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                  <text>Fetnale WWII
aviators horiored with
gold medal, A2

ttckeyes head
len ourney, Bt

Middlep o r t • Pomeroy, Ohio

Jobless rates climb in southeast
Ohio
.

OBITuARIES

.

Page AS
• Virginia Ralph

B Y A NDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS@MVDAI~YTRIBUNE COM

·====::...

=

COLUMBUS - \Vhile Ohw's
unemplo) ment rate held ~tNtd) at
10.8 percent from December 2009
to January 2010. the ~ame cannot be
saiJ for local joblc..,s figure~.
The Ohio Department of Job and
Famil) Sen ices rcj)orted that both
t\leigs and Gallia countie~ and, 111
fact. all counucs in Ohio'~ Sixth
Congressional D1stnct experienced
increases 111 uncmplo) ment in
Januar). Me1gs Count)·~ JObless

SPORTS
• District 13 basketball
teams ar:mounced.
See Page 81

rate cltmbed 2.3 percent from 15.4
in December 2009 to 17.7 in
January. About 1.700 Meig!; residents are currently without \\Ork.
The county'~ total workforce i-. estimated at 9,600 re:sidents.
Galha County's jobless rate
jumped from 10.5 percent in
December to 11.9 percent for
January, nn increase of I .4 percent.
About 1.700 of Gallia'::. estimated
\\orkforce of 14,400 residents are
currently unemployed .
By comparison, in January 2009,
l\.leigs County's unemployment fig-

ure \\as 14.4 percent. while Gallia'f.
was 8.5 percent.
The following i&lt;; a list of count1e~
in southeast Ohio with January
20 I 0 and December 2009 johless
rates included·
• Athens - Jan. 9.5; Dec. 9.0
• Hocking- Jan. 13.3; Dec. 12.1
• Juchon- Jan. 13.0: Dec. 11.6
• Lawrence - Ian. 9.6: Dec. 7.9
• Morgan - Jan. 18.5: Dec. 16.4
• Perl) -Jan. 16 2: Dec. 14.2
• Picka\.,a\
Jan. 13.3; Dec.
12.2

•

• Ross
hn. I ~.8; Dec. 12.9
• Scioto
Jan. 14.9, Dec. 13.7
• Vinton -Jan. 16.0; Dec. 14.2
• Washington
Jan. 11.6: Dec.
9.8

Following is a Jist of jobless fig
ures for other counties m Ohio's
SIXth Congre&lt;;sional Di~trict w1th
Januar) and December rates
included:
• Belmont- Jan. 12.1; Dec. 10.1
• Columbiana
Jan 14.8; Dec.
13.7

• Pike -Jan. 18.0; Dec. 16.5

Buckley
retiring as
Meigs Local
superintendent

Barner, Carper
headed to
prison for child
exploitation
B Y B RIAN

J.

B Y C HARLENE H OEFLICH

REED

HOER.ICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BREED@MYOAILYScNT NELCOM

PO~IEROY

t\

Pomeroy man alre,tdy serving eight )ear" for pandering child pornography was
sentenced to 19 and a half
)Cars ~1onday on additional
pandenng charges
Another, a regt-;tered !'.exual predator. has .tdm.tted
he had inappropn, te contact
with .m etght year old boy
,md \HII go back to pnson.
Common Plea.-. Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III
ruled that D,tvid Barner.
49. formerly of Mudfork
Road, could not '' ithdra\\
arlene Hoefllchfphotos
the guilty plea to pandering
B1rd watch1ng 1s a favonte act•v y
any 1ncludmg l1 da ates, left, and Ann
child pornography he
Lambert talktng here to naturalist J M Fry about 1dant1fymg b,rds
entered m August. 2009.
Barner had filed a motion
to \\ ithdra\\ his plea l.1te
la~t ye.tr.
Barner was returned from
the state pnson where he io;
sef\ mg an etght )Car sentence for pandering obscenlt) irn ol \ mg a minor
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen S. Willir ms said
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
Barner filed a motion to
HOE LICH@MYDAI:.YSENTINEL COM
withdraw hiii earlier plea of
~mlty to pandering obscenMIDDLEPORT - It was apparent b)
Ity invoh ing a minor and
the large crowd attending the Riverbcnd
two additional counts of
Arts Council's program Tuesday mght
the "ame oflense. one count
on "The Art of Bird Watching'' that it'&lt;&gt; a
of pandering sexuall) -orifa\orite fonn of entertainment here.
ented material ill\olving a
Naturali~t Jim rry enlightened those
minor. and gros~ ~cxual
attending on the ,·ariety and habits of
imposition. .
.
Cro\\ dented Barner s
birds m Ohio in a colorful slide presenmotion to '' 1thdraw h1s
tation with creati\e narrative.
I plea of last August, and
Fry, \\hose career was as a naturali"t
sentenced Barner to 19 and
With the Columbus .\tetra Parks, also About 30 patntrngs of birds on display
a half )Cars on the remain\\rote for man) ) ears .1 nature column complemented J1m Fry's slide presentaing counts.
for the Columbus Dispatch. He i" credit- tion on birds of Ohio.
Barner's arre"t and coned '' 1th settmg a new state record for
viction is the result of un
bird "pecies o;een in Ohio, 28) in 1978.
created in -.,e\er.ll mediums b) loc,ll
investi••ation b) Williams'
FoliO\\ ing his slide show. the geni,ll artists. There \vas also a d1..,pla) of bud
office e and the sheriff's
Fr) not onl)' took questions but later feeder'&gt; and bnd houses, se,eral built b)
dcpurtment. The
case
mingled \\ 1th the audience to talk about local woodworkers. others donated b)
against Barner beg&lt;H1 last
area merchants. auction~:.d off to help
his fa,orite subject -birds .•
vear with the disco\ery of 11
Complementing hi~ presentation was defra) costs of bringing the naturalist to
videotape which depicted
an exhibit of about 30 paintings of birds Meigs Count).
children under 10 &gt;ears .of
age in a state &lt;ll nu~1ty
bcin" directed to act out m a
sexl~tl manner. Williams
1
said.
She secured a search warrant and officers ~ciLed
computers which contained
images or obscene a!1d
porno"raphic
matenal
SchooL, ''ere both rehtred school ) ear \\'ere S) h ia
B Y C HARLENE HOEFLICH
mvoh ing children.
1 HOEFLICH@M'r'OAILYSENTINEL COM on four-\ car contracts cffec- ~1ickunas,
~lichal'l
John Eugene Carper. 54. I
the at "the e:-.:pirat1on" of Ramthun and Hden Slack .
appeared before. Cn!w
POMEROY
The con- their current contr~K'ts at a
The Bo.trd appnwed b)
Wednesda) to adnut he VIO- tracts of several emplo) l'es salan estahlished h\ thl' re-..olution ac~.'epting the
lated the terms of his parole
administrative positions admii1i~trathe salan ;ched- ,unounh and rates as dett'rby sending a vale.ntine to an in
in the l'vleigs Local School uk current!\' in· effect. mined t) the Courit)
e1ght year-old chtlu and. by District were e\tended dur- Given a three" year contract Bud1!et Commis-,hm .lllthohi&lt;; udmis~ion . mcetmg the mg Tuesday night's meeting e\tethion on hi-.. current
rizu1g the necessary ta\
child. lie 'dll go back to of the i\ teigs Local Board of contract wa-., D:l\ id Deem le\ ies and ce11if) ing tlwm
prison for an additional two Education.
a~ ~ I iddle School ns-.i-.,tant
to the count\' auditor for fi-..year~ because he had conOn recommendation of principal.
cal \Car 20i I. A-. listed h)
tact with a child i•~ violation Superintendent William
Kellv Lambert \\as hired. Mar:k Rhonemus. trcasurof the terms of ht'&gt; rdca-.e, Bucklcv, Rust) Bookman abo on a fh e \ear contract
er/CFO, the are General.
•tnd becau~c he did not com- was re-employed a-. federal as El\.IIS cootdinator: and
3.lW mill~ {inside). and
;)ly \" ith the in\tructions or funds coordinator on a Karla Brown as spl'l'lal
16.20 mdb (Olllsldl' his parole officer
fi\'e-vear contract effective education coordinator on a \ oted). bond retirl'ment
Carper'-; . .
a!torney, ut the expiration of hb cur- four year contract. hoth
k\ \ .2.l)0 mills (Hlted) and
Christopher renogl ta. told rent contract.
cflcl·ti\e at the e\piration IK\\· building capital mainCnnv Carper admitted to
Ste\'C Ohlinger, principal of current contracts.
tcnanCL' le\ \. .50 milh
hoth allegations against
In other actwn the Board (n1ted)
of Meigs High S~ho~ll, and.
·
him. hut said he wi II never Darin Logan, pnrll'lpal of hired as sub-.,tillltc teachers
Please see Contract, AS
Please see Exploitation, AS the Meigs Intermediate for the rl·nmindcr of the

THE ART

I NSIDE

(

Bird Watchin

• Engineer dad wants
to tra1n baby too soon.
See Page A3
• Rio Grande students
study flying squirrels.
See Page AS
• Taste of Home
Cooking School.
See Page AG
• URG/RGCC career
fair set for March 30.
See Page ~6

·~=--W EATHER

!

Contract extensions given
to administrative personnel

High: Mid 60s.
Low: Lower 50s.

.INDEX
2 S EC I IONS- 12 PA&lt;a~&lt;;

Calendars

A3

· eds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sport s

B Section

, :ww Ohiu \'aile}·

Publi~hing

liJ!IJI,I !I!1.11!II
..

Co.

Please see Rates, AS

POMEROY - W11liam
L. Buckle) is, retiring as
superintendent of the !\te1g"
Local School Di-.,trict, a
po~ition he has held for the
past 17 ) ears.
The effecth e date of h1s
restgnation for
retirement
purposes
is Aug. 1.
2010. His
re:-.tgnation \\a:accepted
bv
the
Buckley

:vie i g s
L o c a I

Board of
Education
at Tue&lt;.day
night's meeting held at the
Meigs Elementary School.
Highlights of the -.chool
distnct 's progress under
Buckley 'f;
leader~hip
mclude the con-.,olidation of
the
c;e\ en
elementary
schools and the initiation of
n $33 million butldmg project m 2000 to include con"truction of ne\\ clementar)
,md middle -.,chool buildinp
and rena\ at ion of Meig"
Hi!!h School. all of ''hich
\\ e~e completed in 2004.
Also built Juring th.tt
time '' ith the remamder of
fund-. from a perm,ment

Please see Buckley, AS

Last meeting
on Seaford
fire levy
B v BETH S ERGENT
BSERGEI'l..@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

D \RWJ:'\' - The propo-.,ed three milll'Ontmuo~"
fire protection lc') Ill
Bedford Town~hip h~"
become a hot top1c lor rc-.,tdents on both side-., of the
issue but ,1\ ' ' tth an) i"~ue.
the bc"t &lt;kcision is an
mfonned dect..,ton \\ hich j..,
''hat the last of three informattOil&lt;ll meeting~ hope" to
tiCCOlllpli"h.
The third and final informatit,nal met'tin1! on the
fire protection le~) begins
at 7 p m .. Tuesda\. l\larch
16 at Carleton Cl1llrch on
Kingsbur) Road. fhe meetin~ at Carleton Church ''as
original!) -.,cheduled for
Feb. 9 but had to be can~.-eled. due to inclement
'' eathcr.
,
According to those orgalllLlll''::&gt;
tl1e • meeting-.,:
"BcdfNd restdents are
encouraged to attend to
!cam llh'l't' a~out protecting
thc1r -.,afet) and pr&lt;.'lpC11) 'ia
the k' '. '' hich "ill be
'oted nri during the primar)
election on .Ma) 4.''

Please see Bedford, AS

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March n,

2010

Math and English classes
could be standardized

Olivier Douliery/Abaca PressiMCT

Members of the ~omen Airforce S~rv1ce Pilots (WASP) who served during World War II attend a Congressional Gold
Medal ceremony rn the1r honor at the Capitol Visitor's Center in Washrngton D.C. Wednesday.

Female WWII aviators honored with gold medal
BY KIMBERLY HEFLING

SEA'I~fLE
(AP)
Governors and education
leaders on Wednesday proposed sweeping new school
standard!) that could lead to
stt!dents across the country
us111g the same math and
l:nglish textbook&amp; and takmg the same tests, replacing
a patchwork or state and
local sy~tems in an attempt
to raise student achievement
nationwide.
But states must first adopt
the nC\\ ngorous ~tandards,
and implementing the standards on such a large scale
won't be easy.
Two states - Texas and
Alaska - have already
refused to join the protect,
and everyone from ~tate
lcglslatllrcs to the nation's
10,000 local school boards
and 3 million teachers
could chime in with their
opinions.
The public i~ invited to
comment on the rropo~ed
nev. standard., unti April 2.
and the developer'&gt; hope to
publish final education
goals for K-12 math and
l~n~lish in May.
The state-led effort was
coordinated by tl)e National
Governors Association and
the Council of Chief State
School Officers. Experts
were called in to do the
writmg and re.,earch. but
state education officiab and
teachers from around the
nation
\Vere
acti\ely
invohed.
After the standards are
complete. each state will
:-ttl! ha\e to decide whether
to adopt them as a replacement for their existin!! education goal!&gt;.
~
The stakes could be h1gh.
President Barack Obarna
told the natwn'&lt;. governor:-.

WASPS Hutchison. R-Texas, and
Thirty-eight
v.ho had been sitting m a
wheelchair stood up and were killed in !&gt;ervice in Barbara i\likulski. D-Md ..
Mtluted through the entire World War I I. But they along with Reps. Ileana
WASHii\GTON
The) song as a relative gently were long considered Civil- Ros-Lehtllll'n, R-Fia., and
flew planes during World supported her back.
Ians. not members of the Susan Davis, D-Calif., led
War II but \\ eren 't consid•·women Aiiforce Service miliwry. and thus were not the push in Congress to get
ered real military pilots. No Pilots, we are all your entitled to the pay and ben- the women recogni;ed.
!lags were draped O\er their daughters; you taught us cfih given to men.
. Hutchison noted at the
toffins when the) died on how to tlv," said House
They were only afforded ceremonv that when the
dut\'. And v. hen their scr- Speaker Nimcy Pelosi, the veteran status 1n Jl)77 unit was disbanded in
vic~ ended. they had to pay first \\oman to sene as nfter a long fight. It's esll- I 1)44. man' of the women
their 0\\ n bus fare home.
Speaker of the C.S. House matcd that about 300 of had to pay·from their O\Vn
These aviators
all of Representatives. She said the more than I .000 bus fare home from an airwomen - got long-overdue the pilots \\ ent unrccog- WASPs arc snll alive.
111
Sweetv.ater.
field
recognition on Wednesdav. nitcd for too long. e,·cn
A day earlier, the vmmcn Texas. \Vhen some died on
1'hev
received
the thou!?h their sen ke blazed participated in a wreath- duty. it was fellow female
Congressional Gold Medal, a trml for other ''omen 111 laying ceremony at the aviators who helped pa)
the highest civil\an honor the l'.S. militarv.
U.S. Air Force Memorial their funeral expenses, she
given by Congre ... s, in a cerIn accepting· the award, w1th the knowledge that it said.
The Congressional Gold
emony on Capitol Hill.
WASP pilot Deanie Pamsh, may be one of the last
About 200 \\omen \\ ho 88. of Waco, Te'l.as, said the times so many of them Medal \\as av.arded in 2000
:;erved as Women Airforce women had volunteered could gather. Killen said it to the ~a\ ajo Code Talkers
Service Pilot!&gt;. or WASP.,, without expectation of was the "gals \\ ho are and in 2006 to the Tuskegee
were on hand to receive the thnnh. Their mission was watching from upstairs" Airmen.
Despite the danger and
award. Now most!) in their to fly noncombat missions she's been thinking of.
"1 reallv don't ~care for obstacles thev faced. the •
late 80s and early 90s. some to free up male pilots to 11)
publicH) but what I really women m inter\ iews fondly I R0.\1E (AP) - Googlc
came in wheelchairs. man\ O\erseHS.
"We did it because our do core about 1s the 900 or recalled the camaraderie said Wednesday it ..... ill scan
sported dark blue uniform~.
up to I million old books in
and one. June Bent of count!') needed us.'' Parrish more that &lt;~rc already dead they shared
"It wa~ fun coming into a 1 national libraries in Rome
and gone and have not had
Westboro. t-.1a ... s.. clutched a said.
WASP Ty Hughes Killen, the cogni;.nncc and recogni- strange airport and having and Florence, including
framed photograph of a
mechanics
say. work...
by
astronomc~r
85. of Lancaster, Calif., put tion that I feel thev &lt;.hould the
('omrade who had d1ed.
As a military band played it more !&gt;imply· "We're a have for their families,'' 'Where's the pilot?"' said Galileo Galilei, in \\hat':Doroth.v Eppstein, 92, of heine described as the first
"The
Star-Spangled bunch of tough old ladies," Killen ... aid.
dea(of its kind.
Kalamazoo,
Mich.
Sen:-.
Ka).'
Bail~y
Banner," one of the v.omcn she said in an interVIew.
Officials from Google and
the Italian culture ministrv
said 1t wa~ the first time
Google Boob and a culture
ministrv ha\ e had such a
ASSOCIATED PRESS

lust month that he wants to
make money from Title I the federal government's
big!!est school aid program
- contingent on adoption
of college- and careerreading and m&lt;tlh
Already, the federal
crnment has opened bi
for $350 million to work on
new national tests that
v. ould be g1vcn to students
in state-; that adopt the
national standards.
But some critics v.orry
the rederal government,
which is enthusiastically
watching the project but not
directing it. will force them
to adopt the results.
"Texas has chosen to preserve its .,overei!!n authoritv
to determine what is appropriate for Texas children to
Jearn in its public !&gt;Chools,"
Robe11 Scott, 1exas' commisswner of education.
wrote in a letter to U.S. Sen.
John Comyn. R-Texas. "It
is clear that the first step
toward nationalization of
our schools has been put
into pla...:e:·
The Bill &amp; Melinda
·"'
Gates Foundation. whic ~
helping pay for the ef~
believes most states \\
value the new national
standards.
Vicki L. Phill1ps. dtrector
of foundatiOn\ K-12 education program. :-aid every
state she's talked to thinks
hi!!h :-chool achie\·ement
isn't high enough and that
more students need to !!raduate ready for college.~
"The standards make
those aspirations concrete
and tangible." Phillips said.
One state. Kentucky.
already adopted the standard., in February. before
the process was complete.

Google to digitize old books
from Rome, Florence
I
boob m the
city's
libran.
I
He \aid di!!itiz.ing
Ttt~can

from before l868 \~'ill h
spread
Italian
cui
throughout the world.
Googlc will co\ er the
costs of the scannim'! of the
books, all of them~out-ofcopyrig~t Italian works.
includin!! 19th-centun· literature and 18th-centur) scientific volumes.
The
Italian libraries
(
partner~hip.
alreadv ilad embarked on
The fir:-t case in this .,aJ
said she wome., that the prac- · 'They ask, 'Did thi~ memCulture .:vfinistr) official their own project to put
monella outbreak v.as ticc could lead to a switch ber purcha~e products A. B Mario Resca sa\ s the deal their collections online. and
reported last :-ummer, and from a voluntary sy...tcm to or C in this time frame?' and will help saw the books' so far digital catalogues of
by t'\ovember. CDC investi- mandator: usc of such cards. \\ e tell them. ·Yes. they did· content forever and noted !&gt;Ome 285 .000 book titles
gators were examming a
"That sends chills down or 'l\o. the) didn't.'"
that the 1966 Florence and other information haYe
my spine,'' :-.he said.
Supermarkets !!eneraJJv. flood ruined thousands of been created.
multistate cluster of cases.
Through interviews and
Some stale and local will supply infon11ation to
questionnaires. im estiga- h~alth agcncie&lt;; have used health authoritie... if custor:-. suspected some kind of shopper card., to trace cases tamers consent. said Jill
Italian meat was the culprit. of food poisoning. Before Hollingsv.:orth. \icc presibut pet~ple couldn't remem- this outbreak. the CDC had dent of food safetv at the
ber what brand the) bought, tried it a few times. too, but Food Marketing Institute, a
Rchravesh sa1d.
wi_thout :-ucccss. Bchra\ esh trode group t'or groceries in
So the CDC a~ked super- said.
the U.S.
markets for certaill bu) ing
Some supenmukets have
Bruce Chassv. a food
at the
information on ~e\ en 'ic- also u-.ed shopper-card ..,afety profes ...
tims in Washington stttle. information to JlOtif) ell!&gt;- University of lllinois at
focusmg on suspect prod- tomers by letter or automat- Urbana-Champaign. said he
ucts rather than everything ed telephone call that a is intrigued by the new
the customers had bought. product they bought ha:- means of tracing food-poi...oning ca~es. He noted it
Rchravesh said. "We didn't been recalled.
care about the brand of totHealth authorities II) ing to can be extremely difticult to
let paper people were buy- trace the source of a food- get to the bottom of outin!!,'' !:ihe !&gt;aid.
poisoning outbreak typically breaks cau~ed b) relatively
Of tho:-.e :-even people. ask 'ict1111s what they minor ingredients.
•Free for 3 Months -15 Movie Channels Including
li\e had bought Italian bought and what they ate.
"Cantaloupes and eggs arc
meat-; made by the Rhode But without n.:.:ciph or other ca.,y," he said. "The fact that
Island company. Daniele hard evidence, thev often it\ onl) an incrcdient in
1ntcrnational
lne.. find them~elves at the mercy products in other~things. that
Behravesh ~aid.
of people\ mcmones.
makes it really hard to track."
•Lowest All-Digital Price Nationwide!
Further imcstigation Sc\'Crallarge ... upermarkct
J. Kathryn ~lacDonald.
including the use of data chain~ did not respond to an epidemiologist with the
* Tho MOST HD Available! Over 150 HD Channels!
from other\ Jctims' shopper reque!&gt;t'&gt; for comment on Wa.,hington state Health
cards - pointed to salami health investigators' use of Department who worked on
made by Daniele and. more "hopper ...:ards. but Costco the salmonella outbreak.
-;pecttically. the imported - where Cirimele bought such some advocates' pmapepper it \Va~ ~:oatcd in. mcdt th.tl wa:-o Iuter recalled cv t'car:-o arc unfounded.
!'hat came from l wo spi1.'e - said it provided data to
·'This is not being used as
suppliers in New York and the CDC once customers a tool for open-ended
!"ew .Jersey. All three com- gave their OK.
trawltng through many
"In this instance. we actu- re...:ords hoping to find
panics have since recalled
~ome products.
ally v.orkcd WI) closely something."' M!tcDonald
'l11e CDC would not say with the CDc:· said said. "The records are treathow many patients gave Christine Summers. the ed with the same level of
access to the1r accounts or Issaquah. W.t~h .. chain's confidentiality as would
were asked to do so. but director of food safety. medical records"
Behrnvesh said mn..,t agreed.
":VIost of the time when a
person gets real I) sick with a
Taking Applications
fbod-horne pathogen. they're
verv happy to talk with us
ami tr; to help out with th~
HUD Subsidized
invest1gauon.' ..,he said.
Efficiency/1
Bedroom
Some privacy ad\'ocate'&gt;,
h 50yrs or qualifying disability
though. arc troubled.
Lor1gtime shopper-c.ml
~,,ALL ~
Low income priority
criti1.· Kathennc Albrecht.
UllUlltS
7 40-992-7022
director of a group called
ARt
pAl~
Silverheels
Against
Consumers
SupcnnarJ...ct
Privacy ! !~/;'-"'"" A Realty Company-EHO
Ill\ a~ ion and Numbering.

CDC uses shopper-card data to trace salmonella
BY DAVID MERCER
ASSOCIATEDPAESS

CHAMPAIGN. Ill. - As
they scrambled recently tn
trace the source of a !&gt;almonella outbreak that has sickened hundreds around the
countrv. investigator'- from
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention successfully used a new tool
for the fir~t time - the
shopper cards that millions
of Americans swipe e\ery
time they buy grocerie!&gt;.
With permis'&gt;ion from the
patients, investigators followed the trail of grocery
purchase~ to a Rho'de bland
company that makes salami.
then zeroed in on the pepper
used to season the meat.
Never before had the
CDC successfully mined
the mountain of data that
supermarket chains compile.
''It wa:- really exciting. It
was a break in the investigation for sure," CDC epidemiologist Casey Barton
Behravesh !&gt;aid.
At least 245 people in 44
states have been sickened in
the outbreak. That includes
30 in Culifornw. IIJ in
11Jinois, 18 in New York and
17 in Washington state.
The victim'&gt; included
Raymond Cirimele, a 55year-old Chicago man. lie
~aid no one asked for h1s
shopper-card &lt;.lata, but he
would have provided it if
someone had.
"1 don't have anv secrets.
so I'm not worried.about it."'
he said. "lt's kind of liJ...e the
· whole a1rport ~ecurity and
all 'that. I'd rather fly on a
safe plane."
Shopper cards have been
around for more than a
decade. offerin~ customers
discounts ,in exchange for
letting supennarJ..:cts track
their buyinrr habits. The
cards are u...~l to build customer loyall) and help
stores market the1r products .

•

or

The Maples

ji

m.-

t

..

�.. ..........

..

--------------~----------·----- --------------------~~--~------------------

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

Pa

·The Daily Sentinel

st.ut" to 1adc " bit. doesn't

docsn 't knm\ ho\\ to fmd 1t

11! 1 h1s toilet-training Issue

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
.md I .tre a bit ol .tn
couple. becau-;c I .tm
.. ,. ce sptnt" I) pe and he
t'i more of a methodical.
engineet ing I) pe So I !'lle~s
I shouldn't be too surprised
that \\C 'Jta\C had lots or
cl.tshcs 0\er how to r.tic;e
our bab) dau~hter. The lat
est thing i~ dm mr me nut-..
He inststs on 11) mg to
potty tram her '' ath a stt ict
rcgunen of rule~ and procc
&lt;lures, and I s.t) let her ".ut
ttll -;he ~~ read) • .ts I ha\ e
heard it' caster then. Ho''
do I oct hun to b,tck off on
this?- J.C.
Dear J.C.: It"s too bad
that )OU and ) our hu~b.md
ha'e .;.u~.,h dtflcrcnt tempera
ments. I thmk the old ••dare
of "opposites attrc1ct" ma)
'Cf) "ell be ttuc ''hen pCO"
pie are ftN datmg
C\Cf)thmg about the other pet son
that seems a btl exotic 01
different rnakeo;; him or her
more interc ting. But when
'ou st&lt;~rt hm tng chtldt en
,j "ant to prc.,ent that
•
.!al common f10nt, the
allure of being oppo ite-;

rntght be followed b) all
sort" of clashes, and your
child could end up very con
fu~ed &lt;~bout "hose v,dues
(.llld instl1.1l:tJOns) she should
foliO\\, And if \ou aren't
cnrcful, there coukl end up
hl'ing a lot ol urgtung 111
)'OUr hou-.chold - which
tsn't \Cry goou for an) one.
So I suggest ) ou both take
some parentmg classes or
'' atch some 'tdeos together
th.ll could spark a dio;;cusaon on your parentmg
st) b. .md ho'' to blend
them more easil). The tOJ
let traming assue is J good
one to ~&gt;tart '' llh. because
)'OU can find plent) of
,unmunitton out there that
should sohdlf) the idea that
letting
children
\vOrk
through the1r hfe ..tage.,
\\ ithout pressure 1s the better "U) to go - and 1f ) ou
'',lit until pre~chool, she
may just folio\\ the other
kids' lead, and )OU \\on't
hmc to do .1 thing. Sugge~&gt;t
that your husband ~md bab)
spend ume domg fun things.
He may just be searching
for a \\U) mto her \\Orld and

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I run
so fntstmtcd wtth my son
that I am tcacv to s\.:rcam~
He ts one of thc'ic 1-Jds who
no, days.
spends hotu:o.
week.,, months .•tctu.llly
in hio; room practac111~ He
pr.tcttccs everything from
o;;ingmg .tnd d.1 1cmg to read
ing monolo •ues to pl,1yu1r
the guttur
) ou tMme it.
He i., a \ e1 y t&lt;llcnted teen.
but he has .11\\ays refused to
taJ..c lessons of .In) sort or to
perform an an) public
\et:uc. C\en for t,mul)
NO\\ the cl ••,s pia) ts commg up. and he .., on 't If) out 1
Help' - \\.!\1.
Dear \\ ,I\ 1.: It must be
vcr) troubling lor ) ou to
kno\\ th.1t )OUr son has so
man) t.llcnts but chooses to
h1de lm light under 1barrel,
as the old sa) ing •ocs He
sound ... lake a \Cr) stubborn,
talented hoy who hear" the
beat of .1 d1J I e1 ent dnunmer
.mel doesn't have any mten11011 of getting in line an)tllne soon. In tact, I'd \en
tute to say th.tt if )OU can
step back " btt, tukc a deep
breath und let ham do his

...

Meigs County Forecast

Local StockS

Thm· du~ ...Cloud) ..Sho
\\ers .. \1,unl) 111 the after
noon. Htgh m the mad 60&lt;&gt;.
East \\ md~ .mnmd '\
mph .. Bccommg ~outheast
in the afternoon. Ch.mce of
ram 80 percent.
Thur·sda) night ...Mostl)
cloud). Sho"ers ...~ntnl) m
lhe e\ening. LO\\., m the
lower 50&lt;; South \\ inds 5 to
I 0 mph Chance of ram 80

AEP (NYSE)
34.15
Ak,zo (NASDAQ) - 56.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.52
Big Lots (NYSE) - 35.88
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 30.78
BorgWarncr (NYSE) - 36.71
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

pen:~nt

Frida) ...J&gt;, rtl) ... unn) 111
thl:
1m n . Th n becom
t '
Ud) A ch.m c
\\Jih &lt; It ht
t t undcro;torm
n the· upper 60s
~t w md., around 5
C han~.e of ram 50 per
Frida~ night ... Shower-;
hkel) "tth a '&gt;li ht chance
of
und storm-. 111 the
Then
showers
n ht
111 the
Southe st '' m(h

Lo'""

eA3

5 to I 0 mph. Chance of rain
80 pen:ent.
Saturda\ ...ShO\\ ers like
I) Cooler With highs in the
upper 50s. Chance of ram
70 percent.
Saturda)
night and
Sunda) ...Sho\\ers likel;.
J ows around 40. Highs 111
the IO\\er 50s. Chance of
ram 60 pcrcent.
Sunda) night. ..Cloud)'
\\ tth a 40 percent chance of
ho\\crs l..o\\S in the upper

30.,
1\londa) ... Nio tly doud)'
the
mornmg .Then
be.:ommg partl) &lt;; nn) \
40 petcent chan\,;e of "hO\\
cro;; Highs in the lo\\er 50 .
'1onda~ night ...~1ostl)
cloudv m the e\ ening ...Then
becorrung partl) ~cloud).
L.o\\:. m the mid 30.,
Tuesda~
through
\\cdnesda) ...Partl) cloud).
Htgh .. m the mid so~ LO\\..,
111 the mid 30s.
111

2010

Community Calendar

Engineer dad wants to train baby too soon
DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

~

'J1narsday, :M arch u,

A S K D R_ . l3 R. C) T H I ItS

BY

~

- 14.99
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.30
Channing Shops (NASDAQ) - 6;59
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.69
Collins (NYSE) - 60.90
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.20
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.96
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.51
Harlcy·D~vldson (NYSE) - 26.96
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 42.93
Kroger (NYSE) - 2215
Limited Brands NYSE) - 23 49
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)
53.87
Oh o Valley Bane Corp. (NA5-

thmg. he rna) be read)
to mtroducc h1mself in the
ncx.t few year.;,. a!'. he gets
older or goes of1 on hts own
tn college or a career. It may
be that he's a perfectiom!-.t
and he isn't qu1te ready. o1
he may be shy or immature
c~nu just needs some time to
gnl\\ into h1c; abtlities.
But what he doesn't need
i., a lot of prc~sure ftont his
lamil) to get out there &lt;1nd
perform. Since you are so
mcredibh fru.;,trated -- .md I
can't sa) '1 b ame )OU. as )OU
JUst want the bo) to be able
to reap o;;ome rc\\ard'&gt; from
all hi" hard \\ork
I thmk
) ou need to tf) to back off a
bit and come to tern1s \\ ith
reality. He ma) ne\er perfoml in public. and &gt;ou need
to accept this and go on,
tre.lttng him "ith lo\ e and
respect. If he begins to feel
you are support1ve of whale\ er path he chooses to take
with hi-, m~.ny talents, you
\\ill be betteroffns .. family.
Stop talking about the play.
and just let hm find his own
wa) - it might e\ en lead to
the audttron room.
(c) 2010 bv King Feat/llt;S
O\\ 11

S) ndicate

Public meetings
Thursday, March 11
WELLSTON GalliaJackson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
Waste District Board of
Directors
Executive
Comm1ttee, 3 p.m., full
board at 4 p m., distnct
office, 1056 New Hampshire
Avo., Wollcton.
Tuesday, March 16
POMEROY
lnformationil meettng on
proposed three-mill contmuous ·f,re protection levy for
Bedford Township, 7 p m ,
on
Carleton
Church
K•ngsbury Road.

Church events
Thursday, March 11
POMEROY- Dee Rader
speaks at 7 p.m.. St. Paul
Lutheran Church, as Metgs
County
Mimstenal
Association's commun1ty
Lenten program contmues.
Friday, March 12
LONG BOTIOM - Hymn
sing with OASIS ,7 p.m .,
Faith Full Gospel Church
Thursday, March 18
MIDDLEPORT - Heath
United Methodist Church,
free commumty dmner,
4.30-6 p.m , spaghetti,
Texas
toast,
desserts,
refreshments

TUPPERS PLAINS - r
VFW Post 9053 meets at 1
p m. wath d1nner served a1

6:30.

.

POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters 11 :30 a.m. at the
new Beginmngs United
Method1st
Church
Hostesses, Velma Rue anCI
Eleanor Thomas
SYRACUSE - Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p m. at
the Syracuse Community
Ce~e~
·
Saturday, March 13
POMEROY
Chnsttar:~
Motorcycle
Assoctatton
regular meetmg 5 p m
Common Grounds
Monday, March 15
POMEROY Regular
meetmg
of
Pomeroy
Chapter 186 Order of
Eastern Star 7 30 p m. wJt
refreshments at 6.30 p
and mock tnttra.tlon.
Tuesday, March 16
CHESTER - Daughters
of Amenca, Chester Counc11
323, 7 p.m. at the hall. Good
of order to have refresh'ments and auction. Take
items for auctton

m.

Youth events
DAQ)- 24.99
BBT (NYSE) - 29.63
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 16.20
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.43
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.90
Rockwell (NYSE) - 56.16
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.21
Royal Dutch Shell - 57.59
Sears Holding \NASDAQ)- 103.28
Wal-Mart (N YSE) - 53.63
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.76
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.18
Worthington (NYSE)- 17.59
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 10, 2010, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Malls In
Gallipolis at 40) 441-9441 and
Les ey Marrero m Po nt P ea
at 304) 674-Q174 MemberS PC

Saturday, March 13
RACINE- Racme Youth
League fmal ball s•gn-ups,
10 a.m. - 2 p m., Racine
Masonic Lodge, there will
be a $5 per ch1ld late fee if
ch1ld ts reg1stered after th1s
fmal s gn-up event.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, March 11
CHES ER
Shade
e 453. 7 30 p.m.
Refreshments.

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.99
•

March 1s National Colorectal Awareness Month
' cause of cancer deaths m the Umted States Thts
Colorectal Cancer 1s the second
accounts for approximately 10% of all cancer deaths. Holzer Clinic encourages
scheduling a Colonoscopy to prevent this dis~ase as well as indentify nsk factors
All men and women should begin screening at age 50 or sooner.if you have certarn
nsk factors. Holzer Cltnic is dedicated to providing the highest level care poss1bl.e
Our Board Certtfied Gastroenterologists are avatlable to help with early detection

dwo A ye ·-Gyamfi, D,
a kG. Christopher. D
C rist pher T. Meyer, DO
arc Subik, D

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740.446.5763

vvww.holzerclinic.com

HS

HOLZER
CLINIC

�PageA4-

The Daily Sentinel

11tm·s day, March u,

The Daily Sentinel

2 010

RtMl~D ME To ~VER
'iJA1C~ THE NEWS l~

111 Co u rt Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
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3D[

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cou.l!rt•ss slur/1 make""' law resl'ecting an
t•stalllisllmetrt of rel(~iotr, or l'rollibititr,R tire free
ext•rcist• tlremif; or allriclgirr,l! tire freedo m of SJ'eeclr,
or of tire 11ress; or tire r(f!lrt of tire J'Cople peaceably
to assemble, tmtf to 11etitiou tire Got•ernmeut
for a redrt•ss of,l!rier'allces.
The First Amendm ent to the U.S. Constitutio n

T C) l ) AY I N I-1 I S T ( ) 1{. Y
Today IS Thursday, March 11, the 70th day of 2010.
There are 295 days left m the year.
Today's Highlight in History.
On March 11, 1985, M1khail S. Gorbachev was chosen
to succeed the late Sov1et President Konstantin U.
Chernenko
On this date:
In 1810, French Emperor Napoleon I was married by
proxy to Archduchess Mane LoUise of Austna.
In 1861, the Const1tut1on of the Confederate States of
Amenca was adopted during a convention in
Montgomery Ala
In 1888, the famous Blizzard of '88 began Inundating
the northeastern Un ted States, resulting In some 400
deaths.
In 1930, former Pres1dent and Ch1ef Justice William
Howard Taft was buned m Arlmgton Nat1onal Cemetery.
In 1941, Pres1dent Frankl n D Roosevelt s1gned the
Lend-Lease B1ll, prov1dmg war supplies to countries
fighting the AXIS
In 1942, as Japanes~ forces continued to advance in
the Pac1flc dunng World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArthur
left the Ph1hppmes for Australia. {MacArthur, who subsequently vowed, "I shall return," kept that promise more
.than 2 1/2 years later.)
In 1959, the Lorrame Hansberry drama "A Raisin in the
Sun' opened at New York's Ethel Barrymore Theater
In 1965, the Reverend James J. Reeb, a white minister from Boston, d1ed after bemg beaten by whites durg c v nghts disturbances m Selma Ala
In 1977 more than 130 hostages held n Washmgton
D r. by H nat Mu rms were freed after ambassadors
from th ee Islam c nat ons JOined the negot1at ons
n 2004 i 0 bombs eJq&gt;loded m qu1ck success1on
across the commuter ra11 network in Madrid, Spatn,
k1lhng 191 people and woundmg more than 2,000 m an
attacl&lt; linked to ai-Omda-msp1red militants.
Ten years ago R cardo Lagos was sworn in as president of Chrle the second soc1ahst to take the post s1nce
Sa vador A ende was k1 ed 1n a 1973 coup.
F1ve year ago A JUdge court reporter and shenff s
deputy wer shot and k lied at an Atlanta courthouse·
Bnan N hots suspected of k1l11ng them and a federal
agent surrendered a day later at the apartment of a
woman he d taken hostage Ash ey Smith. (Nichols was
later conv cted of murder and sentenced to hfe in pnson.)
One year ago: President Barack , Obama signed a
$41 0 brlhon spendmg package to keep the government
runn1ng through Sept. 2009, even as he called it "imperfect because of the number of earmarks it contamed A
German teenager, T1m Kretschmer, went on a shooting
rampage startmg at a school in Winnenden, killing 15
people before commrttmg suicide.
Today's Birthdays Medta mogul Rupert Murdoch is 79.
ABC News correspondent Sam Donaldson is 76.
Supreme Court Justice Antomn Scalia is 74. Actress
Tnc1a O'Ne:l IS 65. Smger Bobby McFernn is 60. Singer
Nma Hagen IS 55. Country srnger Jimmy Fortune {The
Statler Brothers) IS 55. Singer Cheryl Lynn is 53. Singer
Lisa Loeb IS 42. Actor Johnny Knoxville is 39 Actress
Thora B1rch IS 28. Actor Rob Brown is 26.

Thought for Today: ''Real success Is finding your
lifework In the work that you love." - David
McCullough. American h istorian.

LETT E RS T O THE EDITOR
Lettc"S 10 the ed1tor should be hm1tod to 300 words. All loners are
subject to od1tmg O"ust bo s1gnod and Include address and telephone
number No uns1gned letters will be published Lene·s should be in
good taste address.:'lg 1ssues not personalities. "Thank You· letters
w1o not be accepted lor pubhcat1on

The Daily Sentinel
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correction Polley

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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12 Wooks

La:w1rzakers 111ust contitlue u;ork 011 Ho111.e First
You rna) recall that last November.
State Sen. Dale Miller, D-Cie\eland.
,md I introduced Senate Bill 214, legi.,lation that would expand cligibilit)
for Ohio's Home Fir t program,
\\hich allows md1\ iduals in nursing
facihttC'\. '' ho are Medicaid-eligible,
to b) pass .tn) '"att1ng lasts for home
and communit)·ha'&gt;ed care servtces.
The bill, \\ hich '"as recently
appro\Cd by the Senate Hnance and
Financial Institutions Committee.
would m.tkc semor:s nnd disabled
Oh10ans. who are at nsk of immment
udmt&lt;,ston to •' nur 111g f &lt;.lilt)' 1mme
d1atcl\ c t tble or PASSPOR f
As&lt;;1sted Ll\ m
or PA( I
Program of All-lnclusn e Care forth·
Elderl).
J worked to estnbltsh Oh10 's Home
Ftr:.t program in 2005 m un effort to
gi' e Ohioan~ an nuf'img home
abiht) to rece1\e the c.are the) n
the comfort of thetr own home .
O\er the pa~t !-.C\eral )ear~. hundred
of Oh10an ha'e taken nd\oantage of
the program In fact. bet\\een Jul)
and October last )\:ar, there \\ere 521
Home l·irst enrollments, accordmg to
the Ohio Depc~rtment of Aging
Studies ha\ e consistent!) shown
thai a large majority of Ohio consumers \\ ould prefer to age in their
homes, and it has the added benefit of
working to save taxpayers millions of
dollars per year. I t eo-..h $560 per
month for an individual re~-7eivin!!
PASSPORT nssi tancc and $842 fo~·
Assisted Li\ ing. but the state , pends
nearly $1.700 per pattcnt, per month
for nursing home care. The Ohio
Bu~iness Roundtable has said that if
Ohio simpl) achie,ed the national
a\ crage on spending for home and
communi!) based care - \\e current!) rank 39th in the n:.ttion - the "tate
could a'e $900 million a )Car in

John
Carey

Medtcaid costs.
While state leader&lt;; ha\ c taken
mcremental steps
t 111d l her efforts
nd
mmunlt)OhiO.thts
t
. As part
of C\ ml bud ct reduction., ordered
b) the Stnckland Adnum.,tmtion, the
Department of A m tmplemcntcd
\\atttng li.,ts for P\
&gt;RT,As i11ted
Ln mg~ and PACE:.
mg hundred
ofOh1oans. who n
dare cltg1ble
for the e !-.Cf\ 1ces. \Hilling lor a lot to
open up.
Ho\\C\ cr. thanks to b1parti&lt;&gt;an
cooperation and the dedtcated efforts
of senior ad' ocate'&gt; aero s Ohio. the
Go' ernor w i~cl) mO\ ed last month to
transfer $5.3 million in c:-asting funds
at the Ohio Dep&lt;u1menl of Jobs .md
Famil\ Sen ices to the Ohio
Department of Aging to eltminate
these \\ aiting lists through the 20 II
fi..,cal year. These dollars "nuld ha\ e
been "pent to treat a smaller group of
people in more expensive nun.ing
home care.
I applaud the Go' cmor's action to
remo\e thee waiting lists \\hich \\ill
help hundreds of Ohioan~ access
home and commumt\ -based care ser' ices O\er the next~ sC\Crrtl months.
but it i" onl) a ~hort-term solution. It
is critical that the General Assembl)
contmues to mo\e fOf\\ard \\ ith SB

214 to allo'" for greater flexibilit) in
home care cho1ce for tho e \\ ho
need it m the future
Home First alread) help!&gt; Oh10an"'
m nursing facilities. "ho arc,.
Medicaid-eligible. b) pass an) ''.lit
ing list&lt;; for PASSPORT or A&lt;;~i&lt;;ted
Lh ing and return to their homes. SB
214 \\OUld further mcrease opportu- •
nities under the Home Ftrst Ia\\ b'v
allowing Oh10ans. who are Medicaideligible and at-risk of immment
admission to a nursing home. to
immediate!) acce~s home and com '
munit) -based health care sen ice&lt;.
through PASSPORT. A '&gt;sis ted Li\ mg
or PACE. f.he bill \\Ould help thou~ands of seniors and disabled
Ohioan&lt;, avoid nursing home~ alt.
gether. creaung e\ en grcc~tc=r chos
m Ohio's health care ")stem for co
ume~ and
mg the ~tate m1lhons
of dollan. per ) car.
I be he' e that state go' ernment ha'
a rc5ponstbilit) to manage the pubhe's dollar:. effictentl) and tmnsparentl) and ''ith the best mterest of tax
pa) ers in mmd. SB 214 is cons1 tent
'"tth that goal. I ''til continue to '' ork
"'1th member&lt;:. of both parties 10 the
House and Senate to mo\e the bill
fof\\ ard for the future stabiht) of
Ohio· budget and the health and
\\ell-being of current and future gen- ,
c1 at ions of Ohioan&lt;:..
If )OU have an) que:-tion", thoughts •
or conce"m:-. about a "tate issue. or if
you need a:;sistancc "orking "ith .1
state go' ernment .1genc). plc.tsc
\\rite to me: Senator John A Cnre\.
Ohio Senate. Statehouse. Columbu~.
Ohio 43215 or call m) oft tee at (614)
466-8156. I abo encourage \ou to
'istt Ill) page on the Ohio ·senate
website at '' '' \\ .ohiosennte go\ JOhn
care).

-.a'

•

�11mrsday, March n,

2010

Deaths

www. mydailyscntinel.com

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Rio Grande students study flying squirrels·
Virginia Ralph

Vi1g1nia Ralph of Middleport d1ed Wcdne-;dHy, March 10.
2010, at Holter Medtcnl Center.
Sen ices will be held at 1 ~.m., Saturday, March 13.
2010, at Anderson McDamel l·uneral Home in Pomeroy.
V1sllation \\ill be held from 6 8 p m., Frida). March 12,
10, m the funeral home .
n online registr') is available nt \\ ww.andersonmcl.com .

For the Record
Marriages
POMEROY - Marriage licenses \\ere granted m Meigs
Count) Common Plea:- Court to Christopher Patrick Carroll.
23, Tuppers Plains, and Samantha Jo Cole. 22, Middleport:
Rusly Rn) Lawson. 52, Long Bottom, and Yvonne June
Tyree, 49, Charleston, W.Va.: and Robert Ernest Thnrla, 31,
and St.1r..:e) Talisha Hubbard, 30, Syracuse.

Charges: 2 gave kids sleep
supplement at day care
CINCINNATI (AP) - Two fanner Ohio day care workers
accused of slippine an 0\ er-the-counter d1etary supplement
into candy and gi,·ii1g it to their charges to help lhem sleep at
nap time "ere charged \\ ith misdemeanors Wednesday.
Pamela Hartley. 56, of Cleves. and Donna Scott, 41, of
Cincinnati. have been charged "'ith three counts each of
ld endangering and three counts each, of misrepresenta• n by childcare pro" ider. Hamilton County prosecutor
Joseph Deters aid. The ~omen could be sentenced as
many as J8 months in jailtf con\ icted.
P.1rents had told 1mest1g&lt;~tors thetrchildren often eemed
grogg) after Jeavmg the day care. The ch.trges are the most
seriouo,; that can be applied, Deters smd.
Hartley \\HS the director and Scott was the lead infant
teacher at Covenant Apo~tolic Church Day Care In the
Cincinn.lti suburb of Springfield To\\ nship, the prosecutor
said. Ther \\ere fired from the da) care after the .tllegations
surfaced m December.
Court records had no uttorney listed for Hartle) and
Scott, and there "'ere no phone listings for the \\Omen in
Cincinnati or Cle\es.
The church's p&lt;btor, Shelly Hendncks, \.\ould say onl)
that the church and day care ha\ e cooperated With authoritie . Hendncks said the day care was still operating but
decltned to say ho\\ man) children are enrolled.
A co-worker nottfied police m December that Hartley
and Scott gn\e the childr~n melntonm m candy.
"I understand hO\\ up et the parents of the.se children
must be," Deter said in his Mntcment. .. Da\ c.rre \\ orker;
re pons1blc for a ' en 'alu hie commodity and must be
h ld to h1 h standard·~

Rates from Page AI
Jefferson
Jan. 15.4: Dec. 14.0
• Mahoning
Jan . 13.7: Dec. 12.5
• Monroe
Jan. 17.1: Dec. 14 .5
• Noble
Jan. 18.6: Dec. 16.4
• Trumbull -Jun. 14.3; Dec. 13.3
State\.\ 1de. e'en countie recorded jobless rates of 18
percent or h1gher, "1th Otta\.\ a Count) topping the chart rtt
19.8 percent m JanuaJ) . ln additton to Morgan. Noble and
Pike count1e . Clmton (19 3 percent). Htghland (19.1 percent) and Huron (1 8 .3 percent) were each m that categof).
DeJa\\ ure Count) enjo) ed the Ia\\ est unemplO) ment rote
m Ohio at 8 .4 percent in January. Athens and Lawrence
counties were in a group of nine counties \\hose jobless
rates \\ere lower than 10 percent in January. The rest of thai
Jist includes Holmes (8 .6 percent). Mercer (93 petcent),
Franklin (9.4 percent), Geauga (9.7 percent), Medma (9.8
percent) and Union (9 .8 percent).
The U.S . unemployment rate \.\JS 9.7 percent in January.
do\.\n from 10 percent in December 2009.

Buckley from PageAl

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RIO GRANDE- While
many people do not even
realize that fl)ing squirrels
arc found in southeastern
Ohio. students at the
University of Rio Grande
arc tracking and studying
these fascinnting animals.
I he students arc working
on the research project with
Certified Wildlife Biologist
and Assistant Professor Dan
Althoff. Ph.D. who also i
mvolved with several other
intercstmg and important
research projects.
Althoff. who It\ es in
Jackson. teaches biology
courses on the Rio Grande
l'nmpu!., but also teaches in
tht~
Wildlife and Fi:.h
Conservation
and
Management
bachelor's
degree program that Rio
Grande offers on the
Hocking O:&gt;llege campus.
Hocking College cannot
offer bachelor's degree programs. so Rio Grande offers
several bachelor's degree
programs on the Hocking
College campus. Thi:-.
mnngement is another way
thai Rio Grande n~aches out
to students in the region, in
order to make a college education acce sible.
Althoff began his research

work on the flying squirrels
15 years ago when he was
teaching
at
flocking
College.
..1 started the flyin~ squirrel project by putltnf? up
nest boxes," he explatned.
When he took a job teaching at Kansas State
Unhersity. he discontinued
the project but left up many
of the nest boxes.
In 2006, Althoff returned
to Ohio so that he could
teach at Rio Grande, and he
started the work studying
the flym~ sqUJrrels once
again. Th1s type of qUJrrel
i nocturnal, so it sleeps
most of the day and many
people do not even know
that they live here. Also,
they don't actually fly,
Althoff explained.
"They glide," he said. The
squirrels glide between the
trees and down to the
ground.
"They're pretty amazing."
he said. He and his students
have placed nest boxes in
several southern Ohio counties, and the squirrels often
sleep in them during the
day. The boxes are. built so
that they can be closed
when the student take them
down so they examine and
handle the animals.
Some animals have been
tagged in recent years so

that the students can track
where they are living and
how they react to changes
in habitat.
The research is also great
experience for the students,
as they are able to leam
about handling animals in
the wild and learn more
about the work of a wildlife
biologist.
.., look at it as an outdoor
lab opportunity,'' Althoff
said.
Rto Grande prides itself
on giving students one-onone mstruction and handson learning opportunities.
and this program is just
another example of the type
of instruction available to
Rio
Grande
students.
Althoff enjoys bemg part of
the cooperative program
between Rio Grande and
Hocking College, and said
he is pleased to teach students who are so focu ed on
learning about wildlife.
Durin£! his time at Kansas
State University, Althoff
also started working on
research projects for the
U.S. Anny and for the U.S.
Anny Corps of Engineers.
One project for the U.S.
Army involved looking at
how military maneuvers
impact small animals.
plants, the shape of the land
and the soil in the wild . He

Bv MATT LEINGANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Oh10
Stute
University sa1d
Wednesday a background
check on a Jamtor who hot
t\\O supenisors before
k1lling himself didn't
reveal that he had a criminal record, raising more
questions about how his
past prison sentence \\as
mtssed
I he chool relea ed a
b ckground report from
September on Nathan el
Brown 50. who pohc:e )
entered u mamtenance
shop Tuesda) mornmg and
fatall) shot a supen i-;or.
injured another and then
killed himself.
Bro\\n, who \\as up et
over h1s pending dismt al,
spent ab6ut five years m
pri on 10 the 1970 and
1980s for receiving stolen
property. according to court
and pnson records.
Ohio State said it hired an
ouLSide
"endor,
LLC
in
OPENonline
Columbu , to conduct the
background check. The
report turned up no criminal
records on Brown, who
denir..:d on his job application that he had been convicted of a crime.
Angela Bo:-.worth. an
executive vice president
"ith OPENonline, said in a
tntement that the company

is reviewing what happened
and that Brown may have
given Ohio State an incorrect birth date.
"Applicants with a criminal past have been known to
pro' ide incorrect date of
bJrth information," she aid,
but the problem could also
be a data entl)' error.
Brown's btrth date is June
5. 1959, according to Ohio
State records. It IS listed as
June 4, 1959, on "anous
pn on and court documents
H1 mtddle name. Ahm 1
n 1 tent n 11 re ord
p
Mo t f B w
records were de
e
1994 - 10 )ears ter ht
release. which i department
polic) . 'iaid state pri:;ou:;
Julie
pokes\\ man
Walbu
A c
mal conviction
doe ~n t necessaril) disqualif) JOb candidates from
being hired at Ohio State.
School policy allows managers to evaluate the nature
of the crime and how long
ago it occurred.
Police have not described
a motive for the shooting,
though campus Police
Chief Paul Denton called it
work-related. Brown. who
also was fighting foreclosure on his hou:-.e, appeared
to be a man in cri. is,
Denton said.
lt was also unclear where
Bro" n !!Ot the t\\ o handgun used in lhe assault or if

at

intended to target other
employees.
Ohio State sent Bra\\ n a
letter March 2, stating that
his probationary emplo)ment \\Ould end Saturdav
because of poor performance. Supen 1sors complained he \\as tnrdy. slept
on the job and had problems
followml! instruction .
Emplo},ees who don't
make probation arc allowed
to tay through the end of a
PJ.Y penod. as long as there
re no sues that \\Ould
an immed1ate disrequ
such ns concerns
olence. theft or
other beha' 10ral bsues.
Oh1o State spokesman Jim
L)nch snid.
e policy gives probatJJ \\Orkers a.chancc to
f1 h work assignments
and to draw a final pa)check. said Richard Murrn).
president
of
Communications Workers
of America Local 4501,
\\ hich represent cu todial
\\Orkers at Ohio State.
Brown's per onnel file
doesn't indicate 1f his bosses ever became aware of his
criminal record after he was
hired in October.
Brown was connctcd in
1979 of recei" in~ stolen
propert). \\ hich me Iuded
stereo equipment and a CB
radio, according to Stark
County court records. He
was initially released in

1980 but returned to prison
a year later over allegations
that he physically a saulted
his
!?.irlfriend's
child.
Walburn said.
Brown was not charged
in the case. but the parole
board concluded there was
enough evidence that he
'iolated terms of his
parole. she said. The parole
records are all that remain
of his time in prison, and
those are not public record.
Walburn said.
Police on Tuesda) found
Bro"' n with a self-mflicted
gunshot wound in a garage
bay at the maintenance
shop. He "'as pronounced
dead at a campu hospital
hours later.
One of BrO\\ n's shooting
vtctims. building services
manager Larry Wallington.
48. died at the scene. The
other. :-.hift leader Henry
Butler. 60, was in stable
condition at Ohio State
Uni\er~it\ Medical Center,
officials ;aid.
Butler'
son. Bf)·ant
Butler. said hi father's
medical condition \\as
imprO\ ing and that he could
lca\e the hospital a earl) as
Wednesday. He expres:-.ed
bewilderment over the
~hooting.
.
''If you lose your JOb. you
lo:-.e your job. Don't lea' e
like that," Br) ant Butler
WSYX-TV
m
told
Columbus.

University of Dayton to present human rights award

Bedford

Contract

(On the lnrernet
wwwJio.edu)

OSU: Check found no criminal past on shooter

improvements IC\'), passed pnor to the bond issue. lor
blllldmg the new schoob and canceled upon passage ol that
y, was a new field house on the high schoo campu&lt;;, a
DAYTOX (AP) - An prc:-.ent the Oscar Romero 800.000 refugees nation" ide
bus garage near the ne\.\ elementary school. and rcno- Ohio university \\ill present Human Ri2hts Award to the for 35 )Cars. Unt\erstt) offiatton of the Saltsbury school, vacated in the consolidation, its human rights award to a conference\, Migration and cials say it a! o ha" ad\ ocated
into a central office for district personnel
.
department of the U.S. Refu£ee Services depart- laws to stiffen penalties for
Under Buckley's leadership the schools have made sig- Conference of Catholic ment on March 29.
human traffickers. pro' ide
nificant academic progreso;, initiated everal n.e.... programs Bishops.
The uniYersity says the protection and relief to victims
including tech prep , and moved from academ1c emergency
The University of Dayton department has coordinated and increa...,e congressiOnal
to contmuous imprO\ement in the "report card" evaluation said Wednesday that it will the resettlement of more than appropriations for refugee
of the Ohio Department of Education. The anticipation IS,
according to the superintendent, that the district will be
ranked effective this )Car.
As for Buckley's plans once retited. "There\ the grondfrom Page AJ
cluldren to spend more time with. a farm to work on. and
the time to do those thinks I ha\ en 't had time to do. And
According to Bedford unteer firefighters or fire- PomerO\' ~layor John
then we'll see what else comeo; up.''
of
Fi cal Officer Barbara fighting companie to oper- ~1us~er... members
Grucscr, if the three-mill ate the same. including the Pomeroy Villuge Council.
Pomero)
contmuous le\ y pas es on payment of firefighter B)cr-Htll.
contribution Volunteer Fire Department
May 4. it would generate an employer:.
rrom Page AI
e timated $49.185.87 based required under section member:-.
Bedford
on 2009 property ta~ valua- 742.34 of the Ohio Revised Township Tru:-.tees. For
be able to complete his probation bccauc;e he cannot get tion. This estimated figure Code at a rate not exceed- more information call Sim
along with his parole officer.
. \\as also confirmed by ing three mills for each one at 992-115~.
Carper was sentenced in Jallllflf)'. 2004! on a c&lt;.~lllll 01 t-.lcigs County Auditor dollar of valuation. which
menacing by .:-talking and five counts of.unp~lrtunmg. or Mary Byer-Hill yesterday. It amounts to thirty cents
soliciting sex from minors. Carper's 'ictlms Ill the 2003 was previously reported the ($0.30) for each one hunand 2~ sex offenses ~vere minors, .tgcd 13 to 15 · accord- levy would bring m an esti- dred dollar:- of \ aluation.
ing to h1o; court record 111 Common Pleas .Court..
"'
mated $45,963.36 but for a continuing period of
As~ reg1~tered sexual prcda~or. Carper 1 ~ r~qutred to 'l:r- 1 Grueser said this was based time. commencing in 2010.
h1s residence address \\ tth th~ shenfl s departme1_1t on property tax , aluation fir t due in calendar )Car
90 days. Former!) of Cool\ !lie. C~per se':ed . hts for 2008.
20 II."
term in prison at the Mad1son CorrectiOnal InStitution.
Last month the Meigs
The levy, if passed, will
County Board of Elections support a proposed fire staprm idcd The Daily Sentinl'l tion for the township
with the issue's bullot which will be a substation
wording \\ hich, pending of the PomerO\ Voluntcct
rrom Page AI
final :-tate approval, is as Fire Department. No lc\)
Approval was gi\ en by the board to chan~e from folio\\ s: "An additional t~lX money will be used to
GatesMcDonald Health Plus, recently acqu1red b) for the purpo:-.e of providing build the station. The staSheakley UniComp, to CompMan,tgement. He~lth Systet~ls, and maintaining fire appa- tion's construction would
Inc., as the district's managed care orgamzatwn, effectiVe ratus. appliances. buildings be I00 percent paid for by
or sites therefore, or ource a federal grant '' orth
immediately.
of
water supply and materi- $811,750.
The next Board meeting was changed to ~onday, ~larch
lm itcd
guests
to
22. due to conllicts w1th another eH!lll. It Will be held at 7 als, or the payment of perTuesday's
meeting
im•lude
manent,
part-time,
or
volp.lll. in the Central Office.

Exploitation

has been tnvolved in several studies 111 this area, and
is still working on this
research 1 he project is for
the U.S.Anny. but hal&gt; benefits for many different
purposes.
One research project for
the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers involves studying
the utility of using a remote
control blimp in order to
take low-level aerial pho1
to~raphs in the wild . For
th1s project, which he is also
st1ll working on. Althoff
used remote control blimps
to stud) areas in wildlife, in
order to see how effective
the photographs from the
bhmp could be m accurately
accessing the ground .
Althoff has worked with
partners on both research
projects. and enjoys studvmg different topics 1n
\.\ildlife and then sharing his
findm!!s in order to benefit
others~working in the same
field. He also enjo) s teaching at Rio Grande.'' here he
can work closel) \\ ith hi
students and use the hills ,
woodlands and outstanding
wildlife areas in southern
Ohio to help his students
learn.
"It':- vef) exciting for
me:· Althoff aid.

protection and a.;,istance.
The
award
honors
Archbbhop 0 car Romero,
a :-taunch ad" ocate for El
Sahador's poor and di enfranchi:-.ed. He wa a as inated 30 ) ears ago \\ hde
officiating a ~Ia s.

�-

T'he Daily Sentinel

-

.

--

~

----

... _____

......- ......________

--~--------

JLcoxCAliL

Tech Growth
pushing industry,
business in SE Ohio

._._

PageA6
Thursday, March

11, 2010

Taste of Home Cooking School
Featuring OU grad
BY BETH SERGENT

favorite pa11 of the cooking
experience is. Cohen
said: "I mn alway~! excited
Culinary
Specialist to come into a cornmuntty
Cheryl Cohen of Dover will and share my love of cookswing into spring with ne"" ing with new people. I
recipe~ featured in "'l~tste of always have a great time at
Home'' magazine at the the show, because the audishow. Cohen received her ence makes it fun!"
Cohen i:-. looking forward
· Bachelor of Science Degree
in
Home
Economics to coming to your Meigs
Education
from
Ohio County. saying: "We're
University and previou~ly going to have a lot of fun at
worked as a cooking ~chool this event. Trust me, you
manager and instructor in a don't want to m1ss it!"
Those attending the show
local supermarket.
According to her biogra- will receive a gift bag from
phy. Cohen conducts cook- the cooking show's sponsors.
ing schools throughout plu~ two copies of the magaOhio.
West
Virginia, zine which Brenda MetTitt,
ViJ;ginia and Marylan~d. In of K92. said more than CO\'an average year she can put ers the price of admission.
40,000 miles on her car Along with additional prize
traveling to places like drawings and food samples.
l\1ei,p County to share her around 40 local vendors will
pa~ston of cooki'ng. Cohen
be .set up in the gymnasium,
attributes her love of cook- demonstratmg and selling
ing to watching both her their goods. Merritt said
grandmothers work and cre- there will be ne\\ prites thi:-.
ate meals in the kitchen.
year, including a "be~t seat in
When asked what her the house" drawing for seats
~chool

with the best V1ew of the
show.
This year's show has a
theme of "Fre~h Picked
Favorites." According to the
magazine, the Taste
Home Cooking School
two and one-half hour
o;tage demonstration of I012 recipes. offering ··valuable'' cooking tips.
The cooking school was
brought back for the second
year in a row to showcase
Meigs County as a tounst
destination, according to
Merritt who added: ''The
vendors are from Meigs
County and inside the gift
bags we place the Meigs
County Visitor's Guide for
those from outside the
county.''
Merritt said last vear's
soldout show saw attendees
from
Parkersburg.
Charleston and Huntington.
W.Va. and the Marietta area.
Merritt de!'.cribed "'Taste
of Home'· as the leading
food magazine in the \\Orld.

ne.,smen are reluctant to add BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
MDTNEWS@ MYDAt-YTRIBUt-;10 COM more Jobs because they feel
ROCKSPRINGS - The
the economy is unstable,"
GI\LLIPOLI~
You said Wilo.,on. ·'That " n fear popular Taste of Home
haw an idea fl)r a ncvl prod- we're trying to oven.:orne. Cooking School set for
urt. a n~w bu~ine~~ or The most obvious sign of Tuesday. ~1arch 16 at Meigs
upgrade~ to \OUr ex1~ting
economtc recoYery in this High School will feature a
business, theil comes the countrv \\ill be the resuJTec- culinary specialist who
hard pru1: figuring llUt how tion o(job growth.'' .
graduated
from
Ohio
to make that idea a real it).
In order for small busi- University.
Recently rcprc~entat ives nessc.., to grow, Wilson said
Doors open at 5 p.m. with
of Te~.·hGw'~ th Ohio. gov- tl('CCss to credit is key.
preshow · events planned at
ernment and bu-,ines~ joined
''Congress has taken ~teps 5:45 p.m. and the cooking
together In speak \\ith resi- to address this problem.'' dernonstratton at 7 p.m.
dents about what the pro- "attl WilM)n. "Legislation in There are 700 tickets up for
gram offers.
Congress passed last year grabs at $15 each. Tickets
Located at the Voinovich says the Small Business arc still avatlablc at the
School of Leadership and Administratton lending pro- office of K92 FM The Frog
Public Affairs at Ohio grams ''ill be made more (the ~&gt;how's sponsor) in
tJnivero;Itv and tundeJ b\ u&lt;;able. more business Middleport and the Meigs
the Ohil; Department llf friendly and less red tape as County Tourbm Office on
Development project the \\C move forward."
West Main Street in
Third Frontier initiative.
Dee! spoke about the Pomeroy. Last year the
TechGro\\ th Ohio \vas initi- impot1ance or education to show ~old out and those
ated to push industrv and job gro\\ th and ensuring wishing to purchase tickets
busine&lt;&gt;s for\\ arcl in the 19- there is a 4ual iried work- are urged to do so us soon as
county regton of southeast- force for jobs in their area.
possible.
ern Ohio.
"One of the things (the
While the program focuses Go,·ernnr·s
Office
of - - on four technolog) indus- Appalachia) tries to do i~
ti ies - digital interactive look at projects that will
media. bio-~cicnces. bio- help proYide traming for
agriculture and adv&lt;ulced individuab that \\lll prepare
energ) - all companies are them for high tech jobs or 1
enc~)uraged
to contact jobs in thei;· region.'' said 1
Students from Alpha
TechGn_;,vth for a~~tstance.
Dee!, who used the power
career -.en·ices. about 20 can offer to the communiSENTINEL STAFF
A
seminar
entitled plallt management program MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSEWINEL.COM businesses from around the tv," Haft said. "It's some- Sigma Phi fraternitv are
scheduled to assist with set
.. Advanced Ent!rgv - A at the University of Rio
~1itl-Ohio Valley are schedthing that will benefit the up and parking for employfor Grande as an e\ample.
New
Oppot1uniiy
RIO GRANDE - The uled to be in attendance, but com'Tnunit). We're all in this er~ in attendance.
Appalachwn
Busine::.~
In addition, Ded touched University
of
Rio she said that list could gro\\ together. Rio Grande and
For information about the
Growth'' ''as held on Feb. on revolving loan programs Grande/Rio
Grande as the date moves closer.
the communitv. If there's URG/RGCC career fair.
18 at the University of Rio offered through develop- Community College will
Haft said the career fair is anything our office can do
Grande to discus5. obstacle~ ment dhtrich and grant host its annual carel.!r fair open to Rio Grande students to a~sist folks. we encour- contact Susan Haft at (7-1-0)
245-7276. The deadline for
bu~ines~e::. face either in
fundinj:!, offered b\ the GOA Tuesday. March 30. The fair and the general public. She age them to give us a call." busmesses to reserve space
sta11-up or gnl\\ th.
Yia local agencies.
is scheduled from noon-3 said .she believes the career
~Haft said people are at the career fair is Fnday.
... eminar,
l)uring
the
"We are~lookin!! at wavs p.m. in Bob Evans F.Lrm fair i~ a valuable resource encouraged to brine their March 19.
TechGrowth Pre&amp;ident John we can imprO\ e the quali"ty Hall on the Rio Grande for local people seeking resumes~ with them~ to the
(For a complete list oj
dla1er. l'.S. Rep. Charlie ot life for individuals in campuo;.
emp!O) ment.
career fair. She said Am) bustnesses scheduled ru be
Wilson. D-Ohio, Gm ernor's these comn1unitie,, as well
Accordmg to Susan Haft.
"It's an excellent opportu- \Vibon, reference outreach
the career fair. 1·isit
Office
of
Appalachia as 1m pro' e the infra~truc­ lhrector of rH!\\ student nity that folks can can avail specialist at Rio Grande ·s at
www.rio .edulacademicslpa
Executi\ e D1rector Fred ture for tho-.e deYclop- advising office. testing and themselves of and that we Davis Library. will be ge .php?ID=careeradvising)
Dee! and Scott Miller. direc- ments," said Deel.
tor
of
Energ}
.Uld
Mtller spoke &lt;~bout what
En' iron mental Programs at advanced energy means dnd
the
Ohio
Unher~it)
\ommich School. spoke to
attendee., J.bout the benefih energ:~
S
s
e EMT Terry have multiplied in the past
Da\ '" L•l)rary The cos.
"\\ hen \\ e talk ubout
ENTINEL STAFF
ot JOining with }echGro\\th.
'l
upk1
and paramedic decade with more people
"\\e need to get the work- tllh anced energy, \\ hJ.t \\ e 1 MOSNEWS MYDAILVSENTINEl..COM the one-dJ) t..'
$30
of
\\h1ch
IS
patd
to
the
Ro)
Jones,
both whom
force hack to work again." see is a gro\\ ing a~ceptance
RIO GRANDE _ Many Red Cross. For more mfor- have years of motorcycle usmg cell phones while dr.i' ing and increasing wil
:-aid Glazer. "There's only of rene\\ able energy. out the
animal
populations
one \vay that happen.., and question is 'how do we get riders travel in group~ and mation about the cla~s con- experience.
the likelihood exim that at tact ~1
Thompc;on at
Thomp~on 'and Hopkins Thompson said.
that· to Cl cate business to thnt point?"' said .\tiller. somet1me
one of them "'ill mik t r r ·du or (740)
r~ both a\ id motorcvcle
Due to the absence of an
actn ity around it."
Like the other speakers.
7'14-00I.J
nJ
"'ho
work
at
·the
enclosed
cabin and safetv
ha\
e
an
accident.
Galli
a
Miller
talked
about
funding
TechGrowth offers '&gt;Up1 he c. ~~ is focused L'mversity of Rio Grande. equipment. the motorc):_
port to businesse.., to help opt 1ons, costs and research County residents Mike
and
Terry to\\ard the motorcyclbt and With motorcycles becommg clist has to relv on their
..;peed Jp the process of de\elopment and deploy- Thompson
Hopkms have developed a the care of injuries par1icu- more popular and more rid': wits for their safetv.
gro\\th, \\hether it be pro ment.
In addition to the motorcycle fir~t aid. and lar to motor('ycle accident-;. ers on the road, thev felt it Thompson would also like
fe.,sional buo;iness ac,.,j-:,
ad\ anced energ) ~eminar, a ~afety course th~t w•.ll he First aid and CPR cei1ifica- was important to educate to remind the public as the
tance or funding.
..;eason
The purpose of the seminar ,, as held through- , o~fered at tht· Unl\ erstty of tions "ill be earned throu!!h more riders with life sa\'ln!! motorcvcle
the American Red Cross by skilb and accident avoid: approaches to look twice
"Growth Grunt:." are to help out the region enutled "Rc- R~o Grande:
before merging or pulling
fhe class ts '&gt;Cheduled ut 9 attendin!! the class. The ance techniques.
businesse-; identtfv obsta- im enting Small Business in
"The dangers on the road into intersections.
cles they may fac·e in the Appalachia'' to connect a.m., Saturday. March 13 at first aid~and CPR instrucgrowth of the1r bu~ine~s and bu::.ine~s leaders. mventor:..
help them O\ercome those entrepreneurs and investors
obstacles. In addition to together in the hopes of
offering grant opportunities. pu:-hing small business forTechGrO\\ th "'orks closely ward in Appalachta.
CI.:\CIKNATI (AP) - A plan more.
Cyndi Loveless was
tor in these dog~ and cah
~ ith
outside
funding
The rein\'enting business
new
pantry for pets offers
Or!!aniLers said thev want landing in the shelter~ ...
among 140 families on the
sources to ensure bu..,inesses series zeroed in on small
The American Soctet\' for first distribution dav. ,., hen
have a chance to tap into business panel di~cussion help for peoplt! who can"t to make sure people are able
those re~ources.
about· resources. what bear to part with their ani- to ade4uately care for their the Pre\ cntion of Crucitv to more than 5.600 pounds of
estimated · in pet food was giYen out.
"We're a gatekeeper for model TechGrowth uses to mals even as they struggle pets or aren't forced to giYe Animals
·'J'd die first before I let
the imestment community:· e\aluate busine~ses· and to put food on their O\\ n them up because they're .:'\member that I million to
going through economic 2 million pets had been them go." she said of her
entrepre.1eur's
a tables.
said Glazer. "We help pre- ga\e
The Cincinnati Food hardships.
abandoned nation" ide since four dogs and two cats.
pare compames to be chance to pitch their ideas.
"People lose their jobs the recession began 111 "They're~ part of the family.
Glater said TechGro\',:th Pantn· had its first distribready
and
inve ... tment
should be the first step for ution· oYer the weekend. and can't afford to keep December 2007. based on and vou can't get rid of vour
investment worthy.''
'"'
• •
Primarily. TechGro\\th entrepreneurs, even tf he or and pet owners lined up their pets. or they haYe to real estate industry numbt-rs famllv."
DeBra said the pantr.
targets start-up busine-;ses she does not belie\'C the bust- dozens deep to recei\'e a move from their house to and pet ownership figures.
The Cincinnati Food will hold regular gi\ ewith technological innova- ness will he eligible for assis- two weeks' supply of pet an apartment that doesn't
enough
food. treats, cat litter and allow pets.'' said Shannon pantry is the first just for aways if it
tive idea'. as \Veil as exist- tance through the program.
founder
of pets in the city. although donations.
"We want to he a gate\\ ay other items. Two local non- DeBra,
mg businesses who are
animal-rescue Recycled Doggies. \Vhico other food pantries have
"We'd like to distribute
for
all
the
service profit
making a mme into techno
providers." said G laLer. groups teamed up to obtain is \\Orking with Pet offered pet food along with food e' ery two to three
logical innovation.
During his speech, Wibon "The main reason to invite donations to supply the Alliance on the pantry. grocenes as the recession weeks." DeBra said. "'But
that depends Of! donations."
focu~ed on the importance
people to stm1 \\ith us is first giveaway, and they " 1\loney is definllely a fac- has dragged on.
ol small businet;s to the eco- vou never knO\\ .''
nomic growth of Ohio. tis • If the business is not eligible for help through
well as the nation.
··1 don't use the term eco- TechGrowth, Glatcr said
nomic engine lightly." -;aid they will make sure that
Wilson. "But I truly bl'licve person is connected with the
we. as small business peo- proper resources.
''1 want entrepreneurs to
ple, and with l'echGrowth
and the combination of reflect on. being in busine~s
what I c&lt;tn do from my for themselves doesn't necoffice. we can mm e to essarilv mean thev have to
improve and usc the ceo do it f" thcmscl\·es," said
nomic engine of small busi- GlaLcr. ·
For more il({ormation on
ness to improve our tUitionTedtGrmrth, 1·isir the n~b
al economy .ts well."
scre~nings.
at
Wilson -;aid the bi!!!!Cst site
obst&lt;tcle standing. in the~ \va) li'IV \1'.1l'Ch GrowthOh i o .com
and click on the "Tell U:s
of job growth i~ fe.tr.
The most accurate screening test for colorectal cancer is a colonoscopy._
"Right now. we are at _a YtJllr Story·· or apply tah or
juncture where s?me bust- call (740) 593-9588.
Pleasant Valley Hospital otTers the leading digital imaging equipment for
BY MICHELLE MILLER

1

URG/RGCC career fair set for March 30
Annual event open to students, public t;bb~;l~;~~"~.,~~~:· •n•

M0 torcyc1e f"rrst ar"d and' safety c1ass 0 ffered

~~~~go~~ta~~~p~rea~~~~~c~~

!

I

Cincinnati pantry offers help to pet owners

geb

Colorectal Cancer is the third leading
cancer killer in the United States.
However, colorectal cancer is highly preventable
and can be detected early through

E-mail us your
community news
and photos!
mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

colonoscopies and a highly skilled gastroenterologist on staff: Ori T7uk, ~vtD.
At Pleasant Valley Hospital, we've made a commitment to
support you in making healthy choices. For more information
about getting a colonoscopy please call, (304) 675-8615.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Tk f"aJifit, of P~"ofo~~tillfa~

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

h ds to intcn ic\\ A-nod, Pugc B2
Sport Brief , Pugc B6
l&gt;istrict 13 teams, Pugc B6

Thursday, l\1arch II, 20 I0

RedStorm softball sweeps West Virginia

A ec:hedu.o 1 'PC :-ling tWgh
Q;..

!rom Cl

llllflrty cpott lliJ 8\l\lOia fW01v:11g IOllml
18

Mason nrd Me~ coont1es

lbursday, March. 11
Class AA·Rogtonnls
(2) Po t Pleasant at (2) Wmr, 7 p rr

B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENT.I)lE'..

Saturday• .Mruch.13
Division IV·AI Convo
D ''ICI Rf181s

l3)

Scutrcrn vs (3) Mancha •

--

3pm

Rio's Sn1ith " 'ins
MSC Pitcher of
the \Veek honor
B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS
SPE'CIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LOUISVILLE. Kv.

Unl\er~it) of Rio Gmnde

sophomore Anna Smtth \\ciS
named the
Mid-South
Conference
Softball
Pitcher nf
the Week.
the confer
e

n

c

e

announced
o
n

CHARLESTON. W.Va.
- The Unh ersit) of Rto
Grande RcdStorm o;oftball
team rem.lined unbeaten in
the earl} portion of the
20 I 0 season with a doublehc.tder .,..-.eep of West
Virginia Tech on Tue day
e\ cning at Cupnal High
I School in Charleston. WV.
Rio \\On the first game 120 in ~ix innings behind the
pitchinf
of
masterful
sophomore Anna Smith and
took game two 111 extra
innings by an 8-3 score.
Rto Grande (4-0. 2-0
~1SC). \\Jth the wins, starts
Mid South Conference pia)
off on the right foot.
Smith (3-0l followed up
her one-hit shutout on
Sunda)
versus
OSUNcwark with another onehitter .tgamst the Golden

Bear:c. in the oj)ener. Ali
Holmes led off t 1c game for
WVU Tech (u-11, 0-2
MSC) '"ith a double and
Smith then sl.unmccl the
door as WVU I ech had
only one other base runner
in the game after that and
she rc.1chcd on an error.
Smith had I 0 stnkeouts
and did not walk a batter.
"Alllld thre\\ another
great ~amc, another onehitter.' said R10 Grande
head co.tch Da\ 1d Pyles.
"She gave up th.tt lead-off
hJt and didn't allow anything after 1hat."
Smith also helped her
cause at the plate, gomg 2for-4 with a run scored and
an RBI. Senior centerfielder Leah Hamman
(Lexmgton, Oil) had a big
game for the ReciStorm
offensively. going 4-for-5
with three RB l's and a
stolen base.
Freshman

third baseman Jaymie
Rector (Heath, OH) went 2for-5. scored· tv.o run!&gt;.
knocked m three a·nd
swiped a pair of bases
while freshman de~ign.tted
hitter Mack;!nzie Rucker
(Procton ille, OH) collected two hit'i in four at-bats.
scored three runs and
knocked in two.
Senior catcher Ka) I) n
Heading (Hilliard, OH)
alo;o collected an RBI hit.
Game t\\o looked to be
more of the same as Rio
Grande vaulted out to a 3-0
lead \\ ith t\\O runs in the
second inning and one
more 111 the third. But the
lead \\as short-li\ eel as
WVU Tech respomkd with
three runs in the fnurth
mning to He the game.
The game went into extra
mnmgs and R10 put it av.ay
with five runs in the top of
the eighth to "in R-3.

Smith picked up the ,..,m 111
relief as she pitched 4 2/3
mnin~s of shutout ball,
allowtng only one ..-.alk.
She "itruck out eight batters.
lcftf1clder
f·rco;hman
Kaitie Ste\\ art (l'lea ... ant
Hill. OH) \\a'&gt; the top
offcnsi\e performer for the
RedStonn m game t\\ o us
she produced three hits m
four m:bats with a double. a
run &lt;;cored und two RBI's
Sophomore fir),t baseman

Chchte
Brooks
(N.
Lcv.t-;burg , OH) went 2for-3 at the plate w 1th a run
scored and .t run batted 111.
Hamman, Headtng and
junior ~hortstop Amber
Bowman (Hebron. OH&gt;
each added two hits.
Bowman scored two run:c.
and had one RBI. Hamman
had a run scored and an
RBI
Both of Headtng·s
safeties \\ere of the tv.oba~e 'ariel).

WVt: Tech had only
three hits. one of ..-.hich '"a"
a two-run home run olf the
bat of Stephamc t\1ckcll in
the three-run fourth innmg
that tied the game
"Allison (Mills) '&gt;tarted
and I had to bnng Anno1 m
the fourth after the\ tied 1t
and ~he \\as light'&gt; out:"
P) lee; &lt;;aid. "We \\ent to
extra inningc; and hud to go
to the international tiebreaker (a runner bcgms the
inning at second ba.;,e) and
\\e c;cored fi\e runs to win
the game."
"I wao; pleased \\ ith our
effort and it's a good start
for us in the conference.''
Pyles added.
Rio Grande \\ill step out
of conference on Frid.ty
afternoon to face off wnh
f·mrmont State at home.
Game one '" slated to begin
at 1 p.m.

Mond&lt;~) .

The conferen c e·.,
weeki) honor i!\ the fir),t of
the sea on for Smtih.
Sm1th pitched a one-hit
shutout 111 the Rcdo;torm ·
8 0 \\ m O\ er Oh10 State
l nh er'\lt) Ne'' ark to earn
the conference's pitcher of
the \\ eek a\\ ard .
fhe Ros&lt;;, Ohio natl\e,
Struck out six en route to
''"inning her ftrst game of
the !&gt;C.l'ion. Smith earned
the no-h1tter into the f1fth
inni11g
''hen
OSUNe\\ ark 'o;
Jess Spain
!'.poi ed the effort with a
Rto
t\\ o uut ... m le
Or nde ndt:d th
me m
r \ du to the mere) rule
R1 Grande· he. d c o.~ch
Oa\ 1d P) les wuo; pled cd
mllh and o;a\ s o;he ha~
up "here she left
n 2009. "It looh like
&lt;,he'~
contmu cd from
' here '&gt;he left off lao;t
) l: r
Hopefull) . she can
contmue to be the dom1
1 atm~ pll~her that ~he •~
he'-&lt;~u&lt;.e \\,. 're gomg to
need her. not onl) earl} in
the se son. but all the wa}
do..-.n the 'itretch.'' he ~ atd.
P} Je.., satd th.tt the one
hit gi\ en up by Smith on
Sunda) wa), a legitunate
base l11t and added that
Smith ..-.as fortunate that
she \\ao;n't injured by the
'tcious l111e drive . "The
hit th.tt they had . fortu nate!\ it didn't hurt her
becauo;e 1t \\a., a legit hit
right b.1ck up the middle
and Anna \\a!&gt; able to get a
glo\ e on 1t to protect hero;elf." p, les said . "In a
one-hJtter hke that. ) ou · rc
hopmg that it is a legit hit
on not one of those borine, ..-.as It, \\a~ 1t not.
. it \\•IS \\C1J -pitchcd
ball game and '' e had
some good defensive
pia)~ behind her."
Rio Gr.1nde finished its
first week of competition
w1th a 2-0 record .
Smith

A. Troester

Howard

1

•

Pullins

Burdette

Rees

Caldwell

OVP area lands 26
on District 13 squads
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILY'"RIBUNE COM

hoth boys and girls - are
selected by the coaches from
those respective areas.
From Gallia and Mcig
count1cs, there \\Cre n combined 12 girl'&gt; and 12 boys
selected to this winter's
annual quad
as v.cll n
one CO&lt;tch of the year from
each of the Dt\J!'&gt;ion IV Jio;t .
Tho e coaches \\ere Ho" ie
Caldwell for boy and John
Burdette for girl'&gt;. both of
"hom led Eastern to 20-\\ in
seasons.
There "ere II first team
selections, six second team

A total of 26 people from
the Ohio Valley Publishing
area - 24 pla)ers and t\\O
coaches - \\ere selected to
the District 13 Basketball
Coachco; As!&gt;ociation teams
for the 2009-10 hoops season.
District 13 encompas!'&gt;es
high school programs located in Galha. Meigs,
Jackson.
Vinton.
Washington.
Hocking.
Athens and Lawrence countie"'. The teams - which arc
broken down by d1vision for Please see District ll, 86

Bryan Walterslf1le photo

Eastern senior Jake Lynch (1 0) releases a shot attempt over a Symmes Valley defender
dunng the first half of this Tuesday, March 2, file p!loto of a Diviston IV sectional final at
Wellston High School. Lynch. a four-year starter for the Eagles, was named the Dtvtsion IV
Player of the Year by the Distnct 13 Basketball Coaches Assoc1at1on.

Rested Buckeyes head for Big Ten tourney
C'OLU~IBUS. Ohio (AP) There nrc Jato., of players who don't
like conference tournaments. Ohio
State's hvan Turner isn't one of
them.
Turner loveo; it that the games
come as if thC) · re on a conve) or
belt. that coachco; don't ha\c time
to de\ ise intncatc defcnsi\ c plans
and that players can let their natural instinct&lt;; tlow.
Conscco
The
games
at
Fieldhouse in Indianapolis arc like
playground pickup games "ith
capacity cro,His.
· 's a ~rcat atmosphere. It's n
case.' 'laid Turner, recently
ted ns the conference's player
the year "You see Big Ten basketba ll at its be:-t hccau~e tiH:y're
not typical Big Ten games.
Coaches don'l ha\'e time to prepw·e
for 1t. becau!'&gt;e )&lt;&gt;U h:t\C to go back
• each day, (su) you're juo;t pl:t)oing
ba.,kctb&lt;tll. You have a Jot of highscoring game!&gt; and it's fun."
The filth-ranked Buckeye!&gt;. "inncrs of 13 of their last 15 game~.
tl) to back up thc1r top o;ecdmg !n
the tourn.unent when the) pia) Ill
Jhe quarterfinals at noon on l·ridny.

The Big fen co-champions (wtth including last ~cason's 65-61 ~et­
bnck to Purdue.
Purdue and Michigan State)
Conch Thad Mutta has gone with
meet the '' mner of Thursday's
firc;t-round game between eighth· ju~t fi, e pia) ers for the most part
-;ceded Michigan and ninth-seeded down the stretch. The) ha\e bene)0\\3.
fited b) ha\ mg mnc da) s off
Team captain David Lighty \\He; bet\\ecn chnching their share of the
unable to pia) tn last year's Big title With a 73-57 '"in O\er lllinoi ...
Ten tournament. mtssmg all but the on March 2 and the1r Big Ten tourhrst fev. games of the season after nament debut.
The Bud,eyes feel rejll\ enated,
brcakmg a bone in his foot. He\
lookmg fon\ ard to this )Car's tour- dcsptte a long and arduous sea...on.
nament more than anyone else on
"As I planned practice last ni~ht.
I looked at Ill} watch and, I'm hke.
the Ohio State roster.
"It's kind of lik.c a high-school my gosh. it's March 10," ~l atta
mode. You're going to pia) a team said. "And I aid the math of
on Friday and they pl:t) Thursday October. f'\ovember. December,
so you go over there \\ ith your .January. February. .\ larch. It's
jacket on. with ) our teamnmtes, rurating. But it doesn 't fed that
and you watch them. You sit in the wuy to me at all."
Mands and get honed by their fan~ ...
II has already been a hannl.'r :-~.·a
Lighty said with a laugh. "And I son. B eside~ captu ring a pieel.' ll[
ha\'cn't played there in a while. thcit third Big Ten regular-),ea~on
This tournament's going to he kind cn.m n in the l n~l five years. Turner
was selected as the Big Ten's pin)·
of fun for me.''
The Buckeyes (24-7) ha\C won er of the year and Mntta "as picked
seven of their last 10 games in the m. the top coach.
"That's rea II) cool, defimtel) just
conference toumamcnt, takmg
their only Big Ten tournament title bemg recogni1ed. I'm reall) gratein 2007. The)·, e loc;;t in the chamPlease see Rested, 86
pionship game three other time~.

''ill

I

' Ohio State's
Will1am
: Buford puts
up a shot
agamst
lllinots's
Demetn
McCamey in
the ftrst half
of an NCAA
college basketball game
at Value Ctty
Arena in
Columbus.
Ohio, on
Tuesday.
I

Shari Lewis/
Columbus
Oispatch/MCT

�Page U 2 • TI1e Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentincl.com

Thursday, March u,

2010"

A-Rod: Lawyers are setting up interview with feds

I
Phil MasturzofAkron Beacon JournaVMCT

Cleveland Browns quarterback Derek Anderson (3) rushes
out of the pocket dunng game act1on against the Oakland
Raiders. The Browns defeated the Ratders. 23·9, at
Cleveland Browns StadJum in Cleveland, Oh1o, Sunday,
December 27, 2009.

•
n
erson
apo
og
IZes
A d
I

ta~tic."

1

for Browns remarks I

CLEVbLAND (AP)
Like one of h1s errant pa!&gt;ses. quarterback Derek
Anderson sent a rocket at
Browns fans he '' isheo.; he
could take back.
Anderson apologized to
Cle\ eland fans Wedneo;da)
after calling them "nnhleo;s"
and addin~ the) "don't
oesene a"' mncr'' tollo"' mg
his release b) the team.
Anderson "'as let go b)
the B ro\\ n~ on 1ue-.da).
ending an une,en fhe-)ear
stint. In an e-nMI to 1 he
(Willoughb)) Ne\\s-Herald.
a frustrated Anderson cnticized Bro\\ n5 fan .md sa1d
he will ne\er forget thnt
some of them l:heercd ''hen
he was inJured.
"The fans arc ruthle-.s und
don't descne u \\ 111ncr, ·
Anderson "'rote "I "'Ill
ne,er for et ettm '-hccrcd
''hen I "' ' m)ur d I kr O\\

the club to start Brady
Quinn. a tirst-round draft
pick m 2007.
On Wednesday. Anderson
sent an e mail to Cleveland
mcd1a members saying he
regret c;ome of his comments.
" fhose of ) ou who got to
knO\\ me personall) from
cmering the Browno; O\er
the past fi\e )Cars. know
th1~ wao;, out of character for
me," Anderson said. "I wasn't taken out of context. but
I w.ts speaking out of frustration after my career with
the BrO\\ ns came to a close.
1 had some great t1mes playing in Cleveland. e&lt;;peciall)
dunnc the 2007 season. and
J met 'some great people and
made many lifelong friends
alon the \\av
"I'm looilng fornnrd to
'-t 1rt1ng a ne\\- chapter m Ill)
l.fc.

I
1\.nderl'&gt;on\, release &lt;.
t:
hope and pra) I'm pia) m~ one da) utter the Bro\\ n

t ttmc.".-. I "' .-.n t

reat

'\\hen m\ team comes to
tO\\ n and·(\\ e) roll them."
When Anderson sustained
a knee injury m a 2008 game
against lnd1anapoli . some
Bro"'n fans cheered ao; he
la1d on the f1eld m p.1m
Despite m km the Pro
Bo\\ I m :!007. th m m•)
of Cle'Yel.md f.m-. "'. nted

acquued backup Seneca
Wallace m a trade from
Seattle. Anden;on was due a
2 million roster bonus on
March 19.
The 26-)ear-old b expected to draw interest from e'
erul team and
reported
I) \ ISJl Anzon&lt;~ and Seattle
th1 \\eel..

''ill

Beng·aIs t ry for deaI
Wl.th vet WR Bryant
.

CINCINNATI (AP) Antonio Bryant\ agent smd
the recen er and the
Cincinnati Bengal-. "'ere
z.,ery close" to .m ••greement on Wednesday . .11110\C
that \\Ould hkel) predud.!
the addition of Terrell
0\\ens.
For the -.econd ye.u m a
ro''· the Benguls arc tr)lll£
to find a complement for
Chad Ochocmco, the onl)
receiver '' Jth appreciable
experience on the roster.
Ochocmco has lobbied to
get Owens. ''ho "'·'S into,.,n
on Wednesday to meet team
officialo;.
Instead. the Bengal!-.
appeared to be closing m on
B•yant. who visited a day
earlier und left without a
deal in place.
Agent Lamont Smith didn't return a phone call on
Wednesday. but told the
team's Web site that the
sides were ''\·ery close'' to a
deal.
1 he
Cmcinnati
Enquirer reported that
Brvant would get ct four·
year. $28 million contra~r.
The 29-)ear old rccCI\er
had career high&lt;; '' ith X3
catches for J.248 yards and
seven touchdO\\ ns "ith
rrampa Ba) in 200!5. He had
tom carulnge ·~ Ill'; left. k~1ec
repaired dunng trmmng
camp last season, and k.nec
problems limited him to -~9
catches fnr 600 ) ards with
four touchdowns.
Gelling an cxperienl!cd
receiver was the tca111's tup
priority in free aecncy. I'hc
Bengals
lost
T.J.
I Juushmandzndeh to tree
apency a year ago. nnd
s1gned Lavcrnnues Cole;;. to
a four-year deal expect1ng
him to fill the g&lt;~p. Cole-.
struggled to blend in .md
was released after only one
season.

I'AMPA. H&lt;~ (AP}
Alex Rodnguct rna) !\oon
be t&lt;~lking to federal authonties. and he hopes it will
happen close to '&gt;pring traming.
La\\) ers fM the Yankee
slugger arc '!Citing up an
interv1ew as part of an m-. ec;tigation into a Canndmn doctor who I!&gt; the focus of a
cro~s-honler drug smugglmg
case IIIVolving
human
growth hormone.
Roell 1guez :)aid the Site is
under discuc;sion but he
would like 1t near the team's
spring complex in T&lt;llll(M
rather than in Buffalo. N.Y.,
where the U.5 im estigat1on
JS being conducted He
expect., to ..non knm' the
mten 1ew date.
"The 1dea s to schedule
somethmg that allo\\s me to
cooperate and also get my
work in," Rodnguez said
Wedneo;,da).
"Ob' iousl)
doing n here \\OUid be fanRodngucL \\Ould not indicate Jf he pressed his
laW)er~ to lock in a date, but
he s.ud they have been
working on if fur ''ma~~e a
fc\\ days. I don't know.
KJthlecn Mehltrett~.:r. acting l:.S. allomc) for w~.:!!tern
New YNk. ~uid 1t b not
unusual for investigators to
go to those they \\ nnt to
inte1vie\\ but dechned to
comment on the inve,tigatJon. Maureen Dempse), .m
FRI
spokeo;woman
in
Buffalo, would not comment
on Rodriguez'!&gt; statements.
Citing the lll\CMigation.
Rodnguez law.&gt;er James
Sharp did not respond to
'&gt;C\eral messo~ges left b) The
A-,~ociated Preso;,.
On March I. Rodriguez
sa1d he \\U&lt;; U\\.lre federal
agents wanted to talk to h1m
about his relation'&gt;hlp With
Dr. Anthony G.'llca. Galea
told the AP on Mond&lt;~y that
he helped the three-time
M\'P recover from a htp
lllJUI)' Ia ':it ) ear but pre
s~nbcll onlv anti mfiJmm&lt;~
t ne'&gt;. not (JGH

Rodnguez said he i5 not
b) the WHit or
questions from the media
because the invesugnt1on is
"not about me.''
Other ba.,eball plny~r&lt;&gt;,
mcludmg Jose Reyc&lt;; and
Carlos Beltran of the Met.,,
have been contacted by federal invcsugators regarding
Galen. Colorado Rockies
closer Huston Street !&gt;aid
federal imestigators might
want to talk to him about the
case. Reye~; and Beltran smd
they did not receive IIGH
from Galea.
Rodriguez has appeared
more at ea~e this year than
lao,t spring. "'hen he
acknowledged usmg steroid!&gt;
from 2001-03. Dressed in
workout gear Wednesda). he
"a1d h1s surgically repaired
h1p from a )Car ago was
much better
"It just feels good to be
back at \\ork. and have the
freedom and flexibility to
lldve a regular camp," he
sa1d. "There's no question I
want to ramp things up a lit
tie b1t and obviously work
diligently ·nore than anything dm\ n here not overdo
things."
At !&gt;Omc point this season.
he will sec his surgeon.
Marc Philippon. and have
X-Ra) s. perhaps during the
All Star break or on a westem road trip.
During his rehabilitation.
Rodnguez met Galea. who
has close ties to chiropractor
Mark Lir.dsay. Lindsay
helped Phillippon monitor
A-Rod's recO\Cl).
Galea. who recent])
resigned as team doctor for
the Canadian Football
League's
Toronto
Argonauts. became the focus
of authorities' attention last
September when his asslsrant, Mary Anne Catalano,
was stopped at the lJ .S. border m Buffalo.
Galea \\as arrested in
.Canada last October on four
charges rel::!tmg to an unap·
pro\ ed -.ubo,tance uc;ed m
he I no
herap} call d
fru~trated

~~~N~~~::,WR Gily,~r~

Ton) P1ke and l\1ard) GJI)Jrd
got another chance to 1mpre
!'-IFL ,.,outs. th s tm ~.::on th
O\\n turf. The) thmk the'r
pulled 11 off together.
The quarterback and
recei,er who led C'incmnatJ
to back-to-back Big East
tides were the mam feature at
the uni\ersit) 's pro da) '?n
Wedne ...da\.
Thenty·SIX
teams \\~:re represented."' ith
4Jn9ct'lr&lt;;lC ccor·calWchd.~like Smgletury

The highli~ht ''as Pike
A f t e r throwing \flrlc&gt;US route&lt;; to
me c t i n g G'l1 &gt;'•ard • I"'P
" 1·i&lt;;inoeo the combi•
w i t h n.1t1on that was one of the Big
ca!&gt;t's best. The) 'rc sllll
~r) ant on lcanunr NFL pass routes,
t ue~da)' which ~an be much ditTerent
from the one'i they used m
B eln g a 1dse 1 college.
NOTEBOOK \\e
Both talked to scouts
come
---Owens,
who has the same agent as
Ochocmco and \\as mterested in bemg paired with his
fnend Ill Cincinnati. He
wa.sn 't the IT first choice.
hO\\e\er.
The 36 )ear-oldrecei\er's
production has dropped
each of the last two seasons
m Dallas and Buffalo. He
tle\\ in from the West Coast
on Tuesday afternoon and
had dinner with coach
Marvin Lewis. I lc met w•th
owner Mike Brown and
assi..,tant
coache"
on
Wednesday.
Ochocinco was excited
about the possibJiit) of 12
adding Owens. tweeting to
him th&lt;~t they would be like
Batman and Robin in
Cincinnati. When he heard

of the Bcngals · intensified
negotiations "'ith Bl) ant on
\\ednesda),
Ochocinco
t\\eeted congrutulations and
\\-Ondered 1f there \\as any
\\ ay of still getting 0\\ens.
After his 'isit. Owen"
thanked the team for its
interest
and
tweeted
Ochocinco: ''I'm en route
back 2 LA imagmmg \\ht
WI:. could hv done 2gether!!
Holv delta skymiles Robin!
U trilk &lt;~bout unstllppahlc! !"
The Bengals also need
help at tight end. On
Wednesday. they rc-signeu
reserve tight end Dan Coats.
\\ ho became a free agent
"hen his contract expired at
the end of the season. Coats
plnycd in all 17 games last
!&gt;Cason and caught 16 passes
for 150 yards.
\I

Alejandra Villa/Newsday/MCT

New York Yankees Alex Rodriguez throws a ball during
spring training at the George Steinbrenner f1eld tn Tampa,
Florida on Monday
Acto,egm. He 1s known for
uc;ing a techmque, called
platelet-rich plasma therap),
designed to speed rccO\ CC).
He has used that to treat seveml high&amp;profilc athletes.
t:.S. federal court documents ~ay "20 'ials and 76
ampoules of unknown mis
branded drugs mcluding
Nutropm (Human Grov.th
Hormone
HGH) and foreign home5&gt;pathic drugs"
"'ere found m a car Catalano
was dnvmg.
But G.llea aid Catalano
could IUJ\C had onl) a tin).
half-empt) bottle -- or one
ampoule of IIGH - becatl'•e
she w.. ., bringing the dmg
across the border for his use.
The 51-year-old Galea
su&lt;r1'1 he's t.1ken HGH, \\h1ch
,.., bann d b) the major

sports, for a decade been.
it can improve the quality of
life for people over 40.
Even if he's cleared m the
111\ e ...tJgation. Rodriguez
could be in 'iolation of h1s
record $275 million. 10-year
contract because a team has
the right to approve doctors
not on its medical staff.
If Rodriguez was treated
'' ithout club consent. any
attempt
to
determine
whether he violated hi!S contract or ba..,eball's collective
bargainin$ agreement likely
would hm!!e on "hether
treatment \\•a:. elective or
llCCe!&gt;Sary.
General manager Brian
Cashman said the Yankees
"no comment still stands"
while the federal investigation is proceeding.

j:~~~V~-~;!~n;j ~~~res~sr~ni~~~

talkmg to guys
C) 're extremel)
"'hat the) sa\\
toda): P1kc saJd. "It's an
ongomg proces~ to get those
(1\"'A..) route. do\\ n and ~et
on the same page, but I thmk
it ''ent \\ell toda)."
Both had ..pec1fic impro,ements in mind compared to
how the) did at the ;"\~rL
~couting combine last month.
''here Pike's pa~se!'&gt; ~ometimes wobbled and some of
Gil)ard'~ 40&amp;yard dash times
to~red 4.5 s~conds.
'earin!! black shorts and a
white shirt on a mild da).
Ptke made all types of thro\\ s
from midfield. occasionally
mis mg pla)ers filling in as
J-cceJvers. He ho\\ed he was

tedh hming him m
•
(
of the b•t!£CSt que:;;uo , dbt&gt;Ut P1ke m\ohes h1
non-throwmg arm. He bTOke
his left foream1 as .1 JUnior
and had a plate inserted He
broke u agam last c;eason and
had to h.,,e a larger plate
mserted. then returned and
pla)Cd \\ith a protccti~ecast.
A foot-Long car runs along
the underside of the foreann.
a r('minder of his la~t ~urgery.
The arm has healed - he
doesn't \\Car an) thing protecti-.e on it - but NFL teams
focused on it at the combine.
Gil)ard's biggest short·
commg at the combme was
h1s time Ill the 40-)ard dash.
He \\Orked on getting a better
start and relaxing. nnd got

artificial turf at Nif!P.
Stadium."' here he was limed
at 4.47 seconds.
Gil)ard "'as one of the
nation\ top receivers and
k1ck returner-. during his
~enior ...eason. He greatly
1mproved hb NFL draft
standin!! with his performance at the Senior Bo\\1.
where he had 103 yards
recei' ing and a 32-yard
touchdO\\n catch.
Gilyard is hoping to go in
the first or -.econd round.
Several Beneals coaches
attended the workout. though
the team hasn't civen htm any
indication that rt\ particularI) intere~ted. The Bengals
could u:-.e a slot receJ\er and
kick returner. and Gil.&gt;ard
would IO\e to "tay in tO\\n.

�---------------------------

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Thursday, March 11,2010

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Help Wonted · General

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Help Wonted· General

LAB TECHNICIAN
Ttte Gal po IS Parks &amp;
No prol~
Truck d. vera wanted
l nstrumoni/Eiectrlcal
ek
egaI sec tary R Q C1 ss A COL, 2 yra
Mechanic (Techn lan) Seeking tempo ary worl&lt; RecreatiOn Dept IS ac
ers Interested In Plant copt111g apps lor sum·
W11h good an todo and cxp Rosu e wf3 work An immedate opening
Lab work 40hr work mer workers tor tho Ga •
maMer y, 'h publlc
rei Send to D ver P 0 exiSts with M&amp;G Polyweek antiCipated Ov r· pous C ty Pool season
dudng tJ; ty to scret Box \145 Gal pohs OH mersUSA,LLC Ma·
tlme rnay be roqu roo WE aro accopt1ng apps
g r ty or ca rs who 456.11
SOl' County WV lor a
must hava m n mum or a for adm s or&gt;s conoesy be 111 tnslS Must be ~~~~~~~~ candidate possess ng
2 yr asslctate degree n s10n &amp; I tegu ids {Ute
graduate ot accred too ...
1110 toiiOWIIlg
high SCI100t or eQU va nt
Food Services
expGnence/education
cham stry. physiCS biOI· guards rrust be Red
ogy or oqu valent Mut• Cross certJ Apps May -~-----""""1
.
WI
oc:no strated ab ty Ace PIIng rosumos tor M 111rrum 2 years dem·
~avo a moderato degree be picked up C the Mu·
I
YOUNG'S
J&amp;L
to typo 55 WPM profl· cxp FT Subway Mgr 0 onstrated
a nt 1n word process ng
expenenceltraln ng on
or
mapa! Bu tdmg 518 2nd
Constructl'on
10
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Gal polls MOSt or all of t'le follow·
knowledge of skill ncoes· Ave Gall poliS, OH M·F
Commerdal &amp; Residential
Forty
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Salary &amp;
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With good benefits
Ro Bor&gt;s 0 IJ'Itcrvtew Send ng eQuipment
• Room additions • Roofing • (,ar
standard
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Oh o Legal S Nloes 964 OH 43n 3 or apply on usrng RS L1nx, RS Logox
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foundation~
wAter t eat'llent equ,p· 3·31·2010 @ 4:00 pm.
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5000, RS Logox 5
• Roofing &amp; Gun~r•
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Questions or more Info, • Decks
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
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Allen Bracley Vanable
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Entry level wage rat•) c ca11 Broil Bostic or Bev • Garages
ARE AN EQUAL OP·
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Un:vers ty of Rio Grand
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opportun ty tor a rna to· Pool can be pocked up &amp;
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A COL With Hazmat E'l 50 8$SOCi t I
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offered by M&amp;G Poly· urer's olf100 on or before
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good 50 P Oduction
borers 3 Phase Motor Controls
mers 111 Mason County Ma• 26 rno:'e IIllo call
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n cded rrust be ble to lnd YIOuals neetmg
ca 1 'acl0-5 8 6122 tor oommu ICate e~'ectiVely these reQU rements must WV C8ndlclates rrust 74Q-992·'n77
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Ollert&gt;rooK CcJ'Iler IS cur·
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R&amp; J 'UOk g
Mu t be able to 1ft 35 lbs employment history and
liOns
tor
SIAIE
ena OhiO
years demonstrated ex
lESIED N111S!ng Ass!S·
Hometown Insurance Center
Job Ino :~des p M trac sone mos
ropetrtJVely descnpti&lt;Yis or any ce:-tt·
perlenco roqu :-od The
Also ablo 10 reach fk:at1ons •ra1nlng
tants lor all shifts, lull
torosaOhonMtownlnsunm~r.com
1 re &amp; wold r&gt;g stoop knoel or r.tand and
preferred
cand datos lime hOurs available In·
tor trw
courses or relevant prorepa :-s Mu t have own
shall possess ond be
toots clean v ltd drovers otl'or such positions I e. grams completed. Cand
able to demonslrato me· terestod apphe&amp;;'11S can ~=~~=~~~~::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
PICk up an epp11C8ItOn or f
dates
of
interest
will
be
license s nC' dcd COL a push pull Have dexter·
chaniC81 SkillS InClUding
contact Lucy Goff BSN
plus, compelit•vo wages
ous ust:&gt; of both hards. contracted for pre-err·
but not limited to wold·
RN Staff Development
based on axp benet ts good vision, able to work ployment
lng ability to trouble·
Coordonator
@
40lK, hcalt~. dontal Ax with f'"ln suporvls.on and assessments/interviews.
shoot and repair pumps
740.992·6472 M·~' 9a·5p
opt1ons.
llr&gt;llorms pro perlorM reQuired physl·
and the k.'lOwlodgo and
Reply to:
at 333 Page St , M1ddle·
v1ded wotk boot allow· cal ctutoes
ab1hty to use all lorms Clf
Adccco IS an EOE .and a
M&amp;G Polymer~
port Oh EOE &amp; a par!ICI·
ance
proels.or•
measurement
drug free work ptaoe
pant ot the Drug-Free
Attn: Human Re·
For rnto:mnt1on ca w ff
tools lndivldua s neet ng
If rn• estod please ca I
sources·
Worl&lt;place Program
800-462·9365 X 206
these roqu roments must
e (304) 522·6623 speak
lnstrumenVEiectrlcaf
Total Construction
tax 740.374 3059
submit a resume post . . - - - - - - - - ,
With L or M ke
Mechanic (Technician)
rna
to
One Call to Do It i111
marked
by Wednesday
P.O. Box 8
March 31 2010 to tho
&lt;tea rider 0 "UU!ktng co
Apple Grove, WV 25502
Pole BJ.ms M etal Roofs
address below provld ng
0
To Buy
F1rc &amp; \ \ater Damage
contact f'llornalion em~am WANTED·
------~------Full-llme em- ploynent history and doRegional
Dump
ond
Dl) ''all 'Repatr
ployment 111 your own ~ ol any oertlt
Pneumatic Tanker Drlv·
eB.
-- - - - - - - - home as a Home Serv· callOfls tralt\lng courses
R&amp;J Trucking Company
Full nme Positions
Ices WOfl(er with Buck· or
rclavart
prog errs
Replacement
Marietta
OH
Avafloblel
eye CommU:'l ty Serv· cOMpleted
Cand dates
15
\\
indo\\ s and
1005 We provide salary of mteresr W' be con
seaxtung lor qua led
M3ko Ca for Conser·
appbcants mu • bO at
• ve Po tical Org noza· pi~&gt; beref IS and a da ly tacted for pro-employ·
\in) I Siding
least 23y;-s have rr '"
too s\Jdl as lhe NRA
room and board rate. mcnt assessmentslinte •
Remodeling,
pcciahst s, LTI&gt;
You provide a home Vl6WS
rrum or 1 y or sate
Roofs, Garages,
'11oC ston offers
(740)
742·2563
gu dance and tnendshtp
Reply to:
commercia dr ng expePole Buildings,
A comprchcn :Ve benem a tamoly atmosphere
M&amp;G Polymers
• Siding • \in) I
r'.ence :1 a truck Hazmat
t package perform·
ReQu res ability to teach
Siding, Decks,
Attn: Human Re·
certrfleat on c1 n MVR
\\indo" • ~Ictal
arce bonus prolcs·
personal living SkillS and
sources-Maintenance
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
and good ob stab ty
Drywall, Additions
and Shingle Roof~
s10na1 worklng env ron
a
comm1tment
to
tho
Mechanic
We
o
competllrve
and New Homes.
,. r&gt;t odv !1Coment op• Ul-cks • Addition~
growth and development
P.O. Box8
bene'ts pus 401K
d
Cell: 740-416-5047
portlln
and mucl&gt;
ot an IndiVidual with de· Apple Grove, WV 25502
Insured· Free
·l ~kctrirnl
Owners:
vacation pay
more'
email :
velopmental
disabilities
Estimates
•l,lumhing
Coni ct
D "s
Jon Van Meter &amp;
II nterested co:1tact Coj
rshadfrm
@aol.com
' SOQ-462 936 to
• l'oll· llurn~
Paul Rowe
y Calf and Schedule Your co a at 1·8()(}-531-2302
go
Interview·
or
(740
286-5039
www
1 -888-tMc:-PAYU ext.
Pre-e p!Oyment
Drug
2311
Te
Eo a Opponuhttp obs nfoe slon.c
Employer
om
In Memory

CARPENTER
SERVICE

,.-----------=------n

Great coverage and
superior service

304-773-1111
BErie

~Insurance·

Get A Jump
n
SAVINGS

SUNSET

(ONSTRUffiON

FIND A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEOS

Shop the
Classifieds!

740-742-3411

co

In '\lemor)

Karen L.
Price
Hudson

Pliblit\
m~
lour Righi I 1\DGW lldilmd Rigbt II\

on ~ our 56
Uirthdn)
\h\ 3) s \\ ith us.
LO\e, Brother

questions to (614) 297·
celved at:
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE
Is
hereby Tho Ohio Historical So- 2455.
A pre-bi d conference
given that on Saturday, ciety
March 13, 2010 at 10:00 Historic Sites and Fa· will be held at 11 :00 AM
on March 25, 2010 at
a.m., a public sale will cllitles Division
SIC\C
be held at 22739 Buck· 1982 Velma Avenue, Buffington Island State
·'I'&gt;IH:I
town Rd., Racine, OH. Col umbus, Ohio 43211 Memorial, S. R. 124,
"&amp;-t,~ "" 1k.rf"
the Farmers Bank and until Aptll 8, 2010 at Portland, Ohio. OHS
~O\\ Sclhng:
Savings Company Is 2:00 PM local time urges bidders to attend
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks
• rord &amp; \1otorcrnft
selling for cash In hand (Owner's clock) and the conference for an
overview of the project,
Parh • F ngmc,,
.~tJ:---------------3,1" or certified check the opened Immediately scope, content, adminTro~nsfer Cases &amp;
thereafter, for provld·
following collateral:
r ransnussrons
Friendli of"1'1ze Grill" would like to 1985 Skyline Fortune lng the material and Istrative procedures
• Aftennarket
Mobile Home Ser No. labor for the comple- and an opportunity to
thank the following local businesses: #37390362U
view the project site.
Replacement Sheet
tion of:
Project
No. The anticipated project
~leta! &amp; Components
the Farmers Bank and OHS
Andcr.o I Llmnurc
Kl C
cost range Is $50,000 to
wr All ~Llk~ )( \'chodes
Savings
Company, CP0906
George \ !'.u • r Sh 1\
\\rid Hor;e
Pomeroy, Ohio, re· Buffington Island State $110,000.
Racmc.Ohto
I iliT'lcr~ H.mk
PoY.cll Food I 1r
sj!rves the right to bid Memorial Exhibit Kiosk A Bid Guaranty and
740-949-1956
\\end)'
Md)ooalt.l s
Meigs Contract Bond are re·
at this sale, and to w ith- Portland,
McCit
l.ll Po n: )'
P1tz3 Hut
qulred as defined In the
draw the above collet· County, Ohio
0 II') Queen
eral prior to sale. In accordance with the Contract Documents.
Dommo's Putn
Further, The Farmers Contract Documents Prevailing wage rates
Bod) I ,JiltaSICS
Bank and Savings prepared under the dl· for Meigs County as
C)tut.lro 100
Company reserves the rectlon of George r.t. determined by the
Att tud ' 'iJion
right to reject any or all Kane Jr., Architect. State of Ohi o, Depart·
&amp; l anm1g
The project will be ment of Commerce, Di·
bids submitted.
The above described awarded to one suc· vision of Labor and
Tuppc"' arc
Mel R1t.lcnour
collateral will be sold cessful Bidder. Tho In- Safety will be applica·
as Is-where Is, with no structions to Bidders, ble to this YVork.
£-lder Bcennan
expressed or Implied Bid Form, Form of Con- No bids may be with·
And the m3llv OTH ER
tract, Drawings, Spccl· drawn withi n ninety
warranty given.
"ho dona telfor the
(omm \sron r
flcatlons, and other {90) days after the Bid
For
further
Information,
\\
E.LKLR
fnmrl)
\t rke Bartrum
documents Opening. The Owner
or tor an appointment contract
Bob's \1arkct of M.1 on
to Inspect collateral, may be examined at reserves the right to
prior to sale date con· the following locations: waive Irregulari ties and
tact Cyndle or Ken at Historic Sites and Fa· to reject any or all bids.
(3) 11 , 18, 25
clllties
740·992-2136.
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
The Ohio Historical So·
(3) 10, 11 , 12
clety
-------1982 Velma Avenue
Public Notice
Columbus,
Ohio
Public Notice
43211
PROBATE COURT OF
The Home National F. W. Dodge • McGraw MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN RE: CHANGE OF
Bank will auction the Hill
The \'A Mcdicnl Cenh'l' in Uuntington.
following Items on Sat· 6200 Rockslde Woods NAME OF
\\\
t s seck•ng Pnmar) Care trnrned
SKYLER LEE KERNS
urday March 13, 2010, Blvd I 310
TO SKYLER RAY REIT·
Phystclan~ ,md R Ns for u planned Outreach
at 10:00 A.M. at the Cleveland, OH 44131
Chmc. 111 Gal hpoh~. O H fhe dmtc \\i ll
bank's lot beside our F.W. Dodge/Builders MIRE
Exchange
Case No. 20106012
drlve-thru.
mnrall) he open t\\O OJ)~ per \\eck \\lth the
NOTICE OF HEARING
2007 CHEVY
HHR 1175 Dublin Road
poten!IJI of mcn:ascd chnrc ttme dcpcndmg on
3GNDA23DX7S543861 Columbus, Ohio 43215 ON CHANGE OF NAME
demand ,md mcrc.•scd pauent ba!it
F.YV. Dodge- McGraw (R.C. 2717.01)
1 he \ A oflcr .a comprehensive benefits 2001 HONDA CIVIC Hill
Applicant hereby gives
1 HGEM21991l054532
p.1cku1!c mdudmg Malpr actice Co,erage.
notice to all interested
MERCURY 7265 Kenwood rood
1999
Fedorall:.mplo:ccs Reurcmc nt S)~tcmfFERS),
persons and to Heather
C 0 U G A R Ci ncinnati. OH 45236
Heu)Jh and l tfe l nsuran~..e. fhnft
mgs Plan
Bid Documents will be Kerns. whose last
12YVFT61L1X5640236
(40l kl, gen erous Lca\e ant.! Hohd.t)S.
1997 FORD RANGER available electronically known address is 1554
1FTCR15XXVPA64740 and as hardcopy on Nye Ave., Pomeroy, OH
EducatiOnal and Re,cJr~..h opponunnres and
45769, that tho appll·
2002
FREIGHT March 15, 2010.
more
Obtain electronic ver- cant has tiled an AppllLINER
Please m~urc .tpphcau on matenals arc
1FUJBBCG62LG29441 slons by registering on cation for Change of
rcccl\cd no l.1ter than A pnl 2, 20 10 l·orward
the plan holders list Name In the Probate
1991 BMW
all apJlh".tllon matcnal s to the VA '\1 cdka l
WBAAJ9315MEJ01597 and downloading doc· Court of Meigs County,
Center.
I-IRM S (U5 l. An N. Mtcah
The Home National uments from the OHS Ohio, requesting the
Stngcf/KC\111 Ton~,;\, 1540 Spri ng , \:rollc)
Bank reserves the right website at: www.ohlo· change of name of
IJfi\C, H unt ington , \\.\ 2')704 I os 1IHHI
to reject any and all hlstory.org/snlhsfs.htm Skyler lee Kerns to
Skyler Ray Reltmlre.
bids. All vehicles are 1 •
rnfonn.tlltlll .md npphcatton requirements can
sold, as Is where, Is Hardcoples of the Con· The hearing on the aph e l tHIIld hy ICV !CWIII g lhC v ao.: ,tllt')'
with no warranties ex· tract Documents may plication will be held on
,lllno u nccmcuts on
L SA JOBS at
pressed or Implied. be obtained for a the 12th day of April,
\\\\ W,USilJUbS gm,
For an appointment to charge of $15.00 by 2010, at 1:30 o'clock
Phy~t~rans (V.Ico~nc) .mnouncc ment number
see, call 949·2210, ask faxing a request to tele· pm In the Probate
phone (614) 297·2455. Court of Meigs County.
I ll 029 G A l \ 8 Dl )
for Sheila.
Rc •1 tcrcd '\ursc' (v~:u.:anc) .mnounccmcn t
Please make checks located at 100 E. Sec·
(3) 10, 11 , 12
payablo to the Ohio ond St., Pomeroy, OH
number 10 0~0 GAl 18 P\\ I
Historical Society.
45769.
I or ddtllonaltnfonnatiOn rica~ contact
Direct all questions to Gary Rcltmlre
Public Notice
Mr. \\ifliam Lanning, LCS\\-BCU,
Mr. Fred Smith, OHS 832 East Main St.
ut 30~·-129·6755, El\1 227t• or
ProJect Architect at Pomeroy, OH 45769
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
304-429-7570 (fux ).
Sealed Bids will be re- (614) 297·2446 or fax (3) 11

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
l&gt;ump1ruck
St'f"\icc
\\ c do dri\C\1 B)~
I imcstone • Grn' cl
I up oi • hll Dirt

I 01

1

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
fell

Stanley Tree-

H&amp;H

Trimming

Guttering

&amp; Removal

SeaM ess G11"e-s
Rooltng S d ng Gutte'S
Insured &amp; Bonded
740.653·9657

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

constrncuQIt

d ••
p Pale Barns, Garages,
ROliSH STREET
STORAGE

New Construction, Room Add., •
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeling, Decks
Phone:7~7~16
Cell 74~7-3642

89 Roush St.

Mason. \\\ 25160

35 yrs up. Free Est. FuUy Insured

Owners:
lftm Cremeans 8 Boger SeUus

Hill's Self
Storage

VA Medical Center

s..,

YVVI040954 Cell740-416-2960 74D-992.0730

29625 Bashan Road
Racene, OH 45771

740-949-2217

:\11l1·1AEL'S
SERVICE n ::\TI-:R
1555 :"'n: ,\ w.
l'nnJCnl\·, 011
• Or I &amp;. II Iter ~h.m 'C
• rune Ups
• Broke er. 1ce
• A( Recharge
• ~hr.ore:duu 1
rep.ur • I m: Rcpa1r
• Tnmsm''''on l 1lter
&amp; llutd Change
• Gcneml \1echamc
"orJ...

5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Sizes

7:00

Hours
am - 8 :00 pm

i

Roofin •• Stdmr.
Sofitt. D--~ks. Dvor;,
\\ mdo""· l lectm::
Plumbmg. Dr." .til
Remodd ng. R1 )m
Addition'
L ocal Contractor

740·367-0544
I' r cc I· tinmh ~

7 40·367-0536

,\ eu· Corwrurtwn and
Rcplareme11t \ m_l/ HmdolH

CONTRACTOR WINDOW
&amp; MANUFACTURING,llC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

(74!1t 992·119111

II V•rrw/1: /11 Rl'plac unmt II'"'

-

"' '

fnr Oftler llamc1 &amp; lrmla&lt;

I.E\\' IS

CONCRETE
( 'ONS'J'Rl iCTIO!'i
Conc rete Removol
and Replacement

\111)pcs or
Concrete "ork
29 '''nr~ F.,pcri,•nr('

Da,·id Lc" is
7-'0-')92-6971

I rcsh :'\orth Cnrolin.1
SHRI\IP
t740) 742·2.%3
IMJ&lt; nnrr l'ronn. bnd ...n

lO per lh CJSh onl)
f

1

I'C'q n:d

'IJ1

'ih1pmcnt&lt; nm1c cv.=l)
ti'"&lt;'l fr f! \

Arc~ptlng 1\c\\

Stmlcnts
Piano Kc~ hoard
J unc \ 1111\ rnnkl'n
Pomcro~.OH

740-992-9752

�....

-·-- ----------------~~~------~----~~-.~~--------~~---Thursday, March 11 , 201 0

www.mydallysentlnel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

AREII'r
YOIJ (i()IIJG

A 8A()

J.1eR

;/,A/JGOVSR..

TO I'IOR,I&lt;

Chris Browne

G0 oP/Yo tJ'Lt.. 85
HERE WIIEII k\OTrl~t:l

No, I t1AI/E

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Prickly
1 Tng tuncplants
t1on, for
6 Pitched
short
11 Synthetic 2 Skill
fiber
3 Alertness
12 Make a
4 Warty
rug
critter
13 Pocket
5 About to
14 Packing
be a
mom
heat
15 S low
6 Sawyer's
p assage
creator
17 Prohibit
7 Valiant
19 B akery
one
offenng
8 Farm
20 T rophy
father
23 Demi's
9 Preceding
beau
period
25 Lohen10 Unite
grin's
16 Armed
love
helicopter
26 Avo1ds,
17 Grounds
with "of'
28 Pak istan
neighbor
29 Tribute
30 l awn
makeup
31 Pine's
k1n
32 Cardinal
33 Ness foe
35 Kick back
38 T rue
41 Similar
42 M islead
43 Used a
sponge

Tom Batiuk

~AGAR THE HORRIBLE
3

'

18 Houston
p layer
20 D1scernmg
21 Custom
22 Did
kitchen
work
24 Finger
count
25 Shade
source
27 Flower
part

31 Sent a
copy
33 Soap un1t
34 Film('50s style)
35 Unrefined
36 Yale
student
37 Gloss
target
39 Eroded
40 F1rst name
in horror

44 01d

•.. )JJONOn/JIIG

TOPAY1

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 85

English
forest

COil/..CJ GE'f
Me Oi/TOP

8£(),1

W illiam Hoest
7 II

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

..L.ORETTP:S VERY HON~T ... SI-U: SAID ~ WOUl-DN'T
BE A MINUTE AND WOUl-DN'T SPEND A DIME.~

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

T HE MIGHTY
SHPHINX lS A

/HE. PRINT lS
TOO SMAt...L.

MIND RgADE.R.

\

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
... l'U. .JI$f Ha-P

Ut\'l"ll.~~

)

TO WALl' g:(f!JO~
r;t;trr H,A'(c:'f(?$1'

UPAAPt.a:lK ~IER

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Da v~ Gr~~ n

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Hank Ketchum

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" Maybe I should try keeping a list."

i

~

HAPPY BTRTHDA't for Thursd.l), Mard\11, 2010:
llUs ye.u you have many opporturubes for dl.ingt'
and heading in a ~ith e direction. You will be mum
h.1pp1er as} ou launch into a ne\' life cycle. You could
discOver hOw content you are when takmg a proadh e
stance You could be amazed by) our affumath e
behavior. If~ ou are single. ) ou will be surrounded b\
potenti.ll swtol"'. You ,~iiJna\eto workatsfa)mg ~m­
gle. Others y,iJJ been\'lOUSof\'OUr many admirers. If
)uu are attached, the two of you nucltt ha\ e a disagret"'ment about how to lead your daily lffe But berou..&lt;:e of
your especia11y upbeat pen;onality, the two of you ron
hop O\er any problem. AQl:ARIL'S makes a great heaJ.
er.
1l1e Star• SIIUU• UIS Kind ofDmt YiJu71 Hare- 5-DI/III!l'lll.
4- PO&lt;o'ltu.oe; 3-Avm~ge; 2-So-so; 1-Diffo'Ult
ARIES (!\larch 21-Apnl19) .
***** Staying focused takes talent, l'Sf't.'\."MII) as a
duld, lo\ed une or Ol'ativ~ endea\OT ~popping up
needing extra attention. lA'lfl't lose yuur focus, and get
done what you deem a high priority. A meetmg could
be quite di.;trJcting. Tonight: \\"here the gang is.
TAURUS (Aprii2().M,l)' 20)
*** You might want to do ~;omethmg \l'l"\ dilfereht and handle a matter dll'ierently trom d l-x&gt;~S. lhi&lt;; l'i
cl I'\(&gt;- win s!lu.ltion. and you mi);hl need to go \\'lth the
tlow. Set&gt;k out other solution.o;, though, ou might be
h.ud ·pn&gt;S&lt;ed to comil'\(-e other&gt; of the ''nghtness" of
your ideas. Tonight Could be late.
GEML""'l (May 2l-June20)
Keep reaching 0\Jt for other.; and, if ne&lt;.&gt;d
be. find an e&gt;.pert or h• o to help resoh e an ISsue Lbten
to \\hat others are ~) ing rather than become reactive
'tour creativity doesn't respond well to this pre.'Sllre
You nught feel a little out &lt;1f kilter m this &lt;:~twtion.
Tonight: J::ktach from the unmediate
CA!\CER Oune 21-July 22)
'**** A key a-,o:;ooate makes demands. Lasten to
another's suggestions cotla!mmg fmanfi'S )ou rould
be O\-erwhelmed by pressure. and are I10f ~
straight Be aware of your limits, and honor them
according!). Torught. Go \\1th a suggestion
LEO (Juh 23-Aug. 22)
**'** You could be slorrruer thim \OU realiZe
Suddenly, e'l.c~se; oflate might boo.1nie more cipparent. Do .1sk \ our-;ell whv you are ro &amp;&gt;nous Let go and
relax. Re&lt;td bet\\ een the lines with someone you mre

*****

about. Vl'hat this person isn't saymg could be more gg·
ruficant than )OU think. Tonight: J'res,ure builds m your
d&lt;lily life.
\ 'ffiGO (Aug. 23-St.&gt;pt. 22)
'*"*'* Relax \\lth )OUT daily demands. ~etimes
you get ro uptight you lose 'our temper. l.:nderstand
"'hat IS happt'lling \\1thin your unmediate cirde Deal
\\1th otherS on a one-on-one le\·eJ. )our creati\it} flour
!Shes. Tm~Kick back.
UBRA
23-0.;t 22)
*'*'*'*''*' our imagmation fills m the gaps. You
under&gt;tand the unphcations· ho\\E'\'e.f,) ou find a Situation far more m\lgoratmg than m the pust. Pressure
builds \\hen you \\ant one thmg and Others v. ant
cmothet Tonight: EnJOY the moment
SCORPIO (O..t 23-l'\0\ 21)
'*''*'*'* 'tou might \\ant to 11) another approach or
do so:netlung \t'l) difft'l\'nt 'tour '&lt;)fter ~ide emerges
1\'lth an a$003te who rrught M\ e dlifirulty seeing the
\\hole ptcture. WalJ., this pel"'n through t}ie steps.
Torus#: Happy at home.
SAGITIARllS (1'\m. 22-Dec 21)
***** Commumrution i-. act:h e. You l'annot rom·
pl.1in. ;-.:l, m.tlter wh.lt you m.mage lo get p.1~t ,\IlOther
person's reser. alion~. Li.;;ten to whitt l.., ~ing shared If
) ou deta&lt;h from your preferenns, \ ou11 rome up on
top. 'lbnis;ht: T.'llking up a -.torm.
CAPRI COR." {Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
~'*' Watch your spending. It ea--ih could get out of
controL The unexpected o1dd ... e.'l.citement to\ our da)
'tour abiht\ to share} our feelin&amp; helps a person.11 rela
tionshtp A purchase tor vour hOme !llight be a \'1?1)"
good deo~on. forught. Treat bme.
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20-feb. IS)

***'*'* )ou lik&lt;' wh.1t IS hap~ m \'OUT unme-

dtate rude of mends. ~til\ m touch with \ our net.'lii
when dealmg \\'lth a her) j-"o?rsonality m }our hte Don't
b..lck down. k~pms in mind voor linuts Realire "hat
IS happerung. Tonight: \\'hate\ er knocks} our~ off
PISCES (Feb 19-March 20)
~'* Kno\' \\hen to mo\ e for.' ClJ'd Take aCtion
di~) and \\,th n'rt.mll) 'too knov. what to do and
which Wil) to go c.etting agreement might t.1ke a
hea\') effort Ju.~ do what }OU nt.'\."d to do. Tonight
1hkc some pt'n:on.'ll time.

l.urp drnt BlsJr ~;
kttp

/Uv.tt

1 tile l•zlmul
r:oudinl'l'JSilf: •

�-..----~-----~------------ - ------------___,

Page 86 •

111c Daily Sentinel

local Sports Briefs
Integrity baseball-softball signups
S1 nup~ for the lntegrit)' ba eball and
c;ottball k•.tguc., v.11l be held on h1dn), March 12. und
Saturdm. ~lurch I 3. :u the \ tnton Baptl&lt;,t Church located
on St.ue Route 160 111 Gnlll.t Count)
TilC ~1gnup.., are for bn) !". und g1rlc; .tges four (as of Jan. 1,
2010) to I:! (.t~ of Apnl30, 2010) .md there v.ill be a $38
regt~tratton fee per ~hlld. \\ hil..h mdude5 " uniform. The
lc&lt;tgucs &lt;uc a(..,o 111 I b.tll, B.~seb.tll !\hnor and A-ball Ltttle
1 caguc Ml"ljor
The 1ntch 1.2 signup t1mc arc fmm 6:30p.m. until 8:30
p.m, \\htlc the March 13 tunes arc scheduled from 2 p.m.
until 4 p.m. B1 ing a b.11l u glO\e to sign up.
P1act1ccs be •m 111 Apt II .md •ames Will take place m both
M.tv and June I here WJII ,,J.,o be an award.., mght in Jul)
\IN fO\l, Ohtu

Tournan1ent Presale Tickets
RACI"\1 . Oh1o
Prc&lt;..tle tickets for Southern\ district
tournament "ame • rc .1\ tl.tblc at the !ugh ~hooL T1ckets
nrc a\ml ble Jurmg s~o.hool hour m the office. Sl:hool
'' 111 recle\e 25 percent of the proceeds lor t11:kets purc:ha ed at the '-hoot

MYL baseball-softball sign ups
MIDDll PORI. Oh10
1 he Middlepo11 ':Iouth League
\\ill be holdm ba~cball and &lt;.oflball s1gnups on Saturda),
l\1urch I~. at the Middleport Council Chambers from 10
u.m. unul noon I he 1gnup fee~ are $25 per ch1ld or S40
per f&lt;1111ll) ••md n l.ttc tee \\111 be ch.trged to anyone who
v. anh to si~nup after !\1nrch 13.
J·ot mme inform.ttil1n, COiltdl:t (),1\e Bo)d m (740) 5900438 or lony.t Coleman at (740; 99::!-5481.

Mason Rec Surnnter signups
MASO;\, \V 'V.t
I he Ma~on Recreation Department
v.-111 holdm • o;ummer b,tscball and ofthall stgnups e'ery
Monda) .md Saturd.t) m March at the Hatr Shop in !\h1son.
Monda) s1gnup~ ''til nm from 6 p.m. unttl 8 p m and
Saturd.l) ignups from 10 • m. unul noon.
For more 1nfor,nat1on, contact J.m1e Paule) at (304)
7719107 orR1ck Ke.trn at r304) t&gt;82 .2312.

Green Ball Association
Cl Nl ENAR'\. Oh10
The Green B.tll A ..,oct ..tlon ''ill
he holchng re •tstt ttton lor summer b.tll on Monda}. Murch
15th from 6 ~0 fi '0 p m m th Green Elemental) library.
These v. ill be the on I) '" o opportumt1e&lt;. to regi&lt;,ter children
for baseball md &lt;.oftbJII ( h1ldren age 4 17 rna) pia).
co...t l'i 15 pet chtld ~25 tor c.tc!l .lddltiOnal child.

Gallipolis baseball-softball signups

www .mydailyscntincl.com

Thursday, March

l'l, &lt;2010

Top Big Ten teams still have much to prove
I DIANAPOI IS (AP}
lnjunes to Oh1o State's Evan
Turner nnd Purdue's Robbie
mtght
have
Hummel
dimmed the Big Ten's
chances of snaggmg u No. I
seed in the l'fc AA tournanot that the tc.tms
ment
aren't going to try to make a
nm and strengthen their
cn.,es.
Turner m1s~ed six games
this :;cason v. ith two broken
bones in hie; ltm cr hack, &lt;111d
the tcn1n went 3 3 without
him. He came back to be
n.1med B1g Ten pla)er of the
) car n'&gt; the fifth-ranked
Bucke)CS \\On 14 of 11
games .1fter his return to
claim a share of the conference title
The Buckeyes (24-7) open
tournament pin) f-rtda)
agnmst M1chtgan or lov.a.
Turner cons1dcrs that game
pan of the bu..,iness he needs
to handle before what man)
constder h1s inevitable JUmp
to the !\fBA.
"I
definite!)
ha\ en 't
thought about nn) of that
tuff yet," Turner aid &amp;~fter
Sunday's
Will
.tgamst
Illinois. ''I'm trvm~ to ju t
lhc in the moment nsht now
\\ith m) team. We stJIIlld\e
a couple more trophies to
\\in."
Ohio State and Pl\rdue
aren't the onl) t\\O team&lt;.
with somethm&amp; to prmc.
No. 11 Mich1g.m State has
su pcnded guard Chns Allen
for at least the tournament
opener. and the Spartan
need the1r bench to step up.
llhnois 1., try mg to nap n 3game &lt;.ktd .• 011hwc tern has
19 \\ins and I 'I If) mg to reach
the NCAA tournament for
the fi~t 11mc, and Mmnc.-.ota
attempt to break mto the
f1eld nfter a )&gt;trong fimsh m
conference pin).
Purdue \\on I0 st1 aight
and looked hke a sohd contender for a No. I seed. but
the
SIXth-ranked

''ill

Purdue's

Robb1e
Hummel
was helped

off the court
after tnjunng

h1s rtght leg
during an
NCAA
against
Minnesota rn
Mtnneapolls,
Mtnnesota,
on February

24.
Jeff Wheeler/
Minneapolis
Star
TrlbuneiMCT

Boilermakers (26-4&gt; lost to
Michigan State on Feb. 28 m
the1r first full ~arne v. ithout
Hummel,\\ ho '' gone for the
season with u knee injury.
Purdue coach Matt Pmnter
knows that experts no longer
consider his team u Hnal
Four contender, and he's
using that to motivate hts
teani. The Boilem1alters will
play
No~t~western
or
Indmnn on J&lt;ru.lay.
"That's the challenge l'\e
ghen our guys and talked to
our guys about." Pmnter
said. "There's onl) one thing
to do v. hen people knock
you and they don't thmk
) ou •re goin2 to ha\ e a:&gt;
much succes ~.and that'~ go
out and pro\C them \\rong
und win.'
NCAA ~election committee chairman Dan Guerrero
aid \\edne da) that mjurie
are fa'-'lored into the selection proce s. but exact!) hO\\
depend on the team and the
•
circumstances.
"We will e\ aluate that
team's performance v. 1th the
pla~er ,md without the player,' Guerrero said. "It's \el')
likely that a team can be JUSt

as strong or perform m a
m.mner that doe n't requ1re
us to make any changes in
terms of \\here ''e thought a
team m1ght be. It 1s omethmg '' e
discuss nt great
length m our meetmgs."
Michtg.m State (24-7) will
be \\ ithout Allen for at leru.t
one gnme, Fnda) 's matchup
with the Mmnesuta-Penn
State v. mncr. He usually
start5 and i~ the lifth-leadmg
sc01er 1or the Spartans. averaging 9 I points per game.
Coach Tom lzzo wa hard
on his tcan. after the &lt;iloppy
win at Purdue, but he hked
the \hi\ hts team bounced
back u1 a 64-48 \\in mer
Michtgan on Sundu) that
gave the Spanan&lt;, a ~hare of
the conference title.
"R1ght nO\\. \\e're better
than I gi\c u credit for, but
not us good a I think '' e can
be." lao aid "Some,,here
m bel\\ ccn 1s v. here \\e are
nght nO\'-' Are \\ e gomg to
\,mit for\\.trd or are \\C
going to smk back? That \\ill
be the big key in the next
couple of da) ...
No I' \\ 1sconsm (23-7)
''ants to beef lip ns resume

''ill

for NCAA seeding. The
Badgers v. ill get thetr chanc.:e
'' ith a first-round match up
'' ith Illinoi , which has lost
fi,e of six heading into the
tournament.
"Now. \\e put oursehes in
a major bind,'' Jlhboi coach
Bruce Weber said. "We've
got to go to the tournament
and do some damage if
we're going to ha\C an)
chance for postseason."
Painter be he\ es Jllmois
and Minne ota should make
the field of 65, and
North\\ estern desen es co··
sideration . .North\\ estern su
fered a costh loss to Indiana
on Saturda) :but the\\ tldcat~
have a \\in O\ er Purdue and
will set a rematch \\ tth the
Hoosters on Thursda).
·'J think Illinoi ~hould be
in;· Painter satd. "A lot of
the experts sa) the) 're gomg
to ha' e to get a \\in in the
tournament. From \\ atchmg
them and pia\ ing a~ainst
them. lllino1 i~ an CAA
tournament team. and o Is
Minnesota. Nonh,,estern
gi'e us fit!.. They v.ould be
a tough out in the !\CAA
tournament.''

2009-10 District 13 Basketball Coaches Association Teams
10

Bo) s Basketball
DIVISION

Dv

1-11

ON

D IVISION

IV

Ill

FIRST TEAM
2

12
12
12
12
2

K
Adl s OakH
Rebecca PUCkett Oal&lt; H
B a Tac:kOtt
on
Mo gan Gr nstead Aiexander
A.manda Ruffner Chesapeake
Wt' • ey Oaugn•ery Ajexc_'lder
U1 Caud Oak

2

•2
2
11

•o

'I

•o

Player of the Year: Ka ssa Adkins Oa~t li
Coach of the Year: Doug Hate Oak

NI·W HA\ I K W.V. .
\\Ill hold ..,,gnup!&gt; on Mnrch 14, from 2-4 p.m. at the
Waham.t H1gh School g) m.
The fee ts ~ '0 pa pi&lt;~) er or $45 per tmmediatc fnmil).
All mtetcstcd pla)CI need to be s1gned up on or before
March 14 Team v. Ill be fom1ed and practice "ill begin
as oon ds pos&lt;,1blc

SPECIAL MENTION
Y!or Da s M ona
Jell 01o1Z Log
Elhan Moore Ga po ~
Levt LawhOild Vil"ton County
Andrew Ct&gt;1 stman Jackson
Perry Wheeler M netta
Ett-ar All
V1nton County
Cody Kre chbaum Mllorlelta
Ctay E onWOod Warr n

DIVISION

12
12
11
11

12

12
12
11

12

'2

2

12

12
11
11

12

12
Player of tho Yur Todd Kochendoorf
Coach of the Yoa1· M rl&lt; La!of' ronton

PPHS Longaberger Basket Givea\\'ay
POJI"T PI I· \SAN1 \\ V.t.
The Point Plea,ant H1gh
School softb.tll booskr&lt;, arc h.t\ m' .t Longaberger Basket
Gheav.a} 111 the month of Apnl. A nev. basket v.11l be
drc~\\ n on each \\Orkmg da) of the month. Tickets are nO\\
on sale ut the \1ason Jar m Pomt Pleasant.

Rested
from Page UI
fu I that I h3\ e those honor-;," ~.tid Turner. hc;tcd on
almoc..t eve!) \II Amcttca
team "Mo..,t of the troplucs
\\Ill r,rob bl) go to Ill)
mom
Mattn ha&lt;. been tabbed as
the B1g Ten·., coach of the
\ear e.tdl of th three tune'
im teams h \C \\un there'
ul.tr-seJ'\on aO\\ n
·I reall) beiiC\C tht.,,
that's the pla)er!&gt;," he sn1d.
"I don't score. I don't
rebound. I don't get ~tops
the gu)s earn conche"
those awards •·
When 11 "''" pointed out
to htm that he was ~clc~:ted
by the media ,ts the league's
top co.Jch but th.tt Jw, peers
had chosen PUJduc '!&gt; Malt
Pamtcr. M.tttu JOked. 'I H
alv.ay~ md that )OU
ll)"
know n hell of n lot more
than \\C knot\."
Sttll. the l3ucke\ c~ d1dn 't
feel C\ er) one got "their due.

'I urner \\as an unanimous

selection in media balloting
for pia) er of the year, but
one Btg Ten coach did not
vote for him - e\en though
the JUnior led the conference 111 sconng (20.1 points
per game). steals (2.0) and
rebounding (8 3) and \\as
second in a%tSts 15 9). He
hkcl) \\ill end up .t the
nat io1Ml pl.t) cr of the ) car.
Mane~ \\as clear!) troubled but stopped short of
cntiCIZIIlg the coach for not
m.tkln!! it unanimous.
"I thmk (Turner) is \el')
dc-.cn mg of that. But that'
111 Ill) mind, neither here
nor there," he ~aiel. "You
knov.. th.tt's up to them and
their JUd~ment."
L1kcwtse. Light), a 6foot-7 'hutdcl\\ n defender.
\\.IS not picked for the Big
Ten's delensi\C team.
l ight) '\atd he '' ould use
that sh~ht .ts moti\ution.
''I'll JU~t go out there and
keep doing what I'' c been
domg
pia) mg the game
the w,t) J',e been playmg
and helping m) team get
v. tn ," he said.

11

10
1~

Aaro M
wat rfo."d
Jake Reyno ds M er
Tanner R ey Sl Joseph
Joseph Unger St Jose¢!
Cody Blackburn St Joseph

12
11
11
11

onton•

10

12
11

12
10
10

D IVISION

11

12

12
10
12
12

12

9
10
11
11

IV

12
12
12

Player ot the Year: S!na K111g W • rlord"
Coach of tho Vur: John B rde e Ea •

11

11

12
12
11
10

12
12

11

SECOND TEAM
Player of the Year· LeAnne Ross M e!tl'
Coach of the Year: Scott Cozzens r. a tta

SECOND TEAM
J::!yn Btadburd South Pont
Kelsey Mart r&gt; Jackson
Elena Le10 Athens
Maegal" Grose Manetta
Amy Noe Ga po s
Ba ey Poage Warren
Jordanna Rauen Wan"cn
T1nesha Taylor South Po I'll
Chelsey Evans, Logan
Miranda Grues1or Ma1gs
Pa1ge Lamb Marlolta
Amanda Brown Manella
Allison Graves V nton County

Di\ io;;ion l\ and all \\ere
seniors. EHS landed t\\O in
Titus Pierce and Mike
John on, '' h1le Southern
from Page Bl
had the other \\ ith Michael
honoree' and se\ en pia) ers Manuel.
Each dt\ i ...ion ''as also
v. ho ''ere named pecial repre ented in the special •
mention.
mention catcgol). Rl\ er
Staning '' 11h the bo) s.
There v.cre :.ix first team Valle)· lone rcprescntnti\e
enior Cod\ McA\ena
honorees to come from the ''a
bo) s · stde. \\ 1th EHS enior in Di,ision JII, ,\h1le SGHS
Jake l ) nch bemg the lone sophomore Dalton Matne)
area rcprcscntath c to ea111 &lt;D-4) and GAHS junior
pla)Cr of the )Car honors. bthnn l\loore (Di' ision 1-11)
Lynch,"' ho was honored as were abo ~elected
There \\ere five first team
the top D-4 player. \\us
honorees
to come from the
joined b) senior Kell)
girls'
side.
\\ith Did ion l\
Winebrenner
(l::.astern),
seniors Scan Coppick and landing three of tho ...e in
Cyle Rces (Southern), and seniors Kase\ Turle\ and
semor B1 nnclon l inn ison Audrionna i)ulhn~ .. lrom
(South Galhn) no;; first team l:.astcrn and South Gallin
senior H,1ilce S\\ ain.
~clecttons in l)i, 1sion IV.
Senior Alhe Troester
Senior John Troc tcr of
Galha Acndem) \\U also " (GAHS) ,md junior Morgan
1Jr&lt;;t tc.mt election 111 HO\\ ard (Meigs) \\ere also
named fir..,t team in
Di\ ision I-ll
The three second team Dl\ ision 1-11.
There \\ere three second
honoree • all came from

District 13

12
12

Ktr-g w • :1ord
Kasey Tur ev Eastern
C nda C;,ck: r Fodera HOCking
Em y BrOW!' Waterford
H
Swall' Souti' Ga
Audnonna Pu s. Eastern

12

LeAnne Ross Ma etta
Ka FleiCtl r South POint
Ton Dixon V ntOfl County
Ba ey Tope l,pg
Taylor Dolak. Wa ren
Allie Troester G ipoli s
Morgan Howard Me~gs

11

10

FIRST TEAM

s

II

11

12
10
11
1

SPECIAL MENTION

SPECIAL MENTION
Chad F1 her. F rland
SaM Cooke. ROCk H1ll
J P Taylor Ironton
Josse Smltt&gt; Me gs
Regg1e S rrs Bolp e
Cody McAvena R•vor Va ley
Ethan Prater Sout/1 Po :~t

SPECIAL MENTION
Kayle R de~~&gt; Alexander
Ch ea Harper ROCk H
Ch SflY Kenn son Tnnble
Lorna Ceaser tromon
Kayle SWiger Fa nd
Brearna Bt&gt;tler Oak H
K mm e Bennell Chesapeake
Sarah Mayo Chesapeake

Giris Basketball
FIRST TEAM

\¥ahama Hall of Ji"'ame n1eeting
\1ASO . \\ \..t
There \\Ill be a \\ahama Hall of
F-ame Bo.trd of Trustee meetm' on Thur day. !\1arch II. ut
6.30 p m ,t \\ h. rna H1gh School

SPECIAL MENTION
L~.oke Tay or Symmes Va I1Y
Oa ton Matney South Ga ro

DIVISION

Il l

1'
1'

12

11

.
I he Nev. Ha,en Yout'l League

1

1'

12
12

12

•2

I

12
12

New Haven Youth League Signups

~2

11

SECOND TEAM

11
9
12

12
11

12
10
12

Eme Connery Ea&lt;"'
Brooke Oraye wa·erto:d
Ct'.eyene Dunn Sot; ern
Reg na LeftWich Belpre
Jesse MorriS SyMMes Valley
Brool(e Skinner, Sy&gt;nmes Va I1Y

11
10
12

11
11

12

SPECIAL MENTION
AbbyTO: M
Chandra Canaday South Ga a
Erica Corn Symmes Val ey
Jasm ne Wa~.ogl'l South Gallra
Br anna Hasley Be pre
Bever y Maxso" Eastern
All West, Waterford
Koyla Hayes. Symmes Valley

•-

•

12
10

12
12
11
,1
12
9

'ndcstes D Slrtcl 13 rPpresentawe for the Oh o

Nort~mhA

team honoree from the
area. t\\ o of '' hich came
from D-4 in Ea tern junior
Emcri
Conner)
and
Southern senior Che\ene
Dunn. Ga1hn Acndem)
emor Am) oe '' n al o a
econd team electton in
Dt\ 1 ion 1-11.
There ''ere four ~pecial
menuon selecuon-. from the
area, '' 1th three of tho e
coming in Dht ton 1\.
Scmor Ja~mine \\a ugh and
Ch.mdra
sophomore
Canndn) both earned spe·
ciul mention honors for
South Gall in. '' hilc junior
Be\ crl) Max on did the
same for !!astern.
Junior .\lirunda Gruescr
also eat ned spe~·ial mention
nccolndes fo1 ~ l cig.., Ill
Di\JStOn 1-IJ.
Other pla)Ct'S of the )CUr
111 bo) ~ tncluded D) Inn
Nc\\ som
of
Jackson
(01\ iswn 1-11) and Todd
Kochendocrfct of Ironton
(D-3). Other co.~chcs of the

StarGama

'car in bo\ s \\ere Jeff
Skinner of Athen~ (Di\ ismn
1-11) nnd ~lark Lnfon of
Ironton (D-3).
·
Other pia) ers of the ) ear
111 girl' included LeAnne
Ro" of Marietta ( Dt\ 1s1on
I-ll), Kari, ...a Adkins of Oak
Hill (D-3) and Sinn King of
Waterford (D-4). Other
coache' of the )ear in gtrls
''ere Scott Cozzens of
Marietta (Di\ i ion I-m and
Doug Hale of Oak Hill (D-

3}.
Senior' that hn\e
''ill participate 1
the Dbtriet 13 All-Star
game to be pia) ed at the
Gallia Academ)
High
~chon I
g) mnn,ium
on
:0.1ondn). ~larch 22. lfht.·
girls game will begm at 6
p.m . "ith th(' bo) ~ foliO\\mg
There v. ill nbo be n threepoint 'houtout and Jnm
dunk contest in bet\\een
game . Adnus~1on for the
C\Cnt is ..,5.
cl~cted

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      <name>ralph</name>
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