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                  <text>student
MathCo mts
Is, A6

qualifies
state

Man h ter nips
Eagles at bt1zzer, Bt

•

ti

Midd leport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Garn s sentenced on remaining
cou ts in Doris Jackson case

SPORTS .
• Tornadoes advance
to drstrict final.
See Page B1

of rcccivmg !&gt;tolcn property
und tampering \\ ith evidence.
In September, Gat nes
entered guilty pleas to
counts of rcceivmg stolen
propcrt). tampcrmg \\ ith
e\ idence, ob~tructing JUStice and escape.
Pro::.ecutin"
Attorney
Colleen William!&gt; !&gt;aid
Garnes was charged in connection with e\ents following Jachon 's Febnuu y
2009 murder, and for escap
ing from the count) jail in

POMEROY
Pomeroy man
Charles Williams
Jackson'&lt;&gt; c.1r after
der appeared in
Pleas Court ~lo
final sentencing.
.l.unes Lee U
\\as one of II
'' ho appeared
f'red W. Crow Ill
He \\as sentenced
)Cars

Games was sentenced to
18 months for receiving
stolen property and five
years for tampeting with C\ idence. 1 he sentences v. ere
ordered to be ~ened consecutnely. for an aggregate of
six and one half years.
A fi\ e-) ear sentence for
obstructmg justice and five
years for escape were suspended. Games \\ill be on
community control/probation for fi\ e years after he

August 2009, whJle being
held on those counts. Two
other men escaped from the
jail at the same time.
Garnes ac;sisted Williams.
who Is no\\ in prison tor
Jacko;on '!&gt; murder. in disposing of items Williams stole
from Jackson'!&gt; home, and
hiding Jackson's stolen
Mercury.
Games was also charged in
a separate lndictment. along
with two other men. with
escaping from the ~1e1gs
County Jail on Aug. 23.

Please see Garnes, AS

the busiest place
morning and lined
lies lined up to
lutheran Soo1al
t-1:=~nm~rs11 stopped traffic and
to Sacred Heart
ng lots fi led.
and volunteers used
up the fresh and
nrf'lifPirrA&lt;::. for their fam1ly S
the Catholic
on"·"'"•" distnbution Site.
uc;:.uarw

Smith-Capeh'art
Post 140 in
New Haven to
celebrate 91 years
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSI&gt;::WSCMYDAILYSENT N:LCOM

HAVEN. W\a.
Smith Capehart Post
in Ne\\ Ha\en \\ill eel
ebrate their 91 st bu1hda) ot
The Amenca Legwn on
~1arch 2"", 2010 at the Post
Home.
As 111 the past, reservauons are bemg taken. The
deposit is $10 per person
and mu~t be turned in at the
Post by March 24. The
monC) v. ill be refunded at
the door.
Social hour \\ill begin at
Ci p.m. \\ ith dinner bemg
sen ed b) the Eastem Star
shortly after 6 p.m.
Re&gt;-en at1ons and payment
can be mailed to Post I 40
P.O. Box 267 Ne\\ Ha .. en,
WV 25265. They also can
be paid at the Post during
regular busmess hour!&gt;
The dinner is open to all
Legionnaires, Auxiliary,
und S.A L. members, along
• w1th a guest.

1

I

Council
approves
$2.3 million
operating
budget
B Y B RIAN

J . R EED

BREEDCMYOAILYSENTINEL COM

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport \ 1llage Council
c~pprm ed an operatmg budget
of $2.3 million at Monday
e\cning's regular meeting
The budget, prepared and
outlined b) the Fi~cal Officer,
Susan Baker. mdudes a
$746,0:.)() appropnation m the
general
fund. Council
appro\ed an ordinance authorlling appropriations for ordinary expenses at its regular
meetinc. B) Ia\\, permanent
appropriation~ must be in
place b) the end of March.
The \ illage has been opcratmg on u temporary appropriation since Jan. 1.
The foliO\\ in~ sum:- "'ere
appropriated: General fund,
$746.382; fire equipment.
20,929.84; \\ater operating.
387.513.45: meter depo-.;its,
10.000: tree. 4.059: sc\\er
impro,ement. 30.000: street,
144.794; firetruck. 59.000;
, se\\ er operating, 550,000;
leak insurance, 3.000: di,astcr relief, 2.943: mayor's
computer. 5.000: refuse.
237.850: recreation. 2500:
cemetel), 8,000; \\ater capital impro\t~ment. 150.000.
(Total: $2.361,973.45&gt;
It is -wo11hy of note that
some funds contained in the
annual appropriation represent grant funds.' oted millage and other source of
re\enue.
Other business
Council \1ember Juha
Houston reported on pl.ms
for a cleanup \\eekend in
the \ illace the \t,.eckend of
April 23. She encouraged

Please see Middleport. AS

Willis
appointed
to Syracuse
Council
B v B ETH SERGENT
BSERGEW"CMVDAILYSEWIN~l CO .1

WFATHER

S'\ RACUSE
Timoth)
Willi:-. has been
appointed to S) racu:-.e
\'illal!e Council. filling the
:-.eat ~' acated b) formt-r
Coundh.,oman Jo) Bentle).
Bentle). '' ho \\a recle~t­
cd last ) ear for a :-ccond
tem1. resigned her seat due
to health reason-..
Willis ''a-. chosen from n
fidd of four candidate:. '' ho
submitted letter'&gt; of intcrc t.
Tho-.e candJdatt's included
K:uehn Roberts. Dcnril R.
HudsZm.ll. Scntt D. Kime~.
\\hen the nommations
were brought to a 'ot~.
Councilman Mike Vanmeter
j said he appreciated all tho::-c
1 '' ho "hO\\Cd interest but felt
1 the 'ote -.hould ~o.me dO\\ n
to Robert... and \\ 1 ~hs lx·~au-,e
the) actL~all) p1-e' 1ousl) fil~d
and ran tor a 'eat .on coUJ_K'II.
t:ltimatel). counc1l fdt smce
\\'illi rccehed more \Otc'
than Robert' m the ~enera!
clcct!on,. he shour.d be
applHnted to Bentle) s f\)rm~r :"eat. Thl.' 'ot~ to appo!nt
\\ Jlhs \\ .ts unammoth "1th
Council :-.tember-- Vanmeter.
\lil-.l'
Jach,
I?oroth)
Amberger and .IP V:man \Oting. Councilman Bnhb) Ord
''a" .lb,ent.
Please see Syracuse, AS
(Bo)

I,

F IZ. OM THE l)AS T'

'

Book to document
stories of
Leading Creek

High : Mid 60s.
Low: Upper 40s.

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGE:.NTOMYDAILYSENT''II[l COM

INDEX
2

Ste t rn~s- 12 PAm s

Calendars
sifieds
Comics
Editorials
Spo rts
, ,20 IU

A3

B3-4

Bs
A4
B Section

Ohio Va ll••&gt; J&gt;uhli,hing (.'o.

ll.l!IJI,I !1!1. !I!II

Beth Sargent/photo

Members of the
ing Creek Citizens Committee are collecting ~tories about
of the Leading Creek Watershed for an upcom1ng book the
life in and the h.
organization is oe~1e1ooma. From lett to right are Cindy Parker, Karla Sanders,
Michelle Donovan
n and Carol McDonough.

--

POMEROY
The Leading Creek
Con sen anc) Di trict runs through
fh e to\\ nslups lll .\1\.'ig" Count).
township' "ith the1r O\\ n uniyue sto1ics to tell documenting local histOr)
and life .1long the creek.
Karla Sanders an AmenCorps 'olunteer and organizer of the Lc.1dmg
Creek Cititcn" Committee spoke to
members of the :'\ie1gs Count)
Chamber of Commen.'t' ) e~terda) to
garncr ~l!llpOt1 for a proJm&gt;-ed book
"hich "1 I collect the h1stOI\ of the
creek and Its \\ atershcd. In order to
publish the book. S,mdcrs has applk·d
for a Ohio llum.muies Council Grm11
" hich requires a 50 percent match.
The project has a total cost of 2.000,
Please see Book, AS

____ __

- - -- . --.-~

........_

____

......-..........._.......__.__..,..

__.

�-----------~---··-----

.

--.

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

\Vednesday, March 10,

Ohio State janitor's gunfire kills co-worker, self
By

emplo) ment was to end
Saturday.
About a half-dozen other
COLUMBUS
An Ohio emplo)ees were m the
State l 1 ni,cr it) janitor building when the shooting
who ''as Jbout to lose his began, Denton said He
job \\alked anto a nldinte- described the ~hooting as
nnncc building for Ills c.trly work-related but didn't
mormng shift Tucsdn) and describe a motive.
s~ot
I\\ o
sup~n isor~.
The ~hooting was reportkilllllg tllll' ol them und ed at 3:30 a.m. Tuesday.
fatal!) shooting hunself. No Police tactical units ~ur­
students \\Crc hurt.
rounded the building and
Nathaniel IJrown. 51, found Brown with a selfarrived for \\Ork at the mflictcd gunshot wound in
nation's largest university a garage bay, Denton s,tid.
dressed in dark clothing, a He was pronounced dead at
hooded sweat sh1rt and a a campus hospital several
backpack. He then opened hours later.
fire in an office suite usmg
Brown had been schedtwo handguns. campus uled to work h1s normal
Police Chief Paul Denton third shift. Denton said.
aid.
One of the \ ictims, buildBrown !&gt;pent five years m mg sen ices manager Larry
pnson in the 1970s and '80s Wallington, 48. died at the
for recel\ mg &lt;;tolen proper- scene The other. operat) but hed &lt;~bout it on his job tions shift leader Henry
application, records sho\\. It Butler, 60, was in stable
\\asn't unmedwtely clear condrtion at Ohio State
whether Ohio State had t:nivcrsity Medical Center.
done the required back- officiab said.
ground check. on hm1.
Butler wrote a letter Feb.
Ohio Stute released docu- II recommending that
ments from Bnmn's per- Brown
be
terminated,
sonnel fik showing that according record~ relca~ed
-supervisors complained he by the university. Even
was tard), slept on the JOb though colleagues had made
and h.td problems fnllo'' ing a special effort to help
instructrons. The unherslt) Bru\\ n. he wa~ r.ot improvsent him a letter March 2 ing. the letter said.
mforming hun th.ll his
Denton declined to Sa)
MATT LEINGANG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

whether other employees
"ere targeted. Police nl'io
didn't de~cribc the contents
of Bro\\ n's backpack.
l'hc other employees in
the building at the time have
been offered ~rief counseling. Denton sard.
"This is n tr.tglc e\ent,
and our hearts go out to all
of the families," said
Vernon Baisden. assi~tant
vice president for public
safety.
Pohce released two 9 II
calls. In one, a caller tells
the dispatcher that he pulled
into the garage and heard
gunshots. lie identifies
Brown as the shooter and
says Brown was in the
proces~ of bemg fired.
Brown, who \\as stiJI on
probation as a recent hire.
had recent!) complained to
a union repreo;cntatiVC that
his supervisors were being
unfair in their evaluation of
him. said Richard Murray,
president
of
Commun ication Workers
ul America l.o~:al 450 I,
which r~prcsents cu~todtal
workcn; at Ohio State.
'' lie was lrustrated and
up ct, ccrtainlv. But he didn't make nny ti1rcats or anything," Munay :-.aid. "J he
union couldn't do more
with the case because
Bro\\n didn't file a fonnal

Ohio Briefs

complaint. he ~aid.
Brown was released from
prison in 1984 after serving
about five years on a charge
ol receivmg stolen property,
records ::;how. The cnsc file
had been archived, and
more information on the
crime wa~n't immediately
available, prisons spokeswoman Julie Walburn said.
On his job application,
Brown checked "no" when
asked whether he had ever
been convicted of a felony
or misdemeanor. A letter
from Ohio State offering
him the job said it was contmgent on a satisfactory
criminal background check.
Baisden declined to
comment on whether the
check wa::. completed.
Ohio State's policy on
background
checks
depends on the type of job
po~ition. he said.
Both shooting victims had
worked for the university
for about 10 years. Family
member~ reached Tuesday
declined to comment.
Classes went on as ~ched­
uled Tuesday. More than
55.000 students attend the
main campus in Columbus.
The maintenance building i~
next to a power planf and
across the street from Ohio
Stadium, home to the university's football team.

Death row inmate who
overdosed back in prison
COLUMBUS (AP}- Officials say an Ohio inmate
who intentionally overdosed on pills hours before his
scheduled execution has retumed to prison a'nd is on
suic1de wntch.
Prisons spokeswoman Julie Walburn says 43-yearold l..twrencc Reynolds Jr.. who admitted taking an'
overdl1se. arrived at the Ohio State Penitentiary in
Youngstown at 12:20 p.m. Tuesday.
Walburn says Reynolds is isolated from other
inmates and under constant observation by staff
Reynolds was treated at a Young::.town hospital
after he was found unconscious in h1s death row cell
Sunday night.
The type of drug he used and why it was prescribed
aren't being disclosed. Ho\\ he accumulated the pills
is under imestigation.
Reynolds· cxecuuon for the 1994 murder of his
neighbor near Akron has been rescheduled to next
week.

Ohio Senate passes dating
violence protection bill
COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio Senators have unammously passed a House bill that would allow juvenile
~ourt~ to issue protection orders for minors in dating
relntit111~hips

The Ohio llouse of Representatives is expected to
concur today. The legislation would then go to Gov.
Ted Strickland, who is expected to sign it..
The bill \\as inspired in part by the plight of
Cle\eland teen Johanna Orozco. who was shot in the
face by her 17-year-old ex-boyfriend in 2007 has had
numerous operations. Orozco wanted to get a protection order,'but Ohio juvenile courts cannot issue them
agamq minors.
An advocac) group ~aid in a national survey last
)ear that onl) a handful of tates ha\e laws enabling
minors the same protection order rights as adults.

Ohio doctor gets 20-to-life in wife's poison death
BY THOMAS

J. SHEERAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVElAND
Rel.tll\ es of the \ ictim
sobbed and held each other
as a judge handed down a
life prison tenn Tuesday for
a doctor convicted of killing
h1s wife by lacing her calcium
supplement
with
C) umde .:.o he could be \\ rth
h1' m•stre&lt;;&lt;;
)aze d ~
41 \\On't he
h tblc for parole lor J.t
lea t 20 )caf5
Es a. \\ ho drdn 't test1f)
ut his tnal. softl) satd "yes"
''hen Cu) ahoga Count)
Common Plea
Judge
Deena Calabre e a ked if
he wunted to p.l, up a
chance t comment at h•"
entencmg
But rei all\ e'"i of the \ 1c
t1m poke up. ~tanng hm1
do\\ n 111 an emotionally
charged courtroom and
cha1lengmg htm to own up

to the Ia) mg.
"Are ) ou a man," asked
'ictim's
brother,
the
Dominic DtPucciO. "It's
) our last chance to save
)Our soul. nght here, nght
now.''
Essa ''a~ convicted last
\\eek of lacing his "'ife\
calcium supplement with
C\'anide m 2005. Rosemarie
l:ssn collapsed \\ hilc dri" mg and crashed her car
mto another vehicle near the
couple·~
suburb n
Cle\-eland home
Es&lt;;a. dres.:;ed in an
orang~ jml ::.uit and ,., ith his
hands cuffed in front of
h1m. pushed back m his
chrur and mostly looked
stratght ahead as the par
ents. s•blmgs and fnends of
h1s \\ 1fe c;pok.e to the JUdge
belore the sentence was
1mposed.
Essa \\ 1ped h1s eyes '' 1th
a tissue at one pomt. \\hen
DtPucciO read a statement

that he S&lt;~id he had drafted
on behalf of the couple's 7and 9-year-old children.
They arc bein£ raised b)
her familv.
"We hold our mommy
close to our hea11s at night,"
the statement smd. It said
the chtldrcn mis thetr
mother, c~pecwll) during
holiday and ::.pecial fnll)ily
events
"~he 1 no\\ here to be
tound ext:ept m ou
I eart&lt;;. r ad D!Pu~.clo .1
fanul)
member~
.., ho
packed the courtroom
clutched ea(;h other and
cried. The JUdge. takmg a
deep breath. kept casting
her eye' do'' 11\\ ani.
Prosel.utor&lt;.o ciJ.1med th
former emergenc) room
doctor .u an Akron hosp1t.ll
k11led h1s \\ tfe o he could
be \\ uh " m•stre'l&lt;;. The
defense tned to blame the
ktllmg on a Jealous m1stress
who wanted to marry E~sa.

Ex-bailiff found guilty
of attempted bribery

Es a·s attorneys ~aid their
client couldn't afford a
lawyer to handle an appeal
and would seek a courtappointed attome~.
E~sa\ brother. Firas Essa,
who changed his testimony
nnd told juror~ the defendant admitted to the killing.
declined comment ~tfter the
sentencing.
The defendant's mi tress
a nur e te-;ufied that E~ a
1 ked
fore hts \\ f
dea h
d
ometh
pen.
Rosemarie E sa d1ed aft r
talon~ a calcium tablet and
era hm her SU\ mto an
car near the cou
m Gates M1lls
the other car was
hurt ~ eed Essa, a Detroit
natne who e famil) is from
a Palestinian temtol)', fled
to Lebanon after police
seized drug bottles at his
home.

CJNCII\'NATI (AP) - A fonner Ohio court bailiff
accused of offering to get a case dismissed for money
in the courtroom \\here he worked has been found
gurlt) of attempted bribery.
'
Damon Ridley \\as found guilty Tuesday. He was
.tcquittcd of charges of theft in office and bribery. The
former bailiff for Hamilton County Common Pleas
Judge John West could be sentenced to up to 18
months in pri&lt;;on.
A convicted drug dealer testified that he gave
R
' S1,000 to ensure he \\ ouldn 't go to prison for
COnVICtiOn before West.
B hffs run day-to-day courtroom operations and
bedule when cases are heard.
R1dle) resisned in October 2008 after im estigators
q estione.d hun about \\' hy some cases hadn't
t d on m )'ears.

Ohio man gets 5 years
for giving wife AIDS
CLEVELAND (AP) - An Ohio man has been sentenced ih CJe\eland to five years in prbon for infecting his wife with the AID.S '\irus.
Authorities sa) the un~uspectin!! woman had a 14ye,tr r~lationship \\ ith Fernando Castro. Her treatment
was delayed because he ne\ er told her about his A IDS
condition.
Cu)uhogn County Common Pleas Judge Timothy
McGintv sentenced the 51·vear-old Castro on
~tonda)· on his guilty plea to fefoniou~ assault.
Health officials said in court that had thev known
he wa, sexuall) acthe. the) \\Ould have helped him
tell hi, wife. But he claimed on hospital fonns that
he wa, single.
Ca tro apologiL.ed to hi wife in court and asked for
her forgheness. She wanb a dhorce.

Feds to probe cause of runaway Prius in California
BY ELLIOT SPAGAT
ASSOCIATfD PRESS

EL CAJON. Calif. - The
government sent nl\estigator Tuesdm to examine a
Prius that sped out of control on a California freeway.
and To) ota smd it \\anted to
in ten iew the dri \ er a the
bes1eged automaker deeth
\\ ith a high profile new
headache that raised questtons about the &lt;;afel\ of tts
•
beiO\ ed h) bnd.
A da) after ::.tate troopers
helped the car ::.IO\\ to a stop
and 1ts dnver to emerge
unharmed. fo)OtJ could
shed no ne\\ light on what
might h.tvc gone \\ rong. 'I he
Priu&lt;; is not r:u1 of Toyota's
vast recall o ga~ pednls that
can become stuck, but it is
co\'ered bv an earlier recall
of floor nl'ats that can catch
the accelerator.
The freeway incident happened at the \\oN possible
ume for Toyotct - JUSt
hours after it mv1ted
reporters Monday to hear
experts insi!.t that electronic
flaws could not cause car~ to
speed out of control under
real drh ing conditions.
The N.ltiOP.il H1ghway
Traffic
Safet)
Administration sent two
investigators to examine the
car. a gO\emment spokeswoman suid. ·lo)Otrt Motor
Corp. ~pokcsrnan Bria_n
Lyons 'latd the autorn.tker ts
sending three of it.s own
technicians to irnestigatc.
Another
Toyotu
spoke~man . .John Hanson.
said the com pan) \\anted to
talk to the drt vcr. James
Sikes.
His car, a 2008 model,
was co-.cred b) the tloor
mat recall, but the dnver in
Monday's incident s;ud the
pedal Jammed nnd was not
trapped under the mat.

Sikes told authorities he
was driving on Interstate 8
outside San Diego when
the accelerator ~became
stuck. He said the car
reached 94 mph before a
trooper. calling out instructions from a megaphone.
helped him !&gt;low do\\ n and
turn off the eqginc.
A pair of 911 calls spanning 23 minute-. recounted
the harro\\ ing experience.
In the audio released
Tuesda). Sikes sounds panicked at times as he tells a
dispatcher about a ..tuck
accelerator. The d1spatcher.
Leighann Parks. repeatedly
tells Sikes to throw the car
into neutral and turn off the
ignition. Sikes often didn't
respond to her instruction~.
"My car can't slow
down," Sikes telb her. At
one point, Parks asks if he
had put the car into neutral.
and Sikes responds. ''I'm
trying to control the car!"
Sikes. 61. was identified
in a 2006 newspaper story
as a real estate executive
and longtime lottel) player
who won $55,000 and was
elected to appear on a
California Lottery TV
game sho\\.
He appeared at a news
conference quickly after
incident
the
free\\ ay
Monday and also spoke to
reporters Tue~day at his
Toyota dealership. \\here
hrs car\\ as tmvcd.
S i1-.:cs said he called 911
about I :JO p.m. Monday
after accelerating to pa~s
another car.
''I pushed the gas pedal to
pass a car and it diJ something kind of ftrnn). ... It
jumped and it .ust stuck
there." he said.
Sikes smd he tried to pull
on the gas pedal but it didn't
"move at all." He said he

nearly hit the bnck of a bigrig and was traveling so ra~t
he couldn't read the numbero; on freeway call boxes.
A patrol car driven by
CHP Off1cer Todd Neibert
pulled alongside the Pnus.
and the officer told Sikes
O\er a loudspeaker to push
the brake pedal to the
floor and apply the emergency brake.
The bmkmg. coupled with
a steep incline on the freewa). slowed the car to-about
50 mph. Sikes said he then
shut off the engine and the
car coasted to a stop. Neibe11
then mo\ed his car in front
of the Prius to hlock it.
"It started to slow do" n,
it \\as still re' ving up, but
it \\rt'l ~lowing dmHI,"
Sikes said Tuesday. "I hit
the button to turn the car
off at abnut 55 mph. It did
shut down.''
Neibert said he considered deploying a spike trip
as a last resort and wns glad
Sikes was able to stop tht
car before a steep do'' nhill
that wns approaching.
"He \\&lt;IS visibl) haken,
he seemed in shock."

~eibert

said. ''The brakes
were definite!\ down to
hardly any material."
The CHP held the car
overnight, and it was towed
to the dealer~hip Tue~day.
CHP
Officer
Brian
Pennings said.
"There"s no collision. -.o
our im cstigation 's done,''
Pennings ~a! d. ''There·, no
crime. ~ .. We're ju t glad it
ended safe!\."
Toyota lia~ watched its
reputation for quality crumble because of recalls tied to
risk~ that cars can accelerate
uncontrollabl) or can't
brake proper!). The company is defending itself
against suggestions that bad
electronics are to blame for
the problem - not simpler
mechanical flaws. as Toyota
maintains.
The runawav Prius onh
makes Toyota's image problem worse. said Larn L.
Smith, president o( the
Institute
for
Cri...,i
Management in Louisville,
K). - even if video only
sho'' ed the aftennath, \\ tth
the Priu::. resting behind the
patrol car.

prR;;~;;~~~-;E~~~

1
Will be given In MEIGS COUNTY by
1
I Be/tone HEARING AID CENTER I
1
Dr. A. Jackson Bailes Office
1
I
507 Mulberry Hghts, Pomeroy, OH .
I
FRIDAY, MARCH 12 ·9:00am-noon
I Call Toll Free 1·800-63~-5265 for an immediate appointment. I
1The tests will be given by a Licensed Hearing Aid Specialist. 1
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding
I conversation is Invited to have a FREE hearing test to see if I
1 this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you for 1
your FREE HEARING TEST, a $125.00 value.
I .UAW. ARMCO ANDWALK
ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
I
INS WELCOME

L---------------~

2010

Annie's Place
Home Cooked
Daily Dinner Special

r-..---,
I

Open II :OOam to I O:OOpm
Monday-Sunday
......,...____
,
.
.
-~--

~

•

"-v~-

"

~{J! "',.

\

State Rt 7 Tuppers Plains
Call Ahead for Pickup

@

our Pickup \Vindow

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel
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�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

\ •V ednesday, March 10,

2010

ASK DR.. BR.() I' HERS

: He 011ly ]Jretertds to go Chester Council Lodge plans rally
:to work after losing job
Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

near Dr. Brother1:1: I am

a ) oung \\oman who has a
Dear Dr. Brotht•1·s: ·1 h1~
pretty cmb.trTa..,sing. but I
.n e st,u ted somcthinr I
don't exact!) kno\\ ho\\ tu
stop. and I'm pretty Mire I
should o;top. No. I'm not
ha\ 1ng an ullmr. My gul
fncnd thinks I lhi\C .1 good
)Oh. though. anJ I d1d
but
I lo~t 11 about a month ago.
nd a~ of no\\ I am still prcten1,hn~ that J still ha\C 11!
Ho'' Mck rs that'"' An)\\3).1
tecl bad telhng her &lt;~bout
.m) da). whcri 1 am JU t
makmg 11 all up. Ho\\ the
he&lt;..k do I !!CI out of this?
Help'- C.Y.
ll1•ar (' ·' .: I don·, ha\ e to
lecture ) ou on ho\\ dt'&gt;honec,t and self-dec;tructi\e this
kmd of bcha' 101 ~:an be, as
.) ou sound plcnt) remorseful .tlrc.td). \\hen a man
pretends to go to the office
each da) after lo~ing h1s
JOb, it's usual!) .1 c1y for
help from c1 part ot him th.tt
feels th.tt the c;hame .md
rt of losmg ,1 JOb arc too
Jch to 'hare \\llh a lo\Cd
• une l surlll) there are people .11 home "ho are he,l\ Ily
dependent on hun. and he
''ants breathmg room rn
order to come up" rth .tne\\
1dea before the ''hole farm1) has to mourn the lo s of
the old one.
L nfonunateh .the e kind'
ol ntses take up enormous
amounts of cnerg) that
could be U'icd to )OUr
..1d\ ..Intage 1n JOb huntmg
And )OU are diggmg )OUr
grc~\e a lrttle deeper b)
te hng )OUr girlfnend about
)OUr noneXI!-.tent dJ).lf )OU
'&gt;top th.u r1 •ht no" and con
fe, ... to her .md tr) to get her
to ...e.. th 1 )OU \\cren 't tr'
m It f I he: but JU t h..1n '
1r s If esteem '&gt;he
u But don't
It ~he 1~ 'erv
up
h\ )OUr reh.latiOn. If
'&gt;he ~ n et past th1~ deccp
•.
_ ~k her to help you
to\\ ard gettmg another
L t her kno" that -;he 1&lt;;
..,.,cnti I pan ot )OUr hfe
ml t t
u d on't \\ant to
d " p t her an) tunher.
'I
nt to mdudc her
•Ill Ill '&gt;
\d'' deCISIOn. at
:Je ' untrl &gt;'ou ct )OUr
\.,rediblht) b.tck Realize
that th.._ I'&gt; .1 t111~t ISSUe, and
you ha\c blo\\n 1t, blf.·lime.
So don't expect m1radcs.
'Good lul:h..

•••

respon~Iblc

JOb th.lt, unfor
tunatcly, carries with it
~ome trnvel to various
Amcri~an cities. l'\e never
liked flying, but l have to do
it for my Job, so I grit my
teeth .1nd go. But I' 'vC
noticed that the more sec\J
rit) measures are stepped
up. the more nenou~ I
become Then 1 stan worr)mg about looking su-.piCIOUs m)self becau-.e I am
nen ou ~ h there an) \\-3) to
c&lt;~lm
m)self do\\n? I
ulrcad) take a tranqmliter,
but 11 's not 'cry etfectJ\e.
-H.\\.

(HI S fl R
1 he Dl'&gt;tnct I ~ 1all)
to be held on Apr1l 15 wa&lt;,
&lt;Innounccd ,,, a recent meetmg of
('he~ter Council 323. Daughters of
Amcnca when the) met at the hall.
Al~o announced """the scholar
~hip .tpplkation~ .uc to c subm1ttcd
b) \1,m:h ~I
1 helma WhHt.:
presidt.:d ut thc meet111g which
opened 111 nturtllstk form mcluding
the plcJgc to the Chn..,tian and
Amem:.m tl.tg.... 'cnpture pra)er

and pledge.
Reported at the mect111 \\ere the
heart problem.., bc111g expe11CIH.:cd
by Jud) M&lt;u,hall, the Illnec;., of
Gary Wolfe .utd K.tthf)n B.lllm, and
the hosplldht.ttion of the brOihcr of
Ruth Smith.
M.lr) Jo Barnnger read "Game'&gt;
for When We Get Oldc1." Qu.utcrly
birthday!-. will he ob~er.,.eJ nt the
next meeting. DeiOII'&gt; Wolfe,
E:.sther Smith. 1 J Klllt.: had

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 11
CHESTER
Shade
R1ver lodge 453, 7.30 p.m.
at the hall. Refreshments.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 meets at 7
p.m., w1th dinner served at
6:30.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters, 11·30 a.m at the
new Begmmngs Un1ted
Method1st
Churc~.
Hostesses, Velma Rue anp
Eleanor Thomas.
SYRACUSE - Wtldwood
Garden Club, 6·30 p.m , at

the Syracuse Community
Center.
Monday, March 15
POMEROY Regular
meetmg
of
Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30p.m., w1th
refreshments at 6:30 p.m.
and mock initiation.

Dear H.\\.: Somcumc"i
e'en mediCation doesn't
help If \\e don't get to the
root of the pwblem. It
ounds as though ) ou are
'cr) frightened. perhap~
about gettmg caught up in
some kind of horrible &lt;o:ccuThursday, March 11
nty snafu, or perhaps about
WELLSTON Galliaendmg up m an interrogaJacl&lt;son-Meigs-Vinton Solid
tion room or. \\Or~e )Ct. jail
Waste Distnct Board of
'' h1le your plare lea' cs
D1rectors
Executive
without you and )OU miss
Comm1ttee, 3 p.m., full
all your appomtment&lt;&gt;. And
board at 4 p m d1stnct
C\en \\OI"Se )Ct. bemg fired
off1ce, 1056 New Hampsh1re
at the end of it all So you
are putting an a\\ ful lot of
pressure on ) ourself not to
stand out in 3n) wa)
\\ hich, of course. \\Ould
RACJNl·
Mana
m.IkC .Ul)One nCf\OU~.
(
l·rcckcr)
.111d
Jerrod
It ma) be that ) ou could
get ) ourself noticed 1f Dou!!la., of 46475 To" nship
o;creeners tum to beha\ ioral Road 67. R.t~.:1nc, announce
profiling - checking pas~ the brnh of ,1 son, Kaden
sengers "ho act scared. You Kerth Dougla~. He "a"&gt; born
m1ght need to join u therap) on Feb. 19 at the O'Biene&lt;,~
Hospital
111
group that sta)" up to dute ~1cmmwl
on mrlinc practkeo; (keep Athen~ and \\ei •hcd 7
some kmd of fearful 11) er pound.;. 8 5 uun~.:eo;.
membership card in )Ottr
'' .tllet to show the '&gt;t.TCen
cr'). ) ou rna)' find that such
a program \\Ill help )OU
focus on the anx et\ mthcr
th n tr) mg to pu~h 11 d "n
or make 1t go 3\\ d) throu h
the use of medicatiOn
I ..1crng the feelmg of fe.1r
and conquering them \\Ould
be a more permanent solu
t1on than m.tkmg them go
a\hl) tempor.ml). Kno"
that ) ou are not alone
a
re...ent Gallup L SA Toda~
poll '&gt;howed that the
m~.:reased 1\CCunt) at airport., l'i makmg other modes
of transportation more
Every 8 Seconds ...Someone Calls a Poison
nttr.tdi\e, e\en if their safeCenter
l) record 1sn't us good. Go
figure!
(c ) 20 I 0 by King Fe arure\
What is a poisoning?

Public meetings

Birth announced

Ave , Wellston
Tuesday, March 16
POMEROY
Informational meetmg on
proposed three-mills ftre
protect1on levy for Bedford
rownsh1p, 7 p.m , Carleton
Church on Kmgsbury Road

Church events
Thursday, March 11
POMEROY - Dee Rader
speaks at 7 p.m., St Paul
lutheran Church, as Me1gs
County
Mimsterial
Assoc1at1on's community
Lenten program contmues
Friday, March 12
LONG BOTIOM -Hymn

smg w1th ·OASIS 7 p m
Fatth Full Gospel Church

Youth events
Saturday, March 13
RACINE- Rac1re Youth
League, fmal ball s1gn-ups
10 a.m. - 2 p.m Ractne
Masontc Lodge, there w1 l
be a $5 per ch1ld late fee 1~
ch1ld 15 registered after thiS
final s1gn-up event.

E-mail us your
community news
and pho,tos!

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

Make the right call
to the Poison Center
1-800-222-1222

National Poison Prevention Week
March 10-14, 2010

s, ndicare

Meigs County Forecast
50 percent.
I· rida)
night ...Rmn.
Mmnl)
after midnight.
Lo\\ ~ in the Jo,, er 40s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Saturdn) ... Ram like I).
High&lt;&gt; in the upper so ...
Chance of rain 70 percent.
Saturda)
night ...Rain
likel) 111 the evenmg_.Then
sho\\ers like!\ after mid
hursda) ... Cloudy. mght. Lo\\" in the upper
Showers liJ.,cl) .. Main!) m ~0 . Ch..1nce of rain 60 perthe afternoon. Highs in the cent.
Sunda' and Sunda~
lo\\cr 60s. Southeast wmd"
night
...c"loudy with a 40
5 to I 0 mph. Chance of rain
percent chance of 'ihowers.
70 percent
Thursdny night ...\lostly llig.hs in the lo" cr 50'&gt;.
cloml).
Shu\\ c• ~ I ows in the mid 30s.
Munda) ...\tostl) eloud)
IJkci~ ...M.unly
in
the
with
a chance of 'howers in
e\elllng. Lows 111 the lo\\el'
the morning ... Then panl)
50~. Southea~t winds 5 to I 0
mph. Ch.111ce of r.tin 60 per· sunn) in the afternoon
Highs in the lower 50s
cent.
Frida) ...Most I) cloudy Chance of r.1in 30 percent.
!\1onda) night. ...Mostl)
'' ith a chance ot showers.
A ch.111ce of thunderstorms cloud). Low&lt;; in the nud 30,.
Tuco;da) ...Mo&lt;al) sunn).
tn the afternoon. Highs 111
the nud 60&lt;.;. Chanl:e of ram Jlighs in the lo\\er 50s.

\\ edne-sdn) ••. Most!)
doud) "Ith a 30 percent
chance ot '&gt;hO\\ers. Highs m
the nud 60~ . South '' utds 5
to 10 mph.
\\cdnesda)
night. ..
Mo..,tl) cloud) "ith a 30
percent ~hance of ho\\ers.
I O\\ &lt;. 111 the upper 40
hcast "mds around 5

---- ---- --------

A poison exposure occurs when a person swallows,
breathes touches, or gets splashed in the eye with
somethtng that can cause srckness or death
Po1somng 1s a matter of dose-too much of anything
can be dangerous Products such as pam medictnes
and household cleamng products are common
causes of po1son exposures m the United States
Most consumer products are safe 1f label d1rect1ons
are followed but some can be po1sonous if used
mcorrectly

• Parn killers such as acetammophen and s1m lar
med1cat1ons
Adults
• Pam k1llers
• Sedatives (drugs used to reduce anx1ety), hypnot1cs
(sleepmg pills) and ant1psychot1cs (drugs used to
treat mertal1llness) and
• Household cleaning products

Where do people get poisoned?
Approxtrrately 90 percent of po1somngs occur tn
the home

Where can people get help for poisonings?

Who gets poisoned?

13 percent are on purpose. due either to a su1cide

Po1son Centers can be reached at 1-800-222-1222
01almg th1s number WI I connect you to your loca
Po1son Center Po1son Centers are staffed by
nurses phar1T1ac1sts and phys1c·ans. Here you can
get help w1th po1sonmg emergencies and obtam
mformat1on on ways to keep your fam1ly safe Po son
Centers are open 24 hours a day, seven days a
week Serv1ce 1s available throughout the entire
Un1ted States and many terntories The call1s free

attempt or mtent1onal misuse

and confidential

What are the leading causes of poisoning
for children and adults?

Why call a Poison Center?

In 2007 2 5 m1lllon people were exposed to potsons
Almost 1 3 million of these occurred 1n children 5
years or younger In the same year, almost 860,000
adults (20 years and older) called Po1son Centers

How do people get poisoned?
Mo~t po1somng exposures are unintentional. About

Almost 9:&gt; percent of the publ c who call a local
Po1son Center get the help they need over the
telephone Without hav1ng to go to a doctor or the

Children
• Cosmet1cs such as perfume or na1l pohsh. and
personal care products such as deodorant and soap

hosp tal

• Cleanmg products SlJCh as laundry detergent and
floor cleaners

Local Stocks

For more mformat1on call your Po1son Center at 1800-222-1222 or v1s1t www.Po1sonHelp hrsa.gov and
\fflW,aapcc.org

~----~----

AEP (NYSE) - 34.12
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 55.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.08
Lots (NYSE) - 35.97
Evans (NASDAQ) - 30.74
..,\11/,,.n,,,. (NYSE) - 37.25
ury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 14.75
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.33
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.60
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.61
Collins (NYSE) - 60.60
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.25
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.67
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.49
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 26.68
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 42.42
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.35
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 23.59
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 53.74

1efrc.-.hments. At the next m tm
refrc ... hments \\Ill b
old tnd
game' "Ill be pia&gt; ed.
Attendmg were Esther Sm1th. Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant, I .tura Mae
NH;C, Delom Wolfe. Thelma White,
Sand)' White. Juhc Cu1lls, Ruth
Smith, M.uy Jo Barnn cr I \Crett
(il.tnt, Dorio; Grue'&gt;er N;mcy Kmg
Jud) Buckley. Jo Ann Ritchie,
Sh.tron Riffle, Bobb) Kill)! and
S.tmantha Kmg.

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAsDAQ)- 24.98
BBT (NYSE) - 28.82
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 15.78
Pepsico (NVSE) - 64.36
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.89
Rockwell (NYSE) - 56.05
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.23
Royal Dutch Shell - 57.24
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 101.01
Wat·Mart (NYSE) - 54.06
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.66
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.09
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.67
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 9, 2010, pro·
vlded by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
ot (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Hsi~p.
1·800-222-1222

American Association of
Polson Control Centers

!JoHIO
Gavin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

'

�Pagei\4....

_T_h__e_I&gt;
__a_i~ly~S_e_n
__ti_n_e_l______________~~=-==~~~~~------------~w~cd~n~es=d~a~y,~M~a~r~ch~J~o~,=2o~·~o:

The Daily S.e ntinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cougress shall make uo law respecting au
establislrmeut of religiou, or prolribitiii.S! tire .free
e.\'ercise tlrereC?_f; M abri1(~itr.S! tht•freedom of spac/r ,
or C!f tlrt• prt•ss; or tlrt• r(l!lll of tire pe()p/e petrceahly
ta c~ssemble, ,wJ to petiticm tlrt• Gor,erttmetrt
jt&gt;r '' redress '!f.l!riei'IIIICes.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Y0 U

1~

() P I N I () N

Middleport water, sewer rates
Dcnr Editor:
On .1 rough m eragc I "ould &lt;&gt;a) there are 2000 plu!.
\\atcr meter~ m Middleport. I hme lhed here around 5
)Cars plu&lt;&gt; and I hmc not o;een any impro\&gt;ements at all
m the quaht) of the '' ater.
On the other hand tf you t&lt;~kc the $5 per month for
wuter unprO\ ement that the ctty charges. that adds up to
a good lump urn. 2000 p)uo,; meter times s.:; equal!.
10 000 per month. t1me~ 12 cquah. $120.000 per )Car
ltve ) ears equals $600,000 l·or \\hat? TI-t is is not
ml.'ludmg the charge for wate1 con&lt;&gt;umption people use
Wh) should the rc~identc; of Mtddleport pa) lngh
~e\\er bill&lt;; when a lot of SC\\eraec goe&lt;; directly to the
alre.ld) polluted Ohio Rl\ er? I my ~e lf think that the
Vtll,tnc of Middleport and Ctt) Counci l car come up
\\ tth .1 different \\a) in pa) m ~ the cost of running the
Vtll.t£e of Middleport.
There are lots of \\H)~ to hnng m extra rc\enue and
not pre) on there 1dents. One \\u) J') to start cracking
do\\ n on the Jndianc~polts 500 speeder~&gt; that use Ash
'-treet from Po\\ ell to Thtrd Street. I ha\ e &lt;,een vehicles
tr. velmg at le,lst 50 to 60 mtle'&gt; per hour do\\ n thts
treet p. :&lt;&gt;t the ball park .111 hours of the dJ). bpecwlly
c trl\ 111 the morningc, and early e\&gt;cnmg.
Inc speed ltmtt in Mtddleport '" 25 mph. !\o\\ tt the)
d \\ ttc ttd.ets to the t.ul ..11 " th. t tf) ..1nd pu h
t ~ t th t
th " ' to bnng n extr&lt;~
t
I m n t ) n th. t th Mtddleport Polt~.:
t 1 m t ·domg the JOb Th ') n ed to con~entrate on
c c problem 1 his ts Ill) opmton.
Donald Miller
Middleport

Where's the stimulus?
l&gt;em· I ditor:
1 he maJor road comtng mto Pomerov froM the tour
..111 to the red ltght
poor excuse for a road. I kno"
\\c r th poore t (QUill) m th -.t.tte. but thts looks and
fc Is temble dm mg mto tO\\ n It s all one big continued patch all the \\a).
Stop the \\ater from runnmg do\\n in the road, m..1ke
•ood dttches \\here needed and you'll stop wa&lt;&gt;ting our
tax mone)
lo an-..\\el' Mr. Fife's quco;tton about these gas prices
the people that could and should do something all dnve
company "chicles "ith company credit card:- and they
don't c.trc ho\\ much )OU hm c 10 p.1y for gas.
Mila&gt; Thnmpsnll
Pomeroy

'"a

Thought for Today: "Show me a man who
claims he Is objective and I 'll show you a man
with Illusions." - Henry R. Luce, American
magazine publisher (1898-1967) .

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TO TB.E EDITOR

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(usPs 213-960)

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our man concern n a 1 stores 1s to Pubfished T1.1esday through Friday 111
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Department extensions are :

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f::ditor: Char'enc Hoefl•ch, Ext 12
Reporter: Br n Reed. Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent Ext 13

Advertising
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell
740-446 2342 Ext 17
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Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
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52 weeks .... . .......'128.1JS
Dally •• •• •••••••••••••••50'
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Census data not so confidential cifter all
'I he cutren t $350 milhon ad cammore acces..,ible tn scholar~ who can
paign for the 20 I 0 Censw•. including
usc the dnta the) provide ..
the much-maligned $2.5 mtllion
As Hcnr) Brad). dean ol the '
Super Bow I -;pot&lt;;, urges indh tduals
Goldman School of Pubhc Policy ut
to "Tell &gt;our stor) ·• ·1 he Census
UC Berkclc) and pnnctpaluneo,;ttga
Bureau is particularly eager for
tor for the California Censu
Mary L.G.
mmorities and illegal tmmi~rant~ to
Research Data Centers helpfull)
Theroux
do so. as they arc trddtttonaU)
added: "We're trying to make center-"
behe,ed to be the most undercounted.
''here lots of federal agen~.; ies \\til let
Yet \\ idespread non-cornpltancc,
us use their data:'
espcctall) among those mo-;1 likely to
While rea5.surance-. are repeated.,
be discriminated against b&gt; a maJorithttt the data i" held under the -.tnctcst '
t). may not 'be rooted stnctly in the
securit), and \\ill only be u ed for
"ignorance'' the ads arc destgned to
innocuou" ~ &gt;rojects like "ro,crnrncnt
overcome Htstory
mdudmg \CT)
programs and -..oluuons to our prob
s~urances.
recent hi.Stnn
')h \\., th t th
e "o;tnctl) Iem ... do '' e reaII) '' atlt acadermc-.
mas on pro' tded to th C
perfc th to octal engineer polic) soluuon
u ed agam t )OU
under the ba'&gt;ed on sensitive personal d ta
The mo t recent example' occurred t
d \\ P \\ei'S Act. After all, the) n1a) rum out to be n
m 2002 and 2003, when the Cen us ..1nd rnor~ re ntl)·. under the tenm of more de trable than the .. oluuon&lt;&gt;'
Bureau turned 0\Cr infornt.Jtton it had the t:SA PATRIOT A~t. nO\\ extend- prU\ idcd b) go' ernmem progro~
·
collected about Arab Amencan
ed b) the Obam dt m-.tration.
like internment and rendit10na
Homeland Secunt).
In preparation
ts year's cen- Without the protection-; afforded b.
Data from the 1940 Cen u
-.u!"s, 140,000 \\Or
\\ere hired to right to pm ac). there ·s I ittle ch~ nee
used to mtern Japanese ltah.m.
co]h:ct GPS readmg.., for evef) lront of escaping a political will to en foRe
German Amencan&amp; folio" mg the door m the natton. Such pinpoint pre- drscriminator) policic
..
U.S.'s entr) into the \\ar, and to mon- cisiOn \\ill certaml) simplif) the
Thts "mis~ion creep" for tht':
itor and pen.ecute other~ who escaped process of locating an) indl\ idual or Census thus pu,hes up again•;t a le.,el
internment. In additton to pro' tding group that rna) be identtfied as a of dt comfott no .1mount of ad\Crttsgeographic mforn1ation to the \\ ar threat to "national securit) ·• in the ing dollar can like!) a su,1gc Man)
Department. the Censu'&gt; Bureau future. Remember, for example. the \\til no doubt choo e to foliO\\ fom1e1
released the name. addres"&gt;. age. ~ex. I 976 Senate Report in "hich 26,000 Senate majorit) leader Trent Lon·~
citizenshtp status and occupation of American \\ere slated for roundup advtcc to ~kip an) Census quco.;tmn~
Japanese
Americans
in
the b) the I·BI m the e\cnt o'f a national the~ feel 'iolates their
ac\
Washington. D.C' ., area to the emergenc) at the height of the Cold '' htch mm ''ell include am exceed
Treasury Department in n:sponsc to \Var. Nm\ that the U.S. GO\emment's ing the Con,titution \ rnand:1te for an
un un~pccificcl threat aguin~t Terrori-..t Watchli:-.t has exceeded one "actual Enumeratwn .. Unfmtunatel)
Prcstdcnt Franklin Roo._e,elt in million. the GPS data acquired could choosmg pri\acy now cost more:
be inslrumcntnl in accomplishing legislauon recent!) pa ~ed rat'e~ the ·
1943.
There mm well be other mstanccs such .1 roundup.
fine tor "an)one O\Cr 18 )eat old
Meam\ hile. the data is also o;hared \\ ho refuse., or "illfull) neglect~ t&lt;' '
of such data sharing of '' hich ''e
remain una\\ are, as the full cope of a little more broad!) than ad\erttsed. complete the questionnmrc or .tn-:.\\er
the peri&gt;onal informatton released Stanford Unl\er~it) recent!) joined que!".tion~ po:.ed b) censuo; tal..ers' ,
during World War II has onl) recent- UC Berkelc), Duke, the l'ni\erstt) of from a limtt of 100 to 5.000
a•
~1ichigan. UCLA. and others in ha\ly been brought 10 light.
fact not ad\ erti ed e'en Ill the sm..1ll ,
Thth, \\ hile the Ccmu" Bureau ing its 'Ct') O\\Jl cen:-.th data center. print
.,
assures us that ''your conlidcntialit) As the director of the new center
( \1arr I. G. Themu&gt;.. is r;rnior 1 u t ,,
is protected. Title 13 requires the explained, "The Cetbu~ Bureau is pre~ith;,lf m 7he lndependrm
Census Bureau to keep all inlmma- ·very mtcres!l.•d in making the centers lnsrirwe .)

P"'

�Wednesday, March to,

Local Briefs

2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Minority births on track to outnumber white births

----

Bv

women are waiting until
they are older to have chilurcn. but it is not yet known
POMEROY - Dec Rader ,., ill spc:tk at 7 p.m. Thursday
WASHINGTON
whether that will have a
at St. ~at~l L,utheran Ch_urch as the ivlc1gs County Mmisterial Minorities make up nearly noticeable effect on the curAssoctat1on s conHnutllt)' Lcnt~·n program continues.
half the d1ildrcn bom in the rent trend of increas111g
At 7 P:m .• March I H. J~ws tor Jesus and Passover obser- U.S .. p;ut of a historic trend in minority newborns.
v~!nce \\Ill be held at Tnmty Church. Rev. Brian Dunham which minorities are expected
The numbers highlight
w~ll spc•1k at 7y.m. on ~larch 25 nt Grace Episcopal Church. to become the U.S. majority the nation's growing racial
fhe seas&lt;:m s o~servance c~&gt;!lcluJes at noon on Good over the next 40 years.
and age divide, seen in
J\pnl 2, With thl: tratlltwnal devotion, Stations of
In fact, demographers say pockets of communities
ss. at noon &lt;tt Sacred Heart Church. Pastor Rev thi~ )Car could be the ''tip- across the U.S ., which could
.
Heinl \\ill be joined by mmisters of the nssnciatiOJ~ pmg point'' when the num- heighten tensions in current
111 the Good Friday prayer service.
ber of babies born to policy debates from immiminorities outnumbers that gration reform and educaof babies born to whites.
tion to health care and
Modern Woodmen dinners
The numbers are growing Social Secutity.
There arc also strong
POI\1EROY - A Modern Woodmen dinner will be held ~ because immigration to the
at Pizza Hut in Pomeroy from 2:3_0 to 4;30 p.m. Saturda), j U.S. has boosted the number implications for the 2010
and a~other one at Crow~ KFC 111 Pomeroy nn Tuesday of Hispanic wc•men in their population count. which
from ~ to 7 p.m. In both mstanccs the Camp ,., iII pay $3 prime childb..!aring \Cars.· begins in earnest next week.
Minorities made up 48 per- when more than 120 million
tow~rd each person's meal anu a drawing will be held for a
of U.S . chi lOren born in U.S. households receive
cent
fam tly door priLe.
·
2008. the late~t ccn~us esti- their ccn;.us forms in the
mates available, compared mail. The Census Bureau IS
to 37 percent in 1990.
running public service
"Ccnsu~. proJections sug- announcements this week to
gest Amenca ma\' become a improve it&lt;; tally of young
minority-majority country children, particularly minoriby the middle of the century. ties, who are most often
CLEVELAND (i\P) - Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland has For America's children. the 1111sscd in the once-a-decade
ordered a revie\\ of a proposed bicycle lane on the replacement future i~ now," said Kenneth head count. The campaign
John&lt;;on. a soci~1logy protes- features Nickelodeon's Dora
bridge for Interstate 90 heading into dm\ntown Cleveland.
sor
at the University of New' the Explorer. the EnglishThe Ohio Department of Transportation, "hkh has
Spanish-speaking
balked at the idea as too expensive and risky for cyclists Hamp~hirc who researched and
man) of the racial trends in 1\:ickclodeon cartoon characand pedestrians. :-.nys it•will take another look.
Environmentalists had complained that the lack of a bike a paper being released ter who helps "mommy fill
out our census fom1.''
lane in briugc plans· conflicted with the governor's green- Wedne~day.
Johnson explained there
The population tigures
. bs initiati\e.
are now more Hisp~1nic are used to distribute federv.omen of prime childbear- al aid and redraw lcgblative
ing age who !'end to have boundaries "ith racial and
more children thm1 women ethnic balance, as requireJ
from Page AI
of other races. \ 1ore white by federal law.

Lenten program

H OPE Y EN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Strickland wants review
of bridge bike lane idea

Middleport

residents to usc the opportunity to place unwanted items at
curbside for free pickup. $he noted that the dogwood trees :
in the village begin to bloom in late April. and that it is a
good opportunit) to do some spring cleaning around the
village's neighborhoods.
~
The cleanup service is pro vi Jed through the village's completes his six and a halfyear sentence. Williams
refuse fee.
Councilman Craig \\'ehrung reported complaints from said.
Also appearing:
residents about dust resulting from the sev.er and water
Ernest M. Roach. 34.
•
projects, and discussed the matter with Village
Pomero). having pled guilty
Administrator Favmon Roberts.
Mayor Michaei Gerlach urged1Jarticipation in the U.S. to felony tleeing and escape
Census. Forms are due in ~liddlcport households on March in November. Roac)1 was
15, and are to be returned by April I . He said it ts very sentenced then to three
important to the village's operations and to the quality of years for escape, and is
life in the community that all census fom1~ be returned and presently sen ing that sentence. He was also charged
all residents counted.
So much public funding is based on census data. Gerlach with an escape from the
said. that it is essential that the village repott a complete count. Middleport Jail on Aug. 17.
Roach was sentenced to a
Gerlach abo reminded council members of a public
forum with State Rep. Debbie Phillips, D-Athens. at 7 p.m. 11\c-ycar term of community control for the charge of
on Thursday at the freight depot in Dave Diles Park.
failure
to comply.
Council also
L.
• • Christopher
Approved the mayor's report of fees and 11neli coljccted
Holsinger.
27,
Pomeroy.
ebruary, $7.213.50.
•
• Approved payment of bills in the amount of $39.384.07. admitted to \ iolating terms
• Approved hiring of Brenda Leslie as a pat1-time dis- and conditions of communit) control in a 2004 case and
patcher in the police department.
Also present were Council President Rae Moore. and was :-entenced Tuesday to
Council members Jean Craig, Sandy Brown. and Sha\\ n Rtce. two years for breaking and
entering and vandalism.
• Joshua T.H. Hunter. 26.
Middleport, appeared for
sentencing on three separate •
from Page At
drug posse:-sion charges. ln
November, he entered a
which means the LCCC is in need of donations to meet the guilty plea to buQ~lary and
match. Businesses or individuab who contribute will be three counts of possession of
recognized in the book. Cash as \\ell as supplies such a~ Oxycodone. H)drocodone
notebooks. nash drives. \Oice recorders and money for anJ Suboxone.
postage arc welcome.
Hunter was sentenced in
Sanders said another important component of the project February to five years for
are volunteers to collect the stories of life along LeaJing burglary and is sen ing that
Creek. So far, local volunteers partidpating on the project
include Janet Bolin. Cindy Parker. Carol ~lcDonough. Mary
Beth Loh~e. Catherine Cutcher, though more ar~welcome.
Locals who joined the !.CCC came up with the idea of
the book which is tentatively titled, ''Leading from the
Past." The LCCC believes the book will allow volunteers
to interact with watershed residents and fonn trusting relaAlso. SoU(he_rn Local
tionships for future community projects, promoting stew- 1 School Nurse J.unte ~1aynard
ardship of the area. The book will al~o collect and preserve 1 and Southern Supenntendent
I histories of the watershed which may be lost if not doc- Anthony Deem sp&lt;;&gt;kc_ to
council about .the d1stn~t\
• ented in writing.
As yesterday\ Meigs County Chamber of Commerce's ' pl~n to hos~a tnathlon \\hrch
Busincss-.Minded Luncheon. :\1iddlcpot1 Mayor Mike 1 WJII bcn~ht }he Southern
Gerlach. who is also a local history buff, said he supports c;ommunny hU1ess Center.
the project and from a historical point of view. the region 1 he. fitness center 1s a free
the watershed calls home is significant. Gerlach pointed out sen·1ce offered to students
in the Rutland area alone. the lirst church and school in and commumty members at
Meigs County were founded. the last mountain lion was Southern . High School.
killed in the watershed and Morgan's Raiders cut across the Ma):ard sa1d the fitne~s c~n­
area on their way to their waterloo at Buffington Island .
ter 1s operated by ~p;-,nme
Sanders said she hopes the bonk will contain 25 short sto- 1 attendants :•;ho ar~ pa1d $5~
ries, as well as photographs. from seven of the tO\vnships a qua~ter. fhe tnathlon wIll
the watershed calls home. The book is to be printed by the help lmance the ~abo!· costs
company Lulu and be available on Amazon.com. The of th: c~nter wh1ch Ill tum
. .
LCCC will also be donating 100 books to the local libraries bcneltts 1ts use:s.
Maynard satd the d1~tnct
and other organizations to promote education about the
area and watershed.
has set Aug. 2X as the date
If you would like to donate cash. supplies or tell your of t_he triathlon. which will
:;tory for publication in the book, contact Sanders at 992- t ~egm at Stm: Mtll .r~rk and
4282 or at sanders.lcwg@ yahoo.com.
mc_lude. runmng. btkmg anu
In other Chamber business:
swrmmmg. ~hl) nard asked
A representative with the Meigs Rio Center s.aid the ccn~er ; council men~hers if tl~cy
is considering offering a continuing cducatton class tor would cons1der k:epmg
adults who wish to become more proficient on the co1~1putcr. 1 Lo!1don_ Pool (?pen tor the
including learning to usc Facebook and eBay and Tw1tter. ' swtmmmg pon1on and wh&lt;;t
Cindy Parker from Healing Heart Herbals said h.er local- , tim~ would co~t the orgamly made teas are now available 'at l·ood For I hought 1 za~10n. ~ouncll seemed t.o
Community Market in Pomero).
t~111k th1s would be a _pos1- .
AJ1amber President Bill Quickel said the chamber b ttve c~·cn.t for the village
~ing on developing a website to promote chamber and smd tt wc•uld get back
I v. 1th Maynard on the co~ts.
thembers and their bu~inesses.
Peoples Bank now offers banking options for people with Syracuse normall~ closes
smart p~ones ..
.
.
~ondon Pool the_ th1r~ week
The laste ot Home Cooking School trckets are a\'tulable at 1 111 Augu~t. \\ hr_ch IS the
the chamber office or WYVK The Frog; ~loors. open at 5 p.m .. .,~e.d;: of the l\1crgs Coull!Y
show starts at 7 p.m. on March 16 at Me•gs J:Itgh School.
hm. Maynard also satd
The Chamber's Spr 111 g Dinner and Auctmn Will be he~d those '~ho arc &lt;.'o!npet_lllg 111
at 6 p.m .. April 10 at Kountr) Rcsott Campground tn the tnath.lo~l :'.Ill s1gr~ a
Racine . Auction items arc needed nnd can be donated by war\·er ot lrab1hty agamst
calling Chamber Director Michelle Donovan at 992-5005. the district and village.
St. Patrick's Day flowers were provided b) the Pomeroy
Deem also spoke to counFiower Shop and lunch v.as provided b) the Pomeroy cil about a school-based
McDonalds. The Pomeroy I .ibrary provided the meeting space. health clinic Southern hopes

Book

)

Garnes from Page AI
sentence. He was sentenced
Monday to a five-year term
of community control on
the three drug char{!es.
• Michael A. Non·ille. 25,
Pomcrov. entered a {!Uiltv
plea to" grand theft~of
firearm, and receiving
stolen property. also a
firearm . Cro\\' continued
sentencing to May. Bond
was continued.
• Stephanie Martin. 28, of
Point Pleasant. W.Va ..
entered pleas of guilty to
three coum~ of illegal proce~sing of drug documents.
Crow accepted~ the pleas of
guilt) and continued sentencing to May. Bond was
continued.
• Timothy Coleman, 28.
Pomero:. James Curtis, 39.
Bidwell. Jesse A. Ward. 29.
Athens. Kenny Turley. 40.
Mason. W.Va .. Shannon Lee
Nitz. 34, Pomero\. all
appeared and entered pleas
of guilt) to non-support of
dependents. Sentencing was
continued to MaY.
• Danual D"al ton. 41.
Athens. entered guilty pleas
to two counb of non-support and was sentenced to
two consecuttve s1x months
sentences. The sentences
\\ere suspended and Dalton

a

Syracuse rrom Page At

1

"The adults among them Ga . an Atlanta suburb. the
selves sometimes forget population has shifted from
the census is•about every- 16 percent minority in 1990
one, and kids should be to 58 percent minority in
counted." said Census 2008. The number of blacks
Rureau director Robert and Hispanics nearly douGroves . " If we fail to count bled. while the number of
a newborn that is born this white young people stayed
month, that newborn miss- roughly the same.
• The population of
es all the benefits of the
Dakota
County. Ncb ..
ccnsu!-1 for 10 year:.."
increased from 15 percent
White~ currently make up
mmority in 1990 to 54 pertwo-third~ of the total U.S.
population. and recent cen- cent in 2008. due largely to
sus estimates sugge~t the an intlux of Hispanics who
number of minoritic,s may came looking for work in
not overtake the number of meatpacki11g and other labor.
• In Lake County. Ind .. a
whites until 2050.
Right now, roughly I in suburb of Chicago. the minor10 of the nation's 3.1 42 ity population grew from 43
counties already ha' e percent in 1990 to 53 percent
minority
populations in 2008 as the number of
greater than 50 percent. But white children declined, the
I in 4 communities have number of blacks. stayed stamore minority childret1 than ble and the number of
Hispanics increased.
v. hite children or are nem:The 2008 census estiing that point. according to
the studv. which Johnson mates used local records of
births and deaths. tax
co-published .
That is because H1spanic records of people moving
women on average have within the U.S .. and census
three children. while other statistics on immigrants.
women on average have The figures for ''white'' refer
two. ·n1e numbers are 2.99 to those whites who are not
children for Hispanics, 1.87 of Hispanic ethnicity.
On the l'\et :
for whites. 2 13 for blacks
Census PSA with Dora
and 2.04 for Asians in the
Explorer:
U.S. And the number of the
white women of prime lzttp :IItin yurl .comlygup2px
Census Bureau: www.cenchildbearing age is on the
decline. dropping 19 per- ws.gm·
Population
and
cent from 1990.
Derelopment
Review:
For example:
• In Gwinnett Count]. http://rinyurl .coml\·8pllbc

was placed on probation for
a period of five years.
• Corbett E. Ratliff. 42.
Cheshire. appeared .Vtonday
and pled guilty to two counts
of failure to proYide support
and was sentenced to a tenn
of s1x months on each. The
sentences were suspended
and Ratliff was placed on
probation for fiye years.
• Adam Lambert. 20.
Rutland. entered pleas of
guilty to burglary and grand
theft. Crow sentenced
Lambt:n to 18 months for
grand theft and continued
sentencing on the burglary
was
count.
Lambert
remanded to the custodv of
the Sheriff to be transpo-rted
to prison.
• Jonathan Matthew Slater.
22. Albany, entered pleas of
guilty to breaking and entering and grand theft of a motor
vehcle.~Sentencing \\US con-

tinued. Slater is serving a
pri..,on sentence imposed~ by
the Vinton County Common
Pleas Court .
• Jamie L. Chapman. 24.
Pomeroy. entered pleas of
guilt) to two counts of
receiving stolen property
and two counts of forgery.
Crov. accepted the pleas of
guilty and continued sentencing to i\fay.

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to begin to provide acute
care for students. their families and the communitY.
,Maynard said Dr. Doug
Hunter would be a collaborative physician and she
\\ ould be able to write prescriptions and see patients
since she is a nurse practitioner. The sen ice would be
pro\ ided on a sliding fee
scale based on mcome.

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LENDER

�PageA6

JL

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 10,

2010

Submitted photos

Brandon Coleman, Eastern eighth grader, was one of eight
students qualifying for the MathCounts state competition at
the regional contest held in Logan. He will compete in the
state finals Saturday in Columbus.

Seven students tn the talented and gifted program at Eastern competed in MathCounts regional contest at Logan. They
were from the left, front, Ahyah Gantt, Austin Gheen, and Brandon Coleman, and back, Molly Dunlap, Katie Keller,
Thunder Clonch, and Joshua Parker.

Eastern student qualifies
for MathCounts state finals
Those students then congregated on stage to compete in
front of parents, teammates
POMEROY
An and friends for the Top
E,tstern eighth grader partic- ~1athCnunt~
lnd1vidual
ipating m the Athens-Meigs A" ard.
Coleman
was
Educational
Sen tee among the top eight qualifyCenter's program~ for gtfted mg him to mo\ e on to the
student~ m Meig~ Count).
~tate contest in Columbus.
has qualified for the Ohto
MathCounts. now in ib
State MathCount conte~t to 27th ) ear. IS a natiOnal nonbe held tn Columbu
profit organizatiOn de&lt;&gt;tgned
Saturd n, \-larch I ~
to ptomote math excellence
Br,mdon Co eman
among middle school stu
one o1 the top e.ght mdi\ id
dent"&gt; b) makmg mathemat
u ls qu...l f) mg for the state h . .., a' challenging. exdtmg
conte&lt;;t tn comp tlt.,tons held ..1nd prestigiOus a&lt;, an:r
10 the
~..1rch 6. 2010
school sport.
Both the Ea..,tem and
Re~tonal MathCounh comteam-s
were
petition held in Logan on Southern
March 6. \1eigs County "'as coached b) Kim Allen,
rcpre-.entcd b) t" o teams Director of Gifted Sen ices.
two -;ixth grade Southern and Sarah Lee. Gtfted
..,tu~nto; and se\ en etghth
lnterventton SpeciJiist. both
of
the
Athens-Meigs
gracie E:.astem '&gt;tudents " ho had the1r math kno" l- I".ducat10nal Sen we Center.
Jenmfer Hedges.Junior high
edge put to the te&lt;;l.
The partJctpant~ took part math teacher. alo;o assisted
"1th the E:.astern team.
111 thtee round~ ot competiIn ~1eigs Count) schools
tion. both indh 1duallv and
as a team. before the top the program is mcorporated
eight individuals emerged. 1nto programs for gifted
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH

1-lOEFLICH@ MYOAILYSENTINE:;L COM

"a.,

~tudent~

and is geared to
prm iding today's middle
~chool student... with a
foundation for success in
science, technology, engineering and mathematic..,
careers.
The
e'mphasts
of
MathCounts. ts to promote
mathematics achievement
through grassroots involvement in e\ er) state and territor) pro' iding extra mcenti\e'!t m an c:1tmosphere for
students to pu~h themsehe&lt;.
to" ard ..1Ch1e"ement 111
mathemaucs The program
i~ offered through the leadership of the National
Societ) of Professional
Engineers at the local and
~tate le\cl with the goal of
securing Amenca '-; global
compeUtl\ eness
Thts )ear'c; MathCount&lt;&gt;
competitiOns
contmue
until the final 228 studenb
are selected from the 57
states and terntories to
advance
to
the
MathCount:. national competition to be held in .Ma).

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

-

Joseph Morris and Cameryn Harmon represented students in the MathCounts reg
compe

~-

Pom~roy

merchants discuss
projects and promotions

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICt-&lt;@MYDAILVSENTINEL COM

POMEROY Bulbs.
banners, Easter bunnies and
bag&lt;. were topics of dl~cus­
SIOn at the Pomeroy
Merchants
' As&lt;;ociation
meeting Tuesday at Peoples
Bank.
Plan&lt;; ~re made to move
forward on ordermg 150
limited edttion ornamental
glas' bulb~ to be .,old to
raise mone\ to support
do\\ ntm\ n Pomeroy beautification projects. The new
bulbs will be available for
purchase early ~ummer.
featured on the new
bulb will be the l\leigs
~ounty Courthou'&gt;C, no"
160 vears old. The buildlllg ·was constructed in
1~50 at a co:.-.t of $5,000
and b distmcti\e for having a ground floor entrance
on all three lcveJ-...
The
Merchants
also
approved proceeding with
lhe purcha~e of new banners
for the light posb in the
dm\ ntown area. Suo.,an
Clark-Dinge:.-.s pre:.-.ented
some picture-; of possible
designs for one side of the .
banners, with Bobbi Karr to
provide floral designs for
the other side.
A discussion was again
held on purchasing bags in
which to distribute information on about Pomeroy, the
entertainment activities and
adventure' in ..,hopping
which the village offers.
Jane llarns di-.pluyed a
large canv.t.., hag, which can
feature a design of the merchants' choice. She will get
more mforrnation on cost

and s11es available to present at the next meeting.
Plans were made to again
this year sponsor the annual
Eao:;ter egg hunt on Bob
Roberts field, the date and
time to be announced later.
Michelle .Musser will be
chairman of the e' ent.
Jackie Welker displayed a
11) er announcing the Big
Bend Fanner and Art1san
Market to take place on the
Pomeroy parking lot each
e\ ening before a performance hy Rh) thm on the
River performers. Started
last summer the market wa ...
so succc..,sful. it was decided to continue it th1s summer. The concerts will he
held on Friday e\ enmgs at
8 p.m. beginning on June
25 and go through Aug. 13
4 to 8 p.m.

Promotional matenal on
Saturda) free parking was
discussed a~ well a~ other
way~
to con\'e\
that
Pomero\
~~ ''consumer
friendl\:·
Agu(n the merchants di~­
cus;'ed the issue of police
officers "target•ng out-oftowners.'' The) all agreed
the 25 mile. an hour speed
limit is not the problem.
but sugge:&gt;ted parking
along Main Street just
\\aiting for someone they
can pick up is. "People
aren't coming to PomerO)
for fear of fines." commented one of the members. adding that this 1s
''chasing a\\ ay customers."
Welker,
\\ ho
is
on
Pomeroy Village Council;
was a~kcd to bring the
issue before Council.

ANKlNG, INSURANCE, INVESTMENTS.
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�----------~~~--------~------------------·~--~~~·----------~-- ------~--------.-.---~-

1nside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Local Spor ts Br iefs, Page H2
Bro\\ ns relca r \ ndrrson. Page B2

Wednesday, l\1arch 10. 2010

thrill of VICtory and the agony of defeat. Eastern head coach How1e Caldwell, left, toss•
IS rolled-up program m disgust as Manchester fans celebrate in the background after
Dawson Little's bul:zer-beating trifecta went in dLring Tuesday night's D1v1sion IV distnct
semifinal at the Convocation Center 1n Athens, Oh1o.

Manchester nips Eagles at buzzer

Tornadoes advance to district final

BY BRYAN W ALTERS
.BWALTERSCMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

ATHENS. Ohto
The
clock &lt;&gt;truck mtdmght for
the ~!astern
bo) ~ basketball
team
on
Tucsda)
mght. as its
CJildcrell.t
1 c.cason
' came to a
.. hocking
.._____.__ "'--_ h It dunn
4 44 c;ct
Winebrenner ba~.k
to
·Manchester

m

Sarah Hawley/photos

Southern's Sean Coppick shoots the bal over two South Webster defenders durmg the
second half of Tuesday's district tournament contest

B Y S ARAH HAWLEY
EHAWLEY@MVOA LYTRIBUN COM

ATHE~S. Ohto- A 15-2
run m the second half of
Tuesdo)
C\ening s
d I.., t riC I
&lt;&gt;em• final

a

Dt\ttslon IV
di trtct
scm1f1nal
matchup at

\IClOr)
..----- - O\er South
\\ebster

e

Tornadoes

tl&lt;lll

(17-5)

Center on
the t.:ampu
L---..__-"'--' of
Ohw
Lynch
l m'er It)
The topseeded Eagle (20-21
\\ ho fi1115hed the regular
ea&lt;&gt;on "'ith a school-best
No.6 ranking m the AP poll
stormed out to an early
5-0 lead, but the third-seeded Greyhounds (14 9)
countered "'ith an impre..,
she 26 10 surge to lead b)
a" man) as II point ldte m
the first half.

struck f1r t
in the t.:On
teo;;t. gomg
up 2 0 on a
Z a c h
\1 an u e I
Z. Manuel
basket .
The Jeee
1 took n brief lead on a \\ es
1 Loop three-pointer. before
an 8-0 run gave the Purple
and Gold a I0-3 ad\ anlage.
South Web:-.ter put together
an 8-0 run of its O\\ n to
Bryan Walters/photos
retake the lend at the 2·35
Eastern's Tyler Hendrix, middle, goes in for a layup attempt
mark b) a core ol 11-10.
over the outstretched arms of Dawson Little (40) and Blake
Blevins dunng the second half of Tuesday mght's Divis1on IV
Please see Advance, 86
d stnct semifinal at the Convocation Center m Athens, Oh1o

h
Comoc
t

Please see Eagles. 86

r

h

e

Southern s Cyle Rees goes up fof a layup dunng the second half of Tuesday's d1stpct sem1-fmal contest agamst
South Weoster. The Tornadoes won 51-42 to advance to
the d1stnct championship game on Saturday.

Free agent Owens will meet with Bengals
NCIN0ATI (AP) I Q...,cns headed to
Cmcinnall on Tuc da) to
see tf the Bengals arc mterebted m addmg him to their
&amp;tailed-out pa'&gt;sing game.
The 36-year-old receiver
tv. eeted on Tue day that he
wao; on his \\ ay to meet \\ tth
team o fticials. Receiver
Chad Ochocinco has been
lobbying for the Bengnb to
sign O wens since the end of
tnst season, when the
6 engal s· passing game
la.tked a deep threat.
"En route (at) Natti
land!'" 0\\ens t\\Ceted. "i'll
Jel u gu) s know ho" the
m tg went! Cn 't go 2 bad
qpnstdering the pursuit of
lflt L ombardi shiny thing!!"
The Bengals "ent 10-6
and won the AFC North t.tst
sea~n b) relyin~ on the1r
defense and the1r mnning
game . They lost to the New
York Jets in their first pia)me since 2005. strugto move the hall.
·nnati needs at least
om:: proven receiver after
releasing L avcranue:-. Cole~ .
who lao;tcd only one '-Cason
with the Bengals. Recc•Yer
M att Jones. "ho was out of
the NH . last season after
l ack sonville released him
for of f-field problems, h.~s
signed a one ) ear deal wtth
the Bcngals.
I t's unclear whether they

Please see Owens, 82

Come See the Wei/ness Center Renm·ations &amp; 1\'ew Equipment

•
•
•
•
•
•

John Sleczer/Kansas City Stnr/MCT

Buffalo B1lls wide receiver Terrell Owens (8 1) scores a
touchdown as he is hit by Kansas City Ch1efs safety Jon
McGraw (47) in the f1rst quarter. The Bills defeated the
Ch1efs, 16-10, Sunday, December 13, 2009, at Arrowhead
Stadium in Kansas City, M1ssouri

Thursday, i\1arch 18, 20 10
1 p.n1. to 2 p.n1.
Public Is Invited
I Iealthy Snacks &amp; Tours
Sign-Up for Door Prizes
For more infonnation. (3 04) 675-7222

PLEASANT VALLEY
WELLNES CENTER

Tk h.mtt, tJ{ Ptt-tJ{u~itJifak

�................

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

Page B2 • l11c Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

NASCAR puts Carl
Edwards on probation
for 3 races
CHARL01Tl::.,
N.C. banging fenders with
(AP) - Sticking v. ith its established 'eterans. Tony
''boys, hc~\e at it" attitude, Stewmt and Juan Pablo
NASCAR placed C.1rl Monto) a pia) ed retrrliato·
Ed\\ ants on probation fo1 ry bumper-cars in the scathree J'dCCs Tue~dH) for &lt;;on finale at Homestead.
deliberately
wrecking
lll'iton said the day after
Brad Keschm ski's c.u last the lrnale that NASCAR
\\eekend in Atlanta.
had perhaps gone too far in
l·dwards \Viii he mnru- sterilizing the competition
tored b) !'JASCAR through and acknowledged that
the A prd I 0 race at more emotion and personPhoenix but mn) drive Ill ality could benefit the
the Sprint Cup and sport The "ha' e at it" era
Nationwide Senes.
''as announced Jeo;s than
NASCAR
president two months later. and
Mike Helton aid Ed" nrdc; Helton ''as not backing
acted unacceptably Sunday down Tuesday.
but did not Ciosc; the hne in
"The clear message. I
what the sanctiomng body think, v.e sent in January
Wtll allo\\
th1s :o.enson. was that we \\ere willing
NASCAR prom1sed m to put more responsibility
JanU.!f) to gi\ e the drh ers in the hands of the dri\er."
more lee\\3) 111 policing he -;aid. ''But there IS a line
themseh es and settling you can cross and we'll
scoreo; m un effort to cner step in to maintain )a\\ and
gize the sport.
order v.hen \\C think that
"We made it \CIY clear line\ crossed.''
to (bdwards) that these
Just what · that l'n"'J
''l 11 1.' Is ' .I t: h
act10ns "ere not acl'cpt11nl\ we see 11 " en
able and did go beyond we sec rt.'' he replied.
''hat we said back 111
Clint Bo\\}er, participatJanual) .tbout putting the mg in a Goodyear tire test
driving back 111 the hands at Darlington, disagreed
of the dri\ers." Helton with NASCAR 's assessc;aid.
"\Ve
believe ment.
"I thmk there's a too far
(Edwards) understand our
in C\ er) thing and that v. a
position nt thi" pomt."
There had been a trong too far. Bottom line.
call from fans and anal) sts Simple as that," Bov. yer
'd Th
for NASCAR to suspend
Edwards. v.ho returned to aJ · .. at was a prett)
the track dO\"n 153 laps scar)
incident
that
could'\e
been
a
lot
from an earlier accident worse."
'' ith Kec;elow-;J...I and
intent on wreckmg his car. . The fairl) lenient P.unHe tried for at least one lap 1 shme~t - man) 'Iew
before succeeding v.tth probation as a -;lap. on the
three laps to go. nudging • w~tst - dr~w SWift an.d
Kesel ow sk 1·., car and mixed rea~tiOn from dr~­
scndmg tt airborne. The \ ers '' ho JUmped to t~cir
car bangeu hood-1 rrst off 3 Twitter. accounts d~nng
retaining wall before flip· Helton s
20-mmutc
pm ~ back onto Its wheel . &lt;~nnouncement.
"Jo one v.a hurt
''Huh'" wrote KeHn
uppurted Ha 'Kk, "ho " s 'iU'&gt;
Ke-.el " ki
NA c;;cAR ., d CJ 1011
p nded one race 111 2(){ 1
Th ) are not ll1 an ell\ 1 for m-;ubordmatiOD
he
ble posttJon ,, hen It parked hi'&gt; truck at the
come' to the e mt~tter • but door of the NASCAR
the) do an out tanding hauler when he wa... c;umjob." he s~ud 111 a state- moned to discuss rough
ment. addm• tt \\a~ unfor- drhing at Martms\Ille.
tunate the uc tdent O\ cr
"I'm thinkmg about ask!&gt;hadowed Pen-;ke Racm mg for a refund for all of
teamm. t Kurt Bu-;\,;h 's my penalues! 1 ! !"
But Scott Speed and
\ ICtOr)
Edv. ardc; ackno\\ !edged Mtchael \\altnp applauded
his action v. as intentional !'\ASCAR's decision.
"You can't ask the driver
but md he wa surprrscd
b)' Kese)O\\ -;J...I's car takmg· to take their glo\es off one
flight Because NASCAR v. eek and then te 11 em to
appro\ed greater dnvcr put 'em back on the next,"
leeway before the season, Waltrip wrote.
Helton said ~AS CAR
a severe JHllliShment lor
Edwards
most
like!} :saw two distinct parts to
would ha\ c quashed the the accident: Edwards'
"have at it" attitude after action; Ke:selowski's car
going airborne. The more
the first test.
The decision to lighten &lt;;erious of the two, in
up after ) ears of penaliz- NASCAR 's opinion, i:s figout
why
ing drner&lt;; for minor uflng
infractions
Dale Kcsclow:skt'~ car acted as
Earnhardt Jr. was once it did.
"That's someti' in!! that is
puni hed for cursing on
and
TV; Jeff Gordon wa&lt;; ver) important to
placed on probation for we want to studv verv
sho' ing M.ttt Kcnseth - closely to figure out things
was m large part due to that we can do to help preincreased fan excitement o,;ent this ver) quick!) in
created by some 2009 the future:· Helton said.
"This is a very important
feuds.
Denny Hamlin had a element of all of this. that I
monthslong dispute w11h \\ould osk all of us to be
Keselow!&gt;ki. nn aggres.,ive reminded of the fact of the
young dri\ cr wl.w' h.a::.. car getting airborne was a
made no apologres for very serious issue.''

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

..

~~

~~~

~

~

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Local Sports Briefs
Integrity baseball-softball signups

p.m. in the Green blementary library. These will be the only
two opportunities to register children for baseball and softVINTON, Oh10- Signups for the Integrity baseball and ball. Children ag~~ 4- 17 rna) play. Cost is $35 per child,
softball league&lt;; \\ill be held on Frida)'. March 12, and $25 for each uddJtiOnal child.
Saturday, M;uch 13, at the Vinton BaptiSt Church located
on State Route 160 in Gnllia County.
The signups arc for boys and girls ages four (as of Jan. I.
2010) to 12 (,1s of April 30, 2010) and there will be a $38
VINTON, Ohio
The Vinton Summer Youth League
registration fcc per child, which include~ a uniform. 'I he will be hnving an organizational meeting and signups for
leagues arc also m T-hall, Baseball Minor and A-ball Little baseball and f.oftball 011 Wednesday. March 10, from 5
League Major.
.
p.m. in the school calcteria. 'I he fee is $35 for the first
The ~larch 12 signup times an.: from 6:30p.m. until 8:30 and $20 lor each additional child.
p.m .. while tl·c March 11 timec; are scheduled from 2 p.m.
!·or additional information please call Dawn McDonald at
until 4 p.m. Bring a ball a glove to s1gn up.
740-388-8631.
Pml:lrces begin ni April and games will rake place in both
May and June. There will also be an awards nrght in July. I

Vinton Summer Youth League

1burnament Presale Tickets
RACINE. Ohio
P1c ale tickets for Southem's district
toumament game are uHlllc~ble at the high school. Tickctc;
are a\ mlable dunng school hour-; in the office. Schools will
recieve 25 percent of the proceeds for tickets purchased at
the school.
•

~

MYL baseball-softball Signups

MIDDI hPORT, Ohio -The Middleport Youth League
will be holding baseball and softball signups on Saturday.
March 1.3. at the. ~id~leport Council Chamber~ from 10
a.m. unt.tl noon. I he srgnup. fees are $25 per chtld or $40
per familY:· .md a.lnte fee w1ll be charged to anyone who
wants to srgr.mp alter. ~larch 13.
h&gt;r more 111formmron, contact Dave Boyd at (740) 5900438 or Tonya Colcrnnn at t740) 992-5481.

M
R S
•
ason ec ummer s1gnups
MASON. W.Va. - The ~lason Recreation Department
will holdlf)g summer baseball and softball signups e\ ery
Monda) and Saturd:l)' in March at the Hair Shop in Ma on.
Monda) signups wtll run from 6 p.m. until 8 p.m. and
Saturday signups from 10 a.m. until noon .
For more in! ormatiOn, contact James Pauley at (30-t) 7739107 or Rick Keams at (304) 882-2312.

Green Ball Association

Gallipolis Parks and Rec baseballsoftball signups

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - The Gallipolis Parks and
Recreation Department w11l hold baseball and softball
signups Thursda). March 4. thru Friday, March 12. You can
sign up at the Gallipolis Municipal Building. 518 Second
Ave., from 7:30a.m to 4 p.m. Evening signups will be held
Tuesda), March 9. and Thursday. March 11, from 4 p.m. to
6:30 p.m. on the first floor.
The cost is $35 per child and $20 for each additional
child. Baseball players must be between the ages of 4-15 as
of April 30.2010, and softball players must be bet~een the
ages of 4-15 as of December 31 , 2009. For more mformation contact Brett Bostic. Director of Parks and Recreation,
at 740-441-6022.
Registration can be mailed to the Recreation Dept., 518
Second A\ e., Galltpolb, Ohio 4563 I, and must be postmarked by March 12.

New Haven Youth League Signups
NEW HAVEN. W.Va. -The 1'\ew Ha,en Youth Lea.
will hold signup on March 14. from 2-4 p.m. at
Wahama High School gym.
•
The fee is $30 per player or $45 per immediate family.
All interested player need to be signed up on or before
March 14. Teams ,,j)] be fom1ed and practices will begin
as soon ns po sible.

Wahama Hall of Fame meeting

MASON, W.Va. There v. ill be a Wahama Hall of Fame
The Green Ball Association will be ho:ding registration Board of Trustees meeting on Thursday. March II, at 6:30
for summer ball on Monda), March 15th from 6:30 -8:30 p.m. at Wahama High School.

Browns release former Pro Bowl QB Derek Anderson
Cl I.:.VELAND (AP)
Quarterback
Derek
Anderson's une.ven fi\e) ear
tint
with
the
Cleveland Bmwns i-; O\er
The team r lea ed the
one trme Pr Bowl qu r
n d &gt;
terback fuc&lt;;J )
&lt;1fter the Brown~ cqutred
backup Seneca \\all ace m
a trade from Seattle.
Anderson made the Pro
Bow I m 2007 when he
threw 29 touchdO\\ n pas
e-; and Jed the club to I 0
6 record Howe\er hi
promising career ha been
in u tat! pin ever smce He
lost his &lt;;tnrtmg job to
Brad} Quinn at the start of
last season, got It back,
lost it again. returned to
the starting lineup \\hen
Quinn got hurt. and won
Cle\ eland's
last
two
games .
The
26-ycar-old
Anderson spent five ... ensons
with
Cle' eland.
which claimed him off
waivers from Baltimore in
2005. Anderson "as due a
$2 million roster bonus
~l&lt;~rch 19 and his salary

was set for $7.45 million
in 20 I0. financial burdens
tbat factored heavil) into
the Browns' decision to
dump h1m
I \\ant to
for el)
o the (
or
z n
fi' e ) e r , co
E
Mangm1 said in a state
mcnt. "He did e\Cr)thmg
f him and It v.
to coach such
e pe~on. I \\-ant
to w
m all the be t io
the future
Anderson passed for
3.787 ) ards in 2007. tossing 17 of hi~ 29 TD passes
to \\Jde receher Bra)Jon
Edwards, \\hom Cleveland
last sca ... on traded to the
;-\C\\ York Jets. Blessed
with one of the NFL'~
stron!!cst arms. Anderson
was never able to duplicate
the succes~ he attained in
'07.
In seven starts I ast sen~on. Ander ...on completed
just 81 of 182 pa... sc .. (45
percent) for 888 yards with
three TDs and 10 intercep-

tions. On a windy Oct. II
111 Buffalo. Anderson went
only 2-ot-17 fnr 23 yards,
but the Browns managed to
eck out a 6-3 win over the
Bill
on· ratmg v. ,1c; an
A
42.1 and the
ent 3-4 with him
arting lineup. But
desplle h1
truggles and
\.:On t nt criticism from
and fans who preQuinn, Anderson
complained and
re med one of the team's
leader:.
After Qumn sustmned a
scason-endmg foot injUI)'
on Dec. 20, Anderson
turted
and
won
Cleveland's final two
games u the Bro\\ ns finished \\ ith a four-game
\\inning streak - a ... purt
that like)) sa,cd Mangini'~
job.
Andcr~on
will likel)
catc'h on \\ ith another tean'l
quickly. He's 6-foot-6. he's
) oung and he's got one of
those rare rifle arm:s that
make TFL GMs drool.
He's at o got experience

v. ith 34 career starh.
As for the Brown~. it's
still unclear which direction they· II go at quarterback. Quinn hasn't lived
up to expectations and
Wallace. who v.orked v.ith
Cleveland president Mike
Holmgren
with
the
Seahav.ks. has nice
around skills but doe
appear to be the fut
Holnu!ren said last \\ee
that the team wa acthel)
looking for a quarterback
but did not specify if that
meant in free agenC) or via
trade.
The Bro" ns also ha\e I I"
pick~ in April':s draft. and
it'!&gt; possible the club could
usc a high one to groom a
starter.

t

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Subscribe rodav.
992-2155

us.

Owens
from Page Bl
ha\e much mterest in
Owens. whose production
declined each of the last two
seasons with Dalla'&gt; and
Buffalo. Former T.unpa Ba)
recci\er Ant()mo Bryant
"as 111 Ctncmnnll on
Tuesday.
Owens, a six-time Pro
Bov.l receiver, hnd 69
catches for I .052 rards and
10 touchdowns With Dallas
in 2008. and dropj)Cd otl to
55 catd1cs for 829 yardo;
\\ ith fi vc touchdowns last
season in Buffalo.
Owens and OchoCIIH.:o arc
represented In agent I)rcw
Rosenhaus. ·who didn't
return n phone mcssngc
Tuesday. Roscnhaus .told
Sirius NH.. Radio on h tday
night that he had talked to
the Bengalc; about Owens,
but wasn't sure where the
tet~m was headed.
Bryant had career highs

wtth 83 catches for I ,248
yards and seven touchdowns in 2008 with Tampa
Bay. He needed surge1y for
torn cartilage in his left
knee during-training camp
last year. and was bothered
by pain in the knee all cason. He finished with · 39
catche:s for 600 yards and
four touchdown-;.
Cincinnati's
passing
offense finished 26th in the
league last season even
though Carson Palmer was
back from an elbow injury.
The Bcngals didn't ha\e a
reliable third-down reeet\'er
left TJ.
as aHoushmand7udeh
free agent for
Seallle before last season and Coles failed to hknd
iuto the offense.
The Bengals also lacked a
deep threat after Chris
lfcnty got hurt. Henry later
died in a fall from a truck
during a domestic dispute.
Getting a receiver and a
tight end are among the
tcam'c; top pnorities in free
agency and the draft.

•..,;;..-.,.~~;;.;.; '_,~~~=lliili[ill~~~:li~~~~£=@~~~~~ttJt~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
~

�~--------------------~----------------------~-·------~-- -

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Own a new computer
for as little as $29.99
per weeki No credit
check! Guaranteed
Consumer Funding.
1-888·282-3535
Financial

ures a
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.
1

Buried In Credit Card
Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877·264-8031

.I2EJIT
Sfiii..fM.ENL

!!SA
We solve debt
problems!
If you have over
$12,000 In debt
CALL NOW!
1-8n-266-0261

Pet
C omatror
740-446-3745

Apartments/

Automotive

Autos

05

Ca·avan

Dodge

76000

~

es

d
$5300 OBO 95
Dodge Ra
150 4X4
129 ()()()
- 5 speed

$2500
OBO
740.25&amp; 1233
25&amp;9031
&amp;

C
or
Trucks

to
lOr Hosp 18 ?n SR
CIA (740) 441·01 J4

DIBECIV

OH CONVE'NIE'"'TLY
LOt
CATFD
&amp;
AFFORDABLE• Townho~ apart·
., ra';
arellor
aN
llOuses 1or rC! I C
740-441·1 111 !o·
~==~~~~= calion &amp; fOfiT' tJoo

For tho best TV
experience, upgrade
from cable to
DlrccTV today I
Packages start at
$29.99
1-866-541.0834

-;;;;;=S;;;;;potts;;;;;;;;;;;;;U;;;;til;;;:ity~=

-

DISH NE'TW..QRK
Save up to 40% off
your cable bill! Call
dish Network today!
1-877-274-2471

¥ . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . ..

c

tr

A.r

hookp
electic

•erorso 8A P

3000

Ree!Estate
Sales

EHO

Ellm VIew Apts
(304 )882-3017

Commercial

VQNAGE
Unlimited local
and long
distance calling
for only $24.99
per month.
Got reh ble phone

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We W r'
' 888 582 3345
SEPnC
PUMPING
Co
Oti and
Glli
Mason Co WV Roo
Evans
Jac.ksol'
OH

~800-=5~37~-9~5~2~8~~~~
S
•
ecunty

AtiT
Free Home Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from AOT
Security Services.
Call1-888·274·3888
Tox / Accounting

AMERICAN TAX

Bfbl.EF:
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you OW!). If you owe
over 515,000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1-877·258·5142

I 400

financial

·~======
Money To lend

=======NOTICf Borrow Smart
Corotact tho Ohro D1v1·
stor of F ranetal lnsutu
11on Olf1ce of Consumer
AlfJ1rs BEfORE yoL rcfl
narco your home or ob·
ta1n a loan. BEWARE of
rC(luests fo• any large
advance payiT'cnts of
lees or 1nsuranco Call
tho Ofllcc of Consumer
All · s
toll
free
at
1 -866·2/8·0003 to learr
1 tro f:"ortgago b oker or
cndor IS property 11
consed (Tl1 s Is a public
orvicc
a r&gt;auncei"'\Crt
I om 'hO OhiO Va ley
Pub shrng Coll'pany)

Comm Space 4 ease
Rc
.&gt; O!te
P:ne
1oca on
busy
htgh!}'
VIS b 0
dwi"twr COI"'CC:
14()()..2000
sq
11
S700 mo 740· 709-1960

Busineu &amp; Trade

School
Gallipolis Career

Uerchandlse

900

College
(Careers Close To Home)
Co" Today• 74().446-4367
1 aOQ.214.Q452

scMce from Vonage
Call Today!
1·877·673·3136

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
ATV ..................................... ..................... 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats1Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles .............................................. 1025
Other"""'"'"'""""""""""""""'"'""' ..... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ............................................. 2000
Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Autos ...............................- ... ................... 2010
Classic/Antiqucs ....................................... 2015
Commercialllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Ut llty.................- ..........................2030
Trucks...." ...................................................2035
Utility Tra lers ........................................... 2040
Vans ........................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Salcs ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ..........................................3005
Commercial ...............................................301 0
Condominiums ..........................................3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale .........................................3025
Land (Acreage) ......................................... 3030
Lots ...........................................................3035
Want to b1.1y ................................................ 3040
Real Esta:e Rentols ................................... 3500
Aoartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................351 0
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ...................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots ..........................................................4005
Movers ......................................................4010
Rentals .................................................. 4C15
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies .................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ......................... 5050
Employment..............................................6000
Accountfng/Financfal ................................6002
AdmlnlstratlveJProfesslonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ............
6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Constructlon ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 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
Musical .......................................................6040
Part·Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ..........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Free Rent Special Ill
2&amp;3BR ap•s $39.,

....,

owre

Lifelock
Are You Protected?
An Identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-daysl
1·877-481-4882
Promocode:
FREEMONTH

Townhoules

I

Classifieds!!

C

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ..........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Blrthday/Annlvcrsary.................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memoryrrhank You .................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals.............. .....................................230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services. • ............................................. 300
Appliance Servlcc ....................................... 302
Automotive .............................................-. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Business ............................................ 308
t"a&lt;h&gt;rlnn .....................................................310
~hllltl/~·rru!nv Care ..................................... 312
............................................. 314
:on1tra•cto1rs..................................., ...............316
Domestlcs/Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ....,............................................... 320
Financla1 .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; CooiTng .......................................328
Homo Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama ....................................336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces .................................342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roofiog .........................................................346
Sccurlty ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntcrtalnmont ..................................352
Financial ......................................................400
Financial Servicos ....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................. 410
Money to Lond .............................................415
Education ...................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ...........................505
lnstruc1ton &amp; Training ................................510
Lessons.......................................................515
Personal ..................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ soo
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses ..................................................... 610
Livestock .................................................... 615
Pets ...........................................................620
want to buy ................................................625
Agrlculture ...................................................700
Farm Equlpmcnt ..........................................705
&amp; Produco.......................................710
Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land .......................................... 720
nt to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appllance .....................................................910
Auctloi'\B .......................................................915
Bargain Basement ......................................920
Collectlbles ..................................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Suppllcs ....................................935
Flea Markets .................................... :........... 940
Fuel Oil CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous.............................................965
Want to buy.................................................970
Yard Sate .....................................................975

2000

Fuel I Oil/ Cool I
Wood/Gas

For Sale By Owner
106 Mabe I ne Dr Ga h·
pols 28R
1BA Full
Basel"lert
Remodeled
or katchen 1 Car Garage.
Ccr.• a r AI app stay
$9;;~ 500 /40.645-7965

Seasoned •~rov.ood
All 1-t:dwood
740 853 2439
740·446 9204
600

Animals
Livestock

Miscellaneous
12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446-0390.

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired new &amp; rebu 'I
In stock. Cell Ron
Evans 1-800.537·9528

2 Reg Angus Cows w
calves by !hell sides 1
Angus Bull 1 yr old Can
be reo Cs 256-6444
Carpet Sale 00
lat10n O'l poc
orders
Pets
Prtve a ttl save a t
-~==;;;;;;;;;===- Mol ohan Carpet 22'2
AKC rna e Yorkie puppy Eas•cm A'i
Ga ;lol
for
sale
$400 OH (740) 44&amp; 7444
74().444-360 1
eve Away 10 to 12
dump

t JCk loads o'
A I d.. Contact
lemale, 2 males ca 1 740.8 3.01'14
304-812-4060 &amp;
Sale
Bcrbar
Carpet
message
5 95yd • Spec a s on V~­
ry 1n SIOCK·d1VO a I II e
FOUND mate Ger.~an save a lot Mol ohnn car
Shepard I'!'IX w pu:'ple pot 2212 Eastom Ave
OH
(740)
collar
on 160 Gallla GaiiiPQhS,
446·7444
area. Call740·441·0500

C~
~
KC
~~
Yo-rl\-10 -----~~ c c "

Free to good rome ador·
able kittens par1 pors1an
Call 740.441.0833
700

Agriculture

form Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT
VALLFY
HORSE LIVe
STOCt&lt;
TRAILERS
LOAD
MAX
EOUIP
MENT
mAILERS
CARGO EXPReSS &amp;
HOMESTEAD foR
CARGOCONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK fLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR E'-1·
TIRE TRAILE~ INVE"'·
TORY A~
WWWCARMICHAE1.
TRAILERS COM
• •
740 446 3825

WaniTo Buy
Abso t.IC Top
ver gold
c
10KI14Kt18K
e ry dent~
1935
vS

Dol ar
rs
a Y
gold ew
gold p:e
currercy

p."'O' n

sets

1

2006 3SR 2 SBA &lt;! n ~~-~-~-:-Twp l.Mng Roo w~rre
Place
Fam 1y
Room
Separate D n ng Room
SpaCious
K•tcl&gt;en
w .Jrar te Countc:1op &amp;
rsland 1n the M ddlc &amp;
H :elwood
Cab n_ts, ·- - - - - - - .. lrdry ROOIT' 72 x27 w
27 x50 Attached Garage
3.5 Car Beaut1ful View r
Cour.•.ry wl2 38 ACI'es
Prced
10
se
PH
740 645 5174
or
740.339 2780 Leave a
,.,essag
Must see to
precaate S158 800 No
rea tors ard ro lal"'d con·
1 CIS
Serous
on'y

diB· ~--------~---- - - - - - - - - -

MTS Coli" Shop
Ga •

Recreational
Vehicles

1000

I

:""""""~""":':==== ;;:;.;;;====~=
ATVs

Look g lor lOQ.40C ac•
rs of hu t ng ;md lor
l~as
J If
93 4 whcoiE!t K w 300 304 984 9358
Pa

;..;;;;;;......:;..;;;;;;..;;;;;;==-

CC x4 w "lgh &amp; Low 304 549 1~
Range New Trres StOOC
Real Eslate
f m 740 645 51 74
3500
Renlals
Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

RV

Servtoe at

cl'

740-446 3825

•

Houses For Sole

Carm
Tra rs

Modem 'BR
'40·446·0390

apt

C
WD

�-

- --

-

--

- --

-- --...._.......,_

____

~~-~-~- -

----- -

Page 84 • TI1e 0.1ily Sentinel
Houses For Rent
IBR 1BA Apt at 210 5th
St N w Havn
WV
S3SO 3BR 1BA H
813 ~tong
G poliS
OH
3BR 2BA T•
H man All
OH S450 A
N
Ut
rc
740.645 7661
74()-339 3046 aft r 5pm

Clerical

Nonprof t taw
legal secretary
Will' good all!lud and
rnanner with pub JC JO·
ud rog ab ty to saeen
o b ty o~ ca ors whO
may be n cr s Must be
graduate or accred ted
lltg~ schoof or equlva en1
wIll dom strated eb tty
to type 55 WPM profi·
c ent 1n word process ng
Sa ary SI 0 452+ DOE
wnh good benof ts Re·
ply with resume to Soc·
rctary
Southoastom
Ohio Legal Services. 964
~
East Slato Street. Ath·
2 B~R~88-G-8-r'-io-ld--S4-2-5 ons
Ot•lo 4~701
WE
no
$400
uop ARE AN FOUAL OP·
740 645•1646
PORTUNITY
AfTIRMA·
TIVE
ACTION
EM·
2BR Homo
&amp;tovo &amp; PLOYfR
flidgc fum WID hook~.op =~~~~===
11nl n shod basement
Drivers &amp; Delivery
NO smokers NO pets
Ref &amp; dep req S450/Ro UQu d Asphalt Dnvers
C ty schools Ca b fo e n cdcd r Pl P eas&amp;nt
a ea
ust be 21 yrs old
9 p 'l1 740·256-9190
or otd r must haveCLass
3 BR 1 BA 2 car gar 3 A COL With Hazmat En·
dors
1
and
good
m
fomHz Hos
ta
app
$700 MVR local I ps
rno.c$500
dep
Ca I ca 1-800-598 6122 lor
MOre Info
74().44&amp;4426

Good
to the

ks

Last
Word

ts

p~o

·VInyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
• Garages
·Pole Buildings
·Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Thafs the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

MECHANIC NEEDED :
R&amp;J Trucking Co
M ~
etta Ohio
JOe Includes PM tree
tor tra er 1re &amp; weld ng
r
rs Must have own
too s cl an va id drivers
IICens Is recdod, COL a
PUS COI"lpo1 tlve wages
based on cxp bereflts
40tK health denU:' Ax
optiOns,
uniiOI"llS pro- Help Wanted • General
YI(f d work bOOt allow·
ADECCO IS now h1nng
4 Rms + Ba Stove &amp; nee
fridge 'iO 0 rv St No For rformallon call Jeff 50 asSOCiates! II
50 Production laborers
pets S4SO.mo .. d p 800-462 0365 X 206
e needed rn,::;t be able to
fax 740·374 3059
446 3945
communrcate effectively
"'
to
work 1n a safe manner
4000
Manufactured &lt;jea 1 dorC l]trucldng co
bo a tearr player end
Houalng
&gt;
have good ettendanca
Regional
Dump and and wo.'k h story
Pneumatic
Tanker
Drlv·
M
st be able to tift 35 lbs
Lon
someu:nes
repetitively
Also able to reach
15
stoop knee or stand and
o:her such positlOllS 1 e.
pus~&gt; pu
Have dexter·
ous use or both hands
good Y!Sion able to work
with m superviSlon and
2BR
perto
requ red phys •

ne

YOUNG'S

Construction

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

• Roofing &amp; Gu11era
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Palnllng
• Patio and Porch DKkl
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
9'12·ft2 1!' 7411·5'11..011)5
Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
- Winter
lals -

304-773-1111
SEAL IT
Medical

Help Wanted • General

Overbrook Cer&gt;tcr os cur·
renUy accepting epplica·
liOns
for
SIAIE
IESifO Nurs ng Assis·
tarots lor a Sh •ts full
tJme hours ava able lnterestcu app ::arts can
ptd\ .JP an applicaton or

contact

Wcy Goff BSN,

Staff DevelopmGI"!
Coo:d nator
C
740-992 6472 M·F 9a·Sp
at 333 Page St Middle~ Oh EOE &amp; a participant of !he Orug·Free
Workplace Prcgram

RN

CO:'\S IIH C 1'10:\

Roofing· SidingPamting- Gutters

-

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR

affordable Pnces.
Call Dcnnb Bo)d

740-992-1611

740-992-2029

- - - - - - -.....E~penenced Cook Food
SeMCO
w :1\er end
.Qn-Ca P rt·Tlme CalC'·
ng needed for Sodoxo
Apply n p rso" at tre
Unlv rs ty of Rio Grando

Cell and Schedule Your
Interview:
1·888·1MC-PAYU ext.
2311
http ://lobs lnfoclslon.c
om
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

T he \ \ t\lcdicol Center In lluntingtun,
\\\
l'i ' eka ng Pnm..r) Care tramed
Ph}'tcwn and RNs lor 1 planned Outreach
C'lmte an G a l hpoh~. OH Tho chnll \\ •II
mtllall) be o{l\!n '"' o d ys per "eck wuh the
potcn11"l or 111 re sed chml tune depend eng on
dem.md and mcrc.1-.cd patient base
The \ A o ft r~ a comprehen ave bcnef1ts
packa!!e tndudmg l\1alpr cu~.:e Co\er.• e.
h.&gt;deral f mplo)ec: Renremcnt 'iy tcm(FERS).
Health aml l tfe In ur n~,;e, fhnft ,t\ mg.s Plan
(401k) . encrou' I e \C and Hohda)s.
1 dul:atwnal • nd Rc earch opport unlltes and
more
Plea c ansure apph c.1t10n matcnals .1re
rece1H:d no later thnn Apn l 2 20 10 J orward
••11 lpphcat•on muter~&lt;~ls to the VA 1\l edtcal
IIRM S (0SJ, AnN. M1 cu h
Center
Smger Ke\111 Toney. 1540 Spnng Valle)
Dm·e. Hunti ngton , \\ V 25704 l'nsi11on
111fonn.li1Uil und pph~.:ntwn rce}lnremenl~ can
be found by n!V IeW tllg th e \ Ul'fl llC)
an n oun~.:cmc n ts
on
U SAJOBS
nt
WWY. USil JOb £0\
Ph) Sll.. lolnS (vnC.llll.:) oiiiiiOUOCement ll~llnber
I 0 029 G A l 3 8 Dl )
Reg1stered Nurses (\i!C3 n~;y &lt;~nnouncemcnt
number HJ.(.r:IO GAl ~8 P\\ )
f or ltddlliOnal mfommt1on. please contact
\lr. \\IIlium J.nnning,I.CS\\ -IJCJ).
nt 30..-429·(•755. l·.xl 2276 or
304-a29·7570 (tnx).
10 1

Stop &amp; Compare

Total Construction
One Call to Do It 1111
Pole Barns Metal Roofs
F1rc &amp; \\ater Damage
D f) \\aiL Repa1r

Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,
Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,
Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured· Free
Estimates

\\indo" and
\'in) I Siding

peciali ts. t:m
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • \in~ I
\\indo " ~ • \1ctal

and Shingle Roof~
• l&gt;ceks • \ddilion~
•l lectricul

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Cell : 740·416·5047
email:
j rshadfrm @aol.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;

740-742-3411
(0

J ... Hollon
rucking
1-880 M PA(lJ
REMEMBER Ext 1911
Appl~.o on ane:
httJ; !jobs tn'
oo con

package be ng of!&lt;Jred
Interested
candidates
are to submit resunes to '~"""""""""""""""""""'====
614-7t6-2272
Manageme!V /
Neett 5 ladtes to se
Supervisory
Avon Call 446·3358

Legal Notice
In The Court Ot Com·
mon Please, Meigs
County Ohio
Case No 09DLT001
Oron Dungee, Dana
Dungee, State ot Ohio
Dept.
ot Taxation,
Ronald
Manning,
Sharon Manning, Glendon Mynes, Catherine
Mynes, John/Jane Doe
1·3 will take notice that
on November 30, 2009
plaintiff Peggy Yost.
Meigs County • Trea·
surer flied a petition for
tax foreclosure against
them In the Court ot
Common Pleas, Meigs
County Ohio third floor
of the County Court·
house the same being
Case No. 090LT001 in
said Court, praying that
plaintiff be found to
have a good and valid
f irst lien on certain
premises taxes, as·
sessments and penal·
ties,
that
all
defendants, be re·
qulred to set forth their
claims or be forever
barred from asserting
them, that plaintiff be
paid within a reason·
able time, to be named
by the Court, the equity
or redemption ot defen·
dents, be foreclosed
and Order of Sale Is·
sued to the Sheriff dl·
reeling him to sell said
premises In the manner
by
R.C.
provided
5721 .19. ParceiiD I 05·
00161.000. A complete
legal description can
be found at the Meigs
County Recorder's Of·
fice at Volume 283,
Page 61 of the Meigs
County Records.
This cause will be

Remodeling

~

Now H111ng Satellite In·
Help Wonted· Generol stallers
cell Apphcat1ons
for
1·74()-4.46..7443.
managor, asststart man·
Seeking volunteers lor a agcr &amp; lila guards for
t-orso stables n ex· SyraC&lt;Jso V11lege London
Full Tlme Positions
change lor rid rg 1 me/in· Pool can be ptCk.ed up &amp;
1
Avallable
strucllon Poss ble future returned to ClorWTreas·
Make Cals for Consererrployment opportunity urer's ol' ce on or belore
vatrvc Pollical Org&lt;:n za· Ca;l (740) 446-8945 or Mar 26 moro Info cell
lions sllCh as tho NRA
740.992-nn
J740) 645-0023
!oCiSlOO offers
Acomprehensive benefits package perform·
ance bonuseS pro!es·
SionaJ working emnronne I advancement apport
end mucto
more

~Insurance·

Replacement

SUNSET

t,opetlorl;:JI
trea ent equtp-

bene t

BErie

CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
· Garages
• Complete

laboratory
analyzing

moclerate

ROBERT
BISSEll

Decks· Etc
l·or Fast Courteous
Serv 1ce Free
Estimates &amp;

(ONSTRUcriON

~

ogy or eq
M
have a moderate degree
of
lillO•vledge of ski
sary 10 preform work with

~

l'nl uffiliull·d "llh Milo.&lt; Man'tllll Roolltt!l &amp; Rrmoddinx1

Hometown Insurance Center

pt1

ment. :1d coe sampl ng
E'llry level wage rate 0
approx. S18 00 pe hr

Fun, insured
l'n-e C"&gt;1hnat~ • 25+ yrars experience

tereaaOhometownnsurancecenter.com

STYlE. ..

standa d
chemlcal

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garage•

(that's easy on your wallet)

Your Career Storts
HereI'
Full ond Part Tlme Po·
altlons Aval able

ry

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Ruom additions • Roofing • &lt;
• Gem·ral Remodeling • Pole &amp;: Hor~e
narns • \ 'in} I &amp; \\ ood I cndng
foundations
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985·4141
740· 416-1834

Great coverage and
superior service

WANTED FuiH1me em·
ploymcrt 1n your ow11
homo as a Home Scrv·
tees Worlo;er wlttl Buck·
eye Co~rmul' ty Serv·
tees We provldo sa ;y
p us beroof ts and a da ly
room and board rate
You provide a llo:ne
guidance and friendship
a tam y atmosphere
Requ es ab ty to 1 ch
personal IMng
and
a commttme t to the
growtl! nd d ve opment
of an indivldu w Ill developm nta
dlsa
If
• ro ted COI"tact Cea• 1-800-531 2302
cal dulles
or
(740)
285 5039
Adecco s an EOE and n Pro-employncnt
Orug
drug free work place
Teshng Eq I Opponu
If Interested p case en nily Employer
{304) 522-6623 speak
at w th lJs8 or M1ko

vacatiOn pay
Contact
DenniS
1 SQ0-462 0365 to apply
to

eaft Marcum Construction

CARPENTER
SERVICE

t&gt;ump lrurk
Sen lee
\\ e do driH\\a~ s
limestone • Gru\cl
lb p . oil • I-i ll Dirt

...THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS

740-985-4422

SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

740-856-2609

~o\\ Sclhng:

• l'ord &amp;

~lutorcraft

Pan' • bngmc,,
Tr:msfer C'n es &amp;
Transm1sstons
• A ftermarket
Replacement .Sheet
~1etal &amp; Components
For.\ M.ll " f \

c

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

740-949·1956

be two (2) dump body
and snow plows.
Each bid shall be ac·
companied by a salls·
factory
bond
or
certified check on a
solvent bank equal to
tlve percent (5%) of the
bid submitted for the
vehicle and condi·
tioned that the bidder
shall, It his bid is ac·
cepted, execute a con·
tract in conformity to
the Invitation and bid
within 10 days after no·
- - - - - - - - lice ot the award ot the
contract to them.
Public Notice
The bids shall be

draw the above colletera I prior to sale. Fur·
ther, The Farmers Bank
end Savings Company
reserves the right toreject any or all bids submltted.
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 con·
tact Cyndle or Ken at
740·992·2136.
(3) 10, 11, 12

submitted on the at·
tachod forms in a
sealed envelope plainly
marked
" Tandem
Dump Bodies and
Snow Plow" .
Tho County reserves
the right to accept or
reject any or all bids or
portions thereof.
(3) 3, 10

--------

INVITATION AND NO·
TICE TO BIDDERS
NEW DUMP BODY,
SNOWPLOW
Sealed bids will be
rocolved by the Board
ot County Commls·
stoners of
MEIGS
County, Ohio at the of·
flee of the County Commissioners, 100 East
2nd Stroet, In tho City
of Pomeroy, Ohio until
1:10 o'clock p.m., pre·
valling local t mo on
tho 17 day ot March,
2010 and then at 1:10
p .m. at said office
opened and road aloud
tor the furnishing ot
two (2) dump body and
snow plows for the
MEIGS County Engl·
neer.
Bid documents may be
secured at the Engl·
near's office at 34110
Fairgrounds
Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
8cm·3pm
botwoon
Monday-Friday.
Phone 740.992·2911
QUANTITY
The number ot units
being purchased will

Cell

Racmc.Oh1o

heard on April 26. 2010
at 11 :00 am or as soon
thereafter as meets the
convenience of the
Court. Interested par·
ties have 28 days to respond to the Complaint
tor Tax Foreclosure.
Answers are to be !tied
with the Meigs County
Clerk ot Courts , Third
Floor ot the County
Courthouse. Pomeroy,
OH 45769
2110, 17, 24, 313/10, 17

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
March 13,2010 at 10:00
a.m., a public sale will
be held at 22739 Buck·
town Rd., Recine, OH.
the Farmers Bank and
Savings Company Is
selling tor cash in hand
or certified check the
following collateral:
1985 Skyline Fortune
Mobile Homo Ser No.
137390362U
tho Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, re·
servos the right to bid
at this sale, and to with·

WV1040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740-992.0730

Guttering
Se!!:-1 ess Gutters
Roof ng 5 d ng Gv•crs
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

fl'ee Estlmlltes lor
• Backhoe • rrencbtng
• Brusll HoglJing
• Port!!!le Bandmlll
Tree Trl:nmlng • setting
Poles &amp; rrasm

C811740-992·9572

sJ
construcu
~
ora

E.'l:penenced
Rdercnccs A\ atI blc'
Call G n unle)
740 591 8M4

Pole Barns, Garages,
New Construction .. Room Add..

•

Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber.
Concrete Wmk,
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phone: 74D-867-D616
Call 740-447-3642
35 yrs exp. Free Est. Fully Insured

Owners:
Tim Cremeans 8 Roger Sellers

Hill's Self
Storage
29625 Bashan Road
Racme OH 45n1

11!11!1111

740-949·2217
Sizes s· X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Public Notice

:\11CIIA EI.'S
The Home National SER\'ICI-: ('E:'\TER
Bank will auction the '
1555 ~ \ 1-: \n•.
following Items on Set·
l'omcnl\ , Oil
urday March 13, 2010,
at 10:00 AM. at the
• run l ps
bank's lot beside our
• Hrolke Sen
drlve-thru.
• ~C Re~.:ha e
2007 CHEVY
HHR
• Mm r e\h:Iu\t
3GNOA23DX7S543861
rep.11r • T1re Rcpau
2001 HONDA CIVIC
• Tran'm''' on l1ltcr
1HGEM21991L054532
&amp;:. Flu1J Change
MERCURY
1999
• General Mecham
C 0 U G A R
\\urk
12VVFT61L1X5640236
t740) 992-11')10
1997 FORO RANGER
1FTCR15XXVPA64740
2002
FREIGHT
LEWIS
LINER
CONCRETE
1FUJBBCG62LG29441
1991 BMVV
CONSTRt:CTION
WBAAJ9315MEJ01597
Concrete Removal
The Home National
and Replacement
Bank reserves the right
to reject any and all
\II I) pes 01
bids. All vehicles are
Concrete \\ oa·k
sold, as Is where, Is
29 \curs I XIICril'ncr
with no warrantieS ex·
pressed or Implied.
Da\'id Lc\\ is
For an appointment to
740-992·6971
see, call 949·221 0, ask
tor Sheila.
(3) 10, 11, 12

~dd I ~'n

I ocal Contractor

740-367-0544

Hours
7 :00 am • 8:00 pm

I ret' I ' timatc

740-367-0536

,,c

\ cw (on~truction and

!'oft~~~ co:.;;;;;;c:l~:·~~ ;;~''K {

I

&amp; MANUFACTUDING.llC
AND SIDING INSTALLATION

\cccpting ~l'\'
Studl•nh

, PianoiKr) hoard
.Junl' \nn\rankl'n
Pomcro). OH
•
7-t0-992-9751
..
~~~~---- ~~--------~-

�........................

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

· ------~~--~~~~--~------~~----~~~~

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

www.mydallysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 ..As You
Ltko It"
1 Composer
Kurt
forest
6 Abacus
41 Hunt for
ptece
42 Tree part
10Comtcs
orphan
DOWN
11 Good
1 Frittorod
Judgment
away
12 Threaded 2 Concert
fastener
extras
13Small, to
3 Close
Simone
4 Tall tales
14 Foot
5 Dotect1vC
features
Archer
15Texas
6 Tankard
town
fi 1
161mportant 7 Door sign
time
8 Dtgres17Numborston
system
9 Addtct's
base
progran
16 Wntcr
11 Wrenches,
Stout
In Bntatn
19 Go.ng to
seed
22 Fleet unrt
23 Franc
replacer
26 Publicly
condemning
29 Toppe r
32 Sinkmg
. signal
33 Roadster
34Charm
36Grow dim
37 "Oiympta"
painter
38Madame
Cude
39Dc Mtlle
of dance,

Mort Walker

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

15 Island
souvenir
17 Keys m
text
20 Help
21 Bloke
24 Actor
Montalban
25 Trymg to
lose
27 Guest's
bed

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

26Salad
base
29 Eastern
monks
30 P1cture
31 ~rene of
"My Favorite Wife"
35 Onton's
kin
36 Vegas
game
38Biemish

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

l PON"r 71-lltJI&lt;
YOUR FRtENr?
GWJBEAM 16
GOING 7t:J
VIGil, i"RIXIE

'"I
ULED VOO FOR 4:45P.M. BECAUSE ~E TOLD
ME VOO WERE T~ LAST PERSON ~E WANTED TO SEE."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

HOW LONG

HAVe: You HAD

WHAT

THIS PROBf.,&amp;M?

f'R08L.E.M '?

J

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

*-

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
lw Dave Green
I

2 1 8
;

"Sony, the only perfume I'd like would
smell like a chocolate-chip cookie."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

5

2

9

6

.

..5
!!

II

'll

~

1 8 9 6 f.-4 5j 2
16
4
7
2
3
9
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·1 3 4 16 7
Diffi.ult} Le1el ***
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6 9 ~
I L Gg
BL 9
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6 8
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~

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday. March 10
2010.
llus) ear, you start a ne\\ hfe cycle Deahng '' tth
an anger IS..&lt;;Ue needs to be of pnmary conc'\'m
OtherwiSe, you might ruin ''hat pott'Ilhall} could be
d sensational pdiod 11m; luck cycle could 1mp l.i
your goals and relationships If) ou are smgle, ) ou
wlll ha\-e a \alid option to change }Our st.ltu&lt;&gt; II )OU
are attached, the two of you can learn to relate on a
ne" le1 el. The intensi~ and t'.mng "ill only mten
f) if you so ch~ AQl:ARIL"S understands )OU
\\"ell

Tire StilTS Shtra• tlre Kmd P{ Day YG •11 H
i
Dvnamrc; 4 POSitrre 3 At&gt;erage; .Z
I Olf!irul
ARIES (March 21·Apn119)

*s.:

*"**'*Perhaps you na\e noti~d the tt.ons1on m
the past few months. FinaU\, you c;ee some reid on
the how.on Zero m on w h.it LS tmportant, end foliO\\
your instincts. Kno\\ that you ha\ e the dbtht v to
change .1 sccr~&lt;trio. Torught Find a reason to Ct'lebrate
TAURUS (Apri12~M&lt;ty 20)
**** Re,1ch out lor someone )OU respect .1nd
know well. If vou 11ant to eluninate a h,tssle. don't
worry. A ~udtfen e\ ent could do JUSt that A met'lmg
pm1 es to be instrumental and dm.muc Ltslen to
S\tggesti&lt;ms. Tonight Rumlng the midmght otl.
cr~tl:\11 (\1ay 21 June 20)
*****Deal "ith someone direct]), c1nd c1llow
greater giH'·and-take. 'rou nught fmd out ho" unpredicl.tble a boss or someone 'ou deal wtth can be
Perhaps you ha\·e been constderu1g taiJng achon. The
time L~ corrung. Tonight Let )Our unagmat.on come
into play.
CANCER (June 21 Juh 22)
*"*** You v.'lll find that otht:rs could be mon:
acoommod.1ting than m the t'eelc"nt pel! l 'lou rrught
not nant to celebrate JUSt yet as .:1 d1 greeiT'en. could
come out of .t relaxed approach Decbton-.; \'OU m lkt:
m the near future could • tick. Tomgh Oumer n 1lh c1
fa\ onte E"rsnn
LEO Uul) 23 Aug 22)
* *"*'* The more\ OU clCOOmphsh, the better 'tOO
n iU feel. A partner could be surprised b) ''hat Is
going to happen The unexpected ah' O) s remmds
\ ou that) ou cannot t'ategonze people, e\ ents ~nd stt
uations. lbnight: S..1rt thrOugh your uwtl,\l!Ons
\'IRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl 22)

,..,..,...,.. 'rou add thclt humor and playfuJne.&gt;s to stt
uabons )our unagmauon delights man~. Rom.mce
1\\ eaks rru !IY of) ou Don't be rigid or dtfficult "hen
dealmg wtth ~ituation,. l:se the attemoon to fO&lt;\h on
\\Orl&lt;.. Torught E\·er playful.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22)
**"*'* Remam ~ure of' ourself. )our sense of
St'\.'lmlv miJ;ht be necessar} to ilrlchor a n ork related
sttu.tbon. t:nderstand what t.:. going to happen \\1th a
cluld or IO\ ed one You might be encourogmg a
\ olab e '&gt;Jtuallon. Tonight: Add more lightness to the
momenL
SCORPIO (Oct 23-!\:o\ ~1)
**'*'* keep wmmurucation rollmg, and be senst
b\c to a child or IO\ed one How \OU \L&lt;;Uahze a Sltu·
alton rould be much different than' ou antinpated
Cnderstanding e\ohes through a chscuss10n. You
could be surpn;ed b) what )OU hear forught: Head
on home
SAGI1TARI(.;S1:--.:o\ 22 Dec 21)
*** Be d\\clre of the lmancidl implimhon&lt;i or
your dt&gt;cmon'&gt;. ) ou might \I ant to rethink plan~
kncmmg that wu. l&lt;Xl,hd1e limiL-., ),,u nught lik~
''hat (X&gt;mes up for Hlu The une.\}'t'Cted occul"i
&lt;~round ) our home ."Thmght: Hook up w1th a friend.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
*****You kn•1\\ what you ''ant .tnd in fact are
qutte ,·,tpable of creating your fair share of uproar tt
need be. Feel free to t~s plans a&lt;;tde if) ou don't like
\\hill IS 01.'\."Urrmg. Your ,oense of humor emeJges out
of the blue Tonisht Treat, ourself on the" a) home
AQUARit.:S (Jan 20-Feb 18)
* ** Though 'ou might be out of &lt;;Orts \ ou can
l"h.mge }our mood i.l , ou gt\ e m to "pontane11\ The
C.."JSt nught be .tn ISSUe at a lc'ltcr pom Keep .,nultng
and remc~u1 open. 'lou ,,,IJ feel better ,md better dS
th del)' ages Ton:,;ht Do onl) \\ hat \ 0\.1 \\ant
J'ISCES feb IQ..Mdn."h 20)
**** t.:w the da\ laght hou~ to the mel~ when
)OU

ft.&gt;t&gt;l a.~ 1f' ou c.m h.aiidle \\-h.ttever comes tn your

darect10n. Be direct \\Jth d triend who IS ah1 a;" there
for }OU ThiS person need." to undn-;tand what L&lt;;
gomg on \I tth }ou. Torught. Some time Jm;l for) our·
~If

�\

Page B6 • fhe Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Wednesday, March 10,

2010

Eagles
from Page Bl
The Green and White
then had to baltic for the
next I\\ o plus quartl'rs to
dig thems~:h ~:~ out of that
hole. \\ hich the hagles ultamatcly ended up doing
when the\ ralhed back for
1our separate lends in the
foua1h before findmg thmgo;
tied up at 44 wtth I :36 left
in regulntion .
After tht' 'lloundo; missed
on their opportunit) to
recapture the lead. EHS
decided to hold for one shot
\\ ith I: IS o;!lll ~hO\\ mg on
the clock.. The f~agles. hO\\e\er. made a major mistake
b) launl:hmg their game'' inning .1ttempt prematurely. \\ hich allmved MHS to
pull in the rebound and call
timeout \\ ith 6.2 sceonds
tcmainmg.
t\lanche;;ter, out of its
timeout. inbounded the ball
to southp&lt;~w guard Ddwson
Little. \\ ho proceeded to
dribble up the left s1de of
the floor. The -.enior
relea.;;ed hts game-\\ inning
attempt from about 23-fcet
av. ay and drew nothing but
net as tame expared
allowing the Gre) hounds to
snap bastern·s 14-game
v. innmg :;trcak and advance
to the di:-.trict championship
on S,nurda'.
The Gre) hounds '- '' ho
are 110\\ 3- I again-.t AP
ranked teams this season ''ill lace third-seeded
Southern ( 17-5) m the district finals on Saturday at
the Como at 3 p.m.
For Eastern coach Howie
Cald,,ell. ruesda) night
\\as a batter pill to S\\ allo\\.
He got the start that he
''anted from his club. but
then it JU"t started falhng
apa11 after thaL
"We jumped out to .1 5-0
lead in the firM quarter ,md
had all the momentum m
the \\Orld •omg ....nd then
e p nacke~t \\ e d1dn t
I \ v. 1th "'omp 1'- re nd
u
\C an .n II
nt d ft~tt. then v. e had to
battle all mght long to final1) get ahead," Cald\\ell
commented "We didn't
pia) \\ Jth the pobe und
character that v.e usually
1d (thts sca-.on) I don't
knov. tf n wa ncr. es or
\\hat t wa-. but we JUst
v.eren't our~el\es. I am dasappomted '' ath thl! loss.''
And of all the thing!'. that
\'went uncharacterisucalh
\\rong forthe Eagles. 1t
the ending that had
Cald\\ ell frustrated the

"'i"

most.

"\Ve held for the fin.tl
shot wtth I: 18 left on the
~lock. If your going to nm
the clock all the "'3) do\\ n
to six seconds. '' hy not ju5.t
go ahead and run it all the
wa) dO\\ n?" Caldwell said.
"And then ,., e g&lt;l\ e them an
opportuntt) to come dO\\ n
and score. We kno..., that
Little is left-handed, and he
dribbled left-handed all the
Wa\ down the length of the
floor.
~
"I ha\e to gi\e him
(Little)" lot of credit. he hit
1t. I just don't understand
what \\C were thinking."
After establishing that 50 lead just 1·43 mto regulation. the Greyhounds countered \\ ith a 17-4 surge to
take a 17-9 ad\ antage after
etght minutes of play. That
MHS lead gre\\ to 26-15
with 2:24 left 111 the second
period. but Eastern closed
the half on a small 4-0 spurt
to enter the Intermission
trailing 26-19.
The Eagle~; \\ere just 8of-30 from the field (27
percent) over the opening
J6 minutes of play. whtle
~ranchester was 12-of-24
shooting overall lor. 50 percent. EHS was 2-o1·9 from
three-poult
range
an~l
Manche~ter ended the first
half 2-of-4 from he yond the
arc. Eastern also committed
five turnovers. one more
than the guests.
"We weren't liharp in the
fir~t half and our ~xecution
was terrible. I mean evcrythmg that we did was like
running up a hill.'' Cald\\ell
said. "We were :\ lot more
tenacious and inten~e in the
second half, ami that \\as
the team I've been mcd to
watc!~mg all the time this

year.
Eastern cut its halftime
defJcat dO\\ n to four on

Sarah Hawley/photo

Southern players (from left) Colby Roseberry, Marcus Htll, Taylor Deem, Andrew
Roseberry, and Ethan Martin applaud as a teammate makes free throws in the final minutes of Tuesday's district tournament contest at the Convocation Center in Athens, Ohio.

Advance
from PageBl
Southern retook the lead.
12-11. at the 2:00 mark on a
Michael Manuel basl\et.
before Ethan Martin converted on a three-point pia)
to put the Tornadoes up by
4. The Jeeps Connor Scou
scored on .1 mo-point field
goal, making the score 15Bryan Walters/photo
13. advantage Southern, at
Eastern's Titus Pierce goes up for a shoot over two the end of the first quarter.
Manchester defenders during the f1rst half of Tuesday
South Web:.ter scored first
evening's district tournament contest at the Convocation in the . . econd quarter. t) ing
Center in Athens, Ohio.
the game at 15. The Jeeps
in
Div
sion
IV
this
,,
inter
took their first lead in nearthree separate occasaon of
1
noted
that
thi~
year's
ly eight minute:; on a Oa\ id
the third quarter. then
pulled to within two points team has been one of the Sutton two, before Southern
(32-30) w1th I:49 left in the most pleasant extleriences knotted thmgs backup at 17.
took a brief lead.
stanza . .M,mche~ter. hO\\ ev- of his professional career. Southern
18 _17 . with 6:04 remaining
er. added a lute basket to He JU'it wished it wa-.n't in
the half. before the Jeeps
take a 34-30 edge into the O\er.
scored six straight to take
fin.tle
''This has been as enjoy- their largec;;t lead of the half
The Eagles ran off hve able a year that 1 ha\ e had at 23-18 \\ ath 4:57 remamstr•.ught points to start the co.tchmg-\H&lt;;e Ill a fe\\ mg m the half.
The
fourth t kmg tls ftrst lead ) ears becau e this group Tom doc-. regamed the
ot the s cond h If ~ath 7 04 \\ i.i'&gt; o ~.; mpetttl\ e and at 1e d .:!4 .:! fol; L w n t
rcmmmng at 35-34 Both really maJe coachmg a real b~ sket
\lla~o.h I !\1
team~ traded baskets and
JO) - both for me and the before
~ uth
\\
one-poult leads O\ er the staft ," Caldwell saad. "They Tre\ or Queen made a t\vo t
never next 24 seconds. then were a lot of fun and gave the.Jeeps the one poant
M liS connected on a free accomplished a lot thao; sea- halftime I ad, 25 24.
The
m.tdoes cored
thro'\ to knot things up at son. The~ "ill be a club that
the .;;econd half
37 with 6:24 left m regula- I \\ill talk about for a long far t t
time. and the) may ha\e ot p
g up 26-::?.5 on a
tiOn.
Eastern led 39 -::.7 '' ith been the best de fens•' e club Tfi\ .or Deem two pomter.
5 29 left and then took 11" J'"Ve coached m u long. long South \\ebc:.ter scored eight
consecutl\e pmnts to take
b1gge t lead of the fourth tame.''
The Eagles - ,., ho \\on its largest lead of the cont4~:39) \\ith 3:58 remaining. but both times the TVC Hocking title w1th test. seven points. at the
Manchester rallted to tte an unblemished 10-0 mark 4:0.:! mark of the third quarthings up. MHS rec.aptured - suffered their second ter. 33-26. South~rn cor~d
the lead .1t 44-42 '' tth 2:41 three-point toss of the eu- the next se\en pom.b to l_!«;
remaining, but then Eastern son, EHS also lost to I the ~a'!le ~t 33 \\:1th I::&gt;.::&gt;
1 remammg m~the thard, quarcountered with a ':mcket at Athens by a 45-42 maroin
~
1 ter, before ~outh \\ eb-.ter
I :36 to agam knot the score back .on Dec~m bcr - 9 • • took a brief lead at 35-33 at
at 44
settmg up the dra- 2009. 111 The Plams.
the 1:42 mark.
The
matic conclusion.
Tornadoe~ regained the lead
fhe Eagles "ere 16-of-59
MANCHESTER 47,
with :57 remaining in the
from the field overall for 27
EASTERN 44
period on a C) le Ree~ twopercent. including 2-of-11
pointer. and lead b) a 37-35
Manchester
17
9
8
13
47
from three-point range for Eastern
:,core at the end of thl' third
9 10 11 14 - 44
18 percent. EHS also outre·
MANCHESTER (14-9) Travis quarter.
bounded Manchester b) a (3)
Southern scored the fir:-.t
Combs 4 1-2 9, Dylan Rickets 1 o-o 2
32-15 margin, including a Dallon West 0 0-0 0. Blake Blevms 6 o- four points of the fourth.
13-2 edge on the offensive 0 15, McKenz1e Smith 1 0-0 2 Dylan concluding a 15-2 run that
Hanson 2 4-4 8 Dawson Litle 5 o-o 11
glass. Eastern finished the TOTALS
19 5-6 47 Three-po nt goals 4 began at the 4:02 mark of
night \\ ith I0 turnover~. (Bievms 3 l.lltle)
the third qum1er. Southern
t\\ ice
as
many
as (1 1 EASTERN (2Q-2) M1ke Jo~nson 2 ne\ cr trailed in the final
1-2 5 JaKe Ly'lch 1 3-4 5. Kelly
Manchester's fhe.
Wu•ebrenner 6 4-4 18 Brayden Pran 1 quarter.. mnscoring the
Kelly Winebrenner led o-o 2 Tltus P1erce 41·2 9, Tyler Hendnx Jeeps 14-7 in the period.
1 o-2 2 Kyle COnnery 0 o-o 0, Devon Scan Coppick scored the
the Eagles wath a game- Baum
1 1-' 3. TOTALS 16 1G-15 44
high 18 points. foliO\\ ed by Trree-po1nt goats· 2 (W•nebrenner 2)
fir~t eight points of the
Tatus Pierce with nine
fourth for the Purple and
stat stlcs!lndivlciualleaders
G 11
·
10 f h , 14
markers. Juke 1.) nch and F10ldTeam
goals M 19-40 ( 475) E 16-59 . JO c .....conng .. ,o . t ~: .
Mike Johnson both added (271) Thrco-po1nt goats M4·8 (500), 1 111 the quarter. \\e teel hke
five pomts in the losing E 2·11 ( 182). Free 1r·ows M 5·6 if \\ e can get Sean going
833) E 1G-15 ( 667)· Total rebounds
I
-h
h'
effort. Winebrenner. Pierce, (M
15 (Bievms 11). E 32 (Lyncl'l 6, t 1at opens ot er t mg~ u~;
Lynch and Johnson arc the P1erce 6) Offensive rcbo1.nds: M 2 he did a great JOb,
evms 21 e 13 (Hendrl~ 3) Ass1sts M Southern head coaeh Jeff
lone semors on the . . quad. 5(8(Sm1lh
4) E10 (Johnson 4), Steals M '
all of whom ha"Ve ~tartcd for 6 (LIItla 3). E 8 (Johnson 3); Blocks M4 Cald\\ ell satd about the pia)
the program m cr the la~t (Blevins 2), E 1 (Wmobrennor). of Coppiel-:.
Turnovers M14, E 11 Team louis. M
Southern wa . . !{-1 0 from
three )Cars.
·
the tree
t h row 1·me ·111 t 11e
Devon Baum chipped in 14 E 10
three, while the duo of
Brayden Pratt and Tyler
Hendrix rounded things out
with t\Hl points. bHS wa . .
also IO·of-15 at the free
throw lin~: for 67 percent.
Manchester \\as 19-of-40
O\ era II from the fiell.l for 48
percent. i nduding 4-of-8
from the ttifecta for 50 percent. The gue!\ls \\ere also
5-of-6 nt the charity stripe
of Identity Theft Last Year·
for 83 percem.
Blake Blevins
the D-4
AP district pia) er of the
Help Protect Yourself Today.
~ear
paced
the
Grcvhounds with a doubler - - - - - - - ..... - - - - - - . ,
double effort of 15 points
1 ao DAY RISK~Ee· TRIAL
I
and II rebounds, folltm ed
....
Q) Little with II points nnd
I
I
' ·Bn -4a, ·4ea ,
Travis Combs \\ ith nine
---------~
marker&lt;;. Dylan Hanson and
\lcKen,~;ie Slllith rounded
oul the rcspl.!ctivc seoring
with eight and two point-..
Cald\\ell
who earned
co-coach of the year h&lt;mprs
1

final period, scoring its final
six points from the foul line.
The Tornadoes took their
largest lead of the contest at
the final buzzer, with the
nine point margin. 51-42.
The 1-3-1 zone defense of
the Tornadoeli forced South
Webster to &lt;;hoot from
three-point range for most
of the contest, where the
Jeeps were 5-17 (.294) in
the game. "I told the guys
the big key was that when
the) got us down 33-26
there in the third lJUa11er we
didn't panic, we lituck with
what we \\-ere doin~. The
kid~ got maybe a httle bit
more 'under control on
offense. lind I think our
~uys showed a lot of poise
m that situation:· Caldwell
stated about the solid play
and attitude of his team
throughout the contest.
Copptck led the \\ay for
Southern \\ ith 17 points, 15
corrung art the econd half.
~11c:hael Manuel cored 14
Rees had eight
rd Zach Manuel
wpointo;.
M,lrtin had three
pomts, Dustin Saber and
lavlor Deem each . . cored
• pomt~. and Andrew
rT) had one point.
ptck also lead the
tn rebounds '' ith
se\en. follov.ed b\ ~1ichael
Manuel and Zach Manuel
v. ith five each and Rees
v.ith four. Ree!\ led the team
m assists \\ tth fiH·. followed by Deem. Coppick.
Michael Manuel. and Zach
Manuel \\ ith t\\ o each.
Michael Manuel had three
steals for the Purple and
Gold. while Copp1ck added
t\\0.
South Web!\ter was led in
scoring b) Wes Loop \\ ith
I7 poinh. Austin Loop had
I0 points. Trevor Queen and
Da\ id Sutton each scared

six points, Connor Scott had
two points. and Josh Wright
added one point.
Southern out rebounded
South Webster 26-21. with
each team having seven
offensive boards.
The
Tornadoes committed tw
.
more turnovers. II. th
South Webster, 9. but committed 11 less f"ills.
Southern had three more
a. . -.b.ts, 14-11. and steals, 74. than the Jeeps in the conte~t.

With the victor\', Southern
will advance to the district
championship for the second consecutive sea~on, folIowinl! a 15 vear absence.
are just real excited
to get that opportunit) to
come back here Saturday
and play," Caldwell -.aid of
his team advancing to the
district championship contest on Saturdav.
Southern ·will
face
Manche~ter. '' ho defeated
Eastern
on
Tuesda'
evening. at 3 p.m. on
Saturday at the Com ocation
Center in Athen .....

··we

SOUTHERN

51,

SOUTH WEBSTER 42 •

15 9 13 14 - 51
S Webster 13 12 10 7 - 42
(3) SOUTHERN (17·5).pyte Rees 4 ()-()
8 Dust n Salser 0 2-2 2 Taylor Deem 1
o-o 2. Sean COpp1ck 5 7-7 17 Ethan
Mal'lln 1 1-2 3 Andrew Roseberry 0 1·2
1. M1chae1 Manuel 5 4·7 14 Zach
Manuel1 2·3 4. TOTALS. 17 17-23 51
Three-pomt goals: None
(1) SOUTH WEBSTER (19-4) Ashton
M1ller 0 0-0 0 Conner Seen 1 o-o 2,
Austin Loop 4 o-o 10 Trevor Oueen 3o0 6 Josh Wright o 1-2 1 Brandon
Malone o o-o 0 Greg Pearso 0 o-o 0
David Sutton 2 2·2 6 Wes Loop 7 o-1
17 TOTALS. 17 3-5 42 Three-pont
goals 5 (Was Loop 3. Aus~" Loop 2)
So!.thOrn.

Team statiStiCs!Tndivfdualleadcrs

Reid goals· s 17-40 ( 425) SW 17-46
(.370). Three·polnt goals· S o-s (000)
SW 5-17 (.294), Free throws S 17-23
( 739) SW 3·5 (.600) Total rebOunds· S
26 (Copplck 7), SW 21 Ol!ens1ve
rebounds s 7 (C0pp1ck 3). SW 7
Ass1sts S 14 (Rees 5) SW 11 Steals S
7 \M chael Manuel 3), SW 4 Turnovers
S 11, SW 9,Team lou s S 7 SW 18

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In Pomero~. OH
12 .:-.ooou • 1 pm
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TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL 1-800-247-261 5
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��PAGE 2

Spring-Summer Emergency Guide

Emergency Contacts
MEIGS COUNTY
Dispatching of local police,
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Department, local fire departments and emergency medical
service is through Meigs County
9-1-1.
Non-emergency
numbers
include:
Columbia Township - 740992-3371
Letart Falls- 740-992-3371
Middleport - 740-992-6424
Pomeroy - 740-992-6411
Portland- 740-992-3371
Racine- 740-992-3371
Rutland-Salem Township 740-992-3371
Syracuse - 740-992-3371
Meigs County Sheriff- 740992-3371
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol - 740-992-2397

GALLIA COUNTY

service is through Gallia County
9-1-1:
Non-emergency
numbers
include:
Gallipolis City Police - 740446-1313
Gallia County Sheriff's
Department - 740-446-1221
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol - 740-446-2433
Gallia County Emergency
Medical Services - 740-446-3126

MASON COUNTY
Dispatching of local police, fire
and emergency vehicles is done
by contacting 9-1-1.
Non-emergency
numbers
include:
Mason County Sheriffs
Department - 304-675-3838
Point Pleasant Police - 304675-1104
Mason Police- 304-773-5201
Mason Fire - 304-773-5832

New Haven Pdre- 304-882-3203
Dispatching of Gallipolis City
Police, Gallia County Sheriff's
Department, local fire departments and emergency medical

New Haven Fire- 304-882-3444
Hartford Police - 304-882-2888
Henderson Police- 304675-5722

I\Ac:11rgi~

LC11WSOM,

J.
DDS

"WE CATER TO COWARDS''

General Denflstry
Hours by appoinnnent
New patients welcome
106 Tree Blvd
Racine, Qhlo
74o-949-2575

-'".!"oo.."~

�Spring-Summer Emergency Guide

PAGE3

Poisons
If a foreign substance is ingested, call your local poison center or
911 immediately.
• The only fluid that should be
administered by mouth before contacting a physician or poison center
is water.
• Neutralization is no longer
recommended for any toxic
ingestion. The heat caused by
mixing an acid and a base in the
stomach could cause more harm
that the effect of the initial poison
itself.
Here's how you can help:
• When a substance is swallowed, give the person water only,
until instructed to do otherwise.
• In the case of skin contact,
wash the area with cool or tepid
water for 20 minutes.

• In case of i~halation, move the
victim to fresh air for 20 minutes.
Take the product or empty bottle to the phone with you so you
can read the label to the staff at
the poison center. Be sure to tell
them:
• What was taken
• When it was taken
• How much was taken
• The age and weight of the victim
Always remember:
If the ingested agent is from a
container, take the container, with
the label intact, to the medical facility treating the patient.

HEALTH MANAGEMENT NURSING SERVICES
QUALI'IY CARE NURSING SERVICES
ULTIMATE HEALTtl CARE

Home Health Care Services

• Registered
Nurses
• Ucensed
Practi~l
NurJes
• Certified Nurse Aides
• Home Health Aides
• Community CPR and Educational Services
• Home Health Care Training

392 Silver Bn'dge PIaza, Galtpo
I' f'IS, OH
740-446·3808
4j5 .Solida Road, South Point, OH
740-377·9095

Quality Care Nursing Services, Inc.
Ultimate Health Care, Inc.
Health Management Nursing Services, Inc.

1-800-759-5383

�����Spring-Summer Emergencv Guide

PAGE 8

Drowning
One of the major causes of death
in America is drowning. Because
they have stopped breathing,
drowning victims can die within 4-6
minutes.
• Begin rescue breathing upon
reaching the victim in the water,
even if several minutes have
elapsed.
• Once on shore, follow the
ABC's of Emergency Action. Move
the head or neck as little as possible because of the possibility of a
broken neck.

• Have someone phone for medical help.
• Don't attempt to drain water
from the victim's lungs.
• If you cannot ventilate after two
attempts, treat as choking and use
abdominal
thrusts
(Heimlich
Maneuver) and continue rescue
breathing.
• Even if the victims seems all
right, insist he/she be seen at an
emergency facility. Near drowning
can be fatal hours after the incident
occurs.

Heat Exposure
Heat Cramps
Due to the loss of body salt
and fluids:
• Cool the victim by moving him
to a cool environment.
• Give salt, one teaspoonful to a
quart of water or a sports drink, to
replace body salts.
• Keep the victim quiet and cool.
• Have the victim evalt.Jated by a
physician.

Heat Exhaustion
Due to the loss of body fluids
and a breakdown of the body's
cooling mechanism.
• Move to a cool environment.
• Attempt to cool the victim down.

• Replace fluids and salts by giving a solution of one teaspoonful of
salt in a quart of water or Gatorade.
• Phone for medical help.

Heat Stroke
A profound disturbance of the
heat-regulatory mechanism characterized by high body temperature and collapse and sometimes
by convulsions, coma and death.
• Move the victim to a cool
environment.
• Cool the victim by applying 9001
towels or sheets to his body.
• Phone for medical help
• Lay the victim flat and elevate
his legs 8-12 inches.
• Keep victim cool until help arrives.

DEPARTMENT OF JOB AND FAMILf SERVICES
CHlLDUHS SEllVICES DIVISION

To Repott Child Abuge &amp; Neglect
1-740-992.g65&lt;i' • 1-&lt;6'00-992-260&lt;6'
Child Abu.!UJ 1-fotline
AlrRnporlr: Rnmaln

Anonytnou~·

1-lol"llnn Optm 241-/N:. A Dlily 7 Dlily£ A Week

for mote information CIJl/
175 Race ~treet, P.O. Box 191 • Middleport, 01-145760
www.meig~djf!J.net

f.lmm: M-T-W-r, ?-4:80
Thut~. ~5: go ~at. &amp; ~un. Clo~ed

�Sprlna-SaDIDI&amp;r E01eraencv Guide

PAGE 9

Heart Attack
Pain, in one form or another,
always accompanies a heart
attack. It can be anything from a
mild ache to unbearable pressure. When severe, pain is often
felt as being constricting and
viselike.
•
Pain may even be described as a
band being tightened around the
chest. Pain also often includes the
burning or bloated sensation that
usually accompanies indigestion.
Pain may be continuous and then
might subside - Do not ignore it if
it does.

Early Warning Signs
None of the symptoms below is
conclusive proof of a heart attack.
The more signs and symptoms
present, the more likely it is that the
patient is undergoing a heart attack.
• Chest discomfort
• Weakness
• Anxiety and denial
• Difficulty breathing
• Nausea and vomiting
• Sweating (cold)
• Paleness

How To Cut The Risk
Studies show that the danger of
heart attack and stroke increases
with the number of risk factors
present.

Risk Factors That
Can Be Changed
• Cigarette smoking
• Diabetes
·Stress
• High blood pressure
• Excessive weight
• High blood cholesterol
• Exercise

Risk Factors That
Cannot Be Changed
• Heredity
• Sex
• Race
• Age
)

How to Survive
a Heart Attack
You can best help - possibly save
a life - if you know in advance;
• The nearest emergency center
equipped to handle cardiac emergencies.
• How to do CPR
• How to get medical help (call 911)

Knowing these
things, you should
• Help the victim to the most comfortable position - usually sitting,
with legs up and bent at the knees.
• Phone for medical help.
• Loosen clothing around the
neck and midriff
• Be calm and reassuring; keep
.
the patient calm
• If the victim is a known cardiac
patient, have him take three nitroglycerin tablets within 10 minutes,
approximately one tablet every three
minutes. If the pain persists ...
• Comfort the victim and be prepared to initiate the ABC's of
Emergency Action.

Vital Signs
Temperature
• Severe factors affect temperature, pulse and respiration. A few are:
Age, health or fitness, emotion and
time of day. Temperatures in infants
and children are slightly higher.
Adult Normals
• Temperature .98.6 F (37C)
• Pulse 60-80 pulses per minute
• Respiration 12-14 breaths per
minute
Blood Pressure
• Normal Systolic is 139 or less:
Borderline is 140-159, and High is
160 or more.
• Normal Diastolic is 89 or less:
Borderline is 90-94, and High is 95 or
more.
• Systolic - Maximum pressure
in blood vessels when heart beats.
• Diastolic - Minimum pressure
in blood vessels when heart relaxes between beats.

���PAGE12

Spring-Summer Emeruencv Golde

Diabetic Coma
and Insulin Reaction
'

If someone becomes confused,
incoherent or unconscious for no
apparent reason, he may be a diabetic who is having an insulin reaction or going into a diabetic coma.
Take Action!
A diabetic reaction is a true
emergency.
.
• Phone for medical help.
Look
for
Medic Alert
Identification.

Diabetic Coma
• Symptoms may come on gradually. The diabetic's skin will be flushed
and dry, his tongue dry, his behavior
drowsy, his breathing rapid and deep,

·

and his breath will have a fruity cxlor
like acetone or nail polish remover.

Insulin Reaction
• An insulin reaction is the result
of a too-rapid drop in the diabetic's
blood sugar level. Symptoms come
on rapidly.
•• The diabetic is sweating and nervous, his breath odor is normal. The
tongue is moist, his pulse rapid, his
breathing shallow. He may be hazy
and faltering . If he is conscious and
can swallow, give some form of sugar
(sugar packet, fruit juice, candy or
sweet soft drinks).

Drug Overdose

Types of overdose may include
prescription drugs , vitamins,
heart medication , alcohol , laxatives, etc . Any time medication is
taken without a doctor's -prescription or is taken without following
directions an overdose has
occurred.
Until Help Arrives:
• Observe the victim
• Cover the victim warmly
• Do not administer liquor or
stimulants
·
Servin~ ~· ou since 1946 with
quality P"-.,.._Tiption scrvit..-e
at con'IJ:H!tith:c prices-

Do not induce vomiting in the
following situations:
• When victim is unconscious.
• When a caustic substance (lye ,
drain cleaner, acid or bleach) has
been ingested.
• When a petroleum product or
any product made from petroleum
distillates has been ingested
(including insecticide, gasoline or
kerosene)
• When the victim is pregnant
• If the victim is drowsy or sleepy
Rus."CIJ St&lt;&gt;ve•· ( . andy
(;r~·ctin~ot

('ards

,Jhn Shore Figurines
LuLu ~~~1ds
f'ull Litu.' of Medical Suf»plicl'o

•

I

�For: exa.,., smaJier switlGS.·.are
meat fOr smaller cHildren CRIU·~·
1 tar.gat Cl'dldren use tttem
MElkt sure c:hilchn cannot reach
lltifrnovtrm'l*1*
might pfnctt or
trap any ooqy part.
Play equrpment sliol,lld be itmaiMd
• l$a$t 6 ~ fr9rn any barriet, sum
as a 'Walt~ce. ~ Shot.ild be

'*

securety~edf0Pr8Wlrt~.
~~anchorS 8hould tiUMa
below the surface d the di1 arid
beneath the fuij depth Of the~

cover Of abSorbent material.

wSfR~~~~:.,

~w· around It

J'W'Qo4 ~nd equi(ii&amp;lit
should be fr.ee of• ,ptinters; all
fences and fJQulptnent shoul4
free of naus that stick out.
Metal slkles expOsed to ~

w

swnlight can bum d\Udren·s haods
and legs:. P~sttc slides a~

Jik,ely ~ ~ bum inb,o:lef.
POsitiOn sRtles In the shade ~r f~
them away frOm the aftemocm: tun.
Sftdes should nave a pl,atform
with rails at the top for chiiGtten to
hold. The sides of the slldt:t should
be 4 inches high.
Make su~e there are no rOcks,
pieces ofglass, sticks, toys, debri&amp;,
or oiler ~ at the base of...a
slide.
These could gal In the way of..a
child landing safely. The cleafe

and safer-,su~d area ~
extinCt :ft:Qit'l"lh61 ~&gt;tit o.f the ~
dfb~ l®~:.to:the
~lldEr'PlUs

# fbt

heigh.tntlltt

�Spring-Summer Emeruencv Guide

PAGE14

Whiplash
What to do?
• Apply an 1ce pack wrapped in a
towel to the affected area immediately. Twelve minute applications
every hour are considered to be
tire most appropriate. Continue this
procedure for 48 hours. In most
cases it may be used longer.
·After 48 hours, moist heat in the
form of hot packs or even hot moist
towels would be mandatory.

• See your chiropractic physician
as soon as possible. He will examine and x-ray your neck to determine the extent of injury and will
chart the appropriate course . of
treatment. Often there are other
body parts injured such as the lower
back, shoulders, and knees. A comprehensive examination will bring
any of these problems to light.
Remember, with prompt attention
and treatment, recover can be speedy
and effective.

Medicine Warning
Remember that drugs do not last
indefinitely. They may lose their
potency, or they may evaporate to
concentrations that can be harmful.
• To prevent deterioration, keep
all bottles tightly stoppered. Keep
medications in a cool, dry, preferably dark place.
• Don't keep any drugs left over from

a previous illness unless advised to do
so by the doctor. Discard any drug that
has changed color or consistency or
becomes doudy. Especially avoid the
use of old iodine, eye drops, nose
drops, cough remedies and ointments.
Keep all medicines, including
non-prescription drugs such as
aspirin, out qf the reach of children.

Moving Injured Victims
Pulling the victim to safety:
Pull the victim either by the feet
or by the shoulders. Protect the
neck from excessive movement
and the head from injury as you
move the person.
lifting the victim to safety:

Check for injuries before lifting
the injured person to safety. All
parts of the injured body should be
supported while lifting. Keep the
body in a straight line, not bent,
during lifting of the victim.

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              <text>March 10, 2010</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
