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Scouts give cookies··
to nursing home
residents, A6

Eagles win fourth
grade toumament, A6

\

Printed on 100%
.R~ycltd Newsprint

~

)

SPORTS .·
'
~'High

school softball .
action. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Family
Health Care, the federallyqualified health center in
Middleport, could have a new
home for its Meigs County
practice if federal health care
stimulus funds are awarded as
they are expected to be.
Mark Bridenbach, the
executive director of the
Chillicothe-based non-profit
firm, said county commissioners and others working

to expand health care · ser- Health Care's medical pracvices in Meigs County have tice . in Middleport, wnich
there
from
visited a new 10,000 square- relocated
foot Family 1{ealth Care Pomeroy just last year, could
· office in McArthur, which be soon and once again in
·could ser.ve as a model for a need of space. Bridenbach
said federal stimulu~ funds
new facility here.
Bridenbach said the U.S. awarded Monday will proDepartment of Health and vide funds for a second famHuman Services is expected .ily physician and other staff,
to make $1.5 billion avail- but said that could create
able to Federally-Qualified more space problems for the
Health Centers, like Family growing practice.
Bridenbach said the pracHealth Care, for construction of new clinic facilities. tice is seeing an increase in
Bridenbach said Family demand for medical services

Hearings for
AMP app.eals
stretch
into 2010

,..

...

...

..

~

.
. &lt;

,.

..
Signs of spring
are everywhere. In

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM ·

Page AS
' ; Lloyd Nelson, 63
• Robert Price, 44

INSIDE
• Pistachio warning
could signal food ,safety·
shift. See Page A2
• Big summit, small
hopes; leaders meet on
eco.ncimy. See Page A2
• Ohio hunter:s donating
venison to food pantries.
See Page A3
• Budget director says .
education budget sate'.
See Page A3• AEP cuts 2009
earnings forecast. .
. See Page AS ·
• LawYolJ'Can Use. ·
See Page AS
··· For the Record.
See Page AS
·• · Meigs sixth
graders take top
prize. See Page A6

·. WEATHER

Details (In Page A3

r

:':

'•'

Bv BETH SERGENT

· OBITUARIES

on a sliding scale, because
more patients are finding
themselves unemployed and
without health care coverage. Family Health Care sees
patients without regard for
medical insurance coverage.
County
Commissioner
Mick Davenport said land for
sue~ a new facility would ~
available at the Rocksprings
site where commissioners
hope a 24-hour emergency
room could be built, if
Family Health Care wishes to
locate there. . However,

dOWntown ·

COLUMBUS .....:. The latest hearing regarding the
. latest appeal of a permit for
the proposed American
· Municipal
Power
Generating Station stretches
into 2010.
•. ·
According to the Ohio
Environmental
Review ·
Appeals Commission's web- ·
site and Natural Resources
Defense Counc iI, a prehe.aring conference has .beeri .s.et
for 10 a.m., Jan. 20, 2010 in
. regards to the apreal of
American Municipa Power- '
Ohio's National Pollutant
Discharge
Elimination
System penrtit. The appeal
was filed by the NRDC,
Ohio Environmental
Council, ' and Sierra Club.
The actual de· novo hearing
on the appeal is scheduled
for 10 a.m., Jan. 25-Jan. 29,
2010 in Columbus.
A prehearing conference
on the apreal of AMPOhio's fina air permit-toinstall issued by the Ohio
EPA is scheduled for 10
a.m., July 27 while the de
novo hearing is scheduled
for 10 a.m., Aug. 3 - Au~.
21 in Columbus. The air
permit is being appealed by
NRDC, OEC, Sierra Club
and
National
Parks
Conservation.
Last month the Ohio EPA
· approved a final solid
waste
permit-to-install
(PTI) for the proposed
landfill, which will receive
combustion waste from the
AMPG~proposed for
·
Letait Fall .
Accordin to Thorn Cmar,
lead council with the
NRDC, the or~anization is
not involved m anything,
such as an appeal, concerning the landfill.
In addition to the appeals
of the final NPDES and air
permit, an application for
the US Army Corps of
Engineers 404
permit
remains pending.

2 SEcriONS -

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
Calendars
Classifieds

A3

A3 ·
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather
2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Stimulus
award to
expand staff
at Middleport
practice
Bv BRIAN J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

: ' Midtileport, the ·

· orname:Otarpear

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport's
Family
' S$Cond Ave'm.ie
Health .Care will add an
· are awash'tn
additional family doctor,
nursing and clerical staff
. fre$h, y.,htte ~ .. ·
with the latest award of
blooms; whlle torfederal stirnulu.s funds.
. sythla, lilies and.
The U.S. Department of
;othEir spring flow·
Health
and Human Services
. ·ers are seen
announced
the release of $8
.• .the stteet$
front yarps. • million to expand services
offered, at community health
center,s in Ohio.~ J&lt;amily ..
Health Care is one of those
centers and will receive
. $316,405 {rom the latest
award for its six centers in
Chillicothe,
McArthur,
Logan, The ·Plains, New
'Jihdustr.ies tOO.k
Lexington and Middleport,
.advantage of ' ' ..
All of them will see staffing
Tuesday's warni '
increase and other improve.. weather to com· ·
ments through this latest
plete some fan&lt;;!. ·
award.
.
·sc:aplr)g wor~ . . .
Its executive director,
store's .•
Mark Bridenbach, said a
nlillildi'ln area. . . ··~
· second physician can be
· added to the Middleport
J; Aeedtp~~ot
staff sometime in August
through this funding award.
A family doctor.and nurse
practitioner · now
see
patie~ts at the Middleport
practice. Another receptionISt might also be added to
the local office staff,
Bridenbach said, through
this funding award.
·
The money was made
availaWe by the American
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act . and comes as more
Americans join the ranks of
the uninsured, the · White
House said Monday.
'
"More Americans are losing their health insurance
and turning to health centers
for care." . said Health
. Resources and Services
Administrator
Mary
Wakefield, ''These grants
wi II aid centers in their
efforts to provide care to an
increasing
number of
patients during the economIC downturn."
.tre~s Uoing t11orth .

Please see AMP, AS

INDEX

Davenport said, the practice
can locate anywhere in the
county if funds are awarded.
Any construction by
Family Health Care would
be independent of commissioners' plans to secure
sti mutus funds for a new
emergen~y room. Davenport
said architectural plans have
been completed for a 15,000
square-foot E.R .. which
would be built on land the
Community Improvement
Corporation owns near
Meigs High School.

J

Please SH Expand,
AS .
.

elimination
Nearly too attend · Division launches invasive species
Conservation' . Service ,
Meigs.
and
Gallid
qualify
for
assistaiu:e
nearly $1 million is availcancer survivor dinner
ties include Adams, Athens, able to landowners to

STAFF REPORT

MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Cancer survivor Dan
Smith then auctioned three
afghans made and donated
by
Betty . Pooler
of
Middleport to benefit the.
Meigs · RFL, bringing in
$400. Successful bidders
were Judy Nelson. Gloria
Kloes and Joe Bolin .
· Truly Saved, comprised
of Craig Harrison; Kathy
McDanieL Jackie White,
entertained by performing
several gospel songs·. Jeri
Hill of Racine introduced
the luminary service by
signing. ·'I Can O~ly
Imagine.'' RFL Planmng
Committee Member Rae

POMEROY- Nearly 100
people attended the recent ·
Cancer Survivor Dinner held
by the Meigs County Relay
for Life Planning Committee
at the Mulberry· Community
Center.·.
Crisp · and
JoAnn
Courtney Sirn. the 2009.
Meigs
RFL
co-chairs
emceed the event. The
American Cancer Society's
Patient Navigator for Meigs
County. Kirri Painter, discussed free services available to county residents who
are cancer patients or the
Please see Survlvon. AS
families of cancer patients.

STAFF REPORT

Champaign. Clark, Fairfield,
Fayette, Franklin, Highland.
COLUMBUS - Nearly Hocking.
Jackson.
$1 million in federal Lawrence.
Madi~on,
landowner assistance funds Morgan, Perry. Pickaway.
and technical advice from a Pike.. Scioto, Ross, Vinton
forester are avai.Iable in a. and Washington. (Click for
22-co~nty · area in central · niap - ohiodnr.com/porand southeastern Ohio for tals/18/invasive_plants/inva·
woodland owners interested sive-map.doc)
in .controlling invasive
"It. just . makes more
spec1es.
sense to grow oak trees
Both Meigs "and Gallia than weed species like tree
are included in the counties of heaven and bush honeywhich qualify to. apply for suckle." said David Lytle.
financial. assistance in state forester and chief of
removing invasive species the Ohio Division of
~ which discourage healthier Forestry.
"Thanks to a
forests. ,,
partnership
with
the
Other participating coun- Natural
Resource
MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

..
'

remove these non.-native
species and to encourage
healthier woods through- ·
out central and southeastern Ohio."
Invasive plants are estimated to cause bill ions of
dollars in damage annually
to the environment. forestry,
agriculture, industry and
recreation .
,
Annemarie Smith, an
invasi\·e species forester
based in Athens, is available to meet property owiters with five or more acres
of wooded land in the targeted 2:! counties. She can

Please see Forestry, AS
'

�•
.

· The Daily Sentinel

I

I

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Big

. Wednesday, Aprilt,

•

The Daily Sentinel

2009

Pistachio warning could
signal food safety .shift

this affects the whole industry. it 's not good .''
California supplies 99 .99
TERRA BELLA, Calif. percent of the U.S. pi•tachio
It could take weeks before ' market, according to the
health officials know exactly California Pistachio Board.
which pistachio products
"What's scary is that it's
BvTOM RAUM
eration," he said, noting that
may
be
tainted
with
salmoafter
the nuts have been
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
nations like to keep control
nella,
but
they've
already
.
processed
that this stuff is
over their own fiscal and
issued
a
sweeping
warning
getting
into
it. ~ it.. real!Y
LONDON - Desperate ·monetary policies.
to
avoid
eating
the
nuts
or
makes
you
wonder, . sa1d
but uivided on ways to lift
And global leaders were
foods containing them.
Marcia Rowland. an av1d pistheir nations from economic quarreling up to the last
The
move
appears
to
inditachio eater in Apopka, Aa.
mi&gt;ery. world leaders con- minute before the summit.
cate
a
shift
in
how
the
govThe FDA learned about
' crged for an emergency
Adding to the pressure.
emment
handles
food
safetY.
the
problem March 24,
,u nun it Tuesday holding French President Nicolas
issues
from
waiting
until
when
Kraft notified the
,cant hopes of finding a Sarkozy said Tuesday the
contaminated
foods
surface
agency
that routine product
magic- bullet solution for leaders cannot afford to .let
one-by-one and risking that testing )lad detected salmothe crisis that brought them the week pass without makmore people fall ill to jump- nella in roasted p1stachms.
hurrying to London.
ing substantial progre's in
ing
on the problem right Kraft . and the Georgia Nut
Even as President Barack fixing the world s economy.
'
away.
even ifthe message is Co. recalled their Back to
Obama and the others were
"We have to obtain
vague.
Nature Nantucket Blend
arriving : the U.S. acknowl: results , there is no chpice ,
Officials
wouldn't
say
if
trail
mix the next day and
edged its allies would not the crisis is too serious to
the'
approach
was
in
response
expanded
the . recall . to
uo along with a massive allow us· to have a summit
to
any
perceived
mishandling
include
any
Planters and
AP photo
burst of stimulus spending, for nothing," he said.
of
the
m~sive
peanut
recall
Back
to
Nature
products that
while Europe was forced to
European countries are President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama
that
started
last
year,
only
that
contain
pistachios
Tuesday.
backpedal from hopes for pushing for a iougher regu- wave as they disembark Air Force One a\ London's Stansted
they're
trying
to
keep
people
kraft
spokeswoman
tighter financial regulation . latory system for global International Airport, Tuesday.
from getting sick as new Laurie Guzzinati said · her
Instead , leaders are trum- finance, while the U.S. is
details
surface ·about the company's auditors visiled
peting the limited common emphasizing more spending and Latin America, the strug- and with Chinese President California
plant at the center the plant early last week,
ground they could reach, - an idea that holds little gle is for food or no food ."
Hu Jintao.
of the pistachio scare.
and ·"observed employee
rncl uding more money for interest for Europeans wary
.London does not have a
With Moscow, the agenda
"What's different here is practices wh.ere raw and
the International Monetary about debt.
·
good history for successful will inClude disputes over that we are being very roasted nuts were not adeFund and closer scrutiny of
Obama planned a round of economic summits. One energy, Russia's continued proactive and are putting out quately segregated and that
hedge funds and tax havens . meetings with leaders on held in London in 1933. ·opposition to U.S. missile a broad message with the could e~plain the sporadic
As for the broader issues, Wednesday,
including attended by more than 1,000 defense sites in Eastern goal of trying to minimize contamination!'
they 're hoping for the best Queen Elizabeth JJ, summit world leaders and financial Europe and warhead cut- the likelihood of consumer
She said she didn 't know
· - or at least that they will host B·ritish Prime Minister officials - althougH not backs. Obama has indicated exposure," said Dr. David specifically what they saw.
do no harm.
Gordon Brown and the pres- President Franklin ·D. ·less enthusiasm for the mis- Acheson, FDA's assistant .
Federal inspectors last visWith turbulent world mar- idents of Russia and China. Roosevelt - met for six sil.e system than predecessor commissioner for food safe- ited the plant in 2003 , and
. kets watching closely, the
The world economy is in weeks and then gave up.
George W. Bush, .raising ty. "The only logical advice tk California Department
: stakes are high, especially far worse shape than when
Still, most leaders were · hopeful expectations in to consumers is to say 'OK of Public Health was there
. for America's new president, the group of rich and devel- upbeat Tuesday as they ' Moscow. But Russian lead- consumers, put pistachios last year, Acheson said.
·stepping onto the world oping countries last met in headed to London.
ers have engaged in tough on hold while we work this Federal officials made note
stage for the first time to deal November and set lofty · "It is important and neces- talk lately in terms regain- out. We don't want you of several problems - an
with the economic crisis and goals for international coop- sary for the summit to take ing their own Slatus in the exposed, we don't want you open door into one of the nut
to meet face-to-face with eration.
credible decisions which world, posing an early test getting salmonella.'"
rooms, and an employee
many other leaders.
Trade is deteriorating, will help to halt and reverse for Obama.
·
Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, the wearing street clothes that
One global change is protectionism is on the the current slowdown and to
Obama's meeting with Hu president's new acting com- weren.'t adequately covered
being acknowledged: The march and joblessness is. ris- instill a sense of confidence is likely to touch on recent missioner who started - but nothing that pqsed a
forum for grappling with ing. Street demonstrations in the global economy," said Chinese concern about the · Monday, made it clear staff food safety threat, he said.
world economic problems have increased, and wide~ Indian Prime Minister safety of its vast holdings in . needed to move quickly, · . Acheson said managehas grown beyond the spread protests are expected Manmohan Singh.
U.S. Treasury bonds, given Acheson ·said.
ment corrected the problems
establ~hed eight post-war in London this week.
The agency announced that day, and said he did not
Summit partners will dollar-eroding U.S . stimueconomies that dominated
Brown, the host, had ini.- meet for dinner on Ius programs. China sur- Monday that Setton Pistachio have access to California
previous economic summits tially trumpeted the gather- Wednesday evening, then · passed Japan last year as the of Terra Bella Inc ., the sec- inspectors' records.
the U.S., Britain , ing as "a new Bretton hold a business meeting on largest holder of U.S. debt, and-largest pistachio procesCohen said the plant had
Germany France, Japan, Woods - a new financial Thursday.
and any Chinese flight away sor in the nation, recalled never had an illness com. Canada, Italy and Russia. architecture for tire Y,ears
A draft of the commu- from those investments more than 2 million pounds plaint, followed industry
Now, 20 nations are coming ahead." But the meeting was nique circulating ahead of would rock global markets· of its roasted pistachios.
health guidelines and had its
together in London, with ·shapin~ up as bearing little the meeting sugl!ested that
On the way to . Europe,
Suspect nuts were shipped huge metal silos and ware- .
fast:growing developing similanty to the 1944 con- global leaders w!ll embrace Obama aides · made · clear as far away as Norway and . house inspected regularly,
economies such as China, ference in New Hampshire stimulus spending totaling expectations have been low- Mexico, Acheson . said but refused to provide addiIndia, Brazil and Saudi where the winners of World about $2 trillion . But that ered.
·
Tuesday. One · week after tional details or records.
Arabia - imponant players War II gathered to set post- intludes a number of meaInstead of focusing on the authorities ftrst learned of Several plaques on the firm's
in· any effort to coordinate war global monetary and sures already announced.
·additional stimulus spend- the problem, they still had office walls showed the firm
economic policy - sittirig financial order.
Leaders of European ing the U.S. had sought, little idea what products wait industry awards for
as full negotiating partners.
Brown's spokesman said countries,led by Germany's White House press secretary were at risk, he said.
fond safety excellence.
"For the first time, there's the prime minister hall spo- Angela Merkel, continued Robert Gibbs emphasized
As federal health inspectors
No illness have been tied
a recognition that major ken briefly by telephone on to resist calls for more stim- what already has been take swabs inside the plant to to contaminr.:ed pistachios.
emerging markets and Tuesaay .with Obarna, who ulus and for printing money accomplished. G20 nations try to identify a salmonella Two people called the FDA
developing countries have a was on Air Force One.
as the U.S . Federal Reserve · have spent so far an amount source, a whole range of complaining of gastroin,
critical role at the table,"
"It's an oppgrtunity for and the Bank of England equal to 1.8 percent of their products from nut bars to ice testinal illness .that could be
said Mike Froman, a White both of them to take stock of have done to try to jump- : collective gross domestic cre;un and cake mixes remain associated wiih the nuts, but
House international eco- where we were," Brown's start a recovery. .
·
r.roduct, he said, calling that in limbo on grocery shelves.
the link hasn't been con-.
nomic adviser.
spokesman Michael Ellam
Memories of the hy(lerin- 'a significant commitment.'' . Company officials said firmed, Acheson .said.
But will that mean action said. ·
flation · ·in the 1920's ii'I
Gibbs also said he. expects Tuesday they suspected .. While consumer advocates
to sto~ a global downward · Work] Ba.nk President Germ.any that gave w_ay to ajoin.t pledge that the lead- their roasted pistachios may · praised the government's
.
spiral. ·
Robert Zoellick.called for the the nse of Adolf Haler's. ers w1ll act further 1f devel- have been contaminated by swift action·. they said the pisFroman acknowledged G20 to back a $50 billion liq-· Nazi party still haunt mod- · opments warrant, and .. he salmonella-tainted taw nuts tachio recall illustrated that
that there have been few uidity fund to keep global ern•day Germany.
said that commitment satis- they were processed with at more oversight was needed.
examples of international trade moving. In rich counOn Wednesday, Obama fies Obama. He also touted the hulking facility.
"It is·encouraging that this
gains in times of crisis. tries, he said, "people talk of will have separate meetings new regulatory proposqls
Roasting is supposed to response was so quick. but
"The depression was made bonuses or no bonuses. In with
Brown,
Russian and the intention to boost kill the bacteria in nuts. But we need to move to a system
'great' by the lack of coop- parts of Africa, South Asia President Dmitry Medvedev, contributions to the IMF.
problems · can occur if the that focuses on prevention
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - roasting is not done correct- through the entire food pro~ff
ly or if roasted nuts are re- duction process," said Jeff
exposed to bacteria.
Levi. executive director of
The firm sells its Trust for America's Health.
BY ToM KRISHER .
The companies have yet to of the year. Presumably survive alone, and it would California-grown pistachios
Two California legislators
AP AUTO WRITER
receive specifics front the those cuts will come sooner. be left to get sold off in to giants of the food indus-. introduced a bill Tuesday
task force on how much more
Henderson said GM also .· pieces. There were signs of. try such as Kraft Foods Inc., that would require periodic ,
DETROIT - He doesn't they must cut and whe.re, but must slash its staggering lia- progress, however, that ·a as well as 36 wholesalers · testing of food at food proknow exactly what the Henderson is proceeding bilities - not just the $49 partnership . could . be across the country.
cessing facilities and manObama
administration with_ deeper cuts and pulling billion in bond debt and arranged . .·
.
"We care about our busi- date processors to report to
wants him to cut. but Fritz prevtously announced mea- secured loans, bpt also penFiat
CEO · Sergio ness and . our customers state authorities within 24
Henderson. the new CEO of sures forward.
sion obligations and retiree Marchionne flew to Detroit greatly," said Lee Cohen, hours any positive test result
General Motors Corp., isn't
"We need to reinvent health care costs .
late Monday. for talks, and the production manager for for a dangerous contaminant.
waiting around to find out. General Motors . and we
"We need to basically the Italian automaker Sellon International Foods
"We shouldn't be reacting
Cut deeper. Work harder. need. to do it in a very, very address all of our level of agreed to reduce its stake in Inc .. a sister company to to the next crisis. we should
Move fa&gt;ter.
abbreviated time frame here indebtedness, because in fact , Chrysler from 35 percent to Sellon Pistachios. "We've be pre,.enting the next criThat"s how he described in ·2009 so that we're . not what they want is a healthy 20 percent in exchange for never had an illness com- sis," · said Assemblyman .
the ailing automaker 's spending our time careening balance sheet, and that providing small-car tech- plaint before but obviously Mike Feuer, 0-Los Angeles.
urgent effort to meet a June f(om cnsis to crisis in the healthy balance sheet needs nology, according to a perI dead! ine to fix its debt - future," he told reporters at to address each of these con- son briefed on the negotiaridden balance sheet. cut GM 's headqu~rters. complex stituencies," he said.
tions who was not authobillions in costs and take in downtown Detroit.
Henderson wouldn 'I say rized to speak publicly.
other step' to · transform
There are. formidable specifically if pensions or Under the new terms, Fiat's
it&gt;elf into a profitable entity. obstacles, though. Even health care would change. share would .. increase in 5
It 's the same government- with less demaoding hurdles but it's likely that GM's percent increments every
; mposed race that Chrys.ler in the government's original .400.000 U.S. retirees and time certain milestones are
LLC is running. only GM ·s · loan terms, GM 's bondhold- spouses will see benefit met, the person said.
smaller neighbor has to ers have been reluctant to cuts, along with its 244,000
At GM . Henderson said
cover more distance in half settle their $28 billion for active workers .
the 60 days should be
the time .
what may be pennies on the
He said the company enough time· to accomplish
The Auburn Hills. Mich .. dollar. The company still probably will close more its work. but bankruptcy
l&amp;llllck lluiiii•IIIWIII lllliiiiiKCIIHinlltlll.
automaker must make the hasn't reached a deal with than the five factories it could come before then if
Whether you've just gotten married, had a baby, bought a new
same cuts us GM. and sign the United Auto Workers on promised to shutter in its GM management and the
home or retired· big life changes can mean big tax changes.
up .Fiat Group SpA as a part- fundin~ a union-run trust February restructuring plan government determine it
H&amp;R Block will help you maximize your refund by·showing you ·
ner, all in 30 days. Fiat's that Will take over retiree filed With the government. . won't be able to ' meet the
tax deductions or c"'dits you're enlitted to. At H&amp;R Block if you
CEO jetted to Detroit for health care costs.
More buyout and early deadline .
don't get the:maxlmum refund you're entittedto,your·tax- '
intense negotiations. but if
It's uncertain whether retirement offers are likely.
"If it 's quite clear that · preparation is free.' When you've got people. they're with you .
Chrysler doesn't meet .the they can work together to
If GM doesn 't satisfy 'the we're not able to accomevery step of the way.
deadline,\t's almost certain- compromise on their -com- government in time. a short plish what we need to do in
ly destined for the auction peting i·nterests. even bankruptcy would allow the terms of operut\onal restruc.hawse.
though failure means they company to wipe out its turing. reduction of debt on
H&amp;R BLOCK
For GM. failing to take stand to lose a lot more.
debt. change contracts and th~ balance sheet and what
• quick action means surren- · It was clear. though. that emerge as a healthy busi- Yfe need to do to accomplish
dering to court supervision every scenario will include ness. The government is these broad parameters o(
618 East Main St.
Mon·Frl. 9:00- 6:00
in bankruptcy. The compa- more pain for just about backing automakers· war- having a viable business.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Sat. 9:00 . 5:00
ny has resisted bankrupicy · anyone connected with the ranties and has pledged this will be a management
740.992-6674
Other
Hours
by Appointment
talk in the past, but companies.
financing for GM.
judgment." Henderson said.
II You Oisco'N an H&amp;A 8!0ctt MTOr on your retum that et~tllles you ro 1 ~rver ~lund
$llll.llet
Henderson said Tuesday it
OM said in its February
For Chrysler. however,.
Besides slashing costs.
lax li&amp;Qility) ~we calcula~. we'll relond your 1U·ptepatallon lee tor !Not relum R~·~ ' """' 1.
Is now "certainly more plan it would cut 47.000 Obama's auto task force has . GM must start selling more
must b8 maele
the
year rn vmoct1 1M
retum r&amp;.
HRB 'rn
.I
probable .'~
Jobs worldwide ,·by . the end decided it has no chance to cars, and the company
Cl~ng

'

.,

•

calen~r

I~

prepared . ~

·. Page.Aa

BYTHEBEND

Promote (Learning
to Give' curriculum

Bv GARANCE BURKE

bankruptcy

.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

.GM' Chrysler race dea.dll'neS tO hold·

'

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Wednesday, ~prilt;

2009

Budget director·says education budget safe
will not leave the governor's
COLUMBUS (AP) Gov. Ted 'Strickland 's bud- education plan underfunded.
get 'director says taking
Pari Sabety told members
more than $900 million in · of the Senate Education
federal stimulus money Committee Tuesday that
from Ohio's general fund officials can meet federal

The LEAGUE. Earth ,Pay
involves improving our
environment and communi. Dear Apnie: As a physi- ties. and activities run
cal educa1ion teacher, I have through the month of April. ·
had the opportunity to work The LEAGUE inspires kids
Roush Family and others. /
with a lot of students in my to give of themselves and
RACINE ~ Soutllllrn
· nine years of teaching. In ·become more responsible
Charge
UMC Men's Prayer
·this age of video games, it citizens. We hope all princiWednesday,Aprill
Breakfast,
8 a.m., Carmel
seems harder and harder to pals, teachers and school
PAGEVILLE . _ Scipio
Fellowship
Complex.
motivate students to want to .organizations will check out Tow~shiD Trustees, regular
Monday, April 6
the website and find ways to ....
6·30
p.m .,
Participate .
u,ee tJ ng,I
.
I
h
RUTLAND
~ An indoor
· The good news is, our r- get invo ved in these wofl · Page:ville Town Hall.
.
c
amp
meeting
will be held
· •.vice learning initiative as while events.
. Thlllliday, Aprll2
at
7
p.m.
April
6-12 at the
begun to change that attiDear Annie: My two sisSYRACUSE _ Syracuse
"tude in both our students ters live in different states. Village Council , T p.m. at Rutland Church of the
· and our community. I ho~ They have daughters who · village hall.
. Nazarene. On Sunday, April
you can help me share w1th are getting married three · POMEROY _ Meigs 12 the service will begin at
· .other teachers, students, weeks apart. Since my wife . County Board of Health, 5 6 p.m. Speaker will be Rev.
Ray LaSalle and singers,
··schools .and communitie.s ana I "don't have the
nti
M·
b h p.m., co erence room, e1gs Ralph and Joanne Dunmire.
0
how they can engage their resources to y to ot
County Health Department.
students in learning even weddings, rent a car and &amp;et
·· more .by doing for others, a hotel room plus a g1ft,
starting with Earth Day &gt;n which one do we attend? I
April. And it's free!
love my nieces equally, but
This is rnY third year par- attending both is more than
Friday, April 3
ticipating in The LEAGUE we can afford. Any suggesMIDDLEPORT
Wetfuesday, April 1 .
. · with my school. We have · ti011s? - Torn in Toledo
Healing and miracle serPOMEROY
The
·collected clothes and
Qear Tolede: Here · are vice, 7 p.m,. Rejoicing Life Middleport Literary Club will
canned food. written letters your options: See if there Church 500 N. Second Ave. meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
to soldiers, firemen and are low-cost airfares and Information at 992-6249.
Library. The book "Little
. police officers. held penny hotels thai will allow you to
Saturday, April4
Heathens" by Mildred Kalish
drives for local c_hildren's attend both; attend neither;
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel . will be reviewed by Marlene
hospitals. and near Earth attend · the first one for sing, 7 p.m., Middleport Kuhn. Dana Kessinger will be
· Day we take our ·entire stu- which you receivt an invita- Nazarene Church, New hostess. There will be a book
dent population into the tion; you and · your wife Prophets Quartet,. The exchange among. the memlocal neighborhoods to help could each attend one alone Dollys and Bride, Evelyn bers.
. · .clean up after winter. We in a show of family loyalty.
·· plant flower. beds and trees We think you should openly
·m various courtyards, and · discuss the problem with
· have sponsored a local park your sisters so they will
COLUMBUS - Ohio additional deer management
· in honor of a fallen soldier understand your dilemma
deer
hunters have donated tool. helping wildlife .man.· from
our cdmmunity. and whatever decision you
more than 54,800 pounds of a$.ers encourage ·hunters to
Students in all grades can make.
·give of their time·, treasure
Dear Annie: I would like venison to lo~al food banks k1ll more does.
Venison that is donated to
· .and talents.
to respond to "Ringless," through the 2008-09 deer
hunting
season,according
to
foQd
banks must be processed
I have seen the excit.e- who was greatly disturbed
by
a
federal. state or locally
ment in niy students - an that her husband didn't wear Farmers
Hunters
and
inspected
and · insured meat ·
Feeding the Hungry (FHFH)
ex~itement to help other his wedding ring.
people while physically
My wife and I have been and the Ohio Department of processor that is participating
"doing something to make a married 61 years, and I've Natural Resources (ODNR) with FHFH. Hunters Wishing
· to donate their deer to a foQd
"difference. My school popu- never worn a wedding band Division of Wildlife.
·. ;lation is made up of proud because rings cause me to
The 54,800 pounds of bank are not required to pa~
children· from single-family . develop a skin condition venison equals approxi-, for the processing of the vern.. blue-collar homes with little that requires a trip to th·e mately 219,200 meals for son as long as the program
eitra money. The LEAGUE dermatologist. Both of us Ohioans in need. Last year, ha~ funds available to cover
: gives every child the oppor- have been faithful and I FHFH collected 20,902 the cost. There are. C\UTelltlY
tunity to feel valued and never considered that a ring pounds of venison throughc
valuabl.e · be&lt;;ause of t.heir would ensure any greater out the season. A total of
gifts. for others. As an edu- love for her.
· 1,096 deerwere donated this
calor, I strive to teach my
If "Ringless's" husband deer hunting season com· students that they are a nee- avoids . wearing a wedding pared to 418 in 2007-08.
.. essary and imrortant piece band in order to pose as a
"Many deer. hunters ·took
· of our schoo community single man, ·then she has the 'extrn step to help offset
regardless . of background. cause
for
·concern. . hunger felt by Ohioans," said
The LEAGUE heiQ!i me Otherwise, I would tell her -,1 im Marshall, assistant chief
·prove this to every clllld in to drop her objections and of the Division of Wildlife.
terms they and their fami- tove the guy without it. - . "The Division of Wildlife
lies understand.
G.
hopes to partner with FHFH
I would encourage any · ' Annie's Mailbox is writ· again this next deer season.''
·teacher with a classroom or ten by Kathy Mitchell and
The Division of Wildlife
· ·teacher-certified group (like Marcy Sugqr, hmgtime edi· collaborated with Farmers
· a student council or club) to tors of the Ann Landers and Hunters Feeding the
go to · the site www.the" · column. Please e-maU your . Hungry in an effort to assist
league.arg to see the won- questi(Jns to anniesmail- with the processmg costs
·deiful ".Learning to Give" boxcomcast.net, or write associated with . donating
curriculum and ideas for to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. venison to· a food bank. A
'engaging our students in the Box 118190, Chicago, IL $100,000 subsidy grant was
giving of their time, talent 60611. To find out more provided in two $50.000
and treasure for others. about Annie's Mailbox, allotments th~t ·are to be
Rob Merchant, Break-0- and read features by other matched with funds generatDay Elementary, New Creators Syndicate writers ed or .collected by FHFH. ·
·whiteland, Ind.
and cartoonists,. visit the The Division subsidized this
Dear Rob Merchant: Creators Syndicate Web year's FHFH operation as an
Thanks for your letter about page at'www.creators.com.
~

accounting guide\ines by
simply moving the dollars
from one funding pot to
another.
State Senator Jon Husted
questioned the administra-

tion 's ability to fully funa its
plan because the federal
funds mu&gt;t go directly to districts , rath~r than being used
to meet requirements of the
governor's schools plan.

Community Calendar
Public meetings ·

~

Church events

I

'

!

· Clubsand
organizations

Thursday, April 2
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, Auxiliary
7 p.m. Thursday at the hall .
CHESTER - ChesterHistorical
Shade
Association, 7 p.m . at the
Chester Courthouse.
Friday, April3 ·
POMEROY Meigs
County PERI #74, regular
meeting, I p.m., Mulberry
Community Center. Doug
·Lavender speaking on 911
in Meigs County.
Saturday, April 4
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 meet in regular
session with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m., followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
PORTLAND . "f.be
Portland Community Center
will host the first horse show
of the year sponsored by the
Ohio River Producers.
Warm ups ~ 10 a.m., show
at noon. Call Bruce 740590-8836 or 843-5216 for
more information.

, M'ond~y, April 6
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer lnitiati ve,
regular meeting, noon, conference
room.
Meigs
County Health l)epartment.
·I

Birthdays
Friday, April3
RACINE - Eva Mae
Christian will observe her
9()th birthday on April 3.
Cards may be sent to her at
Box 827, Racine, Ohio 45771 .
· · Saturday, April 4
REEDSVILLE
Charlotte VanMeter will
observe her 80th birthday on
April4. Cards may be sent to
her at 41458 Sumner Road ,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
Sunday, April S
POMEROY - Elva Dean
.Barnitz will observe her
90th birthday on April 5.
Cards may be sent to her at ·
1628 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Ohio hunters donating venison to foOd pantries
43 participating meat proces.sors across the state. A list is
provided at www.thfh.org.
Since last year, FHFH has
more than doubled the number of chapters from 12 to 27 ,
with the need for more.
Anyone interested in becom"
ing a local program coordinator or a .participating meat
rocessor should . visit the
P.Local
· FHFH" page · at
www.fhfh.org. The web page
includes a current list of coordinators, program names and
the coUnties that they serve ..

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• 11'11111111 ~ A liMp 'fOOl" budctf lilt!
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u.
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Silo Up OIIIIMI www.LocoiNtl.etnl

GREETING!!
'

·. Local Weather
Wednesday •.. Mostly . Not as cool with lows in the
· cloudy with showers with a upper 40s: · East winds
· chance of thunderstorms in around lO mph with gusts
. the morning ...Then sunny in up to 20 mph. Chance of
the afternoon. Highs in the r;~in 60 percent.
· .lower 60s. Southwest winds
Friday...Showers likely.
Elijah Wayne Circle
,5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain Highs around 60. Chance of
. 90 percent.
rain 60 percent.
· Wednesday
night •. ~
Friday nigbt ...Mostly
Mostly clear. Lows in the cloudy with . a 30 percent
upper 30s. North winds chance of showers. Lows in
around 5 mph in the the upper 30s.
·. ·
evening ... Becoming light
Saturday and Saturday . LONG BOTTOM
·and variable.
night ...Partly cloudy. ·Highs Jeffrey . W. Circle Jr. and
Thursday .. ,Most I y in the lower 60s. Lows in Carolyn C. Circle, of Long
Bottom, announce the birth
sunny. Warmer with highs the upper 30s.
of
a son, Elijah Wayne
in the lower 70s.
Suoday...Mostly sunny
Circle.
He was born on Feb.
. Thursday night...Most!y with a 40 percent chance of
16,
2009
at O'Bleness
cloudy with showers likely. showers. Highs in mid 60s.
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
He weighed 8 lbs. 4oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Circle has a ·
daughter, Hannah Laree
Circle, two. The infant is
the grandson of Jeff and
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NASAEP (NYSE) - 25.26
Sonia Circle of Long
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 37.75
DAQI- 21
Bottom and Mary Bentz of
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 10.33
BIT ·(NYSE) - 16.92
Big Lots (NYSE) - 20.78
Peoples (NASDAOI - 12.98
Pomeroy. He is the greatBob Evans (NASDAOI - 22.42
Papaleo (NYSEI - 51.48
grandson
of Harold C1rcle
BorgWarner (NYSEI - 20.30
I'Nmler (NASDAQ}•- 5.40
and
Grover
and Elsie
Cerrtury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
RockWell (NYSEl - 21.114
White,
all' of Long Bottom.
-2.11
Rocky- (NASDAQ) - 3.50
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.60
Ropl Dutch Shell :.... 44.30
.

Birth
announced

Local Stocks

Chllrmlng Shops (NASDAQ) 1.40
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 27~
Collins (NYSE) - 32.64
DuPont (NYSE) - 22.33
US Bank (NYSE) - 14.61
Gannett (NYSE) - 2.20
General Electric {NYSE}- 10.11
Harfoy·Daotdton (NYSE} - 13.39
JP MOf!!8n (NYSE} - 26.58
Kroger (NY$E) - 21 .22
Ltmfttd Bnnda(NYSE) - 8.70
Norfolk Southern .(NYSE} - .
33.75
_...,
.

Selra Holding (NASDAQ} -

:1\pril12, 20.09
.. '.Deadline Wed.
.,:;J\pril 8, 2009
,.,":....

.)

Dean's list ·

45.71

Wai-MIIrt (NYSE) - 52.10
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.03

Size tx3
·.Person per ad·
date Sun.,

.•~Actual
••

•

WesBanc:o (NYSEJ - 22.89

Wonhlngton (NYSE} - B.71
Dally stock "JJIff8 are th6 4

p.m. ET closing quotes of trono-

oetlons tor Marc:h 31, 2009, poovldtd by Edwald Jones tl ...n-

clllt advtsor.luac Millo In
·
Galllpolta Ill (740) 441-8441 and
Lasley l.lamro In Point P-nt

at (304} 67~174. Member SIPC.

POMEROY - Renee
Denise Bailey. Pomeroy,
was named to Wheeling
Jesuit University's dean's
list for the fall , 2008 semester. Students named to. the
·Jist earn a grade point average of at least 3.5 and must
be enrolled full-time . .

I

Cameron Rodgers

Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;.'Dad .

Mail to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel· ,
11.1 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

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· The Daily Sentinel

I

I

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Big

. Wednesday, Aprilt,

•

The Daily Sentinel

2009

Pistachio warning could
signal food safety .shift

this affects the whole industry. it 's not good .''
California supplies 99 .99
TERRA BELLA, Calif. percent of the U.S. pi•tachio
It could take weeks before ' market, according to the
health officials know exactly California Pistachio Board.
which pistachio products
"What's scary is that it's
BvTOM RAUM
eration," he said, noting that
may
be
tainted
with
salmoafter
the nuts have been
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
nations like to keep control
nella,
but
they've
already
.
processed
that this stuff is
over their own fiscal and
issued
a
sweeping
warning
getting
into
it. ~ it.. real!Y
LONDON - Desperate ·monetary policies.
to
avoid
eating
the
nuts
or
makes
you
wonder, . sa1d
but uivided on ways to lift
And global leaders were
foods containing them.
Marcia Rowland. an av1d pistheir nations from economic quarreling up to the last
The
move
appears
to
inditachio eater in Apopka, Aa.
mi&gt;ery. world leaders con- minute before the summit.
cate
a
shift
in
how
the
govThe FDA learned about
' crged for an emergency
Adding to the pressure.
emment
handles
food
safetY.
the
problem March 24,
,u nun it Tuesday holding French President Nicolas
issues
from
waiting
until
when
Kraft notified the
,cant hopes of finding a Sarkozy said Tuesday the
contaminated
foods
surface
agency
that routine product
magic- bullet solution for leaders cannot afford to .let
one-by-one and risking that testing )lad detected salmothe crisis that brought them the week pass without makmore people fall ill to jump- nella in roasted p1stachms.
hurrying to London.
ing substantial progre's in
ing
on the problem right Kraft . and the Georgia Nut
Even as President Barack fixing the world s economy.
'
away.
even ifthe message is Co. recalled their Back to
Obama and the others were
"We have to obtain
vague.
Nature Nantucket Blend
arriving : the U.S. acknowl: results , there is no chpice ,
Officials
wouldn't
say
if
trail
mix the next day and
edged its allies would not the crisis is too serious to
the'
approach
was
in
response
expanded
the . recall . to
uo along with a massive allow us· to have a summit
to
any
perceived
mishandling
include
any
Planters and
AP photo
burst of stimulus spending, for nothing," he said.
of
the
m~sive
peanut
recall
Back
to
Nature
products that
while Europe was forced to
European countries are President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama
that
started
last
year,
only
that
contain
pistachios
Tuesday.
backpedal from hopes for pushing for a iougher regu- wave as they disembark Air Force One a\ London's Stansted
they're
trying
to
keep
people
kraft
spokeswoman
tighter financial regulation . latory system for global International Airport, Tuesday.
from getting sick as new Laurie Guzzinati said · her
Instead , leaders are trum- finance, while the U.S. is
details
surface ·about the company's auditors visiled
peting the limited common emphasizing more spending and Latin America, the strug- and with Chinese President California
plant at the center the plant early last week,
ground they could reach, - an idea that holds little gle is for food or no food ."
Hu Jintao.
of the pistachio scare.
and ·"observed employee
rncl uding more money for interest for Europeans wary
.London does not have a
With Moscow, the agenda
"What's different here is practices wh.ere raw and
the International Monetary about debt.
·
good history for successful will inClude disputes over that we are being very roasted nuts were not adeFund and closer scrutiny of
Obama planned a round of economic summits. One energy, Russia's continued proactive and are putting out quately segregated and that
hedge funds and tax havens . meetings with leaders on held in London in 1933. ·opposition to U.S. missile a broad message with the could e~plain the sporadic
As for the broader issues, Wednesday,
including attended by more than 1,000 defense sites in Eastern goal of trying to minimize contamination!'
they 're hoping for the best Queen Elizabeth JJ, summit world leaders and financial Europe and warhead cut- the likelihood of consumer
She said she didn 't know
· - or at least that they will host B·ritish Prime Minister officials - althougH not backs. Obama has indicated exposure," said Dr. David specifically what they saw.
do no harm.
Gordon Brown and the pres- President Franklin ·D. ·less enthusiasm for the mis- Acheson, FDA's assistant .
Federal inspectors last visWith turbulent world mar- idents of Russia and China. Roosevelt - met for six sil.e system than predecessor commissioner for food safe- ited the plant in 2003 , and
. kets watching closely, the
The world economy is in weeks and then gave up.
George W. Bush, .raising ty. "The only logical advice tk California Department
: stakes are high, especially far worse shape than when
Still, most leaders were · hopeful expectations in to consumers is to say 'OK of Public Health was there
. for America's new president, the group of rich and devel- upbeat Tuesday as they ' Moscow. But Russian lead- consumers, put pistachios last year, Acheson said.
·stepping onto the world oping countries last met in headed to London.
ers have engaged in tough on hold while we work this Federal officials made note
stage for the first time to deal November and set lofty · "It is important and neces- talk lately in terms regain- out. We don't want you of several problems - an
with the economic crisis and goals for international coop- sary for the summit to take ing their own Slatus in the exposed, we don't want you open door into one of the nut
to meet face-to-face with eration.
credible decisions which world, posing an early test getting salmonella.'"
rooms, and an employee
many other leaders.
Trade is deteriorating, will help to halt and reverse for Obama.
·
Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, the wearing street clothes that
One global change is protectionism is on the the current slowdown and to
Obama's meeting with Hu president's new acting com- weren.'t adequately covered
being acknowledged: The march and joblessness is. ris- instill a sense of confidence is likely to touch on recent missioner who started - but nothing that pqsed a
forum for grappling with ing. Street demonstrations in the global economy," said Chinese concern about the · Monday, made it clear staff food safety threat, he said.
world economic problems have increased, and wide~ Indian Prime Minister safety of its vast holdings in . needed to move quickly, · . Acheson said managehas grown beyond the spread protests are expected Manmohan Singh.
U.S. Treasury bonds, given Acheson ·said.
ment corrected the problems
establ~hed eight post-war in London this week.
The agency announced that day, and said he did not
Summit partners will dollar-eroding U.S . stimueconomies that dominated
Brown, the host, had ini.- meet for dinner on Ius programs. China sur- Monday that Setton Pistachio have access to California
previous economic summits tially trumpeted the gather- Wednesday evening, then · passed Japan last year as the of Terra Bella Inc ., the sec- inspectors' records.
the U.S., Britain , ing as "a new Bretton hold a business meeting on largest holder of U.S. debt, and-largest pistachio procesCohen said the plant had
Germany France, Japan, Woods - a new financial Thursday.
and any Chinese flight away sor in the nation, recalled never had an illness com. Canada, Italy and Russia. architecture for tire Y,ears
A draft of the commu- from those investments more than 2 million pounds plaint, followed industry
Now, 20 nations are coming ahead." But the meeting was nique circulating ahead of would rock global markets· of its roasted pistachios.
health guidelines and had its
together in London, with ·shapin~ up as bearing little the meeting sugl!ested that
On the way to . Europe,
Suspect nuts were shipped huge metal silos and ware- .
fast:growing developing similanty to the 1944 con- global leaders w!ll embrace Obama aides · made · clear as far away as Norway and . house inspected regularly,
economies such as China, ference in New Hampshire stimulus spending totaling expectations have been low- Mexico, Acheson . said but refused to provide addiIndia, Brazil and Saudi where the winners of World about $2 trillion . But that ered.
·
Tuesday. One · week after tional details or records.
Arabia - imponant players War II gathered to set post- intludes a number of meaInstead of focusing on the authorities ftrst learned of Several plaques on the firm's
in· any effort to coordinate war global monetary and sures already announced.
·additional stimulus spend- the problem, they still had office walls showed the firm
economic policy - sittirig financial order.
Leaders of European ing the U.S. had sought, little idea what products wait industry awards for
as full negotiating partners.
Brown's spokesman said countries,led by Germany's White House press secretary were at risk, he said.
fond safety excellence.
"For the first time, there's the prime minister hall spo- Angela Merkel, continued Robert Gibbs emphasized
As federal health inspectors
No illness have been tied
a recognition that major ken briefly by telephone on to resist calls for more stim- what already has been take swabs inside the plant to to contaminr.:ed pistachios.
emerging markets and Tuesaay .with Obarna, who ulus and for printing money accomplished. G20 nations try to identify a salmonella Two people called the FDA
developing countries have a was on Air Force One.
as the U.S . Federal Reserve · have spent so far an amount source, a whole range of complaining of gastroin,
critical role at the table,"
"It's an oppgrtunity for and the Bank of England equal to 1.8 percent of their products from nut bars to ice testinal illness .that could be
said Mike Froman, a White both of them to take stock of have done to try to jump- : collective gross domestic cre;un and cake mixes remain associated wiih the nuts, but
House international eco- where we were," Brown's start a recovery. .
·
r.roduct, he said, calling that in limbo on grocery shelves.
the link hasn't been con-.
nomic adviser.
spokesman Michael Ellam
Memories of the hy(lerin- 'a significant commitment.'' . Company officials said firmed, Acheson .said.
But will that mean action said. ·
flation · ·in the 1920's ii'I
Gibbs also said he. expects Tuesday they suspected .. While consumer advocates
to sto~ a global downward · Work] Ba.nk President Germ.any that gave w_ay to ajoin.t pledge that the lead- their roasted pistachios may · praised the government's
.
spiral. ·
Robert Zoellick.called for the the nse of Adolf Haler's. ers w1ll act further 1f devel- have been contaminated by swift action·. they said the pisFroman acknowledged G20 to back a $50 billion liq-· Nazi party still haunt mod- · opments warrant, and .. he salmonella-tainted taw nuts tachio recall illustrated that
that there have been few uidity fund to keep global ern•day Germany.
said that commitment satis- they were processed with at more oversight was needed.
examples of international trade moving. In rich counOn Wednesday, Obama fies Obama. He also touted the hulking facility.
"It is·encouraging that this
gains in times of crisis. tries, he said, "people talk of will have separate meetings new regulatory proposqls
Roasting is supposed to response was so quick. but
"The depression was made bonuses or no bonuses. In with
Brown,
Russian and the intention to boost kill the bacteria in nuts. But we need to move to a system
'great' by the lack of coop- parts of Africa, South Asia President Dmitry Medvedev, contributions to the IMF.
problems · can occur if the that focuses on prevention
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - roasting is not done correct- through the entire food pro~ff
ly or if roasted nuts are re- duction process," said Jeff
exposed to bacteria.
Levi. executive director of
The firm sells its Trust for America's Health.
BY ToM KRISHER .
The companies have yet to of the year. Presumably survive alone, and it would California-grown pistachios
Two California legislators
AP AUTO WRITER
receive specifics front the those cuts will come sooner. be left to get sold off in to giants of the food indus-. introduced a bill Tuesday
task force on how much more
Henderson said GM also .· pieces. There were signs of. try such as Kraft Foods Inc., that would require periodic ,
DETROIT - He doesn't they must cut and whe.re, but must slash its staggering lia- progress, however, that ·a as well as 36 wholesalers · testing of food at food proknow exactly what the Henderson is proceeding bilities - not just the $49 partnership . could . be across the country.
cessing facilities and manObama
administration with_ deeper cuts and pulling billion in bond debt and arranged . .·
.
"We care about our busi- date processors to report to
wants him to cut. but Fritz prevtously announced mea- secured loans, bpt also penFiat
CEO · Sergio ness and . our customers state authorities within 24
Henderson. the new CEO of sures forward.
sion obligations and retiree Marchionne flew to Detroit greatly," said Lee Cohen, hours any positive test result
General Motors Corp., isn't
"We need to reinvent health care costs .
late Monday. for talks, and the production manager for for a dangerous contaminant.
waiting around to find out. General Motors . and we
"We need to basically the Italian automaker Sellon International Foods
"We shouldn't be reacting
Cut deeper. Work harder. need. to do it in a very, very address all of our level of agreed to reduce its stake in Inc .. a sister company to to the next crisis. we should
Move fa&gt;ter.
abbreviated time frame here indebtedness, because in fact , Chrysler from 35 percent to Sellon Pistachios. "We've be pre,.enting the next criThat"s how he described in ·2009 so that we're . not what they want is a healthy 20 percent in exchange for never had an illness com- sis," · said Assemblyman .
the ailing automaker 's spending our time careening balance sheet, and that providing small-car tech- plaint before but obviously Mike Feuer, 0-Los Angeles.
urgent effort to meet a June f(om cnsis to crisis in the healthy balance sheet needs nology, according to a perI dead! ine to fix its debt - future," he told reporters at to address each of these con- son briefed on the negotiaridden balance sheet. cut GM 's headqu~rters. complex stituencies," he said.
tions who was not authobillions in costs and take in downtown Detroit.
Henderson wouldn 'I say rized to speak publicly.
other step' to · transform
There are. formidable specifically if pensions or Under the new terms, Fiat's
it&gt;elf into a profitable entity. obstacles, though. Even health care would change. share would .. increase in 5
It 's the same government- with less demaoding hurdles but it's likely that GM's percent increments every
; mposed race that Chrys.ler in the government's original .400.000 U.S. retirees and time certain milestones are
LLC is running. only GM ·s · loan terms, GM 's bondhold- spouses will see benefit met, the person said.
smaller neighbor has to ers have been reluctant to cuts, along with its 244,000
At GM . Henderson said
cover more distance in half settle their $28 billion for active workers .
the 60 days should be
the time .
what may be pennies on the
He said the company enough time· to accomplish
The Auburn Hills. Mich .. dollar. The company still probably will close more its work. but bankruptcy
l&amp;llllck lluiiii•IIIWIII lllliiiiiKCIIHinlltlll.
automaker must make the hasn't reached a deal with than the five factories it could come before then if
Whether you've just gotten married, had a baby, bought a new
same cuts us GM. and sign the United Auto Workers on promised to shutter in its GM management and the
home or retired· big life changes can mean big tax changes.
up .Fiat Group SpA as a part- fundin~ a union-run trust February restructuring plan government determine it
H&amp;R Block will help you maximize your refund by·showing you ·
ner, all in 30 days. Fiat's that Will take over retiree filed With the government. . won't be able to ' meet the
tax deductions or c"'dits you're enlitted to. At H&amp;R Block if you
CEO jetted to Detroit for health care costs.
More buyout and early deadline .
don't get the:maxlmum refund you're entittedto,your·tax- '
intense negotiations. but if
It's uncertain whether retirement offers are likely.
"If it 's quite clear that · preparation is free.' When you've got people. they're with you .
Chrysler doesn't meet .the they can work together to
If GM doesn 't satisfy 'the we're not able to accomevery step of the way.
deadline,\t's almost certain- compromise on their -com- government in time. a short plish what we need to do in
ly destined for the auction peting i·nterests. even bankruptcy would allow the terms of operut\onal restruc.hawse.
though failure means they company to wipe out its turing. reduction of debt on
H&amp;R BLOCK
For GM. failing to take stand to lose a lot more.
debt. change contracts and th~ balance sheet and what
• quick action means surren- · It was clear. though. that emerge as a healthy busi- Yfe need to do to accomplish
dering to court supervision every scenario will include ness. The government is these broad parameters o(
618 East Main St.
Mon·Frl. 9:00- 6:00
in bankruptcy. The compa- more pain for just about backing automakers· war- having a viable business.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Sat. 9:00 . 5:00
ny has resisted bankrupicy · anyone connected with the ranties and has pledged this will be a management
740.992-6674
Other
Hours
by Appointment
talk in the past, but companies.
financing for GM.
judgment." Henderson said.
II You Oisco'N an H&amp;A 8!0ctt MTOr on your retum that et~tllles you ro 1 ~rver ~lund
$llll.llet
Henderson said Tuesday it
OM said in its February
For Chrysler. however,.
Besides slashing costs.
lax li&amp;Qility) ~we calcula~. we'll relond your 1U·ptepatallon lee tor !Not relum R~·~ ' """' 1.
Is now "certainly more plan it would cut 47.000 Obama's auto task force has . GM must start selling more
must b8 maele
the
year rn vmoct1 1M
retum r&amp;.
HRB 'rn
.I
probable .'~
Jobs worldwide ,·by . the end decided it has no chance to cars, and the company
Cl~ng

'

.,

•

calen~r

I~

prepared . ~

·. Page.Aa

BYTHEBEND

Promote (Learning
to Give' curriculum

Bv GARANCE BURKE

bankruptcy

.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

.GM' Chrysler race dea.dll'neS tO hold·

'

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Wednesday, ~prilt;

2009

Budget director·says education budget safe
will not leave the governor's
COLUMBUS (AP) Gov. Ted 'Strickland 's bud- education plan underfunded.
get 'director says taking
Pari Sabety told members
more than $900 million in · of the Senate Education
federal stimulus money Committee Tuesday that
from Ohio's general fund officials can meet federal

The LEAGUE. Earth ,Pay
involves improving our
environment and communi. Dear Apnie: As a physi- ties. and activities run
cal educa1ion teacher, I have through the month of April. ·
had the opportunity to work The LEAGUE inspires kids
Roush Family and others. /
with a lot of students in my to give of themselves and
RACINE ~ Soutllllrn
· nine years of teaching. In ·become more responsible
Charge
UMC Men's Prayer
·this age of video games, it citizens. We hope all princiWednesday,Aprill
Breakfast,
8 a.m., Carmel
seems harder and harder to pals, teachers and school
PAGEVILLE . _ Scipio
Fellowship
Complex.
motivate students to want to .organizations will check out Tow~shiD Trustees, regular
Monday, April 6
the website and find ways to ....
6·30
p.m .,
Participate .
u,ee tJ ng,I
.
I
h
RUTLAND
~ An indoor
· The good news is, our r- get invo ved in these wofl · Page:ville Town Hall.
.
c
amp
meeting
will be held
· •.vice learning initiative as while events.
. Thlllliday, Aprll2
at
7
p.m.
April
6-12 at the
begun to change that attiDear Annie: My two sisSYRACUSE _ Syracuse
"tude in both our students ters live in different states. Village Council , T p.m. at Rutland Church of the
· and our community. I ho~ They have daughters who · village hall.
. Nazarene. On Sunday, April
you can help me share w1th are getting married three · POMEROY _ Meigs 12 the service will begin at
· .other teachers, students, weeks apart. Since my wife . County Board of Health, 5 6 p.m. Speaker will be Rev.
Ray LaSalle and singers,
··schools .and communitie.s ana I "don't have the
nti
M·
b h p.m., co erence room, e1gs Ralph and Joanne Dunmire.
0
how they can engage their resources to y to ot
County Health Department.
students in learning even weddings, rent a car and &amp;et
·· more .by doing for others, a hotel room plus a g1ft,
starting with Earth Day &gt;n which one do we attend? I
April. And it's free!
love my nieces equally, but
This is rnY third year par- attending both is more than
Friday, April 3
ticipating in The LEAGUE we can afford. Any suggesMIDDLEPORT
Wetfuesday, April 1 .
. · with my school. We have · ti011s? - Torn in Toledo
Healing and miracle serPOMEROY
The
·collected clothes and
Qear Tolede: Here · are vice, 7 p.m,. Rejoicing Life Middleport Literary Club will
canned food. written letters your options: See if there Church 500 N. Second Ave. meet at 2 p.m. at the Pomeroy
to soldiers, firemen and are low-cost airfares and Information at 992-6249.
Library. The book "Little
. police officers. held penny hotels thai will allow you to
Saturday, April4
Heathens" by Mildred Kalish
drives for local c_hildren's attend both; attend neither;
MIDDLEPORT - Gospel . will be reviewed by Marlene
hospitals. and near Earth attend · the first one for sing, 7 p.m., Middleport Kuhn. Dana Kessinger will be
· Day we take our ·entire stu- which you receivt an invita- Nazarene Church, New hostess. There will be a book
dent population into the tion; you and · your wife Prophets Quartet,. The exchange among. the memlocal neighborhoods to help could each attend one alone Dollys and Bride, Evelyn bers.
. · .clean up after winter. We in a show of family loyalty.
·· plant flower. beds and trees We think you should openly
·m various courtyards, and · discuss the problem with
· have sponsored a local park your sisters so they will
COLUMBUS - Ohio additional deer management
· in honor of a fallen soldier understand your dilemma
deer
hunters have donated tool. helping wildlife .man.· from
our cdmmunity. and whatever decision you
more than 54,800 pounds of a$.ers encourage ·hunters to
Students in all grades can make.
·give of their time·, treasure
Dear Annie: I would like venison to lo~al food banks k1ll more does.
Venison that is donated to
· .and talents.
to respond to "Ringless," through the 2008-09 deer
hunting
season,according
to
foQd
banks must be processed
I have seen the excit.e- who was greatly disturbed
by
a
federal. state or locally
ment in niy students - an that her husband didn't wear Farmers
Hunters
and
inspected
and · insured meat ·
Feeding the Hungry (FHFH)
ex~itement to help other his wedding ring.
people while physically
My wife and I have been and the Ohio Department of processor that is participating
"doing something to make a married 61 years, and I've Natural Resources (ODNR) with FHFH. Hunters Wishing
· to donate their deer to a foQd
"difference. My school popu- never worn a wedding band Division of Wildlife.
·. ;lation is made up of proud because rings cause me to
The 54,800 pounds of bank are not required to pa~
children· from single-family . develop a skin condition venison equals approxi-, for the processing of the vern.. blue-collar homes with little that requires a trip to th·e mately 219,200 meals for son as long as the program
eitra money. The LEAGUE dermatologist. Both of us Ohioans in need. Last year, ha~ funds available to cover
: gives every child the oppor- have been faithful and I FHFH collected 20,902 the cost. There are. C\UTelltlY
tunity to feel valued and never considered that a ring pounds of venison throughc
valuabl.e · be&lt;;ause of t.heir would ensure any greater out the season. A total of
gifts. for others. As an edu- love for her.
· 1,096 deerwere donated this
calor, I strive to teach my
If "Ringless's" husband deer hunting season com· students that they are a nee- avoids . wearing a wedding pared to 418 in 2007-08.
.. essary and imrortant piece band in order to pose as a
"Many deer. hunters ·took
· of our schoo community single man, ·then she has the 'extrn step to help offset
regardless . of background. cause
for
·concern. . hunger felt by Ohioans," said
The LEAGUE heiQ!i me Otherwise, I would tell her -,1 im Marshall, assistant chief
·prove this to every clllld in to drop her objections and of the Division of Wildlife.
terms they and their fami- tove the guy without it. - . "The Division of Wildlife
lies understand.
G.
hopes to partner with FHFH
I would encourage any · ' Annie's Mailbox is writ· again this next deer season.''
·teacher with a classroom or ten by Kathy Mitchell and
The Division of Wildlife
· ·teacher-certified group (like Marcy Sugqr, hmgtime edi· collaborated with Farmers
· a student council or club) to tors of the Ann Landers and Hunters Feeding the
go to · the site www.the" · column. Please e-maU your . Hungry in an effort to assist
league.arg to see the won- questi(Jns to anniesmail- with the processmg costs
·deiful ".Learning to Give" boxcomcast.net, or write associated with . donating
curriculum and ideas for to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. venison to· a food bank. A
'engaging our students in the Box 118190, Chicago, IL $100,000 subsidy grant was
giving of their time, talent 60611. To find out more provided in two $50.000
and treasure for others. about Annie's Mailbox, allotments th~t ·are to be
Rob Merchant, Break-0- and read features by other matched with funds generatDay Elementary, New Creators Syndicate writers ed or .collected by FHFH. ·
·whiteland, Ind.
and cartoonists,. visit the The Division subsidized this
Dear Rob Merchant: Creators Syndicate Web year's FHFH operation as an
Thanks for your letter about page at'www.creators.com.
~

accounting guide\ines by
simply moving the dollars
from one funding pot to
another.
State Senator Jon Husted
questioned the administra-

tion 's ability to fully funa its
plan because the federal
funds mu&gt;t go directly to districts , rath~r than being used
to meet requirements of the
governor's schools plan.

Community Calendar
Public meetings ·

~

Church events

I

'

!

· Clubsand
organizations

Thursday, April 2
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, Auxiliary
7 p.m. Thursday at the hall .
CHESTER - ChesterHistorical
Shade
Association, 7 p.m . at the
Chester Courthouse.
Friday, April3 ·
POMEROY Meigs
County PERI #74, regular
meeting, I p.m., Mulberry
Community Center. Doug
·Lavender speaking on 911
in Meigs County.
Saturday, April 4
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878 meet in regular
session with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m., followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m.
PORTLAND . "f.be
Portland Community Center
will host the first horse show
of the year sponsored by the
Ohio River Producers.
Warm ups ~ 10 a.m., show
at noon. Call Bruce 740590-8836 or 843-5216 for
more information.

, M'ond~y, April 6
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer lnitiati ve,
regular meeting, noon, conference
room.
Meigs
County Health l)epartment.
·I

Birthdays
Friday, April3
RACINE - Eva Mae
Christian will observe her
9()th birthday on April 3.
Cards may be sent to her at
Box 827, Racine, Ohio 45771 .
· · Saturday, April 4
REEDSVILLE
Charlotte VanMeter will
observe her 80th birthday on
April4. Cards may be sent to
her at 41458 Sumner Road ,
Reedsville, Ohio 45772.
Sunday, April S
POMEROY - Elva Dean
.Barnitz will observe her
90th birthday on April 5.
Cards may be sent to her at ·
1628 Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Ohio hunters donating venison to foOd pantries
43 participating meat proces.sors across the state. A list is
provided at www.thfh.org.
Since last year, FHFH has
more than doubled the number of chapters from 12 to 27 ,
with the need for more.
Anyone interested in becom"
ing a local program coordinator or a .participating meat
rocessor should . visit the
P.Local
· FHFH" page · at
www.fhfh.org. The web page
includes a current list of coordinators, program names and
the coUnties that they serve ..

•I'IIIIIA/t t"lmloal . _ .
• 11'11111111 ~ A liMp 'fOOl" budctf lilt!
• Hl•·Mftl dlriSIM Wdh ·Wt~M'raill
• Ct!atoM Btltl Paga • nwt, 'ii'MIIIh'r &amp; ri'IOI'&amp;1

( :,"!':~ 6XltlsfriFJ'l
u.
...___ _ _ .Jf.lt/'J,..,..

Silo Up OIIIIMI www.LocoiNtl.etnl

GREETING!!
'

·. Local Weather
Wednesday •.. Mostly . Not as cool with lows in the
· cloudy with showers with a upper 40s: · East winds
· chance of thunderstorms in around lO mph with gusts
. the morning ...Then sunny in up to 20 mph. Chance of
the afternoon. Highs in the r;~in 60 percent.
· .lower 60s. Southwest winds
Friday...Showers likely.
Elijah Wayne Circle
,5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain Highs around 60. Chance of
. 90 percent.
rain 60 percent.
· Wednesday
night •. ~
Friday nigbt ...Mostly
Mostly clear. Lows in the cloudy with . a 30 percent
upper 30s. North winds chance of showers. Lows in
around 5 mph in the the upper 30s.
·. ·
evening ... Becoming light
Saturday and Saturday . LONG BOTTOM
·and variable.
night ...Partly cloudy. ·Highs Jeffrey . W. Circle Jr. and
Thursday .. ,Most I y in the lower 60s. Lows in Carolyn C. Circle, of Long
Bottom, announce the birth
sunny. Warmer with highs the upper 30s.
of
a son, Elijah Wayne
in the lower 70s.
Suoday...Mostly sunny
Circle.
He was born on Feb.
. Thursday night...Most!y with a 40 percent chance of
16,
2009
at O'Bleness
cloudy with showers likely. showers. Highs in mid 60s.
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
He weighed 8 lbs. 4oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Circle has a ·
daughter, Hannah Laree
Circle, two. The infant is
the grandson of Jeff and
Ohio Yalley Bane Corp. (NASAEP (NYSE) - 25.26
Sonia Circle of Long
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 37.75
DAQI- 21
Bottom and Mary Bentz of
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 10.33
BIT ·(NYSE) - 16.92
Big Lots (NYSE) - 20.78
Peoples (NASDAOI - 12.98
Pomeroy. He is the greatBob Evans (NASDAOI - 22.42
Papaleo (NYSEI - 51.48
grandson
of Harold C1rcle
BorgWarner (NYSEI - 20.30
I'Nmler (NASDAQ}•- 5.40
and
Grover
and Elsie
Cerrtury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
RockWell (NYSEl - 21.114
White,
all' of Long Bottom.
-2.11
Rocky- (NASDAQ) - 3.50
.
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.60
Ropl Dutch Shell :.... 44.30
.

Birth
announced

Local Stocks

Chllrmlng Shops (NASDAQ) 1.40
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 27~
Collins (NYSE) - 32.64
DuPont (NYSE) - 22.33
US Bank (NYSE) - 14.61
Gannett (NYSE) - 2.20
General Electric {NYSE}- 10.11
Harfoy·Daotdton (NYSE} - 13.39
JP MOf!!8n (NYSE} - 26.58
Kroger (NY$E) - 21 .22
Ltmfttd Bnnda(NYSE) - 8.70
Norfolk Southern .(NYSE} - .
33.75
_...,
.

Selra Holding (NASDAQ} -

:1\pril12, 20.09
.. '.Deadline Wed.
.,:;J\pril 8, 2009
,.,":....

.)

Dean's list ·

45.71

Wai-MIIrt (NYSE) - 52.10
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.03

Size tx3
·.Person per ad·
date Sun.,

.•~Actual
••

•

WesBanc:o (NYSEJ - 22.89

Wonhlngton (NYSE} - B.71
Dally stock "JJIff8 are th6 4

p.m. ET closing quotes of trono-

oetlons tor Marc:h 31, 2009, poovldtd by Edwald Jones tl ...n-

clllt advtsor.luac Millo In
·
Galllpolta Ill (740) 441-8441 and
Lasley l.lamro In Point P-nt

at (304} 67~174. Member SIPC.

POMEROY - Renee
Denise Bailey. Pomeroy,
was named to Wheeling
Jesuit University's dean's
list for the fall , 2008 semester. Students named to. the
·Jist earn a grade point average of at least 3.5 and must
be enrolled full-time . .

I

Cameron Rodgers

Happy Easter
Love, Mom &amp;.'Dad .

Mail to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel· ,
11.1 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Child's Name'----,-----'--------From _ _ _ _~---------YourName ____~-----~--------~-Address ----------~---

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:Phone#~----------------~-,-------:
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�•

.

'

OPINION
jlll _about mergers

The Daily Sentinel

Tile Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio'

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnal.~om

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

Congtess shall make no law respecting an
·eswblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging t~e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the rig~t of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for ·a redress of griePances. ·
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READE.R' S

V.IEW

Value
Irfo needed on stolen guns
. Dear EtJittlr:
Our borne was broken into on March 17 and some guns
we treasured were stolen. They had come to my husband,
Larry "Bub," from deceased family members, grandfathers, fathers and brothers, and can never be repla~ed.
· We're asking that anyone with information contact the
Meigs County Sheri!fs Office . The sentimental value of
· those guns is immeasurable to our family.

Melissa A. Holsinger
· Racine

AIG. the company that
broke the world by selling
fake insurance policies~
removed their name from
the front of their New York
City skyscraper. How much
did that cost? The letters
were, like, 5 feet 1!111. You
just can't send down AI
from · th~ mailroom with a
screwdriver and ·a ladder
and take them down. They
probably had to use a few
guys with cherry pickers .
They took them down in the
middle of the night so we're
talking golden time for the
crew. But is taking down the
s1gn really_ gomg to solve
any .of AIG 's problems?
I'm sure that as the
months go on'_ "':e'll learn
that the rnllhon-dollar
bonuses they gaye_ to the
guys who lost bdhons are
chump change. They · are
probably spending your
bailout money right now, on
focus groups to find out 1f
AIG should change their
name to "Warm and Fuzzy
Financial," "Huggy Bear
Enterprises" or "Insurance
'n' Things?"
Anyone who's worked for
a big corporation knows it
isn't the stock-option giveaways or ~ndeserved bonuses that k11ls them, but the
corporate culture itself. One
place · I worked ai changed
their logo seven times in
two years. It used to be Big
Corp . Inc ., and then it

Jim
Mullen

bou~ht Coloss~l Brands so
1t Became B1g Colossal
Brands. They hired the most
expensive g~phic designers
in the worlo to come up
with a logo for the new
company. The highly paid
de signers and the highly
paid executives Went on spa
· retreats together; they went
to trust-building camps
together. they went deepsea fishing together off
Cabo San Lucas. After mil·. lions of dollars and countless hours of confabbing,
faxing and e-mailing, the
new logo was revealed. It
consisted of the letters "B"
and "C" intertwined to look
as if they were having some
kind of kinky alphabet sex
with each other. A business
school triumph! The. executjves who had spent so
much time and money on it
all ~greed it was a work of
genms and they were all
geniuses. Then they spent
millions more ·changing
every piece of corporate .stationery, every notepad,
every handout baseball cap,

. PageA4
Wednesday, Apri11, 2009

an~

admonitions

every tote bag and every Sales tanked. Some other
giveaway pen to the new magazine stole our new art
logo. All the old stuff was director. They went out of
thrown out. Two month~ business, too . .They won an
later Big Colossal Brands "Edgy" posthumously.
merged with Humongous
. Of course all the staProducts becoming Big, tionery, baseball hats, etc ..
Humongous &amp; Colllssal 'had to be tossed out once
Inc.
more. This time, the "B"
The new company adopt- and the "C" performed their
ed Humongous Products ' . kinky sex game inside a
corporate. mono which was · large "H." Changing · the
"Something you ate today, logo did not improve . the
we touched." It worked fine bottom line as expected. I
formostofthe,company,but never once heard anyone
I was in their magazine divi- say. "Hey, nice new logo . .
sion and it didn't get us I'm giving you all my busimuch business. We had our ness ."
own problems. Once a year
While the executives
the editor would decide to · were busy picking logos
redesign the whole maga- and mottos, the stock price
zine to inake it ·~edgier." of BHC steadily dropped. A
Incredibly, th~ magazine- Wall Street · raider bought
buying publi!= didn't seem to the whole company for a
·appreeiate the significance
of our font change from song, fired all the high·
Times New Roman. to priced executives aild resold
Courier, that we'd spent mil- the company a year later for
lions going from a three-col- a .gazillion-dollar profit.
umn format to two coluinns, Members of the logo team
that the "edgy" new art were all quickly hired by
director (we had to buy out · other big corporations. and
the old one) did not like to are now busy spreading
. read the stories he w.as their management magic to
designing. On the headline other lucky offices.lf we all ·
for -a piece about adoption, chipped in and paid them a
the letters looked like shards bonus to leave, we'd all be
of broken glass. For the arti- better off.
cle about the top ten beach
(Jim Mullen is the author
vacations, the pictures were of "Jt Takes a Village Idiot:
·of rotting fish and evil-look- Complicai,ing the Simple
ing pop·!Opll half-buried in Life'' and "Baby's . First
the sand. The new format' Tattoo." You ctln reach him
. won an "Edgy" Award. atjim:_mullen@myway.com).

..
.
I

FACToRY
SECONDS
ARE IN·.~---.,,

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today .is Wednesday, April I, the 9lst day of2009. There
-are 274 days left in the year. This is April Fool's Day.
· · Today 's Highlight in History:
On April!, 1945, American forces launched the amphibious invasion of Okinawa during World War II.
On this date: .
· In 1853, Cincinnati established a fire department made
up of paid city employees.
·
. In I 918, the Royal Air Force was established in Britain.
In 1933, Nazi Germany began persecuting Jews with a
boycott of Jewish-owned businesses.
... In 1939, the.United Sta.tes recognized the government of
Gen. Francisco Franco in Spain, the same day Franco went
on radio to declare victory m the Spanish Civil War.
In 1946, tidal waves struck the Hawaiian islands, resulting in niore than 170 deaths.
·
·
. In 1~58, President Dwight D. Eisenho.wer signed a $1.85
billion emergency housing measure.
.
, In 1960, the first weather satellite, TIROS-1, was .
launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
'
In 1963, most of New York City's daily newspapers
resumed publishing after settlement was reached in ~ 114day strike.
·
·
.. In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon signed a measure
.banning cigarette advertising on radio and television ; to
take effect after Jan. I, 1971.
. In 1984,recording star Marvin Gaye was shot to death by
· his father, Marvin Gay Sr., in Los Angeles, the day before
his 45th birthday. (The elder Gay pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter, and received probation.)
. ·
. ·Thought for Today: "Si mi ahuela tuviera ruedas seria
If you still think ·that
una bicicleta." (If my grandmother had wheels, she'd be a President Barack Obama is
bicycle.) - Spanish proverb.
about hope and chan~e and
moms and apple p1e and
noth.ing objectionable or
radical, consider his nominee for head of the Office of
Legal Counsel, Dawn
utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less Johnsen.
Her record sets off many
than 300 words. Alllerters are subject to editing, must be
· signed. and include Qddress and telephone number. No alarms, with the most disunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in tressing sirens arising from
good taste , addressing issue~·, not personalities.' utters of her views on abortion.
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Regardless of what the New
York Times might write,
, ed for publication .
·
(they called her position on
abortion "hardly unusual"
in a recent glowing endorse,
men!,) I'd like to think that
you'd have to attend a
Reader Services
(USPS 213-9601
wacky women's studies lee•
Correctlo11 Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Oo.
ture in order to find people
,., Our main oonOOm in all stories Is to Pubtishe~ every mornmg. Monday
who equate pregnancy with
,
through
Friday,
111 Court Stre~n .
be accuraIe. If ~ou know o1 an error P
-• •
postage
"
omeroy. Ohio . •
~,,,unu'"'" 1ass
slavecy.
• In a 1101y, call the newsroom at (740) · paid at PomiJ&lt;OV,
•
Johnsen is the former
992·21 56.
_ , The ~ted Press and
legal director · of the
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Nationa( Abortion and
Pottm..tw: Send address correc·
Our main number Is
Reproductive
Rights Action
lions to The Dal~ 5entinel, P.O. BoK
(740) 992-2156.
•
League (now kno~n as
729, Pomeroy, Ohio -15769.
Department llllllmslons are:
NARAL
Pro-Choice
Sublcriptfon Rates
•
America, in the hopes of
• By ca~ "' motor rouw .
News
fooling people). While
· - ..............'11.30
• Editor: Chartene Hoeflich, E&gt;&lt;t. 12
there,
in a case involving a
52 """" ..... .......'128.85
" Ropoiler: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
law that limited
Missouri
Dllfty • ' ... " . .. • • • •• " . .50'
l'loporl8&lt;: Bo1h Sergent, E&gt;&lt;t. 13
the
use
of
taxpayer money
Septor .C Htan .
.
28 - · .. " .........'511.61
and stqte resources for abor5 2 - · .......•.. •.'116.10
tion. Johnsen called restric. Advertising
~ should remi'l in adv8lnOe
tions
on nbortion "involun ·. OUtsiCte Setes: Dave Hams. Ell!. 15 '*'&lt;t )a The Oat; - · No subtary
servitude," arguing
scription
by
mall
penniaed
in
areas
' Oulslde S.tee: eoonda Davis, Ext 16
where
home
carrier
service
is
available.
that
,
with
them "the state
ClooaJCin:.: Judy Clark. Ext, 10
has conscripted (an expec,.
.,., Sublcrlpllan
tan!
mother 's) b®y for its
...... llllga ~nty
own
ends." This leads to,
12 Weetcs .. ; . " .. . _.; "'35-.211
she wrote, "forced pregnan26 Weeks ....... . . ... .'70.70
52Weeks . .. . . . : .....'140.11
cy," which is a violation of
E-tNU:
the Bth Amendment, which
mdsnewsOmydaitysentinet.com
Outolde l!oigo County
outlawed
slavery.
12 Weeks .... . ........'56.5!;
Pregnancy
,
she
declared,
?5 Weeks . : . ... ..• , . ' 113.60
··requires a woman to pro52 Weeks ..... ... .. ..'227.21
vide continuous physical

•

.

REYNOLDSBURG - Lloyd Elwood Nelson, age 63,
went home Sunday, March 29. 2009.
He was a Deacon and member of Full Armour of God
Baptist Church'.
.
He is survived by his wife of 44 years, Connie; son, Marty
· (Stacy) Nelson; grandchild, Autum; sisters, Betty (Ron)
Jacks and Charlotte Good; several nieces and nephews. .
He was preceded in death by father Elwood; mother Mary;
sisters Hester Adams and Pauline Davis; biuther Gene.
Friends_may call from 6-8 p.m., Friday at Full Armour of
God Baptist Church, 14454 E. Broad 'Street,R,eynoldsburg
where a service will also be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday.
Pastor Rocky Brown officiating.
Arrangements . by Evans Funeral Home, 417.1 E.
Livingston Ave., Columbus, www.j:vansfuneralhome.net.

Bottom, again~t Millie L. Forester,
Columbus. and Autumn Lee. Langsville,
against Forest Lee, Jr., Glouster.
A divorce was granted to Jimmy R.
Lee, Jr .• from Samantha Lee .

Common Pleas Court to 10 years in
prison on a charge of aggravated burglary. He was given credit for 17 I
days served.

POMEROY Civil judgment
actiGns have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court: Shelly
Materials, Inc., Thornville~ against
Tyrone Brinager, doing business as Tye
LEBANON - Three individuals
Brinager and Sons Produce, Portland;
POMEROY
An
action
for
dissowere transported to area hospit!lls folAmerican Express . Centurion Bank,
New York, N.Y., against James F. ·lution of :marriage Wa6 filed in Meigs lowing a one-vehicle. accident that
Sundquist ,
Middeport;
Amex County Common Pleas Court by Occurred .a t approximately 5:30 p.m.
Centurion Bank, Weston, Fla .. against Loyal M. Holman. Racine. and Edna on· Friday.
According to troopers. Zachary W.
Melinda Gibbs, Rutland; and Fam1ers Holman, Racine.
.
A
dissolution
was
granted
to
Andrea
Sigman; 18, Portland, was driving a
Bank and Savings Co ., Pomeroy,
Melaine Smallwood and Carlton Boyd 2003 Chevy Cavalier eastbound on
against Juan Tabler, Mi&lt;ldlepc)rt.
County Road 35 approximately half a
· Foreclosure actions were filed by Smallwood.
mile west of Ohio 124 when the vehi·
Geauga . Savings Bank. Newberry,
cle
traveled off the right side · of the
against Merrell Blaiikenship , Racine,
roadway and struck a tree. Following
and others; . and United Midwest
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses
the
acciqent. biick seat passenger
Savings Bank, DeGraff, . against
were
issued
in
Meigs
County
Dalton
Imboden, 15, Racine, was
Gennifer Grace Gloeckner. Columbus.
Common
Pleas
Court
by·
Jeremey
transported
to Cabell-Huntington by
A suit alleging personal injury was
23.
Racine
,
and
Sheila
Dean
Deweese,
·
.Medflight
with
incapacitating. Sigman
filed by Monte J. Riffl e. Racine,
Marie Partlow, 30, Racine; and Dana al)d front seat passenger Ashley N.
against Donna M. Bums, Portland. ·
Ray Williams, Sr., 53, Pomeroy, and Freeman, 18, Syracuse. were both
Nicole Daw.n Clary, :35, Pomeroy. · transported by ·Syracuse EMS to
GALLIPOLIS - Robert Wayne "Rob" Price, 44, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday, March 28,2009 at his residence.
!ac~~o 9eneral with non-incapacitat·
mg mJunes.
Services will be 2 p.m., Sunday, April 5, 2009 at the ·
POMEROY - Actions for divorce
Sigman was Cited with failure to .
Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Ron Bynum officiating.
POMEROY - Ryan K. Graham · contr0J.,and the vehicle he was driving
Burial will follow at Gallia Baptigt Cemetery. Friends were filed in Meigs County Common
may call at the funeral home on Saturday, April 4, 2009 Pleas Court by Tony L. Forester, Long was sentenced in Meigs ·county sustained severe damages.
from 5-8 p.m.
•
·
A full obituary will be published on Thursday.

Dissolution

Highway Patrol

Marriage licenses

Deaths

Robert Wayne 1lob' Price

Divorces

Sentenced

AEP cuts 2009 earnings forecaSt

Local Briefs

COLUMBUS (AP) another7.5 million shares to
American Electric Power on ·· cover over-allotments. The
Monday lowered i(S forecast total would equal about 14
for 2009.profit citing the eco- · percent of the company's
nomic downturn, and said ii current shares, according to
plans to i.~sue more stock and a recent regulatory filing.
cut capital spending.
.
AEP said it would use the
The power company said money to reduce debt:
· rt expeets to earn $2.75 to
Shares of AEP fell $l.L9,
$3.05 per share. this year, or 4.5 percent, to .$25.08 in
down from the old forecast regular filing before the

"In addition to the effect didn't adequately cover its
of dilution from our planned fuel and environmeinal
stock issuance, the ongoing spending . Columbus~based
economic downturn is a sig· AEP plans .to appeal parts of
nificant factor in our revised the decision in Ohio, home
guidance ," said Michael G. to about one-fifth of its cusMorris, AEP's chairman tomers.
and chief executive.
Recent rate increases in
Morris said demarid for Ohio. Indiana, Oklahoma.
electricity is down , espe- .and Virginia · have helped
cially among industria:! cus- the co.mpany. however.
AEP said ·it would cope
of $3 to $3 .40 per share.
announcement of new tomers, hurting earnings
AEl' said Monday that it shares. In the opening min- from AEP's regylated busi- with the economic doWnlowered its profit PUidan.ce' utes of extended tradt' ng, the nesses . The downturn'S tum by cuning its capital
P
·because of economic factors shares fell another 88 cents, effect is even greater, he budget for 201Q to $1.8 bilsaid, on wholesale. power lion from a. planned $3.4
and !he djlution caused by or 3.5 percent, to $24.20.
1ssuing more shares.
The stock .offerinft is sales from the company's billion. The reductions will
be spread across generation.
The company said it pl~ns being manag.ed by affi iates . generating units.
to sell about SO m11hon of Cred1t Su1sse, JPMorgan
Morris also cited a March transmission and distribushares to the public, and Chase, Barclays . Citigroup rate decision by Ohio regu- tion · units, and some pro,
underwriters could get' and Morgan StanJ~y.
lators that the company said jects are being delay~d.

Legal Services office .relocates·
ATHENS _ Southeastern Obio Legal Services' Athens
office has relocated to 964 East State Street, Athens.
The office is one of nine area offices serving low income
· · · ·
rTesidents in Ohio's Appalachian £olintles m· CIVI1 c.ases.
he ~thens .Office serves Athens, Gallia, Meigs, and
· Vinton counties. ·
.
·
With this move, telephone service was temporarily inter1 d1
th
ed d 10
ue_
rupted · The disruption aste onger an expect
roblems with the telephone earner. Regular phone serv1ce
~as now be restored. Callers will be able to talk to someone
right away at the office's regular phone numbers: 1-800686-3669 or 740-594-3558. .·
.
.
The program also provides legal services to homeowners.
at risk of foreclosure without regard to income, homeowneis (up to. 200 l?ercent federal poverty !~vel income) yvho.
are being sued m foreclosure, and low mcome tax payers
who need legal assistance.
·. ·
..
..

----,..--..,.-~-----'--..,.------------------,---,--------'--

. Law You Can Use ·

Senior league

School
evaluations
and
indellendent
evaluations:
The· f.iou.nda.tzon
.• . d.if.snecza
. ' l educatzon
• el'zgz'b l'l'zty

out if he is eligible for special education servu:t~s? . ·

Benefit dinner-auction

A:

Under the· Individuals
with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA) the first step in
qualifying your child for
SJ?Cciai education is having
h1s school complete a multifactored evaluation to
assess him in all areas~ :Of
can
functioning .. You
request an evaluation by
delivering a written request
to your special education
director. principal, .or other
school official, by hand Qr
by certified mail, return
receipt requested.
.

POMEROY -The ann~al benefit diimer"auction of the
Chester-Shade Historical Association will be held Friday
night at Meigs High School. Dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m. Door prizes of flowers donat1,1d by area merchants
will be awarded.

Expand rroni P~eAt

Not unusual to be

~

Cjvil suits

Uoyd Elwood Nelson

..

'

The Daily Sentinel

For the Record

POMEROY
Senior League play at Pine Hills Golf
Course will begin at 9 a.m. Friday. A continental break- I ·
fast will be served. All senior men and women are eligible to p!U'Iicipate.
· ·
·
·
..·
'}:'
Mike White, course operator, will review course changes
Q: My child is struggUng
Q: How do I know if my
for the new season, so players are urged· to attend .
in school. How do I find · child is entitled to an evalu-

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysen~el.com

Obituaries

~

f
~~
/

·

Wednesday, Aj&gt;rilt, 2009

led by anyone·(especially a president)

· McCarthy, · in his . case opposite. (On iohnsen's pri. against Johnsen, ret:ounted ority list: Making sure that
. her OLC record, one that candidates for Bus h-era DOJ
the New York Times, for positions who were passed
one ; chose to overlook . over for leaning left get
Kathry·h · · McCarthy exp,osed the "par· .· "special consideration" in
ticul&lt;~i'ly rich ' hypocrisy of the Obama ad~pinistration.)
Lopez:
Johnsen's recent condemnaJohnsen's nomination has
lions of the Bush admiltis- . been moved out Df the
!ration's use of executive Senate Judicial Committee
authority, showing how she on a party-line vote and
service to the fetus in order ardently defended Clinton's awaits a full-Senate test.
to further the state's assert- will to power when his She'll need 60 votes to get
ed interest" in the unborn administration did such confirmed. Remembering
. child. She argued that a things as "(invent) extraor- . the circus foisted upon so
mother "is constantly aware dinary rendition , (detain) many George W. Bush nomfor nine months that her Cuban refugees without inees, it's hard -to believe
body is not her own ."
trial at Guantanamo Bay,. that Republicans and modThat's not unusual?
(conduct)
·warrantless erate Democrats will let her
At the very least it's high· national-security searches, sail through to the OLC.
ly partisan, which presents a and (attack) a foreign counOr so I have the audacity
big problem . The little- try without congressional to hope.
.
known but highly influen- authorization." · But after
The on-radicalism &lt;if the
. .tial task of heading the OLC Bush took similar measures · Obama administration is an
requires being an "admiilis- to · protect the · country, untruth . And Johnsen's
!ration's lawyer's lawyer." Johnsen cried foul.
nomination plays a signifiAs former federal prosecuIt's getting to be a tired cant role in exposing the
tor Andrew c. McCarthy refrain, but it's abundantly " moderate Obama" myth
explained the job, in a dear that a Republica.n that m~ny Americans have
recent piece for National nommee w1th Johnsen s bought mto - most recently
Review on Johnsen, "It ' past would be rc;&gt;undly the Catholic Unive~ity of
authoritatively interprets the thrashed by tl. pundtts and Notre Dame·, wh1ch IS prolaw for the attorney general the public (probably unfai~- vidin_g th~ pre~ident. cover
and, in doing so, drives ly and slande!Ously. so,, if for _h1s ~11-hfe ll)ltlallves by
administration Ie~al poli~y." ~cent htstory ts any mdica- lettmg h101 spe:ak at 1ts comIt's the most umdeolog1cal lion). Instead . led by the · mencement th1s May.
post there is in a presiden- lefty cheerleaders at the
It shouldn't be unusual to
tial administration.Which is gray lady, we're engaged in expect . ·honesty
about
why Johnsen should be the a bo~t of kn~e-j:rk .Bush· Johnsen, or to expect the
last person filling it. Besides bashmg, wh1le tmportant Senate to take a close look
her rddically anti-life past, question~ such as wh:&gt; a~ her. But we should conthere 's also her record with Johnson 1s and what shes &amp;Jder. President Obama's
Jne Clinton administration ~id and don.e go unexam- increasingly radical moves
(where she served in - sur- med.
very unusual indeed.
. prise - the Office of Legal
l~ .qbama aims to ~e(Kathryn wpez is the ediCounsel.), a resume that poh11c1ze
the
Just1ce · tor of Natrona/ Review
suggests she's anything b1,1t Department. as he claims, by Online (www.nationalre- ·
the breath of•fresh air that · selecting Johnsen he has ••iew.com). She can be conPresident
Obama
has picked an ideologue who tacted at k/opez@natioiUll-.
promi~ed.
would absolutely do just the review.com).

Briden bach agreed that demand for medical care for the
uninsured has .increased ·in these bad economic times.
Family Health Care offers services on a sliding fee scille,
accepts private insurance, and offers services to those with
no insurance. Co-pays are ·minimal.
.
"The additional funding for staff will a:llow us to ·expand
services at a time when demand is on the increase,"
Bridenbach said. "Wt:- are seeing more uninsured patients
due to higher unemployment."
Tlie Increased Demand for Services funds will be distributed to 32 federally qualified health center grantees in
Ohio. The health centers will use the funds over the next
two years to create or retain approximately 147 health center jobs. · ·
·
·
·
.
The IDS awards are the second set of health center grants
provided ihrough the Recovery Act. On March 2, President
Obama annmmced grants worth $155 million to 126 ne~
health centers.
.
Bridenl)ach said he expects $1.5 billion in ad11itional stimulus funding to be made avrulable for new construchon of
health centers. (See related story, page 1.)

Q: Is the school required
by law to provide an evalu-

ation any time a parent
requests one?

AMP fro~ PageAl .
In addition to last month's final sqlid waste permit, a
complete list of permits approved finili for the AMPGS are
as follows: the air permit-to,install (finalized February .
2008), NPDES permit (finalized November 2008), 40 I
Water Quality Certification (finalized January), Ohio
Power Siting Board (OPSB) Certificaie of Environmental
Compatibility and Public Need-Generation Facility (final- ·
ized March 2008), OPSB Certificate of Environmental
Compatibility and Public Need-Transmission Line (finalized November 2008).
·

Forestry rrom Page At
·assist landowners with plant identification, on ways to
address an infestation of weedy invasive plants, including treatment and control recomrile~d&lt;~tions , and on h~w
to qualify for -federal cost-share assistance f~nds prov~d­
ed by the N~tural Resources Conserva!10n Serv!ce
(NRCS) through the Environmental Quahty lncenhve
Program (EQlP).
·
.
.
In addition to working with landowners directly, Smith
and other ODNR foresters will assist landowners through
education and outreach. Why grow a weed when you can
grow. an oak tree ? Residents are asked to co~tact
Annemarie Smith at (740) 589-9914 or send an emml to
lnvasiveSpeciesForester@dnr.state.oh.us.
The role of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is
to ensure a balance between wise use and protection of our
natural resources for the benefit of all. Residents can learn
more about the Ohio Division of Forestry and InvasiveSpecies at www.ohiodnr.com/forestry.
·

A: No. The school must
evaluate only if it suspects
a disability. lf it suspects a
disability. it will obt;tin
your written consent for an
evaluation. If your school
is not going to honor your
request for an evaluation,
it must give you a legal
document called a " prior
written notice" explaining
why it is not going to eva!uate your child, and it
must . give you a copy of
the booklet, "Whose Idea
Is This"?

request an Independent the child's righ! to an !EE.
Educational
Evaluatictn Only one lEE 1s perlllitted
. atio'll?
.
.
(lEE). An lEE is olie of the per school evaluation.
· A: Under IOEA, schools most important procedural
are required to . identify, ·safeguards available to parQ: How do'es the. inde- ·
locate and evaluate all chil- ents under the IDEA pendent · evaluator ff.et
dren with disabilities who because it provides an paid?
·
may need special education. independent view of the
A: The school district will
Many schools will deny child at school district either assume up-front
evaluations to struggling . expense.
responsibility for payment
You must inform the and will issue a purchase
children because !hey first
want to do "interventions" school district in writing order, or the parent may .
to determine whether addi-- that . you disagree with its obtain the lEE. cover the ·
1ional services will improve evaluation (though you are costs initially, and present
the child's performance not' required to . explain proof of parment to the
without special education. why), and request an lEE. If school . dis.t rtct for reim- .
The effectiveness of these ihe school does .not want to bursement. In situations
-approaches depends upon provide you with an lEE, it · where school districts
the circumstances, but gen-· must promptly initiate d\le refuse the cost of the IE'E,
erally, parents should care- process proceedings lo parents can consider meetfully consider interventions prove that its own evalua- mg with their superint~n­
that are not based upon tion is appropriate (which .. dent, filing a complaint with
.
the Ohio Department of
thorough . evaluations of rarely ·occurs).
Assuming the school Education , or, if necessary,
their child.
does not initiate and win consulting an advocate or
· Q: If the school agrees to due process, you are enti- attorney about taking furevaluate, how long should tied to an lEE. You ·should !her steps.
ask the school for its lEE
this process take?
.
A: The school must policies and a list of recomThis "Law You Can
obtain written parental con- mended ·independent ~:valu­ column ' was provided by
. sent within 30 days.of a par- ators .• but you may select the Ohio. State Bar
ent 's request. It has an addi- your own independent eval- Assoi:il!lion. It was pretiona! 60 days to complete uator, whether or not this pared. by CleveiJJnd 'attorperson is on the school's ney Judith C. SaltZJRan of
the evaluation .
'
list Some schools have Hickman &amp; Lowder Co.,
Q: What can I do if the •policies that limit lEEs L.P.A. The column offers
~chao/ perforn1s a11 evalua- . according to the indepen· general information about
tion and I' am not satisfied dent evaluator's location or · tile law. Seek ·a11 attorney's
qualifications , but these advice before applying this
with the results?
A: If you disagree with policies are valid only if information to a ' legal
the evaluation, you may they do not interfere with problem.

Use"

·SurvivorSrrom Page At

Moore conducted the. Luminary
Service, which included a special
reading, l)lusic and a moment of
reflection and remembrance to
those who have battled cancer.
God's NET. volunteers under
the direction of Ron Vance, prepared and served the meal. Also
. mvolved in the dinner were Taz's
Marathon, Legar Monument Co.,
Pomeroy Chapter # 186 Order of
Eastern
Star,
AndersonMcDaniel · ·Funeral
Home,
General Tire Sales, Hili's Food
Mart, Friends of Julia and Ji1lie
Campbell, Roadside Hot Spot,
Farmers Bank, 'State Farm
lns./Mike Swiger, Agent, Jane
Harris of Dan's Clothing Store,
Shade River Lodge #453, Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, Del
Pullins and Larry Marshall..
Numerous door prizes were
also awarded. Sue L1ghtfoot sold
luminaries and Norma Torres of
' Sash
.
Photo courtesy ol Jason
the MCCJ's Think Pink Program
erected a display about breast Nearly 100 people turned out for the Cancer Survivor Dinner tield by the Meigs County
health/services.
Relay for Life Planning Committee.
·

•

J

�•

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'

OPINION
jlll _about mergers

The Daily Sentinel

Tile Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio'

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnal.~om

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

Congtess shall make no law respecting an
·eswblishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exerdse thereof; or abridging t~e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the rig~t of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for ·a redress of griePances. ·
- The Firat Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READE.R' S

V.IEW

Value
Irfo needed on stolen guns
. Dear EtJittlr:
Our borne was broken into on March 17 and some guns
we treasured were stolen. They had come to my husband,
Larry "Bub," from deceased family members, grandfathers, fathers and brothers, and can never be repla~ed.
· We're asking that anyone with information contact the
Meigs County Sheri!fs Office . The sentimental value of
· those guns is immeasurable to our family.

Melissa A. Holsinger
· Racine

AIG. the company that
broke the world by selling
fake insurance policies~
removed their name from
the front of their New York
City skyscraper. How much
did that cost? The letters
were, like, 5 feet 1!111. You
just can't send down AI
from · th~ mailroom with a
screwdriver and ·a ladder
and take them down. They
probably had to use a few
guys with cherry pickers .
They took them down in the
middle of the night so we're
talking golden time for the
crew. But is taking down the
s1gn really_ gomg to solve
any .of AIG 's problems?
I'm sure that as the
months go on'_ "':e'll learn
that the rnllhon-dollar
bonuses they gaye_ to the
guys who lost bdhons are
chump change. They · are
probably spending your
bailout money right now, on
focus groups to find out 1f
AIG should change their
name to "Warm and Fuzzy
Financial," "Huggy Bear
Enterprises" or "Insurance
'n' Things?"
Anyone who's worked for
a big corporation knows it
isn't the stock-option giveaways or ~ndeserved bonuses that k11ls them, but the
corporate culture itself. One
place · I worked ai changed
their logo seven times in
two years. It used to be Big
Corp . Inc ., and then it

Jim
Mullen

bou~ht Coloss~l Brands so
1t Became B1g Colossal
Brands. They hired the most
expensive g~phic designers
in the worlo to come up
with a logo for the new
company. The highly paid
de signers and the highly
paid executives Went on spa
· retreats together; they went
to trust-building camps
together. they went deepsea fishing together off
Cabo San Lucas. After mil·. lions of dollars and countless hours of confabbing,
faxing and e-mailing, the
new logo was revealed. It
consisted of the letters "B"
and "C" intertwined to look
as if they were having some
kind of kinky alphabet sex
with each other. A business
school triumph! The. executjves who had spent so
much time and money on it
all ~greed it was a work of
genms and they were all
geniuses. Then they spent
millions more ·changing
every piece of corporate .stationery, every notepad,
every handout baseball cap,

. PageA4
Wednesday, Apri11, 2009

an~

admonitions

every tote bag and every Sales tanked. Some other
giveaway pen to the new magazine stole our new art
logo. All the old stuff was director. They went out of
thrown out. Two month~ business, too . .They won an
later Big Colossal Brands "Edgy" posthumously.
merged with Humongous
. Of course all the staProducts becoming Big, tionery, baseball hats, etc ..
Humongous &amp; Colllssal 'had to be tossed out once
Inc.
more. This time, the "B"
The new company adopt- and the "C" performed their
ed Humongous Products ' . kinky sex game inside a
corporate. mono which was · large "H." Changing · the
"Something you ate today, logo did not improve . the
we touched." It worked fine bottom line as expected. I
formostofthe,company,but never once heard anyone
I was in their magazine divi- say. "Hey, nice new logo . .
sion and it didn't get us I'm giving you all my busimuch business. We had our ness ."
own problems. Once a year
While the executives
the editor would decide to · were busy picking logos
redesign the whole maga- and mottos, the stock price
zine to inake it ·~edgier." of BHC steadily dropped. A
Incredibly, th~ magazine- Wall Street · raider bought
buying publi!= didn't seem to the whole company for a
·appreeiate the significance
of our font change from song, fired all the high·
Times New Roman. to priced executives aild resold
Courier, that we'd spent mil- the company a year later for
lions going from a three-col- a .gazillion-dollar profit.
umn format to two coluinns, Members of the logo team
that the "edgy" new art were all quickly hired by
director (we had to buy out · other big corporations. and
the old one) did not like to are now busy spreading
. read the stories he w.as their management magic to
designing. On the headline other lucky offices.lf we all ·
for -a piece about adoption, chipped in and paid them a
the letters looked like shards bonus to leave, we'd all be
of broken glass. For the arti- better off.
cle about the top ten beach
(Jim Mullen is the author
vacations, the pictures were of "Jt Takes a Village Idiot:
·of rotting fish and evil-look- Complicai,ing the Simple
ing pop·!Opll half-buried in Life'' and "Baby's . First
the sand. The new format' Tattoo." You ctln reach him
. won an "Edgy" Award. atjim:_mullen@myway.com).

..
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I

FACToRY
SECONDS
ARE IN·.~---.,,

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today .is Wednesday, April I, the 9lst day of2009. There
-are 274 days left in the year. This is April Fool's Day.
· · Today 's Highlight in History:
On April!, 1945, American forces launched the amphibious invasion of Okinawa during World War II.
On this date: .
· In 1853, Cincinnati established a fire department made
up of paid city employees.
·
. In I 918, the Royal Air Force was established in Britain.
In 1933, Nazi Germany began persecuting Jews with a
boycott of Jewish-owned businesses.
... In 1939, the.United Sta.tes recognized the government of
Gen. Francisco Franco in Spain, the same day Franco went
on radio to declare victory m the Spanish Civil War.
In 1946, tidal waves struck the Hawaiian islands, resulting in niore than 170 deaths.
·
·
. In 1~58, President Dwight D. Eisenho.wer signed a $1.85
billion emergency housing measure.
.
, In 1960, the first weather satellite, TIROS-1, was .
launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla.
'
In 1963, most of New York City's daily newspapers
resumed publishing after settlement was reached in ~ 114day strike.
·
·
.. In 1970, President Richard M. Nixon signed a measure
.banning cigarette advertising on radio and television ; to
take effect after Jan. I, 1971.
. In 1984,recording star Marvin Gaye was shot to death by
· his father, Marvin Gay Sr., in Los Angeles, the day before
his 45th birthday. (The elder Gay pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter, and received probation.)
. ·
. ·Thought for Today: "Si mi ahuela tuviera ruedas seria
If you still think ·that
una bicicleta." (If my grandmother had wheels, she'd be a President Barack Obama is
bicycle.) - Spanish proverb.
about hope and chan~e and
moms and apple p1e and
noth.ing objectionable or
radical, consider his nominee for head of the Office of
Legal Counsel, Dawn
utters to the editor are welcome. They should be less Johnsen.
Her record sets off many
than 300 words. Alllerters are subject to editing, must be
· signed. and include Qddress and telephone number. No alarms, with the most disunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in tressing sirens arising from
good taste , addressing issue~·, not personalities.' utters of her views on abortion.
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Regardless of what the New
York Times might write,
, ed for publication .
·
(they called her position on
abortion "hardly unusual"
in a recent glowing endorse,
men!,) I'd like to think that
you'd have to attend a
Reader Services
(USPS 213-9601
wacky women's studies lee•
Correctlo11 Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Oo.
ture in order to find people
,., Our main oonOOm in all stories Is to Pubtishe~ every mornmg. Monday
who equate pregnancy with
,
through
Friday,
111 Court Stre~n .
be accuraIe. If ~ou know o1 an error P
-• •
postage
"
omeroy. Ohio . •
~,,,unu'"'" 1ass
slavecy.
• In a 1101y, call the newsroom at (740) · paid at PomiJ&lt;OV,
•
Johnsen is the former
992·21 56.
_ , The ~ted Press and
legal director · of the
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Nationa( Abortion and
Pottm..tw: Send address correc·
Our main number Is
Reproductive
Rights Action
lions to The Dal~ 5entinel, P.O. BoK
(740) 992-2156.
•
League (now kno~n as
729, Pomeroy, Ohio -15769.
Department llllllmslons are:
NARAL
Pro-Choice
Sublcriptfon Rates
•
America, in the hopes of
• By ca~ "' motor rouw .
News
fooling people). While
· - ..............'11.30
• Editor: Chartene Hoeflich, E&gt;&lt;t. 12
there,
in a case involving a
52 """" ..... .......'128.85
" Ropoiler: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
law that limited
Missouri
Dllfty • ' ... " . .. • • • •• " . .50'
l'loporl8&lt;: Bo1h Sergent, E&gt;&lt;t. 13
the
use
of
taxpayer money
Septor .C Htan .
.
28 - · .. " .........'511.61
and stqte resources for abor5 2 - · .......•.. •.'116.10
tion. Johnsen called restric. Advertising
~ should remi'l in adv8lnOe
tions
on nbortion "involun ·. OUtsiCte Setes: Dave Hams. Ell!. 15 '*'&lt;t )a The Oat; - · No subtary
servitude," arguing
scription
by
mall
penniaed
in
areas
' Oulslde S.tee: eoonda Davis, Ext 16
where
home
carrier
service
is
available.
that
,
with
them "the state
ClooaJCin:.: Judy Clark. Ext, 10
has conscripted (an expec,.
.,., Sublcrlpllan
tan!
mother 's) b®y for its
...... llllga ~nty
own
ends." This leads to,
12 Weetcs .. ; . " .. . _.; "'35-.211
she wrote, "forced pregnan26 Weeks ....... . . ... .'70.70
52Weeks . .. . . . : .....'140.11
cy," which is a violation of
E-tNU:
the Bth Amendment, which
mdsnewsOmydaitysentinet.com
Outolde l!oigo County
outlawed
slavery.
12 Weeks .... . ........'56.5!;
Pregnancy
,
she
declared,
?5 Weeks . : . ... ..• , . ' 113.60
··requires a woman to pro52 Weeks ..... ... .. ..'227.21
vide continuous physical

•

.

REYNOLDSBURG - Lloyd Elwood Nelson, age 63,
went home Sunday, March 29. 2009.
He was a Deacon and member of Full Armour of God
Baptist Church'.
.
He is survived by his wife of 44 years, Connie; son, Marty
· (Stacy) Nelson; grandchild, Autum; sisters, Betty (Ron)
Jacks and Charlotte Good; several nieces and nephews. .
He was preceded in death by father Elwood; mother Mary;
sisters Hester Adams and Pauline Davis; biuther Gene.
Friends_may call from 6-8 p.m., Friday at Full Armour of
God Baptist Church, 14454 E. Broad 'Street,R,eynoldsburg
where a service will also be held at 10 a.m. on Saturday.
Pastor Rocky Brown officiating.
Arrangements . by Evans Funeral Home, 417.1 E.
Livingston Ave., Columbus, www.j:vansfuneralhome.net.

Bottom, again~t Millie L. Forester,
Columbus. and Autumn Lee. Langsville,
against Forest Lee, Jr., Glouster.
A divorce was granted to Jimmy R.
Lee, Jr .• from Samantha Lee .

Common Pleas Court to 10 years in
prison on a charge of aggravated burglary. He was given credit for 17 I
days served.

POMEROY Civil judgment
actiGns have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court: Shelly
Materials, Inc., Thornville~ against
Tyrone Brinager, doing business as Tye
LEBANON - Three individuals
Brinager and Sons Produce, Portland;
POMEROY
An
action
for
dissowere transported to area hospit!lls folAmerican Express . Centurion Bank,
New York, N.Y., against James F. ·lution of :marriage Wa6 filed in Meigs lowing a one-vehicle. accident that
Sundquist ,
Middeport;
Amex County Common Pleas Court by Occurred .a t approximately 5:30 p.m.
Centurion Bank, Weston, Fla .. against Loyal M. Holman. Racine. and Edna on· Friday.
According to troopers. Zachary W.
Melinda Gibbs, Rutland; and Fam1ers Holman, Racine.
.
A
dissolution
was
granted
to
Andrea
Sigman; 18, Portland, was driving a
Bank and Savings Co ., Pomeroy,
Melaine Smallwood and Carlton Boyd 2003 Chevy Cavalier eastbound on
against Juan Tabler, Mi&lt;ldlepc)rt.
County Road 35 approximately half a
· Foreclosure actions were filed by Smallwood.
mile west of Ohio 124 when the vehi·
Geauga . Savings Bank. Newberry,
cle
traveled off the right side · of the
against Merrell Blaiikenship , Racine,
roadway and struck a tree. Following
and others; . and United Midwest
POMEROY
Marriage
licenses
the
acciqent. biick seat passenger
Savings Bank, DeGraff, . against
were
issued
in
Meigs
County
Dalton
Imboden, 15, Racine, was
Gennifer Grace Gloeckner. Columbus.
Common
Pleas
Court
by·
Jeremey
transported
to Cabell-Huntington by
A suit alleging personal injury was
23.
Racine
,
and
Sheila
Dean
Deweese,
·
.Medflight
with
incapacitating. Sigman
filed by Monte J. Riffl e. Racine,
Marie Partlow, 30, Racine; and Dana al)d front seat passenger Ashley N.
against Donna M. Bums, Portland. ·
Ray Williams, Sr., 53, Pomeroy, and Freeman, 18, Syracuse. were both
Nicole Daw.n Clary, :35, Pomeroy. · transported by ·Syracuse EMS to
GALLIPOLIS - Robert Wayne "Rob" Price, 44, of
Gallipolis, died Saturday, March 28,2009 at his residence.
!ac~~o 9eneral with non-incapacitat·
mg mJunes.
Services will be 2 p.m., Sunday, April 5, 2009 at the ·
POMEROY - Actions for divorce
Sigman was Cited with failure to .
Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Ron Bynum officiating.
POMEROY - Ryan K. Graham · contr0J.,and the vehicle he was driving
Burial will follow at Gallia Baptigt Cemetery. Friends were filed in Meigs County Common
may call at the funeral home on Saturday, April 4, 2009 Pleas Court by Tony L. Forester, Long was sentenced in Meigs ·county sustained severe damages.
from 5-8 p.m.
•
·
A full obituary will be published on Thursday.

Dissolution

Highway Patrol

Marriage licenses

Deaths

Robert Wayne 1lob' Price

Divorces

Sentenced

AEP cuts 2009 earnings forecaSt

Local Briefs

COLUMBUS (AP) another7.5 million shares to
American Electric Power on ·· cover over-allotments. The
Monday lowered i(S forecast total would equal about 14
for 2009.profit citing the eco- · percent of the company's
nomic downturn, and said ii current shares, according to
plans to i.~sue more stock and a recent regulatory filing.
cut capital spending.
.
AEP said it would use the
The power company said money to reduce debt:
· rt expeets to earn $2.75 to
Shares of AEP fell $l.L9,
$3.05 per share. this year, or 4.5 percent, to .$25.08 in
down from the old forecast regular filing before the

"In addition to the effect didn't adequately cover its
of dilution from our planned fuel and environmeinal
stock issuance, the ongoing spending . Columbus~based
economic downturn is a sig· AEP plans .to appeal parts of
nificant factor in our revised the decision in Ohio, home
guidance ," said Michael G. to about one-fifth of its cusMorris, AEP's chairman tomers.
and chief executive.
Recent rate increases in
Morris said demarid for Ohio. Indiana, Oklahoma.
electricity is down , espe- .and Virginia · have helped
cially among industria:! cus- the co.mpany. however.
AEP said ·it would cope
of $3 to $3 .40 per share.
announcement of new tomers, hurting earnings
AEl' said Monday that it shares. In the opening min- from AEP's regylated busi- with the economic doWnlowered its profit PUidan.ce' utes of extended tradt' ng, the nesses . The downturn'S tum by cuning its capital
P
·because of economic factors shares fell another 88 cents, effect is even greater, he budget for 201Q to $1.8 bilsaid, on wholesale. power lion from a. planned $3.4
and !he djlution caused by or 3.5 percent, to $24.20.
1ssuing more shares.
The stock .offerinft is sales from the company's billion. The reductions will
be spread across generation.
The company said it pl~ns being manag.ed by affi iates . generating units.
to sell about SO m11hon of Cred1t Su1sse, JPMorgan
Morris also cited a March transmission and distribushares to the public, and Chase, Barclays . Citigroup rate decision by Ohio regu- tion · units, and some pro,
underwriters could get' and Morgan StanJ~y.
lators that the company said jects are being delay~d.

Legal Services office .relocates·
ATHENS _ Southeastern Obio Legal Services' Athens
office has relocated to 964 East State Street, Athens.
The office is one of nine area offices serving low income
· · · ·
rTesidents in Ohio's Appalachian £olintles m· CIVI1 c.ases.
he ~thens .Office serves Athens, Gallia, Meigs, and
· Vinton counties. ·
.
·
With this move, telephone service was temporarily inter1 d1
th
ed d 10
ue_
rupted · The disruption aste onger an expect
roblems with the telephone earner. Regular phone serv1ce
~as now be restored. Callers will be able to talk to someone
right away at the office's regular phone numbers: 1-800686-3669 or 740-594-3558. .·
.
.
The program also provides legal services to homeowners.
at risk of foreclosure without regard to income, homeowneis (up to. 200 l?ercent federal poverty !~vel income) yvho.
are being sued m foreclosure, and low mcome tax payers
who need legal assistance.
·. ·
..
..

----,..--..,.-~-----'--..,.------------------,---,--------'--

. Law You Can Use ·

Senior league

School
evaluations
and
indellendent
evaluations:
The· f.iou.nda.tzon
.• . d.if.snecza
. ' l educatzon
• el'zgz'b l'l'zty

out if he is eligible for special education servu:t~s? . ·

Benefit dinner-auction

A:

Under the· Individuals
with Disabilities Education
Act (IDEA) the first step in
qualifying your child for
SJ?Cciai education is having
h1s school complete a multifactored evaluation to
assess him in all areas~ :Of
can
functioning .. You
request an evaluation by
delivering a written request
to your special education
director. principal, .or other
school official, by hand Qr
by certified mail, return
receipt requested.
.

POMEROY -The ann~al benefit diimer"auction of the
Chester-Shade Historical Association will be held Friday
night at Meigs High School. Dinner will be served at 6:30
p.m. Door prizes of flowers donat1,1d by area merchants
will be awarded.

Expand rroni P~eAt

Not unusual to be

~

Cjvil suits

Uoyd Elwood Nelson

..

'

The Daily Sentinel

For the Record

POMEROY
Senior League play at Pine Hills Golf
Course will begin at 9 a.m. Friday. A continental break- I ·
fast will be served. All senior men and women are eligible to p!U'Iicipate.
· ·
·
·
..·
'}:'
Mike White, course operator, will review course changes
Q: My child is struggUng
Q: How do I know if my
for the new season, so players are urged· to attend .
in school. How do I find · child is entitled to an evalu-

.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysen~el.com

Obituaries

~

f
~~
/

·

Wednesday, Aj&gt;rilt, 2009

led by anyone·(especially a president)

· McCarthy, · in his . case opposite. (On iohnsen's pri. against Johnsen, ret:ounted ority list: Making sure that
. her OLC record, one that candidates for Bus h-era DOJ
the New York Times, for positions who were passed
one ; chose to overlook . over for leaning left get
Kathry·h · · McCarthy exp,osed the "par· .· "special consideration" in
ticul&lt;~i'ly rich ' hypocrisy of the Obama ad~pinistration.)
Lopez:
Johnsen's recent condemnaJohnsen's nomination has
lions of the Bush admiltis- . been moved out Df the
!ration's use of executive Senate Judicial Committee
authority, showing how she on a party-line vote and
service to the fetus in order ardently defended Clinton's awaits a full-Senate test.
to further the state's assert- will to power when his She'll need 60 votes to get
ed interest" in the unborn administration did such confirmed. Remembering
. child. She argued that a things as "(invent) extraor- . the circus foisted upon so
mother "is constantly aware dinary rendition , (detain) many George W. Bush nomfor nine months that her Cuban refugees without inees, it's hard -to believe
body is not her own ."
trial at Guantanamo Bay,. that Republicans and modThat's not unusual?
(conduct)
·warrantless erate Democrats will let her
At the very least it's high· national-security searches, sail through to the OLC.
ly partisan, which presents a and (attack) a foreign counOr so I have the audacity
big problem . The little- try without congressional to hope.
.
known but highly influen- authorization." · But after
The on-radicalism &lt;if the
. .tial task of heading the OLC Bush took similar measures · Obama administration is an
requires being an "admiilis- to · protect the · country, untruth . And Johnsen's
!ration's lawyer's lawyer." Johnsen cried foul.
nomination plays a signifiAs former federal prosecuIt's getting to be a tired cant role in exposing the
tor Andrew c. McCarthy refrain, but it's abundantly " moderate Obama" myth
explained the job, in a dear that a Republica.n that m~ny Americans have
recent piece for National nommee w1th Johnsen s bought mto - most recently
Review on Johnsen, "It ' past would be rc;&gt;undly the Catholic Unive~ity of
authoritatively interprets the thrashed by tl. pundtts and Notre Dame·, wh1ch IS prolaw for the attorney general the public (probably unfai~- vidin_g th~ pre~ident. cover
and, in doing so, drives ly and slande!Ously. so,, if for _h1s ~11-hfe ll)ltlallves by
administration Ie~al poli~y." ~cent htstory ts any mdica- lettmg h101 spe:ak at 1ts comIt's the most umdeolog1cal lion). Instead . led by the · mencement th1s May.
post there is in a presiden- lefty cheerleaders at the
It shouldn't be unusual to
tial administration.Which is gray lady, we're engaged in expect . ·honesty
about
why Johnsen should be the a bo~t of kn~e-j:rk .Bush· Johnsen, or to expect the
last person filling it. Besides bashmg, wh1le tmportant Senate to take a close look
her rddically anti-life past, question~ such as wh:&gt; a~ her. But we should conthere 's also her record with Johnson 1s and what shes &amp;Jder. President Obama's
Jne Clinton administration ~id and don.e go unexam- increasingly radical moves
(where she served in - sur- med.
very unusual indeed.
. prise - the Office of Legal
l~ .qbama aims to ~e(Kathryn wpez is the ediCounsel.), a resume that poh11c1ze
the
Just1ce · tor of Natrona/ Review
suggests she's anything b1,1t Department. as he claims, by Online (www.nationalre- ·
the breath of•fresh air that · selecting Johnsen he has ••iew.com). She can be conPresident
Obama
has picked an ideologue who tacted at k/opez@natioiUll-.
promi~ed.
would absolutely do just the review.com).

Briden bach agreed that demand for medical care for the
uninsured has .increased ·in these bad economic times.
Family Health Care offers services on a sliding fee scille,
accepts private insurance, and offers services to those with
no insurance. Co-pays are ·minimal.
.
"The additional funding for staff will a:llow us to ·expand
services at a time when demand is on the increase,"
Bridenbach said. "Wt:- are seeing more uninsured patients
due to higher unemployment."
Tlie Increased Demand for Services funds will be distributed to 32 federally qualified health center grantees in
Ohio. The health centers will use the funds over the next
two years to create or retain approximately 147 health center jobs. · ·
·
·
·
.
The IDS awards are the second set of health center grants
provided ihrough the Recovery Act. On March 2, President
Obama annmmced grants worth $155 million to 126 ne~
health centers.
.
Bridenl)ach said he expects $1.5 billion in ad11itional stimulus funding to be made avrulable for new construchon of
health centers. (See related story, page 1.)

Q: Is the school required
by law to provide an evalu-

ation any time a parent
requests one?

AMP fro~ PageAl .
In addition to last month's final sqlid waste permit, a
complete list of permits approved finili for the AMPGS are
as follows: the air permit-to,install (finalized February .
2008), NPDES permit (finalized November 2008), 40 I
Water Quality Certification (finalized January), Ohio
Power Siting Board (OPSB) Certificaie of Environmental
Compatibility and Public Need-Generation Facility (final- ·
ized March 2008), OPSB Certificate of Environmental
Compatibility and Public Need-Transmission Line (finalized November 2008).
·

Forestry rrom Page At
·assist landowners with plant identification, on ways to
address an infestation of weedy invasive plants, including treatment and control recomrile~d&lt;~tions , and on h~w
to qualify for -federal cost-share assistance f~nds prov~d­
ed by the N~tural Resources Conserva!10n Serv!ce
(NRCS) through the Environmental Quahty lncenhve
Program (EQlP).
·
.
.
In addition to working with landowners directly, Smith
and other ODNR foresters will assist landowners through
education and outreach. Why grow a weed when you can
grow. an oak tree ? Residents are asked to co~tact
Annemarie Smith at (740) 589-9914 or send an emml to
lnvasiveSpeciesForester@dnr.state.oh.us.
The role of the Ohio Department of Natural Resources is
to ensure a balance between wise use and protection of our
natural resources for the benefit of all. Residents can learn
more about the Ohio Division of Forestry and InvasiveSpecies at www.ohiodnr.com/forestry.
·

A: No. The school must
evaluate only if it suspects
a disability. lf it suspects a
disability. it will obt;tin
your written consent for an
evaluation. If your school
is not going to honor your
request for an evaluation,
it must give you a legal
document called a " prior
written notice" explaining
why it is not going to eva!uate your child, and it
must . give you a copy of
the booklet, "Whose Idea
Is This"?

request an Independent the child's righ! to an !EE.
Educational
Evaluatictn Only one lEE 1s perlllitted
. atio'll?
.
.
(lEE). An lEE is olie of the per school evaluation.
· A: Under IOEA, schools most important procedural
are required to . identify, ·safeguards available to parQ: How do'es the. inde- ·
locate and evaluate all chil- ents under the IDEA pendent · evaluator ff.et
dren with disabilities who because it provides an paid?
·
may need special education. independent view of the
A: The school district will
Many schools will deny child at school district either assume up-front
evaluations to struggling . expense.
responsibility for payment
You must inform the and will issue a purchase
children because !hey first
want to do "interventions" school district in writing order, or the parent may .
to determine whether addi-- that . you disagree with its obtain the lEE. cover the ·
1ional services will improve evaluation (though you are costs initially, and present
the child's performance not' required to . explain proof of parment to the
without special education. why), and request an lEE. If school . dis.t rtct for reim- .
The effectiveness of these ihe school does .not want to bursement. In situations
-approaches depends upon provide you with an lEE, it · where school districts
the circumstances, but gen-· must promptly initiate d\le refuse the cost of the IE'E,
erally, parents should care- process proceedings lo parents can consider meetfully consider interventions prove that its own evalua- mg with their superint~n­
that are not based upon tion is appropriate (which .. dent, filing a complaint with
.
the Ohio Department of
thorough . evaluations of rarely ·occurs).
Assuming the school Education , or, if necessary,
their child.
does not initiate and win consulting an advocate or
· Q: If the school agrees to due process, you are enti- attorney about taking furevaluate, how long should tied to an lEE. You ·should !her steps.
ask the school for its lEE
this process take?
.
A: The school must policies and a list of recomThis "Law You Can
obtain written parental con- mended ·independent ~:valu­ column ' was provided by
. sent within 30 days.of a par- ators .• but you may select the Ohio. State Bar
ent 's request. It has an addi- your own independent eval- Assoi:il!lion. It was pretiona! 60 days to complete uator, whether or not this pared. by CleveiJJnd 'attorperson is on the school's ney Judith C. SaltZJRan of
the evaluation .
'
list Some schools have Hickman &amp; Lowder Co.,
Q: What can I do if the •policies that limit lEEs L.P.A. The column offers
~chao/ perforn1s a11 evalua- . according to the indepen· general information about
tion and I' am not satisfied dent evaluator's location or · tile law. Seek ·a11 attorney's
qualifications , but these advice before applying this
with the results?
A: If you disagree with policies are valid only if information to a ' legal
the evaluation, you may they do not interfere with problem.

Use"

·SurvivorSrrom Page At

Moore conducted the. Luminary
Service, which included a special
reading, l)lusic and a moment of
reflection and remembrance to
those who have battled cancer.
God's NET. volunteers under
the direction of Ron Vance, prepared and served the meal. Also
. mvolved in the dinner were Taz's
Marathon, Legar Monument Co.,
Pomeroy Chapter # 186 Order of
Eastern
Star,
AndersonMcDaniel · ·Funeral
Home,
General Tire Sales, Hili's Food
Mart, Friends of Julia and Ji1lie
Campbell, Roadside Hot Spot,
Farmers Bank, 'State Farm
lns./Mike Swiger, Agent, Jane
Harris of Dan's Clothing Store,
Shade River Lodge #453, Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, Del
Pullins and Larry Marshall..
Numerous door prizes were
also awarded. Sue L1ghtfoot sold
luminaries and Norma Torres of
' Sash
.
Photo courtesy ol Jason
the MCCJ's Think Pink Program
erected a display about breast Nearly 100 people turned out for the Cancer Survivor Dinner tield by the Meigs County
health/services.
Relay for Life Planning Committee.
·

•

J

�,

.•

PageA6

LOCAL • STATE '
win fourth grade tournament

~he Daily, Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprilt,

.

.Inside

2009

·-

'

Bl

The
Daily Sentinel
.
.

Riverside Seniors start April 7, Page Bi
~

Wahama jlowns ButTalo, Page 86 ·

-}'

Point blanks Lady Huskies, Page 86
Eastern Lady Eagles fourth
grade basketball team completed their season by winning the league champi·
onship, Pomeroy's 18th
annual fourth grade tournament and the Little Hocking
tournament, and winning
second place in the March
Madness tournament sponsored by the Lady Eagles
Varsity girls' team. They finished the season with 17
wins and five losses and
one tie. Bobby Calaway and
Tom Pullins were coaches
· and are picture&lt;:! with Laura
Pullins , Katlyn Barber, Alia
Hayes, Kaitlyn Carl,
Hannah Sharp, Maddy
Russell, and Taylnn
Rockhold: Grace Adams is
not pictured but was a team
member.

;

Wednesday, Aprill, 2009
LocAL SCHEDUl.E
•

POt.t~ROY - •A sc;MdUie of upcoming h~h
school vatsfty sporting events ln'w'Oiving taam•
from Mflrgs, Mason and G11lia counlie,.

.

Yit&lt;lnU!Iay,AIJilU
ea..ball

Eastern St Parkersburg, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy vs Ironton, 5 p.m.

.River Valley at Waterford, 5 p .m.
Tolsia at South Gallia. 5 p.m.

Softball
Gallia Academy vs lronlon, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. River Valley. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama , 4 :30p.m.

Tennis
Gattia Academy at Minlord, 4 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at floca, 4 p.m.

Thuraday..ApdU
s•aeball
Eastern atTrimbfe, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vi,rl10n County,5 p.m .
Point Pleasant at Aiver.Valley, 5 p.m. .
River Valley vs. Point Pleasatit, 5 p.m.
W,.anama vs. Ch.as Catholic. 5:30p.m
Southern at Waterford. 5 p.m .
·Softball

Submitted photo

Ea.stern at Trimble, 5 p.m
M~igs at V[nton County, 5 p.m .

. ·,

Wahama vs. Buffalo. 5 p.m.
Sollthem at Waterford, 5 p.m.
. .
Tennl1
~Ilia Academy~~ Logan , 4:30p.m.
~~ ~~Pleasant ~s . Spring Valley, 4 p.m.

Submitted photo

· From the left, front, Daisy scouts Emily Zeimer, Madison
Eskew, and Grace Butcher; and, from the left, standing,
Dominque Rhodes, Alexis Taylor, Brianna Smith fjunior
scout) and Roseanna Butcher, delivered girl scout cookies
to residents of nursing homes and senior living facilities as
a part of their "Gift of Caring" badge work.

Erlday,~

Basebalt
Gallia Academy at ChilliCOthe, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Warren , 5 p.rn

: Scouts give cookies to
nUrsing home residents
.

POMEROY
Area
daisy scouts got a lesson in
compassion for others while
workin¥ on their "Gift of
Caring' badge recently.
The youngsters of Daisy
Troop 1106, their leader,
Joy ~bodes of Pomeroy,
and a junior scout. Brianna
Smith, who assist~ with the
girls aged 5 to 7.delivered a
total of 267 boxes of cookleS to the residents of nursillg homes and elderly livi.Pg facilities in the
Mtddleport-Pomer&lt;iy community. ·
~ Rhodes said that the proJect was made posstble only
because 'of generous dona-

.

The srxth grade Lady
· Marauders Basketball Team
recently took first place in
their league basketball tour· :
nament. Pictured in the
·front row (from left) Tori
Walker, Bre Mitchell, Kelsey
· Hudson, Brooke Reynolds,
. Tyra Boothe; McKayla
VanMeter; second row
(from left) Coach Heath
Hudson, Tamara Miller,
Ariel Ellis, Lindsey
Patterson, Hannah
Cremeans, Assistant
Coach Darrin Cremeans.

.

.

pt ~IMsant 'vs. Ravenswood, 5:30 p.m.
Rl'ver Valley at Wahama, 4:30p.m.
Wahama vs~ Riner IJ;alley, 4:30p.m.
'
Softball
·
Pallia Academy at Chitticothe, 5 p.m.
Meigs a.t Warren, 5 p.m.
·.
PQir'lt .Pleasant vs. Sissonville, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Wahama , 4:30 p.m.
YJahama VS. River Velley, 4:3() p.m,. ·

tions from 30 area busines~es. Siilce the cookies come
in different varieties, each
resident was given· the
oppornmity to make a
choice as the scouts made
the delivery.
,
"The smiles on the residents' faces made .it a \'ery
special experience for the
scouts who hand-delivered.
each box," commented
Rhode~. Visits were made to
Overbrook
Center,
Rocksprings Rehab Center,
Darst's Private Care Home,
The
Maples
and
.Crosspoints.

·. COLUMBUS (APJ
rhe state can stop or reverse
the annual growth of obesity among adults and children within five years, but it
first must promote greater
access to healthy food and
e~ercise,
the
Ohio
Department of Health said
in a report releas~d Tuesday.
· The department's "Ohio
Obesity Prevention Plan" sets
out a number of policy ~rior­
i!ies tl)at can be ach1eved
between now and 2014.
State officials should
focus efforts on preventing
. more Ohioans from becoming obese, rather than pro- ·
ll'loting weight loss among
those already seriously
overweight, the repott said.
•· Gov. Ted Strickland directed the department to formulate the comprehensive plait
last September. A 2007 government survey found that
28 .I percent of adults in the
~tate were obese, while an
Ohio Department of Health
study found almost 19 percent of Ohio third-graders
were obese.
· The· report said obesity
threatens the health of childri:n, the productivity of
workers and the affordability of the health care s~stem.
It noted that sign1ficant
improvement in combating
obesity i~ unlikely in just
five years, but said the trend
can stat1 being revers~d. ·
The department outlined
goals to improve physical
activity opportunities, nutrition and access to healthy food
choices and .to co&lt;irdinate policy and resources targeting the
reduction of obesity.
· By the end of 2009. the
Oepartmeot hopes to create a
Statewide trail plan to promote exerciSe opportunities
:mil increase access to fresh
~ healthy fOods by promotmg Ohio farmers markets.
• By the end of 2,010, the
department wants to have
identified opportunities for
increasing access to healthy,
state-produced food&gt; in
vending machines.

,·

on

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The Daily_Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, ·Ohio 45679
•

..

Southern 403 320 2
AValley

221 120 0

....:

14 9 4
8 10 5 .

SOUTHERN (2·0) : Kyle CUnningham.
Taylor Deem (5) and Dustin Salser. .

RIVER VALLEY (8·2r Jacob ·arown, M~tt

Goodrich {6) and Austin Justus.
WP - Cunnlngham;.LP - Brown.

Charlie ·Shepheidtphoto

SOuthern's J.D. Whittington catches .a throw in Tuesday's
game a!;lainst River Valley. Tuesday marked the Tornadoe's
second straight wih Qlthe'season.

..

Angels rally
past Fairland
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

The Maroon and· Gold
countered with a run .in their
half of the first, as Lian
Hoffman started the rally
after being hit by a pitch.
Shellie Bailey knocked
Hoffman .home with a double, cutting the deficit to 2-1
after one complete.
···
Back-to-back one out singles by Brittany Hall an&lt;!
Weatley, 'followed by a two'
out homer from B.reanna:
Hall, gave the Blue and Gold
their · biggest lead of. the
night at 5-1 after an inning
and a half, The guests would

PROCTORVILLE
.
Gallia Academy softball
needed a little time to
· warm up the bats Tuesday
night against Fairland, but
the Blue Angels eventually
found their swing during a
come-from-behind 12-5
victory in a non-conference matchup in Lawrence
. County.
The Blue Angels (2-0)
fell behind. 2·0 after an
inning of play and also
went scoreless through
three complete, but the
guests' bats ca.me to life in
the fourth - when GAHS
managed to .score a pair of
runs to knot ihings up at
lwo through four. complete.
The Blue and White then
· sent I0 batters to the plate in
the top of the fifth, which
resulted in a 7-2 cushion
after five and a half. The
Lady . Dragons countered
with three runs in their half
.of the, fifth to pull within 75, but never came closer the
rest of the way. ·
G AHS sent another I0
hitters to the phlte in the top
of the seventh, which again
~suited in five runs and 12·
5 advantage. FHS we(\t
down l-2·3 in the final atbat ,
allowi.ng· Gallia
Academy to stay perfect
this 2009 campaign.
The Angels produced J 6
hits in the triumph, with 10
different ladies contributing
at lel!St one hit ,to the cause.
Afny Noe and Alii Saunders
both led the way with three
hits apiece, followed by
Kari
Campbell
and

Pluse see Meigs. 81

· Please see Angels, B1

BY· BRYAN WALTERS

AttentionJ3usiness Owners

01&lt;~---

SOUTHERN 14, RIVER VALLEY 8

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

. ..:;.:.....

Free on-line bUsiness Listings

Polcyn with two apiece.
Jacob Brown also had one
safety in·the ~etback .
Starter Kyle Cunningham
earned the win for Southern,
working 4.1 innings while
allowing eight runs,· eight
hits and three walks while
striking out four. Brown who worked five innings on
the mound for the hosts was saddled with the loss.
Brown walked four and
struck out two.
Southern returns to action
today when' it travels to Rici
Grande to batt!e Whiteoak at
5 p.m. River Valley travels
to Waterford for a non-conference contest at 5 p.m.

Meigs comes
up short against
~ockets, 5-3

.,

plan focuses
on obesity
prevention

BY BRYAN WALTERS
then led the rest of the
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM evening. The Purple and Gold
held leads of 7-5 through
CHESHIRE - . It turned three and.I0-6 after four, then
into a real slugfest, but closed the final three innings
Southern baseball just had with a 4-2 surge to wrap up
more pop in its bats Tues'day the sil(-run outcome. ·
night during a 14-8 victory
RVHS knocked out 10 hits
over host River· Valley dur· in the contest and committed
ing
a
non -conference five erros, while Southern
matchup in Galli a County. produced nine hits and made
The Torna!Joes (2-0) four miscues.
stayed unbeaten this season,
The . Purple and Gold
never trailing in the contest received a stellar night from
while scoring a season-best Dustin Salser, who had three
14 times. The Raiders (0-2) hits and five RBls to pace the
dropped their second deci- victi&gt;rs. Taylor Deem and J.D.
sion in as many days, fol- Whittington were next with
lowing a 10-1 setback to two hits apiece, followed by
Ironton St. Joe's on Monday. Chris Holter and Brad Brown
SHS stormed out to ·a four· with one safety each.
run cushion ·after a halfBrown and Whittington
inning of play, but . the both drove in two runs as
Raiders retaliated with two well. Michael Manuel also
runs in each of their next two had a sacrifice fly to plate a
at-bats to knot things up at run.
four through two complete.
Matt Goodrich paced
But the 'Does countered . RVHS with three hits, folwith three scores in the third :Towed · by · Tyler · Smith,
to pull ahead by a 7•4 count, Austin Justus and Zack

.·.
track and Field
.POint Pleasant at BB&amp;T lrwitationat at
Li:lidley. 4:30 p.m.
·
·
· ·Tennis
GaUia Academy vs. Jackson, 4:30p.m.
P9in1 Pleasant vs. Sissonville, 4 p.m.

Submitted photo

Ohio health

Tornadoes kn~ck off River Valley

ROCKSPRINGS
Opening night sure was.
eventful for the Meigs baseball team ·Tuesday· against
visiting Wellston.
Unfortunately for the
two-time defending TriValler Conference Ohio
Divis ton champs, it wasn't
exactly a night to remember
- as the Marauders fell
victim to some bad breaks
during a 5-3. setback that
was called after six innings·
due to darkness. :
The Marauders (0-1 , 0-1
TVC Ohio) never led in the
contest, despite b!!ttling
through three scoreless
innings to start the contest.
But in the fourth, the
Rockets (2-0, 1-0) struck
firsi plood . when Ryan .
· Darnell led off the inniQg
with a single: Two batters
later, Matteson grounded
Into a fielder's · choice to
·score D;rrnell - making it a
1-0 contest through three
and a half.
The score stayed that way
until the fourth, when things
took a very interesting tum
against the hosts. Cales
reached safely to lead off
the inning, . then L9ckard
followed by reaching safely
ori an error - . wbich
· allowed.Cales to score for a
· 2-0 cushion:
.
As MHS starter Bryan .
DeLong was in his windup ·
to the next batter, an umpire
called for timeout on
numerous
occasions.
Darnell lined the pitch to
the left-centerfield fence,
which resulted in an RBI
double - and the play was
l&gt;ept alive. The end result
allowed Lockard to sc.ore,
giving WHS a 3-0 edge.
· Matteson drove in Darnell
two batters later with a single, giving the Blue and
Gold a 4-0 advantage.
Meigs tlnally broke into
the scoring column during
the. bottom of the fifth, as
. ~aleb Davis and J .T. Evans
both reached base safely to
start the inning .· Two outs
and three batters later, Ryan
Jeffers delivered a clutch
single - which scored both
Davis and Evans for a 4-2
deficit after five complete.
WHS started.the 'stxth on
a good note, as Arthur
reached on an error to lead off the inning.
Then the rains came. and
the game was temporarily
postponed due to inclement
The
drizzle
weather.
stopped almost as soon as it
began, and play resumed .
With one away and Arthur.
on third. Lockard hit into a
. , sacrifice fly which

Please see Short. 81

hosts rallied with six unan- Hall took the .loss for
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM swered runs over .their next Wellston , allowing 13 hi.ts
three at-bats to tum a four- and orie walk while striking
ROCKSPRINGS
run deficit into a 7-5 advan- out five. Meigs committed
Meigs softball started slow, tage after five full frames.
only one error, while. WHS
but still managed to begin its
Meigs ·.starter Hailey made three miscues.
season in style Tuesday Ebersbach - who went the . The Lady Rockets struck
night duiing ·a come-from- distance for MHS . - held first ~load, as Folden and
behind . 7-5 victory over the visiting Lady Rockets Breanna HaU led the game
three-time ®fending cham- (0-2, 0-1) without a hit over off with a triple and walk,
pion Wellston during a Tri- the final two innings for the respectiv'ely. Thompson fatValley Conference Ohio winning decision. allowing lowed with an RBI single
Division
matchup
at just one baserunner over that that · plated Folden, giving
Salisbury Field. ··
same span.
·
·
WHS an early 1-0 advanThe Lady Mar11uders (1·0, Ebersbach·· finished the tage. McCarter grounded
1·0 TVC Ohio) fell behind night allowing just seven into a fielder's choice one
2· I after one full inning of .hits in the triumph, fanning batter later, plating Hall for a
play and also trailed 5-I five while. w.alking .three . ~-0. edge after one-half
after two complete, but the over seven mmngs.. BnttanY. mnmg .

Lady Tornadoes
blank River Valley.
and Stephanie Shamblin.
Tucker added four runs t.o
the teams Iota I. three given
CHESHIRE - The Lady up by the pitcher and the
Tornados blew by the Lady fomth beinli a homerun in
Raiders today as Southern the fourth mning with no
softball laced River· Valley outs. ·
in a 15-0. five inning Hunter and Tucker both
match .
contributed t\No runs.. as
Southern started off their well as Holsinger who hit a
blowout with a single ·run in two-run homer in the third
the first inning followed by inning.
a rally of six runs in the sec- Gabiit~clt , Pape, Tucker
ond.
. and .Holsinger had a rally of
Their streak continued RBI's with Gabritsch and
throughout, the game with Pape each• hitting in a run,
live runs in the third inning , Tucker hit(ing in three, and
two runs in the fourth, and Holsinger with a total of
one. to end the game in the five .
·
fifth inning.
The Lady Raider's active
Helping to put the Lady offense were Kristan Stump.
Tornadoes on the board Chynna Mershon, Brianna
were Breanna Taylor, Emma Smith, and Kay lee Rose
Hunter, Lynzee Tucker,. who each had hits during the
t.nna Jessmerlphoto Chelsea
Pape.
Kelsey game.
Brooke
Senior Brooke Gabritsch throws a pitch in a 15·0 blowout over River Valley Tuesday. The . Holsinger,
Gabritsch. Chey.enne Dunn, Please see Southern. Bl
Lady Tornadoes' victory against the Raiders marked their .first win of the season. . ·
BY ANNA JESSMER

MDSSPORTSOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM ·

.

'

'

'

'

.

'

�,

.•

PageA6

LOCAL • STATE '
win fourth grade tournament

~he Daily, Sentinel

Wednesday, Aprilt,

.

.Inside

2009

·-

'

Bl

The
Daily Sentinel
.
.

Riverside Seniors start April 7, Page Bi
~

Wahama jlowns ButTalo, Page 86 ·

-}'

Point blanks Lady Huskies, Page 86
Eastern Lady Eagles fourth
grade basketball team completed their season by winning the league champi·
onship, Pomeroy's 18th
annual fourth grade tournament and the Little Hocking
tournament, and winning
second place in the March
Madness tournament sponsored by the Lady Eagles
Varsity girls' team. They finished the season with 17
wins and five losses and
one tie. Bobby Calaway and
Tom Pullins were coaches
· and are picture&lt;:! with Laura
Pullins , Katlyn Barber, Alia
Hayes, Kaitlyn Carl,
Hannah Sharp, Maddy
Russell, and Taylnn
Rockhold: Grace Adams is
not pictured but was a team
member.

;

Wednesday, Aprill, 2009
LocAL SCHEDUl.E
•

POt.t~ROY - •A sc;MdUie of upcoming h~h
school vatsfty sporting events ln'w'Oiving taam•
from Mflrgs, Mason and G11lia counlie,.

.

Yit&lt;lnU!Iay,AIJilU
ea..ball

Eastern St Parkersburg, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy vs Ironton, 5 p.m.

.River Valley at Waterford, 5 p .m.
Tolsia at South Gallia. 5 p.m.

Softball
Gallia Academy vs lronlon, 5 p.m.
Meigs vs. River Valley. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wahama , 4 :30p.m.

Tennis
Gattia Academy at Minlord, 4 :30p.m.
Point Pleasant at floca, 4 p.m.

Thuraday..ApdU
s•aeball
Eastern atTrimbfe, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Vi,rl10n County,5 p.m .
Point Pleasant at Aiver.Valley, 5 p.m. .
River Valley vs. Point Pleasatit, 5 p.m.
W,.anama vs. Ch.as Catholic. 5:30p.m
Southern at Waterford. 5 p.m .
·Softball

Submitted photo

Ea.stern at Trimble, 5 p.m
M~igs at V[nton County, 5 p.m .

. ·,

Wahama vs. Buffalo. 5 p.m.
Sollthem at Waterford, 5 p.m.
. .
Tennl1
~Ilia Academy~~ Logan , 4:30p.m.
~~ ~~Pleasant ~s . Spring Valley, 4 p.m.

Submitted photo

· From the left, front, Daisy scouts Emily Zeimer, Madison
Eskew, and Grace Butcher; and, from the left, standing,
Dominque Rhodes, Alexis Taylor, Brianna Smith fjunior
scout) and Roseanna Butcher, delivered girl scout cookies
to residents of nursing homes and senior living facilities as
a part of their "Gift of Caring" badge work.

Erlday,~

Basebalt
Gallia Academy at ChilliCOthe, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Warren , 5 p.rn

: Scouts give cookies to
nUrsing home residents
.

POMEROY
Area
daisy scouts got a lesson in
compassion for others while
workin¥ on their "Gift of
Caring' badge recently.
The youngsters of Daisy
Troop 1106, their leader,
Joy ~bodes of Pomeroy,
and a junior scout. Brianna
Smith, who assist~ with the
girls aged 5 to 7.delivered a
total of 267 boxes of cookleS to the residents of nursillg homes and elderly livi.Pg facilities in the
Mtddleport-Pomer&lt;iy community. ·
~ Rhodes said that the proJect was made posstble only
because 'of generous dona-

.

The srxth grade Lady
· Marauders Basketball Team
recently took first place in
their league basketball tour· :
nament. Pictured in the
·front row (from left) Tori
Walker, Bre Mitchell, Kelsey
· Hudson, Brooke Reynolds,
. Tyra Boothe; McKayla
VanMeter; second row
(from left) Coach Heath
Hudson, Tamara Miller,
Ariel Ellis, Lindsey
Patterson, Hannah
Cremeans, Assistant
Coach Darrin Cremeans.

.

.

pt ~IMsant 'vs. Ravenswood, 5:30 p.m.
Rl'ver Valley at Wahama, 4:30p.m.
Wahama vs~ Riner IJ;alley, 4:30p.m.
'
Softball
·
Pallia Academy at Chitticothe, 5 p.m.
Meigs a.t Warren, 5 p.m.
·.
PQir'lt .Pleasant vs. Sissonville, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Wahama , 4:30 p.m.
YJahama VS. River Velley, 4:3() p.m,. ·

tions from 30 area busines~es. Siilce the cookies come
in different varieties, each
resident was given· the
oppornmity to make a
choice as the scouts made
the delivery.
,
"The smiles on the residents' faces made .it a \'ery
special experience for the
scouts who hand-delivered.
each box," commented
Rhode~. Visits were made to
Overbrook
Center,
Rocksprings Rehab Center,
Darst's Private Care Home,
The
Maples
and
.Crosspoints.

·. COLUMBUS (APJ
rhe state can stop or reverse
the annual growth of obesity among adults and children within five years, but it
first must promote greater
access to healthy food and
e~ercise,
the
Ohio
Department of Health said
in a report releas~d Tuesday.
· The department's "Ohio
Obesity Prevention Plan" sets
out a number of policy ~rior­
i!ies tl)at can be ach1eved
between now and 2014.
State officials should
focus efforts on preventing
. more Ohioans from becoming obese, rather than pro- ·
ll'loting weight loss among
those already seriously
overweight, the repott said.
•· Gov. Ted Strickland directed the department to formulate the comprehensive plait
last September. A 2007 government survey found that
28 .I percent of adults in the
~tate were obese, while an
Ohio Department of Health
study found almost 19 percent of Ohio third-graders
were obese.
· The· report said obesity
threatens the health of childri:n, the productivity of
workers and the affordability of the health care s~stem.
It noted that sign1ficant
improvement in combating
obesity i~ unlikely in just
five years, but said the trend
can stat1 being revers~d. ·
The department outlined
goals to improve physical
activity opportunities, nutrition and access to healthy food
choices and .to co&lt;irdinate policy and resources targeting the
reduction of obesity.
· By the end of 2009. the
Oepartmeot hopes to create a
Statewide trail plan to promote exerciSe opportunities
:mil increase access to fresh
~ healthy fOods by promotmg Ohio farmers markets.
• By the end of 2,010, the
department wants to have
identified opportunities for
increasing access to healthy,
state-produced food&gt; in
vending machines.

,·

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The Daily_Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, ·Ohio 45679
•

..

Southern 403 320 2
AValley

221 120 0

....:

14 9 4
8 10 5 .

SOUTHERN (2·0) : Kyle CUnningham.
Taylor Deem (5) and Dustin Salser. .

RIVER VALLEY (8·2r Jacob ·arown, M~tt

Goodrich {6) and Austin Justus.
WP - Cunnlngham;.LP - Brown.

Charlie ·Shepheidtphoto

SOuthern's J.D. Whittington catches .a throw in Tuesday's
game a!;lainst River Valley. Tuesday marked the Tornadoe's
second straight wih Qlthe'season.

..

Angels rally
past Fairland
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

The Maroon and· Gold
countered with a run .in their
half of the first, as Lian
Hoffman started the rally
after being hit by a pitch.
Shellie Bailey knocked
Hoffman .home with a double, cutting the deficit to 2-1
after one complete.
···
Back-to-back one out singles by Brittany Hall an&lt;!
Weatley, 'followed by a two'
out homer from B.reanna:
Hall, gave the Blue and Gold
their · biggest lead of. the
night at 5-1 after an inning
and a half, The guests would

PROCTORVILLE
.
Gallia Academy softball
needed a little time to
· warm up the bats Tuesday
night against Fairland, but
the Blue Angels eventually
found their swing during a
come-from-behind 12-5
victory in a non-conference matchup in Lawrence
. County.
The Blue Angels (2-0)
fell behind. 2·0 after an
inning of play and also
went scoreless through
three complete, but the
guests' bats ca.me to life in
the fourth - when GAHS
managed to .score a pair of
runs to knot ihings up at
lwo through four. complete.
The Blue and White then
· sent I0 batters to the plate in
the top of the fifth, which
resulted in a 7-2 cushion
after five and a half. The
Lady . Dragons countered
with three runs in their half
.of the, fifth to pull within 75, but never came closer the
rest of the way. ·
G AHS sent another I0
hitters to the phlte in the top
of the seventh, which again
~suited in five runs and 12·
5 advantage. FHS we(\t
down l-2·3 in the final atbat ,
allowi.ng· Gallia
Academy to stay perfect
this 2009 campaign.
The Angels produced J 6
hits in the triumph, with 10
different ladies contributing
at lel!St one hit ,to the cause.
Afny Noe and Alii Saunders
both led the way with three
hits apiece, followed by
Kari
Campbell
and

Pluse see Meigs. 81

· Please see Angels, B1

BY· BRYAN WALTERS

AttentionJ3usiness Owners

01&lt;~---

SOUTHERN 14, RIVER VALLEY 8

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

. ..:;.:.....

Free on-line bUsiness Listings

Polcyn with two apiece.
Jacob Brown also had one
safety in·the ~etback .
Starter Kyle Cunningham
earned the win for Southern,
working 4.1 innings while
allowing eight runs,· eight
hits and three walks while
striking out four. Brown who worked five innings on
the mound for the hosts was saddled with the loss.
Brown walked four and
struck out two.
Southern returns to action
today when' it travels to Rici
Grande to batt!e Whiteoak at
5 p.m. River Valley travels
to Waterford for a non-conference contest at 5 p.m.

Meigs comes
up short against
~ockets, 5-3

.,

plan focuses
on obesity
prevention

BY BRYAN WALTERS
then led the rest of the
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM evening. The Purple and Gold
held leads of 7-5 through
CHESHIRE - . It turned three and.I0-6 after four, then
into a real slugfest, but closed the final three innings
Southern baseball just had with a 4-2 surge to wrap up
more pop in its bats Tues'day the sil(-run outcome. ·
night during a 14-8 victory
RVHS knocked out 10 hits
over host River· Valley dur· in the contest and committed
ing
a
non -conference five erros, while Southern
matchup in Galli a County. produced nine hits and made
The Torna!Joes (2-0) four miscues.
stayed unbeaten this season,
The . Purple and Gold
never trailing in the contest received a stellar night from
while scoring a season-best Dustin Salser, who had three
14 times. The Raiders (0-2) hits and five RBls to pace the
dropped their second deci- victi&gt;rs. Taylor Deem and J.D.
sion in as many days, fol- Whittington were next with
lowing a 10-1 setback to two hits apiece, followed by
Ironton St. Joe's on Monday. Chris Holter and Brad Brown
SHS stormed out to ·a four· with one safety each.
run cushion ·after a halfBrown and Whittington
inning of play, but . the both drove in two runs as
Raiders retaliated with two well. Michael Manuel also
runs in each of their next two had a sacrifice fly to plate a
at-bats to knot things up at run.
four through two complete.
Matt Goodrich paced
But the 'Does countered . RVHS with three hits, folwith three scores in the third :Towed · by · Tyler · Smith,
to pull ahead by a 7•4 count, Austin Justus and Zack

.·.
track and Field
.POint Pleasant at BB&amp;T lrwitationat at
Li:lidley. 4:30 p.m.
·
·
· ·Tennis
GaUia Academy vs. Jackson, 4:30p.m.
P9in1 Pleasant vs. Sissonville, 4 p.m.

Submitted photo

Ohio health

Tornadoes kn~ck off River Valley

ROCKSPRINGS
Opening night sure was.
eventful for the Meigs baseball team ·Tuesday· against
visiting Wellston.
Unfortunately for the
two-time defending TriValler Conference Ohio
Divis ton champs, it wasn't
exactly a night to remember
- as the Marauders fell
victim to some bad breaks
during a 5-3. setback that
was called after six innings·
due to darkness. :
The Marauders (0-1 , 0-1
TVC Ohio) never led in the
contest, despite b!!ttling
through three scoreless
innings to start the contest.
But in the fourth, the
Rockets (2-0, 1-0) struck
firsi plood . when Ryan .
· Darnell led off the inniQg
with a single: Two batters
later, Matteson grounded
Into a fielder's · choice to
·score D;rrnell - making it a
1-0 contest through three
and a half.
The score stayed that way
until the fourth, when things
took a very interesting tum
against the hosts. Cales
reached safely to lead off
the inning, . then L9ckard
followed by reaching safely
ori an error - . wbich
· allowed.Cales to score for a
· 2-0 cushion:
.
As MHS starter Bryan .
DeLong was in his windup ·
to the next batter, an umpire
called for timeout on
numerous
occasions.
Darnell lined the pitch to
the left-centerfield fence,
which resulted in an RBI
double - and the play was
l&gt;ept alive. The end result
allowed Lockard to sc.ore,
giving WHS a 3-0 edge.
· Matteson drove in Darnell
two batters later with a single, giving the Blue and
Gold a 4-0 advantage.
Meigs tlnally broke into
the scoring column during
the. bottom of the fifth, as
. ~aleb Davis and J .T. Evans
both reached base safely to
start the inning .· Two outs
and three batters later, Ryan
Jeffers delivered a clutch
single - which scored both
Davis and Evans for a 4-2
deficit after five complete.
WHS started.the 'stxth on
a good note, as Arthur
reached on an error to lead off the inning.
Then the rains came. and
the game was temporarily
postponed due to inclement
The
drizzle
weather.
stopped almost as soon as it
began, and play resumed .
With one away and Arthur.
on third. Lockard hit into a
. , sacrifice fly which

Please see Short. 81

hosts rallied with six unan- Hall took the .loss for
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM swered runs over .their next Wellston , allowing 13 hi.ts
three at-bats to tum a four- and orie walk while striking
ROCKSPRINGS
run deficit into a 7-5 advan- out five. Meigs committed
Meigs softball started slow, tage after five full frames.
only one error, while. WHS
but still managed to begin its
Meigs ·.starter Hailey made three miscues.
season in style Tuesday Ebersbach - who went the . The Lady Rockets struck
night duiing ·a come-from- distance for MHS . - held first ~load, as Folden and
behind . 7-5 victory over the visiting Lady Rockets Breanna HaU led the game
three-time ®fending cham- (0-2, 0-1) without a hit over off with a triple and walk,
pion Wellston during a Tri- the final two innings for the respectiv'ely. Thompson fatValley Conference Ohio winning decision. allowing lowed with an RBI single
Division
matchup
at just one baserunner over that that · plated Folden, giving
Salisbury Field. ··
same span.
·
·
WHS an early 1-0 advanThe Lady Mar11uders (1·0, Ebersbach·· finished the tage. McCarter grounded
1·0 TVC Ohio) fell behind night allowing just seven into a fielder's choice one
2· I after one full inning of .hits in the triumph, fanning batter later, plating Hall for a
play and also trailed 5-I five while. w.alking .three . ~-0. edge after one-half
after two complete, but the over seven mmngs.. BnttanY. mnmg .

Lady Tornadoes
blank River Valley.
and Stephanie Shamblin.
Tucker added four runs t.o
the teams Iota I. three given
CHESHIRE - The Lady up by the pitcher and the
Tornados blew by the Lady fomth beinli a homerun in
Raiders today as Southern the fourth mning with no
softball laced River· Valley outs. ·
in a 15-0. five inning Hunter and Tucker both
match .
contributed t\No runs.. as
Southern started off their well as Holsinger who hit a
blowout with a single ·run in two-run homer in the third
the first inning followed by inning.
a rally of six runs in the sec- Gabiit~clt , Pape, Tucker
ond.
. and .Holsinger had a rally of
Their streak continued RBI's with Gabritsch and
throughout, the game with Pape each• hitting in a run,
live runs in the third inning , Tucker hit(ing in three, and
two runs in the fourth, and Holsinger with a total of
one. to end the game in the five .
·
fifth inning.
The Lady Raider's active
Helping to put the Lady offense were Kristan Stump.
Tornadoes on the board Chynna Mershon, Brianna
were Breanna Taylor, Emma Smith, and Kay lee Rose
Hunter, Lynzee Tucker,. who each had hits during the
t.nna Jessmerlphoto Chelsea
Pape.
Kelsey game.
Brooke
Senior Brooke Gabritsch throws a pitch in a 15·0 blowout over River Valley Tuesday. The . Holsinger,
Gabritsch. Chey.enne Dunn, Please see Southern. Bl
Lady Tornadoes' victory against the Raiders marked their .first win of the season. . ·
BY ANNA JESSMER

MDSSPORTSOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM ·

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Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

.

Wednesday, Aprll1, 2009

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Riverside Senior Golf All the Wright moves pay off at Villanova
League beoins
April
7th
~·
non-member riding at $25.
The season wtll be divided
into to twa-. parts with a picMASON - The 2009 nic following the first half
,er,ion of the Riverside, and the•annual awards dinSenior Men\ Golf League ner after the second. This
· will bemg on Tuesday, April season's eligibility rules are
: 7th_. There will be an o;gani- the same as last season: you
tauonal meetmg startmg at · must bj! a male player at
~ a .01. with the 2009 seasori least fifty years of age or
to tollow with a shotgun older to be eligible to play.
'tart at 9 p.m.
Special tee assignments for
There have been some the different ages of players
: changes to the. Senior are also being used to bal. Leageu Constitution and ance the skill and ability of
By-Laws to be d1scussed as the participants.
well as other business that
All male golfers are weimay have occurred dur- come to play whether they
ingthe winter season.
·
are members or not.
The cost for playing in the
The league officers want
. league has not changed. If to make this the-biggest year
· you are a member of ever in the history of the
River&gt;ide Golf Club tl will Riverside
Men ·s Golf
'
cost $4. A Riverstde mem- League.
For more information,
ber riding will be $13.· A
Non-member walking will contact the Riverside Golf
be SI6 . with the cost of a Club, (304) 773-5354.
STAFF REPORT

.

MO SS PORTSOMVOAILYSENTINEL. COM .

Rebels fall to Vikings, 11-2
BY ANNA JESSMER
MDSSPOATS@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

. WILLOW
WOOD : South Gallia's boys varsity
baseball faced an 11-2 setback as the faced Symmes
Valley in their season opener..
.
Symmes Valley opened up
the game with a run in the
first inning with South
Gallia holding them at 1-0
throughout the second.
Symmes scored again in
the third inning. setting the
score at 2-0.
The Rebels stepped up
their game m the fourth
inning. getting two runs in.
led by freshman Corey
Haner with what Cmtch
Sullivan called "a solid

offensive effort."
The inning unfolded with
senior Zach Haislop hitting
a double follqwed by junior
Brandon Harrison driving
him in with a single RBI.
Harrison then advanced to
second on a passed ball,
after which he was driven in
to home by Haner who shot
a single up the middle of the
field.
The other three innings
follo\Yed with Symmes
putting four runs on .the
board in the fifth and three
in the sixth, finishing their
win in the seventh.
SYMMES VALLEY 11,
SouTH GALLtA 2

200 0
242
sSValloy
Gall•a 000
101 243 o --11130

•
eJgs
M

VILLANOVA, Pa. (AP)- relations pan of it. I don't '
With his graying hair coifed think you can get higher
to perfection , hi&gt; tasteful marks many those areas than
designer suits worn without a Jay gets."
wrinkle and shoes more polWrifi\ht has made it clear
ished than his recruits, Jay that V1llanova is the only proWright always looked like he gram he wants to coach.
could pose for a GQ layout as Wright last week immediately shot down any speculation
easily as a team photo.
For a guy who knows his he'.d be interested m making
labels, here's one Villanova's . the move to Kentucky
47-year-old dapper dandy"': because. well, he's just a.
might enjoy more than the Philly guy at heart. He's a
Hugo Bpss name stitched Churchville native, was · a
inside his jacket: Final Fo1.1r teenager when Martelli
•
coached him at summer
coach .
At a Final Four that boasts camp; played at Bucknell,
national championship win- worked for the Philadelphia
ners Roy Williams, Tom lzzo Stars of the USFL and spent
and Jim Calhoun, Wright's five years as a Villanova
career resume could seem as assistant under Massimino.
out of place as a ci~cus clown . When Massmu~o wore out
on a best-dressed hst, but the hts welcome at Villanova and
man \\·ito's always dressed left for UNLV, he wanted his
for success has found it in top protege with him, Wright
cpnvincing fashipn the past didn't want to leave, bUt his
five years at Villanova.
allegiance to Daddy Mass
When Wright shakes hands was the deciding factor
. wi~b North
Carolina's ins~ead of staying on as an
~1lh~ms before Satllrday asststant u~der Steve Lal'pas.
mght s . ~ational sem1fin'al Former V1llanova p~stdent
game, ~e 11. be only ~e fourth Rev. Edmund J. Dobbm even
coach m V~llanova hJstol)' to made a personal plea f9r
lead theWJ!dcats to the Final Wnght to stay on the Mam
Four and firSt smce the rotund Lme.
and . . rumpled
Rollie
Wright called moving to
the desert the greatest,
Massuruno m 1985.
Look beyond the looks - smartest career move he ever
Wright is married to a former made. He passed on the
Villanova cheerleader, after Northern ArizonaJ'ob in 1994
all -and it's easy to see why (Ben Howland got that one)
he's become such a hit with and accept«d the head coachfans
from the ritzy suburban ing-Jb'ob at Hofstra.
•
Philadelphia crowd to his
" e Hofstra job wasn't a
own local peers who now great job, but I wanted to get
routinely take an "L" when back east ," Wright said. "I
the Wildcats show up for their would have never known that
date on the schedule.
I was an East Coast guy: We
Five straight NCAA tour- went out there, we loved it,
nament appearances, the sec- btit after a couple. of years it
and-longest streak in team was, whew, we've got to get
history. Two regional finals in back."
four years. Winners of 18 of He led Hofstra to two
their last 19 city series games. NCAA tournaments in his
A 178-90 record in eight final two seasons and was
years at the Big East school. within hours of accepting the
And now this, Villanova's Rutgers job in 2001. when
firs_t Final Four since the 1985 D?bbin swooped in again
natJOnal,!ltle team.
wtth an offer to come home.
Wright brings much more Wright was set to meet
than. a fashion statement to Rutgers' president O!l a
the stdehnes.
Sunday; only for Dobbm to
"He's
embra,ed call on a Saturday and tell
Philadelphia and ·that's made Wri~ht the Villanova job was
it easy for people.to embrace waiting.
.
h.im,' Saint Joseph's coach
"First thing he says was,
Phil Martelli , said. "I think 'You're not going to tum me
coaching involves how you down a~aln, are you?'"
deal with your present team, Wright smd. "I said,' Are you
bow you deal with your offerinr me the J'ob?' He said,
future tean1 and the public 'Yes.' said, 'I'm taking.it."'

Hired in 2001 to replace the
unpopular Lappas , Wnght
only managed to take the
Wildcats to the NIT in ea~h of
his first three seasons. Parts
of two seasons came
unhinged because of a phonecard scandal that forced the
Wildcats to field a seven-man.
team _and fall Wt:ll sh~rt of
March Madness, mcludmg a
15-16 ll)ark in 2007-03.
Wright stuck with his plan
of mining the fertile
Northeast for talent, and soon
landed gems like Randy
Foye , Kyle Lowry, Curus
Sun:pter and Jason F:-'ser.·
'l1llanova ended 1ts fiveyear break from the NCAA
tournament in 2005 and has
~eached the second weekend
m four of the last five years.
"Jay's kind of taken it to
another level," Martelli said.
f1artelli meant Wright's
des1gner duds as ·much as he
was talking about Villanova's
rebifl!l as, an elite program.
Wnght s. dapper sense. of
style goes back to hts htgh
schoo[ years whef! h7 developed an apprectatton for
looking cool and dressmg m a
tasteful manner.
_"I ,.nev7r wa_nted to be
wild, Wnght srud.
He prefers Simple blue,
gray or black suits. As he's
gotten older, Wrifet tells his
personal tailor e'd rather
wear three-button instead of
four-button suits. And when
B
Hugo oss sends a snazzy
suit more appropriate for a
night on the town instead of a·
night against Georgetown,
Wright saves it for a special
occasion.
His former players know
that it's more than the clothes
that make the man in college
:basketball.
"It's not all about the suits,"
said Foye, now with the
Timberwolves. "He'd rather
wear the same jumpsuit every ·
da)' in practice than wear a
sutl every day. If coaches d1dn't have to dress up and wears
suits ~n t~e s1deline, he
wouldn t do .1t.
"He's street. He's tough
and he'lllet you .have it."
Wright and the Wlldcats
have earned plenty of style
points for the way .they bullied their way through the
rug)led Big East, then won
the1r first four tournament
games by comfortable inar-

--------------------Barnes scored on a two-out
single by Meri VanMeter,
rounding things up at the 7fi
Pa Bl
5 finale.
rom ge
Bailey Jed the Lady
Marauders with three bits,
not score again. mustering followed by Hoffman,
only two hits the rest of the Ebersbach and Barnes with
way.
· vanMeter,
two hits aptece.
The score stayed that way Elliott,
Smith and Stanley
until the bottom of the third, also had a,safety each in the
when Meigs erupted for four
Two batters later. Davis the field with the two-run
runs to knot things up at live victory.
Breanna Hall led WHS
delivered a single - fol- decision.
apiece. Hoffman led the with
two hits, follow¢ by
inning off with a solo shot to Folden,
lowed by an error that
Slone Cales picked up the
Thompson.
allowed
Evans
to
reach
left-center, then an error McCarter, Weatley
victory
for WHS, going 4 .I
fromPageBl
and
allowed Taylor Elliott to Brittany Hall with one apiece.
safely for ru11ners at first innings and allowing three
reach safely. Shanalle Smith
Meigs returns to action · allowed Arthur to score an and second- with two out. hits while striking out four
singled in Elliott one batter Thursday ":hen it travels to , insurance run for a 5-2 Cameron Bolin ripped a and walking one. Darnell
later, making it a 5-3 contest.
double to left-center, allow- picked up the save over 1.2
McArthur lor another TVC edge.
·
Smith later scored on a Ohio
matchup, this time
· More bad luck struck the ing Davis to score for a 5-3 innings of relief,, allowing
single by Chandra Stanley
two hits · and zero walks
Vinton County. First hosts in their half of the contest.
to pull within 5-4. then an with
Clay Bolin - with two while fanning two.
pitch is scheduled for 5 p.m. sixth, as leadoff hitter Heath
errot allowed Stanley to
on
and two down - folDeLong, who . went !he
Dettwiller grounded a ball
score - making it a five-all
iowed
by
hitting
a
dribbler
for MHS - took
distance
to . shortstop. Initially,
MEIGS 7, WELLSTON 5
contest.
to
short,
which
resulted
in
the
tough-luck
decision,
Dettwiller was called safe
Hoffman led off-the fourth Wellston230 000 0 - 573 on
play at ' the final out of '-.the sixth allowing seven hits and four
by laying down a successful Meigs 104 110 x - 7 131 ftrst.thebutboom-boom
walks while striking out
was then ruled out mnmg.
bunt for a single. then Bailey WELLSTON (Q-2. 0·1 Ohio) Brillany after a very
The
game
was
called
at
seven.
quick second
and Breanna Hall.
doubled her home two bat- Hall
Jeffers, DeLong, Davis.
thought.
After
the umpire that point due to darkness,
MEIGS (1·0, 1.0 TVC OhiO). Hailey
ters· later to give MHS its Ebersbach and Micki Bames.
much to the protest of the Evans and Cam Bolin each
thought
things
over
with
first lead of the night at 6-5. WP - Ebersbach, LP - Hall
himself, he did rule that Meigs' bench. With that had a hit in the setback,
HR· W- Breanna Hall (second inning,
Meigs Jdded an i11surance two
on, two out); M - Uan Hoffman
said, Wellston gladly left while Darnell and King
run in the fifth when Mtcki (second Inning, nobody on. f)Obody out) Dettwiller was out at first.

Southern
from Page Bl
Southern wi II continue
after thi' win to compete
agatn at Waterford tomorrow at 5 p.m.
River Valley will get
another shnt at a wm

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
C LA.S S IF IE D

gins. The Wildcats will finish
the season WJ!hout a two~arne losmg ~trea_k. an amazmg feat playmg m a conference that placed a record five
teams in the Sweet 16.
He became the kind of
coach that would get Larry
Brown to visit almost every
practice for a year and learn
from Wright almost as much
as the noma&lt;! would teach.
Wright brought 1985 title
team star Ed Pinc;kney back
into the fold as an assistant
for four years, and now has
former 'Nova standout and
NBA veteran Doug West at
his side. Both • moves were
r.art of his commitinent to the
'Villanova Family," a trove
of former players and coaches that in many ways are as
much a .part of this year's
team as Scottie Reynolds·and
Dante Cunningham.
Only VHJanova family
members are allowed on the
floor to watch practice at their
sparkling 2-year-old facility.
"I just want our guys 10
understand how important
Villanova basketball is to, all
the liuys, ·even after they
play Wright said "Any time
the 'ex-players a~e around,
we'd like them to talk to the
team."
Wh .
.
en tt was lime to steji up
the ladder and cut down the
nets after the thriiling win
h w· h
against Pittsburg • ng 1
offered Massimino a snip of
the souvenir. Massimino has
been a tournament regular
behind Villanova's bench and
Jack Kraft, coach of the 1971
national runner-up team, also
has been spotted in the
crowd. Both will have prime
seats Sltturday in Detroit.
"It'S really cool," Wright
said. "l look up to those
guys."
Now, he's in their class and
has earned his place as one of
the greatest coaches in Bi~ 5
history.
fi 1 Winning
ed h'the regional
t
ma cement
IS spo as a
Villanova great. All that's left
is the big one.
"! really thought I wasn't
going to be able to talk to the
team in the locker room
because I'm an emotional
guy, and l was fine," Wright
said. "I was numb. It was
amazing. I'm startin~ to get
emotional now and its amazing."

Short·

IOOtct...if..

000 131. -

ooQ 021 -

HOW

.'

from PageBl

•

Found &amp;malt female Sea~

Muat
on the-

I

81~

HO\Jte for s8!e or rent,
can 500 Extras- Saddle- Pretty, ctaan, 3 SR. bow

WltefprDOIIng

gle

oo Jackson
momtng,owners

Ave. Fri.
·

bags,

ij&amp;hed 1975. Call24 Hrs.

please

caii304..S75-2841.

back rest, luggage Rant $750. No . utilities.
rack &amp; 2 fu~ taco match· Bale. .S1tO,bOO. Kelly.Jo
lr\g heltneis. 9700 mOos 645-6376 0( 4411-1599.
$3000. 3611·9818
No Pols
~89=-"'G~o~ldwi~.-ng-·~1~500~-.-,.,. 3Cr., 2 112 ba. Jim Bema
....~
A...
log home on 2.5 acres
conu.,
1UQut:7'J, many ex-

Un&lt;ond~onall~ellmo
guarantee. Local refer·
~:meee tumtshed. Estab·

740-446-o870, Rogers
easement Waterproofing

NOTICE

Borrow $mart,

Contact !he

01110 Olvl·

lion or Financial lnst1tu·
tions Office of Consumer

Affairs BEFORE you ret!- 1.--_:....---.\
nance your home or oilthe TribiUrte-111 ~=~~:::"'~~ ~~....~----... 1aln a loan. BEWARE ot
Sen·tlneii·AIIJilt~r
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY Jim's Lawn Ma~nlenance, requests tor any large
1

lng the offenng.

~=~"':":~::"':'~

~~=e 0

Wed-5at.

74

1),44

acfv'ance
fees oi

toll ·

•
6 3745

SEPTIC
Gallla Co.

Mason

nder.6 ipeed, vl!lce &amp; 3S Acres near Leon, very
plpcs.hyper-charzer. nice
woods,
electnc,
wmdshield upgrildcd stal easy
access,
b~llding
wlbackres1 over SJtiOO. in sites,
l)reat
hunting,
extras &amp; chrome $.14.200 $42,500.
Frus
Maps

l'lr-::;::;.,c.....::::-cA,G-/

within 30 days.

Any pictures
that are not
picked up wilt be

lng Counc\ltortnd&amp;poncllmt

""""""""""""!!!!!""'
!!!!!!!!! 24·5
-

U

l()(

~~~~~~= ~;;;;:;;:~~~~~
good

'

•-

I
B,

spaua,

G .FT.

~prtl

Frlgldall'l When·

Lee

40-441-7396 $400
;,;o~~i!!!~~B

36

•epoed

out I can

Born

&amp;

AIY·

Show

dsy 1856-352-0469.

Recr..tton~l VehlciH ............................... tooo
ATV ............. - ............,.,._,_......................... _1QQ5

Blrthday/Annlverury.................................. 205 Blcyc!H...................................................,.. 1010
Happy Ado. ...................................................2t0 Baato/Ac-.orlu.................................... 10t5

:Z,~!;;;.~:~k·~;;;;·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ ~=-~--~~~~~~-•.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :g~

Other ...........,_............................................1030

W.nt to buy ,_............................................ 1~15
AUIOmot1 ...............................................,.2000
Auto Rentli\ll.etllle ...... -.:··-······~ ................ 2006
Aut0.........................................~ ••••• .,........... 2010.

Wonted ....................................................... 235

Servl0ea ..:.................................................:•• 300

Appliance Servlce ........................ ~ .............. 30Z
Autcrnotlve .......................,.......................... 304
BuildinG Matarlal• .................. -.... ·-···········-·308

C:l..olc/Antlqu......................................... 20t 5

Comrn.olitlllnduatrlal-······-·····.. ·············-2020

s,.....

Pane &amp; AGce&amp;aOriel............ -........... -......-••2025

Bualn.... _,,,_ ••••• :.......................................... 301

C:otorlng ........................................................3t0
Utlllty.............................................. 2030
1•2 'l'nlcko........................................................~OS .
C:hllci/Eicterly
Cora ...... - ............................... 3
Computer• ....................,............................_. 31 UtilitY Tranere ............................................ '"",..

4

COntractora--.... ---······· .................................. 31&amp;

vane.. -...................................... ,.................. 2045

Oomt~allcafJanltorlal ................................... 318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320

Wanttobuy •••-......................: .................... 2050
R..l EMUe Salea ..................................... ,3000

Home lmprowment8 330

For Sale by Owner.....................................3020

Flnonclat .......................................................322 cemetery t!hlla ..........................................3005
H,.ttn ........................................................... 32&amp; ComrMrelo1 ................................................30tO
Hooting" C:oollng ....................................... S2t Condomlnluma .......................................... aots
.

::'."~"B:;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::~ r.%"1*Ac~o~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::

10

Muo1D/Donce/Drame .................................... 33tl
Other h&lt;vlcoa............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrtcat .....................................300
Proteaaloul ServJcee __ ,____ .............. - ..........:..2
Rapolra ........................................................ 304
Rooflng.........................................................348
securlty ....................................................... MI
Tn/Accountlng .... -·-.. --··· ............................. 350
Travtoi/Entertalnment .................................352
Flnon&lt;&gt;lot
........&lt;.........................: ........,...........ooo_
Financial Services ................ .. -...................
tnauronco ................................................... 410
Money to Lend ...... ~................-....................415
EducatiOf'l ..................................... -••--........... 500
8U81nna a Trade School ... --.. ~................... 505

~me

.

...........................................................3035

Went to buy...............................................3040
RMI Eotate Rantota .....................,.............3500
....,.rtrnentaltownhou............................ 3505
Com.....,lol............:...................................3510
Condomlnluma................................... ., •• _.3515
HouUetorRont .................................... :... 3520

-to

Lanci(Ac~) ..... -...._...................~-·········3521
Btarop ...................:... - ..........................1535
llont .........:;·---.. ·---·····-•-···--··--34000540
Manufactvred ttou ... ng ............... _ ...._, ....·..

L...................................................... - ........ 0005
Moven----·--···"""'"'·······"""·········· ............ 4010

=

r:,.ntllla ....................................................... 4015

salee......... -...............................-...-... :........-4020
tnotructlon a. Trolnlng................................. sto suppltM .................................................... 4025

Leaaana .......................:................................: :

=~.~!~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::600

Animal SupP.II............................................ IOS

Ho,..a ........................................... -.............. &amp;10

Llveetoek ......,...... ,••• -............. --.•• ~ .. ----..........-615
Pet• ..··--··-··"-""'"'""' _____ .. _, _____..... ................. 620

•

' ·

=
·f0i-·g·.;::::::::::::::::::::::::so25
Ftooon Pl'oporty to• ,..,_........................ 5050
Employment........ .................. - ...................&amp;000
AccountlngiFIMnclll................................ eooz

Admlnlatnitl.,..rofeaalonal .....................eoo.

Wonttc buy .................................................. BZS CaohloriC!Mk ............................................. 6006
Agriculture .................................................... 700 ChlkUE.Idarty Cere ......................:............... IOOI
Form Equlpment .................., .....,, ..........,.....705 -C-......................................................eoto
o.roen a Produca..-... ._ ...............................710 con.t:ruc:t~on ......................... --········-··· .... &amp;012
·
Hoy, F-. Seod, Grain ............................... 711 Drt-a 0.11vory ....... - .........
- .............,. 10t 4
Hunting a Lind ..................................... -....• 720 Eduoallon ...................................................I01&amp;
18
Wont tondbuyl -....... --................. --··-·""":..........?25= ElectrlcoEm
....__!!!uT~ng.c~::······-· .... ·····--·······--··80
6020

!................................

Mercha
............ -....
Antlquea ...................................,, .. ,................

Applt.nce ...................................... --.-.......... 910
Aucttono .............. ,.............................,.......... ~
Barg1ln Baaement.·-· ··-································ 112•
CollecllbiH ........................... _., ................... "
Computere .............:................................... -. 830
Equlprn.nt/Suppllea ............-........ --.............. 135
Flea Marketa --.. ·--........... -.............................. 140
Fuel 011 Coa....WoocVGu ............................. l45

Fumlture .........,;;,:.::,:."""'"''"'"""'"''""'"""'-""'""''" ~.

. I

=

Want to Buy .............................:.........., .•..•.

Hobby/Hunt • ..,_11 ............. -.. --.. ----··-·-.. .... ---.
JUd'a COI'nM' .........., •• _, ___ _... ____ :......................IIO
Ml~aC~~IIaneoue ....................................... -....... 1815
Want to tNy ............., ...................-...... : ..... __ •• 970
Verd hie .............__ ,_ .._., ..........,.. ......-......... ,_, .. 175

................ .. _ ...........-...·-·..·---·..._.......
~

=
eoaa

Ent.rtalnrnent ........................................:...
Food Servtcea ............................................6024

~~...,::'~~IJOI&gt;e ...................
Lll PEonfo
1r ········-········-·--··-··-······ 6030
w n rcemen......................................
Maln..,..nCWDomnttc ............................. 603Z
~en~~ge.rnent./S.upervlaory _,. .. _.• _ ........
Mechanlca-....... -·--·--··............. --··----...........&amp;031

--···'*

MediC111 .............................................._.......1038

MPualncalll
.. &amp;.:;···.............................................
·
~
a • .,.._.,..,
___ ,............. -........... -

Ree!MII'IInta ••-... -....... ---·-----·------····-······· .. 1044
S.lea .........................·..................................eo41
Technical Tradea .............-.........-.............-.eo&amp;O
n.ldt~!let:Of\l' ....•...:.............-.................. ts052

1

1

Impound&amp;! ·
fro111 No Pe1s.
Hooda,O. 1
' "~"·
•M
m,.., lor li•tiop
""''•
·
satellite TV Incl. wltent,
800 -6 20-4876 u. y 435

V8

$2000

or 740·44&amp;-1271

kl1chen Items, deoore- 1999 F-150 4 door LB.
For sale CKC yoli&lt;le Jet Aerotkln Motoro . re- tiona, we~t bencll With 4X4 7.3 010&amp;'81. Auto,
Pu!Jpios,3malo,3fe- paired now &amp; rebuilt In weights. Can1 llet ev•'Y· /AJC, CO beautltul 1ruck
males, dew claws re·
stock.' Call Aon Evans. thing, come and find a only garage kept. 63.000
moved, tails docked,
1·800-537-9528.
deal!
m1 Blue/sliver $18,000
!!!"'-~~~~~ 080 ..740-441-7398
ready 10 go April 10th ' :81::ue::""::R:::id:::ge~Spo~H::o::'l";T~ub Thurs. April 2, a til 1, Rl
==304=:-6::7::5·::1::29::8::.
gray/eXt blue/In!. Excel· 7 2 mllot nortil ot Chts·
Worll To luy

=

::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
""

fctml EqulptMnl

ney a
Oep!Ref

obo

56 1652
_
.

ba$kels,
toyS,
Boyd's Call
conditioner,
Longaberger

1

-~~::":~~~:""'

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Notlcea ......................................................... 225
Per•onala .... -.--........ .... -...............................,230

$300, &amp; females
CALL304-675-6411 .
black
cmam, GOLDTRIGGEA

$3SO,

!.....-.-----'----' 740-256·1360

Announcementa .......................................... 200

3

.
Inc.
Need steady
history &amp; solkj ref.

P~e. wa1erltraeh.

500'

~Inn!~
Wl1lt 6
TV's,

room

males
colors

S
Newlyweds

,.

Toy

Legal•·-········--··· .. ·····-·········---···-················· .. 100

·•

CooK Motors 328 $375/dep.

2nd-4th, JackSOn

5pm,

Oh.

UEI -:

f~iendly. 645--2000

DeLong; S -

N lll4·360~l6l.
Yorker
Ave. (740)
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
199t 5111
Chry•ler
ew '!'"~~':""'~~~
4t6·6292 or
(740) lumlshed and untur·
44t-5378 .
nlahed,.' and houses In
,
Pomeroy and Middleport,
Sllv '· Trucks, Coro full secun'Y deposit requl11!d,
al~ and com"'CIS, all no l)e1s. 74().992·221~
wtth warranty.
Prices ·~~~"'"!~~
stsrtlng at $1900. Stop or t BR Apt. $375/mo.

FIND
l'ett
side by side retrlgorolor 98m to
Whe11!: 741l-446-0103
work
new 2411
Cl rclo, yraFree to
home te- 7(whl1e) · like oao
erences. (740) 645-6378.
Bl
cuse,
Police
cars
------BARGAINS
ma
J
~ir':~O::::~:':::::=:'
Haalor, great wllh kids, H..L'-f
Hunt &amp; c...... combined 1Wo hou...
·
"
1
BR
WID hookups
_,
.,....,
hokle
and
now
hlv&amp;
too
Ford&gt;.&amp;
BuHdlng Maierlah
V
WANTED
much stu... 1emo nclose to hospllal Call
EVERY DA,I
. Huge Sovlngo
16 GA AUTOMATIC elude: walnut
Trudll
740-339·9492
S!eel arch buoldlngs. 3
IN THE •======;; lered,Poodles.shom,CKC regia·
SHOTGUN
PREFER
table
chairs, ~~~~~~lllil!l!: ~2~b~.~pt~R~O(f~~....
~~No
tails BROWNING
WITH matching hu!Ch, small '1996 Dakota Truck
r .
20x30, 25x
Club pigs for sale top AI docked, vet ched&lt;ed,
.
drop-teat loble,
air Automat~
l)e1s
required.
~~' miSSit~or~bal~a;nced~~g~~~~~~-S~Ir!e~s~in~to=un~1ry~:use:.
to~ CLASSIAEDS
Jan.
Fab.
256-1233 2
::709.:;:t,:;:6t;::7~~~-:'~
~~~~~~~~w!ln~s~elil
erbend
Pig!
(740)992-7007
~
bears, pu,..., Clothing,
2BR APtCiose to Hoi·
~egel!land6ch9CIIs1:17&lt;4B

Dam ell

740-445·7187

• can

HUGE YARD BALE

T _ L .....

=&gt;.:::-:"O:=w::"!
..,_~==
i BR apartment for rc!IPI m:u

driVe. downtown· Point PleasaRt.
All util. paid No pets cn!l

wt1HI

t,.,.~·

Evano Jackson, Oil
School
~(}!tf
•======= !;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;::~;c;200!1;;;b~~=t=nc;!
V
800-537-8528'
Wanted to do· Yard
0.111pollo C.reor
work, mowing,
COIItgt
Yard Sale
weed-eating, plumtv (Careefll Close To Home)
• Li¥-.lt
lng, palnUng, trash
Calt Toaayl 740-445-4:367 Fair pigs for oa1e Tnpla
Garage sate April 1-4,
hauling eny odd lobs
. t-800-214·0452
P !how-p'"S starting a1
Whites Hlll Rd., Rutland
gatltpollscareerooltege.edu
'loll
-'.--tr304 -882-82 16·
ACO&lt;QdhodMomborAo...,t$100.00304·675·t798.
"1'!"--.
~~~~~~-

must be picked

~

2003 Subaru Legacy
Wagon sharp 1 owner all

1\--t

PUMPING
OH and !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""'
'IN. Ron
lusineu &amp;Trode

Co

Land IAcNap)

hines

ul

TURNED DOWN ON . Publishing Company)
No F" Unless We Wlnl
Hl611·582·3345

·

"'"
low

1-886-278-ooo3 to leam

service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley

call

; ;304-611,.,!!2!1-264!!!151!.!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!

Beauliful ~ Harley David,

at

free

SDCIAI. SECURITY SSI

have
placed In ada at
the Gillllpoll'a
Dally Tribune

1raller. 740-446-1573

payments
of
· 1nsuranc&amp;. Call

the. ottlce oi Consumer
Affiars

matching $165.000 tor appt.

alSo

tras,

It "e mortgage broker or
. lender Is propony 1"
censed. (Th1s Is a publlc

~Pr~o~lllll~oriai~~Sot=-vl~c;":a·

LOunge OJ &amp; ..
Gentlamana

night . WOdnosday,
night Th••""''"'

Box

1.........

lawn Service

Notbs

PUBLISHING CO. rec- mowing mulching and
ommends tha1 'you do much more. Insured, fi'ee
business with people you t;JStlmatJs. 740-395-3389
know, and NOT to send
money tl"trough the mail
Olhtt hrtiels
until you have investigatPet
Cremations. ·Call

57 2
3 52

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

reject or cancel any

,

~

Courtney Shriver with two
apiece.
Kimber Davis. Brittyn
Saunders. Heather Ward,
Morgan Daniels. Mattie
Lanham and Kassie ·Day
rounded out the hit production with a safety apiece.
Noe. Ward, Daniels and
Brittyn Saunders all drove
in 'two runs each.
GALLIA ACADEMY 12,
Ward went the distance
fAIRLANDS
for GAHS in the ci&lt;cle,
allowing just seven hits Gallipolis 000 250 5 - 12 16 1
and two earned runs over Fairland 200 030 0 - 5 7 4
seven innings of work. GALLIA ACADEMY (2-0). Hoa1hor
and Mcittle Lanham.
Witt took the loss for the Ward
FAIRLAND (n/a): Witt. Bias (6) and
.Rucker.
hosts.
WP- Ward. LP- Wilt.
Rucker and. Burcham HA.
GA - 6. Saunders (fourth inning.
both paced Fairland with one on. two out)

Subscribe today.
992-21;55

Lilli &amp; Found

plti&gt;OI!IKI
of

!B

Angels

Ohio Valley
Publishing,...,.,.
. the right to edh,
Errors

SOUTHERN (1-1). Brooke Gabrilsch
;md Lynzee TuQier (5)
RIVER VALLEY (0·1) KatelyA Birchfield
and Knsta Halfhill
WP - Gabntsch: LP - Birchfield

two hits apiece, followed
by Simms. Bias and Ball
with one safety each.
Rucker had three RBis and
and Burcham added two.
GAHS committed just
one error in the contest.
compared to four by host
Fairland.
Gall ia Academy returns
to the diamond today when
it hosts Ironton in a
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League South Division
contest at 5 p.m.

AM AD

SUa.ufuiAd•

100

ad at any time.

SotmtEAN 15, RIVER VALlEY 0
1581
023

to WinE

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

today against the Lady
Marauders at 5 p.m.

Southern
165 ' 21
R1ver Valley 000 00

NOw you con hove borders and Qraphlcs
"-.ll
addedtovourdasslfledads
.{,;.m
Borders$3.00/perad
U! .
Graphics 5()( for small
S1.00 for larve

«

Delong and J.T. Evans.
Cates; LP -

NOW ONLINE .

Should InclUde Til-It~
To Help Get lleaponH ...

WELLSTON (H. 1·0 TVC Ohio):
Cales. Darnell (5) and Darnell.
MEIGS (0·1, Q.1 TVC OhiO): Bryan
WP -

AD

Websl!es"
www.mydallytfibune.com
www.mydailysenlnel.com
www.mydallyreglsler.com

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

WELLSTON 5, MEIGS 3
.
6 INNINGS
,
Wellston
Me1gs

d~!?;:!a~itame.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
•.PLUS YOUR

each led WHS with two
safeties apiece. Arthur,
Cales and Matteson also
added a hit each to the winning cause.
Meigs returns to action
Thursday when it travels to
McArthur for another TVC
Ohio matchup, this time
with Vinton County. First
pitch is scheduled for 5 p.m.
'

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

lanl condition with · cover
$400.
· 74~1·7396

or

zer Hoapltsl on SR 160
CIA. (740) 441·0t 94
Apartment avaHibla now
Rlverbend Apts.
New
Haven WV. Now acct~pt•

lng appllcallorts lor
HUD·subsldiZIJl,
one
Bedroom Ap1s. UtlKHes

lnclucltd. Based on 30%-

of adjusted lnGOme. Call

304·Ba2-3121,

080

avallablo

fol' Senior and Disabled

ridlrig

GOOd,

lawn

:=::""'=;;;;;;~=:;= mo"fl:lr. Ae~ for Jr. Phone
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�-

•

•

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

.

Wednesday, Aprll1, 2009

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Riverside Senior Golf All the Wright moves pay off at Villanova
League beoins
April
7th
~·
non-member riding at $25.
The season wtll be divided
into to twa-. parts with a picMASON - The 2009 nic following the first half
,er,ion of the Riverside, and the•annual awards dinSenior Men\ Golf League ner after the second. This
· will bemg on Tuesday, April season's eligibility rules are
: 7th_. There will be an o;gani- the same as last season: you
tauonal meetmg startmg at · must bj! a male player at
~ a .01. with the 2009 seasori least fifty years of age or
to tollow with a shotgun older to be eligible to play.
'tart at 9 p.m.
Special tee assignments for
There have been some the different ages of players
: changes to the. Senior are also being used to bal. Leageu Constitution and ance the skill and ability of
By-Laws to be d1scussed as the participants.
well as other business that
All male golfers are weimay have occurred dur- come to play whether they
ingthe winter season.
·
are members or not.
The cost for playing in the
The league officers want
. league has not changed. If to make this the-biggest year
· you are a member of ever in the history of the
River&gt;ide Golf Club tl will Riverside
Men ·s Golf
'
cost $4. A Riverstde mem- League.
For more information,
ber riding will be $13.· A
Non-member walking will contact the Riverside Golf
be SI6 . with the cost of a Club, (304) 773-5354.
STAFF REPORT

.

MO SS PORTSOMVOAILYSENTINEL. COM .

Rebels fall to Vikings, 11-2
BY ANNA JESSMER
MDSSPOATS@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

. WILLOW
WOOD : South Gallia's boys varsity
baseball faced an 11-2 setback as the faced Symmes
Valley in their season opener..
.
Symmes Valley opened up
the game with a run in the
first inning with South
Gallia holding them at 1-0
throughout the second.
Symmes scored again in
the third inning. setting the
score at 2-0.
The Rebels stepped up
their game m the fourth
inning. getting two runs in.
led by freshman Corey
Haner with what Cmtch
Sullivan called "a solid

offensive effort."
The inning unfolded with
senior Zach Haislop hitting
a double follqwed by junior
Brandon Harrison driving
him in with a single RBI.
Harrison then advanced to
second on a passed ball,
after which he was driven in
to home by Haner who shot
a single up the middle of the
field.
The other three innings
follo\Yed with Symmes
putting four runs on .the
board in the fifth and three
in the sixth, finishing their
win in the seventh.
SYMMES VALLEY 11,
SouTH GALLtA 2

200 0
242
sSValloy
Gall•a 000
101 243 o --11130

•
eJgs
M

VILLANOVA, Pa. (AP)- relations pan of it. I don't '
With his graying hair coifed think you can get higher
to perfection , hi&gt; tasteful marks many those areas than
designer suits worn without a Jay gets."
wrinkle and shoes more polWrifi\ht has made it clear
ished than his recruits, Jay that V1llanova is the only proWright always looked like he gram he wants to coach.
could pose for a GQ layout as Wright last week immediately shot down any speculation
easily as a team photo.
For a guy who knows his he'.d be interested m making
labels, here's one Villanova's . the move to Kentucky
47-year-old dapper dandy"': because. well, he's just a.
might enjoy more than the Philly guy at heart. He's a
Hugo Bpss name stitched Churchville native, was · a
inside his jacket: Final Fo1.1r teenager when Martelli
•
coached him at summer
coach .
At a Final Four that boasts camp; played at Bucknell,
national championship win- worked for the Philadelphia
ners Roy Williams, Tom lzzo Stars of the USFL and spent
and Jim Calhoun, Wright's five years as a Villanova
career resume could seem as assistant under Massimino.
out of place as a ci~cus clown . When Massmu~o wore out
on a best-dressed hst, but the hts welcome at Villanova and
man \\·ito's always dressed left for UNLV, he wanted his
for success has found it in top protege with him, Wright
cpnvincing fashipn the past didn't want to leave, bUt his
five years at Villanova.
allegiance to Daddy Mass
When Wright shakes hands was the deciding factor
. wi~b North
Carolina's ins~ead of staying on as an
~1lh~ms before Satllrday asststant u~der Steve Lal'pas.
mght s . ~ational sem1fin'al Former V1llanova p~stdent
game, ~e 11. be only ~e fourth Rev. Edmund J. Dobbm even
coach m V~llanova hJstol)' to made a personal plea f9r
lead theWJ!dcats to the Final Wnght to stay on the Mam
Four and firSt smce the rotund Lme.
and . . rumpled
Rollie
Wright called moving to
the desert the greatest,
Massuruno m 1985.
Look beyond the looks - smartest career move he ever
Wright is married to a former made. He passed on the
Villanova cheerleader, after Northern ArizonaJ'ob in 1994
all -and it's easy to see why (Ben Howland got that one)
he's become such a hit with and accept«d the head coachfans
from the ritzy suburban ing-Jb'ob at Hofstra.
•
Philadelphia crowd to his
" e Hofstra job wasn't a
own local peers who now great job, but I wanted to get
routinely take an "L" when back east ," Wright said. "I
the Wildcats show up for their would have never known that
date on the schedule.
I was an East Coast guy: We
Five straight NCAA tour- went out there, we loved it,
nament appearances, the sec- btit after a couple. of years it
and-longest streak in team was, whew, we've got to get
history. Two regional finals in back."
four years. Winners of 18 of He led Hofstra to two
their last 19 city series games. NCAA tournaments in his
A 178-90 record in eight final two seasons and was
years at the Big East school. within hours of accepting the
And now this, Villanova's Rutgers job in 2001. when
firs_t Final Four since the 1985 D?bbin swooped in again
natJOnal,!ltle team.
wtth an offer to come home.
Wright brings much more Wright was set to meet
than. a fashion statement to Rutgers' president O!l a
the stdehnes.
Sunday; only for Dobbm to
"He's
embra,ed call on a Saturday and tell
Philadelphia and ·that's made Wri~ht the Villanova job was
it easy for people.to embrace waiting.
.
h.im,' Saint Joseph's coach
"First thing he says was,
Phil Martelli , said. "I think 'You're not going to tum me
coaching involves how you down a~aln, are you?'"
deal with your present team, Wright smd. "I said,' Are you
bow you deal with your offerinr me the J'ob?' He said,
future tean1 and the public 'Yes.' said, 'I'm taking.it."'

Hired in 2001 to replace the
unpopular Lappas , Wnght
only managed to take the
Wildcats to the NIT in ea~h of
his first three seasons. Parts
of two seasons came
unhinged because of a phonecard scandal that forced the
Wildcats to field a seven-man.
team _and fall Wt:ll sh~rt of
March Madness, mcludmg a
15-16 ll)ark in 2007-03.
Wright stuck with his plan
of mining the fertile
Northeast for talent, and soon
landed gems like Randy
Foye , Kyle Lowry, Curus
Sun:pter and Jason F:-'ser.·
'l1llanova ended 1ts fiveyear break from the NCAA
tournament in 2005 and has
~eached the second weekend
m four of the last five years.
"Jay's kind of taken it to
another level," Martelli said.
f1artelli meant Wright's
des1gner duds as ·much as he
was talking about Villanova's
rebifl!l as, an elite program.
Wnght s. dapper sense. of
style goes back to hts htgh
schoo[ years whef! h7 developed an apprectatton for
looking cool and dressmg m a
tasteful manner.
_"I ,.nev7r wa_nted to be
wild, Wnght srud.
He prefers Simple blue,
gray or black suits. As he's
gotten older, Wrifet tells his
personal tailor e'd rather
wear three-button instead of
four-button suits. And when
B
Hugo oss sends a snazzy
suit more appropriate for a
night on the town instead of a·
night against Georgetown,
Wright saves it for a special
occasion.
His former players know
that it's more than the clothes
that make the man in college
:basketball.
"It's not all about the suits,"
said Foye, now with the
Timberwolves. "He'd rather
wear the same jumpsuit every ·
da)' in practice than wear a
sutl every day. If coaches d1dn't have to dress up and wears
suits ~n t~e s1deline, he
wouldn t do .1t.
"He's street. He's tough
and he'lllet you .have it."
Wright and the Wlldcats
have earned plenty of style
points for the way .they bullied their way through the
rug)led Big East, then won
the1r first four tournament
games by comfortable inar-

--------------------Barnes scored on a two-out
single by Meri VanMeter,
rounding things up at the 7fi
Pa Bl
5 finale.
rom ge
Bailey Jed the Lady
Marauders with three bits,
not score again. mustering followed by Hoffman,
only two hits the rest of the Ebersbach and Barnes with
way.
· vanMeter,
two hits aptece.
The score stayed that way Elliott,
Smith and Stanley
until the bottom of the third, also had a,safety each in the
when Meigs erupted for four
Two batters later. Davis the field with the two-run
runs to knot things up at live victory.
Breanna Hall led WHS
delivered a single - fol- decision.
apiece. Hoffman led the with
two hits, follow¢ by
inning off with a solo shot to Folden,
lowed by an error that
Slone Cales picked up the
Thompson.
allowed
Evans
to
reach
left-center, then an error McCarter, Weatley
victory
for WHS, going 4 .I
fromPageBl
and
allowed Taylor Elliott to Brittany Hall with one apiece.
safely for ru11ners at first innings and allowing three
reach safely. Shanalle Smith
Meigs returns to action · allowed Arthur to score an and second- with two out. hits while striking out four
singled in Elliott one batter Thursday ":hen it travels to , insurance run for a 5-2 Cameron Bolin ripped a and walking one. Darnell
later, making it a 5-3 contest.
double to left-center, allow- picked up the save over 1.2
McArthur lor another TVC edge.
·
Smith later scored on a Ohio
matchup, this time
· More bad luck struck the ing Davis to score for a 5-3 innings of relief,, allowing
single by Chandra Stanley
two hits · and zero walks
Vinton County. First hosts in their half of the contest.
to pull within 5-4. then an with
Clay Bolin - with two while fanning two.
pitch is scheduled for 5 p.m. sixth, as leadoff hitter Heath
errot allowed Stanley to
on
and two down - folDeLong, who . went !he
Dettwiller grounded a ball
score - making it a five-all
iowed
by
hitting
a
dribbler
for MHS - took
distance
to . shortstop. Initially,
MEIGS 7, WELLSTON 5
contest.
to
short,
which
resulted
in
the
tough-luck
decision,
Dettwiller was called safe
Hoffman led off-the fourth Wellston230 000 0 - 573 on
play at ' the final out of '-.the sixth allowing seven hits and four
by laying down a successful Meigs 104 110 x - 7 131 ftrst.thebutboom-boom
walks while striking out
was then ruled out mnmg.
bunt for a single. then Bailey WELLSTON (Q-2. 0·1 Ohio) Brillany after a very
The
game
was
called
at
seven.
quick second
and Breanna Hall.
doubled her home two bat- Hall
Jeffers, DeLong, Davis.
thought.
After
the umpire that point due to darkness,
MEIGS (1·0, 1.0 TVC OhiO). Hailey
ters· later to give MHS its Ebersbach and Micki Bames.
much to the protest of the Evans and Cam Bolin each
thought
things
over
with
first lead of the night at 6-5. WP - Ebersbach, LP - Hall
himself, he did rule that Meigs' bench. With that had a hit in the setback,
HR· W- Breanna Hall (second inning,
Meigs Jdded an i11surance two
on, two out); M - Uan Hoffman
said, Wellston gladly left while Darnell and King
run in the fifth when Mtcki (second Inning, nobody on. f)Obody out) Dettwiller was out at first.

Southern
from Page Bl
Southern wi II continue
after thi' win to compete
agatn at Waterford tomorrow at 5 p.m.
River Valley will get
another shnt at a wm

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
C LA.S S IF IE D

gins. The Wildcats will finish
the season WJ!hout a two~arne losmg ~trea_k. an amazmg feat playmg m a conference that placed a record five
teams in the Sweet 16.
He became the kind of
coach that would get Larry
Brown to visit almost every
practice for a year and learn
from Wright almost as much
as the noma&lt;! would teach.
Wright brought 1985 title
team star Ed Pinc;kney back
into the fold as an assistant
for four years, and now has
former 'Nova standout and
NBA veteran Doug West at
his side. Both • moves were
r.art of his commitinent to the
'Villanova Family," a trove
of former players and coaches that in many ways are as
much a .part of this year's
team as Scottie Reynolds·and
Dante Cunningham.
Only VHJanova family
members are allowed on the
floor to watch practice at their
sparkling 2-year-old facility.
"I just want our guys 10
understand how important
Villanova basketball is to, all
the liuys, ·even after they
play Wright said "Any time
the 'ex-players a~e around,
we'd like them to talk to the
team."
Wh .
.
en tt was lime to steji up
the ladder and cut down the
nets after the thriiling win
h w· h
against Pittsburg • ng 1
offered Massimino a snip of
the souvenir. Massimino has
been a tournament regular
behind Villanova's bench and
Jack Kraft, coach of the 1971
national runner-up team, also
has been spotted in the
crowd. Both will have prime
seats Sltturday in Detroit.
"It'S really cool," Wright
said. "l look up to those
guys."
Now, he's in their class and
has earned his place as one of
the greatest coaches in Bi~ 5
history.
fi 1 Winning
ed h'the regional
t
ma cement
IS spo as a
Villanova great. All that's left
is the big one.
"! really thought I wasn't
going to be able to talk to the
team in the locker room
because I'm an emotional
guy, and l was fine," Wright
said. "I was numb. It was
amazing. I'm startin~ to get
emotional now and its amazing."

Short·

IOOtct...if..

000 131. -

ooQ 021 -

HOW

.'

from PageBl

•

Found &amp;malt female Sea~

Muat
on the-

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81~

HO\Jte for s8!e or rent,
can 500 Extras- Saddle- Pretty, ctaan, 3 SR. bow

WltefprDOIIng

gle

oo Jackson
momtng,owners

Ave. Fri.
·

bags,

ij&amp;hed 1975. Call24 Hrs.

please

caii304..S75-2841.

back rest, luggage Rant $750. No . utilities.
rack &amp; 2 fu~ taco match· Bale. .S1tO,bOO. Kelly.Jo
lr\g heltneis. 9700 mOos 645-6376 0( 4411-1599.
$3000. 3611·9818
No Pols
~89=-"'G~o~ldwi~.-ng-·~1~500~-.-,.,. 3Cr., 2 112 ba. Jim Bema
....~
A...
log home on 2.5 acres
conu.,
1UQut:7'J, many ex-

Un&lt;ond~onall~ellmo
guarantee. Local refer·
~:meee tumtshed. Estab·

740-446-o870, Rogers
easement Waterproofing

NOTICE

Borrow $mart,

Contact !he

01110 Olvl·

lion or Financial lnst1tu·
tions Office of Consumer

Affairs BEFORE you ret!- 1.--_:....---.\
nance your home or oilthe TribiUrte-111 ~=~~:::"'~~ ~~....~----... 1aln a loan. BEWARE ot
Sen·tlneii·AIIJilt~r
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY Jim's Lawn Ma~nlenance, requests tor any large
1

lng the offenng.

~=~"':":~::"':'~

~~=e 0

Wed-5at.

74

1),44

acfv'ance
fees oi

toll ·

•
6 3745

SEPTIC
Gallla Co.

Mason

nder.6 ipeed, vl!lce &amp; 3S Acres near Leon, very
plpcs.hyper-charzer. nice
woods,
electnc,
wmdshield upgrildcd stal easy
access,
b~llding
wlbackres1 over SJtiOO. in sites,
l)reat
hunting,
extras &amp; chrome $.14.200 $42,500.
Frus
Maps

l'lr-::;::;.,c.....::::-cA,G-/

within 30 days.

Any pictures
that are not
picked up wilt be

lng Counc\ltortnd&amp;poncllmt

""""""""""""!!!!!""'
!!!!!!!!! 24·5
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good

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;,;o~~i!!!~~B

36

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out I can

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Recr..tton~l VehlciH ............................... tooo
ATV ............. - ............,.,._,_......................... _1QQ5

Blrthday/Annlverury.................................. 205 Blcyc!H...................................................,.. 1010
Happy Ado. ...................................................2t0 Baato/Ac-.orlu.................................... 10t5

:Z,~!;;;.~:~k·~;;;;·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~ ~=-~--~~~~~~-•.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :g~

Other ...........,_............................................1030

W.nt to buy ,_............................................ 1~15
AUIOmot1 ...............................................,.2000
Auto Rentli\ll.etllle ...... -.:··-······~ ................ 2006
Aut0.........................................~ ••••• .,........... 2010.

Wonted ....................................................... 235

Servl0ea ..:.................................................:•• 300

Appliance Servlce ........................ ~ .............. 30Z
Autcrnotlve .......................,.......................... 304
BuildinG Matarlal• .................. -.... ·-···········-·308

C:l..olc/Antlqu......................................... 20t 5

Comrn.olitlllnduatrlal-······-·····.. ·············-2020

s,.....

Pane &amp; AGce&amp;aOriel............ -........... -......-••2025

Bualn.... _,,,_ ••••• :.......................................... 301

C:otorlng ........................................................3t0
Utlllty.............................................. 2030
1•2 'l'nlcko........................................................~OS .
C:hllci/Eicterly
Cora ...... - ............................... 3
Computer• ....................,............................_. 31 UtilitY Tranere ............................................ '"",..

4

COntractora--.... ---······· .................................. 31&amp;

vane.. -...................................... ,.................. 2045

Oomt~allcafJanltorlal ................................... 318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320

Wanttobuy •••-......................: .................... 2050
R..l EMUe Salea ..................................... ,3000

Home lmprowment8 330

For Sale by Owner.....................................3020

Flnonclat .......................................................322 cemetery t!hlla ..........................................3005
H,.ttn ........................................................... 32&amp; ComrMrelo1 ................................................30tO
Hooting" C:oollng ....................................... S2t Condomlnluma .......................................... aots
.

::'."~"B:;;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::~ r.%"1*Ac~o~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::

10

Muo1D/Donce/Drame .................................... 33tl
Other h&lt;vlcoa............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrtcat .....................................300
Proteaaloul ServJcee __ ,____ .............. - ..........:..2
Rapolra ........................................................ 304
Rooflng.........................................................348
securlty ....................................................... MI
Tn/Accountlng .... -·-.. --··· ............................. 350
Travtoi/Entertalnment .................................352
Flnon&lt;&gt;lot
........&lt;.........................: ........,...........ooo_
Financial Services ................ .. -...................
tnauronco ................................................... 410
Money to Lend ...... ~................-....................415
EducatiOf'l ..................................... -••--........... 500
8U81nna a Trade School ... --.. ~................... 505

~me

.

...........................................................3035

Went to buy...............................................3040
RMI Eotate Rantota .....................,.............3500
....,.rtrnentaltownhou............................ 3505
Com.....,lol............:...................................3510
Condomlnluma................................... ., •• _.3515
HouUetorRont .................................... :... 3520

-to

Lanci(Ac~) ..... -...._...................~-·········3521
Btarop ...................:... - ..........................1535
llont .........:;·---.. ·---·····-•-···--··--34000540
Manufactvred ttou ... ng ............... _ ...._, ....·..

L...................................................... - ........ 0005
Moven----·--···"""'"'·······"""·········· ............ 4010

=

r:,.ntllla ....................................................... 4015

salee......... -...............................-...-... :........-4020
tnotructlon a. Trolnlng................................. sto suppltM .................................................... 4025

Leaaana .......................:................................: :

=~.~!~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::::::::::600

Animal SupP.II............................................ IOS

Ho,..a ........................................... -.............. &amp;10

Llveetoek ......,...... ,••• -............. --.•• ~ .. ----..........-615
Pet• ..··--··-··"-""'"'""' _____ .. _, _____..... ................. 620

•

' ·

=
·f0i-·g·.;::::::::::::::::::::::::so25
Ftooon Pl'oporty to• ,..,_........................ 5050
Employment........ .................. - ...................&amp;000
AccountlngiFIMnclll................................ eooz

Admlnlatnitl.,..rofeaalonal .....................eoo.

Wonttc buy .................................................. BZS CaohloriC!Mk ............................................. 6006
Agriculture .................................................... 700 ChlkUE.Idarty Cere ......................:............... IOOI
Form Equlpment .................., .....,, ..........,.....705 -C-......................................................eoto
o.roen a Produca..-... ._ ...............................710 con.t:ruc:t~on ......................... --········-··· .... &amp;012
·
Hoy, F-. Seod, Grain ............................... 711 Drt-a 0.11vory ....... - .........
- .............,. 10t 4
Hunting a Lind ..................................... -....• 720 Eduoallon ...................................................I01&amp;
18
Wont tondbuyl -....... --................. --··-·""":..........?25= ElectrlcoEm
....__!!!uT~ng.c~::······-· .... ·····--·······--··80
6020

!................................

Mercha
............ -....
Antlquea ...................................,, .. ,................

Applt.nce ...................................... --.-.......... 910
Aucttono .............. ,.............................,.......... ~
Barg1ln Baaement.·-· ··-································ 112•
CollecllbiH ........................... _., ................... "
Computere .............:................................... -. 830
Equlprn.nt/Suppllea ............-........ --.............. 135
Flea Marketa --.. ·--........... -.............................. 140
Fuel 011 Coa....WoocVGu ............................. l45

Fumlture .........,;;,:.::,:."""'"''"'"""'"''""'"""'-""'""''" ~.

. I

=

Want to Buy .............................:.........., .•..•.

Hobby/Hunt • ..,_11 ............. -.. --.. ----··-·-.. .... ---.
JUd'a COI'nM' .........., •• _, ___ _... ____ :......................IIO
Ml~aC~~IIaneoue ....................................... -....... 1815
Want to tNy ............., ...................-...... : ..... __ •• 970
Verd hie .............__ ,_ .._., ..........,.. ......-......... ,_, .. 175

................ .. _ ...........-...·-·..·---·..._.......
~

=
eoaa

Ent.rtalnrnent ........................................:...
Food Servtcea ............................................6024

~~...,::'~~IJOI&gt;e ...................
Lll PEonfo
1r ········-········-·--··-··-······ 6030
w n rcemen......................................
Maln..,..nCWDomnttc ............................. 603Z
~en~~ge.rnent./S.upervlaory _,. .. _.• _ ........
Mechanlca-....... -·--·--··............. --··----...........&amp;031

--···'*

MediC111 .............................................._.......1038

MPualncalll
.. &amp;.:;···.............................................
·
~
a • .,.._.,..,
___ ,............. -........... -

Ree!MII'IInta ••-... -....... ---·-----·------····-······· .. 1044
S.lea .........................·..................................eo41
Technical Tradea .............-.........-.............-.eo&amp;O
n.ldt~!let:Of\l' ....•...:.............-.................. ts052

1

1

Impound&amp;! ·
fro111 No Pe1s.
Hooda,O. 1
' "~"·
•M
m,.., lor li•tiop
""''•
·
satellite TV Incl. wltent,
800 -6 20-4876 u. y 435

V8

$2000

or 740·44&amp;-1271

kl1chen Items, deoore- 1999 F-150 4 door LB.
For sale CKC yoli&lt;le Jet Aerotkln Motoro . re- tiona, we~t bencll With 4X4 7.3 010&amp;'81. Auto,
Pu!Jpios,3malo,3fe- paired now &amp; rebuilt In weights. Can1 llet ev•'Y· /AJC, CO beautltul 1ruck
males, dew claws re·
stock.' Call Aon Evans. thing, come and find a only garage kept. 63.000
moved, tails docked,
1·800-537-9528.
deal!
m1 Blue/sliver $18,000
!!!"'-~~~~~ 080 ..740-441-7398
ready 10 go April 10th ' :81::ue::""::R:::id:::ge~Spo~H::o::'l";T~ub Thurs. April 2, a til 1, Rl
==304=:-6::7::5·::1::29::8::.
gray/eXt blue/In!. Excel· 7 2 mllot nortil ot Chts·
Worll To luy

=

::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
""

fctml EqulptMnl

ney a
Oep!Ref

obo

56 1652
_
.

ba$kels,
toyS,
Boyd's Call
conditioner,
Longaberger

1

-~~::":~~~:""'

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Notlcea ......................................................... 225
Per•onala .... -.--........ .... -...............................,230

$300, &amp; females
CALL304-675-6411 .
black
cmam, GOLDTRIGGEA

$3SO,

!.....-.-----'----' 740-256·1360

Announcementa .......................................... 200

3

.
Inc.
Need steady
history &amp; solkj ref.

P~e. wa1erltraeh.

500'

~Inn!~
Wl1lt 6
TV's,

room

males
colors

S
Newlyweds

,.

Toy

Legal•·-········--··· .. ·····-·········---···-················· .. 100

·•

CooK Motors 328 $375/dep.

2nd-4th, JackSOn

5pm,

Oh.

UEI -:

f~iendly. 645--2000

DeLong; S -

N lll4·360~l6l.
Yorker
Ave. (740)
1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
199t 5111
Chry•ler
ew '!'"~~':""'~~~
4t6·6292 or
(740) lumlshed and untur·
44t-5378 .
nlahed,.' and houses In
,
Pomeroy and Middleport,
Sllv '· Trucks, Coro full secun'Y deposit requl11!d,
al~ and com"'CIS, all no l)e1s. 74().992·221~
wtth warranty.
Prices ·~~~"'"!~~
stsrtlng at $1900. Stop or t BR Apt. $375/mo.

FIND
l'ett
side by side retrlgorolor 98m to
Whe11!: 741l-446-0103
work
new 2411
Cl rclo, yraFree to
home te- 7(whl1e) · like oao
erences. (740) 645-6378.
Bl
cuse,
Police
cars
------BARGAINS
ma
J
~ir':~O::::~:':::::=:'
Haalor, great wllh kids, H..L'-f
Hunt &amp; c...... combined 1Wo hou...
·
"
1
BR
WID hookups
_,
.,....,
hokle
and
now
hlv&amp;
too
Ford&gt;.&amp;
BuHdlng Maierlah
V
WANTED
much stu... 1emo nclose to hospllal Call
EVERY DA,I
. Huge Sovlngo
16 GA AUTOMATIC elude: walnut
Trudll
740-339·9492
S!eel arch buoldlngs. 3
IN THE •======;; lered,Poodles.shom,CKC regia·
SHOTGUN
PREFER
table
chairs, ~~~~~~lllil!l!: ~2~b~.~pt~R~O(f~~....
~~No
tails BROWNING
WITH matching hu!Ch, small '1996 Dakota Truck
r .
20x30, 25x
Club pigs for sale top AI docked, vet ched&lt;ed,
.
drop-teat loble,
air Automat~
l)e1s
required.
~~' miSSit~or~bal~a;nced~~g~~~~~~-S~Ir!e~s~in~to=un~1ry~:use:.
to~ CLASSIAEDS
Jan.
Fab.
256-1233 2
::709.:;:t,:;:6t;::7~~~-:'~
~~~~~~~~w!ln~s~elil
erbend
Pig!
(740)992-7007
~
bears, pu,..., Clothing,
2BR APtCiose to Hoi·
~egel!land6ch9CIIs1:17&lt;4B

Dam ell

740-445·7187

• can

HUGE YARD BALE

T _ L .....

=&gt;.:::-:"O:=w::"!
..,_~==
i BR apartment for rc!IPI m:u

driVe. downtown· Point PleasaRt.
All util. paid No pets cn!l

wt1HI

t,.,.~·

Evano Jackson, Oil
School
~(}!tf
•======= !;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;::~;c;200!1;;;b~~=t=nc;!
V
800-537-8528'
Wanted to do· Yard
0.111pollo C.reor
work, mowing,
COIItgt
Yard Sale
weed-eating, plumtv (Careefll Close To Home)
• Li¥-.lt
lng, palnUng, trash
Calt Toaayl 740-445-4:367 Fair pigs for oa1e Tnpla
Garage sate April 1-4,
hauling eny odd lobs
. t-800-214·0452
P !how-p'"S starting a1
Whites Hlll Rd., Rutland
gatltpollscareerooltege.edu
'loll
-'.--tr304 -882-82 16·
ACO&lt;QdhodMomborAo...,t$100.00304·675·t798.
"1'!"--.
~~~~~~-

must be picked

~

2003 Subaru Legacy
Wagon sharp 1 owner all

1\--t

PUMPING
OH and !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""'
'IN. Ron
lusineu &amp;Trode

Co

Land IAcNap)

hines

ul

TURNED DOWN ON . Publishing Company)
No F" Unless We Wlnl
Hl611·582·3345

·

"'"
low

1-886-278-ooo3 to leam

service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley

call

; ;304-611,.,!!2!1-264!!!151!.!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!

Beauliful ~ Harley David,

at

free

SDCIAI. SECURITY SSI

have
placed In ada at
the Gillllpoll'a
Dally Tribune

1raller. 740-446-1573

payments
of
· 1nsuranc&amp;. Call

the. ottlce oi Consumer
Affiars

matching $165.000 tor appt.

alSo

tras,

It "e mortgage broker or
. lender Is propony 1"
censed. (Th1s Is a publlc

~Pr~o~lllll~oriai~~Sot=-vl~c;":a·

LOunge OJ &amp; ..
Gentlamana

night . WOdnosday,
night Th••""''"'

Box

1.........

lawn Service

Notbs

PUBLISHING CO. rec- mowing mulching and
ommends tha1 'you do much more. Insured, fi'ee
business with people you t;JStlmatJs. 740-395-3389
know, and NOT to send
money tl"trough the mail
Olhtt hrtiels
until you have investigatPet
Cremations. ·Call

57 2
3 52

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
'

reject or cancel any

,

~

Courtney Shriver with two
apiece.
Kimber Davis. Brittyn
Saunders. Heather Ward,
Morgan Daniels. Mattie
Lanham and Kassie ·Day
rounded out the hit production with a safety apiece.
Noe. Ward, Daniels and
Brittyn Saunders all drove
in 'two runs each.
GALLIA ACADEMY 12,
Ward went the distance
fAIRLANDS
for GAHS in the ci&lt;cle,
allowing just seven hits Gallipolis 000 250 5 - 12 16 1
and two earned runs over Fairland 200 030 0 - 5 7 4
seven innings of work. GALLIA ACADEMY (2-0). Hoa1hor
and Mcittle Lanham.
Witt took the loss for the Ward
FAIRLAND (n/a): Witt. Bias (6) and
.Rucker.
hosts.
WP- Ward. LP- Wilt.
Rucker and. Burcham HA.
GA - 6. Saunders (fourth inning.
both paced Fairland with one on. two out)

Subscribe today.
992-21;55

Lilli &amp; Found

plti&gt;OI!IKI
of

!B

Angels

Ohio Valley
Publishing,...,.,.
. the right to edh,
Errors

SOUTHERN (1-1). Brooke Gabrilsch
;md Lynzee TuQier (5)
RIVER VALLEY (0·1) KatelyA Birchfield
and Knsta Halfhill
WP - Gabntsch: LP - Birchfield

two hits apiece, followed
by Simms. Bias and Ball
with one safety each.
Rucker had three RBis and
and Burcham added two.
GAHS committed just
one error in the contest.
compared to four by host
Fairland.
Gall ia Academy returns
to the diamond today when
it hosts Ironton in a
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League South Division
contest at 5 p.m.

AM AD

SUa.ufuiAd•

100

ad at any time.

SotmtEAN 15, RIVER VALlEY 0
1581
023

to WinE

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

today against the Lady
Marauders at 5 p.m.

Southern
165 ' 21
R1ver Valley 000 00

NOw you con hove borders and Qraphlcs
"-.ll
addedtovourdasslfledads
.{,;.m
Borders$3.00/perad
U! .
Graphics 5()( for small
S1.00 for larve

«

Delong and J.T. Evans.
Cates; LP -

NOW ONLINE .

Should InclUde Til-It~
To Help Get lleaponH ...

WELLSTON (H. 1·0 TVC Ohio):
Cales. Darnell (5) and Darnell.
MEIGS (0·1, Q.1 TVC OhiO): Bryan
WP -

AD

Websl!es"
www.mydallytfibune.com
www.mydailysenlnel.com
www.mydallyreglsler.com

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

WELLSTON 5, MEIGS 3
.
6 INNINGS
,
Wellston
Me1gs

d~!?;:!a~itame.com

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
•.PLUS YOUR

each led WHS with two
safeties apiece. Arthur,
Cales and Matteson also
added a hit each to the winning cause.
Meigs returns to action
Thursday when it travels to
McArthur for another TVC
Ohio matchup, this time
with Vinton County. First
pitch is scheduled for 5 p.m.
'

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 83

lanl condition with · cover
$400.
· 74~1·7396

or

zer Hoapltsl on SR 160
CIA. (740) 441·0t 94
Apartment avaHibla now
Rlverbend Apts.
New
Haven WV. Now acct~pt•

lng appllcallorts lor
HUD·subsldiZIJl,
one
Bedroom Ap1s. UtlKHes

lnclucltd. Based on 30%-

of adjusted lnGOme. Call

304·Ba2-3121,

080

avallablo

fol' Senior and Disabled

ridlrig

GOOd,

lawn

:=::""'=;;;;;;~=:;= mo"fl:lr. Ae~ for Jr. Phone
ElY,
INTEGRITY, 25&amp;-1102

KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY HORSE/LIVE·
Maytag
STOC
TRAILERS

nelu11!1

...!!!i!!

peOple.

;;,jii!!iii!!i~ii!!i

gss 70hp

. boat,

CONVENIENTLY

new m~r w/new

CATED

ulu

&amp;
·

LOAFfORD·

• stove, 4 yr1. · ~ld, black lOwer unit, .2 fish finders, Home for Sale by Owner· A.Bl£1 Townhouse apartLOAD
MAX
EQUIP· wfdlgltal oven controls, trolling motor, live wei!, 2 4338 SA t-41, 1 mile ments,
antJior
small
MENT
TRAILERS, asking
St50
abo, new
batteries,
great rrom
the New
High houses for rent. Call
CARGO eXPRESS &amp; (740)992-2476
, shape lor age ol bOat. School, Green Twp. 740·441·1111 lor appiiHOMESTEADER
" "
• ~Prlca
reduced
10
K

CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.

;~ ' -e 10

Worll To luv

B+W

...,

.,..

500·00

pass caupll $139,900. 'call ... t210
or

339-3834

,;u-

.o;,;~~

more ....

ClOOSENcCK FLATBED Absolute Top Dotlor · sll· ~~=
or Into arid pk:1ures QO 10
$3999. VIEW OUR EN- "1111rlgold
oolns,
any
1'111
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· 10K/14KI18K gold (Ow·
www.o .com
TORY AT
olry, don1al gold, pre 2005 Ranger Z-20. 2005
llouMI for Sale
1n""
us
currency "·- Motor 225 with
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
• =••UfY
TAAILERS.COM
proof/mini
se~.
dla- Mlnkota TroiUng mot~r. 3 Bad, 2 Bath! Only
monds, MTS Co•n Shop. deplll linditrs, hydraulic $29,900.
to&lt;
listings
740-4-*382 5
151 2nd ~venue, Galli-. }Eick
plats, S28000. 80()..62()..4946uR019
~~~~~"="'= polis. 446-2642
740-446-4868
oc
Have IOU prtcod a John
740-&amp;15-7491
3 bedroom 2 balh
Ycwd Sal.
Deere lately? You'll ba . .
$349/m011th.
Call

.
Twln Rivers Tower 1s ac-

surprised! Check out ou'r
.
sea Ray· 22' wt 7t40-446-3570
used
Inventory
at Yard Sale rail or shine cud(fy cabl11. 351 w/ 85'
wwwCAREQ.com.
Car- at the Church of ~ of overdrive &amp; randOm ale

.
-~~~'""':~:'!""'·

n

michael

40-44 _
7
6 2412

Equ•pmotit PropheCy. 360 While Rd. tralle&lt;
Galllpolls, OH

April 3rd 446.o51 s

~lance&amp;,

and 4th.

new

OBO.

u11:1

\it

terl!rash!cable.

Campan
__

~:.1-

cepilng OWiicaliOns tor
walllng list for HUO sublldiled: ,BR apariment
for ~- 1-rly/dl-ed,
ca11675·6679

1 BR Apt. $450/mo.
S450/dtp. Includes wa·

/!V• &amp;
1

:Sli::H:::L'""':Sa~les~-:5:-:Sa~rv~Q ~-· clo~,~i:::.~
Now Available at Canni· roya.
chael
Equipment

$700

2&amp;3BR and up, Central
Air, WID ,_up, tenant
pays eloc1ric. EHO Elm
VIew
Apts.
(304)882 3017

work

~

S1eady

Solkj refer·

oo Woodland Park Model

740-446-24t2
Annual
Wood/Ha~s. 40 Ft. 2 bdim 2 slide$ June 740-441·1202 Kim.
pleloly 1umished 2BR. all
.
,...
condition
appliances.
TV,stereo
11
1
.._ o......~ •--~ "--'- Hayoo relldo,..,, 5 taml· ••co on
· LeGrande 8ivd 3 BR
&amp; ~.......
11110
' ...,, ,,...... ~. ~ lies, SR 12-4, Ractne, $12000. 441.()0()0 afler 7
·
sys,
ns
..........-brick hoUH,
tlardwood
1St CU1ting ot timollly hay pas! O&amp;M P!ua on 1oft ~~~~~'"':::~ lloofll,
~rge LR,
eaHn kitchen ware $700/mo +
square bates near Leon !JOing toward Racine, l4J RV SelVa at Carmi- kitchen, F~ with -large
wv 61.579-1508.
on
hill.
kttchen chael .
Ttallefs c~·t.
2 full ba--.
Is'-·
....
~
u~
.... .

::-..........~~--~
5lt5 round ba1eo good
grass
hay 740-446-2412
At 5$3000each
0
,..
·
~~~~~:::-=.:
Netd someone to reiN
your beef or $iairy re·
rol&amp;t'Oo6mentheifel's?
.,.........
Ear field com for sale, al·
felfa haytao&amp; lor 9&amp;18,
c:om fad butchering beef

caii?4Q.gg2•7603 _

table~rs.

111rts

boy's

4t-6t,

7·12, 740-446-3825

women's

am·x!Q, ""n$ tg-xlg, Lit· RV
tie Tyt&lt;n kitcnen. roller SeMoe
Tr81lers

Cannlchtiel
at

.

coas1er &amp; car'S. boy's bi-

cv&lt;&gt;Mt.

digital

camere, 74G-446--l825

Kenmore
washer/d.-yer.
french doors, balhroom
cabinet, tons Of toys &amp;
hOusehold.
740-949-3250

740-949-8224

atun-6pm

M
IU

~

I

GtcMC) 211

dry rootn. natural gas, Landing, 3BR Avatlable
central air, city water, No. Pets. Ttnanl Resmall palio. niC8 yanl, sponslble tor Rant &amp;

one car

ru~oran~~, shiO~'~Ie

:so-D'-

"

roof 5 y!'i. old, 10X14
metal oot build1ng, 5 minut&amp;!i
from
rown.
.
740- 09- 858
5109 950
7 1

Ha"-y
oa...N;)Y,.
~- t200 -:--~--~~~
'"'

EtectriC ~-674-oo23 ·or
304.c179986

~~
-o~-~~~
· ~=:-.
Buutlfut Apta• .t JKk~'
son Estates. ~ Westwood Dr . rrom $365 to
$5(K).

74o-'.W6·2568.

Cll!tom 5900 miles, lots Newer nome built m Equal Houtlng Opportu·
or of extras $6000
firm 2006 on · 2.99 acres. nity. This lf'lititutlon 1s an
Fn·Sun, 304,-6?s-4454.
2BR, largl l.A, aiklng Equal Opportunity Pro-

s1s,oob ?40-446-7029

vider and Emptoyer.

�I

I

I

www.mydailysentinel.com .

The Daily Se!llinel • Page B5

'·

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip

Alder

North

R.LHOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck
•
semce

We do driveways
We Haul

Limestone- Gravel

Sunset
Homes

Hill's Self
Storage

Btyllll RetVII$
Custom Built

29625 Bashan Road

. honies, roors,

• 7s4

" QJ •

• 4
•QJt 0876

· Fia'ci011. OH 45n1

• Q6
•Kt08 53
t K J 9 8
.. 9 5 .
'

Due to lhe current
global economic

740-949-2217

erisis, the management at Monlico, inc.
· has been forced to

garages/pole
buildings,
· additions, drywall,

Dirt- Aa·Lime

· siding, etc. ·

Houn1

740.985-4422

740-742-3411

7:00am· 8:00pm

S&amp;L
Truckiqg
Dump Truck s.",.;u.,

BANKS

downsize our
lettering,inlilng anil
Writing Blalf. We
apologiZe tor any

Service Technician posi·
lion available tor diesel
and· hydraulics. E)/peri·
once
. necessary.
Health/Retirement
&amp;
Benefits. Fax rasume to
740·446·9104 or e-mail
ID

LLCIICAAEO.COM

WANTED
Apply Today!

HIIII-IMC-PAYU
bt. 2454

Automotive or small
engine tech., must

have paid exp. top pay
for the right person.
304·675-3600.

ADVERTISE OUR ITEM OR EVENT
IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
FOR GREAT RESULTS

alig nments. we · ~lso
do Duel's, light ·

mechanic work.,
"complete service oil .
changes. small engine
repair. .
We service and
· winterize boats and

We Haul Gravel,
Dirt, LbneStone,
Ceal Etc ....
can wan or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 740-591-3726
(Cell)

Commercial..•
Residential
• Free Eotimates
(740) 992-5009

Slterlll Sales
more or leas, to a rail· To!Yn&amp;hlp,
Malga
CaH Number 08CV096
Public Notice
road spike In the Inter· County, Ohio and baing ·
Ohio Valley Bank
Sheriff S.let
section of the existing more particularly do-'
Plaintiff
centerline of Stele tcrlbed aalollowa:
vo
CaH Number 08CY079 Route 124 and the ex· Commencing at the tnJemH R' &amp; Krlatln C. Bonollclal Ohio ..c.
lttlng eenterllna of llrsec:tlon of Ruther·
Ac,.llel
~!alntlff
Township Road 174 .ford Road (Twp. Rd.l1)
Diolendanlll
(Shotgun .
Hollow with tho centw of RaeCoUrt of .Common Velma L. Taylor Et al
Road); thence SOutlt 25 coon Creak, thence
PI-, Melga County, =~da';,1 .Common dogs. eaet along the along said Rutherford
Ohio
centerline of old Road, South 83 deIn piQ'tuance of an :;:,-:;,•· Meigtl County, Township Road 174 gr- 10 mlnutte 40
order of Hie to me dl· In purauanco 01 an (9holgun Hollow Road) toconda Waat, a dla·
rected from aald court order 01 aolit 10 mo dJ. 51 O.&amp;lleet to a railroad toncli of 54.41 feet,
In tho above enlltlacl
·
oplka, tlie true place of lhance North 66 deaction, I will expoH to racted from said court beginning lor the ea... greta 26 mlnuttl 04
salo at public auction In the above enllllad m0111 hereby conveyed· aaconda West a dlo·
~- 1
will axpoee
to thanca sou th 25 dage.' ~
' ~- ·
on t.~
ront atepa of action,
aala at Ipublic
auction
~nee of 33,11 ,..t,
the Melge County
·
Eaat 30 .feat; tbenco thence North 32 doCourt HouH on Friday, on th• front atepo of South 65 dago. Weot greoo 31 mlnuteo 11
April 25 2001 111 10 lha Melga County 360 teet· thence North -onda Weat a dlt•
on Friday,
•
.
•
a.m., oI 'oa ld day, tho Court
April Houae
24 2008 81 10 25 doge. Waot llioul lance of 84.38 fliet,
following dncrlbed a
of 'oetd da lh 0 3el feet; lhenco North thence North 5l do,.1_:
• .m.,
y,
74 «Mge. 59' WHiabout 8"" 37 mlnutoo 47
EXHIBIT A
following descrlbe(l 568 feel to the weat line toconda West a dla·
. .loelale·
.
'
.
SitUated In lha County EXHIBIT "A"
ol a tract of land con- lance ol182.88 teet to
of Melgo, In tho State of Sttuate In the Village of voyad to Raymond J. lho point of beginning;
Ohio, and In tho VIllage Po eroy
Mel
Fo.wler and Patsy R. lhtnce, leaving aeld
of Middleport:
. co:::.ty Ohio
go Fowler
by
dHd road South 33 degrees
Being all of Lot No. Situate' In Section 1 recorded. In Vol. 260, 08 mlnuteo15 tocondo
TW81ve (12) In the Otlg- ·rown 6, Renge 14 Rut' Page 565 of tho Do8d Weal, a dlalanca of
lnll Plat and Survey of
'
• Recorda of Malga 284.21 teet to an Iron
the VIllage ol Mlddl• land Townahlp, Melga County, Ohio, thence pin set at a tanc•llne;
pori, Mllgo County, County, Slate of Ohio, North 1 deg. 55' 57" thence North 10 deOhio, Hid Lot. No. and · being I)IOro fully Eut along lhe will greea 4S minutia 24
T!oelvo (12) -bolng on .dHcrlbed 11 followli line of eald.. Fowler .aeconda Weot, o dla·
thllEait e1c1e of Second ~ommenclng 81 1 point property 31
IHt; tence of 147.34 teet to
8tl'lll ...-n Walnut of~::::=~": -thence South 74 dog. an Iron pin. sal near a
and Coal Streell In
• 59" Eut about 588 ft. hickory tree; !hence
Hid VIllage, and lor a thence ..at ~long lhe to an Iron pin, thence South 87 dagrees 19
,_. cleftn"o rolenmce North line of •ld Sec- 25 clog. Eat 356.79 loll minute a 56 aecondo
·11 hereby mode to the l~c:,'! :~8 .!:~~.\'! to an Iron ·pin; and Eaat, a dlatanco of
Pial of lhe Survey of ooulh and paiallel· to thence . North &amp;5 clog. 307.83feet to a polntln
the eerno.
·
Eaat 330 loot to a rail· Rutherford Road, pass·
Being the eomt prop- ll::,,:~a~~~-= ~=~ rued oplka, the place of lng an Iron pin set at
arty convoyed to by
•
beginning.
·
212.64 feat; hence,
Ella Harry to Maude :~~~e~n ~~h." tal= Currant Owner: Velma .along said road, South.
Ryan by · dHd dated nort~ propony9 and L Taylor at al
51 degrees 37 minutes
.May . 31, 1935, and tho oxletlng centerline Property at: 37285. St. 44 HCOnda Eaat a dis·
I1ICOrdtd In book .138 of of Slate Route Number Rt. 1:M
.
lance of 275.88 lnl to
the Died Record&amp; of 124· Hid polnl 1110 litlddloport, OH .
the point ot beginning;
Meigs County, Ohio, at btl~g the ,.I point of WI 11-Gl1251100
aald daacrlbod lract
Poge 482.
.·
l'rlor deocl rollroncee: containing 2.81 acrn.
Being lho uma Raal :::O'i:,ntng loJ.th~= VolUme 2111, Page 793 Currant Owner: Nancy
Eotata convoyed to U~
" ·
· 10
: Appral.-cl at $10,000 Perry at al
·
5
74
llan LouiN Cowlo by th~nce ·
clog. 58 Torma of Sale: Cal)flqt Proporty at: 26505
UWII E. Burford by OOgrant~Jongpt....!!:,• be 101d for . JI&amp;ti lhan Rutherford Rd., Albany,
deod rocordacl In Do8d
.
..,...-, 213rdaottheopprallacl OH45710
Book 170 P-a 40 of line and the exlallng value · 10% dpwn on PPI OS -571 001
•
-B
cenlorllne of Stele
·
""' ·
the Melga County Do8d Route 124 132 00 feat day of Hie, caeh or Prior doed references:
Recorda.
•
·
. cartllled check, bat- Volume 57, Page 539
. Reference Deed: Vol· :::..,~;~t~d~!" 1 ~~:. ance due on contlrma· Appraised at 550,000
. ume 297, Page 219, 00 ,
·
...,.
lion oloele.
. · ,Terma of Sale: Cannot
Melga County Do8d
Waat along 1 line The appraisal did not be aold. lor 1e11 than
· Racorcla. AudHor'a Plr· ::"'
~r!~!~ Include an Interior tx· 2/'Jrda of the apprslaad
dlataftce of33000 feel omlnatlonolthehouH, value. 10% down on
eel No.15-01188.000
SubJect to all 1,_..1, 10 on Iron pin· ·thence Robert E.. Boogie, day of sale, cash or
NHmenta and rlghla- N 74 9g 59, 00• W 11 Molgs County SheriH certified check, bal·
of·way of record.
along attno 132.00 :_. Attorney tor the plain· ance due on conllrma·
PARCEL
NUMBER: to ari Iron Ptn· lhance 1111
·
tlon of eale.
· 1501188000
.
N 15 dag odJO" Ea'" Stephan D. Mllea
The &amp;ppraloal did not
. PROPERTY ADDRESS: along 1 11 ~ 1 and paso· 11 W. Monument Av·, Include an Interior ax·
244 North Second Av• In
. In i onua
amlnatlon
of the
1
· ~ Middleport, . OH ,&amp;,r;,nlootrofor ~ 10~ Dayton, Olr1454o2
hquae.
.
""'""
dlotenc:e of 33G oo loot 137-461·1800
Robart E. Beagle,
Curm~t Owner: J8mH to the point 01· begin- (3) 18,25 (4) 1
Molga County Sheriff
R. Ac;rol Jr. &amp; Krlatln C. nlng and containing
.· ·
Attorney lor lhe PlalnAc,_
·
tiH
1
Property Ill: 244 North ~:,. ~":.io granted
Public Notice
Lernar, Sampson &amp;
• Socond A... .
and conveyed he..With
Rolhluss
; Middleport, Ohio 457110 an eeeemenl lor the Sltorlff S.lea
t 20 E. Fourth St. Blh
. Prtor Do8d Rife-a: u
I 1
· c- Number 08cV033 Floor
· .Volume 297, Page 299
Wella Fargo Bank NA Cincinnati, OH 45202·
Appralled at $90,000
-·-.•
Plaintiff
4007
· Torma of Sale: Cannot and acroN tho follow- va
513-241·3100
.]3e aold lor leaa than lng dHcrl~ tract of Nancy Perry etal
(3) 25 (4) 1, 8
213rda of the apprallacl land, to-wH,
Delendanto
value. 10% down on Situated In tho County Court at Common - - - - - - . d of 1e
h
oiMolge, State of Ohio,
·
.
N • cu or ond Townehlp of Rut· Plaaa, Melge County,
Public Notice .
. IIY
c;ortlllacl chock, bal· land In Soctlon 1 Town Ohio
anc:e ctuo on confirm• 0 Ra
14 of th~ Ohio In , purauance of 1n Spring Cleanup ol
lion olule- com::::y•a PurcheH order of aale to mo dl· Olivo Townahlp Com•
Till lppntlNI did not and mora particularly from Hid court ttrloa will begin April
lncludo 1n Interior ox· daacrtbed N lollowa· In tho obovo antHiacl 10, -other permitting.
amlnldlon of 1M houM. Commonclng lor
lOtion, I will to Anyone having flow era
E. a-la. ., 1 pain) In thl Hie It public auction or decorattono lhey
Molge County Stwfl,· -•• 4 liolllar ., on thl lrOIII _ . 91 wloh lo Nve Ia oskad
Attornty lor the Pliiln- Hid hCtlon 1. tha(ICI tho Molga . COurlty lo rernclvelham prior 1a
1111
East along lh~ Nor:th Court HouH on Friday, April 10th.
Fran~ l Wooldridge line of Hid Soctlon 1 May 111. 2009 at 10 The Oliva Township
Co.
1808 feet,
1 ' a.m., of uld dly, the Tru stees are not re1100 Pol~ St.
following cleocrlbed oponalbla for flowers
10 1 po'?:.'
Colurnbua, Ohio 432011 South and ,.i.nel with real 11-:
or decorations lalt on
114-221·1182
the Waat line ol Hid The following real eo- Camatery loll.
(3) 18, 25, (4) 1
Section 1, 7112 feet, ~T~:,U~.~~~~: (4) 1
.

ll:

..

. Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

t8 Tint
t9 Baloney!
21 Rou~up
need

25 Vampire

29 Wedin a
hurry

(2 wda.)
40 Gull II. •

43 Cygnet
parent
44 Al'!'oya,

Perfume

bottle .

Volcano
In Sicily
Slop signal
Gullible

poraon

Dnad

~lover

Hlgheot· .
degM

.

sawBs tile Contract ·
·
You are South in thfee 1"10-trump. West
leads the hean five. What would be your
plan?
Even if you usually require at least 21
points to open two no-trump, your hand
Is easily wMh lhal miJCh, with a good
five-Gatd suit and 18 point&amp; in aces and
kings.
North should raise to· threp no-trump.
Only show a tong millor with a stronger
or much more dlstribulional hand, one
witf1 which game In the minor is Piobably
safe and a slam might.be avallabla.

THE BORN LOSER ,
'FR.oc,~ 1\RE-~1'1-\IBIOU~.~ P"WII.Be:.R.FO~, CAA'IOU ""' P'"PI\C.j.\ .(1,. ~(I,.LL

mi. /1\E. 'NAAIIAAi ~

· Fll:OC.~ '"-"' OO'f

I

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:

•

WI T\-H.I 11-\ER 1-\AAt&gt;7

You start with .five top tricki: two spades,
two hearts (given Irick one} and one diamond. Five more tricks can come from
dummy's clubs. Ekrt lllhe delandar wllh
the club ace holds h ~ ~ntil the second
or tnird round, ~ou will need a dummy
entry in another suit. What is tile only
semblance of an entry?
Right- the heart queen. And note what
happens if you call for .that card at trick
ona. You .hold the tnck, play a cl•b to
your king, and lead·af\01hef clUb. East
wins with llis ace and returns llis last
lleart. YOu can no long~r reach the

dummy.

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
c.iebr!IY CiPlfr cJ'(Illogram• are.·created hom QIIOIMtall t, tam®t people, pas! h:l J1'esent.
Eactl l~e.l' mlht dphtr 5landl; lor~
.
Today's clue: 0 oquo/5 Y

'' L :G H S X Z U Y H W Z K L W Z Y L N

'

' WBSCNB' MKCUZ 'UY

HN NHHTVUHHN

L K Z W Y A Z Z V 8 N H H. T H U K G H H S

Instead, win the first t~k with your heart

l

ace and drive out th.e club'ace. Perhaps
East will shift to the diamond seven. Win
with your ace (or tlness8) sod lecid ·a
lleart youmelt, forcing a way into the

dummy,

G

Now Selling:
.• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
. Parts • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions

Astro-

Graph

'1Jur'lllrtlldiiY:

KFZLU

K ' ~YK
r

VBOUHTT . KH

KFLSJY. "

. ' .I

·8TBS MHUZS i

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'lead, lollow, or gel out olihe way.' · Ted Tumer
'Give me the ready hand rather than the ready longue.' · G. Garibaldi •

,::~:~' ' S@\\4\\~-l&amp;r..trs·
•
!Ohod b-1 CLAY R. POILA
.
0 lOll;.
R4arr0no~ Tttten of t~.,
r.••mbled ... rdo eo-

·

low 10

· • Aftermarket

form fovr tiM.'!•

::::

v.erC:3.

Sheet

$310/person (quad occupancy)
$350/person (triple occupancy)
$420/person (double occupancy)
$640/person (single occupancy)
To make reselvations please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, l;xt. 1326

....!Jt!A,~
"Tilt

Cincinnati Reds Trip
Sunday, July 19, 2009

$85/person

David Lewis.

Includes transportation and
field box tickets
Playing Milwaukee Brewere
Accept cash, check and credit
.
cards
Leave PVH lower level parking
lot ate a.m.
LIMITED SPACE!
Families encouraged IQ,attend
Leave the driving to .usl
To make reservation! pl11a88
·
· cell,
PVH Community R..atlons

.

· 304.675.4340, Ext. 1492

740-99:1-6971
·

Insured

Free Estimates

ROBERT
BISSEU

Call: M!RCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chain Link fencing &amp; Wood
• Fencing • Room AdditiOnS • Garages
• Vinyl and Wo(\&lt;1 Sidin11• Roofin~;

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740·112·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

.

1:'1. '. ~lhli,

Rooling.-Siding. Guners

Service

The Diily. Se~t

Estlnultes, lOyn Exp.

740-441'9387

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows. ·
f:fectrlc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor .

740.367·0544
Free Eatlmlite1

740.367·0536

0

0
0

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
'Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rnres

.GRIZZWELLS

*Insured

~ WAI1T To RUMMAGE

*Experienced
References Available!

1\lFPU41-1 nlE

Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8644 .
Please leave messa e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodelina, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insund
wv~fl..lr)4'1l

Crllrl(l-t1f,f%O

i

'fHE. mADI'fiGt.lAl. fRIC,t(
WA&amp; 1'0 !'&gt;flCK A PAP£,R
fl~H Qt.l tlOII~Dil~'&amp; !!N:.K...

Gallipolis, OH 45631
tnsund,Fm

0

rere,.

i

ARLO&amp;JANIS

Johnson's Tree

Rick Johnson-Owner

Windows • Melli
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Eiectri&lt;al
•Plumbing
• Pole Bar~s

•.i' I'

Fossil - Vixen - Ideal ·- Import • PANTS'
Gramps to ncwlr.v.eds, "If there is no money•in the
prr.l&lt;:ets, it 'nc,n'l maner who wears the PANTS:';

FNie EstimaliS

740-653-9657

. Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
' (740) 742-2563
• Siding • VInyl

HPB!S.I' .I il'

:GUA~E~'

SCRAM.·LE'I S ANSWERS J/JI!(l9 .

Not affilated with Mik~ MarCum Rooting~ Remodeli~g

. Seamlesa GuHers

r..,.p~. te tile &lt;~••&lt;~I• ~voted
by fllliog ·;n ~- mium~ worC:S
)'cu dt~e!Cirl ftom lt(ltJ No J befcw'

I.

Cell: 740-416-1834

H&amp;H
Guttering

@)

ihat i

740-985-4141

: Vinyl Siding
·Replacement
Windows
•ROOfing.
• Decks
· .• Garages
• Pole Building•
• Room AdiltUons
Owner:
JamHKeesaall
742·2332

:..r-...,...:,....:s:

rJU!.\t;~N:J

{;7. iN !Ht5(

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

25+ eatsex rience

·

l

MilE W. IIRCUI, OWNER

CIIISTRUcniN
•New Homes

.thtu ····"

• Pole Bam~ • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Insured &amp; Bcnt!M

992·-

lrotrble wnh being

physically fit,'' the woman at
thoi!Ylll moaned, "i&gt; you will
•· wear YOUiliclf OUIII}ing In ---· •

J:'::!,

:.:!

Plumpsnd
juicy
2 Frequent
RoHBowl
participant 23 Go it alone 45
· 24 Sta-ehv
3 Bounce
4 Patient's
vegelable 46
26 Zen riddle
need
27 chiCk.man- 47
s --game
ehow ..
uocrlpls
48
6 'Tho! hurtol 28 Daacarlla'
7 Stead •
n81110
49
8 Latin I vertJ 30 lnfera
9 -Moines
32 Van61
I 0 lkllglt ID
Waalo Ioree
t1 Morovt.
36 Wanl-ad
12 Inhale
llltera
17 Codgers'
39 Wading
queries
bird
t9 Lyrical·
40 Knoc:k-20 Made of
laop
llee&lt;;e
41 Raid
21 Brown Of
42 They need
big bands
a PIN
22 Jal44 Llghllan
f

side

On Apnt F.ools' Day. tel's 'tool&lt; ala piece
Df declarer play th~ looks loolish bul

OH, DON'T GIT THAT LOOK--YA
,CAN STILL STAY
FER SUPPER !!

Owners;
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe '

tortlde

16 Sheltered

••port
Brarn-

It is not foolish
on the fools' day
,was cured.·

'n

May 28, 2009 to May 31 , 2009
OCEANFRONT ROOMS WitH
PRIVATE BALCONY

52 Good •
tmtlls
53 Ailringot
10 Harvntlool
poarlo
I 2 Malee block 54 Eaoy mark
. and blue
55 Grau-sldrt
13 Join
donee
14 Niche
15 Third-quar·
DOWN
SPuaheda
raft

Author and editor Edgar Watson Howe,
'who died in 1937, said, •A fool will not
on~ pay lor a ' "'" that &lt;1oes ~1m no
good, bUI will write a testilllOii~ that he

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildin!s
Building; RcmodeUng .
Gr:neral repair
www.banbcclb.oom

RV's.
(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am· 4:30 )&gt;Ill ' .
Sat. 8:00 am • 12
We appruiiiJe yopr

VIRGINIA BEACH
GETAWAY!

• Pool, tl_
tness center and FREE
breakfast each morning at
the hotel
• Deluxe charted coach
transportation
; Coach leaves and returns from
. PVH lower level parking lot
• Cash, check &amp; credit cards
accepted ·
·LIMITED seats available

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Room Addltlona
Remodeling
New Garages .
Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gut~er11l
VInyl Skiing &amp;
Painting
Patio and POrch

BLIC
NOTICES

os Iron ·

31 Ukaacobra
. 33 Military
Dealer: South
. • 34 L':~3 pol
Vulnerable: Bolh
35 Cloudleading
Sout'b
West Nortb East
compound
Pass
3
NT
All
pass
2NT
37 Sign up lor
38 Lei know

~. inc.

Pomeroy, Ohio

so F~ ·

1 Corrode,

.. K 2

1¥-~

co.

• 76 2
• .. A 43

tAQIO S3

in our product

CONSTRUCTION

• J 10 9 8 3

•n

Soutb ~
• A K ·2
lL' A 76

cosmetic changes

L&amp; L Tire Bam
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used T~s.
We buy used ti~s.
computer w~eel

-··

West

48 Give
comfort

llf!•l020!lfl

' /

Lt..\'\OF\\.\...
~111-1 M'i?

0

0
0

·0
0

0

�I

I

I

www.mydailysentinel.com .

The Daily Se!llinel • Page B5

'·

NEA Crouword Puzzle

BRIDGE

ACROSS

Phillip

Alder

North

R.LHOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck
•
semce

We do driveways
We Haul

Limestone- Gravel

Sunset
Homes

Hill's Self
Storage

Btyllll RetVII$
Custom Built

29625 Bashan Road

. honies, roors,

• 7s4

" QJ •

• 4
•QJt 0876

· Fia'ci011. OH 45n1

• Q6
•Kt08 53
t K J 9 8
.. 9 5 .
'

Due to lhe current
global economic

740-949-2217

erisis, the management at Monlico, inc.
· has been forced to

garages/pole
buildings,
· additions, drywall,

Dirt- Aa·Lime

· siding, etc. ·

Houn1

740.985-4422

740-742-3411

7:00am· 8:00pm

S&amp;L
Truckiqg
Dump Truck s.",.;u.,

BANKS

downsize our
lettering,inlilng anil
Writing Blalf. We
apologiZe tor any

Service Technician posi·
lion available tor diesel
and· hydraulics. E)/peri·
once
. necessary.
Health/Retirement
&amp;
Benefits. Fax rasume to
740·446·9104 or e-mail
ID

LLCIICAAEO.COM

WANTED
Apply Today!

HIIII-IMC-PAYU
bt. 2454

Automotive or small
engine tech., must

have paid exp. top pay
for the right person.
304·675-3600.

ADVERTISE OUR ITEM OR EVENT
IN THE BULLETIN BOARD
FOR GREAT RESULTS

alig nments. we · ~lso
do Duel's, light ·

mechanic work.,
"complete service oil .
changes. small engine
repair. .
We service and
· winterize boats and

We Haul Gravel,
Dirt, LbneStone,
Ceal Etc ....
can wan or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 740-591-3726
(Cell)

Commercial..•
Residential
• Free Eotimates
(740) 992-5009

Slterlll Sales
more or leas, to a rail· To!Yn&amp;hlp,
Malga
CaH Number 08CV096
Public Notice
road spike In the Inter· County, Ohio and baing ·
Ohio Valley Bank
Sheriff S.let
section of the existing more particularly do-'
Plaintiff
centerline of Stele tcrlbed aalollowa:
vo
CaH Number 08CY079 Route 124 and the ex· Commencing at the tnJemH R' &amp; Krlatln C. Bonollclal Ohio ..c.
lttlng eenterllna of llrsec:tlon of Ruther·
Ac,.llel
~!alntlff
Township Road 174 .ford Road (Twp. Rd.l1)
Diolendanlll
(Shotgun .
Hollow with tho centw of RaeCoUrt of .Common Velma L. Taylor Et al
Road); thence SOutlt 25 coon Creak, thence
PI-, Melga County, =~da';,1 .Common dogs. eaet along the along said Rutherford
Ohio
centerline of old Road, South 83 deIn piQ'tuance of an :;:,-:;,•· Meigtl County, Township Road 174 gr- 10 mlnutte 40
order of Hie to me dl· In purauanco 01 an (9holgun Hollow Road) toconda Waat, a dla·
rected from aald court order 01 aolit 10 mo dJ. 51 O.&amp;lleet to a railroad toncli of 54.41 feet,
In tho above enlltlacl
·
oplka, tlie true place of lhance North 66 deaction, I will expoH to racted from said court beginning lor the ea... greta 26 mlnuttl 04
salo at public auction In the above enllllad m0111 hereby conveyed· aaconda West a dlo·
~- 1
will axpoee
to thanca sou th 25 dage.' ~
' ~- ·
on t.~
ront atepa of action,
aala at Ipublic
auction
~nee of 33,11 ,..t,
the Melge County
·
Eaat 30 .feat; tbenco thence North 32 doCourt HouH on Friday, on th• front atepo of South 65 dago. Weot greoo 31 mlnuteo 11
April 25 2001 111 10 lha Melga County 360 teet· thence North -onda Weat a dlt•
on Friday,
•
.
•
a.m., oI 'oa ld day, tho Court
April Houae
24 2008 81 10 25 doge. Waot llioul lance of 84.38 fliet,
following dncrlbed a
of 'oetd da lh 0 3el feet; lhenco North thence North 5l do,.1_:
• .m.,
y,
74 «Mge. 59' WHiabout 8"" 37 mlnutoo 47
EXHIBIT A
following descrlbe(l 568 feel to the weat line toconda West a dla·
. .loelale·
.
'
.
SitUated In lha County EXHIBIT "A"
ol a tract of land con- lance ol182.88 teet to
of Melgo, In tho State of Sttuate In the Village of voyad to Raymond J. lho point of beginning;
Ohio, and In tho VIllage Po eroy
Mel
Fo.wler and Patsy R. lhtnce, leaving aeld
of Middleport:
. co:::.ty Ohio
go Fowler
by
dHd road South 33 degrees
Being all of Lot No. Situate' In Section 1 recorded. In Vol. 260, 08 mlnuteo15 tocondo
TW81ve (12) In the Otlg- ·rown 6, Renge 14 Rut' Page 565 of tho Do8d Weal, a dlalanca of
lnll Plat and Survey of
'
• Recorda of Malga 284.21 teet to an Iron
the VIllage ol Mlddl• land Townahlp, Melga County, Ohio, thence pin set at a tanc•llne;
pori, Mllgo County, County, Slate of Ohio, North 1 deg. 55' 57" thence North 10 deOhio, Hid Lot. No. and · being I)IOro fully Eut along lhe will greea 4S minutia 24
T!oelvo (12) -bolng on .dHcrlbed 11 followli line of eald.. Fowler .aeconda Weot, o dla·
thllEait e1c1e of Second ~ommenclng 81 1 point property 31
IHt; tence of 147.34 teet to
8tl'lll ...-n Walnut of~::::=~": -thence South 74 dog. an Iron pin. sal near a
and Coal Streell In
• 59" Eut about 588 ft. hickory tree; !hence
Hid VIllage, and lor a thence ..at ~long lhe to an Iron pin, thence South 87 dagrees 19
,_. cleftn"o rolenmce North line of •ld Sec- 25 clog. Eat 356.79 loll minute a 56 aecondo
·11 hereby mode to the l~c:,'! :~8 .!:~~.\'! to an Iron ·pin; and Eaat, a dlatanco of
Pial of lhe Survey of ooulh and paiallel· to thence . North &amp;5 clog. 307.83feet to a polntln
the eerno.
·
Eaat 330 loot to a rail· Rutherford Road, pass·
Being the eomt prop- ll::,,:~a~~~-= ~=~ rued oplka, the place of lng an Iron pin set at
arty convoyed to by
•
beginning.
·
212.64 feat; hence,
Ella Harry to Maude :~~~e~n ~~h." tal= Currant Owner: Velma .along said road, South.
Ryan by · dHd dated nort~ propony9 and L Taylor at al
51 degrees 37 minutes
.May . 31, 1935, and tho oxletlng centerline Property at: 37285. St. 44 HCOnda Eaat a dis·
I1ICOrdtd In book .138 of of Slate Route Number Rt. 1:M
.
lance of 275.88 lnl to
the Died Record&amp; of 124· Hid polnl 1110 litlddloport, OH .
the point ot beginning;
Meigs County, Ohio, at btl~g the ,.I point of WI 11-Gl1251100
aald daacrlbod lract
Poge 482.
.·
l'rlor deocl rollroncee: containing 2.81 acrn.
Being lho uma Raal :::O'i:,ntng loJ.th~= VolUme 2111, Page 793 Currant Owner: Nancy
Eotata convoyed to U~
" ·
· 10
: Appral.-cl at $10,000 Perry at al
·
5
74
llan LouiN Cowlo by th~nce ·
clog. 58 Torma of Sale: Cal)flqt Proporty at: 26505
UWII E. Burford by OOgrant~Jongpt....!!:,• be 101d for . JI&amp;ti lhan Rutherford Rd., Albany,
deod rocordacl In Do8d
.
..,...-, 213rdaottheopprallacl OH45710
Book 170 P-a 40 of line and the exlallng value · 10% dpwn on PPI OS -571 001
•
-B
cenlorllne of Stele
·
""' ·
the Melga County Do8d Route 124 132 00 feat day of Hie, caeh or Prior doed references:
Recorda.
•
·
. cartllled check, bat- Volume 57, Page 539
. Reference Deed: Vol· :::..,~;~t~d~!" 1 ~~:. ance due on contlrma· Appraised at 550,000
. ume 297, Page 219, 00 ,
·
...,.
lion oloele.
. · ,Terma of Sale: Cannot
Melga County Do8d
Waat along 1 line The appraisal did not be aold. lor 1e11 than
· Racorcla. AudHor'a Plr· ::"'
~r!~!~ Include an Interior tx· 2/'Jrda of the apprslaad
dlataftce of33000 feel omlnatlonolthehouH, value. 10% down on
eel No.15-01188.000
SubJect to all 1,_..1, 10 on Iron pin· ·thence Robert E.. Boogie, day of sale, cash or
NHmenta and rlghla- N 74 9g 59, 00• W 11 Molgs County SheriH certified check, bal·
of·way of record.
along attno 132.00 :_. Attorney tor the plain· ance due on conllrma·
PARCEL
NUMBER: to ari Iron Ptn· lhance 1111
·
tlon of eale.
· 1501188000
.
N 15 dag odJO" Ea'" Stephan D. Mllea
The &amp;ppraloal did not
. PROPERTY ADDRESS: along 1 11 ~ 1 and paso· 11 W. Monument Av·, Include an Interior ax·
244 North Second Av• In
. In i onua
amlnatlon
of the
1
· ~ Middleport, . OH ,&amp;,r;,nlootrofor ~ 10~ Dayton, Olr1454o2
hquae.
.
""'""
dlotenc:e of 33G oo loot 137-461·1800
Robart E. Beagle,
Curm~t Owner: J8mH to the point 01· begin- (3) 18,25 (4) 1
Molga County Sheriff
R. Ac;rol Jr. &amp; Krlatln C. nlng and containing
.· ·
Attorney lor lhe PlalnAc,_
·
tiH
1
Property Ill: 244 North ~:,. ~":.io granted
Public Notice
Lernar, Sampson &amp;
• Socond A... .
and conveyed he..With
Rolhluss
; Middleport, Ohio 457110 an eeeemenl lor the Sltorlff S.lea
t 20 E. Fourth St. Blh
. Prtor Do8d Rife-a: u
I 1
· c- Number 08cV033 Floor
· .Volume 297, Page 299
Wella Fargo Bank NA Cincinnati, OH 45202·
Appralled at $90,000
-·-.•
Plaintiff
4007
· Torma of Sale: Cannot and acroN tho follow- va
513-241·3100
.]3e aold lor leaa than lng dHcrl~ tract of Nancy Perry etal
(3) 25 (4) 1, 8
213rda of the apprallacl land, to-wH,
Delendanto
value. 10% down on Situated In tho County Court at Common - - - - - - . d of 1e
h
oiMolge, State of Ohio,
·
.
N • cu or ond Townehlp of Rut· Plaaa, Melge County,
Public Notice .
. IIY
c;ortlllacl chock, bal· land In Soctlon 1 Town Ohio
anc:e ctuo on confirm• 0 Ra
14 of th~ Ohio In , purauance of 1n Spring Cleanup ol
lion olule- com::::y•a PurcheH order of aale to mo dl· Olivo Townahlp Com•
Till lppntlNI did not and mora particularly from Hid court ttrloa will begin April
lncludo 1n Interior ox· daacrtbed N lollowa· In tho obovo antHiacl 10, -other permitting.
amlnldlon of 1M houM. Commonclng lor
lOtion, I will to Anyone having flow era
E. a-la. ., 1 pain) In thl Hie It public auction or decorattono lhey
Molge County Stwfl,· -•• 4 liolllar ., on thl lrOIII _ . 91 wloh lo Nve Ia oskad
Attornty lor the Pliiln- Hid hCtlon 1. tha(ICI tho Molga . COurlty lo rernclvelham prior 1a
1111
East along lh~ Nor:th Court HouH on Friday, April 10th.
Fran~ l Wooldridge line of Hid Soctlon 1 May 111. 2009 at 10 The Oliva Township
Co.
1808 feet,
1 ' a.m., of uld dly, the Tru stees are not re1100 Pol~ St.
following cleocrlbed oponalbla for flowers
10 1 po'?:.'
Colurnbua, Ohio 432011 South and ,.i.nel with real 11-:
or decorations lalt on
114-221·1182
the Waat line ol Hid The following real eo- Camatery loll.
(3) 18, 25, (4) 1
Section 1, 7112 feet, ~T~:,U~.~~~~: (4) 1
.

ll:

..

. Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019

t8 Tint
t9 Baloney!
21 Rou~up
need

25 Vampire

29 Wedin a
hurry

(2 wda.)
40 Gull II. •

43 Cygnet
parent
44 Al'!'oya,

Perfume

bottle .

Volcano
In Sicily
Slop signal
Gullible

poraon

Dnad

~lover

Hlgheot· .
degM

.

sawBs tile Contract ·
·
You are South in thfee 1"10-trump. West
leads the hean five. What would be your
plan?
Even if you usually require at least 21
points to open two no-trump, your hand
Is easily wMh lhal miJCh, with a good
five-Gatd suit and 18 point&amp; in aces and
kings.
North should raise to· threp no-trump.
Only show a tong millor with a stronger
or much more dlstribulional hand, one
witf1 which game In the minor is Piobably
safe and a slam might.be avallabla.

THE BORN LOSER ,
'FR.oc,~ 1\RE-~1'1-\IBIOU~.~ P"WII.Be:.R.FO~, CAA'IOU ""' P'"PI\C.j.\ .(1,. ~(I,.LL

mi. /1\E. 'NAAIIAAi ~

· Fll:OC.~ '"-"' OO'f

I

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:

•

WI T\-H.I 11-\ER 1-\AAt&gt;7

You start with .five top tricki: two spades,
two hearts (given Irick one} and one diamond. Five more tricks can come from
dummy's clubs. Ekrt lllhe delandar wllh
the club ace holds h ~ ~ntil the second
or tnird round, ~ou will need a dummy
entry in another suit. What is tile only
semblance of an entry?
Right- the heart queen. And note what
happens if you call for .that card at trick
ona. You .hold the tnck, play a cl•b to
your king, and lead·af\01hef clUb. East
wins with llis ace and returns llis last
lleart. YOu can no long~r reach the

dummy.

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos
c.iebr!IY CiPlfr cJ'(Illogram• are.·created hom QIIOIMtall t, tam®t people, pas! h:l J1'esent.
Eactl l~e.l' mlht dphtr 5landl; lor~
.
Today's clue: 0 oquo/5 Y

'' L :G H S X Z U Y H W Z K L W Z Y L N

'

' WBSCNB' MKCUZ 'UY

HN NHHTVUHHN

L K Z W Y A Z Z V 8 N H H. T H U K G H H S

Instead, win the first t~k with your heart

l

ace and drive out th.e club'ace. Perhaps
East will shift to the diamond seven. Win
with your ace (or tlness8) sod lecid ·a
lleart youmelt, forcing a way into the

dummy,

G

Now Selling:
.• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
. Parts • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions

Astro-

Graph

'1Jur'lllrtlldiiY:

KFZLU

K ' ~YK
r

VBOUHTT . KH

KFLSJY. "

. ' .I

·8TBS MHUZS i

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'lead, lollow, or gel out olihe way.' · Ted Tumer
'Give me the ready hand rather than the ready longue.' · G. Garibaldi •

,::~:~' ' S@\\4\\~-l&amp;r..trs·
•
!Ohod b-1 CLAY R. POILA
.
0 lOll;.
R4arr0no~ Tttten of t~.,
r.••mbled ... rdo eo-

·

low 10

· • Aftermarket

form fovr tiM.'!•

::::

v.erC:3.

Sheet

$310/person (quad occupancy)
$350/person (triple occupancy)
$420/person (double occupancy)
$640/person (single occupancy)
To make reselvations please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675-4340, l;xt. 1326

....!Jt!A,~
"Tilt

Cincinnati Reds Trip
Sunday, July 19, 2009

$85/person

David Lewis.

Includes transportation and
field box tickets
Playing Milwaukee Brewere
Accept cash, check and credit
.
cards
Leave PVH lower level parking
lot ate a.m.
LIMITED SPACE!
Families encouraged IQ,attend
Leave the driving to .usl
To make reservation! pl11a88
·
· cell,
PVH Community R..atlons

.

· 304.675.4340, Ext. 1492

740-99:1-6971
·

Insured

Free Estimates

ROBERT
BISSEU

Call: M!RCUM CONSTRUCTION
For: • Chain Link fencing &amp; Wood
• Fencing • Room AdditiOnS • Garages
• Vinyl and Wo(\&lt;1 Sidin11• Roofin~;

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740·112·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

.

1:'1. '. ~lhli,

Rooling.-Siding. Guners

Service

The Diily. Se~t

Estlnultes, lOyn Exp.

740-441'9387

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors. Windows. ·
f:fectrlc, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor .

740.367·0544
Free Eatlmlite1

740.367·0536

0

0
0

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
'Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rnres

.GRIZZWELLS

*Insured

~ WAI1T To RUMMAGE

*Experienced
References Available!

1\lFPU41-1 nlE

Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8644 .
Please leave messa e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodelina, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insund
wv~fl..lr)4'1l

Crllrl(l-t1f,f%O

i

'fHE. mADI'fiGt.lAl. fRIC,t(
WA&amp; 1'0 !'&gt;flCK A PAP£,R
fl~H Qt.l tlOII~Dil~'&amp; !!N:.K...

Gallipolis, OH 45631
tnsund,Fm

0

rere,.

i

ARLO&amp;JANIS

Johnson's Tree

Rick Johnson-Owner

Windows • Melli
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Eiectri&lt;al
•Plumbing
• Pole Bar~s

•.i' I'

Fossil - Vixen - Ideal ·- Import • PANTS'
Gramps to ncwlr.v.eds, "If there is no money•in the
prr.l&lt;:ets, it 'nc,n'l maner who wears the PANTS:';

FNie EstimaliS

740-653-9657

. Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
' (740) 742-2563
• Siding • VInyl

HPB!S.I' .I il'

:GUA~E~'

SCRAM.·LE'I S ANSWERS J/JI!(l9 .

Not affilated with Mik~ MarCum Rooting~ Remodeli~g

. Seamlesa GuHers

r..,.p~. te tile &lt;~••&lt;~I• ~voted
by fllliog ·;n ~- mium~ worC:S
)'cu dt~e!Cirl ftom lt(ltJ No J befcw'

I.

Cell: 740-416-1834

H&amp;H
Guttering

@)

ihat i

740-985-4141

: Vinyl Siding
·Replacement
Windows
•ROOfing.
• Decks
· .• Garages
• Pole Building•
• Room AdiltUons
Owner:
JamHKeesaall
742·2332

:..r-...,...:,....:s:

rJU!.\t;~N:J

{;7. iN !Ht5(

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

25+ eatsex rience

·

l

MilE W. IIRCUI, OWNER

CIIISTRUcniN
•New Homes

.thtu ····"

• Pole Bam~ • Patio's, Porches and Decks

Insured &amp; Bcnt!M

992·-

lrotrble wnh being

physically fit,'' the woman at
thoi!Ylll moaned, "i&gt; you will
•· wear YOUiliclf OUIII}ing In ---· •

J:'::!,

:.:!

Plumpsnd
juicy
2 Frequent
RoHBowl
participant 23 Go it alone 45
· 24 Sta-ehv
3 Bounce
4 Patient's
vegelable 46
26 Zen riddle
need
27 chiCk.man- 47
s --game
ehow ..
uocrlpls
48
6 'Tho! hurtol 28 Daacarlla'
7 Stead •
n81110
49
8 Latin I vertJ 30 lnfera
9 -Moines
32 Van61
I 0 lkllglt ID
Waalo Ioree
t1 Morovt.
36 Wanl-ad
12 Inhale
llltera
17 Codgers'
39 Wading
queries
bird
t9 Lyrical·
40 Knoc:k-20 Made of
laop
llee&lt;;e
41 Raid
21 Brown Of
42 They need
big bands
a PIN
22 Jal44 Llghllan
f

side

On Apnt F.ools' Day. tel's 'tool&lt; ala piece
Df declarer play th~ looks loolish bul

OH, DON'T GIT THAT LOOK--YA
,CAN STILL STAY
FER SUPPER !!

Owners;
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe '

tortlde

16 Sheltered

••port
Brarn-

It is not foolish
on the fools' day
,was cured.·

'n

May 28, 2009 to May 31 , 2009
OCEANFRONT ROOMS WitH
PRIVATE BALCONY

52 Good •
tmtlls
53 Ailringot
10 Harvntlool
poarlo
I 2 Malee block 54 Eaoy mark
. and blue
55 Grau-sldrt
13 Join
donee
14 Niche
15 Third-quar·
DOWN
SPuaheda
raft

Author and editor Edgar Watson Howe,
'who died in 1937, said, •A fool will not
on~ pay lor a ' "'" that &lt;1oes ~1m no
good, bUI will write a testilllOii~ that he

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildin!s
Building; RcmodeUng .
Gr:neral repair
www.banbcclb.oom

RV's.
(740) 992-5344
Mon-Fri
8:00am· 4:30 )&gt;Ill ' .
Sat. 8:00 am • 12
We appruiiiJe yopr

VIRGINIA BEACH
GETAWAY!

• Pool, tl_
tness center and FREE
breakfast each morning at
the hotel
• Deluxe charted coach
transportation
; Coach leaves and returns from
. PVH lower level parking lot
• Cash, check &amp; credit cards
accepted ·
·LIMITED seats available

•

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Room Addltlona
Remodeling
New Garages .
Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
Rooting &amp; Gut~er11l
VInyl Skiing &amp;
Painting
Patio and POrch

BLIC
NOTICES

os Iron ·

31 Ukaacobra
. 33 Military
Dealer: South
. • 34 L':~3 pol
Vulnerable: Bolh
35 Cloudleading
Sout'b
West Nortb East
compound
Pass
3
NT
All
pass
2NT
37 Sign up lor
38 Lei know

~. inc.

Pomeroy, Ohio

so F~ ·

1 Corrode,

.. K 2

1¥-~

co.

• 76 2
• .. A 43

tAQIO S3

in our product

CONSTRUCTION

• J 10 9 8 3

•n

Soutb ~
• A K ·2
lL' A 76

cosmetic changes

L&amp; L Tire Bam
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Points)
New &amp; Used T~s.
We buy used ti~s.
computer w~eel

-··

West

48 Give
comfort

llf!•l020!lfl

' /

Lt..\'\OF\\.\...
~111-1 M'i?

0

0
0

·0
0

0

�)

•

Page 86 • ·The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

hiie Falcons soar past B
Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
MASON
Jerry
Berkley fanned eight in a
route going performance
as the Wahama White
Falcons turned away highly
tt&gt;uted Buffalo hy a 5-2
~ore Tuesday e' eni ng on
· Jhe White Faltons home

tui-r.

· Berkley
limited tr.e
:Sison to just two runs on
five hits on the day whi le
walking one as . Coach
'{om Cullen'!. Bend Area
diamond nine improved to
12--:l on the young spring
baseball season . Garrett
l;Jnder\\'ood drove in a pair
run &gt; with a second
)iming texas league single
with Berkley, William
Zuspan and: iacob Roach
alS.o collecting RBl's for
the White Falcons.
:: Zuspan also came up
,with the fielding gem of
the afternoon · for WHS
when the ju nior 'infielder
took a potential game tying
~BI single away from
Garrett Burdette in the
Buffalo hal f of the fifth
il1fling .
, Like Berkley ~ Chris
Belcher had an impres·
sive out ing fol' Buffalo ·on
the mound with Belcher

or

:

. Wednellday, April1, 2009

.

'

'

Lady ~nights blank

10,:· 5-2

Bankruptcy for
autos might not be
easy or qui~k, A2 ·

Herbert Hoover, 4-0

Berkley singled and Jacob
Roach followed with a one
out walk. Matt Arnold
came on as a courtesy runner for Berkley and both
runners moved into scoring
position on a wild pitch.
Underwood then fought off
a pitch in on his hands and
blooped a single over the
drawn in infield to score
both runs to increase· the
Bend Are.a advantage . to 37
0· •
Berkley sailed thtough
the first three frames
. before Buffalo got on the
board
in the fourth.
Garrett Burdette led off the
Bison fourth inning with a
long triple into the all.ey in
left be lore scoring on a
Nathan Winterstein sacrifice fly to right to make it a
3• 1 conte.st.
8 uffalo tacked on anQth·
11 · h f'f h h
er ta Y 111 t e 1 1 . w en
'I'Ocker- and Belcher e&lt;1me
ur. with back-to-back sin-

of the 'fifth when Zuspan
and Bnce Clark walked
.
,
sandwiched arounc;l a base
Tessa Wyant 's RB!s. This
Bv ANNA JESSMER
hit ,by Anthony Bond.
MDSSPOOTSOMYDAILVSENTINtLCOM
padding Of the SCOre laSted
Zuspan scored on a field·
the Lady Knights· through·
ers' choice by Berkley with
CLENDENfN
..,.
Point
out
the rest of the game.
Bond later coming around
Pleasant'
s
girls
varsi~y
clinching
their win.
to score when Jacob Roach
The other contributors to
coaxed a bases loaded free softball team performed a
sister act this Tuesday as t_he Red and Black offen,triking_ out eig_ht ~nd giv·
pass to drive in a run.
Berkley fanned four of lhey went 4-0 against sive momentum were
ing up just four hits. Nine
sophomore
Morghan
free . pas,es . kept tlic
the final six 'batters he Herbert Hoover.
The two teams were tied Mllens and senior Jennifer
Buffalo right-hander in hot
faced to preserve the hard
fought White Falcon dia- at zero runs a piece going Whickline, each making
water throughout his five
inning stint on the hill but
mond victory, .
into the second inning contact with the ball and
for the most part he was
Underwood,
Zuspan , when s1sters Emily and adding to the number of
able to pitch his way out of
Bond and Berkley had the Anna Sommer stepped up hits for Point .
several jams. Belcher;als.o
lone safeties for Wahama to the- plate, bringing runs
Wyant pitched a tight
came up with a · couple of
while Burdette smacked a in for the Lady Knight s. game, .allowing only two
triple and Tucker, Belcher, The Sommer's girls were hits from Herbert Hoover.
spectacular defensive plays
to keep Wahama from
Winterstein and Rhodes responsible for the first
Those two hits that
had a single each for the two run~ score&lt;;! by t_he . Hoover slipped in came
adding to its run totaL .
n'son
.
Lady Kmg_hts w1th -Em1ly · from Paige Adkins and
The White Falcon_s wastu1
.
WHS
w1·11 be 1'dle unt 1'l h1ttmg
.
.
.
m
teammate Lexi Lawrence.
ed l111 1e time m .gettmg on
Thursday when the Bend Miranda Thompso n: and
the scoreboard with the
The Lady Knights are
.
Area
team
host·s
Charleston
Anna followmg, up With an looking to show another
Ben d Area team p latmg a
·ru11 1·n the. bottom half of
Catholic in a 5;30 pm start RBI, sendmg s1ster Em1Iy strong performance today
against Wahama at 4:30 ori
the
first. Garrett
with River Valley slate~ to hom e.
Underwood was hit by a
visit the White Falcon camPomt . Pleasant
and Wahama 's field.
g es. Tucker would later . pus for a 4:30 pm contest Herbert Hoover battled
'
pitch to get the Falcon rally score
on
a . Parkins
during
the
.
next
two
PotNT
PLEASANT
4,
started · before Zac Warth grounder to third to make it on Friday. .
innings each team with no
HERBERT HoovER 0
was issued a free pass. · 3-2 before Zuspan, robbed
1
WAHAMA 5, BUFFAL0 -2
avaiL
W 1'll'1am_ Zuspan th en I'me d Burdette of a game tying
•
Then , in the fifth inning Po•nt
020 020 o .:.. • too
a sharp single to right cen· hit after going behind the Buffalo 000 110 0 ·- 2 51
Point widened their lead Hoover ooo ooo o - o 2 t
ter
to
bring .home second base bag and throw- Wahama 120 020 x :- 54 2
Underwood with the games ing to first to narrowly get BUFPALO (nla): Belcher, Rhodes (6) ~gains! Hoover as sisters · PO!N'r PLEASANT(4-5): Tossa wyanl
Regan and Devin Cottrill and Dov_in Collrill.
and Bowles. Belcher (6}.
first run .
the streaking Burdette .
WAHAMA
(2·1)
:
Berkley
and
were hit home by team· HERBERT HOOVER tnla): Rachol
~ahama added a couple
Wahama upped its lead to
,
,
Mack and Lexl Lawrence.
Underwood.
3·0 in · the second as of insurance runs in its half WP - Berkley: LP - Belcher.
mates Emily Jones an_d WP - WyantLP - Mac~

'

·Massive chemo
dose targets
canceroUs
liver, A6
.
•·
'

•
·l'rintecl on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

'

MiddlepOrt .• Pomeroy,
Ohio
.

·,

-t)

- SPORTS
~

High school softball
aCtion. See Page Bt

By BRIAN J. REED '
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY . The
-Meigs County Grand Jury
returned a· tO.count indict·
ment against Charles S.
Williams
Wednesday,
charging him with a!lgravat·
ed murder, kidnappmg and
other crimes in the February
death of Doris Jackson of
Tuppers Pl~ins. .
· 1ames Lee tlarnes of

.Pomeroy was alsO indicti:il
ye~terday on counts relating
to the theft of 1ackson's car.
The ·grand jury convened
-resterday morning, and the
mdictments against the two
men were. filed yesterday·
afternoon. Both Williams
and Games are in jail.
Williams is in jail in
Greenwood, W.Va. on pro-r
bation violation charges and ·
Games in lieu of bond set in ·
Meigs co·unty Court on •

rt~iving

. stolen property attempting to commit kid·
and tampering with evidence napping, and he was either
ch~es filed l~t month in the principal offender in the
,t he .ackson case.
collliJ}ission of aggravated
The indictment against murde'r · or committed tbe
39.
of aggravated murder with
Williams,
Par\c:ei'sburg, W.Va ., con- prior
calculation · and
tains tbe following counts:
design; (2) That Williams
• Two counts of aggravat· · was committing, attempting
ed murder with three speci- to commit or fleein!l imme fications:'(!) That Williams diately after committing or
·was committing, attempting attempting to · commit
to commit or fleeing imme· aggravated robbery, and ~e
diately . after comm1tting or was either the principal ·

offender in the commission
of aggravated murder or
committed· the aggravated
murder wilh prior calcula·
tioo and design ; and (3)
That Williams was commit·
ting, attempting to commit
or fleeing immediately after
committing or attempti~ to
commit aggravated rob bery, and he was either the
principal offender in the

Please Me Indictments, A5 .

AMP plant
opponents
speak.out
on appeals
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Fl

INSIDE .

•

COLUMBUS - To many
· people in Meigs County; the
Natural Resources Defense
Council has become syn·
onymous with fighting . the
$3.25 billion American
Power
Municipal
Generating Station prO·
posed for Letart Falls .
With the latest unemploy.'
ment figures in Meigs
Cou\)ty reported;at 1~,2 per~ ,..
· cent, up three-tenlfis of a
percent . from January's
· · reading of 14:9 percent,
many .residents welcome the
jobs the .proposed AMf&gt;QS
. may bring, to the area anti
some are frustrated with
efforts to stop the project.
The NRDC, an environ·
m~ntal group with offiees
across the nation_, is leading
the legal fight for the appeal
of AMP-Ohio's final air permit-to-install and final
NaJional Pollutant Dischar$e
Elimination System penmt,
both approved final by tbe
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency. So why
is this group taking the
charge to tight the AMPGS?
.. NR DC believes that
there are far better options

National

A,.! Round

Semlftn••

•

Second Round

Art! Round

--

--~--

C.

Regonols

Mldllgwst __

S&amp;S Window TlnUnu

.J

• Performing Saturday. ·
:See Page A3 ·

Championship
Game
·

301 Viarzd St. Pt. Pleasant, WV

~

NewRACO .
· sCholarship established.
See Page A3

Detroit

Auto • Commercial • Residential

Aprils · .

• Bethel to celebrate
golden anniversary,
See Page·A3
. • -O'Bieness offers
_);EO/C~ training.
"SeeP
.
age. AS
. · · Local' Briefs.

(304) 675-7963 .
Mldllgan si:· ii'.. )... ···· ·
- - ---~-~-' MIChigan Sl 74
RooertMonls62
]' ..... ·

Window Tinting
Car Audio
&amp; Truck Accessories

{coonediwi
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--·---

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----~ Connodlool92

~

Chattanooga 47

CONNECTICUT

-

aBVU66

~i'exas A&amp;ii79 '

1

CARPET
992-7028

... · ---

lilo_wa56

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-~Wa~hlngton ~!I

1.

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:"Miiqliel'iB. . SI.
. U~h Sl 57

1

..... ·-·. . ·· 1

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Glendal~
Arl ..

WEST

'

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www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

NORTH CAROLINA

~---·-

Mom

North carolina
------·--···

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,

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'

Pt'y-Ln-gamo

... --·.

Dayton, Olllo
,.-·-······· ,, .........

:,

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A~llama Sl 43
:::':':":~ ,[ -

:~ ~o~ehead St sa

.

Cigarette
price hike·
no April
Fool's joke

.see Page AS

.-..-~~::~:: ::.: ::~: .... ~---------~--

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W EAmER

'GonzagaTi

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·.- · ·

Bv BRIAN J. REED

........

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BREED@MVDAILYSENTINELCOM

_

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·-- ~~8 ~;978-------t;s1aruoo~~· · · ' ··· ··· · ·

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... ,.

Oklanoma 84 ·

:. . .

Please see AMP, A5

----,' Ull•ols
" 72

Arizona Sl 67

Ot&lt;~poll'il

'

252 Upper River Rd
. Gallipolis. OH 45631

·

~-------·--

. .. .

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. California 71

n· ···;

. ··~--

•. {MISSOO~ 83

Memphis 91

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...Marytand84
,...._. ........... ,.......

800-446-.0842

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(._Marquono 7{)

Memphis 81
·,
..................... . - -. Mamphls99
'?!_1 ~.:.~'«10 70 ' . .

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l' Rildlord58

1..~_esl~m Ky. Bt
· Gonzaga 77
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Mlssotrl102

.. ----

.. ··· · ..... . ... -.l North carolina 101

, Nonn,caroJina 84

' North Qlrollna

Purdie 60

175 North 2nd Ave. • Middleport, OH

MICHIGAN ST.

· ......, Purduo 76

.

.....

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0Uke86

fiiki~a_mton _ 63.._...._

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Detatto 011 Page A5

·Pomeroy _·. Lib{ary events include egg hunt, 'Wizard of Oz'

~
't

AP

.INDEX
"

.

" II SEC,J10fl!!i -

.

'

111 PAG&amp;&lt;I

A)thf~·s
Mailbox
.
... ~ ~~ ..

'

"'

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~~endyf

...

qassifieds
•
Comics
f;4itorials
"

~ports

Weather

i

A3
A3
83-4

Bs
A4
B Section

As

@)1009 Ohio Valley Publbhlnt! Co.

•

.

-Merchants
sponsonng
egg hunt
Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

HOEFUCHOMYDAILY~ENTINEL:COM

POMEROY ·_ The fifth
annual Easter egg hunt
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Assoeiation will
be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at
the Bob Roberts football
field.
The Easter Bunny .will be
there to greet the children and
will be available to pose for
pictures, according to Jenni
Dunham, chairman. Children
from everywhere are invited
to join in the traditi,onar hunt.

Pleese see Eg h11nt. AS

Bv Simi·SERGENT
eseAGENtOMVtWLVSENTINELCOM

·
POMEROY
What
could an Easter egg hunt
and Dorothy Gale possibly
have in. common? lf you
answered the Meigs County
District Public Libraty,
you're ri~ht.
·
Beginnmg at II a.m. on
Saturday at the Racine
Library, the MCDPL's
Annual Easter Egg Hunt
will be underway, complete
with candy, prizes and
refreshments as well as ·a
few eggs. Age groups for
the hunt will be one-four
years old, five-eight years
old, nine-12 years ·old. The
hunt is free.
At 6 p.m. on Tuesday,
characters from L. Frank
. Baum's "TheWizard ofOz"
wijl make an appearance at

the
Pomeroy
Library.
Children in attendance will
have scenes from the story
read and acted out to them
· before their eyes by actors
from the Meigs High
. School Drama Club. This
program is free · of charge
and open to all age groups.
The Meigs High Schooi
Drama Club production on
· 'the "Wizard of Oz" will .be
h~ld Apnl 17-18 at Me1gs
High School .
.
.
Board Game Ntght Will
be held 'from 4-7 p.m. on
A_pril 14. at the Easte_m
Library. Brmg your favonte
· board 8&lt;1Jl1f It:) play or shru:e.
The U~·dye program _w1ll
beheldat4_p.m.~nApnll6
at the Rac1~e L1brary. The
Library \"1)1 provtde all
matenals ex~ept for maten·
als to be lie-dyed . Items
must be white or v~ry light
~

in color. Examples of items
to bring include: T-Shirts,
socks, purses, baby clothes,
· dresses etc.
Family Movie Night will
beheldat6p.m .• Aprill7 at
the Pomeroy Library and
will include a showing of
the film "The Tale of
, Despereaux" which is rated
G. Refreshments will be
provided
Archaeologist Wes Clarke, ·
of Marietta, will present a
Native American Artifact
Identification Program at 6
p.m .• April 22 at the
Pomeroy Library. Attendees
are encouraged to bring in
items they have .found in the
area to be identified. Clarke
will also be giving a brief
lecture and question and
answer session regarding the
·
...... see Library, AS

POMEROY - An expensive habit became even
more costly Wednesd~y and
it was no April Fool's Day
prank.
..
An increase in the federal
tobacco tax by 91 cents a
pack went into effect yester·
day. The cost of a pack ~f .
brand-name · C1gme ttes 1s
now over $6 at most local
retail outlets. The price of
cigars, smokeless . tobacco
and other 'products also
increased.
The standard suggested
retail price for a c;\rton ·of
Phillip Morris branded cigarettes is now $63.06 in ·
Ohio. or $6.31 per pack.
Generic-branded cigarettes
are siill less expensive than
the name brands, but the
flat tax is the same for all
varieties.
Many
manufacturers
increased their prices prior
to the tax in~reas~ in an
attempt to make up for the
revenue they expect to lose
from smokers who quit,
rather than pay the higher

Please see TIX. AS

•

•

•

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