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.
. . . B6 • ~ lArily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VConn Huskies fend off Missouri, 82-75 . Cavs 'Yin 12th ~ght
•

VluAHovA 78, PITT 76
BOSTON (AP) - S.:ottie
Reynolds made a half-court
dash for the game-winning
"tbe wait goes on for sbot with 0.5 ~onds left.
l'&amp;s.souri.
leading Villanova over
freshman Kemba Wal.k.~r Pittsburgh and ba~o·k. to the
scored 23 points as the top- Final Four for the first time
seeded Huskies held off sinc-e its shock.ing run to the
Missouri 82-75 on Saturday l9t!5 l'hampionship. ·
19 earn a trip to Detroit and
Dwayne Anderson scored
extend the Big East's domi- l7 for the third-seeded
nance of the NCAA tourna- Wildcats. who· responded to
ment.
Pittsburgh 's physical play by
lJConn. (31--l) wott th&lt;' sinking 22 of 23 f~ throws
W~st Regional and will play in the East Re11ional tina!. ·
tbe
Louisville-Mi•·higan
Villanova (:10- 7) won the
State wirnter.
matchup of Big East rivals and
- The- Huskies blew an early advanced to ptar the winner of
ll -{'Oint lead but survived the South Regional champiagamst the frenetic third.- . unship
between
North
Seeded Tigers. who wer.- Carolina and Oklahoma. The
di:Jtied their first Final Four Wildcats are tlie lowesttienh.
remaining so:ed in the NCAA
AP phalo
i.JConn clinched the victo- toumamenl. though not 4uite Villanova guard Scottie Reynolds (•1) goes up for the win"'
·
h' s o 1
·lb ert Brown ·1n the see·• by goin&lt;&gt;,. 10-for-10 from '"~ big an underdo!!- as the ning basket against p 1ttsburg
the-line in the ftnall :02 . Th"' eighth' seeded ' 85 ,team - and half during a men's NCAA tournament regional cham}lllskies are still in the httnt thoo;e 'Otts upset Georgetown pionship cOllege basketball game in . B.oston on Saturday.
fbi their third . national titl~ 'uKi became the lowest so:ed
-:the tirst two went through ~ver to win it all.
nation':; bo:st player. North. the Final Four. '
regiooals in Phoenix iti !9\N
The first two teams to reach Carolina brushed him aside
r~·trare
fro m with a totalteanl effort.
MICHIGAN STATE 64,
this- year ·s F'-..
and 2004
_ .
11uu' "
"
·. When it ended. UConn the Big East. Earlier.
Ty Lawson s•·on:d 19
LOUISVILLE 52
cpacb Jim Calhow1 made Wl Connecticut won the West. On points and Danny Green
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) e!Uiggerated list pump tuld Sunday. Louisville will try to added 18 to lead the to~­
t~ Huskies mobbed each make tt three from the confer. seeded Tm· Heels to a 7-- Michigan State is man:hin·g
Qther ut l-enter wurt. AJ. ence when 1't piays M.tchi gan 60 win over Griffin and ou to Motown.
The
Sparians
gave
the
Pril-e added 18 points for the State in the Midwest.
Oklahoma on Sunday in
. Huskies.
Sam Young S(.'Ored 2t\ and the South Regional finaL
Final Four a hometown feel.
• Leo Lyons and Matt DeJuan Blair bad 20 points
North Carulina (32-4) stoppino overall No. 1 seed
Lawrence each had · 13 and 10 rebounds !'or advanced to the Fin'tl Four louisville 64-52 Sunday to
~ts fOC' Missouri (3 i-7). Pittsburgh (31-5). the fm:t No. fort he ~ecoml straight year win the Midwest RegionaL
Goran Sutori had 19
\!liich overcame an early 13- 1 seed to lose.
. and will play Villanova in
points and 10· rebounds as
J; deficit but couldn't match
Pitt's LevaJl(.-e Fields hit two the national semifinals.
Griffin .scored 23 poiht&gt; th.e second-seetled Spartans
tlte muscular Huskies on the tbul shots with 5.5 seconds
~s. UConn outreboltnd- ldt. tying it at 76. Villanova with 16 rebounds for (30-6) reached their fifth
eo Mizzou 47-32.
then threw an inbowld.s pa«S to Oklahoma. but the Sooners Final Four in ll years a (30-6) went 2-for- 19 from the most trips of any team
. Dogged by reports alleg- nu·"'-..
"""""'-'· andRey"okls-"'·
"
&lt;UVII.
in the nation during thltt
• they violate·' NCAA ""'""
""~- ~ and drove to '"" 3-point range.
ln•" that
""'
u
h
li
....
A
sh
rt
flMt
North
Carolina
advanced
span.
· t'es oop. e """a · o ~ er
,..
recnu.tt.ng n•le•. the Husk
,_ to• keep their fro
""''"" to a record 18th Final rour.· Only '10 miks from their
....... vowed
· m •'-·
'"'' Iane 1·or the go-"'"'""
F
basket.
UCLA has been to 18. but •·ampus. the Spartans will
•QCUS on the task of earning
The. clock ticked down to the Bruins' !980 appear- play
Connecti\'ut
on
zero. but a halt~secood was anc:e was later vacated by Saturday at Ford Field in
. i ·frip to Detroit.
· The first meeting between restored . Fields lofted a des.- the NCAA be.:ause of rul.:s Detroit. A rel'ord crowd of
lite schools featured · a clash pemtion try from three-quar- violations.
72 JlOO •. the largest ever for
tlf styles. The Tigers. who ters coun mtd it was dose.
This will be the Tar wlh:ge basketball\ signalnid scored 102 points on with the ball blwging oft· the Heels· ninth Final Four in ture event. is expected for
Memphis on Thursday backboard a'lime &lt;!'xpired.
19 seasons - and it will each gtune .
lii&amp;ht. wanted to run. The
be played at Detroit's Ford
The Spamins made it 30
Huskies tried to force a half- UNC 72, OKLAHOMA 60 Field. where they routed years after Mugic Johnson
court game and tak.e advanMichigan State 98-63 in led them to a nutiomtl title
lfge of their superior sile
MEM\&gt;HIS. Tenn. (AP) - Decen1ber. Earlier Sunday. over Larry Bird and lnditma
and strength.
Blak.e Griffin might be the the Spartans also reached State..
(lLENDALE. Aril. (AP)

Connecti~ut is nta!Ung
~r tnp t'rom the desert
~ lhe Ftnal Four.

-

I

.

ClEVElAND (APl Tbe Mavericks couldn't
The Cleveland Cavaliers get anything going aglliflst
turneti ()() and didn't mind Cleveland's
suffocatlng
one bit.
defense. and when Ja,mes
LeBron James scored 24 pull~ up and knocked down
points with 12 assists and. a 3-pointer. the Cavs were
orchestrated Cleveland's on their way to win No. 12
sbow on and off the tloo~ as in a row.
the Cavs made more history
On Cleveland's next trip.
with a 102-74 win over the Willlams pulled up for a 3Dallas
Mavericks
on pointer that missed. But
Sunday. extending their before the shot bounced otl
winning streak to a fran.;;hise th.e rim. a retreating James
·
ran over referee Derek
record 12 straight.
The Cavs, who earlier this Richardson near midcourt.
week. surpassed the dub· James crashed hard to the
mark for wins in a season. t1oor and laid there for sevtrailed 35-20 in the t1rst er.U moments as Cleveland
quarter and 49-47 at half- fans quieted and his tearnttme .
But
Cleveland mates gatllered around.
outscored Dallas 30-11 in
But be popped to his teet.
the third quarter and 55-25 and it wasn't1ong before he
in the second half to was danciag on Cleveland\
improve to a league-best 35- sideline during a timeout
1 at home .
and mugging for the ·camera
Cleveland is the 6lst team as the Cavs' reserves tinto win 60 games in the regu- ished off the Maveric·k.s.
lar season.
who came· ioto the game
Dirk · Nowitzki scored 20 holding down the No. S spot
for the Mavericks.
in the cluttered Western
The 28-point win wa~ the Conference standings.
largest in Cleveland's 56
Following player introgames
against
the ductions. James and his
Mavericks.
teammates held a mock.
Mo Williams added · 22 baseball
~ame
with
and Joe Smith had his best Willi:uns hittmg an unagtgame since returning to the nary home run. With James
Cuvs·. The vetetan forward as their ringleader. the Cavs .
had 12 point~. 13 rebounds now 20-2 sinct: the Ali-Stw:
and was Cleveland's only break, recently began slagconsistent ph.tjler in tht' tirst ing pregume productions
before tipoff,
half.
It's all in good fun.and no
· Jason Kidd. who missed
Dallas' previous game with team is having more fun
a sore back. had nme points. than the Cavs right now.
eight as~ists and seven
James didn't !!et his ftrst
rebounds.
field !!&lt;&gt;al untiC there was
The Cavaliers. who trailed just 4':45 left before half·
b~ 15 in tht: second quarter, time. but it was W()rtb the
dtdn 't need long to tum wait.
things around and run their . Driving the right baseline.
rec~,&gt;rd to 25-4 against he crushed a two-handed
Western Conference teams. dunk as Nowitzki watched
James ted center Zydrunas hdples.sly. The bucket
llgauskas for three straight capped a 17-4 spurt by
jumpers as Cleve lund Cleveland. slicing Dallas·
outscored Dallas 10-1 in the 15-point lead to 39-37.
opening minutes of the third Williams. who mtssed hts
quarter. James then· scored first seven shots. finally got
on a layu{&gt; and made two a few to fall and the Cavs
straight Jumpers before ·were somehow within 49-47
threading a pass to Anderson at halftime despite Jan1es
Varejao. whose dunk gave and Willianis each shooting
3-of-ll.
Cleveland a 68-52 lead.

Spt ing Sports Guide
inside today's Sentinel

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action. See . . Bl

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:Page AS
•Lilah 'Sweets' Zerkle, 87

INSIDE
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• 18 HP' - 25 KF'" Kohl oro Couroa••
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INDEX
. a S~l"I'IONS- 18 PA!lllS

I

-ALLPOWER EQUIPMENT
FAMILY OWNED SINCE 1996

1830 OLD LOGAN RD SE
Rl33 JUST SOU TH OF LAN CASTER
LANCASTER. OH 43130 • [740 ) 653-2827
STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FR IDAY 9:00 -6:00, SATURDAY 9:00-5 00

8880 UNITED LAN E
ONE MILE WEST OF ATHENS ON RT 50/J Z • (740l 593-3279
STORE HOURS MON DAY~ F R IO AY 900-600, SATURDAY 9:00-5:00
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Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Obituaries
As
Sports
BSection
Weather
As

I

__ _

~··,

BY 8RitJt J. REm

....

I\':

\' \1'-t i I il

sioos, :voters cao now ~tote
any lime before election day.
Ballots can be requested
POMEROY ...: ·Voters in through tilt! Board or
Pomeroy can begin early .EiediQos oft'il;e. or in pervn&amp;ia1&gt; Tuesday for the May . soo during regular business
5--.:;:
primaries.
boors.
~illage will have the Thete will be oo primary
only May ~ectioo in ~ in Middleport, because
~~.Tb9e~~oc~­ ro~~J~Cil members lhere have
da.tes for Pomeroy V'"illage decided 5o fue as indepenCouncil. Repubtican George dents, elil!lina.ting the need ·
Stewart and · Democrat for a ~ primary there
Victor C. Young W,and ~o and the costs.. associated
ballot issues to be decided. wilb such an election.
The election is May 5, but
1Wo ~y council candue 10 early votiag provi- didates. Republican George

MEEOeiiVOAILYSeNTlNet.COU

_2(1.11.)

\\\\ \\

\IHI.III"HIIll

II

'

Stewart and Democrat Vk'tor
Young lll, .filed before the
February dea,d.fute. but will
advance to the fall election
autornalically along with any
independent· candidates wbo
tile in the meantime.
Voters in Pomeroy also
will da:-ide the !'ate of a proposed
quttrter-percent
tncrease io the· viUage
inco.me. tax and a proposal
for participation in a naturdl
gas aggre~ation progr..un.
Stewart s term and those
of Mary ., McAngus. Pete .
Barnhart and Jim Sisson are

up for eleclioo. Stewart and
Young will advance automatically to the November
general election ballot after
the primary. Independent
candidates have until May 4
to file their petitions in
order to appear on · the
November ballot.
The fall ballot will also
include c·ouncil seats in
Racine .
Rutland
and
Syml·use . Beuuse ·of their
populatwns. those · villages
do not conduct partisan primaries. There are four council seats open in Racine and

•

Syracuse .
respectiv:!k
Rutland's c'Ouncil is m
up of only three seated
members. with three present
·vacancies.
Racine voters will also
e l.:ct a member of the .BQ8ld
of Pi•blic Affairs and
Syramse voters two BPA
members.
Two township trustees
will be elected in each of the
. ~:ounty 's townships. but not
until the November general
election . School board
members will also be el~t­
cd in the fait.

Reward
offered
in Racine
arson
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTiil/ MVOAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - A reward of
up to $5.000 is being otlered
by the Division of State Fire
Marshal for information
leading to· the identiftcatipn
of the person or persons
responsible for last week. 's
tire at 309 Fifth Street which
was lat.:r determined to be .a
case of arson.
. Actordiog .
Shane
Cartmill. spokesperson for
the Division of State Fire
Marshul. a Blue Ribbon
Arson Reward sign has
been posted at the propeny
of last week. 's tire. home of
Fred and Regina Wolfe.
"We have had success
with the Blue Ribbon Arson .
Reward in the past."
Clllrltne Hoeftlch/PIIOIOtl Canmill said. "State Fire
Free faSiing lipid profile and blood giucosa tests were offered by the Holzer Medical Center's Community Health and Marshal investigators have
.
.
Wellness Program by Bonnie McFarland, director, and her staff.
found that · the llerson
responsible for a ftre .often
will talk or brag to someone
about the crime. When that
happens. we need to know.
Bv CHAIUNE HolFUCH
We encourage citizens to
HOEFI.tCHOicl'tOAIIYSENTINELCOM
call with any tip or information. no matter how small or
. POMEROY - The IUIIIU·
insignifioant it may seem. lt
Ill free health fair 111 the
· mleht be exactlv what
Meigs Community Center
investigators are seeking." .
always atlntets a crowd of
According to its website.
helllth-conscious · residents,
in !973. the Ohio FAIR
and this year's event hdd
Plan
Underwriting
Saturday was no ex~ption .
Association founded the
The
"Know I Your
PINse see Arson. AS
Numbers Health Fait" was
sponsored by the Meigs .
Cooperative Parish's Faith
Community Nurse Health
Ministry with Lenora
Leifheit, parish nurse. in
charge.
:.
. The free testing included
fasting lipid profile and
blood glucose testing •. nonfasting total cholesterol and
blood glucose. body mass
indell testing, 11nd blood
Bv BETH SERGENT .
pressure screening .
BSERGENTUMVOAilYSENTINELCOM
On hi.Uid to administer the
blood tests were nurses
GALLIPOLIS · - The
from the Hol:u:r Medical Eunice Jones learned her numbers when she was tested for. body mass index by Andy Gullin-Meigs Community
·
Center's Community Health Brumfield of the Meigs County Health Department.
Action Agencv will host a
and Wellne~s Program, and
conversation on poverty on
Leifheit. Blood pressures by Meigs County Health including the Fnmily Hettlth Meigs County Agricultuml Thursduy at the Galliu
Care. Meigs County Cun~-er Extension Service Family
were tak.en by a Pleusi.IIIt Depart111ent personnel.
Numerous other agencies lnithuive. Ohio Valley Home Nutrition Program. and the County Senior Center at
Valley Hospital staff memeducational Health,lnc .. FmtlilyOxygen Meigs Cooperati~e Purish • 1165 Ohio !60.
ber. and body mass. index distributing
The doors open at 6 p.m.
evaluations were conducted material and. informntion and Medical Equipment. God'' NET.
and
the meeting shoukl con~dudt• at uround g;30 p.m .
"W~ hope to see u good
cross-scc·tion of the populu· .
tion . cs1~dally those people
STAFF REPORT .
The removal of the scrap of the MCHD. clemt up of · by t?wnship . employees who r,•cl'iw our servi~o·es .so
MDSNewseMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM tires was fucilituted through the scrnp tu-es wus u v~ry were !rom stnHhtr nrens .
that their voi,·es can be
u clenn up project funded in difficult tmd costly process.
Illegal dump sites and heard:· Tom Reed. ex.ecutive
POMEROY - Recently. . part by the OEPA from Work cre~s contn1cted by numbers of tires removed
director of GMCAA said .
through the combined money generated throl!gh the scrup ttre ~tsposul luctl- we1e us follows : Pmtmson
The Ohio Associntion of
efforts of the Meigs County state wide retail tire sales ity. Libeny Ttre ot Grove Roud. 600~ Titus Roud.. 450:
Community
Action
Health Department. Ohio over the past several years. City. moved into the area on Durk Hollow Road 1.700: Agencies . nre hosting the
Environmental Protection The project targeted illegal Feb. 19 and began cleun up Old Dext~r Road. 2()0: l'OIWersntions 011 poverty on
Agency. township trustees scrap tire disposal sites . activities . which continued Dt·cter R1,ud. (l00 . Numbers bt•half of Gov. Ted
and the Gullia . Jackson, which consisted of I00 .up through March 2 · . Scrap of tires removed from town- Strkkland's Anti-Poverty .
Meigs. VInton Solid Waste to 2.000 !ires. !he project tires Wtlre . removed from ship rouds·und right of ways Tusk ForCl'. The primary
Management
District, also prov1ded t.or the d1s- muny loc~tt10ns whtch Wtlre wert' as follows : Sutton objt·ctivc is to ensure the
around 6,000 s~o·rup tires posal of scntp ttres denned made chfttcuh by very steep Township. 414: Sakm administration hns access to
were !t:moved from numer- up 11long townshtp und wQoded terrmn und wet Township. 754: Rutland a diverse set of perspectives.
condtttons. Ltk.ewtse. muny
ous locations ·in Meigs county ronds.
PIHSI see Poverty, AS
County.
·
· According to Keith tittle of the scrap tires deuned up
PIHse '" nres, AS

Agencies ~-onsor. ~ee health screenings

GMCAA
to host
conversation
on poverty.

Approximately 6,000 scrap tires collected, removed

.

\

I

OBITUARIES

trad1t1onal t;a'ctar stterirtl

SHR:l !NG .-.\1:

"

SPOitTS

iS ERIES

maneuver a~ility

in accident, As

Middleport • Pomeroy, OJyo

ZERO-TURN TRACTOR
• Ztro·turn

Three injured

-~

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r

•

�The Daily Sentinel

REGIONAL

Pagek!
Tuesday, Mardl3l. aoog

.The DcUiy Sentinel

HMC-Gallipolis completes
LAND 'IRANSFERS
emergency depa•·bnent renovation

POMEROY - Mei~s
Vester Walker. Jr.• Reva
C0011cy Recorder Kay Hill L. Walker. to Danny l.
reported the following Walker, Kayla Walk.er.
GAWPOUS
tl'lllloSfers
of real estate:
deed. Rutland.
Reoovlllioo and e.'q)Wisioo of
Arthut Strauss. deceased.
Joseph D. Zoot. Ester
the Emergeocy Oepar:tmmt
to David See. Cherie See. Zoot. Samuel D. Zook.
at Holz1:r Medical Ci:nll:r·
certifi~a~&amp;
of transfer, · Susie 2ook.. to Eric Manuel
Gallipolis is oow l'OOlplete.
V'tllage of Middlep00.
Priddy, deed. Rutland.
· Emergeocy Department ·
Charles
F.
Chancey,
Joseph D. Zoot. Ester
Unit Mana,..&lt;&gt;er LOO Saunders.
Kuah
Chanl.-ey.
1o
Palll
Zook..
Samuel D. Zook..
RN. MSN .FNP. said patients
Clay.
Dora
A.
Clay.
deed.
Susie
Zook., to Eric
will benefit from the many
Village ofSyr&lt;K-use.
Naz~th Priddy. deed.
upgrades. The capacity of the
Rooald
A.
Spaun.
Jennifer
Rutllll\d.
unit has been increased from
L.. SP&amp;ua. R&amp;J Food Shop,
Jim K. Nelson. 00:\:a.sed.
nine beds to 14 beds to meet
to 'farmers Banl and Jimmy K. Nelson. to Doona
the growing. demand for
Savings Co:. sberiff's deed. J. Nelson. deed. Ora.oge.
emergency services in the
Sc-ipio.
Edward Hennan lyoch.
local area. Annually, abOut
Mary &amp;wen. deceased. Jr.. to Diane Lynch; certifi25.000 patients !e\.-eive lfe&lt;ollto
Robert E. Bowen. affi- 'cate of ttanster. Village ol .
ment in the HMC-Gallipolis
davit.
Salisbwy.
Pomeroy. .
Emergency Department.
Naocy
E.
SummH
to
Reba
Roush. . Reba
New endosed rooms
Dennis Eichinger. Gail Greene. to Earnest A.
· afford patients more privacy
Eichinger.
deed. Olive. ·
Greene. deed. letart.
and solitude . Each room is
Joseph
N.
Ryan.
hggy
J.
Paul M. Kallff, Debbie S.
equipped with a television
Ryan.
to
Kenneth
R.
Davis.
Ka.uff,
to David T. Barnes.
and upgraded technology
Alice
Davis.
deed, deed, Village of Rutland. .
used to monitor patient vita!
Columbia.
ROOelt A. ~. llffidllvit
signs illld cardiac ac~ivity .
Mary
J.
Murray
to
conecling
survey des.ciipThe new momtonng sys'
. •
Sa '"'lllld ptDhl Mkhael L. Stod:ey. deed. tioo, Orange.
tern. a;;cording to Saunders. Renovatiol'i and expansion of the Emergency Department ~t Helzer Medical CentetCharles Hobart Fitch to
will allow emergency staff to Gallipolis is now complete. Th.e expansion included increasing the unit's capaeily from nine Chester.
.
Ellis
McMillan,
deceased.
Jason
Keith Fitch. Nicholas
be more proacll ve in identi·
beds
to
14.
Shown
here
are
the
new
enclosed
rooms
which
provide
more
privacy,and
solito !'hyllis McMillan. affi- . Wade Fill:h. Kiersten Noelle '
fy ing and treating patients tude for patients.
·
dav.
l l.lebanon.
·
Fill:h, Brya.nnah Dawn .
who mighi be suffering hean
Phyllis
McMillan
to
Dailey, deed.·.IAbanoo.
attacks. The system also
Douglas
G.
Raines..
deed,
Charles D. Roberts. Susan
allows for better monitoring
Lebanon.
M. Roberts. to Susan M.
of pediatric/neonate patients.
deed. Olive.
Eber
Pickens.
Delora
Roberts.
Each bed iD the unit can be
Delora
Speocer.
to
·
Horuce
Karr.
Km
Pickens.
monitored simultaneously. ·
Hoine.Niltiooal Bank. deed. Coostnlction Co., to James
'The new monitoring sys,
Village of Racine.
E. Diddle. affidllvit.
tern is also used in the triage
Joseph
·
L.
Roush.
Douglas · Welherholt,
areas and allows staff to perMichefle D. ROUSh. Robert Janet B. Wetherholt. to
form 12-lead electrocardioL.
Ritthle. Jr.. Bridget D. Victor
Wolfe.
deed.
grams. A triage nurse is availRitchie,
Josepb
R.
Roush.
to
·
Lebanon.
,
able lll'OUI\\f the clock. to
Home Nation~! Bank. deed.
Mary K. We!n'. Kattly
quickly assess patient&gt;· needs..
SuttonNillqe ofRal:ine.
Werry Hedges. R~ehtu'd H.
The two existing trauma
Viqinia B. Heilman · to 'Hedges. to Rkhtu'd J. BlOOd
bays were lett open to allow
Allen C. Heilmu. Jean F. Ill. Sharon M. Blood. deed.
for easier access by physi- .
Heilman, Allen C: Hcilman · Village of Pomeroy.
.·
cians and emergency
Uvi~
·
·
Trust.
deed.
Rachel
Church
to
Kendall
depanment staff in the most
· Salisbiuy.
Church. George K. ChurOh.
severe cases.
Michael
McBride. deed. Olive.
·
:
Saunders said adjustJennifer McBride. to S~ven
Pamela S. john sOli to
ments to slalf rotation have
M. Miller, deed. Cliesw.
·William M. McMillion.
been made lo coincide with
Dora
May
Calaway.
deed.
. Village
of
the changes to the physical
deceased. to Warret~ H. Middleport.
·
mak.eup of the emergeocy
Calaway. deed. Orange.
William M. McMilliun • .
depll$lent.
Thomas M. Theiss. affi- Ruby P. McMillion.to Ru~y
''Our staffing patternswere
davit · of abandonment, P. McMillion. deed. Vill!l¥e
changed by the administration
.SultoD.
of Middleport.
· .
to reflect .the 14-bed llllit,"
· Farmers
Bank Wid
Franklin Real Estate Co.
Saunders said. "We've also
SaVings Co. to Donald R. to Southern Ohio Coal Cp.•
increased our physician covSpaun, Clilrinda S. Spaun, deed. Salem.
e
during the middle shift.
~ve three physicians dur- Shown here is one of the new ·enc:losed rooms In the ~renovated and expanded deed, Scipio.
Franklin Real Estate Co.
ing our peak. hours (late after- Emergency Department at Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis. Each room features upcta.ted
Anna. Caroline Cbene·ll to to SOCCo, deeCI, Salem. :
DOOil and evenings) with the
patient monitoring technology (upper right) which allows unit staff to keep trac:k of vital Deutsche Bank. sheriff's
Nancy Elaine Baunte.
goal of decreasing putients• sign~ and cardiac activity.
·
.deed, Village of Middleport, deceased; to William C.
· Robert W. Crow, Ruella · Baume. Bffidavit, Olive. : ·
len~th of stay and iocreusing · ·installed that will enable
patient satisfoctioo."
K. Crow, Jane A. Mitchell,
Charles F. Chancey.
Many of the changes have staff to respond more rapidDanny F. Mitchell, Edward Karah M. Chancey, to
. been implemented with the ly to the ·needs of patients
· W. Wells, to Sharon E. Wolf James A. Ash, deed, Villa~e
goal of moving lower com- and their families.
Matson, deed, Village of of Pomeroy.
. ·
•
. plexity cases through the
Additionally. Saunders said
Syracuse/Sutton..
Gay
F.
Johns$,
· emergency
department vending machines have been
' '· · ·
William
E.
Gibbs. dece~sed.
to
Curtis
more efficie11tly.
installed in the waiting room.
Melinda · Gibbs, to City Johnson, certificate of
---~
· 'd •'-- aft' IS
·
"The vending
machines
Sawi\Jers
National Bank, sheriff's tranSfer, Columbia.
•
SIU ""' Sl
~•t
. . f: .,.
oow making discharge "' ow ~hents am1 Ies to ~et
deed, Scipio.
Gay F. Johnson. deceasctd.
~calls to follow up with ~methmg ~o eat and &lt;Jrin!t
Harry · E. Stobart, Sr., to Nolan Johnson, certifi· ·
patients who have visited the Without havmg to leave their
Mary Stobart, Carroll D. cate of transfer, Columbi~.
e~rgeocy department.
loved ones," Saunde~ said.
Cleek, Ma.r$arel Foster
Gay F. Johnson. deceased,
"We attempt to mlike two ' Overall, . ac_cordmg . to
Cleek. affidavit.
to Julie Fitzgerald, certifi·
. phorn: calls to anyone who HMC-Galhpohs officials,
Carrol D. Cleek to Home cate of transfer, Columbia.
has been discharged to see ~e renoyatio.n and el\pan·
National Bank, deed,
Terry Wayne Wyatt,
how their stay was with us," SlOB pro~t 1s a concert~
Village of Racine.
deceased, to Kathy D.
she said. "We monitor com- effort to 1mprove the quality
Cleo M. Smith to Alice E. Wyatt. corrective affidavit.
plaints and also the nice of care for patients, reduce
Bumpas. deed. Orange.
Bedford.
things they say. We're con- the amount of time people
· Harley Eugene McDonald
Charles L. McClain to
stantly looking at things to . have to wait in the emerto Ted L. Dexter. deed. Beverly J. Moore, deed.
improve ."
~ency
department and
Salisbury.
Lebanon.
Another new feature in the tmprove patient satisfaction.
Harley Eugene McDonald
Wells Fargo . Bank to
HMC emergency department
Holzer Medical Centerto Van Counts. deed. · Secretary of Housing and
is bedside registration. which Gallipolis
. in vested
Salisbury.
Urban Dev:elopment. deed.
Saunders said has been well- $650,000 in the renovation
Deutsche
Bank. Rutland.
·
received by patients and their and e11pansion project.
Harborview
Mortgage
Mary A. Kelley. James M.
families. Bedside registration · which began i11 May 2008.
Loan. Countrywide Home Kelley. to James M. Kelley.
affords patients more privacy
For more il!)ormarion
Loans, Inc .. to .Paul Card. deed. Orange.
while disclosing personal .aoour the services offertd at The new triage areas In the Emergency Department at .deed.
James M. Kelley. Mary A.
· infonnation to hospital staff. Holzer Medictll Center- Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis are equipped with updatJennifer Davis. Jennifer Kelley. Mary A. Hart. ·to
Saunders said a new call Gallipolis. visit the website ,ed monitoring technology that can be used to perform 12· Fink. Christopher Lee Mary A. Kelley. deed.
light system has bee11 ar www.holzer.org.
lead electrocardiograms.
Davis. Chris Davis. to Village
·
of
HSBC
Bank
USA. Pomeroy/Salisbury. .
Renaissance Home Equity.
Gregory
Thomas
sheriff's deed, Villuge of Petroski. Joyce Gradv. to
Midd!ep(ln.
Home National Bank.. sher·
Sari
E.
Suttle
to
John
L.
iff's deed. Lebanon.
. Bv HOPE ROUSH
Peck described the camp- Suttle II. deed. Olive.
Donald L. Bennett.
HROUSHOt.IYc.\tLYREGISTERCOM
ground as being very famiWoodrow W. Hurmon to Marjorie S. Bennett.to John
ly-oriented.
. ·
Albert
S. Hannon. deed. D. Collins. right of way.
POINT
PLEASANT.
"I am excited about help- Columbia.
Olive.
W.Va. - With today's
ing fal)'lilies in the commu·
Gruce E. Allen. deceased.
economy. people are looknity to have u place to · Nancy L. Alkire. Scott H.
Seaman.
to
Scott
H.
to
Lisa Tuy Woods: uffiing for vacation opportunicome and enjoy with their Seaman. deed. Columbia.
duvit.
Lebanon.
·
. ties closer to home.
kids and thear. neighbors."
Donald
Piggott
to
Roben
William
H.
Welsh.
And Gurry Peck. Point
he said.
Pleastmt resident and owner
In addition. Peck has · S. Koren, Penny E. Koran. deceused. to Karolyh M.
Welsh. atlidavit. Olive.
of
Kanawha
River
plans to el\plmd the· camp- deed. Olive. .
Campground. is hoping to
ground in the future by
prov1de that opponunity to
adding another· luke. !50
area residents.
.•
additionul sites as well ns
Everyone
The new L'umpground,
bout docks and a bout ramp.
:1k Vaughan Agency
n11ecls to
which is located along
: PM.-, . -.~'i•h ll.' ~ "''..,...'
He ulso said he intends to
W.Va. 62 between Point
build un l R· hole themed
S&lt;IVe money
Pleusant und Leon, will proHope Rouahlphoto putt-put( golf course.·which
lOl Mulh&lt;fl)'' l ki~hls
vide 112 campsites with full Garry Peck, owner of Kanawha River Campground, stands would feature the histl\ry of
$$$$
l'l&gt;mtroy. Oh1o ~m~
hookups when completed. In front o,l what will be part of the campground, which will · Mason Countv.
J.11l~wJ11~olfl '''I'I:IH /"tlJM ,
In addition , the campground contain 112 campsites with lull hookups as well as a live·
Peck ·added that he
IM:~r l'l~~t~t
will house a live-acre lake acre lake when completed. The campground is expe&lt;;ted to intends to hire seven
stocked with tish; a store open In May.
employees timl will be tukWe can sav11
with camping supplies. food
ing appli•·utions at u later Phone: (740)9~2 -9784
and propane exchange;
Peck suid he decided to Peck said. "There is n lot dute.
you mon11y on
Fa\: (740)992-7980
laundry and shower house; build u campgruund becuuse of tourism coming to the
According to Peck. the·
'
your ht~alth
and a pavilion. There also he reulited there wus 11 nt-ed nreu. und I am trying to cumpground is expected to
Emnil:
· will be tenting. a beach tmd for one in the areu .
help everyone I can ."
l)fficially open Memorial
insurance!
playground.
wulkwuys
"I saw a dcmund for
He udded that the cump- Duy weekend in May. To I"""'ii'""'"''"''"''" ~lllH
along the luke und riverside ~o· umpers in the ureu ground will operate yeur- reserve a campsite or for
und entertainment during because of the high gus round und that sites will be more infonm1tion , call 304the summer.
costs umt vacation costs." ' available by rental only.
59~- 51(!9 .
·,

BvmEBEND

·Taking the plunge!

Tuesday, Much 31, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

If you suspect abuse,
make a report
Itt KAnw lll1c:ttEu.
AND MARcY SliGAR

Members of
1t1e Masoo
United

Methodi&amp;t
Churctl didn't
wait !or the
Ohio River to
wa~mup

bek&gt;re taking
tl'le plunge.

Chun:h members ill'&amp; pictured diving in
to raise
money tor the

National
Multiple
SclerosiS
Soci&amp;ty's MS
Walk.
Su~rrltltcl

ptiQlo

Southern FFA participate in judging

...

Ground broken for new camping area

PageA3

Dear Auit: My next-door neighbor. "Tillie .~ is in her
90s. She is able-bodied. but her mind is slowly sliPf?iDg. We
· had a great relatiqnship until she allowed her neplle\Y. his
wile. their son and the son's girlfriend to move in.
Not only are these relatives rude to us a.nd all the other
neighbors, but they treat Tillie with little respect. She's
out shoveling. the walk at 1 a.m. when there are four
healthy adults in her home. She now lives in her basement
. while they have taken over the main part of the house. We
suspect they are waiting for her to die so they can keep the
place.
·
1 fear these people are only with her for an inheritance.
What can we as concerned neighbors do to better Tillie's
situatioo? - Coaftad iD C•uda
Dear Coal\aed: You c:an check on Tillie often. dropping by to see how she's doing. inviting her for coffee. lettin~ those relatives know you are keeping tabs on her situallon . lf you suspect there is any kind of abuse going Qn
- physical, · emotional or financial - contact the
Canadian Network for the Prevention of Elder Abuse
(c:npea.ca) or the Public: Health Agency of Canada (publichealth.gc .ca) at 130 Colonnade Rd .. AL 650 I H.
Ottawa. Ontario K lA OK9. (In the U.S .. contact the
National Center on Elder Abuse at ncea.aoa.gov .)
Dear AnDie: My husband is a dedicated teacher. Since
we work different hours, there are only a few evenings
when we are able to be together. My husband just made
plans for a couple we know to spend the night at our house
sioce it was the start of their school vacation week. and they
live.out of sta~&amp;. He had barely rnentiooed this to me and we
never disc1,1ssed any coocrete plans. Yet he told them it was
OK.
.
On the rare nights I'm home. my husband spends so
much time oo the phone with co-workers and friends. I feel
left out. What message (between the lines) does that send
to me when these plans are not finalized by both of us? Coacem Warranted ·
Dear Concern: Your husband has created his own separate social life, which is why he fell entitled to make plans
without consulting you. Thts is partly due to your incompatible wort schedules. but also because he has common
ground with fellow teachers and finds their input valuable
and reassuring.
When he wants to talk.. he turns to them instead of you.
But you can fix this if you address it directly and wort on .
ways to improve your communication and commitment. If
you cannot do it on your own. please consider professional
counseling. ·
·
.
·
Dear Annie: I have never written before. but had to
respond to "Dad's Crazy," whose 51-year-old divorced
futher let a 28-yenr-old single mother move in with him.
Eighteen years ago, one of my husband's children could
.have written that letter.
·
When I wus 28. I was having financial problems due to
some health issues. Six months earlier, I had met a 50-yearold man who was~.oing through a divorce. He was lonely
and had a house w1th three bedrooms. He offered to let me
move in for a small amount of rent and some help around
the house. Four years later. we were married. He is the love
of my life. I have four stepchildren who are younger than I
am and eight grandchildren. t·arn part of a loving, caring
family and can't imagine what my life would be like without them.
·
This could he the best thing that ever hapr'ned to Dad or
a huge mistake. but either way, I hope "Dads Crnzy" won't
shut ner futher out. She should let him make the decision
about how his life should play out - and I hope with all
my heart that she and her son will be a part of it. Happier Now
Dear Happier: Thanks for sharing your story. We. too.
hope she can be accepting of Dad's new life and the peo·
ple who are pan of it.

Annit's Mailbox is writttn by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy
Sugar, longlimt editors of tht Ann Landers colThe Racine Southern FFA Chapter recently participated in livestock judging at Hillsboro Stock Yards. The team members umn; Pllllsl
e-mail your questions to annitsmailboxcom. pictured are Eric Cundiff, Clayton Moore, Dustin Smeck, Jack Goode.
cast.lttl, or write to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. Box 11819(),
Chicago, IL 6()611. To find out mon about Annit's
1 Mailbox, and rtad /tatuns by·oll11r Crtators Syndicole
wn'ttrs and cartoonists, visit th1 Crtators Syndicate Web .
pag• at www.crtators.com.
GALLIPOLIS ...; The "Everything's a Ni~htmure," and family. Tickets are on item. Any participant may
French art Colony\ annual and covers topil's I rom bugs sale at the FAC. and are write the1r name on the bid
silent ·auctitm fundntiser is and disasters to the stock. $15 per person or$25 for 11 sheet in hopes of buying
. set lor 6:30p.m. Saturday at mnrkei. A dedicated group couple. Tickets can be pur- thut item. Tickets wi II also
. the FAC's main site. 530 of volunteers helps bring chased in advance or be . available for participunts to take a chance on
First Avenue . Gallipolis.
this event together. and bought nt the door.
A buffe,t-sty led dinner is the many gift cenificntes
• For many years. this casu- plan~ every detail.
· POMEROY ..:.. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Drew
. ally-themed auction has
From one week vacation provided. complete with und novelty items.
All
·
items
have
been
been one of the fAC'~ · get-u·ways to jewelry and appetiz.ers . . main course
Webster Unit 39 recently set Poppy Days for ti)e first week. lnrgest fundraisers. bringing gift buskets. everyone .is and desserts/ Bidding smrts donuted by nren businesses. end iriJune .
tho: community together to sure to find 11 uniquo: item !It 6:30 p.m .. und closes showing the largest l'OmmuPoppy Days was announced at the auxiliary's most recent
have u greut night. while to bid on and un utmos- promptly at 9 p.m. The bid· nity business suppon over meetmg which was opened with the Preamble of the
. suppt&gt;ning the uns in this phere of fun and excite- ding style is silent. with uny other FAC fundraising American Legion Auxiliary Constitution of the United States
region. This year's theme is ment to shure with friends bid sheets pluced by each event.
and the Pledge of Allegiance led by President Alice Wamsley.
It was announced the January n1eeting was canceled due
to illness and weather conditions. Minutes of the previous
meeting were read by Secretary Peggy Harris and approved
as read. Wamsley announced that Joanne Vaughan has been
appointed poppy chainnan and Gladys Cumings was
•
will meet ut 2 p.m. ut the will host the first horse Nalarene. On Sunduy. April appointed. as Girl's State chairman.
Al~o. valentines and candy were distributed to the veter· Pomeroy libmry. The book show of the year sponsored 12 the service will begin at
ans
&lt;ftt Overbrook Rehabilitution Center and Rocksprings
by · the Ohio River 6 p.m. Speaker will be Rev.
"Little
Heathens"
by
Tuesday, March 31
Producers. Warm ups at I 0 Ruy LaSalle und singers. Rehabilitation Center by Wumsley . H wus announced no
PORTLAND - Lebanon Mildred Kulish will be a.m. , show at noon. Call Ralph und Joanne Dunmire. one !rom the umt attended the m1d-wmtet conference due
Township Trustees. 7 p.m. reviewed by Marlene Kuhn . Bruce 740-590-8R36 or
to weather conditions.
at the township building. Dana Kessinger will be 843-5216 for more informuThe 1mnuallegion binhday dinner was held on March 17
Cemetery cleanup to begin. hostess. There will be a lion .
and the' next auxiliury meeting will be held on May 5 at the
book ell.change among the
~'nl(WC decomtions.
legion hull.
Monday, April 6
members.
•'rlday. April 3 .
Wednesday, April 1
POMEROY - · Meigs
Thursd11y, April 2
RACINE - Eva Mae
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
County
Cancer
Initiative.
TUPl'ERS
PLAINS
.Christiun
will observe her
Township Trustees; regular
regular
meeting.
noon.
conVFW
Post
9053.
Auxiliary
90th
birthduy
on April 3.
meeting.
6:30
p.m ..
ference
·
room.
Meigs
7
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
hall
.
Curds may be sent to her at
Pul!eville Town Hull .
County Health Department. BoK 827. Racine. Ohio
Friday, April 3
• Thursduy, April 2
45771.
.
The Athens-Meigs Educutional Service
POMEROY - Meigs
SYRACUSE.- Svra•·use
County
PERI
#74.
regular
Saturday. April 4
Center Preschool registration for the
Villugc Counl·il. 7 i1.1n. at
meeting, I p.m.. Mulberry
REEDSVILLE
village ht1il.
2009-2010 school year will be held
· Clmrlotte VanMeter will
Saturday, April 4
POMEROY - Meigs Community Center. Doug
Monday. April20, 2009 at
observe her 80th binhday
MIDDLEPORT
County Bmlro.l of Heulth. 5 Luvender speaking on 911
Bradbury Lc:aming Center and ·
Gospel sing. 7 p.m .. on Suturday. April 4. Cards
p.m .. L'onference room. In Meigs County.
Middleport
·Nuzurenc may be sent to her at 41458
Monday. May II. 2009 at
~aturday, Aprll4
Meigs County Health
Sumner
Roud
,
Reedsville.
SALEM
CENTER
Stur
Churt·h.
New
Propht'ts
Southern Elementary.
Department.
Grangl' #778 und Star Quurtet. The Dollys und Ohio 45772.
Appointments are necessury.
Sunday, AprilS
Junior Grunge #878 mo:ct in Brick. Evelyn Roush
PQMEROY - Elvu Denn
re!!ular session with pol luck Fumily nnd others.
To st:hedule un appointmem contact
Barnitz
will ubserw her
Monday. April 6
supper at 6:30 p.m .. 1()1·
RUTLAND ~ An indoor 90th birthday on April 5.
lowed hy· meeting ;n 7:30
Betsy at 740-992-2165.
cump
meeting will be held Curds may be sent to her at
p.m.
Wl'llnesday. April I
PORTLAND
The at 7 p.m. April 6-12 ut the 162ll Lincoln Heights.
POMEROY
The
' ·Middleport Literary Club Portland Community Cenle.r Rut lund Church . or the Pomeroy. Ollio 45769.
Submlllecl pholo

FAC fundraiser scheduled for April4 .

Webster Auxiliary
sets Poppy Days

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Birthdays

Preschool Registration

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

•

•••

•

•

�··ne Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

Tuesday, Much 31, 2009

Will
Obama
match
Bush
for
fiscal_
irresponsibility?
The Daily Sentinel
111 Ccut snet • Pomlrcly, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

C011gras shall ma~t no law rrsputing 11ft
· atdlisltmtnt of rrligion, or prohibiting tlu
~ txm:ist tltnrofi or abridging tltt frretlom
of spetclt, or of tltt prtss; or tltt rigltt of tltt
ptoplt ptactallly to IWtmblt, anti to pttiti011
tlu.Gwtmmtnt for a rrtlrrss ofgritNnces.
-:- T1le First Amend!Mflt to the u.s. Constitution

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TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, March 31 , the 90th day of 2009.
There are 275 days left in the year. .
Today's Highlight in History: .
'
On Matdl31.1968.at the.concllision of a nationally broad. ~c:ast address, President Lyndon B. Jolmson shocked his listeners by announcing he would not seek another tenn of office.
· On this date:
,
· · In 1809, English poet Edward FitzGerald, best known
for his translation of "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam."
'was born in Suffolk.
.· In 1880, Wabash, Ind., became the ftrst town in the
world to be illuminated by electrical lighting.
In 1889, French engineer Gustaye Eiffel unfurled the
'· French tricolor from atop the Eiffel Tower. officially
marking its completion.
·
·
.. In 1917.• the United States took possession of the
·. Virgin Islands from Denmark.
· ·
In 1933, Congress approvep, and President Franklin D.
Roosevelt signed, the Emergency Conservation Work
Act, which created the Civilian Conservation Corps.
In 1943, the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
"Oklahoma!" opened on Broadway.
·
. In · 1945, the Tennessee Williams play ''The Glass
: Menagerie" opened on }Jroadway.
·
. In 1949, Newfoundland (now called Newfoundland and
Labrador) enteredc;oofederation as Canada's lOth province.
In 1976. the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that
. Karen Ann Quinlan, who was in a persistent vegetative
state, could be disconnected ·from her respirator.
(Quinlan, who remained unconscious, died in 1985.)
:· J.n 2005; Terri Schiavo. 41. died at a hospice in Pinellas
· Park. Fla .. 13 days after her feeding tube was removed in
. a wrenching right-to-die dispute.
• Ten years ago: Three U.S. Army ~oldiers were cap. tured by Serb forces near the Yugoslav-Macedonia bor. der. (Staff Sgt. Andrew Ramirez, Staff Sgt. Christopher
. ·Stone and Spec. Steven M. Gonzales were released mo~
: than a month later.) Four New York City police officers
. were charged with murder for killing Amadou Diallo, an
: unarmed African immi~t, in a bail of bullets. (The
.
officers were acquitted m February 2000.) ·
: Five years ago: Four American' civilian contractors
were killed in Fallujah, Iraq; frenzied crowds dragged
· the burned, mutilated bodies and strung two of them
· Jrom a bridge. Air America, intended as a liberal voice in
• network talk radio, made its debut on five stations. ·
' Orte year ago: Housing and Urban Development
: Sec:retary Alphonso Jackson announced . his resi~ation
. arrud the wreckage of the national housing cnsis . . A
: Bahamas jury ruled that Anna Nicole Smith's son, Daniel,
· died from an accidental drug overdose, just like his mother.
. American movie director Jules Dassin, whose Greek wife,
· Melina Mercouri, starred in his hit movie "Never on
. Sunday" and six more of his films. died in Athens at age 96.
· Thought for Today: "So often we rob tomorrow's
memories by today's economies." - John Mason
: Brown, American critic and lecturer ( 1900-1969). .

.

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••

A month ago, reflecting
the borrowin$, requirement CBO shows it at $658 bilon George W. Bush's near
from $4.4 tnllion to $3.8 lioo.
trillion.
After that, however. it
doubling of the national
To Walker, the key cost grows again - to $423 bitdebt, budget hawk David
not addressed in any bud- lion in Obama's estimate,
Walker told me that Bush
was "the most fiscally irreget is the growth of entitle- to more than $1 trillion in
sponsible president in
ment programs, chiefly 2018. according to the
American history." ·
Social Security, Medicare CBO.
and Medicaid.
Walker is. one of many
This week, reflecting on
Obarna has held an budget experts urging crethe possibility that Barack
"entitlement summit," has ation of a bipartisan "ftscal
Obama could nearly
redouble the debt. Walker from ·$5.8 tn'llion in , 001 . promised not to "kick the future commission" to reccan down the road" and ommend ways to bring
"'
said that Bush holds the
irresponsibility record "to to $12.6 trillion this year.
spending
bas pledged to "kill gov- entitlement
The CBO did not calcu- ernment programs · that under control and require
this point."
The former Comptroller late the gross debt, but don't work," but even he Congress to vote on them . .
'de
Obama's budget shows it
Ge raJ d
Reps. Jim Cooper, Dne an now-prest nt rising to "'17 .1 trillion in admitted in his press conof the Peter G. Peterson
&lt;~&gt;
ferell(;t that he has not sup- Tenn .• and Frank Wolf, RFoundation and star of the 2013 and $23.1 trillion in plied details.
Va., have reintroduced leg·
"IOU
S.A
..
2019.
The
2019
figure
will
Moreover,
Walker
said,
islation
creating such a
mov1e.
. . .
., . be
th
Walker said it'l\t,too soon to
more an 100 percent healthcare reform needs tti · commission, and Sens. Joe
tell whether Obama wiU of the e.stimated gross be a major part.of control- Lieberman, JD..Conn., and
.
domestic product - the
match Bush m irresponsi~ largest percentage since ling entitlements, "but it George Voinovicb, R-Ohio,
has to· have a positive
expected to sponsor a
bility. bu~ the signs are not just after World War n.
encouragmg.
"And in those days," effect on our fiscal posi- commission. Conrad also
"All (Obama's) words Walker said, "we owed lion." He .said, "Otiama favors a commission.
Walker told me be's warare g&lt;)od" about control- that debt to ourselves. needs to demonstrate how
ling the debt, be said • "but Now we owe it to foreign- he'll control health care ried not only about the
nation's fiscal· future. but
his budget proposes no ers, mainly the Chinese, costs."
Obama's budget con- also about its monetary
transformational changes. who are firing shots across
tains
a $685 billion policy.
His programs are all debt- our bow that they may not
ftnanced ."
"reserve fund" for health
"The Federal Reserve's
Walker said be trusts the keep acquiring our debt."
care
paid
for
with
taxes
on
balance
sheet bas tripled
Already, the Federal
Congressional ·Budget Reserve is buying U.S. higher-income filers, but bailing out financial instiOffice's just-issued esti- . Treasury bills to · keep the cost of insuring 50 mil- tutions,'' he said. "Now it's
mates of deftcits and debt interest rates down . If for- lion people likely will be.at buying long"term govern- .
least double that, Walker meilt debt. It's printing ·
more than those from eigners refused to buy money, which can lead to
Obama's . Offtce
as occurred with British said. ·
"When (White House inflation, a weak dollar
Management and Budget. debt on Wednesday
The CBO shows the interest rates would surge. Chief of Staff) Rahm ·and high interest rates.
"Somehow, it's got to
nation's public debt ·- not damaging· prospects for Emanuel said that a crisis
shouldn't
go
to
waste,
he
unwind
all this. Our entire
counting borrowing from · economic growth and
could have meant that ifs econo_mic ship of state bas
Social Security and other investment.
trust funds - rising from
Republicans have been an opportunity to put our · got to be turned around
$5.8 trillion to $10.2 tril- charging - almost chant- ftscal house in order," from borrowing to saving.
lion by 2014 and $15.1 ing - that Obama's bud- Walker said. "Or it could It's going to be hard."
Obama, be said, '.'has got
trillion by 2019.
get "spends too much, mean that, once the deficit
as
it
·
to
take concrete steps to
hits
$)..85
trillion,
During the·Bush years. it · taxes too much and borgrew from $3.3 trillion in rows too much," but they does this year, you can demonstrate · that his
2001 to $5.8 trillion this shamelessly ignore Bush's keep spending and put it promises have meaning
year ~ from 24 percent of irresponsibility and their on a credit card. That's and reassure China and
gross domestic product to own when they . were in what it looks like to me.''
other creditors - and do it
Both the OMB and the soon."
40.8 percent last year and control of Congress. On
56.8 percent this year. The the: other hand, contrary to CBO show Obama proRight now, though ,
CBO
estimates
that Obama•s assertion in his ducing significant deftcit "where Bush about douObama will preside over press conference Tuesday, reductions i11 his ftrst term bled the natiopal debt,
an increase to 71.4 percent House Republicans will - more than fulftlling his CBO shows that Obama
during his first term and · present a.n 'altem!ltive bud- promise to cut the deficit could be on track to do the
82.4 percent by 2019.
get, but it hasn't been m half.
·
same - and at much high. And Walker says those made public yet.
But this year's $1.85 tril- er numbers. It's not a
numbers understate the
Meanwhile, moderate lion deficit - an astound~ record he should want to
true burden of debt ·on Democrats led by Senate ing 13 percent of GOP repeat::
future generations.
Budget Chairman Kent gives him lots of room.
(Morton Kondracke is
When borrowing from Conrad (ND.) plan to cut Obama's budget shows the exe.c utive editor of Roll
trust funds is included, $600 billion from Obama's deftcit dropping to $300 Call,· the .newspaper oj
gross federal debt went ftve-year budget, reducing billion by 2013, and the Capitol Hill.)

are

of

President

Obama~

Tuesday, Mardt 31, 2009

educational hypoCrisy

"We ftnally have an eduthose children· will be
cation pres1dent," exults
ripped away from their
Randi Weingarten, presimentors and friends. ...
dent of the 1.4 millionObama has, in fact, been
·American
shamefully quiet about
member
Federation of Teachers.
Nat
this." ..
·
And President Barack
Hentoff
Doesn't Obama at least
Obama has assured the
have something to say
nation's children and parpublicly to those children
ents that his Department of
and their parents - espeEducation "will use only
cially when his own secreone test when deciding plies the answer. (I am a tary of Education. Ame
what ideas to support with senior fellow, specializing Duncan (enthusiastically
your precious tax dollars. in civil liberties and educa- appointed by Obama), dis... It's not ·wbether an idea lion at . Cato.) Wrote agrees with . the congres1s liberal or conservative Coulson in the Feb. 26 · sional Democrats shutting
- but whether it works." New York Post:
down these Opportunity
Yet this is the president
"Because the~ saw it as a Scholarships?
· Said
who has remained silent threat to theu political Duncan (New York Post,
when his congressional power, Democrats in March 6): "I don't think it
Democrats
essentially Washington appear willing make sense to take kids out
killed the Opportunity to extinguish the dreams of of a school where they're
Scholarship
Program a few thousand poor kids happy and safe and satis(OSP) in the city where be to protect their political fied and learning. I think
base."Teachers'
now ll·ves and works.
· .,
f unions· are th ose k"d
1 s need to stay i n
· schoo1,
Of the 1•700 Students. a VUiu rart o that base, the1r
. Even 1'f the
h
be
0
w• ose
memall rsf program - as 1s
· qu1te
· cerStartl.ng ,·n k1'ndergarten. 1·n rmany
·
N
0
·
s
prl
·
vate-school
vouch•ear
competltlon.
ot
t
·
·
tJi
· d
thl
.
. am - 1s not reau onze
h
R
d
1
er program, 90 percent are twho
em.is .also
an head
Weingarten,
of New after the next schooI year.
black and 9 pertent are York's United Federation Duncan suggests that
Hispanic. •First the House of Teachers, has started donorS concerned with
and then the Senate insert- UFT charter schools in that education provide finaned into the $410 · billion state. But, like Ol:iama, she cia! assistance to those
omnibus spending billlan- is··· silent about stripping kids through graduations.
guage that will eliminate these OSP kids of their . Perhaps our education
the $7.500 annual scholar- alternatives. And the president, from his continships for these poor chit- largest' teachers union, the uing royalties from the
dren after the next school lllational
Education sale of !'tis books. such as
year. It could only be rea'u- Association.
urged . "The Audacity of Hope,"
thorized by the same c
t k'll th D c might help out. 1 suspe·ct
ongress 0 1 · e · · Weingarten would not
·
D·emocrat-controlled program.
Cong(ess and the antiTwo of these children, object.
voucher
District
of Sarah
d J
p k
Says one of the recipients
an ames ar er,
Columbia Counc1' L
atle!Jd Washington's pres- of · the
OppOrtunity
Fat chance!
tigious Sidwell Friends Scholarships,
teenager
A key. C~&gt;ecut.ioner in the SchooL At the end of the Carlos
Battle
Senate of the OSP' was next school year and the (VoicesOfSchooiChoice.org)
Sen. Dick Durbin of · end of their scholarships, : "If I was in the public
Illinois. I hnve written among the classmates school, I'd have to think
admiringly of Durbin's they'll be leaving are moreaboutprotectingmyself
concern for human rights Sasba and Malia Obama than about learning."
abroad. and his trenchant - who, of. course, do not
As for the Sidwell
criticism of the CIA's ren- need :voucher money.
Fnends School, its beaddition-to-torture history.
As New York Times master, Bruce Stewart, told
How aboul education columnist David Brooks William McGurn of the
rights in lhe nation's capi- · (March 19) notes. the con· Wall
Street
Journal
tal? Andre J . Coulson, gressional
Democrats (reprinted in the March 4
director of the Cato "even refused to grandfa- New York Post), that the
Institute's Center for . ther in the kids already in school has · welcomed the
Educational Freedom, sup- the (voucher) program, so · OSP students, pointing ou~
1

, thatwben parents get more
educational choices for
their children, this beneftts
. not only the kids who are
admitted but also the community. In that New York
Post article, "O's dilemma:
School kids vs. his fellow
Democrats,"
Virginia
Walden-Ford, executive
director of D.C. Parents
for School Choice, bas an
excellent suggestion for
members of the White
House eress corps:
"I'd hke to see a reporter
stand up at one of those
nationally televised press
conferences and . ask
President Obama what he
lhinks about what his own
party is doing to keep two
innocent kids. from attending the same school where
he sends h'1s.?" ·
I wish Jay Leno had
th ought to ask Obama th at
·
. quesuon.
In a Marcb 2 ed'1ton'al , the
Washington Post, nota conservative newspaper, says
the debate about this vanishing opportunity for poor
kids "isn't about facts. It's
about politics and the. ~tran- .
glebold the teachers unions
have on the Democratic
Party. Why else has so
much time and effort gone
into trying to kill Qff what,
.in the grand scheme of govemment spending, is a tiny
program?'
If you f!gree, President
Obama, maybe you can
help the . Opportunity
Scholarship ~rogram be
reauthorized after th~ next
school year. Why not? The
Democrats in Congress
~pay listen to rou.
(Nat HentoJJ is a nationally renowned authority 011
the First Amendti1ent and
the Bill of Rights. He is a
member of the . Reporters
Committee for Freedom oj
the Press. and the Cato
Institute, where he is 11
senior fellow.)

· The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

.Deaths

~. . . . in accident

'lah ~SWeets' Zettde

This weekend three
people were injured
in a one-car crash on
County Road 35. One
patient required extri·
cation by Racine fire·
fighters (pictured} and
was then flown by
HealthNet to Cabell
Huntington Hospital
for treatment of their
injuries. Two other
patients were transported to Jackson ·
General Hospital by
Syracuse's Squad 33.
The Racine Fire
DepartmentiJad 14
firefighters on the
scene. Also assisting
were the Ohio State
Highway Patrol,
Meigs County
Sheriff's Office and
Meigs EMS Medic
Two. As of yesterday
afternoon no further,
· official details had
been released.

.

.
.

.
·
·
·

MASON. W.Va. - Lilah J "Sweets" Zerkle 87 of
Maso~. ~.Va., d!ed Sunday. March 29 , 2009 at St: MaQ-'s
Hospual m Huntmglon, W.Va.
·
She was preceeded in death by her husband William
Lester "Peck" Ze rkle.
'
Friends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Thesday. A celebration of her life will be
held at _II aJII . Wednesday, April I, al the Mason United
Methodist Church with the Rev. Scott Knowlton officialing. Burial wil~ be. in New Lone Oak Cemetery:
. ~e body Will he m state one hour prior to service and
m .heu of flowers contributions can be made to the
Mason United Methodist Church, PO Box· 336, Mason,
W.Va . 25260. ,
.

Local Briefs
Senior league
POME~OY -:- Senior Lea~ue play at Pine Hills Golf

C~urse will begm at 9 a.m. Friday. A continental breakfast

· w1ll. b_e served. All semor men .and women are eligible to
· pan1c1pate.
· Mike White, course operator, will review course changes
for the new season. so players are urged to attend.

Photo courtesy

Steak dinner
REEDSVIL.LE - Olive Township Fire Department will
hold a steak dinner fundraiser from 11:30 a.m.to 2 p.m. on
Sunday at the firehouse. A donation will be accepted . The
dinner includes steak, green beans or com, mashed potatoes
and gravy. a roll and drink.
.

Dinner, concert .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Church of the Nazarene
will hold a spaghetti dinner from 4-6 p.m. Saturday.
Spaghetti, garlic toast, dessert and a drink will be available
for $5. Proceeds will benefit the Kairos Women's Prison
Minislry.
. A gospel concert will follow at 7 p.m., including New
Prophets Quartet, Dollys and Bricle, Evelyn Roush -and
Family and others.

Local Weather
Tuesday•• .Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s. East
winds
around
5
· mph ... Becoming south in
the afternoon.
Tuesday nigbt ...Mostly
· cloudy. A slight chance of
· .showers
in
the
· · evening .. .Then a chance of
, showers after midnight. Not
. as cool with lows in the mid
40s. Southeast Winds 5 to 10
. mph. Chance of rain 50 per·
· ·. cent.
Wednesday ... Mostly

Local Stocks
AEP ("'YSE) - 25.08
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 37.30
Aahl8nd Inc. (NYSE) - U!l
Big Lola (NYSE) - 21.17
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 21.90
BorgW.ner (NYSE) - 20.86
Cantury Aluminum (NASDAQ)

-1.93
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.58
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 1.48

City Haldlng (NASDAQ) - 28.89
· Cillllna (NYSE) - 32.41
DuPonl (NYSE) - 21.93
US Bank (NYSI!) - 13.71
O•nnlll (NYSE) - 2.28
O.neral Electric (NYSE) - 8.93
~·DIIvkllon (NYSE) - 13.42
JP Morg•n (NYSI!) - 24.15
Kroger (NYSE)-: 21.45
Llmllld Br•ndl (NYSE)- 8.70
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 33.13

Jamie Jones

Arson from Page AI
Blue
Ribbon · · Arson
Committee (BRAC) for the
purpose of bringing togeth·
er in a working liaison Law
Enforcement
Officers,
. Firefighters, and Insurance
Industry Personnel to com· bat the crime of arson.
Since its inception. the
chairman of BRAC has
been the chief of the State
Arson Bureau of Ohio.
As for the rewards program, since 1978 BRAC has
sponsored a reward fund 'for

information leading to the .
·identification of person(s)
responsible for arson fires
. in Ohio. Nominations for
rewards are accepted from
any Law Enforcement
Officer charged with lhe
responsibility of investigat·
ing incendiary fires. or any
. prosecutor, or any officer of
an insurance · company
licensed to write insurance
in Ohio. The program incorporates the use of a large
dramatic sign that is posted

on property damaged by
arson. Signs are posted by
fire service and/or law
enforcement personnel.
Since 1978, BRAC has
issued 407 awards in the
total amount of $413,300.
This has assisted in solving
at least 481 fires.
"Anyone with information should contact the
Division of State Fire
Marshal at 1-800-5892728," Canmill said.
According to Canmill and

Racine Fire Chief Jamie
Jones, the fire began on the
front porch causing damage
to the exterior of the home
and smoke and light water
damage' to its interior. The
· fire began shortly after 9:30
p.m. last Tuesday and lhe
Wolfes were home at the
time of the fire. The Wolfe's
garage was also "egged" and
string was slretched across
the highway from telephone
pole to telephone pole al
Fifth and Main Streets.

Poverty rrom PageAl .

cloudy with showers· likely.
Highs in the upper 50s:
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 70 percent.
Wednesday
night ...
Panty cloudy. Lows in the
upper 30s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Thursday ... Mostly
sunny. Highs in the mid 60s.
Thursday · night ...
· Show.ers likely. Lows in the
mid 40s. Chance of rain 60
percent.

expertise and ideas. In addition, the conversations will
assist in the goal. of develoP'
ing strategic recommendations for the administration
to consider, aimed at reducing the percentage of
Ohioans livmg at or below
200 percent· of the federal
poverty level.
,
"These conversations will
greatly benefil Ohio's lowincome populations by providing a forum for advocates, low-income individu·
als, government . agenCies,
non-profit agencies, practitioners and other stake holders to share ideas on bow to
Ohio Ylllly Bane Corp. (NAS.
reduce poveny in Ohio,"
DAQ)- 21.25
Phil Cole, executive direcBBT (NYSE) - 16.27
tor of the OACAA said.
Peop... (NASDAQ)- 12.88
Reed said the GMCAA
Plpalco (NYSE) - 51.79
conversation on poverty is
P19mler (NASDAQ)- 4.110
Rockwell (NYSE) - 21.82
open to all members of the
ROCky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.25
public, from politicians, to
Royal Dutch Shell - 44.27
agency workers to those
Sellra Holding (NASDAQ) who receive assistance from
45.33
Wai·Mert (NYSE) - 51.71 ·
GMCAA. Reed said all
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 4.18
"titles" will be left at the
w..a.nco (NYSE) - 21.15
door to facilitate an open
Worthington (NYSE) - 8.11
and
honest discussion about
Dlllly lllock raportl ' " 1111 4
bow
to serve those who utip.m. ET claalng quoiM of Inn•
IICIIona for March 30, 2008, prolize the agency's services.
vided by Edward Jonea nn•n"Primarily we want to
cl•l edviiDnl laue Milia In
hear
those who receive
Gllllpolll •1 (740) 441+141 •nci our from
services,"
Reed said.
·L"leY Mllrraro In Point PIMHnt
"They
can
shape
our con111 (304) 87«1174. Mem!ler SIPC.

versation, not those who
think we know what's best."
Reed said the local priorities. thai come out of this
meeting will go directly to
the governor's task force on
poverty and will shape

some of the programming munity to help us meet the
needs of the people of
done at GMCAA.
"We are always seeking Gallia
and
Meigs
community input for our Counties ." Reed added.
For more information mil
programming and this meeting is an ideal opportunity Reed or Teresa Varian at
for us to hear from the com- 992-6629 or 367-7341 .

a Daily Sentinel

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Submitted photo

Recently nearly 6,000 scrap tires were removed from across Meigs County during a clean
up involving the Meigs County Health Depa.rtme~t, Ottio ~nvironmental Protection Ag~ncy,
township trustees and Gallla, Jackson, MetQ_s. Vtnton Solid Waste Management Dtstr~CJ.

Tires rrom Page AI
Township. 650: Lebanon ·toes. which transmit such cost associated with illegal
Township. 200: Salisbury diseases as encephalitis, disposal (medical risk/costs.
Township. 70: Chester West Nile Virus and malar- difficult. expe.nsive clean up
.Township. · J00: Scipio ia, any of which can be very activities). paying for di s·
debilitating if not fatal. posal of tires at th.: time of
Township. 60 .
According lo Little. scrap Improper disposal of scrap replacement would be a
tires are an optimal breed- tires is a violation of both very .minimal investment
ing site for several species state and local law. Lillie toward eliminating future
of disease causing mosqut- ·added, compared to the. total . dump sites.

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LOCAL

~e
Sentinel
. Daily
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PageA6

• STATE

Tuesday,M~ 31,

hoi wills a pair,Piae Bl

uRG'

\

Stimulus ~ ----------~----_.----~~----~----~----~---,
funds for
tlbio
schools
.
·new
treatment

l'llmel says elbow Is OK, P1et B6

APAI-Auwsiawas.Piae B6

•

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'

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Thesday, March J.l, 2001)

_____
--. "::.:r-1
-

Bv JwE CARR SMYTH

POWEPCN-A.....,_ol•c

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~ ~ UMorl tll'ld (Will efltlntia

I4P STIITEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

:·COLUMBUS - Gov. Ted
Siiickland plans ·to change
Ute Wll)' his budget proposal
liCcounts for . hundreds of
lb,i.llions in federal stimulus
!lollars for schools to assure
the dollars are spent legal!y.
BDd keep the money from the
State's' general fund~
·
~.In a March 16 memo to
federal education officials,
$1rickland chief counsel
J.l:nt Markus said the
ebange will be made as part
pf upcoming House re~i- ·
sions to Strickland's $54 billion spending blueprint for
lhe next two years, wishing
to clarify that "our state's
spending of these funds is in
alignment with current law."
· The memo was oblained by
The Associated Press through
a·public recordS request. ·
: Washington had warned·
stales that a second round of
education funding could be
j'~ardized if they don't
spend the frrst mund as .
Congress and the president
intended. Federal offilij.als
Called foc the money to go
directly to school districts,
imd not to be used to balance
State budgets or replace exist~ state education funding.
~ Strickland spokeswo!J!jn
t\manda
Wurst
said
~c;mday that an accounting
Change will move the $900
million-plus in federal stimfllus funding out of the
state's general revenue fund
lind into special revenue.
,- ~Some lawmakers have said
die move will create a gaping
hole in Strickland's budget,
suddenly pulling millions ·
from the pot he had intended
to divide among .public
school districts through a
hewly crafted formula that
lays out how much should be
S{!ent on each Ohio student.
That per-pupil amount would
):iiry, based on factors SlfCh as
the district's size, its wealth,
;oo the number of students
special education
•ieeding
•
iervJces.
:: In the .memo to a pair of
Special advisers to Education
'ecretary Arne Duncan,
~;rrkus explained that the
!tate has enough money to
PaY for all the components of
llie formula that are mandated in the frrst two years of the
fatw standards. Those items
~uld ·include offering unitersal ail-day kindergarten . .
He said districts will be
;ncouraged to use stimulus ·
dc;&gt;llars, when permissible,
to pay for those elements of ·
lhe plan that are not initially
required, such as reduced
elass sizes, a lead teacher
prollriun, and establishlnent
l)f haisons at each school to
:\"Ork with families and
p;&gt;mmunity.
• "In future years. as these
additional
components
become ·state mandates, it is
our intention that state funding would be used tg support
these activities," he wrote.
: Markus said having districts use some of their federal dollars to meet future state
mandates will avoid the
'~Cliff effed' when stimulus
funds are suddenly not available in the nex.t state budget.
. Strickland proposes a dramatic reinvention of Ohio's
public schools in answer to
repeated court rulings that
found the current. system
unconstitutional for its over. reliance on property taxes.
."The plan is centered oh
bOth a philosophical shift and
a· revised funding formula
that boosts the state's share r
'o f the cost and lowers what
local taxpayers are expected
t'O cdntribute to local schools.
: Markus told education
ll(lvisers Carm.el Martin and
Ste\te Robinson that the governor set aside.state and federal· education dollars in newly
Q~ated line items in the
srWe's general fund, as Yl'ell as
~g accounung structures
fb segregate them for trac~mg
Arid reporting pwposes.
• :~'Qespite this careful treatfuimt, the presentation has led
die media and other observers
G)· believe that we were simply mixing (the federnl) fuoos
mto a general state .allocation
pool altho_ugh that was never
1he
. intent," he wrote.

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. ~-.yoiFai.-SI&gt;m.
MMos ~. 11\'t:l"sbr. 5 p.m.
-Valley ... - . . . 5I&gt;m.
ol Synvneo Valley. 5I&gt;m.
Gala-.y • - s p.rn.
Meigs vs:. WelsL&lt;n. 5 p.m.

i&gt;lll-. . - .. Holben-· 5:30
.
Sooltlem. 5I&gt;m.
Cool Gnwe .. Soulh 0... 5:30p.m.

Riveflldoy vs.

- a t ~4:30p.m.
l*jQo .. Coonly. 4:30p.m.
\lolloy ol . - , 4:30p.m.
~ - . y vs.

AlhOns. 4:30p.m.

~at~:J:m.
- Vder • v.-""d.

Galla AcadOmy •• - · 5 p.m.
5 p.m. ·
TQislaii!SOutiiGala, 5I&gt;m.

..

~ -.y

nlrontan. 5 p.m.

Molgs ... RM!r VaHev. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahoma. 4:30 p.m.
llar:t&lt; and Field

.Galla At:aiiomy at I!Inbd. 4:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant all'!ice. 4 p.m. .

GABS track
fares well at
Warren Invite
Bv ANNA JESSMER
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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

2009

'

: -VINCENT
Gallia
i\cademy 's varsity track
~e;rrns had a great showing
iu· their season opener
Saturday at the Warren
Relays. Both the boys and
gi~ls team performed well
with the boys taking second
place and the girls team
almost sweeping the entire
competition.
• ·"This is our best finish in
years in a relay. meet" said
Coach Close of the boys
performance at Saturday's
meet. Standouts for the
team included freshman
jumper Tyler Campbell, and
. the 4x800M relay team
comprised of seniors Tyler
Hannan · and · MiChael
Hackel, and juniors C .J.
Harrison and Seth Amos.
Campbell lead the way
for the Blue and White's
. long jump .victory with a
jump of nearly 18 feet, and
the 4x.800M relay team took
fif:;t with a time of 9: 18,
breaking a two year winning streak for what Coach
Close. called "a nearly
invincible Warren team."
The boys earned a combined total of 53 points, finishing second at the meet.
Also I?erforming strong
for Galha Academy .were
ti;!eir Blue Angels who all
bui swept the competition,
winning nine out of the I 0
.events.
The girls set two new
school records for the
efforts in the distance medley relay and the shot put
relay.
·
The team of Genna Baker.
Samantha Barnes, Lauren
AIIkins, and Peyton Adkins
'btoke the 2007 squad's
record of 14:22 with a 13:44
finish.
. Ending the II year nicord
sei by the Angels in 1998,
were what Coach Howell
called "a new crop of raw
talent." Freshman Natalie
Close, sophomore Ebony
Jamison. and veteran Allie
:I'roester smashed the standing school record of 79'6,
Wjth an impressive mark of
89'2,
:. The other events that the
Sirls of Gallia Academy
W9n were the 4x.IOOM
~lay, the 4x.200M relay, the
~OOM relay, . the dis~us
!ilay, the long jump refay,
apd the 4ll400M relay. . ·
;. The ladies representing
tfle Blue and White finished
tbe Warren relays with a
Cpinbined·total of 66 points
lln'd a great .start to the track
season.
: : Gallia Academy boys and
gjils squads will c~mpete
llgain today at Umot.o at
4:30 p.m. and again in the
Cabell Invitational at Cabell
Midland this Saturday starting at II a.m.

CONTACT US
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fa•-

1-740-446-3008

· E·man
~saportsOmydallysentinel.com

Thrley throws
. no-hitter in·Eastern's opening day 'win
.

BY BRYAN WALTERS ·
BWAl.TERSOI.t'lllALYTftliU&lt;E.COM

. 11JPPERS. PLAINS - So
much for opening day jitters.
·
Junior Kasey Torley
pitched a no-hitter, and the
Eastern softball team provided the h'lfler more than
enough run suppon over
five innings Monday as the
Lady· Eagles. posted a I 0-0
season-o{!Cntnj1
VICtory
over visitmg Miller in a TriValley Conference Hocking
Division matchup.
·
The Lady Eagles (1-0. 1-0
TVC Hocking) mustered
ei~ht hits in the triumJ?h.
wnh half of those safeties
coming in the opening atbat. EHS sent a gozen bat~
ters to the plate in the first
inning. which resulted in an
early 6-0 cushion after one
complete frame.
. Turley - making her
Eastern debut. ,after spend-

ing two seasons with Meigs
County rival Southern easily made that e-.trly edge
slick, recording five strikeouts while allowing just
five baserunners over her
five innings of hitless work.
Turley also allowed. four
walks in the winning deci- ·
sion and never faced more
than five batters in any one
Turtev •
inning of work.
The Lady Falcons (0-1, OI) received a leadoff walk tage .
to start the game • .then the Turley followed with a
Lady Eagles retired the next walk to load the bases. then
. three batters to leave Sami Cummins knocked out
Spergin stranded at third a single to bring Gillian
base. That was the only . home· for a 2-0 lead.
time that MHS came within Rawson also scored on an
striking distance of scoring. error durring the Cummins·
Then in the bottom half of hit, making it a 3-0 contest.
the first, Brooke · Johnson
Miller recorded a second
and Haylee Gillian received out, then issued back-tobl!ck-to-back walks to stan back walks to Cassie
the frame, then Allie Hoffman
and
Megan
Rawson pounded out a one- Carnahan - which allowed
o,ut single plating Turley to score and left the
Johnson for a J -0 advan- bases loaded at 4-0 .

.
Johnson followed with a offensive attack with two
single that allowed both hits and two runs batted in .
Cummins · and Hoffman ·to Johnson and Carnahan both
score. making it 6-0 after produced two RBis to go
one full inning .
along with one !lit. Rawson
Eastern padded its lead in and Cummins both also had
the bottom of the second , IIS a safety and drove in one
Cummins walked and apiece .
Brenna Holter reached safe- Gillian and Morrison both
ly . on a fielder's choice to produced one hit each in the
gi.ve EHS two scoring triumph as well. EHS also
threats with two outs in the committed the only error of
frame . After Hoffman the contest. Miller Starter
walked to load the bases. Abby Toth took the l~g
Carnahan delivered a single decision .
to plate both Cummins and · ·Eastern returns to action
Holter for a commanding 8- Thursday when it l.l'avels to
0 cushion through two com- Trimble for another TVC
plete.
Hocking contest at 5 p.m.
Britney Morrison aod
Rawson both reached safely
EASTERN 10, MILLER 0
in the third frame with one
5 INNINGS
out. then Turley brqught
Miller
000 1 00 000
both home with a single making it a 10;0 conte ~t. Ea51ern 622 Ox - tO 8 1
Neither team would manage MILLER (IH , I} 1 TVC Hocking): A. Tolh
and Spergin.
a hit the rest of the way.
EASTERN (1·0. 1·0 TVC Hocking,:
Turley - besides tossing Kasey
Turley ~nd Allie Rawson,
·
the no-hitter - also led the WP -Turley! LP - Toth.

Point Pleasant outlasts White Falcons, 11-3 Southern
Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT PLEASANT B J. Lloyd IICatteted five
hits while striking out 13 ·
Wahama batters to lead host
Point Pleasant ,past the
neighboring White ·Falcons
by an 11-3 margin Monday
evening.
The Big Blacks scored .
three times in each of the
first two innings before
Wahama cut the deficit in
half with a pair of runs in
the second and another tally
in the third. Coach James
Higginbotham's diamond
nine put the game away .
with · a single run in the
fourth and four more in the
fifth to capture the first of
two scheduled contests ,
between the inter-county
rivals.
Point Pleasant banged out
I0 hits on the day to back
the solid pitching performance by Lloyd as PPHS
improved to 3-2 on the
spring. Wahama was playing its second game of. the
ye.ar and dropped to 1-1 on
the diamond campai$n after
a season opemng wm over
Win County.
·
Titus Russell !?aced the
Big · Black offensave attack
with a single and a double
and two runs batted in with .
Brock McClung. also rapping out a couple of safeties
for Point Pleasant. Clay
Krebs and Justin Cavender
drove in a pair of PPHS
base runners with a single
each with D.W. Herdman,
Eric . Veith and Justin
Weaver also adding base
hits for the winners. · Ei~ht
of the nine starters for Pomt
·Pleasant recorded at least
Bryan Waheralphoto
one safe blow apiece in the Point Pleasant starter B.J. Lloyd delivers a pitch during the fifth inning of
Monday night's
in
Point
Pleasant.
non-conference
baseball
game
against
Wahama
Pluse see Point. 82

I

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Bv Scon .WoLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

RACINE
The
Southern Tornadoes of
Coach Ryan Lemley picked
up where they left off last
,..:._ _ ___:, season by ·
defeating
the Trimble
Tomcats 54 Monday
night during a TriValley
Conference
boys' baseball contest
at Racine's
Star Mill
Park. The
league win
g i v e s
Southern
an
early
lead in the
standings ·
as
the
defending
district
champs and
Deem
regional
runners-up begins a trek
toward a successful 2009
season.
Southern lead-off hitter
and junior Taylor Deem
scorched the base paths
with three stolen bases and
two runs scored as a beneficiary of two hard-hit singles
and a line-double. He also
reached on an error in a successful 3,4 night. Michael
Manuel touted his offensive
skills with a single, a walk,
and three stolen bases. Chris
Holter had a single and
J.D :Whittington had a dou-

Please see Southem, 82

Blue Angels blank Portsmouth, 10-0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

. ' GALLIPOLIS The
Gallia Academy girls softball team wasted little time
picking up .whe~e it left off
last season. postmg the P.rogram's 16th consecutive
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League South Division victory Monday night with a
10-0 decision over visiting
Portsmouth in the. season
opener at Memorial Field.
The Blue Angels (1-0, 1-0
SEOAL South) started their
quest for' a third consecutive
SEOAL South Division
championship iii style, scoring .half of t~eir 10 runs during their opening at-bat. The
hosts also scored three in the
second and two in the fifth.
GAHS starter Amy Noe
primarily took care of the
rest, recording seven strikeouts and allowing just one
walk and three hits over her
five innings in the circle to
pick up the winning decisiun
- 1he . 27th career win for
the junior.

Heather Drake took the
loss for the Lady Trojans (01, 0-1), who received hits
from only Emily · Hopkins,
Hannah Foster and Heather
Krekeler · in the setl,lack.
Drake struck out five,
walked six. and hit two batters over four innings of
work.
After a 1-2-3 top ~alf of
tile first, the hosts wasted littie time going to work sending I0 batters to the
plate in the first inning.
Kru:i Campbell led things
off by reaching on a walk,
then quickly s.:ored .on the
combination of a Kimber
Davis · sacrifice and a PHS
error - making it 1-0 just
tWO batters in.
Courtney Shriver - the
reigning SEOAL South
player of the year - followed with a triple, then
Noe helped her own cause
with a home run for a 3-0·
cushion. Brittyn Saunders
followed that with a triple
and Heather Ward walked to
put two runners on with only
one away.

Alii Saunders delivered
big with a two RBI double.
allowing Brittyn Saunders
and Ward to score for a S-0
edge after one complete.
The Angels picked up
right where they left off
again in the second , as two
walks and an error' allowed
Davis, Shriver and Noe to
load the bases up with
nobody
out. · Brittyn
Saunders followed that trio
with an .RBI walk, allowing
Davis to score for a 6-0 lead.
The next batter was Ward,
-who produced t.he only hit in
the evening with a two-RBI
single - plating Shriver and
Noe - for aq 8-0 cushion
through two complete.
T]le score stayed that way
until the fifth. when Amanda
McGhee led off the bottpm
of the frame with a single.
Katie Dunlap produced an
RBI singl'e one batter later,
plating McGhee for a 9-0
edge.
.
A walk was issued to
Anna Jeaamer/photo
Davis and Shriver was hit by Gallia Academy's Amanda McGhee drops down a successful bunt attempt during the fifth inning of Monday
Please see Angels, Bl
night's SEOAL South softtiall contlfst against Portsmouth.
'

.

boys claim
5-4 win

·

�Pap 82 • The Daily Sentinel

wn.mydailysentinel..eom

•••.lftJ1d 'lyse: dinel.com

Tuesday, MU"Ch 31, 2009

Blue Devils, 11::/·ans RedStonn rally for DH sweep of Point Park
play to four-al tie
BY MARKW•II•MS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL ·

Chvtle SMphenllphoto

Gallia Academy's Austin Roush scores a rlln during the first
inning of Monday night's season-opening baseball contest
against Portsmouth at Memorial Field in Gallipolis. Roush
and the Devils had to settle for a 4-all lie Monday night in
the SEOAL South opener, as darkness brought an end to
things after six innings. The game will be I'T)ade up in the
'seventh during a later date.

Trimble blanks Lady 'Does

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm baseball team rallied for a doubleheader
sweep of Point Parle on three RBI.
Monday afti;)(Jloon at Bob
Sophomore rightfielder
·Evans Field in the first two Michael Lynch (Lyndhurst.
games of a four-game OH} added two hits and an
American
. Mideast RBI. junior designated hi~
Conference series. winning Sean Flanagan (S. Euclid.
8-7 in the first game in ei~ht OH) went. 2-for-2 and junior
innings and 6-5 in nme · centerfielder Tyler Schunk
innings in the secood game. (Cincinnati. OH) also had
Rio Grande (17-10, 2-2 one hit and drew a walk: with
AMC) won both games In the bases loaded to win the
their last at-bats. In game game in the bottom of the
one, Rio Grande rallied from eighth.
.
deficits of 3-1. 6-3 and 7-6.
Rio had 14 hits in the
Junior
catcher
Tyler game. Schunk: picked up· in
Plumpton (Peterborou~h, relief. pitching two scoreless
ONT) went 2-for-5 and lied innings.
the game at 7-7 in the bottom
Kyle LucOt went 2-for-5
of the seventh with a two-out with two RBI'S, Brian Grise
solo home run.
went 2-for-3 with two RBI's
Sophomore ftrst baseman and Derek Peluso went 2-forFrancisco
Ramirez 2 with two RBI's and two
(Columbus. OH) went 3-for- runs scored to lead the Point
4 and drove in two runs. . Park offense.
· ·
Sophomore shortstop Brad
Joe Downar took the loss
Konrad (Maumee, OH) was for Pioneers· (5-15 , 2-8
,
3-for-5 and scored three runs. AMC) .
Senior third baseman Edwin
Game two was a wellOrta (Caracas, YEN) had a played game with defensive
productive !!arne at the plate gems all over the field by
as well, gomg 1-for-3 with both teams. There were a few

t!tribune - Sentinel - l\egister {
CLASSIFIED

game . 6-5 .
•
Schunk (3- 1) was the Will·
ning pitcher in relief. pitching three innin.gs :l!K1 allowing two runs wtth four strike, outs and two walks . He
made two great plays in
hiCCUJl5 as well and ~ was fielding sacrifice bunt
able to take advantage, scor- attempts and cutting down
ing three times in tbe bottom the lead ruimer at third basi:.
of tbe ninth to win tbe game.
Jordan Tuschak took: the
Lynch led the offense for loss for "?int Parle. Point
Rio Grande, going 2-for-5 P'.uk. puching ytelded rune
with two RBI's. Orta was 2- . wallcs and had one hit batsfor-4 with a run scored. Rio men in the game.
had Dine hits in the game two
Rio Grande head coach
win.
Brad Wamimont thought the
Rio battled back: from a 3-2 inability to consistently
deficit to tie the game with a throw strikes ~as the big
run in the sixth inning . downfall for Pomt Parle.
Ramirez was robbed of a
'1be biggest thing is that
game-:winning home run in you've got to throw strikes,
the bottom of the seventh you stan wallcing people and
when Point Parle rightfielder hitting people and the wheels
Gino Moio brought the ball sort of came off for them and
back into the field of play we got a couple of lcey hits
after a terrific catch at the .and at the end on a double
walt
play ball , he. ~w it awar,
The Pioneers could not for the wmnmg run ,
stand prosperity however, Wamimont said. "We' ll talce
after Dave Angle gave his it, you've got to have ·some
team a 5-3 with a two-run magtc at home and we got 11
home run in the top of the done in both games.~·
ninth, his second long ball of
Rio and Point Parle will
the game, Rio scored three conclude the four-game
limes in the bottom of the series with a doubleheader
ninth, benefiting from two tomorrow (TueMay), staning
Point· Park errors to win the at noon.

E-m!!ll
mdlclassii"JOd@mydadytribune.com

PLUS YOUR .AD NOW ONLINE

Angels

"'Southern
from Page 81
ble.
Trimble hitters were
Taylor Russell with a double..Adam Mulford a single.
Kacey Cruse a pair of singles, J,D. Chesser a single,
and Joel Barrett a single.
Although the offense was
pretty stout, especially in
the higher ranks, Southern's
defense is looking to get the
webbing checked in its
fielding gloves. Four errors
and a few harmless muffs in
between made the Southern
faithful a little weary by
nights end. Trimble complemented the defensive
effort with four miscues of
its own to even the playing
field.
Trimble gained the early.
lead when Russell reached
via an error, but was
replaced by Adam Mulford
on a · ,fielder's choice.
Mulford came home after a
K!!cey Cruse single and 3-1
ground out by Kiefer
Standley. 'the score . !-0.
·Southern took the lead in
the bottom of the first
inning when Deem singled,
Manuel
singled,
and
Holter advanced the runners
on a sacrifice fly that
brought Deem home for the
tie. Then Jordan Taylor
reached on an error that
scored Manuel to give SHS
••

tEribunt

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KIT l CARLYLE .

from Page Bl .
Obio 'IIIIey
Publishing '"""'"
the right to .odl,
rtjtct Of cane:.~ ..,
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EI'IIII'S MUll
ptepcM'IICI on tilt

e , ....
Wallicploaftng
Found small temale Bea·
Qle an Jackson Ave. Fri.
moming,owners
please
call 304-675-2841.

pu~:11
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rec-

ommends that you do
~~upledjl business with people. you
~
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until you halle investigating the offering.

Unconctitionallltetlme
guarantee. local refer·
ences furnished. Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446-0870. Rogers

Basement WaterprOofing.

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NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Divi·
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nance your home or ob- ·

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tain a .roan. BEWARE ot
call requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. can

Ptule11iooal Senicu

lh!l Office ot consum~r

toll
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1-866-278-ooo:J to leam
No Fee un,... W&amp; w.,1 ~ the mortg~ broker or

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Double o Lounge OJ &amp;
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Wed-Sat.
Genllemans Gallia

BryM~

Walters/phOto

Point Pleasant's Titus Russell, right, drills a hit during Monday night's non-conference
baseball game against Wahama at Point Pleasant. Wahama catcher Garrett
Underwood Is also pictured.
worked a free pass to chase second RBI single of the on the hill for the White
home another WHS run and game to malce it a 6-3 con- Falcons and . issued one
walk: over the final innillg
close the gap to 3-2,
test after three frames.
Three unearned tallies in
A Krebs single. in the and two-thirds.
Point Pleasant returns :to
the bottom half of the sec- fourth made it a 7-3 affair
ond pushed the Point before Point Pleasant blew action on Thursday when
Pleasant lead to 6-2. the game open with a four the Big Blacks travel :to
Valley. Wahama.
Cavender reached on an run fifth with McClung, River
eiror and Herdman coaxed a Weaver and Cavender all after playing 2008 Class
one out walk: before Veith owning base hits in the AA state runner-up Point
Pleasant on Monday, welsingled honie a run. Krebs inning.
·also reached on the White
Lloyd went the distance comes the 2008 Class ·A
Falcons second error of the in picking up the win allow- state · runner-up Buffalo :to
· inning to ,plate another tally · ing three runs on five hits the Bend Area on Tuesday
before
Russell .came with t 3 strikeouts and six in a 5:30 p.m. start.
through with the Big Blaeks free passes. The Falcons
POINT 11, WAHAMA 3:
~ first extra.base hit of the William Zuspan was tagged
season with a run scoring with the loss with Zuspan· Wahoma · 021 000 o - 3 5 3
double.
,
giving up II runs (eight Point
330 ,40 )( . - 1110 2
WHS answered with a earned) on I 0 hits with
WAHAMA (1-1): William Zuspan.
single run in . the third as three strikeouts and four AnthOny
Bond (5) and Garrett
Warth and Terry Henry free !.'asses through four and Underwood.
POINT PLEASANT (3-2): B.J. LIQyd
walked before McGrew a th1rd innings of work. and
Justin Cavender.
brought Warth in with his Anthony Bond finished up WP- Uoyd; LP - Zuspan.

censed. (This is a public
PUIIPING service
announcement
OH
and 11om lh&amp; Ohio Vallay
WV. Ron Publishing Companvl

Co.
nighl Wedne$day, ladl&amp;s Mason · Co.
Evans • Jackson,
OH
nlghl Thurscloy wl drink 101).53
7 1118
·specialS 304-675-3449
Wanled 1o do- Yard

,..

========
~

J\.'C'

I

,,

•

work, mowing,

have been
plaCed In Ids at
the GallipoliS
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures

weed-eatlng, plumbing, painting, lrash
hauling any add jobs
304-882-8216.

Galllpo11o c.,_
Collego
{Careers Close To Home)

on

SAVINGS

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picked up will be

Call Today!740-446-4367

1·800·214·0452

gallipoliscareen=oll8ga ..W
· Act:tediled Member Accrtart. ir1Q Couocil for 1 ~1

disCirded.

Col!eves and Scl'loole 1274&amp;
lOll

·''

·~

luitdtng M_..

its first lead, 2-1 .
Trimble tied it in the top
of the third round when
Curse singled and scored on
4-3 ground out by Chesser
and a passed ball, 2-2.
Trimble went back ahead in
the fourth on a pair of fielder's choices and a Russell
double, 3-2.
Soutliem wasn't long in
answering the call, but did it
with its back against the
wall with a two-out rally.
Whittington doubled, Greg
Jenkins walked, and both
rode · home on a two- RBI
doub'te by Taylor Deem.
Manuel followed to drive
home Deem when the
Southern hurler reached on
an error at first base, the
score 5-~ Southern.
Trimble added a run in the
seventh frame on a Mulford
single and an error, but a fly
out to Adam Warden in
right ended the game.
Manue I was the winning
hurler and asserted himself
, as Southern's number one
man. Manuel had three
walks and five strikeouts.
Russell suffered the loss for
Trimble with four walks
and two strikeouts.
Southern goes to River
Valley for a non-league
game Tuesday.
SOUTHERN

-mydlii'Jb lbune.cam
-mydlil) u llllllcom
www.mydailylegltller.cam

Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992~21~6 (304) 675-1333
ca11 Today•••
Or Fa To (304) I1'MU&amp;

Bv ScOTT WOLFE

\

In One Week With us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

Point

Brooke Gabritsch suffered
·
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
the loss with Southern with outing.
Wahama
managed just
three strilceouts and five
RACINE - The defending walks. Katlyn Walton posted five hits off Lloyd with
Tri-Valley Hocking Division the win for Trimble with William Zuspan and Ethan
Champion Southern Lady three strikeouts and one walk:. McGrew swatting a couple.
Tornadoes made .the job of The Southern bats were of singles -each with Bnce
defending their champi- stymied at the hands .of Clark: adding the remaining
onship a much tougher one Walton, while a 2-0 start gave WHS safety. McGre.w and
after losing the season opener Trimble the needed momen- Clark were the lone two
after being handed a I 0-0 tum to pull off the win. White Falcon batters to
mercy affidavit from bounty Trimble was picked to be a escape Lloyd's strike out
hunter Trimble Monday contender in the league this total on the night.
evening at Racine's Star Mill season in what is expected to
"We were in a groove
Parle. The game was the f'll'St be a good race ·among the swinging the bat," Point
for both teams.
leaders Eastern. Waterford, Pleasant coach James
Southern hitting was led by and Southern.
Higginbotham said followBreanna Taylor with three
ing
the diamond win. "We
Southern goes to River
singles,
while
Kelsey Valley Tuesday.
hit the ball hard ill! evening
Holsinger had a single.
and even the balls that didTrimble was led by Taylor TRIMBLE 10, SOUTHERN 0 n't fall in for a hit for us
Savage with two singles,
were hard shots."
•
Sierra Lenigar had a double Trimble 205 30 - 10 6 1
The Big Blacks scored
and a single. Jessie Spears a Southern 000 00 - · 0 4 ~
three .times in the opening
single. and Kelcie Downs a wP _ Kadyn Wa~on; lP - eroo~ce frame to stalce Lloyd to an
double.
• Gabri1sch
3-0
advantage.
early
Herdman singled to begin
the
inning and Veith was hit
RBis, while Ward and Alii
by
a pitched ball before
Saunders both produced
two apiece. Dunlap and Lloyd singled to · fill the
Brittyn Saunders also added sacks with Point Pleasant
fromPageBl
base runners. Krebs delivan RBI each.
ered
a sacrifice fly to left to
Gallia Academy returns to ·
a . pitch to load the bases action today when it travels drive in the games first run
Russell . and
wtth no¥y out. Noe fol- to Proctorville for a non- before
McClung
.
came through
lo":ed Wl.th an RBI walk:, . conference matchup with
wh1ch scored Dunl!IP to Fairland. First pitch is with run producing singles
finahze the mercy ruhng.
scheduled for 5 p.m.
for a 3-0 Bi~ Black lead.
The Angels produced 10
Wahama came back to
hits in the triumph. with
score
a pair in the second as
GALLIA ACADEMY 10,
eight different batters proClark: singled to start things
PORTSMOUTH 0, (5 INN)
ducing those safeties. Ward
off and Zac Warth followed
Portsmouth 000 00 0 32
· and Brittyn Saunders led Gelllo
Acad .530 02 - . 10 10 o with a walk. McGrew
brought home the Falcons
the way with two hits
PORTSMOUTH
(0·1
,
o-1
SEOAL
first run of the night with a
apiece .
followed
by
South): Heather Drake and Cooper.
Dunlap. Davis , Shriver, GALLIA ACADEMY (1-Q, 1-0 SEOAL single to left before Tyler
Kitchen walked to load the
Noe., McGhee and Alii South): Amy Noe and Mattie Lanham.
WP- Noe; LP- Drake.
bases. Jacob Roach then
Saunders with one each.
HR: GA - Noa (llrst innfng. one on,
Noe had a team-best three one out).

•

1

"This institution is an

Equal Opportunily

Provider and Employer

5, TRIMBLE 4

•

Trimble
101 100 1 - 4 6 4
Sou1htrn 200 300 • - 5 6 4
WP - Mk;haol Manuel; LP - Taylor
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1188 66~ Ot67

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Dln,H

alipmenls.
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complete service oil!
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We service and
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(7'41)1 911:.S.
Custom Home Buih!inf
SIJ!el Frame Buildinp

Comodlolt Fiii!Ailoh. ftdioolin 11!1511

lluilding.lle!nodOiinJI

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6eamlrcpoir

At lho ~- )0\J IIIIJot try "' iloop
YO\Jt - · t o in lho !lark allout yw
~
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IIYQ!&lt; w••S&lt;lliltt in - na-trump, how
WCIIlcl you pltn the play altBr WOJitillii! Eoltplay&amp;ll'lejol:lt7
You. IIIUII win 11&gt;1 liot tric!&lt; wii!l yaut
SPA king. ._.ng Wool ~
-theqll-. l~l!¥thtl!

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OOIN' SOME
Ft:SHIN',
PARSON'!'

the- Wl&lt;lj.:ll ct . . . . , . sill hall• ~~~~ 11&gt;1 ja:ll, the ct
hi&amp; tc\IChlng Olld&amp; when playWig. 11111&lt;1
hW!&lt;I ~lf#t.J Thon iQ\! crooa II! dllnimy.
wltli ahWI and /lUI llii&gt; diWnonQ&lt;IJllli.

SORT OF ...WOR\(IN'
ON NeX:T SUM)AV'S
~ ~ -...

When WOJit willl wltli hi&amp; ~ng.
net icnaw """"' tc de. ~

!il*ll - · WOJit C1P tomlnua ltiol

Appi'Olli~ lin -

......

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Racine.
. . ONo 740-247.ao1t

-·~~ ' too- .
H'6!IC ~-­

lon!t

THE BORN LOSER
"'t ~I&gt; \6, at WOW\
WAAT l'l&lt;\ IIP...tb!

II WOJit gila it '911. - t ti'"" play
ll!lfiMI SQilltCii,. itetludlyl
Is • tc Wilill's prtdi&lt;amtftt'? Vee - oliQ!tol cailod lht Smith
Edt&lt;&gt;. On i!lt Hiot suit plays, it
ttlii&lt;l ham!- not he'&lt;t to win lht !rid&lt;
orgi.o • count~gnsi. no1Ton81Tii~in!Q~

e.E.nu.wrr~ ~Olt ~0\.ILb t Y&gt;-'1, &amp;.iit.R. ~
~U..E. 'iQIJ'ItE

AA.u-1&gt;...

--·~a
Of IXJllliiiiC8 ntUit

$2Wperson.

QIJlT Wll&lt;ll..E '(0\J'It£ 1'\0\ 'tOO

mallon abQUI tho suit originally lect

""- eo\l~t&gt;!

"""' 1!¥1 play$ his lout dummy's iloil. whi&lt;tl &lt;it&lt;1its "
~ (WEast IIIICiho !IQallo QUIWI,
no 1100uld drop 11&gt;1 heart tO under

)U'S

AU MATERIALS INCLUDEDI
Sundays 1 p.lft. liDS p.m. ·
C' II will be Aplll $, 1&amp;, 26

·-3

..... -

Glnt Enl'lco&amp;....., . . . .
lmltrdS...
TGFIII wea.,...ltiltle
-

304 812 4625
' ~lery 4091s loclited ll

alliin Street
Point Piau rnt, WV

diNinG ..

ccnl, be ... - · prido In llilir I!ICI· lit ~....

'*"""'Y'S jack.)

11&gt; ..... Fey 4 Bentllla -

knQWhowtcdoltnd.

_

llnatluciDia: .

claasp'

suit tc tlMW. yQUt ~t II y.O\J
he'&lt;t tlltl ~ '1\!W, Wool muat sllift
tc.llie club ...... I&lt;IV"' ~. i~Qping
Eatst cin wan with the a am:t retum 1.

Bon-

Still Life Oil c....

n. mlgtt

EW ,_ lht

Ia looloing: lor
......... tc ..... ......
1liur. • Fii. . . , .

a. llrivai's " ~ boot 11i&lt;jiiil0d.
888-617'-254il

oftlrtng:

1

sail1 .,. ~ i$' i*'Ol' whQ 0111111$
han! .. hl&amp;lillllt-- ilolll~-·.
tllofi- ~ gMaM"' -~
recagoim.

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allpooo

lift

You must hue
himintheduk

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c1n11&gt; o11 -

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• !l&gt;t '

llV's.

(740),99-2.-53414
Mon·Fri
8:00 am • 4:30 pDil
Sat. 8:00 am - 12

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OH

NO

4!5631.

So. it using i!lt Sm11!! Edt&lt;&gt;. '11/0Jit would

PHONE

CAlLS! II
Now _ . ; n g lor part poeltlo~ (14

hrs or -

-a - ) at

Acqulsitiona Fino . - y.
15l 2nd ,.... Gailt)OIIs.

Now Sellins:
• Ford&amp;. Moloraaft
P'W • Engines.
Trarisfer CIISeS &amp;
Transmissi&lt;lns

·~

SlmiMP
4T4t}1.C.,a,

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lleplacemtlll Sbeet

Metal&amp;.

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CI .ASSIFIEDS

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pen on their own. It will take tlbrt
h&lt;W """' to """ !hom olf;C"'"'t

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IU r'MINU .I lilow

-slxmonlis

·EMPLOYMENT

Fulrn. . omployoH .,.
-lllprovidt

Dalid Lewis

-

F""'E~

Hlring Fullll. .
Poslllons (2·11 pm)
l Onslhi Doclot
I

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Celk 740-4l6-l834

HaH
Guttering

1••c-MYU
bL:MM
0
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Not affilaled with Mii.e Martum-Rootiog II. R.~
25+
•
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. l'ru E•' '11

~Today!

1

• Vmyl and Wood Siding • Rooting
• Pole Barns • ,-atio's ~ Poo:bes a1KfDecks

740-9854141

lloniiM6
l Fun l f'i'otoosional
WOitling Envi""""""'
I Comploai Bon1111S
PI1Ck8go

t

For: • Chain Lint Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Adiili.tions • Garages

Seamllss Gutters ·
Rooting, Si&lt;ing, GuM~$

O.C'OIII

, _ . l3oti&lt;*J

L-ng lor ElcpotleiiCOd
pllinhlr, must have valid

&lt;lrivors .. license.
-

llovo

· 74()-367-7$10

NooO someone. 10 do ,..
modollng: dlyNall, ~

ing and some - t y
~~..,~· wont C'i' 7~76
tlp.wOtt.~·

Wllllttd someone

ins: w(tb b~ to won. 111 a
...bl.
304-67~2308
J04.l9J.3499.

a.ww.
TliO

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Construction

MDS41D'S~

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Gs'r11o 0114H»

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Estl ioo, ltyrs Exp,

cow and BOY

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r-'l""'-------,

THE lN.TEI!NET IS FILLED
WITH OISINFORMATION.
ANI) PEO~ Cli:RR't-PICI(
WAATE'JEJ1 FACTS TME'I
WAN.T TO iA.CK UP W~AT·
IS THEY

, ......1311
RkkJ
eno....

BELIEVE

h

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

IT WAS FOR '1'0\.1, BOT I
TAUCEO 18 OUT OF tT..

""-·

take a long. shOt on a

110, IT w~ AN. A """~ ··
I'M.lJST Tla'lll'lG TO FINO
THE lPSlDE TO HAlliNG A.
LIVE ~T GU£0 TO ME.
{_

3r&lt;l. 2009 nt 5

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and
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eenonto.. Fax ,.,.... to
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to LLCeCAREO.COI.I

Wantoci-Au-o
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!lie

rigi'll

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LIBRA (Sept. &lt;!.3-0&lt;t ~31 - sno..hld •
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SAGlTIARIUS INofi· 23-0.C. 211 - It';

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impo11$n~ to bit •~tr•l"lWI"t ~killrt $nQ on
~ when it oomM to· negotiations

'llwf

that. invoiVa money. It you are 1nQilflltrwnt
or CIIJ91fif, ~Q\.1 wm b4t lh!t on• whQ suf.
tl'lof loss.
CAPRICORN 1000. 22-Jaro. 19) - Oonl
• • arrything tor Qfaflt.d • ...-, 1)8Q0ti~...
ing an agrHmant and make suf"llt that
tN Othlltr party \4 leveling w1tn you.

•rs.

.,., m'ha
• Pille .......

~

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justifl~

Wort

Rates

'Ins~

SOUP TO NUll

'Experienced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley@
740-59l-8044

Pleose le~ve meSS&lt;~

PSI CONSTRUCTION
--R00111 Addlliofts, Rtmocltliac, Met.! a

SIJlltalt Roofs, New Homes,~. DeW.
~

RtlaOCiellaa. Uce-d &amp; IIISIU'td

person

I

AQUARUJ$ (JM. ~F... 191 - lnstoad
of twlplng MSe )'QUt · probl.,-t~s. well~
"lntentlonlltd co~work.ers could creat4
mor• ills it yQI,I · dQn't tirlt "'r"" ttllltir
s.uggestions be""- applying them. You
need help. not motto~ .

PISCES !Fob. 20-Morolo ~) - llolng
!Qr r.actil'lg: l'lai'Shly to a stick~
social slt\latioo w011't do you.r imagtt any
good. In '-ct. it CQI.ltlj 00 I"'I"'()NN Mrm than
~p. Bite 1h8 ~ l let and don't make any
flMdi..a Wfi\llltS.

a Removal
• Proinp~lllld Qualiey

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pqa·IDEA.lS SOMETI!lNG
MIJCH, Ml.lCH BIGGER.
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betbllll w1t11 a iQilnd bll; ~." • Tacf'Nilliant$

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io April

~t-rich-Qvick

CANCE~ (June 2hJuJy 22) -Usa cau·
tion when challenging.
\lktw$ of-~
c1•t.e. aboUt which ~ ,_. strongly.
"Think about how you would fHI it otl'lers
picked apart your belief$.
l&amp;O (July ~&lt;lug. 22) - It m;gnt o.
your tum to- be sa.ddt8d witl'l a work
assignment that tvtryQne l'ta.!J. tri~ to
f,Vokt Compllining abQut it will on!)'
m¥e yoo look inditt.renl to What your
co-wort&lt;Cif'S. ha\1• ~red.
~IAGO (Aug. 23s$opt 22)- Somoono
1"'..__ _ _ _ _, ; , _ , r-------~~
111 with1n your ~r I)I"OUP. mlgl"lt tr)l to p lay
u
CC '"""'T
Politics and attvmpt to lllake you. tP•

'THeil!'$
~COMIN&amp;
KIN&amp; NIP QUEeN

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flnancM-. KMp a lid on a. lllnd8ncy to

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sensiti\titiM uncilir control. and dQn"t rvad:
~ ill wiH into what otn.r1 ha11e tQ say
•here nQ harm was intended. You'll be
t\ekf responsible lor eteating an txtf~.­
ly unpjN$Wlt situatiQn.
GEMINI (Ma~ 2h.lune 201 - Thtt,.·s a

m~.s W"~Othef think

·~Sidlnt
• Alplm-.t

XL~~~~

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i"g. tn. blame wQn't I'Mtlp.

hfrot"• si~ing anything. tak• the tinw to
check things out.
·
·

VlllllQt
of Rio
Grandt 1e ,_
~ lor ll'1e poollloro of piiiHirtie Pol~
Oflicef. Appl~llons may
~ j)icl&lt;ed up at 11&gt;1 Village 111\Jnicipal Building.
Ooa&lt;lil.. lor applicatione

lor

00 't'OU WANT TO
'TALK 10MIM'? DON'T 't'OU
1-lA'JE i\fft'mlNii Bel IER
W~'f

47239 Riel!el Roo&lt;!. L0113 Bonom. OH

Weel&lt;t; Pay &amp;

-:t1

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748-991..69'71

custcmor ...,.,. """'
ll'1e pl1oM lor Non-Prolt
and ConMivllllvt
POilllcal Olgllll!zatiol1s.

Wl-40? Mil 81tOTI-IER '?
'(ES. l-IE'S AROUND
SOMEPLACE ..

c.a: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

edt- !ll"lt!tellhttaMtlef II'IONt.
~ ··dolt; rfCiill/f 8

TAUR\IS (April ~y 20)- ._your

PEANUTS

Wo IllY up Ill S12.2!Whr

CWrllyClQIIw Q ~-~~---~~rarn·~bW illlt'IQ.Ia . . . . Mel n . l

"""'"'apl ['
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••poet
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IH--"1 ~RIES (Marcll 21-April 191 - $om""IN
"
ttl at has . gon• unllfSQN:ifd: might flhally
I· 1· . [1z ·
catch up with you. bringing. a ~nalty.
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l'l)'ing .0 com~ up wiU'I ~CUSM or ltlift..
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TWAT!

Shipments arri.Ye- l!:'(er)l
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Amull.'t- C"rush - Worrv Gibt.ltl • HEIR L OOM~
If yt•W' mom IN yvu 1..~, with e•·erything in the hNtS&lt;.
yo1.1probably had fun, but you won't h,we at~v
HF.lRL00.\1S

ARLOlJANIS

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Cinc:IMil~ hlga'e ~ CanQn F'aknef. lett.
IIISIIMS ffl
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tQMo:h ~ l .............. Bel1griS'
Cll
~ ott 11 son _ . . • fllllt a.-n StadiiJm in
Cll!ldMali on MaMa,.

.

,Blllk~ Griffin and
~ spent a

'JYler

lot 0f

Ume: ~ oo the cowt
WI wtelend and were !&gt;ad
..,gelber Mooday .as. ~ top
~e-getcers
oa
The
~illted
Press' · All-

America ream.
·Griffin. the- · sopbomoo:f~MWIIrli from Ollahoma
~oo led lhe nation in
reoondiog, was the ~
llllallimous selection fur ~
team. Hansbrough. the wn-

sellSus player of~ year last

seiiSQII as a junioc, repeated

as. a fllSt-teamer the day
lifter bis Tar Heels beat the

Sooaers 72-tiO tQ advance to
!MFmalfow-.
~ them oa the team
were players. from schools
with littk All-America history. sopbQmores DeJuan
Blair of Pittsburgh. James
Harden of Ari:aooa S111te ud
junior Stephen CIIIT)I of
btvillson.
.. Griffin. who averaged 21
points and 14.3 rebounds
while shooting 635 peW£ent
froal the field. became rollep bllsketball's image foe
ioUglmess when he returned
fiom a coocussioo ooly to
drivtt hll'adlong ooto · the

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seo~er's. table.
He ~ved

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71 fws.t-team
335 PQints from
the ~ 11litioolll media
Panel that selects the .weekly
Top.25. Blllloting was done
before the NCAA tournaVQtes and

ment.

·Husbrough. a unanifOOIIS p.ick: last season wong
with · Kansas
State's
Michael Beasley. gl.lt 50
first-team votes and 304
~nts. This is. the fourth
straight season the 6-foot-\l
forward received AllAmerica recl.lgnit.ion. He
was a tnird-team pick as "
freshmu ~~nd was o.n the
se.cond team after his
sophomoce season.
Blair is Pittsburgh's. second first-teamer, joining
Don Heimon in 1958.. Curry.
who led the nation in scoc-

·Moats accepts
ofr~eer,s apology for hospital stop
.
.

DALLAS '(AP} - NFL in-law. We call her Jo. Shl} cle.and they n~s.hed into the
player Ryan Moats s.a.id was. just like my mom basi- hQ.Spital. She was by her ·
MQnday he ac~-epts the aPQ}: cally ," Ry~~n Moats. said.
mother's
side
when
~ offered by a Da)las
Powell; who has been Collinsworth. 45. died 11
ict: oflicer who stopped p1~ on paid leave pend- . shon time later from breast
im with a drawn gun in· a mg lin investigatioo. issued a cancer,
bo&amp;pital parking lot as his statement Friday through his
Powell
yelled
at
inotber-in-law was dying.
atll&gt;nleys.
Tumisnia Moats to ~tuy i11
• The Houstoo Tex~~ns nan- "I wish to publicly and the SUV.
Ding back said on ABC's sincerely apologile to the " 'Excuse rne. my mom is
~ Morni 0g America" Moats family. my wlleagues dyin~... Tamishia Moats
tb'at he hopes Officer Robert in the Dallas Police s11id. ·no you understand?"
f!Vwell was sincere in his Dtpartment.and to 1111 ti\Qse T11mi~hit1 Ml.ltlts told
ppology.
·
who have been ri'htfll)ly. Dallas-Fort WQrih televl. Powell stopped Moats' angered by my IICttoos 011 sion station WFAA on
SUV
outside
Bayl?r ~arch 1~. 2009\ After stop. Monday that she wus ,eactRegioolll Mediclll Center 1ft • pmg Mr. Moats veh1cle. I ing instinctively. ''Hn·ould ,
Sliburban Pl11110on March 18 showed poor judgment ll!\d hlwe shot me . Hut ut thut
after the vehicle rolled insells.itivity t(l Mr. Moots time I Will' only thinking
lhrough 11 red light. Moats' and his family by m~ words about my mom:· she sllid . .
wife. Tamlshia. and other t~nd actions," Powell s staleRy&lt;~n Mouts said the ollicer poimed his gun 111
ielatives were lllso in the &lt;:ar. ment Sllid.
The officer pulled out his Tamishia Moats suid she'd Tmnishia Moats and then at ·
gtm lllld threatened Moats like to hear the ~pology per- him .
~ithjllil as the pluyer. ~leud - · S\&gt;natly. but thut she, t\'w.&gt;,
He c~plained thm he .
ed to be wlowed to. go ms,ide would dellnitely m;cepl it.
waited until lh~re w11s no
tile oo.~pital. Moots' mother- A~;~·onhng to video from a tnaffi\' befa&gt;re (:ontinuin~
in-law. 45-ye~~r-old J''n"""' \lushoourd •:t~mem inside the thr1H1~h the red li.:ht .When
Collinsworth. died wbile officer's vehicle. T~amishia Pow.:-U a..~l:ed for proof of
Powell wrote Moots a ticket Moots and another woman insuraawe. M1&gt;t1ls grew
1111d lectured him.
,
di~gurdw 1\lwell's ordt•r more agitated and told the
."I loved Jo ... my mother- to get back insid&lt;' the'r vehi- . llfficer to go find it .
·

A .special suppleme.nt to The Daily Sentinel

TuESDAY, MARCH 31, 2009

'

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