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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, ~Y 27, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

I

Asjudge,SotoEnayor
called baseball dispute
NEW YORK (AP) "The often leisurely game ingful agreement with the
Long before she was a of baseball is fi.lled with players' union.''
Elected commissioner in
Supreme Covrt nominee, many small moments which
Sonia Sotomayor was an catch a fan's breath," she !998 and still on the job.
umpire between baseball said. "There is, for example, Selig refused comment
players and team owners.
that wonderful second when Tuesday on Sotomayor,
Her decision as a U.S. you see an outfielder spokesman Rich Levin said.
District Court judge to issue backpedaling and jumping
Randy Levine, hired in
an injunction against own- up to the wall and time stops late 1995 as management's
ers on . March 31, 1995, for an instant as he jumps up negotiator, bargained under
ended a 7 112-month strike and you finally figure out Sotomayor's · injunction,
that had wiped out the whether it's a home run, a which was upheld by the
World Series for the first double or a single off the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
wall or an out.
Appeals , Levine reached a
time in 90 years .
"We thought it was well
"Unwillingly, I have been deal with Fehr in late 1996,
written, tightly reasoned," drafted onto the deck of this an li!Jreement the sides finalunion head Donald Fehr field with those of you ly s1gned in 1997. Players
recalled Tuesday, "She had . watching out there, waiting and owners successfully
done her homework, ran a · for one of those small negotiated new agreements
good courtroom. The experi· moments to happen. I per- without. work stoppages in
. ·
.
·
APphoto epee we .had there certainly sonally would have liked 2002 and 2006 .
''We're very proud that a
In this photo taken Saturday, May 23, Lancaster Recreation Little League pitcher Cr11ig would suggest that she more time to practice my
would
acquit
herself
well
swing."
·
.
woman
from the Bronx is
Souder. Jr.. from lancaster, Pa., waits on the mound during an injury timeout during their ·
anywhere."
In
announcing
her
nomibeing·
considered
for I the
game against Seattle Central L.ittle League in South Williamsport, Pa., during the 2009
When the National Labor nation to the Suprem.e Court, high.est court in the land.
Wttle League Urban Initiative Jamboree.
·Relations Board went to Presiden\ Obama said her The. · judge is a true
.four!_that March 27 ;seeking deCision showed ·~a swift- American success s ory,"
an tnjunctton forctng owners ness much apprectated by said Levine, now president
to restore free agenf bidding. baseball fans everywhere." of the New York Yankees.
"Some say that Judge "I think the judge's decisalary arbitration and the
anti-collusion provisions of Sotomayor saved baseball," sion enabled everybody to
. an expired collective bar- he said.
· take a deep breath and
gaining
agreement,
She had harsh words in good faith collective bar· .
Sotomayor's name came out her decision · for owners, gaining eventually led to
of
the wheel.
· who had put in place new an agreement that made
SOUTH WILUAMSPORT, congressional committee that comes up, they view it as a
She
held
a
telephone
conwork rules, then withdreW · some real reforms and has
Pa.. (AP) - Thirteen-year-old . he had not used illegal perfor- teaching opportunity.
terence
call
with
the
parties,
them
under pressure from led to 14 . years of labor
One such lesson came up
Nathan Gerard gripped his mance-enhancing
drugs.
Clinton
administration peace."
decided
witnesses
weren't
the
hands tightly as if he were · Clemens has denied that a for- when the dorm room converFive years ago, she had
clurching a · baseball bat and mtir personal trainer injected sation turned to Ramirez. the necessary and scheduled but failed to restore the proof
the
expired
conanother
major sports decioral
arguments.
After
listen.
visions
dreadlocked Dodgers star cur- .
mimicked the batting stance of him with steroids.
ing
to
lawyers
for
90
mintract.
.
sion.
Sy
tt)en elevated to 'the
hisfavorile player, New Ymk
Trudging up the hill to the rently serving a 50-game susutes,
she
took
15
minutes
to
"This
strike
has
placed
the
2nd
Circuit,
she wrote an
Yankees'
slugger
Alex cafeteria after a gaine at pension for using a banned
deliberate,
then
spent
45
entire
concept
of
collective
opinion
for
a
three-judge
Rodriguez.
Volunteer
Stadium, · drug.
minutes reading her deci- bargaining on trial," she panel putting on. h()ld a
· There's one chapter of A- Thompson said he was aware
" I th
ht M
sion,
making clear the bulk : said.
lower-court decision that
Rod's career that he would of Clemens' troubles after clean," 3~~on sai~nny was
of
it
had
been
prepared
.
"The
injury
to
the
basewould have allowed former
Gates inlerrupted and used
rather not copy.
revealing that he loved the
of
time.
ball
players
for
playing
Ohio
State star Maurice
ahead
The Little Leaguer from "Rocket."
the Ramirez case as a primer
"She came to the oral time lost because of the Clarett to be eligible for the
Detroit doesn't call his idol a
"But I still like Clemens," to encourage his players to
arguments
on the case with a unfair labor practices; for NFL draft.
cheater after Rodriguez admit· he said. "You know, everyone learn more about the dangers .
decision
at
hand and used the ·rights that they are not . She said it wasn't surpris·
ted earlier this year to using needs a second chance. He
the oral arguments basically able t9 effectively negoti; ing thai the NFL players'
of using banned substances.
steroids, but the diminutive messed up."
second baseman · said, "I feel
Later, on the other side of
"It's unfortunate," Gates to confront her own deci- ate, cannot be adequately union would agree to
(he) did a bad thing by taking the Little League grounds, said in a nurturing voice. You sian-making," said Gene compensated by monetary exclude players suoh as
drugs."
. Seattle Central league players ''want to know what it will do Orza, the union's chief oper- damages," she told the Clarett from draft.
"That's what unions .do
The
Major
Leagues' lounged on the floor and the for you as an individual , and ating officer. "She obviously standing-room only crowd
U.S.
District
Court
in
every
dliy '- protect people
found
the
parties'
arguments
at
steroids era has gotten the cots of their dorm room after even as a familY. how it can
'
in the union from those not
attention of baseball's next losing a morning game, look- destroy a family ... beyond the - did not require any change Manhattan.
in the conclusion she had · Players had said two days in the union," she said ,
generation.
ing like big leaguers taking a game of baseball ."
earlier they would end the
James A. Quinn of Weil,
Put in perspective, chatter clubhouse break before the
Little League last year part- reached."
near•
strike
if
she
ruled
in
their
Gotshal
&amp; Manges, which
Sotomayor
grew
up
about steroid sagas is far less nightcap of a doubleheader.
nered with the "I Won't Cheat
Yankee
Stadium
and
favor.
But
it
took
two
days
represented
the NFL Players
common in a Little League
Unsolicited, a couple of · Foundation," whicli was
dugout than arguing about players started poking fun at founded by two-time National described herself that day as after Sotomayor's decision Association, said. she had a
· · for owners to a.c cept the fast grasp. .
. . ·. ·. ·.
whether to get piZza or burg- Rodriguez.
League MVP Dale Murphy a baseball fan,
"You
can't
grow
up
in
the
union's
offer
to
return
to
"This
1s
somebody
tb.atis
ers after the game. But men"He . left our team · for with the goal of eliminating
Bronx
without
knowing
.
work,
and
the
season
began
an
intellectual
supersfilr.
A
tion A-Rod, Manny Ramirez money, now · he's using steroids and other banned peror Roger Clemens to some steroids," said 11-year-old formance-enhancing drugs about baseball, particularly April 26, with the schedules very bright woman:" he
Little Leaguers, and they've Harald Hyllseth, a second from sports. Little League from a family where thetr shorted from 162 games to said. "I suspect that from
what I've· seen from her in
baseman, referring to the start players in the World Series claim to fame is that every 144. ·
heard all about it.
member
of
it
has
a
different
Bud
Selig,
acting
baseball
the
2nd Circuit that she is
· At a Memorial Day week- of A-Rod's career with the wore "I Won't Cheat" patches.
and all ·leagues this season tea~ that they have rooted co.mmissioner at t~e time, able to take very complex
end tournament of Little Mariners.
'-"eague teams from urban
"Cheater, cheater. pumpkin- could voluntarily sign up for for, she satd, followmg . sa1d then her dectston was · problems and analyze
with a 'description that "disappointing and may rep- them. She's a good umpire.
areas held at the World Series eater," said 12-year-old Matt the pledge.
·
showed
a sure knowledge of resent a step backward m She calls balls and strike~
complex
in .
South Gordon,a first baseman.
The program, Keener said,
llie
game.
our·negotiations for a mean- well."
.
·
WiUiamsport, youngsters had
That's when coach Jeroli "will make an initial impresstrong opinions just like other "Bookie" Gates chimed in. sion on kids .... What tHey
baseball fans.
·
Gates, who starred in high need to do ls knoW they are
They are disappointed in school baseball growing up in doing something wrong.''
their heroes: They believe in Seattle, went on to play a couIt's a philosophy favored
. by
second chances.
pie seasons in .the minors.
: Jarrad Thompson, a chatty
His talkative players fell Sean Murphy, one of Nathan
coaches at the
I 2-year-old outfielder from silent when Gates told them he Gerard's
THINK
Detroit
· PAL
· the Houston South Central had unknowingly usee! a
league, called Clemens his banned substance while play- Northwest. While Murphy
favorite player - even though ing at Washington State. He hasn't had to talk specifically
the seven-time Cy Young win- said he stopped using the sulr about · big-league steroids
per hasn't pitched since 2007 stance after he learned it was issues with his
Little
with the Yankees.
banned.
Leaguers. he tries to offer
. "He retired didn't lie?"
"We can point the fmger at broader lessons that can be
'l,'hompson asked.
A-Rod. But he may not have applied to sports and beyond.
Clemens hasn't officially known," Gates said. "He may One key message: Role modClaaslfleda
retired. When he does, a 10- not have known that what he els won't always live up to .
year personal services contrdct was taking was a banned sulr expecintions. .
~ Place ·a. 11ewopapor ad
will take effect with the stance. But then again, he may
''You have to look· at those
Astros; Clemens pitched in know. We never know thefull who are (role models) and disfjouston from 2004-06.
details."
tinguish the good and the
Clemens .is under investiga·
Gates and other coaches bad,'' Murphy said. "When
tion. by a federal grand jury said they don't often talk you do things against the
tiying to determine whether about the steroids scandal with rules, it doesn't matter who
the pitcher lied when he told a their Little Leaguers. When it you are.''

Cavs' Wallace angered over
Van Gundy 'flop' remark
. ORLANDO. Fla. (AP) First, Shaquille O'Neal.
Now, Ben Wallace .
For the second time this
season. Orlando coach Stan
Van Gundy has accused
one of the NBA' s biggest.
baddest players of flop ·
ping.
.
On Monday, Van Gundy Gundy "come out here and
Said he was bothered by the do something about it" or
number of limes Wallace shut up, adding an expleand Cleveland Cavaliers ·tive
for
emphasis .
point guard Mo Williams "Whatever he says isn't
dropped to the floor in going to. change the way I
Game 3 of the Easr.ern play defense or the way we
Conference finals agamsl play defense . It is what it
the Magic . He said the pair · ts ."
"fell down more than a
Van Gundy made the
baby learning to walk."
same claims about O ' Neal
Wallace , a four-time in March . . saying he
defensive player of the flopped while guarding
year and one of the Magic
center
Dwight
league's most intimidating Howard. O ' Neal played for
players, took offense to Van Gundy in Miami for
parts of two seasons. ·
Van Gundy's remarks.
Speaking
at
a. Williams said he was
shootaround
Tuesday, .unaware of Van Gundy's
Wallace suggested that Van comments .

"That's what he said?"
Williams asked before
deciding not to escalate the
feud. "OK. I play basket- .
ball. I don't talk to coaches . That doesn ' t help us
win any basketball games."
Cleveland coach Mike
Brown also claimed he didn't hear Van Gundy 's reference of Wallace.
"Stan called Ben a flop perT' he said. ·· T~at's
greaL I guess I' II go tell

Ben."

·

Also Tuesday, .the league
rescinded the flagrant foul
called on . Magic guard
Johnson
for
Anthony
elbowing Williams . in the .
head on a drive in Sunday
night's game . Williams ,
who was called for a blocking foul on the play. needed
four ;tilches to close two
gashes around his left eye
for the blow both he and
teammate LeBron )ames
felt was intentional.

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Grand

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charges against Trader and

Trader. Public Defender . ·

· · · · Trinity tively, originally set ·by Tolley relate to the investi- Herman Carson of Athens

Wliitcr~.
. Stewart, also
POMEROY - An Athens know.n as
Tolley, and
County man and woma11 . Nicol Lafleur, 23, also of
and a Pomeroy couple made Athens County, on charges
their initial appearances in of murder, robbery and
Meigs County Common aggravated burglary.
·Pleas Court Wednesday on
.They appeared before
charges relating to this Judge Fred W. Crow lll yesmonth's mui:der of . an terday. Their bonds we~
continued at $500,000 cash
Albany ,man.

County Court Judge Steven

gation of the murder and not -will represent Tolley.
· Whitcraft and . Lafleur
Trader was released on a were first charged after they
$1.000 personal recog- allegedly used a debit card
nizance bond following yes- allegedly stol11n from the
terday's hearing and Tolley victim, Winfield Hardiman
remains in jail on a $50,000 of Darst Road, at several
·
cash bond.
Trenton Cleland was Albany-area . businesses.
appointed to represent PIHM - Arrllpied, AS.

L. Story. They remain in jail. . the crime itself.
Kristen Trader, 30, and
·calvin Tolley, also known
as Calvin Donahue, 34, of
Pomeroy, were indicted on
single .counts of obstructing
justice.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen
S.
Williams. said yesterday the

i:
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Deem to replace .· .
Arnott on councll.
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - This week Pomeroy
Village Council accepted the resignation .
of Councilman Shawn Amott and then.
approved Dave De~m as his replacetil,en~.
Deem, who'd wntten a letter to couilc1L
expressing an interest in Amott's seat was ·
at this week's council meeting · as was
Vickie Hanson who also eltpressed an ·
interest. Council also received a letter of
interest in the seat by Victor Young, lll
though he was not at the meeting. ·
·
Mayor John Musser suggested Deem
for the empty seat and the nominee was
approved with five -yes votes. There was
one abstaining vote from Mary McAngus
who cited knowing all · three candidates
·and wished not to vote. Arnott's resigna- .
tion is effective May 31 and his term .ends
on Dec. 31 , 20 II. At the last council meeting . Amott told council he wished to
resign his seat due to planning to sell .his
home and move out of the village limits . .
· Amott alsq ~xplamed that he felt upcorn· ·
.:
by the cquncil would htn'i.~
on the village after he move$ oilt~
its limits and believed citizens
deserved an accountable vote on council.
. Various council members and Musser
said they had recently been to Beech
Grove Cemetery to investigate the co!lditions and found them to be good. Musser
said there was a problem with some workers taking flowers off of graves which
they thought were old flowers but Musser
said "that won't happen again." Clerke
TreaSurer Kathy Hysell said the cemetery

OBITUARIFS .
Page AS
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• Lori Ann Miller

INSIDE ·
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.jour, tea planned.
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GALLIPOLIS - Some glimmers of hope that the johlesss
rate in southeastern Ohio will
drop were justified to a large
extent during April, with unemployment in Gallia and Meigs
counties posting a small decline.
County-by-county jobless data
. week b y the
was · reIe ased thrs
Ohio Department of Job and

POMEROY . - A Pomeroy man has
been arrested for allegedly breaking into a
residence on Condor Street Monday
night, according to Pomeroy Chief of :
Poliee Mark E. Proffitt.
Proffitt 511 id Phillip
Brooks, 46, ·
Pomeroy, allegedly broke into the residence of Pa.ul Anthony' at 314 Condor
Street while Anthony was away from the .
ho.use . Proffit~ said Brooks ·allegeclly
busted a window to gain entry into the
home, injuring himself, requiring rneil- ·
ical treatment and stitches. Despite Ute
injury, Proffitt said Brooks allegedly
stole several items, including medications. Proffitt said these items were later
recovered at another residence on
Condor Street.
· Proffitt • said the call came into his ·
department at ~j,round 7 p.m. Monday and
Brooks was arrested. just before 8 p.m.
Brooks was · charged · in ·Meigs County
COUrt on Tuesday with burglary, a felony
of the second degiee, and persistent disorderly conduct, according to Proffitt.
Proffitt said this latest crime is an ex.ample of why residents in Pomeroy should
secure their homes and vehicles as well as
. keep an eye on their neighbor's property.

o.

.Jobless rate dips in area for April

Bs

Obituaries
$ports

Arrest made in Condor
Street burglary

· Pol)leroy's parking lot and downtown streets were filled with motor·
cycles and .riders Sunday; lot the
·Meigs County Bikers Association's ·
24th aonual Memorial Day Run.
Nearly a 'thousand bikes were fiStimated .to have followed a set ro~e ·
from Pomeroy and through
. Middleport to local cemeteries
.before stopping at th,e AO!lks.Prings .
Fairgrounds lor a party. The B§soci"
· ation members honor their fallen
brothers and sisters with the annual r~n. the largest of the association's ·organized events.
Brenda Davlalphotoa

Family Services. The agency came close, Meigs was among
reported
last Friday that only ·four counties ~ith ~tnem­
statewide, joblessness rose to ployment. of 15 percent or hiAtter,
· more than 10 ~rcent.
the others being Jiuron (15.7),
Officials Satd Gallia Cbunty's Morgan and VanWert (each 15)
. rate dipped by three-tenths of a and Williams (16.3).
percent, from 9.5 percent · in
Joblessness alsO fell in Jackson
· March to 9.2 percent in Af:. ril. · Colinty to 11.4 percent, down twO'
Meigs County, which hit 5.4 tenths of a percent .o ver March's
percent in March. dipped seven- 116
La
b
tenths of a~l'cent to 14.7 percent
· percent; wrence ounty Y
tiorApn'l, DJFS repo
· rted.
four-tenths of a percent, from 7.9
While a number of counties

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

Law You Can Use

'Not guilty'
A plea for those who didn't
do it ... and thO$e who did
9:

.What does it mean to "enter a not guilty plea" in a
crunmal or traffic case?
A:. A plea is a person's formal response to a criminal or
trathc charge. A person charged with a criminal or traffic
·offense IS called the defendant. A defendant is typically
call~d ~pon to enter a P.lea. at arraignment. which is the person s ltrst appearance m court. The defendant can choose
. from _t he pleas ofguilty, not guilty, not guilty by reason of
. msani.ry. and no contest. Entering a plea refers to the
Judges act at formally notmg a defendant's plea. or ''entering" it. in the court's official file.

Q: If I know/I did it, is it lying to plead not guilty?
A: In the context of our legal system. it is not "dishonest"
· Io enter a not guilty plea even when you know you com: mitted an offense. By pleading_ not guilty, you are fonnally
denymg that you are guilty ol each and every element of
· the offense.charged against you. If you are charged with a
criminal offense and you are innocent.lhis is the plea' you
would enter. But you must also see your denial of the
charge through a not guilty plea in the broader context of
· the procedure.in criminal cas~s,.
By pleading not guilty, you are asking the prosecutor to
present evidente that establishes all the elements of the
charge against you beyond a reasonable doubt.
· If you are charged with a crime, you have the right to
. hold the government to its obligation offroving beyond a
·reasonable doubt that you committed crime. In other
words, you can honestly plead not guilty because , in the
- eyes of the law, you are considered to be innocent until the
government proves you guilty.
. Q: What if, as a defendant, I want to admit I was at.a
,crime location like the police say, but I don't want to
·admit to doing anything wrong?

A: You would plead not guilty. For most practical purposes. pleas are an "all or nothing" proposition. If you do
not want to admit wrongdoing, you should plead not guilty,
even if some of the fads the government alleges are true.
By entering any other plea, such as a "guilty" or "no contest" plea, you would, in effect, be admitting all of the facts
the prosecutor would otherwise have to.prove beyond a reasonable doubt.

Community.Calendar
RACINE - Last month
was Alcohol Awareness
. Month and in recognition of
this event. the Meigs County
Mobilization for Change on
Alcohol (MCMCA), a part
of the Grant to Reduce
Alcohol Abuse (GRAA)
held several contests at
Meigs, Southern, and
Eastern Local schools. A
winner was selected from
each school district in Meigs
County for each contest.
Students in grades K -two
participated in a coloring
contest, with the· slogan
"Heroes Don't_ Use Drugs
and Alcohol." A poster contest w'ith the slogan "If you
· choose booze, you lose" was
held for students in grades
three-five, and students jn
grades six-eight were challenged to write their own
alcohol awareness public
service announcement.
TI1e coloring contest winners were,
Tia . Arix
(Eastern), Sean Myers
,(Southern) and Breanna
Zirkle (Meigs). The poster
Contest winners were , Abby
Eads (Meigs), Kourtney
Lawrence (Eastern), and
Elizabeth .Wolfe (Southern).
The
public service
·announcement winners were

Contest winn~rs
pictured in the
front row (from
left) Kourtney
Lawrence,
.
(Eastern). Sean
Myers
(Southern),
Breanna Zirkle
(Meigs) and Tia
Arix (Eastern);
back row (from
left) Cole Graham
(Southern),.and
Kayla Hawthorne.
(Eastern). Not ·
pictured are Abby
Eads (Meigs),
Mackenzie ·
Greene (Meigs)
and Elizabeth
Wolfe (Southern).

I

Public meetings ·

Cole Graham (Southern),
Kayla Hawthorne (Eastern),
and · Mackenzie Greene
(Meigs). Each winner was
presented wiih a certificate
of appreciation for their
good work and awarded a
$25 gift card to Walmart .
The teachers of each of the
winning students were also
awarded school supplies for
their help in making each
contest a success . .

Also last month, the Meigs
County
Community
Coalition met at University of
Rio Grande's. Meigs branch.
The topic of the evening was
"Parents Who Host, Lose the
Most" campaigri: Agent Rob
Anderson from . the Ohio
Department of Public Safery
was the main speaker. He
addressed the audience of
parents, . 'students, teachers
and communiiy members on

Clubs and

organizations

the legal consequ~nces of
providing alcohol to minors.
He also spoke about the consequences that adolescents
face if they are under the
influence or in possession of
alcohol. Also last month the
Meigs County Conunissioner
signed a proclamation in support . of , the Alcohol
Awareness Month and the.
"Parents Who Host Lose the
Mas~· campaign.

ThUrsday, May 28, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Wiser to simply back away

Friday, May 29
HARRISONVILLE .
Harrisonville #255 OES
Past Matrons, spring m.eeting, noon, Wild Horse Cafe.
POMEROY - Meigs
. County PERI Chapter #74
meets ·at I p.m. at Mulberry
Community Center. flev
Calvert, first vice chairman
of Ohio PERI will speak on
"Keepin~ Your Chapter
Focused.'
Monday, June 1
POMEROY · - Meigs
County Cancer. hiitlative,
·regul3f meeting, noon, conference room Meigs Comity
Health Departinent.
Thursday, June 4
CHE$TER
Sh~tde
River Lodge 453, special
meeting, 7 p.m. for the purpose of ·coitferring ~ntered
apprentice deg{CC on two
candidates. Refr¢shments, 6
p.m.

I value our friendship but asked to visit her grand- name instead of relationship.
am already with someone I mother. It was unclear if she
·Dear Annie: I read the
Jove and that isn't going to meant my mother or my letter from "Trying My
· .Dear Annie: I have two change. He doesn' t seem to fiance's. so we asked. I also _Best," whose boss comfriends l will call "Tom" understand and continues to asked if she meant her "third plain¢ about her "unptoand "Jack." All three of us say things like, "I don't care grandmother.'' my . · step- fessional hair," which i~
have be~n friends .since high what my wife thinks. I am mother. (She never figured growi'ng back after chemo
school. Tom and Jack were going to be. with- you no out which one she meant.)
treatments. I am So disgustlike brothers lol)g J?efore I matter what."
Later: my fiance asked .ed I can hardly speak. How
meltbem, but even though I
Annie, I don't know what where I came up with the insensitive can a person be?
wa&amp; a girl, they accepted me to do. I don't want Jack's idea that our daughter has · I w&lt;in&lt;l\lr how such a calinto their family.
·
wife to hate me, nor do I three grandmothers. He says !oils person was put ·in
After we graduated, we want the title of "home- since my stepmother is not charge of employees. She
stopped hanging out as wrecker." But I also don't my real mother, she also is should be tarred and feathmuch, but have made an want the friendship to end. I not our daughter's grand- ered. Then she ought to
effort to get together every know things cannot coolin- mother and should not he spend a day in a cancer ceonow and then over the ue like this. How c~.n I get referred to as . such. He ter. A big .bouquet of
years. Tom's job takes up · Jack to Understand without wanted to be sure I would.n 't stink.weeds to her. - l'e~
most of his time . Jack has a losing everything? - ·Only let our child refer to his · Dear Th:.;: Hundreps of
wife and son. I also have a . Sisterly Love Here
stepfather as "grandfather.~' readers wrote to say this
son and . a wotil)erful
Dear Sisterly: Not all They don't ·get along.
. boss could use a refresher
boyfriend. The problem ill friendships can survive
I was taught· that a step- ·c®rse in corili;lils'sion and
Jack's wife . She hates rru:, when one person has an parent is referred to as a . dece(lcy~ Yours was one of ·
which I've· never under- unrequited crush on the grandparent. Who is right? the few ~rintable ones.
stood
since we've barely other. Until now, Jack haS Can my stepsiblings be
Annie s Mailbox is writThursday, May 28
spoken.
But
Tom
says
she
is
kept
.
his
feelings
under
called
"aunt
and
.
uncle"?
ten
by Kathy MW;I)ell and
. POMEROY - . The
jealous because she thinks _wraps, but his cum:nt deter- · Can their children be Marcy Sugar:, longtime edi·
.Meigs Soil . ilnd · Water
Jack and I had "a thing" in ruination to' be with you "cousins"? - Reader in . ton of the Ann J.ilnden
Conservation District Board
·of Supervisors, 11:30 a.m.,
Sunday, May 31
high· school and beyond. makes the friendship unten- Pennsylvania
column. Plelise·e-ltlililyour
at .the · district office at
POMEROY - Builders This is absurd. · .
able. Call Jack and tell ·him
Dear Reader: It is perfect- questions . to (UIII;ieslfulil33101 Hjland Road. .
Quartet in c.oncert. 6:30
·Now I am not so sure you are sorry, but you have Iy OK to refer to stepparents boxtOifiCIISt_.nti, or write
· POMEROY
The p.m., Mt. UI!ioiL Baptist about Jack. After a recent :no interest in · bemg .with . .as grandparentS lll)o o.ther to: .Atinie'1 MrUIJ?o:r, P.O.
·Meigs . Co.unty · Ladies Church, 39091 Carpenter exchange · of e-mails, I him, and suggest he and his · step-relahons. as · aunts, Bu:r 1181·90 · Chktlgo, IL
.Republican' Party, 630 p.m. Hill Road. ·
believe he has feelings for wife get counseling. Then uncles, C9USins, etc . . But · 60611, . To ftiJ!I out . more
in the Meigs County
CHESTER
Hymn me and Tom confmns it. back away and do not when someone. disli."es a .about 'Annie's MaUbox,
Extension Office basement · sing, Chester Church of the Apparently, these feelings respond to any additional stepparent,itcangrate.Since and rttulfeiJIIires by other
are not new . .J care about romantic overtures.
this bothers your fiance, you Crtators Syiidicille ·writers
room. For more informa~ Nazarene.
tion call 696-1042 or 985·
MIDDLEPORT ..,.. Rita Tom and Jack very much.· I · Dear . Annie: My fiance . might give them specific and cartoonists; visit the
3587. .
Pauerson of Columbus, Jove tl;lem, but in a platonic and I have a 4-year-old titles (i.e., "Nonny Grace") . Creators Syndicate · W'tb
HARRISONVILLE speaker 5 p.m. at the New way. I tried to tell Jaclcthat daughter. Last week, she 311d always refet to them .bY page at www.crt(l/Qrs.com .
:senior Citizens will meet Ho~ Church meeting in ·
~at the church. Bloo&lt;f pres- . the old American Legion
s11res Will be taken fol-' hall
in
Middlepqrt.
'lowed by potluck Inn- Patterson to speak on het
· heon.
being held on the lawn of the
.c
. deliverance from drugs and . PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
• TUPPERS PLAINS the change in her life. Mary Parkersburg's Julia-Ann Square "Castle" at 1209 Ann Street.
VFW Post 9053 wm meet at and Harold ·Coo}j; are pas- Historic District will host a Victorian
Tickets are $15 which inchides the
·
·
'7 p.m. Thursday · at' the tors of the church. Public Garden Tour &amp; Tea on Saturday, tea. Tickets and maps are availa~le
ATHENS - O'Bleilen Memorial
' !uppers Plains hall. ·
invite\~.
·
·
June 29, 1 to 6 p.m. •
at several stations on Juliana Street Hospital in Athens will offer blood pres"
· This year's tour will · feature six and at the tea site. There will be sure SC:reening We(jnesday. 'J'he free· ·
. REEDSVILLE .
gardens in the Historic District. · si~:ns on the front lawns of each. blood pressure sc~ning wll) be open. to
,Riverview Garden Club, ·.·
.
Only
one of the gardens has been .· home. Tickets may be pu~hased in the public fro1119
up;tu,noon in .the
.7:30 · j).m., . Reedsville
.
featured before. The gardens vary advance by calling 304-481-4714 or hqspital's patient entrance lobby.
·.United Methodist Church.
· Sunday, May 31
Free colon-rectal C811Ce~. home screen.. POMEROY
Gold
RUTLAND
.· Jack from traditional to courtyard to 304-428-9588:
All proceeds will benefit theJ.11Iia- .ing.kits an4 information' ~311 be .obtained
.Wings &amp; Ribs Festival Shiflet will observe his 80th estate to "teacup." There will also·be
plant
sale.
The
gardens
are
all
in
Ann
Square · Historic District on a daily bas~ at the h'Qspital'fpatient
a
meeting, final committee. · birthday on May 31. Cards
walking
distance.
.
improvement
projects.
.
and visitor enttance information desks as
:assignments, 7 p.m., Meigs may be sent to him at 34951
Saturday, June 27,2009 will be the well as at the Castrop Center infotma,County
Chamber · of Likens Road, Rutland, Ohio · The Tea will ~held on the lawn at
112 I3th Street The plant sale is rain (washout) date.
tion desk.
· ·- ·.
4!)775·.
Commerce Office.
'
•
Friday, May 29
PORTLAND - Lebonan
Township Trustees, 6 p.m.
at the township building.
Wednesday, Jnne 3
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.;
Meigs County Health
.Pepartment.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Tewnship Trustees, regular
6:30 · p.m.,
meeting,
Pageville Town Hall .
· Friday, June S
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Commissioners
rescheduled weekly meeting, to a.m. . ·
. ·

Submitted pl\oto

PageA3

BvmEBEND

'

.The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

·. Church evellts

SUV observes Memorial Day, honors contest winners ..

. RACINE - Memorial
tunity to yiew and handle an
Day services were held at
1$60 Colt, 'and 1851 Navy
Star Mill Park in Racine by
Colt, Springfield rifles used
by the Union forces; and a
the Brooks Grant Camp of
the Sons of the Union
Confederate Calvary Saber.
Veterans and Major Daniel
Mourning also displayed an
McCook Circle of the
example of a Bowie kliife
and another knife referred
Ladies of the Grand Army
to as an "Arkansas toothQ: What happens after I enter a not guiliy plea?
of the Republic.
.
pick." Mr. Mourning conA: Typically. you would enter your plea at an arraignThe ceremony included
.
·
eluded
his. talk with a brief
. ment, which is your first appearance in court made shortly the announcement of the
discussion
of the Battle of
after your arrest or after you received your summons (like a . winners of the group's third
Gettysburg,
thought \&gt;y
traffic citation). After you've entered a not guilty plea, the annual Memorial Day essay
. many to be the turning point
case will be "set over." or scheduled, for further proceed- contest. Theme this yea,r was .
in the Civil War.
in~;s , such as a pretrial or a trial. Usually, at the arraignment, "l would · like to, say thank
After Hilton read "A
a JUdge or magistrate will set the terms for your release . · you to a veteran because ...."
Veteran
Died Today," the
Elizabeth Bearhs, of .
· between the arraignment and trial, but this is not related to
ceremony
concluded with an
the plea. A bond may be required. Just because a case is set Pomeroy, woli frrst place,
honor
guard,
provided by the
fo r a trial date, it does not mean that there has to be a trial. Timothy
. Elam
of
Sons of the Union Veterans.
Reedsville, won second
A picnic lunch provided by ·
and
Kate
Moore
of
place,
. .Q: What happens if I decide I want t/J change my not .
;. gmty
'[ pea.
l ?
the
Ladies followed .
Reedsville
won
third
place.
.
·
&lt;
.
Slibrrilltad
pl\olo
·
.
.
The
. Sons of the Union
: A: Generally, you may change your plea at any time The winners will receive Elizabeth Beams of Pomeroy, top winner in the suv
Veterans
and the Ladies .of
:· before a judge enters a final judgment m the case. This $100."75, and 50 US sav- Memorial Day essay contest, joins Jim Mourning, speaker,
et the observance held In Racine. ·
·
·
· the Grand Army of the
·.often happens when the prosecutor offers you a plea bar- . ings bonds, respectively.
Republic consist of mem: gain (through your attorney if you have one), in which the · Bearhs attended the cere- ·
;. prosecutQr agrees to reduce or dismiss charges or agrees to mony, along with her family. you' because you were provided a brief history of bers who trace their family
history to a Union veteran
·: recommend a pai'ticlilar sentence if you change your "hot She read her essay entitled brave, ignored your fear, and the Star Spangled Banner.
stayed
Joyal
to
your
country."
.
.
Jim
Mourning
of
the
Sons
of
the Civil War. The groups
"A
Veteran"
which
began,
:g uilty" plea to a !luilty plea. Jqst because you pled not··
Jean Hilton, representing of the Union Veterans served work to provide ·education
: ~uilty at your arraignment does not mean you are locked "Due to the cunning bravery
: mto having a trial. You (or your lawyer) can negotiate with of many valiant veterans, the Ladies of the Grand as guest speaker. ·He dis- about the Civil War and to
· the prosecutor for some sort of plea bargain or other agreed our country has the freedom, Army of the Republic, led cussed Civil War weaponry promote the continued cele: resolution (such as a diversion program) right up to the day rights, and liberty that we the ceremony, which includ- and· brought several exam- bration of Memorial Day.
Forinformarion on apply: of the trial. Often there are pre-trial conferences scheduled have today. Thanks to them, ed lighting a candle in · pies for the group to view.
remembrance
of
Union
These
included
several
ing
for membership. please
we have the independence
: by the court for just this.purpose,
that keeps us happy. 'It .is Veterans, the last one · hav- handguns, rifles an.d knives. contact Kila Frank at 740The group had an oppor- 667·3248.
.: Q: Can I plead not guilty in a civil case like an eviction time we found out more ing -died in 1956. She also
:· or small claims case? ·
.
·
abqut the great · men and
·: A: No. There were once different pleas
all kinds of women who laid down their
• areas of Jaw, but now pleas are only called for in criminal lives for us. Put yourself in
:cases. If you're a defendant in a civil suit, like an eviction the shoes of a soldier facing ·
·.or small claims case, your formal response to the complaint his enemies·. Feel the emotions of fear, bravery, and .
: filed against you is called an "answer," not a plea.
loyalty to your countty."
This "Law You Can Use" column was provided by the
'fhe winner quoted an old
Ohio Stale .Bar Association. It was prepared by attorney proverb saying that "courage
Robert A . .Heatley, a member of the OS.BA Criminal is not the absence of fear, but
Justice Committee. The column offers general informa- the strengt~ to overcome it."
tion about the law. Seek an attorney's advice before apply- Her essay concluded with the
ing this information to a legal problem.
words "I would say '.tha!lk

,&gt;

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PageA2

COMMUNI'l'Y

The Daily Sentinel

- --- _

.......... .

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Law You Can Use

'Not guilty'
A plea for those who didn't
do it ... and thO$e who did
9:

.What does it mean to "enter a not guilty plea" in a
crunmal or traffic case?
A:. A plea is a person's formal response to a criminal or
trathc charge. A person charged with a criminal or traffic
·offense IS called the defendant. A defendant is typically
call~d ~pon to enter a P.lea. at arraignment. which is the person s ltrst appearance m court. The defendant can choose
. from _t he pleas ofguilty, not guilty, not guilty by reason of
. msani.ry. and no contest. Entering a plea refers to the
Judges act at formally notmg a defendant's plea. or ''entering" it. in the court's official file.

Q: If I know/I did it, is it lying to plead not guilty?
A: In the context of our legal system. it is not "dishonest"
· Io enter a not guilty plea even when you know you com: mitted an offense. By pleading_ not guilty, you are fonnally
denymg that you are guilty ol each and every element of
· the offense.charged against you. If you are charged with a
criminal offense and you are innocent.lhis is the plea' you
would enter. But you must also see your denial of the
charge through a not guilty plea in the broader context of
· the procedure.in criminal cas~s,.
By pleading not guilty, you are asking the prosecutor to
present evidente that establishes all the elements of the
charge against you beyond a reasonable doubt.
· If you are charged with a crime, you have the right to
. hold the government to its obligation offroving beyond a
·reasonable doubt that you committed crime. In other
words, you can honestly plead not guilty because , in the
- eyes of the law, you are considered to be innocent until the
government proves you guilty.
. Q: What if, as a defendant, I want to admit I was at.a
,crime location like the police say, but I don't want to
·admit to doing anything wrong?

A: You would plead not guilty. For most practical purposes. pleas are an "all or nothing" proposition. If you do
not want to admit wrongdoing, you should plead not guilty,
even if some of the fads the government alleges are true.
By entering any other plea, such as a "guilty" or "no contest" plea, you would, in effect, be admitting all of the facts
the prosecutor would otherwise have to.prove beyond a reasonable doubt.

Community.Calendar
RACINE - Last month
was Alcohol Awareness
. Month and in recognition of
this event. the Meigs County
Mobilization for Change on
Alcohol (MCMCA), a part
of the Grant to Reduce
Alcohol Abuse (GRAA)
held several contests at
Meigs, Southern, and
Eastern Local schools. A
winner was selected from
each school district in Meigs
County for each contest.
Students in grades K -two
participated in a coloring
contest, with the· slogan
"Heroes Don't_ Use Drugs
and Alcohol." A poster contest w'ith the slogan "If you
· choose booze, you lose" was
held for students in grades
three-five, and students jn
grades six-eight were challenged to write their own
alcohol awareness public
service announcement.
TI1e coloring contest winners were,
Tia . Arix
(Eastern), Sean Myers
,(Southern) and Breanna
Zirkle (Meigs). The poster
Contest winners were , Abby
Eads (Meigs), Kourtney
Lawrence (Eastern), and
Elizabeth .Wolfe (Southern).
The
public service
·announcement winners were

Contest winn~rs
pictured in the
front row (from
left) Kourtney
Lawrence,
.
(Eastern). Sean
Myers
(Southern),
Breanna Zirkle
(Meigs) and Tia
Arix (Eastern);
back row (from
left) Cole Graham
(Southern),.and
Kayla Hawthorne.
(Eastern). Not ·
pictured are Abby
Eads (Meigs),
Mackenzie ·
Greene (Meigs)
and Elizabeth
Wolfe (Southern).

I

Public meetings ·

Cole Graham (Southern),
Kayla Hawthorne (Eastern),
and · Mackenzie Greene
(Meigs). Each winner was
presented wiih a certificate
of appreciation for their
good work and awarded a
$25 gift card to Walmart .
The teachers of each of the
winning students were also
awarded school supplies for
their help in making each
contest a success . .

Also last month, the Meigs
County
Community
Coalition met at University of
Rio Grande's. Meigs branch.
The topic of the evening was
"Parents Who Host, Lose the
Most" campaigri: Agent Rob
Anderson from . the Ohio
Department of Public Safery
was the main speaker. He
addressed the audience of
parents, . 'students, teachers
and communiiy members on

Clubs and

organizations

the legal consequ~nces of
providing alcohol to minors.
He also spoke about the consequences that adolescents
face if they are under the
influence or in possession of
alcohol. Also last month the
Meigs County Conunissioner
signed a proclamation in support . of , the Alcohol
Awareness Month and the.
"Parents Who Host Lose the
Mas~· campaign.

ThUrsday, May 28, 2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Wiser to simply back away

Friday, May 29
HARRISONVILLE .
Harrisonville #255 OES
Past Matrons, spring m.eeting, noon, Wild Horse Cafe.
POMEROY - Meigs
. County PERI Chapter #74
meets ·at I p.m. at Mulberry
Community Center. flev
Calvert, first vice chairman
of Ohio PERI will speak on
"Keepin~ Your Chapter
Focused.'
Monday, June 1
POMEROY · - Meigs
County Cancer. hiitlative,
·regul3f meeting, noon, conference room Meigs Comity
Health Departinent.
Thursday, June 4
CHE$TER
Sh~tde
River Lodge 453, special
meeting, 7 p.m. for the purpose of ·coitferring ~ntered
apprentice deg{CC on two
candidates. Refr¢shments, 6
p.m.

I value our friendship but asked to visit her grand- name instead of relationship.
am already with someone I mother. It was unclear if she
·Dear Annie: I read the
Jove and that isn't going to meant my mother or my letter from "Trying My
· .Dear Annie: I have two change. He doesn' t seem to fiance's. so we asked. I also _Best," whose boss comfriends l will call "Tom" understand and continues to asked if she meant her "third plain¢ about her "unptoand "Jack." All three of us say things like, "I don't care grandmother.'' my . · step- fessional hair," which i~
have be~n friends .since high what my wife thinks. I am mother. (She never figured growi'ng back after chemo
school. Tom and Jack were going to be. with- you no out which one she meant.)
treatments. I am So disgustlike brothers lol)g J?efore I matter what."
Later: my fiance asked .ed I can hardly speak. How
meltbem, but even though I
Annie, I don't know what where I came up with the insensitive can a person be?
wa&amp; a girl, they accepted me to do. I don't want Jack's idea that our daughter has · I w&lt;in&lt;l\lr how such a calinto their family.
·
wife to hate me, nor do I three grandmothers. He says !oils person was put ·in
After we graduated, we want the title of "home- since my stepmother is not charge of employees. She
stopped hanging out as wrecker." But I also don't my real mother, she also is should be tarred and feathmuch, but have made an want the friendship to end. I not our daughter's grand- ered. Then she ought to
effort to get together every know things cannot coolin- mother and should not he spend a day in a cancer ceonow and then over the ue like this. How c~.n I get referred to as . such. He ter. A big .bouquet of
years. Tom's job takes up · Jack to Understand without wanted to be sure I would.n 't stink.weeds to her. - l'e~
most of his time . Jack has a losing everything? - ·Only let our child refer to his · Dear Th:.;: Hundreps of
wife and son. I also have a . Sisterly Love Here
stepfather as "grandfather.~' readers wrote to say this
son and . a wotil)erful
Dear Sisterly: Not all They don't ·get along.
. boss could use a refresher
boyfriend. The problem ill friendships can survive
I was taught· that a step- ·c®rse in corili;lils'sion and
Jack's wife . She hates rru:, when one person has an parent is referred to as a . dece(lcy~ Yours was one of ·
which I've· never under- unrequited crush on the grandparent. Who is right? the few ~rintable ones.
stood
since we've barely other. Until now, Jack haS Can my stepsiblings be
Annie s Mailbox is writThursday, May 28
spoken.
But
Tom
says
she
is
kept
.
his
feelings
under
called
"aunt
and
.
uncle"?
ten
by Kathy MW;I)ell and
. POMEROY - . The
jealous because she thinks _wraps, but his cum:nt deter- · Can their children be Marcy Sugar:, longtime edi·
.Meigs Soil . ilnd · Water
Jack and I had "a thing" in ruination to' be with you "cousins"? - Reader in . ton of the Ann J.ilnden
Conservation District Board
·of Supervisors, 11:30 a.m.,
Sunday, May 31
high· school and beyond. makes the friendship unten- Pennsylvania
column. Plelise·e-ltlililyour
at .the · district office at
POMEROY - Builders This is absurd. · .
able. Call Jack and tell ·him
Dear Reader: It is perfect- questions . to (UIII;ieslfulil33101 Hjland Road. .
Quartet in c.oncert. 6:30
·Now I am not so sure you are sorry, but you have Iy OK to refer to stepparents boxtOifiCIISt_.nti, or write
· POMEROY
The p.m., Mt. UI!ioiL Baptist about Jack. After a recent :no interest in · bemg .with . .as grandparentS lll)o o.ther to: .Atinie'1 MrUIJ?o:r, P.O.
·Meigs . Co.unty · Ladies Church, 39091 Carpenter exchange · of e-mails, I him, and suggest he and his · step-relahons. as · aunts, Bu:r 1181·90 · Chktlgo, IL
.Republican' Party, 630 p.m. Hill Road. ·
believe he has feelings for wife get counseling. Then uncles, C9USins, etc . . But · 60611, . To ftiJ!I out . more
in the Meigs County
CHESTER
Hymn me and Tom confmns it. back away and do not when someone. disli."es a .about 'Annie's MaUbox,
Extension Office basement · sing, Chester Church of the Apparently, these feelings respond to any additional stepparent,itcangrate.Since and rttulfeiJIIires by other
are not new . .J care about romantic overtures.
this bothers your fiance, you Crtators Syiidicille ·writers
room. For more informa~ Nazarene.
tion call 696-1042 or 985·
MIDDLEPORT ..,.. Rita Tom and Jack very much.· I · Dear . Annie: My fiance . might give them specific and cartoonists; visit the
3587. .
Pauerson of Columbus, Jove tl;lem, but in a platonic and I have a 4-year-old titles (i.e., "Nonny Grace") . Creators Syndicate · W'tb
HARRISONVILLE speaker 5 p.m. at the New way. I tried to tell Jaclcthat daughter. Last week, she 311d always refet to them .bY page at www.crt(l/Qrs.com .
:senior Citizens will meet Ho~ Church meeting in ·
~at the church. Bloo&lt;f pres- . the old American Legion
s11res Will be taken fol-' hall
in
Middlepqrt.
'lowed by potluck Inn- Patterson to speak on het
· heon.
being held on the lawn of the
.c
. deliverance from drugs and . PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
• TUPPERS PLAINS the change in her life. Mary Parkersburg's Julia-Ann Square "Castle" at 1209 Ann Street.
VFW Post 9053 wm meet at and Harold ·Coo}j; are pas- Historic District will host a Victorian
Tickets are $15 which inchides the
·
·
'7 p.m. Thursday · at' the tors of the church. Public Garden Tour &amp; Tea on Saturday, tea. Tickets and maps are availa~le
ATHENS - O'Bleilen Memorial
' !uppers Plains hall. ·
invite\~.
·
·
June 29, 1 to 6 p.m. •
at several stations on Juliana Street Hospital in Athens will offer blood pres"
· This year's tour will · feature six and at the tea site. There will be sure SC:reening We(jnesday. 'J'he free· ·
. REEDSVILLE .
gardens in the Historic District. · si~:ns on the front lawns of each. blood pressure sc~ning wll) be open. to
,Riverview Garden Club, ·.·
.
Only
one of the gardens has been .· home. Tickets may be pu~hased in the public fro1119
up;tu,noon in .the
.7:30 · j).m., . Reedsville
.
featured before. The gardens vary advance by calling 304-481-4714 or hqspital's patient entrance lobby.
·.United Methodist Church.
· Sunday, May 31
Free colon-rectal C811Ce~. home screen.. POMEROY
Gold
RUTLAND
.· Jack from traditional to courtyard to 304-428-9588:
All proceeds will benefit theJ.11Iia- .ing.kits an4 information' ~311 be .obtained
.Wings &amp; Ribs Festival Shiflet will observe his 80th estate to "teacup." There will also·be
plant
sale.
The
gardens
are
all
in
Ann
Square · Historic District on a daily bas~ at the h'Qspital'fpatient
a
meeting, final committee. · birthday on May 31. Cards
walking
distance.
.
improvement
projects.
.
and visitor enttance information desks as
:assignments, 7 p.m., Meigs may be sent to him at 34951
Saturday, June 27,2009 will be the well as at the Castrop Center infotma,County
Chamber · of Likens Road, Rutland, Ohio · The Tea will ~held on the lawn at
112 I3th Street The plant sale is rain (washout) date.
tion desk.
· ·- ·.
4!)775·.
Commerce Office.
'
•
Friday, May 29
PORTLAND - Lebonan
Township Trustees, 6 p.m.
at the township building.
Wednesday, Jnne 3
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.;
Meigs County Health
.Pepartment.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Tewnship Trustees, regular
6:30 · p.m.,
meeting,
Pageville Town Hall .
· Friday, June S
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Commissioners
rescheduled weekly meeting, to a.m. . ·
. ·

Submitted pl\oto

PageA3

BvmEBEND

'

.The Daily Sentinel

BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

·. Church evellts

SUV observes Memorial Day, honors contest winners ..

. RACINE - Memorial
tunity to yiew and handle an
Day services were held at
1$60 Colt, 'and 1851 Navy
Star Mill Park in Racine by
Colt, Springfield rifles used
by the Union forces; and a
the Brooks Grant Camp of
the Sons of the Union
Confederate Calvary Saber.
Veterans and Major Daniel
Mourning also displayed an
McCook Circle of the
example of a Bowie kliife
and another knife referred
Ladies of the Grand Army
to as an "Arkansas toothQ: What happens after I enter a not guiliy plea?
of the Republic.
.
pick." Mr. Mourning conA: Typically. you would enter your plea at an arraignThe ceremony included
.
·
eluded
his. talk with a brief
. ment, which is your first appearance in court made shortly the announcement of the
discussion
of the Battle of
after your arrest or after you received your summons (like a . winners of the group's third
Gettysburg,
thought \&gt;y
traffic citation). After you've entered a not guilty plea, the annual Memorial Day essay
. many to be the turning point
case will be "set over." or scheduled, for further proceed- contest. Theme this yea,r was .
in the Civil War.
in~;s , such as a pretrial or a trial. Usually, at the arraignment, "l would · like to, say thank
After Hilton read "A
a JUdge or magistrate will set the terms for your release . · you to a veteran because ...."
Veteran
Died Today," the
Elizabeth Bearhs, of .
· between the arraignment and trial, but this is not related to
ceremony
concluded with an
the plea. A bond may be required. Just because a case is set Pomeroy, woli frrst place,
honor
guard,
provided by the
fo r a trial date, it does not mean that there has to be a trial. Timothy
. Elam
of
Sons of the Union Veterans.
Reedsville, won second
A picnic lunch provided by ·
and
Kate
Moore
of
place,
. .Q: What happens if I decide I want t/J change my not .
;. gmty
'[ pea.
l ?
the
Ladies followed .
Reedsville
won
third
place.
.
·
&lt;
.
Slibrrilltad
pl\olo
·
.
.
The
. Sons of the Union
: A: Generally, you may change your plea at any time The winners will receive Elizabeth Beams of Pomeroy, top winner in the suv
Veterans
and the Ladies .of
:· before a judge enters a final judgment m the case. This $100."75, and 50 US sav- Memorial Day essay contest, joins Jim Mourning, speaker,
et the observance held In Racine. ·
·
·
· the Grand Army of the
·.often happens when the prosecutor offers you a plea bar- . ings bonds, respectively.
Republic consist of mem: gain (through your attorney if you have one), in which the · Bearhs attended the cere- ·
;. prosecutQr agrees to reduce or dismiss charges or agrees to mony, along with her family. you' because you were provided a brief history of bers who trace their family
history to a Union veteran
·: recommend a pai'ticlilar sentence if you change your "hot She read her essay entitled brave, ignored your fear, and the Star Spangled Banner.
stayed
Joyal
to
your
country."
.
.
Jim
Mourning
of
the
Sons
of
the Civil War. The groups
"A
Veteran"
which
began,
:g uilty" plea to a !luilty plea. Jqst because you pled not··
Jean Hilton, representing of the Union Veterans served work to provide ·education
: ~uilty at your arraignment does not mean you are locked "Due to the cunning bravery
: mto having a trial. You (or your lawyer) can negotiate with of many valiant veterans, the Ladies of the Grand as guest speaker. ·He dis- about the Civil War and to
· the prosecutor for some sort of plea bargain or other agreed our country has the freedom, Army of the Republic, led cussed Civil War weaponry promote the continued cele: resolution (such as a diversion program) right up to the day rights, and liberty that we the ceremony, which includ- and· brought several exam- bration of Memorial Day.
Forinformarion on apply: of the trial. Often there are pre-trial conferences scheduled have today. Thanks to them, ed lighting a candle in · pies for the group to view.
remembrance
of
Union
These
included
several
ing
for membership. please
we have the independence
: by the court for just this.purpose,
that keeps us happy. 'It .is Veterans, the last one · hav- handguns, rifles an.d knives. contact Kila Frank at 740The group had an oppor- 667·3248.
.: Q: Can I plead not guilty in a civil case like an eviction time we found out more ing -died in 1956. She also
:· or small claims case? ·
.
·
abqut the great · men and
·: A: No. There were once different pleas
all kinds of women who laid down their
• areas of Jaw, but now pleas are only called for in criminal lives for us. Put yourself in
:cases. If you're a defendant in a civil suit, like an eviction the shoes of a soldier facing ·
·.or small claims case, your formal response to the complaint his enemies·. Feel the emotions of fear, bravery, and .
: filed against you is called an "answer," not a plea.
loyalty to your countty."
This "Law You Can Use" column was provided by the
'fhe winner quoted an old
Ohio Stale .Bar Association. It was prepared by attorney proverb saying that "courage
Robert A . .Heatley, a member of the OS.BA Criminal is not the absence of fear, but
Justice Committee. The column offers general informa- the strengt~ to overcome it."
tion about the law. Seek an attorney's advice before apply- Her essay concluded with the
ing this information to a legal problem.
words "I would say '.tha!lk

,&gt;

Birthdays ·

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740-·9 92-21 55
'

The· Daily Sentinel
111 Gourt Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
'

,·

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

' Thursday, May 28, 2009

Tfhen does ·someone apologize to our military?

Afghanistan has been
dubbed "Obama 's War" but
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
maybe it should be called "the
www.mydallysentlnel.com
war on civilian casualties."
You may have thought the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
United States was at war in
Afghanistan to "defeat" the
Taliban and win one for our
-Dan Goodrich
loyal ally in counter-jihad.
Publisher
the Afghan people. But even
that pipedream is beside the
Charlene Hoeflich
point. The latest concernGeneral Manager-News Editor
turned-obsession of the
· United StaJes is eliminating
as many as possible, if not
all. "civilian casualties." If
Con.l!ress shall make no law respecting an
we can only do that, according
to brain-trust, top-brass,
e~tablishment of religion, or prohibiting-the
fairy-tale thinking, we- will
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of surely win the hearts and
minds of the Afghan people.
~pt•edt, or of the press; or the right of the peoIf
can't, Afghan hearts
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the andweminds
will go to those
Gor,emment for a redress ofgrievam:es.
globally recognized humanitarians, the Taliban.
Indeed, there is something
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
wrong with this picture.
That is, if the Afghan people
were really with us , they
would be, well, really with
us - not constantly on or
past the brink of "alienation." But who wants to
admit this? It would necessarily mark the end of the
Bush and now Obama
.Islamic nation-building fantasy that began seven years
ago with the U.S . invasion
of Afghanistan in Operation
Infinite Justice. Come to
Dear Editor:
think
of it, we hurriedly
As Memorial Day approached, my family continued the
,
changed
that operation
l'amily tradition of placmg the flags on ·veterans' graves at
name also for - guess
.Chester Cemetery.
, I had not visited the cemetery since last Memorial Day, what? - fear of alienating
and l was astonished at 'how well kept and beautifully Muslims. Tacitly accepting
trimmed it was! Every headstone had been trimmed the Islamic position that
around, a new very niCe fence has been built, and there was only Allah · dispenses "infino trash lying around anywhere! It looks beautiful! There nite justice," the U.S. govwere so many flowers eveyywhere.
ernment launched Operation .
The old cannon · still stands · as the centerpiece of the Enduring Freedom and
·cemetery with the American flag flying beside it and with "won" its first battle against
many smaller flags on the cannon. As a child l remember, Muslim alienation. Chalk
"marching" from the Chester Commons with live flowers one up for dhimmitude.
Now, a new battle against
that were donated and left at the little building across from
the Commons, ·to the cemetery. After a ceremony at the
t:annon the children were asked to place their flowers on a
:Veterans grave, the ones with the American flags. Also, as
~ child I remember helping put the .flags on ·those graves
.With my Grandfather, Earnest Kmght, then my father,
'Howard Knight, and now with my brother, Chuck Knight.
Such great memories will continue to be made .and the
wndition and care of the cemetery will make them even
more wonderful. My family and .I would like to thank the
~hester Cemetery Commissioners for their great planning
-and hard work on keeping the cemetery "Picture Perfect."
: Janet Knight Pennell &amp;family
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Preserved
Praisefor cemetery ·upkeep

Diana
West

such alienation rages in
Afghanistan.
"Mullen:
Civilian Deaths Hurt US in
Afghanistan" reports the
· d . press ; "Us
Assoc1ate
. .
Envoy Vows to Help Cur
Afghan Civilian Deaths,"
reports · the New York
Times. The premise of these
stories is that it is our own
shortcomings·, our own failores
not inculcated
Islamic attitudes in the population at large - that ate
responsible for Afghan
resentment
over
our
nation's continued efforts to
defeat the Tali ban.
"We cannot succeed in
Afghanistan or anywhere
else, but Jet's talk specifically abou.t Afghanistan, by
killing Afghan civilians."
Joint Chiefs ChairmanAdm.
Mike Mullen said recently,
practically as if killing
Afghan civilians were U.S.
policy. He added: "We can't
keep ~oing through incidents hke this and expect the
strategy to work."
·
By "incidents like this,"
Mullen was referring to a
battle early this month in
Afghanistan's
Fara)l
province where, according
to Afghan government
claims, 140-plus ·civilians
were killed . duril)g a U.S.
aerial - bombardment. Even
as the U.S. military was still
investigating the incident,
U.S.
ambassador
to
Afghanistan Lt. Gen. Karl

W. Eikenbell)' hightailed it route by 200 to 300 w'iting
to an Afghan mosque with Taliban forces. Two policeAfghan president Hamid men
were
killed.
Karzai to present both U.S. "Outgunned and
outcondolences and mea culpas. manned," Centcom reports,
According to the New "the provincial governor
York Times, Karzai, who is requested help from a coaliseeking
re-election, tion quick-reaction force."
promised to rebuild the viiAt this point, Taliban
lagers' houses, to arrange for ·launched another attack on
some of the survivors to go Afghan and U.S. forces, and
on the haj pilgrimage to "a U.S. Navy corpsman was
Mecca,and to build schools, · shot in the shoulder attemptclinics and roads in the ·ing to rescue a wounded
province. This sounds . like Afghan soldier. The coalition
yourtax
force used F-18 close-air
. dollars at work.
h .f
"It 1s c1ear to met at 1 we support to suppress enemy
don't get this Gight, .we: do f1re from nearby buildings
. run the nsk of ahenatmg the and rulow for the rescue of
· Afghan pe~ple ~nd creatmg the wounded Afghan first
what Dav1d Ktlcullen has sergeant; who was trapped
c~!ed the· acctdental guertl- by heavy Tali ban machineIa, E1kenberry later told the gun and rocket-propelledNew 'r'ork Times, referring grenade fire." Coordinated
to the Australian former by a ground commander, "a
a1de to Gen. D_av1d B-1 bomber crew fired on
Petraeus. who on•e mfa- enemy firing and gathering
mously claimed that if he positions in buildings and a
were a Muslim, he would be tree grove. Afghan and U.S.
a jihadist out of a · shared forces remained in the area
"sense of adve~ture.: (This, and observed the villagers
truth bt; told. ahenated m~;J returning after the fighting
As E1kenberry sees 1t, ~~ s · had ceased ...."
all our fault. Except that It's
"We strongly condemn
not.
On
Wednesday, the Taliban for their brutaliCentcom issued interim ty in deliberately uirgeting
findings indicating that 60 and using human shields," a
to 65 Taliban were killed in U.S. military · spokesman
the engagements iri question said. Which is . precisely
along with 20 to30 civilians what
Mullen
and
. - a far cry from 140-plus. Eikenberry shou ld have
Which . makes me wonder: said, praising our forces for
Could the ambassador have a job well done . If that.
apologized to imposters in "alienates" Afghans, good
that audience of "sur- riddance. But meanwhilt,
vivors"? Perish the aliena!- an apology is owed here ing thought.
.
to the U.S. military.
Worth mentioning are
(Diana West is the author
some details about the battle of "The Death of the Grownitself.
According
to up: How America's Arrested
Centcom, after Tali ban Development Is Bringing
fighters beheaded three . Down Western CivilizaJion,"
civilians in an Afghan town, and blogs at dianawest.net.
Afghan· police and army She can be contacted via
forces were ambushed en dianawest@verizon.net):

•

:T ODAY
IN HISTORY
.

Today is Thursday,May 28, the I48th day of 2009. There
·
: Today's Highlight in History: On May 28, 1934, the
Dionne quintuplets - Annette, Cecile, Emilie,• Marie and
Yvonne -were born to Elzire Dionne at the family farm
in Ontario, Canada.
· On this date: In 1533, the Archbishop of Canterbury,
J'homas Cranmer, declared the marriage of England's King
:Henry VIII to Anl)e 'Boleyn valid.
: In 1863, the. ficst black regiment from the North left
-Boston to fight in the Civil War.
·
It took them a while, bu't
: In 1929, the first all-color talking picture, "On with the
Republican
thinkers and their
:Show," openedin New York.
.
·
media
enablers
appear to
In 1959, the U.S. Army launched Able, a rhesus monkey,
and Baker, a squirrel monkey, aboard a Jupiter missile for think they've found a way to
tum the torture issue against
-a suborbital flight which both primates survived .
Democrats.
Enough tiresome
: Thought for Today: "The only thing I regret about my
rhetoric
about
the rule of Jaw
:Past is the length of it. If I had to live my life again, I'd
::Jnake the same . mistakes, only sooner." -Tallulah and America's lost moral·
compass. Let's t3ke the dis~ankhead, American actress (1903-1968).
cuss1on back to the junior,,
high level, where everybody's
LETTERS TO THE
most·comfortable. Let's have
·a national witch hunt.
Skeptical analysts at
: Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less mediamatters.org wrote the ·
-.han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be perfect ·headline: "What did
'41igned, and include address and telephone number. No President Pelosi know, and
Jmsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in when did she know it?'' To
·good taste, addressing issues , not personalities. Leiters· of House Republicans and
./hanks ro organizations and individuals willliot be accept- drumbeaters like Newt
~d for publication.
and
Rush
Gingrich
.
Limbaugh, that's the big
question . Not whether CIA
interrogators - under the
orders of the Bush White
House
violated all norms of
:: Reader Services
(UsPs 2t3-9so)
civilized
behavior frantically
;:
Correction Polley
Ohto Valley Publishing Co.
trying
to
prove one of Dick
Our main concern in all stories Is to Published ev8ry morning, Monday
Cheney's most cherished
be accurate. If you know ol an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
delusions: nonexistent links
992·2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
between Osama bin Laden
Member: The AS&amp;Oeiated Press and
and
Saddam Hussein , used
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Our main number Is
''
to
justify
invading Iraq.
Postmllttr: Send address ·correc(740) 992-2156.
Not, that is, whether
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been us~d . but could be
&lt;lre 217 days left in the year.

EDITOR

.

The Daily Sentinel

Jacqueline 'Jackie' Mencblni
POMEROY - A Memorial ·Mass will be held for
Jacqueline "Jackie" Menchini, who passed away on April
28, on Saturday, May 30, at the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
A reception will be held at 12;30 p.m. followed by the
Mass'at I:30 p.m. Internment will be at the Sacred Heart
Cemetery following the Mass, Friends.are most welcome to
visit with the family at the receptiol) and attend Mass.
Jackie was born in Middleport, Ohio on December 12,
1924 and is the daughter of the late Dr. J;rnst Maag and
Audrey (Hart) Maag, She was a resident of Pomeroy,
Ohio and Millwood, W.Va. until she moved to Annapolis,
Md. in 1998.
She is survived by her son Mickey Menchini of Lima,
Ohio; her daughter Jennifer Menchini Kirby of Annapolis,
Md., her granddaughter Amy Teders of Ottawa, Ohio; her
grandson Chris Menchini of Morgantown, W.Va.; and her
great-grandson Denrick Teders of Ottawa, Ohio; ~he was
preceded in death by her husband, Renzo Menchmt.

Deaths
Lori·Ann Miller

an allegedly dispositive iirtproving the story. Both
rebuke
by
President · The New York Times and
Obama's CIA director, Leon Washington Post, Bob
Panetta. Viewed with even Somerby points out, ran
minimal skepticism , how- same-day stories stating that
ever, Panetta's remarks look Pelosi admitted "for the first
·Gene
like a carefully lawyered time" last week' learning of
Lyons
nondenial denial.
Abu Zubaydah's water"Let me be clear," Panetta boarding in 2003, making
.said. "It is not our policy or her look evasive. In fact, a
practice
to
mislead press release stating that has .
used at .the presideJ1t's dis- Congress. That is against our been featured on Pelosi's
cretion. She further intirriat- laws and our values." The Web site since December
ed _ hold your hats _ that day a CIA director of either 2007. When a Qemocrat's ·
CIA briefers had misled her, party admits. otherwise will · in the crosshairs, such errors
a shock ing calumny that be a memorable one indeed. are rarely corrected.
·
sent Republicans reeling to Panetta also stated that "conHere are some things we
the fainting couches.
temporaneolis records from do know: In September
. What? CIA operatives, . September 2002 indicate 2002, Pelosi had zero
faithful adherents of the Boy that CIA officers briefed authority over the CIA.
Scout Oath, conceal the truth truthfully on the interroga- Whatever briefings she
from a known San Francisco tion of Abu Zubaydah."
received were classified.
liberal? Who could believe
Of course · there's truth·,
In
October
2002,
such a calumny? Not Rep. and then there's the whole President Bu.sh told the
John Boehner, who demand- truth, and . nothing but the nation that , "we've learned
ed that Pelosi either prove .. truth. The last two we that Iraq has· trained AI
the charge or resign. haven't yet seen. Panetta Qaeda ·members in bomB
Gingrich also demanded a carefully neglects IO affirm making and poisons and
full-scale probe.
the accuracy of said records. gases'' - false intelligence
Pelosi, of course, has long As, in fairness; he probably now known to have been
sought an investigation of cannot. Fonner Florida Sen. produced by torture .
the Bush administration's" Bob Graham, longtime in telIn
February
2003,
·use of torture, with particular Jigence committee chairman, Secretary of State Colin
reference to bogus intelli- says he was shown CIA doc- Powell .repeated the bogus
gence. "Let's have an inves- uments listihg four torture claim to the United Nations.
tigation,'' she keeps saying, briefings he'd supposedly · In January 2004, Cheney
"and see who's right."
received. Three of the dates told the Rocky Mountain
Less high-minded GOP conflicted with his own News that "detainees in
savants went to work on meticulous diaries. The Guantanamo" had con•
Pelosi's makeup, hair and agency admitted error.
fessed operational links
clothing. That dashing
The incomparable blogger between . Baghdad and bin
-babe-magnet; talk-radio Digby suggests applying Laden
· subsequently
interrogation proven false by several govcomedian Limbaugh , made "eniJanced
Botox jokes. On CNN, techniques" to all concemed. emment probes.
chivalric Republican con- "After all , if they were reli· . So yeah , ·let's investigate
sultant Alex Castellanos able enough to keep the Pelosi. Botox, lip-gloss and
quipped, "lf Speaker Pelosi nation safe from evildoers," all.
were still capable of human she writes, "they would cer(Arkansas
Democratfacial expression, we'd see tainly be reliable enough to Gazette columnisr Gene
she'd be embarrassed , get [X)Iiticians and bureau- Lvons is a National
because, right now, she is in cmts to admit what happened . Maga;;ine .Award witmer
a very Nixon-like position ." in some CIA briefings."
and co·aurlwr of "The
Ha-ha-ha .
You can tell the media Hunring of the President"
Evidence for the latter tb,inks they've got Pelosi on (Sf. Martin's rPress , 2000).
proposition is surprisingly the run, however, because You cmt' e-mail Lyons at
thin. Pelosi's attackers cite they 've already begun eugenelyons2@yaltop.com).

Local Weather

For the Record

Thursday ... Showers
likely. A chance of thunderin
the
POMEROY - Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs storms
morning
...
Then
thunderCounty Comr/lon Pleas Court by Brian D. Bowen,
Reedsville, against Bethen M. Bowen, Reedsvtlle; Stanley. storms likely in the afterA. Molnar, Albany, against Hollis A. Molnar, Albany; and noon. Locally heavy rainAmanda Christine Reed, Coolville, against Jason Allen fall possible. Highs in the
lower 80s. Southwest
Reed, Reedsville.
.
.
winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance
. A divorce was granted to Janet L. Barry from Richard I.
70 percent.
.
of
rain
Barry.
Thursday niglat••.Mostly
cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms likely in the
evening ...Then a chance of
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage showers after midnight.
was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Mark Lows around 60. West
Edward Proffitt and Nola Renee Profft!t, both of
Syracuse.

Divorces

Dissolution

.

POMEROY ~ Jell)' Franklin, Jr. was sentenced to 18
months in jail on a charge of failure to appear after recognizance release ..The sent.ence ·will be served consecutively
with a sentence previously imposed.
. .
Joshua A. Merica] was sentenced to 18 months on a
charge of deception to obtain dangerous drugs and illegal
· ·
processing of drug documents.

POMEROY - Lori Ann (Pullins) Miller, 48, of
Pomeroy, died May 27, 2009 at Holzer Medical Center.
·Arrangements are incomplete and will be an~ounc~ by the
POMEROY - Act.ions for foreclosure were filed in
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home. Onlme regtstry ts
Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by United States of
available by logging onto www.andersonmcdan.iel.com;
Arneriea, Columbus, against Scott B. Anderson, Franldm,
Ind., and others, and by J.P. Morgan Mortgage Acquisition .
'
Corp., San Diego, Calif., against Debra Russell, Pomeroy,
and others.
· A foreclosure was granted to Deutsche Bank, National
Trust Co., against Don Pooler. and others. ·

•

Foreclosures ·

Local Briefs

Rummage sale

COOLVILLE - . Grace Brethren Church will hold a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on June 12 at the Torch
Community Center. Proceeds will pay for .church camp
expenses for children.

. Haz Mat class
RUTLAND - Basic WMD Hazardous Materials class
will be held June 6 at Rutland Firehouse. The class is free
and open . to anyone. Registration is at 8 a.m. Roger
Deardorff.
Contact Robert Byer at meigsema@suddenlinkmail.com
no later than I p.m. on June 3 to register.
·

Portion of Ohio 124 closed
REEDSVILLE - Four miles of Ohio 124 located 0.1
miles east of Barr Hollow Road closed on Tuesday and will
remain closed until Aug. 15 to allow for a landslide repair
project. Motorists are advised to use the following detour:
Ohto 681 to Ohio 7 to Ohio 144 back to Ohio 124. Please
·. visit www.buckeyetraffic.org for more information on all
statewide closures and restrictions.

· Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAB- .
DAQI- 24.30
BIT (NYSE) - 21.19
Peopln (NASDAQ) - 18.47
Peptlco (NYSEI - 50.01
Premtar (NASOAQI "C" 5.93
.
Rockwell (NYSE) - 30.09
-8.24
Rocky Booto (NASOAO) - 4. 1.5
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.61
Royal Dutcn Sholl - 51 ,48
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) - .
sea.. Holding (NASDAQ) 3.87
56.82
City Holding (NASDAQI - 31.59
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 4U2
Colllna (NVSE) - · 41.36
Wendy'• (NYSE) - ·4.35
DuPont (NYSE) .:.. 27.56
wnaanco (NYSEJ - 15.80
US Bank (NYSE) .,. 17.98
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.62
Gannett (NYSE) - 5.04
Dally atock repol11artthe 4
General Eleclrlc (NYSE) - 12.99 · p.m. ET cl0t1lng quolte of traniHartey-Davldoon (NYSE) - 16.30
actlono for May 'Zl, :lOOt, provldJP Morgan (NYSEI - 34.66
id by EdWard Jones financial
.
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.07
aclvteore teaac Mltle In Oall!poltt
Llmllad Brapde (NYSE)- 12.63
11 (7411) 441-1441 and l.ntev
Norfolk Souther!' (NYSE) Marr
In Point Plea-.nt a!
34.93
(304) 74-01.74. Member SIPC.

AEP (NVSE) - 25.42 ·
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 45.11
.Aehland Inc. (NVSE) - 25;94 .
Big Lote (NYSE) - 23.65
BOb Evant (NASDAQ) - 25.13
BorgWamtr (NYSE) - 30.97
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

.Jobless rrom Page Al
percent in March to 7.5 per- · cent for the first time in
cent in April; Vinton County more than 25 years, state
by six-tenths of a percent to officials said .
The state jobless rate last
13 .6 in April after posting
14.2 p¢rceot in March; and month was 10.2 pe~cent, up
Washmgton County, down from 6.2 percent m Apnl
one-ttmth of a percent from 2008, accQrding to ODJFS.
Last month's rate was the
.9.4 percent in March .to 9.3
highest since December
in April.
The only area county 1983, when joblessness in
seeing an increase in the Ohio hit 10.4 percent,
jobless rate was Athens, department
spokesman·
rising one-tenth of · a per- Bnan Harter said.
The U.S. unemployment
cent over March's 8 percent to 8.I in April.
rate for April was 8.9 per· Ohio's job market contin- cent.
ued to we~tken in April, . Ohio continues to see
pushing the state's unem- major job losses in manu- ·
ployment rate above 10 per- facturing, particularly in the

auto industry, as wellas in
Officials said .Friday that
construction and services, 608,000 workers were
Harter said.
unemployed during April in
"Because of the automo- Ohio, up from 578,000 il)
tive industry and other man- March, when th·e unemploy- ·
ufacturing losses, Ohio is meni rate was 9.7 perceni.
probably going to take a lit- The number of uneniployea
tle bit longer than olher has grown by 235,000 in tlie ·
parts of the country to past 12 months.
recover from this reces(The Associated Press
sion," he said, "So, you're cmllributed'to this story). :
going tq continue to see
unemployment .
rates
increast! over the ·next ·few
months."
Ohio unemployment hit
an.all·time high of 13.8 percent in D~ember 1982 and
January 1983.

·Stephen E. Smith

·.· Council from PageAl

Oh·{{an Club to display coins

has been mowed three . Union Avenue.
POINT PLEASANT. W,Va. - Bob Grahiun of the Oh- .weeks .in a row . .
Council
transferred
Kan Coin Club will be at the City National Bank in ~ason
Hysell said the village $8,000 from the . general
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday and lit the Point Pleasant Bank had not re.ceived any hot fund ·to the street fund .
on Wednesday for a coin exhibition artd f!ee appraisals. ~e mix yet because she hasn't
CoimcU adjourned into
will also ·be displaying Medal of Honorptc.tures along With . been able to get in touch executive session· once to
some photos of the old Pomeroy-Mason Bndge.
with the vendor to get a discuss property acquisiprice to write the purchase tion . .· ·
order Council members
After adjourning back
repoded several pot holes
from Page Al
in the village, mcluding
on·
Pleilsilnt Ridge and
· Also reported to the met, it caused ll domino ·
Pomeroy Police Department affect and pushed together
was property damage at · two other vehicles. which .
· Triplett's Car Wash where were also stopped in trafftc : . . ·
one of the vacuum cleaners . In all, four vehicles · were
were broken away from its ' inyolved in this crash,
fromPageAl
mounting.
.
· · · · including vehicles driven by
The following.trafflc acci- Megan D. Tripp, Pomeroy, Hardiman was .found dead
dents have been reported: Mary A. McDona.ld, Mason, just outside of his home on
Alice
M.
Freeman, WNa. and Brtttany N . . May 9.
.
Pomeroy, was cited for fail- Morarity, · Racine. · No · Investigators · from the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
ure to control when a vehi• injuries were reported.
cle she was driving accidenChristina M. Mash, Identification
and
believe
tally st"!c~ a vehicle ow~ed Alb~ny, \.\las cited for failed Investigation
by Chnstma J. McGuue, to yte!d nght-of-way, ~~en Whitcraft and Lafleur
Pomeroy, which was parked a veh1cle she was .drJVmg intended to rob Hardiman.
in the KFC parking lot .. NQ allegedly pu!led iltto .the Hardiman died of blunt
· were reported ·. .
injunes
. path of a vehrcI~ dnven. by·
. '.force
Bothtrauma.
Whitcraft and ·
Tony A. Darst, Mason, Margaret J. Co:s•, Pometoy.
W.Va. was .cited for ~sure.d Mas~ was _pulhng out of the ' Lafleur have prior criminal
clear distance when a veht- parking lot of the Par-Mar convictions in Athens
de he was driving aliegedly convenient store onto .Nye County Common Pleas
'struck a vehicle stopped in Avenue when the acctdent Court, Williams said, and
traffic near the Wild Horse occurred. No injuries were Whitcraft has been previCafe. Once the two vehicles reported.
ously charged with escape .

Ar.rmgne
·· • ·d

Kodiak
Santa Fe Futon

winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Frlday ...Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the
lower 80s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday
night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. West winds around 5 ·
mph. ·
. Saturday...Panly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks

Sentenced

Arrest

·Is it timefor ·some ,Pelosi fun?

...-.

·Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 20Q9

Several Styles . .
. of Futons to .
choose from

·Motion
Double Reclining
Soja &amp; Matching

April 22, 1956 · June 7, 198 t

If love could have saved
. into regular session, council · r u would have lived
voted to retain Gary
. Forever missed, never
Simpson as a street department employee .working
forgotten. May God hold
·
downtown.
you in the palm of his uwn•t
All members of council
Love,
were present for the meetMom&amp;Family
ing as was Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. Proffitt.

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

' Thursday, May 28, 2009

Tfhen does ·someone apologize to our military?

Afghanistan has been
dubbed "Obama 's War" but
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
maybe it should be called "the
www.mydallysentlnel.com
war on civilian casualties."
You may have thought the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
United States was at war in
Afghanistan to "defeat" the
Taliban and win one for our
-Dan Goodrich
loyal ally in counter-jihad.
Publisher
the Afghan people. But even
that pipedream is beside the
Charlene Hoeflich
point. The latest concernGeneral Manager-News Editor
turned-obsession of the
· United StaJes is eliminating
as many as possible, if not
all. "civilian casualties." If
Con.l!ress shall make no law respecting an
we can only do that, according
to brain-trust, top-brass,
e~tablishment of religion, or prohibiting-the
fairy-tale thinking, we- will
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of surely win the hearts and
minds of the Afghan people.
~pt•edt, or of the press; or the right of the peoIf
can't, Afghan hearts
ple peaceably to assemble, and to petition the andweminds
will go to those
Gor,emment for a redress ofgrievam:es.
globally recognized humanitarians, the Taliban.
Indeed, there is something
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
wrong with this picture.
That is, if the Afghan people
were really with us , they
would be, well, really with
us - not constantly on or
past the brink of "alienation." But who wants to
admit this? It would necessarily mark the end of the
Bush and now Obama
.Islamic nation-building fantasy that began seven years
ago with the U.S . invasion
of Afghanistan in Operation
Infinite Justice. Come to
Dear Editor:
think
of it, we hurriedly
As Memorial Day approached, my family continued the
,
changed
that operation
l'amily tradition of placmg the flags on ·veterans' graves at
name also for - guess
.Chester Cemetery.
, I had not visited the cemetery since last Memorial Day, what? - fear of alienating
and l was astonished at 'how well kept and beautifully Muslims. Tacitly accepting
trimmed it was! Every headstone had been trimmed the Islamic position that
around, a new very niCe fence has been built, and there was only Allah · dispenses "infino trash lying around anywhere! It looks beautiful! There nite justice," the U.S. govwere so many flowers eveyywhere.
ernment launched Operation .
The old cannon · still stands · as the centerpiece of the Enduring Freedom and
·cemetery with the American flag flying beside it and with "won" its first battle against
many smaller flags on the cannon. As a child l remember, Muslim alienation. Chalk
"marching" from the Chester Commons with live flowers one up for dhimmitude.
Now, a new battle against
that were donated and left at the little building across from
the Commons, ·to the cemetery. After a ceremony at the
t:annon the children were asked to place their flowers on a
:Veterans grave, the ones with the American flags. Also, as
~ child I remember helping put the .flags on ·those graves
.With my Grandfather, Earnest Kmght, then my father,
'Howard Knight, and now with my brother, Chuck Knight.
Such great memories will continue to be made .and the
wndition and care of the cemetery will make them even
more wonderful. My family and .I would like to thank the
~hester Cemetery Commissioners for their great planning
-and hard work on keeping the cemetery "Picture Perfect."
: Janet Knight Pennell &amp;family
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Preserved
Praisefor cemetery ·upkeep

Diana
West

such alienation rages in
Afghanistan.
"Mullen:
Civilian Deaths Hurt US in
Afghanistan" reports the
· d . press ; "Us
Assoc1ate
. .
Envoy Vows to Help Cur
Afghan Civilian Deaths,"
reports · the New York
Times. The premise of these
stories is that it is our own
shortcomings·, our own failores
not inculcated
Islamic attitudes in the population at large - that ate
responsible for Afghan
resentment
over
our
nation's continued efforts to
defeat the Tali ban.
"We cannot succeed in
Afghanistan or anywhere
else, but Jet's talk specifically abou.t Afghanistan, by
killing Afghan civilians."
Joint Chiefs ChairmanAdm.
Mike Mullen said recently,
practically as if killing
Afghan civilians were U.S.
policy. He added: "We can't
keep ~oing through incidents hke this and expect the
strategy to work."
·
By "incidents like this,"
Mullen was referring to a
battle early this month in
Afghanistan's
Fara)l
province where, according
to Afghan government
claims, 140-plus ·civilians
were killed . duril)g a U.S.
aerial - bombardment. Even
as the U.S. military was still
investigating the incident,
U.S.
ambassador
to
Afghanistan Lt. Gen. Karl

W. Eikenbell)' hightailed it route by 200 to 300 w'iting
to an Afghan mosque with Taliban forces. Two policeAfghan president Hamid men
were
killed.
Karzai to present both U.S. "Outgunned and
outcondolences and mea culpas. manned," Centcom reports,
According to the New "the provincial governor
York Times, Karzai, who is requested help from a coaliseeking
re-election, tion quick-reaction force."
promised to rebuild the viiAt this point, Taliban
lagers' houses, to arrange for ·launched another attack on
some of the survivors to go Afghan and U.S. forces, and
on the haj pilgrimage to "a U.S. Navy corpsman was
Mecca,and to build schools, · shot in the shoulder attemptclinics and roads in the ·ing to rescue a wounded
province. This sounds . like Afghan soldier. The coalition
yourtax
force used F-18 close-air
. dollars at work.
h .f
"It 1s c1ear to met at 1 we support to suppress enemy
don't get this Gight, .we: do f1re from nearby buildings
. run the nsk of ahenatmg the and rulow for the rescue of
· Afghan pe~ple ~nd creatmg the wounded Afghan first
what Dav1d Ktlcullen has sergeant; who was trapped
c~!ed the· acctdental guertl- by heavy Tali ban machineIa, E1kenberry later told the gun and rocket-propelledNew 'r'ork Times, referring grenade fire." Coordinated
to the Australian former by a ground commander, "a
a1de to Gen. D_av1d B-1 bomber crew fired on
Petraeus. who on•e mfa- enemy firing and gathering
mously claimed that if he positions in buildings and a
were a Muslim, he would be tree grove. Afghan and U.S.
a jihadist out of a · shared forces remained in the area
"sense of adve~ture.: (This, and observed the villagers
truth bt; told. ahenated m~;J returning after the fighting
As E1kenberry sees 1t, ~~ s · had ceased ...."
all our fault. Except that It's
"We strongly condemn
not.
On
Wednesday, the Taliban for their brutaliCentcom issued interim ty in deliberately uirgeting
findings indicating that 60 and using human shields," a
to 65 Taliban were killed in U.S. military · spokesman
the engagements iri question said. Which is . precisely
along with 20 to30 civilians what
Mullen
and
. - a far cry from 140-plus. Eikenberry shou ld have
Which . makes me wonder: said, praising our forces for
Could the ambassador have a job well done . If that.
apologized to imposters in "alienates" Afghans, good
that audience of "sur- riddance. But meanwhilt,
vivors"? Perish the aliena!- an apology is owed here ing thought.
.
to the U.S. military.
Worth mentioning are
(Diana West is the author
some details about the battle of "The Death of the Grownitself.
According
to up: How America's Arrested
Centcom, after Tali ban Development Is Bringing
fighters beheaded three . Down Western CivilizaJion,"
civilians in an Afghan town, and blogs at dianawest.net.
Afghan· police and army She can be contacted via
forces were ambushed en dianawest@verizon.net):

•

:T ODAY
IN HISTORY
.

Today is Thursday,May 28, the I48th day of 2009. There
·
: Today's Highlight in History: On May 28, 1934, the
Dionne quintuplets - Annette, Cecile, Emilie,• Marie and
Yvonne -were born to Elzire Dionne at the family farm
in Ontario, Canada.
· On this date: In 1533, the Archbishop of Canterbury,
J'homas Cranmer, declared the marriage of England's King
:Henry VIII to Anl)e 'Boleyn valid.
: In 1863, the. ficst black regiment from the North left
-Boston to fight in the Civil War.
·
It took them a while, bu't
: In 1929, the first all-color talking picture, "On with the
Republican
thinkers and their
:Show," openedin New York.
.
·
media
enablers
appear to
In 1959, the U.S. Army launched Able, a rhesus monkey,
and Baker, a squirrel monkey, aboard a Jupiter missile for think they've found a way to
tum the torture issue against
-a suborbital flight which both primates survived .
Democrats.
Enough tiresome
: Thought for Today: "The only thing I regret about my
rhetoric
about
the rule of Jaw
:Past is the length of it. If I had to live my life again, I'd
::Jnake the same . mistakes, only sooner." -Tallulah and America's lost moral·
compass. Let's t3ke the dis~ankhead, American actress (1903-1968).
cuss1on back to the junior,,
high level, where everybody's
LETTERS TO THE
most·comfortable. Let's have
·a national witch hunt.
Skeptical analysts at
: Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be less mediamatters.org wrote the ·
-.han 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be perfect ·headline: "What did
'41igned, and include address and telephone number. No President Pelosi know, and
Jmsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in when did she know it?'' To
·good taste, addressing issues , not personalities. Leiters· of House Republicans and
./hanks ro organizations and individuals willliot be accept- drumbeaters like Newt
~d for publication.
and
Rush
Gingrich
.
Limbaugh, that's the big
question . Not whether CIA
interrogators - under the
orders of the Bush White
House
violated all norms of
:: Reader Services
(UsPs 2t3-9so)
civilized
behavior frantically
;:
Correction Polley
Ohto Valley Publishing Co.
trying
to
prove one of Dick
Our main concern in all stories Is to Published ev8ry morning, Monday
Cheney's most cherished
be accurate. If you know ol an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
delusions: nonexistent links
992·2156.
paid at Pomeroy.
between Osama bin Laden
Member: The AS&amp;Oeiated Press and
and
Saddam Hussein , used
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Our main number Is
''
to
justify
invading Iraq.
Postmllttr: Send address ·correc(740) 992-2156.
Not, that is, whether
tions to The Oaily Sentinel, P.O. Box
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in
Subscribers should remit in advance
Claso.!Ctrc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
September
2002
that
capcirea to .The Dallv SentneL No subscription by mail permitted in areas
rured AI Qaeda operative
. Circulation
where home carrier servioe- is availabJe.
Abu
Zubaydah had already
:Circulation Mlflsger: David Lucas.
been
waterboarded 82 times
_:740-446-2342, Ext. 11
Mall Subscription
at
Guantanamo.
Inside Meigs County
In a press conference last
12
Weeks
. ........... '35.26
General Manager
week , Speaker Nancy Pelosi
26 Weeks ............ '70.70
Chartene Hoellid1 . Ext 12
52 Weeks . . . . .. .. ... '140.11
jnsisted she'd been told in
E·mall:
2002 only that "enhanced
Outtlde Meigs County
md9news@l'nydailysenlinel.com
interrogation"
had been
12 Weeks ... . ... ..... .'56.55
declared legal by the Justice
26 We~ks
. ....... .' 113.60
Web:
Department . Not th&lt;ft it had
52
Weeks
...
...
......
'227.21
www.mydaitysentinel.com
been us~d . but could be
&lt;lre 217 days left in the year.

EDITOR

.

The Daily Sentinel

Jacqueline 'Jackie' Mencblni
POMEROY - A Memorial ·Mass will be held for
Jacqueline "Jackie" Menchini, who passed away on April
28, on Saturday, May 30, at the Sacred Heart Church in
Pomeroy, Ohio.
A reception will be held at 12;30 p.m. followed by the
Mass'at I:30 p.m. Internment will be at the Sacred Heart
Cemetery following the Mass, Friends.are most welcome to
visit with the family at the receptiol) and attend Mass.
Jackie was born in Middleport, Ohio on December 12,
1924 and is the daughter of the late Dr. J;rnst Maag and
Audrey (Hart) Maag, She was a resident of Pomeroy,
Ohio and Millwood, W.Va. until she moved to Annapolis,
Md. in 1998.
She is survived by her son Mickey Menchini of Lima,
Ohio; her daughter Jennifer Menchini Kirby of Annapolis,
Md., her granddaughter Amy Teders of Ottawa, Ohio; her
grandson Chris Menchini of Morgantown, W.Va.; and her
great-grandson Denrick Teders of Ottawa, Ohio; ~he was
preceded in death by her husband, Renzo Menchmt.

Deaths
Lori·Ann Miller

an allegedly dispositive iirtproving the story. Both
rebuke
by
President · The New York Times and
Obama's CIA director, Leon Washington Post, Bob
Panetta. Viewed with even Somerby points out, ran
minimal skepticism , how- same-day stories stating that
ever, Panetta's remarks look Pelosi admitted "for the first
·Gene
like a carefully lawyered time" last week' learning of
Lyons
nondenial denial.
Abu Zubaydah's water"Let me be clear," Panetta boarding in 2003, making
.said. "It is not our policy or her look evasive. In fact, a
practice
to
mislead press release stating that has .
used at .the presideJ1t's dis- Congress. That is against our been featured on Pelosi's
cretion. She further intirriat- laws and our values." The Web site since December
ed _ hold your hats _ that day a CIA director of either 2007. When a Qemocrat's ·
CIA briefers had misled her, party admits. otherwise will · in the crosshairs, such errors
a shock ing calumny that be a memorable one indeed. are rarely corrected.
·
sent Republicans reeling to Panetta also stated that "conHere are some things we
the fainting couches.
temporaneolis records from do know: In September
. What? CIA operatives, . September 2002 indicate 2002, Pelosi had zero
faithful adherents of the Boy that CIA officers briefed authority over the CIA.
Scout Oath, conceal the truth truthfully on the interroga- Whatever briefings she
from a known San Francisco tion of Abu Zubaydah."
received were classified.
liberal? Who could believe
Of course · there's truth·,
In
October
2002,
such a calumny? Not Rep. and then there's the whole President Bu.sh told the
John Boehner, who demand- truth, and . nothing but the nation that , "we've learned
ed that Pelosi either prove .. truth. The last two we that Iraq has· trained AI
the charge or resign. haven't yet seen. Panetta Qaeda ·members in bomB
Gingrich also demanded a carefully neglects IO affirm making and poisons and
full-scale probe.
the accuracy of said records. gases'' - false intelligence
Pelosi, of course, has long As, in fairness; he probably now known to have been
sought an investigation of cannot. Fonner Florida Sen. produced by torture .
the Bush administration's" Bob Graham, longtime in telIn
February
2003,
·use of torture, with particular Jigence committee chairman, Secretary of State Colin
reference to bogus intelli- says he was shown CIA doc- Powell .repeated the bogus
gence. "Let's have an inves- uments listihg four torture claim to the United Nations.
tigation,'' she keeps saying, briefings he'd supposedly · In January 2004, Cheney
"and see who's right."
received. Three of the dates told the Rocky Mountain
Less high-minded GOP conflicted with his own News that "detainees in
savants went to work on meticulous diaries. The Guantanamo" had con•
Pelosi's makeup, hair and agency admitted error.
fessed operational links
clothing. That dashing
The incomparable blogger between . Baghdad and bin
-babe-magnet; talk-radio Digby suggests applying Laden
· subsequently
interrogation proven false by several govcomedian Limbaugh , made "eniJanced
Botox jokes. On CNN, techniques" to all concemed. emment probes.
chivalric Republican con- "After all , if they were reli· . So yeah , ·let's investigate
sultant Alex Castellanos able enough to keep the Pelosi. Botox, lip-gloss and
quipped, "lf Speaker Pelosi nation safe from evildoers," all.
were still capable of human she writes, "they would cer(Arkansas
Democratfacial expression, we'd see tainly be reliable enough to Gazette columnisr Gene
she'd be embarrassed , get [X)Iiticians and bureau- Lvons is a National
because, right now, she is in cmts to admit what happened . Maga;;ine .Award witmer
a very Nixon-like position ." in some CIA briefings."
and co·aurlwr of "The
Ha-ha-ha .
You can tell the media Hunring of the President"
Evidence for the latter tb,inks they've got Pelosi on (Sf. Martin's rPress , 2000).
proposition is surprisingly the run, however, because You cmt' e-mail Lyons at
thin. Pelosi's attackers cite they 've already begun eugenelyons2@yaltop.com).

Local Weather

For the Record

Thursday ... Showers
likely. A chance of thunderin
the
POMEROY - Actions for divorce were filed in Meigs storms
morning
...
Then
thunderCounty Comr/lon Pleas Court by Brian D. Bowen,
Reedsville, against Bethen M. Bowen, Reedsvtlle; Stanley. storms likely in the afterA. Molnar, Albany, against Hollis A. Molnar, Albany; and noon. Locally heavy rainAmanda Christine Reed, Coolville, against Jason Allen fall possible. Highs in the
lower 80s. Southwest
Reed, Reedsville.
.
.
winds
5 to 10 mph. Chance
. A divorce was granted to Janet L. Barry from Richard I.
70 percent.
.
of
rain
Barry.
Thursday niglat••.Mostly
cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms likely in the
evening ...Then a chance of
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage showers after midnight.
was filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Mark Lows around 60. West
Edward Proffitt and Nola Renee Profft!t, both of
Syracuse.

Divorces

Dissolution

.

POMEROY ~ Jell)' Franklin, Jr. was sentenced to 18
months in jail on a charge of failure to appear after recognizance release ..The sent.ence ·will be served consecutively
with a sentence previously imposed.
. .
Joshua A. Merica] was sentenced to 18 months on a
charge of deception to obtain dangerous drugs and illegal
· ·
processing of drug documents.

POMEROY - Lori Ann (Pullins) Miller, 48, of
Pomeroy, died May 27, 2009 at Holzer Medical Center.
·Arrangements are incomplete and will be an~ounc~ by the
POMEROY - Act.ions for foreclosure were filed in
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home. Onlme regtstry ts
Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by United States of
available by logging onto www.andersonmcdan.iel.com;
Arneriea, Columbus, against Scott B. Anderson, Franldm,
Ind., and others, and by J.P. Morgan Mortgage Acquisition .
'
Corp., San Diego, Calif., against Debra Russell, Pomeroy,
and others.
· A foreclosure was granted to Deutsche Bank, National
Trust Co., against Don Pooler. and others. ·

•

Foreclosures ·

Local Briefs

Rummage sale

COOLVILLE - . Grace Brethren Church will hold a rummage sale from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on June 12 at the Torch
Community Center. Proceeds will pay for .church camp
expenses for children.

. Haz Mat class
RUTLAND - Basic WMD Hazardous Materials class
will be held June 6 at Rutland Firehouse. The class is free
and open . to anyone. Registration is at 8 a.m. Roger
Deardorff.
Contact Robert Byer at meigsema@suddenlinkmail.com
no later than I p.m. on June 3 to register.
·

Portion of Ohio 124 closed
REEDSVILLE - Four miles of Ohio 124 located 0.1
miles east of Barr Hollow Road closed on Tuesday and will
remain closed until Aug. 15 to allow for a landslide repair
project. Motorists are advised to use the following detour:
Ohto 681 to Ohio 7 to Ohio 144 back to Ohio 124. Please
·. visit www.buckeyetraffic.org for more information on all
statewide closures and restrictions.

· Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAB- .
DAQI- 24.30
BIT (NYSE) - 21.19
Peopln (NASDAQ) - 18.47
Peptlco (NYSEI - 50.01
Premtar (NASOAQI "C" 5.93
.
Rockwell (NYSE) - 30.09
-8.24
Rocky Booto (NASOAO) - 4. 1.5
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.61
Royal Dutcn Sholl - 51 ,48
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) - .
sea.. Holding (NASDAQ) 3.87
56.82
City Holding (NASDAQI - 31.59
Wal-Mart (NYSE) - 4U2
Colllna (NVSE) - · 41.36
Wendy'• (NYSE) - ·4.35
DuPont (NYSE) .:.. 27.56
wnaanco (NYSEJ - 15.80
US Bank (NYSE) .,. 17.98
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.62
Gannett (NYSE) - 5.04
Dally atock repol11artthe 4
General Eleclrlc (NYSE) - 12.99 · p.m. ET cl0t1lng quolte of traniHartey-Davldoon (NYSE) - 16.30
actlono for May 'Zl, :lOOt, provldJP Morgan (NYSEI - 34.66
id by EdWard Jones financial
.
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.07
aclvteore teaac Mltle In Oall!poltt
Llmllad Brapde (NYSE)- 12.63
11 (7411) 441-1441 and l.ntev
Norfolk Souther!' (NYSE) Marr
In Point Plea-.nt a!
34.93
(304) 74-01.74. Member SIPC.

AEP (NVSE) - 25.42 ·
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 45.11
.Aehland Inc. (NVSE) - 25;94 .
Big Lote (NYSE) - 23.65
BOb Evant (NASDAQ) - 25.13
BorgWamtr (NYSE) - 30.97
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

.Jobless rrom Page Al
percent in March to 7.5 per- · cent for the first time in
cent in April; Vinton County more than 25 years, state
by six-tenths of a percent to officials said .
The state jobless rate last
13 .6 in April after posting
14.2 p¢rceot in March; and month was 10.2 pe~cent, up
Washmgton County, down from 6.2 percent m Apnl
one-ttmth of a percent from 2008, accQrding to ODJFS.
Last month's rate was the
.9.4 percent in March .to 9.3
highest since December
in April.
The only area county 1983, when joblessness in
seeing an increase in the Ohio hit 10.4 percent,
jobless rate was Athens, department
spokesman·
rising one-tenth of · a per- Bnan Harter said.
The U.S. unemployment
cent over March's 8 percent to 8.I in April.
rate for April was 8.9 per· Ohio's job market contin- cent.
ued to we~tken in April, . Ohio continues to see
pushing the state's unem- major job losses in manu- ·
ployment rate above 10 per- facturing, particularly in the

auto industry, as wellas in
Officials said .Friday that
construction and services, 608,000 workers were
Harter said.
unemployed during April in
"Because of the automo- Ohio, up from 578,000 il)
tive industry and other man- March, when th·e unemploy- ·
ufacturing losses, Ohio is meni rate was 9.7 perceni.
probably going to take a lit- The number of uneniployea
tle bit longer than olher has grown by 235,000 in tlie ·
parts of the country to past 12 months.
recover from this reces(The Associated Press
sion," he said, "So, you're cmllributed'to this story). :
going tq continue to see
unemployment .
rates
increast! over the ·next ·few
months."
Ohio unemployment hit
an.all·time high of 13.8 percent in D~ember 1982 and
January 1983.

·Stephen E. Smith

·.· Council from PageAl

Oh·{{an Club to display coins

has been mowed three . Union Avenue.
POINT PLEASANT. W,Va. - Bob Grahiun of the Oh- .weeks .in a row . .
Council
transferred
Kan Coin Club will be at the City National Bank in ~ason
Hysell said the village $8,000 from the . general
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday and lit the Point Pleasant Bank had not re.ceived any hot fund ·to the street fund .
on Wednesday for a coin exhibition artd f!ee appraisals. ~e mix yet because she hasn't
CoimcU adjourned into
will also ·be displaying Medal of Honorptc.tures along With . been able to get in touch executive session· once to
some photos of the old Pomeroy-Mason Bndge.
with the vendor to get a discuss property acquisiprice to write the purchase tion . .· ·
order Council members
After adjourning back
repoded several pot holes
from Page Al
in the village, mcluding
on·
Pleilsilnt Ridge and
· Also reported to the met, it caused ll domino ·
Pomeroy Police Department affect and pushed together
was property damage at · two other vehicles. which .
· Triplett's Car Wash where were also stopped in trafftc : . . ·
one of the vacuum cleaners . In all, four vehicles · were
were broken away from its ' inyolved in this crash,
fromPageAl
mounting.
.
· · · · including vehicles driven by
The following.trafflc acci- Megan D. Tripp, Pomeroy, Hardiman was .found dead
dents have been reported: Mary A. McDona.ld, Mason, just outside of his home on
Alice
M.
Freeman, WNa. and Brtttany N . . May 9.
.
Pomeroy, was cited for fail- Morarity, · Racine. · No · Investigators · from the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal
ure to control when a vehi• injuries were reported.
cle she was driving accidenChristina M. Mash, Identification
and
believe
tally st"!c~ a vehicle ow~ed Alb~ny, \.\las cited for failed Investigation
by Chnstma J. McGuue, to yte!d nght-of-way, ~~en Whitcraft and Lafleur
Pomeroy, which was parked a veh1cle she was .drJVmg intended to rob Hardiman.
in the KFC parking lot .. NQ allegedly pu!led iltto .the Hardiman died of blunt
· were reported ·. .
injunes
. path of a vehrcI~ dnven. by·
. '.force
Bothtrauma.
Whitcraft and ·
Tony A. Darst, Mason, Margaret J. Co:s•, Pometoy.
W.Va. was .cited for ~sure.d Mas~ was _pulhng out of the ' Lafleur have prior criminal
clear distance when a veht- parking lot of the Par-Mar convictions in Athens
de he was driving aliegedly convenient store onto .Nye County Common Pleas
'struck a vehicle stopped in Avenue when the acctdent Court, Williams said, and
traffic near the Wild Horse occurred. No injuries were Whitcraft has been previCafe. Once the two vehicles reported.
ously charged with escape .

Ar.rmgne
·· • ·d

Kodiak
Santa Fe Futon

winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Frlday ...Partly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Highs in the
lower 80s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday
night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s. West winds around 5 ·
mph. ·
. Saturday...Panly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the lower 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks

Sentenced

Arrest

·Is it timefor ·some ,Pelosi fun?

...-.

·Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 20Q9

Several Styles . .
. of Futons to .
choose from

·Motion
Double Reclining
Soja &amp; Matching

April 22, 1956 · June 7, 198 t

If love could have saved
. into regular session, council · r u would have lived
voted to retain Gary
. Forever missed, never
Simpson as a street department employee .working
forgotten. May God hold
·
downtown.
you in the palm of his uwn•t
All members of council
Love,
were present for the meetMom&amp;Family
ing as was Pomeroy Chief
of Police Mark E. Proffitt.

�.,

~ Page

A6· The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28 , 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com·

3rdAnnual

•
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The Daily Sentinel ·

. '

~t beats Roane COWity, Page B:Z

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..

.

1 win away from finals, PageB6

Reds sweep Astros,l'age B6

•

.....• .

•

Thursday, May 28, 2009

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BUFFALO . ·. The
• lloflboll - 8 - toumomont
Wahama White Falcon base:
~nt Pteuant vs Chapmanville al baU nine escaped with a 3-1
Vienna 9 a.m.
diamond victory Wednesllay
'ln&lt;l&lt; oncl Flold
.
afternoon
at .Buffalo High
0·2 Regional qualllyi11Q
Byesville
School to advance to the
Meadowbrook HS, 4:30 p.m. ..
Region IV finals in the comfrldlrllor21
pletion of the Regional
-and Fltkl ..
sel)lifinal contest with
0-3 Regional finals
F~l~leld Union
Charleston. Catholic followl-is, 4:30p.m.
•
ing a three day orde:;tl with
the weather:
a.tu•r· Ml)' M
-and Field
The regional semit'inp.l
D.-2 Regional finals at · Byesville win earns · the Bend At¢a
Meadowbrook ·Hs,
diamond nine a berth in the
Region IV finals against
Man on Thursday at 6 p.m.
BASEBAll at Wahama with the Vtctor
advancing to next weeks
PAIRINGS
at
state
tournament
• COLU¥BUS (AP) ~ Polnngs lor the
Appalachian
Power
Park
in
2009 Ohio High Sch(!OI Alhlollc
Charleston.
·
·.
As8ociation baseball tournament.
•
The two ranked teams
P.cftnt Pleasant ac Weir, 8:30 p.m.

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SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

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lkil CoUld® Repair
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Faroritt Pllco To Btly Cblldrea'o CIGdllag· Boil Noll Siloa

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HUUard

.began lhe regional post-season conies! on Monday but ·
rai.n forced the postponement before the first pitch
was. thrown. On Tuesday
the While Falcons and Irish
played five innings before
rain again washed the game
out forcing a tbin:j., day of
ba8!lball aciivity to complete
the Region IV semifinal
affair.
·.
W.ahama carried a 3-1 lead
when play resumed at the
point of interruption .on
Wednesday wilh the Bend
·Area team holding on for the
tourney win.
The White Falcons col·
lected only five · hits during
lhe ]hree day marathon but
bunched three of those in the
botlom half of the fifth
inning to score three times
PIIIH 1H Wahalll8, 82

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.

Eastern has three left in D-3
BY BRYAN WALlER$

STAFF REPORT

LANCASTER - Both
track and field programs
from Eastern and Southern
htgh .schools
started
Division
III
regional
quali- .
vs. Cfncinh&amp;tl Glen Eata (20-7); West
fying
Wednesday
night
·at
.
eoootor Lakola
(22·S) ~··
. «etterlllQ Fairmont (18·10)
Fairfi.eld . Union High
'
School
with . a combined
DIVISION II
dozen athletes .. .Headed
•
&amp;mlflnsfs 'ThtJI'SdSy, 2p.m. snd 5 p.m.
into Friday night's ·Cha!ll·
; •
Flnai(J Friday, 2 p.m.
.
pionship events, that num; .'
AI Hu.,.On High School
ber. is now down to just
Parma Padua Francl...., (17-7) Yo.
h
El~ardon NOtre Oame.Calhedrai Latin I rell · ·
(17-5): Loutovlllo (20·6) Yt. Poland
In fact, of the II rogionSomlnary ·(l?-7)
·
a! qualifiers. that competed.
AITI!IIn Unlvortlty
Lima Shawriao (2S·B) Yo. Bollvllls
in $even . different events
Olear . Fork (24·4): CuyohO!Ia
Wednesday in Fairfield
Walsh Jesuit (23-3) va. Boy VIHaga Bay
C 'n
. I
(17-9)
.
ou ty, ony . one . - .
can:·~~:~;.~:;:":;~~r!~~Now Eastern's Klint Connery
~hlladelphla (IS-.111: WIY&lt;Ir~ (24-4) Ya, - managed to place in the
c~ldga (22-11) . .· . • . • • . to
. p-ei.gb,.t w.hile securi.ng a
. At Un.'wrwJIY ot DIPm
'
h D 3 regtonaI
Cincinnati 1\rchblohop McNicholso ·spo~ In t . e ' (21·9) va. Franklin (22·5): Colu~ St. . chl\lllpionships.
Francis DeS•"• (20.8) VI. eauarontalne
Connery _ . ·who com(2N)
peted in . three spearate
DIVISION Ill
regional events ~ finished
SemlllnsiB Thurridlly. 2 p.m. and 5'p,m. . seventh overall in tl~e 400Finals Frldsy. 8p.m.
meter dash, earning a spot
in Friday's finals witli a
At,Moaolllon Wuhlngton High
'
School
time of 53.49 seconds.
Cqnton Cenlral Catholic (16-8·1) vs.
Connery also failed to
GarreHavllla Ga~leld (18·5); Ga~leld
qualify in the I OOm dash,
HeightS• Trlolov (17·7) Y&amp;•. Warran
Champion (17cA)
.
posting a time of. 12.11
At Ellltl Middle lchaol
seconds to' place 15th out
Milan Ed180n (20·7) . Yo. Richwood
NOrth Union (1 H); Defiance nnora (19of 16 overall.
·B)..vo. Coldwater (27-2)
Connery ....: along with
At ChiiiiOOiho VA ·Mal!lartll
8tadlur~~
Kelly Winebrenner, Mike
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley (23-2) Y8.
Johnson and Keith Aeiker
ProctGrvll" F~ ; Whaelersbu'll (23.:... also failed to qualify in
3) VI. Chllllootht Zane - . (22-&amp;)
At WYigllt s- UniV8fllty
boys ' 4x.400m relay,
the
Cincinnati Hltla Chrfatlan Academy
finishing
14th with .a time
(23-4) va. New Lot&gt;onon Dude (2.1-11):
Manon Plaa"""' (24-4) VI. Hammon · of -3:49.40. The 4x800m
Badin (28-1) ·
·
· foursome of Johnson,
Aeiker; Josh HupP. and
DIVISION .IV
8 .J. Moore · also fatled to
SotnltltiaiS Th~ 2 p.m. ol!tl5 p.m.
&gt;
FinalS Frldl.y, 5 p.m. ·. , . advance to state after plac-..
·ing 14th ove~all · with a.
AI Lorlln'Pipa.Yinl ·
time of 8:58.00.
C"'alllne (13·13) va. Now Middletown
· ~lngllald (2e-4j; Hartville Lake Centar.
Winebrenner was also
Cllrlsllen School (23·5) .va. Gates M•• ·
I
5th
overall in the discus
·
·
·
'
Bry~~n W.llelw'llle photo ·
Gilmour Academy (1fl.5) ·
At Polrlck Htnry High School
Eastern's Keith Aeiker, left, crosses the finish line during the 4xBOO-meter relay Bvenl helc:l
PIHH _'IRc.. 81
To- Christian (17·5) vs. Bascom
last Wednesday at E. E. Davis Stadium at Oak Hill High School in Oak Hill.

Wast

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A I - Holghtl Woynt High
School
Reading (22·3) vs. Cincinnati
Christian (15-5) : Delphos Jellllnron ~18'41:VS· Sidney Lehmori Catholic (20-B)

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.Marshall rescinds

.WINGS SPECIAL

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Stone roDs to
regionals ·16 point lead .
inRSMGL

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.CQM

St'rong&lt;Yllle (23·3); Toledo Sl. Franpio
~ales 117-7) Yo. Whitehouse Anthony .
Wayne (19-7) or Porrysburo (24-1!)
'.
At lln._.lty of Clnolnnatl
• &lt;;:tm:lnnatl ~rchblahop Moeller .(20-5)

•· ..

....... :

_ne rOJI(,t, 1/ P+ll.,l(l.lt

8rylll Wll~ phoio

Prep Track and Field--:- .Division Ill . Regional qualifying

·

ne r4ttrl~ . .

.,

Wanama's Brice Clark, left, rounds second base and heads toward third during this-May
151file photo of a Class A sectional final against Buffalo at Waharria High School In Mason..

Fans·

'

~

MOSSPORT~OMYDAILVSEHTJNEL .eotA

.. Cte¥eland St. tgnattue (22- 7) vs.

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OwnaiCoometoiO@iol:

Tonya Wiw·
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CIIIIRCioloelllliNiil

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·Mda-fri 9am.SJ111• S•~ 'lim-3pm• Eve•i~J Hou11 By /lppointmell

3U llllnl

OH •

446-l473

•
::HUNTINGTON (AP) Marshall has cut ties to a
florida football rec111it folIqwing his arrest.
.
··Marshall coach Mark ·
Sbyder said Wednesday he's
&amp;:leased quarterback A.J .
(1raham from .his scholarsllip after tile 18-year-old
ii.:as charged with robbery
i'ilh a firearm.
· :Police in Tallahassee •
P'la., arrested Graham on
Tuesday.
:.Graham was the 2008
Florida player of the year.
He signed with Marshall in
February after leadi n.g
G.odby High in Tallahassee
to the Class 3A state championship
game.
.

Prep Softball -

MASON - Carl . Stone
of Ripley has added to his
lead, in the Riverside Senior ·
Men~s Golf League. Stone ·
has a total of 84.5 poiitts
for the season tol ead the
runners .up Chc:t Thomas
and Mtck · Wmebrenner
with their totals of 68.5
points. In fourth · place.
alone with 68 poitits is
Ralph Sayre.
. · . ..
Thesday's rainy weather
·brought out 61 players for
play. There was a total of
thirteen four-man teams
and three teams . of .three
players making 16 points
possible · for the . winning ·
team. The low score for the
day was 57 (-13 under par)
by the team of Siebert
Belcher (Pomeroy, OH),
Bob Hill (Gallipolis, OH),
Bill Pethtel (New Haven),
and Paul Lanham (Ripley) .
· There was a tie for sec.ond palce with scores of 60
('I 0 under par) between the
teams of Carl Stone ·
(Ripley}, Bob Stewart
(Coua,geville),
Curtis
Grubb (Gallipolis, OH},
and Pat Williamson (New
Haven); and the team of
Mick
Winebrenner
(Racine, OH), Bob Hysell
(Pomeroy, OH), Jack
Ochletree (Pt. Pleasant},
and Don Waldie (Pt.
Pleasant).
The closest to the pin
winners were Bob Oliver
on . the ninth hole and Bill
. Yoho on teb 14th hole. The
total of different players to. ·
play at least one week of
the season is now 98 with
five weeks remaining in the
first half of he 2009 season.

W.Va. State Tournament

Lady Knights beat"Lincoln on Day 1
De~.ending

Class AA champ tied
.titian against the ladies of
· Chapmanville who are cur- .
with Chapmanville e~:fter five innings renuy 24-3. ·
Bv ANNA JESSMER
MDSSPORTSeMYDAilVSENnNELCOt.t

VIENNA - The Lady
Knights had a strong tournament opening Wednesday
morning at the West
Virginia State Softball
Championships hosted in
Park.
Point
Jackson
Pleasant started off the
morning in a first-round
IJ'latchup aJ!ainst the girls of
Lincoln Htgh School to finish the game with a 3-0 victory.
While the weather might
have been muggy, but the
performance that the Lady
Knights put on was not.
Pitcher Tessa Wyant threw
for seven innings while
allowing only one hit.
Teammmates
Anna
Sommer and Jennifer

Wickline were the Point
Pleasant athletes to cross
homeplate- Sommer once
in the fi..St inning and a follow-up in the sixth, and
Wickhne totaling the three
runs in the sixth.
The opposing Lady
Cougars allowed two
unearned runs from Point
Pleasant with the two errors
that they accumulated during the contest. With only a
single hit .off of Wyant ,
Lincoln was unable to make
any sort of scoring movement.
Lady Knights Wickline,
Wyant, and Devin Cottrill
were the contributors to the
Red and Black runs, each
racking up an RBI to help
secure the Point Ple11sant
lead and their advancement
to !Jle next round of compe-

The .ladies of Point
Pleasant were unable to
complete play against
Chapmanville in Game 2
Wednesday nit:ht. with a
game suspension due to
weather at 9:30 p.m. The
game was the last semifinal match going into the
Class AA · championship
that will . be held Thursday
at 2 p.m .
The game was stopped
during the fifth inning with
a scorless tie between the
two squads.
Point
Pleasant
will
resume
play
against
Chapmanville today at 9
a.m.
POINT PLEASANT 3, LINCOLN 0

~'~lin•
Lincoln

.

100 002 0

oco oco

WP - Wyant; LP -

-

350

0 -

0 12

z.x:o.

Bryan Wlll*-lftle ~

Point Pleasant's Anna Sommer, left, and Tessa Wyant,
right, congnttulate one another lollowing an out In this April
1 file photo against Wahama in New Haven.

�.,

~ Page

A6· The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28 , 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com·

3rdAnnual

•
•

•

'

Imide

.. ,.

,I

'

~

Bl

The Daily Sentinel ·

. '

~t beats Roane COWity, Page B:Z

)

',

.....••

..

.

1 win away from finals, PageB6

Reds sweep Astros,l'age B6

•

.....• .

•

Thursday, May 28, 2009

• •

•

'•..

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BUFFALO . ·. The
• lloflboll - 8 - toumomont
Wahama White Falcon base:
~nt Pteuant vs Chapmanville al baU nine escaped with a 3-1
Vienna 9 a.m.
diamond victory Wednesllay
'ln&lt;l&lt; oncl Flold
.
afternoon
at .Buffalo High
0·2 Regional qualllyi11Q
Byesville
School to advance to the
Meadowbrook HS, 4:30 p.m. ..
Region IV finals in the comfrldlrllor21
pletion of the Regional
-and Fltkl ..
sel)lifinal contest with
0-3 Regional finals
F~l~leld Union
Charleston. Catholic followl-is, 4:30p.m.
•
ing a three day orde:;tl with
the weather:
a.tu•r· Ml)' M
-and Field
The regional semit'inp.l
D.-2 Regional finals at · Byesville win earns · the Bend At¢a
Meadowbrook ·Hs,
diamond nine a berth in the
Region IV finals against
Man on Thursday at 6 p.m.
BASEBAll at Wahama with the Vtctor
advancing to next weeks
PAIRINGS
at
state
tournament
• COLU¥BUS (AP) ~ Polnngs lor the
Appalachian
Power
Park
in
2009 Ohio High Sch(!OI Alhlollc
Charleston.
·
·.
As8ociation baseball tournament.
•
The two ranked teams
P.cftnt Pleasant ac Weir, 8:30 p.m.

at

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Ba.dlum
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va .

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aA&gt;advlaw Helghlo (2l-4);.Lakewood St.
i4word (20.6) Ys. Willoughby Sculh (19·

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Favorite Lum!Mr Yard
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DIVISION I

S#mlnnsiS ThuroflSy, 2 p.m. and 5 p.m.
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Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Man at 'Nahama. e p.m.

1.'' ....,___,..,.:-~,..---..,

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White Falcons soar past
Charleston Catholic, 3-1

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... ..,. ....

j
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;: • At Dublin COllman High Sct&gt;ool
Plckerlngton North (27· 3) vs.

~,__,_,.....,'lli,...B::-1)-::Spor:--.....
-::'G&lt;iodo.,-:
,

Gi•hanna

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

B4Yidoon (22-5) YB . Harrison (18-7)
:.
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Lincoln

(23-5};

HUUard

.began lhe regional post-season conies! on Monday but ·
rai.n forced the postponement before the first pitch
was. thrown. On Tuesday
the While Falcons and Irish
played five innings before
rain again washed the game
out forcing a tbin:j., day of
ba8!lball aciivity to complete
the Region IV semifinal
affair.
·.
W.ahama carried a 3-1 lead
when play resumed at the
point of interruption .on
Wednesday wilh the Bend
·Area team holding on for the
tourney win.
The White Falcons col·
lected only five · hits during
lhe ]hree day marathon but
bunched three of those in the
botlom half of the fifth
inning to score three times
PIIIH 1H Wahalll8, 82

.. 4. ' •.
'

1.'' ;

.· /,

.

.

Eastern has three left in D-3
BY BRYAN WALlER$

STAFF REPORT

LANCASTER - Both
track and field programs
from Eastern and Southern
htgh .schools
started
Division
III
regional
quali- .
vs. Cfncinh&amp;tl Glen Eata (20-7); West
fying
Wednesday
night
·at
.
eoootor Lakola
(22·S) ~··
. «etterlllQ Fairmont (18·10)
Fairfi.eld . Union High
'
School
with . a combined
DIVISION II
dozen athletes .. .Headed
•
&amp;mlflnsfs 'ThtJI'SdSy, 2p.m. snd 5 p.m.
into Friday night's ·Cha!ll·
; •
Flnai(J Friday, 2 p.m.
.
pionship events, that num; .'
AI Hu.,.On High School
ber. is now down to just
Parma Padua Francl...., (17-7) Yo.
h
El~ardon NOtre Oame.Calhedrai Latin I rell · ·
(17-5): Loutovlllo (20·6) Yt. Poland
In fact, of the II rogionSomlnary ·(l?-7)
·
a! qualifiers. that competed.
AITI!IIn Unlvortlty
Lima Shawriao (2S·B) Yo. Bollvllls
in $even . different events
Olear . Fork (24·4): CuyohO!Ia
Wednesday in Fairfield
Walsh Jesuit (23-3) va. Boy VIHaga Bay
C 'n
. I
(17-9)
.
ou ty, ony . one . - .
can:·~~:~;.~:;:":;~~r!~~Now Eastern's Klint Connery
~hlladelphla (IS-.111: WIY&lt;Ir~ (24-4) Ya, - managed to place in the
c~ldga (22-11) . .· . • . • • . to
. p-ei.gb,.t w.hile securi.ng a
. At Un.'wrwJIY ot DIPm
'
h D 3 regtonaI
Cincinnati 1\rchblohop McNicholso ·spo~ In t . e ' (21·9) va. Franklin (22·5): Colu~ St. . chl\lllpionships.
Francis DeS•"• (20.8) VI. eauarontalne
Connery _ . ·who com(2N)
peted in . three spearate
DIVISION Ill
regional events ~ finished
SemlllnsiB Thurridlly. 2 p.m. and 5'p,m. . seventh overall in tl~e 400Finals Frldsy. 8p.m.
meter dash, earning a spot
in Friday's finals witli a
At,Moaolllon Wuhlngton High
'
School
time of 53.49 seconds.
Cqnton Cenlral Catholic (16-8·1) vs.
Connery also failed to
GarreHavllla Ga~leld (18·5); Ga~leld
qualify in the I OOm dash,
HeightS• Trlolov (17·7) Y&amp;•. Warran
Champion (17cA)
.
posting a time of. 12.11
At Ellltl Middle lchaol
seconds to' place 15th out
Milan Ed180n (20·7) . Yo. Richwood
NOrth Union (1 H); Defiance nnora (19of 16 overall.
·B)..vo. Coldwater (27-2)
Connery ....: along with
At ChiiiiOOiho VA ·Mal!lartll
8tadlur~~
Kelly Winebrenner, Mike
Gnadenhutten Indian Valley (23-2) Y8.
Johnson and Keith Aeiker
ProctGrvll" F~ ; Whaelersbu'll (23.:... also failed to qualify in
3) VI. Chllllootht Zane - . (22-&amp;)
At WYigllt s- UniV8fllty
boys ' 4x.400m relay,
the
Cincinnati Hltla Chrfatlan Academy
finishing
14th with .a time
(23-4) va. New Lot&gt;onon Dude (2.1-11):
Manon Plaa"""' (24-4) VI. Hammon · of -3:49.40. The 4x800m
Badin (28-1) ·
·
· foursome of Johnson,
Aeiker; Josh HupP. and
DIVISION .IV
8 .J. Moore · also fatled to
SotnltltiaiS Th~ 2 p.m. ol!tl5 p.m.
&gt;
FinalS Frldl.y, 5 p.m. ·. , . advance to state after plac-..
·ing 14th ove~all · with a.
AI Lorlln'Pipa.Yinl ·
time of 8:58.00.
C"'alllne (13·13) va. Now Middletown
· ~lngllald (2e-4j; Hartville Lake Centar.
Winebrenner was also
Cllrlsllen School (23·5) .va. Gates M•• ·
I
5th
overall in the discus
·
·
·
'
Bry~~n W.llelw'llle photo ·
Gilmour Academy (1fl.5) ·
At Polrlck Htnry High School
Eastern's Keith Aeiker, left, crosses the finish line during the 4xBOO-meter relay Bvenl helc:l
PIHH _'IRc.. 81
To- Christian (17·5) vs. Bascom
last Wednesday at E. E. Davis Stadium at Oak Hill High School in Oak Hill.

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Noworl&lt; Cath&lt;ll~ ~19-8) vo. RaCine
Sllulhorn (12·12); Willow WOO&lt;t
Symmoa Valley(l5·2) YS. Torontq (25-3
. )
A I - Holghtl Woynt High
School
Reading (22·3) vs. Cincinnati
Christian (15-5) : Delphos Jellllnron ~18'41:VS· Sidney Lehmori Catholic (20-B)

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.WINGS SPECIAL

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Stone roDs to
regionals ·16 point lead .
inRSMGL

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.CQM

St'rong&lt;Yllle (23·3); Toledo Sl. Franpio
~ales 117-7) Yo. Whitehouse Anthony .
Wayne (19-7) or Porrysburo (24-1!)
'.
At lln._.lty of Clnolnnatl
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Prep Track and Field--:- .Division Ill . Regional qualifying

·

ne r4ttrl~ . .

.,

Wanama's Brice Clark, left, rounds second base and heads toward third during this-May
151file photo of a Class A sectional final against Buffalo at Waharria High School In Mason..

Fans·

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MOSSPORT~OMYDAILVSEHTJNEL .eotA

.. Cte¥eland St. tgnattue (22- 7) vs.

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446-l473

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::HUNTINGTON (AP) Marshall has cut ties to a
florida football rec111it folIqwing his arrest.
.
··Marshall coach Mark ·
Sbyder said Wednesday he's
&amp;:leased quarterback A.J .
(1raham from .his scholarsllip after tile 18-year-old
ii.:as charged with robbery
i'ilh a firearm.
· :Police in Tallahassee •
P'la., arrested Graham on
Tuesday.
:.Graham was the 2008
Florida player of the year.
He signed with Marshall in
February after leadi n.g
G.odby High in Tallahassee
to the Class 3A state championship
game.
.

Prep Softball -

MASON - Carl . Stone
of Ripley has added to his
lead, in the Riverside Senior ·
Men~s Golf League. Stone ·
has a total of 84.5 poiitts
for the season tol ead the
runners .up Chc:t Thomas
and Mtck · Wmebrenner
with their totals of 68.5
points. In fourth · place.
alone with 68 poitits is
Ralph Sayre.
. · . ..
Thesday's rainy weather
·brought out 61 players for
play. There was a total of
thirteen four-man teams
and three teams . of .three
players making 16 points
possible · for the . winning ·
team. The low score for the
day was 57 (-13 under par)
by the team of Siebert
Belcher (Pomeroy, OH),
Bob Hill (Gallipolis, OH),
Bill Pethtel (New Haven),
and Paul Lanham (Ripley) .
· There was a tie for sec.ond palce with scores of 60
('I 0 under par) between the
teams of Carl Stone ·
(Ripley}, Bob Stewart
(Coua,geville),
Curtis
Grubb (Gallipolis, OH},
and Pat Williamson (New
Haven); and the team of
Mick
Winebrenner
(Racine, OH), Bob Hysell
(Pomeroy, OH), Jack
Ochletree (Pt. Pleasant},
and Don Waldie (Pt.
Pleasant).
The closest to the pin
winners were Bob Oliver
on . the ninth hole and Bill
. Yoho on teb 14th hole. The
total of different players to. ·
play at least one week of
the season is now 98 with
five weeks remaining in the
first half of he 2009 season.

W.Va. State Tournament

Lady Knights beat"Lincoln on Day 1
De~.ending

Class AA champ tied
.titian against the ladies of
· Chapmanville who are cur- .
with Chapmanville e~:fter five innings renuy 24-3. ·
Bv ANNA JESSMER
MDSSPORTSeMYDAilVSENnNELCOt.t

VIENNA - The Lady
Knights had a strong tournament opening Wednesday
morning at the West
Virginia State Softball
Championships hosted in
Park.
Point
Jackson
Pleasant started off the
morning in a first-round
IJ'latchup aJ!ainst the girls of
Lincoln Htgh School to finish the game with a 3-0 victory.
While the weather might
have been muggy, but the
performance that the Lady
Knights put on was not.
Pitcher Tessa Wyant threw
for seven innings while
allowing only one hit.
Teammmates
Anna
Sommer and Jennifer

Wickline were the Point
Pleasant athletes to cross
homeplate- Sommer once
in the fi..St inning and a follow-up in the sixth, and
Wickhne totaling the three
runs in the sixth.
The opposing Lady
Cougars allowed two
unearned runs from Point
Pleasant with the two errors
that they accumulated during the contest. With only a
single hit .off of Wyant ,
Lincoln was unable to make
any sort of scoring movement.
Lady Knights Wickline,
Wyant, and Devin Cottrill
were the contributors to the
Red and Black runs, each
racking up an RBI to help
secure the Point Ple11sant
lead and their advancement
to !Jle next round of compe-

The .ladies of Point
Pleasant were unable to
complete play against
Chapmanville in Game 2
Wednesday nit:ht. with a
game suspension due to
weather at 9:30 p.m. The
game was the last semifinal match going into the
Class AA · championship
that will . be held Thursday
at 2 p.m .
The game was stopped
during the fifth inning with
a scorless tie between the
two squads.
Point
Pleasant
will
resume
play
against
Chapmanville today at 9
a.m.
POINT PLEASANT 3, LINCOLN 0

~'~lin•
Lincoln

.

100 002 0

oco oco

WP - Wyant; LP -

-

350

0 -

0 12

z.x:o.

Bryan Wlll*-lftle ~

Point Pleasant's Anna Sommer, left, and Tessa Wyant,
right, congnttulate one another lollowing an out In this April
1 file photo against Wahama in New Haven.

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

·CLASSIFIED

•

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

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/photo

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MORGAN BURT-

Track
fromPageBl
with a heave of 95 feet, 3
inches. Eastern's lone
fe m,ale participant on
Wednesday - . Morgan
Burt - failed to clear a

Wahama
from Page 81
and erase a 1-0 Charleston
Catholic advantage.
WHS began its three run
rally off Irish lefty, Sam
Wood, after Wood retired
the first two Falcon batters
in the fifth, Tyler Kitchen
ripped a Wood offering into
right to initiate the three
· run uprising with Jacob ·
. Ro.ach working his way ·
buck from an 0-2 count to
coax a walk · off the
Charleston Catholic ace.
Garrett Underwood then
· de livered a clutch, base
clearing double into the
gap in ri ght-center to send
both Kitchen ·and Roach
scampering home with
what proved to be the game
winnin g tallies. William
, Zuspan. provided the local
nme wtth an msurance ru11
moments later following a
free pas&gt; to Zac Warth with
a base hit back through the
middle
to drive
in
Underwood and give
· Wahama a 3- 1 lead.
On ..yednesday WHS dia. mond coach, Tom Cullen.
ca lled on junior right-hander William Zuspan to
close the door on the Irish
in relief of starter Jerry
Berkley. Berkley scattered
five hits while striking out
three and · walking three
with the lone Charleston
·Cath olic
run
being
unearned.
Zuspan. needing six outs
to vault the locals into the
Region rv finals, allowed a
: hit in the sixth and the sev·
enth but pitched his way
out of trouble with three
,trikeouts and no walks.
Matt Goolsby greeted
Zuspan with a single to
center to open the Irish
'ixt h but successive strikeout' and a fine running

height in the high. jump.
Southern 's lone regional
entry - the ·boys 4x200rn
relay team·· · of · Sean
Coppick , .Joey Forester,
Drew Hoover. and Andrew
Young .:... finished 16th
overall with · .a time of
L:45.23.
The
Dc3 · hopeful s

EAsTERN

remaining · from Meigs is . set · to compete in the
County are all from · 800m ·run final on Friday
Eastern . Connery remains as well.
in the 400m dash , while · .The regional finals will
Johnson will compete in · begin on Friday at 4 p.m.
.both ~he ·high jump . and
Complete resu.lts of D-3
. 800m run on Friday. Emeri regional qualifying at
Connery is the final Lancaster are available on
female athlete remaining the
web
at
from Meigs County, as she www.baumspage.com

catch , by Roach 'in left~cen- ._meeting the likes Of Class
AAA foes Logan, Cagital
ter ended the threat: .
In the seventh Charleston and Nitro in addiiion. to
AA
opponents
Catholic placed · the •tying Class
Chapmanville
'
and
runs on base on a WHS
error and a single by Alex Wyoming East.
The
Hillbillies . and
Bobinger with one out but
Zuspan extinguished the Wahama have faced three
Irish bid to knot the score common opponents this
by getting Bo. McKown to year in Buffalo, Charleston
pop out before fanning Catholic and Williamstown
John Baird to end the
game.
Wahama totaled five hits
in the three day outing With
Underwood's two-run blast·
being the big hit of the con- ·
test. Zuspan collected an
RBI single with Kitchen ,
Roach and Brice Clark also
owning a single each.
Wood paced Charleston
Catholic offensively with a
pair of singles with
Goolsby, McKown, David
Sadd , Patrick Huxley and
Bobinger also stroking a
single -each for the Irish .
Wood was sailing along
with a one-hitter through
the first four frames before ·
for Charleston Catholic
before the Falcons got to
the lefthander for three
runs on three hits in the
fifth. Wood worked five
innings allowing three
runs, all earned, on four
hits with four strikeouts
and tllree walks in taking
the
mound
setback .
Bobinger pitched the sixth
for Charleston Catholic and
gave up a lone hit to Clark
while striking out two and
walking none .
Wahama will host the
Region IV finals against
Man ( 16- 12) today at 6
p.m. after the Hillbillies
defeated Matewan by a 5-4
margin in eight innings on
Wednesday in the other
semifinal regional contest.
Like Charleston Catholic.
Man encountered some
pretty stiff competiti on
duri ng the 2009 sprmg sea·
son with the Hillbillies

000 100 0 - ·1 7 0
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r. r ' --•· · &lt;' -~· ""'""
·
.
Equal tli&gt;uslng Opportu·
c•lldiEI&lt;MrlyCorw ......................;................ 312 Trucko ........................................,................2031
con Gn:y parrio&lt;. must,. In ment IIams, schOol disk Juno .1:.S, 11\doota, 11-5, Suv'o. Truclco. C.rs lull nlty 'r!llt ·lnatltutlon 18 en
computo..........................:........................... 314 UtllllyTroll.,.. ............................................ 2040
a""'! r...oo 304-67l-l718 jantlquef, · 2-50cc motor· Forni Run-Morning' Star siZe and oompiOio, all Eq.;.l apqortunlty P.,.
Contractora .....................................;............ 311 Vana........, ................................... ........... ..... 2041
or .593-0408.
sc~. dlshet ~ mtny 1. Pln;e . Grove . Roads. with
wa~.
Prioll vtdaf ltld Enip!opr.·
Domeatlci/Janltorl.t .................................. 311 Wontto buy .........,.....................................2010
other Items IMIIr\g do- jMolgs County Rda. 30 a ~ at $11100. Stop ot ~::.::::~::!-~::;_=
Eloclrloal ...................................................... 3!10 RMI E...to ........................................... 3000
nattd, lood provtctad In :14) ·
. . Doll Ccolc Moto!W ~ Clean 1 br- tum. apart·
Ft ..ncl.t .......................................................322 c-tory Ploto..........,............................... 3008 •
;;lh;;,&amp;c;;;h;;;urc:fl;;;;,;k;;;llc;;;han;;;e!!!!!!""
. .
.
JoeiCion
Pllco. mont, dep. Rei req. coli
HNith ........................................................... sae com ...rctol ................................................3010
Be~
tumnum,
1104-e75-:~e 7o.
tttratlng • Cootlng.;..................................... ue Condomlnlumo.......................................... 3011
::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
..~.- 0
Homo fmp..,_nto :130
,
For S.lo by ow.................,, .......................3020
~
ftlmlluN
toys, ""~"' '"""· .
For .._ . large attracJnlouron............ ;......................,..................,332 HouHO fOr 8ale ........................................ 302S
, _ Equlpntonl
Dy bank In Syrocuoil,
tlvt . 3 bcldroom. untur·
Lawn Ber¥Jce ........,., ........................,.,... , .... 33&lt;1 lAnd (A-1:...............,......... ., .............. 3!)30
EB~
INTEQAI'N 2
.Large
ma~ May29-ll08am
nl- 2nd floor apl. LR
M!J•IclDanc.tDrlma ...............~ ............. ,•••~ ...33&amp; Lota ...................... :..................................... 3031
•
• COUChes 740-25&amp;-8800
_, _..._ F...., .
~... P
1
Other servtceo ........ :...............................:...,.331· Waqt to buy..........,,,,,.;............................. 3040
KIEFER BUILT, .
. '
Hugo Yl•u Su,
overforlks
ark In
...............,...............,.....340&lt; ~oal Eolot• Aon1o_to,...........,...... , .........._.... 3100
V""EV HORSE/LIVE
Ml 1 ·
Saturday, May 29-llO,
Gallpotla, Utiltfts not In·
Plumbln•"'Jootrlcol
"'" S.rvtc••··1"""'""' '"""''"'' •"•"M:a . Apairt~nt./l"ownhDUII'!tl·"'"''"""'~!"""'' 3105
. SnTOC-.. K
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, .
101 tiiiiOVO
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~ of . baby ' "··-·
.
el""~
Profelllonll
fY\
.....
ou-.
~ ",, .....
~
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uuww
Ropolra .........................................................l44 Com010rc1iol..................................,.........,... 3110
LOAD MAX E~IP- Jet A-ton Motora
adult clotheS, .3 Bed, a••• HUD References. req•irtrd, Se·
Roofing .........................................................~ Condomlnlurn~~ .......................................... 31.11
· fOddltf'
\H\IrN'I
.....,..
"'
-·
rlty De-"" S600I
, •·•urlty ......................... :..............................348 Hou-lurlhnl.. ..............,....................... 3520
MENT
TRAILERS; riPattoct,nowl .rollllln .
1. '-"•. · ... -IOJII•lll'llomon"\\ ·. cu
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EXPRESS
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T•x!Acoountlng
........................................... 310 · Land jAoruvoJ .......................................... -2
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ltMis ;. de- dwn.l3 _Y"· 11 a-. f&lt;lt hM: oc&amp;
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or
call
1011
3938
Trovei/E,.rtllln.....,l ..................................352 8 1 -........................................_............. 35H •
lvlno1oiCJ0.537-t528 ..,
· ror· ~ ~ • .,_ ~9'60lToC61.
.._ ...
_
1........
Flnancloi......................................................AOO W•nllo Ron1 ..........................................,... 354Q
CARGO/CONCESSION
•• •M•• ,,...
;:;-~
~~~':'"!~
Financial Servloe~ .................................- ...~.405 ManufiiCturecl Houll,nQ ............................. 4000
TRAILERS
· B+W
1tttct10n . of tova You .
.
Q, I Uvtng 1 ll1d 2
Jnau,.nce .................................................... 410 LOIO ............................................................&lt;IOOS
GOOSENE:..," FLATBED
don' wont to ,.;. thta LoGrando - · ll8R ~w uuo . . .
Monoy to ~- .............................................415 ..............,.................................................!1010 ·
""
24 Ft , llftlUrld
Ridge Ad tOto bfk!k llan!WOod ftooll. Sidroom llpls. at Vlltaga
EducotJon .................................................,...IOO Ron1ol0 ...................................................... !1015
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· pool, - . pooi - · onot Galc1
"
ffi. '2 full bcltho. contrll Menor ana RIYOrSide
Busl-oiT&gt;odoSch001 ...........................105 SIIIOo...........................................................!IO!IO
TIRE TRAILER tNVEN· pump po&lt;1
1 towslgntfrom881
air, tox14 metal build- Apts. In Mlddta!&gt;O~. from
lnatructlon 6 T,.lnlng ................................5l0 . SUppiiOo..................................................... !I021
TORY AT
yr old llnor. $600 OBO. EstataiGaraQe
Sate lng, 5 mlno. from . town. $327 · · to
$592.
Louono........................................................SIS Wontlo auy ............................................... 4030
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·
741l-36!!-6922 ·
" - - CraoJc
_
Road 112 51011,000• 74 o-709-1858 740-992·5064.
Equal
Peraon•l ....................................................... sao AMort Propeny ......................................... IOOO
TRAILERS COM
~.. Anlmals ........................................................ IOO ~ooon !'I'Operty tor oot............................ 102s
.
·
,
ml o11 Aouhl 7 Frt &amp; sat ·
·
Houstno'ot!Portunlty. ·
Animal Supplloo .......................................... IOI Rooort
fur ................................ 1010
7~-3825
Baklwln Plano In ,..1 9am. Family JIVed thOfo 4 Bed, 2 Bethl Only lfilond Vrew Motet Ills
Horno .......................................................... IIO Ettoploy....,...............................................IOOO
=:-:::"~~":!'::~~ ,;,., condition $
for over 50 yrs. Wood- $25,000. tor listings vacancies $36,00/NighL
Llvootock...................................... :............... l11 Accauntlng/Flnanaloi..........,.....................IIOOI
BIG SUMMER SALE ON ,......
,1000 worlclng tools,· household J100-820-o194ti exA019
." ... ~7
P«o .............................................. ,.....,.........l20 Admlnlot,.ll........loool0nai.....................II004
LAWN AND GAAOEN OBO.
740-388-o922 Items I Bmlll owJt. ~~-~~-.-~~ ;.;~:;:;;;;.'j~~;..--.~~
Wont 1o buy.................................................. l25 Coo~ler&lt;C- ....,............. ;..........................10011
EQUIPMENT, 4' Fin~ Leave meseago no an- a~ """" fumltura, a _v;,.,.,..wido fur ul• In Hon- Mcldleh IBR apt Call
Agrlc:ultuN ................................_.... ,............. 'IOO Chlklllldllrlr C.re ...............~ ..................... eooa
lo
swer
,....,.. ..,.,...,
7...
"-tvllot't
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 701 Clerlcet .. ~~":""'"'""'""'"'..., ............................ ~
. 10
lng mowe~ •as
w as
·
·
tf'P· tlipea, toddl9r . fm!: · lbr.Jbi.' oat A ~~ ~
Gardon a ProdUct...................................... ,710 c-o~1~ ..............................................1012 . $599.QO. 5 6 &amp; 1' fin_,.,.
.,
~ a toya and I1)UCh ""'."'
kllocly '"" SpOclouo .
MOon&lt;ilhtid ,
Hoy, Food.SMCI,Gr-'n ...,........"................. 71&amp; Drlvoro&amp;o.tlvory............................"...,..eou
lng """"'" also •val~ Sol 01 tlriO 2254o-18 .mort. ·. ..
copr.., 2 ell'
ftoof ept . Olio~
Hunllng&amp;Lind ......................,....................72G , l!ducallon•.................................,..............I011
abtac MF 2tiOO TAAC. $40, It cu. ft. .
· .
pump Jrl om ioti113 &lt;ia11pcitto .City Park and
Wontlo bU,..................................................'I'II J!!loctrlaat Plumblng...................................eo1•
TOR 011. FOR 72_ $7". lg. ~· col~-·. Fri May at I Sal May 30 565.000 l00-1182.J91ll ,
- · . L...... - , . tm,
M&lt;orohandlH .................................,.,........... eoo Emplo-' AgoncJM ..............................I020
°
~
-M• t 41 F - Lone Bern
"
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Antlqueo .......................................................IOI ~lnmollt,. ..... ,.................................... ~
MONTHS, MF ZERO Rem 12 Ga. 110!1- 1400. I
.
. .
.
Kllchln-d'"lng area With
Appllanco.................................................... 810 foOd Seforl-............................................1024
TURN MOWER ZT29 &amp;15-00SS PtoaM utO cell • ? Lots of miSC. ttemo; Home for Sale 0&lt;1 Stale at\ appliancoo &amp;
AIHltlano ................................................ ,......811 GovornrMnU F-1Jobo .................... IOH
0% FOR 72 MONTHS. phone when calling.
clollling, bic't Routt 160 !HII1011villo) cupboardS, 3 .· BA, 2
Ba&lt;geln Bo....,.nt .......................................UO . Holptn-O.Mrllt .................................. IOH
MF GC2600 TAACTOR
c:lal, lools, ...,.._, 2 m- ln&gt;rn Halnr. battlB.
laundry
·
area,
Cotle&lt;:Ubtoo.................................................. ll25 Law Enfor-t ...................................... l030 . 0% FOR 72 MONTHS,
....,.1 ·guno, vaJI c:lubcl Ootoils ot
$1100 per month. Cstl
Computoro ................................................... l30 Malntonance/Dom..tlc ............................. I032
JIM'S FARM EQUIP· Good rtdlng lawn mower -.ate:.
.
••••325 ....••••5
Equlpment/Suppllea.............. - ......:.............ess M•nagetnentl9up~~rv1110ry ........................ 8034
...
fOf' JJ Call
~
~
Flea Mor1cota .........................,...................... II!IO Mochonlco ................................................. I036
MoNT INC. 2t50 EAST- for sale. ~sk
,
Huge Sole Fri &amp; Set 78 m
laocl ~~-)
Fuat 011 Cooi/Wood/GOa ........:.............. ,..... 94S Modleal ....................................................... 6036
ERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS, 741l-256·11Q2
. ? 669 llulavllta Pike.
_...,..
l'lro
Townhouse
Fumlture ...................................................... l50 Mualcol ....................................................... 6040
OHI045631448-9777
AnliqUOB -.se kids 7~acrnlnBklwoll Ohio
~nmenl$ . 28R, 1.5
Hobby/Hunt a Sp0rt....................................l55 P•rt·11rne--TIImporttrl•• ............................. eo42
·
·
•
· •
bllh. biCk patiO. pool.
Kid's corno,.................................................eeo ~ootou..nlo ...........................,................... IOo44
Massey · Forguoon t35 Hot 1llb Ollllol, 1llp &amp; adult clothes, tamps, $11S,OO, will outrdlvide ployfjround, (trooll, ,.,.
Mlocollanooua.......................... .,_..,............liiiS Sllloa ..........................................................S048
gaa 2 otogo ctutch, lool&lt;· Quollly, Frto DloiJVtiY, l.clngobOrgaf, , _ . - -- . IIOIIvatad age,
wohlr
pd.)
Wont 10 buy...................................... .,.........t7l) Tochnlool .................,..................... IOIO
lng dl-1. good Hrao 10%. lUcl Tullo. - · . ~. ~. tniQ - · c.•. $425/ront
-·
Yard sele .............................~.....;- .............en ~rdltftiFIICIOrY ......................................... soaa
$3200.00 304-81Ht7S
J10WH4777
- ·-,~oyo, T.V.
?40-e0H1t8
dep. COtJ7~
I

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t'rl':tew•:

not

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•na AMU lead WUIIars June 5
for Late Moclola _,,000 to win JuM

~

Kldt 1Z·Under frft • Pits S30 ·

Chttk Otr Webrltt

Wood : S ·....,..

(; Ull)£1~

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$5000.

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, oot

Late Moclel&amp;-$1,500 to win, S176to_otart
410 SprlntS•$1,1500 to win, $200 toit.rt

1"'f1~I.JJ1~VISION

·Rae·

coon Rd. tum ott: ,elJ5,

:

Racing
Even
Frldav
Nlglltl
G•tu Open 4:30p.m. • Hot Laps 1 p.m. • Racing 8 p.m.

3 IS 2

:z1e

medlllely . follow~·

eere $9,000. &lt;146-9385 oi
M5·5142
.

ejon ol Anariclal lni1111u·
llcmo Offlai ol CQnsumer

304-675-4416. .
.
. . . ·requests lor any · iarge
LOST: I!Oaglo ftmale ..a.ld I Eldidy c..,., advance pa)'11&lt;1nta · of
COpper tone Beagle near 37 year-old O!BY "' home ,... or lnsur..,.,.. ean
Gallla County Fair Mo(n : will piovtde , child ·tho Oll1ce ol Consumer·
Gn&gt;urde.
caft. Summer lull • 01 Atflara .IOU tree· at
74&lt;&gt;446-2290
. planned ae1MIIel. : Call , t.JI88.278-0003 1o team
74&lt;&gt;387.0638 for an ·~ tho_mor1gage broker ~r
. Nilllcoo
lender IB , propeny H·
consed.
public
NOTICE OHIO V,ALLEY =~s;;::
-•-· (This is anceme
_.o lmprov.•••nts se,
n1
PUBI.ISHINO CO. reelrom•...,., lhe annou
Ohio . Valley
ommends itiat mu · do
· eo..Publishing CCmpanyf
bliBinesa with .people I®
WOiorprooftng
know, .an&lt;! NOT 10 , .lind . , Ur'lc:Ond•lonoiiWallma
',(Jj '
; "

Frlllav. Mav 29, 2009

"•gut•r Oener•l Admission 111
Sr. CIIIZAln11 112 wiGolden Bueklye C1nl

Wahama

·

the.

WAHAMA 3, CHAS. CATHO~tC 1
Catholic

HQW

placed ads

Shultll Momo~lll

t7112M

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

BUFFALO - In a contest
marked with an hour and a
half intermission , me Black
Knights baseball squad
powered through the weather and the competition to
complete a victonous match
against the Raiders of Roane
County. Point Pleasant
defeated Roane County in a
6-4, seven-inning game to
secure not only a win but a
ticket to continue on in the
Class AA . regional tournament.
T~ first two innings of
the matchup were a dead
heat between the . two
squads, both Point and
Roane unable to move ahead
of the other. This scorless
trend wasJ'romptly finished
in the thir inning, when the
Black Knights racked up a
single run to take the lead
and inch · ahead of the
Raiders in the match.
The fourth inning again
ended without any runs, setting the stage for what
would be .a more actionpacked game completion.
POINT P~EASANTe , ,
Point Pleasant added three
ROANE COUNTY 4
runs to their total in the fifth
which was responded to by a P&lt;;nt
001 03o 2 - 6 91
pair of runs by Roane Ro.ane
ooo 022 o - 4 72
County directly after.
· ' WP- Jones: LP- McKenzie,

AMRA Modlllldl, Punt Stocks, Four Cylinders, Mlni·WtdgH

.

OllfrH H.,., .

With the score at 4-2, the
Raiders rallied together to
put up another pair in the
sixth inning, .tying up that
rn&lt;~tch at 4 apiece.
The Black Knights' deter, )·
mination and strength triumphed with a two-run
finale and a solid defensive
effort in the seventh inning
that clinched the 6-4 victory
over Roane.
Offensive contributors to
the Point PleaSant success
were many. o·.w. Herdman
went 2 for 4 in the match as
weU as knocking out a dou·
ble . Eric Veith finished the
game at I for 4 and was
noted with a double and an
RBI. Titus Russell went 3
for 4 a.,nd hit two · almosthomer doubles that earned
him two RBis in the contest.
· Other hitters included a
single from catcher B J.
Lloyd, a single from Justin
Weaver, and a double from
Justin Cavendar.
The.Biack Knights continue in Class AA tournament
play on the road today at
Weir starting at 6:30p.m .

with Man sportin~ , a 3-2.
mark against the tno whil\!
Wahama was 7-2 against
the Bison , Yellow Jackets
and Irish.

WP - Barkley; LP Zuspan.

OrFa!!

Point beats Roane County
Bv ANNA JESSMER

www.mydlilylltJUne.com ·
www.mydaltytentktel.com
www.mydallyreglls..com

YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

J1samer

JosH HUPP-- EAsmRN

Sentinel • Page 93

{![;fibunt - Sentinel-

In this May
15 file
photo, Point
Pleasant's
Brock
McClung
reaches for
third base
in the Black
Knights' ,
post-season
match
against
Aavenswoo
d. Point
Pleasant
defeated
Roane
County
Wednesday
night in the
ClassAA
regional
tournament.

JOEY FORESTER AND SEAN
CoPPICK - SOUTIIERN

The

www.mydlllysentlnel.com

-··---

,,,

I

1\_ .......

'

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

·CLASSIFIED

•

IMlcbtssi!"~d~"!':!uytrit.mecom

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

l\tgtsttr
(304) 675-1333

Anna
/photo

MOSSPORTS'OMVOAilYSENTINEl.coM

'

.,ff! ··"'
...,.....
.

'

MORGAN BURT-

Track
fromPageBl
with a heave of 95 feet, 3
inches. Eastern's lone
fe m,ale participant on
Wednesday - . Morgan
Burt - failed to clear a

Wahama
from Page 81
and erase a 1-0 Charleston
Catholic advantage.
WHS began its three run
rally off Irish lefty, Sam
Wood, after Wood retired
the first two Falcon batters
in the fifth, Tyler Kitchen
ripped a Wood offering into
right to initiate the three
· run uprising with Jacob ·
. Ro.ach working his way ·
buck from an 0-2 count to
coax a walk · off the
Charleston Catholic ace.
Garrett Underwood then
· de livered a clutch, base
clearing double into the
gap in ri ght-center to send
both Kitchen ·and Roach
scampering home with
what proved to be the game
winnin g tallies. William
, Zuspan. provided the local
nme wtth an msurance ru11
moments later following a
free pas&gt; to Zac Warth with
a base hit back through the
middle
to drive
in
Underwood and give
· Wahama a 3- 1 lead.
On ..yednesday WHS dia. mond coach, Tom Cullen.
ca lled on junior right-hander William Zuspan to
close the door on the Irish
in relief of starter Jerry
Berkley. Berkley scattered
five hits while striking out
three and · walking three
with the lone Charleston
·Cath olic
run
being
unearned.
Zuspan. needing six outs
to vault the locals into the
Region rv finals, allowed a
: hit in the sixth and the sev·
enth but pitched his way
out of trouble with three
,trikeouts and no walks.
Matt Goolsby greeted
Zuspan with a single to
center to open the Irish
'ixt h but successive strikeout' and a fine running

height in the high. jump.
Southern 's lone regional
entry - the ·boys 4x200rn
relay team·· · of · Sean
Coppick , .Joey Forester,
Drew Hoover. and Andrew
Young .:... finished 16th
overall with · .a time of
L:45.23.
The
Dc3 · hopeful s

EAsTERN

remaining · from Meigs is . set · to compete in the
County are all from · 800m ·run final on Friday
Eastern . Connery remains as well.
in the 400m dash , while · .The regional finals will
Johnson will compete in · begin on Friday at 4 p.m.
.both ~he ·high jump . and
Complete resu.lts of D-3
. 800m run on Friday. Emeri regional qualifying at
Connery is the final Lancaster are available on
female athlete remaining the
web
at
from Meigs County, as she www.baumspage.com

catch , by Roach 'in left~cen- ._meeting the likes Of Class
AAA foes Logan, Cagital
ter ended the threat: .
In the seventh Charleston and Nitro in addiiion. to
AA
opponents
Catholic placed · the •tying Class
Chapmanville
'
and
runs on base on a WHS
error and a single by Alex Wyoming East.
The
Hillbillies . and
Bobinger with one out but
Zuspan extinguished the Wahama have faced three
Irish bid to knot the score common opponents this
by getting Bo. McKown to year in Buffalo, Charleston
pop out before fanning Catholic and Williamstown
John Baird to end the
game.
Wahama totaled five hits
in the three day outing With
Underwood's two-run blast·
being the big hit of the con- ·
test. Zuspan collected an
RBI single with Kitchen ,
Roach and Brice Clark also
owning a single each.
Wood paced Charleston
Catholic offensively with a
pair of singles with
Goolsby, McKown, David
Sadd , Patrick Huxley and
Bobinger also stroking a
single -each for the Irish .
Wood was sailing along
with a one-hitter through
the first four frames before ·
for Charleston Catholic
before the Falcons got to
the lefthander for three
runs on three hits in the
fifth. Wood worked five
innings allowing three
runs, all earned, on four
hits with four strikeouts
and tllree walks in taking
the
mound
setback .
Bobinger pitched the sixth
for Charleston Catholic and
gave up a lone hit to Clark
while striking out two and
walking none .
Wahama will host the
Region IV finals against
Man ( 16- 12) today at 6
p.m. after the Hillbillies
defeated Matewan by a 5-4
margin in eight innings on
Wednesday in the other
semifinal regional contest.
Like Charleston Catholic.
Man encountered some
pretty stiff competiti on
duri ng the 2009 sprmg sea·
son with the Hillbillies

000 100 0 - ·1 7 0
000 030

l.,liURSD i\ Y

x

-

m wmE Art AD
Sctc c1uful Ade

ShOuld lncludeT.._ 1 ' To "elp G.t ._pollee.••

KFr &amp; CARLYLE

« POLICIESc

May 29' &amp; 30 on SR 58!1 Lilt_lot S&amp;le: oo R..,oon
Rio Gflnllt, 9-3 Art- Crtel&lt; with .right of wa~: 2
ttqueo. tumlture, milo. mnoo out Aouto
im·

SSndhitl Ad Huge Savings
lab/Terr. mix l.g. 1118ck S1'EI!I. ARCI!
1kig w/ While ohe8l INGS .
304-675-2M1.
J ·RI!FQ'O 20&gt;24. '2Sx30
· .. ·
·
ed1iot for balanced owcdl! ·
Foun~ set of keys Wed. ~i•play dl!ll!uUm~ availilbk·.
7 _ m~!es d~n RT 2 citl todar! 8~3.S2-0469.

Somelhlng_lor l\leryoM

Found on

AffBii's BEFORE you rell•
nance your home· or ob·
ta!n a IOari. BEWARE of

',(\(

-------t 998 . ~QCi&lt;WilOd Cem~r

2311. hew NC
740-24~390

-

~b hlillllt/.
low.6a:.- .
.
.

~!"""'~~~~~ ~:~ - ~':"" :!i:

1992 SOUthwlna 30 ft nlllled, ancl' h"'** In
Motor Homt,tully. Mil Pomeroy and Mlddot10rt.
contained 464 Chevy lieeur1ty deposit required,
motor NC fiOWtr . gtn· no peta, 741!-992·2218
orotor, owning. Uklr\g ~~~~~~~
. $8400. 256-83-le
2~R AI'T,Ciose · to· Hoi'
==-:-:~":':!":!"":~~ zer Holpltal on SR 160
2007 Ulod 19 ft. ShadOW CIA. !7~) 441-(1194
CNIHr travel ~aller w/ CONVENIENTLY
1.().
rt'lont)l through 'tha' .rJ11BII . guarantee. Local reler·
------queen bod up front llg!lt CATED &amp; AFFORD· .
-un~ you have iny~gat- en... tumlahod. Eatlb·
weight, rool mooot ·AIC ABI.EI Townhouse apa~·
_lng lt18,P,ft•rlttg, ,.,,- ·
llshl!l1975. Cai24Hrs. ·
. Bulln•n &amp;Tnido
. unit,
gae
!umace, menta and/or small
,,;
740·448·0670,
Schocil
AMIFMICO/DVD · player, hOu..i !or rent Can ·
.. ' ·
.- ,
TV &amp; 111 ~"" 1 • micro- 741l-4•11:1111 tor Iippi·
1
·
ColllfiO
tango .'over
top. 2_
~~ roll out ~-~~·~:=::o:i=:...,
·,, h.ave"been
a.m.. joba, jCoreers
C!llllpollo
wave
gae .,.,...:.
•: .
WapfldLawn'lawncare
Clcsec.To Homo! .
awning.
Aoldi1~burner$8600,
ELLMti.rormauon.
VIEW APTS
in· at ect.,
mOwing,
waedeetlng
Cslr;~~:~-~4367
Pill
, _ Equljlt1101d
Wan!.~~ llu)o
266·1738
~~
' ~10ond~~~. ~~~~
..
'
have
Galllpo
· liS .ret.304-675·7407
!Iaiii&gt;&lt;&gt;-..-·"'' 11 Kl11ens 8 w0e1ca old Have you priced a John Top Dollar' . 111• Pnme nvtr 1011 tor rent, pa~o · EHO Elm
All ~
OtMr S.. orhioa
""'""'"' Uoo'bt• ....,,,.,,. house broken 10 ~Iva .O...o laiOiy'l You'll bel verlgold oolno; ony beautiful booch, plenty of VIew
Apts.
0111 !1104)882-3017
lrtlierntnll I
'h.t '~~n'bunll
-="::~.;:. away. 448-3742
surpnsedl Check oJJI our 10l&lt;/14KIIBK _gold· feW· •hade
.;.,
~
r
Into.
40 2 82
Dal1J II "' Pet . Cromattona. Call
ubjectlilthe '
:'::"~~~~~::::: used
lnventpry
at olry, donta! gold. pra 7 ... ' 5
Twlr) Rivero To- Is ac·
·
be • ked 74o-446-Bl40
Mini Dachshunds .CKC www.CAREQ.com. Car· 1113&amp; us. .. eurroncy, RV
oeptlng applications lor,
air Houehtg Act
.
must.
.
PIC.
'
rog:
5
•hOl!
hawed
1300
mlcllael
.
Equipment
proof/mint
~·
dlaService
at
Carmlollaol
wafting 1111 for HUO 8\lb968.
ao. d·a:y.·s,
l'l'olwNionaiSirticol
1 long haired S350 1ot 740-448-2412
mondll, MTS Coin Shop• . Trailers .
lldl•trd: ._t,BR apartment
ahot. .&amp; wormed._
151 2nd' Avtn\10, Clalll· -74~3825
lor the old&lt;!rly/Cllaiblad',
wl
TU.ANID DowN ON
H..,_
311U445' or 64 5-2396
po!lt,o14t284/l '. '
.
call876-6_679
Any pictures SOCIAL 8ECUA!TY Sl.t ·.·
moy ,.... meseage.
8TIHL Sales &amp; Sarvloo
RV SaMoe at_ C.rml·
~
... :, .
, NoFet .UnleosWeWinl :..:-k:I~P=
While Fe_inale Cat. 64 Now _Avallabia at Canni· .
:Y""'f!lle '· , chael . , , Trailers .
leil
,that 8~
I·688·582·5345
new seddlo $600, 6 yi Y~!t ~40-=~S~ do- chaal
' Equipment 3 !lmlly fjlrago 0.ta 5/28 t~as
:2B~R::".01*~-:::
. 8:0m~l-:
. f::!rom~H~ol·
:=o:=::---r::l:::::::::: old Quarter Horse wen .. o• · ·
.·
' ·· .
l _5129 if H 283 SR 588
/II~ Jilol':
zer. some · udiUioo p&lt;l. or
,_.'
PUMPING bloke gonde w/ children Free to good home: 5
Rio Grandi. Bo.lw llama, .
.
applianceS
avail,
,•
P up· will be.. SEPTIC
Gallla Co. OH and· w/ coil. New brlddle &amp; adorable and lovaDie 7
....._ clllldren, mile.
04 Hirtoy · Ool/tclaon Su· $400/mo ' +
dop.
:
d'Is.ca"rded' ,
Mason co. wv. Ron new seddls. seoo. Call weei .old klttena. Call
· . ,...rtll, u&lt; ·
per Glicta, dat. loddle 740-.1!8-5288
. or
~~~~~~~~=~~~;;:;;~E~v~on~~~~Ja~elc80r&gt;:~
740'845.0029
Huge YO on
lltoto Sale
blgo.of oxtnlo,
del. eJitro
wlndehleld,
· Jorclan
- - - - - - - · 8()0.537-ts28 · · ~O:H~M~el~ody~~~-~E~blln
740·388-0IIS
AudioM
, ataltin(j
May lots
niQa,. 988'6130
NOW LEASING
Free to good home:
IIOth.June 811\ 9AIIc 1238 258-1a71 otliSi-2092
·
E
O
Small Jack Russell 1 Racine \Jf11ttrd Mathodlll Uevlng Rd. o11 Route 8&lt;! .
Landing. 2 &amp; 3BR Avail·
CLASSIFI 0 IN EX
yearold.Call44e-1909
Churc:fl, Elm St., Raolno, west calumi&gt;Ja between 2003 Honda' XR 7C E able No. Pets, Tenant
L.osllll............nt....;.......:..................................~ "":rvrNtlCI"*I Yehlcloo ............................... 11000005
G,..l Dane Puppies
· Oh Auction Sat. Junt 6, Pt. Plttllllt and MaiiOr\
~'"'t ,~.. lOW - ~~~· Responsible lor Aent &amp;
Announcemo o............................;...,, ........- " :.................................,....... ,..................
10·30 am flll?
.
• - · ~N.
m- · ElectriC 304-87•·0023 or
Bir'lhdoy/Annlvoroory ...............,_...........,...... 205 8Jcycloo......................................................1010
4 boya, 3 ·black and 1 Pa,rtlll listing: wood 4 Family yaR! 11111. Frl· $600, Call446-3040
304-81H98t . ·
HappyAdo................................................... 210 -~~AC-Joo, .. ,........................:...... 10tl
blue Full blooded wnh
da Ma - "··1 Sat
•: ~001 a Founa ............;.................................c211 . OomporiRVo .&amp;'1'rllleio .....................,....... 1020
· ·
shaRI!&lt; 4' Searo fok11rr
Y·
Y ... - p,
·
N Srd A · In MIQdl
,.. ·Memoryffh-.,k You ...................:...........~••• :.. 220 ~orcyclea ........;.................~............ :........ 1021
AKC
,!stared
and hope. 'taCk auto tlarp i. urdiy May ~ Bil•?,
·~n 1 br ve~lhecl ~~·
'• Notlcoo .............;..... :............... :,....,.. ,........... 221' Olhor ................:...........,..,.,....;..... ;.............1010
POP, ca for more mclsiC ih.;,ta In onglnol ac.,.s from Rlolnt 1.0'
. I , &amp; dep. .
I'
:·• ~roonato .........................:......,..;..,...........,.. 230 Wont to ~uy ..............................,................1031
Information
·
·
·
gJon
Hill
boys
&amp; gtno
"'
·
·•
no
pe
~
740·992.0!65
waniOd ·.........~ ..........................................,..231 · Autoino1lvo ..... ,....... ,.. ,............................... 2000
S04·593-s079
or case, 10' Dlrfta 18~ ll-""r ~- women'o
· ~-~'
a. 1
·
300 . ,.u
• 1o a
. 1 J1L
·
2001
· ·)
··
saw
jointer.~-(Cra,~
"' -,· . Longaberger,
'
· ' ......0
_ .""
,1 A"'•·
-~~~coo ..................................... ,,.,,.............
~• • -......................................
304-593-347,
man'f, 8'lnaldt
d_o
_ '"!"~llll!i
- '·......1111!' 0011
•- ·· Ol •......
..., ·
• , Appllarico Sorvtco ........,.................... ~... :,... 3ml Autoe,.................................;....................... 201D
-··~·
COli~··~ ~
1101ot1t 52 Welt
AutomoUvo ... ;.,;.... ,....,.. ;.......;..,,....;.......~.... 304.. Cl-lo/Antl-..........;..._......................... 2011
T a
dowo. roto tiller. ' IIQor """"attoua, . ~-~•, 04 Niror\, *111\danl, . ak ·
'
'
BulldtngJII!-Iolo ...........&gt;.,..................:...... 301 Commorc10Uind..... rloi ............................... 2D20 · · ~IJI!IiWI!!ant!l!ll"!tllli;....
V'f~:~ mate, toolo &amp;. tool. alapd, toyl,lft:.
. 258-153eot256-1233
WOOd .Dr.. from $365 to
Butlneea ............. :......................................... 3DI P•rt•• .Acoeeaorl••·.................................:aou
w. td Older f, I Arrl so· dOo ranle ......,..IM., 5 FU.IVI:I.ur:
'
. ·$580.
7~2668.
Corarlng.................... :..................................310 Spon. Ullllly .............................. T ......;....... 2030
'"
'""'
·
r. r ' --•· · &lt;' -~· ""'""
·
.
Equal tli&gt;uslng Opportu·
c•lldiEI&lt;MrlyCorw ......................;................ 312 Trucko ........................................,................2031
con Gn:y parrio&lt;. must,. In ment IIams, schOol disk Juno .1:.S, 11\doota, 11-5, Suv'o. Truclco. C.rs lull nlty 'r!llt ·lnatltutlon 18 en
computo..........................:........................... 314 UtllllyTroll.,.. ............................................ 2040
a""'! r...oo 304-67l-l718 jantlquef, · 2-50cc motor· Forni Run-Morning' Star siZe and oompiOio, all Eq.;.l apqortunlty P.,.
Contractora .....................................;............ 311 Vana........, ................................... ........... ..... 2041
or .593-0408.
sc~. dlshet ~ mtny 1. Pln;e . Grove . Roads. with
wa~.
Prioll vtdaf ltld Enip!opr.·
Domeatlci/Janltorl.t .................................. 311 Wontto buy .........,.....................................2010
other Items IMIIr\g do- jMolgs County Rda. 30 a ~ at $11100. Stop ot ~::.::::~::!-~::;_=
Eloclrloal ...................................................... 3!10 RMI E...to ........................................... 3000
nattd, lood provtctad In :14) ·
. . Doll Ccolc Moto!W ~ Clean 1 br- tum. apart·
Ft ..ncl.t .......................................................322 c-tory Ploto..........,............................... 3008 •
;;lh;;,&amp;c;;;h;;;urc:fl;;;;,;k;;;llc;;;han;;;e!!!!!!""
. .
.
JoeiCion
Pllco. mont, dep. Rei req. coli
HNith ........................................................... sae com ...rctol ................................................3010
Be~
tumnum,
1104-e75-:~e 7o.
tttratlng • Cootlng.;..................................... ue Condomlnlumo.......................................... 3011
::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
..~.- 0
Homo fmp..,_nto :130
,
For S.lo by ow.................,, .......................3020
~
ftlmlluN
toys, ""~"' '"""· .
For .._ . large attracJnlouron............ ;......................,..................,332 HouHO fOr 8ale ........................................ 302S
, _ Equlpntonl
Dy bank In Syrocuoil,
tlvt . 3 bcldroom. untur·
Lawn Ber¥Jce ........,., ........................,.,... , .... 33&lt;1 lAnd (A-1:...............,......... ., .............. 3!)30
EB~
INTEQAI'N 2
.Large
ma~ May29-ll08am
nl- 2nd floor apl. LR
M!J•IclDanc.tDrlma ...............~ ............. ,•••~ ...33&amp; Lota ...................... :..................................... 3031
•
• COUChes 740-25&amp;-8800
_, _..._ F...., .
~... P
1
Other servtceo ........ :...............................:...,.331· Waqt to buy..........,,,,,.;............................. 3040
KIEFER BUILT, .
. '
Hugo Yl•u Su,
overforlks
ark In
...............,...............,.....340&lt; ~oal Eolot• Aon1o_to,...........,...... , .........._.... 3100
V""EV HORSE/LIVE
Ml 1 ·
Saturday, May 29-llO,
Gallpotla, Utiltfts not In·
Plumbln•"'Jootrlcol
"'" S.rvtc••··1"""'""' '"""''"'' •"•"M:a . Apairt~nt./l"ownhDUII'!tl·"'"''"""'~!"""'' 3105
. SnTOC-.. K
..fo•tlERS·
, .
101 tiiiiOVO
1"?,
~ of . baby ' "··-·
.
el""~
Profelllonll
fY\
.....
ou-.
~ ",, .....
~
~ .. No -to a"-'"·".
uuww
Ropolra .........................................................l44 Com010rc1iol..................................,.........,... 3110
LOAD MAX E~IP- Jet A-ton Motora
adult clotheS, .3 Bed, a••• HUD References. req•irtrd, Se·
Roofing .........................................................~ Condomlnlurn~~ .......................................... 31.11
· fOddltf'
\H\IrN'I
.....,..
"'
-·
rlty De-"" S600I
, •·•urlty ......................... :..............................348 Hou-lurlhnl.. ..............,....................... 3520
MENT
TRAILERS; riPattoct,nowl .rollllln .
1. '-"•. · ... -IOJII•lll'llomon"\\ ·. cu
,.....,
mo.
-·
c•~ao
EXPRESS
~ ~-'lA
~- nimo ' brandt,
' .
. ·, Col '
~
•Or
T•x!Acoountlng
........................................... 310 · Land jAoruvoJ .......................................... -2
- 5 HMSTEADER
: · &amp;
In-~ on
ri
other'
ltMis ;. de- dwn.l3 _Y"· 11 a-. f&lt;lt hM: oc&amp;
.
or
call
1011
3938
Trovei/E,.rtllln.....,l ..................................352 8 1 -........................................_............. 35H •
lvlno1oiCJ0.537-t528 ..,
· ror· ~ ~ • .,_ ~9'60lToC61.
.._ ...
_
1........
Flnancloi......................................................AOO W•nllo Ron1 ..........................................,... 354Q
CARGO/CONCESSION
•• •M•• ,,...
;:;-~
~~~':'"!~
Financial Servloe~ .................................- ...~.405 ManufiiCturecl Houll,nQ ............................. 4000
TRAILERS
· B+W
1tttct10n . of tova You .
.
Q, I Uvtng 1 ll1d 2
Jnau,.nce .................................................... 410 LOIO ............................................................&lt;IOOS
GOOSENE:..," FLATBED
don' wont to ,.;. thta LoGrando - · ll8R ~w uuo . . .
Monoy to ~- .............................................415 ..............,.................................................!1010 ·
""
24 Ft , llftlUrld
Ridge Ad tOto bfk!k llan!WOod ftooll. Sidroom llpls. at Vlltaga
EducotJon .................................................,...IOO Ron1ol0 ...................................................... !1015
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· pool, - . pooi - · onot Galc1
"
ffi. '2 full bcltho. contrll Menor ana RIYOrSide
Busl-oiT&gt;odoSch001 ...........................105 SIIIOo...........................................................!IO!IO
TIRE TRAILER tNVEN· pump po&lt;1
1 towslgntfrom881
air, tox14 metal build- Apts. In Mlddta!&gt;O~. from
lnatructlon 6 T,.lnlng ................................5l0 . SUppiiOo..................................................... !I021
TORY AT
yr old llnor. $600 OBO. EstataiGaraQe
Sate lng, 5 mlno. from . town. $327 · · to
$592.
Louono........................................................SIS Wontlo auy ............................................... 4030
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·
741l-36!!-6922 ·
" - - CraoJc
_
Road 112 51011,000• 74 o-709-1858 740-992·5064.
Equal
Peraon•l ....................................................... sao AMort Propeny ......................................... IOOO
TRAILERS COM
~.. Anlmals ........................................................ IOO ~ooon !'I'Operty tor oot............................ 102s
.
·
,
ml o11 Aouhl 7 Frt &amp; sat ·
·
Houstno'ot!Portunlty. ·
Animal Supplloo .......................................... IOI Rooort
fur ................................ 1010
7~-3825
Baklwln Plano In ,..1 9am. Family JIVed thOfo 4 Bed, 2 Bethl Only lfilond Vrew Motet Ills
Horno .......................................................... IIO Ettoploy....,...............................................IOOO
=:-:::"~~":!'::~~ ,;,., condition $
for over 50 yrs. Wood- $25,000. tor listings vacancies $36,00/NighL
Llvootock...................................... :............... l11 Accauntlng/Flnanaloi..........,.....................IIOOI
BIG SUMMER SALE ON ,......
,1000 worlclng tools,· household J100-820-o194ti exA019
." ... ~7
P«o .............................................. ,.....,.........l20 Admlnlot,.ll........loool0nai.....................II004
LAWN AND GAAOEN OBO.
740-388-o922 Items I Bmlll owJt. ~~-~~-.-~~ ;.;~:;:;;;;.'j~~;..--.~~
Wont 1o buy.................................................. l25 Coo~ler&lt;C- ....,............. ;..........................10011
EQUIPMENT, 4' Fin~ Leave meseago no an- a~ """" fumltura, a _v;,.,.,..wido fur ul• In Hon- Mcldleh IBR apt Call
Agrlc:ultuN ................................_.... ,............. 'IOO Chlklllldllrlr C.re ...............~ ..................... eooa
lo
swer
,....,.. ..,.,...,
7...
"-tvllot't
Farm Equlpment .......................................... 701 Clerlcet .. ~~":""'"'""'""'"'..., ............................ ~
. 10
lng mowe~ •as
w as
·
·
tf'P· tlipea, toddl9r . fm!: · lbr.Jbi.' oat A ~~ ~
Gardon a ProdUct...................................... ,710 c-o~1~ ..............................................1012 . $599.QO. 5 6 &amp; 1' fin_,.,.
.,
~ a toya and I1)UCh ""'."'
kllocly '"" SpOclouo .
MOon&lt;ilhtid ,
Hoy, Food.SMCI,Gr-'n ...,........"................. 71&amp; Drlvoro&amp;o.tlvory............................"...,..eou
lng """"'" also •val~ Sol 01 tlriO 2254o-18 .mort. ·. ..
copr.., 2 ell'
ftoof ept . Olio~
Hunllng&amp;Lind ......................,....................72G , l!ducallon•.................................,..............I011
abtac MF 2tiOO TAAC. $40, It cu. ft. .
· .
pump Jrl om ioti113 &lt;ia11pcitto .City Park and
Wontlo bU,..................................................'I'II J!!loctrlaat Plumblng...................................eo1•
TOR 011. FOR 72_ $7". lg. ~· col~-·. Fri May at I Sal May 30 565.000 l00-1182.J91ll ,
- · . L...... - , . tm,
M&lt;orohandlH .................................,.,........... eoo Emplo-' AgoncJM ..............................I020
°
~
-M• t 41 F - Lone Bern
"
-·
·•
Antlqueo .......................................................IOI ~lnmollt,. ..... ,.................................... ~
MONTHS, MF ZERO Rem 12 Ga. 110!1- 1400. I
.
. .
.
Kllchln-d'"lng area With
Appllanco.................................................... 810 foOd Seforl-............................................1024
TURN MOWER ZT29 &amp;15-00SS PtoaM utO cell • ? Lots of miSC. ttemo; Home for Sale 0&lt;1 Stale at\ appliancoo &amp;
AIHltlano ................................................ ,......811 GovornrMnU F-1Jobo .................... IOH
0% FOR 72 MONTHS. phone when calling.
clollling, bic't Routt 160 !HII1011villo) cupboardS, 3 .· BA, 2
Ba&lt;geln Bo....,.nt .......................................UO . Holptn-O.Mrllt .................................. IOH
MF GC2600 TAACTOR
c:lal, lools, ...,.._, 2 m- ln&gt;rn Halnr. battlB.
laundry
·
area,
Cotle&lt;:Ubtoo.................................................. ll25 Law Enfor-t ...................................... l030 . 0% FOR 72 MONTHS,
....,.1 ·guno, vaJI c:lubcl Ootoils ot
$1100 per month. Cstl
Computoro ................................................... l30 Malntonance/Dom..tlc ............................. I032
JIM'S FARM EQUIP· Good rtdlng lawn mower -.ate:.
.
••••325 ....••••5
Equlpment/Suppllea.............. - ......:.............ess M•nagetnentl9up~~rv1110ry ........................ 8034
...
fOf' JJ Call
~
~
Flea Mor1cota .........................,...................... II!IO Mochonlco ................................................. I036
MoNT INC. 2t50 EAST- for sale. ~sk
,
Huge Sole Fri &amp; Set 78 m
laocl ~~-)
Fuat 011 Cooi/Wood/GOa ........:.............. ,..... 94S Modleal ....................................................... 6036
ERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS, 741l-256·11Q2
. ? 669 llulavllta Pike.
_...,..
l'lro
Townhouse
Fumlture ...................................................... l50 Mualcol ....................................................... 6040
OHI045631448-9777
AnliqUOB -.se kids 7~acrnlnBklwoll Ohio
~nmenl$ . 28R, 1.5
Hobby/Hunt a Sp0rt....................................l55 P•rt·11rne--TIImporttrl•• ............................. eo42
·
·
•
· •
bllh. biCk patiO. pool.
Kid's corno,.................................................eeo ~ootou..nlo ...........................,................... IOo44
Massey · Forguoon t35 Hot 1llb Ollllol, 1llp &amp; adult clothes, tamps, $11S,OO, will outrdlvide ployfjround, (trooll, ,.,.
Mlocollanooua.......................... .,_..,............liiiS Sllloa ..........................................................S048
gaa 2 otogo ctutch, lool&lt;· Quollly, Frto DloiJVtiY, l.clngobOrgaf, , _ . - -- . IIOIIvatad age,
wohlr
pd.)
Wont 10 buy...................................... .,.........t7l) Tochnlool .................,..................... IOIO
lng dl-1. good Hrao 10%. lUcl Tullo. - · . ~. ~. tniQ - · c.•. $425/ront
-·
Yard sele .............................~.....;- .............en ~rdltftiFIICIOrY ......................................... soaa
$3200.00 304-81Ht7S
J10WH4777
- ·-,~oyo, T.V.
?40-e0H1t8
dep. COtJ7~
I

.res

55

:::3t::~

~~~f~=~5~~~:

'thln

t'rl':tew•:

not

icked

•na AMU lead WUIIars June 5
for Late Moclola _,,000 to win JuM

~

Kldt 1Z·Under frft • Pits S30 ·

Chttk Otr Webrltt

Wood : S ·....,..

(; Ull)£1~

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.....

a
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.._rty

I_

·-"i· ,.._,1\o!t

ell-

w w.- -

'

- - - - - - - - - , ·---- - ------

$5000.

-

·H
, oot

Late Moclel&amp;-$1,500 to win, S176to_otart
410 SprlntS•$1,1500 to win, $200 toit.rt

1"'f1~I.JJ1~VISION

·Rae·

coon Rd. tum ott: ,elJ5,

:

Racing
Even
Frldav
Nlglltl
G•tu Open 4:30p.m. • Hot Laps 1 p.m. • Racing 8 p.m.

3 IS 2

:z1e

medlllely . follow~·

eere $9,000. &lt;146-9385 oi
M5·5142
.

ejon ol Anariclal lni1111u·
llcmo Offlai ol CQnsumer

304-675-4416. .
.
. . . ·requests lor any · iarge
LOST: I!Oaglo ftmale ..a.ld I Eldidy c..,., advance pa)'11&lt;1nta · of
COpper tone Beagle near 37 year-old O!BY "' home ,... or lnsur..,.,.. ean
Gallla County Fair Mo(n : will piovtde , child ·tho Oll1ce ol Consumer·
Gn&gt;urde.
caft. Summer lull • 01 Atflara .IOU tree· at
74&lt;&gt;446-2290
. planned ae1MIIel. : Call , t.JI88.278-0003 1o team
74&lt;&gt;387.0638 for an ·~ tho_mor1gage broker ~r
. Nilllcoo
lender IB , propeny H·
consed.
public
NOTICE OHIO V,ALLEY =~s;;::
-•-· (This is anceme
_.o lmprov.•••nts se,
n1
PUBI.ISHINO CO. reelrom•...,., lhe annou
Ohio . Valley
ommends itiat mu · do
· eo..Publishing CCmpanyf
bliBinesa with .people I®
WOiorprooftng
know, .an&lt;! NOT 10 , .lind . , Ur'lc:Ond•lonoiiWallma
',(Jj '
; "

Frlllav. Mav 29, 2009

"•gut•r Oener•l Admission 111
Sr. CIIIZAln11 112 wiGolden Bueklye C1nl

Wahama

·

the.

WAHAMA 3, CHAS. CATHO~tC 1
Catholic

HQW

placed ads

Shultll Momo~lll

t7112M

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

BUFFALO - In a contest
marked with an hour and a
half intermission , me Black
Knights baseball squad
powered through the weather and the competition to
complete a victonous match
against the Raiders of Roane
County. Point Pleasant
defeated Roane County in a
6-4, seven-inning game to
secure not only a win but a
ticket to continue on in the
Class AA . regional tournament.
T~ first two innings of
the matchup were a dead
heat between the . two
squads, both Point and
Roane unable to move ahead
of the other. This scorless
trend wasJ'romptly finished
in the thir inning, when the
Black Knights racked up a
single run to take the lead
and inch · ahead of the
Raiders in the match.
The fourth inning again
ended without any runs, setting the stage for what
would be .a more actionpacked game completion.
POINT P~EASANTe , ,
Point Pleasant added three
ROANE COUNTY 4
runs to their total in the fifth
which was responded to by a P&lt;;nt
001 03o 2 - 6 91
pair of runs by Roane Ro.ane
ooo 022 o - 4 72
County directly after.
· ' WP- Jones: LP- McKenzie,

AMRA Modlllldl, Punt Stocks, Four Cylinders, Mlni·WtdgH

.

OllfrH H.,., .

With the score at 4-2, the
Raiders rallied together to
put up another pair in the
sixth inning, .tying up that
rn&lt;~tch at 4 apiece.
The Black Knights' deter, )·
mination and strength triumphed with a two-run
finale and a solid defensive
effort in the seventh inning
that clinched the 6-4 victory
over Roane.
Offensive contributors to
the Point PleaSant success
were many. o·.w. Herdman
went 2 for 4 in the match as
weU as knocking out a dou·
ble . Eric Veith finished the
game at I for 4 and was
noted with a double and an
RBI. Titus Russell went 3
for 4 a.,nd hit two · almosthomer doubles that earned
him two RBis in the contest.
· Other hitters included a
single from catcher B J.
Lloyd, a single from Justin
Weaver, and a double from
Justin Cavendar.
The.Biack Knights continue in Class AA tournament
play on the road today at
Weir starting at 6:30p.m .

with Man sportin~ , a 3-2.
mark against the tno whil\!
Wahama was 7-2 against
the Bison , Yellow Jackets
and Irish.

WP - Barkley; LP Zuspan.

OrFa!!

Point beats Roane County
Bv ANNA JESSMER

www.mydlilylltJUne.com ·
www.mydaltytentktel.com
www.mydallyreglls..com

YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

J1samer

JosH HUPP-- EAsmRN

Sentinel • Page 93

{![;fibunt - Sentinel-

In this May
15 file
photo, Point
Pleasant's
Brock
McClung
reaches for
third base
in the Black
Knights' ,
post-season
match
against
Aavenswoo
d. Point
Pleasant
defeated
Roane
County
Wednesday
night in the
ClassAA
regional
tournament.

JOEY FORESTER AND SEAN
CoPPICK - SOUTIIERN

The

www.mydlllysentlnel.com

-··---

,,,

I

1\_ .......

'

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Co.:lllltln:ial
Space lot' COuntJy living- 3-Sf!A,
Rent lutty oquoppod Sa· 2·3 BA 0&lt;1 ~lOri "' olloce space ...,,. Maoy floor plans! Easy

Commer&lt;:~al

VACANCY: H,S. Auto

able
S4QP'mo
2000 Ftnanc1ng 1 We own the experience
,oq'lt 7&lt;r.l·501-4808
bank.
·caa
todayl CONTACT:
----::::::-~--- 866--215-sn•
-VIrtlon
Ofltc:al

Worehou...Siorago
Ave Gatttpolls'

S3991month for 1800
sqtt BUtld-out negot 1able

Call Wayne
4{)4-456-3802

""""""'~=="""
H&lt;&gt;ti- for Ront
nn•'

J

Ga!!ia-Jadc·

JVSD
E". 201

n..-u. 2

1

Don t miss your :':""":-;:;;;;;;~""';;;;;~
share 0'1 the !ltimulul bail Need 1 ladies to sell
out rnDOey. No Gllll- Avon tal 7~33$8
miCks, No Hype. Call to

Pro-QuaJffied.

be

toll

b.dh.

R.L HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck'
1

F&amp;B .Post 128 ·
American Legion

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

1roo Need someone tor wood

eating wor1t.. SomiP: area
flat Oround some on

otl

lbnL 'R~110: ' "'• down. J·&lt;; ~~~~~-""'!"• hlll&amp;tde. Must have own
~ear•. Iii'&lt; o\1 11(1 !nr '"Uri~· 2005 16~~:80 Clayton An- weed eater.
pay by
l'i00-t&gt;~O-LYJ6 n Ru ~..,
glebtook, 3 br. 2 bath, the job en S8 per hr.
rock fireplace in livWlg 446-2058
1
3BR 2BT W D SIR S575 room, lg. walk-in cto88tS --~~'""!!~~~
renl S575 aepoSII .,. utdl- &amp; garcten tub, cia. micro- OverbrOOk
Rehabilitation
lies 1722 Chatham Ave. wave, dishwasher, stove, Center is currenUy ~­
~74i:::D-~64;,;5:;.·;.;
164
;.;;;,
6 ~':':':~~ refngerator, wid. v~ ino a beautician to work
2BR 00 pets 5450/mo s1eps &amp; under pining in· in the facility's beauty aa·
plus depos1t. Reference eluded must move off lot, lon. Candidates ShOuk:l
reqUifed 740-446-3870
asldng
price $30,000, possess a va.lid Ohio
(740)416-0544
Mana"'ng Coomolo'""-ist
JBR 2 bath 91 Cedar St.
"' Sataty Is based
"""
LX;enso.
· S650tmo
-+
5650/dep,
Inter- ·
Retarehees
' required.
"The ProctoMne.
e&amp;ted candidates shOUkl ""'""'""'""'"'"'""'"'""'
386·1100
D~arenca•
fi~ OlJI an appl~ation at Help Wanted • c;...,.,t
very mce hOme tcr rent
$t and a deed Is all you 333 Page _Street, Middlem Middlepon. good rleed to own your dream port, Ohio. Overbfook
Ideal candi&lt;1ates have
neighborhOOd.. Newly re- .
honre. Galt Nowt
Center ~nldpates in ttle e)(celtent communication
cnotieted.
New
appli·
Freedom ·Homes
drug free Wol1q&gt;lace Pro·
skills, are enthUsiastic
ances. 2 bedrooms, 1
88&amp;-565-0167
granl.
and motivated with a
bath. large kltcher1. sun
drive to socceed in life
room. central a1r &amp; heat,
A great opponunity to
ntce outdoor spaces. can
share a new S300 in Accepting oppllcotlono
and r..Umee dally!
740·992·9784
or
FREE GAS &amp; $300 in
J40-992-5094 for more
FAEE GROCERIES prcr
deta11s
gram. Set your own Call rou.tree to schedule
your interview:
5 room flouse at 44 Olive Accounti-/ flnandcil hours. Easy w~. Who
1·881!-IMC·PAVU
St. Has stoveirefridge.
··•
doesn't want FREE GAS
ext. 2331
$425/rent· plus deposit
&amp; GROCERIES?
Apply Online:
N
446 3945
-w.FrNGuFreeFood.c;om

• Room AddHlons

Remodeling
• New Gerages
• Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio and Porch

Sat. Nights
$99 a game
60,00 or more people

Wi"

And Tues. Night
$300 Coverall

Decks

~0 a;,;P"~15~·~-~~~~
4000

Manuf3clured

Hou~rnq

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

Rentals

•

•
semce

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag·Lime
740-985·4422
Johnson's Tree
Service
Gallipolis, OH 45631
lnsu!l'ed, Free

"""""'""'""'""'""'"""'

Estlmates,..20yrs F.."P·
740-44J.9.l87 .

Rick Johnson·Owner

Sales · Manager position
available: Sales experi·
ence required. Apply in

·lata's 'l'raa

person ay Sparkle Sup·
ply Company 683 State

Service ·

Route 7 Nonh Gat~polls,
OH. No phone calls

pteaao.

send' resu.me anct rererences to
gallipolisaccountant@
gmall:com
or mall to CLA 101, PO
Bo~e 469, Gallipolis, OH

740·446-4514
:':"':~~~~~~~ 45631
2 Br water and tr8sh in·

on

SAVINGS

"""""'""'""'==="'

Middleport, Ohio
Is ·Pleased To Announce
We Are Accepting Appli~
cations For A FuH Time
call AN 7P-7A To Join Our

.Newly remodled 3BA 2
beilh on farm S750 mth. Help Wanted- e~~:p . .cere· Home
health
aids
utilities
included. giver needed for elderly needed
In
Mason
540-729-1331
man, must have refer· Coonty area flexible hrs ..
on Bulavil!e Pike. Cali
367- n62 or after 5pm

training available
304-453-4992.

Street,

Friendly And Dedicated
Staff. Appficanrs Must
· Be Oepehdable , Team
F'J&amp;yEirs .With Positive At-

Magic Yem Day Care Ceu· _":':"":":'--.:":"""'...446_4060
~;;;;;;;;;,,.,,.,,.,"""' rer now hiri{lg (F"fl lead
No Limit to your
--==Sa;;ii;iltl~,._~ reacher position, would pre·
Potential!
titudes To Join Us In
~
f('l 11 ACDS ur CDA certifi·
Providing
Outstanding,
Country .living 3, 4, &amp;. 5 cine. or a individ~al willing
Quality
Care
To . Our
We are seeKing
bedrooms. Owner will fi· to ~wk. townr(!s thi ~ eenifi·
Residents. Stop By And
.
prolessJonai,
nance. Can today lor pre· calc.
Fill Out . An AppWcation
·
Magk Years Day Cure Cen- goat-orlent!=!d lnctlvlduats
quallf)catJon.
to )oln our team. Make'
M·F' 9AM·SPM. Contact
let no~' hiring (PT) after·
Lu·cy Goff ,. Staff 0eveIop1866:1215
._, -5774
lundraislng calls tor
~~~-~-- noon pusiliiJn, luukiflg fo~
Coordlnator
':"
conservatlv.e
ment
Small 2 br. mobile home person who is motivated &amp;
A (740)992
2 EOE &amp;
organizations such as
-647 01
·
in Racine w/lol $12,000, willing 10 take training, ile·
pI
T
the NAA!
Micipant
he
(740)992·5097
cepting re,.,mc:s .5119-$126.
, Drug-Free
Workplace
Card of Thanks

Card of Thank•

The family of Autumn DeMoss and
Baby Caden would lilce to oxpross ou·l
great appreciation Ia the staff of
Anderson/McDonitl funora/ home for
their great compassion, the Pomeroy
Po/ic.e ·Department, Meigs County
Sheriff's Office, all of the firsr
responders who responded to the scene
of the accident, fa.mily and friends w.ho
sent o card, said a prayer, sent flowers,
food or made a monetary donation.
Special thanks to Bruco Swift, Pastor
Len Powell, and all tht peopl• from the
Middleport Church of Nazaren• who
prepared food, sei up tablos, and soen
that wo wert lakin cdre of after the
funeral.
·
We hare never fell as . m~ch
compassion and sympathy as we did in
the days following the.tragic accident.
May God bless and ketp you aU.

.K9782

Racine. OH 45771

Elecltic, Plt,Jmbing,
Df}'Wal/,
Remodeling, Room
Addffions
LDcal Contnoctor

• 83 .
• &amp;3
• K tO 8 5

740.949-2217

Sfzrel 110!
to10'Jt1iY

Allamptoyito havo
potential tl incruH
wege up to 40% after
I mao.

60,..

Headaches in
Homecare? Come Join
a Family Ownect Home
Health Agency · Providing
Flexible Hours anct a

porate

• Weekly Pay -r Bonus
• 2 weeks paid vacat~n
every year

aren't only for
buyln11 or •ellln11
Items. you can use
this widely reed
· section to wish .
someone• ·
Heppy Blrthdey.
provide • Thenk
Yau. and pl•c• an
itld uln Memory"'
.of • loved one.

-

.

7 40-367-1)544
Free Estimates

Hours

7:00am· 8:00 pm

7 40.367.0536 .

Trucking

CONSTRUCfiON

Dump Truck ·
Service
We Haul Gravel.
Lime stone. Coal.
Compost, Top Soil
C~ll Walt or Sandy

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commertlal •
Residenlial
• Free Estimates
('740) 992-5009

Tlme/Perdlem RN18 an~
LPN'S . Cal!
us . a1
1·866·368·1100.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting ·resumes · for the following
positons: Pttdlatrlc RN. 08 RN. ICCU RN.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/o Human Resources
. ·1510 valley Drive, Pt Pleasant,
15550
Or fax: 304·675-6975," or apply on·llne
at www,pvalle¥J!q
AA/EOE

wv

w..t Nonb
Pus .a t
Pus . 3NT

Soulb
2 NT
3.

co.

Eul
Pus
All pUS

Opeiilitg lead: 4 6

,,

CustOm Home Buildi"g
Steel Frame Buildings
Building. Remodeling

General repair
www.banks«lb.com

•

·• fJ

..

/

Wtf~N ~GOT TO Tt¥ 1-AtJP Of
..
Mil-~ ANI&gt; ~ON~Y, ~ .
FOIJNI&gt; OVT ~·,.,

· t.Acrose

. AtJP AI-L~f(GIC

TO B~£-S!

""" ..
•

BARNEY
AUNT SUI&lt;E'I''S LOOKIN' MITEY
OLD, JUGHAID !!
MEBBE IT'S
TlME T'GlT A
NEW MULE!!

THANKS, UNCLE

SNUFF'f !! IT WORK&amp;
E'J'RY TIME II

For mare Informa-

tion. contect yo!lr
locel Ohio Volley
, Publlshln11 office.

/loU~~~ ~

"'

H-

JJefore you play, ·
,review your options
nm Meftof!lsald, '!he wages o1 oln are
death, but 11\8 t&gt;erltflts Include dental.
majOr medical, two-week paid vacation,
pensJon fund, and stock options.
Actually, taken as a pactca90, l'a a
rather attractive Ileal."
At the bridge table, take stock ol your
opllorw, II you flnd tba right one, you can
tell people about your attrtiCIIVe play on
that deal.
Wlllthle deal cook up dlnlter conversa·
tion? You are In three no-trump. ~t
leads the spade six and Easl plays .his
eight. What would be your plan? ·
lvJ regular readers will know, t lhlnk a
· two-no-IM11j&gt; opening bid should show
21 ·22 poinla, but that good 20s Qualny,
And your hand Is an excellent 20, with
almost aH of ita points In aces an&lt;t kings.

~oint ~lensant

KISSING

• Vinyl Siding
• Rep'-ment .
Windows
·Roofing
• Oecka
• Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
. Owner: ·
James Keeaee 11
742·2332

3aegister

(304) 675-1333

c

liOL.Y C~!
A PICTURE
OF JENNV

1'\E' "

ve..,H,
wHe~

't'OtJ

WERE TWO

,,

", ...,

5tiE'S

.i

'I'EAAS

OLJ&gt;!

NOTICES

SI-IE

. ,

DOING
THAT!

L•r;e. nner.rroun, ht..Uut~

CANCER (Juno 21.July 22)- Don't try .
to keep ·pace with rhe 'biQ spenctel'l . .If
you·are uoabte' to match.., eKtravag"ant
pa;l, don't do anything with him or her1hit

$10 per lb Cash only
Pmt is r:equi.red ln .advance
Shipments !lirjve eVery

other Frida

requires oodlils of cash:

I·

'' WOOF"? Wj.tAT'S 'l'IIAT .

KNOW,.IT'S JUST
SOMET~IN6 EVERt(ONE IN
0011. FAMIL'I' ALWAVS SAID..

SUPPOSED TO MEAN 7

or

VIRGO (AIJil. 23-5apt. 22) - trs riot Uke

"

2009 and then opened, vices".

LVI WYDLTKZ YE

LVI GFSVL,

ZLTDZ OVBI

(740) 74l-25ti3

;I:=:J

~~~~~~~~~~~~

J

29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740~992-6971
Insured

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

JTLOV LVI' CTNKFSVL CFI . '' • X.Z.
.T D L F Z L L VY B T Z 0 Y K I

'=~:~~' S~\\oil}A- 'lt!Ps~~

• Reusonublc Rates

• Pole Barns

leave

lenora

of fho

r--::H-:U-:-::-R-::'E-:S~:
l-"1'1:...,.-..-:..;.-1~

I'
·
I·
j· I ~
'-"--"-..l-..J...J.,

. "lt'snoithelnlgediesthalkiSs :
us," the philosopher lectured, ·

·S U RME·T ..,

"it's the'---,"

Is 1 ·I' 1· I I e
e

.

·_.

•

•

•

.

THESE sOUAm

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GE! ANSWER
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS S/27109

Ground - Judge- Young- Eyelet- JURY DUT~
After job hunting all week, my pat ~umbled, "Tho

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Fob. 191 - Yoor '
way of doing things might not be &amp;Ia popular with companions as you lhlm. Hyou
· see them backing off, don't try to pmsPISCES (Fob, 20-Mor&lt;ll 20) - Bo aali-

sure them
compliance.
slble
aboutInto
the vatue ol tbl WOI1c Of setv~ .
tees you porfoon tor anotltef. Yo\1 would
do youJSelf a gra....a disseMce if you
anempt to Ulke advantage of a customer.
Tho """' wiH get out.
ARIES (Mar&lt;ll 21-Ap&lt;il 19) - A you~· being No. 1, you don1 ntQ88Sar·
ity need to be ttl. ~ter ot atttntton.
Howevef. it thel'e'is someone dellberat.ty upstaging you, ft migllt Nb you .the
wrang way.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It ..... IS .
that

t'JaWk'lg

pro-

SOUPTONUTZ
I: ll&lt;:N"T lk&lt;NI&lt; ITS
Ca'tt:H\NG ON ...

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions; Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Rool!i, New Homes. Siding, Decks,
~lhroom tkmodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
iiC ::l·12 0,'1(\

·'·

----

.

Contpl... . tit• ohucltl• ituol•&lt;~
· by ftlllng In · the miiiSIIlg wor&lt;4
Ylltl dtvelo [rpm ll8o Na. 3 bel
'
P!INT NUMBERED lETTE!S IN 1
.

valueleSs. You'U ha¥8 ooty yoursetf to
blamo.

Cnll Gary Stanley @
740-59 1-8044

29lo.1

DAMi

. ldtt.d bv CLAY R. POUAN •. ....;...__ _._.;,.

servlngpot100.

too

•Experienced
References Available!

rr I,'..)!) -1'6

WOlD

much hemming
matter
needS toand
be finaliZed,abOUt
a a
::~~:~~~~~~~:1 . ,dlK:ttve
arrangement Wiu be rendered .

I *Pmn1ptand Quality
Work

• Siding • Vinyl
WindoWs • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • AddidQRS .
·•Eiectrll:al
• Plumbing

Lf

CAPRICORN (OK. 22.Jon . t9) -

· Free Estimates
Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

YXL

Knowing ·the generous p&amp;flon you are,
someone with ul(erlor motives might
attempt 10 take attvantage ot your kind
nature. Oon'l be manlpul~ by a s&amp;lf-

Stup &amp; Compare

JVIG

Avoid debating volatile lssuas with oth·
ers. YoU'll lOok far smartar If you say
nothing; don't. attempt to defend things .
about which you have little or no know..
edge . .

ROBERT
BISSEll
C81STIICD8N

WV110.IQ&lt;l".J,

'•

"VYJ KYPIKN TDI

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - ,

I

J40-992-1&amp;J1

·

(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Sell·
r-,.11"1"-""1'1~:-~r--"1 . SCORPIO
doubts muat not" reattain yOu to the pOint . bestpaidjoblcould fmd was'JURY DUTY:"
. .
..
where you tau 10 make any etfDt'l at all.
it'a 10 8lluligtt a bit - '"" tall a
ARLO&amp;JANIS
•
00U1J10 of-- than not 10 tTY at all.

c

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling ·

Sl.tln-n11!1klng that could have a Cttrect
.ertect upon your interests ShOuld not be
left to· IOffiteine with questionabJe JudO·
ment. Don't hesitate to makit your own

you to stand baek. but you could leave
everVtfling to another beei.use you dOn't
want to Interfere. He or ah.e will Interpret
thlti as hlzll'l884 on your part .and renege
on the deal.
Llf!AA (Sept. 29-0Ct. 23) - Bo optl·
mlstk: abOut au your 11wolvements, but at
the same time, lfslmponant to be realls·
11c as welt. Remember, eesuee built wnh
sand ·oan easily tie washed out to sea.

r=;;:;;;:=:-J

------Public Notice.
------PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tl'l RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF COdy Lee
Saunders
To Cody LH Bowman
NOTICE OF HEARING
OH CHANGE OF NAME
Applicant he,.by glvea
notice to all lnterHted
persons and to the appllcant hullled an Apptltalton lor Chanp of
Name In the Probate
Court of Melga Counly,
Ohio, requeattng the
change of nome of
COdy lee Saunders to
COlly Lee · Bowman.
The.hearing on the ap..
plication wUI be he4d on
the ,2 nd day of July,
2009, at1 :30 p.m.ln the
Probate Court of Melga
County, located ot tOO
East Second StrMI,
Courthouaa, 2nd Floor,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Kristy Bowman
35352 Oerry Ln.
Langsville, OH 457t1
(5) 28

30 Winding
51
curve
52 Llotoome
32 Rudder's
Ploce
"'PI
53 Country :
34 Mad. ·
lddr.
peroonnel
37 Decrea- 54 HBO
receivers
In al'*'gtlt
38 Fooeey
·
friend
4I Beau
43 White1"""1'1'~-,;-'m-1

TodiJVB duB· W/lqU/10 P

LEO (July 2S·Aug. 22) -tmponant deel·

choices.

Roofing, Sldiog, Gutters
lnsurod &amp; Banded
The right Ia rtsl!ved,
40-6_5..3..
65
as the Interest of the .__7..
•9..
..7_ _.
owner may require, to . - - reject any and all bldo,
to walvti any Informal·
.-.......
)ly In bids received,
CUTTING EDGE
and to accept or reject
any Item of any bid un- • £-,tiM., p&lt;i 'lt.t:·
LAWN CARE
lese such bid Ia qual~
. Now Selling:
&amp; Power Washing
lied
by
speclllc · • Fotd &amp; Motorcraft
Commercial &amp;
limitation.
·..
Pnrt•. Engines,
Residential
~nvalopea conllllnlng
T · 1&amp;
Free "·tlmales
bids must be ·lOlled,
T,~~~~~is~f~~s
• L'awn M
...alntenan~
marked, and
u follows:
'Mtennlll'ket
• Lands&lt;:aplng
Bid
for
STREAM
Replacement Sheet
Seth Carleton
CROSSINGS &amp; WATER Metal&amp;~.~~~~:~~~~;''
(740) 517-5432
SYSTEM
F&lt;VAII
Jefi"Stethem
To ba apened
~~~2~~~~
(740) 517-6883
JUNE 24. 2009
'-..;....;....;.,.....;.,.~
Meigs SoU &amp; Water
Conaervatlcin District
33101 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45789
(5) 27, 28; 29 ·

add,._

SOIIIIay

KATBES
.
.

In tne yeariahead, perao"al projects may
be satiSfying, bUt Jt could be artOther
story when.lt comes to work performed
lor someone else. If so, It might be wiser
lo 'took ror another Job than to continue
doing something so dlsaatlatylng.
GEMINI (1!4ay 21-..lune 20)- Think t'MCe
befOre rushing to }Udgment over a altva·
tlon you can usually al:te up· qulctl;ly. If
thlngs are distorted, •Ven a little bit they
could provide a false reading .

EVEN
REI'IEMBEit.

Seamless Gutters

The Meigs County tor 4urnlshlng all mateFamily and Children rials and performing all
First Council (Melga · work tor STREAM
FCFC) Ia requaatlng CROSSINGS
AND
proposals from a quail· WATER SYSTEM·
fled vendor to provide construction of three
Parent Mentor/family (3) crushed limestone
Coach
a""'lcea stream crosalnga and
lhrouiJh the Ohio ChU· conatrucilon ol a live·
dren.Trust Fund to pre- stock water system
..nt chUd abuea and conalatlng of throe (3)
neglect In the county water tanka and aaso·
with a 4ocU8 on chll· elated pipeline, boring
dron and youth In· and plumbing.
votved . In sarvlce Located at: 37120 New
coordination. The con· Lima Road, Section 13,
,tract periOd will be July Scipio Township &amp;
1, 2009 to June 30, Section 18; Rutland
2010 with the contrect Township;
Meigs
amauilt not to exceed County, Ohio.
$14,250.00. The dead· Plana and apecHica•
line for submission of ttons may be viewed
Proposals ' Is June 4, Monday through Frltfay
2009 at 12:00 noon. For . from 8:00 AM 'to 4:30
program Information PM 4rom May 27 to
and guidelines contact June 23,20119 at Meigs
And... Osborne, FCFC SWCD, 3310t Hiland
Coordinator, at 992· Rd., Pomeroy, OH
6626 axt. 33 or at the 45769.
·
Meigs County Health A sUe viewing Is ached·
Department, 112 E. uted for Thursday,
Memorial
Drive, June 11th, at 10:00 AM
Pomeroy, OH 45769. All a~ the site. All potential
submissions must be btddera .,. welcome to
racelved by malt or attend. To view the she
hand delivered by the at any other time,
above date and time. plene contact the
No materials rvvtewed SWCD 48 hours In ad·
after that dale wilt be vance lor permission
conaldered. The Malgs to enttf lbe property.
FCFC reserves the Uquldated damages
rfght to reject any or all lor datay '!ill be
propoaals.
$100,00 per calendar.
(5) 14, 21 , 28
day.
'
P.ymenta wlit be made
as follows In lump sum.
Public NoUce
Twenly·llve
percent
(25%) of tho tollll con·
INVITATION FOR BID
tract shall be paid prior
(Construction
Con· to commencement of
ti'IICI)
Ilia Work with the ,...
MEIGS SOIL AND malnlng bellnce due
WATER CONSEJIVA· payable upon SWCD's
noN DISTRICT 33101 final acceptance of the
HILAND ROAD
work.
POMEROY, 9H 45769 Bids must be submitMAY 27, 2009
ted on the provided
SEALED BIDS, subject "Bid" form, and the
to the conditt(!ns con· successful bidder will
talned ha,.ln, will be be required to ••ecute
RECEIVED until 4:30 p. the attached "Contract
m,. TUESDAY, JUNE 23, for Construction Sar-

ooundly

29 Beat

Eld'llltt• ltllht ~tr118~d1tor IWlOihtr

Frld1y, M1y 211, 2009
, By h(nl.. Bodo Oool

Fresh North Carolina
SIIRIMP
(740) 742-1!63

H&amp;H
Guttering

49 Gombllng

· U four JCromblad welda below to .form four simple wordt.

KISSING ' . DOEsN'T
ME'

pad

opposite

by Lule 'Campos

ft ioarrango

.!

-r.:: ..

emanation ·
48 Cougara

C.~ Cipller tr,ptog,.mt art CtMtfd lrM'o .~!)IIIIOnt by l&amp;mool pteplt, Aft llld ~:

.

J&amp;L
Construction

oml
27 NNW

CELEBRITY CIPHER

. .

heart ace, win East'sshift, and play a
.spade to Ioree an entry Into the crummy.

·BIG NATE ····
(740) 446-2342

6 Town- 2 5 1 -

31
s.nta Ft
33 Flnu,..
7 Putslorlh
34 A»utiH Ia 8 Gal
35 lulu llru,..
IICI!Uiintod
mer
· t ""'""'• ln
36 IJtke awl,..
cornttoo
mer
f 0 Clga39 Explosive
goo
If c.t call?
letters
40 Stlckef1t
12 Finn grip
42 Nove
. 18 GuHit.
nolghbor
18 Come to 1
44 Callor cOnholt ·
.
tenlt
20 "''he Moon
· 46 Big
ta ~· obtr
ctlebrallonl 2l Ploln·to 1H
51 Rub against 22 Glfi mtttrltd

Thke the first trick whh your spade ace,
PREVIOUS SOLUtiON: ·everyone Is tryi"i to acoompllsh something big, not •
not on the board. ·:fhen· ctrive out the · r&amp;ali~ng thaltife is matfa up o411111olhlngs. · Frank A. Clark
.
,.

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY! ..

· @allipolls i!Bilil!' m:ribune ·

23 17..ylllble 45 Time to
beware
poem
47 Subtle
IU~CIIIOfl 24 S u -

5 LP

28 Dkllht

hea~ ace learned the game attsost 10
minutes ago, he will not take the first
heart tnck. And nhe does hold up his .
ace, you will then need a dummy entry
to gat to the estallllshod heart v.jnnars.
Where is your enlry?
· ·
Right ~ II must come from spades.
How?

'ROTUt-11&gt;~"

Cell: 7411-416-5041
email:

Owners: ·
Jon Van Meier &amp;
Paul Flowe

Cettlo

alea4a

28 -hod Hl

North's three diSJnOnds was a tranSfer

...-~ (l..t.I,'(QKE: TE:U.I'I\E: WI-I~~
'!1-\E: WORt:&gt;

Racine~ Ol)lo 740-247-2019

-

twtal

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

BANKS

S&amp;L

Eut
• 88
9 A 1 6&lt;
·Q·Jl09
• J 9!

4 AH
9 K2
t A K 81
·· A Q 6 3

THE BORN LOSER

, Paid Holidays OFF
• ModicaVOentaV4011&lt;' · Great Working Environ·
EAP
ment. Now Acc8P.tlng
~ Advancement
Application&amp;
for
Part
Opportunities
"· PIUs much morel

.56 l'rolonVId

57~to

&amp;:"ti

club. Four more can come lr0f1;1 the
hearts. However, II the defender with the

(740) 992-2155
Are You Tired al the

-

&lt;lacld grlefl 56 Truth

14
DOWN
15 Farm hillier
ti Rapid
17 Morsyo .
1 JHn Auel
19 Kind ol
hll'ofnt
leopord
2 Stick
23 StntOI..lle 3 Oz pooch
26 Enjqyaa
4 Dunno or

bid, guarontealng five or t1lOf8 hearts
and at least. zero points. Than North
offered a choice of games wlh three notrump. With only a doibleton heart, you
selected three no-t111mp.
You have five top tricks: two spades
(given ttick one), two diamonds and one

The Daily Sentinel

Program

55 import

• Enllce

Seath

"'!!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""'"""'

~a~::r~~t c;;~er, P;:~.

1 Top etary
11

• Q J 10
.QJ1095
• 54 2
• 14

...

29625 Basltan Road

HardWood cablnel'f Aild Funltlre

Service Technician , posttion available lor diesel
and hydraultcs. E11perlence
necessary.
Heatttv'Retirement
&amp;
Bene1its. Fa)[ resume to
qulrements: Good com- 740--446-9104 or e-mail ' - - - - - - - - - - '
munlc8tion skills in Eng· to UCOCAAEO.COM
llsh, Internet access AnY
previous worldng e~eperi·
.ence could be an advan- Mldlcol
tage. Applicants Should ""'""'""'""'""'""'""""
·send their resume to Ja- son Wheller email Ua- A
Celebration
01
sonwheHer27@gmaft.co
Life·······

eluded. No pets. At John- ._
"""'""'""'""""'""'"""'
son's Mobile Home Park.
Child/Eidirfy Ca
Call 740_+645_0506
;;;;;;;;;;;.;;.=.;;;;;;;;,.;;;;;; m) for more info

~38::iR:"',~2~b~ath~d~o~,b~la~w:::ld~e ences 304·675·3204·

Rooflng, Siding,
• Soffit, Decks,
, Doors, WindOws,

740-992-3220

and e)lpet'lenee required.
~~~:=;;;;;;;;;;~~ Must have good organ~ 2:-:50 Newly remOOeted izaUonal &amp;Ients and the Get that perfect part time
!ralle r lor rent. 2 Br, new ability to work lndepend- paying job woJil;ing for an
wrndows. kitchen, noor· entty With strong an~ oit fJrin at a local agent
lng bathroom, excellent tlon to detail. Please and earn more. Job re·
-condition
1nctudes
.washerldryer. In Porter
on At i60 · $350 rent
plus utilities. · Now taking
applications
call

Hill's Self
Storage

Tree removal, planting,
lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully lri.tsurt~

h:ttp:/ltObl.tntoclllen.carn
Full-time ~""!"'::"""~~--=
busy ac· Beautyffannlng
salon
counUng office In Gallipo- manager needed. Main
us fOr immediate emptoY. St. Pt. PJe.asant wv ""'""''"M'"och""'an"'"'ia""'""""
ment. Acx:ounting degree 1-703-501-4808.
-

Accauntanti
po.stUon with

54 Young
no-thow

Nettb

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

WV03&amp;725

---:;=:;::=:=::--'Y'
Ill.._,IOmmission.

========

ACROSS

· {2-)
12 \'ldoo13 Exclual..

home

~:=~:=:=:=-:-:~ 866·338-3201
"IIIIJ

1

::--~~~-.:;:Eeo~·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'
Governmeol will pay you ...
up 10 $6000 to buy a new tWp W.wcl ~ Gen.ral

74()-42:J.9n8 or

NEA Cronword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

'13"tdttMRit
Jl
'22" .... Bit Stnllr
CN.LOIMOI'flCUIIIN156

U!'QUITed.

740-245-533&lt;

·Great locatiOn 749Thtrd

BULLETIN BOARD

rriectlilf\ICS

Years

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallylelltinel.com
BRIDGE

Mlchanlcl:lnstructor
FIVe

Thursday, May 28, 2009
ALLEYOOP

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, May 28, 2009

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Co.:lllltln:ial
Space lot' COuntJy living- 3-Sf!A,
Rent lutty oquoppod Sa· 2·3 BA 0&lt;1 ~lOri "' olloce space ...,,. Maoy floor plans! Easy

Commer&lt;:~al

VACANCY: H,S. Auto

able
S4QP'mo
2000 Ftnanc1ng 1 We own the experience
,oq'lt 7&lt;r.l·501-4808
bank.
·caa
todayl CONTACT:
----::::::-~--- 866--215-sn•
-VIrtlon
Ofltc:al

Worehou...Siorago
Ave Gatttpolls'

S3991month for 1800
sqtt BUtld-out negot 1able

Call Wayne
4{)4-456-3802

""""""'~=="""
H&lt;&gt;ti- for Ront
nn•'

J

Ga!!ia-Jadc·

JVSD
E". 201

n..-u. 2

1

Don t miss your :':""":-;:;;;;;;~""';;;;;~
share 0'1 the !ltimulul bail Need 1 ladies to sell
out rnDOey. No Gllll- Avon tal 7~33$8
miCks, No Hype. Call to

Pro-QuaJffied.

be

toll

b.dh.

R.L HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck'
1

F&amp;B .Post 128 ·
American Legion

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

1roo Need someone tor wood

eating wor1t.. SomiP: area
flat Oround some on

otl

lbnL 'R~110: ' "'• down. J·&lt;; ~~~~~-""'!"• hlll&amp;tde. Must have own
~ear•. Iii'&lt; o\1 11(1 !nr '"Uri~· 2005 16~~:80 Clayton An- weed eater.
pay by
l'i00-t&gt;~O-LYJ6 n Ru ~..,
glebtook, 3 br. 2 bath, the job en S8 per hr.
rock fireplace in livWlg 446-2058
1
3BR 2BT W D SIR S575 room, lg. walk-in cto88tS --~~'""!!~~~
renl S575 aepoSII .,. utdl- &amp; garcten tub, cia. micro- OverbrOOk
Rehabilitation
lies 1722 Chatham Ave. wave, dishwasher, stove, Center is currenUy ~­
~74i:::D-~64;,;5:;.·;.;
164
;.;;;,
6 ~':':':~~ refngerator, wid. v~ ino a beautician to work
2BR 00 pets 5450/mo s1eps &amp; under pining in· in the facility's beauty aa·
plus depos1t. Reference eluded must move off lot, lon. Candidates ShOuk:l
reqUifed 740-446-3870
asldng
price $30,000, possess a va.lid Ohio
(740)416-0544
Mana"'ng Coomolo'""-ist
JBR 2 bath 91 Cedar St.
"' Sataty Is based
"""
LX;enso.
· S650tmo
-+
5650/dep,
Inter- ·
Retarehees
' required.
"The ProctoMne.
e&amp;ted candidates shOUkl ""'""'""'""'"'"'""'"'""'
386·1100
D~arenca•
fi~ OlJI an appl~ation at Help Wanted • c;...,.,t
very mce hOme tcr rent
$t and a deed Is all you 333 Page _Street, Middlem Middlepon. good rleed to own your dream port, Ohio. Overbfook
Ideal candi&lt;1ates have
neighborhOOd.. Newly re- .
honre. Galt Nowt
Center ~nldpates in ttle e)(celtent communication
cnotieted.
New
appli·
Freedom ·Homes
drug free Wol1q&gt;lace Pro·
skills, are enthUsiastic
ances. 2 bedrooms, 1
88&amp;-565-0167
granl.
and motivated with a
bath. large kltcher1. sun
drive to socceed in life
room. central a1r &amp; heat,
A great opponunity to
ntce outdoor spaces. can
share a new S300 in Accepting oppllcotlono
and r..Umee dally!
740·992·9784
or
FREE GAS &amp; $300 in
J40-992-5094 for more
FAEE GROCERIES prcr
deta11s
gram. Set your own Call rou.tree to schedule
your interview:
5 room flouse at 44 Olive Accounti-/ flnandcil hours. Easy w~. Who
1·881!-IMC·PAVU
St. Has stoveirefridge.
··•
doesn't want FREE GAS
ext. 2331
$425/rent· plus deposit
&amp; GROCERIES?
Apply Online:
N
446 3945
-w.FrNGuFreeFood.c;om

• Room AddHlons

Remodeling
• New Gerages
• Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp;
Painting
• Patio and Porch

Sat. Nights
$99 a game
60,00 or more people

Wi"

And Tues. Night
$300 Coverall

Decks

~0 a;,;P"~15~·~-~~~~
4000

Manuf3clured

Hou~rnq

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~

Rentals

•

•
semce

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag·Lime
740-985·4422
Johnson's Tree
Service
Gallipolis, OH 45631
lnsu!l'ed, Free

"""""'""'""'""'""'"""'

Estlmates,..20yrs F.."P·
740-44J.9.l87 .

Rick Johnson·Owner

Sales · Manager position
available: Sales experi·
ence required. Apply in

·lata's 'l'raa

person ay Sparkle Sup·
ply Company 683 State

Service ·

Route 7 Nonh Gat~polls,
OH. No phone calls

pteaao.

send' resu.me anct rererences to
gallipolisaccountant@
gmall:com
or mall to CLA 101, PO
Bo~e 469, Gallipolis, OH

740·446-4514
:':"':~~~~~~~ 45631
2 Br water and tr8sh in·

on

SAVINGS

"""""'""'""'==="'

Middleport, Ohio
Is ·Pleased To Announce
We Are Accepting Appli~
cations For A FuH Time
call AN 7P-7A To Join Our

.Newly remodled 3BA 2
beilh on farm S750 mth. Help Wanted- e~~:p . .cere· Home
health
aids
utilities
included. giver needed for elderly needed
In
Mason
540-729-1331
man, must have refer· Coonty area flexible hrs ..
on Bulavil!e Pike. Cali
367- n62 or after 5pm

training available
304-453-4992.

Street,

Friendly And Dedicated
Staff. Appficanrs Must
· Be Oepehdable , Team
F'J&amp;yEirs .With Positive At-

Magic Yem Day Care Ceu· _":':"":":'--.:":"""'...446_4060
~;;;;;;;;;,,.,,.,,.,"""' rer now hiri{lg (F"fl lead
No Limit to your
--==Sa;;ii;iltl~,._~ reacher position, would pre·
Potential!
titudes To Join Us In
~
f('l 11 ACDS ur CDA certifi·
Providing
Outstanding,
Country .living 3, 4, &amp;. 5 cine. or a individ~al willing
Quality
Care
To . Our
We are seeKing
bedrooms. Owner will fi· to ~wk. townr(!s thi ~ eenifi·
Residents. Stop By And
.
prolessJonai,
nance. Can today lor pre· calc.
Fill Out . An AppWcation
·
Magk Years Day Cure Cen- goat-orlent!=!d lnctlvlduats
quallf)catJon.
to )oln our team. Make'
M·F' 9AM·SPM. Contact
let no~' hiring (PT) after·
Lu·cy Goff ,. Staff 0eveIop1866:1215
._, -5774
lundraislng calls tor
~~~-~-- noon pusiliiJn, luukiflg fo~
Coordlnator
':"
conservatlv.e
ment
Small 2 br. mobile home person who is motivated &amp;
A (740)992
2 EOE &amp;
organizations such as
-647 01
·
in Racine w/lol $12,000, willing 10 take training, ile·
pI
T
the NAA!
Micipant
he
(740)992·5097
cepting re,.,mc:s .5119-$126.
, Drug-Free
Workplace
Card of Thanks

Card of Thank•

The family of Autumn DeMoss and
Baby Caden would lilce to oxpross ou·l
great appreciation Ia the staff of
Anderson/McDonitl funora/ home for
their great compassion, the Pomeroy
Po/ic.e ·Department, Meigs County
Sheriff's Office, all of the firsr
responders who responded to the scene
of the accident, fa.mily and friends w.ho
sent o card, said a prayer, sent flowers,
food or made a monetary donation.
Special thanks to Bruco Swift, Pastor
Len Powell, and all tht peopl• from the
Middleport Church of Nazaren• who
prepared food, sei up tablos, and soen
that wo wert lakin cdre of after the
funeral.
·
We hare never fell as . m~ch
compassion and sympathy as we did in
the days following the.tragic accident.
May God bless and ketp you aU.

.K9782

Racine. OH 45771

Elecltic, Plt,Jmbing,
Df}'Wal/,
Remodeling, Room
Addffions
LDcal Contnoctor

• 83 .
• &amp;3
• K tO 8 5

740.949-2217

Sfzrel 110!
to10'Jt1iY

Allamptoyito havo
potential tl incruH
wege up to 40% after
I mao.

60,..

Headaches in
Homecare? Come Join
a Family Ownect Home
Health Agency · Providing
Flexible Hours anct a

porate

• Weekly Pay -r Bonus
• 2 weeks paid vacat~n
every year

aren't only for
buyln11 or •ellln11
Items. you can use
this widely reed
· section to wish .
someone• ·
Heppy Blrthdey.
provide • Thenk
Yau. and pl•c• an
itld uln Memory"'
.of • loved one.

-

.

7 40-367-1)544
Free Estimates

Hours

7:00am· 8:00 pm

7 40.367.0536 .

Trucking

CONSTRUCfiON

Dump Truck ·
Service
We Haul Gravel.
Lime stone. Coal.
Compost, Top Soil
C~ll Walt or Sandy

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commertlal •
Residenlial
• Free Estimates
('740) 992-5009

Tlme/Perdlem RN18 an~
LPN'S . Cal!
us . a1
1·866·368·1100.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting ·resumes · for the following
positons: Pttdlatrlc RN. 08 RN. ICCU RN.
Send resumes to:

Pleasant Valley Hospital
C/o Human Resources
. ·1510 valley Drive, Pt Pleasant,
15550
Or fax: 304·675-6975," or apply on·llne
at www,pvalle¥J!q
AA/EOE

wv

w..t Nonb
Pus .a t
Pus . 3NT

Soulb
2 NT
3.

co.

Eul
Pus
All pUS

Opeiilitg lead: 4 6

,,

CustOm Home Buildi"g
Steel Frame Buildings
Building. Remodeling

General repair
www.banks«lb.com

•

·• fJ

..

/

Wtf~N ~GOT TO Tt¥ 1-AtJP Of
..
Mil-~ ANI&gt; ~ON~Y, ~ .
FOIJNI&gt; OVT ~·,.,

· t.Acrose

. AtJP AI-L~f(GIC

TO B~£-S!

""" ..
•

BARNEY
AUNT SUI&lt;E'I''S LOOKIN' MITEY
OLD, JUGHAID !!
MEBBE IT'S
TlME T'GlT A
NEW MULE!!

THANKS, UNCLE

SNUFF'f !! IT WORK&amp;
E'J'RY TIME II

For mare Informa-

tion. contect yo!lr
locel Ohio Volley
, Publlshln11 office.

/loU~~~ ~

"'

H-

JJefore you play, ·
,review your options
nm Meftof!lsald, '!he wages o1 oln are
death, but 11\8 t&gt;erltflts Include dental.
majOr medical, two-week paid vacation,
pensJon fund, and stock options.
Actually, taken as a pactca90, l'a a
rather attractive Ileal."
At the bridge table, take stock ol your
opllorw, II you flnd tba right one, you can
tell people about your attrtiCIIVe play on
that deal.
Wlllthle deal cook up dlnlter conversa·
tion? You are In three no-trump. ~t
leads the spade six and Easl plays .his
eight. What would be your plan? ·
lvJ regular readers will know, t lhlnk a
· two-no-IM11j&gt; opening bid should show
21 ·22 poinla, but that good 20s Qualny,
And your hand Is an excellent 20, with
almost aH of ita points In aces an&lt;t kings.

~oint ~lensant

KISSING

• Vinyl Siding
• Rep'-ment .
Windows
·Roofing
• Oecka
• Garages
• Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Additions
. Owner: ·
James Keeaee 11
742·2332

3aegister

(304) 675-1333

c

liOL.Y C~!
A PICTURE
OF JENNV

1'\E' "

ve..,H,
wHe~

't'OtJ

WERE TWO

,,

", ...,

5tiE'S

.i

'I'EAAS

OLJ&gt;!

NOTICES

SI-IE

. ,

DOING
THAT!

L•r;e. nner.rroun, ht..Uut~

CANCER (Juno 21.July 22)- Don't try .
to keep ·pace with rhe 'biQ spenctel'l . .If
you·are uoabte' to match.., eKtravag"ant
pa;l, don't do anything with him or her1hit

$10 per lb Cash only
Pmt is r:equi.red ln .advance
Shipments !lirjve eVery

other Frida

requires oodlils of cash:

I·

'' WOOF"? Wj.tAT'S 'l'IIAT .

KNOW,.IT'S JUST
SOMET~IN6 EVERt(ONE IN
0011. FAMIL'I' ALWAVS SAID..

SUPPOSED TO MEAN 7

or

VIRGO (AIJil. 23-5apt. 22) - trs riot Uke

"

2009 and then opened, vices".

LVI WYDLTKZ YE

LVI GFSVL,

ZLTDZ OVBI

(740) 74l-25ti3

;I:=:J

~~~~~~~~~~~~

J

29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740~992-6971
Insured

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

JTLOV LVI' CTNKFSVL CFI . '' • X.Z.
.T D L F Z L L VY B T Z 0 Y K I

'=~:~~' S~\\oil}A- 'lt!Ps~~

• Reusonublc Rates

• Pole Barns

leave

lenora

of fho

r--::H-:U-:-::-R-::'E-:S~:
l-"1'1:...,.-..-:..;.-1~

I'
·
I·
j· I ~
'-"--"-..l-..J...J.,

. "lt'snoithelnlgediesthalkiSs :
us," the philosopher lectured, ·

·S U RME·T ..,

"it's the'---,"

Is 1 ·I' 1· I I e
e

.

·_.

•

•

•

.

THESE sOUAm

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GE! ANSWER
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS S/27109

Ground - Judge- Young- Eyelet- JURY DUT~
After job hunting all week, my pat ~umbled, "Tho

AQUARIUS (Jan, 20-Fob. 191 - Yoor '
way of doing things might not be &amp;Ia popular with companions as you lhlm. Hyou
· see them backing off, don't try to pmsPISCES (Fob, 20-Mor&lt;ll 20) - Bo aali-

sure them
compliance.
slble
aboutInto
the vatue ol tbl WOI1c Of setv~ .
tees you porfoon tor anotltef. Yo\1 would
do youJSelf a gra....a disseMce if you
anempt to Ulke advantage of a customer.
Tho """' wiH get out.
ARIES (Mar&lt;ll 21-Ap&lt;il 19) - A you~· being No. 1, you don1 ntQ88Sar·
ity need to be ttl. ~ter ot atttntton.
Howevef. it thel'e'is someone dellberat.ty upstaging you, ft migllt Nb you .the
wrang way.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It ..... IS .
that

t'JaWk'lg

pro-

SOUPTONUTZ
I: ll&lt;:N"T lk&lt;NI&lt; ITS
Ca'tt:H\NG ON ...

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions; Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Rool!i, New Homes. Siding, Decks,
~lhroom tkmodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
iiC ::l·12 0,'1(\

·'·

----

.

Contpl... . tit• ohucltl• ituol•&lt;~
· by ftlllng In · the miiiSIIlg wor&lt;4
Ylltl dtvelo [rpm ll8o Na. 3 bel
'
P!INT NUMBERED lETTE!S IN 1
.

valueleSs. You'U ha¥8 ooty yoursetf to
blamo.

Cnll Gary Stanley @
740-59 1-8044

29lo.1

DAMi

. ldtt.d bv CLAY R. POUAN •. ....;...__ _._.;,.

servlngpot100.

too

•Experienced
References Available!

rr I,'..)!) -1'6

WOlD

much hemming
matter
needS toand
be finaliZed,abOUt
a a
::~~:~~~~~~~:1 . ,dlK:ttve
arrangement Wiu be rendered .

I *Pmn1ptand Quality
Work

• Siding • Vinyl
WindoWs • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • AddidQRS .
·•Eiectrll:al
• Plumbing

Lf

CAPRICORN (OK. 22.Jon . t9) -

· Free Estimates
Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

YXL

Knowing ·the generous p&amp;flon you are,
someone with ul(erlor motives might
attempt 10 take attvantage ot your kind
nature. Oon'l be manlpul~ by a s&amp;lf-

Stup &amp; Compare

JVIG

Avoid debating volatile lssuas with oth·
ers. YoU'll lOok far smartar If you say
nothing; don't. attempt to defend things .
about which you have little or no know..
edge . .

ROBERT
BISSEll
C81STIICD8N

WV110.IQ&lt;l".J,

'•

"VYJ KYPIKN TDI

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) - ,

I

J40-992-1&amp;J1

·

(Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Sell·
r-,.11"1"-""1'1~:-~r--"1 . SCORPIO
doubts muat not" reattain yOu to the pOint . bestpaidjoblcould fmd was'JURY DUTY:"
. .
..
where you tau 10 make any etfDt'l at all.
it'a 10 8lluligtt a bit - '"" tall a
ARLO&amp;JANIS
•
00U1J10 of-- than not 10 tTY at all.

c

• New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling ·

Sl.tln-n11!1klng that could have a Cttrect
.ertect upon your interests ShOuld not be
left to· IOffiteine with questionabJe JudO·
ment. Don't hesitate to makit your own

you to stand baek. but you could leave
everVtfling to another beei.use you dOn't
want to Interfere. He or ah.e will Interpret
thlti as hlzll'l884 on your part .and renege
on the deal.
Llf!AA (Sept. 29-0Ct. 23) - Bo optl·
mlstk: abOut au your 11wolvements, but at
the same time, lfslmponant to be realls·
11c as welt. Remember, eesuee built wnh
sand ·oan easily tie washed out to sea.

r=;;:;;;:=:-J

------Public Notice.
------PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
tl'l RE: CHANGE OF
NAME OF COdy Lee
Saunders
To Cody LH Bowman
NOTICE OF HEARING
OH CHANGE OF NAME
Applicant he,.by glvea
notice to all lnterHted
persons and to the appllcant hullled an Apptltalton lor Chanp of
Name In the Probate
Court of Melga Counly,
Ohio, requeattng the
change of nome of
COdy lee Saunders to
COlly Lee · Bowman.
The.hearing on the ap..
plication wUI be he4d on
the ,2 nd day of July,
2009, at1 :30 p.m.ln the
Probate Court of Melga
County, located ot tOO
East Second StrMI,
Courthouaa, 2nd Floor,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Kristy Bowman
35352 Oerry Ln.
Langsville, OH 457t1
(5) 28

30 Winding
51
curve
52 Llotoome
32 Rudder's
Ploce
"'PI
53 Country :
34 Mad. ·
lddr.
peroonnel
37 Decrea- 54 HBO
receivers
In al'*'gtlt
38 Fooeey
·
friend
4I Beau
43 White1"""1'1'~-,;-'m-1

TodiJVB duB· W/lqU/10 P

LEO (July 2S·Aug. 22) -tmponant deel·

choices.

Roofing, Sldiog, Gutters
lnsurod &amp; Banded
The right Ia rtsl!ved,
40-6_5..3..
65
as the Interest of the .__7..
•9..
..7_ _.
owner may require, to . - - reject any and all bldo,
to walvti any Informal·
.-.......
)ly In bids received,
CUTTING EDGE
and to accept or reject
any Item of any bid un- • £-,tiM., p&lt;i 'lt.t:·
LAWN CARE
lese such bid Ia qual~
. Now Selling:
&amp; Power Washing
lied
by
speclllc · • Fotd &amp; Motorcraft
Commercial &amp;
limitation.
·..
Pnrt•. Engines,
Residential
~nvalopea conllllnlng
T · 1&amp;
Free "·tlmales
bids must be ·lOlled,
T,~~~~~is~f~~s
• L'awn M
...alntenan~
marked, and
u follows:
'Mtennlll'ket
• Lands&lt;:aplng
Bid
for
STREAM
Replacement Sheet
Seth Carleton
CROSSINGS &amp; WATER Metal&amp;~.~~~~:~~~~;''
(740) 517-5432
SYSTEM
F&lt;VAII
Jefi"Stethem
To ba apened
~~~2~~~~
(740) 517-6883
JUNE 24. 2009
'-..;....;....;.,.....;.,.~
Meigs SoU &amp; Water
Conaervatlcin District
33101 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45789
(5) 27, 28; 29 ·

add,._

SOIIIIay

KATBES
.
.

In tne yeariahead, perao"al projects may
be satiSfying, bUt Jt could be artOther
story when.lt comes to work performed
lor someone else. If so, It might be wiser
lo 'took ror another Job than to continue
doing something so dlsaatlatylng.
GEMINI (1!4ay 21-..lune 20)- Think t'MCe
befOre rushing to }Udgment over a altva·
tlon you can usually al:te up· qulctl;ly. If
thlngs are distorted, •Ven a little bit they
could provide a false reading .

EVEN
REI'IEMBEit.

Seamless Gutters

The Meigs County tor 4urnlshlng all mateFamily and Children rials and performing all
First Council (Melga · work tor STREAM
FCFC) Ia requaatlng CROSSINGS
AND
proposals from a quail· WATER SYSTEM·
fled vendor to provide construction of three
Parent Mentor/family (3) crushed limestone
Coach
a""'lcea stream crosalnga and
lhrouiJh the Ohio ChU· conatrucilon ol a live·
dren.Trust Fund to pre- stock water system
..nt chUd abuea and conalatlng of throe (3)
neglect In the county water tanka and aaso·
with a 4ocU8 on chll· elated pipeline, boring
dron and youth In· and plumbing.
votved . In sarvlce Located at: 37120 New
coordination. The con· Lima Road, Section 13,
,tract periOd will be July Scipio Township &amp;
1, 2009 to June 30, Section 18; Rutland
2010 with the contrect Township;
Meigs
amauilt not to exceed County, Ohio.
$14,250.00. The dead· Plana and apecHica•
line for submission of ttons may be viewed
Proposals ' Is June 4, Monday through Frltfay
2009 at 12:00 noon. For . from 8:00 AM 'to 4:30
program Information PM 4rom May 27 to
and guidelines contact June 23,20119 at Meigs
And... Osborne, FCFC SWCD, 3310t Hiland
Coordinator, at 992· Rd., Pomeroy, OH
6626 axt. 33 or at the 45769.
·
Meigs County Health A sUe viewing Is ached·
Department, 112 E. uted for Thursday,
Memorial
Drive, June 11th, at 10:00 AM
Pomeroy, OH 45769. All a~ the site. All potential
submissions must be btddera .,. welcome to
racelved by malt or attend. To view the she
hand delivered by the at any other time,
above date and time. plene contact the
No materials rvvtewed SWCD 48 hours In ad·
after that dale wilt be vance lor permission
conaldered. The Malgs to enttf lbe property.
FCFC reserves the Uquldated damages
rfght to reject any or all lor datay '!ill be
propoaals.
$100,00 per calendar.
(5) 14, 21 , 28
day.
'
P.ymenta wlit be made
as follows In lump sum.
Public NoUce
Twenly·llve
percent
(25%) of tho tollll con·
INVITATION FOR BID
tract shall be paid prior
(Construction
Con· to commencement of
ti'IICI)
Ilia Work with the ,...
MEIGS SOIL AND malnlng bellnce due
WATER CONSEJIVA· payable upon SWCD's
noN DISTRICT 33101 final acceptance of the
HILAND ROAD
work.
POMEROY, 9H 45769 Bids must be submitMAY 27, 2009
ted on the provided
SEALED BIDS, subject "Bid" form, and the
to the conditt(!ns con· successful bidder will
talned ha,.ln, will be be required to ••ecute
RECEIVED until 4:30 p. the attached "Contract
m,. TUESDAY, JUNE 23, for Construction Sar-

ooundly

29 Beat

Eld'llltt• ltllht ~tr118~d1tor IWlOihtr

Frld1y, M1y 211, 2009
, By h(nl.. Bodo Oool

Fresh North Carolina
SIIRIMP
(740) 742-1!63

H&amp;H
Guttering

49 Gombllng

· U four JCromblad welda below to .form four simple wordt.

KISSING ' . DOEsN'T
ME'

pad

opposite

by Lule 'Campos

ft ioarrango

.!

-r.:: ..

emanation ·
48 Cougara

C.~ Cipller tr,ptog,.mt art CtMtfd lrM'o .~!)IIIIOnt by l&amp;mool pteplt, Aft llld ~:

.

J&amp;L
Construction

oml
27 NNW

CELEBRITY CIPHER

. .

heart ace, win East'sshift, and play a
.spade to Ioree an entry Into the crummy.

·BIG NATE ····
(740) 446-2342

6 Town- 2 5 1 -

31
s.nta Ft
33 Flnu,..
7 Putslorlh
34 A»utiH Ia 8 Gal
35 lulu llru,..
IICI!Uiintod
mer
· t ""'""'• ln
36 IJtke awl,..
cornttoo
mer
f 0 Clga39 Explosive
goo
If c.t call?
letters
40 Stlckef1t
12 Finn grip
42 Nove
. 18 GuHit.
nolghbor
18 Come to 1
44 Callor cOnholt ·
.
tenlt
20 "''he Moon
· 46 Big
ta ~· obtr
ctlebrallonl 2l Ploln·to 1H
51 Rub against 22 Glfi mtttrltd

Thke the first trick whh your spade ace,
PREVIOUS SOLUtiON: ·everyone Is tryi"i to acoompllsh something big, not •
not on the board. ·:fhen· ctrive out the · r&amp;ali~ng thaltife is matfa up o411111olhlngs. · Frank A. Clark
.
,.

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY! ..

· @allipolls i!Bilil!' m:ribune ·

23 17..ylllble 45 Time to
beware
poem
47 Subtle
IU~CIIIOfl 24 S u -

5 LP

28 Dkllht

hea~ ace learned the game attsost 10
minutes ago, he will not take the first
heart tnck. And nhe does hold up his .
ace, you will then need a dummy entry
to gat to the estallllshod heart v.jnnars.
Where is your enlry?
· ·
Right ~ II must come from spades.
How?

'ROTUt-11&gt;~"

Cell: 7411-416-5041
email:

Owners: ·
Jon Van Meier &amp;
Paul Flowe

Cettlo

alea4a

28 -hod Hl

North's three diSJnOnds was a tranSfer

...-~ (l..t.I,'(QKE: TE:U.I'I\E: WI-I~~
'!1-\E: WORt:&gt;

Racine~ Ol)lo 740-247-2019

-

twtal

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

BANKS

S&amp;L

Eut
• 88
9 A 1 6&lt;
·Q·Jl09
• J 9!

4 AH
9 K2
t A K 81
·· A Q 6 3

THE BORN LOSER

, Paid Holidays OFF
• ModicaVOentaV4011&lt;' · Great Working Environ·
EAP
ment. Now Acc8P.tlng
~ Advancement
Application&amp;
for
Part
Opportunities
"· PIUs much morel

.56 l'rolonVId

57~to

&amp;:"ti

club. Four more can come lr0f1;1 the
hearts. However, II the defender with the

(740) 992-2155
Are You Tired al the

-

&lt;lacld grlefl 56 Truth

14
DOWN
15 Farm hillier
ti Rapid
17 Morsyo .
1 JHn Auel
19 Kind ol
hll'ofnt
leopord
2 Stick
23 StntOI..lle 3 Oz pooch
26 Enjqyaa
4 Dunno or

bid, guarontealng five or t1lOf8 hearts
and at least. zero points. Than North
offered a choice of games wlh three notrump. With only a doibleton heart, you
selected three no-t111mp.
You have five top tricks: two spades
(given ttick one), two diamonds and one

The Daily Sentinel

Program

55 import

• Enllce

Seath

"'!!!!!!!!!""'""'""'""'"""'

~a~::r~~t c;;~er, P;:~.

1 Top etary
11

• Q J 10
.QJ1095
• 54 2
• 14

...

29625 Basltan Road

HardWood cablnel'f Aild Funltlre

Service Technician , posttion available lor diesel
and hydraultcs. E11perlence
necessary.
Heatttv'Retirement
&amp;
Bene1its. Fa)[ resume to
qulrements: Good com- 740--446-9104 or e-mail ' - - - - - - - - - - '
munlc8tion skills in Eng· to UCOCAAEO.COM
llsh, Internet access AnY
previous worldng e~eperi·
.ence could be an advan- Mldlcol
tage. Applicants Should ""'""'""'""'""'""'""""
·send their resume to Ja- son Wheller email Ua- A
Celebration
01
sonwheHer27@gmaft.co
Life·······

eluded. No pets. At John- ._
"""'""'""'""""'""'"""'
son's Mobile Home Park.
Child/Eidirfy Ca
Call 740_+645_0506
;;;;;;;;;;;.;;.=.;;;;;;;;,.;;;;;; m) for more info

~38::iR:"',~2~b~ath~d~o~,b~la~w:::ld~e ences 304·675·3204·

Rooflng, Siding,
• Soffit, Decks,
, Doors, WindOws,

740-992-3220

and e)lpet'lenee required.
~~~:=;;;;;;;;;;~~ Must have good organ~ 2:-:50 Newly remOOeted izaUonal &amp;Ients and the Get that perfect part time
!ralle r lor rent. 2 Br, new ability to work lndepend- paying job woJil;ing for an
wrndows. kitchen, noor· entty With strong an~ oit fJrin at a local agent
lng bathroom, excellent tlon to detail. Please and earn more. Job re·
-condition
1nctudes
.washerldryer. In Porter
on At i60 · $350 rent
plus utilities. · Now taking
applications
call

Hill's Self
Storage

Tree removal, planting,
lawn care, and all your
landscaping needs.
Residential and Commercial
Fully lri.tsurt~

h:ttp:/ltObl.tntoclllen.carn
Full-time ~""!"'::"""~~--=
busy ac· Beautyffannlng
salon
counUng office In Gallipo- manager needed. Main
us fOr immediate emptoY. St. Pt. PJe.asant wv ""'""''"M'"och""'an"'"'ia""'""""
ment. Acx:ounting degree 1-703-501-4808.
-

Accauntanti
po.stUon with

54 Young
no-thow

Nettb

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

WV03&amp;725

---:;=:;::=:=::--'Y'
Ill.._,IOmmission.

========

ACROSS

· {2-)
12 \'ldoo13 Exclual..

home

~:=~:=:=:=-:-:~ 866·338-3201
"IIIIJ

1

::--~~~-.:;:Eeo~·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'
Governmeol will pay you ...
up 10 $6000 to buy a new tWp W.wcl ~ Gen.ral

74()-42:J.9n8 or

NEA Cronword Puzzle

Phillip
Alder

'13"tdttMRit
Jl
'22" .... Bit Stnllr
CN.LOIMOI'flCUIIIN156

U!'QUITed.

740-245-533&lt;

·Great locatiOn 749Thtrd

BULLETIN BOARD

rriectlilf\ICS

Years

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydallylelltinel.com
BRIDGE

Mlchanlcl:lnstructor
FIVe

Thursday, May 28, 2009
ALLEYOOP

�_Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Magic 1 win from finals return Bruce powers Reds to sweep of Astros
ORLANDO , Fla. (AP) Qressed in black, the imposing 7-footer sat near the
flpor for Game 4 like a casual NBA fan. He was hardly
one.
Around here . Shaquille
O'Neal means much more.
He represents the link to
Orlando's ~lorious past,
however brief it may be.
Shaq , a basket-breaking
behemoth with the power of
several men, led the· Magic
t9 their only NBA finals
appearance in 1995 , a short
"'sit that ended with an
·embarrassing sweep by
Houston.
. The Magic and their mani~~~~ fans have longed for a
second shot at a title.
·.They can almost touch it.
; Orlando moved within one
win of ending its 14-yeat
fir.tals drought on Tuesday
~ight as Dwight Howard, the
Magic's present-day Diesel,
icored 27 points - 10 in
Q\lertime - in a 116-114
win over .. the Cleveland
(!avaliers to take a 3- 1 lead
in the Eastern Conference
(tnals and shove LeBron
~it,mes and his not-so-supportive cast to the edge of an
early summer break. ·
~· A razor-thin series - two
one-point games, and a twopointer in OT - where tlie
last team with the ball usually emerges victorious, could
end Thursday night . Maybe.
"We're up 3-1 • but we
can~~ relax," sat·d Rashard
Lewis, whose catch-andshoot 3-pointer with 4 _1 seconds left in regulation was.

·

AP photo
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) gets tangled up with Orlanljo Magic center Dwight Howard as he
goes up lor a shot in the fourth quarter in the overtime of
Gam'e 4 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals in
Orlando, Fla., on Tuesday.
Orlando coach Stan Van Kobe finals envisioned by
Gundy, who doesn't sleep many, but · not the guys in
well even when things are blue and white .
going great, knows .if anyThe.Cavaliers can't figure
one can turn this .series out what to do next.
around it's the magnificent
''We're break in~ down in
James.
areas we haven'\'t broken ·
• Th' h' · 1
1
d
11
· " J
·d
' IS t mg ts a ong. ong, own a year, ames sat .
long way f~om over,just like "We f.Ot to give up some-·
the games m th1s senes have thing. '
.
·
ellSily Game 4 's most dra- been," he said. "When
In this series, James has
matic shot. "Anything can · you've got a guy as great as become a solo artist in a
happen. We got to go to him on the other side, you're tight-knit basketball band
Cleveland looking to try and a long way from done."
now splitting up because of
close these guys out."
The odds are stacked · creative differences.
. The Magic got more good against the Cavaliers.
Cavs guard Mo Williams
news Wednesday when the
In the NBA's 62-year post- may soon become known as
NBA rescinded Howard's season history, 190 teams the guy who couldn't back
Game 4 technical foul, his have taken a 3-1 lead in a up his guarantee. An Allsixth of the playoffs. Under series and 182 of them have Star guard who hasn't
league
rules ,
Howard won. More· daunting for the played close to · one ,
would ' v·e been automatical- Cavaliers is that the Magic Williams, who missed 10 of
ly suspended for one game have won 10 of the past 14 15 shots in Game 4, stuck
had he received a seventh meetings between the teams, out his neck by promising
technical during· the postsea- and were one of three teams Cleveland would rally to
~on.
to win at Cleveland's win the series.
- Orlando heads into Game Quicken Loans AI:ena this
It will take three ,&lt;;traight
0 :with no fear of the road. season.
wins over a team rolling like
They finished . off the
James arid Co. are running it hasn't since the days of.
defending champion Boston out of time and answers.
Shaq, Penny Hardaway and
Celtics on their famed parCleveland's
matchup . Nick Anderson.
q,uet floor in a Game 7 in the pr~blems · are
glaring: . "All the· pressure's on
previous round and have a He1ght, depth, speed. You them," satd Orlando tookte
~hance to end Cleveland's name it, Orlando has it over guard Courtney Lee.
James lingered in' the cordream season on the court of Cleveland.
~ing James.
When the Cavs have con- ridor omside Cleveland's
· The MVP, who scored 44 centrated
on
stopping locker room following his
points in Game 4 and has Howard down low. the postgame press conference
done · everything but drive Magic make 3-pointers on Tuesday night. He chattile team bus in the series, (they hit 17 of 38 , in Game ted with friends and family,
lvon't go quietly.
4), and when Cleveland trying to explain what went
: Following Game.4, James, focuses its defense on wrong for the third time in
averaging 42.3 points, 7.3 guarding the perimeter, this series.
·
James was in no tush. And
· rpbound and .? .3 assists, said Howard destroys them near
he's ready for his next shot the basket.
then, Howard and Lewis
at the impressive Magic.
Care for some arsenic? Or stepped through a curtain,
: "I'm up for the chal- hemlock?
creating
an
awkward
lenge," said· James, who
Orland9's bench has been moment that there was only
couldn't replicate his Game a major factor, too, as Rafer one way to remedy. The
2heroics and missed a tou&amp;h Alston (26 points) and MVP spun, adjusted his
1-pointer at the buzzer m Mickael Pietrus (17) gave designer sunglasses and
~arne 4. "And I think my the Magic a huge lift
walked off, heading toward
!!lay, my leadership. has
If not for James' miracu- the team charter.
spoke for that. So 1 Will be lous shot to win Game 2,
The Cavs left for Ohio,
teady, and I think our guys this series would be over and looking for some magic of
be ready also.''
' so would the LeBron vs. their own.
'

CINCINNATI (AP) Jay' Bruce homered twice
and
Bronson
Arroyo
pitched
a
five -hitter
Wednesday night. leading
the Cincinnati Reds to a 6I victory and a three-game ·
sweep of the Houston
Astros.
·
Bruce was in a 1-for: 18
slump when he hit a solo
shot off Felipe Paulino (14) in the fourth. Hts. tworun homer off .the rightbander made it 5- 1 in t)le
sixth and put the Reds _in
position for their first
·sweep of the Astros in
Cincinnati since May 2004 .
Bruce completed his
breakout game with a runscoring triple in the eighth
off
Chtts . Sampson .
Cincinnati has won four in
a row for the first tinie this
season.
.
Arroyo (7 -3) gave up
four singles, a double and

one walk in his seventh Tuesday night.
.
career complete game and
This one provided a fitfirst this season.
ting finish.
..
The last-place Astros
The Reds hn three
have
dropped
seven homers off Paulino - Jeq;y
straight games - thetr Hairston Jr. also had a solo
longest skid of the seas~n s~ot - in six innings. ~
- and htt a new low pomt ngbt-hander fell to 0-~ m
at 18-27.
three
starts · ~gatlist
Houston gave up another Cincinnati this season. :
unearned run - its ninth of
Arroyo gave up a sacnthe _series - while c_om- fice fly to .La':'c~ Berkman
pletmg three days of mtser- m the first mmng, then dug
able baseball in a city . io .. Houston got only two
where it had felt at home. more runners to second
Houston had won II of its base against An:oyo, wh~
last 12 games at Great struck out three m an effi, .
American Ball Park he~d- cient outing- 92 pitches: •
ing into the series .
The Reds scored thet~
On this visit, everything unearned run in the thir~
went wrong.
when Willy Taveras bunted
Houston gave. up eight with . two o~lls . Catche.r
unearned runs m an 8-5 Humberto Qumtero fielded
loss in the opener. then had .and .s ailed a throw into the
Roy Oswalt .- 23-1 career outfield, allowjng Taveras
a(lainst Cincinnati - hurt to reach third standinj! up.
hts.pitching hand and blow Hairston followed wtth a .
lead in a 6-4 defeat on single for his second RBI.

a

Mangini brings (amiliar faces with him to Browns
BEREA: (AP) - . Eric and defensive end Kenyon familiar with his .system. Ot
Barton stood in the middle of Coleman are expected to for-· the .· seven ex-Jets on the
· the Cleveland Browns' tify a 3-4 defense that ranked Browns' roster, six play
defense on Wednesday, flash- . 28th last yelll' at stopping .the defense.
ing signals and hollering for · run, allowing riearly I ~2
"I love . the 3-4," Bowens
Kamerion Wimbley to take rushing y~s a ¥arne.
.
said. "I'm not stuck with my
two steps to the nght. l-Ie's · Mangmt mhented the same hand in the ground and I'm
only been with tbe team a problem with the Jets, who not stationary. We have the
short while, . but 'already ranked 29th in run defense in freedom to move around, disBarton has one of tbe most 2005.. the year before his. guise and switch positions .
important voices on the arrival. It took three years, We have a lot of freedom in
defense. . ·
but in his last season in New this 3-4."
·
Mangini . is also looking
"His forte is getting all II York the Jets ranked seventh
guys gait\~ in the riglit direc- in the league at stopping the outside New York for defention, making sure they're in run, allowing less than · 95 ~ sive help. The Browns signed
the right spots," Browns yards
game.
free agent cornerback R~
coach Eric M,angini said of
''He s the smartest coach Hood thts week.
Barton. "Eric is incredibly I've ever been .around,"
Hood, 27, staried fQr 1he
smart. Not just in terms of his Barton said of Man~irii. "He Arizona C&lt;irdinals the past
ability to pick up the infor- puts guys in posttions to two seasons .before peing
mation, but his ability to make plays. You always released in April. .' He is
process information on the know you're going to be 'well expectc:d to tmmediately
field . He can see a formation pre(Jlil'ed to play the game." push mcumbent Brandon
Mangini grew up in the McDonald for the starting
and anticipaie the adjustment
and antictpate the ~&gt;lay. I've NFL learning the 3-4 system cornerback spot opposite
always respected h1s natural and insists on sticking by it. Eric Wright.
..
If anyone ¢an attest to how.
intelligence ·and his football While the .Browns played a
intelligence."
3-4 under former coach -quickly a team's fortUnes can
Barton is one of seven for- Romeo Creimel, Mangini change in the NFL. it's Hood:
mer New York Jets that said systems within the He witnessed the Cardinal,s
Mangini has brought with scheme can vary. That's one go from NFL doormats . to
him -to Cleveland. Barton, reason ,~! was important for . NFC champions almost
linebacker David Bowens him to 1\iing in some veterans overnight.
.,

per

---·$1·7 ,739

'"'ONTM JND PRICII .

·

will

~x-Kentuckycoach Gillispie sues over tiring
:. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -

in good faith and his counsel Sweet 16 in 2007. The previseasons before
11::tball coach Btlly Gillispie they said in a statement.
Gillispie came on board,
~ the school Wednesday.
Kentucky athletics director A&amp;M was 20-22.
~king at least $6 million ~e Mitch Barnhart, reached
Gillispie went 40-27 in two
llll.YS he is owed on his deal Wednesday
at
the seasons with the Wildcats,
lifter being fired without Southeastern . Conference including a 22-14 mark last
...,use ·
meetings in Destin, Fla., said season that tied for the sec~9iliispie, ~ho was dis- he had no comment.
ond-most losses in the prop;tissed last spnng, was work- "I just got off the phone gram's 106-year history. A
tilg under a memorandum of with our attorneys and I can't stumble down the stretch left
IAftderstanding but . · hadn't say anything," Barnhart said. the WildcatS out of the NCAA
$1gned a formal contract durJimmy
Stanton, ·
a tournament. for the first time
jtJg the two years he coached spokesman for University of since 1991.
ll!e Wildcats.·
Kentucky President lee
He also was criticized for
: He contends that under that Todd, also declined comment failing to properly represent
itlemorandum , he should be because the matter involves
(laid $1.5 million a year for pending litigation.
· the school as an ambassador
occasionally being prickIP.W" of the five years left on Much of the 24-page law- and
ly
with
the media, including
lbe deal .. The suit also asks for s~it hi~h!ig~ts the 49-year--~?ld two halftime
clashes with a
an undtsclosed amount of Gilhspte s btography, descnb- female ESPN reporter.
punitive damages, attorneys' ing htm as an up-and-coming
His one-page termination
~.court costs and interest.
coach who resurrected a
letter
concluded Gillispie was
- The lawsuit filed in federal · Texas A&amp;M program before
nota
"good
fit" for the school,
oOurt in DaUas contends the leavin~ to lead Kentucky, the
and
it
specifically
cited his
ilt:hool's athletics association nation s all-time winningest
failure
to
come
to
an
agree,
IS in breach of contract and college basketball progrrun. It
ment
on
a
full
employment
jtas committed fraud because also says he was negotiating a
.
lhe university never intended new contract with Texas contract.
1.6 honor the agreement. • A&amp;M and that Kentucky offi- During a news conference
the day after he was fired, .
: "Rather than honor its writ- cials interfered.
·ttn, signed deal with coach
" He resigned a promising, Gillispte maintained he was
f;fillispte , defendant prefers successful position as head- due the full $6 million buyout
instead to pretend as though coach with a ·rapidly ascend- as stipulated in the memoranito deal was ever reached," the ing program at Texas A&amp;M," dum of understanding.
"That's what it says in the
lawsuit says . " Unfortunately it says. "He did So because he
for defendant, its make- believed (the university 's) contract, th3t's what it looks
believe world is just that.''
false reJ&gt;resentations to him like to me," he said . "I don't
• University
attorneys during h1s negotiations.''
know all the details and all
expressed swprise over the
In three seasons with the those kind of things. I just
lawsuit.
.
Aggies, Gillispie was 70-26, know we signed a contract.lt
- ''The university was contin- making the NCAA touma- was a shorter version than
~N to negotiate ~ separation ment twice including the maybe some.''
l~Qrrner KentuckY. men's bas- had asked for more time," ous three

' .

•

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�_Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Magic 1 win from finals return Bruce powers Reds to sweep of Astros
ORLANDO , Fla. (AP) Qressed in black, the imposing 7-footer sat near the
flpor for Game 4 like a casual NBA fan. He was hardly
one.
Around here . Shaquille
O'Neal means much more.
He represents the link to
Orlando's ~lorious past,
however brief it may be.
Shaq , a basket-breaking
behemoth with the power of
several men, led the· Magic
t9 their only NBA finals
appearance in 1995 , a short
"'sit that ended with an
·embarrassing sweep by
Houston.
. The Magic and their mani~~~~ fans have longed for a
second shot at a title.
·.They can almost touch it.
; Orlando moved within one
win of ending its 14-yeat
fir.tals drought on Tuesday
~ight as Dwight Howard, the
Magic's present-day Diesel,
icored 27 points - 10 in
Q\lertime - in a 116-114
win over .. the Cleveland
(!avaliers to take a 3- 1 lead
in the Eastern Conference
(tnals and shove LeBron
~it,mes and his not-so-supportive cast to the edge of an
early summer break. ·
~· A razor-thin series - two
one-point games, and a twopointer in OT - where tlie
last team with the ball usually emerges victorious, could
end Thursday night . Maybe.
"We're up 3-1 • but we
can~~ relax," sat·d Rashard
Lewis, whose catch-andshoot 3-pointer with 4 _1 seconds left in regulation was.

·

AP photo
Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) gets tangled up with Orlanljo Magic center Dwight Howard as he
goes up lor a shot in the fourth quarter in the overtime of
Gam'e 4 of the NBA Eastern Conference basketball finals in
Orlando, Fla., on Tuesday.
Orlando coach Stan Van Kobe finals envisioned by
Gundy, who doesn't sleep many, but · not the guys in
well even when things are blue and white .
going great, knows .if anyThe.Cavaliers can't figure
one can turn this .series out what to do next.
around it's the magnificent
''We're break in~ down in
James.
areas we haven'\'t broken ·
• Th' h' · 1
1
d
11
· " J
·d
' IS t mg ts a ong. ong, own a year, ames sat .
long way f~om over,just like "We f.Ot to give up some-·
the games m th1s senes have thing. '
.
·
ellSily Game 4 's most dra- been," he said. "When
In this series, James has
matic shot. "Anything can · you've got a guy as great as become a solo artist in a
happen. We got to go to him on the other side, you're tight-knit basketball band
Cleveland looking to try and a long way from done."
now splitting up because of
close these guys out."
The odds are stacked · creative differences.
. The Magic got more good against the Cavaliers.
Cavs guard Mo Williams
news Wednesday when the
In the NBA's 62-year post- may soon become known as
NBA rescinded Howard's season history, 190 teams the guy who couldn't back
Game 4 technical foul, his have taken a 3-1 lead in a up his guarantee. An Allsixth of the playoffs. Under series and 182 of them have Star guard who hasn't
league
rules ,
Howard won. More· daunting for the played close to · one ,
would ' v·e been automatical- Cavaliers is that the Magic Williams, who missed 10 of
ly suspended for one game have won 10 of the past 14 15 shots in Game 4, stuck
had he received a seventh meetings between the teams, out his neck by promising
technical during· the postsea- and were one of three teams Cleveland would rally to
~on.
to win at Cleveland's win the series.
- Orlando heads into Game Quicken Loans AI:ena this
It will take three ,&lt;;traight
0 :with no fear of the road. season.
wins over a team rolling like
They finished . off the
James arid Co. are running it hasn't since the days of.
defending champion Boston out of time and answers.
Shaq, Penny Hardaway and
Celtics on their famed parCleveland's
matchup . Nick Anderson.
q,uet floor in a Game 7 in the pr~blems · are
glaring: . "All the· pressure's on
previous round and have a He1ght, depth, speed. You them," satd Orlando tookte
~hance to end Cleveland's name it, Orlando has it over guard Courtney Lee.
James lingered in' the cordream season on the court of Cleveland.
~ing James.
When the Cavs have con- ridor omside Cleveland's
· The MVP, who scored 44 centrated
on
stopping locker room following his
points in Game 4 and has Howard down low. the postgame press conference
done · everything but drive Magic make 3-pointers on Tuesday night. He chattile team bus in the series, (they hit 17 of 38 , in Game ted with friends and family,
lvon't go quietly.
4), and when Cleveland trying to explain what went
: Following Game.4, James, focuses its defense on wrong for the third time in
averaging 42.3 points, 7.3 guarding the perimeter, this series.
·
James was in no tush. And
· rpbound and .? .3 assists, said Howard destroys them near
he's ready for his next shot the basket.
then, Howard and Lewis
at the impressive Magic.
Care for some arsenic? Or stepped through a curtain,
: "I'm up for the chal- hemlock?
creating
an
awkward
lenge," said· James, who
Orland9's bench has been moment that there was only
couldn't replicate his Game a major factor, too, as Rafer one way to remedy. The
2heroics and missed a tou&amp;h Alston (26 points) and MVP spun, adjusted his
1-pointer at the buzzer m Mickael Pietrus (17) gave designer sunglasses and
~arne 4. "And I think my the Magic a huge lift
walked off, heading toward
!!lay, my leadership. has
If not for James' miracu- the team charter.
spoke for that. So 1 Will be lous shot to win Game 2,
The Cavs left for Ohio,
teady, and I think our guys this series would be over and looking for some magic of
be ready also.''
' so would the LeBron vs. their own.
'

CINCINNATI (AP) Jay' Bruce homered twice
and
Bronson
Arroyo
pitched
a
five -hitter
Wednesday night. leading
the Cincinnati Reds to a 6I victory and a three-game ·
sweep of the Houston
Astros.
·
Bruce was in a 1-for: 18
slump when he hit a solo
shot off Felipe Paulino (14) in the fourth. Hts. tworun homer off .the rightbander made it 5- 1 in t)le
sixth and put the Reds _in
position for their first
·sweep of the Astros in
Cincinnati since May 2004 .
Bruce completed his
breakout game with a runscoring triple in the eighth
off
Chtts . Sampson .
Cincinnati has won four in
a row for the first tinie this
season.
.
Arroyo (7 -3) gave up
four singles, a double and

one walk in his seventh Tuesday night.
.
career complete game and
This one provided a fitfirst this season.
ting finish.
..
The last-place Astros
The Reds hn three
have
dropped
seven homers off Paulino - Jeq;y
straight games - thetr Hairston Jr. also had a solo
longest skid of the seas~n s~ot - in six innings. ~
- and htt a new low pomt ngbt-hander fell to 0-~ m
at 18-27.
three
starts · ~gatlist
Houston gave up another Cincinnati this season. :
unearned run - its ninth of
Arroyo gave up a sacnthe _series - while c_om- fice fly to .La':'c~ Berkman
pletmg three days of mtser- m the first mmng, then dug
able baseball in a city . io .. Houston got only two
where it had felt at home. more runners to second
Houston had won II of its base against An:oyo, wh~
last 12 games at Great struck out three m an effi, .
American Ball Park he~d- cient outing- 92 pitches: •
ing into the series .
The Reds scored thet~
On this visit, everything unearned run in the thir~
went wrong.
when Willy Taveras bunted
Houston gave. up eight with . two o~lls . Catche.r
unearned runs m an 8-5 Humberto Qumtero fielded
loss in the opener. then had .and .s ailed a throw into the
Roy Oswalt .- 23-1 career outfield, allowjng Taveras
a(lainst Cincinnati - hurt to reach third standinj! up.
hts.pitching hand and blow Hairston followed wtth a .
lead in a 6-4 defeat on single for his second RBI.

a

Mangini brings (amiliar faces with him to Browns
BEREA: (AP) - . Eric and defensive end Kenyon familiar with his .system. Ot
Barton stood in the middle of Coleman are expected to for-· the .· seven ex-Jets on the
· the Cleveland Browns' tify a 3-4 defense that ranked Browns' roster, six play
defense on Wednesday, flash- . 28th last yelll' at stopping .the defense.
ing signals and hollering for · run, allowing riearly I ~2
"I love . the 3-4," Bowens
Kamerion Wimbley to take rushing y~s a ¥arne.
.
said. "I'm not stuck with my
two steps to the nght. l-Ie's · Mangmt mhented the same hand in the ground and I'm
only been with tbe team a problem with the Jets, who not stationary. We have the
short while, . but 'already ranked 29th in run defense in freedom to move around, disBarton has one of tbe most 2005.. the year before his. guise and switch positions .
important voices on the arrival. It took three years, We have a lot of freedom in
defense. . ·
but in his last season in New this 3-4."
·
Mangini . is also looking
"His forte is getting all II York the Jets ranked seventh
guys gait\~ in the riglit direc- in the league at stopping the outside New York for defention, making sure they're in run, allowing less than · 95 ~ sive help. The Browns signed
the right spots," Browns yards
game.
free agent cornerback R~
coach Eric M,angini said of
''He s the smartest coach Hood thts week.
Barton. "Eric is incredibly I've ever been .around,"
Hood, 27, staried fQr 1he
smart. Not just in terms of his Barton said of Man~irii. "He Arizona C&lt;irdinals the past
ability to pick up the infor- puts guys in posttions to two seasons .before peing
mation, but his ability to make plays. You always released in April. .' He is
process information on the know you're going to be 'well expectc:d to tmmediately
field . He can see a formation pre(Jlil'ed to play the game." push mcumbent Brandon
Mangini grew up in the McDonald for the starting
and anticipaie the adjustment
and antictpate the ~&gt;lay. I've NFL learning the 3-4 system cornerback spot opposite
always respected h1s natural and insists on sticking by it. Eric Wright.
..
If anyone ¢an attest to how.
intelligence ·and his football While the .Browns played a
intelligence."
3-4 under former coach -quickly a team's fortUnes can
Barton is one of seven for- Romeo Creimel, Mangini change in the NFL. it's Hood:
mer New York Jets that said systems within the He witnessed the Cardinal,s
Mangini has brought with scheme can vary. That's one go from NFL doormats . to
him -to Cleveland. Barton, reason ,~! was important for . NFC champions almost
linebacker David Bowens him to 1\iing in some veterans overnight.
.,

per

---·$1·7 ,739

'"'ONTM JND PRICII .

·

will

~x-Kentuckycoach Gillispie sues over tiring
:. LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) -

in good faith and his counsel Sweet 16 in 2007. The previseasons before
11::tball coach Btlly Gillispie they said in a statement.
Gillispie came on board,
~ the school Wednesday.
Kentucky athletics director A&amp;M was 20-22.
~king at least $6 million ~e Mitch Barnhart, reached
Gillispie went 40-27 in two
llll.YS he is owed on his deal Wednesday
at
the seasons with the Wildcats,
lifter being fired without Southeastern . Conference including a 22-14 mark last
...,use ·
meetings in Destin, Fla., said season that tied for the sec~9iliispie, ~ho was dis- he had no comment.
ond-most losses in the prop;tissed last spnng, was work- "I just got off the phone gram's 106-year history. A
tilg under a memorandum of with our attorneys and I can't stumble down the stretch left
IAftderstanding but . · hadn't say anything," Barnhart said. the WildcatS out of the NCAA
$1gned a formal contract durJimmy
Stanton, ·
a tournament. for the first time
jtJg the two years he coached spokesman for University of since 1991.
ll!e Wildcats.·
Kentucky President lee
He also was criticized for
: He contends that under that Todd, also declined comment failing to properly represent
itlemorandum , he should be because the matter involves
(laid $1.5 million a year for pending litigation.
· the school as an ambassador
occasionally being prickIP.W" of the five years left on Much of the 24-page law- and
ly
with
the media, including
lbe deal .. The suit also asks for s~it hi~h!ig~ts the 49-year--~?ld two halftime
clashes with a
an undtsclosed amount of Gilhspte s btography, descnb- female ESPN reporter.
punitive damages, attorneys' ing htm as an up-and-coming
His one-page termination
~.court costs and interest.
coach who resurrected a
letter
concluded Gillispie was
- The lawsuit filed in federal · Texas A&amp;M program before
nota
"good
fit" for the school,
oOurt in DaUas contends the leavin~ to lead Kentucky, the
and
it
specifically
cited his
ilt:hool's athletics association nation s all-time winningest
failure
to
come
to
an
agree,
IS in breach of contract and college basketball progrrun. It
ment
on
a
full
employment
jtas committed fraud because also says he was negotiating a
.
lhe university never intended new contract with Texas contract.
1.6 honor the agreement. • A&amp;M and that Kentucky offi- During a news conference
the day after he was fired, .
: "Rather than honor its writ- cials interfered.
·ttn, signed deal with coach
" He resigned a promising, Gillispte maintained he was
f;fillispte , defendant prefers successful position as head- due the full $6 million buyout
instead to pretend as though coach with a ·rapidly ascend- as stipulated in the memoranito deal was ever reached," the ing program at Texas A&amp;M," dum of understanding.
"That's what it says in the
lawsuit says . " Unfortunately it says. "He did So because he
for defendant, its make- believed (the university 's) contract, th3t's what it looks
believe world is just that.''
false reJ&gt;resentations to him like to me," he said . "I don't
• University
attorneys during h1s negotiations.''
know all the details and all
expressed swprise over the
In three seasons with the those kind of things. I just
lawsuit.
.
Aggies, Gillispie was 70-26, know we signed a contract.lt
- ''The university was contin- making the NCAA touma- was a shorter version than
~N to negotiate ~ separation ment twice including the maybe some.''
l~Qrrner KentuckY. men's bas- had asked for more time," ous three

' .

•

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

UP10 $4,000

.

CAIHIACIO .

-. - ·

-·

.

--~--

·-

.

.

REPUTABLE SALES PROFESS.I ONALS

1
\.

"

I ~·

:
I

, ;_
'

,·.

I

I

I

•

I

~

~

.

.!

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HEALTH ·G ARE · . 2· 0~0 · 9

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offers.
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While birth .control pills . usually • she was not usirig any birth control. .. forget to take it, busy students, work·
prevent pregnancy, missing one or . Unlike injectable Depo Provera, ing mothers, stay at home mothers,
two pills can have real coflsequences Implanon d~s not cause bone loss, teenagers at risk for pregnancy,
- ones that might require diapers does not delay return to normal fertili- young married women who are not
and strollers. ·
ty after removal, nor does it cause sig- ready for a baby yet, smokers of the
Everyday life stressors can get the nificant wei~~t ·gain. _Your &lt;kx:tor or age of 35, professional women ·who
best of any of .us - whether it's the_ nurse practJ~oner . ·wdl council you travel frequently... just about any
academic. stress of exam week, the ~tbout What s1de effects YOIJ may expe- woman of reproductive age whO does
pressure ofbills ro pay, the need to rience.Some may ~member Norplant, not want to get pregnlint right now.!
Frese. nius Medical Care,.. Wl'th . work 'two jobs, the responsibility of a. six rQd implant system ~hich was What does · lmpl~tnon .cost?
. caring for yo_ur cbildren, ?r others; . difficwt t() place -and .some~s
Implanon is covered by mosf insur- ·
facilities in Gallipolis and Jackson, . Remembenng to take birth control to_remove. Imp~anon 1s very ~e~nt. ance plans. Ohio University students
Ohio, and Ripley, W.Va., is the pills may fal,l t? the. bottom of Yt?Uf · w1!]l o~y one . tiny ro¢; complications with private insurance .may -select
world's largest, integrated proviper to-do list. Missmg birth control pills at msemon and removal are ra(e. • this device as their birth control
of dialysis products and services for . is easy to do, but is a risk !hat many lmplanon . ~oes not contam option. To determine if you have
patients with End-Stage Renal women cannot afford to take. But Estrogen; so 1t 1s a great method for coverage, you should call the .cu_sDisease (ESRD).
now we have some new_er -options smo~ers over the age of. 35; brea~t- tomer semce number located on the
Ultra Care(R) is Fresenius Medical that do not- require a woman to feeding mothers, ~nd .th~se w1th back of your insurance card. More
Care's unique approach to patient remember anything for years. One of other reasons to aymd estrogen. . information is available on the Web:
care. It is based on the mission of these options is Implano!l. .
.
Ho~ tong does tt last?.~planon 1s http://www.implanon-usa.com . . ·
delivering excellent medical care to . What is Jfnplanon? IMPLANON® effect1ve forthree yeiU'S, After tllree Botton Line? Implanon is along
patients through innovative and effi- is a small, thiri~ implantable hormon- . y¢1U'S, ~- f®,&gt;~must be. ~ptoved, If term birth contr&lt;&gt;l · methOd . that
cient programs, the latest technolo- al contracepti~e that is effective for the woman wishes to contipue to use requires little effort and is saf~ .for
gy, continuous qu~ity improvement up to three yeiU'S. It is a flexable plas- Implanon, a new o~e m~ty be· placed most. women; Once it is. in~ited; .
and a focus on superior customer . tic rod that "measu.res just over one right away. Pot wom~n· who wish to you can "forget about it" for Up to
service·
inch long. It is placed under the skin become pregnant, the device may be three years! ·- · Submitted by }tme
UltraCare is delivered by highly on the inside of the upper arm by a removed at any time and fertility .Broecker, M.P., KIIJhken Bertu1111,
trained staff and demonstrated physician or nurse practitioner espe- returns to normal in-a .uatter of days. D.O., Pam Born, RN, Prtletke
through dedication, leadership and · cially trained to insert Implanon.
Who should consider Implanon? . Managtr, River Rose Obs~trics &amp;
compassion by every team member,
The procedure is performed in the Women on the pill who occasionally Gynecology.
every day. These five main elements office setting and is similar to havin8
of training allow Fresenius Medical an IV started. Local anesthetic is
Care staff and physicians to deliver used so that the patient will not have MRI Procedure ·Room ... Meets ... Breathing Room ·
excellent care to patients through
d'
&amp;
I
·
k
' .
innovative methods, .the latest tech- any tscom.ort.
nsertton ta es
~bout 60 seconds. Implanon cannot
nology, and a shared focus on supe- be seen, but you will know it is there
rior customer service.
Visit our UltraCare-Dhdysis web- because yol! can feel it just undet
.
bo
..
your skin.
·
.
. .
stte to 1earn more a ut our patient
How dOes it prevent pregnancy? .
care services, or to locate a dialysis The small rod releases a low, steady ..
dose of etonogestrel, a synthetic
center near you.
progestin hormone simila( to the
Patient services
progesterone made in the ovaries. It
works by ·preventing the release of
At the facilities of Fresenius eggs and by thickening the mucus on
Medical Care, tJu following ser- the woman's. cervix which may preIntroducing the High-Field OPEN MRI System
vices are provuud to meet the med- vents sperm from entering the uterus.
ical and social service needs of our It does not contain latex or .silicone
Some people worry that an MR scan might be confining and
patients: .
•
and will not dissolve.
uncomfortable. But with Holzer Clinic's new Philips Pitrionima
Since
1998,
there
have
~n more
l .OT MR, the widest, most open high-field MR sy~tem made .
'
• Nutritional counseling
tban 2.5 million lmplanon units pretoday, those worries vanish. And while you' ll find the Panorama
scribed in more than thirty countries.
l .OT comfortable, your doctor will find the image quality
• Social worker support
It is more than 99 percent effective: . .
the chance of getting pregnant is less
rano~m• 1 .or superior and unmatched. That means bett!!r diagnoses a_nd
fewer rescans. At Holzer Clinic you can breathe easy and e11pect
• Home training program
than J pregnancy per I00 women who
a comfortable expereince . Ask your doctor today!
(PO and hemo)
use Implanon,.according to ScheringPiough, the maker of lmplanon.
DIGITAL DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING
• Anemia management
What about side effects and safety?
Irregular bleeding is the most comAND CLINICAL TESTING CENTER
• FMCNA J?atient Travel Service
JTIOn side effect of Implanon, but the
total number of days with bleeding is HOLZER
. Fresenius ',Gallipolis·office, CQ.tl- .be.. ·&amp;imila( 1 ~ 1t.h.e numb&lt;;r, ,Qf &lt;lays a
CLINIC ·
740-395~8854 www.hol:tttrclinic:com · ,
cont'actM 'at (740) 441-9300.
\~oman would speM on her period if ·• '!!~ ,:. ·,

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Everyday!

AU Medicare Part D ·
Pltms Weko~M! ·

Alk your cloctDi' lbout Ohio Valley
Home Hliltb. You onomeone you
care about 111f.Y be eligible for more
· ~thin whit yoli thougllt.'FOI'

qlillllled p!lllentiMadlcare pays
1110%. OVHH hila teem of dedicated
JliofcUilloiiCII Including mnes,
physlcll tflercpists, wound care
speclallcll, Lymphlclclila lherapls1s
III!IIIMift. OVHH worb under orders
from your doctor. Conliclcr OVHH. for
help llllw illfVIIY, llnlb 01' IU--.

3D9 Fifth Street

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• Page 3

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) According to the American Cancer The 'difference that 3-Testa provides general surgeons, medical oncolo- able if diagnosed early, we cannot
Society, l&gt;reas't cancer is the mos~ ·in im~$~ quality e"pands c;:Iinic~l gists, radiation. oncologists, radiolo- emphasize enough the simple steps
. S~tlJifioh cancer ·among American capabdttles and m~t~a~es_ tht; quab- gists, plastic surge9ns, lymphedema wome.n can take to protect themw~_en, 'with the single exception of ty, oLt.ealth care , throughout the specialists and pathologists. Each sel.ves.
·
.
-~ C,I:Uli;:C:l'S1;;I'he chance.of de~elop~ :region. · ·
" . , · · '. · · ·
· case is individualized.
· AIJ 'women over age 20 should permgj~va~lV~~bre~st cancet .at•.some. When it comes. to -breast cancer, In the event cancer is detected, the fom1 monthly self-breast exams . . ·
ti~~ill·ll;\VQ1llan's:life is about lit1c8 · earJy detection is )#valuable. If patient is · assisted through · the . · All women over age 40 should
(l~~).! Qver'·tpe;last 20 years there.. detected early, patients with breast process -by a professional Oncology have yearly screening mammob~ .~p ~- dee~ing mortality frOm. ·c~cer ltave more tre!l~nt options, Nqrse Navigator. These knowledge- grams.
· , ·
th1s. di~ase:Jfdetected early, small· ~uch as breast conservatiOn surgery able, understanding professionals Clinical beast exams ·by a health
b~ast c;:a~c~rs :that have not ye~/lln.d minimally inVasive diagn,ostic assist the patient in navigation of the care professional are recommended
sptead ~o the'h'mph node~ are a~soci..:, ·~du,re~~ At ,Holzer Clini~ outpa- cancer treatment process and overall every 3 years for women age 20 to 39
ated Wltlt a JO·year sumval tate of ttents can undergo a.mammotome or system. They know and understand and yearly thereafter.·
over 90%. · · · · .
·, stereotactiC · breast biopsy, using a the physicians and staff involved in Women with strong family history
Mammograms are the best protec- needle guided · by a mammogram the treatment of the patient and assist of breast cancer or other genetic
tion against ·breast cancer. We .want und~r l!Xal aitesthesi~ resulting in in setting up appointments, guide risks should be screened earlier and
to be sure tha~ you don t avmd .or no stgmficant change ·tn the ap~ar- .them on the proper treatment path, discuss Qptions · for breast cancer
delay_ your ~nnual exam due to fe~r ance of ~h~ brea~t .. In addlt~on, provide education, support and car- reduction strategies with their doc. 1 ?f pam dr~tscffimfort. ~~z~r ~l~c H~ze{ Chmc/ro~t~s MRl gUided ing. They . are Certified. Nurse tor. ·
ts prou . o . 0 er ce 1 te
o ter an u tra~OUf! gui e mammotome Practitioners who have ·.· gained For more information a/Jout th~
. .Mammogra~
·. technology. breast . blopstes. ~or early .tumors National Certification in Oncology comprehensive breast services availMammo~adts a foam pad that serves breast conse~vatton. su~gery _or Care. . · ·
·
able. at Holzer Clinic call 740-446as a cushton between yo~r breast and lllfi!JX:Ctomh m conJunction 'Y1th Since breast cancer is such a com- '54 11 or 'visit us
the · web at
~e. mammography equtpment P':'O" radtatiOn t erapy offers survival mon health danger and is very treat~ www.holzerdinic.com.
.
v1ding every woman the opportumty · rates equal to mastectomy or
for a softer, warmer, more comfort- removal of the entire breast. Sentinal
able mammogram. .
. lymph node biopsy offers patients ·a
In addition .to mammo&amp;t:ap~y and less invasive .way of assessif!g for
breast ult.-asol,lnd, an .exc1t10g new th~ presence of cancer cells m the
edition to Holzer CHnic's Breast lymph nodes of a. breast cancer ·
Care Serv~ces. is the 8 channel patient and reduces the chance of
· Breast ~ coilthat allows simulta- developing arm sweUing or lymneous imaging of both bre~tS. The phedema. · ·
. .
. ·
coil enab~es ~hig~ sensitivity · and •. At Ho~zer Clinic our p~ilosoph~ is
· ho':flog~ne•tym. high tempo~lre~~ to pmv~de seamless, htg~ qualt~.
Iutton 1magJng .o( both breasts With c.ompasstonate care to patients with
complete coverage through to the breast complications via a multi-disa~jacent . t~orac.i&lt;? regi?ns. The ciplina:ry awroach ~0 treatment. We .
breast cotl ts ut1hzed w1th the 3- manage pattents w1th breast probTesla MRI, the highest level of MRI lems as a team, consisting.of family
imaging quality currently available. physicians, gynecologists, internists, _

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Implanon: Birth control You can forget abOut
.

· . HEALTH CARE 2009 . .·

Thursday, May 28, 2009 .·

· ThurscJay;
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Fresemus

HEALTH ·G ARE · . 2· 0~0 · 9

Page 2 •

.

. .

..

.

,

.

.'• .

~

•'

,.

.

.

.

offers.
committed
•
service

While birth .control pills . usually • she was not usirig any birth control. .. forget to take it, busy students, work·
prevent pregnancy, missing one or . Unlike injectable Depo Provera, ing mothers, stay at home mothers,
two pills can have real coflsequences Implanon d~s not cause bone loss, teenagers at risk for pregnancy,
- ones that might require diapers does not delay return to normal fertili- young married women who are not
and strollers. ·
ty after removal, nor does it cause sig- ready for a baby yet, smokers of the
Everyday life stressors can get the nificant wei~~t ·gain. _Your &lt;kx:tor or age of 35, professional women ·who
best of any of .us - whether it's the_ nurse practJ~oner . ·wdl council you travel frequently... just about any
academic. stress of exam week, the ~tbout What s1de effects YOIJ may expe- woman of reproductive age whO does
pressure ofbills ro pay, the need to rience.Some may ~member Norplant, not want to get pregnlint right now.!
Frese. nius Medical Care,.. Wl'th . work 'two jobs, the responsibility of a. six rQd implant system ~hich was What does · lmpl~tnon .cost?
. caring for yo_ur cbildren, ?r others; . difficwt t() place -and .some~s
Implanon is covered by mosf insur- ·
facilities in Gallipolis and Jackson, . Remembenng to take birth control to_remove. Imp~anon 1s very ~e~nt. ance plans. Ohio University students
Ohio, and Ripley, W.Va., is the pills may fal,l t? the. bottom of Yt?Uf · w1!]l o~y one . tiny ro¢; complications with private insurance .may -select
world's largest, integrated proviper to-do list. Missmg birth control pills at msemon and removal are ra(e. • this device as their birth control
of dialysis products and services for . is easy to do, but is a risk !hat many lmplanon . ~oes not contam option. To determine if you have
patients with End-Stage Renal women cannot afford to take. But Estrogen; so 1t 1s a great method for coverage, you should call the .cu_sDisease (ESRD).
now we have some new_er -options smo~ers over the age of. 35; brea~t- tomer semce number located on the
Ultra Care(R) is Fresenius Medical that do not- require a woman to feeding mothers, ~nd .th~se w1th back of your insurance card. More
Care's unique approach to patient remember anything for years. One of other reasons to aymd estrogen. . information is available on the Web:
care. It is based on the mission of these options is Implano!l. .
.
Ho~ tong does tt last?.~planon 1s http://www.implanon-usa.com . . ·
delivering excellent medical care to . What is Jfnplanon? IMPLANON® effect1ve forthree yeiU'S, After tllree Botton Line? Implanon is along
patients through innovative and effi- is a small, thiri~ implantable hormon- . y¢1U'S, ~- f®,&gt;~must be. ~ptoved, If term birth contr&lt;&gt;l · methOd . that
cient programs, the latest technolo- al contracepti~e that is effective for the woman wishes to contipue to use requires little effort and is saf~ .for
gy, continuous qu~ity improvement up to three yeiU'S. It is a flexable plas- Implanon, a new o~e m~ty be· placed most. women; Once it is. in~ited; .
and a focus on superior customer . tic rod that "measu.res just over one right away. Pot wom~n· who wish to you can "forget about it" for Up to
service·
inch long. It is placed under the skin become pregnant, the device may be three years! ·- · Submitted by }tme
UltraCare is delivered by highly on the inside of the upper arm by a removed at any time and fertility .Broecker, M.P., KIIJhken Bertu1111,
trained staff and demonstrated physician or nurse practitioner espe- returns to normal in-a .uatter of days. D.O., Pam Born, RN, Prtletke
through dedication, leadership and · cially trained to insert Implanon.
Who should consider Implanon? . Managtr, River Rose Obs~trics &amp;
compassion by every team member,
The procedure is performed in the Women on the pill who occasionally Gynecology.
every day. These five main elements office setting and is similar to havin8
of training allow Fresenius Medical an IV started. Local anesthetic is
Care staff and physicians to deliver used so that the patient will not have MRI Procedure ·Room ... Meets ... Breathing Room ·
excellent care to patients through
d'
&amp;
I
·
k
' .
innovative methods, .the latest tech- any tscom.ort.
nsertton ta es
~bout 60 seconds. Implanon cannot
nology, and a shared focus on supe- be seen, but you will know it is there
rior customer service.
Visit our UltraCare-Dhdysis web- because yol! can feel it just undet
.
bo
..
your skin.
·
.
. .
stte to 1earn more a ut our patient
How dOes it prevent pregnancy? .
care services, or to locate a dialysis The small rod releases a low, steady ..
dose of etonogestrel, a synthetic
center near you.
progestin hormone simila( to the
Patient services
progesterone made in the ovaries. It
works by ·preventing the release of
At the facilities of Fresenius eggs and by thickening the mucus on
Medical Care, tJu following ser- the woman's. cervix which may preIntroducing the High-Field OPEN MRI System
vices are provuud to meet the med- vents sperm from entering the uterus.
ical and social service needs of our It does not contain latex or .silicone
Some people worry that an MR scan might be confining and
patients: .
•
and will not dissolve.
uncomfortable. But with Holzer Clinic's new Philips Pitrionima
Since
1998,
there
have
~n more
l .OT MR, the widest, most open high-field MR sy~tem made .
'
• Nutritional counseling
tban 2.5 million lmplanon units pretoday, those worries vanish. And while you' ll find the Panorama
scribed in more than thirty countries.
l .OT comfortable, your doctor will find the image quality
• Social worker support
It is more than 99 percent effective: . .
the chance of getting pregnant is less
rano~m• 1 .or superior and unmatched. That means bett!!r diagnoses a_nd
fewer rescans. At Holzer Clinic you can breathe easy and e11pect
• Home training program
than J pregnancy per I00 women who
a comfortable expereince . Ask your doctor today!
(PO and hemo)
use Implanon,.according to ScheringPiough, the maker of lmplanon.
DIGITAL DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING
• Anemia management
What about side effects and safety?
Irregular bleeding is the most comAND CLINICAL TESTING CENTER
• FMCNA J?atient Travel Service
JTIOn side effect of Implanon, but the
total number of days with bleeding is HOLZER
. Fresenius ',Gallipolis·office, CQ.tl- .be.. ·&amp;imila( 1 ~ 1t.h.e numb&lt;;r, ,Qf &lt;lays a
CLINIC ·
740-395~8854 www.hol:tttrclinic:com · ,
cont'actM 'at (740) 441-9300.
\~oman would speM on her period if ·• '!!~ ,:. ·,

· ··-···· ·

~~

-~-- ·':&gt;"

···-

·=}···· . ·

·-·

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

··•••••• :•·

_ _ _ _ _ _ .,.,

..

;

'.
, n

•

o• f • o ' •• t

'

,

,

on

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

•.....,.,,..,
,., AU!".,
..- .,..,

'

\ 0 I' I

..

Senlcit

F~eB/ood

.

Pnma~ cj,et:ls
Everyday!

AU Medicare Part D ·
Pltms Weko~M! ·

Alk your cloctDi' lbout Ohio Valley
Home Hliltb. You onomeone you
care about 111f.Y be eligible for more
· ~thin whit yoli thougllt.'FOI'

qlillllled p!lllentiMadlcare pays
1110%. OVHH hila teem of dedicated
JliofcUilloiiCII Including mnes,
physlcll tflercpists, wound care
speclallcll, Lymphlclclila lherapls1s
III!IIIMift. OVHH worb under orders
from your doctor. Conliclcr OVHH. for
help llllw illfVIIY, llnlb 01' IU--.

3D9 Fifth Street

.

0

• Page 3

'

) According to the American Cancer The 'difference that 3-Testa provides general surgeons, medical oncolo- able if diagnosed early, we cannot
Society, l&gt;reas't cancer is the mos~ ·in im~$~ quality e"pands c;:Iinic~l gists, radiation. oncologists, radiolo- emphasize enough the simple steps
. S~tlJifioh cancer ·among American capabdttles and m~t~a~es_ tht; quab- gists, plastic surge9ns, lymphedema wome.n can take to protect themw~_en, 'with the single exception of ty, oLt.ealth care , throughout the specialists and pathologists. Each sel.ves.
·
.
-~ C,I:Uli;:C:l'S1;;I'he chance.of de~elop~ :region. · ·
" . , · · '. · · ·
· case is individualized.
· AIJ 'women over age 20 should permgj~va~lV~~bre~st cancet .at•.some. When it comes. to -breast cancer, In the event cancer is detected, the fom1 monthly self-breast exams . . ·
ti~~ill·ll;\VQ1llan's:life is about lit1c8 · earJy detection is )#valuable. If patient is · assisted through · the . · All women over age 40 should
(l~~).! Qver'·tpe;last 20 years there.. detected early, patients with breast process -by a professional Oncology have yearly screening mammob~ .~p ~- dee~ing mortality frOm. ·c~cer ltave more tre!l~nt options, Nqrse Navigator. These knowledge- grams.
· , ·
th1s. di~ase:Jfdetected early, small· ~uch as breast conservatiOn surgery able, understanding professionals Clinical beast exams ·by a health
b~ast c;:a~c~rs :that have not ye~/lln.d minimally inVasive diagn,ostic assist the patient in navigation of the care professional are recommended
sptead ~o the'h'mph node~ are a~soci..:, ·~du,re~~ At ,Holzer Clini~ outpa- cancer treatment process and overall every 3 years for women age 20 to 39
ated Wltlt a JO·year sumval tate of ttents can undergo a.mammotome or system. They know and understand and yearly thereafter.·
over 90%. · · · · .
·, stereotactiC · breast biopsy, using a the physicians and staff involved in Women with strong family history
Mammograms are the best protec- needle guided · by a mammogram the treatment of the patient and assist of breast cancer or other genetic
tion against ·breast cancer. We .want und~r l!Xal aitesthesi~ resulting in in setting up appointments, guide risks should be screened earlier and
to be sure tha~ you don t avmd .or no stgmficant change ·tn the ap~ar- .them on the proper treatment path, discuss Qptions · for breast cancer
delay_ your ~nnual exam due to fe~r ance of ~h~ brea~t .. In addlt~on, provide education, support and car- reduction strategies with their doc. 1 ?f pam dr~tscffimfort. ~~z~r ~l~c H~ze{ Chmc/ro~t~s MRl gUided ing. They . are Certified. Nurse tor. ·
ts prou . o . 0 er ce 1 te
o ter an u tra~OUf! gui e mammotome Practitioners who have ·.· gained For more information a/Jout th~
. .Mammogra~
·. technology. breast . blopstes. ~or early .tumors National Certification in Oncology comprehensive breast services availMammo~adts a foam pad that serves breast conse~vatton. su~gery _or Care. . · ·
·
able. at Holzer Clinic call 740-446as a cushton between yo~r breast and lllfi!JX:Ctomh m conJunction 'Y1th Since breast cancer is such a com- '54 11 or 'visit us
the · web at
~e. mammography equtpment P':'O" radtatiOn t erapy offers survival mon health danger and is very treat~ www.holzerdinic.com.
.
v1ding every woman the opportumty · rates equal to mastectomy or
for a softer, warmer, more comfort- removal of the entire breast. Sentinal
able mammogram. .
. lymph node biopsy offers patients ·a
In addition .to mammo&amp;t:ap~y and less invasive .way of assessif!g for
breast ult.-asol,lnd, an .exc1t10g new th~ presence of cancer cells m the
edition to Holzer CHnic's Breast lymph nodes of a. breast cancer ·
Care Serv~ces. is the 8 channel patient and reduces the chance of
· Breast ~ coilthat allows simulta- developing arm sweUing or lymneous imaging of both bre~tS. The phedema. · ·
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· ho':flog~ne•tym. high tempo~lre~~ to pmv~de seamless, htg~ qualt~.
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complete coverage through to the breast complications via a multi-disa~jacent . t~orac.i&lt;? regi?ns. The ciplina:ry awroach ~0 treatment. We .
breast cotl ts ut1hzed w1th the 3- manage pattents w1th breast probTesla MRI, the highest level of MRI lems as a team, consisting.of family
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,•'

HEALTH·CARE 2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

.......

HMC,Holzer
Hospice recognize
volunteers

· 11turSday, May 28, 2009 .

,.

"'.'!. ..

GALLIPOLIS, · Ohio
Francis, Ruth Harper,' and
Holzer Medical Center and Darci Roberts; . 200 Hours:
Holzer Hospice recently -cele- Deanna Cook; 300 Hours: Sue ·
. brated National Volunteer Francis; 400 Hours: Donna
Week April 20-25.
Waugh and .Erica Young; 900
To cap off the week, a recog- Hours: George McFarland;.
nition dmner was held to recog- 2000 Hours: Emily Layne; .
nize the volunteers who devote 2500
Hours:
Naomi
their time to the Hospital and Gooderham; 3500 Hours: Jeane
Hospice service.
Fisher and Phyllis Taylor;
The theme for the dinner 7000
Hours:
Vivienne
was "Volunteers are · First Trowbridge; 7500 Hours:
Class" with aviation decora- Maxine Carman and Diz · L - - SUbmlttlld photo
tions and a "Flight Plan" pro- Richards; 11500 Hours: Martha
Shown
here
are
the
volunteers
who
attended
this
years'
volunteer
recognition
dinner
for Holzer
gram.
Schaeffing; 12500 Hours:
Center
and
Holzer
Hospice
with
Dawn
Halstead,
HMC
Volunteer
Services
director,
and Tom
Medical
Volunteers being recognized Ellabelle McDonald; and
Tope, chief executive officer of Holzer Health Systems in the .back row.
from Holzer Hospice include: . 23.500 Hours: Jessie· Payne:
Tom Tope, chief executive
Marlene Hoffman, . Ellabell
McDonald, Donna McGuire, officer. of Holzer Health "You give your time, expecting -dedication, and we · admire . including teenagers.
.
For more i'l{ormation on vol·
Linda Rapp, and Emelyn Systems, was also in attendance nothing in return, just the satis• you."
Volunteers are always needed unteer Cit Holzer . Medical
Scarberry. ·
and expressed his thanks for the faction of helping peoBJe. That
is a outstandmg asset to offer at Holzer Medical Center and Center, cail (74Q) 446-5056 or ·
Holzer Medical Center vol- · volunteer's service ..
unteer service awards were
"Volunteers are a great asset our patients and their family Holzer Hospice. People of all for Holzer Hospice, caU (74Q)
given to: 100 Hours: Sue for healthcare," he stat~. members. Thank you for your ages are able to volunteer, 446-5074.

... ·.'HEALT:H CARE

..

.

:·

,_..,

__

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
For Tanuny Ellison, RN,
:LPN, her · work ·as ··· an
Oncology Nurse Navigator
· at 'the Holzer Center for · tJ'I"'~7:·
•· Cancer Care (HCCC) is •
. :m~17 than just a job, it's a
;.:·. "'qt.lm~~ ~o . breast cancer ·
Marc~ of th~s y~ar.
Ellison earned certification
as ' ~ Clinical Breast
Examiner at the National
Breast Cancer Association
Conference. She completed
coursework and a three-part
test to earn .the certification,
which qualifies her to
form · screening
breast
-exams.
· "Women with breast cancer
' orten·have high-rate of aMiety, so one of the things I do
for them is to help provide a
lot of support to calm those

·. in

per-

a

·

. ·,

.....

. .. ..
.

·2009
.,

..

..

'

•

. ..

--~

"I've felt the same fears and scheduling appoint- . was founded in 1982.
· they have," said Ellison. "I ments with physicians and
·~Tammy is a valuable
.can, on an .emotional level, therapist$.
member of our staff," said
·understand them. I've been "As a Nurse Navigator, Ken S. Moore, executive
through treatment, so I've. I'm a point person for the. director of the Holzer Center
el(perienced mariy of the patients so they don't· get for Capcer Care ....The work
things they've gone through. lost in the system," Ellison that she does is vital and she
So as they walk · that _path, .said. ·
.. .
· . does a great job helping to
I've already walked it; and · Part of her work includes gUide our patients through
·I'm right there with them. · involvement in HCCC out- · the entire process. We
Because I'm a long term reach activities. She is a . appteciate her so very
suryivor- over 12 y~ars - member of the (i;~nter's much."
Ellison
her husband,
p!ltients l~k at me and say, ~omen Team, which superI can survtve cancer.' My vtses local programs funded Dr. John Ellison, DO, have
experience gives them a lot by a grant from the two children.
of hope."
.
Columbus Affiliate of The . Hoher Center for
In her role as Oncology Susan G. Komen for .the Cancer Care is located on
Nurse Navigator, Ellison Cure®, the world's largest the main campus of Holzer
provides patients with · a grassroots organization of Health .· Systems · at 110 .
wide range of services breast cancc1: surv!vors.and Jackson Pike in Gallipolis,
including education about activists dedicated to find- Ohio. For
informatheir treatment, medication ing a cure for the disease. tion, . vtslt www.holzerand possible side effects, The organization bas gen- cancer.org, or call toll free,
reconstruction, ·cosmetic erated more than $1 billion (800) 821-3860, or (740)
advice (wigs and makeup), for cancer research since it 446-5474.

and

•
Tammy Ellison

·fears;" said Ellison.
·A breast cancer survivor
herself, EDison bas an intimate understanding of the
fears that women b!lttling
breast cancet face.

more

111/ll,. Dl ,;, torli•r...
.
,
ltrttlfllt..
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.. .
., .
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Uf

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.~
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Sf:MI:TMt HIGHI$1 LIVEI.&lt;If MRIIMMM ~c:oiiiiQ!ll.'f 11\''11..._'

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�Page 4 •

,•'

HEALTH·CARE 2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

.......

HMC,Holzer
Hospice recognize
volunteers

· 11turSday, May 28, 2009 .

,.

"'.'!. ..

GALLIPOLIS, · Ohio
Francis, Ruth Harper,' and
Holzer Medical Center and Darci Roberts; . 200 Hours:
Holzer Hospice recently -cele- Deanna Cook; 300 Hours: Sue ·
. brated National Volunteer Francis; 400 Hours: Donna
Week April 20-25.
Waugh and .Erica Young; 900
To cap off the week, a recog- Hours: George McFarland;.
nition dmner was held to recog- 2000 Hours: Emily Layne; .
nize the volunteers who devote 2500
Hours:
Naomi
their time to the Hospital and Gooderham; 3500 Hours: Jeane
Hospice service.
Fisher and Phyllis Taylor;
The theme for the dinner 7000
Hours:
Vivienne
was "Volunteers are · First Trowbridge; 7500 Hours:
Class" with aviation decora- Maxine Carman and Diz · L - - SUbmlttlld photo
tions and a "Flight Plan" pro- Richards; 11500 Hours: Martha
Shown
here
are
the
volunteers
who
attended
this
years'
volunteer
recognition
dinner
for Holzer
gram.
Schaeffing; 12500 Hours:
Center
and
Holzer
Hospice
with
Dawn
Halstead,
HMC
Volunteer
Services
director,
and Tom
Medical
Volunteers being recognized Ellabelle McDonald; and
Tope, chief executive officer of Holzer Health Systems in the .back row.
from Holzer Hospice include: . 23.500 Hours: Jessie· Payne:
Tom Tope, chief executive
Marlene Hoffman, . Ellabell
McDonald, Donna McGuire, officer. of Holzer Health "You give your time, expecting -dedication, and we · admire . including teenagers.
.
For more i'l{ormation on vol·
Linda Rapp, and Emelyn Systems, was also in attendance nothing in return, just the satis• you."
Volunteers are always needed unteer Cit Holzer . Medical
Scarberry. ·
and expressed his thanks for the faction of helping peoBJe. That
is a outstandmg asset to offer at Holzer Medical Center and Center, cail (74Q) 446-5056 or ·
Holzer Medical Center vol- · volunteer's service ..
unteer service awards were
"Volunteers are a great asset our patients and their family Holzer Hospice. People of all for Holzer Hospice, caU (74Q)
given to: 100 Hours: Sue for healthcare," he stat~. members. Thank you for your ages are able to volunteer, 446-5074.

... ·.'HEALT:H CARE

..

.

:·

,_..,

__

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
For Tanuny Ellison, RN,
:LPN, her · work ·as ··· an
Oncology Nurse Navigator
· at 'the Holzer Center for · tJ'I"'~7:·
•· Cancer Care (HCCC) is •
. :m~17 than just a job, it's a
;.:·. "'qt.lm~~ ~o . breast cancer ·
Marc~ of th~s y~ar.
Ellison earned certification
as ' ~ Clinical Breast
Examiner at the National
Breast Cancer Association
Conference. She completed
coursework and a three-part
test to earn .the certification,
which qualifies her to
form · screening
breast
-exams.
· "Women with breast cancer
' orten·have high-rate of aMiety, so one of the things I do
for them is to help provide a
lot of support to calm those

·. in

per-

a

·

. ·,

.....

. .. ..
.

·2009
.,

..

..

'

•

. ..

--~

"I've felt the same fears and scheduling appoint- . was founded in 1982.
· they have," said Ellison. "I ments with physicians and
·~Tammy is a valuable
.can, on an .emotional level, therapist$.
member of our staff," said
·understand them. I've been "As a Nurse Navigator, Ken S. Moore, executive
through treatment, so I've. I'm a point person for the. director of the Holzer Center
el(perienced mariy of the patients so they don't· get for Capcer Care ....The work
things they've gone through. lost in the system," Ellison that she does is vital and she
So as they walk · that _path, .said. ·
.. .
· . does a great job helping to
I've already walked it; and · Part of her work includes gUide our patients through
·I'm right there with them. · involvement in HCCC out- · the entire process. We
Because I'm a long term reach activities. She is a . appteciate her so very
suryivor- over 12 y~ars - member of the (i;~nter's much."
Ellison
her husband,
p!ltients l~k at me and say, ~omen Team, which superI can survtve cancer.' My vtses local programs funded Dr. John Ellison, DO, have
experience gives them a lot by a grant from the two children.
of hope."
.
Columbus Affiliate of The . Hoher Center for
In her role as Oncology Susan G. Komen for .the Cancer Care is located on
Nurse Navigator, Ellison Cure®, the world's largest the main campus of Holzer
provides patients with · a grassroots organization of Health .· Systems · at 110 .
wide range of services breast cancc1: surv!vors.and Jackson Pike in Gallipolis,
including education about activists dedicated to find- Ohio. For
informatheir treatment, medication ing a cure for the disease. tion, . vtslt www.holzerand possible side effects, The organization bas gen- cancer.org, or call toll free,
reconstruction, ·cosmetic erated more than $1 billion (800) 821-3860, or (740)
advice (wigs and makeup), for cancer research since it 446-5474.

and

•
Tammy Ellison

·fears;" said Ellison.
·A breast cancer survivor
herself, EDison bas an intimate understanding of the
fears that women b!lttling
breast cancet face.

more

111/ll,. Dl ,;, torli•r...
.
,
ltrttlfllt..
r.mnO/Of~ DHI... Mtl,_-... Dllf-rtnNI
.. .
., .
.
.

'

Uf

. .
.
.~
4-0 IMMIS Of l'HI K'1US .. IIIITEJIIIIIH. OMAN$

•

.:

..

Hilt SU"VIVAI. .MliS•••

c,i- Sl.iPIMIMI!di$AT'l'Ht IOWUTIWIIA110fll l:IOSI'P6st'tiE. WHGI.IIioew, Tt..~ (CW!Wi£ RIVIAUHG MOllE ~'It lUUI.l'S '
Sf:MI:TMt HIGHI$1 LIVEI.&lt;If MRIIMMM ~c:oiiiiQ!ll.'f 11\''11..._'

'r;.......,..pOIIII~~- M MRI SVSWM DISIS..D Wlnt TOW. f!'111NT CIOMI"CCftT AND~ I\WI8&amp; QUM.IlY IN MINI).

Cntified EsperiftiC~
-~~

740.446.540
\f

t

.

~-

.,,

..

'

..

�.•._,.,.,.__

HEALTHCARE 2009

Page 6 •

---~ --

.... ..,__,._

-...

.;.,.,

.

---;- ......... ~·~----···

..._,_

~.

-

... :.

- ... ....:-... oi• ~-_...,

...... -· ~ -

~ _, __ \.

.
-.1

~- ....

•

I

• - ... ,

HEALTH CARE 2009

Thursday, May '28, 2009 .

Thursday, May 28,2009
.
. .

~·-

•

' ..

-:

~ -~-

_, .

Global milk glut squeezes dairy farrne?s, constlmers

. I'

I

'

'

'

I .

BARNHART, Mo. (AP) - A col- . Barnhart, spends almost as much
The price paid by processors to
lapse in milk prices has wiped away today on hay and other supplies for fatmers is set by the U.S.
the profits of dairy farmers, driving his herd of 160 cows as he did a year Department of Agriculture based on
many out of business while forcing ago, but he's getting paid less fora . commodity markets, which rise and
others to slaughter their herds or gallon of milk than his father in the fall with global demand. Some of the
dump milk on the ground in protest. 1970s. He blames middlemen who raw milk is processed into milk for
But nine months after prices began buy the milk from the dairies, stores as well as butter, yogurt and
tumbling on the farm, consumers process it and sell it to grocery stores other prOducts for U.S. consumption.
aren't seeing the full benefits of the at higher prices.
The · rest becomes powdered . milk,
"Somebody's getting a cut of this, chee!le and whey ·for _international
crash. at the checkout counter.
1'he aver.age price for a gallon of but it's not the dairy farmer," he said. and (,tomestic markets.' ·
·
milk at grocery stores last. month is "It's sad, but they're going to see a
U.S. milk exPQrts soared last year
down just 19 percent from its peak of lot of ·dairy farms go out of busi- ari~ dem~d grew._in co\uitties like
$3.83 in July. Farmers, on the other ness."
Chma .whde supphes dropped · from
hand, got $1.04 a gallon in April At a grocery store in Fayetteville, Europe .and Australia: U:S. dairy
35 percent less than they were paid Ark., Katherine Thacker noticed how exports JUmped to $3.82 bilhon, or
last fall. This winter, wholesale milk prices were slowly falling - 11 percent ~ milk p~uction. in
prices were down as much as 45 per- but not as drastically as last year's 2008 accordm~ .to the U.S. D!1JfY
cent.
price hikes. She was surprised to ~xport Council. Wholesale pnces
Price disparities are a fact of life learn that the lower wholesale milk JUmped.
both for farmers and anyone who prices were being absorbed by dairy
~airies ~sponded ~o the demand
by 1ncreasmg production. . . .
shops at ·a supermarket, but the processors.
nature of milk - how it's stored, . "That's kind of criminal, isn't it?" But once the global recesst?n
priced and sol&lt;l around the world - she said.
..
accelerated last fall, demand, part1cmakes the gap all the more dramatic.
Milk processors and supermarkets ularly exports, fell off a cliff.
In fact, the price that farmers get has see it differently. .
~.S. farmers we~ suddenly faced
been wildly volatile for years, creatLast fall and summer, they swal- With too much milk ~d ·too many
ing a succession of booms and busts lowed losses because of high whole- cows. Wholesale pnces crash~d.
felt from pastures to the grocery sale milk prices and government· Farmers fou~d t!temse!ves spending
store.
mandated ceilings on what they can more to mamtam therr herds than
With each tum, proposals are float- charge. They're now recouping some
ed to end the pricing seesaw, which of.what they lost and anticipating a
at one extreme squeezes .the profits rise in' prices this winter, said Mike
of. farmers and the other squeezes Nosewicz, vice president of dairy
da1ry ~rocessor~. Any fix that ~sts operations at. Cincinnat~~based
the p~1ce of m1lk runs. the nsk . of Kroger Co., wh1ch operates 1ts own
bumpmg up how much consumers dairy ..processing division and sells
pay, too.
milk through 2,400 supermarkets.
Today, frustrations are spilling · At the heart of the problem is the
over as the price crash creates wide· nature of milk. Unlike grain farmers
ly divergent fortunes within the milk who can hold out. for better prices by
in~ustry, boo_
stil]g ~rofits for the storing crops i~ a silo, dairymen
m1ddlemen hke da1ry processors must sell raw m1lk to processors or
while pushing farmers to the edge of else it spoils. And cows keep producbank.ruptcy.
ing whether the economy's expandDarrell Kraus, a dairyman in ing or in recession,

they were being paid for raw mil{
"It's an inequity that cries out 'for
attention, consideration and action,"
said Sen. Robert Casey,_a Democrat
from the dairy stronghold of
Pennsylvania. Casey rrojects that 25
percent of his states 7,400 dairy
farms could disappear because of the
crisis.
.. ·
Casey said · most . lawmakers ·.are
focused on short-term solutions loans or subsidies - to help farmers
bridge the J?Criod of depressed prices.
But he sa1d Congress should also
explore why processors and retailers
are keeping their prices high while
wholesale prices collapse. .
·'
Farmers also are lobbying for a bill
that would change the USDA pricing
system for milk so that wholesale
prices reflect what they pay for feed,
fuel and other supplies. .· ·
If that happens, milk would be the ·
only commodity of its kind to have a
government-set ·price determined in
part by the cost of production, said
Scott Brown, dairy analyst at ·The
University of Missouri's Food and
Agricultural
PC)Jicy
Research
Institute.

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HEALTHCARE 2009

Page 6 •

---~ --

.... ..,__,._

-...

.;.,.,

.

---;- ......... ~·~----···

..._,_

~.

-

... :.

- ... ....:-... oi• ~-_...,

...... -· ~ -

~ _, __ \.

.
-.1

~- ....

•

I

• - ... ,

HEALTH CARE 2009

Thursday, May '28, 2009 .

Thursday, May 28,2009
.
. .

~·-

•

' ..

-:

~ -~-

_, .

Global milk glut squeezes dairy farrne?s, constlmers

. I'

I

'

'

'

I .

BARNHART, Mo. (AP) - A col- . Barnhart, spends almost as much
The price paid by processors to
lapse in milk prices has wiped away today on hay and other supplies for fatmers is set by the U.S.
the profits of dairy farmers, driving his herd of 160 cows as he did a year Department of Agriculture based on
many out of business while forcing ago, but he's getting paid less fora . commodity markets, which rise and
others to slaughter their herds or gallon of milk than his father in the fall with global demand. Some of the
dump milk on the ground in protest. 1970s. He blames middlemen who raw milk is processed into milk for
But nine months after prices began buy the milk from the dairies, stores as well as butter, yogurt and
tumbling on the farm, consumers process it and sell it to grocery stores other prOducts for U.S. consumption.
aren't seeing the full benefits of the at higher prices.
The · rest becomes powdered . milk,
"Somebody's getting a cut of this, chee!le and whey ·for _international
crash. at the checkout counter.
1'he aver.age price for a gallon of but it's not the dairy farmer," he said. and (,tomestic markets.' ·
·
milk at grocery stores last. month is "It's sad, but they're going to see a
U.S. milk exPQrts soared last year
down just 19 percent from its peak of lot of ·dairy farms go out of busi- ari~ dem~d grew._in co\uitties like
$3.83 in July. Farmers, on the other ness."
Chma .whde supphes dropped · from
hand, got $1.04 a gallon in April At a grocery store in Fayetteville, Europe .and Australia: U:S. dairy
35 percent less than they were paid Ark., Katherine Thacker noticed how exports JUmped to $3.82 bilhon, or
last fall. This winter, wholesale milk prices were slowly falling - 11 percent ~ milk p~uction. in
prices were down as much as 45 per- but not as drastically as last year's 2008 accordm~ .to the U.S. D!1JfY
cent.
price hikes. She was surprised to ~xport Council. Wholesale pnces
Price disparities are a fact of life learn that the lower wholesale milk JUmped.
both for farmers and anyone who prices were being absorbed by dairy
~airies ~sponded ~o the demand
by 1ncreasmg production. . . .
shops at ·a supermarket, but the processors.
nature of milk - how it's stored, . "That's kind of criminal, isn't it?" But once the global recesst?n
priced and sol&lt;l around the world - she said.
..
accelerated last fall, demand, part1cmakes the gap all the more dramatic.
Milk processors and supermarkets ularly exports, fell off a cliff.
In fact, the price that farmers get has see it differently. .
~.S. farmers we~ suddenly faced
been wildly volatile for years, creatLast fall and summer, they swal- With too much milk ~d ·too many
ing a succession of booms and busts lowed losses because of high whole- cows. Wholesale pnces crash~d.
felt from pastures to the grocery sale milk prices and government· Farmers fou~d t!temse!ves spending
store.
mandated ceilings on what they can more to mamtam therr herds than
With each tum, proposals are float- charge. They're now recouping some
ed to end the pricing seesaw, which of.what they lost and anticipating a
at one extreme squeezes .the profits rise in' prices this winter, said Mike
of. farmers and the other squeezes Nosewicz, vice president of dairy
da1ry ~rocessor~. Any fix that ~sts operations at. Cincinnat~~based
the p~1ce of m1lk runs. the nsk . of Kroger Co., wh1ch operates 1ts own
bumpmg up how much consumers dairy ..processing division and sells
pay, too.
milk through 2,400 supermarkets.
Today, frustrations are spilling · At the heart of the problem is the
over as the price crash creates wide· nature of milk. Unlike grain farmers
ly divergent fortunes within the milk who can hold out. for better prices by
in~ustry, boo_
stil]g ~rofits for the storing crops i~ a silo, dairymen
m1ddlemen hke da1ry processors must sell raw m1lk to processors or
while pushing farmers to the edge of else it spoils. And cows keep producbank.ruptcy.
ing whether the economy's expandDarrell Kraus, a dairyman in ing or in recession,

they were being paid for raw mil{
"It's an inequity that cries out 'for
attention, consideration and action,"
said Sen. Robert Casey,_a Democrat
from the dairy stronghold of
Pennsylvania. Casey rrojects that 25
percent of his states 7,400 dairy
farms could disappear because of the
crisis.
.. ·
Casey said · most . lawmakers ·.are
focused on short-term solutions loans or subsidies - to help farmers
bridge the J?Criod of depressed prices.
But he sa1d Congress should also
explore why processors and retailers
are keeping their prices high while
wholesale prices collapse. .
·'
Farmers also are lobbying for a bill
that would change the USDA pricing
system for milk so that wholesale
prices reflect what they pay for feed,
fuel and other supplies. .· ·
If that happens, milk would be the ·
only commodity of its kind to have a
government-set ·price determined in
part by the cost of production, said
Scott Brown, dairy analyst at ·The
University of Missouri's Food and
Agricultural
PC)Jicy
Research
Institute.

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Page 8 •

HEALTHCARE 2009

Thursday, Mly 28, 2009

-Residential
pools linked
to many
·child deaths
WASHINGTON (AP) Before opening that. backyard pool, parents should
beware that more young chil~
dren suffer from submersion
injuries or ..deat~s in residential pools than· they do in
public ones.
A report released Thursday
by the Consumer Product
Safety C01pmission focused
on submersion injuries and
deaths from pool and spa
incidents in children under
age 5.
It found that nearly 80 per~ent of the drownings in 2004
to 2006 occurred in residential
settings, such as at the child's
own home or a family member's or neighbor's house. A
·minority happened at public or
business pools. About 64 per.:ent of the estimated injuries
treated in emergency rooms
for 2006 to 2008'also occurred
in a ~sidential setting.
There were on average
about 300 pool- and sparelated deaths each year for
2004 to 2006 .in children
under 5. The report estimated
there were on average 3,100
pool- and spa-related submersion injuries treated in
emergency departments each
year for 2006 to 2.008. Most
injuries and deaths in these
time periods involved pools.
The most common cause of
reported deaths in children
under 5 was an adult losing contact or knowledge of the child's
location, during which time the
child accessed the pool or spa.
The report also says that
about. two-thirds of the pooland spa-related deaths and
injuries involve children ages
· 1 to 2. More boys than girls
suffered injuries or died,
according to the report.·
The report came just days
before Memorial Day, when
many pools across the nation
··
. . ,open for the .s,u,n;mw.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

HEALT,HCARE 2009

• Page 9

.11
up anew sport in mid·life
is fun e~erc~,~but take it.~fully
Later iri the year, it will again be time when the kids get ·
ready to head back to school and the slow-going, lazy days
of slimmer come to an end. Families often fall into a pattern
of slowdown during the school break, and itcan often take
some time to get used to the school morning rush once more.
~urin~ time-crunched mornings, brown bag ~~nches sent
w1th children to school _may not be packed as diligently and
with the healthy foods they should contain. To ensure lunch~ ·
es don't pay ~he price of busy schedules, consider thes~ tips.
• When domg the weekly or monthly shopping ·at the gro, ·
eery store, make a list of nutritious and quickly-prepared
lunch foods. Also, think about what dinner foods can be
transforined into lunch the .next day as leftqvers (chicken cutlets can be cut up to top fresh salads), ,Packaged kids' .lunches from the. refrigerated section of the Fery store ~ertainly
are convement, but they may be packing more sodmm and
calories than a child needs. Instead, stock up on crackers,
sandwich rolls, low-calorie, low-sodium lunch meats·, precooked low-fat chicken nuggets, and .even yogurts for fast
and nutritious lunch options. ·
.
·.
• Variety is the spice of life, and no chil.d wants to go to
school witl\ the same old peanut butter and jelly sandwich
every day. Find out the child:s favorite foods and always
keep the pantry stocked with some of these items. Send him
or her to school with interesting things, such as a pita bread
shell, tomato sauce and shredded cheese for a fast and nutritious pizza.
Fruit threaded on a skewer mixed with cheese makes
healthy kabobs for students who don't have access to a
microwave or other war to heat lunches. Keep a pitcher of
homemade smoothies m the refrigerator so your son or
daughter can take a filling shake to school for lunch.
Smoothies can be as easy as -blending together a banana, a
couple of scoops of low-fat vanilla yogurt, frozen berries
from the freezer section, and a cup of fruit juice. ·
• Take advantage of school lunches once m a while. Many
school districts have revamped their lunch menus in recent
years, offering ·more and more healthy options for students.
~
For example, in the past year Meqford public schools· out·
side of Boston, MA hued a systemwide chef as part of its ini- about diverse foods by encouraging them to understand and
tiative toward healthier lunches. New recipes have been ask questions about what they are eating. Introduce kids to
introduced, the staff has been trained in nutritional cooking, seasonal, regional foods so they will understand that differand proCessed foods have been removed.
ent foods grow at different times of the year," she says.
You may find that other cultures rely on foods that make
When time is especially of the·essence, send your child to
school with a few dollars for cafeteria lunch. Even if you c~mvenient lu~chtim~ offerings. For example, bagel chips or
don't regularly partake in school lunches in your household, p1ta wedges d1~,&gt;ped m hummus can be nutritious and a fast
it pays to have the lunch menu posted for the days when lunch for famihes on the go.
cafeteria food is you!' saving grace. Chances are there will be
• Involve the kids with lunch preparation. There's no reasomething. on the menu that appeals to ~our gra~e schooler son why an older, capable child can't be put in charge of his
or ev~n m1ddle schooler. F~ench bread ptzza day 1s always a or her lunch - freeing up Mom or Dad's time for other
favonte.
.
,
.
morning tasks. Have a talk about what foods you'd like to
• Intr&lt;&gt;&lt;;Juce diverse foods. Chef Ann Cooper d?.tsn t tht.nk see eaten at lunch, and then leave it up to your child to take
~e lefU111ng P.I'Pf~~~ should s!J?p }£,1 .~~ cafet~t;~~ \ , T~&lt;.;h k1ds .ql) P;t~ ~sk of ll.lqqh preparation .. , .

ARLINGTON, Va. ('A.P) ' · · Califomia~ . San Francisco, . is an activity, and have been a gym regular ·one of those uplifting peak experi. Growing up in the South, I had ilo expert on the ~rain whoM~«&gt; knows ·a for years. Family members have ences so· many boomers avidly
chance to learn ice skating. That did- thing ~ or two about ice skating. · He osteoporosis, which weight-bearing sought in their youth.
· n 't stop me from taking it up later in took it ue at age 47 and collaborated. exercise helps stave off. So despite the · I'm no longer young, .and put'1iuing
life in colder environs. When a rink on a 1996' book, ."Ice Skating .- concussion,l have to keep moving.
peak experiences is no longer my top
opened near my house, l signed .·up. Steps to Success" (Hiiman Kinetics
At ftrSt; even using the stationary priority. But millions of people .skate,
·
. Publishers), with Karin Kunzle- bicycle was a woozy experience. and I'm convinced it can be done safely~
for lessons. .
Honing a new physical skill in my Watson, a nine-time Swiss national That improved. But the world still
"When you're older and take up a
50s \vas rejuvenating. The •rinJc's champion. He feels skating is a good, spins sometimes. And occasionally I sport you need good equipment and
exhilarating music and bracing cold low-ip'lpact exercise for older people. have a feeling of remoteness, as if good . supervision," said Peggy .
had me grinning like kid every tune
"It strengthens the legs and your I'm not fully present.
· Fleming, the 1968 Olympic w.omen's
I took to the ice.
- hips and core muscles. You put a lot My doctor says not to skate until ·figure skating champion now active
Until the concussion. .
. .
of tension on the bones. It keeps the the symptoms go away. I didn't tell in exercise and bone health issues.
When I wobbled during my fourth calcium in the bones and kind of him I'd skated a few weeks after my
It niay take more time andwork to
lesson, my instinct was to ..flail and pilshes·away osteoarthritis, especial- accident, to overcome my fear. 1 learn the skills, but the rewards are
. lean back - instead of shifting my ly in women," he said. He does rec- wore a helmet and didn't fall. It was worth it. ,
weight forward tO regain my balance. ommend wearing · protective gear, probably foolish; sustaining a second
"You just feel so much more alive,
Disastrous choice·. The back .of my like helmets and pads. ·
.
fi
If v
head hit the ice with a . force that
Helmets ,_ 1 wasn't wearing . one brain injury before the first one heals more con •dent about yourse . J.OU
shook my entire body. Stars swam in _ reduce the odds of skull injury but ii.sks widespread damage.'
··
get into a whole different energy
my eyes. Tingling impulses shot won't prevent the jarring of the brain But mine is a rebellious generation. level, and that applies to the rest of
down both arms. And 1 couldn't get . during a hard blow. The same is true And ice skating makes me smile.
your life as well," Aeming said.
up.
. .
, ·..
in bicycling or any activity where
The weightless gliding, carnival
That's it exac~ly. An~ I'm going
· My jolted brain had shut down. I head injury is possible.
· atmosphere, hokey Elton John songs, back to skating~ After the spinning
Many serious skating injuries occur laughing kids- it all comes close to stops.
·
had become one of the 1.4 ·million
people each year who, according to early, DeArmond noted, when novices
the Brain Injury Association of haven't learned how to fall: Bend the
America, suffer a traumatic brain . knees, lean slightly forward and, if all
injury.
.
else fails, aim to land on your side:
Was I foolish . to take· up a poten- Take it from me ~ that's a lot to
tiaUy risky activity l!lter in life?
remember when you're new at it.
Falls happen even to the best
Many of us boomers have by now
learned the hard lesson of growing skaters. Dick Button, the Olympic
older: Much of what's lost - loved champion and TV commentator, fell
ones, youth, mental powers- won't in 2000 at a rink in New York while
be regained. So it is with brain trau- attempting an ax~l jump-. Button,'
· rua; s0q1e people don't recover. Even then 70, sustained a fractured skull,
a mild concussion like mine disrupts concussion and blood clots; he
brain function.
developed meningitis, lost hearing in
In the emergency room that day, for ~~~~ear and spent months in rehabilFtesenius
Care has several
instance, I could see out of the corner ttation.
· I~ In tile Tri..COunty Area
·
of my eye a shape I recognized as my
"What I learned is that as you get
·Gallipolis and Jackson, Ohio and Ripley, WV
husband coming toward me, but I older your mind may knQW ex~ctly
• All Ultracare CertHied Staff
couldn't turn my head to greet him. I what to do, but your body w~n t .a~!
• Acute Hemodialysis &amp; Peritoneal Dialysis at Holzer Hospital
couldn't speak above a whisper. I was out the ~o~mands yo~ g•ye •!·
• lncerter Hemodialysis
dizzy and nauseous. The room spun Button sa1d m an e-mad. H1s m1s• Home Hemodialysis
so much when I eased onto a table for take, he said, was to try a difficult
• Pertloneal Dialysis
~ cr scan, I felt as ifl were parachut- ju~p when he ,hadn't. skated in a
·Treatment Options Education
mg out of a plane.
wh~le and hadn .t practiced smaller, · • TransJ&gt;Iant Assistance
I worry because I've learned that eas1er ones first.
.
~·
even mild head injuries can cause
Since Button was th.e flfSt ska~t:r to
permanent damage and con~bute. to !and the double axe! m c?mpetltlo~,
dementia - a concern in sports hke m the 1948 Olymp1cs, I II take his
football, where repeated concussions ~or~ for it on ju.mps. But.I wasn't
have ended careers and caused pre- rummg for fancy JUmps -JUSt exerMEDICAL CA.R E
mature health problems.
cise.
Dr. Stephen J. DeArmond, a neuI have a nervous system disorder 137 Pine St., Evans Enterprise Bldg., GaUipolis, OH
ropatho\Qgi~t ,at the Uoi'iersity of that:s ,vastly imprc&gt;'i~ .by phy$i&lt;;al ..._...._ _ _ _..__...,_...._..,....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.._..

a

FRESE N I U S

I.

.'

·'

�.
Page 8 •

HEALTHCARE 2009

Thursday, Mly 28, 2009

-Residential
pools linked
to many
·child deaths
WASHINGTON (AP) Before opening that. backyard pool, parents should
beware that more young chil~
dren suffer from submersion
injuries or ..deat~s in residential pools than· they do in
public ones.
A report released Thursday
by the Consumer Product
Safety C01pmission focused
on submersion injuries and
deaths from pool and spa
incidents in children under
age 5.
It found that nearly 80 per~ent of the drownings in 2004
to 2006 occurred in residential
settings, such as at the child's
own home or a family member's or neighbor's house. A
·minority happened at public or
business pools. About 64 per.:ent of the estimated injuries
treated in emergency rooms
for 2006 to 2008'also occurred
in a ~sidential setting.
There were on average
about 300 pool- and sparelated deaths each year for
2004 to 2006 .in children
under 5. The report estimated
there were on average 3,100
pool- and spa-related submersion injuries treated in
emergency departments each
year for 2006 to 2.008. Most
injuries and deaths in these
time periods involved pools.
The most common cause of
reported deaths in children
under 5 was an adult losing contact or knowledge of the child's
location, during which time the
child accessed the pool or spa.
The report also says that
about. two-thirds of the pooland spa-related deaths and
injuries involve children ages
· 1 to 2. More boys than girls
suffered injuries or died,
according to the report.·
The report came just days
before Memorial Day, when
many pools across the nation
··
. . ,open for the .s,u,n;mw.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

HEALT,HCARE 2009

• Page 9

.11
up anew sport in mid·life
is fun e~erc~,~but take it.~fully
Later iri the year, it will again be time when the kids get ·
ready to head back to school and the slow-going, lazy days
of slimmer come to an end. Families often fall into a pattern
of slowdown during the school break, and itcan often take
some time to get used to the school morning rush once more.
~urin~ time-crunched mornings, brown bag ~~nches sent
w1th children to school _may not be packed as diligently and
with the healthy foods they should contain. To ensure lunch~ ·
es don't pay ~he price of busy schedules, consider thes~ tips.
• When domg the weekly or monthly shopping ·at the gro, ·
eery store, make a list of nutritious and quickly-prepared
lunch foods. Also, think about what dinner foods can be
transforined into lunch the .next day as leftqvers (chicken cutlets can be cut up to top fresh salads), ,Packaged kids' .lunches from the. refrigerated section of the Fery store ~ertainly
are convement, but they may be packing more sodmm and
calories than a child needs. Instead, stock up on crackers,
sandwich rolls, low-calorie, low-sodium lunch meats·, precooked low-fat chicken nuggets, and .even yogurts for fast
and nutritious lunch options. ·
.
·.
• Variety is the spice of life, and no chil.d wants to go to
school witl\ the same old peanut butter and jelly sandwich
every day. Find out the child:s favorite foods and always
keep the pantry stocked with some of these items. Send him
or her to school with interesting things, such as a pita bread
shell, tomato sauce and shredded cheese for a fast and nutritious pizza.
Fruit threaded on a skewer mixed with cheese makes
healthy kabobs for students who don't have access to a
microwave or other war to heat lunches. Keep a pitcher of
homemade smoothies m the refrigerator so your son or
daughter can take a filling shake to school for lunch.
Smoothies can be as easy as -blending together a banana, a
couple of scoops of low-fat vanilla yogurt, frozen berries
from the freezer section, and a cup of fruit juice. ·
• Take advantage of school lunches once m a while. Many
school districts have revamped their lunch menus in recent
years, offering ·more and more healthy options for students.
~
For example, in the past year Meqford public schools· out·
side of Boston, MA hued a systemwide chef as part of its ini- about diverse foods by encouraging them to understand and
tiative toward healthier lunches. New recipes have been ask questions about what they are eating. Introduce kids to
introduced, the staff has been trained in nutritional cooking, seasonal, regional foods so they will understand that differand proCessed foods have been removed.
ent foods grow at different times of the year," she says.
You may find that other cultures rely on foods that make
When time is especially of the·essence, send your child to
school with a few dollars for cafeteria lunch. Even if you c~mvenient lu~chtim~ offerings. For example, bagel chips or
don't regularly partake in school lunches in your household, p1ta wedges d1~,&gt;ped m hummus can be nutritious and a fast
it pays to have the lunch menu posted for the days when lunch for famihes on the go.
cafeteria food is you!' saving grace. Chances are there will be
• Involve the kids with lunch preparation. There's no reasomething. on the menu that appeals to ~our gra~e schooler son why an older, capable child can't be put in charge of his
or ev~n m1ddle schooler. F~ench bread ptzza day 1s always a or her lunch - freeing up Mom or Dad's time for other
favonte.
.
,
.
morning tasks. Have a talk about what foods you'd like to
• Intr&lt;&gt;&lt;;Juce diverse foods. Chef Ann Cooper d?.tsn t tht.nk see eaten at lunch, and then leave it up to your child to take
~e lefU111ng P.I'Pf~~~ should s!J?p }£,1 .~~ cafet~t;~~ \ , T~&lt;.;h k1ds .ql) P;t~ ~sk of ll.lqqh preparation .. , .

ARLINGTON, Va. ('A.P) ' · · Califomia~ . San Francisco, . is an activity, and have been a gym regular ·one of those uplifting peak experi. Growing up in the South, I had ilo expert on the ~rain whoM~«&gt; knows ·a for years. Family members have ences so· many boomers avidly
chance to learn ice skating. That did- thing ~ or two about ice skating. · He osteoporosis, which weight-bearing sought in their youth.
· n 't stop me from taking it up later in took it ue at age 47 and collaborated. exercise helps stave off. So despite the · I'm no longer young, .and put'1iuing
life in colder environs. When a rink on a 1996' book, ."Ice Skating .- concussion,l have to keep moving.
peak experiences is no longer my top
opened near my house, l signed .·up. Steps to Success" (Hiiman Kinetics
At ftrSt; even using the stationary priority. But millions of people .skate,
·
. Publishers), with Karin Kunzle- bicycle was a woozy experience. and I'm convinced it can be done safely~
for lessons. .
Honing a new physical skill in my Watson, a nine-time Swiss national That improved. But the world still
"When you're older and take up a
50s \vas rejuvenating. The •rinJc's champion. He feels skating is a good, spins sometimes. And occasionally I sport you need good equipment and
exhilarating music and bracing cold low-ip'lpact exercise for older people. have a feeling of remoteness, as if good . supervision," said Peggy .
had me grinning like kid every tune
"It strengthens the legs and your I'm not fully present.
· Fleming, the 1968 Olympic w.omen's
I took to the ice.
- hips and core muscles. You put a lot My doctor says not to skate until ·figure skating champion now active
Until the concussion. .
. .
of tension on the bones. It keeps the the symptoms go away. I didn't tell in exercise and bone health issues.
When I wobbled during my fourth calcium in the bones and kind of him I'd skated a few weeks after my
It niay take more time andwork to
lesson, my instinct was to ..flail and pilshes·away osteoarthritis, especial- accident, to overcome my fear. 1 learn the skills, but the rewards are
. lean back - instead of shifting my ly in women," he said. He does rec- wore a helmet and didn't fall. It was worth it. ,
weight forward tO regain my balance. ommend wearing · protective gear, probably foolish; sustaining a second
"You just feel so much more alive,
Disastrous choice·. The back .of my like helmets and pads. ·
.
fi
If v
head hit the ice with a . force that
Helmets ,_ 1 wasn't wearing . one brain injury before the first one heals more con •dent about yourse . J.OU
shook my entire body. Stars swam in _ reduce the odds of skull injury but ii.sks widespread damage.'
··
get into a whole different energy
my eyes. Tingling impulses shot won't prevent the jarring of the brain But mine is a rebellious generation. level, and that applies to the rest of
down both arms. And 1 couldn't get . during a hard blow. The same is true And ice skating makes me smile.
your life as well," Aeming said.
up.
. .
, ·..
in bicycling or any activity where
The weightless gliding, carnival
That's it exac~ly. An~ I'm going
· My jolted brain had shut down. I head injury is possible.
· atmosphere, hokey Elton John songs, back to skating~ After the spinning
Many serious skating injuries occur laughing kids- it all comes close to stops.
·
had become one of the 1.4 ·million
people each year who, according to early, DeArmond noted, when novices
the Brain Injury Association of haven't learned how to fall: Bend the
America, suffer a traumatic brain . knees, lean slightly forward and, if all
injury.
.
else fails, aim to land on your side:
Was I foolish . to take· up a poten- Take it from me ~ that's a lot to
tiaUy risky activity l!lter in life?
remember when you're new at it.
Falls happen even to the best
Many of us boomers have by now
learned the hard lesson of growing skaters. Dick Button, the Olympic
older: Much of what's lost - loved champion and TV commentator, fell
ones, youth, mental powers- won't in 2000 at a rink in New York while
be regained. So it is with brain trau- attempting an ax~l jump-. Button,'
· rua; s0q1e people don't recover. Even then 70, sustained a fractured skull,
a mild concussion like mine disrupts concussion and blood clots; he
brain function.
developed meningitis, lost hearing in
In the emergency room that day, for ~~~~ear and spent months in rehabilFtesenius
Care has several
instance, I could see out of the corner ttation.
· I~ In tile Tri..COunty Area
·
of my eye a shape I recognized as my
"What I learned is that as you get
·Gallipolis and Jackson, Ohio and Ripley, WV
husband coming toward me, but I older your mind may knQW ex~ctly
• All Ultracare CertHied Staff
couldn't turn my head to greet him. I what to do, but your body w~n t .a~!
• Acute Hemodialysis &amp; Peritoneal Dialysis at Holzer Hospital
couldn't speak above a whisper. I was out the ~o~mands yo~ g•ye •!·
• lncerter Hemodialysis
dizzy and nauseous. The room spun Button sa1d m an e-mad. H1s m1s• Home Hemodialysis
so much when I eased onto a table for take, he said, was to try a difficult
• Pertloneal Dialysis
~ cr scan, I felt as ifl were parachut- ju~p when he ,hadn't. skated in a
·Treatment Options Education
mg out of a plane.
wh~le and hadn .t practiced smaller, · • TransJ&gt;Iant Assistance
I worry because I've learned that eas1er ones first.
.
~·
even mild head injuries can cause
Since Button was th.e flfSt ska~t:r to
permanent damage and con~bute. to !and the double axe! m c?mpetltlo~,
dementia - a concern in sports hke m the 1948 Olymp1cs, I II take his
football, where repeated concussions ~or~ for it on ju.mps. But.I wasn't
have ended careers and caused pre- rummg for fancy JUmps -JUSt exerMEDICAL CA.R E
mature health problems.
cise.
Dr. Stephen J. DeArmond, a neuI have a nervous system disorder 137 Pine St., Evans Enterprise Bldg., GaUipolis, OH
ropatho\Qgi~t ,at the Uoi'iersity of that:s ,vastly imprc&gt;'i~ .by phy$i&lt;;al ..._...._ _ _ _..__...,_...._..,....,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.._..

a

FRESE N I U S

I.

.'

·'

�-

..

...

,

••

'

.

..... ~·

,

•

Page 10• .

HEALTHCARE :2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

HEALTHCARE
•· 20.09
.
..
·..

Thursday, May.28, 2009

''.

· • Page 11

.

· At• pou: 'Manysfu&lt;i~hts stressed, some depressed

_Many wo~en ~eel that the~ ,can't have their cholesterol checked every
g1ve a man du-ectlons: Maybe tt s the . five years and more frequently as ·
stubborn tendency of males, or they age or if they have high cholesmaybe it's that they don't like to be terollevels.
told what to do. It comes as no surprise, then, that it's difficult to get
. · Colorectal cancer
most men to go to the doctor. Maybe
.
screening
.
they don't want to talk about their
This screening uses various tests to
health problems. Perhaps they feel examine the colon for polyps that ·
normal and don't see a need to make may become cancerous · or to ·find
an appointment.
.
colon cancer before symptoms occur.
Or it could be because they. don't Men 50 or older should talk to their
want to hear that anything is wrong doctor about which tests are right for
with them. Whatever the case may them and when to have them done.
be, it's important that men get regular health screening tests. Catching
Prostate cancer
'•
pr®lems early on, can often help
screening test
prevent them from turning into
Prostate cancer is detected through
something more serious down the a blood test that. determines the
road.
amount of prostate~specific antigen
Below are some guidelines on (i_&gt;J?A) in your blood, or. through a
men's screening tests. lf you are a d1gttal rectal exam (DRE) where a
man reading this, talk to your doctor doctor. inserts · his lubricated, gloved Routine hE!althcare.checkups can help doctors .spot ·p~oblems early on so they can ·
·.·.
·
. · ··
about when he thiitks you should finger mto the rectum to examine the be treated before they become more serious.
schedule these exams, as test free. prostate gland for any irregularities.
speech and sound recognition at
quency varies based on your age, The American Cancer Society sug- Cllf!! professional every year.
various levels . Ask your doctor
your health history and your family's gests that men get tested for prostate
Hearing
test
how often you should get your
health history.
cancer every year, starting at age 50.
A hearing test _gauges your hearing tested.

Body measurements
Taking your height, weight and
~y-mass index (BMI) helps determme whether your are overweight.
Overw~ight people are more likely to
have h1gh blood pressure, heart disease or diabetes. BMI is assessed
using a mathematical form of weight
and height.
.
Blood pressure
A blood-pres~ure. test is the only
way to determme 1f you have high
blood pressure. If undetected and
untreated, it can increase your risk of
heart attack, stroke, heart failure and
kidney failure . According to the
Amencan Heart Association you
should get it checked at least' once
every two years - and more often if
your doctor says it's high.

Testicular exam
This test examjnes the testicles for
enlargement, swelling or a lump.
Docto.rs usually check for this at
your physical exam, especially if you
tell them that you've noticed a
change in · your testicles or are
between the ages of 15 and 40.

senous,

Providing Quality Care
FROM Ol.TR PAMHYTO YOlJR.•;

Let us tell you all
the benefits of our
Accelerated Care
Plus Program

Plan for a More Independent Future.
Call today at 740 .992.6606

FP

to set up your treatment plan.
l.

Rocr(Sprinqs
REHABILITATION CENTER
. 36159 Rocksprings Road
Pomeroy, OH 4')769

JAMES L. SCHMOLL, OD

.

www.rock.sprin ~ss k.ill ('dnurs in g.com

· ll;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=7,~
. :, ~--i;;;;;i~
••~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o=;~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J

,.
'

a

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

STDtests
These tests determine if you have a
sexually transmitted disease (STDs) ·
likesyphilis,chlamydia or HIV/AIDS.
Your doctor will determined which
tests you should $el based on risk factors and sexual history.

Dental exam
During this exam; a dentist will
ex~ine your teeth .and ·gums for
cav11tes or oral cancer. The American
Dental Association recommends that
Cholesterol test
you go once or twice a year for a
A blood test is used to detenttine checkup and cleaning~
·
your good (HDL) and bad (LDL)
cholesterol levels. According to the
Eyeexam
AHA, cholesterol is a soft, waxy
Eye exams assess if you need your
substance found among the lipids vision corrected by either wearing
(fats) in the bloodstream and in all prescription eyeglasses or contact
your body's cells. Humans need cho- lenses. They also identify existing
lesterol, but a high level increases vision problems like glaucoma or
your risk of heart disease and stroke. cataracts. Eye experts suggest that
Men ·age 20 years· or older should
y~~ ~~;our eye~ ~~~~~~d by an eye, ,,,,, ,.

•

WASHiNGTON (AP) -. Stress
Mental heaiifl di8oroersli~e depres- · "They · have to learn to become 3lthoudl they're not all set up take
over . grades. Financial ··worries. si01\ typically begin relatively early in . their own monitors about their men- care of serious mental illnesses.
Trouble sleeping. Feeling hopeless. life, doctors say, and college is a _nat- tal health and yet they have no train- "There should be somebody there
. So much for those carefree college ural time for symptoms·to emerge.
ing to do that," she said,
who could at least assess this, and in
days.
The AP-mtv.U poll surveyed stuAlison Malmon, whose older some cases offer reassurance that
The vast majority . of college stu- dents at 40 U.S, colleges, exploring brother, Brian, committed suicide 'l~m sure you'll feel better after
dents are feeling stressed these days; the students' state . of mind and the when she was a freshman ·at · the exams are over,"' he said. Serious
and significant numbers are at risk of pressures they face, incln&lt;Jiog strains . University of Pennsylv;mia in 2000, cases can be referred for treatment,
deptession, according .to .· .an . from tit~ tough economy: It found · decided to do something about it. he said- "and treatment works."
Associated Press~mtvU poll ·
substantull numbers of -s!U.dents with After searching unsuccessfully for a
Depressive disordefs .affli~ an esti. Eighty-five percent of the stpdents . sympto~ of depre~sioi), many of ·group that she coul~ bring to campus ·inated 9.5 peramt of adult Americans
reported feeling stress in their daily them fathng to recetve professtonal ·that would encourage · students to in a given year, or about 20.9 million
lives in recent months, with worries help. Among the poll re$ults:
t;Jlk about mental healtli issues and people. The ~an age for onset is 30.
about grades, school . work, money . • Nine percent of studej~ were at seek help, Malmpn created ·Open According to the mental health
and relationships the big culprits, · ~sk of m~~te. to seyere depres- Minds. That group has grown into institute, the ftrst step to getting
Atthesametime,42pen:entsaidthey ston. That s 10 bne wtth .a recent the nonprofit Active Minds· with appropriate treatment is to visit a
had felt down, depressed or hopeless medical study that found 1 p,ercent of chapters on more than mo~ than doctor. Certain medications and
several days during the past two weeks, young people had depression. .
200 campuses. . ·. .
medical conditions, such as viruses
and 13 percent showed signs of being at • Almost a quarter of those With a Malmon 27 executive director of or a thyroid disorder, can cause the
risk for at least mild depression, based . parent who had lost a.Job during the the nonp~fit.' says students don't same symPtoms as depression. If
on the students' .answers to series of sc~ool year ~bowed stgns of ~t least have to worry about how to .drilw the doctors rule out a medical cause,
questions that medical P.ractitioilers use mtld depress ton, more than rn;•ce the tine between everyday .blues and then they should conduct a psycho- ·
to diagnose depressive 1llness.
. ·
perce~tage of. those whQ hl!(ln t .had a .clinical depression.
logical evaluation or refer the patient
of
trou.
parent
lose
a
JOb.
More.
thll!i,
iwtee
as
.
~·You
don't
need
to
have
a
to a: mental health professional.
These students complained
ble sleeping, having little energy or many ~tudent~ whose . paren~ had diagnosable depreSsion . to go talk to The pOll was cOnducted April 22 to
feeling down or hopeless - and ·lost ,a JOb sat~ they . h~· ser:tously · so'!leone," she. silid. "If you feel down May 4 by EdisOn . Media Research
most hadn't gotten professional help, constdered ending therr ~wn hfe, 13 or if you feel like you're not yourself, and involved interviews with 2,240
Eleven percent had had thoughts that percent to 5 percent. . ·
. go talk to somebody about it."
undergraduate students ages 18-24 at
• Among those who reported senThe AP-mtvU poll found that 84 four-year colleges. To protect privathey'd be better off dead or about
hurting themselves.
· o~s symptoms, of moderate depres- percent of students said they'd know cy, the schools where the poll was
. That's opt just a case of the blues to ston or wo~, JUSt qver ~quarter had where to tum for help if they were in conducted are not being identified,
be shrugged off by taking a.break with ever been diagnosed wtth a mental serious emotional distress or think- the students who responded were not
Facebook or going for a wQ(kout.
. health con~ition. . . . .
ing about hurting themselves. Most asked for their names and people
• · More ~an h~ . of · tho~ who said they'.d go first to friends or fam- interviewed for this story were not
Kristin Potts, who graduated from
Penn State last week with a 4.0 in reJ?o,rted_havmg se~o~sly cons1d~red · ily. Twenty percent said they'd try part of the survey. The poll has a
. margin of sampling error of plus or
chemistry and ·will go on f?r .?l ~as- · sutctde at someJl?mt tn th~ prev1ous school counseling.
That means it may be up to friends minus 3 percentage points.
ter's, says she's seen warmng stgns. year had ~ot rece1ved any treatment
among fellow classmates.
· or counseh~g. .
. · .
and family to guide students toward The TV network mtvU is operated
"I had a couple friends who didn't • Just a thitd.oftho~· w•th moderate professional help where warranted, by the MTV Networks division of
come out of their rooms very much," symptoms of depression or worse had said Malmon.
Viacom and available at many colDr. Thomas Insel, director of the leges. MtvU's sponsorship of the poll
. she said. "I tried my hardest not to be rece1ved any support or treatment
like .that, but I definitely saw it."
from a. coun~lor or .mental health National Institute for Mental Health, is related· to its mental-health camsaid students need to understand that paign "Half .of Us," which it runs
At the .University of Maryland in professional smce starttng ~Uege.
College P'ark, students were sobered
~ Nearly half of those diagnosed depression is "a very treatable ill- with the Jed Foundation, a nonprofit
by two. suicides within two weeks .w1th ~t leas~ .mode~te symp~IJlS ness." Campus counseling centers group that works to reduce suicide
this past semester.
weren t famthar wtth counseling are a good resource, he said, among young people.
"It was pretty scary," says Aimee resources on campus.
.
Mayer, a junior studying psychology.
Anne Marie Albano, an ·associate ,.-----------------------~
She says there's lots of information and professor of clinical .psychology at
Ofiicct"Hours By Appointment
help available for students with mental Columbia University, sa1d college is
disorders, but "there's still a stigma a "tender age" developmentally, a
associated with mental health issues period when. y~~ng adults ~tart. tak •
and so a lot of people don't want to go mg responsibJhty for thetr hves.
to those services. They feel like they're They're selecting careers, moving
- TOZ
less cool or something like that if they toward financial independence,
eye and vision care
LPED
establishing long-term relationships,
go. It's like a sign of vulnerability."
Megan Salame, a sophomore studying perhaps marrying, having children.
civil engineering at George Mason
The most troubling thing coming
University in Fairfax, Va., says she'd tum out . of the AP-mtvU poll and other
443 General Hartinger Pky.
first to her parents if she felt depressed. studies of young adults dealing with
Middleport, 'Ohio 45760
But she hastened to add, "Depressed ~ I depression, she said, is that "they
. , T~Ao"'one: :(7:40.) _~~ .
.. . .
· ~l).',t .fl?allY like to use~ wOrd ~a~. Aon~t.get_ ~elp:' .at.a time,whel! ~~ey're
11 sounds so negative."
JUSt venturing off on the1r own.

..

I

'

1

•

'

'

o

&gt;

•

•j

•

�-

..

...

,

••

'

.

..... ~·

,

•

Page 10• .

HEALTHCARE :2009

Thursday, May 28, 2009

HEALTHCARE
•· 20.09
.
..
·..

Thursday, May.28, 2009

''.

· • Page 11

.

· At• pou: 'Manysfu&lt;i~hts stressed, some depressed

_Many wo~en ~eel that the~ ,can't have their cholesterol checked every
g1ve a man du-ectlons: Maybe tt s the . five years and more frequently as ·
stubborn tendency of males, or they age or if they have high cholesmaybe it's that they don't like to be terollevels.
told what to do. It comes as no surprise, then, that it's difficult to get
. · Colorectal cancer
most men to go to the doctor. Maybe
.
screening
.
they don't want to talk about their
This screening uses various tests to
health problems. Perhaps they feel examine the colon for polyps that ·
normal and don't see a need to make may become cancerous · or to ·find
an appointment.
.
colon cancer before symptoms occur.
Or it could be because they. don't Men 50 or older should talk to their
want to hear that anything is wrong doctor about which tests are right for
with them. Whatever the case may them and when to have them done.
be, it's important that men get regular health screening tests. Catching
Prostate cancer
'•
pr®lems early on, can often help
screening test
prevent them from turning into
Prostate cancer is detected through
something more serious down the a blood test that. determines the
road.
amount of prostate~specific antigen
Below are some guidelines on (i_&gt;J?A) in your blood, or. through a
men's screening tests. lf you are a d1gttal rectal exam (DRE) where a
man reading this, talk to your doctor doctor. inserts · his lubricated, gloved Routine hE!althcare.checkups can help doctors .spot ·p~oblems early on so they can ·
·.·.
·
. · ··
about when he thiitks you should finger mto the rectum to examine the be treated before they become more serious.
schedule these exams, as test free. prostate gland for any irregularities.
speech and sound recognition at
quency varies based on your age, The American Cancer Society sug- Cllf!! professional every year.
various levels . Ask your doctor
your health history and your family's gests that men get tested for prostate
Hearing
test
how often you should get your
health history.
cancer every year, starting at age 50.
A hearing test _gauges your hearing tested.

Body measurements
Taking your height, weight and
~y-mass index (BMI) helps determme whether your are overweight.
Overw~ight people are more likely to
have h1gh blood pressure, heart disease or diabetes. BMI is assessed
using a mathematical form of weight
and height.
.
Blood pressure
A blood-pres~ure. test is the only
way to determme 1f you have high
blood pressure. If undetected and
untreated, it can increase your risk of
heart attack, stroke, heart failure and
kidney failure . According to the
Amencan Heart Association you
should get it checked at least' once
every two years - and more often if
your doctor says it's high.

Testicular exam
This test examjnes the testicles for
enlargement, swelling or a lump.
Docto.rs usually check for this at
your physical exam, especially if you
tell them that you've noticed a
change in · your testicles or are
between the ages of 15 and 40.

senous,

Providing Quality Care
FROM Ol.TR PAMHYTO YOlJR.•;

Let us tell you all
the benefits of our
Accelerated Care
Plus Program

Plan for a More Independent Future.
Call today at 740 .992.6606

FP

to set up your treatment plan.
l.

Rocr(Sprinqs
REHABILITATION CENTER
. 36159 Rocksprings Road
Pomeroy, OH 4')769

JAMES L. SCHMOLL, OD

.

www.rock.sprin ~ss k.ill ('dnurs in g.com

· ll;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=7,~
. :, ~--i;;;;;i~
••~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;~:.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o=;~;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J

,.
'

a

Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center

STDtests
These tests determine if you have a
sexually transmitted disease (STDs) ·
likesyphilis,chlamydia or HIV/AIDS.
Your doctor will determined which
tests you should $el based on risk factors and sexual history.

Dental exam
During this exam; a dentist will
ex~ine your teeth .and ·gums for
cav11tes or oral cancer. The American
Dental Association recommends that
Cholesterol test
you go once or twice a year for a
A blood test is used to detenttine checkup and cleaning~
·
your good (HDL) and bad (LDL)
cholesterol levels. According to the
Eyeexam
AHA, cholesterol is a soft, waxy
Eye exams assess if you need your
substance found among the lipids vision corrected by either wearing
(fats) in the bloodstream and in all prescription eyeglasses or contact
your body's cells. Humans need cho- lenses. They also identify existing
lesterol, but a high level increases vision problems like glaucoma or
your risk of heart disease and stroke. cataracts. Eye experts suggest that
Men ·age 20 years· or older should
y~~ ~~;our eye~ ~~~~~~d by an eye, ,,,,, ,.

•

WASHiNGTON (AP) -. Stress
Mental heaiifl di8oroersli~e depres- · "They · have to learn to become 3lthoudl they're not all set up take
over . grades. Financial ··worries. si01\ typically begin relatively early in . their own monitors about their men- care of serious mental illnesses.
Trouble sleeping. Feeling hopeless. life, doctors say, and college is a _nat- tal health and yet they have no train- "There should be somebody there
. So much for those carefree college ural time for symptoms·to emerge.
ing to do that," she said,
who could at least assess this, and in
days.
The AP-mtv.U poll surveyed stuAlison Malmon, whose older some cases offer reassurance that
The vast majority . of college stu- dents at 40 U.S, colleges, exploring brother, Brian, committed suicide 'l~m sure you'll feel better after
dents are feeling stressed these days; the students' state . of mind and the when she was a freshman ·at · the exams are over,"' he said. Serious
and significant numbers are at risk of pressures they face, incln&lt;Jiog strains . University of Pennsylv;mia in 2000, cases can be referred for treatment,
deptession, according .to .· .an . from tit~ tough economy: It found · decided to do something about it. he said- "and treatment works."
Associated Press~mtvU poll ·
substantull numbers of -s!U.dents with After searching unsuccessfully for a
Depressive disordefs .affli~ an esti. Eighty-five percent of the stpdents . sympto~ of depre~sioi), many of ·group that she coul~ bring to campus ·inated 9.5 peramt of adult Americans
reported feeling stress in their daily them fathng to recetve professtonal ·that would encourage · students to in a given year, or about 20.9 million
lives in recent months, with worries help. Among the poll re$ults:
t;Jlk about mental healtli issues and people. The ~an age for onset is 30.
about grades, school . work, money . • Nine percent of studej~ were at seek help, Malmpn created ·Open According to the mental health
and relationships the big culprits, · ~sk of m~~te. to seyere depres- Minds. That group has grown into institute, the ftrst step to getting
Atthesametime,42pen:entsaidthey ston. That s 10 bne wtth .a recent the nonprofit Active Minds· with appropriate treatment is to visit a
had felt down, depressed or hopeless medical study that found 1 p,ercent of chapters on more than mo~ than doctor. Certain medications and
several days during the past two weeks, young people had depression. .
200 campuses. . ·. .
medical conditions, such as viruses
and 13 percent showed signs of being at • Almost a quarter of those With a Malmon 27 executive director of or a thyroid disorder, can cause the
risk for at least mild depression, based . parent who had lost a.Job during the the nonp~fit.' says students don't same symPtoms as depression. If
on the students' .answers to series of sc~ool year ~bowed stgns of ~t least have to worry about how to .drilw the doctors rule out a medical cause,
questions that medical P.ractitioilers use mtld depress ton, more than rn;•ce the tine between everyday .blues and then they should conduct a psycho- ·
to diagnose depressive 1llness.
. ·
perce~tage of. those whQ hl!(ln t .had a .clinical depression.
logical evaluation or refer the patient
of
trou.
parent
lose
a
JOb.
More.
thll!i,
iwtee
as
.
~·You
don't
need
to
have
a
to a: mental health professional.
These students complained
ble sleeping, having little energy or many ~tudent~ whose . paren~ had diagnosable depreSsion . to go talk to The pOll was cOnducted April 22 to
feeling down or hopeless - and ·lost ,a JOb sat~ they . h~· ser:tously · so'!leone," she. silid. "If you feel down May 4 by EdisOn . Media Research
most hadn't gotten professional help, constdered ending therr ~wn hfe, 13 or if you feel like you're not yourself, and involved interviews with 2,240
Eleven percent had had thoughts that percent to 5 percent. . ·
. go talk to somebody about it."
undergraduate students ages 18-24 at
• Among those who reported senThe AP-mtvU poll found that 84 four-year colleges. To protect privathey'd be better off dead or about
hurting themselves.
· o~s symptoms, of moderate depres- percent of students said they'd know cy, the schools where the poll was
. That's opt just a case of the blues to ston or wo~, JUSt qver ~quarter had where to tum for help if they were in conducted are not being identified,
be shrugged off by taking a.break with ever been diagnosed wtth a mental serious emotional distress or think- the students who responded were not
Facebook or going for a wQ(kout.
. health con~ition. . . . .
ing about hurting themselves. Most asked for their names and people
• · More ~an h~ . of · tho~ who said they'.d go first to friends or fam- interviewed for this story were not
Kristin Potts, who graduated from
Penn State last week with a 4.0 in reJ?o,rted_havmg se~o~sly cons1d~red · ily. Twenty percent said they'd try part of the survey. The poll has a
. margin of sampling error of plus or
chemistry and ·will go on f?r .?l ~as- · sutctde at someJl?mt tn th~ prev1ous school counseling.
That means it may be up to friends minus 3 percentage points.
ter's, says she's seen warmng stgns. year had ~ot rece1ved any treatment
among fellow classmates.
· or counseh~g. .
. · .
and family to guide students toward The TV network mtvU is operated
"I had a couple friends who didn't • Just a thitd.oftho~· w•th moderate professional help where warranted, by the MTV Networks division of
come out of their rooms very much," symptoms of depression or worse had said Malmon.
Viacom and available at many colDr. Thomas Insel, director of the leges. MtvU's sponsorship of the poll
. she said. "I tried my hardest not to be rece1ved any support or treatment
like .that, but I definitely saw it."
from a. coun~lor or .mental health National Institute for Mental Health, is related· to its mental-health camsaid students need to understand that paign "Half .of Us," which it runs
At the .University of Maryland in professional smce starttng ~Uege.
College P'ark, students were sobered
~ Nearly half of those diagnosed depression is "a very treatable ill- with the Jed Foundation, a nonprofit
by two. suicides within two weeks .w1th ~t leas~ .mode~te symp~IJlS ness." Campus counseling centers group that works to reduce suicide
this past semester.
weren t famthar wtth counseling are a good resource, he said, among young people.
"It was pretty scary," says Aimee resources on campus.
.
Mayer, a junior studying psychology.
Anne Marie Albano, an ·associate ,.-----------------------~
She says there's lots of information and professor of clinical .psychology at
Ofiicct"Hours By Appointment
help available for students with mental Columbia University, sa1d college is
disorders, but "there's still a stigma a "tender age" developmentally, a
associated with mental health issues period when. y~~ng adults ~tart. tak •
and so a lot of people don't want to go mg responsibJhty for thetr hves.
to those services. They feel like they're They're selecting careers, moving
- TOZ
less cool or something like that if they toward financial independence,
eye and vision care
LPED
establishing long-term relationships,
go. It's like a sign of vulnerability."
Megan Salame, a sophomore studying perhaps marrying, having children.
civil engineering at George Mason
The most troubling thing coming
University in Fairfax, Va., says she'd tum out . of the AP-mtvU poll and other
443 General Hartinger Pky.
first to her parents if she felt depressed. studies of young adults dealing with
Middleport, 'Ohio 45760
But she hastened to add, "Depressed ~ I depression, she said, is that "they
. , T~Ao"'one: :(7:40.) _~~ .
.. . .
· ~l).',t .fl?allY like to use~ wOrd ~a~. Aon~t.get_ ~elp:' .at.a time,whel! ~~ey're
11 sounds so negative."
JUSt venturing off on the1r own.

..

I

'

1

•

'

'

o

&gt;

•

•j

•

�..
HEALTHCARE
Holzer Clinic bringing the latest
in medical imaging to the region ·

Page 12 •

H?lzer Clinic's Digital Diagnostic Imaging and Clinical
latest state-of the-art medical imaging
eqmpment coupled with a highly experienced and dedicated
staff focused on the delivering quality healthcare to patients
throughout the Ohio River Valley. Holzer Clinic's physician
leadership understands that by investing in and offering the latest technology and equipment, they are able to make a difference. in the quality of health care. that patients receive.
With t~e !ldd1tion of the new Picture Archiving and .
Commumcatwns System (PACS), 4-D Ultras.otind, 3-Tesla
M~I. with breast MR coil, High Field Open MRI, 64-Channel
B~dbance 0' ~canner a~d Nuclear Medici~e. Technology,
~s health chmc system IS truly on the cuttmg edge of the
mdus.try. In addit.ion, the Holzer Clinic Digital Diagnostic
Imagmg and Testmg Center provides a full-service imaging
department that offers conventional Radiografhy
Mammography, Bone Densitometry (DEXA) as wei a~
Fluoroscopic and Interventional Radiology procedures.
. The PACS system's digital format represents a huge leap
m technology, as all of the procedures which had previously been stored on film are now stored digitally. The order- .
ing physician is able to view the image almost instanta•
n~o~s~y with superi~r image quality. This system allows the ·
chmc s board certified Rad10logists to provide a much ·
f~ster report ~umilround so that th.e prim~ ordering physiCian .c~n begrn a treatment plan Immediately if necessary.
~hysicians who are not a part of Holzer Clime can also utihze the s~ste~ and have rea~ize? that having the ability to
detect. senous Illnesses. at an earher stage provides for more.
effective treatment optwns and higher survival rates.
The newest edition to the advanced equipment line-up is
!he !~test-generation in open MRI (magnetic resonance
Imagmg) systems: the Panorama I.OT from Philips
Med~c~l Sys.tems,. N~t only does this MR system offer
~hys1c_Jans high-field 1mage quality for advanced application~, It also features a completely open design that makes
get~mg an MR sea~ a. more posi_tive experience. Many
pat1ents, due to their s1ze or feelings of claustrophobia,
prefer open MR systems. The Panorama I.OT features the
wide~t. patie~t gap o~ any high-field MR system. And,
P.hys1c1ans will ap~rec1~te the high-resolution images posSible from the htgh-field-strength magnet within the
Panorama 1.0~ ~hat enable t~~m to make better .diagnoses.
Another exc1tmg new ed1t10n is the 8 channel Breast
MRI coil tha~ allows simultaneous imaging of both
~rea.sts. The coli enables .hig~ sen~itivity and homogeneity .
m htgh temporal resolut1on tmagmg of both breasts with
co~plete coverage through to th.e · adjacent thoracic
regiOns. The breast coil is utilized' with the 3-Tesla MRI
the highest .levd of MRI imaging quality currently avail:
able. The d1f~e~e nce that}: !esla provides in image quality expands chtucal capabtltt1es and increases the quality of
health care throughout the region .
.Ho~zer Cl!nic contin~es to "7 set apart from the crowd by
offen.ng patlen~s supenor quahty and compassionate healthcare m an envtronment where customer satisfaction is the
highest priority.
Holzer Clinic is accredited by the Accreditation Association
of Ambulatory Health Care and the Digital Diagnostic
Imaging and Clinic Testing Center services are accredited by
,the American College of.J~adiology. For more informa,tion
. contact L-8.D?·71J-8007 qr; visit www.holze~~q.ic..~?"'.·&lt;&gt; •\ ,

200 ~9

Thursday, May 28, 2009
Thursda~, May 28; 2009

I

-,i
I

I

'

'

,.

'

I

o o '

'

.'

. t .' .

.

.

~ Skilled Fast ·Track Rehab
.. ;.I. 'I

-Home·iiea th Care

Living

.

'.

.

"

Dan :Bylef: AinarfOf·faith atld 'a pOsitiVe attitude

~

~ Assisted

·.

H.OL·Z:ER ,HOSPlC·E·· pRoFILE

There Is care after you are discharged
.from the hosp~tal avaltablel
.

..

• Page 13
.J

Tes~mg Center offers the

I

...

HEALTH
CARE ... 2009
.
.

' .

- Senior Care
-. ~a Carel PriVate Duty/ Passp()rt Services
- Hospice Care ·

JACKSON, Ohio - D1,1n Byler is a
man whose faith in God has helped
him cultivate a positive attitude. And
that deep-seated faith combined with
the positive 011tlook on life has helped
him in his battle against cancer..
Jackson res.ldent
So have the healthcare professionDan.Byler, .second
als from Holzer Hospice.
.
from
left, has
Mr. Byler and his wife· Edna
been
a Holzer
anived. in Jackson O ,mnty in 1969,
Hospice patient
relocating from the.Arnish communisince October
ty of Mesopotamia in northeast Ohio.
2008. Also shown
· The Bylers and their 12 children
are, from left to
have been deeply involved in many
right, Holzer
facets of the Jackson County busiHospice Nurse
ness community.
· .
·
Kristina Triona,
Mr. Byler, 78, was fiTSt diagnosed
Mr. Byler's wife
with prostate cancer about four years
Edna, and his
ago. In 2008, his physicians discovered
daughter Ellen.
that the cancer had moved to his bones.
Slibniltted photo
When Mr. Byler's health took a
• tum for tlte worse late last year, the
family contacted Holzer Hospice to
help . care for him. He entered .
Hospice care in October 2008:
"When I was checked in I could
not walk. I could not feed myself. I
could not bathe myself," .said _Mr. Athens and portions of surrounding
Byler. ''lt's un~lievable ~here lam co~nties. Serv.ices are provided f~r
now.Teame from not bemg able to: patients at therr home, m the·hosptJack Ramey, D.U
take care of myselfat all We took it ·tal, nursing hornes,~ assisted _livi~g :
Michael Oark, D.O.
J111e Broecker, M.D.
step by step b~ step." · . / ·.. : · f.~cilities, g~up hmpes or other facilKatbleell8ertuna,
D.O.
Mr. Byler said that he and hts.farn- .Ities. Hosp~ce . servtce.s .are covere~ .
;····
ily have been elf.trelnely impressed under Mechcare,.M.edtcatd; .most pn- ·
·Padlatrk- Aihllaclllt .,
. nt~l
with the care that Holzer }JospiCe ha's' vate insurance .plans, ·· ~M&lt;?s and
J111e Broilc:kor, M.D.
· provided. He said Hospice Nurse other managed-c.are org~Izatlons.. .
Kristina Triona, RN, has been a spe- For more mformatwn about
cial blessing to him.
Holzer lfospice, call tollfree (800) .
"Kristina didn't only take care of 500-4850, or log on to ~he website
me, she was concerned about my www.holzer.org and clzck on · the
· environment and my family," Mr. "Services &amp; Locations" link.
Byler said. "~e who~e experience Hospice is one of. several Holzer
was more than JUSt taking .care of a Health Syste~ entltze~ that benefits
patient. Everybody I caine m contact from the chantable gifts and donawith was very professional, very car- tions secured ~nd manag~d by the
ing and very helpful.''
. .
f!olzer Fo~!wn. One unz~ue ~harTriona said Mr. Byler's faith and ztable. recogmtwn opportunzty zs the .
his positive attitude have played a Hospzce Tre~ of Love.
.
major role in his recovery.
Located m the lobb1 a! Holz~r
"You have to have some kind of Medical . Center-Gallzpolls, thzs
hope," she said. "It's easy -.y~en you're impressive .(ive1oot bronze ~isplay is
sick to lose that.hope. Pos111ve people adorned wztli 125 gold-jinz$h leaves
tend to deal with their illness better. tluli may be perso(llllly engraved for a
And that's one of our goals in Hospice, donation of $500.00. A l~af can also
to try and keep people looking at the be purchased to memo~zalzze, honor
positive and helpmg people understand and recognize .any spe~zal person.
that thinking positively will improve For more znfo,rtnatzon abou! the
their quality oflife and give them_joy." H_olzer Foun~t!on and charztf!ble
. Holzer Hospice provides service to gift opportunztzes, contact Lmda l~~::!!!~~~~~li:~~:::;~:£1d~~!!~[:~~ill
patients ,in Gallia, Ja~on. Meigs Jeffers-Lester at (740) 1146-5217. · · •

.....

,........,..c..-......,
~~

..

'j

..:

.

'

'

.

. . '.

'•'

'' '

'

'

..

'

�..
HEALTHCARE
Holzer Clinic bringing the latest
in medical imaging to the region ·

Page 12 •

H?lzer Clinic's Digital Diagnostic Imaging and Clinical
latest state-of the-art medical imaging
eqmpment coupled with a highly experienced and dedicated
staff focused on the delivering quality healthcare to patients
throughout the Ohio River Valley. Holzer Clinic's physician
leadership understands that by investing in and offering the latest technology and equipment, they are able to make a difference. in the quality of health care. that patients receive.
With t~e !ldd1tion of the new Picture Archiving and .
Commumcatwns System (PACS), 4-D Ultras.otind, 3-Tesla
M~I. with breast MR coil, High Field Open MRI, 64-Channel
B~dbance 0' ~canner a~d Nuclear Medici~e. Technology,
~s health chmc system IS truly on the cuttmg edge of the
mdus.try. In addit.ion, the Holzer Clinic Digital Diagnostic
Imagmg and Testmg Center provides a full-service imaging
department that offers conventional Radiografhy
Mammography, Bone Densitometry (DEXA) as wei a~
Fluoroscopic and Interventional Radiology procedures.
. The PACS system's digital format represents a huge leap
m technology, as all of the procedures which had previously been stored on film are now stored digitally. The order- .
ing physician is able to view the image almost instanta•
n~o~s~y with superi~r image quality. This system allows the ·
chmc s board certified Rad10logists to provide a much ·
f~ster report ~umilround so that th.e prim~ ordering physiCian .c~n begrn a treatment plan Immediately if necessary.
~hysicians who are not a part of Holzer Clime can also utihze the s~ste~ and have rea~ize? that having the ability to
detect. senous Illnesses. at an earher stage provides for more.
effective treatment optwns and higher survival rates.
The newest edition to the advanced equipment line-up is
!he !~test-generation in open MRI (magnetic resonance
Imagmg) systems: the Panorama I.OT from Philips
Med~c~l Sys.tems,. N~t only does this MR system offer
~hys1c_Jans high-field 1mage quality for advanced application~, It also features a completely open design that makes
get~mg an MR sea~ a. more posi_tive experience. Many
pat1ents, due to their s1ze or feelings of claustrophobia,
prefer open MR systems. The Panorama I.OT features the
wide~t. patie~t gap o~ any high-field MR system. And,
P.hys1c1ans will ap~rec1~te the high-resolution images posSible from the htgh-field-strength magnet within the
Panorama 1.0~ ~hat enable t~~m to make better .diagnoses.
Another exc1tmg new ed1t10n is the 8 channel Breast
MRI coil tha~ allows simultaneous imaging of both
~rea.sts. The coli enables .hig~ sen~itivity and homogeneity .
m htgh temporal resolut1on tmagmg of both breasts with
co~plete coverage through to th.e · adjacent thoracic
regiOns. The breast coil is utilized' with the 3-Tesla MRI
the highest .levd of MRI imaging quality currently avail:
able. The d1f~e~e nce that}: !esla provides in image quality expands chtucal capabtltt1es and increases the quality of
health care throughout the region .
.Ho~zer Cl!nic contin~es to "7 set apart from the crowd by
offen.ng patlen~s supenor quahty and compassionate healthcare m an envtronment where customer satisfaction is the
highest priority.
Holzer Clinic is accredited by the Accreditation Association
of Ambulatory Health Care and the Digital Diagnostic
Imaging and Clinic Testing Center services are accredited by
,the American College of.J~adiology. For more informa,tion
. contact L-8.D?·71J-8007 qr; visit www.holze~~q.ic..~?"'.·&lt;&gt; •\ ,

200 ~9

Thursday, May 28, 2009
Thursda~, May 28; 2009

I

-,i
I

I

'

'

,.

'

I

o o '

'

.'

. t .' .

.

.

~ Skilled Fast ·Track Rehab
.. ;.I. 'I

-Home·iiea th Care

Living

.

'.

.

"

Dan :Bylef: AinarfOf·faith atld 'a pOsitiVe attitude

~

~ Assisted

·.

H.OL·Z:ER ,HOSPlC·E·· pRoFILE

There Is care after you are discharged
.from the hosp~tal avaltablel
.

..

• Page 13
.J

Tes~mg Center offers the

I

...

HEALTH
CARE ... 2009
.
.

' .

- Senior Care
-. ~a Carel PriVate Duty/ Passp()rt Services
- Hospice Care ·

JACKSON, Ohio - D1,1n Byler is a
man whose faith in God has helped
him cultivate a positive attitude. And
that deep-seated faith combined with
the positive 011tlook on life has helped
him in his battle against cancer..
Jackson res.ldent
So have the healthcare professionDan.Byler, .second
als from Holzer Hospice.
.
from
left, has
Mr. Byler and his wife· Edna
been
a Holzer
anived. in Jackson O ,mnty in 1969,
Hospice patient
relocating from the.Arnish communisince October
ty of Mesopotamia in northeast Ohio.
2008. Also shown
· The Bylers and their 12 children
are, from left to
have been deeply involved in many
right, Holzer
facets of the Jackson County busiHospice Nurse
ness community.
· .
·
Kristina Triona,
Mr. Byler, 78, was fiTSt diagnosed
Mr. Byler's wife
with prostate cancer about four years
Edna, and his
ago. In 2008, his physicians discovered
daughter Ellen.
that the cancer had moved to his bones.
Slibniltted photo
When Mr. Byler's health took a
• tum for tlte worse late last year, the
family contacted Holzer Hospice to
help . care for him. He entered .
Hospice care in October 2008:
"When I was checked in I could
not walk. I could not feed myself. I
could not bathe myself," .said _Mr. Athens and portions of surrounding
Byler. ''lt's un~lievable ~here lam co~nties. Serv.ices are provided f~r
now.Teame from not bemg able to: patients at therr home, m the·hosptJack Ramey, D.U
take care of myselfat all We took it ·tal, nursing hornes,~ assisted _livi~g :
Michael Oark, D.O.
J111e Broecker, M.D.
step by step b~ step." · . / ·.. : · f.~cilities, g~up hmpes or other facilKatbleell8ertuna,
D.O.
Mr. Byler said that he and hts.farn- .Ities. Hosp~ce . servtce.s .are covere~ .
;····
ily have been elf.trelnely impressed under Mechcare,.M.edtcatd; .most pn- ·
·Padlatrk- Aihllaclllt .,
. nt~l
with the care that Holzer }JospiCe ha's' vate insurance .plans, ·· ~M&lt;?s and
J111e Broilc:kor, M.D.
· provided. He said Hospice Nurse other managed-c.are org~Izatlons.. .
Kristina Triona, RN, has been a spe- For more mformatwn about
cial blessing to him.
Holzer lfospice, call tollfree (800) .
"Kristina didn't only take care of 500-4850, or log on to ~he website
me, she was concerned about my www.holzer.org and clzck on · the
· environment and my family," Mr. "Services &amp; Locations" link.
Byler said. "~e who~e experience Hospice is one of. several Holzer
was more than JUSt taking .care of a Health Syste~ entltze~ that benefits
patient. Everybody I caine m contact from the chantable gifts and donawith was very professional, very car- tions secured ~nd manag~d by the
ing and very helpful.''
. .
f!olzer Fo~!wn. One unz~ue ~harTriona said Mr. Byler's faith and ztable. recogmtwn opportunzty zs the .
his positive attitude have played a Hospzce Tre~ of Love.
.
major role in his recovery.
Located m the lobb1 a! Holz~r
"You have to have some kind of Medical . Center-Gallzpolls, thzs
hope," she said. "It's easy -.y~en you're impressive .(ive1oot bronze ~isplay is
sick to lose that.hope. Pos111ve people adorned wztli 125 gold-jinz$h leaves
tend to deal with their illness better. tluli may be perso(llllly engraved for a
And that's one of our goals in Hospice, donation of $500.00. A l~af can also
to try and keep people looking at the be purchased to memo~zalzze, honor
positive and helpmg people understand and recognize .any spe~zal person.
that thinking positively will improve For more znfo,rtnatzon abou! the
their quality oflife and give them_joy." H_olzer Foun~t!on and charztf!ble
. Holzer Hospice provides service to gift opportunztzes, contact Lmda l~~::!!!~~~~~li:~~:::;~:£1d~~!!~[:~~ill
patients ,in Gallia, Ja~on. Meigs Jeffers-Lester at (740) 1146-5217. · · •

.....

,........,..c..-......,
~~

..

'j

..:

.

'

'

.

. . '.

'•'

'' '

'

'

..

'

�•

•

HEALTHCARE 2009

Page 14 •

Thursday, May 28, 2009

.· HEAUTHCARE
-2009
.

Thur'Sday, May 28~ 2009

~

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~.

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• Page 15

.•

Trinuning down in time for beach season
.

.

.

-

-

.

R

r many people, sum- loss process, but those aren't thingsyouenjoy,beitjogging calJries each. day, giving
mer is all about the en~ugh to ensure Ion~ te~ in. the ·park, g?i~g for hikes · your m~tabolism a boost
beacb. Whether you we1ght loss. Exerctse ts · wtth a local hiking club, or even when your body is at
live near an ocean or do your essential to losing weight and · eruplling in fitness classes a:t a rest. While this doesn't mean
weekend beach getaways at a keeping that. w~ight off. nearby gym. The more you men and women should . hit
nearby laie, you probably Rese~ch ha~ mdtca~ed .that ~ilj~y your rou~ne; the easier the weights like professional
have one daing on your mind 30 .mmutes of exerctse .five tt will be to mamtain.
· football players, it does highwhen you bit the sand: soak- d~ys per weelc could .be s~ffi- ·. • ~onsider ~~ight training. · light the irnpo!'fance of a reging up some sun, and looking ctent for succe~sful. w~t¥ht · Wetght trammg . doesn't imen ~at com~jnes both diet
good while you do it. .
loss: Of_ course, each mdtv!ij- mea~ you. need to end ,up and w~tght traming.
A big part of looking good ual ·~ d1ffere~t~ and 30. mm- looking h~e · the . famed
• Shtft your focus. LOsing
at the beach is shedding utes ts the mt~umum tec&lt;?m- weightlifter~ . ·in ·. V,en?ce ·weight isn't easy. Where
those few extra and stubborn mended · datly . exerctse. Be~ch, Calif. But ltfttn~ .many people stumble is their
pounds you might have Increased exerctse can be ~eights c~n be very benen· quest ~o be thin, as opposed
gained d.-ing the winter more h~lpful, but those ~ew ~tal, parti~ularly . for those ,to _th~1rquest to be healthy.
months. Nearly everyone has to exerctse should take thmgs mterested m bummg fat. In Shtfttng focus from being
gone through the trials and slowly at first , and the~ grad- he~ book Strong Women Stay ,.thin, which is arbitrary, to
tribulations of attempting to ~ally add m?re to therr rou- Sil'!' .(Qantam),
Tufts. being healthy, which can be
lose weight, but there is a tme as thetr b?dY · g~ws U~t~erstty
researcher !Duch more tangible if you
way to successful weight loss acc~stome~ to datly exerctse. Mmam Nelson fpund , t~at:· mvolve your doctor, can be a
that will not only leave you . It s .also, Important to note · women who combmed a diet . boon to your weight loss
looking g?&lt;&gt;&lt;~ on the be~ch, tha~ any. Successful. ex~~ise and weight ,training regimen· ~oats.
Being
h~althy
but lookmg, and feehng, regime!' Js one th~t mdiv1d~- lost 44 percent more fat thi!n mvolves making · a lifestyle
good throughout the year as als enJoy. Exercise . dQeSil t wom~n who .solely follow~ change, ~herein. you adj_ust
well.
.
. .
·~ h~ve to mean ~nmng . five the diet po~on of the regt- your eatmg habtts · to altgn
~ _Exerc1se 1s. Important. mtles· ~~ mom~ng or v1got- men.
..
• . them more with. lowering
Dletmg .and takmg supple- ously lifting_ wetghts .. Tailor That's. ~cause muscle cholesterol ~nd blood.- p~sments can help the wetght your exerctse - routme to bums a s1gmficant number of sure than s1mply sktppmg

BEND .AilEA
CHIROPRACTIC
·cENTER

.

·~

.

.

meats to shed a p(,und here
and there.
. ·
• ·Educate yourself. Goals
are great and can be especially beneficial when attempting
to lose weight. But long term
goals are often better tailored
to successful and lasting
weight loss than short term
goals:· For example, telling
yourself you want to drop 10
pounds ·in two weeks might
be attainable, bUt it's not neeessarily beneficial. That's
because such rapid weight
Joss · is most likely coming
from the loss of water and
muscle, and not fat.
Losing muscle is not good,
as you'll need musele to
maintain an elevated metabolism. Long tenn goals, such
as losing 10 pounds in 4 to 6
weeks, could be a much
healthier target than losing
weight fast. To educate your- ·
self about healthy weight
loss, consult your physician. ·

On January 29111 d this year my husbmd
J.R. &amp;tep &amp;ufferm a severe stroke. In lhe
beginning we were gh-en very tilde bope
thut he would lalk, dress himself, au or
take steps again. But God t.d Olher pifor him. lluoul!fl prayer and pro(essiooal
help from the therapy IC3n at Arbon d
Gallipolis he has made amazing PI08Jess.
The therapy staff is considerale, caring
and respedful 10 everyone In dlcir care. If
you arc looking I'or a beallhc8re OCIJier for
a lo\..:d ~ in need al full
ret.b.
such as, s~ oc:c:upuional' or ph)'Sical
therapy. I recxilnmend you check out
Arbors of Gallipolis. I'm alttainly ,.,_. 1
did.
-

Most Insurances Accepted Including:
Workman's Comp
Medicare - Medicaid - Caresource

,,ydc

Dr. Kelsey M. Henry, D.C
Heather Edwards, LMT
Massage Therapist

.

Bv STEPHEN Pofif'ER
D.O, PH.D., M.P.H.

remind
parents
though
are med•roper use
conseura~~e parother
medito dis~;ard
that
~ut. red to

Holzer Clinic can help/··
ISe11lingan example for others to follcm, Holzer Clinic's continuing commitment is...

"To pnwlde high quality, accasslbfe, patient centered care."
As we strive to meet this challenge, Holzer Clinic offers a number of resources
assist those who are either uninsured or undetinsu.red. Our goal is to ensure .
those who need care receive care.
Talk to your Holzer Clinic account representative tooay or visit our "BM&lt;Mil'GM
under the •'Senltces" tab on our
1'~~~~~=~::~=~.,:section
at .
to learn about health care coverage tools
resoi.WCeS, free saeenings, insurance assistance programs, department of
lt.....lth

lbank You,
Kay Estep

initi&amp;tives and more.

Medidll Excellence

FN0 .\1 Ol N F \ .\111 } /D } Ol N \
CHIROPRACYC WORKS
CALL OR STOP BYT01l4Y TO SEE HOW WE CAN HELP YOU!

Local Carin&amp;--

'Ar6ors at" CJa{CivoCis
Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitaticrn Center

740-446-541·
1
www.holzerclinic.com·

170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 • 740-44(;..7112

. . ..

www .gall~p.&gt;~isskillednlJ!Sing.com

. ..

.

.... " ..

·

*Locally J\·N·n- ea
&amp; Operated
*On Site Billi
*Accepting New uai1'1Aft1'a

• •• '

.

'

•

f

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•• •• 4 l

• l 1 I

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HEALTHCARE 2009

Page 14 •

Thursday, May 28, 2009

.· HEAUTHCARE
-2009
.

Thur'Sday, May 28~ 2009

~

.,.

,.

~.

..

.

.

.

,.

.

.

• Page 15

.•

Trinuning down in time for beach season
.

.

.

-

-

.

R

r many people, sum- loss process, but those aren't thingsyouenjoy,beitjogging calJries each. day, giving
mer is all about the en~ugh to ensure Ion~ te~ in. the ·park, g?i~g for hikes · your m~tabolism a boost
beacb. Whether you we1ght loss. Exerctse ts · wtth a local hiking club, or even when your body is at
live near an ocean or do your essential to losing weight and · eruplling in fitness classes a:t a rest. While this doesn't mean
weekend beach getaways at a keeping that. w~ight off. nearby gym. The more you men and women should . hit
nearby laie, you probably Rese~ch ha~ mdtca~ed .that ~ilj~y your rou~ne; the easier the weights like professional
have one daing on your mind 30 .mmutes of exerctse .five tt will be to mamtain.
· football players, it does highwhen you bit the sand: soak- d~ys per weelc could .be s~ffi- ·. • ~onsider ~~ight training. · light the irnpo!'fance of a reging up some sun, and looking ctent for succe~sful. w~t¥ht · Wetght trammg . doesn't imen ~at com~jnes both diet
good while you do it. .
loss: Of_ course, each mdtv!ij- mea~ you. need to end ,up and w~tght traming.
A big part of looking good ual ·~ d1ffere~t~ and 30. mm- looking h~e · the . famed
• Shtft your focus. LOsing
at the beach is shedding utes ts the mt~umum tec&lt;?m- weightlifter~ . ·in ·. V,en?ce ·weight isn't easy. Where
those few extra and stubborn mended · datly . exerctse. Be~ch, Calif. But ltfttn~ .many people stumble is their
pounds you might have Increased exerctse can be ~eights c~n be very benen· quest ~o be thin, as opposed
gained d.-ing the winter more h~lpful, but those ~ew ~tal, parti~ularly . for those ,to _th~1rquest to be healthy.
months. Nearly everyone has to exerctse should take thmgs mterested m bummg fat. In Shtfttng focus from being
gone through the trials and slowly at first , and the~ grad- he~ book Strong Women Stay ,.thin, which is arbitrary, to
tribulations of attempting to ~ally add m?re to therr rou- Sil'!' .(Qantam),
Tufts. being healthy, which can be
lose weight, but there is a tme as thetr b?dY · g~ws U~t~erstty
researcher !Duch more tangible if you
way to successful weight loss acc~stome~ to datly exerctse. Mmam Nelson fpund , t~at:· mvolve your doctor, can be a
that will not only leave you . It s .also, Important to note · women who combmed a diet . boon to your weight loss
looking g?&lt;&gt;&lt;~ on the be~ch, tha~ any. Successful. ex~~ise and weight ,training regimen· ~oats.
Being
h~althy
but lookmg, and feehng, regime!' Js one th~t mdiv1d~- lost 44 percent more fat thi!n mvolves making · a lifestyle
good throughout the year as als enJoy. Exercise . dQeSil t wom~n who .solely follow~ change, ~herein. you adj_ust
well.
.
. .
·~ h~ve to mean ~nmng . five the diet po~on of the regt- your eatmg habtts · to altgn
~ _Exerc1se 1s. Important. mtles· ~~ mom~ng or v1got- men.
..
• . them more with. lowering
Dletmg .and takmg supple- ously lifting_ wetghts .. Tailor That's. ~cause muscle cholesterol ~nd blood.- p~sments can help the wetght your exerctse - routme to bums a s1gmficant number of sure than s1mply sktppmg

BEND .AilEA
CHIROPRACTIC
·cENTER

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meats to shed a p(,und here
and there.
. ·
• ·Educate yourself. Goals
are great and can be especially beneficial when attempting
to lose weight. But long term
goals are often better tailored
to successful and lasting
weight loss than short term
goals:· For example, telling
yourself you want to drop 10
pounds ·in two weeks might
be attainable, bUt it's not neeessarily beneficial. That's
because such rapid weight
Joss · is most likely coming
from the loss of water and
muscle, and not fat.
Losing muscle is not good,
as you'll need musele to
maintain an elevated metabolism. Long tenn goals, such
as losing 10 pounds in 4 to 6
weeks, could be a much
healthier target than losing
weight fast. To educate your- ·
self about healthy weight
loss, consult your physician. ·

On January 29111 d this year my husbmd
J.R. &amp;tep &amp;ufferm a severe stroke. In lhe
beginning we were gh-en very tilde bope
thut he would lalk, dress himself, au or
take steps again. But God t.d Olher pifor him. lluoul!fl prayer and pro(essiooal
help from the therapy IC3n at Arbon d
Gallipolis he has made amazing PI08Jess.
The therapy staff is considerale, caring
and respedful 10 everyone In dlcir care. If
you arc looking I'or a beallhc8re OCIJier for
a lo\..:d ~ in need al full
ret.b.
such as, s~ oc:c:upuional' or ph)'Sical
therapy. I recxilnmend you check out
Arbors of Gallipolis. I'm alttainly ,.,_. 1
did.
-

Most Insurances Accepted Including:
Workman's Comp
Medicare - Medicaid - Caresource

,,ydc

Dr. Kelsey M. Henry, D.C
Heather Edwards, LMT
Massage Therapist

.

Bv STEPHEN Pofif'ER
D.O, PH.D., M.P.H.

remind
parents
though
are med•roper use
conseura~~e parother
medito dis~;ard
that
~ut. red to

Holzer Clinic can help/··
ISe11lingan example for others to follcm, Holzer Clinic's continuing commitment is...

"To pnwlde high quality, accasslbfe, patient centered care."
As we strive to meet this challenge, Holzer Clinic offers a number of resources
assist those who are either uninsured or undetinsu.red. Our goal is to ensure .
those who need care receive care.
Talk to your Holzer Clinic account representative tooay or visit our "BM&lt;Mil'GM
under the •'Senltces" tab on our
1'~~~~~=~::~=~.,:section
at .
to learn about health care coverage tools
resoi.WCeS, free saeenings, insurance assistance programs, department of
lt.....lth

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FN0 .\1 Ol N F \ .\111 } /D } Ol N \
CHIROPRACYC WORKS
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170 Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 • 740-44(;..7112

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*Locally J\·N·n- ea
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*On Site Billi
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Summer Festival Guide

First communion, A7

Inside Today's Sentinel

•

e
l'rinledori H)U%

~.··

Retycled Newsprint ~j,

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SPORTS
·• Southern falls to Green
Wave. See Page Bl

Bv BRIAN J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSEI'ITINEL.COM

POMEROY - ~ept. 10
is now the target "live
date'' for Meigs County's
9ll service. ·
Emergency
Medical
Services Director Doug
Lavender · told
Meigs
County
Commi~sioners
Thursday the call center will

be .ready . to operate once
Lavender said he has enlistVenzon completes the, nee- ed the help of State Senator
essary work of. installing the · Jifllllly Stewart, R,Aihany, in.
telephone circuitry required prompting the telephone
· to oper:dte the computer and company to complete the
work, and said it .is expected
dispatchingequipment.
"We have been waiting to ill: . coml)l!lted later this
for the. last six months for summer. The law· requires a
!his part Qf the .work to .~ . 30-day
waiting
period
. cmnpJeteiJ .so we can begm beiween the inStallation ofthe
operating . the service," necessary9I.l equipment and
Lavender ~aid yesterday.
the system'~ opemtton.

That wattmg period is clear whether "Phase '2''
designed to allow for pub- 911 service will be av.ail· lie education about the ser- able when the service .
vice. Lavender said the begi,ns
operating,
of
process education could whether that will be made
begin during the Meigs available at a . later time.
County Fair, and said pro- . That phase allows 911 dis. grams desi~ned to train patchers to locate. callers
youngsters lD the use of 'using global positioning ·
91I will be pres~nted when
h
·
d
the new school year begins . system tee no 1ogy, .an
. Lavender said it is not
Please see 911, AS

OBnuARIES
Page A3
• Jacqueline Menchini
• Lori Ann Miller

HliALTHC.AR-E ·200.9

Page 16 •

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· Thursday, May·%8, 2009

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.• PHS alumni
· enjoy reunion, · · ·
award scholarships.

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Total Hip, Knee &amp; Shoulder Replacements,
Sports Medicine~ Back lnjyries~ ·
Arthroscopic Surgeries (Knee, shoulder, · An~~ &amp; Wrist)
&amp; ·Fracture Fixations
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• Experiencedi:lhysicians . · .
• Complete Radiology.Services
• Outpatient Rehabilitation Services
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WEATHER ·.

Meigs Board reviews vocational nwo.rinc

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Discusses
changes needed

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INDEX ·

+Inpatient Rehabilitation Services- Skilled Nursing
+ Complete line o(Home Medical Equipment
· ·+ Integrated, Comprehensive Care.

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To schedule an appoiotment,

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Bv BETH SERCENT

BSER()ENTfiMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

-~ ..

· (Physical, Occupational, Speech &amp; Massage Therapies) . ·

•

Co111lnunity Sunday to
honor p~bHc servants ·

The church has invited
COUnty
employees and State
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH .
.
highway
patrol officers as
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Details on Page A8
SYRACUSE - .Those · well as firefighters. police
who serve the public whether officers, village · official'
POMEROY
The
on a · village council, iiS a from Syracuse and Racine ..
enrollment decline in vocamedic, a police oflicerQr any
As for Staills, he is a well
. tiona! training programs and
type
of
public
servant
can
known
mandolin player who
· what might be done to elitn·
find
their
work
both
reward-·
was
born
and raised in West
inate · some subjects and
2 SECI10NS - 1.6 PAGFS
ingand thankless at times but Virginia. He has appeared
offer new ones as away of
this Sunday the "thankless" on NBC's Today Show,
annie's Mailbox
A2 attracting more students is
part will be amended.
. · CNN; People Magazine as
A2 under discussion by the
Community Sunday held well · as Country Music
Calendars
· Meigs Local Board of
at the Syracuse Nazarene Magazine did a full page
Classifieds
B5-6 Education.
.
Church will recognize article on him and he hru;
Superintendent William
those local public servants appeared on the CBS
Comics
87 Buckley
reported to the ·
with a free meal and certifi, Evening News with Dan
Editorials
A4 Board at its Wednesd&amp;y
caies
of .appreciation. The Rather. Staats has also perCharlene HOelllch/pholo
A~-?. night meeting that for the
event
is from 10;30 a.m. • fcim1ed on the Grand . Ole
Faith
n;:J
2008-09 school · year there Adriahna Patterson, Meigs Intermediate School fifth gtader, 1:30 p.m. outside on · the .· Opry stage five times. ·
.BS was a 43 student drop in was presented.a pin lor performance in the Meigs County church grounds. In addi- · Staats also won . the
NASCAR
". .., . enrollment and noted areas spelling b.e e by Meigs Local Board of Education Member tion, well known· gospel Vandalia
Gathering's
Obituaries
~ . where there appears to be a. Barbara Musser at Wednesday's meeting. Also recognized group the Johnny Staats Mandolin Championships in
but not present was Macey Hayman. seventh grader. The
Sports
B Section continuing decline.
Trio will perform,
1996-97 and 1999. In 1999
two
gi~s were the .top spellers iri the Middle School.
Well over 100 students
"We are just trying to cone he also won the ·guitar title
Weather
AS from the three school disneet
our people with commu- 311d placed thin;l in the. fiddle
spend in vocational classes,
vocational . hBuckl&lt;;Y bno~edg tthat
©a009 Ohio,Valley Publishing Co. tr·,·cts take
de ta plans are to run a bus for the nity leaders and show appre- competition , Staats has
classes at Meigs High with c ange m usm s u n s
ciation to those people for recorded his frrst CD "Wtres
that figure incloding the' from the Qther two districts morning session, then pick the job they do:' Pastor Mike · and Wood" on Giant Records
20 to 25 studen.ts who . could result .in better enroll- those students up at noon Adkins said. "We feel a lot of in ·Nashville, Tenn. which
come from Eastern and m~ni. Since three periods and leave more students for · those people a lot of times do includes appearances by Sara
4 Southern .
arej the most a student can · Pl•ase .see Meigs, AS
,a pretty thankless job." ·
E.vans and Kath~ Mattea .

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•• Meigs County Court
:news. See ·Page A3
:.• Tis the season ... for
. weddings. See Page A6
: • A Hunger For More.
See Page A6
• Camp Francis .
Asbury fundraiser is
May.31. See Page A7
·· • Crow Family .
: scholarships awarded .
. :See Page AS
. • Firemen's Festival
~atures Sk ~un/walk. ·
See Page AS

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