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                  <text>log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

Dr. Brothers
.... Page 2

Sunny
today. High of 82.
Low of 55 .. Page 2

Ohio: The heart of
March Madness
.... Page 5

OBITUARIES

Chester A. Boster, 94
Virginia ‘Jenny’ Mae Craft, 38
Bernard J. Diddle, 89
John Morris Glass, Jr., 74
Martha L. Tubesing, 89
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 46

Automatic recount required in commissioners race
Percentage spread insufficient to declare winner

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY
—
The
Meigs County Board of
Elections’ official count of
ballots from the March 6
Primary Election Tuesday
morning did not result in
a declared winner for the
Jan. 2, 2013 term seat on

the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners.
The official count, including 66 provisional ballots
and two absentee ballots received by the deadline but
not counted before, resulted in changes in the unofficial figures released earlier.
However, the difference in
numbers was less than the

one-half of one percent of
the total number of votes
cast in that race as required
by election laws before a
winner can be declared.
Therefore, the law requires that an automatic recount take place. That will
occur at 8:30 a.m. on March
29.
The official count shows

incumbent Tom Anderson
trailing Randy Smith by
three votes. In the official
count the vote for Anderson was 1696, while Smith’s
count was 1699, the difference not being enough to
declare a winner without
an automatic recount as the
law requires.
In all the other races, the

winners announced in the
unofficial count were certified following Tuesday’s official count.
Of the total 16,429 registered voters, only 5,815 cast
their ballots in the March 6
primary election. Of the total number of voters casting
ballots 1,290 were democrats, 4,463 were republi-

cans, one was of the green
party, one was libertarian,
and 60 were nonpartisan.
The total of voter turnout
for the March 6 primary
election was 35.39 percent,
according to figures provided by the Board of Elections.

Seniors can benefit
from housing program

AAA8 offers helps with accessibility and repairs
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

submitted photos

The scouts gather for a 100th anniversary celebration photo.

100th anniversary of scouting celebrated
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

SYRACUSE —It was 100 years
ago on March 12, 1912, that Juliette “Daisy” Gordon Low assembled 18 girls from Savannah,
Ga.and formed the first girl scout
troop.
Convinced that “all girls should
be given the opportunity to develop physically, mentally and spiritually,” the founder of girl scouting had as her goal to bring girls
out of isolated home environments
and into community service and
the open air. She envisioned girl
scout hiking, playing basketball,
going on camping trips, learning
how to live in the outdoors, studying first aid as a survivor skill and
contributing to the community.
Today in Meigs County, well
over 100 girls enjoy the scouting
program which Julietta Low envisioned 100 years ago.
On Sunday, March 11, they all
gathered at the Carleton School in
Syracuse for a celebration of the
anniversary which included project work and fun activities as well
as carrying out a community project — contributing small stuffed
toys to the American Red Cross to
use in their disaster work.
Since the founding of the girl
scout program in the USA 100
years ago, the membership has
grown to over 3.2 million girls and
submitted photos
submitted photos
adults, and has an alumni of more Daisy Girl Scout Claire Howard works on a Containers for cookies were constructthan 50 million women.
“swap” project.
ed by some of the girl scouts.

‘Not guilty’ plea entered in Ball murder case
Bond and trial date set in case against Hawkins

By Amber Gillenwater

mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

GALLIPOLIS
—
A
Bidwell man accused of
murdering a Morgan Township woman late last month,
has pleaded not guilty to
all counts of his four count
indictment in the Gallia
County Court of Common
Pleas.
Lee A. Hawkins, 47, 393
Skidmore Road, Bidwell,
pleaded not guilty to one
count of aggravated murder,
one count of murder, one
count of tampering with
evidence, and one count of
the abuse of a corpse during
a hearing on Monday.
Hawkins was arrested
by deputies with the Gallia County Sheriff’s Office
and agents with the Ohio

Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation
on March 13 following an
investigation into the death
of Betsy Ball, 67.
Ball was last seen at approximately 7 p.m. on February 29 and was reported
missing during the early
morning hours of March 1.
Following this, deputies,
along with other emergency
services workers responded to the area near Ball’s
home on Wilder Road in
Morgan Township to begin
the search for the missing
woman.
However, after receiving
a phone tip, Ball’s remains
were found later that day
approximately five miles
from her residence near the
village of Vinton.
According to informa-

tion previously reported by
Gallia County Sheriff Joe
Browning, preliminary autopsy results prepared by
Gallia County Coroner Dr.
Daniel Whiteley indicate
that Ball expired as a result
of strangulation.
Hawkins was reportedly
a farm worker who had
been employed by the Balls
at their family farm.
The indictment in this
case alleges that Hawkins
did, on February 29, “purposely and with prior calculation and design, cause
the death of Betsy Ball,” a
special category felony; purposely cause the death of
Ball, a special category felony; tampered with evidence
in an attempt to impair its
value in a proceeding investigation, a third degree

felony; and “without legal
authorization, treated a human corpse in a way that
would outrage reasonable
community sensibilities,” a
felony of the fifth degree.
During Monday’s hearing, Hawkins’ bond was
set at $1 million, 10 percent and defense attorney
Barbara A. Wallen was appointed as counsel for the
defendant.
A negotiated plea agreement in this case may be
filed with the clerk of courts
by May 4. A jury trial has
been scheduled for 9 a.m.
on May 15.
The defendant is currently being held in the Gallia
County Jail.

POMEROY — For seniors trying to “age in
place,” one program currently being offered through
the Area Agency on Aging 8
can make a difference.
Many Meigs Countians
reside in large older twostory homes which in cases
may be a hindrance or may
make it impractical for them
to remain there although
that’s what they want to do
and what many continue to
do because for them “there
is no place like home.”
This is where the AAA8
Housing may be able to help,
according to information
from Gwynn Stewart, communications director for
Buckeye Hills — HVRDD
and the Area Agency on Aging.
“Grants are available to
fund repairs for homeowners who are 60 years of age
or older with 35 percent area
median income level or less
and own their home or have
a life estate in the property,”
said Joe Gage, AAA8 Housing Coordinator. “For residents who qualify monies
may be used to assist with
the costs associated with
accessibility modifications
such as widening doorways,
wheelchair ramps, handicap
modifications of a bathroom
or kitchen and other home
repairs.”

Gage is also an AgingIn-Place Specialist through
the National Home Builders
Association (NAHB) developed to address the growing number of consumers
that will soon require housing modifications to “age in
place.” These professionals
are remodelers, general contractors, designers, architects and even health care
consultants.
Gage
is
responsible
for grant administration
across the eight-county region which serves Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington Counties. He
can help eligible residents
answer questions such as
“how can I make my kitchen
more functional; how do
I modify my bathroom or
home entrance and what
type of contractor should I
use?”
AAA8 will assess the
home for eligible repairs
and develop specifications
for repair and bid the project to qualified providers
to complete the modifications. Households served
under this activity must be
at or below 35 percent of
area media income and own
their home or have a life estate in the property.
For more information,
call 1-800-331-2644 or visit
www.areaagency8.org.

URG offers new
master’s program
Staff report

mdtnews@mydailytribune.com

RIO GRANDE — The
University of Rio Grande/
Rio Grande Community
College (URG/RGCC) has
expanded its master’s degree programs once again
in order to meet the needs
of area residents.
Rio Grande already offers
master’s degree programs
in education and business,
and these programs have
proven to be very popular.
The new program is actually a redesign of a program
previously offered on campus.
In July, Rio Grande will
begin offering the Master
of Education with a Concentration in Integrated
Arts. “Our new administration decided to revitalize
this master’s degree program,” said Greg Miller,
Ph.D. More than 800 students graduated from this
program when it was previously offered at Rio Grande
for more than 15 years.
“The M.Ed. In Integrated
Arts is a program designed
to encourage adults to look
for the strengths in all of
our children — understanding the diversity of learners — value and build on
those strengths for a better
tomorrow. I am honored to
be involved with a program

that offers such promise,”
said Zak Sharif, Dean of the
College of Professional and
Applied Studies.
This program is a great
fit for teachers but is not
limited to teachers. The
program is open to anyone
with a Bachelor’s degree
who is genuinely interested
in exploring project based
learning. It has been valuable for educators in domains such as math, health,
science and many other areas who want to engage students and make them active
learners who meet learning
objectives. The program
has graduated individuals
from museums, culture centers, youth oriented organizations, community college faculty members, and
artists from all disciplines.
The program has attracted
students from New York
to California. Although
this program does not
lead to a teaching license,
it has been mentioned in
national and international
publications as a model for
professional development.
“I applaud the Master of
Education program at Rio
Grande. This program is
grounded in how we learn,
experiential learning, and
it taps into the creativity
within each of us. I envy
See URG ‌| 3

�Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Forecast Meigs County Community Calendar
Wednesday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near 82.
Light and variable wind.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around
55. Light east wind.
Thursday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 85. Calm
wind becoming west around
6 mph.
Thursday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
57. Calm wind.
Friday: A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
before 1 p.m., then showers
likely and possibly a thunderstorm between 1pm and
5 p.m., then showers and
thunderstorms likely after
5 p.m. Partly sunny, with
a high near 77. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts between a tenth and quarter
of an inch, except higher
amounts possible in thunderstorms.
Friday Night: Showers
and thunderstorms likely
before 11 p.m., then a

chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
54. Chance of precipitation
is 70 percent.
Saturday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a high
near 69. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Saturday
Night:
A
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 48.
Chance of precipitation is
50 percent.
Sunday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 66. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
45.
Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 69.
Monday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 45.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a
high near 67.

Local stocks

AEP (NYSE) — 38.44
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 19.74
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 61.93
Big Lots (NYSE) — 45.52
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 37.88
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 83.43
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 9.34
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.69
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 5.78
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 35.48
Collins (NYSE) — 57.66
DuPont (NYSE) — 52.71
US Bank (NYSE) — 31.70
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 20.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 49.42
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 45.38
Kroger (NYSE) — 24.10
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 47.25
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 66.95
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.21
BBT (NYSE) — 31.37
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 17.29
Pepsico (NYSE) — 65.28
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.46
Rockwell (NYSE) — 81.42
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 12.40
Royal Dutch Shell — 71.09
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 80.00
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 60.60
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.05
WesBanco (NYSE) — 20.43
Worthington (NYSE) — 18.39
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes
of transactions for March 20, 2012, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Wednesday, March 21
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner will
be held from 5-6:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of
Nazarene. It will be an Easter Dinner.
Thursday, March 22
POMEROY
—
The
Meigs County American
Cancer Society Volunteer
Leadership Council/Survivorship Taskforce meeting
will take place at noon at
the Wild House Cafe. New

members are welcome. For
more information contact
Courtney Midkiff at (740)
92-6626 ext. 24.
POMEROY — Alpha Iota
Masters Sorority will meet
at 11:30 a.m. at the McClures in Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post meeting, 6:30
p.m. at the hall.
SYRACUSE — The Ladies of the Meigs County
Republican Party will meet
at 6:30 p.m., at Carleton
School. Refreshments will

be served. All women are
welcome.
Saturday, March 24
POMEROY — Prayer
Task Force Strength Encounter, 6:30-8:30 p.m. at
the Mulberry Community
Center. Music provided
by the Soul Harvest Band
— Sacrifice of Praise,
food provided by Cops for
Christ and the Christian
Motorcyclist Association
— Delivered Chapter. Testimony and Infomercials for
resources will be available

to help in the fight against
drug addiction.
Monday, March 26
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will hold its regular
board meeting at 7 p.m. in
the high school media center.
POMEROY — The Veterans Service Commission
will meet at 9 a.m. Monday
at the office, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.

Meigs County Local Briefs

Prayer Task Force Strength
Encounter
POMEROY — Prayer Task Force
Strength Encounter, 6:30-8:30 p.m., on
Saturday, March 24, at the Mulberry
Community Center. Music provided by
the Soul Harvest Band — Sacrifice of
Praise, food provided by Cops for Christ
and the Christian Motorcyclist Association — Delivered Chapter. Testimony
and Infomercials for resources will be
available to help in the fight against drug
addiction.
Mulberry Avenue hill closed
POMEROY — Columbia Gas Co.
workers will be working for the remainder of the week on the gas line relocation
on the Mulberry Avenue hill near the
pond. Earlier it was announced the work
would be completed Wednesday. While
the hill remains open for part of today,
Thursday it will be closed all day as the
workers cut away a section of the road
in order to lay new gas lines. New lines
will also be laid along the upper bank of
the pond.
Syracuse church program
SYRACUSE — At 11 a.m. Sunday
at the Syracuse Community Church on
Second Street, Gary and Pam Gillispie
of South Charleston, W.Va. will be the
special singers.The pastor invites the
public
Free community dinner
MIDDLEPORT — A free community
dinner will be served at 5 p.m. Friday at
the Middleport Church of Christ, Family Life Center, corner of 5th and Main
Streets.
MHS musical postponed
POMEROY — The Meigs High
School musical, “The Wedding Singer,”
announced for this weekend has been
postponed due to the hospitalization of
a lead character. It has been rescheduled
for April 20 and 21.
Skin tests scheduled
POMEROY — Meigs County Tuberculosis Clinic personnel will be at the
Scipio Fire Department from 5 to 6 p.m.

Monday to do skin tests. They will return on Wednesday, March 21, to check
the skin test results.
Southern Alumni Banquet
RACINE — The annual reunion of the
Racine/Southern Alumni banquet will
be held on Saturday, May 26 at 6:30 p.m.
at the Southern High School. Tickets
are $15 and available now at Southern
High School and Racine Home National
Bank.They will be $25 at the door. Flags
are $30. The website is www.tornadoalumni.net.
Meigs SWCD Board of Supervisors
POMEROY — The Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will meet in regular session
at 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, March 22, at
the district office at 33101 Hiland Road.
Tree and bush
trimming clinic
MARIETTA — On March 31 at
Lanes Farm and Market west of Marietta, a tree and bush trimming clinic will
be held by educators of the OSU Extension Service. The class will be held rain
or shine from 1 to 4 p.m. Topics covered
will be pruning apple and peach trees
integrating pest management of fruit
crops, and pruning bramble and blueberries. Registration is required at http://
go.osu.edu/H2Q or call the office, 740376-7431.
Farmer’s Market
POMEROY — Anyone interested in
taking part in the Farmer’s Market on
the Pomeroy Parking Lot this Summer is
asked to contact Derek Brickles at (740)
590-4891.
Wanted: old
computers
POMEROY — The Invincible Industries Teen Center at the Mulberry Community Center is in need of old computers, both PCs and Macs, for repair or use
of parts. Mike Tipptin, a computer specialist, has volunteered to see what he
can do to get some working computers
for the teen center. He has volunteered
to pick up old computers. Call 740-444-

5599 and leave a message so that he can
call back. Beth Clark is the lead volunteer at the youth center and says she has
long recognized the need for computers
for the kids to use for study and/or entertainment.
Cemetery cleanup
RACINE — The Racine Village spring
cleanup of the Greenwood Cemetery will
be the week of March 25, 2012. Anyone
wishing to save any decorations are being asked to remove before March 25.
RUTLAND TWP. — The Rutland
Townshp Trustees request that grave
decorations be removed from the Miles,
Robinson, Wright and Rutland Cemeteries until April 1 for spring cleanup which
is about to begin.
TUPPERS PLAINS — Cemetery
cleanup will begin on April 2 in Olive
Township. Trustees request removal of
items from grave sites.
Preschool
registration
MASON COUNTY — Mason County
Schools Preschool Registration will be
taking place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on the
following days, March 23 at the Early
Education Station in Point Pleasant
and Leon Elementary, April 20 at New
Haven Elementary, and April 26 at the
Nazarene Church on Mt. Vernon. April
26 will also be a make up day. For information call 304-675-4956.
Community Lenten services
MEIGS COUNTY — Meigs County
Ministerial Association is hosting community Lenten services each Thursday
during Lent. An offering is received to
help those in need in Meigs County. Refreshments will be served following the
services. All Thursday evening services
will be held at 7 p.m.
March 22 — New Beginnings United Methodist Church, Pastor Warren
Lukens speaking.
March 29 — Grace Episcopal Church,
Pastor Brenda Barnhart speaking.
Good Friday (April 6th) at Noon the
Ministerial service will be The Stations
of the Cross at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church.

Holzer Clinic receives Silver Telly Award O’Bleness welcomes new HeartWorks director
Prestigious award earned for ‘Dreams’ campaign

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer
Clinic has recently received
notification that the commercial for Holzer Center for
Cancer Care, “Dreams”, has
received the National 2012
Silver Telly Award in the Regional TV and Multi-Market
Campaign (Business to Consumer Category).
The Silver Telly Award
is one of the most soughtafter awards by marketing
industry leaders, from large
international firms to local businesses, production
companies and ad agencies.
Less than 100 companies
nationwide are selected as
Silver winners. Holzer Clinic
also received a Bronze Telly
Award in the Health and Wellness category for the same
campaign. Based on the ratio

of winners over the past several years, approximately 7
to 10 percent of entrants are
chosen as Silver Telly Award
winners. Historically, Bronze
Telly Award Winners typically have represented about
18 to 25 percent of entrants.
“We are truly honored to
have been chosen for this
prestigious award. Much
thought, planning, preparation and time goes into a
high-quality campaign such
as Dreams,” said Marjean
Kennedy, Holzer Clinic Director of Marketing and Business Development.
Holzer Clinic received a
Silver Telly in 2011 for the
“Firsts” campaign, making
this the second year in a row
the entity has received this
highest honor. The 2011

campaign was placed in the
Winner’s Circle with entities
such as Geico, McDonalds
and AT&amp;T.
Founded in 1979, the Telly
Awards is the premier award
honoring outstanding local,
regional and cable TV commercials and programs, as
well as the finest video and
film productions, and web
commercials, videos and
films. The Telly Awards annually showcases the best
work of the most respected
advertising agencies, production companies, television
stations, cable operators,
and corporate video departments in the world. The Telly
Awards is a widely known
and highly respected national
and international competition and receives over 11,000
entries annually from all
50 states and many foreign
countries.

Need to
advertise?
Call

The Daily
Sentinel

740.992.2155

ATHENS — The O’Bleness Health System welcomes Megan Beatty, MS, CES, as
the new director of the HeartWorks Cardiac
and Pulmonary Rehabilitation program.
HeartWorks is located in the Cornwell
Center at O’Bleness, and works in conjunction with WellWorks at Ohio University in
Athens.
Beatty completed her Bachelor of Science in sport sciences and her Master of
Science in clinical exercise physiology at
Ohio University. She worked as an exercise
physiologist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus for six years before coming to O’Bleness. Beatty received her basic
life support (BLS), automated external
defibrillator (AED), and cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) certification through
the American Heart Association. She is
an American College of Sports Medicine
(ACSM) Certified Clinical Exercise Specialist, and is trained in advanced cardiac
life support (ACLS) and pediatric advanced
life support (PALS).
For more information about the Heart-

Works or WellWorks programs, or to schedule an appointment, call (740) 593-2278 or
(740) 592-9457.

Megan Beatty, MS, CES

Attacks in 8 Iraq cities kill 46 ahead of summit
BAGHDAD (AP) — A
torrent of bombings and
shootings ripped across
eight Iraqi cities on Tuesday,
targeting police and Shiite pilgrims and killing 46
people. The deadly wave undermined the government’s
hopes for stability ahead of
next week’s meeting of the
Arab world’s top leaders.
The Iraqi wing of alQaida said it was behind at
least one of the attacks near
Baghdad’s heavily guarded
Green Zone. A statement
on a militant website said
the group targeted the office
that will oversee security for
the upcoming Arab League
summit the first time the
meeting is set to be held in
Baghdad for more than a
generation.
“Death is approaching
you, when you least expect
it,” said the Islamic state of
Iraq, a local front group for
al-Qaida.
Authorities have feared
al-Qaida or its Sunni sympathizers would try to thwart

this year’s Arab League summit. Plans for Baghdad to
host the meeting last year
were postponed, in part
because of concerns about
Iraq’s security.
In all, eight cities were hit
Tuesday in what appeared
to be coordinated attacks
against police and government officials. More than
200 people were wounded
in a gloomy reminder of the
violence that has sown chaos
across Iraq since the U.S. invasion exactly nine years
ago.
One of the deadliest
strikes came in the Shiite
holy city of Karbala, where
officials said two car bombs
exploded in a crowded shopping and restaurant area.
Thirteen people were killed
and another 50 were wounded in that assault, said local
provincial council member
Hussein Shadhan al-Aboudi.
Five Iranian pilgrims were
among the dead. Located 50
miles (80 kilometers) south
of Baghdad, Karbala is a

destination for thousands of
Shiite pilgrims from around
the world who visit the golden shrines of two revered
imams each day.
“The intention of these
attacks is to destabilize the
security situation in Karbala
and other Iraqi cities and
to shake the people’s confidence on the government,”
al-Aboudi said. “It seems
that the terrorists want to
abort the upcoming Arab
Summit in Baghdad. The
message is directed to the
Arab leaders that Iraq is not
safe enough to be visited.”
The wave of violence began after dawn Tuesday.
Militants blew up the
house of a police official in
the western city of Fallujah,
planted bombs near the fortified Green Zone and shot
up a security checkpoint in
Baghdad, set off an explosion at a police station in
the northern city of Kirkuk
and attacked restaurants and
shopping areas in two southern towns.

�Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Obituaries

Death Notices

Bernard J. Diddle

Bernard J. Diddle, 89, of Marietta and formerly of Racine,
passed away at 9:18 p.m. on Monday, March 19, 2012, in
the Marietta Memorial Hospital. Born February 16, 1923,
in Racine, he was the son of the late Oval and Sarah Roush
Diddle. He was retired from the U.S. Corps of Engineers
having served as lockmaster at the Gallipolis Locks &amp; Dam.
He was a member of the Antiquity Baptist Church, a 57
year member of the Pomeroy/Racine Lodge #164 of Free
and Accepted Masons of Ohio, a life-time member of the
Racine Post #602 of the American Legion, Meigs County
Gun Club and the Meigs County Fish and Game Club. He
was a U.S. Army veteran of WWII.
Surviving is his wife, Opal Miller Diddle, whom he married on July 3, 1947, in Cattlettsburg, Kentucky; three sons,
George (Cathy) Diddle, of Columbus, Ohio, Tom (Sharon)
Diddle, of Portersville, Pennsylvania, and Bon (Elaine) Diddle, of Belpre, Ohio; six grandchildren, Steven Diddle, Bob
Don Diddle, Holly Panazzi, Mandy Diddle, Hayley Diddle
and Christine Diddle; eleven great-grandchildren; brothers,
Tom (Pam) Diddle, of Racine, and Don (Carol) Diddle, of
Pomeroy; sisters, Libby Fisher, Marilyn Powell and Carolyn
Adams, all of Racine; sisters-in-law, Vicki Diddle, of Addison, and Betty Diddle, of Auxier, Kentucky.
In addition to his parents he was preceded in death by
brothers, Waid Diddle and Ralph Diddle; sister, Adria Dials; and brother-in-law, Arthur Dials.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m., Friday, March 23, 2012,
in the Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine. Officiating will be
Rev. Don Walker. Interment will be in the Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call one hour prior to the service at the funeral home. Military graveside services will be conducted
by Racine American Legion Post #602, Feeney Bennett
Post #128 of the American Legion and Tuppers Plains Post
#9053, Veterans of Foreign Wars. A Masonic service will
be conducted at 12:30 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting
www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Job seekers getting asked
for Facebook passwords
SEATTLE (AP) — When
Justin Bassett interviewed
for a new job, he expected
the usual questions about experience and references. So
he was astonished when the
interviewer asked for something else: his Facebook
username and password.
Bassett, a New York City
statistician, had just finished
answering a few character
questions when the interviewer turned to her computer to search for his Facebook page. But she couldn’t
see his private profile. She
turned back and asked him
to hand over his login information.
Bassett refused and withdrew his application, saying he didn’t want to work
for a company that would
seek such personal information. But as the job market
steadily improves, other
job candidates are confronting the same question from
prospective employers, and
some of them cannot afford
to say no.
In their efforts to vet applicants, some companies and
government agencies are going beyond merely glancing
at a person’s social networking profiles and instead asking to log in as the user to
have a look around.
“It’s akin to requiring
someone’s house keys,” said
Orin Kerr, a George Washington University law professor and former federal
prosecutor who calls it “an
egregious privacy violation.”
Questions have been
raised about the legality of
the practice, which is also
the focus of proposed legislation in Illinois and Maryland that would forbid public
agencies from asking for access to social networks.
Since the rise of social networking, it has become common for managers to review
publically available Facebook
profiles, Twitter accounts
and other sites to learn more
about job candidates. But
many users, especially on
Facebook, have their profiles

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

set to private, making them
available only to selected
people or certain networks.
Companies that don’t ask
for passwords have taken
other steps such as asking
applicants to friend human
resource managers or to log
in to a company computer
during an interview. Once
employed, some workers
have been required to sign
non-disparagement agreements that ban them from
talking negatively about an
employer on social media.
Asking for a candidate’s
password is more prevalent
among public agencies, especially those seeking to fill
law enforcement positions
such as police officers or 911
dispatchers.
Back in 2010, Robert
Collins was returning to
his job as a security guard
at the Maryland Department of Public Safety and
Correctional Services after
taking a leave following his
mother’s death. During a
reinstatement interview, he
was asked for his login and
password, purportedly so
the agency could check for
any gang affiliations. He was
stunned by the request but
complied.
“I needed my job to feed
my family. I had to,” he recalled,
After the ACLU complained about the practice,
the agency amended its
policy, asking instead for job
applicants to log in during
interviews.
“To me, that’s still invasive. I can appreciate the
desire to learn more about
the applicant, but it’s still a
violation of people’s personal
privacy,” said Collins, whose
case inspired Maryland’s legislation.
Until last year, the city of
Bozeman, Mont., had a longstanding policy of asking job
applicants for passwords to
their email addresses, socialnetworking websites and
other online accounts.

Chester A. Boster

Chester A. Boster, 94, of
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, formerly of Thurman
went home to be with the
Lord at 2:30 a.m. on Tuesday, March 20.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Friday,
March 23, 2012, at the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home
with Rev. Kenneth Leedy
officiating. Friends may call
the funeral home from 5-8
p.m. on Thursday, March
22, 2012, and from 12 p.m.
until the time of the funeral on Friday. Interment
will immediately follow at
Hill Cemetery in Thurman
where there will be a Mili-

tary Graveside Service conducted by the DAV Post 45
of Jackson.

John Morris
Glass, Jr.

CMSgt. (retired) John
Morris Glass, Jr., 74, of Titusville, Florida and formerly of Point Pleasant, West
Virginia, passed away on
Thursday, March 15, 2012.
Visitation will be held
from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m.
on Thursday, March 22,
2012, at North Brevard Funeral Home in Titusville,
Florida. A funeral service
will be held at 10 a.m. on
Friday, March 23, 2012, at
the First United Methodist

Church of Titusville. Burial
will follow at Oaklawn Memorial Gardens, Titusville,
Florida.

Virginia ‘Jenny’
Mae Craft

Virginia “Jenny” Mae
Craft, 38, of Letart, W.Va.,
passed away on March 18,
2012, at her home.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. on Friday,
March 23, 2012, at the
Deal Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., with Pastor
Charles Staats officiating.
Burial will follow in Barton
Chapel Cemetery in Apple
Grove, W.Va. Friends may
visit the family from 6-8

p.m. on Thursday, March
22, 2012, at the funeral
home.

Martha L.
Tubesing

Martha L. Tubesing, 89,
died Monday, March 19,
2012, at Indiana Masonic
Home, Franklin, Indiana.
Services will be held at 11
a.m., Thursday, March 22,
2012, at Floral Park Cemetery Mausoleum Chapel,
with no visitation.
Arragements are entrusted to Flanner and Buchanan-Floral Park, 425 North
Holt Road, Indianapolis,
Ind.

Ask Dr. Brothers

Can’t stand the thought of full-time work
By Dr. Joyce Brothers
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have a problem: I can’t
stand the work week, sitting at the same desk every day and not having any
freedom. It seems all I do is
commute, work, commute,
watch TV and go to bed. It’s
not the kind of life I want.
I know I should appreciate having a good job, but
I am just not cut out for all
these hours away from real
life. I don’t think I am lazy,
but I am very aware of my
life slipping away while I’m
cooped up in my car or at
my desk. How can I change
my attitude? — H.N.
Dear H.N.: In this day
and age of unemployment
and massive underemployment, your lament is a pretty common one. Despite
your defensiveness about
being lazy, I don’t believe
you need to worry about
your character. It is likely
the job that’s the issue.
If you had one you liked,
you’d be much more apt to
lose yourself in work during the day and not resent
being cooped up behind a
desk. There is nothing like
a lack of motivation to make

the hours and
days drag on
until you feel
you are nothing but a rat in
a cage. I get it.
That said,
what are you
going to do
about it? Your
feelings will
change naturally if you can
change your
work environment and find
a reason to get up in the
morning. Are there opportunities where you already
work for advancement or
even a parallel move to a
more interesting and diverse position? If so, go for
it. See if you can do some
work from home or arrange
some job sharing or flex
time so you can take on
something additional that
you enjoy more. As soon as
your interest level begins
to rise, you probably will
shed some of the dreadful,
trapped feelings you are
now coping with. If all else
fails, make sure you’re not
wasting the rest of the day
watching TV — make that
downtime count.

***
Dear
Dr.
Brothers:
I
have always
been
supportive of my
best friend as
she struggled
through
a
lot of rejection
while
trying to get
established
as a writer. I
taught her a
lot about how
to write and sell her work,
and she leaned on me a lot
for advice since I’m already
successful in the field. Now
she’s gotten a book-publishing contract and I’m ready
to share in her happiness,
but she has suddenly found
a better best friend to hang
around with. I am hurt and
don’t know what to do. —
B.V.
Dear B.V.: I can see why
you are frustrated and hurt.
Not only have you seemingly been replaced by a
new best friend — which is
bad enough to cope with —
but your former best friend
hasn’t even bothered to acknowledge all the help you
gave her to get to her shin-

ing moment. This situation
could make you very bitter
if you let it, but maybe there
are a few steps you can take
to salvage the friendship
and get things back on the
right track. First you will
have to try to let go of your
anger toward your friend
for dumping you and seemingly using your goodwill
without giving you anything in return. It could be
that in the turmoil of the
moment, she is seeking to
enjoy all the glory for herself, and doesn’t really want
to be reminded that she had
a lot of help and owes you
a debt of gratitude, at the
very least.
Why don’t you wait until
some of the hullabaloo dies
down, and then invite her
for a lunch to talk about
things? Let her know that
you have missed her friendship and that you were glad
to help with her current success. I am betting that she
will begin to remember all
you have meant to her, personally and professionally,
and you can reset your relationship. Good luck!
(c) 2012 by King Features Syndicate

Feds, local grand jury to probe Fla. teen’s death
SANFORD, Fla. (AP) — Federal
and local prosecutors are launching
parallel investigations into the fatal
shooting of an unarmed black teen by
a neighborhood watch captain as outrage over the case grows.
A central Florida prosecutor’s announcement Tuesday that a grand jury
will consider evidence in the case came
a day after Justice Department said it
would probe the death of 17-year-old
Trayvon Martin. The moves follow a
day of protests calling for the arrest of
George Zimmerman, 28, who claims
he shot Martin in self-defense during
a confrontation last month in a gated
community in Sanford, Fla.
Zimmerman spotted Martin as he
was patrolling his neighborhood on
a rainy evening and called 911 to report a suspicious person. Against the
advice of the 911 dispatcher, Zimmerman then followed Martin, who was
walking home from a convenience
store with a bag of Skittles in his pocket. Police have described Zimmerman
as white; his family says he is Hispanic
and not racist.
“The department will conduct a
thorough and independent review of
all the evidence and take appropriate
action at the conclusion of the investigation,” the Justice Department in an
emailed statement.
The federal agency said it is sending its community relations service
this week to Sanford to meet with

authorities, community officials and
civil rights leaders “to address tension
in the community.”
In a statement released Tuesday,
Seminole County State Attorney
Norm Wolfinger urged the public to
be patient as the investigation unfolds.
He said grand jurors will meet April
10.
An online petition urging local authorities to prosecute Zimmerman has
drawn more than 500,000 signatures
at website Change.org
Civil rights activist Al Sharpton is
expected to join Sanford city leaders
in a Tuesday evening town hall meeting to discuss with residents how the
investigation is being handled. Earlier
Monday, students held rallies on the
campus of Florida A&amp;M University
in Tallahassee and outside the Seminole County Criminal Justice Center,
where prosecutors are reviewing the
case to determine if charges should be
filed.
Yet authorities may be hamstrung
by a state law that allows people to
defend themselves with deadly force.
Prosecutors may not be able to
charge Zimmerman because of changes to state law in 2005. Under the old
law, people could use deadly force in
self-defense only if they had tried to
run away or otherwise avoid the danger.
Under the new law, there is no duty
to retreat and it gives a Floridian the

right “to stand his or her ground and
meet force with force, including deadly force,” if he feels threatened.
“I don’t think a man who exited his
vehicle after the 911 dispatcher told
him to stay inside the car can claim
self-defense,” Carl McPhail, a 28-yearold Barry University law school student, said at the Sanford rally.
The 70 protesters at the Sanford rally chanted “What if it was your son?”
and held posters saying, “This is not a
race issue.” Many carried Skittles.
Martin’s parents and other advocates have said the shooter would have
been arrested had he been black.
“You would think that Sanford is
still in the 1800s claiming that this
man can call self-defense for shooting
an unarmed boy,” restaurant owner
Linda Tillman said.
U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown, D-Fla.,
along with members of the Congressional Black Caucus and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, had asked the
U.S. Department of Justice to review
the case.
Late Monday, Florida Gov. Rick
Scott directed the state Department
of Law Enforcement to help local authorities in their investigation. The
governor said in a memo to department Commissioner Gerald Bradley
that the circumstances surrounding
the death “have caused significant
concern within the Sanford community and the state.”

URG
From Page 1
the students who will have
the teachers who graduate
from this program!” said
Thomas R. Hoerr, Ph.D.,
Head of School, New City
School, St. Louis, MO.
“The focus is on effective
learning,” Miller said. The
program also has a strong
emphasis on problem solving and collaboration.
Educators enrolled in the
program will discuss innovative teaching methods,
and will look for creative
and imaginative solutions
to challenges they may
have meeting their academic program standards and
indicators. The program is
committed to authentic assessment methods and promotes the use of rubrics to
support the development
of skills and competencies.

For those who enroll fulltime, the program will take
about 13 months to complete. Students also have
the option to enroll in the
program and progress at a
slower pace.
Because many of the students in the program will
likely be working as teachers, the only time they will
have to be on campus regularly for classes is during
the month of July. During
the school year, they are
able to take their classes
online, and rarely need to
come to campus for special
meetings and occasional
evening class sessions.
Students will also have
the opportunity to choose
from several educational
field trips that they will
be able to take during the
summer. All of the details
of the trips have not yet

been finalized, but trips to
places such as New York
City, London, Wales, Italy
and China are all being discussed. Each trip will offer
unique learning opportunities for the master’s degree
students.
Many of the trips will
also be open to community
residents, and will offer
outstanding tourism opportunities. Rio Grande is
able to set up special visits,
such as meetings with artists, musicians and theater
professionals on the trips.
Those who attend the trips
are able to visit places that
are not available to most
tourists.
Most importantly, the
new master’s degree program will offer everyone
enrolled the opportunity to
learn new teaching methods and skills in order to

best reach their students.
The program offers innovative ideas for classroom
teaching, and those enrolled in the program will
enjoy collaborating with
each other as they progress toward earning their
degrees.
For more information
on the new Master of
Education program, as

well as information on the
other Master of Education programs offered by
Rio Grande, call Miller at
1-800-282-7201 or 740-

245-7030, or send an email to gmiller@rio.edu or
contact Dreama Hudson
740-245-7167 email dhudson@rio.edu.

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TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL 1-800-247-2615
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FARLEYS ARKANSAS PONDSTOCKERS, INC.

�Point Pleasant Register

Opinion

Pot and driving puts
drivers, passengers at risk
Stephen Wallace,

Senior advisor for policy, research,
and education Students Against
Destructive Decisions (SADD)

New data from SADD
(Students Against Destructive Decisions) and
Liberty Mutual Insurance
reveal that more young
people are combining marijuana and driving, placing
themselves — and often
their friends — at risk.
Perhaps this shouldn’t
be a surprise given that the
University of Michigan’s
recent Monitoring the
Future study pointed out
that marijuana use among
eighth- to-12th graders
rose in 2011 for the fourth
straight year (as compared
to substantial declines in
the preceding decade) and
that daily use of the drug
among 12th graders is at a
thirty year high.
But what may come as
a surprise is that the number of teens who report
driving under the influence of marijuana (19 percent) has surpassed those
reporting driving under
the influence of alcohol
(13 percent).
Oddly, many teens don’t
see that as a problem.
Hazy logic
Indeed, more than onethird (36 percent) of teens
who have driven after using marijuana say the drug
presents no distraction to
their driving. Also alarming, among the teens who
say they have driven after
drinking, 19 percent of
them believe alcohol use is
not distracting.
Hazy logic or wishful
thinking?
Regardless, the White
House Office of National Drug Control Policy
(ONDCP) notes that marijuana use affects alertness,
concentration, perception,
coordination, and reaction
time – all needed for the
safe operation of a motor
vehicle.
ONDCP points to roadside study of reckless
drivers in Tennessee that

Reader Services

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error in a story, call the newsroom at
(304) 675-1333.

found that 33 percent of
all subjects who were not
under the influence of alcohol and who were tested
for drugs at the scene of
their arrest tested positive
for marijuana.
Proof in point.
Beyond driving
But weed and cars are
only part of the story.
Among all Americans
twelve and older who
abuse or are dependent on
an illegal drug, 60 percent
abuse or are dependent
on marijuana, according
to Dr. Robert DuPont of
the Institute for Behavior
and Health and Former
Administrator of the Drug
Enforcement Administration Peter B. Bensinger,
in a letter published in the
New York Times. Nationally, they say, admissions
for primary marijuana use
to state-financed treatment have increased by 31
percent from 1998 to 2008
(the most recent year for
which data are available).
In addition, according
to the National Institute
on Drug Abuse (NIDA),
a number of studies have
shown an association between chronic marijuana
use and increased rates
of anxiety, depression,
and schizophrenia. And
some of these studies have
shown age at first use to be
an important risk factor,
where early use is a marker of increased vulnerability to later problems.
NIDA also reports that
chronic marijuana use,
especially in a very young
person, may also be a
marker of risk for mental
illnesses — including addiction — stemming from
genetic or environmental
vulnerabilities, such as
early exposure to stress or
violence.
Sensible solutions
When it comes to impaired driving by youth,
common sense suggests
that if teens aren’t engaged in illegal behavior in
the first place, they won’t
be driving under the influ-

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ence in the second.
Yet beyond issues of
zero tolerance lies an enduring truth … young people themselves often hold
the key to keeping their
friends safe and alive.
And where driving is concerned, that means when
they see something they
need to speak up to protect themselves and their
friends.
Indeed, the SADD/Liberty Mutual study reveals
that friends do play a significant role, as most teen
drivers say they would
stop driving under the influence of marijuana (90
percent) or alcohol (94
percent) if asked by their
passengers.
Yet even teen passengers are seemingly less
concerned about riding
in a car with a driver who
has used marijuana than
with one who has used alcohol. While a significant
majority (87 percent) say
they would speak up and
ask the driver to refrain
from getting behind the
wheel after drinking, only
72 percent of them report
they would do the same
for a driver who has used
marijuana.
Empowered
Thirty years ago, students at Wayland (MA)
High School responded to
the impaired driving crash
deaths of two classmates
just days apart by forming a club to protect one
another. They called it
SADD (Students Against
Driving Drunk, now Students Against Destructive
Decisions), sparking a
landslide of public attention aimed at the problem
of impaired driving and
saving many thousands of
young lives.
Their model of peer-topeer education and intervention is not dated; it
stands today as a poignant
reminder of what can be
accomplished when we
empower our children to
say something.

Page 4
Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Corporations pay less
in taxes than Buffett, Romney
By Scott Klinger
Corporations pay a lower effective tax rate than
Warren Buffett and Mitt
Romney, but you wouldn’t
know it from all the complaints that our corporate
tax rate puts our country
at a competitive disadvantage. Last year, U.S. corporations paid just 12.1
percent of their earnings
in federal corporate income taxes. Buffett’s tax
rate is 17.4 percent; Romney’s reported 2010 tax
rate was 13.9 percent.
The corporate tax system is riddled with loopholes and subsidies that
do create competitive
problems, but not the ones
CEOs are talking about.
Our broken tax system
blesses U.S. multinational
corporations with lots
of loopholes that enable
them to pay less in taxes
than Main Street businesses. It allows large
companies, even those in
the same industry, to pay
vastly different tax rates.
It has starved our government of revenue, adding to
the pressure for deep budget cutbacks rather than
the investments needed to
rebuild our crumbling infrastructure, educate our
children and support the
innovation needed for economic success.
President Obama has
called for corporate tax
reform that is “revenue
neutral” – using any revenues gained from closing loopholes and ending
subsidies to pay for lowering the statutory corporate tax rate and extending or introducing other
tax breaks. The problem
with “revenue neutral”
tax reform is that it locks
in the corporate share of
our government’s bills at
historically low levels. Tax
reform that results in GE
paying more and Wal-Mart
paying less is not a step
forward.
Contrary to common

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.

perception, U.S. corporations pay far less toward
the cost of public services
and infrastructure than
they did in decades past,
and less than foreign competitors pay in their countries today. In the 1950s,
corporate federal income
taxes accounted for nearly
one-third of federal government revenue; in 2011,
corporate taxes accounted
for less than 8 percent.
U.S corporate profits
account for more than 10
percent of GDP, a 50-year
high. Federal corporate
income taxes collected as
a percent of GDP are at a
50-year low.
U.S. corporate tax revenues as a percent of national GDP are lower than
all but one industrialized
country – Iceland. U.S.
corporate taxes accounted for 1.2 percent of U.S.
GDP in 2009, compared
to 2.3 percent among the
26 industrialized nations
of the Organization for
Economic
Cooperation
and Development (OECD)
that collect and report tax
data.
Meanwhile, U.S. multinational corporations are
reporting record levels of
profits to shareholders.
And their balance sheets
are loaded with record levels of cash – more than $2
trillion at last count.
President Obama’s tax
framework addresses important issues such as
curtailing the abuse of offshore tax havens, but the
devil is in the details. For
example, a proposed minimum global tax could reduce the incentive of U.S.
multinationals to disguise
domestic profits and shift
them to low or no-tax corporate tax havens around
the world. But if the rate,
now unspecified, is set too
low it could become a permanent tax break for U.S.
multinational corporations
whose accountants are expert at assigning expenses
to the domestic side of the

ledger for U.S. tax deductions while assigning profits to the “foreign” side.
And it doesn’t take a large
rate gap between the corporate tax rate and a minimum global tax to produce
large tax savings for corporations with revenues in
the billions.
One way Congress could
address closing loopholes
right now is through the
Cut Unjustified Tax Loopholes Act introduced by
Senators Carl Levin of
Michigan and Kent Conrad
of North Dakota. It would
crack down on offshore
tax haven abuses and close
tax loopholes that encourage corporations to move
jobs abroad.
The challenge of corporate taxes and competitiveness is not that rates
are too high, but loopholes, preferences and
subsidies make corporate
tax collections far too low.
Rather than focusing on
revenue neutral corporate
tax reform which locks in
corporate tax revenues at
bargain-basement levels,
President Obama would
be wiser to insist that all
profitable U.S. corporations – big and small – are
expected to pay their fair
share of taxes.
Big businesses want all
the benefits of government spending – from
government contracts, a
publicly educated workforce, transportation networks and courts to enforce property rights, to
scientific research they
are happy to commercialize, and bailouts in the
billions. Their increasing
unwillingness to pay for
the public services and infrastructure that underpin
our economy is the real
threat to America’s competitiveness.
Klinger is tax policy
director of Business for
Shared Prosperity, a national network of business
owners, executives and investors.

Point Pleasant Register

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Publishing Co.
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Point Pleasant, W.Va.

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www.mydailyregister.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�The Daily Sentinel

Sports

WEDNESDAY,
MARCH 21, 2012

mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

Lady Knights open season with 8-3 win over Scott
Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. —
The Point Pleasant softball team
started its 2012 season off in style
Friday night with an 8-3 victory
over visiting Scott in a Cardinal
Conference matchup in Mason
County.
The Lady Knights (1-0, 1-0 Car-

dinal) never trailed in the contest,
as the hosts jumped out to a 3-0
advantage through two innings
of play. The Lady Skyhawks (01, 0-1), however, countered with
three runs in their half of the
third, which ultimately left the
game knotted up at 3-all through
three complete.
Point Pleasant captured control
of the game in the bottom of the

fourth, as the Lady Knights plated
five runs to claim a comfortable
8-3 cushion headed into the latter
innings. Madison Barker allowed
just three hits and zero runs over
the final four frames, allowing the
reliever to get the winning decision.
Kristen Riegal started for PPHS
and allowed five hits, three earned
runs and two walks over three in-

nings. Riegal also struck out one
Scott batter. Barker finished with
seven strikeouts and issued one
walk. Point also claimed a narrow
9-8 edge in hits, but SHS had all
four errors in the contest.
Brooke Fisher led the hosts
with three hits, followed by Regan Cottrill and Bekah Darst with
two safeties apiece. Sarah Hussell
and Breanna Shobe also added a

hit apiece to the winning cause.
Cottrill drove in two runs, while
Fisher and Darst knocked in one
each.
Allyson Johnson paced Scott
with three hits, followed by Alley
Brown with two safeties. Jennifer
Smith took the loss after allowing
five earned runs, nine hits and
three walks over six innings in the
circle.

Now a Bronco,
Manning says hello
to his new team
DENVER (AP) — Peyton
Manning got John Elway’s
seal of approval and Elway
got the quarterback he
thinks will bring the Denver
Broncos their next Super
Bowl title.
Now, everybody gets to
see if Manning’s surgically
repaired neck goes along
with the plan.
Manning was introduced
as the new quarterback
of the Denver Broncos on
Tuesday, the four-time MVP
taking the spot once held
by Elway, who as Broncos
vice president engineered
the deal to bring the NFL’s
most sought-after free agent
to town.
After holding up his new,
orange No. 18 jersey in a
photo op with Elway and
owner Pat Bowlen, Manning answered many of the
questions that have been
bouncing around since
March 7, when his old team,
the Colts, released the quarterback and set in motion
one of the most frenetic
free-agent pursuits in history.
On the neck injury
that kept him off the field
through 2011: “I’m not
where I want to be. I want
to be where I was before I
was injured. There’s a lot

of work to do to get where
we want to be from a health
standpoint.”
On his potential role in
being the man who could
bring about the end of Tim
Tebow’s popular stay in
Denver: “I know what kind
of player Tim Tebow is,
what kind of person he is,
what an awesome year it
was. If Tim Tebow is here,
I’m going to be the best
teammate. If other opportunities are presented to him,
I’m going to wish him the
best.”
On Elway’s role in leading
him to choose Denver over
other suitors, the most serious of which were the Titans and 49ers: “I’m seeing
him as the leader of a franchise. I really liked what he
had to say. Everyone knows
what kind of competitor he
is as a player. I can tell he’s
just as competitive in this
new role. That got me excited.”
And so, the deal was
sealed. Manning has a fiveyear, $96 million contract
and plans to retire in Denver. The Broncos, meanwhile, have some protection
in the way the contract was
formulated. There’s no sign
See MANNING ‌| 6

Karl Mondon/Contra Costa Times/MCT photo

Peyton Manning of the Indianapolis Colts threw for three touchdowns against the Oakland Raiders. The Colts defeated the
Raiders, 31-26, in Oakland, California, Sunday, December 26,
2010.

OVP Sports
Schedule

Wednesday, March
21
Baseball
Roane County at Point
Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Softball
Winfield at Point
Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo,
5:30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Point Pleasant at St.
Marys, 4 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at St.
Marys, 4 p.m.
Thursday, March 22
Baseball
Point Pleasant at
Ravenswood, 5 p.m.
Softball
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Friday, March 23
Baseball

Charleston Catholic at
Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Saturday, March 24
Baseball
Southern at Gallia
Academy (DH), noon
Point Pleasant at Tolsia (DH), noon
Wahama at Meigs
(DH), noon
Softball
Chapmanville at Point
Pleasant, 2 p.m.
Wayne at Wahama
(DH), noon
Track and Field
Eastern at Warren, 10
a.m.
River Valley at South
Point, noon
Boys Tennis
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg, 10 a.m.
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at Parkersburg, 10 a.m.

Jim Prisching/Chicago Tribune/MCT photo

Ohio State University fan Tom Henighan gets charged up for an NCAA Men’s Basketball game in Atlanta, Georgia. The Buckeyes will be one-fourth of the Ohio schools playing this weekend, as Cincinnati, Xavier and Ohio are also still alive in the
Sweet 16.

Ohio: The heart of March Madness
CINCINNATI (AP) — Stirred by
a pep talk from the school president,
the Ohio Bobcats applauded themselves in the locker room and celebrated their trip to the NCAA tournament’s round of 16 by chanting: “We
are Ohio!”
Not a bad March motto for the
whole state.
The nation’s 17th state is the first
to send four teams to the NCAA’s
round of 16 the Bobcats, Ohio State,
the University of Cincinnati and
Xavier. The four come from different
conferences and play different styles,
but have gone a combined 8-0 in the
tournament.
Beware the Buckeyes all of them.
“It’s super for Ohio basketball,” former Ohio State star Jerry Lucas said
in a phone interview on Monday. “It’s
always been good, and will always be
good. This whole region has traditionally had great basketball. To see
Ohio be the first to have four in the
Sweet 16 that’s great.”
Seven other states have managed
to get three teams into the round of

16, according to STATS LLC: Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Texas, California,
North Carolina, Kansas and Tennessee. Ohio has topped them all.
No state has ever had a better opening week in the tournament.
The First Four games were played
in Dayton, where President Barack
Obama and British Prime Minister
David Cameron watched Western
Kentucky pull off an historic comeback in the opener.
The rest of the state has kept up the
excitement.
Ohio State the Big Ten school
whose band spells “Ohio” in script
at halftime of football games lived up
to its No. 2 seed by beating Loyola,
Md., and Gonzaga. Ohio University
the Mid-American Conference representative whose band dances to the
“Party Rock Anthem” at halftime got
a 13th seed and became the tournament’s latest mid-major darling.
The Bobcats knocked off Michigan
a result as pleasing on High Street
in Columbus as on Court Street in
Athens in their first game, then beat

South Florida to get to the round of
16 for the first time since 1964.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati and Xavier
the city rivals who brawled on the
court in December took big strides in
refurbishing their seasons and reputations.
The Big East’s Bearcats knocked
off Texas and Florida State to reach
the round of 16 for the first time since
2001 under coach Bob Huggins. No.
10 seed Xavier, the only Atlantic 10
team left, beat Notre Dame and Lehigh to reach the regional semifinals
for the fourth time in five years.
Some of their neighbors are coming
along. Ohio, Indiana and Kentucky
are supplying seven of the final 16
teams this weekend, another numerical measure of the area’s rich college
basketball tradition.
“Oh my gosh, we talk about that
all the time,” said Xavier athletic director Mike Bobinski, who is on the
NCAA tournament selection committee. “Within a 150-mile radius or so,
there’s a tremendous concentration of
See MARCH ‌| 6

Locals compete in District 13 all-star games
Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

JACKSON, Ohio — The Division
III-IV boys and Division I-II girls came
away victorious Tuesday night at the
2012 District 13 Basketball Coaches
Association All-Star games held at
Jackson High School in the Apple City.
The Division I-II ladies scored a 4634 victory in the opening contest, but
the Division III-IV boys avenged that
setback with a 76-63 decision in the
nightcap.
The Division I-II girls team led 26-20
at the intermission, then used a 20-14
second half run to seal up the triumph
for the bigger schools. Warren’s Allie Grace Proctor and Erin Dillow of
South Point both lead the victors with
10 points, while Allison Flowers of Belpre posted a game-high 12 points in the
setback.
The Division III-IV voys team led 3631 at halftime and closed regulation on
a 40-32 run to wrap up the 13-point outcome. Meigs big-man Jesse Smith led
the victors with a game-high 15 points,
while Warren’s Tyler Ward scored 11
markers to pace the Division I-II squad.
Proctor and Smith were names the
girls and boys Most Valuable Player, respectively. Paige Roseberry (Oak Hill)
and Derek Flint (River Valley) won the
girls and boys three-point contests, and
Colt Chapman of Jackson won his second straight slam dunk title.
Senior selections to the 2012 District

13 Coaches list are eligible to compete
in the event. The three-point and slam
dunk contests are open to any player
named to the District 13 teams.
District 13 Basketball All-Star
Games
Girls
I-II 46, III-IV 34
D3-4: 20-14 — 34
D1-2: 26-20 — 46
DIVISION III-IV 34
Chelsea Harper (Rock Hill) 1 0-0 2,
Katie Fuller (Fairland) 3 1-2 8, Courtney Thomas (Southern) 1 0-0 2, Allison Flowers (Belpre) 4 1-2 12, Kaitlyn
Pottmeyer (Waterford) 3 0-1 6, Morgan McMillian (Southern) 0 0-0 0,
Chandra Canaday (South Gallia) 1 0-0
2, Kelsey Lerch (Belpre) 0 2-2 2. TOTALS: 13 4-7 34. Three-point goals: 4
(Flowers 3, Fuller).
DIVISION I-II 46
Allie Grace Proctor (Warren) 3
4-6 10, Elena Lein (Athens) 3 1-1
7, Brooke Simons (Logan) 1 3-6 6,
Amanda Brown (Marietta) 3 0-0 9,
Meredith Harless (Jackson) 1 0-0 2,
Erin Dillow (South Point) 4 1-1 10,
Gracie Staten (Athens) 0 2-2 2. TOTALS: 15 11-16 46. Three-point goals:
5 (Brown 3, Simons, Dillow).
***
Boys
III-IV 76, I-II 63
D3-4: 36-40 — 76
D1-2: 31-32 — 63
DIVISION III-IV 76
Daniel Kline (Nelsonville-York) 3

2-2 9, Nigel Courts (Wellston) 2 1-2
5, Andrew Roseberry (Southern) 2
2-2 6, Ethan Martin (Southern) 1 1-4
3, Cory Haner (South Gallia) 3 0-0 6,
John Johnson (South Gallia) 1 1-2 4,
Dalton Matney (South Gallia) 3 3-4
10, Patrick Hintz (Chesapeake) 4 0-0
9, Jesse Smith (Meigs) 6 3-4 15, Tate
Lang (Waterford) 4 0-0 9. TOTALS: 29
13-20 76. Three-point goals: 5 (Kline,
Johnson, Matney, Hintz, Lang).
DIVISION I-II 63
Colt Chapman (Jackson) 4 0-0 8,
Evan Salyers (Fairland) 5 0-0 10,
Tim Grosel (Marietta) 2 0-0 5, Ryan
Chesser (Vinton County) 1 2-2 4, Josh
Skinner (Athens) 2 0-0 4, Nick Saunders (Gallia Academy) 1 0-0 2, Tyler
Ward (Warren) 4 0-0 11, Jeremy Hastie (Warren) 3 0-0 7, Josh Windland
(Warren) 2 0-0 6, Josh Kisor (Oak
Hill) 2 1-2 6. TOTALS: 26 3-4 63.
Three-point goals: 8 (Ward 3, Windland 2, Grosel, Hastie, Kisor).
***
Girls Game MVP — Allie Grace
Proctor, Warren
Boys Game MVP — Jesse Smith,
Meigs
Girls 3-point contest winner —
Paige Roseberry, Oak Hill
Boys 3-point contest winner — Derek Flint, River Valley
Boys slam-dunk winner — Colt
Chapman, Jackson (2nd straight year
won slam dunk contest)

�Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 6

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs Williams: UNC preparing
River Valley summer
baseball-softball
signups

BIDWELL, Ohio — Summer softball and baseball
signups will be held at
River Valley Middle School
on Tuesday, March 20 and
Tuesday, March 27 from
6:30 p.m. until 7:30 p.m.
Junior girls and junior pony
leagues have extended their
age group to 13-16 as of Dec.
31, 2011 for girls and May 1,
2012 for boys. Little league
is for boys ages 11-12.

Mason summer
baseball/softball
signups

MASON, W.Va. — Children may be signed up for
baseball or softball from 10
a.m. to noon, every Saturday
in March at the Hair Shop
in Mason. A copy of the the
child’s birth certificate is
needed to register. For more
information, call Ryan Miller
at 604-857-1548, or Rick Kearns at 304-674-3491.

Softball league signups

to play without Marshall

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant girls
softball league signups will
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.
be held from 6-8 p.m. on the
Tuesdays of March 20 and (AP) — North Carolina
coach Roy Williams says
27 at PPJSHS Commons.
his team’s “preparation is
100 percent” to play withEastern-Southern
out injured point guard
Alumni Game
TUPPERS
PLAINS, Kendall Marshall.
Williams says MarOhio — Any graduate from
either Eastern High School shall’s playing status reor Southern High School mains undecided for the
is invited to participate in Midwest Regional semifithe 2012 Eastern-Southern nal against Ohio on Friday
night in St. Louis.
Alumni Basketball Game
“You’ve got me between
on Saturday, March 24, at
a rock and a hard place,”
EHS. The women’s game Williams said Tuesday.
will start around 4:30 p.m. “I cannot give you any
and the older alums will answers. I’ve given evtake the floor at 5:30 p.m. erybody all the answers I
The younger division will can give because I’ve said
be the final contest around honestly, I do not know.”
7 p.m. There is a registraWilliams spoke Tuestion fee and the deadline is day, two days after the
Friday, March 16. For more left-handed
sophomore
information, contact Sam broke his right wrist on a
Thompson at sthompson@ drive in the second half of
easternlocal.net
a win against Creighton

in the second round of the
NCAA tournament.
Marshall had surgery
Monday to insert a screw
into his wrist.
His father Dennis told
The Associated Press in
a text message the following day that his son is
“doing much better” and
experiencing less pain.
He added that his son was
improving and had “slept
through the night.”
Marshall, from Dumfries, Va., is a secondteam all-Atlantic Coast
Conference pick who has
351 assists in 36 games,
the best season total in
league history and fourth
most in NCAA history.
“I’ve got to try to come
up with a way to replace
somebody that is darn
hard to replace,” Williams
said.

The pass-first point
guard is averaging about
eight points and 10 assists, though he has
stepped up his offense
recently and scored in
double figures the past six
games. He had 18 points
and 11 assists in the 87-73
win against the Bluejays,
his fifth double-double in
that span.
He played about 7 minutes after the injury before leaving the game late
with the victory secured.
Marshall has been the
Tar Heels’ most irreplaceable player, leading the
fast-paced offense with
his see-everything court
vision and perfect pitchahead passes in transition.
The Tar Heels lost No. 2
ballhandler Dexter Strickland to a season-ending

knee injury in January. If
Marshall can’t go, the job
would fall to freshman
Stilman White and versatile senior Justin Watts.
“Stilman has basically
had everything thrown
at him all year,” Williams
said, adding that Watts
“has had limited portions
thrown at him.
“So we’ll throw a few
more portions at him
and try to get him a tremendous number of repetitions Tuesday and
Wednesday and Thursday
in practice, and see if we
can get them up to speed,
because our preparation
is 100 percent preparation
to play without Kendall.”

Steelers WR Hines Ward retiring Thompson leads Cavs past Nets, 105-100
PITTSBURGH (AP) —
Hines Ward believes he
can still play football. The
longtime Pittsburgh wide
receiver known for his
high-wattage smile and his
bone-crunching blocks just
couldn’t stomach the thought
of doing it in some strange
uniform on some strange
field with nary a Terrible
Towel in sight.
“I just wouldn’t feel right,”
Ward said.
So rather than play for a
15th season — and his first
outside the Steel City — a
tearful Ward opted to retire
on Tuesday and secure a
legacy unmatched in the franchise’s long history.
“I can say I’m a Steeler
for life and that’s the bottom
line, that’s all I’ve really ever
wanted,” Ward said.
Ward holds every significant franchise receiving record, including receptions,
receiving yards and touchdowns. His 1,000 career
catches rank eighth all time
and he is one of two players
with at least 1,000 receptions
and two Super Bowl rings.
The decision comes three
weeks after the 36-year-old
was released by the Steelers
in a salary cap maneuver.
Ward says he was contacted
by several clubs but never
had any formal discussions.
He insists there are no hard
feelings for his release, understanding that football
is a business. As if to prove
the point, Ward embraced
Steelers owner Art Rooney

II after stepping away from
the podium following the announcement.
“Thank you (Mr. Rooney)
for giving a small town boy
from Forest Park, Ga., a
chance,” Ward said.
The former third-round
pick out of Georgia was due
to make $4 million next season, an expensive option for a
player whose role diminished
significantly in 2011 when he
finished with 46 receptions,
the fewest since his rookie
season in 1998. He embraced
his role as mentor to Pro
Bowlers Mike Wallace and
Antonio Brown even though
he knew they were chewing
into his playing time.
“I know the wideouts are
going to be in great hands,”
he said. “They’re full of talent.”
And they’re part of an offense that didn’t exist when
Ward made his debut 14
years ago. He spent most of
his first three seasons blocking for running back Jerome
Bettis, something he did better than any receiver in the
league.
Over time, the Steelers
evolved from the grind-itout attack that has been the
club’s identity for decades.
Ward’s breakout season
came in 2001 when he set
a franchise record with 94
receptions then obliterated
that mark in 2002 when he
finished with 112 catches.
He made four straight
Pro Bowls from 2001-2004
and seemed to get better

as he aged. He was named
the Most Valuable Player of
the 2006 Super Bowl after
catching five passes for 123
yards and a touchdown in
Pittsburgh’s 21-10 victory
over Seattle, the franchise’s
first championship in 26
years. The Steelers added a
second title in 2009 to give
them six, more than any
other team in the league.
Ward hoped to get the
Steelers their seventh Lombardi Trophy but didn’t
catch a pass in a 29-23
overtime loss to Denver in
the wild card round of last
year’s playoffs. Only one
pass came his way, a dart
down the sideline by quarterback Ben Roethlisberger
during Pittsburgh’s final
drive in regulation. Denver
cornerback Champ Bailey swatted the ball to the
ground and Ward walked
off the field and into the unknown.
The former “Dancing
With the Stars” champion
could have a lucrative postseason career in front of a
camera — he worked the
red carpet during the Oscars — but he maintained
after his release he could
still contribute. He still
does.
“I feel like I have a few
more good years in me left,
Ward said. “I would love
nothing more to get back to
the Super Bowl.”
He wasn’t willing to do
it, however, outside Pittsburgh.

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — The Cleveland
Cavaliers finally got a glimpse of rookies
Kyrie Irving and Tristan Thompson hitting
on all cylinders.
Thompson scored a career-high 27 points,
grabbed 12 rebounds and gave Cleveland the
lead with a tip-in with 1:11 to play, and Irving added 26 points, seven assists and five
rebounds as the Cavaliers snapped a threegame losing streak with a 105-100 victory
over the New Jersey Nets on Monday night.
The performance was something Cavaliers
fans have been anticipating since the club
took Irving with the No. 1 overall pick in the
draft last June and followed three picks later
by grabbing Thompson.
“We’ll see,” Irving said when asked if this
might have been the first of many big nights
for the rookies. “He played really well tonight. Hopefully, he’ll have a lot more nights
like this and contribute as well as he did tonight. He played really big for us, especially
down the stretch. Him playing well, as long
as me and Antwawn (Jamison), if we get all
of us on, especially everyone in the starting
five, we’re dangerous.”

The rookies were the difference down the
stretch in sending New Jersey to its third
straight loss. Thompson broke a 97-all tie
with his tip-in and Irving scored the final
six points for Cleveland, with the first four
coming after Thompson grabbed defensive
rebounds.
Thompson’s big performance came just
one night after he was limited to seven points
and six rebounds in almost 35 minutes in his
first career start. No. 2 was a lot better.
Thompson, who has known Irving for
years as former high school opponents in
New Jersey, laughed when asked if this was a
start for the two.
“It’s the first of the first,” said Thompson,
who had about six dunks working pick-androlls with Irving. “We’ll see where it goes
from there.”
Newcomer Gerald Wallace had 27 points
and 12 rebounds to lead New Jersey. Deron
Williams added 28 points, but threw the ball
away with roughly 16 seconds to play when
he passed up a 3-point attempt to make a
pass underneath with New Jersey down
103-100.

March
From Page 5
high-level basketball competition and talent, and great
coaching and committed
programs. I’m not sure this
area gets its due in terms of
how big college basketball is.
“You hear of Tobacco Road,
but this region is as powerful
and basketball-committed as
any in the country. It’s there
for everybody to see at this
point based on how the tournament has played out.”
Ohio’s
still-standing
schools may seem so dissimilar, but there’s less than
six degrees of separation
between them. Xavier has a
hand in much of that.
Buckeyes coach Thad
Matta emerged as an upand-coming coach at Butler
which plays in Hinkle Fieldhouse, where “Hoosiers” was
filmed with John Groce as an
assistant. They moved on to
Xavier together, then to Ohio

Manning
From Page 5

ing bonus. Manning will
get $18 million guaranteed
for next season, but must
pass a physical before each
season, starting in 2013, to
get paid.
“I don’t consider it much
of a risk, knowing Peyton
Manning,” Elway said. “I
asked him, ‘Is there any
doubt in your mind that you
can’t get back to the Peyton Manning we know of?’
And he said, ‘There’s no
doubt in my mind.’”
It was 14 years ago that
Bowlen stood on the podium in San Diego, lifted the
franchise’s first Super Bowl
trophy and proclaimed:
“This one’s for John.”
But this franchise hasn’t
been anywhere near what
it was since Elway retired
a year later with a second
title in tow.
His return to the front
office last year and set off
a whirlwind of activity that
landed the Broncos in the
playoffs. But Elway is in
this to win Super Bowls
and he’s throwing his hat in
with Manning, the 50,000yard passer who redefined
the quarterback position
through the 2000s, not
Tebow — who seems most
comfortable carrying and

State. Groce then made the
90-minute trip to the southeast corner of the state to
become the Bobcats’ coach.
Current Xavier coach
Chris Mack and Cincinnati
coach Mick Cronin grew up
in the city, attending Catholic high schools that play in
the same conference.
At various times, they’ve
all shared a path.
“The fact that so many
have come through Xavier at
some point of time there’s a
lot of pride in that, honestly,”
Bobinski said. “We feel good
for their success. We appreciate what they added to
Xavier while they were here.
The fact that they’re running
their own programs and are
doing a great job is terrific.
“This week’s unique success is validation for how talented those guys are. They’re
proving it.”
At least one of them will
be gone on Thursday. Ohio

State plays Cincinnati in Boston, a rematch on the 50th
anniversary of the Bearcats
beating the Buckeyes in the
national championship game
for the second year in a row.
Just as Ohio provided a
memorable start to the tournament, it’ll get the second
weekend going in a fitting
way.
“I have great respect for
their program,” Cronin said
of Ohio State. “Other than
that, they’re the next team
we play. You know, these
guys have a goal. We have a
goal: We get in the tournament to win it. I want my
guys thinking that way because I believe in them.
“It’s important that they
know that I believe we’re capable of winning the whole
tournament.”
At this point, no one
would be shocked if an Ohio
team is the last one standing.

not throwing the ball.
“Tim Tebow’s a great
kid. If I want someone to
marry my daughter, it’s
him,” Elway said. “Tim is
a great football player, but
with the opportunity that
presented itself here, we
had to take advantage of
that.”
He said no decision has
been made on Tebow’s
future, but he seemed to
be preparing the quarterback’s fans to say goodbye.
“That’s the tough part of
this business,” Elway said.
Manning, who turns 36
on Saturday, said he made
a quick connection with
Elway, who won his two
Super Bowls in Denver
after his 37th birthday.
Since No. 7’s retirement, a
long string of quarterbacks
have come to Denver, trying in vain to replace the
unreplaceable. If anyone
can get out of that shadow,
Manning could be the man.
He’s got two trips to the
Super Bowl and one title,
11 Pro Bowls and was the
fastest player to reach
50,000 yards and 4,000
completions.
Long known as a master
student of the game, there
are hours of highlights available that begin with Manning standing at the line of

scrimmage, surveying a defense, checking out of a play
— or two — then calling
the right one and getting
the Colts to the end zone.
It’s expected he’ll be able
to run his kind of offense in
Denver, which reverted to
an option-style system to
maximize Tebow’s potential
last year.
One other factor in Manning’s decision to play
outdoors in the Mile High
City: The nearly $40 million in salary cap room the
Broncos have, putting them
in the mix for quality free
agents, possibly including
Manning’s former teammates Jeff Saturday and
Dallas Clark.
The status of Manning’s
neck, however, will be an
ongoing issue. It’s one
thing to throw through the
entire route tree on a practice field, which he did to
pretty much everyone’s satisfaction, quite another to
take a blindside hit from a
300-pound defender, which
hasn’t happened since he
was surgically repaired.
Does Elway have a Plan
B?
“Plan B? I don’t have a
Plan B. We’re going with
Plan A,” he said.

�S51°05ʼ52” E 286.22ʼ to a
point, thence;
S51°32ʼ21” www.mydailysentinel.com
E 338.44ʼ to a
point, thence;
S59°34ʼ38” E 170.69ʼ to a
point, thence;
N78°45ʼ13” E 257.41ʼ to a
point, thence;

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY.
PEGGY YOST, MEIGS
COUNTY TREASURER :
Plaintiff
vs
BEN
:

:

CASE NO. 10 DL 004
H.

EWING,

Defendants

et

al.

:

In pursuance of an Order
of Sale dated January 26,
2012, in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, at the front door of
the Court House, in Pomeroy,
Ohio, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 30th
day of March, 2012 at 10:00
o'clock A.M., the following described real estate, situate in
the County of Meigs, and State
of Ohio, to-wit:
Situated in the Township of
Orange, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio. Beginning at a
point, said point being in the
southern line of Section 35,
T.4N-R.12W and being
3,927.49ʼ from the southwest
corner of said Section 35.
Said point also being in a line
of Benjamin and/or Doris Ewing (Deed Book 0304 page
0243), in a line of Brenda
and/or Gary Johnson (Official
Record 0021 Page 0147) and
in
the
centerline
of
Keebaugh-Follrod Rd. T444,
thence making a new line
through the lands of said Ewing and with the centerline of
said Road the following six (6)
lines;
Legals

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Notices

Mammograms are
still available for
those who qualify.
Through the
Susan G. Komen
Grant At
Holzer Center
for Cancer Care

N09°04ʼ03” E 80.29ʼ to a point,
said point being in said centerline, in another line of said Ewing and in a line of Delbert
and/or Marguerite Stearns
(Deed Book 0235 Page 0913),
thence leaving said Road and
with said Ewing and said
Sterns;

For more
information,
please call
740.446.3064.
Legals
Chester Township Trustees
will accept bids for cemetery
mowing contract for Chester,
Mt Herman and Mound Cemeteries for the 2012 mowing
season.
Cemeteries are to be mowed
at least 10 timess throughout
the season with special emphasis on holidays. Bids must
be received by the township by
March 27, 2012.
Chester Township Trustees
PO Box 46
Chester OH
45720
Bids must include a copy of insurance liabilty coverage with
Chester Township named as
an additional insured and 2
references.
Chester Township reserves
the right to reject any and all
bids (3) 20, 21, 2012
SHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
THE STATE OF OHIO,
MEIGS COUNTY.
PEGGY YOST, MEIGS
COUNTY TREASURER :
Plaintiff
vs
BEN
:

:

CASE NO. 10 DL 004
H.

EWING,

Defendants

et

N59°59ʼ56” E 208.36ʼ to a
point, thence;
N35°12ʼ56” E 45.17ʼ to a point,
thence;
N00°06ʼ06” W 69.03ʼ to a
point, thence;
N21°58ʼ26” W 248.56ʼ to a
point thence;
N07°51ʼ19” W 393.52ʼ to a
point, thence;

al.

:

In pursuance of an Order
of Sale dated January 26,
2012, in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, at the front door of
the Court House, in Pomeroy,
Ohio, in the above named
County, on Tuesday, the 30th
day of March, 2012 at 10:00
o'clock A.M., the following described real estate, situate in
the County of Meigs, and State
of Ohio, to-wit:
Situated in the Township of
Orange, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio. Beginning at a
point, said point being in the
southern line of Section 35,
T.4N-R.12W and being
3,927.49ʼ from the southwest
corner of said Section 35.
Said point also being in a line
of Benjamin and/or Doris Ewing (Deed Book 0304 page
0243), in a line of Brenda
and/or Gary Johnson (Official
Record 0021 Page 0147) and
in
the
centerline
of
Keebaugh-Follrod Rd. T444,
thence making a new line
through the lands of said Ewing and with the centerline of
said Road the following six (6)
lines;

S79°19ʼ37” E 60.21ʼ to a point,
said point being a corner to
said Ewing, a corner to said
Stearns and in the center of
the Middle Branch Shade
River, thence with said Ewing,
with said Stearns and with said
River for eight (8) lines;
N21°11ʼ36” E 156.74ʼ
point, thence;
N38°07ʼ51” E 167.28ʼ
point, thence;
N80°32ʼ43” E 62.83ʼ to a
thence;
S51°05ʼ52” E 286.22ʼ
point, thence;
S51°32ʼ21” E 338.44ʼ
point, thence;
S59°34ʼ38” E 170.69ʼ
point, thence;
N78°45ʼ13” E 257.41ʼ
point, thence;

to a
to a
point,
to a
to a
to a
to a

S64°40ʼ43” E 455.28ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
to said Ewing, a corner to said
Stearns, in said river and in
the eastern line of said Section
35, thence making a new line
through the lands of said Ewing for seven (7) lines;
S56°51ʼ05” E 315.58ʼ to a
point in said River;
S69°22ʼ08” E 344.49ʼ to a
point in said River;
S57°39ʼ20” E 148.93ʼ to a
point in said River;
N73°23ʼ59”E 137.82ʼ to a point
in said River and then leaving
said River;
S39°34ʼ31” E, passing a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set at 42.53ʼ, a total distance of 562.53ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set;
S54°50ʼ12” W 165.78ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set;
S11°34ʼ53” W 961.75ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set, said rebar being in a line of said Ewing and
in a line of Delbert and/or Marguerite Stearns (Deed Book
0228 Page 0507), thence with
said line;
N78°22ʼ18” W 559.42ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
to said Ewing, a corner to said
Stearns, in a line of Loretta
and/or Sammie Brown (Deed
Book 0330 Page 0279) and in
the centerline of above said
River, thence with said Ewing,
with said Brown and with said
River for eight (8) lines;
N22°00ʼ56” E
point, thence;
N36°40ʼ44” W
point, thence;
N65°59ʼ19” W
point, thence;
N88°21ʼ04” W
point, thence;
S84°48ʼ03” W
point, thence;
S81°33ʼ19” W
point, thence;
S88°48ʼ19” W
point, thence;

286.28ʼ to a
65.36ʼ to a
159.35ʼ to a
251.67ʼ to a
270.33ʼ to a
74.58ʼ to a
156.42ʼ to a

S84°33ʼ19” W 309.54ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
N59°59ʼ56” E 208.36ʼ to a to said point being a corner to
Help
WantedGeneral
point, thence;
said Ewing, a corner to said
N35°12ʼ56” E 45.17ʼ to a point, Brown, in said River and corthence;
ner to above said Johnson,
N00°06ʼ06” W 69.03ʼ to a thence with said Ewing and
said Johnson for three (3)
point, thence;
N21°58ʼ26” W 248.56ʼ to a lines;
point thence;
N07°51ʼ19” W 393.52ʼ to a N70°26ʼ41” W 267.30ʼ to a
point, thence;
point, thence;
N20°13ʼ54” W 692.59ʼ to a
N09°04ʼ03” E 80.29ʼ to a point, metal tee post found, thence;
said point being in said center- N79°19ʼ37” W 357.04ʼ to the
line, in another line of said Ew- point of beginning.
ing and in a line of Delbert
and/or Marguerite Stearns Containing 82.19 acres, and
(Deed Book 0235 Page 0913), being shown upon that certain
thence leaving said Road and plat by Fox Engineering,
with said Ewing and said PLLC. A copy of said plat,
60299297
dated March 08, 2007 is
atSterns;
tached hereto and made a part
S79°19ʼ37” E 60.21ʼ to a point, of this description.
said point being a corner to
said Ewing, a corner to said The above parcel contains
Stearns and in the center of 34.19 acres from Section 35,

HELP WANTED

Syracuse Village is accepting applications
for manager, assistant manager, and lifeguards for the 2012 season at London Pool.
Pick up applications at Village hall from 8-4
weekdays, applications are due by 4 pm on
April 4.

S64°40ʼ43” E 455.28ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
to said Ewing, a corner to said
Stearns, in said river and in
the eastern line of said Section
35, thence making a new line
through the lands of said Ewing for seven (7) lines;
S56°51ʼ05” E 315.58ʼ to a
point in said River;
S69°22ʼ08” E 344.49ʼ to a
point in said River;
S57°39ʼ20” E 148.93ʼ to a
point in said River;
N73°23ʼ59”E 137.82ʼ to a point
in said River and then leaving
said River;
S39°34ʼ31” E, passing a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set at 42.53ʼ, a total distance of 562.53ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set;
S54°50ʼ12” W 165.78ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set;
S11°34ʼ53” W 961.75ʼ to a 5/8”
rebar w/cap set, said rebar being in a line of said Ewing and
in a line of Delbert and/or Marguerite Stearns (Deed Book
0228 Page 0507), thence with
said line;
N78°22ʼ18” W 559.42ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
to said Ewing, a corner to said
Stearns, in a line of Loretta
and/or Sammie Brown (Deed
Book 0330 Page 0279) and in
the centerline of above said
River, thence with said Ewing,
with said Brown and with said
River for eight (8) lines;
N22°00ʼ56” E
point, thence;
N36°40ʼ44” W
point, thence;
N65°59ʼ19” W
point, thence;
N88°21ʼ04” W
point, thence;
S84°48ʼ03” W
point, thence;
S81°33ʼ19” W
point, thence;
S88°48ʼ19” W
point, thence;

286.28ʼ to a
65.36ʼ to a
159.35ʼ to a
251.67ʼ to a
270.33ʼ to a
74.58ʼ to a
156.42ʼ to a

Legals
S84°33ʼ19” W 309.54ʼ to a
point, said point being a corner
to said point being a corner to
said Ewing, a corner to said
Brown, in said River and corner to above said Johnson,
thence with said Ewing and
said Johnson for three (3)
lines;
N70°26ʼ41” W 267.30ʼ to a
point, thence;
N20°13ʼ54” W 692.59ʼ to a
metal tee post found, thence;
N79°19ʼ37” W 357.04ʼ to the
point of beginning.
Containing 82.19 acres, and
being shown upon that certain
plat by Fox Engineering,
PLLC. A copy of said plat,
dated March 08, 2007 is attached hereto and made a part
of this description.
The above parcel contains
34.19 acres from Section 35,
19.30 acres from Section 29,
15.76 acres from Fraction 35
and 12.94 acres from Section
34.
Reference Deed: Volume 304,
Page 243, Meigs County Deed
Records.

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 09 CV 097
Chase Home Finance LLC
Vs
Beth Howes aka Beth A.
Howes, et al.
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed from said
court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at
public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, March
30, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
real estate:
Parcel One:
Situated in the Township of
Chester, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
Being a part of a 40 acres tract
transferred to John L. Bass as
Tract II of a deed recorded in
Deed Book 306, page 693,
Meigs County Recorderʼs Office, also being a part of the
Northwest quarter of section 6,
Township 2-N, Range 13-W,
Chester Township, more particularly described as follows:
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of Township Road
#83 of which bears South 58
degrees 44ʼ 51” West a distance of 72.61 feet to the intersection of said
centerline and
Legals
the East line of said 40 acres
tract; thence along said centerline South 58 degrees 44ʼ 51”
West a distance of 208.71 feet
to a point; thence leaving said
centerline North 31 degrees
15ʼ 09” West passing through
a 5/8ʼ iron pin set at a distance
of 18.71 feet and going a total
distance of 208.71 feet toa a
5/8” iron pin set; thence North
58 degrees 44ʼ 51” East a distance of 208.71 feet to a5/8”
iron pin set; thence North 31
degrees 15ʼ 09” East passing
through a 5/8” iron pin set at a
distance of 190 feet and going
a total distance of 208.71 feet
to a principal point of beginning, containing 1.000 acres,
subject to all legal easements
and rights of way.
Bearings are assumed and are
for the determination of angles
only.
The above description was
prepared from an actual survey made on the 25th day of
June, 1993 by C. Thomas
Smith, Ohio Professional Surveyor #6844
Parcel Two:

Parcel
Numbers:
1000133.000, 1000129.000,
1000134.000 &amp; 1000130.000

Situated in the Township of
Chester, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:

Subject to all legal highways,
easements, right of ways, zoning ordinances, restrictions
and conditions of record.

Being a part of a 40 acres tract
transferred to John L. Bass as
Tract II of a deed recorded in
Deed Book 306, page 693,
Meigs County Recorderʼs Office, also being a part of the
Northwest quarter of section 6,
Township 2-N, Range 13-W,
Chester Township, more particularly described as follows:

ADDRESS OF PROPERTY:
41144 Keebaugh-Follrod
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Said premises appraised at
$140,000.00 and cannot be
sold for less than two-thirds of
said amount;
TERMS OF SALE: Ten
per cent (10%) cash in hand
on day of sale with balance to
be paid upon delivery of deed.
THIS SHERIFF'S SALE OPERATES UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR. THE MEIGS COUNTY
SHERIFF MAKES NO GUARANTEE AS TO STATUS OF
TITLE PRIOR TO SALE.
ROBERT BEEGLE, SHERIFF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
LAWRENCE A. HEISER
OTHS, HEISER &amp; MILLER,
LLC
Attorney for Plaintiff
(3) 7, 14, 21, 2012
Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 09 CV 097
Chase Home Finance LLC
Vs
Beth Howes aka Beth A.
Howes, et al.
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed from said
court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at
public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, March
30, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
real estate:
Parcel One:
Situated in the Township of
Chester, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:
Being a part of a 40 acres tract
transferred to John L. Bass as
Tract II of a deed recorded in
Deed Book 306, page 693,
Meigs County Recorderʼs Office, also being a part of the
Northwest quarter of section 6,
Township 2-N, Range 13-W,
Chester Township, more particularly described as follows:
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of Township Road
#83 of which bears South 58
degrees 44ʼ 51” West a distance of 72.61 feet to the intersection of said centerline and
the East line of said 40 acres
tract; thence along said centerline South 58 degrees 44ʼ 51”
West a distance of 208.71 feet
to a point; thence leaving said
centerline North 31 degrees

Beginning at a point in the
centerline of Township Road
#83, being the Southwest corner of a 1 acre +/- tract as recorded in deed Book 336,
page 721; thence along said
centerline South 58 degrees
44ʼ 51” West a distance of
313.07 feet to a point; thence
leaving said centerline North
31 degrees 15ʼ 09” West passing through a 5/8” iron pint set
at a distance of 18.71 feet and
going a total distance of
313.07 feet to a 5/8” iron pin
set; thence North 58 degrees
44” 51” East a distance of
521.78 to a 5/8” iron pin set;
thence South 31 degrees 15ʼ
09” East a distance of 104.36
feet to an existing 5/8/” iron pin
being the Northeast corner of
said 1.000 acre tract; thence
along the North line of said
1.000 acre tract South 58 degrees 44ʼ 51” West a distance
of 208.71 feet to an existing
5/8/” iron pin being the Northwest corner of said 1.000 acre
+/- tract; thence leaving said
North line and along the West
line of said 1.000 acre tract
South 31 degrees 15ʼ 09” East
passing through an existing
5/8/” iron pin set at a distance
of 190.00 feet and going a total distance of 208.71 feet to
the principal point of beginning, containing 2.750 acres
+/-, subject to all legal easements and rights-of-way.
Bearings were derived from a
previous survey recorded in
Deed Book 336, at page 721.

centerline South 58 degrees
44ʼ 51” West a distance of
313.07 feet to a point; thence
The
leaving said centerline North
31 degrees 15ʼ 09” West passing through a 5/8” iron pint set
at a distance of 18.71 feet and
going a total distance of
313.07 feet to a 5/8” iron pin
set; thence North 58 degrees
44” 51” East a distance of
521.78 to a 5/8” iron pin set;
thence South 31 degrees 15ʼ
09” East a distance of 104.36
feet to an existing 5/8/” iron pin
being the Northeast corner of
said 1.000 acre tract; thence
along the North line of said
1.000 acre tract South 58 degrees 44ʼ 51” West a distance
of 208.71 feet to an existing
5/8/” iron pin being the Northwest corner of said 1.000 acre
+/- tract; thence leaving said
North line and along the West
line of said 1.000 acre tract
South 31 degrees 15ʼ 09” East
passing through an existing
5/8/” iron pin set at a distance
of 190.00 feet and going a total distance of 208.71 feet to
the principal point of beginning, containing 2.750 acres
+/-, subject to all legal easements and rights-of-way.
Bearings were derived from a
previous survey recorded in
Deed Book 336, at page 721.
The above description was
prepared from an actual survey made on the 1st day of
September, 1993, by C. Thomas Smith, Ohio Professional
Surveyor #6844
Parcel Number: 03-00080.001
and 03-00080.002
Property Located at:
Skinner Road

36675

Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference: 257,
905
Property Appraised at: 60,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on
day of sale, case or certified
check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal
did not include
Legals
an interior examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle, Meigs
County Sheriff
Channing L. Ulbrich
Ohio Supreme Court Reg.
#0071855
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH
45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
Run Dates: 3/7/12, 3/14/12,
3/21/12
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
MidFirst Bank
Plaintiff
vs.
No. 09-CV-164
Robert A. Hayes, et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of a Praecipe
Order of Sale with appraisal in
the above entitled action, I will
offer for sale at public auction,
in the second floor lobby of the
Courthouse
at _100 East 2nd St Pomeroy,
OH 45769
in the above
named county, on Friday, the
30th day of March, 2012
at
10:00AM
the following described real estate, situate in
the County of Meigs
and State of Ohio, and
Village of Syracuse , to wit:
The following real estate Situate in the Village of Syracuse,
in the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio and being in 100
Acre Lot No. 297 in said Village and being Lots Nos. 53
and 54 in Carleton's Second
Addition to said Village. Excepting the coal underlying
said premises with the right to
mine and remove the same
without injury to the surface.
Subject to all legal easements
and leases.
Said Premises Located at
2292 Sixth Street, Syracuse,
OH 45779 also known as Parcel # 2000369000 and
2000368000
Said Premises Appraised at
$40,000.00
and cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE:
posit

10% de-

David F. Hanson
Attorney
Robert E. Beegle
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
*In Cities or Villages, GIVE
STREET and NUMBER if any.
If no such Number exists,
GIVE STREET or ROAD on
which located and also the
names of the intersecting
Streets or Roads immediately
North and South or East and
West of such lands and tenements. Sec. 11678.
(3) 7, 14, 21, 2012

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate

The above description was
prepared from an actual survey made on the 1st day of
September, 1993, by C. Thomas Smith, Ohio Professional
Surveyor #6844

Case Number 11 CV 076

Parcel Number: 03-00080.001
and 03-00080.002

Mark A. Doss, et al.

Property Located at:
Skinner Road

36675

Pomeroy, OH 45769
Prior Deed Reference: 257,
905
Property Appraised at: 60,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on
day of sale, case or certified
check, balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not include
an interior examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle, Meigs
County Sheriff
Channing L. Ulbrich

First Guaranty Mortgage Corporation
Vs
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed from said
court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at
public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, March
30, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
real estate:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and in the
Township of Rutland.
Being in Fraction 2, Township
6 North, Range 14 West, of
the Ohio Companyʼs purchas
and being described as follows:
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of Happy Hollow

Daily Sentinel • Page 7

Sheriff Sale of Real Estate
Case Number 11 CV 076
First Guaranty Mortgage Corporation
Vs
Mark A. Doss, et al.
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County, Ohio.
In pursuance of an order of
sale to me directed from said
court in the above entitled action, I will expose to sale at
public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs County
Court House on Friday, March
30, 2012 at 10:00 a.m. of said
day, the following described
real estate:
Situated in the State of Ohio,
County of Meigs and in the
Township of Rutland.
Being in Fraction 2, Township
6 North, Range
Legals14 West, of
the Ohio Companyʼs purchas
and being described as follows:
Beginning at a point in the
centerline of Happy Hollow
Road (Township Road 174
North), said point being north
350 feet and west 575 feet
from the southeast corner of
said fraction 2; thence north 74
deg. 50ʼ 35” west, 272.14 feet
along the centerline of said
Happy Hollow Road (Township
Road 174 North), to a point;
thence north 42 deg. 09ʼ 49”
east, 360.74 feet to an iron
rod; passing a 16 inch sycamore tree at 43 feet and a 28
inch oak tree at 195.4 feet for
reference; then south 3 deg.
28; 09” east 339.18 feet to the
point of beginning, passing an
8 inch oak tree at 160.11 feet
and a 24 inch twin oak at
311.18 feet for reference, containing 1.00 acres, more or
less.
Subject to all leases, easements and right of way of record.
Parcel Number: 1100768000
Property Located at:
Happy Hollow Road

33336

Rutland, OH 45775
Prior Deed Reference: Volume
260, page 875
Property Appraised at: 90000
Terms of Sale: Cannot be sold
for less than 2/3rds for the appraised value. 10% down on
day of sale, in form of cash
(personal checks are not accepted), balance due on confirmation of sale.
The appraisal did not include
an interior examination of the
house.
Robert E. Beegle, Meigs
County Sheriff
Matthew I. McKelvey
Ohio Supreme Court Reg.
#0074762
Attorney for the Plaintiff
Lerner, Sampson &amp; Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480 Cincinnati, OH
45202-4007 (513) 241-3100
Run Dates:
3/21/12

3/7/12, 3/14/12,

IN THE COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Case No. 11 CV 039
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
Wells Fargo Bank, NA Plaintiff
VS.
Neal D. Bonecutter and Laura
E. Bonecutter Defendant
To the Clerk:
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on the Front Steps
of the Courthouse, In Pomeroy
Ohio in the above named
County, on Friday, the 30th
Day of March, 2012, at 10
oʼclock A.M.., the following described real estate in the
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, and in the Township of
Chester to wit:
SITUATED IN THE CHESTER
TOWNSHIP,
MEIGS
COUNTY, STATE OF OHIO
AND BEING
IN SECTION 12, TOWN 2
NORTH, RANGE 13 WEST
OF THE OHIO COMPANY'S
PURCHASE AND BEING DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:
BEGINNING AT A POINT
WEST ABOUT 2330 FEET
AND SOUTH ABOUT 2680
FEET AND
SOUTH 40 DEG.
02' WEST 637 FEET FROM
THE NORTHEAST CORNER
OF SAID SECTION 12, SAID
POINT OF BEGINNING
BEING SOUTH 40 DEG. 02'
WEST 637 FEET FROM THE
JUNCTION OF THE
CENTERLINES OF COUNTY
ROAD C-20 (OLD U.S. 33)
AND COUNTY ROAD C-26,

�02' WEST 637 FEET FROM leading from Long Bottom to
THE NORTHEAST CORNER Keno and off a tract of land
OF SAID SECTION
12, SAID
consisting of nine acres deed
Wednesday,
March
21, 2012
POINT OF BEGINNING
to Ida Borham, this land conveyed joins Wm. Stethem on
BEING SOUTH
40 DEG. 02' the Southwest
corner and off
Legals
Legals
WEST 637 FEET FROM THE the North side of the said nine
JUNCTION OF THE
acre tract.
CENTERLINES OF COUNTY
Tax ID No.: 0900348000
ROAD C-20 (OLD U.S. 33) No Address: This parcel fronts
AND COUNTY ROAD C-26, Bigley Ridge Road between
SAID POINT OF BEGINNING
Mt. Olive Rd and Angela Rd.,
BEING ON THE
Long Bottom, OH.

PARCEL
NUMBER
0400010.000
Said Premises Located at
36425 Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Said Premises Appraised at
$65,000.00
And cannot be sold for less
than two-thirds of that amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% of the
highest bid, cash or certified
check, due on the day of sale,
balance due upon confirmation
of the sale by the Meigs
County Court of Common
Please, the deed will be issued
upon the balance being paid.
Run Dates: March 7,14 and 21
Robert E. Beegle___
Sheriff of Meigs County
Amy Carr Esq.
Attorney for Plaintiff
Sheriffʼs Sale of Real Estate
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County.
WWR #10062150
IN THE COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JPMORGAN CHASE BANK,
N.A. SUCCESSOR BY
MERGER TO BANK ONE,
N.A.
CASE NO. 11-CV-020
(Foreclosure)
Plaintiff
vs.
LARRY W. SAMPSON, et al.
Defendants
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at public auction, on the Meigs
County Courthouse steps, in
the above named County, on
Friday the 30th day of March,
at 10:00 a.m., the following described real estate to-wit:
Situated in the Township of Olive, County of Meigs and State
of Ohio, and described as follows:
PARCEL NO. 1: Situated in
Section Thirty, Town Three,
Range Eleven of the Ohio
Companyʼs Purchase, the land
conveyed in this Deed consists
of one acre, more or less, and
lays north of the public road
leading from Long Bottom to
Keno and off a tract of land
consisting of nine acres deed
to Ida Borham, this land conveyed joins Wm. Stethem on
the Southwest corner and off
the North side of the said nine
acre tract.

PARCEL NO. 2: The following
all such lot or parcel of land lying on the West side of the
public road deed to Alexander
Dixon by John Spaun and
Samuel Spaun and wife, which
deed is dated Sept. 6, 1867,
situate in the County of Meigs
and State of Ohio in Section
Thirty, Town Three, Range
Eleven of the Ohio Company's
Purchase, bounded and described as follows: A five acre
lot off the Northeast corner of
the South half of the Northeast
quarter of Section Thirty, the
same being a part of Lot No.
646, except a small corner on
the Northeast end of said five
acre lot deeded to Catherine
Dean for an outlet or a road.
EXCEPT 1 acre conveyed to
Ida Corham by deed recorded
in Deed Book 126 Page 598
Meigs County Deed Records.
Tax ID No.: 0900349000
No Address: This parcel fronts
Bigley Ridge Road between
Mt. Olive Rd and Angela Rd.,
Long Bottom, OH.
PARCEL NO. 3: Situated in
the Township of Olive, County
of Meigs and State of Ohio, in
the Long Bottom Special District, bounded and described
as follows:
Beginning at a stone corner on
the line of lands owned by William Stethem and C.A. Coleman running South 35
&amp;frac12; rods thence East 22
&amp;frac12; rods to the county
road; thence North with the
meanders of said County road,
36 rods to a stone corner;
thence West 12 rods to the
place of beginning, containing
3 acres, more or less. Same
lands being situated in Section
30, Town 3, Range 11 Ohio
Company's Purchase.
Tax ID No. 0900348000,
0900349000 and 0900350000
Said Premises located at
51922 Bigley Ridge Road and
vacan land on Bigley Ridge
Road, Long Bottom, OH 45743
Said Premises appraised at
$65,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds that
amount.
Terms of sale: 10% of the purchase price down the date of
sale with the remaining balance to be paid within thirty
days from the date of sale.
David W. Cliffe (0059537)
Attorney for the Plaintiff
3/7/12, 3/14/12, 3/21/12

REAL ESTATE SALES

Rio Grande Community College will be receiving sealed
bids for the following items:
·
2009 T1520 New Holland
4WD Tractor with only 290
Hours; Front loader and quick
attach dozer blade included.
· 2009 Woods RD6000 Finish mower
The deadline for submitting
bids is Saturday, March 31,
2012 at 10:30am. RGCC will
hold a public opening immediately following on Saturday,
March 31, 2012 at 10:30am at
the Rio Grande Meigs Center,
42377 Charles Chancy Dr.
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. Bidder
need not be present at opening. Owner reserves the right
to reject all bids. Items may
be viewed at the above mentioned location Monday – Friday from 9:00am to 6:00pm.
Call 740-992-1880 for more information.
SERVICES
Child / Elderly Care
Will take care of the elderly in
their homes. Have exp.
304-675-3264
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

FINANCIAL
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

300

SERVICES

Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

ANIMALS
Want To Buy
Cash for junk autos. 388-0011
or 441-7870
AGRICULTURE
Farm Equipment
Case IH 1190 3 cylinder deisel
w/canopy, 37 Hp drawbar, 43
Hp Pto, good condition all hydrolics work, $4250; Ford 501
sickle bar 7' cut mower, $500,
phone 740-247-2117 or
740-444-2793

ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lost &amp; Found
A Pit Bull / Boxer mixed
mostly White with some black
and brown markings was
FOUND in the Jackson area.
Call 590-3750.
We have lost our dog. She is
a salt &amp; pepper schnoodle
(part schnauzer &amp; part poodle). She answers to the name
Sophie. Please help us find
our dog. A reward will be given
to anyone who leads to our recovery of Sophie. If you have
any information, please call
304-675-7474.
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

MERCHANDISE

For Sale By Owner
1978 Nashua trailer-2 BR, w/d,
stove, frig, covered porch, live
in or use as rental, $5000
304-882-2539
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
1BR, upstairs Garage Apt, water/trash paid. $350 month,
$350 deposit. No Pets
740-446-3870
2 &amp; 3 BR apts, $385 &amp; up,
sec dep $300 &amp; up,
AC, W/D hook-up,
tenant pays elec, EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740-988-6130
2 BR, furnished, $600 deposit,
$600 Rent, Electric. Small
dogs
considered
740-446-9595
2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Lg 1 Bedroom Apt. with DW
and W &amp; D. Garbage &amp; water
pd. located on 588 $450mo.
$450dep. Call 419-359-1768.
New Condo w/patio in Racine,
Oh, 2 br, 2 bth, liv-rm, eat-in
kitchen. w/dishwasher., microwave, stove &amp; frig, central air,
must see, No Pets, $675 plus
electric, 740-247-3008
One
Bedroom
740-446-0390

Apt.

RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing
Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail.
Rent plus dep &amp;
elec. Minorities
encouraged to apply. No pets.
304-674-0023
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.
Studio Apt. Rio Grande area,
within walking distance to
Campus. $425 mo / $425 dep.
Call or Text 740-339-2494.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679

Miscellaneous

Houses For Rent

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

Want To Buy

1 BR, $350 mo, $350 dep, ,
NO PETS,Syracuse, OH
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
AUTOMOTIVE
Trucks
2009 F-250 V-10, gas engine,
56,000 miles, asking $23,000
new condition, run's great,
740-742-3029, 740-416-0019
call after 4pm

2 BR house, family room, W/D
hook-up, Carport, @ 32 madison Call 441-8578 leave message $450/mo
NO PETS.
2BR, 1 1/2 BA, Kitchen furnished, Rear 248 1st Ave., 1
year lease, $550/MO + Deposit &amp; Reference, No Pets
740-446-4926
3BR, $600/month, $600/Deposit 740-367-0641 or
740-446-4015
Nice 2 - Story country home
on lg lot (Rm for garden)
near RV Schools - 3 BR
renovated bath, All electric,
stove,frig,w/d hook-ups, attached garage. $575 rent
plus dep. Applications Call
446-3644.

Houses For Rent
Very nice home for rent in Middleport (upstairs portion of the
home), good neighborhood.
Newly remodeled. New appliances, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
ceintral air &amp; heat, large deck
on back, garage available, Call
740-992-9784 for more information.
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Lots
Trailer lot on Bailey Run Rd for
rent, $150 per month. includes
water, 252-333-2495
Rentals
Nice 14 X 70 2 bedroom
Trailer in country. Lg Porch,
water pd. You pay gas &amp; Elec.
$525 per/mo. 590-8670.
Small 2 bedroom trailer, $250
rent, $250 dep, yrs lease, no
pets, no calls after 9pm,
740-992-5097
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Construction
Edward's Roofing &amp; Construction, finish carpentry, 20 yr experience, Satisfaction guaranteed, 740-444-9112.
Help Wanted- General
LOCAL CONVENIENCE
STORE CHAIN
is NOW Hiring Cashiers,
ALL SHIFTS.
Apply online at
www.parmarstores.com
or fax resume
to 740-376-1565.
Olive Township is currently accepting applications for the position of Fiscal Officer. Please
send resumes to PO Box 242,
Tuppers Plains, Oh 45783 by
March 30th

Point Pleasant
Moose Lodge is now

accepting Applications for
Bartender and Server call for
Applications at
1-304-675-4805 between the
hours 9am to 1pm Monday
thru Friday
Medical
Overbrook Center is accepting
applications for RN's and a
part time receptionist/secretary.Must have knowledge of
Microsoft Word and Excel programs and be availablr for
some weekend hours. Applications are available at our facility, 333 Page Street, Middleport, Oh 45760 EOE

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes
2-BR 1 bath small mobile
home for rent. 1-2 persons
only. Water/Trash paid. NO
PETS! Great Location @
Johnsons Mobile Home Park!
Call 740-446-3160.
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Miscellaneous

Tax ID No.: 0900348000
W
EDNESDAY
PRIMETIME
No
Address:
This parcel fronts
Bigley Ridge Road between
6
PM
7 PM
Mt. Olive Rd and Angela Rd., 6:30
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Long
3 Bottom,
(WSAZ) OH.
News
Fortune
News NBC Nightly
PARCEL
NO. 2:WTAP
The following
4
(WTAP)
at Sixof land ly-News
all such lot or parcel
ABC
6 News
ing6 on(WSYX)
the West
side
of theABC World
6 AlexanderNews
at to
public road deed
European
Dixon
by John
Spaun andNightly
7
(WOUB)
Samuel Spaun Journal
and wife, whichBusiness
deed is dated Eyewitness
Sept. 6, 1867,ABC World
8
(WCHS)
News of
News
at Meigs
6
situate in the County
10TVinNews
and State of Ohio
SectionCBS Evening
10 (WBNS) HD
Thirty, Town Three, RangeNews
Eleven of the Ohio
The Company's
Big
Two and a
11 (WVAH)
Purchase,
bounded
and de-Half Men
Bang Theory
scribed as follows:
five acreNightly
BBC ANews
(WPBY)
lot12off the
Northeast
corner ofBusiness
America
the South half of
the Northeast
News
13 at CBS Evening
13 (WOWK)
quarter
of Section
6:00Thirty,
p.m. theNews
same
being
a
part
of
Lot No.30 Rock
30 Rock
18
(WGN)
646,
except a small corner onReds Live
24 (FXSP) Insider
the
end of said five
25Northeast
(ESPN) SportsCenter
acre
deeded to CatherineBasketball
26 lot
(ESPN2) SportsN.
Dean
an outlet or a road.
27 for
(LIFE) Wife Swap

Notices
Public Auction

www.mydailysentinel.com

CENTERLINE OF COUNTY
ROAD C-20 AND OVER A
CULVERT; THENCE NORTH
46 DEG.
16' WEST 564.1 FEET TO AN
IRON ROD SET AT THE
BASE OF A 24 INCH OAK;
THENCE SOUTH 66 DEG. 52'
WEST 222.5 FEET ALONG A
FENCE TO AN IRON ROD
SET AT THE BASE OF AN 18
INCH WALNUT, SAID WALNUT BEING NORTH 80 DEG.
23' EAST 360 FEET FROM
THE NORTHEAST CORNER
OF THE WILBUR BAILEY
FARM;
THENCE SOUTH 33 DEG. 21'
EAST 608.7 FEET TO THE
CENTERLINE OF COUNTY
ROAD C-20, CROSSING AN
IRON ROD SET AT 5617
FEET FOR REFERENCE;
THENCE
NORTH 63 DEG. 38' EAST
70.1 FEET AND NORTH 57
DEG. 35' EAST 101 FEET
AND
NORTH 47 DEG. 02' EAST
126.9 FEET ALONG THE
CENTERLINE OF COUNTY
ROAD
C-20 TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING CONTAINING 3.82
ACRES, MORE OR LESS,
EXCEPTING ALL LEGAL
RIGHTS OF WAY.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

www.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21
7:30

Jeopardy!

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour

8

PM

Whitney (N)
Whitney (N)

8:30

Are There
"Boots" (N)
Are There
"Boots" (N)
Suburgatory

9

PM

9:30

Bent "Pilot" Bent (N)
(P) (N)
Bent "Pilot" Bent (N)
(P) (N)
Happy
Modern
Family
Endings (N)
Nova "Extreme Ice"

10

PM

10:30

Rock Center With Brian
Williams Ann Curry
Rock Center With Brian
Williams Ann Curry
Missing "Pilot"

11

PM

WSAZ News
Tonight
WTAP News
at 11
ABC 6 News
at 11
Great
Getaways
Eyewitness
News 11PM
10TV News
HD at 11
The
Simpsons
Charlie Rose

11:30

(:35) Tonight

Show (N)
(:35) Tonight
Show (N)
(:35) News
Nightline
Closer to
Truth
(:35) News
Nightline
(:35) LateS
(N)
Excused

The Middle
"The Map"
Wild! "Animal Inventors:
Steve Jobs: One Last
Animal IT"
Thing
Entertainm- The Middle Suburgatory Modern
Judge Judy
Happy
Missing "Pilot"
Family
Endings (N)
ent Tonight "The Map"
Wheel of
Criminal Minds
CSI: Crime Scene "Malice
Jeopardy!
Survivor: One World (N)
Fortune
"Foundation" (N)
in Wonderland" (N)
Eyewitness News at 10
Two and a
The Big
American Idol The finalists perform live once again
Half Men
Bang Theory hoping to impress the judges and America. (N)
p.m.
Nature "Survivors of the
Nova "Extreme Ice"
Inspiring
PBS NewsHour
Inspiring
Firestorm"
West Virg
West Virg
Criminal Minds
CSI: Crime Scene "Malice News 13 at (:35) LateS
13 News at Inside
Survivor: One World (N)
7:00 p.m.
Edition
"Foundation" (N)
in Wonderland" (N)
11:00 p.m.
(N)
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
Funniest Home Videos
WGN News at Nine
30 Rock
Scrubs
Coaches' Tournament
Sports Tour Sports Tour Ocean Race Game 365
The Dan Patrick Show
WPT Poker
NBA Basketball New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers (L)
NBA Basketball Los Angeles Lakers vs. Dallas Mavericks (L)
NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament Quarter-final (L)
NCAA Basketball NIT Tournament Quarter-final (L)
SportsCenter
W. Swap "Harris/ Weasel" Wife Swap
W. Swap "Tassier/ Tyson" Wife Swap
Wife Swap
29
Movie
+++ Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story ('04, Com) Vince Vaughn. ++ Meet the Parents ('00, Com) Ben Stiller.
The 700 Club
(FAM)
EXCEPT
1 acre
conveyed toAuction
30 (SPIKE)
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction Hunters (N)
Digger (N)
Digger
Auction Hunters
Ida
by deed recordedBig Time R. SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob SpongeBob '70s Show
31Corham
'70s Show
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Friends
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(NICK) Big Time R.
in34
Deed(USA)
Book NCIS
126 Page
598
"Dead Air"
NCIS: Los Angeles
NCIS
NCIS "Kill Screen"
Psych
Fairly Legal "Satisfaction"
Meigs
County
Deed
Records.
35
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Conan
(TBS)
37
John King, USA
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
(CNN)
Tax
ID
No.:
0900349000
38
LawOrder "Murder Book" LawOrder "Criminal Law" Law &amp; Order "Ramparts" Law &amp; Order "Magnet"
Law &amp; Order "Marathon" Southland
(TNT)
No
Address:
This
parcel fronts
39
CSI: Miami "Forced Entry" CSI: Miami
++++ The Shawshank Redemption ('94, Dra) Morgan Freeman, Tim Robbins.
The Shawshank Rede...
(AMC)
Bigley
Ridge
Road
between
40 (DISC) Sons of Guns
Sons of Guns
Guns "Kamikaze Cannon" Guns "Behind the Scenes" Doomsday Bunkers
Guns "Behind the Scenes"
Mt.
Olive
Rd
and
Angela
Rd.,
42
Bounty "All My Children" Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Bounty
Bounty
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
Duck Dy
(A&amp;E)
Long
Bottom,
OH.
52 (ANPL) River Monst: Giants
Gator Boys
Rattlesnake Republic
Rattlesnake Rep "Mutiny" Rattlesn "Deadly Surprise" Rattlesnake Republic
57
++++ Juno ('07, Com) Michael Cera, Ellen Page.
Bad Girls "Sister Act"
Bad Girls Club "Evil Pair" Bad Girls /(:15) ++++ Juno ('07, Com) Ellen Page.
(OXY)
58
+++ Return to Me ('00, Rom) Minnie Driver, David Duchovny.
+++ Unfaithful ('02, Thril) Diane Lane, Richard Gere.
+++ Unfaithful
(WE)
PARCEL
NO.
3:
Situated
in
60
Ice Coco
Ice Coco
E! News
Khloe Lamar Khloe Lamar THS "Biggest Scandals Ever" The Soup
Ice Coco
C. Lately (N) E! News
(E!)
the
Township
of
Olive,
County
61
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Home Imp
Home Imp
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hot/ Cleve. HappilyDiv. Queens
Queens
(TVL)
of62
Meigs
and State of Ohio, in
Narco Bling
Weed "Buds on the Ballot" Weed "Pot or Not?" (N)
Narco Bling
(NGEO) Weed "Buds on the Ballot" Warrior Graveyard
the
Long
Bottom
Special
Dis64 (NBCSN) NBC Sports Talk
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Detroit Red Wings vs. New York Rangers (L)
NHL Live!
Fight Night NBC Sports Talk
trict,
bounded and described
65 (SPEED) NASCAR Race Hub (N)
Pass (N)
Pass Time
Dumbest
Dumbest (N) Car Warriors "Cutlass" (N) Stunt.
Stunt.
NASCAR Race Hub
as67
follows:
Restoration Restoration Restoration Restoration Only in America (N)
Restoration Restoration Swamp "Treebreaker 2"
(HIST) Only in America
68 (BRAVO) Tabatha Takes Over
Tabatha Takes Over
H.Wives "Under the Knife" Interior Therapy (N)
Million Dollar List (N)
Interior Therapy
Beginning
at a stone corner on
72
106 &amp; Park "Wild Out Wednesday" (L)
++ Meet the Browns ('08, Com/Dra) Angela Bassett, D. Mann.
Rip the Runway 2012 (N) The Game
The Game
(BET)
the
line
of
lands
owned
by
Wil73 (HGTV) For Rent
For Rent
House
House Hunt. Property Brothers
Income
Cousins
HouseH (N) House (N)
Property Brothers
liam
Stethem
and
C.A.
Cole74
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Ghost Hunters "Urgent"
Ghost Hunters Int'l. (N)
Monster Man (N)
Ghost Hunters Int'l.
man (SYFY)
runningMonster
South"Seeing
35
400 (HBO) + Envy ('04, Com) Jack Black, Ben Stiller. (:45) Fighter + Green Lantern ('11, Act) Ryan Reynolds.
Luck
Bill Maher
&amp;frac12;
rods
thence
East
22
450
(4:50) +++ Pulp Fiction John Travolta. +++ Inception ('10, Act) Leonardo DiCaprio, Joseph Gordon-Levitt. ++ Secret Window Johnny Depp.
(:40) Zane
(MAX)
&amp;frac12;
rods to the county
500 (SHOW) (:15) All Good Things ('11, Dra) Ryan Gosling.
Shame. "A Great Cause"
Rita Rudner and 3
House Lies
Californica. Inside Com. Movie

road; thence North with the
meanders of said County road,
36 rods to a stone corner;
thence West 12 rods to the
place of beginning, containing

�Wednesday, March 21, 2012

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday,
March 21, 2012:
This year your wit, mental agility
and resourcefulness come together in
an unprecedented manner. Whatever
you touch seems to work, yet there is
a current of the unexpected that runs
through your life. People recognize
your abilities and enjoy tossing ideas
at you. If you are single, romance
could be very exciting but unstable.
Change is a constant in life that
often creates excitement. If you are
attached, the two of you seem to grow
closer together. This is a year that will
be instrumental to your relationship.
You might be strengthening the foundations. ARIES is always ready for a
challenge.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHH Keep your own counsel, as
you have much to think about. You
could cause more change by doing
nothing at this point. The situation in
question could transform radically.
Get into an intense conversation and
exchange ideas. Tonight: Make it
early.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Others will respond well to
your calls and inquiries. Loved ones
and friends actively seek you out
because they know how much you
have to offer. Keep some opinions to
yourself. Should you decide to share,
choose a trusted partner. Tonight:
Where you want to be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH You have excellent ideas
and a lot to offer. Others appreciate
your sharing nature, but be prepared
to take the lead. Use care with new
acquaintances. You will have a tendency to attract people who are emotionally unavailable. Tonight: To the
wee hours.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Keep reaching out for
someone who has more expertise.
Feedback can only help you make better decisions. You also might want to
do more research and speak to more
people. The more opinions you hear,
the better decisions you’ll be able to
make. Tonight: Feed your mind and
hop on the Internet.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Somehow, you have a way
with a key person in your life that adds
to the positive vibes. Count on this
person’s support, and acknowledge his
or her level of caring. Communication
sizzles. You will want more information

once you hear some news. Hop on the
Web, and/or speak to someone who
knows about this topic. Tonight: Be
with a favorite person.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH If you let others take the
lead, you will free up a lot of time and
enjoy yourself so much more. You
have an opportunity or open window.
You can only gain from the experience; it could be a real eye-opener.
Tonight: Out.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Your ability to defer to others and see situations differently from
the majority could become a problem.
In an open discussion with a partner,
loved one or close friend, share some
of your reticence and thoughts. He
or she will understand you better.
Tonight: Sort through offers.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHHH Keeping your feet on the
ground could take a lot of work. Your
present inclination will be to float from
this thought to that topic. If you can, go
off and follow your imagination. You
will have a hard time being present in
the banal day-to-day events. Tonight:
Make plans with a loved one.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHH You could be tenser than you
would like. Someone you care about
might be draining you without intending to. Be caring, but establish boundaries. Check on a matter involving
your home. Tonight: Get some extra
R and R.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Your creativity and caring only add to your interactions. A
loved one, child or potential flirtation
responds well to a conversation.
Focus some of this dynamic energy on
a project — it could be golf; it could be
work. Tonight: Go with the moment.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH Remain sensitive to your
budget. Before you make a purchase
for your home, do some intense price
comparison. You might see an alternative or decide to wait. Trust your decision-making ability. Tonight: Spend
time with a family member.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH No more excuses.
Move on a key matter. You might
be delighted by what you hear and
by someone’s enthusiasm. Express
your appreciation in a manner that
can be heard. Understanding evolves
between the two of you. Tonight:
Celebrate the moment.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com

�Wednesday, March 21, 2012

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

www.mydailysentinel.com

MAD MARCH

MAYHEM!

WHO WILL WIN THE

FIN AL FOUR?

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
www.mydailytribune.com

The Point Pleasnt Register
mydailyregister.com

The Daily Sentinel
mydailysentinel.com

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&amp; RADIO SHACK

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MICHIGAN STATE

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John Greer Agent/Owner
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INDIANA

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WISCONSIN
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