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Patients paying for more

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Chamber educated
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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

GOP Sources:
Auditor to
be Kasich
running mate

•

COLUMBUS (AP)
Soun.·e!'&gt; tell The Associatt•d
Press that Ohio Auditor
Mar) 1~1ylor will drop her
re election bid to become
Republican John Kasich's
running mate in the race for
governor.
The 43-year-old Ta) lor b
A Ohio GOP's highest rank~ nonjudicial officeholder
and \\ ould add ) outh and
diversit\ to a ticket that seek"
to defeat Democratic GO\.
Ted Strickland in No,embcr.
Report:-. on Taylor's likcl)
selection were published
Tucsda\. fir!'&gt;t in The
Columbus Dispatch and later
in The (Cleveland) Plain
Dealer. The) were confinned
for the AP b) Republican
sources "ho rcque ...ted
anon) mity because they were
not authoritl.!d to speak for
the campaign.
Taylor's departure from
the auditor's race creates a
political opportunity for hl.!r
Democratic
challenger,
Hamilton Count) commissioner David Pepper. Ohio's
auditor is on the ptmerful
apportionment board set to
rednm legislath c dbtricts
this )Car.

• Wahama corrals
Bison. See Page 81

Rec~cled

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 Sf.CfiOSS- 12 PA&lt;.J~

Calendars

A3

eds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

( 20IO Ohio\ alit..') l'uhll~hlng Co.

li)JIJI,I !1!1.! 1!11

~

D.,-

Medical examiner reviews Rizer gunshot wounds
B Y B RIAN

J.

R EED

Kenneth Rizer, Sr.. in April,

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

2009. A jur) ...eated to hear

POMEROY
Prosecutors called their last
\\ itness to the stand
Tucsda) in the second murder trial of Paula Rizer.
Rizer. \vho gave emotional testimony on her O\\ n
behalf in her first trial last
year. is charged with murdering
her
husband.

her case in October acquitted her of aggra\ a ted murder, but deadlocked on a
le..,...er charge of murder.
The case began late last
wt•ck in Meigs Count\
Common Pleas Court, \\ tth
Judge Pred W. Crow Il l presiding.
Prosecuti ng
Attorney Colken Wi ll iams
and Assi stan! Prosecutor

Matthew Donohue arc presenting the state·~ case.
Dr. Russell Uptegro\e, a
forensic pathologi t in the
~1ontgomer)
County
Coroner's Office. reviewed
dozens of photographs
taken of Kenneth Rizer's
body during the au tops),
which Uptegrove conducted
in Dayton the day after
Ri1.er's death.
Those photos clearly

how gunshot \\OUnd and
of other mjuries.
including e\ idence of a
broken bone Uptegrove
said he beiJC\ es \\as fractured by a bullet. Rtzer's
right hand shows more C\ idence. Uptegr&lt;1ve identified scvl.!ral graze-type
\\ounds, including one at
the ba...c of the dead man's
thumb. and another on the
back of the thumb.
C\ idence

Attome\ Herman Carson,
\\ho repre~sents RiLer through
the Ohio Public Defender's
Office. said in his opemng
statements one of tho e
wounds is a clear sign of a
struggle bet\\cen the couple
during the last n:maining seconds of Kenneth Rizer\ life.
Rizer claims she tired at her
husband in self defense.
Please see Rizer, AS

Pomeroy
votes
for
•
tncrease
in fees
B Y B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
An
increase in building permit
fees. fees to operate a trash
service and a IlL''-' rental rcinspection fcc all received
unanimous votes and passed
the first of three readings at
this week's meeting of
Pomero\ Village Council.
First councifapprm cd the
first reading of an amendment to existing ordinance
461 '' hich current!) has a
building permit fee et at $6
for a home impro\ ement or
ne\\ building project under
S 1.000 '" i th S I added for
e"ef) additional $1.000 the
project is e!'&gt;timated to cost.
This ordinance has not been
:-.ince
1974.
Charlene Hoefllchlphotos amended
The tables were filled with all kinds of food and families filled shopping carts as they moved down the line during Tuesday's Council \ oted to increase
this fee to a non-refundable
vrsit of the Lutheran Social Services mobile food pantry.
$25 for a home impro\ement or nc\\ building project under $1 .000 \\ rth $2
added for every additional
$1,000 the project is estimated to cost. This fcc is
not to exceed $350.
Although all members
voted in ~fa, or of the project. Councilman
Vic
Young sugge... ted the "ordB Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
When a...kcd "here all the
ing of the ordinance be
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM
food came from. ~fcPherson
aliered. taking is ... ue '' ith
...aid it "as donated b) area
the word "repair.'' feeling
POMEROY - ''We're churches and purchased
this was "too har ...h'' and too
here becau:-.e we care;· said \\ ith money given by corpobroad. possibl) unfair!)
Mark ~kPherson, mobile rate partner... concerned
affectin!! homeO\\ ner:s \\ ho
food pantry manager for about the needs of people in
\\ish ~to make small
Lutheran Social Sen ice~. a... Southeastem Ohio.
Improvements to their
he directed the di\tribution
McPher~on said that the
of food to about I 50 Meigs mobile food pantr) is also The weather was cold and the lines were long but the homes. It \\as agreed to
Count) families Tuesday no\\ going into Gallia and pe9ple who needed food were patrent. In a small tent !'&gt;end the amendment back
to the ordinance committee
motning.
Lawrence County on a n:gu- registration to get food was completed.
for further re\ icw.
The big )Clio\\ truck filled lar basis. It will be returning
Council also appro\ed
to the brim with food rolled to Meigs County on the secthe first reading of an
into Pomeroy well before ond Tuesday of every month
amendment of ordinance
noon and parked on the and, added McPherson.
445
which
currently
Sacred Heart Catholic Church "another trmc each month if
requires those in the trash
lot where about 25 Meigs we can get the donations ."
pick-up sen ice to pay a $50
Cooperative Parish \olunHe \Vas complimentary of
annual permit fee to operate
tecrs and others gathered to local \ olunteers \\ ho "take
in the 'iJlagc. The amendhandle the distribution.
ownership or the program
ment \\ottld~rai ...e th1s annuA ro\\ of tables was set up and run it.''
al fee to 5100. There .tre
and filled with food, shopWhile in Pomcro) the
current!) mne independent
ping carts were brought out, Rc\. f r. Walter Heinz made
trash collectors legall)
and from noon to 2 p.m. the a $300 donation
to
operating in the '1llage.
line ne\er ~topped.
McPherson for the food
The original ordmance \\as
Families who had rc!!is
pantr) program on behalf of
apprO\ e-d Ill 1974.
tcred in ad\ance of the vi:-.it the local Rotary Club. the
Counctl then appro\ ed
hned up to get a number. and Catholic Church Pat ish . •md
the first of three readmgs
then waited in the cold for the Knights of Columbus.
their tum to get a shoppmg
"It's a \er) ... mall gift for Mark McPherson, mob1le food pantry manager, left, amending the housmg and
cart and go through the line \\hat's being done here accepts a check for $300 from the Rev. Fr. Walter Hetnz on building code ordinnncc.
to select the food the' need- today," he commented. behalf of the Catholic Church Partsh. the Mrddleport- inse11ing a $15 re-mspeced from the\\ ell-filled tables. "We're so thanklul."
tion fee for rental properPomeroy Rotary Club, and the Knrghts of Columbus.
ties. Currently. landlords in
Pomero) are required to pa)
a $25 rental inspecuon fee
annually. 1 hts inspection is
to be performed b) the
Pomeroy
Code
B Y B RIAN J. R EED
temporary appropriations. 144,794.49.
Wehrung
and
Sandra Enforcement Officer. If the.:
BREED ,... DAIL'r'SENTINEL COM
allowing the village to pay
Firetruck fund, 59,000: Bn)\\ n were re·ckcted to ordinance passes, if a tenant
bills and operate until per- ~e\\er operating fund. eounerl in Nm ember. and 1110\ es out. the rental propPO;\IEROY
Four manent appropriations arc 550.000: leak insurance took thcit oath of office
crt) must be re-insrccted at
members of Middleport appnn ed later this \\inter: fund. 3.000: disaster relief from
Ma) or
!\ 1ichael an additional fee o 15.
Village Council took the General
fund. fund, $2.943.62: \\ater Gerlach.
After di..,~:u&lt;; ...ing the matoath of office Monday $746.382.52: fire equip- capital improvement fund.
Council .tlso appro' ed ter\\ ith Pomero) Fire Chief
e\ening.
ment. 20.929.84; water 150.000: ma)or\. comput- rules of council Gerlach Rick Blc~ettnar. council
Rae Moore wa-, re-elected operation.
387,513.45: er fund. 5.000: refuse asked council members t'o \ oted to forgl\ e clll estimatpresident of council. She meter depo its, $1 0,000; fund. 237.850.23: recre- re\ Je\\ their commtttce ed S 1.500 of a $3 300 bill to
\\as first elected to that street planting fund, 4.059: ation. 2.500: cemetCr) a signments and make Bedford TO\\ n hip for fire
po5.ition a year ago.
se\\er
imprO\ement, fund. 8.000.
Please see Pomeroy, AS
Council also approved 30,000:
street
fund,
Moore. Jean Craig, Craig Please see Middleport AS

Food pantry
rolls into town

WEATHER

:\euwrint

Middleport Council organizes for 201 0
11

..

••

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Page A2

The Daily Sentinel

B Y T OM MURPHY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

B Y D ONNA GoRDON
B LANKINSHIP
ASSOCIATED PRESS

••

VVednesday, Januaryt3, 2010

Patients paying for more face time with doctors

Gates Foundation
allocates $38M in
banking grants
SEATfLE
From a TV
soap opera advocating savings in the Dominican
Republic to banking by
motorbike in Ethiopia and
lndra, the Bill &amp; Melinda
Gates Foundation's most
recent grants to promote
global de\ elopment have a
decidedly more creative
bent.
But the ingenuity of the
recipients of the $38 million
in
grants
announced
Wednesday did not result
from a foundatron request
for ne"W ideas It was an
unexpected bonus. said
Joyce Bontrager Lehman. a
program officer in the foun
dation's financial sen ices
for the poor initiative.
Lehman said the aim of a
recent request for propos·
als was more basic: The
Gates Foundation wants to
work with microfinance
networks around the world
that have already made a
successful transition to
allow the1r customers to
sa\ e money as well as take
out loans.
The goal of the grants is
to give more people a safe
way to save their money.
The foundation estimates
these new initiatives could
ma~e savings . ~ccounts
avallable to II milho~ pe?
pie . across ~ 2 countnes !n
Afnc~. Asra and Latin
Amenca over the next five
years.
"Our goal is to help them
reach farther down into
poorer markets and farther
out into the more remote
areas ," Lehman said.
The impact could grow
beyond the estimates, if the
potential the foundation
sees in these ideas is
reached. she said. noting
that these projects have an
enormous potential for
duplication in other organizations.
This is the foundation's
second big collection of
grants in its financial services initiative . Another
$35 million in grants was
announced in September to
help facilitate agent banking services in Africa. Asia
and South and Central
America, through the use
of mobile phones and
kiosks in markets and post
offices.
Mary Ellen lskenderian,
CEO of New York-based
Women's World Banking,
was happy to learn that the
network of 40 microfinance providers and banks
in 28 countries will be
given $8.5 million for a
variety of initiatives that
aim to reach an estimated
3.5 million people.
Iskenderian also was
Gates
delighted
the
Foundation decided to wrap
what she called a "crazy
idea" into the mix. The
foundation is going to pay
to
produce
a
new
Dominican Republic soap
opera or "tella novella" with
savmg money as a recurring
theme
Of course, the soap opera,
which is expected to begin
airing in the second half of
2010, will also focus on
more typical soap opera
themes: relationships and
family
drama.
said
lskenderian.
And some stones will
combine both approaches.
such as one about a woman
Saving money without letting her husband know sh(\
has an extra pot of cash, and
the story of a mother who
learns about savings from
her teenage daughter who
has become mom's go-to
person at the end of the
month when she runs out of
money.
The idea of transmitting
social messages through
tella novellas is not new;
pirth control and HIY AIDS
prevention have been promoted through the same
medium. The complicated
part of this grant, however,
is the Gates Foundation's
need to see proof that a
grant delivers on its
promise. lskenderian said.
Her organi1ation will be
closely monitoring banking
activity throughout the
countr) when the soap
opera begins airing.

~----------~~

.......

Over the counter coldand-flu remedy: $5.99.
Trip to the doctor's office:
$20.
Extra time to bend your
doctor's ear: $1,500 a year
and up.
Primary care physicians
are increasingly offering
exclusivity to those willing
to pa) for it.
These practices. known as
concierge. boutique or
retainer practices, typically
charge annual fees that
range from S 1,500 to
$10.000 or more. The fee
allows the businesses to
prosper with a far smaller
roll of patients than has
become the norm under the
traditional system.
Patients like the extra
attention and lack of
crowded waiting rooms.
Doctors say they need
alternatives to a payment
system that forces them to
cram their schedule with
appointments.
But the growth comes
with concerns about doctor
access. particularly since a
bill
moving
through
Congress could cover millions of uninsured people
and flood doctor offices
with new primary care
patients.
Heidi
Berman
pays
1.500 annually to see Dr.
Stephen
Glasser
in
Baltimore. The 38-year-old
attorney said visits to her
previous doctor lasted five
or maybe 10 minutes.
··rf you had questions.
they were sort of an afterthought because the experience was so mshed," said
Berman, who switched to
Glasser a year ago.
Now, if she forgets to ask
a question during normal
office hours, she calls her
doctor in the evening and he
immediately calls back.
"It's personalized attention that I think ... every
person is really entitled to."

s

I

AP photo

Dr. Stephen Glasser poses for a portrait Tuesday in his Baltimore office. Glasser used to
care for about 3,500 patients, seeing between 25 and 30 a day. He pared the total down
to between 600 and 700 when he converted to a concierge practice six years ago.

she said. "It's unfortunate
that you have to pay for
that, but for me. the S I 500
a year for that extra attcn
tion is worth every penny
and then some."
The fee typically gives
patients longer, more indepth appointments with
doctors as well as extras
normally not covered by
insurance. That can include
an annual physical that
delves into nutritional
counseling and depression
screening and provides a
wider range of tests and
blood work than patients
usually receive. They also
get after-hours access to
the doctor.
Most patients still need
insurance in addition to this
fee, and they still pay copays and other coveragerelated costs
Glasser used to care for

about 3.500 patients. seeing between 25 and 30 a
day. He pared the total
down to between 600 and
700 when he com·erted to a
concierge practice six
years ago.
He still has full days. but
he traded 10-minute visits
for more time with patients.
including physicals that can
last longer than an hour.
"Back then. you're sort
of putting out the fires and
treating complications and
trying to keep people out
of the emergency room,"
he said.
The number of doctors
who operate a retainer
based practice is hard to pin
down and is still a small
slice of the roughly 326,000
U.S. primar&gt; care doctors.
But organizations that help
start them report brisk
growth.

MDVIP Inc .. based in
Boca Raton. Fla .. works
\\ ith 140 doctors who have
about 122.000 patients. It is
one of the bigger firms in
the business and has seen
both doctor and patient
totals grow by I0 percent
or more e\ery year since
the company started in late
2000.
Concierge
Choice
Physicians in Rockville
Centre. N.Y.. works with
120 doctors who have convcrtt::d
their practices.
Managin~ partner Wayne
Lipton sa1d there also could
be a few thousand doctors
who set up retainer-based
practices wtthout such help.
In contrast. a 2005 U.S.
Government Accountability
Office report Identified only
146 concierge physicians in
the entire country.
The gro"Wth in concierge

care is "a reflection of the
fact that we· ve got a very
dysfunctional health care
system.'' under which doctors are forced into a "ham
ster wheel'' system in whi.
they must see lots
patients just to stay afloa
financially, said Dr. Lori
Heim, president of the
American Academy of
Family Physicians. which is
neutral on the subject.
But J-Iarvard Mt::dical
School
professor
Dr.
Stephanie
Woolhandler
sa1d concierge practices are
··absolutely the ""rong solution:· one that lea\es
behind people who can't
afford better care.
Woolhandler. who still
sees patients. says the entire
system must be fixed to
place more \ alue on a doctor·s time.
Some doctors try to juggle the two systems and
operate only part of their
business under a concierge
model. Others may waive
fees for needy patients.
MDYIP works with physicians to find new doctors if
patients can't pay the fe.
when a doctor converts.
Despite these options.
some patients are still left
with a tough search for
affordable care.
Florence Day. of Sandy
Spring. Ga .. had a hard time
getting her blood pressure
under control after she lost
her doctor a couple of years
ago. He switched to a
concierge practice and she
declined to pay the S I .500
fee to stay with him.
Day. 90. lives on a fixed
income and is covered by
Medicare. Her daughter
helped her eventually find
a doctor she likes. But
she's not thrilled with a
system that charges an
annual fee on top of the
payment she's always
made at the doctor's office.
'That's like putting up a
deposit. you know. and l
don't think that's right."
she said.

Stimulus Watch: White House changes job-count rule
J.

But more errors were
found. with tens of thousands of problems docuWASHINGTON - The mented in corrected counts,
White House has aban- from the substantive to the
doned its controversial clerical. Republicans have
method of counting jobs used those flaws to attack
under President Barack what so far is the signature
Obama 's economic stimu- domestic policy approved
Ius, making it impossible to during Obama's presidency.
The new rules are intendtrack the number of jobs
saved or created with the ed to streamline the
$787 billion in recovery process, said Tom Gavin,
money.
spokesman for the White
Office
of
Despite mounting a vigor- House's
ous defense of its earlier Management and Budget.
count of more than 640,000 They came in response to
jobs credited to the stimu- grant recipients who comius, even after numerous plained the reporting was
errors were identified, the too complicated, from lawObama administration now makers who complained
is making it easier to give the job counts were inconthe stimulus credit for hir- sistent and from watchdog
ing. It's no longer about ~roups who complained the
counting a job as saved or mformation was unreliable.
created; now it's a matter of Gavin said.
"We· re trying to make
counting jobs funded by the
stimulus.
this as consistent and as uniThat means that any stim- form as we possibly can,"
ulus money used to cover he said.
The new stimulus job
payroll will be included in
the jobs credited to the pro- reports will continue to
gram, including pay raises offer details about jobs and
for existing employees and projects. But they were
pay for people who never never expected to be the
accounting
of
were in jeopardy of losing public
their positions.
Obama's goal to save or
The new rules, quietly create 3.5 million jobs,
published last month in a Gavin said.
memorandum to federal
The quarterly job reports
agencies. mark the White posted on the Web site for
Recovery
House's latest response to the
and
criticism about the way it Accountability
counts JObs credited to the Transparency Board reflect
When
The only a fraction of the jobs
stimulus.
Associated Press
first created under the program
reported flaws in the job and can't account for job
counts in October, the White creation stemming from
House said errors were other stimulus programs
being corrected and future such as tax rebates and
counts would provide a full other federal aid, the
and correct accounting of spokesman said.
just how many stimulus jobs
One scenario could see
were saved or created.
job counts on some projects
Numbers published later , decrease from the number
than that would have been
identified
more
640,000 jobs linked to stim- reported under the old rules,
ulus projects around the if saved full-time jobs are
country. The White House converted into partial j~bs
said the public could have under the new reportmg
confidence in those new rules. But other job counts
numbers, which officials for projects likely will
argued proved the adminis- increase . . with recipi~nts
tration was on track to keep now required to add JObs
Obama 's promise that the under new rules that previstimulus would save or ere- ously weren't counted
ate 3.5 million jobs by the because they were not in
end of this year.
jeopardy.
BY B RETT

B LACKLEDGE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The changes are in line
with
Government
Accountability Office recommendations and "should
reduce the debate around
figures."
said
these
Elizabeth Oxhom, a spokeswoman for the White House
recovery office.
But the result of the new
rules will be that future
claims of job creation from
the stimulus will be even
more misleading, said Rep.
Darrell Issa, the ranking
Republican on the House
Oversight and Government
Reform Committee.
"It is troubling that the

administration is changing
the mles and further inflating the Recovery Act's
impact and masking the
failure of the stimulus to
produce sustainable economic growth or real job
creation," Issa said in a letter sent last week to the government board monitoring
stimulus spending.
Recipients of recovery
money no longer have to
show that a job would
have been lost without the
stimulus help, and they no
longer are required to keep
an ongoing tally of jobs
saved or created. The new

Be a

rules allow stimulus recipients to limit the job tally
to quarterly reports. making it impossible to avoid
double-counting a job that
was created in one quarter
and continued into the
next.
Issa wants the Recovery
Board, the government's
independent
oversight
panel, to change how it
1dentifies the count of stimulus jobs and to add a note
on its Recovery.gov Web
site explaining that there is
now a different definition
for what constitutes a job
under the stimulus.

' .

FLU

FIGHTER

ock Out H1Nl

•

�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Januaryt3,2010

Chamber educated on tax changes
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILVSENTINEL COM

POMEROY
With
Januat) come~ the headache
of preparing to fik taxes
with several new tax
taking place at the.:
I level.
Yesterday.
James
Mourning. CPA. spoke to
the Meigs Count) Chamber
of Commerce about what
new federal tax change~
might affect their members
and community. Mourning
talked about the Making
Work Pa} pro\ i~ion \\ htch
"ill pro\ ide a refundable
tax credit of up to 400 for
\\orking indi\ iduab and up
to ~800 for marrtcd taxpayen. 1Jling joint return~ .
Thts tax credit "ill be calculated at a rate of 6.2 percent of earned income and
\\ill phase out for taxpa) cr~
\\tth modified adjusted
gro~s tncome in excess of
$75 ,000. or $150.000 for
married couples liling jointly. According to the IRS. lor
people who receive a pa}
check and arc subject to
withholding. the credit will
typically be handled by
eir employers through
tomated
withholding
•
changes in early spring .
These changes ma) result in
an increase in take-home
pay. The amount of the
credit \\ill be computed on
the
employee's
2009
im:ume:: tax return filed iu
20 I 0 . Taxpayer~" ho do not
ha\ e taxe~ "ithheld b\ an
employer during the "year
can also claim the credit on
their 2009 tax return .
Mourning also spoke
about the change in the
Earned Income Tax Credit
which in 2009 increased for
workers with a third qualifying child and the rules
changed for determining
who is a qualifying child.
Other notable changes to
the federal tax code for
2009 are:
Energy-efficient home
impro\"ement tax credits
allO\\ ing for 30 percent of
cost of impro\"ements
homeo\\ ners v. ho make
erg} -efficient improvements to existing homes.
The maximum credit is
' $1.500.
The re~idential ener.,,
efficient property creJit

ASK DR.. BROTHEI~S

Reunion with birth
mother goes poorly
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Beth SergenVphoto

James Mourning, CPA, (far right) discussed new federal income tax changes for 2009 at
yesterday's Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's Bustness-Minded Luncheon. Also pictured are Michelle Donovan, chamber director, and Bill Quickel, chamber president.
equals 30 percent of what
you spend on property such
as solar electric systems.
solar hot ""' ater heaters.
geothermal heat pumps.
\\ind turbines and fuel cell
property. ~o cap exists on
the amount of credit available except in the case of
fuel cell property.
The
American
Opportunit) Credit allows
for a credit for the fir~t four
) ears of college \\ ith a
maximum annual credit of
$2.500.

Unemployment Benefits
and FUTA surtax were
extended which means
unemployment insurance
benefits to out-of-work
Americans in all 50 states
was e\tendcd h} an additional 14 \\ecks.
Also. if )OU purchased a
new car before the end of
2009. )OU rna) be eligible
for a tax deduction limited
to the sales and exci~e taxe~
and similar fee~ paid on up
to $49.500 of the purchase
price or a nev. vehicle.

Other Chamber ne·ws:
The
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce and
River City Players will present "Death by Dinner
Theatre·· with doors opening
at 5:30 p.m .. performance at
6 p.m .. Feb. 12-1.3 at
Riverside Golf Club. ;\1a~on.
W.Va. Call 992-5005 for
tickets which are $25 each.
Bun's Part) Bam catered
yesterda) 's luncheon held at
the Pomero) Libraf) \\ ith
flO\\ ers
pro\ ided
b)
POtnero) Flm\er Shop.

Pomeroy Merchants to fill Main Street windows
what improvements can be ornamental bulbs which
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFL.ICH@MYOAILVSENTINELCOM
made for this year's events have been sold over the
was discussed.
years by the Merchants
POMEROY
Ways to
The parade chaired b) Association. All of the bulbs
improve Pomeroy through Toney Dingess was success on hand have no\v been sold
filling the front windows of ful "ith good entries, with the exception of two of
vacant Main Street busine's including an array of cos- those issued in 2006 picturbuildings v.ere discu!-.sed at tumed pets. and dozens of ing the new bridge. The)
Tuesda) 's meeting of" the children visiting Santa.
arc at Fanner~ Bani\ it anyPomeroy
~terchants
The home tour planned b) one is interested in purchasAssociation at Peoples Bank. the .Merchants Association in~ them at SS each.
It was suggested that per- was described as the ··best
The
Merchant~
haps the art class at Meigs ever:· by Bill Quickel. pres- Association \\ill ha\c a ne''
High School "ould paint tdent. based on comments bulb rs~ued wtthtn the ne:-.:t
seasonal scenes or figures he heard. As for the village se\eral months. Some dison cardboard for displa) in Christmas
decorations. cussion is under\\ 3) on
\\indo\\ s u~ing some George Wright suggested what it "ill feature in the
hting
which
would getting some ne\\ ones wa) of art. A report on the
•
enhance the do\vnto\\ n. along with strings of lights bulb fund prepared b) Edna
daytime and nighttime.
prior before this year's holi- Weber of farmer~ Bank
The success of Christmas day season.
showed a balance in the
programs and projects and
A report was given on the fund or $2.835 at the end of

the year with approximately
;.lllother $100 to be added.
Over the years the money in
the fund has been used for
beautification projects in
do\',!Jltown Pomeroy.
Quickel announced that a
m~1rder myster).: "D~ath b)
Dmne~ Theater. \\ nttcn_ by
th~ Gllmores for the Rn:er
Cit) Pla)ers Communtty
Theatre. will be presented at
the ~lcigs Count\ Chamber
of Commerce dmncr on Feb.
12 and 13 at the Ri\ er~ide
Golf Club in .Mason, W. Va.
The 20 lO Visitors Guide
"as discussed and the
Merchants 'oted to take an
ad\l:rtisemcnt in the magazine which is widely distributed.

Dear Dr. Brothers: I had
been thinking for years
about contacting my birth
mother. and I finall) did it.
I am not a kid - actually. I
am in my 30s - and she is
in her 60s. The problem is.
this one didn "t go as well as
l'd hoped. I mean, 1 thought
I'd feel something for her,
hut :-he was just a senior citir.en sitting there "ith an
ugly purse. I almo~t feel
like:: I \\ish I hadn't met her.
~1) adopti' e parents are
nasty. so nov. I am feding
pn'tt) much all alone. ~f)
"real" dad is unknown.
Ncm what'' - K.B.
Dear K.B.: Betore \\C figure out where to go from
here. let's do a little~ reviewing of the past. When
adoptecs plan to look for and
contact their bitth parent or
parents. they can't help hut
pour a whole lot of expectations into the expenence to
come. It can he so perfect in
your head. And the plethora
of television shows emphasizing reunions with hcart&lt;;tirring music and cheering
studio audiences set the
seeker up for a peak experience. The problem is. almost
any reunion i:-. bound to be a
disappointment \\hen mea~ured against the fantasies
both parties build up. It is
almost ine\ itable that you
would suffer a giant letdov. n
and a feeling of emptiness
nfterward, along with a restless feeling of wanting more.
The fact that you didn't
have a vet) good relationship with your adoptive parents and that your birth
father is unkno\vn put"
more pressure on you and
your birth mother. But I
wouldn't be so quick to
characterize your initial
meeting as a colossal failure. Her willingness to meet
with )OU ~ignab her ''illingncss to get to know )OU.
The fact that )OU felt like a
stranger is not such a terrible thing - ) ou "ere a
stranger. A study in the U.K.
showed that about half of
the adopted people followed
were ~till in touch eight
years after the reunion. Like
them. you can begin to build
on your mutual interest in
knowing one another. and
give her another chance.
•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: 1
have suddenly been thrust
into a strange world that I
know nothing about, and I
am feeling very anxious. A
relative of mine called and
said her ~on is in a drugI rehab facility not too far
! from me. and wondered if I
1 \\OUld go \isit him. Hers a

teenager whom I used to
spend time \\ith hut haven't
seen for a le'' year.... I don't
knO\\ what I would say or
do in such a place, but I
agreed because she begged
me to visit him. How should
I act. and what should I . . ay
or not say? Help! - M.Y.
Dear M.Y.: You do sound
very nenous. It is understandable: You \\ant to be
helpful. but you ha\e a
\ague idea that the potential
is there for ) ou to actuall)
make thine:s \\Orsc, mess
up. sa) so~mething "ron g.
break a rule ... \\ hatever! s~)
the first thing ) ou need to
do is relax: realize that this
isn "t about you. and do
some research before ) ou
stumble into a sJtuation in
which you find yourself
\\ ay over your head. By
research. I mean lind out aU
you can about the facility
and its staff and philosophy.
as well as the ntle-, under
which you must operate· if
) ou go there to see your.
teen relative.
There are tons of different
approache~ to addiction.
and each center\\ ill have its
O\\n culture. Learn about it
before )OU go. and if )OU
are pem1itted. !)peak to th~
teen's counselors to find out
what is expected of )OU.
Some places do not allo\\
'isitors at all. Then do some
more research about \our
relative. HO\\ ''ell do·\ ou
knO\\ htm - if at all"? \\;hut
are his interests. his dream~
and ambitions'&gt; What music
does he like, what sports
teams or pastimes"? Chances
are. if you can engage him
on a level that rouse~ his
interests. he won't resent his
parents sending you O\er as
much as he might if )OU
were obviousl) there just to
please them. So. first. cairn
down. Thts \\On"t be )OUr
favorite visit. but ) ou !1.1\ c
an opportunity to actual!)
do orne good.
(c) 2010 hy Kin~
Feature~

Syndicare

Emergency Medical
Technician
(EMT Basic)
Nurse Assistant
(STNA)

Buckeye Hills
Career Center
F•r mDrc~d•ll

h•fnrJRali&lt;~a

toUaC'e

Cutrr •• HO lH 5H4

•••.b•c•

~ltiUJ('arn-rc~••~r.C'•m

FAl.VIILY

Judge: Ohio Dem falsified campaign finance reports
ATHEI\S (AP)- A county Democratic party leader
in Ohio has been com icted
of two counts nf fal~i lication
for misreporting campaign
finance reports during a run
for prosecutor.
A judge in Athens

County Common Pleas
Court also found Athens
County Democratic Party
Chairwoman Susan Gwinn
not guilty of two counts of
theft in office. two counts
of unauthori:ted use of
proper!) and one count of

money laundering .
During Gwinn's trial in
December. Wolff dismissed
t\\ o felony briber} charges
stemming from claims that
she illegally offered money
for college ~tudent!)' votes.
State Dcmocr,ttic Party

Chairman Chris Redfern says
Gwinn will be removed from
the party\ executive committee. Neither G\\ inn nor her
attorney returned calls seeking comment Monda).
She \\ill be sentenced on
\tarch 15.

to revtew "I am Murdered"
by Bruce Chadwrck.
Thursday, Jan. 14
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW Post
9053, 6:30p.m. meal, 7 p.m.
meeting.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30p.m.
at the hall. Refreshment following.
RACINE Sonshine
Circle, 6:30 p.m. card sign·
ing, with meeting at 7 p.m.
at the Bethany Church.
Hostesses, Edie hubbard,
Proffitt,
and
Betty
Blondena Rainer. Take
stuffed animals for her

fund. All women invited.
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Community
Center. Shirley Hamm to
lead a dried flower project.
Members to take materials
to work with
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters 11 :30 a.m. at the
New
Beginnings U.M.
Church Pomeroy. Carol
McCullough and Carolyn
Grueser, hostesses.
Friday, Jan. 15
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees, financral
meeting, 7 p.m. at village
hall .

HPuhlishing for the Heart"

Reach the Lost &amp;
Hurting Families

Community Calendar
Public meetings
VVednesda~Jan .

13
Lebanon
Trustees will

~?RTLAND ~nship

meet.
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern
Local School
Board, organizational and
regular meetings, 6:30p.m.,
elementary library conference room.
Tuesday, Jan. 19
DARWIN - Public meeting to discuss proposed 3mil fire protection levy for
Bedford Township, 7 p.m .,
Hemlock Grove Grange

Hall , invited guests include
local insurance representatives, Meigs County Auditor
Mary Byer-Hill, Pomeroy
Mayor
John
Musser,
Pomeroy council members,
Pomeroy Fire Department
members,
Bedford
Township Trustees.

Clubs and
organizations
VVednesda~Jan. 13
POMEROY -Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. Leah Ord

Invite them to your church
Touch their souls with God's Word.
God said: ·~They do not need to go awa).
You ghc them something to eat." .Matthc\\ 4:16

U:br @alii polis lilailp ~nbunr
740-446-2342 ext. 17

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, .January 13, 2010-

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Charlene Hoeflich
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SLACKE1E ...

Congress shall make no law respecting em
establislmwzt of rel(v.iott, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of speech,
or of the press; or the right of tire people peaceably
to assemble, and to petitiou tire Govemmeut
for a redress ofgrievauces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTOIZY
Today 1s Wednesday, Jan. 13, the 13th day of 2010.
There are 352 days left in the year.
Today"s Highlight in History:
On Jan. 13, 1794, President George Washington
approved a measure addi~g two stars .an~ two stripes to
the American flag. followmg the adm1ss1on of Vermont
and Kentucky to the un1on. (The number of stripes was
later reduced to the original 13.)
On this date:
In 1733, James Oglethorpe and some 120 English
colonists arrived at Charleston S.C., while en route to
settle 1n present-day Georgia.
In 1864, composer Stephen Foster died in New York at
age 37.
In 1898, Emile Zola's famous defense of Capt. Alfred
.
Dreyfus, "J'accuse,·· was published in Paris.
In 1910, opera was experimentally broadcast on rad1o
for the first time as Lee De Forest transmitted a performance of "Cavalleria Rusticana" and 'Pagliacci ' from the
stage of New York's Metropolitan Opera.
In 1945, during World War II, Soviet forces began .a
huge, successful offensive against the Germans 1n
Eastern Europe.
.
In 1962, comedian Ernie Kovacs died in a car crash 1n
west Los Angeles 10 days before his 43rd birthday.
In 1966 Robert C. Weaver was named Secretary of
Housing ~nd Urban Development by President Lyndon
B. Johnson; Weaver became the first black Cabinet
member.
In 1978, former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey
died 1n Waverly, Minn., at age 66.
In 1982, an Air Florida 737 crashed into Washington,
D.C.'s 14th Street Bridge after takeoff during a snowstorm and fell into the Potomac River, killing 78 people.
In 1990, L. Douglas Wilder of Virginia became the
nation's first elected black governor as he took the oath
of office in Richmond.
Ten years ago: Microsoft chairman Bill Gates steppe~
aside as chief executive and promoted company president Steve Ballmer to the position.
Five years ago: Major League Baseball adopted a
tougher steroid-testing program that suspended firsttime offenders for 10 days and randomly tested players
year-round.
One year ago: President-elect Barack Obama's
nominee for secretary of state, Hillary Rodham
Clinton, vowed dunng her Senate confirmation hearing to revitalize the mission of diplomacy in U.S. foreign policy. Obama's choice to run the Treasury
Department, Timothy Geithner, disclosed that he had
failed to pay $34.000 in taxes from 2001 to 2004.
U.S. Marshals apprehended Marcus Schrenker, 38,
in North Florida days after the businessman and
amateur daredevil pilot apparently tried to fake his
own death in a plane crash. (Schrenker faces a
March trial on charges of bilking investors of more
than $1 million .) Actor-director Patrick McGoohan
died in Los Angeles at 80. Author Hortense Calisher
died In New York at 97.

Bulldozed in New London
Bv

DR. JoHN

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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the government takes property by
eminent domain, the seizure must be
for a "public use." This is the language of the U.S. Constitution, where
it says in the Fifth Amendment that
private property shall not be taken
except for a public use. and then onl}
with just compensation from the government. New London was offering
to pay Ms. Kelo for her property, but
her contention was that in taking her
property, and giving it to another private party for de,elopment - in the
way the Ne\\ London De,·elopment
Corporation and Pfizer desired was no longer a public use.
New London officials argued that
greater tax revenues would be produced by the revitalization and. therefore, some public good wa~ done by
the restructuring of the Fort Trumbull
area. Kelo and the Institute for Just1ce
pointed to such a contention as ominous for all homeowners. smce local
government~ could .~I most. ah~ a).s
imagine a '"higher use to whtch mdtvidual residential properties could be
put.
•
Unfortunately. the Supreme Court
found in favor of Nev. London and
against Kelo, but the case produced a
firestorm of protest across the country, leading over 40 states to mo:e
tightly
control
eminent-domam
abuse.
What about Pfizer? Well. a firm
that should have been devoted to liberty and private propert) was_ in effect
complicit with New London 111 ushering Ms. Kelo and others out of homes
the) had chosen and purchased.
Ptizer even received special tax treatment, paying on!) one-fifth of the
usual property taxes for .the first I 0
years of occupancy of 1ts research

site .
'
What thanks did ~ev. London ~.,
receive from Pfiter for putting its '.JI
own citizens out of their homes? That ~.~~
brings us to the latest development: ., ..
Ptizcr is mo' ing the research jobs •
elscv. here.
The cit} probabl) will not ..get l '
back' its tax forgiveness. State tax
momes from Connecticut used to
enttce '\lew London tore\ italize have.;"
been expended. Local businesses that _.!..
depended upon Pfizer and the de\ elopmcnt for patronage are nov. looking at financial decline. What remains
is a barren undeveloped site where
homeO\\ ners once kept their homes ·
\\ ith pride.
It is a sad storv of local gove~
ments drawn into projects by t
promise of large state grants. Tli .'
grant then allowed them to accede to '·('
the special demands of large enter- .
prises like Pfizer for tax breaks and ~ ~,
special treatment. What is e'en sad- ' 1"
der is that in their rush to redevelop. 1
these same local governments bull- •
dozed the fundamental rights of their ;~
ov. n constituents and. then. their "
"business partner.' Pfizer, cast them '
aside whenever it chose to do so. Ms.
Kelo has a perfect right to say "I told
1•;;
you so."
(Dr. John A. Sparks is dean of the:;,~
Calderwood School of Art.\ ana '
Letter.\ at Gron• City Co/le~e. Grove
Cit\'. Pa .. 11 here he reaches U.S.
Coil.\titutional llistory and Business ..
Lall', and he i.\ a felloll' with The
Ccmerfor Vision and Value.\. A mem- ,.
ber of the State BCir of Penmyh·an~a.
he ;, a graduate of Grove Ctt) .m
College and the Unilwsitv oj !:':
Michigan Lall' School.)
';
•141

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

·er Serv1ce

SPARKS

Pfizer, the huge drug company, has
announced that it will be leaving a
large research complex in New
London. Conn., and moving several
hundred jobs to nearby Groton. Such
belt-tightening in tough economic
times would normally draw little critictsm. In this case. however, it
should.
Recall that Pftzer played a central
role in getting "'ew London to seize
the homes of local residents who
lived adjacent to the Pfi£er site.
Pfizer. according to accounts, wanted
that mixed residential area, called the
Ft. Trumbull section. to be leveled
and replaced with an upscale development that would include a five-star
luxury hotel. top-tier condos, and private office space for Pfizer's suppliers. workers. and visitors. Now Pfizer
is leaving Nc'h London "high and
dry.'' How did this happen?
A little less than a decade ago, New
London and Pfizer wanted to "redevelop" a portion of tllat old coastal
Cit). spurred on by a large state grant.
What they did not predict was the
local outcry against this "revitalization'' when Ft. Trumbull residents
learned that their homes would be
taken by the process known as "eminent domain." Among the residents
was the kind but spunky Susette
Kelo. who. with the help of an outside
legal advocacy organization, the
Institute for Justice. and the institute's
lead attorney, Mr. Scott Bullock, took
her case all the way to the U.S.
Supreme Court. It became known as
the ··Kelo case."
Keto's contention was that when

Thought for Today: "The whole secret of life is to
be interested in one thing profoundly and in a thousand things well." - Horace Walpole, 4th Earl of
Orford, English author (1717-1797).

Correction Policy

A.

CENTER FOR VISION AND VALUES

I'

Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks .•.. .• ..• • . • ! 35.261
26 Weeks .. .. . • .. •. . •.' 70.70
52 Weeks .•• . . • ....•' 140 11
Outside Meigs County

12 Weeks . . • . . • . . . . .•56.55
26 Weeks
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52 Weeks . . . • . • • • . ! 227.21

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VVednesday, Januaryt3, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Pancho's moving to Ohio officials urge participation in 2010 Census
former Halftime location
count of res1dents on Apdl
15. Tha. mcludes the
amount of federnl aid that
COLUMBUS
""ill come to Ohio and hm\
Ohioans: Uncle Sam \\ants many representatn es the
you ... to participate in the state ""Ill have in Congres:-..
2010 Census.
Ohio is the only state that
"Ten questions. it' II take could lose two seats when
I 0 minutes, but the input Census results arc used to
will last you for the next redrm\ congressional disdecade,"
said
Ol11o tricts. according to projecTreasurer Kev111 Boyce, tions by the nonpartisan
who co chairs the Complete data anai)Sis firm Polidata.
Count Ohio commtnee.
Nine states are projected to
That was the message at a lose one seat: 33 to keep the
sparsely attended kickoff same number; seven to gain
rail) held Monday at the a seat: and one. Texas, to
Statehouse. ""here .,tate and gain four seats.
local officials emphasited
.\-fa)or
Columbus
the special importance of Michael Coleman said
the I 0-y ear population updated population data has
count in Ohio and handed the potent al to significantly
out Census pens, pencils, affect cit) life.
refrigerator magnets. bookCensus results will determarks and tote bags. About mine ho\\ much urban cen50 people attended.
ters including Columbus,
There is much at stake Cleveland and Cincinnati
when the U.S. Census will get in federal grants to
Bureau takes the official support hospitab. police
BY JULIE CARR S MYTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Bv HOPE

RousH

HROUSH C MYDAILYREGISTER COM

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va.
For the past few
months the building on
Street in Point
t, W.Va., that once
Bennigans and
Halftime Sports Bar and
Grill has stood vacant.
In recent days. however.
it's been the site of quite a
bit of activity. Todd Bowen.
owner of Pancho's Mexican
Cantina in Point Pleasant.
confirmed that he plans to
mOYe his restaurant from its
current location at 124
Highland Avenue to the lot
adjacent to the busy intersection at the foot of the
Bartow Jones Bridge.
According to Bowen. the
papen.,.ork"' is still being
finalized. but if all goes
well, Pancho's will definitely be switching locations.
Currentl). the interior of the
building is being renovated
in order to assure that
everything will be ready for
the restaurant's move.

''There 1s some damage
and things that need to be
fixed and finalized, but we
have signed the deal,"
Bowen saW. "The new
location will e:ive us more
visibility and~better park
ing. It will make a difference as for people getting
there.''
Bowen emphasized that
Pancho's will continue to
operate as an upscale
Mexican restaurant regardles5 of the location change.
"We started here a little
over five years ago. and we
are verv excited about the
move and happy about the
buildmg. We are happy to
do business in Point
Pleasant." he said.
Bowen also owns a pizzeria and another Pancho's
Mextcan
Cantina
in
Ravens"" ood.
Halftime. which was
owned by Richard K. Rose.
closed
its
doors
in
November. The Halftime
located in the Charleston
Town Centre Mall also
closed in 2009.

and fire, scvv er and vv ater
systems. and programs for
the poor and the homeless.
he said.
'"In domg thi!-.. you can
keep your taxes down and
)OU may save someone\
life." Coleman :-.aid.
John O'Gntd). chaimmn
of tht:" I·ranklin County
Board of Commissioners,
said he hopes central Ohio's
growing I atino and Somali
populations participate in
strong number!'. as well.
because it will help steer
mon.: federal resources to
their communities.
Bo) ce said Ohio e:-.timate" between 20.000 and
40.000
people
went
UIH:ounted when the last
Cen ... u:-. \\a" taken in 2000
and the state docsn 't '"'ant
that to happen this time. The
2000 Census tallied rou2hlv
11.4 mtlhon people in Ohio.
According to estimates
and projections anal) zed b)

Polidata. Ohio has seen just
1.8 percent population
gro\\ th since 2000 - the
fourth slO\a. est in the nation
after manufacturing neighbor Michigan: hurricane"' racked Louisiana: and
1\;orth Dakota. where young
res1dents 111 particular are
leaving rural areas. North
Dakota has no districts to
lose, however: it already
sends the minimum one representative to Congress.
U.S
Department of
Commerce spoke:-.woman
Carol Hector-Harris . . aid
Ohio's census committee
has been ranked first in the
nation. based on the ereativ itv and extent of its
strateg) to fo . . ter participation. That includes puttmg a
Census chairperson in place
in all 88 countie . . and holding event:such
as
~fonda) \ rail).
On The '\ et:
www.censu \ .olzw .~m·.

~tate

partially upholds
ruling on former AG aide

COLUMB~S (AP) - A
committee has partially
upheld the state's decbion
that a former top mde to
fallen Attorne) General
Marc Dann improper!) classified workers at his private
construction compan) when
determining his workers
compensation obligations.
Anthony Gutierrez had
appealed the decision by the
state Bureau of Workers'

CompensatiOn that says he
improper!) classified four
individuals who performed
work at MTV Construction
as independent contractors
mstead of as employees
A committee for the
bureau upheld the decision
on Monday, saying all but
two of the employees that
Gutierrez had claimed were
contractors were actually on
his payroll.

Meigs County Forecast
Wed n es d ay ... Sunny.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Southwest winds 5 to I 0

.

Highs in the upper 40s.
Saturday night and
Sunday.. .Mostly cloudy with
a chance of rain and snow.
ednesday
ni~ht ...
Lows around 30. Highs in the
tly clear. Cold with lower 40s. Chance of precipis around 19. Southwest tation 50 percent.
winds around 5 mph.
Sunday night •..A chance
Thursday...Sunny. Highs of rain in the evening.
in the mid 40s. South winds Mostly cloudy with a
around 5 mph.
chance of snow. Cold with
Thursd ay night...Partly lows in the mid 20s. Chance
cloudy
in
the of precipitation 40 percent.
evening ...Then becoming
Martin Luther King J r
mostly cloudy. Cold with Oay.. .A chance of snow in
lows in the upper 20s. South the morning. Partly sunny.
winds around 5 mph.
Highs in the lower 40s.
Friday and Friday Chance of snow 30 percent.
night .••Mostly
cloudy.
Monday night and
Highs in the mid 40s. Lows Thesday ...Mostly cloudy.
around 30.
Lows in the upper 20s.
Saturday..•Partly sunny. Highs in the lower 40s.

i

Brian J. Reed/photo

Middleport Mayor Michael Gerlach administered the oath of office to members of Village ~ouncil whose ter":ls began on
Jan. 1: Craig Wehrung, Sandy Brown, Jean Craig and Rae Moore, who was elected pres1dent Monday even1ng.

Middleport from Page At
recommendations for this
year's appointments.
Debbie Cundiff met with
council to discuss ongoing
problems with traffic flow
in the alley between Grant
and
Lincoln
Streets.

Council will place signs in
the
aile)
advising
motorists of children in the
neighborhood, but cannot
limit access to only those
vvho JiYe in the area.
Gerlach said.

Council also:
• Apprmed bills for pa)mcnt. totaling $62.274.50.
as approved by the finance
committee.
• Approved reports for
Nov ember and December

from the finance. public
\\ orks. mcome tax. and
refuse departments.
Also
present
were
Council members Shawn
Rice and Julia Houston, and
Fiscal Officer Susan Baker.

Pomeroy from Page At

runs made into the township contact info. or the phone
by the fire department in number can be obtained by
2009. Blaettnar said the calling
the
Pomeroy
contract with Bedford is for Municipal Building.
a flat fee of $150 per call
Currently
Volunteer
into the township, no matter Energy is offering a rate of
AEP (NYSE) - 35.62
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
the call. though the wording 69 cents per l 00 cubic feet
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 62.85
DAQ) - 20.55
in the contract say5 "fire for the year through the natAshland Inc. (NYSE) - 40.52
BBT (NYSE) - 27.43
There were approxi- ural gas aggregation procalls."
Big Lots (NYSE) - 30.21
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.60
mately eight auto acctdents gram. Columbia Gas is curBob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.60
Pepsico (NYSE) - 61 .55
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 35.51
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.86
and two landing zone calls rently charging customers
ry Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rockwell (NYSE) - 48.22
that trustees were asking to 49 cents per l 00 cubic feet
38
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.62
be forgiven, not the actual though prices fluctuate over
•
pion (NASDAQ) - 1.53
Royal Dutch Shell - 61.07
fire calls made.
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) Sears Holding (NASDAQ) the course of a year.
5.87
100.43
Young pointed out it costs Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.68
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 54.73
the taxpayers of Pomeroy also pointed out there is a
Collins (NYSE) - 56.56
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.42
money each time a fire $20 delivery charge for the
DuPont (NYSE) - 34
WesBanco (NYSE) - 13.16
truck
from Pomeroy is gas if you are in the gas
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.31
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.17
Gannett (NYSE) - 16.40
taken to Bedford Township. aggregation program.
Dally stock reports are the 4
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.77
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
Musser agreed but added
Spaun and other members
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 24.81
act ions for Jan. 12, 2010, provld·
the village is currently in of council complimented
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.49
ed by Edward Jones financial
negotiations with the town- the street department for
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.71
advisors Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
ship over the construction keeping the streets clear
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 20.43
at (740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) Marrero In ~oint Pleasant at
of an $815 .000 fire station during recent snow events.
54.02
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.
in Bedford Musser said he
didn't feel like the trustees Spaun also asked for
were complaming over the upgraded inventor) sheets
bill but asking lor some from each department
Ultimately the v?te
help.
from Page At
was unanimous to forg1ve
Other injuries caused by automatic handgun. that the S I .500 charges from
the six shots fired at they had argued, and that 2009. Young )o,uggested
Kenneth Rizer on April 3 once 5he fired a shot. the Blaettnar bill the in sUI ance
included a torn aorta. two gun continued to fire.
companies of the drivers
gunshot wounds to the
• Donna Rose. a forensic involved in the accidents to
heart. and damage to the scientist specializing in recoup some of the mone).
liver. A bullet jacket was analysis of trace evidence.
Councilman
Jackie
found in Rizer's lung. tested samples from both Welker said he was still
Rizers • hands for particulate getting questiOn" about the
Uptegrove told the jurY.
Jurors heard two tape- matter consistent with gun- gas aggregatiOn program
rded statements Paula powder, and found both offered by the village
r gave the day of the tested positive. She said her Musser said eligible resishooting, conducted by analysis does not indicate dent~ should've received a
•Deputy Scott Trussell and. who fired a gun or from letter about the program
later, Ohio Bureau of what direction it fired.
but those residents arc
Criminal
Identification
• Abby Tignor of State required to notify Volunteer
and Investigation Agent Farm Insurance said the Energy. which sent the letLarry Willis.
couple had a $20,000 life ter. i r they don't want to
Rizer told the two investi- insurance policy. but that a participate in the program.
gating officers she and her Joan
outstanding
had If the resident doesn't do
husband had been to the reduced its value.
this. the) are automatically
supermarket earlier in the
Carson and Assistant enrolled in the program
day on April 3. She said Public Defender Glenn though the) can opt out at
when they returned home. Jones will begin calling an) time. The letter . . erlt to
her husband insisted on defense witnesses this eligible resident:-. and busiteaching her to use a semi- morning.
nesse:-. should contain the

Local Stocks

Rizer

..

detailing equipment. tools
and other various assets.
Young requested Liberty
Lane be looked at for safety
due to a steep drop off near
the road. Young also
brought up poor road condition~ on Lincoln Terrace
and Willis Hill.
Council also approved
$400 in repairs for Car 12 of
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department.
Also. in the previous
stor) on Pomeroy Village
Council. it was incorrectly
reported Young v.oted for
Councilman
George
Stewart for council presidenr. Young was the lone
vote against Stewart and
nominated Spaun for the
position.
Council also approved the
ma)or\ rcp011 which contained $17.8 10 \\Orth of
lines and forfeitures collect-

ed. Nov. 1-30, there were 74
parking tickets issued,
$2,219.80 collected from
meters. $294 received from
tickets. $30 from permits.
for a total of S2,543.80.

Internet
I

,1S'ERVING IPOM£ROY

For info nnatio n contact
the Adu lt Center at 740-245 5334
Financial ai d is a\ ailable for those'' ho qua hf)

�----------...-.....

........-~-----~-...-

. . . . .. ----·-·---- - ·---- -- ·-

....- -.......- ..- -...........

--..-------~-·--:--:-oo:-o:-:~---"-!'!'--:-----~

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,Januaryt3,2010

Ohio Briefs

Court reinstates death sentence for Ohio neo-Nazi

Ohio urged to bolster
human trafficking law
COLUMBUS (AP) - La\\maker~ and ad\ocates want
Ohio to do more to light what they've described as modernday slaver).
A Monday conference at the Ohio Statehouse focused on
human trafficking and ways to strl.!ngthen a year-old state
Jaw that increased sentences for crimes if human trafficking is involved.
State Sen. Teresa Fedor. D-Toledo, introduced the bill
Go\. Ted Strickland signed last January and says she plans
to offer a new measure to make human trafficking a standalone felony offense.
Human rights expet1 Mark Lagon of the Polaris Project
said Ohio also needs to broaden its definition of human
trafficking to include fon:ed labor and not just people
coerced into the sex trade. And. he said the state should
offer more assistance to trctfficking \ ictims.

Lancaster man admits
to vandalizing grave
LANCASTER (AP) - An Ohio man who authorittes sa)
vandalized a woman's gra\e marker after being rejected b)
her daughter has pleaded guilty to vandalism and been
placed on fi\e years· probation.
Fairfield County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard
Berens suspended a one-year prison sentence for 2 !-yearold Steven Locke of Lancaster following the Monday plea.
He will not have to serve the time unless he violates terms
of his probation. which include staying away from the victim and her family and attending counseling.
Police say Locke hit the bronze marker in Floral Hills
Me mOt) Garden with a sledge hammer in October to hurt the
dead \\!Oman's 17-)ear-old daughter for refusing to date him.
Locke called his actions .. stupid.. and his lawyer says he
is remor-;eful.

Defendant: I'm too
young to be charged
COLU\1BUS (AP) - A federal defendant in Ohio is
arguing he can't be charged with drug trafficking because
he was a juvenile when he was arrested last )Car- not 30.
Federal prosecutors in Columbus sa) Rigoberto GomezGomez told authorities he was 30 years old when he was
arrested in August.
Prosecutors also say immigration and marriage records
prove he was bom in 1978.
But after he was indicted last month on charges of selling
cocaine, marijuana and methamphetamine. Gomez-Gomez
filed notice that he was 17 when arrested.
He provided a birth certificate and affidavits from people
he says were present when he was born in Mexico in 1992.
He wants his case sent to juvenile cout1. U.S. District
Court Judge Gregory Frost is expected to rule this week.

Man sentenced in child killing
CLEVELAND (AP) - A northeast Ohio man convicted
of fatally shooting a 12-ycar-old girl in a street gunfight with
another man has been sentenced to 23 years to life in pnson.
James Yhonquea had pleaded guilty to aggravateo mur
der in the 2007 death of Aste\e' "Cookie" Thomas. He \Vas
sentenced Tuesdav in Cle\eland.
Authotities sa) ·22-year-old Yhonquea shot the girl after
Eric Wilson shot him in the back. They sa) Yhonquea spun
around and fired. striking the girl instead of Wilson.
Thomas was rctuming home from a corner store when
the bullet struck her in the neck. Her death prompted a rally
in her neighborhood. and communit) leaders announced a
series of anti-crime initiatives.
Wilson was convicted last January on involuntary
manslaughter and other charges and sentenced to 35 years
in prison.

Man pleads not guilty
in pipe bomb case
CLEVELAND (AP) - An Ohio man injured in 1'\ovember
when two explosions rocked his apartment has pleaded not
guilty to a fedeml chm·ge of possessmg dozens of pipe bombs.
Fifty-six-year-old Mark Campano of Cuyahoga Falls was
arraigned Tuesday.
He \\as brought into a federal court in Cleveland with his
left hand !'&gt;till bandaged.
Campano didn't speak but nodded his agreement when a
judge said he would enter a not guilty plea on his behalf.
He ·s charged with having about 37 unregistered pipe bombs.
Campano, a former doctor who practiced in Ohio and
West Virginia. was arrested after two explosions ripped
through his apartment.
His mother says her son didn't intend to harm anyone and
detonated the devices in remote areas as a hobby.

Report: Ohio school
official spied on critics
'

TOLEDO ( AP) - A state report says a former school
official accused of stealing from the Cleveland and Toledo
districts also spent taxpayer money to investigate board
members and critics.
The state auditor's office says Daniel Burns spent S 1.500
while in Toledo to investieate and do criminal background
checks on three board menlbers and two district critics.
Ohio Auditor .VIar) Ta) lor said last week that Bums stole
near!) $660,000 through fake equipment purchases and a
duplicate payment scheme for equipment repair in ~oledo.
Bums oversaw the district's business office for manv
·
years before working for the Cleveland schools.
He has been indicted in Cleveland for allegedly pocketing $160.000 for ptinting equipment purchases never provided. He has pleaded not guilty.

Autopsies show smoke
killed men in barn fire
LEBANON (AP) - An Ohio coroner's office says
autopsies show that smoke inhalation killed two men who
died in a raceway barn fire that also killed 45 horses.
The Warren Countv coroner's oftice in southwest Ohio
has not officially rele.asl.!d the names of the two men ktlled
in the Dec. 5 fire at the Lebanon Raceway. Family members,
horse owners and fellcm workers identified them last month
as longtime grooms Ronnie Williams and James Edwards.
A memorial service was held at the racetrack Dec. II to
remember the two men and the horses.
The men arc he lie' cd to have bt:en sleeping when the fire
ripped through the barn.
The accident remains under imcstigation by the state tire
marshal\ office, but criminal intent has been ruled out.

BY THOMAS J. SHEERAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - The
Supreme Court on Tuesday
reinstated for a second time
the death sentence of a neoll.lati convicted of murdering three men in Ohio more
than a quarter century ago.
The justices ruled unanimously that a federal
appeals court wrongly set
aside the death sentence of
Frank Spisak.
The 6th U.S. Cin.:uit Cout1
of Appeals in Cincinnati
found Spisak's trial lawyer
\Hts ineffecti\C and that his
jury receh ed fault) sentencing instructions.
In an opinion by Justice
Stephen Bre~er. the high
court said the 6th Circuit
should have deferred to
state court ru Iings that
uphdd Spisak's death sentence
Spisak was convicted of
three murders at Cleveland
State Universtty over a
seven-month period in 1982
- crimes he said were
motivated by his hatred of
gays. blacks and Jews. At
the same time. Spisak
claimed his crime'&gt; were
sparked by mental illness
related to confusion about
his sexual identity. He
wants to have surgery to
become a woman.
The 1983 trial became a
public sp\'ctacle a!&gt; Spisak
celebrated his killings in
court and open!) discussed
his hateful views. He even
grew a Hitler-style mustache. carried a copy of
Hitler's
book,
"Mein
Kampf' during the proceedings and ga\ c the Nazi
salute to the jury.
The 6th Circuit once
before had thrown out
Spisak's sentence only to be

been difficult on his family,
Sheehan said.
··Here again is another
chapter where you know d
family who has moved for
ward in their lives has to go
back to a dark part in their
time and rehash so
thing," he said.
Spisak\ attorney. Michael
Benza, said he was disap;
pointed the court didn't
agree that the performance
of Spisak\ trial lawyer had
harmed his chances.
Benza had argued that
Spisak's attorne)~ Thomas
Shaughnessy. who died in
1997. failed to argue that
various circumstances in his
fa, or meant Spisak should
escape the death penalty.
Shaughness)
describeq
Spisak at trial as ..dement•
ed·· and .. undesen in!! of
s~mpathy."

AP photo

This Oct. 8, 2009, file photo shows Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Judge Brendan Sheehan in his office in
Cleveland. The Supreme Court has reinstated for a second
time the death sentence of Frank Spisak, a neo-Nazi convicted of murdering three men 1n Ohio more than a quarter
century ago. Spisak killed Sheehan's father in 1982.
re\ersed by the Supreme
Court.
Spisak. who has called
himself Frances Anne.
blamed his crimes on a
mental illness related to a
sexual identity cnsis.
Cleveland's Cuyahoga
Count) Common Pleas
Judge Brendan Sheehan.
who was 15 when Spisak
was tried for killing his
father in a men's bathroom

at Cleveland State. said his
famil) \\Ould be rclie\ed to
have the lingering case
move ahead.
"We're hoping that this
chapter can bl.! put behind us
and that the Ohio courts will
follow
through
with
Supreme Court statements,..
satd Sheehan. who developed an interest in the law
during the Spisak trial.
The case's duration has

~

"lfs very troubling that a
lawyer can stand up and say
the things that the lawyer said
in this case to the detriment o(
the client." Benza said.
Benza said he expects to
ask the governor for
clemency for Spisak.
Ohio Attorney General
Richard Cordray. \vho
argued the state's case be
the justices. said he \'v
happy with the ruling and is
detennined to see the sentence carried out. He said he
expects the Ohio Supreme
Court to set an execution
date soon. scheduled in
sequence with other cases
before the state justices.
Cuyahoga
Count)
Prosecutor Bill ~Jason said
Spisak deserves the death
penalty. "Certainly this man
has hatred that supercedes
anything that we'\e ever
seen in this county:· he said.
"This guy is an animal."
(The case is Smith ''·
Spisak, 08-724.)

f.

Perspective: Ohio AG tries to smooth lobbyist rift
COLCMBUS (AP) - In
government. lobbyists are
easy targets.
The) have a reputation for
influence that is often
deser. ed, particularly in
term-limited Legislatures
like Ohio ·s. Some make
piles of money. Many are
generous campaign contributors. And a rare few - take
Washington's Jack Abramoff
- are outright crooks.
But Ohio Attomey General
Richard Cordray's harshly
worded pronouncement last
week that he was getting
tough of Ohio\ Statehouse
lobbyists st111ck many around
Capitol Square as inconsistent with recent history.
"Clearly. more than ever.
the expertise of the Attorney
General's oftice is needed to
help prevent corruption as
wealth\ and well-connected
speciaf interests increasingly attempt to shape the laws
and public policies that
affect ordinat") Ohioans:· a
Cordra\ statement said.
All that talk of wealth and
corruption upset members
of the Ohio Lobbying
Association. which has been
striving in recent years to
professionalize its reputation and soften its image.
fhe group wants Ohio to
know for instance. that many
lobbyists arc soccer Moms
with kids at home. not palm
greasers in pinstripcd suits.
They note that the triple digit
growth in lobbyists around
the Statehouse - now II for
every state lawmaker - ~s
good economic news in bad
times. They offer routine
training in state ethics and
reporting laws.
Cordr&lt;l) 's release came on
the heels of a new development: Lcgislathc Inspector
General Ton) Rledsoe had
sent the names of 15 lobbyists and employers to the
attome~ £Cneml's collections
enforcement section for the
tirst time for failing to pay
$2.200 in late fees on earlier
penalties. The original fines
came from not filing expenditure rcpot1s on time.
For the lobbyists· association. which reports its members arc 99.9 percent compliant with reporting requirements. a $2.200 in fines
seemed ml.!asly justification
for Cordray's bombastic
tone. Critics said Cordray
was just hashing lobbyists to
grab a headline ahead of his
potential contentious reelection bid against former
U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine.

Lobb) ing Association
President Victor Hipsley
tssued a statement saying
he would "challenge any
other profession that is regulated by the state to
demonstrate a level of compliance that high ...
Hipsle) said he was "surprised" at Cordray's comments: "The story had to do
with enforcing required
reporting standards and contained no allegation of cor-

ruption or scandal on the part
of a lobbyist or anyone else."
Cordra) said in an inter\ iew Monday that one thing
he wanted to do \\as remind
the public of hts office ·s
powers of enforcement O\ er
lobbyists - to hint at \\hat
can happen if reporting
deadlines aren't met and
fmes aren't paid.
As a ne\\ casino oversight
commission is created in the
Legislature
following

,
,
,

,

November's vote to authorize the gambling houses in
four cities. Cordra) said the
power and influence of th'
groups could be intense.
.. Some $47 million \\
spent m the campaign in
~ovember."
he
said.
..we·ve never had a commission like this before and,
as the Legislature deliber~
ates on that. we \\ant them
to be aware of that additional scrutiny:·

,
,
,

Invite them te your church. ·
1'eech their souls itn God's \Verd.

-"'We will shout(or joy wlien we are
ictorious and lift up our ba ers in the
name ofGod.''
Psa 20:5

Cal

~nlltp.oLt~

11lailp ~ribunc
740--446..2342

�wow

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Sports Briefs. Pugt' B2
OS

up~cts

J&gt;urdm.-. ]'age 86

\Vednesday, January 13, 20J 0
~CAL SCHEDUlE
~g

EROY- A stnodulo ot upcom
hrg"
school VIHSoty sporting events Jnvolvong
toams from Molgs rnd Gnlha coo.ntooe

-

Wvdnuday, January 13
Boys Basketball
Wahama at Wrlhamstown, 6 p m
Girls Basketball
Galha Academy at Jackson 6 p rn

TUPPERS

f:Il11oy. JJlllllllry 15
Boys Basketball
Eastern at Southern, 6 30 p m
Warren at Go ra Academy 6 p.m
Chesapeake at Rrvor Va!!oy 6 p m
Mergs at Athens. 5 p m
South Galha nt Ironton St Joe 6 p m.
Point Pleasant at Hannan. 6 p.m.
OVCS at Teays Valley Chr s11an, 7 30
p.m.
Girls Bssketball
OVCS at Teays Valley Christian. 6 p.m.
Grace Chnstian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Charleston Catholic, 6 p m.
Wrestling
.
t Pleasant at Wtnner's enoree lnvrte,
•

Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWlEYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

ThurJidllY. Jnnunry.14
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Water1ord 6 p m
South Point at Rrvor Val ey 6 p m
Southern at M er 6 p m
Metgs at Alexander 6 p 1"1
Teays Valley Chnstran at South Ga I a 6
pm
Pornt Pleasant at S ssonv~lle, 5.45 p m
Wrestling
A rver Val ey Southeastern at Jackson, 6
pm.

SaturdayLJilf!uarv 16
Boys Basketball
Parkersburg Cntho rc at Eastern 6 30

PLAI~S

The Ea... tem Lady Eagle..,
\\On their ninth game of the
2009-'20 I 0 ...cason Monda)

evenin~ despite trailing at
the eno of the first quarter
fi$ain"t the Wahama Lad)
htlcons.
The vi ... itinl! Uzdv Falcons
lead by a score o( 15-11 at
the end of the first quarter.
but were unable to hold the
lead for long as the Lad)
Eagles rccm ered quick!) in
the second quarter. Eastern
scored 25 second quarter
point'o.
\\hile
holdinl!
Wahama to only four points
in the period. The Lady
Eagle:- took a 36-19 lead at
the half.
The Lady Eagles contmueJ to increase their lead in

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOI.IYOA LYTRIBUNE COM

MASO:"il. W.Va. - One
incredible game and one
wild ending-led to one big
victor) for the Wahama
bo) s basketball team
Tuc1:&gt;dm night during a 5351 dedsion over ,'!siting
Buffalo in a non-confer, encc matchup in Mason
BOYS BASKETBALL
County.
Wahama 53. Buffalo 51
Both the White Falcons
Portsmouth 58, Gall1a 55
(4-3) and Bison ( 1-6) batHannan 56, CLC 43
tled through 15 lead
changes and eight t1cs
Point 56. Rrtchie Co 42
Meigs at Vmton Co, late
0\ er the course of all but
one second of regulation.
Southern at S Gallia, ppd.
v.hich led to a 51-all tie.
R Valley at Coal Grove, ppd.
That final second. howGIRLS BASKETBALL
e\ cr. played pivotal m the
CLC 32, Hannan 31
final outcome as Buffalo
43, Pornt 30
- \\ ith posses ... ion of the
ball - called a timeout
that it didn't ha\e \\ith
just eight-tenths of a ...econd left on the dock.
That critical error bv
BHS resulted in a technfcal foul. v. hich allotted
How a state pane of sports wruors and
Wahama a pair of free
broadcasters rates Ohro high school
g~rls basketball teams rn the weekly
throw~
that ultimately
Associated Pross poll of 2010. by
could have sealed the 'icOHSAA dr.llslons. wrth won-lost record
and total pornts (first-place votes rn
tory.
parentheses):
Tyler Kitchen sank both
of the charity tosses to
DIVISION I
v. rap up both the 16th lead
1
Prckerington N (14) 11·0 213
of the contest and
change
2
Tot Start (2)
8-2
109
the final margm of victory.
~
Upper Arlington
1(}() 107
4
Dresden Tn·Valloy (2)11-0 100
lt was also the first victory
5
Tol Warte (2)
9· t
92
for WHS since December
6 Twtnsburg (2)
10.1 89
87
2:;, a~ well as the fir-..t
7
Kettenng Farrmont 9·1
8
Manon Hardrng
9.() 73
game
for the Red and
9
Crn Oak H Is (2)
7-2 70
White since December 29.
10 Mentor
1().() 67
Others roceMng 12 or more pomts 11,
Neither team led the
Can McKtney (1) 66 12 Westlake (1)
contest b\ more than four
64 13 (t e) Crn Mt Notre Dame Crn
Ursuline 39 15, Akr Frrestone 33 16
point~. and both teams
Wadsworth 26 17 Youngs Boardman
held
at least one four21. 18 Warren Howand 20 19.
StrongSVII e 19 20 Crn Sycamore 16
point advantage through21 W. Chostor Lakota W 12
out the first half. WHS.
however, also had a pair of
DIVISIONII
four-point ad' antagc~ in
•
Ketter ng Alter (10) 1().() 213
the fourth and never
2
Hathaway Brown (5) 8·3 1n
trailed over the final 5:46
;3 Walsh Josurt (6)
11·1 153

Thesday results

AP Ohio girls
basketball poll

4
5

Tlpp Crty Tippecanoe 9·1
103
Can. S
1 1·1 102
6
Trffon Cotumbtan 12) 11·0 101
7
Sandusky Perkrns ( 1) 1O.Q 80
8
Cin. lndran H11i (1)
7·t
64
7·1
60
9
Wauseon
10 Cambndge
10·1 42
Others recervrng 12 or more pornts: 1t,
Sunbury B1g Walnut 41 12. Sprrng
Kenton Rrdge 38. 13, Plarn City
Jonathan Alder 29. 14 Salem 27 15,
Day Carroll 20. 16 Celina 18 17,
Zanesvrllo 16 18 (Uo) Day Ch81"1rnade·
Ju lOMe, Lewrstown lndran Lake 15 20
Chagnn Fa! s 13

DIVISION Ill
1
S EuclidRogna(14)8·2 206
2
Mid MadiSOn (7)
1 Hl 185
e-o
183
3
uberty-Benton (2)
4
Oak HI
11.() 97
5
Rohwood N Union 9·1
88
6
TuscarawasVaey(1)11·1 84
7
Cots A!rtcentrlc
6·3 79
8
Anna(t)
1().() 72
9
DefranceTinora (1) 9.() 71
1
M bury Lake
e-o
Others reoelving 12 or more points 11
Loudonv le 47 12 Brookvfl e 39 13
Georgetown 35 14 Hamilton Bad•n 28
15, Heath 24 16, Akr Manchester 20
17. Youngs. Ursuline 13 18 (he)
ailles, Collrns Western Reserve 12.

o

•

so

DIVISION IV
1

Delph. St John's (7) 9·0
171
Bucyrus Wynford (4) 11·0 158
3
Ottoville (3)
11·0 154
10.0 129
4
Kalida (1)
9.()
97
5
Kirtland (2)
6
Cle HIS Luth E (2) 1 1·3 94
7
Berlin Hiland (4)
9.() 90
8
Holgate
10.1 86
T9 Now Riegel
e-1
63
T9 Harvest Prop (1)
10.1 63
Others receMng 12 or mOl' e potnts 11
Pandora·Grlboa 55 12 Reedsville
Eastern(1)47 13 Cn Country0ay(1)
42 14 Mansfield St Poters 33 15
Delphos Jefferson 26 16, Wator1ord 19
17 Morral Ridgeda o 16 18, Caldwe I
13
2

Peters and Whitney Fields
each had two points. and
Mackenzie Gabritsch and
Katie Davi:-. rounded out the
scoring\\ ith one point each. ranked 12th m the first AP
Eastern was led O) Kase) poll of the season.
Turley with 21 poinh.
Audrionna Pullin~ scored EASTERN 77, WAHAMA 28
12 points. Allie Rawson had
'15 4 7 2 - 28
11 points. Bc\crly Maxson Wa~:'T\11
1t 25 1124- n
added nine points. Emeri Eastern
Conner) scored seven WAHAMA (4·2) Ke sey Zuspan 1 2·2 4
go Gardner 0 ().() 0. Karista Ferguson
points. Brooke Johnson Pa
1 1·2 5, Mackenzie Gabrtscll 0 1·2 1
scored si~ points. Brenna Ocldra
Peters o 2-4 2 Ke sey B ups 0 oHolter added four points. 0 0 Taylor Hyse I 3 3-4 9 Wh tney Frelds
2. Alex Wood 2 1·3 5 Katie Davis
Ashley Putnam had three 01 0.()
1·2 t. Br ttany Ashworth 0 ().() 0 Kayla
poinb. and Cheyenne Doc1i Lan or 0 ().() 0 TOTALS 8 11-19 28
and Tori Goble each scored Plroo-pornt goals 1 (Ferguson)
EASTERN (9.()) Brenna Holter 2 ().() 4
tv.o points.
Shelby Smrth 0 ().() 0, Cheyenne Ooczr 1
The Lady Falcon.., return 0·0 2 Beverly Maxson 4 1-3 9
Audrtonna Pullrns 6 0·2 12 Tori Goble 1
to action tonight as they host 0-0
2, Kelsey Myers 0 0-0 0, Kasey Turley
Buffalo in a make up game 10 1·1 21 Emerr Connery 3 1·5 7
Ashley
Putnam 1 1·2 3. Brooke Johnson
with the two quarter JV con2 2-2 6, Allie Rawson 3 4·5 11. TOTALS:
lcsl beginning at 6.10 p.m. 33
10·20 77
Three·pornt goals 1
Eastern
travels
to (Rawson)

K:--:OXYILLE,
Tenn.
(AP) - Lane Kiffin is
returning to Southern
California as the Trojans'
coach after just one cason
at Tennessee .
Kiffin
wa
chosen
Tuesda) to replace Pete
Pullins
Turley
Carroll. h1s mentor nnd
the second half. outscoring
employer for six sea ons.
Wahama 17-7 and 24-2 in
Kiffin was the ·I rojans'
the third and fourth qua11er!&gt;
offensi\ e
coordinator
respectively. Eastern went
before his brief tints with
on to win 77-28 over the
Lady Falcons.
the Oakland Raiders and
The Lady f·alcons were
the Volunteers.
h:d in scorin•• bv Taylor
"This was not an eaS\
Hysell with ~im! polllts.
decision:· he said in ~~
Karista Fer¥uson and Alex
brief press conference on
Wood eacn added five
Tennessee's cam pus. ··I
points. Kelsey Zuspan
really belie\e this b. the
scored four pomt~. Dl!1dru
onl) place I \\OUid h&lt;l\C
left here to go.''
HLs father, re pccteJ
defensi\ c coach Monte
Kiffin. and longtime USC
assi1:&gt;tant Ed Orgeron al o
'' 111 lea' e Tennessee to
join him. esc said m a
..,tatement.
Volunteer
assi:-tant Kippy BrO\\ n
v. a ... promoted to interim
coach.
ESPN.com first reported
the ... urpri ... ing mO\ e b)
Kiffin and the Trojans.
"ho needed just one da)
to fill one of the most
desirable job 111 college
football. Carroll formallv
took o'er the Seattle
Seahawks on Tucsd&lt;t)
after winning 97 games,
seven Pac-1 0 championships and two national
titles over the past nine
vears.
· ··we are rcall) excited to
welcome Lane Kiffin back
to USC.'' Trojan athletic
director Mike Garrett said.
'·I was able to '' atch him
clo~eh \\hen he v.as an
as&lt;.isuint '' ith u .... and ''hat
I sav. was a bnght. creathe \oung coach \\ho 1·
thought \\auld make an
excellent head coach here
if the nppor tunit) e'er
arose. I'm confident he
and his staff ''ill keep
LSC football performing
at the high lc\'el thut we
expect."
The 34-)car-old Kiffin
is one of Carroll's top disciples from his nine-year
tenure at CSC. Kiffin. a
former Fre..,no State quarterback. worked hi-. \\a)
up to offen"i'e coordinator in 2005 '' hile also
sho'' ing imprc-.. ... ive kill
as the Trojans' recruiting
.tfter
coordinator
Orgeron's departure from
Los Anuelc-..
For tZ\o sca ...ons. Kiffin
"hared responsibility for
the Trojan ... · offen ...c "ith
fello" longtime Carroll
Bryan Walters/photo
Wahama's Ryan Lee drives in for a layup during Tuesday evenmg's contest against Buffalo assistant Stew Sarki-.ian,
who left USC to take ove1
at Wahama High School. The White Falcons defeated Buffalo by a score of 53·51.
at Washtnuton after the
2008 season.
Although Kiffin's forceful pe•;onality didn't
make him a hciO\·cd figure
among player" or mlministrators. he \\as a ke) part
of the Trojans' best )Car"
under Carroll. coordinating the1r pa-.sinu game and
, pro' iding inst~l~Ction to
qm~rterbacks Matt Leinart
and John David Boot).
Kiffin then became AI
Davi ... · unusual choice to
take O\ er the Oakland
Raiders as a 31-)ear-old
coach '' ith almo t no NIL
experience. He made it
through just 20 games
before an ugl) public firmg in '' hich Da' is called
Kiffin a liar who brought
··ctisurace" on the Raiders.
Killin went 7-5 at
Tennessee last sea-.on as
the youngest head roach
in the Football Bo\\ I
Subdi\ ision, but he abo
brought an Un\\ elcome
spotlight on the Voh with
several minor :--.ICAA 'io
lations. He certain!) didn't
AP file photo
sound rend) to lc.1'e nftcr
This Jan. 3, file photo showing Green Bay Packers' Charles Woodson (21) defending Tcnnes..,ee 's season ended
against Arizona Cardinals' Larry Fitzgerald in the f1rst quarter of an NFL football game, in
Glendale, Ariz. Woodson won The Associated Press 2009 NFL Defensive Player of the
Please see KiHin, 82
Year award, Tuesday.

White Falcons fend off Buffalo, 53-51

pm.

Southern vs
North Adams at
Chesapeake HS, 4 p m
Herbert Hoover at Pont Pleasant 6 p m
fianran at Hathe d!McCoy Shootout,
TBA
Girls Basketball
Manetta at GelliS Academy. 6 p m.
Coal Grove at South Gallra, 6 p m
Wahama at Point Pleasant 1 30 p m
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at Wrnner s Chorce lnvrte
TBA

Kiffin leaves
Tennessee,
Waterford on Thursday
cvenmg to fl!CC the Jcfending TVC !locking ch,unpi- 1 returns to USC
ons. The Lady Eagles are

Lady Eagles remain unbeaten, defeat Wahama

Please see Wahama, 86

Packers CB Woodson voted AP's top defensive player
NEW YORK (AP) - In
his 0\\11 view. Charles
Woodson put togethel' his
best pro season in 2009.
How appropriate. then, that
he b The Associated Pre..,..,
2009 NFL Defensive Plaver
of the Year.
•
The versatile Woodson
tieed for the league lead with
nine interceptions. returning
three for touchdown.... and
was a ke\ to the Packer"·
turnaround on defense. His
role in Green Bay's ranking
second in overall defense.
first in interceptions (30),
takeaway!&gt;
(40)
and
turnover margin (plus-24)
earned Woodson 28 votes
Tuesday from a nationwide
panel of 50 sports writers
and broadcaster:-. who cover
the NFL.
"Yeah. it's the best."
Woodson said of his performance this ~cason. '"There ·s
no question about it. 1 was
hesitant to say it early on
this year: just con-.istent
play. playing at a high level

Please see Woodson, 81
I.

..

�i

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Gossage wants steroids
:users barred from Hall
NEW YORK (AP) Goose Gossage watched
Mark McGwire 's televised
confession to steroids use
and was happy his former
teammate came clean.
That's where the praise
ended. with the Hall of
Fame reliever saying there
should be no place in
Cooperstown for McGwire
or any other ·player who
used performance-enhancing drugs.
"I definitely think that
they cheated:' Gossage
said Tuesday in a telephone interview with The
Associated Press. "And
what does the Hall of
Fame consist of? Integrity.
Cheating is not part of
integrity."'
For Gossage, Hank
Aaron still holds the career
record of 755 home runs
and Roger Maris owns the
season record of 61 . The
Goose tosses out the fantastic figures posted by
Barry Bonds . McGwire,
Sammy Sosa as part of a
''cheating era;· dismissing
them as if they were
scuffed baseballs being
rolled to the clubbies. He
equated them with Pete
Rose, barred from the Hall
ballot because of his lifetime ban for betting on
Cincinnati while managing
the team.
"The integrity of the
Hall of Fame and the numbers and the history are all
in
jeopardy,"
said
Gossage, inducted two
years ago. "I don't think
they should be recognized.
Here 's a guy Aaron, we're
talking about the greatest
record of all records. And
he did it on a level playing
field. He did it with Godgiven talent. And the same
with Mari s , absolutely.
These are sacred records
and they've been shattered
by cheaters:·
Hall of Farner Willie
McCovey wouldn't factor
drugs into the equation and
said he likely would vote
for McGwire if he had the
opportunity.
" Whe ther
he
took
steroids or not. he did so
baseball,"
much
for
McCovey said. " He almost
helped save baseball for a
fe w years there."
Joe Morgan, a Hall of
Farner and the board's vice
chairman , feels bad for
players who didn't use
performance enhancers.
"Those guys are being
penalized twice," he said.
"First, the guys who did
steroids had all those great
numbers, made all the
money, and the guys who
didn't do steroids and just
had good years , didn't
make as much money. So
they get hurt there. Now at
the end of their careers
when you have to compare
those numbers to the guys
who did do steroids,
they're going to get hurt
again as far as the Hall of
Fame is concerned. So I
can't in my own mind
e xcuse what happened,
whatever the reason."
Anti-Doping
U.S.
Agency executive director
Travi s Tygart dismissed

McGwire 's claim that
steroids didn't help him
become a better player,
that they only allowed him
to become more healthful.
"It's just crazy. I don't
buy that for a second," he
said. "It's sort of disappointing you don't just
come clean, take full
responsibility. But the
trend is with most athletes
we've seen in baseball that
they take half responsibility."
Former World AntiDoping Agency president
Dick Pound criticized
baseball
commtsstoner
Bud Selig, who issued a
statement declaring the
Steroids Era over.
"I think the jury is still
out on that issue and that
the self-serving statements
by Bud Selig do nothing to
increase
confidence,"
Pound said in an e-mail.
"What has emerged in the
whole baseball mess is that
drug use is widespread and
that even the best players
are involved - and still
MLB is whistling past the
graveyard."
Steve Trachsel, who
gave up McGwire 's historic home run No. 62 a
dozen years ago, was saddened
by
McGwire 's
admission.
"It's
disappointing
because it's such a great
moment in the history of
sports. So many people
were rooting for him and
Sammy, not just in
America but all around the
world," Trachsel told the
AP. "It's kind of disappointing the whole thing is
kind of dirty now.''
Byron Dorgan, a U.S.
Senator
from
North
Dakota, used McGwire's
confession as an opportunity to urge the Hall of
Fame Veterans Committee
to elect Maris, a two-time
AL MVP who grew up
Grand Forks and Fargo.
"More than forty years
after breaking Babe Ruth 's
home run record, Maris
now stands as the only
player to do so without the
use of steroids," Dorgan
said. "It's important to set
an honest example for our
nation's children who put
themselves in danger when
they try to emulate their
sports heroes by bulking
up with performanceenhancing drugs."
McGwire's
tearful
admission that he used
steroids for a decade,
including when be hit 70
homers in 1998, was the
talk of baseball.
"Hopefully that will help
clear the air and we can
move on," Houston Astros
president of baseball operations Tal Smith said.
McGwire, who retired in
200 l, had been widely
ridiculed since he evaded
questions before a congressional committee five
years ago, repeatedly saying he wasn't there to
address his past. His confes sion was sparked by the
St. Louis Cardinals' decision in October to hire him
as hitting coach.

he wouldn't be willing or
able to leave Tennessee
after just one year. Yet
from Page Bl
several coaches with USC
ties said they weren't
with a loss to Virginia interested in the job,
Tech in the Chick-fil-A including NFL coaches
Bowl - but the Trojans Jeff Fisher and Jack Del
dido 't have a vacancy Rio and Oregon State
coach Mike Riley.
then.
Monte Kiffin will lend
" I know there's a ton of
his
defensive acumen to a
excitement about what
we're doing, and we're school that annually fieldjust
getting
started," ed an impressive defense
under
Carroll,
while
Kiffin said last week.
He returns to USC with Orgeron is likely to return
the school facing a years- to his role as the Trojans'
long NCAA investigation best recruiter who helped
over events during his stack Carroll's early USC
tenure as an assistant, teams with a dizzying
including Reggie Bush's array of topflight talent.
"Ed did a marvelous job
final years at the school.
While no discipline has during his previous time at
been handed down, it's USC, and we all know that
widely expected to arrive Monte is a defensive
guru," Garrett said. " I
later this year.
Kiffin was suggested as know Lane will fill out his
a candidate immediately staff with other outstandafter Carroll's departure ing assistants like them,
became official Sunday, ones who Trojan players
but many Trojans thought and fans will really like."

Kifrm

¥4;

q.

aq

www.mydailysentinel.com

G&amp;UQ

auccs;

~ednesday, January13, 2010

Sports Briefs
Indians sign 28 Mark Grudzielanek

be inactive, which means he will not have to report to a
probation officer.
The former Browns receiver was traded to the Jets two
days after he was accused of punching a friend of NBA star
LeBron James on Oct. 5.
Edwards was expected to return to the Jets facility later
Tuesday. The Jets play at the San Diego Chargers in a playoff game on Sunday.

CLEVELAND (AP) - Former Gold Glove-winning
second baseman Mark Grudzielanek has signed a minor
league contract with the Cleveland Indians.
A .290 career hitter, Grudzielanek did not play in the
majors last season. He spent 2009 in Minnesota s minor
league system after signing with the Twins in July. In 2008,
he batted .299 with three homers and 24 RBJs in 86 games
for the Kansas City Royals. He ended that season on the
disabled list with an ankle injury.
The 39-year-old Grudzielanek has played with five
teams over 14 major league seasons from 1995-2008. He
was an All-Star With Montreal in 1996. He led the NL in
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals have redoubles in 1997 and most recently won a Gold Glove with
signed Mike Zimmer as defensive coordinator after two
the Royals in 2006.
years of improvement under his 8uidance.
The team, which ranked 27th m the 2007 NFL yardage
rankings, rose to fourth in Zimmer's second year as the
BengaJs won the AFC North Division. The defense gave up
BEREA (AP) - Cleveland Browns president Mike 301.4 yards a game and finished sixth in scoring defense at
Holmgren says a foot specialist has recommended that 18.4 points.
quarterback Brady Quinn does not need foot surgery.
Coach Marvin Lewis said in statement Tuesday that
Quinn sustained a Lisfranc if·ury on his left foot against Zimmer's signing helps provide continuity. Contract terms
Kansas City on Dec. 20. On uesday, Quinn visited Dr. weren't announced.
Robert Anderson in Charlotte, N.C. Holmgren said it was
The 20 lO season will be Zimmer's 11th as an NFL
his understanding that Anderson does not feel Quinn needs defensive
coordinator. He has coached for Dallas and
an operation.
Atlanta.
Holmgren said Quinn will return to Cleveland next week
to be examined by the team's medical staff. If surgery is
required, a Lisfranc foot injury can sideline a player for
months.
Holmgren, who helped develop NFL quarterbacks Joe
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)- Marshall guard Damier
Montana. Steve Young and Brett Favre, has watched tape Pitts has been suspended one game for an unspecified vioof Quinn but said it is too early to make any determination lation of team rules.
on his potential.
Marshall coach Donnie Jones announced the sophomore's suspension Tuesday.
Pitts has started 12 games for Marshall ( 13-2). He leads
the team with more than four assists per game, is the top
LAGUNA NIGEL, Calif. (AP) - The ball Alex free throw shooter and is fourth in scoring at 10 points per
Rodriguez hit for his SOOth home run will be auctioned off p~.
•
online.
SCP Auctions said bidding will begin Jan. 20 for the ball
recovered by a college student at the old Yankee Stadium
when A-Rod hit No. 500 on Aug. 4, 2007.
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP)- Former Cleveland
SCP also sold the balls Barry Bonds hit for his 755 and Browns
coach Romeo Crennel has spoken to the New York
756th home runs.
Giants by telephone about their vacant defensive coordinator's job but is giving the Kansas City Chiefs the first shot
at hiring him.
Crennel's agent, Joe Linta, said in an e-mail to The
Associated Press on Tuesday that Crennel talked to the
Giants on Monday.
Linta said Crennel is focused on becoming the Chiefs'
CLEVELAND (AP) - New York Jets wide receiver
Braylon Edwards has been placed on probation after plead- defensive coordinator.
Chiefs coach Todd Haley has yet to clarify the status of
ing no contest to misdemeanor aggravated disorderly concurrent defensive coordinator Clancy Pendergast, who is
duct in Cleveland.
Edwards was in court Tuesday after he initially pleaded still on the staff.
Last week, the Chiefs hired former Notre Dame coach
not guilty in November to misdemeanor assault after he
was accused of punching a man outside a downtown night- Charlie Weis as offensive coordinator. Weis previously was
the offensive coordinator in New England under Bill
club.
Judge Michelle Earley gave Edwards a suspended 180- Belichick at the same time Crennel coordinated the
day jail sentence and fined him $1.000. His probation will defense.

Bengals re-sign defensive
coordinator Zimmer

e

Browns' Quinn to avoid foot surgery

Marshall's Pitts suspended for 1 game

Ball from A-Rod'sSOOth HR to be sold

Crennel spoke to Giants, focused on Chiefs

Edwards pleads no contest,
gets probation

part because of the way he
anchored a defense in transition. Woodson was used in
a variety of ways by new
fromPageBl
defensive coordinator Dom
every week, turnovers, Capers as Green Bay made
playing multiple positions the switch to a 3-4. At
and playing them well. times. the unit was shaky for Woodson, who
Combine that with just except
played
the
role of cover corgoing out there and having nerback, blitzer,
fun, and this is definitely and ballhawk. run-stuffer
the best.''
"Any time you go out
He doubled the number of there on the field, you go
votes for New York Jets out there to win the game,
cornerback Darrelle Revis of course," Woodson said,
in becoming the first Green "but you go out there to be
Bay winner since Reggie consistent and a reliable
White in 1998 and just the player. And that's what that
second Packer in the 36- award is. You go out there,
year history of the award.
you can make plays and can
Woodson,
the
1997 continue to make them
Heisman Trophy recipient, through the season and
is the first cornerback cho- you're mentioned as far as
sen top defensive player being Defensive Player of
since Deion Sanders in the Year, you know you're
1994.
doing some things right.''
He got the honor in great
The Packers went 11-5

Woodson

during the season, including
taking seven of eight games
in the second half of the
schedule to secure an NFC
wild-card berth. In that
span, Green Bay allowed
15.6 points per game. Take
away a last-second 37-36
loss to Pittsburgh, and the
number becomes a minuscule 11.4.
Woodson had 63 unassisted tackles and 18 assists,
according to the Packers,
plus 21 passes defensed.
four forced fumbles and one
recovery, two sacks for 18
yards and three quarterback
hits.
"I've said it before, he's
had two or three games that
I can't imagine any defensive player in the league
having better games." said
Capers, who also coached
Rod VVoodson (1993) and
Jason Taylor (2006) when
they won the award. "I

think it speaks volumes
when he was player of the
month in September and
came back and got player .
the month again (
November)."
In his third season, Revis
established himself as the
league's I?remier cornerback, takmg away such
prime threats as Steve
Smith, Randy Moss, Andre
Johnson, Terrell Owens,
Chad
Ochocinco
and
Marques Colston. He had
six picks. returning one for
aTD .
Denver linebacker Elvis
Dumervil, who led the
league in sacks, and New
Orleans safety Darren
Sharper, who tied with
Woodson for the interceptions lead and also ran back
three for scores, each got
three votes. Minnesota end
Jared Allen received the
other two votes.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

w

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Adli Should Run r OIV1J

'

Meigs County, OH

l\egtgter
To Place
\!Cributte
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
Dally Jn·Col umn: ShOO a.m.
Monday-Friday tot Insertion
In Next Day•• Paper
Sunday In•Columnt !J100 a.m.
Friday For Sundays; Pap er

~ ~4

POLICIES. Ohio ~llcy Publllhlng r-Yes the right to tdrt. reject. or c:tnc:tl •"Y ld at any time. Errore must be reported on the flrat day of pubhct~lon and the
Trlbi.IIO-Strtlnti·ROQICler &gt;'nil be r..potwlble lor 110 more then tr. eott ol tr. epect occupied by the error and only the flrat u_,oon. Wt ar.n 1101 be lbble lor
any 10:::1 or ~I\Sillhet roJIAllla kCltll the p~blleatlon or omlaelon otan a.tvtrtoltmtnl Correctoon wtll be medtln lht ftrtt ••allal&gt;la e4ltton. • Box numblr Ida
lit o!ways oonndenuat • CU'rent rate caro appiiH. • All rtal e.tato advtrtllt!lltnt• are tubJKI to the Federal Fall i'loualng Act ol 1888. • Tn• ~'*
teCOpll only help wantotd eels meerlng EOE .tandarda. Yit wt!l not knowingly . - p t any advtrtlstng In vlotahon ot the law. WID 1101 bo rnpons;blt tor any
errore In an ed taken over the phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Announcements

Notices

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Uncondltoonaf ltfetnne
guarantee Local refer·
ences furrushed Estabfished 1975. Catl24 Hrs
74(}.446-0870, Rogers
Basemer Waworooftno.

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO
rec·
ommends thai you do
bus ness woth people you
know and NOT to send
money through the mad
Otfte r Services
untO you have tnvestogat·
Call
lng the ofleMg
Pet
Crematooos
740-446·3745

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

500

Apartments/
Townhouses

Education

BeaUitfUI 2 BR apt. for
hoghly qual11ied person or
couple W D hookup &amp;
dishwasher. Inc. water,
sewage &amp; trash Central
healmg &amp; a1r. No pets.
$560/mo.
Kelty
74().645-6378.

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Homo)
Call Today! 740·446-4367
1·800·214.()452
ga lipO!isc3ruercoUego odu
Aocred 'od Member AD: edit·
tng Counollot tndepeNf nt
Co !egos end Schools 12748

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
1·888·582-3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
co.
OH
and
Mason co.
Ron
Evans
Jackson.
OH
800-537-9528

wv.

400

Financial

Personals
Money To lend

Wi I take care of loved NOTICE Borrow Smart
one In your home DebContact fle Ohoo OiVI·
bie 74()-4.46.4333.
StOll of Ftnanctal lnstttU·
toons OfltOe of Consumer
Allatrs BEFORE you reft·
300
Services nance your home or obtatn a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
ot
Building Materials
fees or tnsurance, Call
the Office of Consumer
Clearance II
Affiars
:oil
free
at
Uquidatton of Repoe'd &amp; 1-866·278-0003 to learn
Foreclosed
steel
arch tf the mortgage broker or
buildings
due
to the lender is properly h·
Enormous Response we censed. Chis is a public
announcement
only have a few models servtce
left I Otsplay D1scounts t from the Ohio Valley
1·866·352·0469
Publishtng Company)

600

Anomals

Pets
3 mth old Jack Russell
Terner pups Have all
shots.
Call
446·4706
S100 ea.
4 mo old pupptes, free
to
a
good
home
740·446-9552
AKC M nrature Dachs·
hund Pup Red Female
(740)256-1498

www.comics.com

AKC m noaturo Sc:hnau- ----------~
zers Pant &amp; Chocolates
Agriculture
Parents
on
pre-ntscs 700
740-441·1657

Farm Equipment
Free 9 lab pups 5 choc.
1 male, 4 yellow 1 ll'ale
EBY,
INTEGRITY.
6 wks old 304·675·2925
KIEFER BUILT,
or 304·593·8173.
VALLEY
HORSEil.IVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS
Two Lovely Englts~ bull· LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
dogs for Adoptt0'1,Bolh MENT
TRAILERS.
Male and female.Ready CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
to become your sweet HOMESTEADER
babtes contact me via CARGO/CONCESSION
my ematl : 1aydenstl· TRAILERS
B+W
vester@ltve.com .
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV .... ,....................................................... 1005
WNW CARMICHAEL·
Bicycles ......................................................1010
TRAILERS COM
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
740-446-3825
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Have you pnced a John
Other ..........................................................1030
Deere lately? You'll be
Want to buy ...............................................1035
surpnsed' Check out our
Automotive .......... , ..................................... 2000
used
tnvontory
at
Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
www CAREO COlT'
Car·
Autos .......................................................... 2010
m1chael
Equtpment
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
740-446·2412
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
STIHL Sales &amp; Servoce
Sports Utility.............................................. 2030
Now Available at CarmtTrucks .........................................................2035
c:ttael
Equtpment
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
740·446·2412
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
900
Merchandise
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal................................................ 301 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner .....................................3020
Fuel Oil Coal
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Wood/Gas
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary .................................. 205
Happy Ads .............._....................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
...................................................... 308
ng ........................................................ 310
ild/Eiderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janitorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal .....................................340
Professional Servlces.................................342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Aooflng .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accou ntlng ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertainment .................................. 352
Financial .......................................................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trainlng ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal .......... - .......................................... 520
Animals ............................................... ......... 600
Animal Supplles ................ .......................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 61 0
Livestoc:k......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment.......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance •. ,.................................................. 910
Auctlona ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplles....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Fu rniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous ..............................................965
Want to buy..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

I

Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial •...., ..........................................351 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Ac:reage).......................................... 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies .................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ................................ 6002
Administrative/Professional .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ..._................................................... 601 o
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics .................................................. 6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales.....- .....- ..........._ ................................ 6048
Technical Trades ...........- .......................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

I

I

Seasoned lorewood
All Hardwood.
74().853·2439
740-446·9204.

unlll1122110
Cortacl
Gary
Fenderbosch for further informa·

110n
740-446·1642 oxt 740

Used

55 Gal Barrels
wlth top I ko new on y
been used With plastoc
ltner $15 Jms Farm
Equ pment
2150 East·
ern Avo. Ga polls OH
740-446-9777

Manufactu~ed

Housmg

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
2 BA Mob .e Home
pets. Water, sewer, trash
IJ'lCiuded
At Johnson s
Mobile
Home
Pari\
740-645-osos

Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wood Or., from $365 to
$560.
740·446-2568.
Equal Houstng Opportu·
ntty. Th1s tnstttutton is an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vtder and Employer.

2
BR Mobl o Home.,
S425 mo S425~p. Mu~t·
have ref. No Pots V1nton
area. 740·388·0011

Efficiency Apt. For Rent.
No Steps. No Pets. Rent
and All Utililtes (Inc.)
$500/mo 1624 Chatham
Avenue
{Rear)
740-446-4234
or
740-208-7861

2·2BR
Mobile
Homes
dep
1
S4001mo-t-S400
Addtson.
1
Cheshore
367·7025

2 BR Traoler for rent
$500/mo.
446·4060 o;
367·7762.

2BR Mobde Home In
Ractne.
S3251mo+S325
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex dep 1 yr lease. No Pets
1n
town,
5475'fT10. No calls
after 9PM
H?
Oe!)+rel. No pets. Ouoet 740·992·5097
place 446-1271
2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2 J&gt;OOGracious Living 1 and 2
ple, S3001monlh,
Re~ 2010by UFS, Inc
Bedroom Apts at Vttage
No Pets NO
femces
Manor
and
Roverside
alter
7pm
!!!~~~~~~~!!! - - - - - - - - - ApiS. tn M ddleport, from CALLS
Real Estate
740-441..0181
WantTo Buy
3500
$327
to
$592
Rentals
740-992·5064.
Equal 4 br 2 ba $650.00 a
Absolute Top Dollar • s I·
Houstng Opportunity.
mon. 1 br $325.00 a
verigold
co ns
any
10KI14K 18K gold jeW·
Apartments/
Jordan Landing Apart· mon. In GaltpoOs Ferr'V
wv 740·973-8999
ehy. dental gold. pre
To wnho uses
menta
1935
US
currency,
2.3.4, br. avatlable w/ For Rant 2000 14x70
d•a·
and 2 bedroom apts, 2nd month tree rent all
proofim•nt
sets,
3br., 2 ba. SSOO.OO a
moods, MTS Cotn Shop. furn1shed
and
unfur· electnc, no pets call for
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· ntshed, and houses 1n detatls 304·674..()()23 or mon. 304·675·7911
Pomeroy and Middleport. 304·61 0·0776
potts. 446·2842
!'or rent 2 br 2 ba sn~ 00
secunty deposit required,
apt. Call a mM. + d(p. oroduJe, ,,,nr
Recreali.onal no pets. 740·992·2218
Modern
1BA
1000
l.tuon &amp; "bier
Vehtcles
740·446·0390
&lt;'311304·(175·7961
2 BR Completely Furn.
$600/mo
+
elec. NiCe 1 BR wash-dry. For rent on AT 2 N 3 br
SSOO/dop. Call 446-9585 Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili· 2
Campers/ RVs &amp;
ba
doublewtdo
ttes. Call 740-446·9585.
or 446-9595Traile'"'
304·895-3129
$500/mo ·SSOO dep.
2 br apartment $375.00
RV Servoce at Camu- a mon. tn Pt Pleasant N~
oce -3~B~R~
Apt~
for -re_n_t Mob le home for rent.
Tra ers 304-812·4350
chael
stove, refndg. &amp; 'o/o3ter Hud accept call bofor~
740-440-3825
2BR APT Close to Hol· Inc. W D hookup. Close 9pm 304·675-3423.

~

zar Hosptta on SA 160
AV
A (740) 441..0194
Serv1ce at Carmichael
Tr:ulers
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
740-446-3825
GATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE• Townhouse apart·
2000
Automotive ments
a1dfor
smau
houses for renl
Call
740-441-1111 for appll·
catoon &amp; information
Autos

c

Free Rent Spe cial Ill
01 Grand AM 4 cyf. 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
95,000 miles now tores up, Central Air, WiD
$3.300 00 304·593-42 I 8
tenant
pays
hookup,
electroc.
Call between
the hours of 8A·8P
94 510 Blazer 4x4 t 49K
EHO
M1. Newer Eng. Looks &amp;
Ellm VIew Apts.
Runs
Good
$2,850.
(304)882-3017
740·256·6043.
Twtn Rtvers Tower il ac·

FOR SALE 2003 CRV
or Honda. perfect shape,
or ly 2 owners
never
72.000 mt es
wrecked
510,500
Call
(740)
Miscellaneous
or
(740)
441·8299
441·5472
156-Solver Half Dol ars
Common Dates S7 ea.
Real Estate
also complete set of
3000
Peace Type. Silver DolSales
lars 24 Cons $1250.
Ca Is
Only!
Senous
74()..533-3870
For Sale By Owner
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired. new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
12 Unit Apt. Complex.
Evans 1-800·537-9528 446-()390.
Ga!lopolis Developmental
Center, Surplus Bid Sale
1993 Ford Van Poor
Cond1110n fluns
1991
Ford Van Poor
Condition Wtll Not Run
Diesel
Generator
356
KW
Sealed
Btds
Accepted

4000

•

Houses For Sale

2006 3BR 2.5BA Green
Twp. L1v1ng Room wiF11e
Place,
Family
Room.
Separate Dtntng Room,
Spactous
Kttch9n
w:Grantla Countertop &amp;
Is.and n the M ddlo &amp;
HardwOOd
Cab nets,
La~!)' Room 72'x27 w
27 x50 Attached Garage
3 5 Car. Beautiful Vow tn
Country w/2 38 Acres
Pticed
to
sell
PH
740-446-4910 Leave a
message Must seo to
appreoate $158 800

to hospital, Centenary Own a New 3BA, 2 BA
Ad Gallipolos OH no
w I acre. 5% dcro&lt;ln S52.5
pets. 446·9442 after 5p:n
mo. WAC, Near Holzet
Recently bu t, 2BR, 1BA 7 40-446-3570
Apts.
WfO
HookJps,
Soleli
Olstlwasher,
Garbage
Dtsposal, Great loca:Jon,
Very noce used 3 bed·
btw Roo Grande and
room 2 bath home. Only
Jackson, overtook ng us
511,995
tncludes de tv·
35.
S5251mo+dep
ery. 740.385-2434
740·645·1286
Valley
Green
Spring
Apartments
BR at
S395t2 BR
at 5470
Month 740-446·1599.

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments · 2BR, 1.5
bath. back patto, pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
cepttng applications for age, water pd.)No pets
wa11tng llsl for HUD sub· allowed
5450/rent,
StdtZOO. 1·BR apartment $450/sec
dep.
Call
for the elderly/disabled 740·645·8599
call 675·6679
H ouses For Rent

G)

2BR Apts Clean reno·
vated dwntwn.
new
appt , lam lloonng. water
lncl
sewer
&amp;
trash
S4751mo 740-709·1690

1 &amp; 2 BR nouses Gal po·
Its, Oh, rent starttng @
$275 per mth plus uttl·
toes deposit starttng
@
$275 depostl, no pets.
256-6661

t BA and bath. f rst
monthS rerot &amp; deposit
references roqu11od, No
Pets
and
clean
740-441·0245

2BR Ho4Jse tn Kanauga.
S425/mOtS425 dep. No
pets
Plus
Uut
740-441·2707

1
BED·
MIDDLPOR....
ROOM
APARl MENT,
APPLIANCES
FUR·
NISHED
NO
PETS,
NON SMOKING, NICE,
740·856·88€3

AAANew2010
4BR Doublowlde
Oniy_S~7.651

2010 Singlewtd"
lncredlble S19.99.5
ONLY at MIDWEST
mymtdweslhome.com
740.828.2750
Mob1le Homel Ex~;., ...,nt
condotlon• 2006 Clayton
MH, 14x60. 2 BA, Inc
Range,
Fridge.
A/C.
Skirting.
Fiberglass
Steps. H tch and llres
Call 740-446-8997

OHIO'S
BEST BUYs
2010 3BR Doub ewide
$39.977
HUGE 2010 4br!2ba
FHA $349 mo
2010 3br/2ba Single
from $199 mo

MIOWESTHOMES
mymtdwesthomes com

740.828.2750

3 BR 1 5 BA Natural
Gas. Central Atr, Newly _ _ _
Th_e_B
_I_G_S_a-le- Remodelod. S600imo +
depoSit + ref. 446· 0073
or 446·2966. Close to
GAHS &amp; Hospital.

N 4th Ave.. Middleport.
2 br furnished apt. dep
3 BR, 2 1/2 Baths. Stove
No
pets,
&amp;
ref ,
&amp; Ref. Furn., CIA1r, 75
740·992·01€.5
Locust Str., $600. per
Apartment available now mo.
$600
De~·osot.
RIVerbend
Apts
Now 740-446-3667
Haven WV. Now accept·
lng
appl:catlons
for
HUD·subsld.zod.
one 3 br. homo 10 Pomeroy,
"
rent
S500 per mo..
Utlntles 74()..
-8
Bedroom Apts
591 644
tneluded B3SCd on 30"4
of adJusted tneomo Ca 4 Rms .., Ba. Stov9 &amp;
304-882-3121
ava lablo fridge 50 Olive St No
for Sen or and Disabled pets $450/'TlO + dep.
people
446-3945

Used Homos &amp; Owi"Or
F1nancmg ·New 2010 •
Doublowide $3 7 .989
Ask about $8.000 Re·
bates
mymtdwesthomo.com
740·828·2750

"Tho ProctoMIIe
Dtflorence·
$1 and a deed ts all you
need to own your dream
home Ca Nowl
Freedom Homes
888-565..()167

�sz

4

q

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery

~~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;?-o•
REGIONAL DRIVERS
R&amp;J Trucking Company
OH
IS
n
Marietta
searclnng for qua fled
applicants, must be at
least 21 yrs have m mmum of 1yr dnvmg exp
n a truck, Hazmat conifucalton clean MVR and
good rob stabohty We ol·
fer compehtJVe benefits
plus 401 K and vacat1on
pay
at
Contact
Dennos
1-8Q0-462-9365 to apply
to
or
go
www.rrtruckmg.com
E.O.E

Help Wonted· General

Help Wanted- General

Overbrook Rehab htalton
Center Is currently sock·
lng a beautician to work
In the lac tuy s beau1y sa·
ton Candidates shou d
possess a va d Oh o
Manag ng Cosmetolog st
License Salary IS based
on
commissiOn
Interostod candidates should
ttl out IHl appl~eat on at
333 Page Street, Middle·
port,
OhiO
Overbrook
Center p&lt;lri•Clpates '" the
drug tree Workplace Program

Do you enJOy helping
pooplo? II so. I wlU giVe
you FREE RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an
Income Just lor moVIng 1n
and helping my 87 year
old mother You woll live
hero as I ot were your
own home, mmus the ex·
pcnses 740-416-3130

-Ac-c-ep- ti-ng- -a-p-pl-ic-at-,o-ns
tor part time cashiers.
Apply at Par Mar #38 .
15289 Huntington
Rd.
Gallopolls Ferry,
No
phone calls please

wv

Help Wonted • General

AcceptJOg
resume
for
hOusekeeping
laundry,
floor tech manager 1n
AVON' All Areas' To Buy Manetta area Fax reor Sen Sh1rtey Spears sumo to Attn sally
304-675-1429
740-373-3915

c

Looking lor a Job ?
Look1ng for candidates to
take up the posihon of
SatoSIAccounllng/Man·
agement Cord1nator and
more • no sales exp.
needed as Instructions
will be provided contact :
danaross.employer@yahoo.com lor detatls.
Looking for a new career opportunity?
Make calls for leadtng
conservahve orgamza·
liOns uldudong the NRA'

J&amp;L
Construction
• VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
• Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;

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

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215
740-591 -0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

740.446.92

LPNs/RNs needed for '----=-=~~~::::..:::::.:.::.:..:;:.~:=:---..JJ
pediatnc home
health
care In the Crown City
area. FTIPT hours avail·
CONSTRUCTION
able for Sunday thru Sat·
Remodeling,
urday night shifts. Exp.
wtventltrachlg·tube
pre·
Roofs, Garages,
ferred Email resume to
Pole Buildings,'
• New Homes
dcantreiiCpcnsohio.com
Siding, Decks,
or ca11800.518·2273.
· Garages

Public Notice
The annual financial report for 2009 Is complete and available for
review by appointment
at the home of the Fiscal Officer, Osle Foil rod
(740) 985-3866.
(1) 13

ROBERT
BISSEll

CONSTRUCTION

4 pictures for sale w/glass.
Paid $500 Sale $1 00
Exercise equipment, make
offer. Sacrifice
1-740-949-4059
Ask for Nikki

Help Wanted

Pharmacy Techmcian
Needed

Help Wanted

CERTIFIED
MECHANICAL
Plumbing Company office
manager/estimator/supervisor
wanted to manage commercial and
residential work Responsible for bidding
and supervising work. ~laster Plumber
license preferred but not mandatol).
Must appl) b) sending resume to
Certified ~lechanical
PO Box 68 Chester, OH 45720 or
wes@karrcontracting.com.
Salal) is based upon experience.
Office located in Athens. OH

I

~·-tJ111

II,

lf:l •

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Roofing Siding.
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywaff,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

29625 Bashan
Ractne, OH 45771

740-949-2217

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Estimates

,740-367-0536

Assists the Pharmacist an
the dally operations and
customer serviCes of the
pharmacy. Greets cus·
tomers and assosts the
Pharmac st n perscrip·
1100 transactiOns. 1nclud·
tng recetvong the per·
scropttons. data entry, fill·
mg perscropt10ns and
other related pharmacy
serviCes as directed by
tho Pharmacist. Expenence and Cenofication as
a Pharmacy Tochmcian
required. Please send re·
sume to Fruth Pharmacy
Corporate Office, Attn:
Personnel, 4016 Ohio
River Road, Point Pleasant, WV 25550
Southern Cabtnetry, an
equal
opponuntty employer, ts seekang as·
sembly Uno workers. In·
terested applicants may
apply In person Monday
through Thursday 9a·3p
at the Gallia County In·
dustnal Park located on
SR 850, 41 lntematiOOal
BLVD

{that's easy on your wallet)

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

SUNSET

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
January 16, 2010 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and SavIngs Company is sellIng for cash in hand or
certified check the following collateral:
2005 Pontiac Grand
P
r
I
X
2G2WP522551125416
2007 Honda Civic Sl
2HGFA55597H700793
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and
Savings
Company reserves the
right to reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"as Is-where Is", with
no expressed or Implied warranty given.
For further Information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date contact Cyndle or Ken at
992-2136.
(1) 13, 14, 15

. -.'1

I •

Great coverage and
superior service

CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES

PUBLIC NOTICE FOR
THE
VILLAGE
OF
RACINE
In compliance with
Amended
Section
319.11 of the Ohio Revised Code, a full and
complete copy of the
" Annual Financial Report " of the VIllage of
Racine is available for
public inspection at the
office of the Clerk/Treasure, located on the
first floor in the MunicIpal Building, Racine,
Ohio. The Office hours
are Monday through
Friday, 9:00am to 3:00
pm. the telephone
number Is 740-9492296.
David
Spencer,
Clerk/Treasurer
VIllage of Racine
(1) 13

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Call and Schedule Your
lnteN!ew'

Public Notice

•

Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free
Estimates

740-742-3411
H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing , S1dtng, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

·Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

304-773-1111

~Erie
~ Insurance·
Total Construction
One Call to Do It All

Pole Bnrn~ ~Ictal Roofs
Fire &amp; Water Damage
Dl} \\all/Repair

Replacement
\\ indo\\S and
\in) I Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Sidin~ • \in) I
WindO\\S • :\Ictal
und Shin~lc Roofs
• Decks • ·\dditions
•Electrical

• Plumbin~

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell: 740-416-5047

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

• J&gt;olc Barns

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!======
Tuppers Pla1ns Regaonal
Sewer Dtstnct IS accept·
1ng resumes for a mmntenance man for the diS·
tnct. A license operator
would be a plus Hours
30 to 40 per week and
on emergency call outs
Mall resumes to P 0
Box 175. Tuppers Platns
Ohao45783
Medical

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
Dump 'I rue!..
Sen icc
We do drhcna)s

l.imcstonc • Gnncl
Overbrook Center as cur·
lop Soil • 1- ill Dirt
rently accepting applica·
tions tor State Tested
Nursmg Assistants lor all
shifts. Interested apph·
cants can pick up an appficatoon or contact Lucy
Cdl
Goff, BSN, RN Staff De·
velopment
Coordinator - - - - - - - - .
@ 740·992·6472 M·F at
333 Page St., Middle·
port, Oh. EOE &amp; a parbcipant of the Drug-Free
Workplace Program

740-985-4422

...

740-856-2609

IH,KS
CO'\S fRL ( 1'10:\
(0.
Pomcro), Ohi11

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Classifleds
d

Doctors Office needlnQ
part bme X·Ray Tech ,
Call
304·675-1637
or
come by in person to
3009 JackSOn Ave , P1
Pleasant between 1·3pm
M·F

*' ••I

I'O&gt;ouon •mmcduuel)
able for bo.lhng cltrk \Ooor&lt;l
(lt0Ce"tn8 &amp; some com
puler sktlls a mu't '\pphca
uons •'utlable all da) \\ed

Tuesda) &amp; Thur• mom
tng&gt; ~uue 112 PU:asam \al
le) Ho,p•tal

Jjt;tJ

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RN, MSW, and Dlellctan
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WV.
lax resumes to
304·675·1505.

*Prompt and Quahty

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Rc,idcntial
• 1· n'&lt;' ~ ,Jim:lh''

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(7~0) 992-50119

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•&amp;-.t,!Jt.., f4'1'1lee4.

740 591 044
Please lca\C' mc,S.Il!C

:"\o\\ Selling:
• I ord &amp; i\lotorcraft

Baer

1 rnn,missions

Builders
• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeling
• Plumbing

C'u tom I lome Bulldmg
Steel I rnme Bmldmg
Huald ~-Remodeling

Gene I repatr
""" .hanl..,cclh.l'llm

Parb • Em!lne~.
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• Backhoe • Trenchlnl
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Tree Trimming• Setting
Poles aTrusses

Call740·992·9572

Racine, Ohio

~~7~4~0-~94~9~-·~95~6~~;;;;;;;;;;~ =

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Commercial &amp; Residential
E2!.:;, • Room additions • Roofing •

740-416-1568

Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Yinll &amp; \\ood sidin~

1\IICIIAEL'S

47239 Riebel Rd., long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

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Wednesday, January 13, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

· BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Just
1 Tolerate
42 College
6 Show
heads
sorrow
10Comic
DOWN
actor
1 Augments
Leary
2 Queen's
11 Barber
home
offering
3 Chanter
12Ratson- 4 Dreaded
13 Words to
5 Jargon
28 Lauds
the bandsuffix
29 British
leader
6T1ny
Columbia
14 Loafer, for
amount
neighbor
one
7Worry
30 Squad-car
15 Turn
8 Madonna
sound
16 Pewter
musical
31 Ethical
compo9 Rabbit
35"Finding
nent
of
Nemo"
17 Catchy
story
fish
music
11 Mall
36G rown-up
18 Road goo
masses
issue
filly
19 Decadent 15 King of
27 Print
38 Roulette
22 PennsylFrance
measures
bet
vania port
NEW
CROSSWORD
BOOK!
Send
$4.75
(Check/m.o.)
IO
23 NaturalThomas Joseph Book 1 P.O. Box 536475, Orlando. FL 32853-64/5
ness
26 Rescind
29Belief
32 Ones with
power
33Veto
34Radio
parts
36 Lauer of
"Today"
37 Archery
item
38 Numerical
comparison
39 Learns
about
40 Flynn of
film

I. TOOK SOME INTIMATE
PHOTOS OF BEETLE ON

OUF( DATE LAST NIGHT

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

WI-lOA! DID 1. JU5f
HEAR 400 5Ac.&gt;

fHE f-WORD IN
MOOf001'5!~

r

r

GAR THE HORRIBLE
HOW AfjOJ)'f

A flAW PIG/1,

r/AG?Afl ?

No

'T .Itt. WAt-r

THAN~...

Chris Browne
..,

fOR !?INN~!&lt;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

I
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I
i

1

1-13

j----=~

J
~~--~~--~--------~-.~~~

~~~a~~

THELOCKHORNS

A-.
&amp; .-~~~~~~~~~~~

HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

MOMMY H,Al5 "to Pt.Jf" ON
MY 5NOW5l.Jrf, 'GNOW BooiG.
'GNOW, Gt-JoW, G/oJoW.. ,

1 -I

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1/ o~:~'l ':6

~~I)~

"YOU DIDN'T GET FAR IN THIS NOVEL., LEROY ... THE
POTATO CHIP CRUMBS STOP AT PAGE 2.7."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

I.IV'I WEARING

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

BUNN~

SHL.t PPERS.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

4 7 3 1 9 6 8
1
8
5 8 6 4 3
2
3
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t&lt;1

" How did my wisdom teeth ~et
smarter than the others?'

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for v\~ay, Jan. 13, 2010:
This year, open up to possibilities. If you hit an
obstacle, become reflective rather than a bulldozer
pushing as hard as possible. This demanding approach
will backfire automatically. If you think outside the box,
you will be able to make a big difference in what
evol\es. Trust in your abilities, though they might be
tested. Remember, you are the Goat; even if you stumble, you continue your climb. If you are single, you'll
see life in a new light though relationships might be a
little difficult to get off the ground and stabilize. If you
are attached, ilcould be dose lo impossible not to ld
some of rour is.c;ues float through the bond. Remember,
a relationship involves two people, not one. A fellow
CAPRICORf'\ can be overly challenging.
'!he Stars Shmv the Kind af Day Yo11'1/ Hm •.:: 5-Dyllnmi.;;
4-Posim•c; 3-Az&gt;rmge; 2-So-S&lt;l; 1-D!ffimll
ARIES (March21-April19)
*** You can and will make a difference wherever
you decide lo put your energy. You could berume fru&lt;r
tTaled by a blockade or two, but you can and will handle it. You find out where hidden hassles lie. Tonight:
Could be late.
TAURUS (April2Q-May 20)
**** Your spirit soars. and you~ a situc1tion in a
new light. Your humor opens up a blockage and alJows
others to haYe a little more give-and-take. You could
laugh at what others see as difficult. Tonight: Kick ba&lt;k
and detach.
GEMINI (tvlay 21-June 20)
****Working \\ilh one per.;on rould take its toll
on you, especially ~s one blockage after another romes
up. Kick back and detach. Your creativity might not be
able to resolve some of the evolving i&amp;;ues, but remain
true to your.-elf. Tonight: Let go of a problem.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
****Defer to someone ebe knowing there are situations you might want to change, and move on. By
staying observant and open, you'llleam a lot more of
what could be and the direction in which you are heading. Tonight Sort through your options.
LEO (fuly 23-Aug. 22)
***Accomplishment feels good, but you might
not be able to push ,\ situation in the direction you so
choose. Be aware of the possibilities If you don't go
down the normal route. You might need to veer in
another direction. Tonight: Put your feet up.
VlRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

****Allow greater creativity and dynamic
thought into an issue. Even though you might try to
dose a door on a situation, it doem't work- not even
slamrning it works. Don't take a financial risk, no matter how good it sounds. Tonight Ha,·e reasonable
expectations.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
** You could feel unusually limited right now. If
you want to do something differently, now is the time.
Investigate option.'&gt; "'ith new eyes, knowing that perhaps you ha\·e overlooked something. You could be
shutting it out v.oithout knowing it. Tonight; Li' ing it
up.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
**-**Keep conversation.s moving. e\·en though
someone or se\eral people seem blocked for various
reasons. You might a.~k yourself what you aren't revealing and why. Analyze why you are holding back before
you judge someone else. Tonight: Work with the
moment.
SAGllTARlUS (1\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** Could you be O\'erslepping a boundary with
a friend v.oithoul knowing it? Stop and look at &lt;~ ~itua­
tion carefully. Sometimes vou lake rertain details for
gr,mtect. Learn to mo\'e through problems. Tonight
Your tTeclt.
CAPRICOM (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
****You discover many "''ays you could trip
yourself up. Today could pro,·ide too many e:~.amples
for you to integrale into one day. Do your best, knowing it serves you to understand how you might be
interfering with progress. Tonight: Cllat with a trusted
friend.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-Feb. 18)
Know when to ba&lt;k off, especially as you seem
to run into a hassle no matter which way you tum.
Your normal creativity and upbeat manner go far and
allow greater give-and-take. Tonight: Listen to your
inner dialogue; in here lies an aru;wer.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****A friend could sorely disappoint you, and
you wonder if you could have made a differenre. Let
go and worry le$ right now. Sometimes when you get
too foa.u;ed, you inadvertently cause a problem.
Tonight: Stay away from difficult p&lt;:!Ople.

**

facqut'lme Bigar IS tl?t llze lntenret
at lt!tpJ/ll1!'ill}lCquelllrel•rgar.a"'L

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,Januaryt3,2010

Prep Notebook: Galion girls finally win league game Manning, Lewis ready
B Y RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

A ne\v bm•kethall "ea..,on
brings hope - no matter
how mam setbacks arc in
the rearvicw mirror.
With a 49-41 victory at
Upper Sandusky on Jan. 5.
Galion's gtrls ended a !53game losing streak in the
Northern Ohio League.
The last time the Tigers
won a league game \Vas
Jan. 23. 1999. when they
beat Bucyrus 42-36.
The girls on this vear's
roster \~·ere in preschool.
"It's amazing,'' "econdyear coach Henry Gehring
said. "The girl-. stepped up.
but the thing that always
came back wa" the streak.
The seniors kept pia) ing
and kept playing and kept
playing - and believing."
MAGIC
~l \JBER:
Lima CentrJI Catholic
boy!'&gt; coach Bob Segger..,on
got career win No. 500
with a 51-39 \Vin over
Delphos St. John's on
Sunday.
Seggerson has spent all
32 seasons at LCC. is a
graduate of the s&lt;:hool and
played his first varsity basketball
game
against
Delphos St. John's as a
sophomore during the
1963-64 season.
Two former coache" with
more than 500 wins
watched Sunday's game at
LCC - Delphos St. John's
Bob Arnzen (676 "in!-&gt;)
and Wayne Trace's AI
Welch (540 win!'&gt;).
QUOTABLE:
Cincinnati Taft sophomore
forward
Adolphus
Washington had 24 points
and 17 rebounds to lead

the
Senators
pa!-&gt;t
Wood\' ard
75-60.
Wa ... hington, a transfer
from Roger Bacon. has had
double-doubles in all nine
games for Taft (8-1 ).
"He's a double-double
walking,'' Taft coach Mark
Mitchell said.
FAST
STARTS:
Coldwater's boys are off to
their hest start in 24 years
after a 7'2-51 win over
Cridersville
Perr)
improved them to 7-0: and
Mentor is 9-0 v. ith \\ins
over Massillon Jackson to
win the Surf N' Slam
Tournament in San Otego
and with a double OT win
over \Varren Harding on
Sunda) at the Play-ByPia) Clas~ic at Cleveland
State.
BIG PRODUCTIOI'\:
Euclid has won four in a
rO\v since an 0-2 start with
Demetrius Treadwell a\'eraging
23
points.
16
rebounds and 5 blocks per
game.
2X TRIPLE-DOUBLE:
Van Buren's Rich Meyer, a
6 6 junior. had triple-doubles almost back-to-back.
with
18
points.
II
rebounds and a schoolrecord 16 blocked shots in
a 65-56 win over \Jew
Riegel. then 18 poinb. II
rebounds and I 0 blocks
two games later in a 58-55
win O\ er Fostoria St.
Wende lin.
SPARTA~
EXISTENCE: Carey's Michael
Dennis has committed to
play football at Michigan
State. Spartans basketball
coach Tom Izzo might
\vant to also check. out the
6-8. 275-pounder. In a 79-

77 overtime "in over
Bucyru ... W) nford. Dennis
scored 41 point... and
grabbed
12
rebounds
Dennis "as a one-man
\uecking crew late in the
game, scoring 24 of his 41
points in the fourth quarter
and overtime. Carey net.!ded them all to earn its first
basketball
win
over
Wyn ford si nee the 1985
season.
MILESTONES:
Aja
Hall became Fostoria's
girls career scoring leader
when she had 33 points in
a 74-54 loss to Willard to
up her total to I .206
points: Archbold bo) s
coach Doug Krauss \\On
his 399th cart.!er game
when the Bluestreaks beat
Sherwood Fain·iew 69-34;
and
Brandi
McDaniel
became Franklin's all-time
leading girb scorer and
now has I .I 6 7 career
points.
NOTE TH IS : Drew
Stechschulte's only points
t' th
3
o
c game came on a pointer with 12 seconds
left to give Kalilh a 30-29
win over Holgate; Chad
Mossing scored 44 points.
hitting s1x ~-pointers, in
leading
Metamora
Evergreen to an 83-52 win
over Cardinal Stritch: after
losing to Defiance 73-53
on
Friday night, the
Ottawa-Glandorf boys won
bv an tdentical 7 3-53 score
on
Saturday
aga111st
Bo\\ ling
Green:
the
Paulding boys scored just
two points in the first half
to trail Columbus Grove
25-2. then ncar!) rallied by
outpointing Grove 24-9 in
the third quarter of a 50-42
defeat: Ohio State recruit

Jordan Sibert scored 19
points to lead Cincinnati
Princeton past defending
Kentucky state champion
Covington Holmes 57-54
in overtime its first
home-court loss in three
years; junior guard Charlie
Byers hit a short jumper
with 3 .5 seconds left to lift
Cincinnati Moeller past La
Salle 49-47. disappointing
a
standing-room-only
crowd at La Salle. which
had not lost at home in
nearly two years: and
Pettisville's girls snapped
Stryker's
34-game
Buckeye
Border
Conference win streak
\\ ith a 48-38 win on
Saturda).
F I NALLY: Cincinnati
Mount Notre Dame junior
guard Kathryn Reynolds
suffered a torn ACL in a
game recent!)'. and she is
out for the season.
Reynolds. who has se\·eral Division I college
offers, was the floor leader
for MND . She was the lone
returning starter from the
2008-09 MND team, as the
Cougars this year seek
their fifth consecutive
Ohio Division I championship.
Averaging 9.6 ppg this
season. she is best remembered for making the \\inning basket in the 2008
Division I state finals. with
a dramatic layup at the
buzzer to beat Lakota West
69-67.
"It's a big blow. but you
still have to play the
game,'' MND coach Dante
Harlan said. "We're going
to make some adJustments.
and hopefully the)' work
out.''

Turner scores 32 as Ohio State beats No. 6 Purdue
WEST
LAFAYETTE.
Ind. (AP) - Ohio State's
Evan Turner dismantled
Purdue ·s highly respected
defen'&gt;e.
He scored 23 of his
career-high 32 points tn
the second half, and the
Buckeyes rallied from a
13-point deficit to beat i\o.
6 Purdue 70-66 on Tuesda)
night.
Turner "cored 14 of Ohio
State's final 18 points,
wtth many coming against
Purdue defensive stopper
Chris Kramer. He also had
nine rebounds in his third
game since missing a
month with a fracture in
his back.
Ohio State coach Thad
Matta s,ud he's not sure
Turner 1s I 00 percent
healthy.
"Honestly. I hope about
50.'' Matta joked. "I think
he·s getting it back. I've
gone back. I've looked at a
lot of tape of when we·\ e
had him (before the
injury). and he was playing
at a high level. I thought he
played at a high le\ el
tonight.''
Purdue
coach
Matt
Painter couldn't find the
right defense for the 6foot-7 point guard.
''Evan Turner had his
way with all of our guys."
Painter said.
The Buckeyes withstood
one of the best single
game efforts in Mackey
Arena. Robbie Hummel

scored 29 of
his career-high
35 points in
the first half
for
Purdue
( 14-2. 2-2 Big
Ten). He tied a
school-record with eight 3pointers and had
10
rebounds.
Painter lauded Hummel's
effort.
"It was great:· he said.
"He carried us. I thought
Ohio State was quicker to
the basketball and played
harder than we did. and he
just flat out saved us.''
Turner wasn't trying to
outscore Hummel.
''I was just motivated to
try and win." he said. "I
know I'm going to end up
getting my points and my
shots."
William Buford had 19
points and seven rebounds
for the Buckeyes ( 12-5. 23). \\ ho were in danger of
falling out of the conference race early. Instead.
the Buckeyes toppled the
conference's
highestranked team and now feel
thev are still in the race.
"A lot of people are
going to Jose here and
there." Turner said. "A lot
of people are going to lose
in this building, and a lot
of people are going to lose
at Michigan State in other
places."
E'Twaun Moore added
19
points
for
the
Boilermakers. v.ho lost

their st.!cond straight after
tying a school record with
14 straight \vins to start the
season .... Purdue \Vas coming off a 73-66 loss at
Wisconsin on Saturda)'.
It was the first home loss
for the Boilt.!rmakers this
season.
"We had some older !!U\o s
that did not play ~like
juniors
and
'ieniors."
Painter said.
Purdue took an early 139 lead before Ohio State
responded with a 9-0 run.
including three buckets by
Buford, to take an 18-13
advantage with 10 minutes
to play in the first half.
Hummel responded with
perhaps the most impressive 3-point shooting barrage in Purdue history. He
made six: threes in the final
6:02 of the half to shoot
Ohio State out of its zone.
The Boilermakers closed
the first half on an 11-2 run
that included three 3-pointers by Hummel to take a
41-29 lead.
Hummel's eight threes 111
the half tied Cuonzo
Martin's school record for
3-pointers in a game set in
1994 and
broke
the
Mackey Arena record of
seven 1n a game. He surpassed his previous career
high of 25 points before
the break.
Ohio State abandoned its
1-3 I zone late in the first
half after I lummel's barrage. and David Lighty

guarded him for most of
the second half.
"I challenged Da\e to
guard him and he did a
good job,'' Matta said. "I
knew he was getting tired.
\\e just kept asking him to
sta)' ""ith it.''
Ohio State started the
second half\\ ith a 13-6 run
to cut Purdue's lead to 4 742, but Moore converted a
3-point pla)' to temporarily
slow
the
Buckeyes'
momentum.
The Buckeyes closed to
58-52, but a layup by
Moore after an Ohio State
turnover, then a fast-break
dunk by J aJ uan Johnson
made it 62-52 with 4:07 to
play.
Ohio State responded
with a 10-0 run, all on
points by Turner, to tie the
game. Hummel left the
game late with a dislocated
pinky finger. but he
returned minutes later with
two fingers on his left hand
taped together with 2:04
left.
Hummel made two free
throws with 20.5 seconds
remaining. but Ohio State
got the ball inbounds
against Purdue's pressure.
and Buford converted two
free throws with 16.8 seconds left to create the final
margin.
" It's disappointing that
you put yourself in position to win, and you didn't.
on your home court."
Painter said.

Wahama

The Bison scored the
first four points of the second half to take a 3I-28
cushion with 5:55 showing. but WHS countered
with a 9-6 run the rest of
the period to knot things
up at 37 headed into the
finale.
BHS took its final lead
of the night \Vith 6:20
remaining, establishing a
41-40 margin. The hosts
countered with a free
throw at 5:46 to tie things
up. then reeled off four
consecutive points to take
a 45-41 lead at the 4:02
mark.
Buffalo managed to tie
the contest at 47 with I :54
left 1n regulation and
again at 51 with just 21
seconds remaining. but
Wahama made its way to
the free throw line for the
win ""ith just under four
seconds remaining.

After WHS missed the
front end of a one-andbonus situation. a Buffalo
player hauled in the
rebound and began to
dribble down the court
when a teammate called
the extra timeout - stopping the clock with JUSt
eight tenths of a second
7.ach Whitlatch paced
Wahama and all scorers
with a game-high I6
points, followed by Isaac
Lee with 13 and Matt
Arnold with nine markers.
Kitchen and Ryan Lee
rounded out the winning
total with eight and seven
points respectively.
Wahama.
on
the
evening, connected on 10of-22 free throw attempts
for 45 percent. but made
5-of-8 charity tos"e" during the pi\ otal fourth
frame. BIIS finished the
night just 4-of-7 at the line

for 57 percent.
Jared Tucker led the
guests with 12 points. followed b) Cameron Jones
\vith 10 and Tyler Allen
with eight.
Wahama
returns
to
action tonight when it
travels to Williamstown
for a makeup contest at
5:45p.m.

from Page Bl
of regulation.
Buffalo stormed out to
an early 4-0 advantage
just I :37 into the contest,
but the hosts countered
with an 11-7 run over the
next 4:24 to knot things up
at II apiece. Wahama
closed the canto on a 4-0
spurt to take a 15-1 J edge
after eight minutes of
play.
Both
teams
were
involved in six lead
changes and two ties in
the second canto, with
Buffalo outsconng the
hosts 16-13 overall in the
second. The Falcons, however, took a slim 28-27
cushion into the intermi:-ston.

WAHAMA 53,
BUFFALO 51
Buffalo
Wahama

11 16 10 14 15 13 9 16 -

51
53

BUFFALO (1-6): Evan Childers 0 0·0

o. Dominic Rich 1 0·0 2. Jarrett Smith

0 0·0 0, Greg Rose 2 0·0 5, Lev1
Jordan 1 0·0 2, Cody Parkins 1 2·4 4,
Jared Tucker 6 0·0 12. Alex Ferran 2
0·0 6. Jerod Taylor 1 0·0 2. Cameron
Jones 4 2·2 10, Tyler Allen 4 0·1 8
TOTALS: 22 4·7 51. Three-point
goals: 3 (Ferran 2. Rose)
WAHAMA (4-3): Elijah Honaker 0 0·0
O, Anthony Bond 0 0·0 o. Matt Arnold
4 1-7 9, Trenton Gibbs 0 0-0 0, Ryan
Lee 3 1-2 7, Zach Whitlatch 5 4·6 16,
Isaac Lee 6 1·3 13. Tyler Kitchen 2 4·
4 8. TOTALS: 20 10-22 53. Throe·
pomt goals: 2 (Whrtlatch 2)

for next battle of words
INDIANAPOLIS (APl Peyton Manning will spend
Saturday night doin!! his
usual work. barking in'Structions at the line of scrimmagi.!.
Ray Lewi~ will try to
match Manning word for
word. jab lor jab. audible for
audible.
Their teammates have
been through enough of
these rounds to know it will
be the most entertaining. and
loudest. chess match of the
divisional-round weekend.
It's Peyton vs. Ray. The
Sequel.
''It can get pretty chaotic
out there.'' Colts left tackle
Charlie Johnson said with a
laugh, reflecting on other
times he's been in the crossfire. ''Thcy'\·e played against
each other so man) times
that Peyton \\ill make a
check and then Ray will
make a check and then
Peyton will make another
check. In a way, it's kind of
fun to listen to."
Or at lcnst to sec how two
of the best players at their
positions. arguably of alltime. manage this battle of
wits.
In many ways. the resumes
of Manning and Le\\ is look
virtually the same.
The Colts quarterback is
the NrL's first four·time
MVP. The Ra\ens linebacker is one of onlv four
player:- in league history to
earn two NFL defensive
player of the ) ear awards.
Both have become playoff
regulars. pt.!rennial
Pro
Bo"" krs. Super BO\\ I champions and Super Bowl
MYPs.
Manning is considered the
game's best student because
of the countless hours he
spends breaking down tape.
memorizing defenses and
using his knowledge to make
all the right calls at all the
right time~s.
Lewis is Manning's defensive equivalent. He~has spent
the past 14 sea'&gt;ons putting
teamrnatt.!s in position to
harass quarterbacks. force
mistakes and create one of
the league's most feared
units.
And. clearly. the) respect
each other.
Following Sunda\o 's 33-14
victory at- Ne\\ England.
Lewis talked about the challen~e of facing his old ri\·aJ.
whtle
Manning
spent
fuesday praising Lewis·
stud) habits.
"I have great respect for
the way he prepares. I can
tell by the way he plays how
hard he prepares," Manning
said. "It certainly shows up
for his team on Sundays.''
But they are nor clones.
Lewts leads with a loud.
fier)' st) le that includes a
penchant for trash-talking
and occasionally the outrageously funn). Against
Manning. that means trying
to interpret !\Ianning's audi-

bles out loud
~1anning is all business.
He concentrates on gcttinc
teammates into the rigllt
spots. ignoring Lewis' barbs.
That's when the real game~
begin.
•
''Peyton always kn&lt;
what he's doing, and I do1
think he's listening to what
Ray is saying:· Colts ri~ht
guard Kyle DeVan sa1d,
smiling. "He's making sure
to put us in the right play. It
you want to look at it like a
chess board. he (Manning) is
putting his pieces in plade
there and he's pretty good
doing it."
The philosophy has produced
almost
nawle s
results.
Indy (14-2) has won se\en
straight games
again t
Lewis' defense. including a
17-15 \ictory in Baltirn()r~
two months ago. In 2006. the
onh other time the Colts and
Ravens met in the playoffs,
Manning failed to produce a
touchdown
against
the
Lewis-led defense but still
orchestrated a 15-6 divisional-round win at Baltimore
that led to Indy's Super
Bowl title.
Now the Ravens (I 0
return to Indy. where
are 0-4 all-time and lost 31
last season in their on I) other
appearance at Lucas Oil
Stadium.
"\\'hat do I recall? I recall
it wasn ·t Yery prett) .'' satd
Baltimore
coach
John
Harbaugh. whose brother.
Jim is in the Colts· Ring ot
Honor. "I recall them getting
out in the first half and prei:
ty much knocking us out. It
was a real tough day for the
Ravens."
Lewis &amp; Co. think they
can change the script this
time.
When the teams met in
Week 11, Manning produced
only two touchdowns. The
Ravens allowed just 27 TDs
all season. the second-lowest
total in the NFL. and amon\!
teams with at least five posi:
season games since 2000.
the Ra\ ens haYe allowed the.
fewest points per ga~
1 '
(12.Q).
"It's a great matchu
Harbaugh said. '·Nobod) .
better than Pevton as far as
recognizing defense" and
makin!! great decisions in
terms of ~·here to go with the
ball and those ~kind" of
things. probably the best that
there's ever been at that. I'm
kind of biased tO\\ard Ra\.
obviously. He does that (geiting the team in the rrght
plays) and he does so many
other things. He's a great
leader:·
And a loud one. too.
"You just kind of chuckle
when ) ou hear the banter
going back and forth,"
Johnson satd. "They may
think the) know " here the
ball's getting thrown. like to
the right. but the) don't really know."

at

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