Unfortunately. the president
(Arkcw.l'fls
Democrat·
World Economil· Forum's appe&lt;trs to have succumbed Ga:elle . columnist Gene
200!!-09
Global to the latest educational Lvons is a National
Competitiveness · Report. . miracle cures: tougher stan- Ma}ga zine Award · winner
(Switzerl&lt;md was second. · dards, charter schools and !jilt co-author of "The
follow ed . by Denmark . merit pay for teachers. all Huming rif the President"
Sweden and Singapore.)"
touted by Republicans· (Sr . Martin's Press. 2000).
Reporter Valerie Strauss· perennially eager to disci - You ·cw1 e-riwil Lvuns at
soun.:c w01s !Jniversity of pline the lower classes. In eugenelyrms2@ yahcio .com).
.'

Sentences from Page At

Community dinner

MIDDLEPORT - The Heath United Methodist Church indicted in connection with
will offer a free community dinner from 4-6:30 p.m. tonight. the break-in at an Albany
residence last November.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
sentenced Hunter. and she
.
was . remanded to ·the cusCOLUMBUS ·(AP) - In a March 18 story and glance tody
Robert
about proposals tQ chmige redistricting, The. Associated Beegle offor Sheriff
transport
to the
Press erroneously repbrted the intent of one plan. A bill Women's . Reformatory
at
introduced by state S"ens. Kevin Cou~hlin and Gary Cates Marysville. Simms was senwould change the drawing of legislauve districts, not con· tenced to four years in
gressional ones.
in January.
• Also, the story and glance should have made clear that a , prison
James
W. . Marcum.
proposal from state Sen. Jon Husted would change the way
Bidwell.
had
entered a plea
both congressional and legislative districts are .drawn. •
of guilty to one count of
improper handling ~f a
firearm in a motor vehicle. a
I
felony of the fourth degree.
and was sentenced to 18
months in prison. Crow suspended the sentence and
placed Marcum on commu. SALISBURY - 1\vo individuals were transported to an nity control for five years.
Marcum wus charged in
area hospital with minor injuri~s following a two ve~icle
an
indictment after a traffic
accident that occurred at approxtmately 5:40p.m. on Fnday.
. According to trOOpers. Courtney N. Haggy, 20, Syracuse, stop by . the Ohio State
. was driving her 1997 Chevy Blazer southbound on Ohio 7 Highway Patrol in May.
.
when she stopped in traffic to tum left onto County Road 24. 2008.
Brenton M. Welsh. 18.
Annene L. Russell,47, was also driving her l999GMC Jimmy
· southbound on Ohio 7 and her vehicle failed to stop in time and Pomeroy. w11s sentenced to
1~months on pleas of guilty
struck Haggy's vehicle in the rear. causing it to ovenum.
Haggy and front seat passenger Danny A. Haggy. 49, to burglary and grand theft
Pomeroy were transported by Southeast Ohio EMS to of a motor vehicle in
. Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal with minor injuries and re.leased September. 2008. Crow
ordered the sentences to be
. the same day. .
.
.
.
Russell wus cited with fmlure to control ~nd her veh1cle served consecutively.
Crow suspended Welsh's
sustained disabling damages. Huggy's vehicle sustained
sentences.
as well. and
severe damages.
placed him .on community
control for five yeurs .. He
was ordered to complete the

: Correction: .Ohio Redistricting story
.

SEPTA . program
10
. Nelsonville.
.
Bobbie Roush, 31, Point
Pleasant. W.Va.. was to
have appeared on a motion
to show 'Cause · why . she
should not be held in con- ·
tempt of court. but failed to
uppear. A motion to revoke
probation will be filed.

The Commission denied
the other distribution system reliability programs
proposed by AEP·Ohio in
tts ESP nppliclllion.
On Mlly I. 2008. Gov. Ted
Strickland . signed SB 221
into law. marking the oneyear mmiversary of the date
he outlined his Energy. Jobs.
and Progress Plan to stabilize electricity prices. create
jobs. and expand Ohio's
green energy industry. SB
221 took effect on July 31.
2008 and incorporates a sys·
tem under which rates
would be set by the PUCO
and outlines a path for electric utilities to implement
market-based pricing. ·
On July 31. 2008, AEPOhio filed an application for
an ESP. The PUCO held
five local public hearings in
AEP-Ohio 's service terri to·
ry at which 124 customers
testified about the company's application. The evidentiary hearing began on
Nov. 17, 2008 and conclud·
ed on Dec. 10, 2008.

~Jmon· ~!lid

. f~~c~..

Williams said.
Roush pleaded guilty in
March, 2007, to a count of
forgery and a count of ·
receivmg stolen property.
She was sentenced to two
one-year terms, which were
suspended . .and she had
been placed on community
control.

Achun Mc.DI\nlel
A Jai'Mis Andctt'$f.ln
DIRIK." 'I"ORS

/ter

c,..,,..,.,,.

A.i'aila&amp;ll

Middlep&lt;.lft Pomer\\y
992-5141 992-5444
w~ •·.'Jildtr !iOOlncd&amp;n i~ Lcom

For the Record

·Highway Patrol

' '

Ohio Northern invested
with frrm accused of fraud~·

ADA (AP) - Another university in Ohio says it inve~t­
ed money with a firm whose owners are now charged w1th
fraud in New York.
. .
.
. . .
Ohio Northern University Ill Ada says 11 had $10 mtlhon
invested with Westridge C~pital Management Inc .. ~hose
two owners were arrested m February on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud and secunhes fraud.
.,
.
Ohio Northern President Kendall .Baker says u s too early
.
. .
. to know if the school cun .get 1ts money back:
Earlier this week, Bowhng Green State UnJverstty sa1d u
had $15 million with the firm.
·
•

CALL81f,
.

'

,,

Bridge
fromPageAl
Rose said in addition to
bringing
down
the
approach spans, · workers
are also -dismantling ,the
metal decking which is
basically bein~ rolled up
"like a blanket ·' to get the
bridge as light as possible.

..._

,~

\.

.'

.',\

.

.'ll•i·•; !., . . .': .
. ·~ , A. . ..t 01~118JIItfr.
,.. \

. • lf ; 1

-

.t

·"

''

�)

•

PageA4

OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Much 19,2009

..

Analysis.·
U'hite
l-;louse,
Dems
backpedaling
on
AIG
The Daily Sentinel
E~
tionof~
BY DAVID

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

· Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall makt no laav rtsptcting an
tstablishmtnt of religion, or prohibiting the .
fret txtrcist thrn:ofi or abridging theji"ftdom of
spttch, or of the pl't'ss; or the right of tht people peauably to assmable, and to petition the
. Gowrnmtnt for a l't'lirtss ofgritvancts.~
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READER'S

VIEW

.Problem?.
.Tr'!ffic doesn't bear out speed limit
Dear Editor:
In regards to the speed limit in Pomeroy. the town should
look ;1t the speed limit in other towns like Vienna. W.Va .
The speed is 40 mph . There is a lot more traiTil' there but
they don't lower the speed limit.
If Pomeroy was going to limit the numh\!r of speed
changes.lthink. 35 mph would have been more appropriate
not 25 mph . Look at Mason W.Va. It"s 35 mph. they don't
seem to have any trouble.
Where did common sense go? The tratlic flow in
Pomeroy does not justify a reduced speed like 25 mph
Anyone who drives through Po~1eroy in the morning will
tell you thlll this is true : There is not that much traffic. 0nly
people going to work .
.
l know this letter won't change anything. The Pomeroy
Council won't admit that they made a mistake and fix the
problem
.
David Ball
Racine . .

two weeks ago."
economic recovery .
new plantoOOilout
That would be when the
Critkism that Obarna and the fmancial indus!f&gt;' was
Treasury Department decid- Democr.lls are embarking widely panned. and his 001!WASHINGTON - For ed to make an additional on a new era of tax-and- firmatioo was held up earhthe tirst time since last fall's $30 billion available to spend is undercut by the er when it was disciQsed he
election. Democrats and the American
lntt:mational tack of a budteet alternative had .paid $34.000 in back
Obama administration are Group Inc .• the huge insur- · from Repubhcans - the taxes :
backpedaling furiously on anl-e conglomerate deemed. party that presided over a
Obama himself has been
an issue easilv understood too big to fai~by two admin- historic run-up in the feder- vocal on the need to do
by linancially "str~P.ped tax- istrations.
al debt earlier this decade everything po-ssible to
payers: $165 m1l1ion in
Which goes to the crux of when it controlled both the recoup the money paid out
bonuses ·paid out at bailed- the Democrats· current White House- and Congress. in bonuses. and so far. no
out AIG.
political problem.
less than 100 days into Demonats in Congress
Republicaru;. struggling to
Gone are the days when · the Obama administration. . have tried to hold him to
regain their political foot- they could merely bludgeon polls have brought little · account .
.
mg. are content to let the Bush adminisuation and good news to Republicans .
But
the
Treasury
Democrats try to dig their promise- to seek bipartisan
While a recent Pew sur- Department isn't immune.
way out of this mess on · solutions to the nation's vey found some slipl"lge in even from Democrats.
thetr own.
economic problems.
Obama 's support. tt also
··rm outraged by this;·
Professing shock at the
Now. in conlfl)l of the registered only 28 percent said Bau;;us in a statement.
bonus payments. Democrats White House and Congress . . approval for the job beino "At one point the Treasury
have embarked on a bimy- they are struggling to come done by GOP congress ion.:'~ was in a position to stop
up etl'ort to impose what up with an ellplanation for leaders. the lowest in nearly these bonuses. Those were
amounts to confiscatory what no one in either party · 14 years. And a separate the terms of TARP. terms
survey by CNN and that I helped dralt."
taxes on the bonuses. a seems moved to defend.
Senate
_Maj9rity
Lead~r
Opinion
Research Corp. p~1t
But ·talk of legislation
maneuver that almost surely
will be' tested in the courts. Harry Re1d. D-Nev .• satd support for the president s only leads to . more uncomTreasury
Secretary AIG stands as a symbol of handling of the economy at fortable questions for
Timothy Geithner won a "greed and perhaps corrup- nearly 60 percent.
Democrats.
Against this backdrop.
Sen. Olympia Snowe. R·
strong vote of conlidence tion ."
Sen. M&amp;\ Baucus. D- White House press secre- Maine. and Ron Wyden, DWednesday from President
Burack Obama. whose Mont.. scoffed at AIG's tary Robert Gibbs sought to Ore .. won passage of a provision earher. this year that
administraiion has been daim that the m\lney repre- explain AIG.
He told reporters that they said would have prestruggling with the contro- sents retention pay. "There
versy since the weekend.
are enough bright people in Geithner "last week engllged vented the type of payments
But the mood is less char-· this c~'untry th&lt;tt would do . with the CEO of AIG to now at the center of a storm.
It was dro!'ped without
iti1ble among l'Oilgressional the job for an honest salary. communicate what we
Demo&lt;.:rats.
And and enough honest tll~pay - thought were outrageous •md ellplanation tn . the final
R~publicans have · made
ers demanding that we put unn&lt;:ceptable bo.nuses;' and com!'romise on the ecoGeithner their top target. not an end to this stuff. You can "received a commitment to nom1c stimulus measure.
surprising given Obama\ bet I'll ·make mre justice is . lessen sum~: of tqe bonuses replaced by a less restrictive
continued hrgh llpproval mt- served," he said.
for senior executives."
set of'conditions backed by
mgs.
But the bonus payments
Asl..ed directly if Obama Sen. Christopher Dodd. D"It\ shoding that they occurred on the Democrats' is satisfied that he found out Conn .. and accepted by the
would - the administration watch. and for Republicans. about the bonuses in a time- White House.
would come to us now and AIG seems politically prov- ly htshion. Gibbs said: "Yes.
"The president goes out
the president is satisfied."
and says this is not acceptact surprised about these. idential.
contmcts," said Sen. Mitch
Their
overwhelming
The .president "has .:om- able and then some backMcConnell. R-Ky.. the opposition to last month's plete confidence" i.n . his room deal gets cut to let
Senatt' GOP leader. "This stimulus bill appeared to be Tn:asury secretary. Gibbs . these things get paid out
administration could have · gaining little traction us addt&gt;d. although Geithner's anyway." said Wyden.
and shou.ld have ... prevent- Democrats showcase every early tenure has been any(Dal'icl Esr1o is AP 's chiej
ed this from happening. shovelfuf of dirt thm is thing but smooth. The congressiomll correspon,
They .had a lot of leverage turned ~ all in the name of Cab)net official's introduc- dent).
~&lt;P SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

SOMEONE

The Daily Sentinel

w- . :... . . .

•

[ :~: . ~

BONUSES.

I

Otlicials tout success of·Ohio tourism.spending
COLUMBUS (AP) - Lt.
Gov. Lee Fisher said
Wednesday the state ·s
investment into promoting
tourism is paying otl and
cites a study to bock the
administration·s request to
increase tourism funding.
. But it comes during austere ~ when the state is
looking to trim iJeP.utnnental budgets.
.
A state- funded Sludy performed by an outside
research group foond that for
every $1 the Slate spent to
mark.et tourism, it received
$12 in state and local tax
revenue. Fisher said.
1lte ili-~th campaign
began in May and brought
in $31 millioo in tax rev-

enue - Sl3.S million in
local taxes lind S17.4 millioo in state taxes.
The campaign. called
-Too Much Fun for Just
One Day." generated about
$437 million in new visitor
spending. Fisher said. The
campaign encourages: visi·
tors from nei~hboring cities
such as Pittsburgh. Detroit
and Indianapolis. as well as
Obio's major cities. to make
three-day getaways to Obio
·.
·
destinalions.
GOv. Ted Strickland has
~ a IIIQCiest increase
m Ohio's $8.5 •· million
tourism budget in the next
two-year budget plan.
'"It's COIIllterintuitive but I
wQuld actually suggest that

in these difficult economic
times I bc!,lieve that your
industry may end up doing
better than other industries." Fisher told a. gathering of tourism industry profes&amp;ionals.
Spending 011 tourism marketing in the current fiscal
year. which ends June 30. is
$6.2 million. The governor's next two-year budget
proposal funds tourism at
$6.8 millioo. a 10 percent
increase.
The proposed increase
comes at a time when some
state agencies fa..-e significant cuts.
The Department of Aging,
for example, would see a 4 ·
percent cut from the current

fiscal yetr to the next fiscal
year. while the ~nt of
Development - which oversees tourism· spending _would see a 5 pen:ent l"Ut.lollowed by an II pet~.-ent cut.
Fisher said the hi~h
return on investme-nt of
tourism dollars justified an
increase in tourism funding
in a tight budget.
. "llte governor and I have
proposed a. I0 percent ·
mcrease in tourism because
we think this is now a time
to invest in an industry that
... can do pretty well, even
in a tough economy:·
Fisher said. "But in the end
it will all be up to the
Legislature. whether they
agree witb our proposal.~ .

Dedication mm PageAl

Strickland said. ~In addi- · and has given thf: region pie. government nod busitioo, the Bridge of Honor another sustainable route for nesses for future' growth. It is
will provide a vital trans- day-to-day travel. commerce .exciting to provide the essenponation link between and growth for the states of tial resoun:es the area needs
REYNOLDSBURG - Ruth E. Gotthardt . age 87. went Pomeroy and Mason and it West Virginia and Ohio:·
for ~"Oiltinued enrichment
to. be ~ith the Lord on Sunday March 15, 2009 at Wesley will foster a-onomic growth
"The replacement of the and development." . .
. Rtdge m Reynoldsburg after a long ~nle with dementia.
in the ~-ommunities."
original 1928 bridge illusThe bridge's dedication
Manchin also echoed . tr.ttes ODOT's continued ceremony will also posthu~h.e was born June 26,1921. in Meigs County. to the late
Wtlh~ and Gladys (Jociam) Morgan. She was also pre- Strickland's sentiments on focus on advancing Ohio's. mously recognize the eiTorts
. ceded m death by husband Ronald L. Gotthardt in 1995.
IM;moring the sacrifiee.of ser- infr.tStructure to ensure the of three local veterans. Stall'
Ruth was a retired Medlclll Transcriptionist at Mercy vice men · and women. safety of evel1' citizen as well Sgt. Jimmy G. Stewart forHospital for 20 years. and was a volunteer for 1lte American including the sacrifices as max1m1zmg economtc merly of West Columbia.
Red Cross. She is survived by ~ son Bruce {Michelle) made by the three honorees. development lor the region," W.Va. and Gen. James V.
. Gotthardt. Carroll; grandchildren Ross, Daniel and Emily Manchin also stated: ''I am affirmed Larry Woodford, Hartinger and Cpl. Edward
. Gotthardt; great-granddaughter Abbigail Snyder; brother pleased that the construction district I 0 deputy director of A. Bennett bOth formerly of
' Roger (Mary) Morgan. Athens; niece Kathy (Robert) of the new Pomeroy-Mason ODOT. "These two commu- · Middleport. The three men
Moore. Newark; nephew R. Keith Morgan, Utah; great Bridge has been completed nities rely he~vily on its peo- have been named as hon, niece and nephew Lindsey and Ryan; and many dear friends
Friends may visit Wednesday from 5-7 p.m. at the
Deayne R. Spence Funeral Home, 550 Hill Rd. North (St.
Page At
Rt . l256), Pickerington. Ohio 43147 where funeral service
will follow at 7 p.m. Rev. R. Robert Kimes officiating.
uvuilable federal funding as
Graveside service and interment will be II a.m. Thursday employs to service its cus- eight percent in 2011.
tomers,"
the
PUCO
said
in
a
The
effective
dllte
of
the
we believe the technolo~ty
at Riverview Cemetery. Middleport, Ohio. In lieu of flowpress
release.
new
genemtion
rates
is
Jan.
associated with smart gnd
ers. donations may be made to Wesley Ridge or the
In
approving
the
ESP,
the
.1.
2009.
AEP-Ohio
will
be
can
provide sig_nil'il'unt
Alzheimer's-Dementia Association in her memory. Online
Commission
said
it
is
able
to
collect
the
difference
benefits
to the company's
condolences available at www.spencefuneralhome.com.
incenting AEP-Ohio to of rates charged since Jan. customers which include
implement programs that I. 2009 and rates authorized managing energy usage and
give customers.tools to save by the PUCO yesterday.
energy oosts.''
, ·
on their electricity costs and
The .Commission alSo
The company will collect
imr.rove service reliability.
the ditlerence m rates from approved the enhanced veg. • We believe that it is customers through the end etation management proessential for Ohioans to of 2009.
gram proposed in AEP· ·
have tools available to them
The Commission approved Ohio's ESP application.
MIDDLEPORT - The Tiny Tech Preschool is now to lower their energy costs," AEP-Ohio 's gridSMART Under the program. AEP·
enrolling new students.
·
PUCO Chairman Alan R. program thitt will enable the Ohio will move to a four·
The preschool features extended morning and afternoon Schriber said. "Our expecta- company to improve reliabil- year cycle-bused vegetation
hours, flexible scheduling, individualized help for children tion is that the rites we are ity, reduce costs and allow management program.
2 l/2 to 5 years old; Both Ohio and West Virgmia vouchers approving today will go customers to better control
The company will also
are accepted .
toward that initiative.
their electric bills through employ additional resources
AEP-Ohio will phase-in advanced meterin~ technolo- · and increase the level of
The school will work with families on a tuition package
that meets the needs of both the schedule and the .family . authorized increases to cus- gy. AEP-Ohio wtll recover vegetation · management
budget. For more infonnation contact Mindy Chancey, . tomers' generation rates. the costs of implementing the work performed. The compreschool administrator, 740-922-free. The preschool ts For Columbus Southern program over the three-year pany will recover the costs
Power customers. these ESP plan.
located at 873 South third Av., Middleport. .
associated with this pro·
·
annual increases will be
"The federal stimulus bill gram.
cap!)Cd at seven percent in provides federal matching
Initially the company will
2009 and siK percent in funds for 'smart grid pro- recover only the costs assoand 2011.
• jects like the one proposed ciated with the pro~rum.
POMEROY - Entertainment has been scheduled for six 2010
Ohio
Power
customers
by AEP-Ohio," Cha1rman The program costs will be
· evenings in April. The entertainers include Johnny Rawls
will
have
increases
capped
on April3, Patrick Sweany on Aprill8, Eddie Shaw and the at eight percent in . 2009, Schriber said . . "We are subject to an annual review
directing the company to and reconciliation by the
Wofe Ganson April 10, Blackberry Jam on April 18, Bill'
Lupkin anp the Chicago Blues Coalition &lt;in April 24, and seven percent in 20 l 0 and take steps to apply for Commission.
NF1. Draft Party ori ,April 25.
.

·Rulh E. Ciotlluudi

orees of the new structure.
The dedication will teature
remarks
from
both
Strickland and Manchin.
Also in attendance · will be
ODOrs
Director
or
Transportation. Jolene M .
Molitoris. and West Virginia
Secretary of Transportation.
P..tu I Mattox. Jr. The Feeney-.
Bennett Post 128. American
Legion Color Guard from
Middleport will be conducting the 21-gun salute and the
River Blend . Barbershop
Quartet will be singing tho:
National :Anthem. · ,

Rate rrom

·Local Briefs·

l

EnroUment under way

UTI_

Entertainment scheduled

Will these (education'presidents ever learn?

H

ere we go again:
Another administration. another education president. The United
States has no other kind. At
least since the 1983 study
"A Nation at Risk.'' every
administration has declared
its determination to save
school children from what it
called "a rising tide of
mediocrity that threatens
our very future as a natmn
LETTERS TO THE
and a people ."
To hear President Bamck
EDITOR
Obama tell it. mediocrity 's
. Letters ro rile editor art' welcome. They should be less winning. Recently. he spoke
:rhan 300 "'oms. All lerters are .mbjeetto.editill/i, must he to the U.S . Hispanic
;signed. and illcillde address and telephone mmiber. No Chamber of Commerce.
:unsigned letters will be jmblishecl. Letters should be in Sadly. he informed them
· good taste, addressing i.1sues. 1101 personalities. Leiters of "that despite resources that
· thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- are unmatched anywhere in
the world, we've let our
ed for publiwtion.
grades slip, our schools
.. ~--------------------------~~
crumble. our teacher 4uality
fall short and other nations
outpace us . Let me give you
a few statistics . .In eighth: Reader Services
(usPs 213·960)
grade math . we've fallen to
Correction !Ioiiey ,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
ninth place. Singapore 's
Our main concern in all stories Is to ~ubli~hed every mornmg . Monday
middle-schoolers
Olltperthrough Fnday, 111 Court Street,
• be accurate. If you know o1 an error Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·class pestaQe
form ours 3 to I, Just a third
... in a story, can the n.ewsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
•
of our 13- and 14-year-olds
: 992-2 156. ·
Member: The Associated Press and
can read as well as they
the Ohio Newspapet Association.
should .... (A) stubborn gap
Poatm..ter: Send address correc·
Our main number Is
persists between how well
tions to The Daily Sentinel. P.O. BoK
(740) 992·2156.
white
students ai·e doing
729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
.Dep1rtment extensions ere:
compared to their African·
Subscription Rates
American ami Latino classBy
carrier
or
motor
route
mates .. .. What's m stake is
News
4
.'11.30
nothing less than the
Editor: Charlene HoefliCh. Ext. 12
52 weeks ........... .'128.85
American
Dream ."
• Reporter: Brian Reed , Ext. 14
Deily ...................50'
• Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext 13
Permit me a sigh. This
Senior Citizen rates
26 weeks ............ .'59.61
·'American Dream" busi52 weeks ......... . . .'116.90
ness comes up whenever
A~vertising
Subscribers should remit in advance
politicians find themselves
Outalde Sales: Dave Harris , EKI . 15 clrect to The Da~ Senflnel. No sub·
at
serious odds with reality.
, Outside Sateo: Brenda Davis, EX! 16 scnpl1on by mail permitted in areas
It
's
harmless enough insofar
where
home
carrier
serviCe
Is
available.
Clau.!Cire.: Judy Clark . Ext 10
as it declares our common
Malt Subscription
hope to provide our childnm
lnalde Molga County
General Manager
with greater opportunities.
12 Weeks . .......... . .'35.26
Charlene Hoelllch, Ewt t2
It can be.come downright
26 Weeks , . .... . .. . ... '70.70
pemicious. however, when
52 Weeks . , . .. . . ... , .'140.11.
E·mell:
those dreams are illusions.
mdsnews C my~ailysentl nel . com
Outalde Melga County
To any skeptic who's fol12 Weeks .. .. ..... . . . .'56.55
lowed educational refom1s
26 Weeks ... ,, ... .. .. .'113.60
Web :
since
the Reagan adminis·
52 Weeks . . ........ .. '227.21
.com
L___www.mydaitysen11nel
_ _ __ _
tration, two things . should

~

I I

.POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - Frances D. ~Frannie"
Dickens. 46, uf Point Pleasant. W.Va.. died after a short illness at Haber Medical Center.
· She was a grilll'OOic for Pleasant Valley Hospital.
She was born Jan. 19. 1963 in Fr.mklin County. a daughter of~ lat': Frank D.·and Betty lou Loc'as. Dickens.
~ IS SUIVIVed by her k&gt;vin~ family and her special com~011. Wendell Barber of Pomt Pleasant; soo and daughte~·m-law. R~ K . Landers of Point Pleasant; daughter.
Mtehel~ (Kurtts) Allen of Racine: grandchildren: Rachel.
Nathii;Riel. Skyra. Kade111.-e and lsabela. and Charles Smith
of J&gt;oint ~asant, Shelia (Darrin) Warth. Joshua DickeR\.
Frankie Di~ens and Locy ~ckens. all of Pomeroy, and ·
. JOllllthan Dickens of Galhpo!IS; brothers and sisters: Rena
and ~alph Day of Pomeroy. Shelia Dickens of Middleport.
De~.te Monson of Point Pleasant and Faith (Charlie)
Pemungtoo of Pomeroy.
Funeral will be at II am. Friday, March 20.2009.at Deal
. Funeral Home in Point Pleasant with Pastor Carl Swisher
.: offidating. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens in
· Pomeroy.
·
Friends may call 6-8 p.m. Thursday at the funeral home .
Condolences may be e-mailed to dealfuneral@suddenlinbnail.com.

ITII

I

.BROll6HT UP
THE Al6

TODAY IN HISTORY

·-------------------------------

'

WERE: WHEN

·

Today is Thursday. March 19., the 78th day of 2009.
There are 287 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
.
On March 19. 1979. the U.S. House of Representatives
began televising its.day-to-day business.
. On th1s date:
In 1859. the opera "Faust" by Cl{arles Got~ nod premiered
in Paris.
In 1917. the Supreme Court , in Wilson v. New. upheld
the eight-hour work day for railroud workers .
In 1918. Congress approved daylight saving time.
· In 1920, the S~:nate' rejected. for a second time, the .Treaty
·of Versailles by '49 to 35. falling short of the two-thirds
majority needed for approval.
In 1931. Nevada Gov. Fred B. Balzar signed a measure
legalizing casino gambling.
In 1945. during World War II. 724 people were killed
:when a Japanese dive bomber attacked the carrier USS
Jirank.lin off Ja11an: the ship, however. was saved. Adolf
:Hitler issued h1s so.called ''Nero Decree." ordering the
destruction of German facilities that could fall into Allied
hands .
Thought for Today: "History is principally the inaccurate
narration lif events which ought not to have happened." Ernest Albert Hooten. American aflthropologist ( 1887. 1954).
.

..

.,-

THIS IS
WHERE THEY

The D~y Sentinel • Pap As

www~atinel.com

· Arizona scholar Gemld the actual world, none has
Bracey. author · of a fine . been proven to work.
Everybody wants kids to
book
called
Reudin~
Edwmionul Re,earch: How do their best; imposing artito
Al'llid
Gelling ficially high achievement
Stutistimllr
Snookered . standards, however. is like
Gene
Those dis1i1al reading lev- standing on that metaphori Lyons
els? Bracey cites studies cal beach commanding the
showing that "were kids in tide. Awhile buck, Los
other countries to sit for our Angeles decided to require
NAEP
(National all high school graduates to
be clear: Despite Obama 's Assessment of Educational pass Algebra; the result was
dropout
ra1es.
doom-·saying. there's been ~rogress) exams. NO coun- higher
try
would
have
a
majot'ity
of
Period.
genuine.
measurable
Charter schools are the
progress in American public students proficient in reading
using
NAEP
achievelatest
version of the
schools. Second, fads.
ment
levels."
.
"Talented
and Gifted" craze.
panaceas and miracle cures
Most troubling were (Years ag\). I won an arguare as common as infallible
Obama
's
comparisons ment wi1h my wife by cllalbetting systems at the racethe
states.
It's true len~ing her to name a single
among
track. Most have exactly the
Missi ssippi lags behind wh1te kid in our neighborsame utility.
Wyoming
in reading Scores. hood who hadn't been
It's simply false that
Also
that
more
than half of . declared a budding genius.
American kids have " fallen" to ninth place in math . Mississippi public school A lon~ moment passed.
African- ·•somenmes I hate yqu," she
are
They've actun!ly risen to students
American.
More
than
two- said.) That is. they're a sop
tllm status from 23rd among
thirds
qualify
for
free
or to striving middle-class par41 nations taking pan in
that same study in 1995 . By reduced-price · lunches. ents like the Obamas. Like
2003. the United Stuies Furthermore, notes Bob religious schools', some do
run ked I 5th. However Somerby, in the Deep Sollth well as long as they· re able
much sense it makes to 'Torced illiteracy was offi- to cut highly motivated kids
compare the United States cial staie policy. t'nr several from the .herd.
Alas, studies show the
to rich. culturally homo~e­ · centuries, for what is nnw
(M
ississipfi
's)
largest
stu·
bigger
charter schools get,
neous
countnes
hke
dent
racia
group
...
it
was
the smaller their advan·
Sweden and Finland that set
the curve. it's doubtful com. against the law .. : tn teach tages. ·
Then there 's me.rit pay.
pnrisons to Malaysia mean black children how to read."
Yet
the
good
news
is
that.
Wam your kid's school to
anything Ill all.
Singupore 's . kids otltper- again contrary to Obama, resemble 'The Office." or
form America's 3-to- I at racial achi evement gaps the Dilbert emilie strip'/
whal'.1Ohama didn 't·suy. All hHve . steadily narrowed Introduce pay increases
of them'' Or just lhos~ sim:e the 1970s. (Check this based on student perforse Icc ted into a "college from the National Center mance. Who 'II want to teach
prep" curriculum'? Almost for Edu~ational . Statistics if those underachievers then?
doubt
me:
.certainly the latter. As atl you
Maybe . some Mother
admirably skeptical article http :// nee s .e d·.gov /nation· Teresa will opt:n a charter
buried in the B section of sreportcnrd/ltt/results2004/s school.
the Washington Post point- . ub-reading-race .asp)
Otherwise.
they're
So what's going on? screwed.
ed nut: "The United States
remains at the top of the · Unfortunately. the president
(Arkcw.l'fls
Democrat·
World Economil· Forum's appe&lt;trs to have succumbed Ga:elle . columnist Gene
200!!-09
Global to the latest educational Lvons is a National
Competitiveness · Report. . miracle cures: tougher stan- Ma}ga zine Award · winner
(Switzerl&lt;md was second. · dards, charter schools and !jilt co-author of "The
follow ed . by Denmark . merit pay for teachers. all Huming rif the President"
Sweden and Singapore.)"
touted by Republicans· (Sr . Martin's Press. 2000).
Reporter Valerie Strauss· perennially eager to disci - You ·cw1 e-riwil Lvuns at
soun.:c w01s !Jniversity of pline the lower classes. In eugenelyrms2@ yahcio .com).
.'

Sentences from Page At

Community dinner

MIDDLEPORT - The Heath United Methodist Church indicted in connection with
will offer a free community dinner from 4-6:30 p.m. tonight. the break-in at an Albany
residence last November.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
sentenced Hunter. and she
.
was . remanded to ·the cusCOLUMBUS ·(AP) - In a March 18 story and glance tody
Robert
about proposals tQ chmige redistricting, The. Associated Beegle offor Sheriff
transport
to the
Press erroneously repbrted the intent of one plan. A bill Women's . Reformatory
at
introduced by state S"ens. Kevin Cou~hlin and Gary Cates Marysville. Simms was senwould change the drawing of legislauve districts, not con· tenced to four years in
gressional ones.
in January.
• Also, the story and glance should have made clear that a , prison
James
W. . Marcum.
proposal from state Sen. Jon Husted would change the way
Bidwell.
had
entered a plea
both congressional and legislative districts are .drawn. •
of guilty to one count of
improper handling ~f a
firearm in a motor vehicle. a
I
felony of the fourth degree.
and was sentenced to 18
months in prison. Crow suspended the sentence and
placed Marcum on commu. SALISBURY - 1\vo individuals were transported to an nity control for five years.
Marcum wus charged in
area hospital with minor injuri~s following a two ve~icle
an
indictment after a traffic
accident that occurred at approxtmately 5:40p.m. on Fnday.
. According to trOOpers. Courtney N. Haggy, 20, Syracuse, stop by . the Ohio State
. was driving her 1997 Chevy Blazer southbound on Ohio 7 Highway Patrol in May.
.
when she stopped in traffic to tum left onto County Road 24. 2008.
Brenton M. Welsh. 18.
Annene L. Russell,47, was also driving her l999GMC Jimmy
· southbound on Ohio 7 and her vehicle failed to stop in time and Pomeroy. w11s sentenced to
1~months on pleas of guilty
struck Haggy's vehicle in the rear. causing it to ovenum.
Haggy and front seat passenger Danny A. Haggy. 49, to burglary and grand theft
Pomeroy were transported by Southeast Ohio EMS to of a motor vehicle in
. Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal with minor injuries and re.leased September. 2008. Crow
ordered the sentences to be
. the same day. .
.
.
.
Russell wus cited with fmlure to control ~nd her veh1cle served consecutively.
Crow suspended Welsh's
sustained disabling damages. Huggy's vehicle sustained
sentences.
as well. and
severe damages.
placed him .on community
control for five yeurs .. He
was ordered to complete the

: Correction: .Ohio Redistricting story
.

SEPTA . program
10
. Nelsonville.
.
Bobbie Roush, 31, Point
Pleasant. W.Va.. was to
have appeared on a motion
to show 'Cause · why . she
should not be held in con- ·
tempt of court. but failed to
uppear. A motion to revoke
probation will be filed.

The Commission denied
the other distribution system reliability programs
proposed by AEP·Ohio in
tts ESP nppliclllion.
On Mlly I. 2008. Gov. Ted
Strickland . signed SB 221
into law. marking the oneyear mmiversary of the date
he outlined his Energy. Jobs.
and Progress Plan to stabilize electricity prices. create
jobs. and expand Ohio's
green energy industry. SB
221 took effect on July 31.
2008 and incorporates a sys·
tem under which rates
would be set by the PUCO
and outlines a path for electric utilities to implement
market-based pricing. ·
On July 31. 2008, AEPOhio filed an application for
an ESP. The PUCO held
five local public hearings in
AEP-Ohio 's service terri to·
ry at which 124 customers
testified about the company's application. The evidentiary hearing began on
Nov. 17, 2008 and conclud·
ed on Dec. 10, 2008.

~Jmon· ~!lid

. f~~c~..

Williams said.
Roush pleaded guilty in
March, 2007, to a count of
forgery and a count of ·
receivmg stolen property.
She was sentenced to two
one-year terms, which were
suspended . .and she had
been placed on community
control.

Achun Mc.DI\nlel
A Jai'Mis Andctt'$f.ln
DIRIK." 'I"ORS

/ter

c,..,,..,.,,.

A.i'aila&amp;ll

Middlep&lt;.lft Pomer\\y
992-5141 992-5444
w~ •·.'Jildtr !iOOlncd&amp;n i~ Lcom

For the Record

·Highway Patrol

' '

Ohio Northern invested
with frrm accused of fraud~·

ADA (AP) - Another university in Ohio says it inve~t­
ed money with a firm whose owners are now charged w1th
fraud in New York.
. .
.
. . .
Ohio Northern University Ill Ada says 11 had $10 mtlhon
invested with Westridge C~pital Management Inc .. ~hose
two owners were arrested m February on charges of conspiracy, wire fraud and secunhes fraud.
.,
.
Ohio Northern President Kendall .Baker says u s too early
.
. .
. to know if the school cun .get 1ts money back:
Earlier this week, Bowhng Green State UnJverstty sa1d u
had $15 million with the firm.
·
•

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Bridge
fromPageAl
Rose said in addition to
bringing
down
the
approach spans, · workers
are also -dismantling ,the
metal decking which is
basically bein~ rolled up
"like a blanket ·' to get the
bridge as light as possible.

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C1IR IS

defined as the "medical spe-

a.Ity ~on relief of the

pain and odler symptomS of
serious illness."
One of the good people
cummtly serving as a voiQnteer .for Holzer Hospice is
former music teacher
Marlene · Hoffman
of
Galli{lOlis. She became a
Hospice volunteer in 1998
following her retirement
Submllllcl plloto
from . the Gallipolis City
School District. Hoffman Former music teacher Marlene Hoffman has been a volunteer at Holzer Hospice in
said she sees her worlc with · Gallipolis since retiring fTom the Gallipolis City School District in 1998. Hoffman said she
Holzer Hospice as a calling. sees her WOfk with Hospice as a calfing.
"I believe in the program;
'
at
Holzer by Hospi~.
I believe in paUiative care~" fo:vi~efs ~a-~ !oru~,andlies volunteers
Holzer Hospice provides
Hospice. She said that the
Hoffman said. wi believe
~""· uvu "
uum
Hospice
staff
will
plug
peoservice
to patients in Gallia.
that any ~rson faced with a
r up to 1'3 months followterminal 11lness should have ing the death of a loved one. .pie into areas that are appro- Jackson and Meigs counties.
the opportunity to receive
Hoffman said she feels priate for their talents. tnter- as well as portions of Athens,
Lawrence and Vmton councare thin will include pain ble~ to be able to use ~er ests and comfort level.
"You will never be asked to ties. Holzer Hospice is
relief and pain control.
God-giVen talents and gills
"As I was teaching for all to help people t~gh her do something that you don't atcredited by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation
those years, I had a vision .lo volun_teer work w1th Holzer want to do," Hoffman said.
Sharon
Shull,
RN.
BSN,
of Healthcare Orgruiizations
be a volunteer." she added. "I Hosp1ce.
· :Wanted 10 bi: a volunteer. I
"It's good to be able to Program Director/Volunteer and is a member of the
Hosp{ce and
actuallr had a need to volun- , ~ (my ~al~nt) with peo- Coordinator for Holzer National
Jeer. Its very rewarding and pte, she said. 'God gave me Hospice, encourages any- Palliative Care Ul'ganization
.makes me feel like a con- the talent. Why would I not one that is interested in and the Ohio Hospice and
~buting member of society." use it? You talk to any volun- becoming a volunteer to fill Palliative Care Organization.
Hoffman performs various leer - people who are really out an application for
For information about
review. Trainmg. to become Holzer Hospict, call 740clerical duties in the Hospice tuned in~o volunt~rism office, which IS located at and I think you will fmd a a volunteer will be provided 446-5074, or toll free 800· 2881 State Route 160 in common thread: you always by the coordinator and other 500-4850, or log on to the
Gallipolis, and assists the gel more than _you giv~ ." . Hospice staff members . website www.holzer.org and
organization's bereavement
Hoffman satd there ts cur- Future presentations on vol-· click . on the "Servius &amp;
care program, ~hich pro• rently a pressing need for unteering will be announced Locations" link.

Federal funding available for rural home purchases
: MARIETTA
The
United · Stales Department
of Agriculture (USDA)
Rural Development office
in Marietta announced
today that Federal funding
Is available for eligible
applicants who wish to pur:Chase a home.
· .According to Carol
&lt;;:ostanzo, Area Director at
the Marietta office, which
'SerVes 18 counties including
Meigs. many people who
l)ever thought they could
·own a home now have
'&amp;nother opportunity. More
informatiori and applications can be obtained by
contacting the Marietta
·office. .
,. The home mortgages are
$Ubsidized to lower · the
1!10nthly mortgage payments . Over 350 homes
were purchased in Ohi~ last
:Year through the D1rect
Loan program administered
by Rural Development.
. These no down-payment
loans can be used to purchase existing homes or to
,.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

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build new homes that are · cants must have maintained
modest. The program per- a satisfactory credit history,
mils loans for up to 100 per· have a stable source of
cent of the. home's income . an~ meet rep~yappraised value. The loan's. ment gut~e~t~e~, alon~ w~th
repayment period is 33 other ehg1b1hty crnena.
·years at a lo-.yer new fixed Income limits vary accordInterest rate. 4% effective ing to family size and
March I. Subsidy amounts county of residence .
·
vary based on the appli~
Rural . Developmenl also
cant's household 'income. administers a Guaranleed
To qualify . for a loan, the Rural Housing l?rogram, in
house must be localed in an which the houSjng loan is
eligible rural area.
provided by a private finan"This is great news for cia! institution and guarancilizens of rural communi- teed by Rural Development.
ties and can make the Last year, over 1.100 famiAmerican Dream of home lies purchased their homes.
ownership a .reality. We with the help of Guaranteed
want people to know that Rural Housing Program.
the interest rate on a Rural Income limits are very til&gt;·
Development loan is lhed era! for this program.
for the life of the loan. For · The Marietta office· serves
those that qualify, we can 18 COUnties throughout
reduce ihe payment even Southeastern Ohio with its ,
further, to as .low as I% , hous~ng programs. as well as_
based on the level of house- offenng a broad ·range of
hold income. However there . community and ecoliomic
is great security in knowing development ~lions. For
that it can never exceed the more mfo1111a11on o pro· fueil rate." Costanzo said.
grams. contact USD Rural
In addition, the appli- Development at (7 } 373- .

7113.
or
e-mail
Caroi.Costanzo@oh.usda.gp
v. Rural Development's
Marietta. Office mailing
address 1s ~ 1330 SR .676,
Sune A. Manetta, OH 45750.

ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital reminds
the community the deadline for the contest to name
the new boutique at the
Castrop Center is Friday.
Man:b 20. 2009.
. The boutique features an
assortment of head coverings. wigs, scarves and hats.
all available at no ~'OSt tor .
women · experiencing hair
loss due to cancer treatment.
The prize is $100 in cash.
Because multiple .submissions of the same name have
been submitted, if the win-

20s.

Northeast

Satui-day
through
Sunday...Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s .
Lows in.the lower 30s.
Sunday
night ud
Monday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Monday nigbt .. .Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s.
Tuesday
through
WeclnesdayM.Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 60s. Lows
in the l9wer 40s.

Local Stocks

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Southern FFAEquine J'eam

-us ·

Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.88 .
Chlrmlllil ShOpe (NASDAQ) 1.11
Clly Holcllng (NASDAQ) - 27
Colllna (NYSE) - 32.72
DuPont (NYSI!) - 21.112
US Blnk (NYSI!) - 11.83
Gl!nnetl (NYSI!) - 2.48
Gl!nenl Elec:trlc (NYSE)- 10.32
HMey:D1v1c1aan (NYSE) - 13.78
JP lllarpn (NYSE) - 27.11
Kroger (NVSE) - 21.27
Llmlt8d B,.ncll (NYSE) - 8.55
Namitk Soulhern (NYSI!) 31.30

DAQ) ,.. 22.21
B8T (N'iSE) - 11.23
Potopt11 (NASDAQ)- 11.81
'-filleD (NYSE) - 48.47
PNmler (NASDAQ) - 4.12,
llaclc011H (NYSE) - 23.15 ·
llaclcy Boola (NASDAOI- 3.11
Floylll Dulch Shell - 45.74
S... Haldlng (NASDAQ) 39.82
W.f.MM (NYSE) - 50.44
W.nd;'l (NYSE) - 5.38
W.aB• lCD (NYSE) - 20.39
Worthington (NVSE) - 8.21
Doolly atock ...........,. the 4
p.m. ET clollng q - ot trlnaactlonl tor llltcll 18, 2001, provlcllcl by Edwin! Jonel fllllll-

ctalldviiON . _ Milia In

Glltlpollllt (740) 441·8441 lnd
.LM!ey llllrNro In Point P.....nt
It (304) 67+41174. Mlmbet SIPC.

..

'libe
Holzer Center for ·Cancer Care' is abQut
more than .jdst Cliii1~
~
' '
~es about advanced
technology, such a&amp; image-guided
. ftdij~~~~
..
.
i )'bc~~.I1. ~ abo,W ~en · ~1.And healing. And partnersl~p~
un••&lt;.~l•" .?P~ we have wi~ &lt;?hk&gt;"~~te's James. Cancer Hospital and
f.;~~'$Q~Q\re.Jie&amp;~e&amp;r~i;h lil.sti.l:ute.
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COLUMBUS (AP) · Kendall Hackney's nwnbm.
are decent, not. great, ~
a~ 13.1 pomiS a game,
63 rebol,mds, and makes
•lmnst half of her sbols from

CINCINNATI (AP) Hall of Famer Frank
~Obins.on will be the grand
lllilrSbal of the 90th Findlay
Market Opening Day
Parade in Cincinnati on the field.
. But those numbers are lost
APri16.
· 'The annual parade from Deltt to the oae 011e1p0wering
that mallltrs.most !)9:.
the hiStoric ~n-air market statistic
10.
area of Cincinnati to Great
Thai is Cincinnati MOUIIl
American Ball Park is . the Notre
record witb
traditional kickoff to the HackneyDame's
in
the lineup. Those
·1J111jor.Jeague baseball sea- 99 wins, incL...tmo victories in
son.
•
. three·~Di'C!t•.,.:~
I sta""
the last
·~·
"'
· l'be Reds hav.e named championship games,
are the
Robinson their honorary ones ihat coun'f the mosl and
captain for the season open- add up to ber. ~ the 2009
er witb the New York Mets. Associated , PreSs · Ms.
, Robinson played for the Baskelball award winner.
Reds from 1956 to 1965 to
"I had oo idea about that,".·
. ~gin his 21-year major the 6-foot-2 senior said when
lejtgue career. He was · asked about her won-loss
·ibducted into the Reds Hall recoid in four ~ears at MND.
of Fame in 1978 and . the "Coach just silid to us yesterli4sebalt . Hall bf Fame in day that the seniors ha'·e a
Cooperstown in 1982.
chance to win 10 I games if
. He was an All-Star player we win our final two games.
lilld MVP . in both the That's incredible."
· ·
·ililltional and American
They're clearly the most
leagues, and the firsi black important numbers.
"Wecanlalkaboutthescorrpimager in .both leagues.
•
ing averages of some kids
here, but when she has to
'
score
can score;· said her
RB coach,sheDante
Harlan, who
leads
MND
into
the state tour~oahHerron
narnent for the sixth rear in a
row. "She had 23 (polllts) and
, I:LEVELAND (AP) Rlmning back Noah Herron 11 (rebounds) against Mason.
lias Signed with the She bad 17 and three blocked
eleveland Browns, who lost shots last week. She just does
~on Wright to free agency whatever·it is that needs to be
eliJ'Iier Ibis week.
:rhe 26-year-old Herron
~ dtafted by Pittsburgh in
the. seventh round in 2005.
HI' has rushed for 273
yards, caughl 29 passes for
MINNEAPOUS (AP) ~II yards and scored five Ohio State was the only Big
toilchdowns in 23 career Ten women's 'team consisg~s with Green Bay and tently ranked in the national
Tampa Bay.
polls this season, one clear
The 5-foot-11, 225- sign that this league of late
poullder could fill Wright's · has been lagging behind the
role as a part-time back country_'s otlier power conbehind Jamal Lewis. Wright ferences.
sig'ned a two-year contract . The strength of the midwith Arizona ·on Tuesda~.
dle of the pack. however,
Coincidentally, Wnght made enough o( an impresand Herron were teammates sion on the NCAA tournaat'Northwestem.
ment selection committee to
Herron played 16 games warrant five learns chosen
for the Packers in 2006. He for the field.
spent all of 2007 on Green
So how good, or bad, is
Bay's injured reserve list the Big Ten these days?
with a knee inj'ury and was . "The tournament 1s a litinactive for al four 'ames mus test," said Buckeyes
he was on Tampa Bay s ros- coach Jim foster. whose
last year.
.
· team was IOth in the most
recent Associated Press
rankings. "We're about to
Steelers sign DB
find out."
State (27-5) is the
Bryant to 1-yr deal No.Ohio
3 seed in the Berkeley
region and gets 10 open at
PITTSBURGH (AP) home. though in a different
The Pittsburgh . Steelers re- arena than it's used to. in
signed cornerback Fernando Columbus on Saturday
Bryant to a one-year con- against .Sacred Heart. But
tracl on Wednesday to retain Stanford,lhe second-ranked
some secondary depth after team in the latest AP poll.
losing free agen! cornerback looms in a potential thirdBrrant McFadden .to the round game a few miles ,
An zona Cardinals. ,
. .from the Cardinal's campus.
: Bryant, fotmerly of the
Nobody else from the .Big
Jaguars and Lions, signed Ten is seeded to survive the
with Pittsburgh in Nov. II second round, and No. 10
and made three tackles in Minnesota (19- II) must
tWo games. He was inactive play at Noire Dame on
'on game days during most Sunday in the Trenton
of the remainder of the sea- region. Purdue (22-10) is .
lhe No. 6 team in the
son.
Oklahoma
City region, and
Bryant, a 1999 first-round
draft pick by Jacksonville
PIUH SH Women. BJ
who spent his first five NFL
seasons with the Jaguars,
ti¢s seven interceptions · in
(t2 career games.
.•
.
Penn
Cavs
Szczerbiak out
••
State's
Jamelle
tliith knee injury
Cornley,
::
•J:LEVELAND (AP)
center,
C11valiers forward Wally
loses the
Szczerbiak could be out for ball as Ohio
ttH:ee weeks with a sprained Stale's B.J.
l~t knee.
Mullens,
•Szczerbiak injured his
. left, Kyle
t:.]ee in the closing seconds
Madsen
~ the third quarter of
(15) and
tyesday night's 97 -9~ win Jon Dlebler
o-Jer the Orlando Magic. He (33) defend
tHJderwent an MRI exam
during the
tltpt revealed a sprained second hall
rfledial colatenil ligament, of an :NCAA
the team said .
basketball
Szczerbiak has been a key
game
oontributor
for
the
Tuesday, ·
Cavaliers, who raised their
Feb.24, in
home record to 30-·1 and . ·Columbus.
have a 4 1/2 game lead over
the Boston Celtics for the
AP photo
tJest record in the Eastern
C1&gt;nference.

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"Honestly, Kendall is the
Next year, Hackney will one kid everybody likes to
take her act lo SoUthern pick on.» said Harlan, who
California, ietuming to the bas a srunning 74-7 record in
stale where she livell for six three years as the Cougars'
ears until her family came head coach. "She's such a
~ to Ohio when she was goodie-two-shoes - she's in
12.
ihe National Honor Society.
What makes Hackney so she's~ perfect 4.0 - that
effective is thai she bas few ev"""'
likes to tease her."
-·,
weaknesses.in her game.
Hackney said she ' II even
Early on she was told that miss that when her high
she'd need to be · a good school days are done.
defender if she wanted to play
"I'm so blessed 10 have
in high school, so she warted w0 n three state champi~u&lt;Uu
""" on that part of ber g_ame onships when so many others
and now can body up With a never ~~ to win one." she
post player or go out on the said. "I II miss my teammates
perimeter to shut down a so much because they're such
Sliooter.
great people. I'll miss the
With two older brothers, school that has supported me
she had to work hard just to so much, my coaches who
score points. So she worked have done so much for me .
on her offensive skills until It's a unique program and
she coi1ld shoot from outside I've been blessed to be a part
as weU as muscle her way of a lot of victories."
around the paint for baskets.
It illways t'Omes down to
During a IQ..minute conver- the victOj'les.
sation in the middle of a busy
Others considered for the
week of classes and slate- award
included
Kari
tournament hoopla, Hackney · Daugherty of Warsaw River
continually
says
bow View, Emilee Harmon of
"blessed" she is. And by that, Pickerington Central. South
she doesn't mean phrsically Euclid Regina's Tay'ler
blessed with an athletes body. Mingo, Cincinnati Winton
She said slie's blessed to be Woods' Dayeesha Hollins.
surrounded by so many good Malina I-loward ofTwinsburg
players. Blessed to have such and Yolanda Richardson of
great parents and brothers. Toledo Start.
Blessed to .have had the
As winner of the 22nd
coaching she had .
.annual Ms. Basketbilll award.
OK, maybe she's not so Hackner will receive a
blessed to be the player every- · plaque m the shape of the
body teases.
state.
·

APphoto

Cincinnati 'Mount Notre Dame's Kendall Hackney puts up a
shot in a regioncil semifinal game on March 10 in Dayton.
Hackney, who averaged 13.1 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.3 assiSts,
2.1 blocked shots, 1.9 steals while shooting 47 percent from
the field, 33 percent on 3-pointers and 78 percent at thj line,
was named Associated Press Ms. Basketball in Ohio.

Big 10 teams try to reverse recent NCAA struggles

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so you specia Jess time wondering and worrying. But most of all, the
'.
, l:Jolzer Cc:ilter ·for Cancer Care is about trust.
I,

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·:At Holzer, weproinise every new: patient will be seen within 48 bouts

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•The Southern FFA's Equine Team recently aH4~ndled,.the Hillsboro Judging Contest. Pictured
'are team members' Chelsea Holler, Miranda
Emily Manuel, and Rusty Carnahan.

Hackney is 22nd Obio Ms. Basketball

Qrowns sign

Ohio v.ltey lllnc CCirp. (HAS- .

AEP (NYSE) - 27.25
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 36.88
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 7.54
Big Lot. (NYSE) - 20-10
Bob E-. (NASDAQ) - 21.85
BorgWimer (NYSE) - 211.311
c.ntury AlUminum (NASDAQ)

'

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Ohio AP Ms. Basketball

ter

: ·COLUMBUS (AP) - A $4 billion in debt at the state's make better use oflheirspace.
new report says capital debt 14 four-year universities and employ technology more
·ot Ohio's J?Ublic colleges 23 community colleges.
often and find new financing
'and univers1ties has nearly
That liguro is up from $1 strategies _to slow the pace of
iuadrupled in the past billion in 1998. About half necessary construction and
aecade and can no longer , that debt is for educational debt accumulation.
continue at its current pace. space.
· The report also says that
· Ohio State University and
Wednesday's report by the mandatory energy efficienthe University of Cincinnati Ohio Board of Regents rec- cy should also reduce costs
beldmorethanhalfofthetotal ommends that the institutions by 2014.
'

HaUofFamer
Frank' Robinson
to head parade

·winds

around 5 mph .

t ~oPIIeeJtt

Thursday' March 19, 200IJ

Local Weather
Tbursday•••Cioudy with
showers ·
in
the
moming ...Tben
partly
sunny with a chance of
·showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the mid 50s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 80 percent.
Thursday night •..Partly
cloudy. Cooler with lows in
the lower 30s. North winds
5 to IOmph. ·
FridayM.Sunny. Highs in
the.upper 40s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Friday nlght...Mostly
cl~ar. Lows in the upper

Bl

The Paily Sentinel

Mllcby wilsldbrod. ;,, Pa&amp;e 116

ning name chol;en bas been
:oubmiltl:d. by lllOre than one
person. a drawing will be
held to determine the winner. 1be winning name will
be announc«&lt; in April.
To enter the contest, seDi
your ll8llle choiCe, contributOr's name, address. phooe
number and/or ~mail~
to: O'Bleness Memoria!
Hospital.
Community
Relations
Department,
Boutique Naming Contest,
55 }bpital Dr., Athens, Ohio
45701; or e-mail obleness@obleness.org.

Report: $4B in capital debt at Ohio co eges

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Boutique naming
Contest deadline near

GALLil'OUS - Holzer
· Hospice is looking for a few
goo3 people. Actually, the
organization is looking for
many good people 10 join
the rank-s of its. volunteer
program.
Holzer H~ is a service
of Holzer l;tealth Systems
and was founded in 1994 to
povide palliatiowe care, comfort .00 quality of life for
~ wbc:i have a life-limilmg illness, According IO the
website 111111w~lJia)liativ':'

.com, pGlliatffe

PageA6

LoCAL • .STATE

The Daily Sentinel

C1IR

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r: 30 m1n.
·. folloWi.ng
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Georg•a Tedl {21 ·9)

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. Xa¥ie&lt; (25-6)

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i21:io1 -: ~.·
- ~-- - ~--

30 min. toi iOwi ~ · G~Za~a

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Iowa City, Iowa - March 22

{26· 6!__ ·- ~

S..ttte - March 21

~~~~ ) :~a~~~Ji.:4f~~-~

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·-, OKLAHOMA CITY
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PU!due (22·10)

c~~~~-(_~J_:_~_) _

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Chattanooga, Tenn. - Marth 21

,.,

----- -' Nafth Carolina (27 ·6) ~ ,

. Noon . UC~ !.' 7·1~l__._····~

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-- • - - -- Rutgers {19--12)
30 mm foiiOWII19

. ", vcu (26-8 }

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Young Buckeyes must grow up fast :·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
.State's players know what others
are saying about them .
About how they' re too young to
be ready lor a tirst-round NCAA
tournament game Friday against
experienced Siena ami will gel
rattled by all the attention .
;:)le watt·h ESPN like evcryoody. else does . The word gets
around. Evervbody's picking
Siena because tftey've got a veter- '
an team and. well. succe:~s speaks.
They've done
it
before .
Everybody is going off lhnt ,"
Buckeyes point ~uard P.J . Hill
said Wednesday. ' I don't blame
everybody else for going with
them . They've done it before and
(people) have seen it with their
eyes . .But we're going to try to
upset thut."
The eighth-seeded Buckeyes
(22-10) meet ninth-seeded Sienu
(26· 7) in the first round of the
Midwe st Regional at the
University of Duy1on - roughly

un hour or so down the road from
Ohio State's campus.
Even though Ohio State has a
slightl y better seed. many pundits
pick S1ena to advance because the
Buckeyes don't have a senior on
the roster - no one on the team
has ever played in an NCAA tournament - and the Suints ' hocked
fourth-seeded Vanderbilt 83-62 in
the first round u year· ago in
Tampu. Fla.
The thinking goes that Siena,
which relurns all five starters from
that team. won 't be scared of the
spotlight's glare. That figures to
be a major ndvantage .
"It could be. just because
they 've been in it," Ohio State
coach Thad Matta said. "But I've
always sa id . once ·that ball gets
tossed up. you l)et in that arena
~ou don t know 1f you 're playing
m the NCAA tournament or in a
Division Nipe tournament. It's,

Please see Buckeyes, B2

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·

7pm ·
.
.
- - . 1 Pram&amp; View (23-10)

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C1IR IS

defined as the "medical spe-

a.Ity ~on relief of the

pain and odler symptomS of
serious illness."
One of the good people
cummtly serving as a voiQnteer .for Holzer Hospice is
former music teacher
Marlene · Hoffman
of
Galli{lOlis. She became a
Hospice volunteer in 1998
following her retirement
Submllllcl plloto
from . the Gallipolis City
School District. Hoffman Former music teacher Marlene Hoffman has been a volunteer at Holzer Hospice in
said she sees her worlc with · Gallipolis since retiring fTom the Gallipolis City School District in 1998. Hoffman said she
Holzer Hospice as a calling. sees her WOfk with Hospice as a calfing.
"I believe in the program;
'
at
Holzer by Hospi~.
I believe in paUiative care~" fo:vi~efs ~a-~ !oru~,andlies volunteers
Holzer Hospice provides
Hospice. She said that the
Hoffman said. wi believe
~""· uvu "
uum
Hospice
staff
will
plug
peoservice
to patients in Gallia.
that any ~rson faced with a
r up to 1'3 months followterminal 11lness should have ing the death of a loved one. .pie into areas that are appro- Jackson and Meigs counties.
the opportunity to receive
Hoffman said she feels priate for their talents. tnter- as well as portions of Athens,
Lawrence and Vmton councare thin will include pain ble~ to be able to use ~er ests and comfort level.
"You will never be asked to ties. Holzer Hospice is
relief and pain control.
God-giVen talents and gills
"As I was teaching for all to help people t~gh her do something that you don't atcredited by the Joint
Commission on Accreditation
those years, I had a vision .lo volun_teer work w1th Holzer want to do," Hoffman said.
Sharon
Shull,
RN.
BSN,
of Healthcare Orgruiizations
be a volunteer." she added. "I Hosp1ce.
· :Wanted 10 bi: a volunteer. I
"It's good to be able to Program Director/Volunteer and is a member of the
Hosp{ce and
actuallr had a need to volun- , ~ (my ~al~nt) with peo- Coordinator for Holzer National
Jeer. Its very rewarding and pte, she said. 'God gave me Hospice, encourages any- Palliative Care Ul'ganization
.makes me feel like a con- the talent. Why would I not one that is interested in and the Ohio Hospice and
~buting member of society." use it? You talk to any volun- becoming a volunteer to fill Palliative Care Organization.
Hoffman performs various leer - people who are really out an application for
For information about
review. Trainmg. to become Holzer Hospict, call 740clerical duties in the Hospice tuned in~o volunt~rism office, which IS located at and I think you will fmd a a volunteer will be provided 446-5074, or toll free 800· 2881 State Route 160 in common thread: you always by the coordinator and other 500-4850, or log on to the
Gallipolis, and assists the gel more than _you giv~ ." . Hospice staff members . website www.holzer.org and
organization's bereavement
Hoffman satd there ts cur- Future presentations on vol-· click . on the "Servius &amp;
care program, ~hich pro• rently a pressing need for unteering will be announced Locations" link.

Federal funding available for rural home purchases
: MARIETTA
The
United · Stales Department
of Agriculture (USDA)
Rural Development office
in Marietta announced
today that Federal funding
Is available for eligible
applicants who wish to pur:Chase a home.
· .According to Carol
&lt;;:ostanzo, Area Director at
the Marietta office, which
'SerVes 18 counties including
Meigs. many people who
l)ever thought they could
·own a home now have
'&amp;nother opportunity. More
informatiori and applications can be obtained by
contacting the Marietta
·office. .
,. The home mortgages are
$Ubsidized to lower · the
1!10nthly mortgage payments . Over 350 homes
were purchased in Ohi~ last
:Year through the D1rect
Loan program administered
by Rural Development.
. These no down-payment
loans can be used to purchase existing homes or to
,.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

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build new homes that are · cants must have maintained
modest. The program per- a satisfactory credit history,
mils loans for up to 100 per· have a stable source of
cent of the. home's income . an~ meet rep~yappraised value. The loan's. ment gut~e~t~e~, alon~ w~th
repayment period is 33 other ehg1b1hty crnena.
·years at a lo-.yer new fixed Income limits vary accordInterest rate. 4% effective ing to family size and
March I. Subsidy amounts county of residence .
·
vary based on the appli~
Rural . Developmenl also
cant's household 'income. administers a Guaranleed
To qualify . for a loan, the Rural Housing l?rogram, in
house must be localed in an which the houSjng loan is
eligible rural area.
provided by a private finan"This is great news for cia! institution and guarancilizens of rural communi- teed by Rural Development.
ties and can make the Last year, over 1.100 famiAmerican Dream of home lies purchased their homes.
ownership a .reality. We with the help of Guaranteed
want people to know that Rural Housing Program.
the interest rate on a Rural Income limits are very til&gt;·
Development loan is lhed era! for this program.
for the life of the loan. For · The Marietta office· serves
those that qualify, we can 18 COUnties throughout
reduce ihe payment even Southeastern Ohio with its ,
further, to as .low as I% , hous~ng programs. as well as_
based on the level of house- offenng a broad ·range of
hold income. However there . community and ecoliomic
is great security in knowing development ~lions. For
that it can never exceed the more mfo1111a11on o pro· fueil rate." Costanzo said.
grams. contact USD Rural
In addition, the appli- Development at (7 } 373- .

7113.
or
e-mail
Caroi.Costanzo@oh.usda.gp
v. Rural Development's
Marietta. Office mailing
address 1s ~ 1330 SR .676,
Sune A. Manetta, OH 45750.

ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital reminds
the community the deadline for the contest to name
the new boutique at the
Castrop Center is Friday.
Man:b 20. 2009.
. The boutique features an
assortment of head coverings. wigs, scarves and hats.
all available at no ~'OSt tor .
women · experiencing hair
loss due to cancer treatment.
The prize is $100 in cash.
Because multiple .submissions of the same name have
been submitted, if the win-

20s.

Northeast

Satui-day
through
Sunday...Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s .
Lows in.the lower 30s.
Sunday
night ud
Monday...Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s.
Highs in the lower 60s.
Monday nigbt .. .Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s.
Tuesday
through
WeclnesdayM.Partly cloudy.
Highs in the mid 60s. Lows
in the l9wer 40s.

Local Stocks

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Southern FFAEquine J'eam

-us ·

Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.88 .
Chlrmlllil ShOpe (NASDAQ) 1.11
Clly Holcllng (NASDAQ) - 27
Colllna (NYSE) - 32.72
DuPont (NYSI!) - 21.112
US Blnk (NYSI!) - 11.83
Gl!nnetl (NYSI!) - 2.48
Gl!nenl Elec:trlc (NYSE)- 10.32
HMey:D1v1c1aan (NYSE) - 13.78
JP lllarpn (NYSE) - 27.11
Kroger (NVSE) - 21.27
Llmlt8d B,.ncll (NYSE) - 8.55
Namitk Soulhern (NYSI!) 31.30

DAQ) ,.. 22.21
B8T (N'iSE) - 11.23
Potopt11 (NASDAQ)- 11.81
'-filleD (NYSE) - 48.47
PNmler (NASDAQ) - 4.12,
llaclc011H (NYSE) - 23.15 ·
llaclcy Boola (NASDAOI- 3.11
Floylll Dulch Shell - 45.74
S... Haldlng (NASDAQ) 39.82
W.f.MM (NYSE) - 50.44
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W.aB• lCD (NYSE) - 20.39
Worthington (NVSE) - 8.21
Doolly atock ...........,. the 4
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ctalldviiON . _ Milia In

Glltlpollllt (740) 441·8441 lnd
.LM!ey llllrNro In Point P.....nt
It (304) 67+41174. Mlmbet SIPC.

..

'libe
Holzer Center for ·Cancer Care' is abQut
more than .jdst Cliii1~
~
' '
~es about advanced
technology, such a&amp; image-guided
. ftdij~~~~
..
.
i )'bc~~.I1. ~ abo,W ~en · ~1.And healing. And partnersl~p~
un••&lt;.~l•" .?P~ we have wi~ &lt;?hk&gt;"~~te's James. Cancer Hospital and
f.;~~'$Q~Q\re.Jie&amp;~e&amp;r~i;h lil.sti.l:ute.
, ..1'" :
;~. 1'

),.

COLUMBUS (AP) · Kendall Hackney's nwnbm.
are decent, not. great, ~
a~ 13.1 pomiS a game,
63 rebol,mds, and makes
•lmnst half of her sbols from

CINCINNATI (AP) Hall of Famer Frank
~Obins.on will be the grand
lllilrSbal of the 90th Findlay
Market Opening Day
Parade in Cincinnati on the field.
. But those numbers are lost
APri16.
· 'The annual parade from Deltt to the oae 011e1p0wering
that mallltrs.most !)9:.
the hiStoric ~n-air market statistic
10.
area of Cincinnati to Great
Thai is Cincinnati MOUIIl
American Ball Park is . the Notre
record witb
traditional kickoff to the HackneyDame's
in
the lineup. Those
·1J111jor.Jeague baseball sea- 99 wins, incL...tmo victories in
son.
•
. three·~Di'C!t•.,.:~
I sta""
the last
·~·
"'
· l'be Reds hav.e named championship games,
are the
Robinson their honorary ones ihat coun'f the mosl and
captain for the season open- add up to ber. ~ the 2009
er witb the New York Mets. Associated , PreSs · Ms.
, Robinson played for the Baskelball award winner.
Reds from 1956 to 1965 to
"I had oo idea about that,".·
. ~gin his 21-year major the 6-foot-2 senior said when
lejtgue career. He was · asked about her won-loss
·ibducted into the Reds Hall recoid in four ~ears at MND.
of Fame in 1978 and . the "Coach just silid to us yesterli4sebalt . Hall bf Fame in day that the seniors ha'·e a
Cooperstown in 1982.
chance to win 10 I games if
. He was an All-Star player we win our final two games.
lilld MVP . in both the That's incredible."
· ·
·ililltional and American
They're clearly the most
leagues, and the firsi black important numbers.
"Wecanlalkaboutthescorrpimager in .both leagues.
•
ing averages of some kids
here, but when she has to
'
score
can score;· said her
RB coach,sheDante
Harlan, who
leads
MND
into
the state tour~oahHerron
narnent for the sixth rear in a
row. "She had 23 (polllts) and
, I:LEVELAND (AP) Rlmning back Noah Herron 11 (rebounds) against Mason.
lias Signed with the She bad 17 and three blocked
eleveland Browns, who lost shots last week. She just does
~on Wright to free agency whatever·it is that needs to be
eliJ'Iier Ibis week.
:rhe 26-year-old Herron
~ dtafted by Pittsburgh in
the. seventh round in 2005.
HI' has rushed for 273
yards, caughl 29 passes for
MINNEAPOUS (AP) ~II yards and scored five Ohio State was the only Big
toilchdowns in 23 career Ten women's 'team consisg~s with Green Bay and tently ranked in the national
Tampa Bay.
polls this season, one clear
The 5-foot-11, 225- sign that this league of late
poullder could fill Wright's · has been lagging behind the
role as a part-time back country_'s otlier power conbehind Jamal Lewis. Wright ferences.
sig'ned a two-year contract . The strength of the midwith Arizona ·on Tuesda~.
dle of the pack. however,
Coincidentally, Wnght made enough o( an impresand Herron were teammates sion on the NCAA tournaat'Northwestem.
ment selection committee to
Herron played 16 games warrant five learns chosen
for the Packers in 2006. He for the field.
spent all of 2007 on Green
So how good, or bad, is
Bay's injured reserve list the Big Ten these days?
with a knee inj'ury and was . "The tournament 1s a litinactive for al four 'ames mus test," said Buckeyes
he was on Tampa Bay s ros- coach Jim foster. whose
last year.
.
· team was IOth in the most
recent Associated Press
rankings. "We're about to
Steelers sign DB
find out."
State (27-5) is the
Bryant to 1-yr deal No.Ohio
3 seed in the Berkeley
region and gets 10 open at
PITTSBURGH (AP) home. though in a different
The Pittsburgh . Steelers re- arena than it's used to. in
signed cornerback Fernando Columbus on Saturday
Bryant to a one-year con- against .Sacred Heart. But
tracl on Wednesday to retain Stanford,lhe second-ranked
some secondary depth after team in the latest AP poll.
losing free agen! cornerback looms in a potential thirdBrrant McFadden .to the round game a few miles ,
An zona Cardinals. ,
. .from the Cardinal's campus.
: Bryant, fotmerly of the
Nobody else from the .Big
Jaguars and Lions, signed Ten is seeded to survive the
with Pittsburgh in Nov. II second round, and No. 10
and made three tackles in Minnesota (19- II) must
tWo games. He was inactive play at Noire Dame on
'on game days during most Sunday in the Trenton
of the remainder of the sea- region. Purdue (22-10) is .
lhe No. 6 team in the
son.
Oklahoma
City region, and
Bryant, a 1999 first-round
draft pick by Jacksonville
PIUH SH Women. BJ
who spent his first five NFL
seasons with the Jaguars,
ti¢s seven interceptions · in
(t2 career games.
.•
.
Penn
Cavs
Szczerbiak out
••
State's
Jamelle
tliith knee injury
Cornley,
::
•J:LEVELAND (AP)
center,
C11valiers forward Wally
loses the
Szczerbiak could be out for ball as Ohio
ttH:ee weeks with a sprained Stale's B.J.
l~t knee.
Mullens,
•Szczerbiak injured his
. left, Kyle
t:.]ee in the closing seconds
Madsen
~ the third quarter of
(15) and
tyesday night's 97 -9~ win Jon Dlebler
o-Jer the Orlando Magic. He (33) defend
tHJderwent an MRI exam
during the
tltpt revealed a sprained second hall
rfledial colatenil ligament, of an :NCAA
the team said .
basketball
Szczerbiak has been a key
game
oontributor
for
the
Tuesday, ·
Cavaliers, who raised their
Feb.24, in
home record to 30-·1 and . ·Columbus.
have a 4 1/2 game lead over
the Boston Celtics for the
AP photo
tJest record in the Eastern
C1&gt;nference.

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"Honestly, Kendall is the
Next year, Hackney will one kid everybody likes to
take her act lo SoUthern pick on.» said Harlan, who
California, ietuming to the bas a srunning 74-7 record in
stale where she livell for six three years as the Cougars'
ears until her family came head coach. "She's such a
~ to Ohio when she was goodie-two-shoes - she's in
12.
ihe National Honor Society.
What makes Hackney so she's~ perfect 4.0 - that
effective is thai she bas few ev"""'
likes to tease her."
-·,
weaknesses.in her game.
Hackney said she ' II even
Early on she was told that miss that when her high
she'd need to be · a good school days are done.
defender if she wanted to play
"I'm so blessed 10 have
in high school, so she warted w0 n three state champi~u&lt;Uu
""" on that part of ber g_ame onships when so many others
and now can body up With a never ~~ to win one." she
post player or go out on the said. "I II miss my teammates
perimeter to shut down a so much because they're such
Sliooter.
great people. I'll miss the
With two older brothers, school that has supported me
she had to work hard just to so much, my coaches who
score points. So she worked have done so much for me .
on her offensive skills until It's a unique program and
she coi1ld shoot from outside I've been blessed to be a part
as weU as muscle her way of a lot of victories."
around the paint for baskets.
It illways t'Omes down to
During a IQ..minute conver- the victOj'les.
sation in the middle of a busy
Others considered for the
week of classes and slate- award
included
Kari
tournament hoopla, Hackney · Daugherty of Warsaw River
continually
says
bow View, Emilee Harmon of
"blessed" she is. And by that, Pickerington Central. South
she doesn't mean phrsically Euclid Regina's Tay'ler
blessed with an athletes body. Mingo, Cincinnati Winton
She said slie's blessed to be Woods' Dayeesha Hollins.
surrounded by so many good Malina I-loward ofTwinsburg
players. Blessed to have such and Yolanda Richardson of
great parents and brothers. Toledo Start.
Blessed to .have had the
As winner of the 22nd
coaching she had .
.annual Ms. Basketbilll award.
OK, maybe she's not so Hackner will receive a
blessed to be the player every- · plaque m the shape of the
body teases.
state.
·

APphoto

Cincinnati 'Mount Notre Dame's Kendall Hackney puts up a
shot in a regioncil semifinal game on March 10 in Dayton.
Hackney, who averaged 13.1 points, 6.3 rebounds, 1.3 assiSts,
2.1 blocked shots, 1.9 steals while shooting 47 percent from
the field, 33 percent on 3-pointers and 78 percent at thj line,
was named Associated Press Ms. Basketball in Ohio.

Big 10 teams try to reverse recent NCAA struggles

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so you specia Jess time wondering and worrying. But most of all, the
'.
, l:Jolzer Cc:ilter ·for Cancer Care is about trust.
I,

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·:At Holzer, weproinise every new: patient will be seen within 48 bouts

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. l~arn rjiore, call tl\e experts at the Holzer Center for Cancer Care
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•The Southern FFA's Equine Team recently aH4~ndled,.the Hillsboro Judging Contest. Pictured
'are team members' Chelsea Holler, Miranda
Emily Manuel, and Rusty Carnahan.

Hackney is 22nd Obio Ms. Basketball

Qrowns sign

Ohio v.ltey lllnc CCirp. (HAS- .

AEP (NYSE) - 27.25
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 36.88
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 7.54
Big Lot. (NYSE) - 20-10
Bob E-. (NASDAQ) - 21.85
BorgWimer (NYSE) - 211.311
c.ntury AlUminum (NASDAQ)

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Ohio AP Ms. Basketball

ter

: ·COLUMBUS (AP) - A $4 billion in debt at the state's make better use oflheirspace.
new report says capital debt 14 four-year universities and employ technology more
·ot Ohio's J?Ublic colleges 23 community colleges.
often and find new financing
'and univers1ties has nearly
That liguro is up from $1 strategies _to slow the pace of
iuadrupled in the past billion in 1998. About half necessary construction and
aecade and can no longer , that debt is for educational debt accumulation.
continue at its current pace. space.
· The report also says that
· Ohio State University and
Wednesday's report by the mandatory energy efficienthe University of Cincinnati Ohio Board of Regents rec- cy should also reduce costs
beldmorethanhalfofthetotal ommends that the institutions by 2014.
'

HaUofFamer
Frank' Robinson
to head parade

·winds

around 5 mph .

t ~oPIIeeJtt

Thursday' March 19, 200IJ

Local Weather
Tbursday•••Cioudy with
showers ·
in
the
moming ...Tben
partly
sunny with a chance of
·showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the mid 50s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 80 percent.
Thursday night •..Partly
cloudy. Cooler with lows in
the lower 30s. North winds
5 to IOmph. ·
FridayM.Sunny. Highs in
the.upper 40s. North winds
around 5 mph.
Friday nlght...Mostly
cl~ar. Lows in the upper

Bl

The Paily Sentinel

Mllcby wilsldbrod. ;,, Pa&amp;e 116

ning name chol;en bas been
:oubmiltl:d. by lllOre than one
person. a drawing will be
held to determine the winner. 1be winning name will
be announc«&lt; in April.
To enter the contest, seDi
your ll8llle choiCe, contributOr's name, address. phooe
number and/or ~mail~
to: O'Bleness Memoria!
Hospital.
Community
Relations
Department,
Boutique Naming Contest,
55 }bpital Dr., Athens, Ohio
45701; or e-mail obleness@obleness.org.

Report: $4B in capital debt at Ohio co eges

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Boutique naming
Contest deadline near

GALLil'OUS - Holzer
· Hospice is looking for a few
goo3 people. Actually, the
organization is looking for
many good people 10 join
the rank-s of its. volunteer
program.
Holzer H~ is a service
of Holzer l;tealth Systems
and was founded in 1994 to
povide palliatiowe care, comfort .00 quality of life for
~ wbc:i have a life-limilmg illness, According IO the
website 111111w~lJia)liativ':'

.com, pGlliatffe

PageA6

LoCAL • .STATE

The Daily Sentinel

C1IR

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r: 30 m1n.
·. folloWi.ng
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Georg•a Tedl {21 ·9)

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. Xa¥ie&lt; (25-6)

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30 min. toi iOwi ~ · G~Za~a

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Iowa City, Iowa - March 22

{26· 6!__ ·- ~

S..ttte - March 21

~~~~ ) :~a~~~Ji.:4f~~-~

.L

·-, OKLAHOMA CITY
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rouowing

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PU!due (22·10)

c~~~~-(_~J_:_~_) _

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Chattanooga, Tenn. - Marth 21

,.,

----- -' Nafth Carolina (27 ·6) ~ ,

. Noon . UC~ !.' 7·1~l__._····~

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-- • - - -- Rutgers {19--12)
30 mm foiiOWII19

. ", vcu (26-8 }

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Young Buckeyes must grow up fast :·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
.State's players know what others
are saying about them .
About how they' re too young to
be ready lor a tirst-round NCAA
tournament game Friday against
experienced Siena ami will gel
rattled by all the attention .
;:)le watt·h ESPN like evcryoody. else does . The word gets
around. Evervbody's picking
Siena because tftey've got a veter- '
an team and. well. succe:~s speaks.
They've done
it
before .
Everybody is going off lhnt ,"
Buckeyes point ~uard P.J . Hill
said Wednesday. ' I don't blame
everybody else for going with
them . They've done it before and
(people) have seen it with their
eyes . .But we're going to try to
upset thut."
The eighth-seeded Buckeyes
(22-10) meet ninth-seeded Sienu
(26· 7) in the first round of the
Midwe st Regional at the
University of Duy1on - roughly

un hour or so down the road from
Ohio State's campus.
Even though Ohio State has a
slightl y better seed. many pundits
pick S1ena to advance because the
Buckeyes don't have a senior on
the roster - no one on the team
has ever played in an NCAA tournament - and the Suints ' hocked
fourth-seeded Vanderbilt 83-62 in
the first round u year· ago in
Tampu. Fla.
The thinking goes that Siena,
which relurns all five starters from
that team. won 't be scared of the
spotlight's glare. That figures to
be a major ndvantage .
"It could be. just because
they 've been in it," Ohio State
coach Thad Matta said. "But I've
always sa id . once ·that ball gets
tossed up. you l)et in that arena
~ou don t know 1f you 're playing
m the NCAA tournament or in a
Division Nipe tournament. It's,

Please see Buckeyes, B2

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·

7pm ·
.
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Buckeyes

Women
fromPageBl
Iowa is No. 8. The
Hawkeyes (21-10) start at
home, but top seed
Oklahoma will probably
await in round two if Iowa
.• beats
Georgia
Tech .
Michigan State (20-10) is
No: 9 in the Berkeley
regiOn.
The Southeastern and Big
East conferences each have
seven teams in this year's
tournament. and the Big 12
and Atlantic Coast conferences have six. The Pac-10,
with lhree, is the only major
league with fewer schools
in than the Big Ten this
year. The Pac-10 , though,
has at least put a team in the
Final Four over the previous
three seasons. The Big Ten
has not . with only one in a
regional final during that
·span.
·
Since 2000, the Big Ten is
57-44 in the NCAA tournament. The SEC (118 -53).
Big East ( 103-51). ACC
(79-48) and Big 12 (711-55)
have all fared considerably
better. Purdue, in 1999, has
the only. national title by u
Big Ten team in the sport.
Much like on the men's
side, this one of the most
rugged conferences in the
country. When it comes to
toughness. however. perhaps enough is enough.
'Tm not convinced until I
see otherwise that the physicality in the league•. is a
good thing for us," Foster
said, alluding to the ISgame regular season schedule that has each team facing all but two of the other
members twice . The SEC,
Big East, ACC and Big 12
each play fewer conference
games . .
There
are
benefits,
though.
"The Big Ten used to be
thought of as a power and
pounding,
walk-it-up
league, but now our styles
· are so varied," Michigan
State coach Suzy Merchant
said. "There are teams like
Minnesota that still play a
physical brand of basketball , but there are teams
----~ __J _

_

_ _ - - - - · --

......,

I

....

6 ILr:om

tltribunt - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

no other atmosphere like
it." said Turner. who led the
Big Ten in scoring at 17.1
pomts a gwne. "'That ifs fun
fromPagtBl
to be a part of '!-fld when
you're winning i~'s even
here we go. we've got a job more fun ...
to do.~
But Lighty will be cheer::. ""t as Lf the Buckeyes ing from the bench. In hi&gt;
dc)n 't e11pect to have some place on the court will be a
butterflies. In fact. they starting unit of three soph(}expect them. ·
mores "(Turner. Jon Diebkr.
"I'm sure the first four lauderdale). a freshman
minutes is going to be crazy (William Buf11rd) and a
for us.~ center Dallas senior (Hill.· who seldom
lallderdale said. "It's the played a year ago in his ftrSt
fust four minutes of some- year on campus after tr.msthing you've been dreaming . ferring from Junior college).
of as a child - you know, Mullens is . lhe fmt player
"'ne Sllining Moment~ by off the beoch.
luther Vandross, all that
Mullens said it's an
stuff. But after those first eatirely different world il\
four minutes, I think we·u the NCAAs - as if he
be fine. We'll settle in and would lrnow.
pla)llit.e it's anotller basket·
~Yeah. it is. You're playball game .~
ing a team that you' d never
Just two years ago, Obio seen film on until just the
· State advaQCed all the way other day." he said. "'It's
to the national champt· really different from confernnsbip gliDe beflft fallmg ence play. You lose, you go
to Florida. That seems like a hOme. You win, you keep
couple of ice ages ago goin~. It's . going to b~ a
aro~ Columbus. Three great expeneDcc: for me.
.
freshmen who were the
Since losing Lighty. the
· linchpins of thai team left Buckeyes bave found diffor the NBA after one sea- ferent leaders and spread
. son (Greg Oden, Michael around the responsibility.
Conley Jr., Daequan Coole).· That in itself may make
· · Last year. Matta rebuilt a them stronger than a typical
team that .went 19-13 over- bunch of NCAA rookies.
all and 10-8 in the BiJ Ten,
"I really believe this:
but was left off the mvita- With wbat this team \1as
tion list for the NCAA tour- been througb fo.r 22 straight
nament. So, the Buckeyes games, they shouldn't be
won the NIT. a s~ that shocked or taken back, just
helped persl*le 7-0 fresh- by wbat we've seen and the
man Kosta Koufos to leave environments we've been
after one season.
in," Matta said.
Matta started over again.
Hill said that because
this time building a:rou!KJ a Ohio State bas a reco~iz­
BJUUP of sophomores, two able name. because tt is
JUnior-college transfers and almost expected to beat
a couple of acclaimed fresh- quality programs witlllittlemen. Now the Buckeyes are known names like Siena's,
back in the NCAA tournament - and again facing it adds to the burden.
"When lhey throw the
questions that second-year
ball
up for the opening
star Evan Turner and 7-0
freshman
center
B .J. iump. it's going t\&gt; feel like
Mullens might .leave early tt's us versus the world
then," he said. "We've got
for the pros.
The only player still tremendous pressure to win
around from the 2007 and. not only to win, but to
national
championship perform at the highest level
game, David Lighty, broke on the biggest stage at this
his foot in December and time of year.'' ·
It'll be different in a lot of
missed the remainder of the
ways
than what any of them
season. He is the only link
across two short years to the have faced before.
Turner was particularly
highlights of ·that tournaupset by the 9:40 p.m. start
ment ru·n.
·
"(lighty) just says it's time.
"'That's my bed time," he
fun. He says it's •the best
time of the year, that there·~ said with a wide grin.
such as Ohio State that play
up tempo and there are
some teams that shoot a
bunch of 3s. So regardless
of the type of team you play
in the tournament, Big Ten
coaches can tell their players. 'We've seen that .' That
can only he!p in the NCAA
tournament.
The crowds at most
places are pretty good'. too,
which can provide useful
tests for postseason play.
"I think winning in the
Big Ten is very difficult on
the road, because especially
at Purdue you're playing in
front of 10,000 to 12 ,000
.fans." GoJl!ter's co~ch Pam
Borton satd. "That s pretty.
much what we're going to
see when we go to Notre
Dame_. It's goin~ to be a~
unbehevable environment. ·
· Minnesota
probably
wouldn't have been invited,
however, without playing so
many quality teams before
Big Ten play began. The
Gophers lost to Stanford,
Iowa State (No . 4 seed) and
South Dakota State (No. 7
seed) and beat two teams
from
major
leagues.
Colorado and Boston ·
College .
" I think everybody's really beefed up their nonconference schedules." Borton
said, in reference to the Big
Ten .
.
As one of the last at-lar~e
teams in. the Gophers w1ll
be
closely
watched.
They've got a reputation to ·
uphold , for one, with seven
appearanc~s in the last eight
years . They made it .to the
Final Four in 2004 and
advanced to the regional
semifinals in 2003 and
2005.
"I think it's an expectation for not just everybody
out there but the f.layers and
myself as wei ," Borton
· swd. "These players come
to Minnesota because we're
going to play in the NCAA
tournament every single
year."
The Gophers are also car·
rying the conference flag, as
center Ashley Ellis-Milan
acknowledged.
"We're going to go out
there and show 'em what
the Big Ten's all about," she
said.
·

•

.In One Week With Us .
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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can

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SU.Dt hiAU

l\egl~ter

Jll$T$U

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 {304} 675-1333

0/fi-HMN
HOW

tu.c:om

-mydlil)&lt;rtJ

·Sentinel

'Otrihunt

To Place

-~-COlli
~CGIII

AD

SliG'IId IIKtlb l " - a To . . G.tlllfUII ••

Word Acle
~llt-C&amp;I tWt . . . ~
v 1 ........W .... hRT UJA
ra .... o.ya .... s

-. • we.._
~

· , a ....... a~~~~tr.• .... nat ·n I

Di•p!•y M•

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Altll:Z Uhyt1.2-.3
O.ya ........ Te
•tt•r tiOa

_..,- ...__,.

•auca... ~~ep r

' II'

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.......,...

-----

.,

Kll' a CARLYLE

cPOUCIESc

kitncartyt.omcast.net

hllftbeeil

Found Sl&gt;ih·TN typo dog
on Bulaville Pike coil
740-24S-S606 to iOenlily

'*"*'

In . . .

the G''lpDII&amp;
Dally 1l1butllt
mull ... plcUcl
FoUtld . YQU09 dog on
. wtlltln 30 cllyl.
Oshel Rd. PI.Piooslflt .
Ally

.... 304-593-17Q8.

lli.o.ForW.
3 Bo&lt;1
2 Bo.111! Only

Wontl&gt;dl cleani"9
job&amp;. yart:l ..ortt &amp; big
eati"9 jal&gt;s. l-lillSi&lt;los a cr0o1&lt; tledS are
nq

clear

m

Cay Jaooe:qt ,..., .... ......_ swatlay ~--Yt \tOO

.....
,.......................
....:......................
....__,_ . . . .
r

CHlRGE

p -.

Tcal:-

$24.900.
for
liSDflli!S MOVE IN ~EAOV Com~e&gt;R019
~ tumishod 28R. all

ii!Jillianceo.

TV.storeo

4338 Sll 141 1 Mile sys, u,...,. &amp; compte19
From New ~ School kitchen *•re S100'mo ...,
2HXJ Sq. Fl. Nice home o1ec $5QQI&lt;IeQ. ~

Will also

out brush.
25&amp;-1269 onylime.

::~··~·~~~.,~~::

Call

Price
10
$13!1.900. Fo&lt; mo&lt;O In!&lt;&gt;
and pict\110$
!jO
to
WWW.ONb:cam
phone
~ 1210"' 339-'3834

picluretl

!Mterenot
plckecl up will be

-rn

apt.

1br
74().446.3736

Call

SPRING SPECIAL

SM llo'{H You In I
AI
Vaftoy VieW Apartments
800 Slate Route 325
Thurinan, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
1-2 Bedroom Apartm&lt;lnts
with applianCes tum~
On sila laundry latiity.
Call for d&amp;l:aits or piCk up
application at rental

We
will
.-tnglyiiCHJit
ldvi!IIHmltllll
lolallon oltl!e law.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legato ...........................................................100
Annou......-ta .......................................... liOO
Blrthday/Annl..,..ry ..................................2011
Happy Ada...................- .• ·~··- .......~................210
loat I Founc1 ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... HO
Notlcea ......................................................... 225
Persanalo ...: ..,.............................................. a30
Wanted ........................................................ 235

I

- -- -- - - - - - -·

Rec,...tanal'fthlct.. ................:.............. 1000
ATV ...... ....................................................... 1005
licyC:IM................................. ..................... 1010
&amp;o.t.IAcciUoriH .................................... 1015
. Campa&lt;r11V. 1 T'rltltera ............................. 1020
Motorcyc!M ............................................... 10215
Other .....:.................. .,........ .. ...................... 1020
Wan1 to buy ....................... :..........,............ 1035
Automot1.................................................. 200Q

Servk:ea ....................~.................................. 300 '"Auto Ren..ULuu .....................................2001
Appllanoit Servlce ....................................... 30:1 Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Automouve ................................................... 304 · Ctaaalc/Antlq........................................... 2015

Building Material a .......................................301
auatneaa ...................................................... 301
Ceterlng..................... .................................. 310
' . Child/Elderly C.re ....................................... 312
Computera .................................................. 31•
Contrectora.................................................. 311
Domaatlco/Janllorlot .. .. .. ............................. 311
Electrlcol .........................,............................ 320
flnanc'-1 .............. ., ........ ............................... 322

Lawn
334
Mualc/Dance/llra-.: ................................,.331
Other SOrvi-............................................. 3H
Plumblns;Eiectrlcat ..................................... ~o
Ptoteaalonal SOrvtcea ....... .. .... ......... ........... ~a
Repalla ...........: ........ ......... ............................
Roofing .......................................... ......... .. .... ~&amp;
SOc:urlty .................................. ,..................... Ma
ToxiACGDunllng ............ ........................,...... 3SO
Tl'avei/Entertalnment ..................................352

Commerclolllnduolrlal .............................. 2020
Pa... 1 - l e a.............................. ....aoas
Sporta Ullllty ..............................................:l030
Trucka ............ .. ... :................................. ......2035
Utility ll'1tllera ............................................ 2040
Yana ............................................................:HMS
Want to buy ....... .. :..................................... 2050
Real Elll!te SOiea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005
Comrneraltl ....... .. ... ................ .. ,.. ............... 3010
Condomlnluma ..........................................:!015
for SOle by
3020
Hou. .• for S.le ... ;..................................... 302S
Land (Acraage) ........... ...............................3030
Lota ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 30.0
RHI Eatote Rantolo ....................... ............3500
Apartmanto1Townl1ouaaa ......................... 3505
Comrnerclot ................................................ 3510
Condomlnluma ... :...................................... 35tS
Hou . .a tor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acruge) ...................... ... ... ... .. ......... 3525
Storego ........:....,. ..............,......................... 3S35

Flnancl•l. ................. :.......................... ,... ......400

Went to Rent ...................... ...... .................. 3540

Financial Servlcea ........................ ............... 405

Menutactured Houalng ............................ . 4000

Health ........................................................... 32e
Heating a Coottng ....................................... 3a&amp;
Nome Improvement• 3:!0
lnaun~nce ..... ."............................................... 332

s.rvtce ...............................................

s«

lnaurance .................................................... 410
Money to lend ...., ....... .,............. ..... .... ., .. ..... ats

Educetlon .... ; ..................................;............. soo
aualneao
SChoot ........................... 505
lnotructlon i. Tl'olnlng ............................. .... 510
Lnaono ......................:................................. 515
Peraonal ....................................................... 5:10
Anlmola .............. ... ....................................... 100
Animal Supplies .......................................... 805
Horaee ..........................................................oto
Llveatock ............. , ........................................815

I,.,_

-- -·· ·- -···

'

•oao

Admlnlatn~tlvWPrafeu1onai.....................I004

Want 1o buy .................................................. 825
Agrlcul1uro ................................................... 700

Caahler/Cierk ............................................. OOOI
Child/Elderly Core ..................................... 5008

Farm Equlpment ................................... :...... 705
Garden a Produce .......................................710
Hoy, feed, Seed, Groin ............. .. ................ 715

C&amp;.rlcal ....................................................... 8010
Conatructlon .....,........................................S012
Drlvera I Dallvory ..........................., ......... 8014

Hunting &amp; Land ... ........................ ., .............. 7:10
Wan1 to buy ..................................................7as
Merct)andi. . ................................................ IOO
Anllquoa ........................................,............. 11015
Appllanco ................................ ,...................,&amp;10
Auctlcna ....... :............................................... 815
Bo'lloln BoHment .... ...................................
Colloctlblea .................................................. ll25

Educatlon .... ,..............................................8018
Electrical Plumblng ............:...................... II018
Employment Agenot.. ......................:........
l!nte...lnrnent ............................................II022
Food Sorvl...............................................
Government II F-.ol Joba .................... IIOH
Help on- Gonorai .................................. II028
Low Entorcemont ...................................... 8030

aoao
aoa•

Computera ................................................... 830

Maln.. nancWDomeatlc ............................. I032

Equlpmorit/Supplln ..............,.....................fl35
Flea Morkata ......... : .............., ....................... IMO
Fuel Oil CoaVWood/Gaa ,..,,,, ...................... 105
Fumlture ......................................................
Hobby/Hunt 1 Sport ... ., ............................... ass
t(ld'a Corner.................................................MO
Mlacellaneoua.......... ................,...................teS
Want to buy ..................................................l70

Management/Suparvlaory ........................ 11030
Mochanloa ..................................................1031
Modlool , ...................................................... 1031
Muelcai .......................................................804D
Part-Time-Tampororlaa ............................. 8CM2
Reatauranta ....... 1..... ............................ ,,,,,,4Q44
S.lea ........................................ ...................Cb4a
Tac~nlcal Tl'odea ....................................... 8050

Yard Sale .....................................................171

r.•tlleWFactory .........................................toSa

,.&amp;o

·-~-·

Lot. .............................................................4;005
Movora ......................................................... oto
Aentala ...................................,................. .. 4015
SOIH ........................ ., .................................
Suppllu ..................................................... t025
Want to Buy ....., ..............................,...........030
Reaort Ptoparty ......................................... 5000
Reaort Property lor ute ..,........................ 5025
Reeort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ............................................... aooo
Aceountlng/Financlal ...........:.................... eooa

Peta ............................................................... l20

aao

·--·--·

owner.....................................

..

-custom American graph·
l'ltmlluft
ic$, ~~&amp;rage kept, 245 mi.
'!!&amp;;;;;~II!'"~;;;;;~ '!!&amp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Riding is not tor me. Has
Female Hu~ky 2 yrs old. Oak enWrtainment Ciiln-. over $500 in extras
APR reglstereo all while tor, ·2 oak· end tables &amp; $35()0. 740.441-1720
WlO ~og 74tJ.208-78SO
coffee table, comer desk.

1 and 2 bedroom apts ..
fumishad
and
unlur·
nished, and houses ln
Pcmoroy and Middlepon.
security deposit required,
no pels. 740-992·2218

~--'!!!"-.-~~ computer
chair, . hiQh
3-4 ~r. sm Pincfler mix , F chatr,
kitchen
stools,

1BR Apt, WID hookups.
satellite TV incl. w/rent.
clOSe to hOspital. Call
740-339-0362

.'*

not llx&amp;d. well beha\18d, lamps,
,
gels
ak&gt;ng
wlolllor 740.992·5326. misc.

sofa ,

A~~~~~~~

dogs.741J-992·3793
Aus~allan
Shephoro 5
months (F) $200. Call
379-2932

on~.

Possibility ol rental
assistance.
Equal HouSing
Opportunity
TOOt 419-526·0466
"This institution ts an
Equal Opportunity
PrQ\!kter and EmplOyer~

2br apt. Rodney area No
1996 Dekota Automatic pets. Dep!Rot roQuirod
$.1500 OBO 256·1652 or 740.446·1271
or

GALUICQLIS.

OH

Holt· 256· 1233

~~~~~~~

709-1617

'!'
Fo~r~Sa~le~M~I~n.~D~ac~h~
S· day Inn Sat 9-5 &amp; Sun ~
~
. 000
~ 2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi· Spacious
7 ~p:!!T~Cr.,ui~se'"r"'4:"::60:::
200

s

hund pupptes S300.00 9-3 Mar. 28 &amp; 29 Slate
ca1174 388. 0318 .
Roule 7 Daily Adm .
~~"!':-~'"'::~ $4.00 Dealor TableS 525
Free 16 wk male Fron t Sighl Promotions.
A··~~•
.. JCo-"oilor
mnt ;
LL!!C!!7~41J-!o66
i!ii:7·~04!iti2!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-~n ""
Wormed
potty trained
Call740·367-7574
Mlstell-

mites
OBO. zer Hoopilal on SR 160
7500
CIA (740) 441·0194 •
256.eenor 256•1261
.
96 Chevy lJ4 ton 2WD. Apan~nt available now
350 vortec. SSp, 108 ~· Aivertlencl
Apts.
New
h~h
104
Haven WV. Now 'accept·
1

o::-~---~---:

1\JII(~ Impou nds! C'W's from

o-

•

....;i;i;;;;;;;;

.,.,_;;.,..~

reese

'... '

500

•

$3250 740:379-2748

Free to good home 7 Jet Aeration Motors re- ~!

m!.

HorwJa.nl!..·\ y~ Jrtps.

.... old very paired. new &amp; rebuilt in Fflr\h..,l}. 11\1.1{'(', ft~t . lb.lings
puppIes 6 """s.
cute, parents on prem- stock. Call Ron Evans. tKXl-624J•.um~ e., v 4J~
lses 304·840.3609.
1.81J0.537·9S2B.
Trucb
Free to !jOOO home: 2 yr
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~
old {M) Schnauzer, gray, For Sale ·Surwision-Pro 04
Chevy
Slhterado
approx. 18 lbs. Call 248
tanning
~
uucK, 4DR. 4WO. mint
3
740.682·7672
$1200.00
304·674 · 6
cond 92,000 miles Call
7
7
~~~~-~~ or 304·6 5·I04 ·
741J-441 :8299
Reg.
Cocker
Spaniel.
Tri-cOlored {M) 3yrs old. Singer sowing machine 1986 Ford 1150 4 Wheel
Proven Stud Exceilent w/ . deluxe cabinet. does Drive Pickup . Straight 6,
DisR $100 446·0356
everything
$100. Wild Holly Carb. &amp; Eisen·
Cheny OR tbl seats 15, hOwer
Heads.
Runs
no
chairs
$600. great &amp; 4 wheel dri'lle
741).441·8299
SQ/060
w9rks groal $1 ~
·
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ;.,
74!!0.!!!98i!8!;
·6;,748.;,!!!!!!!!!!"""'
Farnl eq..;.,....t
Wont To
=

au.,

:;;;;;;;;;;;;-"~~~ ;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;i;o;;iai;;i;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;=W;;;;ont;;;;;;T;;;;o;;;;I;;;;U'/~=
EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY · HORSEILIVE·
STOCK
· TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EOUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS.
•
CARGO EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W

Absolule Top Dollar - sll·
vorlgold
coins.
a.nY
1lll&lt;i l 4K/taK gold )owelry, dental go~ . pre
1935
US
currency,
proo!!mint
sets, . dla·
· d "TS C · Sh
mon s. M
otn
Oil·
Galli
t51 2nd Avenue,
·
polis. 446·2842
.

=======

Want to buy Junk Cars,
caii740·•• •·0884

~~~-~~~~~

:

Far •-'ly ....,_
"'-·--BeautifUl COUntly senlng,

4BR, 2BA Ranch , I 112
car gar., brlci&lt;/Vinyl. New
Heating/Cooing
system
lrg eat-In . kit. 24x24 FR.
FP. to much 10 list. Sits
on 2.65 acras. Include$
loah / Accuaorieo
36x48 pole bldg. N~ar
RVHS. $I8S,900
new
Ford 3000 Diesel Tractor hlf _Salt ''f lrl~k Rn-.s !;~oat 74()..245-5815 for show·
a spd, International 684 I'N.\ A'to . IR 112 Ji. full ~ tng. Homo can be seen
luaL.lrd at
Diesel Tractor real nice. ,,vct h!IUkd.cnghlc

GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW QUA EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
W'{ffl.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740·446·3825

740.286·652~

$100.). 0~0 ~10ol- h7~·bl l8 .

www.forq~r com

lng
applications
HUD-subsidlzed .

secon&lt;lithlro
floor · apl.
overlooking
Gallipolis City Pari&lt; and
River. L.R. don, lrg.
Kitchen-dining area with
all new appliances &amp;
·

cupboards,

fo r baths.
one

3

laundry

8Ft

2

area.
$900 per . month. Can .
Bedroom · Apts. Utilities " 6·2325 or 446-4~25
included. Based on 30% Tara
TownhOuse .
of adjusted income. Call
304·882·3121 ,
oval labia Apamnenls • 2BR . 1.5
lor Santor and Disabled balll. back patio. poQI,
people.
playground, (trash, sowage.
water
pd .}
~~~~::--~ $425/rent,
$425Jwc.
CONVENIENTLY
LO· dep. Caii741J-367·0547
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
. . _ Far Ronl
ABLE! Townhouse ~part- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'""!';;;;;;~~
ments, . ancvor
small s t ~J/mo! 4 .tied. ! huth.
houses tor rent Call Runk R~P'-·~ \~~ '-'l'wn . 15
740..441 ·111 1 tor appti· ~c~rs. gq AI'RI for h'ting~
.:.;ca~tioi!:n~&amp;':':in:"!lo:::rma~lio~n'::.~- glM.I-6.2(:1.4946 e.\ Rtm
ELLM VIEW APTS
1BR houte In town at 1o
2&amp;3BA and up, Control VInton Ct WID and ap.
Air. WID hookup, tenant pt"'nces Included. Call
pays electric. EHO Elm 741J-446-4659
View
Apts. .;,;lb;;;r.~~$~350~
.• m-o-nt~h-~ln
(304)882·3017
~. . HUO
Syracuse. '~postt,
Twin Rivers Tower Is ac· appro119d
No
Pols
cepting applicat&lt;&gt;ns lor 304·675·5332 weekends
waiting list tor HUD sub· c:74;;;0;;·5~91:;;·02
~65~-~~
sldiled. 1·BR B!Partment ~
:!br. m Pt . l'lhtsant. $46..~ .
for tho olde""ldlsabled,
R 1
"'
nkllllh. Homc~te11d
cl\ ty
coll675·6679
•
Bn'''l .\(IHl~-4024 "'
JW-ti7~ ·1l7W ·

(ir

~~~;;.,~~~ 2 8R nouse In Gallipolis
Fumlshed apamnent 2nd
Avo. upstairS all utitllies
pak:l tBR No PelS Gallipolls. 446•9523

WID
conn.
$400/mo
$200/dep. You pay all
utllllles. No section 8 or
HUD.
Call
Wayne
404-456·3802

Fumtsned opanmenl 1
pers on
utU1t1es
pa10
1 919 2nd A
downsta rs
ve.
S2l5lmo, 446•31145
Modem lBR apartment.

3~ · BR, 2.5 battle . in
town
home
a~allab!e
Aprlt 1St. Gaa h&amp;llt.
$8110/mo + dop. You pay
u"lltlea. Call ._.6-3844
for applicatkln.

448:0390

�-.

.......

--·--

--·-•

Buckeyes

Women
fromPageBl
Iowa is No. 8. The
Hawkeyes (21-10) start at
home, but top seed
Oklahoma will probably
await in round two if Iowa
.• beats
Georgia
Tech .
Michigan State (20-10) is
No: 9 in the Berkeley
regiOn.
The Southeastern and Big
East conferences each have
seven teams in this year's
tournament. and the Big 12
and Atlantic Coast conferences have six. The Pac-10,
with lhree, is the only major
league with fewer schools
in than the Big Ten this
year. The Pac-10 , though,
has at least put a team in the
Final Four over the previous
three seasons. The Big Ten
has not . with only one in a
regional final during that
·span.
·
Since 2000, the Big Ten is
57-44 in the NCAA tournament. The SEC (118 -53).
Big East ( 103-51). ACC
(79-48) and Big 12 (711-55)
have all fared considerably
better. Purdue, in 1999, has
the only. national title by u
Big Ten team in the sport.
Much like on the men's
side, this one of the most
rugged conferences in the
country. When it comes to
toughness. however. perhaps enough is enough.
'Tm not convinced until I
see otherwise that the physicality in the league•. is a
good thing for us," Foster
said, alluding to the ISgame regular season schedule that has each team facing all but two of the other
members twice . The SEC,
Big East, ACC and Big 12
each play fewer conference
games . .
There
are
benefits,
though.
"The Big Ten used to be
thought of as a power and
pounding,
walk-it-up
league, but now our styles
· are so varied," Michigan
State coach Suzy Merchant
said. "There are teams like
Minnesota that still play a
physical brand of basketball , but there are teams
----~ __J _

_

_ _ - - - - · --

......,

I

....

6 ILr:om

tltribunt - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

no other atmosphere like
it." said Turner. who led the
Big Ten in scoring at 17.1
pomts a gwne. "'That ifs fun
fromPagtBl
to be a part of '!-fld when
you're winning i~'s even
here we go. we've got a job more fun ...
to do.~
But Lighty will be cheer::. ""t as Lf the Buckeyes ing from the bench. In hi&gt;
dc)n 't e11pect to have some place on the court will be a
butterflies. In fact. they starting unit of three soph(}expect them. ·
mores "(Turner. Jon Diebkr.
"I'm sure the first four lauderdale). a freshman
minutes is going to be crazy (William Buf11rd) and a
for us.~ center Dallas senior (Hill.· who seldom
lallderdale said. "It's the played a year ago in his ftrSt
fust four minutes of some- year on campus after tr.msthing you've been dreaming . ferring from Junior college).
of as a child - you know, Mullens is . lhe fmt player
"'ne Sllining Moment~ by off the beoch.
luther Vandross, all that
Mullens said it's an
stuff. But after those first eatirely different world il\
four minutes, I think we·u the NCAAs - as if he
be fine. We'll settle in and would lrnow.
pla)llit.e it's anotller basket·
~Yeah. it is. You're playball game .~
ing a team that you' d never
Just two years ago, Obio seen film on until just the
· State advaQCed all the way other day." he said. "'It's
to the national champt· really different from confernnsbip gliDe beflft fallmg ence play. You lose, you go
to Florida. That seems like a hOme. You win, you keep
couple of ice ages ago goin~. It's . going to b~ a
aro~ Columbus. Three great expeneDcc: for me.
.
freshmen who were the
Since losing Lighty. the
· linchpins of thai team left Buckeyes bave found diffor the NBA after one sea- ferent leaders and spread
. son (Greg Oden, Michael around the responsibility.
Conley Jr., Daequan Coole).· That in itself may make
· · Last year. Matta rebuilt a them stronger than a typical
team that .went 19-13 over- bunch of NCAA rookies.
all and 10-8 in the BiJ Ten,
"I really believe this:
but was left off the mvita- With wbat this team \1as
tion list for the NCAA tour- been througb fo.r 22 straight
nament. So, the Buckeyes games, they shouldn't be
won the NIT. a s~ that shocked or taken back, just
helped persl*le 7-0 fresh- by wbat we've seen and the
man Kosta Koufos to leave environments we've been
after one season.
in," Matta said.
Matta started over again.
Hill said that because
this time building a:rou!KJ a Ohio State bas a reco~iz­
BJUUP of sophomores, two able name. because tt is
JUnior-college transfers and almost expected to beat
a couple of acclaimed fresh- quality programs witlllittlemen. Now the Buckeyes are known names like Siena's,
back in the NCAA tournament - and again facing it adds to the burden.
"When lhey throw the
questions that second-year
ball
up for the opening
star Evan Turner and 7-0
freshman
center
B .J. iump. it's going t\&gt; feel like
Mullens might .leave early tt's us versus the world
then," he said. "We've got
for the pros.
The only player still tremendous pressure to win
around from the 2007 and. not only to win, but to
national
championship perform at the highest level
game, David Lighty, broke on the biggest stage at this
his foot in December and time of year.'' ·
It'll be different in a lot of
missed the remainder of the
ways
than what any of them
season. He is the only link
across two short years to the have faced before.
Turner was particularly
highlights of ·that tournaupset by the 9:40 p.m. start
ment ru·n.
·
"(lighty) just says it's time.
"'That's my bed time," he
fun. He says it's •the best
time of the year, that there·~ said with a wide grin.
such as Ohio State that play
up tempo and there are
some teams that shoot a
bunch of 3s. So regardless
of the type of team you play
in the tournament, Big Ten
coaches can tell their players. 'We've seen that .' That
can only he!p in the NCAA
tournament.
The crowds at most
places are pretty good'. too,
which can provide useful
tests for postseason play.
"I think winning in the
Big Ten is very difficult on
the road, because especially
at Purdue you're playing in
front of 10,000 to 12 ,000
.fans." GoJl!ter's co~ch Pam
Borton satd. "That s pretty.
much what we're going to
see when we go to Notre
Dame_. It's goin~ to be a~
unbehevable environment. ·
· Minnesota
probably
wouldn't have been invited,
however, without playing so
many quality teams before
Big Ten play began. The
Gophers lost to Stanford,
Iowa State (No . 4 seed) and
South Dakota State (No. 7
seed) and beat two teams
from
major
leagues.
Colorado and Boston ·
College .
" I think everybody's really beefed up their nonconference schedules." Borton
said, in reference to the Big
Ten .
.
As one of the last at-lar~e
teams in. the Gophers w1ll
be
closely
watched.
They've got a reputation to ·
uphold , for one, with seven
appearanc~s in the last eight
years . They made it .to the
Final Four in 2004 and
advanced to the regional
semifinals in 2003 and
2005.
"I think it's an expectation for not just everybody
out there but the f.layers and
myself as wei ," Borton
· swd. "These players come
to Minnesota because we're
going to play in the NCAA
tournament every single
year."
The Gophers are also car·
rying the conference flag, as
center Ashley Ellis-Milan
acknowledged.
"We're going to go out
there and show 'em what
the Big Ten's all about," she
said.
·

•

.In One Week With Us .
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l\egl~ter

Jll$T$U

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 {304} 675-1333

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HOW

tu.c:om

-mydlil)&lt;rtJ

·Sentinel

'Otrihunt

To Place

-~-COlli
~CGIII

AD

SliG'IId IIKtlb l " - a To . . G.tlllfUII ••

Word Acle
~llt-C&amp;I tWt . . . ~
v 1 ........W .... hRT UJA
ra .... o.ya .... s

-. • we.._
~

· , a ....... a~~~~tr.• .... nat ·n I

Di•p!•y M•

•='

Altll:Z Uhyt1.2-.3
O.ya ........ Te
•tt•r tiOa

_..,- ...__,.

•auca... ~~ep r

' II'

·'

.......,...

-----

.,

Kll' a CARLYLE

cPOUCIESc

kitncartyt.omcast.net

hllftbeeil

Found Sl&gt;ih·TN typo dog
on Bulaville Pike coil
740-24S-S606 to iOenlily

'*"*'

In . . .

the G''lpDII&amp;
Dally 1l1butllt
mull ... plcUcl
FoUtld . YQU09 dog on
. wtlltln 30 cllyl.
Oshel Rd. PI.Piooslflt .
Ally

.... 304-593-17Q8.

lli.o.ForW.
3 Bo&lt;1
2 Bo.111! Only

Wontl&gt;dl cleani"9
job&amp;. yart:l ..ortt &amp; big
eati"9 jal&gt;s. l-lillSi&lt;los a cr0o1&lt; tledS are
nq

clear

m

Cay Jaooe:qt ,..., .... ......_ swatlay ~--Yt \tOO

.....
,.......................
....:......................
....__,_ . . . .
r

CHlRGE

p -.

Tcal:-

$24.900.
for
liSDflli!S MOVE IN ~EAOV Com~e&gt;R019
~ tumishod 28R. all

ii!Jillianceo.

TV.storeo

4338 Sll 141 1 Mile sys, u,...,. &amp; compte19
From New ~ School kitchen *•re S100'mo ...,
2HXJ Sq. Fl. Nice home o1ec $5QQI&lt;IeQ. ~

Will also

out brush.
25&amp;-1269 onylime.

::~··~·~~~.,~~::

Call

Price
10
$13!1.900. Fo&lt; mo&lt;O In!&lt;&gt;
and pict\110$
!jO
to
WWW.ONb:cam
phone
~ 1210"' 339-'3834

picluretl

!Mterenot
plckecl up will be

-rn

apt.

1br
74().446.3736

Call

SPRING SPECIAL

SM llo'{H You In I
AI
Vaftoy VieW Apartments
800 Slate Route 325
Thurinan, Ohio 45685
740-245-9170
1-2 Bedroom Apartm&lt;lnts
with applianCes tum~
On sila laundry latiity.
Call for d&amp;l:aits or piCk up
application at rental

We
will
.-tnglyiiCHJit
ldvi!IIHmltllll
lolallon oltl!e law.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legato ...........................................................100
Annou......-ta .......................................... liOO
Blrthday/Annl..,..ry ..................................2011
Happy Ada...................- .• ·~··- .......~................210
loat I Founc1 ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... HO
Notlcea ......................................................... 225
Persanalo ...: ..,.............................................. a30
Wanted ........................................................ 235

I

- -- -- - - - - - -·

Rec,...tanal'fthlct.. ................:.............. 1000
ATV ...... ....................................................... 1005
licyC:IM................................. ..................... 1010
&amp;o.t.IAcciUoriH .................................... 1015
. Campa&lt;r11V. 1 T'rltltera ............................. 1020
Motorcyc!M ............................................... 10215
Other .....:.................. .,........ .. ...................... 1020
Wan1 to buy ....................... :..........,............ 1035
Automot1.................................................. 200Q

Servk:ea ....................~.................................. 300 '"Auto Ren..ULuu .....................................2001
Appllanoit Servlce ....................................... 30:1 Autoa .......................................................... 2010
Automouve ................................................... 304 · Ctaaalc/Antlq........................................... 2015

Building Material a .......................................301
auatneaa ...................................................... 301
Ceterlng..................... .................................. 310
' . Child/Elderly C.re ....................................... 312
Computera .................................................. 31•
Contrectora.................................................. 311
Domaatlco/Janllorlot .. .. .. ............................. 311
Electrlcol .........................,............................ 320
flnanc'-1 .............. ., ........ ............................... 322

Lawn
334
Mualc/Dance/llra-.: ................................,.331
Other SOrvi-............................................. 3H
Plumblns;Eiectrlcat ..................................... ~o
Ptoteaalonal SOrvtcea ....... .. .... ......... ........... ~a
Repalla ...........: ........ ......... ............................
Roofing .......................................... ......... .. .... ~&amp;
SOc:urlty .................................. ,..................... Ma
ToxiACGDunllng ............ ........................,...... 3SO
Tl'avei/Entertalnment ..................................352

Commerclolllnduolrlal .............................. 2020
Pa... 1 - l e a.............................. ....aoas
Sporta Ullllty ..............................................:l030
Trucka ............ .. ... :................................. ......2035
Utility ll'1tllera ............................................ 2040
Yana ............................................................:HMS
Want to buy ....... .. :..................................... 2050
Real Elll!te SOiea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plota .......................................... 3005
Comrneraltl ....... .. ... ................ .. ,.. ............... 3010
Condomlnluma ..........................................:!015
for SOle by
3020
Hou. .• for S.le ... ;..................................... 302S
Land (Acraage) ........... ...............................3030
Lota ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy ................................................ 30.0
RHI Eatote Rantolo ....................... ............3500
Apartmanto1Townl1ouaaa ......................... 3505
Comrnerclot ................................................ 3510
Condomlnluma ... :...................................... 35tS
Hou . .a tor Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acruge) ...................... ... ... ... .. ......... 3525
Storego ........:....,. ..............,......................... 3S35

Flnancl•l. ................. :.......................... ,... ......400

Went to Rent ...................... ...... .................. 3540

Financial Servlcea ........................ ............... 405

Menutactured Houalng ............................ . 4000

Health ........................................................... 32e
Heating a Coottng ....................................... 3a&amp;
Nome Improvement• 3:!0
lnaun~nce ..... ."............................................... 332

s.rvtce ...............................................

s«

lnaurance .................................................... 410
Money to lend ...., ....... .,............. ..... .... ., .. ..... ats

Educetlon .... ; ..................................;............. soo
aualneao
SChoot ........................... 505
lnotructlon i. Tl'olnlng ............................. .... 510
Lnaono ......................:................................. 515
Peraonal ....................................................... 5:10
Anlmola .............. ... ....................................... 100
Animal Supplies .......................................... 805
Horaee ..........................................................oto
Llveatock ............. , ........................................815

I,.,_

-- -·· ·- -···

'

•oao

Admlnlatn~tlvWPrafeu1onai.....................I004

Want 1o buy .................................................. 825
Agrlcul1uro ................................................... 700

Caahler/Cierk ............................................. OOOI
Child/Elderly Core ..................................... 5008

Farm Equlpment ................................... :...... 705
Garden a Produce .......................................710
Hoy, feed, Seed, Groin ............. .. ................ 715

C&amp;.rlcal ....................................................... 8010
Conatructlon .....,........................................S012
Drlvera I Dallvory ..........................., ......... 8014

Hunting &amp; Land ... ........................ ., .............. 7:10
Wan1 to buy ..................................................7as
Merct)andi. . ................................................ IOO
Anllquoa ........................................,............. 11015
Appllanco ................................ ,...................,&amp;10
Auctlcna ....... :............................................... 815
Bo'lloln BoHment .... ...................................
Colloctlblea .................................................. ll25

Educatlon .... ,..............................................8018
Electrical Plumblng ............:...................... II018
Employment Agenot.. ......................:........
l!nte...lnrnent ............................................II022
Food Sorvl...............................................
Government II F-.ol Joba .................... IIOH
Help on- Gonorai .................................. II028
Low Entorcemont ...................................... 8030

aoao
aoa•

Computera ................................................... 830

Maln.. nancWDomeatlc ............................. I032

Equlpmorit/Supplln ..............,.....................fl35
Flea Morkata ......... : .............., ....................... IMO
Fuel Oil CoaVWood/Gaa ,..,,,, ...................... 105
Fumlture ......................................................
Hobby/Hunt 1 Sport ... ., ............................... ass
t(ld'a Corner.................................................MO
Mlacellaneoua.......... ................,...................teS
Want to buy ..................................................l70

Management/Suparvlaory ........................ 11030
Mochanloa ..................................................1031
Modlool , ...................................................... 1031
Muelcai .......................................................804D
Part-Time-Tampororlaa ............................. 8CM2
Reatauranta ....... 1..... ............................ ,,,,,,4Q44
S.lea ........................................ ...................Cb4a
Tac~nlcal Tl'odea ....................................... 8050

Yard Sale .....................................................171

r.•tlleWFactory .........................................toSa

,.&amp;o

·-~-·

Lot. .............................................................4;005
Movora ......................................................... oto
Aentala ...................................,................. .. 4015
SOIH ........................ ., .................................
Suppllu ..................................................... t025
Want to Buy ....., ..............................,...........030
Reaort Ptoparty ......................................... 5000
Reaort Property lor ute ..,........................ 5025
Reeort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ............................................... aooo
Aceountlng/Financlal ...........:.................... eooa

Peta ............................................................... l20

aao

·--·--·

owner.....................................

..

-custom American graph·
l'ltmlluft
ic$, ~~&amp;rage kept, 245 mi.
'!!&amp;;;;;~II!'"~;;;;;~ '!!&amp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Riding is not tor me. Has
Female Hu~ky 2 yrs old. Oak enWrtainment Ciiln-. over $500 in extras
APR reglstereo all while tor, ·2 oak· end tables &amp; $35()0. 740.441-1720
WlO ~og 74tJ.208-78SO
coffee table, comer desk.

1 and 2 bedroom apts ..
fumishad
and
unlur·
nished, and houses ln
Pcmoroy and Middlepon.
security deposit required,
no pels. 740-992·2218

~--'!!!"-.-~~ computer
chair, . hiQh
3-4 ~r. sm Pincfler mix , F chatr,
kitchen
stools,

1BR Apt, WID hookups.
satellite TV incl. w/rent.
clOSe to hOspital. Call
740-339-0362

.'*

not llx&amp;d. well beha\18d, lamps,
,
gels
ak&gt;ng
wlolllor 740.992·5326. misc.

sofa ,

A~~~~~~~

dogs.741J-992·3793
Aus~allan
Shephoro 5
months (F) $200. Call
379-2932

on~.

Possibility ol rental
assistance.
Equal HouSing
Opportunity
TOOt 419-526·0466
"This institution ts an
Equal Opportunity
PrQ\!kter and EmplOyer~

2br apt. Rodney area No
1996 Dekota Automatic pets. Dep!Rot roQuirod
$.1500 OBO 256·1652 or 740.446·1271
or

GALUICQLIS.

OH

Holt· 256· 1233

~~~~~~~

709-1617

'!'
Fo~r~Sa~le~M~I~n.~D~ac~h~
S· day Inn Sat 9-5 &amp; Sun ~
~
. 000
~ 2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi· Spacious
7 ~p:!!T~Cr.,ui~se'"r"'4:"::60:::
200

s

hund pupptes S300.00 9-3 Mar. 28 &amp; 29 Slate
ca1174 388. 0318 .
Roule 7 Daily Adm .
~~"!':-~'"'::~ $4.00 Dealor TableS 525
Free 16 wk male Fron t Sighl Promotions.
A··~~•
.. JCo-"oilor
mnt ;
LL!!C!!7~41J-!o66
i!ii:7·~04!iti2!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-~n ""
Wormed
potty trained
Call740·367-7574
Mlstell-

mites
OBO. zer Hoopilal on SR 160
7500
CIA (740) 441·0194 •
256.eenor 256•1261
.
96 Chevy lJ4 ton 2WD. Apan~nt available now
350 vortec. SSp, 108 ~· Aivertlencl
Apts.
New
h~h
104
Haven WV. Now 'accept·
1

o::-~---~---:

1\JII(~ Impou nds! C'W's from

o-

•

....;i;i;;;;;;;;

.,.,_;;.,..~

reese

'... '

500

•

$3250 740:379-2748

Free to good home 7 Jet Aeration Motors re- ~!

m!.

HorwJa.nl!..·\ y~ Jrtps.

.... old very paired. new &amp; rebuilt in Fflr\h..,l}. 11\1.1{'(', ft~t . lb.lings
puppIes 6 """s.
cute, parents on prem- stock. Call Ron Evans. tKXl-624J•.um~ e., v 4J~
lses 304·840.3609.
1.81J0.537·9S2B.
Trucb
Free to !jOOO home: 2 yr
~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~
old {M) Schnauzer, gray, For Sale ·Surwision-Pro 04
Chevy
Slhterado
approx. 18 lbs. Call 248
tanning
~
uucK, 4DR. 4WO. mint
3
740.682·7672
$1200.00
304·674 · 6
cond 92,000 miles Call
7
7
~~~~-~~ or 304·6 5·I04 ·
741J-441 :8299
Reg.
Cocker
Spaniel.
Tri-cOlored {M) 3yrs old. Singer sowing machine 1986 Ford 1150 4 Wheel
Proven Stud Exceilent w/ . deluxe cabinet. does Drive Pickup . Straight 6,
DisR $100 446·0356
everything
$100. Wild Holly Carb. &amp; Eisen·
Cheny OR tbl seats 15, hOwer
Heads.
Runs
no
chairs
$600. great &amp; 4 wheel dri'lle
741).441·8299
SQ/060
w9rks groal $1 ~
·
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ;.,
74!!0.!!!98i!8!;
·6;,748.;,!!!!!!!!!!"""'
Farnl eq..;.,....t
Wont To
=

au.,

:;;;;;;;;;;;;-"~~~ ;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;i;o;;iai;;i;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;=W;;;;ont;;;;;;T;;;;o;;;;I;;;;U'/~=
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Absolule Top Dollar - sll·
vorlgold
coins.
a.nY
1lll&lt;i l 4K/taK gold )owelry, dental go~ . pre
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currency,
proo!!mint
sets, . dla·
· d "TS C · Sh
mon s. M
otn
Oil·
Galli
t51 2nd Avenue,
·
polis. 446·2842
.

=======

Want to buy Junk Cars,
caii740·•• •·0884

~~~-~~~~~

:

Far •-'ly ....,_
"'-·--BeautifUl COUntly senlng,

4BR, 2BA Ranch , I 112
car gar., brlci&lt;/Vinyl. New
Heating/Cooing
system
lrg eat-In . kit. 24x24 FR.
FP. to much 10 list. Sits
on 2.65 acras. Include$
loah / Accuaorieo
36x48 pole bldg. N~ar
RVHS. $I8S,900
new
Ford 3000 Diesel Tractor hlf _Salt ''f lrl~k Rn-.s !;~oat 74()..245-5815 for show·
a spd, International 684 I'N.\ A'to . IR 112 Ji. full ~ tng. Homo can be seen
luaL.lrd at
Diesel Tractor real nice. ,,vct h!IUkd.cnghlc

GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW QUA EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
W'{ffl.CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
740·446·3825

740.286·652~

$100.). 0~0 ~10ol- h7~·bl l8 .

www.forq~r com

lng
applications
HUD-subsidlzed .

secon&lt;lithlro
floor · apl.
overlooking
Gallipolis City Pari&lt; and
River. L.R. don, lrg.
Kitchen-dining area with
all new appliances &amp;
·

cupboards,

fo r baths.
one

3

laundry

8Ft

2

area.
$900 per . month. Can .
Bedroom · Apts. Utilities " 6·2325 or 446-4~25
included. Based on 30% Tara
TownhOuse .
of adjusted income. Call
304·882·3121 ,
oval labia Apamnenls • 2BR . 1.5
lor Santor and Disabled balll. back patio. poQI,
people.
playground, (trash, sowage.
water
pd .}
~~~~::--~ $425/rent,
$425Jwc.
CONVENIENTLY
LO· dep. Caii741J-367·0547
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
. . _ Far Ronl
ABLE! Townhouse ~part- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'""!';;;;;;~~
ments, . ancvor
small s t ~J/mo! 4 .tied. ! huth.
houses tor rent Call Runk R~P'-·~ \~~ '-'l'wn . 15
740..441 ·111 1 tor appti· ~c~rs. gq AI'RI for h'ting~
.:.;ca~tioi!:n~&amp;':':in:"!lo:::rma~lio~n'::.~- glM.I-6.2(:1.4946 e.\ Rtm
ELLM VIEW APTS
1BR houte In town at 1o
2&amp;3BA and up, Control VInton Ct WID and ap.
Air. WID hookup, tenant pt"'nces Included. Call
pays electric. EHO Elm 741J-446-4659
View
Apts. .;,;lb;;;r.~~$~350~
.• m-o-nt~h-~ln
(304)882·3017
~. . HUO
Syracuse. '~postt,
Twin Rivers Tower Is ac· appro119d
No
Pols
cepting applicat&lt;&gt;ns lor 304·675·5332 weekends
waiting list tor HUD sub· c:74;;;0;;·5~91:;;·02
~65~-~~
sldiled. 1·BR B!Partment ~
:!br. m Pt . l'lhtsant. $46..~ .
for tho olde""ldlsabled,
R 1
"'
nkllllh. Homc~te11d
cl\ ty
coll675·6679
•
Bn'''l .\(IHl~-4024 "'
JW-ti7~ ·1l7W ·

(ir

~~~;;.,~~~ 2 8R nouse In Gallipolis
Fumlshed apamnent 2nd
Avo. upstairS all utitllies
pak:l tBR No PelS Gallipolls. 446•9523

WID
conn.
$400/mo
$200/dep. You pay all
utllllles. No section 8 or
HUD.
Call
Wayne
404-456·3802

Fumtsned opanmenl 1
pers on
utU1t1es
pa10
1 919 2nd A
downsta rs
ve.
S2l5lmo, 446•31145
Modem lBR apartment.

3~ · BR, 2.5 battle . in
town
home
a~allab!e
Aprlt 1St. Gaa h&amp;llt.
$8110/mo + dop. You pay
u"lltlea. Call ._.6-3844
for applicatkln.

448:0390

�www.m,-lySintinel.com

...... 84 • 1M DUly Sentinel

......,., rdl1t,2G08

www.ll¥!'rllyttldilll.cam

: AIIfVQOP

The Dilly Sentinel • Page B5
NEA Crossword Puaale

BltiOGE

, ........
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

......
.......

's

t

ta.._.,

12 Cw:u' :!

Hills Self
Stordge

i

......

•• '3

-

A 10
• AKt
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: IIONTY

Wt$1

• Itt 5 1

"'K 2
•AQ1 0852

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t TS

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• QJ 5

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• A8
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WtSIN-Eaol

a•
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Pass 3 NT

2 NT

Pass
AU pass

()peniDg lead: • a

: FRANKl EARNEST

Third time lucky
with a count signal

•

/

Both

.•

481.....,
out
49 Doll"a cry

51 -

=

53 llaundoir
55 llhriera
.........
5li

31 Giw-btW .
8 EICGIIod by 53 - llwal do 57 In il)acllll
~aunc~ry
t Loak .. 11 ss eon...,
34 llnolll. tt .... ......
abbr.
....
.
oq.
39 ,.,... ....
31 Willi IMcllr 12 Conc:oct
mentln lilt
S7 ,.,.,., wwd 13 To'a 011110- 41 UnwriiJpad
38 liMy ~
. ah
44 Ollfc:e U·
· -.old
17 Autlloraiellnl
40 Thoi linSt.!
46 TrbiiCIIJUIIIt
19 Browbtit
via WlnCicllr. 20 " 47 SpHCI
43 Anlhncla
limbed .
-.

baitor

Vulne~:

s.nte-

....
22Eur,lllrh
D a..ae~ong 3 •. ICoppol 23 F1el M1tiV
M """"4 ~out
25 ONe!; It 1
2t Yin-• 5 !lplnlahu.,.
plalw(2
17 WIIOcblit
21 "lhrlllln
.._)
II -lor 1M
lllnlll"
• AMuolly
111111
1 Flityollle
belilg

30 Inland
31 PI 1-.

Dealer: West

CGel

Englisll pl\iiOSCif)htl John kocl&lt;e, who ·
dlt&lt;l In 1704, saki, "I havt olways
lhQught tho ac11ons ot mon tho best
~n~erp..,.,. ot tlttir lhoughts..
In ~·s dNI. East had tho 8-H

o t - West

ted h~ ~

Mwl. 11\&lt;1 East &lt;*d not play tlllr&lt;l hand
h9! bo&lt;:liuH lit was sc - I n tho suit

lnslHc1 ht gave a count sip!, dnlpp;ng his two 1o show an odd number ol
Clrdsln tltt suit
Making an aceurate ~gnallilol that hell)$
only If pannor lnltrPIIIl l corTtCI1y 11\&lt;1
P~CM tltt killing c:ontlnuatiOII.
Tills do4l Is Nalor 011 papor than ~
woUld bt at tho table. .kook at tho West
ind North lltnds. o.ttndlng agllnst
lhree. no-~ump, you, Witt, ltld tho
heart tight: lhrat, (st.ting. hilt&gt;
low Willi I doublotOII), nlil.; How woold
you 1\orJt lo defeat tho contract?

: BARNEY

For
ANewHome? ! . W.pay

Laallno~t

.

Cqme Jolfl OUr Team!!!
You 'H Be Glad. That You
Did!!! {References ,R&amp;-quired)

Tlluallllian Is Joist a
~cala.yl

-·-

TrY the

uplo$12.MIIw

: Hiring Fullllme
Positions (2-11 pm)
: Onsite Doctor
: Weekly Pay&amp;
Bonuses·
l Fun &amp; Professional
WorKing Erwironmen1
t COmplele Benefits

Classifieds!!

LOSE TH' SALE

• Room Acldltlone
i$

oc-

OllPiieatoos

lor

Middleton Estates
c.pttng

Remodeling
•NewGmgee

'rtJu OjlOned with a -

• Elec:trk:lll 6.

PRNILPN's. You wilt be
part of a team tnat provides services ti indi~idu­

Plurnlllng

• Roofing I Guu.r.
• VInyl Sieling 6.
Painting
• Pallo lll1d Porch

als w1th mental retardation and de~telopmiOtal
disabilities.
Interested
applicants may apply at
· Packaga
· 8204 Car!a Otivt. Galli·
lntoCisiOn named one of PQiis, Ohio 45631 or
e-ma11 a resume to dalr
lhe Tops Employers in
shire3@su&lt;kttnllnk.net

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019
Owners:
Jon V.n Meter a
Paul Rowe

Tbe Daily Sentinel

. THE BORN LOSER
BR.UT\1.)~
J\r.)\ CALLtl) I~

Cell: 74c.-41&amp;-5047
email:

'•

quaons.
Now t1tt conbect Is unmakable. East will
gat In and lead his heart lour lluou~
dedarer.

•
••

·s.n,d·s ,,_.._. .

Sprlnc
SPORTS G·UIDE
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

wvoxns

Now Selling:

•

:a

• Ford &amp; Motoo:ran
Parts • Engines,
Transfer
&amp;
Tmttsmis.sionS
• Aftennurkel
Repluc·ement S""et
Mttal &amp; CQmponenls
f\1r All Ml.ll~:~ 11f V~hkl~ s

r

OFF JU$T .ECAV!IE
:t FEL.T L.IKE IT,

ly.......,
l'tldiiV. - _
..... _
-

W+-!0 wc:lVLD T'EACH
YOU S.TUDENTS?

~OVNO!I

80RijOOD.

( (l \11{1 11
I il\,llll I I ill\

~aJebalf
~,j~afl

lnsuml
f'n:t"

E~iamm:~

IIBEIT
BISSELL

HA$

'SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

cem•111•
Hames
·New

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

MJ-BI2·1m
Stop &amp; Compare

.

'

laada
lob loa•P~

Sbop

,,

TALK ABOuT
6ETTIH6 ME

llOI.IlD 'liltJ TALK

TWE PRINCIPAL
INTO TIIAT?

IN TROUBLE ..

Riebel Road, long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141
C•ll : 740-416-1834
N\,. afi11Mtl.'d w i ~h Mtk.t Man;um Mooting &amp; Remodtlina

15+ •••rs t.&lt; ..Wnrt

&amp;H
Guttering

f'rr&lt; ll'stiriHII&lt;s

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• VInyl Siding
• Rtpltc:ement
Window I

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

l

RI&lt;L Julmson·O..ntr

JlmHK-11
742-2332

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Sldln11
Specialists, I.TD

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

• Plumbing
• Pole Burns

DEATH EXPERIEm:E.

74&amp;-441·9387

740·387-&lt;1544
F"" EIIIIIIIIH
740.387·0536

• Sldln~ • VInyl ·
Windows • Metal
and Shhigle Roofs
• lk'tks • Additions
•Eioctrlt•at ·

ME HAD 1\NOTf.IER
EPfAAN~ AFTER ME
MOST RECENT ~II­

Golllpnlls, OH 45631
lnsurod, Frtt
•:stlmal .. ,lOyrs Exp.

(740) 742·256.1·

COWandBOY

Johnson's Tree
Servke

Seamless Gutters
Rooting. Siding, Gutters
lnsuted &amp; Bonded
741).653·9657

Owner:

Friday, March 20~ 2009

Call Dave or Brenda
992-2155

~7239

• Room Addition•

'

OH,SURE .. SNeAK UP
8V TWE TEACHER'S
OESK, AND P1.U6 IN
'iOIIR !lAIR DR'fE« !

IIIEW.IIICII.-U

•Gtragll
··POle Bulldlngl

Reserve your advertising space today!
Advertising deadline Is ·
'

Cull: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chain Link Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Additions • Gamges
• Vinylnnd Wood Siding • Roofing
• Pole Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

• Rooting
•Deckt

·.

Work
*Reusonuble Rules

' Insured

' Experienced
Relerenees Available!
Cull Gury Sumley @
740-591 -8044
Pleuse leave mes.."' 1e

Room Additions, Kemodollng, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, Nom Homes, Sldlng.lk'&lt;ks,
Bathroom Rcmodclln~. l.lcenstd &amp; Insured

or

vou

I I I 1 1. I
I
I I I I' I
1

6

.

8

'

•

.

.

Comolore tno &lt;iluckl• quo:&amp;d ·

by tilling in the rnt:Jing W0-1'~
you ci&amp;'o'eloo from !ttD No. 3 beiCiw

PltN1 NUMSEQ€0. tfllfRS I

2

.

l

IN lHESE IJU,\i[S

Devout .. Giant' ·· Ensue

Crndlc • liNIVERSI'

"for your peace of mind," g.rnmps told the lx&gt;SS)
fdlow, "you should resign as general manager ol tt~e·
!IN IVERSE."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

on your own.
{Nov. 23-Doc. 211 - 'll&gt;u ·

SOUPTONUTZ

~t'i'IY.

I'UT I'M

l-ldT AI.\..
"ff..Ai
5TUPID

---~-- 1 ·-----------

•

I I 17 0

~~~;.~ as the content' of her

SCR.-.._\l·Li:TS ANSWeRS JiiS.\N

tM whOit help would be Invaluable
might, to your aurprllt, &lt;:ont.ct you for 1
ravor. Exchlnge ldN1. and 111let one
1no1ntr.

.. -· - ---·· -----:--·- --;---,---1..--------- -- ,. ___ . ·-.. .

•

I

"}IavC' you t.' ver nottcOO." 11
fellow sighoo to his budd~,
.,hat a wom~tn 's minu is as

ti g~ic:~~~\~ lEll[il to I I I I I I 0

Someont who It · gener~lly unruchablt

.,

~~-

I I I Is ...

I 1I

a game than a challengt. Evan m ore sur·

f

H 0 C UP

O MR O A N

prlsing. ~ will ha\1'8 lun In the process.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - This
could be an tMctllent da~ to go shopping, upeelalty II you enjoy bargain .
hunting. There is a good Chance you will
spot aomtlhlng you've been wanting tor
a lOng time at a great price.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 191 -

:I AM,
; AHYWAV

GU BED

.I

to you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - ·II you recognize that your counterparl In a joint
arrangemtnl Is thi nking uniquely,
encourage him or h&amp;r to reline those
thoughts. There may be a gem ot an Idea
lurking that would benelll you both.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-NoY. 22) - FOI~
_.;;.....;;._"""" your lmpulsiS If they yrge you to be ol
ur.vlce to anoth1r. Ytlur good deeds will
bear unexpected fruit thst you couldn't

OI&lt;AY .,. F'll'IE.
!'MKII-ID O'F

1

1

can coMiderably tnhsnct your prol:labllltlts tor SUCQNS If ~u treat lilt more like

: G'Mc*l, 6Ul-1111Er..
, i1U6T \loW
: STU~ID li'O
: ~ 'l\1\1-1\&lt;..

of

NODA ~I I

uP

~rod~d
SAGITTA~IUS

:• GRIZZWELLS

privi~ga

low 1&lt;1 form fcl!f omplo words.

VIRGO
(Aug.
221a
wa~ about
you23-Sepl.
that brings
out 'il&gt;u
the have
best In
othefS. k. a result; those with whom you
have dealings will come
wilh Ideas
anQior opinions that wNI be ol great value

have

·-·~ ·~

•

.-.y
-ylng you tor paat good - ·
PISCES(Ft0.2Q.- 20)- A sudden

Tills

ARIES (March 21-April19)- KH!&gt; your
mlnd open, and reject ell tendencies to
put limltetiQnS on your thinking
Surpri!llngly, everything you do will turn .
out to be easier than you thought. even·
things that were previously diHicult.
· TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ YOu will
PRIIKI~~ surprise_yourself with what you accom·
plish all because som10ne has faith in
and your '&lt;teas. Praise Is the vehicle
that helps tremendously In stimulating
talent and ingenuity, ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Something
quite unusual but positive Is ~~~~ to
d&amp;wlop lor you, but It will b9 of short
duraUon. Be prepared to move swiH~ the
moment you recognize Its value.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Challenges awaken yOur senses. inCiud·
ing your lngenui1y. talent and stored
knowledge. Should you find yourself
operating under pressure. don't hesitate
to make a snaP decision when called for.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221- A.Ught mlghl QQ
ott with regard to s.ometh1ng that you
thOught was of lesser value. Your new
Insight will gel you moving In a whole
new direction.
·

~"~.~~~~;..~~~~~~;~;~

*PI\•mptnnd Quulily

PSI CONSTRUCTION

.I

you .... _ _them lho ·
,. lho. hand ol piOII-

thai could beconskMr·
Is ap1 to be In lho oiling.
h hu something to do with yOur tlnancill
slt._.tiOn and • way to greetty better lt.

1

740.992·6971

and-

able~

~.......::... !
~ · ~ ·~~ ~

David Lewis

Ia a good

~~t

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

29 Y•ars Exlll'rien&lt;-e

In lho ytor alload, -

LIKE A
chance lhaO you COUld - - a low
fVN NE16H· · - wi-lla •• unooopaciOd -

I I Ill"

''~;AIIl'iJ*Qt

PREVIOUS SOLUTilN: ' ... do mteltling. Pay your rent tor lhe
iving on lh1s tleautilul, biut-grMI. lvlng Earth.'- Dave Foreman

R..rror10a It""'' of lht
0 fovr
rocmblod wcna bo·

·TOOK. ,.. bit.v

Shipmetus urrh'~: ~\' try
i ' '

.Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

OJCIG JUSB

- - - - - - ........., CLIY I. PCUAN _:..._.:;
·---

II'
l,•rp, PU~ l'rufto11, tw.cb 00
$10 p&lt;t I~ Ct1&gt;h only
~nr i~ l'l.'l.luirt'\1 in tk.h'ar\l.'o:

. IVGB, " -

.'~!::' S©tl~lA -lt£~s~

~t.•IG,~.M_J'E
__

c.,.,,

comins

tv«&gt;-bbd. ~

lng a docont sl&gt;-&lt;:ar&lt;l su~ 11\&lt;1 6-1 ohilt&gt;
card ~nts. North was strong lor his
overcall. And Soultl was a lad waek lor
two no·tfump, which would usually
prcrnlse t0-12 pclnis But he did not tlkt
by Luis Campos
tho idea ol a lrid&lt;-one heart lead from
CtltQrffl CWIIt' cry~ s a1t Cl'lh:l trom ~llb:lm by ltmous people. PBSI and ~'ant
East. (North must play carel'ully to make
. Eacn 1nr 1r1 lilt c-Phel 9111'\ds i'Of n:tnlll'
two spades.)
Today'! ctut: F &amp;qu•s H
Allor taking ltla first trido, declarer cash·
" JDZ RP IIFUH ZFRHVP JWWUJD
OS tis Sfl'lda ac.. Now Is your big
mcrnant - you must'drop your king! If'
you play low, Soulh wiiiiMO his second 0 C I H K.U K. "- . L J I DR E U K U H R P " L B · UB UP
spade and ·collect at 1tast leur 5Pid"- ·
one heart, two d1arnollde ind two clubs. IIUDU LJKU ZC UDJPU JGG ZFJZ RP
'1\lu molst assumt that East has lour
spades to lha 10 and bolh · mtnor-su~t

OOT OOLYI~ GUJ€. ~ 1'1 Lt.
~lUCK Oil A511JGI.t MO/.I ...

�www.m,-lySintinel.com

...... 84 • 1M DUly Sentinel

......,., rdl1t,2G08

www.ll¥!'rllyttldilll.cam

: AIIfVQOP

The Dilly Sentinel • Page B5
NEA Crossword Puaale

BltiOGE

, ........
ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

......
.......

's

t

ta.._.,

12 Cw:u' :!

Hills Self
Stordge

i

......

•• '3

-

A 10
• AKt
t

: IIONTY

Wt$1

• Itt 5 1

"'K 2
•AQ1 0852

•

t TS

T4

• Q ·~' 8
• QJ 5

"' It 7 4

-~
• A8
• K J 9
t J &amp;U

• 8 6 31

14 """""'
15 WIIIIL I
...

-16

I

t

lillln'""*Y

"e::-

1 Aa:wn'a

11

n

a..~~w
~

2

•

-.

WtSIN-Eaol

a•
z•
Pass 3 NT

2 NT

Pass
AU pass

()peniDg lead: • a

: FRANKl EARNEST

Third time lucky
with a count signal

•

/

Both

.•

481.....,
out
49 Doll"a cry

51 -

=

53 llaundoir
55 llhriera
.........
5li

31 Giw-btW .
8 EICGIIod by 53 - llwal do 57 In il)acllll
~aunc~ry
t Loak .. 11 ss eon...,
34 llnolll. tt .... ......
abbr.
....
.
oq.
39 ,.,... ....
31 Willi IMcllr 12 Conc:oct
mentln lilt
S7 ,.,.,., wwd 13 To'a 011110- 41 UnwriiJpad
38 liMy ~
. ah
44 Ollfc:e U·
· -.old
17 Autlloraiellnl
40 Thoi linSt.!
46 TrbiiCIIJUIIIt
19 Browbtit
via WlnCicllr. 20 " 47 SpHCI
43 Anlhncla
limbed .
-.

baitor

Vulne~:

s.nte-

....
22Eur,lllrh
D a..ae~ong 3 •. ICoppol 23 F1el M1tiV
M """"4 ~out
25 ONe!; It 1
2t Yin-• 5 !lplnlahu.,.
plalw(2
17 WIIOcblit
21 "lhrlllln
.._)
II -lor 1M
lllnlll"
• AMuolly
111111
1 Flityollle
belilg

30 Inland
31 PI 1-.

Dealer: West

CGel

Englisll pl\iiOSCif)htl John kocl&lt;e, who ·
dlt&lt;l In 1704, saki, "I havt olways
lhQught tho ac11ons ot mon tho best
~n~erp..,.,. ot tlttir lhoughts..
In ~·s dNI. East had tho 8-H

o t - West

ted h~ ~

Mwl. 11\&lt;1 East &lt;*d not play tlllr&lt;l hand
h9! bo&lt;:liuH lit was sc - I n tho suit

lnslHc1 ht gave a count sip!, dnlpp;ng his two 1o show an odd number ol
Clrdsln tltt suit
Making an aceurate ~gnallilol that hell)$
only If pannor lnltrPIIIl l corTtCI1y 11\&lt;1
P~CM tltt killing c:ontlnuatiOII.
Tills do4l Is Nalor 011 papor than ~
woUld bt at tho table. .kook at tho West
ind North lltnds. o.ttndlng agllnst
lhree. no-~ump, you, Witt, ltld tho
heart tight: lhrat, (st.ting. hilt&gt;
low Willi I doublotOII), nlil.; How woold
you 1\orJt lo defeat tho contract?

: BARNEY

For
ANewHome? ! . W.pay

Laallno~t

.

Cqme Jolfl OUr Team!!!
You 'H Be Glad. That You
Did!!! {References ,R&amp;-quired)

Tlluallllian Is Joist a
~cala.yl

-·-

TrY the

uplo$12.MIIw

: Hiring Fullllme
Positions (2-11 pm)
: Onsite Doctor
: Weekly Pay&amp;
Bonuses·
l Fun &amp; Professional
WorKing Erwironmen1
t COmplele Benefits

Classifieds!!

LOSE TH' SALE

• Room Acldltlone
i$

oc-

OllPiieatoos

lor

Middleton Estates
c.pttng

Remodeling
•NewGmgee

'rtJu OjlOned with a -

• Elec:trk:lll 6.

PRNILPN's. You wilt be
part of a team tnat provides services ti indi~idu­

Plurnlllng

• Roofing I Guu.r.
• VInyl Sieling 6.
Painting
• Pallo lll1d Porch

als w1th mental retardation and de~telopmiOtal
disabilities.
Interested
applicants may apply at
· Packaga
· 8204 Car!a Otivt. Galli·
lntoCisiOn named one of PQiis, Ohio 45631 or
e-ma11 a resume to dalr
lhe Tops Employers in
shire3@su&lt;kttnllnk.net

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019
Owners:
Jon V.n Meter a
Paul Rowe

Tbe Daily Sentinel

. THE BORN LOSER
BR.UT\1.)~
J\r.)\ CALLtl) I~

Cell: 74c.-41&amp;-5047
email:

'•

quaons.
Now t1tt conbect Is unmakable. East will
gat In and lead his heart lour lluou~
dedarer.

•
••

·s.n,d·s ,,_.._. .

Sprlnc
SPORTS G·UIDE
'

CELEBRITY CIPHER

•

wvoxns

Now Selling:

•

:a

• Ford &amp; Motoo:ran
Parts • Engines,
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&amp;
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• Aftennurkel
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f\1r All Ml.ll~:~ 11f V~hkl~ s

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•:stlmal .. ,lOyrs Exp.

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I I I 1 1. I
I
I I I I' I
1

6

.

8

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•

.

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Comolore tno &lt;iluckl• quo:&amp;d ·

by tilling in the rnt:Jing W0-1'~
you ci&amp;'o'eloo from !ttD No. 3 beiCiw

PltN1 NUMSEQ€0. tfllfRS I

2

.

l

IN lHESE IJU,\i[S

Devout .. Giant' ·· Ensue

Crndlc • liNIVERSI'

"for your peace of mind," g.rnmps told the lx&gt;SS)
fdlow, "you should resign as general manager ol tt~e·
!IN IVERSE."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

on your own.
{Nov. 23-Doc. 211 - 'll&gt;u ·

SOUPTONUTZ

~t'i'IY.

I'UT I'M

l-ldT AI.\..
"ff..Ai
5TUPID

---~-- 1 ·-----------

•

I I 17 0

~~~;.~ as the content' of her

SCR.-.._\l·Li:TS ANSWeRS JiiS.\N

tM whOit help would be Invaluable
might, to your aurprllt, &lt;:ont.ct you for 1
ravor. Exchlnge ldN1. and 111let one
1no1ntr.

.. -· - ---·· -----:--·- --;---,---1..--------- -- ,. ___ . ·-.. .

•

I

"}IavC' you t.' ver nottcOO." 11
fellow sighoo to his budd~,
.,hat a wom~tn 's minu is as

ti g~ic:~~~\~ lEll[il to I I I I I I 0

Someont who It · gener~lly unruchablt

.,

~~-

I I I Is ...

I 1I

a game than a challengt. Evan m ore sur·

f

H 0 C UP

O MR O A N

prlsing. ~ will ha\1'8 lun In the process.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - This
could be an tMctllent da~ to go shopping, upeelalty II you enjoy bargain .
hunting. There is a good Chance you will
spot aomtlhlng you've been wanting tor
a lOng time at a great price.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 191 -

:I AM,
; AHYWAV

GU BED

.I

to you.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 23) - ·II you recognize that your counterparl In a joint
arrangemtnl Is thi nking uniquely,
encourage him or h&amp;r to reline those
thoughts. There may be a gem ot an Idea
lurking that would benelll you both.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-NoY. 22) - FOI~
_.;;.....;;._"""" your lmpulsiS If they yrge you to be ol
ur.vlce to anoth1r. Ytlur good deeds will
bear unexpected fruit thst you couldn't

OI&lt;AY .,. F'll'IE.
!'MKII-ID O'F

1

1

can coMiderably tnhsnct your prol:labllltlts tor SUCQNS If ~u treat lilt more like

: G'Mc*l, 6Ul-1111Er..
, i1U6T \loW
: STU~ID li'O
: ~ 'l\1\1-1\&lt;..

of

NODA ~I I

uP

~rod~d
SAGITTA~IUS

:• GRIZZWELLS

privi~ga

low 1&lt;1 form fcl!f omplo words.

VIRGO
(Aug.
221a
wa~ about
you23-Sepl.
that brings
out 'il&gt;u
the have
best In
othefS. k. a result; those with whom you
have dealings will come
wilh Ideas
anQior opinions that wNI be ol great value

have

·-·~ ·~

•

.-.y
-ylng you tor paat good - ·
PISCES(Ft0.2Q.- 20)- A sudden

Tills

ARIES (March 21-April19)- KH!&gt; your
mlnd open, and reject ell tendencies to
put limltetiQnS on your thinking
Surpri!llngly, everything you do will turn .
out to be easier than you thought. even·
things that were previously diHicult.
· TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ~ YOu will
PRIIKI~~ surprise_yourself with what you accom·
plish all because som10ne has faith in
and your '&lt;teas. Praise Is the vehicle
that helps tremendously In stimulating
talent and ingenuity, ·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Something
quite unusual but positive Is ~~~~ to
d&amp;wlop lor you, but It will b9 of short
duraUon. Be prepared to move swiH~ the
moment you recognize Its value.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) Challenges awaken yOur senses. inCiud·
ing your lngenui1y. talent and stored
knowledge. Should you find yourself
operating under pressure. don't hesitate
to make a snaP decision when called for.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221- A.Ught mlghl QQ
ott with regard to s.ometh1ng that you
thOught was of lesser value. Your new
Insight will gel you moving In a whole
new direction.
·

~"~.~~~~;..~~~~~~;~;~

*PI\•mptnnd Quulily

PSI CONSTRUCTION

.I

you .... _ _them lho ·
,. lho. hand ol piOII-

thai could beconskMr·
Is ap1 to be In lho oiling.
h hu something to do with yOur tlnancill
slt._.tiOn and • way to greetty better lt.

1

740.992·6971

and-

able~

~.......::... !
~ · ~ ·~~ ~

David Lewis

Ia a good

~~t

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

29 Y•ars Exlll'rien&lt;-e

In lho ytor alload, -

LIKE A
chance lhaO you COUld - - a low
fVN NE16H· · - wi-lla •• unooopaciOd -

I I Ill"

''~;AIIl'iJ*Qt

PREVIOUS SOLUTilN: ' ... do mteltling. Pay your rent tor lhe
iving on lh1s tleautilul, biut-grMI. lvlng Earth.'- Dave Foreman

R..rror10a It""'' of lht
0 fovr
rocmblod wcna bo·

·TOOK. ,.. bit.v

Shipmetus urrh'~: ~\' try
i ' '

.Tuesday, March 31st, 2009

OJCIG JUSB

- - - - - - ........., CLIY I. PCUAN _:..._.:;
·---

II'
l,•rp, PU~ l'rufto11, tw.cb 00
$10 p&lt;t I~ Ct1&gt;h only
~nr i~ l'l.'l.luirt'\1 in tk.h'ar\l.'o:

. IVGB, " -

.'~!::' S©tl~lA -lt£~s~

~t.•IG,~.M_J'E
__

c.,.,,

comins

tv«&gt;-bbd. ~

lng a docont sl&gt;-&lt;:ar&lt;l su~ 11\&lt;1 6-1 ohilt&gt;
card ~nts. North was strong lor his
overcall. And Soultl was a lad waek lor
two no·tfump, which would usually
prcrnlse t0-12 pclnis But he did not tlkt
by Luis Campos
tho idea ol a lrid&lt;-one heart lead from
CtltQrffl CWIIt' cry~ s a1t Cl'lh:l trom ~llb:lm by ltmous people. PBSI and ~'ant
East. (North must play carel'ully to make
. Eacn 1nr 1r1 lilt c-Phel 9111'\ds i'Of n:tnlll'
two spades.)
Today'! ctut: F &amp;qu•s H
Allor taking ltla first trido, declarer cash·
" JDZ RP IIFUH ZFRHVP JWWUJD
OS tis Sfl'lda ac.. Now Is your big
mcrnant - you must'drop your king! If'
you play low, Soulh wiiiiMO his second 0 C I H K.U K. "- . L J I DR E U K U H R P " L B · UB UP
spade and ·collect at 1tast leur 5Pid"- ·
one heart, two d1arnollde ind two clubs. IIUDU LJKU ZC UDJPU JGG ZFJZ RP
'1\lu molst assumt that East has lour
spades to lha 10 and bolh · mtnor-su~t

OOT OOLYI~ GUJ€. ~ 1'1 Lt.
~lUCK Oil A511JGI.t MO/.I ...

�--- ·-··-

Psar 86 • ~Daily Seutiuel

www~tinel.com

-·.'
-..;:..
•

.Zips' mettle io be t~ed by. Gonuiga
.

· PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) who will start his 106tb up.H
· -They haven't been to the game fOf Akron Thursday,
Adversity may be coming
NCAA tournament in 23 played against McKnildlt at Thursday.
years. They are oa.med litter Gahanna Lincoln High
Goozaia and went ~~~~diezipper ga)osbes. Their mas- School.
feated ihrougb the West
cot is "Zippy" the kangaroo,
"I didn't know that!" he Coast Conference regular
fur goodness sakes.
said to McKnight about tile · seasoo and tournament. The
Yet there is nothing shy or prison ball. jabbing at .his Zags have woo 18 of 19
warm Of cUddly about these teammate in the Zips' locker games - the Qllly I05S tp
Akron Zips. High-flying, room Wednesday. "That Mempbis, a No.2 seed in the
heavily •favored Gonzaga explains wbere the elbows tournament. They qwetly
only wishes there was.
came from in our games:'
believe .this is tbe most tal"1 don't think I've ever, in
In-your-face Akron is 19th ented of their II consecutive ·
. 20 years of watching game in the nation in scoring NCAA tournament teams.
tape, seen a team that plays defense, yielding less than . ljley have scori~ throats
that bard," said coach Mark. 60 points per game. Coach ms1de and out. Leadiitg ~­
Few, whose fourth-seeded Keith Dambrot said that er Josh Heytvelt (14.9 pomts
Bulldogs (26-5) meet No. 13 rugged play must intensify to per game) is listed as a 6seed Akron (23-12), the stay w1th Gonzaga ~ which foot-11 center, but hits 42
rusged champion of the hl\S top{!Cd 8t;l points 22 percent of hi~ 3-point shots
APpholo Mtd-American Conference times this season and Wl!S and 57 f!Crtent overall.
· ranked lOth in the finllt Second-leading scorer Matt
Defending lditarod champion and current leader Lance Mackey, right, drives his team into tournament;. 011 ThursdaY m
Associated Press poll. .
Bouldin makes almost SO
the White Mountain, Alaska checkpoint on the lditarod Trial Sl.e d Dog Race on Tue~y.
. ~~ ofthe NCAA
"We're going to play hlml percent of his 3-j!Ointers; 53
There are l!OOd reasoos for ... but we have to d6fead lite Jjercent ov~. 1\vQ other
that blue-collar wOfk: ethic. we've never defended," Said · :tiuiiOOgs average in !lou~
Two of Akron's three lead- Dambrot, whO took' over the figures': S~homore AustiD
. NOME. Alaska (AP) - old feniale who was in the YUkon Quest lnternationllt ing SCOfers, brothers Brett Zips in 2004. "We'just have Daye · (12. · points) and
Make it three lditarods in a leadformuchofthelastpart .Sled Dog Race; considered and Chris McKnight, grew to scrap."
.
· ·
sometimes· ·flashy, somerow for Lance Mackey.
of the race.
. to a tougher race than the
Beyond prison yards, times reckless point guard
up playing against prison Akron's scrap can also be Jeremy Pargo (10.1 points).
- The
musher
from
Mackey was about six Alaska eomptition.
in Lancaster, Ohio, traced to its rust-belt roots.
"I think we do bave the tiltinmates
Mackey dido 't run the
Fairbanks. won the 1.100" hours ahead of the secondThe unemployment rate in ent and the team to be able to
Dlile trek across the wilder- and third-place mushers: Yukon Quest · this year, south of Columbus. .
Casullt pick-up g~s?
Akron's Summit County, get to a Final Four;" Heytvelt
ness Wednesday in the Sebastian Schnuelle ol cboosmg mstead to tram an
"0~, ~~ at aiL It's 50000 home of shuttered factories, said. _"I don't . think ~re's
world's most famous sled Canada and John Baker of Alaska Native musher for
physu~al,
sru_d
Chriards ,was 9.3 percent in_Janual)'. It anythmg stoppmg us bes1des
~~ race.And it wasn't even Kotzebue. He increased his the lditaJo&lt;l.
McK.ru~t,
a
seruor
forw
was 10 2 percent .in netgb- us in getting there."
.
bloiie.
lead along the wind-swept . Sixty-seven teams began
Next to the. rugged Ztps,
Mackey slapped hands western coast of Alaska.
the race more tban a week averagmg 9.2 eomts per . boring Portage Colinty.
"I think it plays a major . the f~ewheehng Bulldogs
with fans along Nome's Fierce, biting winds blew ago in. Willow, about 50 game - 2.2 pomts below
Front Street and was in off the Bering Sea, fore- miles north of Anchorage. sophomore Brett, the team role. Most of our team are look: like sleek: greyhounds.
D\obbed by family members ing temperatures to 50 Ten teams have · e1ther leader. "Those games ~e Ohio kids, and a couple of That's why Linhart said be
ifter crossing under . the below zero. Many mushers scratched . or been with- me ba~k to the g~s we ~ kids from the Pittsburgh could use advice from Akm!l
play w!!h my dad m the dri- area. So· they've gone native LeBron James, a
City's famed burled arch at waited out the storm in drawn.
vew~Y·.
.
. . through th~ same things with ,b~ddy who plays sum11_1er
H:38 a.m., hours ahead of checkpoints faJ1her back. ·· Three dogs bave died in
·
?h1lhp
McK.mg~~
IS
a the steel mdustry and the p1ckup games wtth the Zips
his nearest competitors.
Mackey became the third this year's race. The dogs
·lmmediatley after win- musher in the race'~ 37-year . were on the team ~f rookie pnson guard supervtsmg 150 automobile industry," said on campus and played for
ning, he gave treats to his history to win in three con- Lou Packer of Wastlla, who mmates_ at the ~outhe~ Dambrot, who went to Dambrot at the city's St.
dogs.
secutive years. . joining scratched afteF he was found Com:cllOnal Institute m Akron's Firestone Hi~h Vincent-St. Mary High
School. and graduated m School from 1999-2001.
. "This never gets old," he Susan Butcher ( 1986-88) Monday 22 miles past the Lancaster.
"There,
are
no
fouls.
You
1982 from the University of
James bought the Zips cussaid at the finish line, hug- and Doug Swingley (1999· lditarod checkpomt by
get
knocked
down,
you
betAkron,
where
he
was
four·
tom
blue, gold and . white
ging two of his dogs. .
0 I).
searchers in a plane. He told
"It's pretty awew,!"e," he
In Mackey's two previous the Anchorage Daily News ter ~et .!N'ck. up ·. and . keep year baseball player. "The game shoe~ for. this season,
economy in Oh1o is not very complete w1th a sketch of the
added. Pretty cool.
. victories, he headed into the be believes the. tw&lt;! dogs playmg, Chris satd.
And
forget,
pouting
o~er
good. l .think we have scrap- ~city skyline and a sign
He commended his "little lditarod about two weeks froze to death m the h1gh
the lack of a call whtle py kid, guys that want to of_. H1ckory .Street - on
superstar Maple," a 3-year- after winning the 1,000-rnile winds.
splayed on the court.
.
show they can play. .. .
which
the . Cleveland
The referees? Other pns; · "We're scrapp~, thc:te's QO . Cav!IJ.iers superstar ~w up.
.oners.
· c:loubt aboufif •.(\~ I d91l't James.~as had 34 po!nts and
"It's really physical," . know if it's lhe ino8t-talented 14 ass1sts plu~ 37 .pomts and
McKnight said. "That's the team we've ever had, but it's· 14 rebounds m hts last two
way me and my brother grew the team that's played the games in Portland. ·
up playing, the way our high hardest ... and it's the team
"Yeah," Linhart said,
· school coaches taught tis, the that probably ·bas the highest laughing. "Maybe we can
way this team pla~s ." . ·
character of any ~earn we:ve hav_e coa~h speak to ~Bron
Senior Nate Lmhart, the had. When you btl advers1ty, lomght to ~1ve us pomters
Zips' second-leading scorer l think that character shows for out here. '

Mac~ey's wins 3rd ~onsecutive lditarod

I

Bridge of Honor
edition inside
today's Sentinel

::
..
•

.• •.•.
•

2009Spring
Improvement Planner
inside today's Sentinel

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
-,,\I '- ' " • I ni. ~'&gt;. '\ .,, ,-,,

I RID\\ . \1 \l{l'll ~ ll . .!oo q

""''

..

SPORTS
.. Lady Oaks advance
to state fllaL See Pace Bl

Identification
and
Investigation joined Meigs
· . Prosecuting ·
County
POMEROY- Charges of Attorney . Colleen
S. .
rec.eiving: stolen {lroperty Witliams and Meigs County
and tampering w1th evi- Sheriff Robert Beegle in
dence have been filed in the making the announcement
Mei~s C~ty C~ in oon- late Thursday afternoon.
. nection wtth the mveshga- . James Lee Games, 39, of
tion into the murder of Pomeroy is charged with
Doris Jackson in late one count of receiving
February.
stolen property. a fourthOhio Attorney General degree felony, relating ~o
Richard Cordray and the the 1989 Mercury MarqUis
Ohio Bureau ·of Criminal owned by Doris Jackson.

Garnes is also charged with felony charge relates to the
one count of tampering with 1989 Mercury Marquis
evidence. a third-degree owned by Doris Jackson .
felony. · Games was taken . Williams is also char&amp;ed
into custod;t by Sheriff with ooe count of tumpenng
Beegle's ofhce Thursday with · evidenl·e. a third·
afternoon.
degree felony.
·
Charles S. Williams. ·39.
Doris Jackson. 83. was
who is being held at the found dead in her Tuppers
North Centml Regional Jail Plains home on Feb. 26. Her
in Greenwood, W.Va., on an vehicle was recovered on
unrelated charge. was Feb. 28 in Athens. A~ents
charged Thursday with one from BCI&amp;i's Major Cnmes
count of receiving stolen Section were joined by
property. This fourth-degree deputies from the Meigs

AP~m

Bv B.ETH SEt:~QENT

OBOUARIES
.-

·PageA3

•.

: • Hazel Barnhouse, 57
.

'

INSIDE

·~ New salon.
·See Page A2

• Family Medicine.
See Page A2
• Tuming away
.viol,eoce isn't easy.

·Hammel making bid to be Rays' 5th. starter
.

PORT CHARLOlTE, Fla. to rush his development. , ·
(AP) - Jason Hammel is
Hammel or Niemann likemaking strides toward earn- ly will be in the rotation.
· ing a spot in Tampa Bay's with the other beginning the
rotation, and injured out- season as a long reliever.
"His mound composure
fielders BJ . Upton and Matt
Joyce are closer to getting has been good. He's really
back on the field for the held together well in diffiRays.
cult moments," Maddon said
Hammel settled down of Hammel. "I think he's
after a shaky start to pitch ·drawn on some of his expetbur innings in Wednesday's riences from last year."
7-3 victory over the. Upton, recovering from
Cincinnati Reds. Upto.n an~ offseason surgery on his left
Joyce saw limited action in a (non-throwing) shoulder,
Class-A game.
played three innings on
Hammel. competing with defense but did not bat.
Jeff Niemann and .David · Maddon said the 24-yearPrice for the No .. 5 spot in old center . fielder. who hit
the rotation. allowed three seven homers to tie an AL
runs and five hits, including record for one postseason.
Edwin Encarnacion's sec· will bat and play in the field
ond-inning homer. and sacri- during another minor league
lice flies to Joey Votto and game Thursday.
Ryan Hanigan .
There's no timetable for
"I liked how he came back him to play in a major
the last two innings," Rays league exhibition.
"He came through it well ,
manager Joe Maddon said.
· "tie went from 50 pitches felt good, no problems," the
for the first two to 19 over manager said. "He had to
tlie last two innings. I liked make one play, but he felt
tiie way he settled in and good."
Joyce. sidelined most of
pitched well after that."
Hammel began last season spring training by . right leg
as the fifth starter, primarily tendinitis. went 1-for-2 with
because Ali·Star Scott a walk and played three_
K.azmir was on the disabled innings in the field.
.
"It felt really goOd," said
list. The right-hander shifted
to the bullpen and made 35 Joyce. obtained this winter
relief appearances after . in a trade that sent right-hanK.azinir returned.
der Edwin Jackson to the
Right-hander Mitch Talbot Detroit Tigers.
was optioned to Triple-A
"Just getting your legs
Durham this week and Price. back into it. That's the
who made his major league biggest thing, running on
debut in September and was and off the field," Joyce
a contributor in the postsea- said. "You'll be surprised at
son
a reliever, likely will how quick it fades. How
start the season in Durham your body has to adjust.
because the Rays don't want (Upton) said the . same

as'

thing."
Right·hander
Edinson
Volquez pitched three
shutout innings for the Reds,
but allowed six hits and had .
to work out of situations
with runners in scoring position in every inning. He also
walked two and struck out
two in his second outing
since returning from the
World Baseball Classic.
"He
was
good,"
Cincinnati . manager Dusty
Baker said. · '
·
"His control wasn't as
good as it was last time . But
this guy has a knack for
pitching himself out of trouble. That's what he did
today. He threw a lot of
pitches in a short period of
time. He's still got to minimize his pitches, but he got
out of trouble."
The Reds aflowed seven
runs in the fifth inning, five
of them unearned . Left-han·
der Bill Bray gave up ari
RBI single to Pat Burrell and
a two-run single to Dioner
Navarro. Reid Brignac hit a
three-run homer off righthander Carlos Fisher. .
"That's a couple of games
in a row for a big inning,"
Baker said. "If we make a
defensive play or two, we
won't have that innin~. You
can't give away outs.'
. Pl~tES

4, TwiNS 3,

,. 1QINNINGS .

At
Bradenton.
Fla.;
Francisco Liriano walked
four in four innings and
allowed two runs. one
earned. Matt Tolbert and
Detmon Young homered off
Pirates starter Zach Duke. '

'

•

'~

County Sheriff's Offici' '.m
executing multiple seatc:ta
warrants Thursdlly. The:
investigation into tbe murder
of. Doris Jackson is ongoing.
BCI&amp;I has been asked to
serve as the lead investigating agency in this case by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
OITice. Anyone with any
infonnation related to the
murder of Doris Jackson is ·
asked ' to •onta..:t the Meigs
County Sh~rill"s otlke at
(740) 992-337 1'

BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

.

'

AMP reacts
to latest
permit
approval

Cllllrtene Hoetllchl))hoto

Members of the Meigs County Tuberculosis Board ara from the left. seated. Edna Wood, secretary; Shawn Arnott, vice
president, Kelley Grueser, president. and members. Roselyn Stewart, and standing. left to right, Margie Blake, Leanne
Cunningham, Duane Weber, Jane WaltOn, Julie Randolph, Kathy Cumings, Jim Lawrence, April Burke and Margie Lawson .

Tampa Bay Rays first baseman Carlos Pena, left, puts a late tag on the back of Cincinnati
f:leds Willy Tavaras on a pick-off attempt in the second inning of a spring training baseball
game in Port Charlotte, Fla., on Wednesday.

. ,

- ~A6

• Blowders in concert
· -.at a~ church Sunday.
'See .Pilge A7 .

WEATIIER

·Meigs ·lAtDilty Tuberculosis
f;linie reports on ·2 008 aedvity
Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH

any known risks or 5 mm with
known risk .
She said the risks include a low
POMEROY - Over the past year immune system, chronic illness. time
there was one active.case oftuberculo- spent in a correctional facility. hqmesis, according to Nancy Broderick. R. less shelters or traveling outside the
N., clinic director.
·
United States to a country with a high
·The report noted that the person rate of tuberculosis:
'
A positive skin test generally means
with active tuberculosis was provided
necessary treatment. Eight others who an exposure to the tuberculosis germ
had positive slqn tests were given the without having active tuberculosis disnecessary preventive treatment, ease, explained Broderick, noting that
according to the report.
a positive skin test is followed up by a
Broderick explained that a skin test chest x-ray or a repeat skin test if it is
is considered positive when the · questionable. Medications are usual~y
enduration . (thi~kening of the skin) prescribed for nine months for latent
measures 10 mm or greater without (tuberculosis infection) and twelve
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

months for an active case. A person
with a low immune system can have a
negative skin test but can have active
tuberculosis, according to the nurse.
Other illnesses such as cancer,
uncontrolled diabetes . or MV can
iower immunity allowing the tubercu·
losis germ to become active tuberculosis disease. Broderick listed signs and
symptoms of. tuben;ulosis - weight
loss. night sweats. loss of appetite',
fever. chills. shortness.of breath. productive wugh with bloi1dy sputum.
As with any medication there are side
ell'ects. These should be reported to a
privtite physician or the tuberculosis

Please see Clinic, A]

COLUMBUS
According to officials at
Munil'ipai
American
Power-Ohio. its proposed
"state-of-the-art"
power
plant in. Letart Falls took
anotlier step forward with
.this week's issuance of a
final solid waste pennit-toinstall (PTI) fi'Qm the Ohio
Environmental Protection
·
· ·
Agency.
The agency issued the PTI
for the landfill, which will
receive combustion .waste
from
tbe
American
Munil'ipul Power Generating
Station (AMPGS) proposed
for Letart Falls. AMPGS will
supply ~wer to 81 munici·
pal elcctnc systems m four
states, who are partners in the
project.
In a statement. AMPOhio officials said "the
AMPGS project will use
leading edge technology to
control emissions. making
it the cleanest facility of its
type in the region and one·
of the cleanest in · the
nation. That same technology ·wi ll significantly
reduce the amount of waste
from the facility - positively impacting the landJill operations."
Pluse see AMP, AJ

Commissioners
open, approve
bids for projects
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Man rescues
best frie':lfl

Ask Us About Our
... ..

\:

"f

l '

\

, I .

Brush fires continue

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYilAILYSENTINEl.COM

1 •5.99 .. .
1n&amp;"x4'xr

PT
Dash&amp;

4" x4'"x 8'
.8 8.1&amp;88

'

'

'I

I

' '
;

'
'

'

._

•

'

25 Supreme OC
$58.00 a square
30 Oakridge
Dimensional OC
$68.00 a square

1:111111 &amp; t:any lln,.l

DaM
3"x5"X8'

PT

$3.25 ea

POMEROY - Dog is
often referred to as man's
best friend though yesterday
'
man rescued that best friend
from a steep cliffside behind
Fruth Pharmacy on West
Main
Street.
• : 8 SEC'IlONS - 16 PAGES
The call 'came into the
Pomeroy
Police Department
i\nnie's Mailbox . · A2
around 3:30 a.m. yesterday
Qalendars
A2 that a dog, a tWo-year old
Classifieds ·
Bs-6 rottweiler named Buster,
had broken from his chain
~omics
87 and fell about 40 feet down
becoming trapped
Editorials
A4 ' aonhillside,
a cliff which was not easJto.itb • Values
As-7 ily accessible. According to
the police department .
NASCAR
88 Patrolman
Jon K.ulcher
Obituaries
A3 could get within 20 feet of
'•
' the dog but the cliff was too
B Section steep for a simple rescue.
~orts
AS The decision was then
Weather
' made to then call the
Pomeroy Fire Department
which according to the
police department contacted
.a High Angle Rescue Team
Delalla on Page A8

INDEX
.

', .

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.

PIHH 1H I~FU' Al

,.

POMEROY Meigs
County
Commissioners
opened bids for two projects
funded . . through
the
Community Development
Block Grant fonnula program at Thursday's regular
meeting.
· Brush fire season CQn·
Eagle Electrical Services
tinues to burn in Meigs
of Plain City was the apparCounty. Pictured are
ent low bidder for electrical
firelighters trying to
upgrades to be completed at
extinguish a brush fire
the
Portland Community
off of Blake Hill Roa:d
Center. with a bid of
near US 33 on
$6.500.
· A second bid of
Wednesday. Although
$8
.850
was subm.itted by
the highway was not
KAL
Electric.
Athens .
closed, at least one
Oil's Fire and Safety
lane was blocked to
Equipment
was the apparent
light the fire which had ·
low bidder for turnout and '
made it nearly to the
safety
gear for members of.
road. The Pomeroy and
·
the
Scipio ' Township
Middleport Fire
Volunteer
Fire Department. ·
Departments were on
The bid for coats, boots,
the call as was
hoods und gloves was
Syracuse's Squad 33.
Open burning is prohib- $15,340. All-American Fire
Equipment was the otfier
ited in incorporated vilbidder · on that purchase.
lages and from 6 a.m.
with a proposal of $16.210 .
to 6 p.m . In unincorpo. The bids will be reviewed
rated areas March·May, by Grants Administrator
October-November.
Jean Trussell, the• Portland
Staff pholo
Community Center' board
and the fire department.
Commissioners received no
bids for purchase of a new

Plaasellt Comml5slon, A3
••

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