<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3343" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/3343?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:21:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13254">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/2c84eb8a7dfe9cfbfb6fac6798df4fd5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e9905e6ee1e806f0ea13ef4f87bdba16</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12048">
                  <text>------·--:-------------""'!'11"'11

-----------~-----~·~---·~--~---··-

MeigsSWCD
announces
winners,A3

Practice makes ·
perfect,A2

O BITUARIES
Page AS

• Jon E. Spencer

SPORTS

Middleport moves toward
EPA sewer requirements
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

• Eagles, Tornadoes
send 19 to regionals.

See Page 81

MIDDLEPORT
Another step toward
bringing Middleport's
sewer system into complia1,1ce with EPA mandated regulations was
taken at Monday night's
meeting of Middleport
ViJlage Council.
Council passed an ordinance authorizing the village to sign an agreement
with URS Engineering for
the final design in preparation to bidding the project.

· A second ordinance plete the engineering part
passed by Council autho- of the project and take it
rized Mayor Michael right up to the construeGerlach to apply for a tion phase. The majority
loan through the Water of the sewer work will be
Pollution Control Loan along Front Street and
Fund (WPCLF) to pay . constmction will probathe village's portion of bly begin in the spring.
the cost.
according to ClerkURS has been working Treasurer Susan Baker.
with the village for the
At the meeting Council
past several years on the gav~ second readings to
sewer improvement plan. two ordinances for addiThe overall project cost tional permissive taxes
is $3.5 million with the on motor vehicle license
village to take out a fees on village residents.
$222.900 loan.
Currently the \illage has
This phase will com- one such permissive tax

Both Blaettnar and
Admini-.trator
Village
Paul ~Hellman said they
working
would
be
together this summer to
begin flushing hydrants
and repairing what the)
could though this process
could take years and a
financial commitment.
Possible grants were discussed to help with the
project.
The topic then turned
to a fire contract with

Please see Council. AS

Please see Pomeroy, AS

in place. The two ordinances. if passed in third
readings, will mean vehicle owners wiJJ pay an
additional $5 on each one
for a total of $10 more.
James Gheen met with
·()unci! to ask questions
abolJ the permissive
taxes, the affect on people in these bad economic times. the question of
how the money generated will be spent. and the
possibility of putting the
matter on the ballot.

Please see Sewer, AS

POMEROY The
Meigs County Health
Department and Meigs
County TB Office will be
sed
Monday
for
moria! Day.

•••

POMEROY - Meig~
Count) Clerk of Courts
Office will be closed
today and tomorrow and
will
reopen
Friday.
However. computers will
be offline until June I.

Flag football
signups
POMEROY The
Meigs Flag Football
League is currently signing up players for the
20 10 NFL Flag Football
Season. All players interested should go to
www.meigsffl.com
to
sign up before the June 15
deadline. Payment will be
taken online via credit
card. The league is for
children in kindergarten
through sixth grade:

•

WEATHER

High: Upper 80s.
Low: Mid 60s.

Beth Sergentlphoto

April showers have brought May flowers to places like Mitch's (pictured here) in ~~dd l epo rt. M ~ny r~s­
idents across Meigs County are planting flowers, tending their gardens and wa1t1ng on that first npe
tomato from the farms along Ohio 124 in the Letart Falls and Grea_t Bend areas.

,

INDEX
•

2 SECliONS -

12 p \.GES

Calendars

Council updated on new fire house
B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

sifieds
Co'mics

,

Editorials
Sports
&lt;

2010

B Section

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

POMEROY - This
week
members
of
Pomeroy Village Council
were updated on plans to
build a new, second fire
house by Chief Rick
Blaettnar.
•
Council
previously
approved
a
motion
allowing Blaettnar to
take steps in securing the
Seyler prope11y on Nye
Avenue for building a
second fire house in

Pomeroy. Blaettnar said
at this point, other than
the $1 spent to hold the
prope11y. there has been
no money spent, though
he said there will eventually be a bill for a survey
which is currently underway.
The property is around
I 7 acres Blaettnar told
council and an estimated
price to purchase the site
is $50.000. Once the sur•
vey is done and Blaettnar
has a better idea of the
building he asked to meet

with the village finance
committee and then
update council on the
project.
According to Blaettnar.
the second station will
give Pomeroy a higher
ISO rating (for insurance
purposes), pos::.ibly taking that rating from a
four to a three. This
would likely benefit
businesses the · most
which would see a
decrease in their insurance rate!!, Blaettnar told
council.

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The
placement of two billboards in Pomeroy has
been put on hold until
the village solicitor can
determine whether or
not their placement
would violate a section
of the Ohio Revised
Code.
The billboards were
approved by the village
zoning committee for
placement on private lots
at the corner of East
Main and Plum Streets
and West Main Street
near the corporation limit
on the side of the road
near
the
hillside.
Resident Donna Boyd,
who lives near the proposed site on West Main
Street. said she was told
by Robert Young, historian and scenic byways
project manager for the
Ohio Department of
Transportation,
the
placement of the billboards is in violation of
the
ORC.
section
5516.06 "Designation of
scenic byways - advertising devices."
The section reads:
''The director of transportation may designate
any portion of the interstate system. national
highway system, or primary system as a scenic
byway. The director
shall exclude from designation as a scenic
byway any segment of a
highway in a zoned or
unzoned commercial or
industrial area that is
determined by the director to be inconsistent
with the designation of a
scenic byway."
Boyd gave members of
Pomeroy Village Council
a copy of the section during council's regular
meeting this week. Boyd
said the section allows
for exceptions but Young
told her he believed
council would find none
that applied in this situation.
President of Counci I
George Stewart. who was
sitting in for an absent )
Mayor John Musser, said
Musser had contacted
Kanawha
Valley
Advertising. the company that' wished to place
the billboards. and asked
them to put their plans on
hold
until
Village
Solicitor
Christopher
Tenaglia could render a
legal opinion.
Councilman
Jim
Sisson, who is on the
variance committee. said
he disagreed with waiting because the decisions
to grant the variances
have already been made,
and, '\.ve don't want to
run business out of
Pomeroy."
Back in November the
spokesperson
from
Kanawha
Valle)
Advertising called the
billboards a "significant
investment" in the community which includes
paying income taxes to
the village on revenue
generated from the billboards. Income from
these billboards is estimated at $25-$30.000
per year.
Stewart told Sisson if
there is a state law
against the placement of
the billboards along the
Ohio Scenic Byway then
council had to obey that
law. Sisson asked about
other billboards already
in existence along the

Offices closed

•

Billboards
put on hold

�_____________ _ -

_.,..

,

~--

..

- - -·--------~----~------~----------·------·~~--.--~~~--------~----~·~.,

PageA2

The Daily sentinel

W e dnesday, May

O'Bieness Health System and OhioHealth
reach agreement on ·new relationship

FAM I LY MED I C I N E

Men can als~
contract HPV

OhioHealth to manage O'Bieness Hospital and Health System
physicians, board memATHENS
the bers and management
OhioHealth and
team,"
.said
Mike
O'Blenc~s Health System,
Bcrn-.tein. chief strategy
both not for-profit health
care systems, announced officer. OhioHealth.
"Our work is focused
today the) have entered
into a management agree- on the future and how,
ment which will allO\\ together. we can ensure
both organizations to that O'Bleness thrives
work together more clo-.c- and serves the Athens
1) to deli\ er high qual it). communtty."
financiall)
-.u. . tainable
The four senior leadand coordinated health- er-.hip positions include
care service-. O\ cr the long chief executive officer
tenn to southeastern Ohio. (CEO); chief financial
ln thi-. management officer (CFO): vice
agreement. OhioHcallh president of Medical
\\ill place four senior Affairs (VP-~1A) and
Iem.lt:rship po...,ition-. on uirc~,;tur of Lm!i!)tic:s. To
the management team at ensu1e a seamless transiO'Bieness and \\ill have tion and oversee selecrepresentation on its tion of the leadership
board of directors. team. Larry Thornhill,
O'Bleness will remain vice president. Regional
an independent, commu- System Development
nity-based health system for OhioHealth. will
governed by its current assume the duties of
local board of trustees. interim CEO.
This strengthened rela
The management agreement takes effect Aug. tionship will provide
benejits.
multiple
I. 2010.
· "The 0 · Bleness board Significant etforts wifl be
of directors is excited focused on expansion of
about the implementation clinical programs and
of the management agree- sen 1ces. improved cliniment \\ ith OhioHealth," cal outcomes. physician
saw James Riestenbcrg. recruiting and improved
between
DDS.
Chairman. coordination
O'Blenes.... Board of Doctors
HospitaiDirector'. '"We feel that Nelsom ille
and
this arrangement going O'Bleness. Initial prioriforward\\ ill great I) bene- ties \.\ill include informafit our patient-. and tion system decisions.
increase the 0 · B leness physician recruitment
Health System's abilit) to and understanding other
thrive in the healthcare current needs.
em ironment today and
Various factors have
tomorrow."
driven this decision
"OhioHealth is proud including the success of
to work with O'Bieness the existing relationship
and all of the employees. and the increasing eco-

Bv MARTHA A. SIMPSON, 0.0., M.B.A.

nomic and competitive employs physicians and
challenges of healthcare allied health practitioners
reform on healthcarc 111 four practices through
providers large ami small. 1ts affiliate, Athens
As a result, the leadership Medical Associates. For
of ObioHealth,
the more information, please
O'Bieness
Health visit our Web sites at
System. Ohio University, www.obleness.org and
the Ohio University www.oblenesshealthsysCollege of Osteopathic tem.org.
Medicine and physician
leaders. reached the deciAbout OhioHealth
sion to make an alrcadv
~amed by FORTlJ'\lE
strong relationship even .Magaline as one of the
stronger through the for- "I 00 Best Companies to
mal management agree- Work For" in 2007. 2008.
and
2010.
ment.
2009
"We are very excited OhioHealth is a nationalabout this ne\\ closer ly recognized, not-forrelationship between our profit, charitable. healthtwo organizations and care organization servmg
acknowledge the hard and ~upported by the
work and efforts by the community. Based in
O'Bleness mana~ement Columbus, Ohio. it is a
team and board of direc- family Of 2.300 physitors," added Bernstein. cians. 18 hospitals, 23
"We look forward to health and surgery cenhome-health
being part of the future of ters,
healthcare in Athens and .providers, medical equipthe ~urrounding commu- ment and health service
nities.''
suppliers throughout a
40-county
area.
About the O'Bieness OhioHealth hospitals in
Health System
Ohio
are
central
A regional network of Riverside
Methodist
skilled healthcare profes- Hospital. Grant Medical
sionals. dedicated sup- Center. Doctors Hospital.
port staff and modern Grad)
Memorial
facilities, the O'Bleness Hospital and Dublin
Health System offers ~1ethodist Hospital.
convenient access to
OhioHealth member
advanced technology and and affiliate hospitals in
healthcare services in southeastern Ohio are
several locations in Doctors
Hospitalsoutheastern Ohio. At the Nelsonville.
Hocking
Community
cornerstone of the system Valle}
is O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
and
the
HospitaL a private not O'Bleness Health System.
For more information,
for-profit hospital located
in Athens, Ohio. The please visit wwlv.ohioO'Bleness Heath System health .com.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FAMILY MEDICINE
OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE •

Question: I took my 11-year-old son in for a checkup recently. and his doctor recommended that he get
vaccinated for genital warts. I knew they were giving
this to girls. but I didn't know boys could get it too.
Should I have him vaccinated? My doctor made it
sound like it was optional.
Answer: The val:cine you are talking about is the
human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccine. The decision
to have your son \ accinated is one that only you and
your child's physician can make. However. I can give
you some information about this vaccine to help you
make a more informed decision.
There are multiple strains of HPV. and the two main
health risb caused by the \ irus arc cen ical cancer
and genital warts. However, HPV can al&lt;;o cause cancers of the penis. anus and throat.
Cen ical cancer claims the lives of about 4.000 women
annually, and about II ,000 new cases are diagnosed
each year. Statistically speaking. this condition is the
most critical HPV risk. which is the main reason why the
HPV vaccine is now recommended for girls and young
women. Because of the effectiveness of this vaccine,
cervical cancer is now a very preventable cancer.
The strains that cause cervical cancer are referred to as
strains 16 and 18. HPV six and II are the strains that cause
genital wmts in both maJes and females. There is one
approved vaccine that prevents all four of these strains .•
HPV is a sexually transmitted disease, but becau
the virus can spread by simple skin-on-skin contac
actual intercourse does not have to occur. By vaccinating your son. you can prevent his contraction of
the wart-causing strains of HPV and you can prevent
him from being a can·ier of the strains that could
spread cervical cancer to women.
The more young boys and girls we can vaccinate.
the easier it will be to reduce the overall number of
both cervical cancer and genital wart outbreaks. There
are no studies showing that the vaccine prevents all
cancer-causing strains of HPV infections at this time.
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) officially
recommends the HPV vaccine for girls and young
women. At this time. the CDC only indicates that the _
\accine "may be administered" for boys. The vaccine
is a three-shot series. which is most effective when
started before the person becomes sexually active.
Some parents worry that their children get too many
vaccines. However, studies show that HPV vaccines
save lives. prevent serious diseases and very rarely
cause negative reactions.
Most insurance companies cover girls and young
women. but since the CDC has not yet recommended
the vaccine for boys, it may not be covered by your
plan. If )OU decide to get this vaccine for your son but
have problems \Vith the cost. discuss this with your
doctor or local health departme·nt.
Family J\tfcdicine® is a weekly column. Cjene.
medical que,tions can be sem to Martha A. S1mps
D.O., l\4.BA. Ohio Unil'ersitv College of Osteopath
Medicine, Communication~ Office. Athens. Ohio
45701. or familymedicine@ m~eom .ohiou.edu.

Practice makes perfect

I

Submitted photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital recently participated in the West Virginia Hospital Associati?n R~gton 2 Functional
Exercise to evaluate emergency respol'se plans, policies and procedures._Th~ exerc1se g~~es planners, participants and evaluators the information necessary to fine-tune current gUidelines. In add1t1on to ~VH, other
healthcare facilities also participating included St. Mary's Medical Center, Cabell Huntmgton Hospital .. Logan
Regional Medical Center. VA Medical Center and Williamson Mem?rial Hospital Shown above trackmg the
mock scenario was, at left, John Bumgarner, Evaluator, and, at nght, Saybra Pearson, Corporate Safety
Office at PVH.

PVH therapist awarded doctorate
POINT PLb\SANT .
W.Va.- Chri-.ta Grady.
a physical therapist for
Pleasant Valle) Home
Health Sen ices, recently 1 received
her
Doctorate of Ph\ sical
Therapy
from • the
University
of
St:
Augustine with campuses in St. Augustine, Fla.
and San Diego. Calif.
Previous!),
Grady
received her Bachelor's
Degree in Health and
Human Resources (2000)
and her Master of
Science
Degree
in
Physical Therapy (2002)
from West
Virginia
University
in
Morgantown, W.Va.
A Pleasant Valley
Hospital employee since

2 0 0 8 '
Grady is a
I icensed
physical
therapist
in West
Virginia
and Ohio.
.. This
Christa
achieYeGrady
ment certain!) retlects the dedication and interest Christa
po:-.sesscs in providing
quality healthcare services to our local communities," praised Linda
Lieving, Director of
Pleasant Valley Home
Health and Hospice
Services.
Grady is the daughter
of Dennis and Barbara
Brumfield of Point

Pleasant. This dedicated
physical therapist and her
husband. BJ. a teacher at

Point Pleasant High
School. currently reside
in Point Pleasant.

Guns claim kids' lives in
both urban, rural areas
CHICAGO (AP) Children in the most rural areas
of the United States arc as likely to die by gunshot as
kids in the biggest cities, a new analysis of nearly
24,000 deaths finds.
Not surprisingly. murders involving firearms are
more common among city youth. But gun suicides
and accidental fatat·shootings level the score: They
are more common among rural kids.
"This debunks the myth that firearm death is a bigcit\ problem." said lead author Dr. Michael Nance of
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. "This is everybody's problem."
.
.
.
The findings were publtshed ~londay m the JOUrnal
Pediatrics.
The researchers analyzed data on nearly 24.000
gun-related deaths among children 19 and )Ounger
from 1999 through 2006. That included about 15 .0~
homicides. about 7.000 suicides and about 1.400 ace.
dental shootings for the eight-year period.
The researchers sorted them b) county then compared
the gun death rates for the !TI~st urban counti~s - those
with populations of I million or more, l~e Dallas
County in Texas
and the most rural counties - ~he
ones far from cities or with fewer than 2,500 people, like
Powder River County in Montana. They found ~ssen­
tially the same rate, about 4 deaths per 100,000 c~lclJ:en .
A previous analysis of adult deaths found Slmtlar
patterns.
.
.
. ,
.
The new findmgs add tmportant mformat10n to
what's kno\Nn ubotrt guns and kids, said Dr. Elizabeth
Powell of Northwestern Univcr:sity's Feinberg School
of Medicine, who has conducted research on fireanns
in Chicago. but was not involved in the new stud).

SETTLE IRS TAXES

EnJOY Great SaviPgs, Service and Benefits ...
with tbe
AARP Auto &amp; Home Insurance Program
from The Hartford.

For a fraction of what you owe
Jq

II

Call The Hartford Toll-Free Today
to Request Your FREE Quote:

1·877·487· 7796 I
\Inn \A" I'

1 ttn

he+&lt; ~u I ' f r ou 1

rk•« ha\t VttUr roloc)

. AAnn•

~

1

IIY \

.r S!QP ,,
.!

l

In

8• rn•shme-,t

~bankl('v(') 1 xl('\1~

prup&lt; r1\

CODE 471103 :

•'&lt;~oa"' phon&lt; ~11&lt;1.&lt;

~ 1ur ~
I k1lli: st tl' nd 1Ju~11 • ~' 1&gt;a~ •o I 1,1,
prol.&gt;ft'l1 '
.! flimin~1e pl 1altoc). lnt&lt; r ~~

tax lirn~

~a 1&lt;ty

AutoltHomelnaurance ~

Pr01J11m....

....l:iJ
.....,......

26, 2010

* - AMERICAN
= TAX RELI EF
If )OU 0\\~ O\~r $15,000 in balk talt'•
CAll NOW

FREE CONSULTATION

�,--------·--

.. ----

-~-

....--

--

-·-

-- ..

-

·-

·-

~--~-

··---

Pa~eA3

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 26,2010

ASK DR.

Bl~OTHERS

Feeling guilty is a choice

Submitted photos

Kelsie Powell of Meigs Middle School was the overall
county champion in the MSWCD essay contest.

Meigs SWCD
•
announces wtnners
POMEROY
"Conservation Habits Healthy Habitats" was
the theme of the 20 I 0
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation Poster and
Essay Contest.
Jenny Ridenour, education coordinator, was in
charge of the contest
which was for fourth and
sixth graders and geared
to teaching students how
io landscape and
ldlife has changed
•
over the last 200 years.
"Many of the wildlife
species we see today
were not here when Ohio
became a state. Many
others, like deer and
turkey had disappeared
but over the last 100
years have returped.
Other species, like bison
and elk may not return,''
said Ridenour. She went
on to explain that stu: dents learned that conservation is careful management of the environment
and of our natural
resources, and the habitat
is the place where something lives because it is
adapted to find food,
water, shelter, and space.
Wherever you are you
are in a habitat. People.
plants and animals all
need each other and they
need clean water, air
soil.
Each of us," she said,
can be good stewards of
our natural resources at
our home and in our
communities. Each of us
can make a difference by
starting in our own backyard, our school or in our
community."

t

Fourth grade students
made a poster on brown
paper bags supplied by
TNT Pit Stop. These
bags are returned to TNT
Pit Stop for distribution
· to its customers. The
bags are to serve as a
reminder to the residents
of Meigs County of the
importance of good
habits to keep habitats
healthy.
A total of $235.00 was
awarded to 14 fourth
grade classes in the
poster contest, with first
place in each class
receiving $10 and second
place winners, $5. Each
student received a "Wild
Ohio for Kids" magazine
booklet and a pencil.
Madison Hendricks of
Meigs Intermediate was
the overall county champion in the poster contest
and
received
$25.
Madison was also chosen
to
represent
Meigs
County at the State
Poster Competition.
Winners in each class
along with the name of
the teacher, listed first
and second place respectively, are as follows:
Meigs winners by
class, listed first and second respectively, were as
follows: Gillilian - Greg
Sheets and Aubrey Hart;
Korn
Madison
Hendricks and Thelma
Morgan; Ramey - Devin
Humphreys and Mariah
Haley; King - Raymond
Lawson
and
Paige
Denney; Walker - Isaiah
Ash-Bullington
and
Peyton Humphreys; Hill
- Shelbi Dailey and

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday ...Sunny. slight chance of showers.
Highs in the upper 80s. Lows in the mid 60s.
North winds around 5 North winds 5 to 10 mph.
mph.
Chance of rain 20 perWednesday night ... &lt;Jent.
Partly cloudy. Lows in
Friday...Partly sunny.
the mid 60s. North winds A chance of showers and
around 5 mph.
thunderstorms in the
Thursday ... Mostly afternoon. Highs in the
sunny. A slight chance of mid 80s. Chance of rain
showers and thunder- 40 percent.
storms in the afternoon.
Friday night...Mostly
Highs in the upper 80s. · cloudy. A chance of
rth winds around 5 showers and thunderh. Chance of rain 20 storms in the evening.
•
percent.
Lows around 60. Chance
Thursday night .••A of rain 30 percent.
slight chance of thunderSaturda.r •.. Mostly
storms in the evening. sunny. Highs in the lower
Mostly cloudy with a 80s.

Madison Hendricks of Meigs Intermediate was the
overall county champion in the poster contest.
Chelsea Pierce.
test, with first place in
Southern winners by each class receiving $10
class, listed first and sec- and second place winond
respectively, ners, $5. Each student
VanMeter - Beau Monis that participated received
and Autumn Ritchhart; a "Wild Ohio for Kids"
Ban - Sailor Warden and magazine booklet and a
Julia Montgomery; Kohli pencil.
- LaiTy Dunn and Emily
Kelsie Powell of Meigs
Phillips.
Middle School was the
Eastern winners by overall county champion
class. listed first and sec- in the essay contest and
ond respectively, Jewell - received $25. Winners in
Mariah Pel)nington and each class along with the
Ryan Kennedy; Lisle - , name of the teacher, listSarah
Bunce
and ed first and second place
Madison Kuhn; Weber - respectively, are as folBrittany
Long
and lows:
Sophia Carleton; Otto -Southern, Manuel Elayna Bissell and Josh Holly
Cochran
and
B~;ewer.
Dustin Lagore; Neal Mid Valley Christian Courtney Katona and
School, Shelby Bing, Allison Burns; Knight first and Alii DeWew, Dalton Patterson and
second.
Janson Wolfe.
Sixth grade students
Eastern,
Houck
wrote a two page essay Kourtney Lawrence and
about good habits needed Holly Johnson; Circle to maintain our healthy Sabra Bailey and Cara
habitats. By working to Amos.
improve our environMid Valley Christian,
ment, you can develop Asbeck-MoiJy Fisher and
good habits that will last Dylan Darst.
your entire life and also · Meigs,
Benjamin
inspire others around Wilson and Wyatt King;
you. Develop conserva- James Fish and Jackie
tion habits so that it Jordan; Kelsie Powell
becomes second nature and Kaylnn Seymar;
and increase healthy Greg Priddy and Lexie
habitats.
Houdashelt, MacKenzie
A total of $205 was Hunter and Evan George;
awarded to I 2 sixth grade Tyler Fields and Cody
clas~es in the essay .con- Smith.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.97
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 49.36
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.81
Big Lots (NYSE)- 36.10
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.49
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 35.60
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

- 10.05
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.83
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)

-4.77
City Holding (NASDAQ) -

32.23
1
Collins (NYSE) - 57.58
DuPont (NVSE) - 35.48
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.89
General Electric (NYSE) 15.95
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 29.94
JP Morgan (NVSE) - 38.94
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.21
Limited Brands (NYSE) 24.67
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) 54.31

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 19.57
BBT (NYSE) -30.52
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 15.00
Pepsico (NYSE) - 62.89
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.36
Rockwell (NYSE) - 51.84
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -

8.00
Royal Dutch Shell - 51.72
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 88.04
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.28
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.38
WesBanco (NYSE) - 18.05
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.43
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for May 25,
2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
SIPC.

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
just found out J' m pregnant with my fourth
child. I don't want to
even tell my mother
because instead of being
happy, she gets very
weird. Ever since our
first child, every time I
try to tell her what I consider good news, she
plagues us with questions
like "Are you sure this is
the right decision?" My
husband and I are both
responsible
people.
We're not rich. but we're
not stupid either, and
always make reasoned
decisions. Why does she
always get like this? N.B.
Dear N.B.: It is difficult when someone close
to you rains on your
parade. You probably
count on your mother to
be happy for you, to
understand your hopes
and dreams, and above
all to give them her seal
of approval. Even though
you are a very competent
adult, you are - like
most of us - stili in the
mind-set of wanting to
please your parent, just
like the little girl you
once were. Especially on
large and momentous
decisions, it is natural to
want your mother's
approval. After all, you
are going to have to live
with the results of your
decisions, and you want
her to be in your corner
and a part of your life.
When
your
mother
comes up with worrisome questions, she
could just be playing
devil 's
advocate
pressing a bit to make
sure you aren't being
impulsive or going forward without thinking
things through.
She may have had lots
of experiences that you
haven't, and is trying to
give you the benefit of
some of her wisdom. Or,
you might think back to
the years when you were
growing up -.is this just
her style? Has she always
questioned your judgment, either in an effort
to get you to think or as a
reflection of her own
insecurities and wony as
a mother? If you can put
this in context within
your mother's world, you
won't be so apt to take it
personally as some kind
of insult. I know it is disappointing to have her
rain on your parade, but
you still can be close.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers:
My best friend is completely in love with his
fiancee - I almost sometimes think too much. He
left a place in the country
that he really liked to

Public
meetings

Other events

Thursday, May 27
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Saturday, May 29
Conservation
District
RACINE -. Southern
Board of Supervisors High School Class of
11 :30 a.m. at the district 1980 reunion, 6-10 p.m.,
office at 33101 Hiland Racine American Legion.
Road, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPOfH- The
Friday, May 28
Middleport High School
GREAT
BEND
Class of 1960 will have a
Lebanon
Township reunion at the Depot in
stees, regular meet- Dave Diles Park, from 1
' 7 p.m., township to 3 p.m. Any former
•
!ding.
Middleport alumni are
Wednesday, June 2
welcome to stop by and
PAGEVILLE - Scipio visit.
Township Trustees, regu- • RACINE
The
lar meeting, 6:30 p.m., Racine-Southern Class
Pageville Town Hall.
of 1975 will meet from 11
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Middle School. Alumni
VIsitors are invited to stop
Wednesday, May 26
by and visit.
MIDDLEPORT
Sunday, May 30
Middleport
Nazarene
SALEM CENTER Church, free community Rutland High School

Church events

Features SyndicaTe

Internet
Unlimited Hours, No Contracts'

$J.J5JI
• FREE 2411 Ttdm"-'1 Support
• nsl8n! ~no .~t!o!p )'CUI Duddy~~·
• 10 ~- ad&lt;jr~ 114th t.'etmail•
• CUSUlnl Star1 Page. ne•; •"•tl'et &amp; more•

.i/!rp,pn;r
•I l
( Surf up to 25x faster!_;
' - - - - - JfJSI'Jrt&gt;OI!I

Sign Up Online! www.LocaiNeLcom

------------------------------------5-6:30 p.m.,
dessert and

move to her preferred
location of the city. He
sold his car - which he
loved- in order to buy a
vehicle that was more to
her liking. Now he's talking about taking her last
name when they get married. I t'hought I was
open-minded, until I
heard this. What's wrong
with this dude, or am I
too judgmental? - P.D.
Dear P.D.: Obviously
you care very much
about your friend and are
hoping for the best for
him. You don't want him
to be hurt, and you .are a
bit uncomfortable seeing
him obviously "blinded''
by Jove and perhaps losing himself a bit in the
relationship. It may also
hurt a little that he is
devoting all of his energy
and attention to the
woman in his life, instead
of to his buddy. Perhaps
you are feeling a bit left
out in the cold, and even
somewhat uneasy about
whether your friend is
going overboard in his
devotion to his soon-tobe wife. It is nice that
you are such a good
friend.
Almost all the things
you mentioned are fairly
typical of the compromises and changes one
goes through while planning a transition from "I"
to "we." It is natural to
want to ple:;t&lt;:e our spouse
and fit in with his or her
lifestyle, personality and
expectations. I would
feel a bit better if I heard
you say that the fiancee
also is changing up some
things for her man! And
perhaps she is - you ju.st
might not know about 1t.
Taking her name does
seem to be a rather drastic step, and I would
expect that of someone
who perhaps doesn't
have a close relationship
with his own family
name. Many men I ike to
cany on that connection.
but it's a new world
today, and maybe he just
likes her name better, or
there is another specific
reason.
(c) 2010 by King

SERVING POMEROY,!

Comniunity Calendar
dinner,
entree,
drink.

Or. Joyce Brothers

class of 1960 will meet
at the Star Grange
about noon for a covered dlsh dinner and
social time. Everyone is
welcome.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, May 27
MASON, W.Va.
Alpha
Iota
Masters
Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet

Thursday, May 27, at
11:30 a.m., at the
Mexican Restaurant in
Mason, WV.
TUPPERS PLAINSVFW Post 9053, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., the hall.
Tuesday, June 1
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge 363,
refreshments at 6:30
p.m., meeting at 7:30
p.m., work in the Entered
Apprentice Degree, bring
non perishable item for
food bank.

~~

GallToday&amp;S&lt;r•e!

LocaiNet

740·992·6260

Reliable Internet Access Since 199·1

Protect Your Home r-;ow.ro A,·oid Cost!) Repairs LATER!
•Guar•nteed Ttrmitt Control
'Call \htad lo Sthedult Your Fall Trtatment
'Ttrmite P!lwnlion Tl'tlttmtntl
• Grt'Jt For lad1 B«J'
• Ouldoor Po"er Spra1&gt; for Gentr.llln~s • fnjo.1 \our Summer... \\itbout the Sung
• Pre&lt;on,trudion Termite fmtment'
·~~~~

(

hlllll)llptWtd
hllllh lntlldh

~ '•ltl) of fh•klrra ~ P&lt; h

,,o-.rrmil)

I

Gallipolis OH • 740-446-9996

~

ro~J,:::·
888·274·3888

Hours: Mon·Fri Bam-Midnight
EST iat:Sun 8am·8pm EST

�The Daily Sentinel

0PINIO.

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Wednesday, May 26,

2010

IM~\6T
ttWeet\aA'Tot{&amp; HA~ APMl1ieP

ATW/\ r:k

111 Court Street • Pometoy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

Pag~A4

AN \NteRNAi\ONA\. 1~
Of\~~~~
COt\CWeeb M \i W~
A.~Kor{emi~

lrii\T SUtiK1\\e SOUtH

l(o~ ~~~Vessel.!

.....

1M1 ACRIM\NA\. SOUTH l(OR&amp;AA
WARGR\Y COWA\~ A
G~ PROJcx:A.\\0~ Wl\eN 11

*'-\!eRA"t'el.~ RAMM.et&gt; A
r~es ~al'U~~ \~
Otl A reACefUl. MlGGlO~

ltt 1"~~ WATettS!

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting tile free
exercise thereof; or abridgitlg the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govermnent for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday, May 26, the 146th day of
2010. There are 219 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 26, 1940, the evacuation of more than
338,000 Allied troops from Dunkirk, France, began
during World War II.
On this date:
In 1521 . Martin Luther was banned by the Edict
of Worms (vohrms) because of his religious beliefs
and writings.
In 1868, the impeachment trial of President
Andrew Johnson ended with his acquittal on the
remaining charges.
In 1908, the first major oil strike in the Middle
East occurred in Masjid-i-Suleiman, Persia (Iran).
In 1913, Actors' Equity Association was organized in New York.
In 1938, the House Un-American Activities
Committee was established by Congress.
In 1960, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge
accused the Soviets of hiding a microphone inside
a wood carving of the Great Seal of the United
States that had been presented to the U.S.
embassy in Moscow.
In 1969, the Apollo 10 astronauts returned to
Earth after a successful eight-day dress rehearsal
for the first manned moon landing.
In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon and Soviet
leader Leonid Brezhnev signed the Anti-Ballistic
Missile Treaty in Moscow. (The U.S. withdrew from
the treaty in 2002.)
In 1981, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet
crashed onto the flight deck of the aircraft carrier
USS Nimitz off Florida.
In 1994, Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley
were married in the Dominican Republic. (The marriage, however, ended in 1996.)
One year ago: President Barack Obama nominated Sonia Sotomayor to be the first Hispanic justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. California's
Supreme Court upheld the Proposition 8 gay marriage ban but said the 18,000 same-sex weddings
that had taken place before the prohibition passed
were still valid.
Today-'s Birthdays: Actor James Arness is 87.
Sportscaster Brent Musberger is 71. ·Country musician Gates Nichols (Confederate Railroad) is 66.
Rock musician Garry Peterson (Guess Who) is 65.
Singer Stevie Nicks is 62. Actress Pam Grier is 61.
Actor Philip Michael Thomas is 61. Country singer
Hank Williams Jr. is 61. Former astronaut Sally K.
Ride is 59. Actress Margaret Colin is 53. Country
singer-songwriter Dave Robbins is 51. Actress
Genie Francis is 48. Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait
is 48. Singer Lenny Kravitz is 46. Actress Helena
Bonham Carter is 44. Actor Joseph Fiennes is 40.
Singer Joey Kibble (Take 6) is 39. Actor-producerwriter Matt Stone is 39. Contemporary Christian
musician Nathan Cochran is 32.
Thought for Today: "Talent is what you possess; genius is what possesses you." Malcolm Cowley, American author and critic
(1898-1989).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. Ali letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You· letters will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so)

Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
(
)
at 740 992"2156

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second·class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the Ohio
Newspaper
Our main number is
Assoctation.
(740) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send addresscorrec·
Department extensions are: lions to The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box. 729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

News

Subscription Rates
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
By carrier or motor route
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 4 weeks •...•......' 11.30
52 weeks ........ .'128.85
Dally .••.••.••.••.••••50'
Advertising
Senior Citizen rates
Advertising Director:
Pam
26 weeks •...•...•.'59.61
Caldwell, 740·446·2342, Ext. 17
52 weeks ....•.. , .'116.90
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Subsaibers should remit in advance
Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
direct to The Daily Sentinel. No sub·
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10 scription by mail permitted in areas
where home carrier service is avail·
Circulation
able.
Circulation Manager: 740·446·
2342, Ext 11
Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
General Manager
12 Weeks ....•.... .'35.26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
26 Weeks ....•.... .'70.70
52 Weeks ........'140.11
E-mail:
mdsnews@ mydailysentlnel.com
Outside Meigs County
Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

12 Weeks ..........'56.55
26 Weeks . . . . . . '113.60
52 Weeks .........'227.21

Pro-life death?
BY DR. PAUL KENGOR
CENTER FOR VISION &amp; VALUES

In November 2008, just after
the historic election of Barack
Obama, I wrote a piece titled,
"Pro-Life Death?" I noted that
America's choice of Obama as
president and, equally important,
9f a massive liberal l}lajority in
Congress, constituted the death of
the pro-life movement as we
know it. That is, the pro-life
movement had sought to reverse
abortion through legislative
action and the courts, and had
made tremendous gains through
eight years of George W. Bush enough to place the nation at a
crucial
turning
point.
Unfortunately, we failed to turn
the comer on Election Day 2008,
instead moving in the exact opposite direction.
It was a moment of decision,
one authorized by millions of prolife Christian voters, many of
whom gave this go-ahead to the
Death Culture unwittingly, oblivious to the ramifications of their
choice at the voting booth that
day. According to CNN exit
polling. 45 percent of Protestants
and 53 percent of Catholics voted
for Obama, giving the green light
to a man who was without question the most radical abortion
advocate of any serious presidential nominee in the history of
America.
This is background, of course,
as President Obama nominated
Elena Kagan to the Supreme
Court to replace Justice John Paul
Stevens. A 50-year-old former
Harvard Law dean, Kagan's abortion stance is surely one Obama
supports, even as Obama seems
reticent about discussing it openly. That reticence is understandable, with Republicans threatening to take back Congress in
November - a conservative
backlash that could halt Obama's
sweeping agenda - and with
most Republican senators having
voted against confirming Kagan
to her post of solicitor general.
Nonetheless, pro-life groups,
who monitor the likes of Kagan

Revisited

for a living, are deeply con- will likely replace Justice R.
cemed. Charmaine Yoest, presi- Bader Ginsburg. With those th
dent of Americans United for picks alone. Obama should be
Life, legal arm of the pro-life able to ensure three more decades
movement, calls Kagan ''an of Roe v. Wade. Thus far in
ardent abortion supporter.'' America. Roe has given birth to •
telling LifeNews.com: ''Elena 52 million legal abortions. Will
Kagan has strong ties to abor- the next 30-some years produce
tion-advocacy organizations and another 50 million?
expressed admiration for activist
As I wrote in November 2008,
judges who have worked to Obama 's election means the proadvance social policy rather to life movement can no longer rely
impartially interpret the law."
on changing law - though that ·
Seconding Yoest is Marjorie fight should not be abandoned Dannenfelser, president of the but must redouble efforts to
Susan· B. Anthony List, which change hearts and minds. Pro-Jif.:
backs pro-life women who run for ers must devote more resources at
office. "Kagan has been a strong worthy causes like placing ultrasupporter of the pro-abortion sound machines into crisis pregagenda," says Dannenfelser. nancy centers. That window into
Among other things, Kagan "vig- the womb has proven the single
orously opposed the de-funding most effective instrument in conof taxpayer-funded clinics which vincing young women not to propromote abortions." Dannenfelser ceed with abortion. When those
added: "If confirmed to sit on the women see that child. alive and
Supreme Court. Kagan will serve real, it changes them more than
as a rubber stamp for President any philosophical or legal argu- •
Obama's radical pro-abortion ment. Indeed, it's no surprise that
agenda."
the abortion lobby is scared.
Dr. Kevin Roberts. executive death of this technology
director of Catholic Families for which, ironically, increase
America, says Kagan has been women's knowledge and empow"actively hostile .. . to the ers her ''choice" - and will not
unborn," and expresses ''grave support taxpayer dollars to subsiconcerns" about Kagan's "dan- dize it, even while pushing taxgerous internationalism" - i.e., a payers to subsidize abortions.
disturbing recent trend among
With these Supreme Court
"progressive"/activist ·picks by Obama, we are now in
certain
judges to cite, say, European the inevitable process of suffering
Union law rather than the U.S. what America authorized on
Constitution.
November 4, 2008. Obama is
On the other side of the divide, implementing what his fellov.·
Terry O'Neill, president of the Americans ·- including tens of
adamantly "pro-choice'' National millions of pro-life Christians Organization for Women, says her made possible. As for us in the
group "applauds'' Kagan's nomi- pro-life movement. we must make
nation.
the best of it, in the hopes that the
Let's bring this back to the big next 30-some years of Roe will
picture:
not generate another 50 million
Kagan is Obama's second court abohions.
pick into a year-and-a-half presi(Dr. Paul Kengor is professor of
dency, with the previous being political science and executive
Sonia Sotomayor. Sotomayor, like director of The Center for Vision
Kagan, is very young by court &amp; Values at Grove City College.
standards. Both could live long . His books include "The Judge;
enough to spend 30 years on' the William
P. Clark, Ronald
court - longer if they match Reagan s Top Hand," "God and
Stevens' longevity.
Ronald Reagan" and ''1&amp;
T~ey are merely two picks by
Crusader: Ronald Reagan W
President Obama. Next, Obama the Fall of Cornmunism. ")

�....~----------.......

--",...._.---~------------._.._.------------------------oo:--------"!""!':!"""'-~

Wednesday, May 26,2010

Obituaries
Jon E. Spencer
Jon E. Spencer, born Feb. 21, 1950 in Pomeroy.
died May 18. 20 I 0 in Bradenton, Fla. after an extend
ed illness.
He was preceded in death by parents Kathryn and
Charles Spencer and brother, Kell) Spencer. He is
sun ived b&gt; sister. Charlesana Sloan, Lakeland. and
her. Jim Spencer, Bradenton. as \\Cll as several
ts, uncles, cousins. three ncphe\\ s and man}
fncnds.
Spencer moved to Horida in 1961 and was a graduate of Manatee High School. a Vietnam Veteran and
Trustee of Harvey Memorial Church on Bradenton
Beach where he nm the sound system. He enjoyed
politics and \\ riting letters to the editor of the local
newspaper, with sc\ eral being published. He was a
carpenter, teacher of forensics and Internet surfer. His
many interests included sailing, drawing, painting.
playing darts and music. He built and played a dulcimer and was an avid conservationist.
A memorial sen icc \\ill be held June 6 at the
Harvey Memorial Church in Bradenton Beach,
Fla. and in July at the Letart Palls Cemete~y.
Memorials may .be sent to Han cy Memonal
Church or to hosp1ce.

Owner of chimpanzee in
Conn. mauling dies at 72
NEW HAVEN. Conn. (AP) - The Connecticut
woman whose chimpan~:ee mauled and blinded her
friend last year, leading to lawsuits and a national
debate over the regulation of exotic pets. has died. her
me} said Tuesdaj.
and} Herold died \fonday night of a 1uptured aor•
tic aneurysm, Ia\\ yer Robert Golger said. She was 72
Herold's 200-pound chimpanzee, Travis, went berserk
in February 2009 after Herold asked her friend, Charla
· Nash, to help lure it back into her house in Stamford. The
animal ripped off Nash's hands. nose. lips and eyelids
before the animal was shot and killed by pollee.
. "Ms. Herold had suffered a series of heartbreaking
·tosses O\ er the last several years. beginning with the
death of her only child, then her husband, then her
. beloved chimp Travis, as well as the tragic maiming
of friend and employee Charla Nash," Golger said in
a statement. "In the end. her heart. which had been
broken so many times before. could take no more."
The chimpanzee's rampage forced Herold to stab
her beloved pet "" ith a butcher knife and pound him
•
with a shovel.

Sewer from Page AI
Council emphasi~:ed that the mone} ,., ill go into the
street fund and is restricted as to use to repair and
maintenance of the streets. A-;, for gomg on the ballot
Baker said legally it is not an 1ssue which can be
authorized by vote of the people, but must be
roved by vote of Council. Gerlach commented
the hope is enough money will be generated to
vide the required match to grants which might be
received by the village for street work.
Council passed a resolution to place on the fall bal' lot a renewal of the current one-mill levy for general
operating expenses of the village.
Since Jean Craig resigned from Council at the last
meeting, consideration was given at Mo1,1day's meeting to possible candidates to fill the position. It was
decided to hold a special open session of Council at 7
p.m. on June 3 for the purpose of interviewing
prospective candidates. A vote on the appointment
will come at the next regular meeting of Council.
Mayor Gerlach repo11ed that the village will hire
young people 14 to 24, up to five, to work June, July
and August. to be paid with money from the Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family Sen ices He also
noted that the \ illage has received a $600 Drug Free
Work Place grant.
Police Lt. Monte Wood reported that contracts to
house prisoners have been signed with Syracuse,
Pomeroy and Gallipolis, and will be signed soon with
the Meigs County Sheriffs office and Racine.
Attending the meeting besides Mayor Gerlach and
Clerk-Treasurer Baker were Council members. Rae
Moore, Sandra Brown, Julia Houston. Crmg Wehrung
and Shawn Rice.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Director demands philanthropy from choir
BY KEVIN Joy

tions during a recent two- Methodist Church and and supplies for an Afterweek
period:
the Bexle&gt; High School. At School All-Stars chapter
Harmony Project raised the high school. he at Champion Middle
COLUMBUS (AP)
$15.000 - enough to coached Josh Radnor School.
On a recent Monday purchase a grand piano who became the star of
The Los Angeles nonC\Cning, David Brown for the Lincoln Theatre. the CBS sitcom "How [ profit. v..hich emphasizes
was inhaling peanut-but- where the group will per- Met Your Mother."
academic enrichment and
tcr crackers ("for pro- form sold-out shows
In the e;1rl&gt; 1990s. fitness. operates several
tcin") and Coca-Cola VVedncsday
and Brown founded a chari- Columbus branches.
("the caffeine") in a scat- Thursday.
ty minded group, the
"It was a great feelmg alcoYe at the Bar of
They raised SI 0.000 I 50-member New York ing,"
said
Donald
Modern Art.
more to buy 100 trees for Metro Mass Choir, simi- Anthony,
executive
The fuel, though basic, Columbus.
lar to the Harmony director of the central
was necessary: For the
Vocalists also placed Project.
Ohio programs.
The ensemble. profiled
"It far exceeded my
1 next 90 minutes, the 46- food boxes or coin banks
I year-old Brown v.ould at their workplaces and in in 0, the Oprah expectations.''
1 become a
shoelcss. businesses. (u.S. Bank Magazine. performed at
Choir members also
sweat-drenched fireball and the first Bexle} Carnegie Hall and the painted and landscaped
- hands flailing, body Bank will count the col- Apollo Theater; and as an Blackburn Recreation
moving about the cav- lections this week and onstage
backup
for Center on the city's east
ernous downtown venue write checks to the Mid- Michael
Jackson, side and collected I .800
and mouth letting loose Ohio Foodbank.)
Whitney Houston and items for Toys for Tots.
"'ith directions at a rapid
··Even if we're not other acts.
In the time smce,
clip.
touching people directly"
Yet the logistical chal- Brown "'T" '"ho isn't paid
'Tm talldng to you through
song.
said lenges of coordinating but provides ~tipends for
nice because the press is Harmony Project singer such a group in space- the band
has continhere," Brown smc.l in a and Columbus preschool starved Manhattan. he ued his push.
slight Southern drawl, teacher Bobbi ·Townes, ·said. spurred a move to
"I think it\ on course."
admonishing idle chatter 25, "we're touching them New Orleans.
he said.
among vocalists not through the grapevine. I
Efforts there failed; he
Brown has secured a
pulling their weight.
think that addl&gt; a sense of arrived three months tax-exempt status for the
"I don't care what's passion an'd drive."
before Hurricane Katrina. Harmony ProJeCt and ralgoing on. 1 want }OU to
What's more. a cultiHe then tried Los lied corporate support
be in this moment.''
vated medley of races, Angeles, where friends from Limited Brands,
Although
the religions. political view- and potential sponsors Wai-Mart. The Dispatch
Louisiana native and for- points, sexual orienta- saw his long-simmering Printing Company and
mer Capital University tions and geographic Harmony Project idea as others.
student refers to his man- locations encourages par- a viable concept for a
This )Car, participation
agcnal style as "total drill ticipants to meet others reality-TV show.
has gro\\ n by 40 singers .
sergeant ... (with) in- outside their zones of
Brown declined.
The fi\.e-piece band
your-face screaming and comfort and conve''This isn't about peo- from the initial concerts
yelling,'' the approach nience.
ple getting cut. losing has expanded to an
differs markedly from the
"We accept whoever something," he said. ensemble of 13, with
mood and mission of hi&lt;&gt; walks in the door." "This is about people get- strings, brass and longbaby: a 135-member Brown said.
ting something."
time Columbus pianist
choir
dubbed
the
The experience is ne\\
He
returned
to Bobby Flojd.
Harmony Project.
for singers accustomed to Columbus m 2008 to
Joining the shows this
The ensemble. open to church~or school groups. work in political consult- week will be adult-conanyone, attracts partici"This is the first com- ing and fundraising.
temporary
songwriter
pants from throughout munity choir I've ever
In the back of his mind. Beth Nielsen Chapman,
central Ohjo in an exper- been
in."
said meanwhile, the Harmony whom Brown met in
iment blending diversity. Reynoldsburg resident Project
lingered. New York.
philanthropy and music.
Janae Miller, who is Conceived
through
The choir, to perform .
The members sing. of blind because of glauco- l&gt;Ocial-networking web- again do\\ nto\\ n in the
sites and word-of- mouth. summer for WaterFire
course - a mix of rock ma. "It's multicultural."
tunes. gospel spirituals
Though a singer since the choir came together Columbus. will reconand inspirational fare she had clear vision, in October.
vene
with
open
composed by Brown Miller,
32,
credits
Offering interested par- rehearsals in the fall.
but they are also required Brown with helping her ties an open bar and the
Renda Ross, a Capital
to complete community- to learn unfamiliar songs "chance to be something University social-work
service work.
- some of them taught bigger than yourself." professor
"'ho
met
"If you don't serve," by repetition without Brown Jured I 00 people. Brown in the early 1980s
Brown said, "you don't sheet music.
The first two Harmony when both were attendsing."
"Da\. id is real." she Project
shows.
in ing college. sa"" the
The results seemingly said. "lie's tough but also December. fill~d the 566- effc&lt;.:b of his choir in
speak to the small-is-big \ery charismatic. He seat Lincoln Theatre.
New York - and has
mentality: Spare change keeps us laughing."
Through the perfor- found the results miradds up; a landscape is
Brown reached central mances and fundraising rored here.
altered by a few \olun- Ohio in 1985, studying efforts. the group eventu"It has been a really
uplifting experience for
tecr hours - collective!) "ocal performance at all&gt; raised $47.000 tallied.
Capital before taking including S 17.000 to me." said Ross. 47, of
By having singers choral and theatrical establish and fund six Dublin. "It's always from
solicit $10 and $20 dona- teaching jobs at Bexley months' worth of staff the heart."
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

BP engineers draw up plans for .'top kill'

COVINGTON,
La.
(AP) - BP is going in
for the kill. The trick is to
do the job quickly and
cleanly.
As earlv as dawn
Wednesday: the oil company \\ill tf} to choke to
death the gusher at the
bottom of the sea by
force-feeding it heavy
drilling mud and cement
- a tactic called a "top
kill" that is routinely
used above ground but
has ne\.er been tried
5,000 feet underwater.
If it's not done just
right, it could make the
leak worse.
rrom Page AI
The stakes for BP are
high,\\ ith politicians and
Oh1o Scenic B)'\\ay? Councilmen Jackie Welker and others losing pat ience
Vic Young said once Tenoglia renders an opinion. with the company over
those other billboards located within the village and its inabilit&gt; to stop the oil
the ordinance which governs them may have to be leak that sprang more
revisited. Young also said he felt Kanawha. Valley
than a month ago after an
Advertising should've checked into the state law as offshore drilling rig
well before approaching council.
exploded. Eleven worker-;, were killed. a,nd by
the most consen ative
estimate, 7 million gallons of crude have spilled
from Page At
into the Gulf of Mexico,
Louisiana's
Bedford Townsh1p. Pomeroy had no contract with fouling
marshes
and
coating
Bedford this year though Bedford signed a contract
with the Scipio Fire Department to provide fire pro- birds and other wildlife.
"We \vant "'hat e\ CfJtection to residents. Blaettnar said it was his underbody
wants - to stop the
standing the contract \Vith Scipio is $500 per call.
flov. at the source as
Pomeroy has been charging Bedford $150 per call.
Councilman Vic Young said he doesn't believe the quickly as possible,'' said
people of Pomeroy mind assisting residents of BP spokesman John
Bedford Township with fire protection but added: "If Curr)'. "We understand
these trucks roll out we need to get paid and protect the frustration and we
just want to bring this to
the taxpayers of Pomeroy."
ung explained since the taxpayers of Pomeroy closure."
Engineers were doing
aying for the equipment, the first obligation the
at
least 12 hours of diagcil has when preparing a contract with Bedford is
•
to the residents of Pomeroy who pay for the fire nostic tests Tuesday.
levies. Young felt Pomeroy should have the same con- They planned to check
fi vc spots on the "'ell's
'
tract as Scipio.
five-story
Jack Welker. Bedford Township TIUstcc, was also at crippled
this week's council meeting and said he supported blO\\ out preventer to
Pomeroy providing the primary fire protection but the make sure it could "ithtrustee's attorn~y advised them not to break the con- stand the he a\. y force of
tract with Scipio. I lowever, Welker said Scipio was the mud. A weak • pot in
willing to give up the cast side of the township to the device could blow
under the pressure. causPomeroy which would not include US 31.
The contract is still being drawn up by Village ing a brand ne\\ leak.
BP has been drafting
Solicitor Christopher Tenaglia and will be coming
plans for the top kill for
across council's desk shortly, according to Blaettnar.

Pomeroy

Council

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

weeks but had to delay it
several t1mes as crew-;
scrambled to assemble the
equipment at the site 50
miles off the coast. A
flotilla of rigs, barges and
other heavy machinery
stood ready there Tuesday.
A top kill has worked
on aboveground oil wells
in Kuwait and Iraq. BP
CEO Tony Hayward
pegged its chances of
success in this case at 60
to 70 percent.
Kent We lb. a BP senior
vice president. cautioned
that engineers are speeding through a planning
process that would normally take months. He
warned that the top kill
could be delayed or scuttled if Tuesday's pressure
readings are bad.
Once the test results
are in, scientists with the
federal
Minerals
Management
Sen ice
will examine them and
BP will consult with government officials before
deciding whether to press
Qn, Curry said.
If all goes as planned,
engineers will pump
fluid t\\ ice as dense as
water from t\.VO barges
into two 3-inch-\\ ide
lines that will feed it into
the blowout preventer.
Crews plan to pump it in
at a rate of 1.680 to 2.100
gallons per minute in
hopes of counteracting
the upward pressure of .
the oil gushing to the surface. They stockpiled
some 50,000 barrels of
the· heavy mud, a manu
factured substance that
resembles clay.
Wells said it could take
anyv. here from a fe\\
hours to two day. s to
determine whether the
top kill is working.
If it succeeds. BP plans
to follow through by
injecting a stream of
cement to permanently

seal up the well. The&gt; are correct. "it's going to
may also install a new spit every. thing back in
blowout preventer on top yuur face," Bea told The
as a fail-safe.
Associated Press. He
Live video of the leak estimated that anything
has been available online above 1.6 million gallons
for the past few dajs. and a day would be too much
BP said Tuesda} that it for a top kill to work. ·
will continue throughout
Nevertheless. ''they're
the planned 'top kill' pro- trying and that's a good
cedure.
An
Obama thing," Bea said. "I ceradministration official. tainly pray that it works,
speaking on condition of because if it doesn't
anonymity to disclose there ·s this long waiting
private discussions. said time" before BP can dig
BP agreed to keep the relief wells that would
public video feed only cut off the flo\\.
under pressure from the
In addition to the dan
administration.
ger of the blowout preEarlier in the day. Rep. venter spnnging a leak,
Edward J. Markey. D- the risks include the pos
Mass.. said he had sibilit) that the mud
learned that BP had could tear a new hole in
planned to tum off the the leaking well pipe.
video feed during the top
If the top kill doesn't
kill and complained that work, or makes tpe probwould lem worse, BP will proba
the blackout
"obscure a vital moment bly turn to a containment
111 this disaster.''
box resting on the
Bob Bea. an engineer- seafloor. It is a smaller
ing professor at the version of the I 00-ton box
university of California the company lowered Se\
at Berkeley, said the pro- era! weeks ago in hopes of
cedure canies a high risk capturing much of the oil.
of failure because of the That larger device was
velocity at which the oil clogged \\ ith ice crystals
may be spewing.
and BP had to abandon it.
If some of the higher but the company hopes
estimates of 3 million to · the smaller \ersion might
4 million gallons a da) "'ork better.

'Preschool Registration
The Athens-Mcig~ Educationa Sen tcc
Center Preschool registration for the
2010-2011 school year will be held

Wednesday, June 2. 2010 at
Bradbury Learning Center
Appomtment~

.trc ncces ...af!.

To schedule .111 appointment cont.1ct

Betsy at
740-992-2165.

'

'

�-----------...-.~·

-+to--. . . ...

-~---

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

-~·--------!';------------------

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, May 26,2010

Troops to the Ex-.Detroit mayor gets up t9 5 years in prison
Mexican border:
BY COREY WILLIAMS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Obama to send 1,200
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Under pressure to take
action. President Barack
Obama on Tuesday
ordered 1.200 National
Guard troops to boost
security along the U.S.Mexico border. preempting
Republican
efforts to force a congressional vote to send the
troops.
Obama
will
also
request $500 million for
border protection and
law enforcement activities. according to lawmakers and administration officials.
The president's action
comes as chances for
comprehensive immigration reform. Obama's
long-stated goaL look
increasingly dim in thts
election year. Obama has
been all but compelled to
do something since
Arizona ·s passage of a
tough illegal-immigration law thrust the border
problem into the public
spotlight.
Indeed, Arizona Gov.
Jan Brewer credited her
signing of the controversial new law for compelling Obama to act.
Signing the law. Brewer
said in a statement,
"clearly ignited the talk
of action in Washington
for the people of Arizona
and other border states."
The National Guard
• troops will work on intelligence. surveillance and
reconnaissance support.
analysis and training. and
support efforts to block
drug trafficking. They
will temporarily supplement Border Patrol
agents until Customs and
Border Protection can
recruit and train additional officers and agents to
serve on the border.
according to a letter
Tuesday from top administration security officials
to
Senate
Armed
Services
Committee
Chairman Carl Levin. DMich.
In 2006. President
George W. Bush sent
thousands of troops to the
border to perform support duties that tie up
immigration agents. But
that program has since
ended, and politicians in
border states have called
for troops to be sent ro
curb human and drug
smuggling and to deal
with Mexico's drug violence that has been
spilling over into the
United States.
The White House
released the letter signed
by national security
adviser James Jones and
White House counterterror chief John Brennan
not long after Obama met
at the Capitol with
Republican senators who
pressed him on immigration issues. including the
question of sending
troops to the border.
Arizona Sens. John
McCain and Jon Kyl
have been urging such a
move, a11d Republicans
planned to try to require
it as an amendment to a
pending war spending
bill.
In a speech Tuesday on
the Senate floor. McCain
said the situation on the
U.S.-Mexico border has
·'greatly deteriorated."
He called for 6,000
National Guard troops to
be sent. and he asked for
$250 million more to pay
for them.
"I appreciate the additional 1.200 being sent ...
as v.ell as an additional
$500 million. but it's
simply not enough,"
McCain said.

DETROIT
Time
and
again..
Kwame
Kilpatrick's exceptiOnal
McCain's amendment oratory skills rallied
would direct the defense Detroit voter!-&gt; to his side
secretary to deploy the despite his frequent trouNational Guard troops. bles as mayor.
The letter from Jones and
But all his swagger and
Brennan took scathing professions of love for
aim at thal'approach .
family. God and the city
"lt
represents
an failed to sway a judge
unwarranted interference Tuesday.
who
sent
with the commander in Kilpatrick to prison for
chief's responsibilities to up to five years for viodirect the employment of lating his probation :&gt;temour armed forces," Jones ming from his conviction
and Brennan wrote.
for ~ lving under oath
Democrats were con- about' an'"'affair with his
sidering
countering chief of staff.
McCain ·s amendment
The former mayor's
with a proposal of their rehabilitation "clearly ...
own after disclosure of has
failed:'
Wayne
the administration plans.
County Circuit Court
The White House wasn't
Judge David Groner said
expected to formally
before announcing his
send ils spending request
sentence.
to Capitol Hill until after
"Frankly. your continthe Memorial Day recess.
ued
attempt to cast yoursaid
Kenneth
Baer.
self
as the victim, your
spokesman for the White
House
Office
of lack of forthrightness.
Management
and your lack of contriteness
and your lack of humility
Budget.
serve
to affirm that you
A military official said
have
not learned your
Tuesday that details were
Jesson."
the judge said.
still being worked out on
The
criticism
was some
the troops· orders and
of
the
harshest
leveled
at
destinations. adding that
the timing of their the one-time Hip-Hop
deployment was not yet mayor and darling of
clear. Also undetermined Michigan's Democratic
was which units from Party. who early on in his
which
states
would political career displayed
the bravado and elodeploy.
The
Defense quence to talk his way
Department. which has out of politically thorny
been jousting with the situations.
Brash and arrogant.
Homeland
Security
Kilpatrick
was criticized
Department for the better
during
his
first term for
part of a year over the
possible deployment. had improperly using city
previously
expressed credit cards to pay pricey
concems that the troops restaurant tabs. It was
not be used for law later revealed that his
enforcement
duties. wife used a city-leased
Pentagon officials are vehicle for her personal
worried about percep- use. Each time. he asked
tions that the U.S. was for his constituents· forgiveness. and he came
militarizing the border.
The administration\ from behind to win replans appear to use election in 2005.
But his political forGuard troops only in a
soured
when
supporting role. accord- tunes
Kilpatrick
testified
in a
ing to the military official, who spoke on condi- whistleblov.er lav.suit
of
anonymity trial that he was not
tion
involved
because the details were romanticall)
still being worked out. with his chief of staff.
Some of the troops will Text messages between
be armed. but others will the two later showed he
not.
Arizona Democratic
Rep. Gabrielle Giffords
said the situation on the
ground now is different
from
when
Bush
deployed the Guard.
Arrests have fallen tn the
Arizona
secto~
and
there' ve been record
drug seizures.
She said the border is
more \ iolent and law
enforcement is outgunned. She and other
lawmakers want the
troops to be armed they were not in the previous deployment.
She said the U.S. needs
to "spend what it takes"
to secure its border with
Mexico.
The Mexican Embassy
said Tuesday it hoped the
National Guard troops
would be used to fight
drug cartels and not
enforce
immigration
Jaws. Mexico has traditionally objected to the
use of military forces to
control undocumented
migration. saying such
measures would criminali.£e migrants and open
the way for potential
abuse.
Cecilia Munoz. White
House director of intergovemmental affairs, told
a group of Spanish-language reporters Tuesday
that the National Guard
troops would not deal
directly with migrants.
More than 20.000
Border Patrol agents are
deployed now, mostly
along the nation's southern border.

Eric Seals/Detroit Free Press/MCT

Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick listens to Judge David Groner after being
sentenced to prison for probation violation Tuesday in Detroit, Michigan. Kilpatrick
was sentenced to serve 18 months to 5 years in prison.

was lying. Before the text And often times when I
message scandal broke. read about mvself. read
the city paid the two about that person ... r m
v.histle blowers an $8.4 extraordinarily confused
because it's not me."
million settlement.
Over the next 15, minAt
issue
during
Tuesday's hearing wa&amp; utes. Kilpatrick recount$1 million Kilpatrick ed how he fell in love
was ordered to pay the with his wife, Carlita.
city
after
pleading and later cheated on her:
guilty in 2008 to failed as mayor: admitted
obstruction of justice. to the text message ~can­
Groner ruled last month dal. which led to perjtll)'
that Kilpatrick failed to charges and forced him
report all of his assets from office: and the 99
and meet other condi- days spent in jail after
pleading
guilty
tions of his probation.
to
Before Groner sen- obstruction of ju~tice
tenced Kilpatrick to one- charges that ::.temmed
and-a-half to five years in from the scandal.
Ki lpatrick described
prison. including 120
day&lt;&gt; for time served. the how. after joining his
former
mayor
was fami ly' in an affluent
allowed one more chance Dallas suburb. he la.vished them v. ith gifts
to plead for leniency.
Dressed in a dark. cus- ''trying to make e v~ery­
tom-fit suit. Kilpatrick thing perfect." The
stood, paused several problem was that the
moments then cleared money spent on plastic
his throat as the court- surgery for his wife. preroom packed with the sents and high Ji, ing
news media, supporter::. ::.hould have been used
and the curious hushed to help pay what he
to listen.
owed Detroit.
··I \Vant to go home
"It's hard to speak to
some of the things that your honor. where I
have beeu said about belong." Kilpatrick told
me." he satd. "Let me Groner. appealing to the
just ~tart by saying, I'm a judge's compassion.
There would be little
human being: a real live
flesh and blood person. from the judge. who said

Kilpatrick "failed to si ncerely accept responsibilit)" for his actions.
He had Kilpatrick led
from the courtroom in
handcuffs.
•
Assistant Prosecut
Athina Siringas said that
the former mayor's plea
for mercy was "vintage
K wame Kilpatrick. The
reality of the situation is
totally different. He
accepts no rcsponstbility
for his O\\ n beha\ ior."
Kilpatrick's •.tttorney.
Michael Alan Schwartz.
vowed to appeal. and
had 42 rlay s in which to
do so.
Sch\\ art/ said he was
''deeply dtsapp&lt;?inted" by
the
sentence
and
expressed
uncertainty
about hO\\ Kilpatrick
would come up \vith the
remaining $860.000 he
0\\'eS the City.
"Some people feel he
should have outside contrition. I guess the best
thing to
is to come out
in sackcloth and ashes:·
said Schwartz. defendi.
Kilpatrick's desire
cxtnwagance. ''He did
go out and live in a certain lifestyle. Is that what
he\ being put into prison
for? Because he didn't do
all those things?"

do

'

: '
·
·

·
•
:

•

�.

-

Eff

The nlaiiy Sentinel

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

tt?;~ ~hedule of~

oming
high school vars1ty &amp;porting events
•nvolv•ng teams •rom Ma• on M111g~ and
Gall•a cc unt•e

Wed.ne.sday,~

· Baseball
Class AA Regional Final
• Magnolia at Po1nt Pleasant, j) p.m
Track and Field
Reg1onat 0·3 Meet at Fairf1e d
Union HS, 4 p.m.

-

Gallia Academy swreeps team titles at D-2 district m-~et
OVP area sends
24 athletes to
regionals in 40
separate events
BY BRYAN WALTERS

Baseball
Div1s10n IV reg1onat semi nat
Southern vs Tuscarawas Ce tral
Catholic at Fairfield Union H ~. 5
p.m.
Softball
D1vts1on II reg1onal semi nal
Gallia Academy vs. Dover at
Pickenngton Central HS, 5 p.m.
Track and Field
Regional 0·2 Meet at
Meadowbrook HS. 4 p.m.
fll.day.~

Track and Field
Reg1onal 0·3 Meet at Fairf1eld
Union HS. 4 p.m.

Doumit's 1-IR
.ads Pirat~es
over Reds ~2-1
CINCINNATI (AP) Ryan Doumit hit a solo
homer with two outs 11n the
top of the ninth irming
Tuesday night - hi second game-deciding liomer
in three days - an :i the
Pittsburgh Pirates helld on
for a 2-1 victory ove:r the
Cincinnati Reds.
Brandon Phillips ri1ed it
1-all in the eighth with his
I OOth career home1r off
reliever Joel Hanrahan ( 10). who took OYer for leftbander Paul Mabolm.
Octavio Dote! pitched the
ninth for his 1Oth save in
12 tries - he's 7 for 7 in
May.
Doumit.
who
is
Pittsburgh's top hitter on
the road. had the first
game-ending homer ~&gt;f his
career Sunday in the 1Oth
.

inj.!, of a 3-2 win over

anta. This time, he conted off Nick MasS4et (3sending the Reds to
only their fourth loss in 11
games.
'
It was scoreless until the
eighth, ~hen a routine fly
baJJ lost in the lights
knocked Reds rookie Mike
Leake out of the rurming
for a notable win.
Leake was tr'} ing to
become the first rc&gt;okie
Reds pitcher to win his
first five decisions $ince
1976. when Santo AJcala
did it with the Big Red
Machine behind him. He
didn't allow an extra··base
hit until center fi1~lder
Drew Stubbs lost Aki
· Iwamura 's routine fly ball
in the lights, letting it drop
more than 30 feet awa.y for
a leadoff triple in the
eighth.
Former first-round pick
Neil Walker, called u~l earlier in the day. then doud for a 1-0 lead and his
t major league RBl
• Walker also spent last
September with
the
Pirates. He was a catcher
when the Pirates mad~· him
the lith overall pick in the
June 2004 draft, but has
learned to play outfield and
every infield pos)tion
except shortstop. He rrade
the two-hour dri\'e from
Triple-A lndianapolij~ on
Tuesday and started at
third base for A~ndy
LaRoche, out with a bad
back.
Walker is part ofa wave
·of prospects expected to
~ join the Pirates in the next
few months, lookmg t10 get
them turned around after
an unprecedented 17
straight years of losing.
This one also feal;ured
one of the Reds' quid~-ris. ing stru·s. The 22-yea:r-old
Leake was pitchin~ for
Arizona State a year ago,
and made the jump directto the majors in s~&gt;ring
ing, when he won the
spot in the rotatiop. So
· far, he's been the bci t of
·the bunch.
Using a curve that dips
and a fastball that qlarts,
Leake has kept unfan iliar
batters off-balance. He
al)owed eight hit-; -1- all
smgles - through ~ven
innings, losing his shutout
after Stubbs lost th I ny
ball.
Maholm kept up ith
Leake: al~owing six hits in
seven mnmgs.

BWALTEA$,.., MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

OAK HILL, Ohio - It
was a banner weekend
for the Gallia Academy
track and
f i e I d
teams on
Saturday
as
both
the Blue
De \o i Is
and Blue
Angels
c a m e
away with
Hysell
Division
.--------. II team
titles at
the 2010
Southeast
District
Track and
F i e 1d
Championships
held
at
D a v is
Hager
Stadium
in Jackson County.
The Blue Angels with a team score of 137
points - captured their
15th straight district
championship by a convincing 48-point margin
over runner-up Athens
(89), while the Blue
Devils posted a winning
tally of I 03.5 points to
pull off a four-point victory over Ironton (99.5).
It is the first time that
GAHS has captured both
team crowns at the same
district meet since 2001.
when the event was held
at Fairland High School.
Both track squads also
joined the softball team
in winning district titles
Members of the Galllia Academy girls .track and field team pose for a picture Saturday after winning thEl 2010
Division II district ch1ampionship at Davis Stadium in Oak Hill, Ohio.

Please see D-1, 86

GAHS tennis seas~on
ends at distri
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

ATHENS, Ohio
The clock struck midnight on the Gallia
Academy tennis team's
sea~on
on Saturday
afternoon
at
Ohio
University, as none of
the three Blue Devils
who qualified for the •
Division II district tournament advanced out to
state - thus ending· the
final season of Jim
Osborne's
coaching
career at GAHS.
The Blue Devils who finished 12-4 overall and second in the
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League at 5-1
this spring - had three
Paul

of the final 36 ~1layers
(12 singles and I~~ doubles) remaining Jn the
southeast district c mpetition, but only on , managed to come away with
a match win.
'
Senior Josh J ~c kson
closed out his brilliant
career by going 1- over-

Please see Tennis, Bl

photo/Jackson County Times-Journal

The Eastern duo of Klint Connery, left, and Kyle Connery, right, spring towards the
finish line of the 400m dash final held Saturday at the 2010 Division Ill district track
and field championships at Davis Stadium in Oaik Hill, Ohio.

Eagles_,'Does send 19

D-3 regionals

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OAK HILL, Ohio The track teams from
Eastern and Southern
combined to advance 19
athletes to the re~ional
track meet at Fa1rfield
Union High School following the Division III
track and field championships at E.E. Davis
Stadium in Oak Hill.
Ohio, this past week.
The top four finishers
in each event at the dis
trict meet held at Oal-.
Hill High School qualified for the regionals.
Eastern landed 13 in
the regionals in nine
events. Emeri Connery
and Mike Johnson each
won district champiBryan Walters/file photo
onships in their respccti ve events. Connery The Southern duo o~ Colby Roseberry, back, and Kody
Wolfe exchange the baton during the 4x800m relay
Please see D·l, Bl
final held Wednesday at Davis Stadium in Oak Hill.

'

Bryan Walterslfi

Gallia Academy senior Josh Jackson hits a ""''n Krl"'r"'
during this April 24 file photo against Jac:K~~&lt;m
Memorial Field in Gallipolis, Ohio.

'

..

�Page

B2 •

..,

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

and
K) le
Baum.
Conner). 4x400'11 runners arc \Vinebrenner.
Klint Connen. Johnson.
from Page Bl
and K) le Conner)'. and
4x800m runners are B .J.
won the 800m run "hile t-.foore. Brayden Pratt.
Johnson took first in the Travis Ed\\ ard~. and
high jump for the second Johnson.
Klmt Connery placed
consecutive
. season.
Connery's HOOm time of fourth in the 400m dash
2:25.05 set a nC\\ district to also ad-vance to
record. \\hilc Johnson's r~ginnals. Fifth place
winning jump was a 6 finishers for the Eagles
feet. 4 inches.
were Cline in the shot
Tyler Cline was distkt put and Kyle Connery in
runner-up in the discus. the 400m dat;h
with the bo)s' 4x lOOm.
For the Lady Eagles,
4x400m. and 4x~WOm in :..ddition the Emeri
rela) teams also finish- Connery.
Savannah
ing in the runner-up Ha\\ le) qualified for
position. The 4:-;: lOOm rcgionals with a third
team members are Klint place finish in the 400m
Kcll) dash. and the 4x400m
Connery.
Winebrenner,
Devon relay team of Hawley.

D-3

Tennis

Kanssa
Connollv.
Victoria Boso, mid
Emeri Connery placed
fourth. In fifth place for
the Lad) Eagles \\ere
Ashley Putnam in the
shot put and the 4xHOOm
rehn team of Emeri
Cor1ncry. Boso. Breea
Buckley, and Audrionna
Pullins.
Southern will be sending six athletes to the
regionals 111 five events.
John Gray won the
district title in the ROOm
run. while the boys'
4xXOOm relay team of
Gray.
Andrew
Roseberry. Kody Wolfe.
and Colby Roseberry
placed fir..,t and set a
new district record \\ ith
a time of 8:35.47.
Wolfe placed second

Wednesday, May 26,2010

in the 3200m run. \\ ith track
team
placed relay
team
with
Taylor Lcmle) placing fottrth at districts with Johnson. Winebrenner.
\\ hilc and Klint Connery
fourth in the shot put. 74
points,
The 4x400m relay team Southern placed fifth in returning.
Klint
of
Gra).
Colby the boys competition Connery in the 400m
Roseberry.
Sean with 50 points. On the dash,
and
Emeri
Coppick. and Andrew girls' side. Eastern Conner) in the 800m
Roseberry also took placed lith \\ith 30 run. Southern's Sean
fourth place to qualify point .... '' hilc Southern Coppick was a regional
for the regional tourna- was 21st with I 0 qualifier in 2009 in the
ment.
points. Wheelersburg 4x200m relay, but qualFifth place finishers won both team compe- ified as a member of
for Southern were Sean titions.
the 4x400m relay te
Coopick in the 300m
Repeat regional qual- this year.
hurdles and the girls' i fers arc Eastern's
Complete results o
4x lOOm relay tam of Johnson in the high the 2010 Division III
Haley
Linkous, jump. the 4x800m relay district track and field
Breanna Taylor. Kelsey team with returntng championships
are
Strang, and Brittany members Moore and available
at
Cogar.
Johnson. the 4x400m www.baumspage.com
1
South Gall ia High , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --...
School did not have an
athlete qualif) for the
regionals.
The Eastern boys

www.mydailysentinel.com

. . WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

from Page Bl
all and finishrng in the
final eicht.of the first singles draw - the best fini"h for GAHS since the
early pat1 of the millennium.
Jackson defeated Jan
Ro\\ land of Portsmouth
5-7.6-3.6-3 in his opening match. but suffered a
3-6. 3-6 setback to sec~
ond-secded Anderson
Ribtero of Martins FelT).
The duo of ~ 1ollie
Blake and Cody Billing:&gt;
also advanced to d1 trict
pia) in first doubles. but
the pair came up short in
a 4-6, 1-6 setback to
Clark and ~lcCiure of
Unioto in the opening
match.
The district losses
complete the 25-year
tenure of Osborne as tennis coach at GAllS.
Osborne- \\ho \\ill al..,o
not be returning as basketball coach after 41
seasons - amassed a
228 184 career mark
with the tennis program.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Sub5cribe todav.
992-2155 .

Vc• ..ar

Sheriff Sale
Case No. 08-DR-079
Laurie C.H. Barber,
nka, Laurie A. Hannon
Plaintiff VS
Kevin L. Barber
Defendant
In pursuance of an
Order of Sale in the
above entitled action, I will offer for
sale at public auction on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio In
the above named
County, on Friday,
the
28th
day of May, 2010 at
10:00 o'clock A.M.,
the following described real estate,
to-wit:
PARCEL ONE:
Situated 1n the
TOWNSHIP
of
OLIVE, COUNTY of
MEIGS and STATE
of OHIO
Situated In Sections
3 and 9, Range 11,
Town 4, and In Lot
1162, and beginning
94 rods west of the
Ohio River at the
southeast corner of
said
Lot
1162;
thence north 92
rods to the north
line of said Lot No.
1162; thence west
55 rods; thence
south 9:? rods to tho
south line of said
Lot No. 1162; thence
east 55 rods to the
place of beginning,
containing 31 acres
100 rods, more or
less.
Excepting a road or
right of way from
the west line of the
above described lot
of land to the east
line of said lot
where the road Is
now used.
Reference
Deed :
Volume 288, Page
841, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Prior
Reference
Deed: Volume 337,
Page 761, Meigs
County
Deed
Records.
Auditor 's
Parcel
09·
Number
01356.000
Property Address :
55158 Barr Hollow
Road, Reedsville,

•

Ohio 45772
Current
Owner:
Kevin Barber.
PARCEL TWO:
Situated
In the
Township of Olive,
County of Meigs
and State of Ohio:
Being in Section No.
9, Town No. 4,
Range No. 11 and
Lots Nos. 1161 and
1162 and bounded
and described as
follows:
Beginning • at the
northwest corner of
Lot No. 1162; thence
50
rods;
North
thence East • 80
rods; thence south
66 rods; thence
West 80 rods to the
west line of said Lot
No. 1162; thence 16
rods to the place of
beginning, contain·
ing 33 acres; the
same reservation of
right of way as described In the deed
of John Hetzer Is
continued and confirmed by these
presents.
Also the following
described tract of
parcel of land ad·
joining the above
and beginning 41
rods North of the
Southwest corner of
said Lot No. 1162;
thence North 35
rods; thence East
80 rods; thence
North 16 rods to the
north line of said
Lot No. 1162; thence
East
49
rods;
thence South 51
rods to a stake;
thence West 129
rods to the place of
beginning and containing 33 acres and
119 rods, except 12
acres deeded to
Charles Hetzer.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 334, Page
49, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Prior
Reference
Deed: Volume 202,
Page 19, Meigs
County
Official
Records.
Auditor's
Parcel
Numbers:
09·
00713.000 and 09·
00714.000
Property Address;
54998 Barr Hollow
Road, Reedsville,

Ohio 45772
Current
Owner:
Kevin and Laurie
Barber
PARCEL THREE:
Situated in Olive
Township, Town 3
North, Range 11
West, Meigs County,
Ohio, and being part
of the Wolf Subdivision as recorded in
Cabinet 1·B, of the
Place Records In
the Recorder 's Office
of
Meigs
County, Ohio and
being described as
follows:
Lot 7 and Lot 8, subject to all restric·
tions
and
conditions
as
shown on the place
which Is recorded in
Cabinet 1-B, of the
Plat Records in the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Subject
to
all
teases, easements
and rights of way of
record.
Excepting and reserving unto the former Grantors, Gary
L. Wolf and Patricia
L. Wolf, their heirs
and assigns, the
right to grant appropriate utility easements for electricity
service across the
northerly portion of
said Lot 7 and Lot 8.
This reserved right
shall be for the benefit of the entire
subdivision
Wolf
and said right or
easement shall be
fully assignable to
the
appropriate
electric company.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 336, Page
529, Meigs County
Deed Records.
Excepting and reserving
to
the
Grantors all gravel,
coal, oil and gas
and other minerals
together with the
right to enter upon
the surface of the
premises to drill, lay
lines and produce
oil and gas and to
use such of the surface as Is necessary
for the purpose of
drilling, laying line,
meters and other
production equip·

ment, provided that
the Grantor shall
pay the Grantee
damages to growing
cops which results
from the placing of
gas wells on Ole
premises, provided
that the Grantors
shall pay to the
Grantee the sum of
$500.00 for setting
and oil
meters
tanks, if such need
to be set and
$500.00 tor each
well location which
will be the llqui·
dated damages to
the
surface for
drilling each well,
provided
further
that all gas lines
shall be burled
below plow depth.
The only surface
rights reserved with
the mineral reservations are those pertaining to oil and
gas development
and production as
provided herein.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 143, Page
183, Meigs County
Official Records.
Auditor 's
Parcel
09·
Numbers:
01491.003 and 09·
01490.001
Property Address:
62867 State Route
124, Long Bottom,
Ohio 45743
Current
Owner:
Kevin and Laurie
Barber.
PARCEL FOUR:
Situated In Olive
Township, Town 3
North, Range 11
West, Meigs County,
Ohio and being part
of the Wolf Subdivision as recorded In
Cabinet 1-B of the
Plat Records In the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio
and being described
as follows:
Being Lots Number
5 and 6, subject to
all restrictions and
condition as shown
on the plat whleh Is
recorded In Cabinet
1-B, of the Plat
Records In the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Further subject to
an Agreement to
Modify Covenant as

I~IJ:l!::l-.~ 1.~ K.a-.ow~

more fully shown In
Volume 327, Page
485, of the Meigs
County
Deed
Records.
Excepting and reserving unto the
Grantors, Gary L.
Wolf and Patricia L.
Wolf, their hears
and assigns, the
right to grant appropriate utility easements tor electricity
service across the
northerly portion of
said Lot 5.&amp; 6. This
reserved right shall
be for the benefit of
the entire Wolf Subdivision and said
right or easement
shall be fully assignable to the appropriate electric
company.
Excepting and reserving any gravel,
coal, oil, gas and
other
minerals,
along with associated rights, previously conveyed or'
reserved.
Subject to easements,
leases,
rights-of-way, conditions, restrictions,
government
and
zoning regulations
of record.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 57, Page
675, Meigs County
Official Records.
Prior
Reference
Deed: Volume 96,
479, Meigs County
Official Records.
Auditor's
Parcel
Numbers:
0901491.001 and 09·
01491.002.
Property Address:
62867 State Route
124. Long Bottom,
Ohio 45743
Current
Owner:
Kevin and Laurie
Barber.
PARCEL FIVE:
Tract 1: Situated In
Township,
Olive
Town
3
North,
Range 11 West,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and being part of
the Wolf Subdivision as recorded in
Cabinet 1·B, of the
Plat Records in the
Recorder's office of
Meigs County, Ohio
and being described
as follows:

Lot 4, subject to all
restrictions
and
conditions
as
shown on the plat
which is recorded In
Cabinet 1-B of the
Plat Records in the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Further subject to
an Agreement to
Modify Covenant, as
more fully shown In
Vol. 327, Page 485,
of the Meigs County
Deed Records.
Subject
to
all
leases, easements
and rights of way of
record.
EXCEPTING and reserving unto the former grantors, Gary
L. Wolfe and Patricia L. Wolf, their
heirs and assigns,
the right to grant appropriate
utility
easements tor electricity
service
across the Northerly
portion of said Lot
4.
This reserved
right shall be for the
benefit of the entire
Wolf
subdivision
and said right or
easement shall be
fully assignable to
the
appropriate
electric company.
EXCEPTING and reserving any minerals
previously
conveyed or reserved.
REFERENCE DEED:
Volume 291 , Page
829, Meigs County
Deed Records, Volume 31, Page 725,
and Volume 63,
Page 717, and Vol·
ume 295; Page 206,
Meigs County Offi·
clal Records.
Auditor's
Parcel
No.: 09·01492.002
Property Address:
62863 State Route
124, Long Bottom,
Ohio 45743
Current Owner: Laurie C. H. Barber nka,
Laurie A. Hannon.
Tract No.2: Situated
in Olive Township,
Town
3
North,
Range 11 West,
Meigs County, Ohio,
and being part of
the Wolf Subdivision as recorded In
cabinet 1-B of the
Plat Records In the

PLablic Nc•C:iccs i n Nc"YVspapers.
Dclivcrccl RiAht t o VoLar D o o r .

Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio
and being described
as follows:
Lot 3, subject to all
restriction and conditions as shown on
the plat which Is
recorded In Cabinet
1-B of the Plat
Records In the
Recorder's Office of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Further subject to
an Agreement to
Modify Covenant, as
more fully shown In
Volume 327. Page
485, of the Meigs
County
Deed
Records.
Subject
to
all
leases, easements
and rights of way of
record.
EXCEPTING and re·
serving unto the former Grantors, Gary
L. Wolf and Patricia
L. Wolf, their heirs
and assigns, the
right to grant appropriate utility easements for electricity
service across the
Northerly portion of
said Lot 3. This reserved right shall be
for the benefit of the
entire Wolf Subdivision and said right
or easement shall
be fully assignable
to the appropriate
electric company.
EXCEPTING and reserving any gravel,
coal, oil, gas and
other
minerals.
along with associ·
ated rights. previously conveyed or
reserved.
The real
estate
above described Is
subject to all leases,
easements
and
rights of way of
record.
Reference
Deed:
Volume 291, Page
829, Meigs County
Deed Records, Vol·
ume 2, Page 741,
and Volume 63,
Page 717, and Volume 295, Page 206,
Meigs County Offl·
cial Records.
Auditor 's
Parcel
No.09-01492.001
Property Address:
State Route 124
Current
Owner:
Laurie C. H. Barber

nka, Laurie A. Hannon.
Terms of Sale: The
opening bid shall be
not
less
than
$245,057.92.
The
terms of the sale
shall be 10% of the
sale price due on
the day of sale by
certified
bank
funds, with the balance due at the
closing within 30
days of that sale.
The property shall
be sold where Is, as
Is, with no warranties either express or Implied.
Robert E. Beegle.
Meigs County SherIff.
Christopher
E.
Tenoglla, Attorney
for the Plaintiff
200 East Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·6368
(5) 12, 19, 26

Public Notice
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers of the following named fiduciary has been
filed In the Probate
Court,
Meigs
County, Ohio for approval and settle·
ment.
FILE NO. 2006 3
003 - The first account of Emmet
Lawrence Windon,
Trustee of the Trust
Created Under Item
V of the Last Will
and Testament of
Alfred Burl Windon,
deceased.
Unless exceptions
are filed thereto,
said account will be
set for hearing
before said Court
on the 29th day of
June, 2010, at which
time said account
will be considered
and continued from
day to day until finally disposed of.
Any person Interested may file writ·
ten exception to
said account or to

matters pertaining
to the execution of
the trust, not tess
than five days prior
to the date
set for hearing.
L. SCOTT POWELL
Judge
Common
Pleas
Court, Probate Dlvl·
sion
Meigs County, Ohio
(5) 26
Public Notice
BID FOR BUS
Heart of the Valley
Head Start, 39105
Bradbury Road Mid·
dleport, Ohio 4576.
Is accepting bids fo
one 30 passenger
school bus. Speclfl·
cations for the bus
can be obtained by
Athenscalling
Meigs Educational
Service Center at
7 4 0-992-4280.
Quotes
will
be
opened In the treasurer's office at
noon on Thursday,
June 10, 2010. The
board reserves the
right to reject all or
any part of the bid.
Bids should be labeled
" Bid
for
School Bus" and
mailed to:
Heart of the Valley
Head Start
Treasurer's Office
39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
(5) 26 (6) 2

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

�......

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

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

_________________

_______________________________ _,.,..,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

----~~----------~------~------------------~
~ribune - Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

Websi{es:
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
nkitclass~~d~~~&gt;~!il&gt;11llxme.com REACH 0 VER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydailysentinel.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONUNE
To Place
~ribune
Sentinel
l\egigter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
www.mydallyregrster.com

Call ~Oday...

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

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

HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should I nclude These Items
To Help Get Response ...

500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To
Home)
Gall Todayt 740-4464367
1-1!00·214·0452
gatripOitSCAreercollego ectu
Accred led Member

Aocrod 1ng Counc I for
lndependont Colleges and

SchOols 12748
700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed' Check out
our used mventory at
www.CAREQ.com.
Carmrchael Equ1pment
740-446·2412

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

Daily In-Column: 9:00a.m .
A ll D isplay: 12 Noon 2
Bu sin ess Days Prfor To
Mo nday-Fr id ay f or Insertion
In N ext Day'• Paper
Publica tion
Sunday ln-&lt;:otumn: 9 :00a.m . Sund ay Display: 1 :00 p.m.
Friday Fo r Sundays Paper
Thur6day for Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m.1:o 5:00 p.m.

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your A.ds With A Keyword •Include Complet e
Oescliptlon • I nclude A Price • AvoKI Abbreviations
• I nclude Phone Number And A.ddreu Whtn fltt ded
• ""Should Run "I Oa~

-

-m-

or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oearlliru

Word Ads

JUST SAY
CHARGE It!

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourctassifiedads
f,~
Jm
Borders$3.00/ perad
E!
,1
Graphics 50¢ for small
&lt;a
$1 .00 for large

POUCIE8 Olio 'tlllley Pubiiiiii11JteJMtvft h tighlto edit. re)tcl. or~~ any ed ata~y time. Error• mUll bt reported oo the ftrll day of pLt&gt;llellton ana tht
Trlb~rllt*.f!egl lltf wttl bt retpOilf!blt for no more U'l81\ the coli oltht epee occupied by the I' tor and only the ftr1fl 1'*111011. We siiiN not bt !table for
any loll or e&lt;ptntt t hat rttuna 11om the publicatiOn or oml..ion of an tltwtr11temtnt Correction wll bt medtln thl ftrtt IYIIIabte edtllon. ·Sox number Ids
111 tiWIIyt confldlll\llal. • C~trtnt rile e~~ro appbes. • Atii'Ml Ml&lt;ltt ldvtrtlltlrltnte l!t eub~ to lht Fedetll Fair Ho~log Act olt9e8 • ThiS newspeper
acceptt only netp wanted edt mett1111 EOE etandar&lt;lt. We !Will not knOt~lngly acctpl any I&lt;IYtrttolrv In vlolllloo of t!lt lew W1U I1Qt bt responlible lor any
tnorstn an ed taken o-;er the phone

Manufactured
Campers / RVs &amp;
4000
Housmg
Trailers
EBY,
INTEG RITY. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~~~~~~
KIEFER BUILT,
RV
~
VALLEY
Sales
Serv•ce at Carm chael
HORSEJUVESTOCK
Tra1lers
· -rho ProctoMIIo
TRAILERS,
LOAD 740-446·3825
D•fference·
MAX
EQUIPMENT
Servtco
at
S1 and a deed IS an
TRAILERS,
CARGO RV
Traitors you need to own your
EXPRESS
&amp; Canmchaol
740-446·3825
dream home Call Now•
HOMESTEADER
Freedom Homes
CARGO/CONCESSIO
Real Estate
888·565·0167
N TRAILERS. B+W 3500
Rentals
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999.
200 Announcements
VIEW OUR ENTIRE
Apartments/
TRAILER INVENTORY
AT
Townhouses
Lost &amp; Found
WWW.CARMICHAELT
RAILERS.COM
740· Second floor 1 B.R. Found·
Verizon
446·3825
apartment overlooking phone at intersection

Regrstered Charolats
Yearltng Bull born
10 27/08
Med.
Framed Polled &amp;
well muscled animal.
(good temperrnent)
$1200.00 Call Tony
Leport 304·675·31 05
leave a message

Gallipolis City Park,
L.R.,Kitchen/drnnmg
area. bath, washer &amp;
dryer $400.00 mo. can
740·446·4425 or 740·
44s- 2325.

Pets

Farm Equipment

900

Merchandise

WantTo Buy
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;._Absolute Top ')ollar ·
srlverlgold coins. any
10KI14KI18K
gold
jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935 US rurrency,
proof/mint
sets,
d•amonds. MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd ll.venue.
Galhpol•s 446-:&lt;642
1000

Recreati.onal
Vehtcles

- - - - - - -·
Grac•ous Lrvmg 1 and 2
Bedroom
Apts
at
ViUage Manor and
Riverside Apts
in
Middleport. 740·992·
5064 Equal Hous ng
Opportun ty
Th1s
institution is an equal
opportumty
prov1der
and employer

600

Uvestock

Polled Hereford Bulls
2 yrs. old $1500 •
$1800.
Taylor
&amp;
Taylor Farm 740·
643·2285

33/Tornado Rd./124,

.:.
7~
40~·~
94~9~·~
80!!!i0~3~~~

=

Notices
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do busaness w1th
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mad until
you have Investigating
the offering
------Free carpet w1th
paddtng,
740·742·
2019

Full Blooded Cocker
Spaneil Puppies for
sale. 740·388·0401.
700

L-----------------------1

Wanted

Classl f leds

N}'~o-it-yourself classified ads
Save time and. money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.
~

Do-it-yourself convenience
~Easy to use
~ Upload photos and graphics
~ Print and Online options
~ 7 great packages·to choose from
~ART BUY DEALS ON
fGI' prtyate party

-c:llamlae.1111 1

Other Services

EnJOY a book: Faith Pet Cremations Call
Hope
Love 740·446·3745
lnsptration in Todays
DIRECTV
World
For the best TV
click: INGodslovebyja
experience,
nehurlow.com
upgrade from c able
to
tctures a
DlrecTV today!
have been
Packages start at
placed in ads at
$29.99
the Gallipolis
1-866-541-0834
Daily Tribune
must be picked
D.lS..t:i
within 30 days.
NETWORK
Any pictures
Save up to 40°o off
that are not
your cable bill! Call
picked up will
dish Network
be
todayl1-8n-274discarded.
2471

Pnme nver lot for rent,
beautrful beach, plenty
of shade, for info. can
740·992·5782

WHBlZ

Care. T~.

RVI, 4·Whwlarl,
$1001 soooo Etc. 1 ltlllll!*' 1111
4 IM&amp;, 14 da)'l 4llnn, 4fi d•Y•
Item per

5

45.99 ~ $34.99

The Qaily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

Agriculture

Farm Equipment

Notices

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Animals

Life lock

GREEN
LAWN
Are You Protected ?
MOwtng
304-675·
An identity is stolen
161 0 or 304·593·
every 3 seconds.
1960 No job too big
Call Llfelock now to
or small!
protect your family
free for 30-daysl1Services
300
8n-481-4882
Promocode:
ID
Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740·446·0870.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofong

~

Unlimited local
and long
distance
calling for only
$24.99 per
month.

Get reliable phone
Patterson
service from
Construction FOR
Von age
ALL
Call Today!
CONSTRUCTION/A
1·877-673-3136
EMODELING needs,
free estimates call
or Z1rkle Storage, unrts
740·245·9626
740·853·1 024
available
Call
rmmedrately.
Lawn Service
304·882·2314
or
304·67 4·3559.
Call
for
FREE
Estimate.
Lawn =~~~~~=
mowing and weed
Professional Services
740·388·
eating.
0320
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
repair
Will
SSI
lawnmowers . 7will
No Fee Unless We
pay up to $200 for
Wrnl
junk cars. Call 740·
1·888·582·3345
441·1306 or 740·
645·1794
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galha Co OH and
Best Lawn Care now Mason Co WV Ron
acceptrng new lawns. Evans JacksOn, OH
Caii74C&gt;-645·1488.
800..537·95 28

Security

New
Hollland
3
beater silage wagon,
good
condition
$3500. Call 740·643·
2285

AOI
Free Home
Security
S850 Value
wi th purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from AOT
Security Services.
Call1-888-274-3888

Tax/ Accounting

AMfBJCAtil"AX

B.E..UE..E

STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equ1pment
740·446·2412
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain
Seasoned
cow
manure drrt for sale.
ground ear com. $7
a hundred, 740·992·
2623. 740·992·2783

Settle IRS Taxes for
Merchandise
900
a fractio n of w hat
you owe. If y ou owe
over 515,000 In
MisceHaneous
back taxes call now
for a free
Jet Aeration Motors
consultation. 1·877repaired, new &amp;
258·5142
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800400
Financial
537·9528

Burled ln Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1-877-264-8031

Repo'd Steel Arch
Buildings. 16 X 24,
20 X 26, and 25 x
34.
Going
to
DEALER AUCTION!
for
the
Selling
balance owed. Ask
about our Display
Program! 1·866·352·
0469.

Money To Lend

Want To Buy

NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact
the
Ohio
Dlvtslon of Finartctat
lnst1tut10ns Office of
Consumer
Altars
BEFORE you retmance
your home or bbtatn a
loan
BEWARE of
requests for any large
act1anco payments of
fees or Insurance Cell
the OH•ce of Consumer
Affiars ton free at 1·
866·278·0003 to team
II the mortgage broker
or lender Is properly
licensed (This IS a
public
servrce
announcement from tho
Oh1o Valley Publishmg
Company)

01ler's Towing. Now
buytng JUnk cars
w motors or wlout.
740-388·0011
or
740·441 ·7870.
~~~~~~=
Yard Sale
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;3 Fam1 h 28th-31st,
9 • 5 4 mile out
Bulavrlle Pike, baby
computer
1tems,
desk, exercise equtp,
clothes. eel.

financial Services

CREDLLCAB.E

B.E.IJE.E

.....---:=,.,....,..,,..--....,

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

--------6th ann. CVS pharm.
yard sale&gt; bring your
stuff SAT. June Sth 8
til ??Accepting items
to sell for relay for
Life
~LE
Fri &amp; Sat, 8 • 4, 4.5
m11es out Crab Creek

F.ld
Yard Sale, Antique
Cab1net
&amp;
Mtsc
Ant1ques
2466 5
Mtle Ad , Galhpohs
Ferry. 5·28 • 5·31.

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUROFFICE AT 992-2155

Hubbards Greenhouse
Close-Out Sale
All Flats &amp; Baskets $4.00 ea.
4 inch pots 50¢ ea.
Open M-Sat 10· 5 Closed Sunday

Recreati.onal
Veh1ctes

1000

Motorcycles
2002
Honda XR
100, runs great,
ready to ride. $750.
Call740-256-9291
2003 HONDA XR
400R.
.1oo oBo.
Call 304-575-0034 or
304-675-7515.

s·

2000

Automot1ve

Apartments/
Townhouses
BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2
BR APTS., Jackson
52
Estates,
Westwood Dr., 740446-2568.
Equal
Housing OpportuOJty
This IOSIIIUtiOR is an
equal
opportunity
and
prov1der
employer.
Modem 1BR apt.
Call 740-446-0390

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
06 PT Cruiser 25,000
Month. 446-1599
miles new tires exc.
cond. 304-675-3476
Houses For Rent
Autos

Card of Thanks

Card of Thanks

;=:::::::;=;::=:;:::~::;:;:;:;::~~;;
The family of Victoria Rosalie
(Wise) Smith, who went to be
with the Lord o n May 2, 201 0,
would like to thank all those
who expressed sympathy and
provided comfort d uring this
time
of
sorrow.
Your
thoughtfulness has been greatly
appreciated.

Vernon Smith
Phil and Shirley Wise

--...;:::::""'::::::,.•J

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

POINT OF SALE
Full Time position, must be skilled
in M1crosoft office, accounting.
customer service. type 50+ wpm.
and be able to work in a fast paced
environment.
Wage
will
be
commcn-.urate
with
experience.
Benefits a' ailablc.
Please send to:

Fruth Pharmac'
4016 Ohio Rh·er Road
Point Pleasant, W\t 25550
Attn: Zack Stone
Any emails can be sent to
zstone@fruthpharmacy.com
Help Wanted

• Help Wanted

LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSE AND/OR
MEDICALASSISTANT
Pleasant Valley Hospital is . currently
accepting applications for a licensed
practical nurse and/or medical assistant.
previous medical office experience or
hospital related experience preferred, but
not required.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
cjo Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or apply on-line
at www.pyalley.or&amp;

AA/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Customer Service
Representative
We have an opening for a
part-time customer service
position in our Gallipolis
location. Successful
applicant must be people
oriented, pleasant telephone
etiquette, professional and
dependable. Must have
experience in computers, and
enjoy working with numbers
and work well in a fast paced
atmosphere.
For employment
consideration,
send resume to :
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

2000 L ncoln LS,
1 BR. nice, PP area.
Loaded--low Miles,
$325Homestead
Call 304-895-3378.
Realty. Ask for Nancy
For
Sale
1999 675-5540, 675-0799.
Concorde Chrysler
phone 2BR, 1 BA. 88
$2000.00
304-675-5077
Garfield. $425 mo.
$400 dep.. + util.
Commercial /
HUD. ok, 740-645Industrial
1646
1996 Volvo Road
Tractor. sing!~ axle,
10 SPD Cummings
M-11 ergine, tires
80%, 674,000 miles,
very good truck, no
smoke, ready to
work, $5,900, 740843-1072
2003 Freightliner box
truck, under C.D.L.,
18' box, sliding 15'
ramp, cat engine,
model 3126, 250 HP.
3' sliding side door,
275 K miles, air rid~
front &amp; rear, air seat.
9 speed, $10,900,
74Q-843-1072

3 br. 1n New Haven WV
$400.00 a mon. +
$400.00 dep. no pets
304-882-3652.
2 BR Duplex-644
2nd Ave $450/mo
deposit
&amp;
plus
utilities. Stove and
refrig. W/d hookup
no pets. One year
lease. References.
446-0332 9am to
Spm Mon-Sat.
House for rent 3br.

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Dom1no's P1zza Now
hinng safe dnvers for
Pomeroy, Gallipolis
and Pt. Pleasant
apply 1n person.
Education
The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center has a position
an
opening
for
Occupational
Therapist for the
Athens
County
Schools,
for the
2010-2011
School
Year.
Applicants
hold
a
must
certificate or license
that allows them to
serve
as
an
Occupational
Therapist. Salary will
be
based
on
expenence
and
certification
accord1ng to the
salary schedule. This
position has Board
approved benefits.
letter
of
Submit
Interest. resume and
references to John
D.
Cosanzo,
Superintendent,
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center, 507 Richland
Avenue, Suite # 108,
Athens, Oh 45701.
Application Deadline:
Friday, June 11 ,
2010, 12:00 NOON.
The AMESC is an
equal
opportunity
Employer/Provider.

Hartfora.. Inc.
• Holl'K' Wlndo" Rcplan·m;·nt
• Mirro.., C ut l'u Ontt·t • \ 1nbih·S•·nkl''
• -\cn•pted b.\ .\II Jn,unntt·•-s
• AU Work Guar:111t~• II
• l.rn:all) 0\Hll'd &amp;. OptmiNI

Employment

Administrative/
Professional
Wanted
Hotel
Executive
Housekeeper, some
hotel
experience
required.
Responsibilities
Include
laundry,
rooms, superv1s1on of
room
attendants.
scheduling
&amp;
ordering
supplies,
etc. Send Resume
to: CLA 518, PO Box
469. Gallipolis, OH
45631

.,
New
-2~B~R~.-ap~
t. "'!'W
':':/~
D

Hookup,APP.
INC.
Child/Elderly Care
Rio/Jackson
area.
$525/mo +dep. Call Experienced
740-645-1286
Grandmother of 10,
Efficiency apt, all will care for your
utilties paid, $325 per child ages 2·10 in
month + security my home. Second
Gallipolis,
deposit
740-446- Ave,
weekdays
only,
4652
sorry no 1nfants. 7406 1
RIVERBEND PLACE 645-7 3
Clerical
APTS.
• br, Hud
subsidised, elderly &amp;
MEMBERdisabled
complex, TEAM
Homeless
Shelter
accepting
seeking
candidates
aapilcations,
304882-3121
to
provide
supervision of shelter
Middleport, 1 &amp; 2 br. residents'
daily
apts, dep. &amp; ref., No chores and assist
w/training
pets, 740-992-0165
independent skills.
New Haven, 1 br.
furnished apt., dep. Clerical duties as
&amp; ref., No pets, 740- reqwed. Min. HS

TSO is an aqual
opportunity employer
that offers excellent
competitive salaries
and benefits.
Meigs Co. facility
looking for water
aerobics &amp; Zumba
Instructor, 740-9926488
The Village of Rio
Grande is taking
applications for the
position of Fiscal
Officer/
Tax
Administrator.
The
hours
will
be
between 30 to 34
hours each week.
backgroundaccounting
IS
An
preferred.
Applications may be
picked up at the
Village
Municipal
Building, 174 East
College Street, Rio
Grande,
MondayFriday during regular
bussiness hours of
AM
to
9 :00
S:OOPM.The
application deadline
is Friday, May 28,
2010 at noon.
~~~~~~~

Apts. - 2B"l, 1.5 BA,
back patio, pool,
playground, (trash,
sewage, water pd.).
No pets allowed,
$450/rent $450/dep.
Call740-645-8599

47239 Riebel Rd., l ong Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740-416· 1834

Fully insured
Free r'&gt;iimatcs- 25+ }Cars C\pericncc
1\ nl affili.ohd 1\ilh \llko· \l an·u~o

Rnorin~: ,\ Rtnmdl'lin~o

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

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

• Room Addition~ &amp; Remodeling
• 1\e" Garages • Electrical &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• \ i n) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patio a nd
Por ch Decks wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
Rick Price - 17 yrs. Experience

• 992-6215 7~0-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

ROBfRT BISSfLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compar:e

250 Columbus Rd.

Athens, Ohio

!!!!!~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~
Medical
Medical

RIVERSIDE
SEAMLESS GUTTERS
CONTINUOUS GUTTERS

Vinyl siding, Home
:Maintenance, Power
\\' h' - &amp; G tt Cl n'n Bonded &amp; Insured
I

Attitudes to Join Us
in
Providing
Outstanding, Quality
Care
to
Our
Residents, Stop By
and Fill Out an
Application M-F 9amSpm or Contact Lucy
Goff.
Staff
Development
Coordinator @ 740992-6472 EOE &amp; A
Participant of the
Drug-Free
Workplace Program
STNA's You'll love
our
facility!
Rocksprings
Care
Center,
an
Extendicare facility
located in Pomeroy,
is currently seeking
full and part-time
STNA's for second
(2p-1 Op) and third
shifts (10p-6a)! We
are searching for
caring
individuals
who
enjoy
job
satisfaction! Contact
us today to learn
about
our
competitive wages
including
a
shift
differential for 2nd
shift, benefit package
and
our
tuition
assistance program.
If you are interested
in becoming a STNA.
contact us about our
training
program.Contact me
today!Andi
Ayres,
RecruiterEArea
Mali:
aayres@extendicare.
414-908comFax:
7204Extendicare
Health Services, Inc.
is
an
equal
opportunity employer
that
encourages
workplace diversity.

HELP WANTED
$500.00 SIGN ON
BONUS •
WEEKEND AND
HOLIDAY
DIFFERENTIALS
&amp; VERY
COMPETITIVE
HOURLY RATE
OF PAY
WE ARE
SEEKING
COMPETENT.
EXPERI6NCED &amp;
COMPASSIONAT
E
CAREGIVERS
IN CABELL
COUNTY
(LESAGE AREA)
&amp; MASON
COUNTY
JOB
REQUIREMENTS:
CURRENT CPR &amp;
FIRST AID
CERTIFICATION
OR AGREE TO
OBTAIN
VALID WV
DRIVER'S
LICENSE AND
RELIABLE
VEHICLE
CRIMINAL
HISTORY
BACKGROUND
CHECK

CALL 304965-9081 OR
1-8n-3467595 TO
OBTAIN
APPLICATION
OR FOR
ADDITIONAL
INFORMATIO
N

I

Free Estimates
304-812-4795

Insured

Free Estimates
9000

Servic.e I Bus.
Directory

lawn Care
For Sale
Riding
Lawn mower. like
new.740-256-11 02

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

r-r.ooking For~
ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

*Offer effective
5/25/1 0 &amp; For
a Limited Time

••••1!1!••·~~~~~~~~~~---•••••1111!1•••••••,

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;M;;;;e;;;;d;;;;ic;;;;a;;;;l;;;;;;;~
A Celebration Of
Life... Overbrook
Center, Located at
333 Page Street,
Middleport, Ohio is
Pleased to Announce
We Are Accepting
Applications for Full

Tim&amp; end ,_,. 'TtiiMP! IIH::JJrlt'!o
license. Send cover
letter resume and 3
ltrs. of reference
to:SCAC,Inc.,HRD,
540
5th
Ave.
Huntington,WV
25701. Reply by
5!28/10.EOE.

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Room additions • Roofing • "'"' "'"" '
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

SUNSET CONSTRUCTION

$450.00 and month
rent + Dep. no pets
and need ref. near
Locks on Rt. 2 304-

the 6000
call

1
bedroom
apt,
newly remodeled, all
utilities paid, $750.00
per month+ security
740-446deposit
4652

Ripley Auto Glass

WV#040954 Cell740-416-2960 740-992-0730

°

BR and bath. first
&amp;
months
rent
deposit. references
reqwed. No Pets
and clean. 740-4410245

.1IJ.I.HH2-.1060
Fa x 30-'-8H2-.'\0XO

Help Wanted ·
General

Position Opening
TASC of Southeast
Ohio (TSO), a private
not-for-profit
Truc:lcs
576-2642
substance
abuse
1984 Chevy 10 ton
Manufactured agency, is seeking a
Dump Truck. very 4000
time
Case
Housmg full
good condition, 740- =;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Manager to work with
388-9011
~
abusesubstance
Rentals
related offenders.
Real Estate
3000
Sales 2 BR Mobile Home,
Job
duties
and
School
Addiville
responsibilities
District, $350.00
For Sale By Owner
+ dep.
740-367- Include, but are not
limited
to
12
Unit
Apt. 0632
assessment, referral,
Complex. $316,boo.
monitoring,
case
446·0390.
and
Nice 3 BR, 2 BA, NO management
testing.
Real Estate pets, Call 740-256- drug
3500
.Successful candidate
Rentals 1417.
must possess at a
RENTERS WANTED minimum one year of
Let Clayton Homes
Apartments/
experience
in
tum you from renter treatment,
Townhouses
social
to owner, CALL 1work,or
related,
2BR APT.Ciose to 866-338-3201.
setting,
Bachelors
Holzer Hospital on SR
degree in behavioral
16 CIA. (740) 441 - _R_E_
N_T'""
E'""
R'""
S-W~A~N'""T~E~
D science or related
0194
Let Clayton Homes
field
preferred,
CONVENIENTLY
tum you from renter Chemical
LOCATED
&amp; to owner CALL 1Dependency
AFFORDABLE!
866-338-3201 .
Counselor Assistant
Townhouse
or
preferred,
apartments.
and/or
Sales
Social
small hou..&lt;es for rent. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ Licensed
(LSW)
Call 740-441-1111 for Beautiful
16x80 Worker
applicatiOn
&amp;
preferred.
mobile
home
in
mformation.
Bradbury.
Country
submit
Free Rent Special living &amp; only 5 Please
Ill
monutes from town. resume and cover
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and Close to 1 acre, 1 car letter via mail to
up, Central A1r, WID garage, 2 covered Stephen K. Thomas,
hookup, tenant pays decks, ramp on back Executive Director,
electric. Call between deck, central air, heat PO.
Box
88,
the hours of 8A-8P.
pump, new shingled Gallipolis,
Ohio
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
roof.
Move
in 45631 or fax to 740(304)882-3017
condition. Photos at 441-2970 or e=mail
to fjscal@oybh,org.
www.2487Now.info
Twin Rivers Tower is or call 740-367-0577, Deadline
for
accepting applications Price $SO,OOO
submission is May
for waiting list for HUD ~~:;.;;.;;;..:.;;;;;.;.._ _,
24, 2010.
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment for
elderly/disabled.
675-6679

~
1~
~~;_d

AN's, LPN'S and
State Tested Nursing
Assistants to Join
Our Friendly and
Staff.
Dedicated
Applicant's Must be
Dependable, Team
Players with Positive

'

�Wednesday, May 26, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

rn-~~~------------~

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Twist of
fiction
7 Nick and
Nora's
dog
11 Ebb
12 Destroy
13 Come into

IT t&lt;EEPS
OFF
AND ROLLING
UNDER A
FALLI~G

K

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

· HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Chris .Browne

JOSEPH
46 Guitarist
Flatt

DOWN
1 Valuable
rock
2Moon
lander, for
short
VIeW
3 Water
14 Like some
cooler
cheese
4 Words of 17 Army doc 30 Trade
15 Choice
action
18 Kind of
33 Mexican
caviar
5 Perimeter
ac1ds
money
17 PhySICS
6 Country
191ce-cream 35 Milky
amount
dance
scoop
stone
20 Harbor
7 Barceholder
36 Entice
towns
lona's
21 Floor
37 Upper
23 Running
region
squares
limit
bird
8 Hawaiian 22 Winter
38 Binary
24 Lettering
crop
weather
digit
aid
9 Father's 24 Mona Lisa 40 Crude
26 Really
Day gift
trademark
home
enjoy
10 Plus
25 Finger
41 Wield
27Game
16Capsize
count
42 For every
pieces
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK I Scna $4 75 (checl&lt;/m.o.) to
Thoma~ Joseph Book 1, PO Box 5364/5, Orlanr1o, FL 32853-64/5
28 Pub pmt
29Stuck,
so to
11
speak
31 Once r
called
32 Pink
shade
33 Nuisance
34Bayou
cooking
37 Eccentric
fellow
39Workout
exercise
43 Writer
Rice
44Kindle
45Gaze
5-26

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

1 c:&gt;ON'T t&lt;.NC&gt;\111 WHY
MOMMY Cl..OSe5 ·n-\e
CI)R"fAING WI-lEN :t

THELOCKHORNS

61)t-l6eAtv\ ALWAYS
FINOG A WAY IN

William Hoest

"TAt&lt;e A NAP.

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

"I'M l-OOKING FOR A GET-WEl-l- CARD WITH
JUST A HINT OF 1-TOl-D-YOU-SO."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

8 3

1
5
3
6
1
~
~~---+--~--4---+-~~~------7
2
4 ,
6
4
51 j

1-----1--- -1--~----1~--+----+---+----+-~

l

5

3 2 6 8 !

~~---+--~--4---+-~~~--- ~ ~

2
" I'm ready if anybody wants to
break something."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

9

!

1

7

~

2

3
8

3 5 6 4

1

I~

~~--_.--~--~--._~~~--_.--~ ¥
~12b

.

.

G B 6 L ~
~ 9
£ ~ 6 9
""" 9 L v 9 £
ls;
" v 6_ £ B 9
~
B 9 G £ L
i';! ~ 9 ! L·- v G
"
&gt;l
f·£ v 9 G B
.. L ~ ·B- 9 6
- 6 G 9 ~ v
;::0
c

·~

......

v

~'

I

I

,,'IH(I

9 9 £
B v L G
G B 6 ~
~ L G 9
6 9 ~ v
9 6 £ B
L ~ 9 6
£ G v 99 £ B L

HAPPY BlRTIIDA'Y for
Wcdnesda)j May 26, 2010:
This vear you move in new directions, i.rlsp~ by other prople and
what they have discov~:n.-od. Day-today communication will be active,
and sometimes volatile, depending on
how you handle challengl'S. Running
away won't work. You might want to
get into an exercise program o£ sorts
to help reduce stress. lf you arc single,
you could meet someone and have an
instant fight. The attr,\Ction is that
high! The energy skyrockets between
you. If you are attached. the two of
you need to expre-..., yourselves while
not judging each other. It i-; just who
this person is. SCORPIO j.., a good
teammate.
TI1e Stars Show the Kind of Day Yilll 'll
Hmoe: 5-Dynamic; 4-Po:;itire; 3-Atrmge;
2 -So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****Deal with others directly.
You might fed like you arc juggling
hovo different concerns. Your knowledge and understanding need to
come out A partner cannot be all
wrong. Tonight fogetheml'SS \vorks.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***** Deal " ith otOcn. directly.
You nught feel pushcy:i beyond your
limits. A family member nL'Cds to
make his or her point, but ~&gt;metimcs
you might be offended by hb or her
style. TfUs person could bl' caustic.
lonight Say "yes" to an invit.1tion.
GEMINI (May 21·Jum.• 20)
**** Flow through cl problem
and look at all the possibiliti\.'S. A partner gives you strong fl'(•dback,
whether you like it or not. You could
feel uncomfortable with -;orne of the
conver.;ations that comt• up. lonight:
Put your feet up.
CANCER Oune 21 July 22)
***** Allow mon.• imagination
and creativity into your work and life.
Whether coaxing a child or letting
someone m \&gt;n a scc.vt, the words and
style in which you dwo-.,e to communicate m,1kc all the d iffcrmcc.
Jonight: Fun and g;unL'S!
LEO Ouly 23 Aug. 22)
****Plunge into work kn&lt;)Wing
that you might h.we to adapt. Much
~ms to be changing on a day-to-day •
. lc\'el. You easily could get fed up \\;ith
a family member. Rcmcmlx•r that
words said cannot be t,1kcn back.
Ionight Exercise rather than let tension build.
•

VIRGO (Aug. 2~Sept. 22)
**** * Communication could
sizzle, and you might misunderstand
wh.1t somt•onc else is ~aying. You
don't \\ .mt a problem, so choose vour
words \\ith care. You can come up
with inten....,ting solution..... Tonight:
Hang out with fritmds.
LIBRA (Sept. 2~0ct. 22)
** * A fril•nd could push you in a
direction that might not be comfort·
able. You h,we a bt t&lt;&gt; do and accomplish. You might n\.'l.'d to f;Stablish
some strong bound&lt;HiL'!&gt; and do some
internal proce;sing in order to quiet
down a domestic ......,ut•. fonight Your
treat.
SCORPIO (Oct 21-~0\~ 21}
**** You arc dose to unstoppable, and that c,m be witne.;sed ~y
your rcspon.o;cs. Where a partner or
associate could fL·el defeated, you arc
empowered in no uncert&lt;~in terms.
Listen to news with a touch of cyni·
dsm Tonight Don't Jet someone trigger your temper.
SAGrrfARIUS ('Jov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Know \Vht'fl to cut out and
not get plugged into a volatile issue in
the office or" ith a partner. At the
same time, \\ith ) our mind visiting
other "Cenci)~ vou C."' ... ily could come
up with ,, wor'iv1biP ,.._,Jution to the
i'&gt;sue. Tonight: Shilrl' an idea v.;ith a
partner Be ready to debilte!
CAPRICORN (Dec 22·Jan. 19)
***** You might want to
understand c).,wtly wh.1t the mechanism driving kl'}' people is. A meeting
provL'S t&lt;l ~ the jX'rtl-'Ct background
for just tho~· qu~tions. A partner
could be gruff. Let him or her be.
Tonight Where po.&gt;ple arc.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-feb. 18)
**** 1.1king charge proves to be
difficult, ~pcl-ially a ... others might be
rnclincd to give you n lot of flak.
Neverthclc..,s, vou arc in the driver's
seat and have "no option but to act that
way. Jonight: Could be .1late night.
PISCES (1-\•b. JC) March 20)
* *** 'tour imagmation could
take vou wh,•n.• others c,mnot even
grasp. You tend to"(-'(-' situation.c;
much diffcn!ntlr fmm m.1nv people.
You can ,md "ill accompli-.b a lot if
you stay mcllO\\ and \\'tiling to find
solution..... T,might: Go for a mental
pursuit.

*

jncqlll'illlt' H(~m ,._,on tilt' lntcmet
at llttp://wwlt•.jncqltclinc/1ignr.c:vm.

�------ -- ------- ---- -- --

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

--~----;---:----..,.....,..,...,

www.mydailysentinel.com

__ . . . . --""""-""!!""'_"'!""'__llll!"""'_..,..____......."!"''l
~

Wednesday, May 26,

2010

Meigs'
Olivia
Cleek, left,
breaks
away from
a small
pack of
runners in
the 800m
semifinals
held last
Tuesday at
Davis
Stadium in
Oak Hill,
Ohio.

Eastern's Mike Johnson pulls away from the competition during the final lap of the
4x800m final held last Wednesday at Davis Stadium in Oak Hill, Ohio.

Gallia Academy's Austin Wilson, left, takes off with the baton after an exchange
with teammate Joe Jenkins, right, in the 4x200m relay event at Davis Stadium in
Oak Hill, Ohio.

~,.....-..,.-...::.:....--.--.~

Gallia Academy's Peyton Adkins, front right, takes off during the start of
4x800m relay final held last Tuesday at Davis Stadium in Oak Hill, Ohio.

D-2
from Page Bl
on Saturday. a first in the
of
Gallia
history
Academy sports.
Gallia Academy had a
total of 18 athletes both boys and girls advance to regionals in
27 events and the Blue
and White also produced
a dozen district championships and· five ·district
records in individual
competitions.
But as good as things
went for GAHS on
Saturday. it was just as
productive for both programs at River Valley
and Meigs - as each
school produced at least
one district champion at
the two-day event.
Meigs had four athletes
advance to regionals in
four separate events.
while River Valley had
two athletes move on
four different contests.
Collectively. the Ohio
Valley Publishing area
will have 24 athletes
competing in 40 different
events at the D-2 re~ion­
al meet at Meadowbrook
High School in Byesville
on
Thursday
and
Saturday, with the topfour finishers in finals
advancing to the state
meet in Columbus.
Starting with the boys.
. the Blue Devils' return to
power was impressive as
they captured five individual district titles and
set three district records
en route to the district
championship. In all. the
Devils are sending nine
representatives. to regionals in II events.
Meigs - which finished I I th overall with
22 points - had one dis-

Southern's
Dustin
Smeck,
left, takes a
practice
run in the
long jump
event as
teammate
Chris
Sowders,
right,
watches
during
semifinals
on '
Wednesday
at Davis
Stadium in
Oak Hill,
Ohio.

th~

trict champion and three also finished fifth in the
regional qualifiers in discus with a heave of
three events, while the 131 feet. 7inches.
The lone district chamRaiders - who finished
pion from Meigs was
16th with five points had one regional qualifi- Tanner Hysell. who won
er. There were a total of the shot put event with a
17 teams at the D-2 boys heave of 46 feet. 9.5
inches. Tyler Brothers
meet.
Austin Wilson won a and Cody Hanning also
pair of district crowns in qualified for regionals
the I 00-meter (I 1.30 sec- after placing fourth in
onds) and 200m (22.85) their respective events.
Brothers was fourth in
dashes, while Seth Amos
set a district record in the the discus contest with a
800m run with a winning throw of 132 feet, 4 inches.
while
Hanning
time of 2:00.35.
The other two GAHS advanced in the 3200m
district titles and records run with a mark of
came in relay events. as 10:46.01.
River Valley's Parker
the 4x IOOm and 4x400m
&lt;&gt;quads posted respective Hollingsworth finished
winning times of I :32.57 fourth ~in the 300m hurand
3:29.73.
The dles and ad\ anced to
4x lOOm team consists of reoionals with a time of
Wilson. Amos. Ethan 4{72 seconds.
On the girls side of
Moore and Joe Jenkins.
while the 4x400m squad things, the Blue Angels
is made up of Amos. captured seven individJonathan ual district titles and set
Moor..,,
Caldwell and Tvler two district records en
route to their 15th
Campbell.
·
The 4x IOOm relay straight cro\.m. In all. the
of
Moore. Angels are sending nine
squad
Campbell, Wilson and athletes to 16 regional
Amos also finished as the events.
River Valley - ~hich
runner up with a time of
44.55 seconds. \\hich finished 8th overall with
was a better time than the 41 points - had one disprevious district record. trict champion and one
Matt Watts was also a regional qualifier m three
two-tima runner-up in events. while the Lady
the 1600m (4:32.36) and Marauders - , who fin3200m
(10:39.61) ished 14th with five
poinb - had one regionevents.
Caldwell ~as third in al qualifier. There were a
the 300m hurdles with a
time of 41.63. while
Caleb Craft had a thirdplace effort of II feet, 6
inches in the pole vault.
Campbell was also
thir&lt;.l in the long jump
with a leap of 20 feet, 5.5
inches and just missed
out on the high jump
event after losing a
tiebreaker
placing
fifth with a height or six
feet even. Jared Golden

total of 15 teams at the
D-2 girls meet.
A II ie Troester and
Peyton Adkins both won
two district crowns individually. the most by any
Blue Angel. Adkim. won
both the 1600m (5:29 .09)
and 3200m (12:12.86)
events. while Troester
won the high jump with a
height of 5 feet. 2 inches
and set a district record
in the discus event with a
winni.ng heave of 130
feet even.
Brea Close ,,et a district record in the 300m
hurdles event with a winning mark of 46.12 seconds. Close was also
third in the lOOm hurdles
with a time of 16.38 seconus. while Troester was
also fourth in the shot put
with a qualifying throw
of 34 feet, 10 inches.
The 4x800m relay
team of Adkins. Abby
Wiseman. Genna Baker
and Samantha Barnes
also captured first with a
time of 10:19.02. Barnes
also won the 800m run
with a time of 2:25.28
and was second in the
lon~ jump \~ith a leap of
15 reet, 7.5 mches.
The 4x400m relay
of
Wiseman.
team
Adkins.
Close
and
Barnes placed second
with a time of 4:16.57.
Haley Angels was also a
runner-up in the pole
vault with a height of 7

feet. 6 inches.
Baker qualified for
regionals in the 3200m
event after placing third
with a time of 12:49.69.
Hannah Loveday also
placed third in the shot
put with a throw of 35
feet, 10.5 inches.
Wiseman qualified for
the 800m run after finishing fourth with a mark
of 2:33.80. while Natalie
Close placed fourth in
the discus with a heave
of 115 feet even.
Breanna
West
just
missed qualifying for
regionals after finishing
fifth in the long jumj)
~ ith a leap of 14 feet.
9.25 inches.
The lone district champion from River Valley
was Jessica Hager. who
won the 200m dash with
a time of 27.49 seconds.
Hager also finished second in both the IOOm
hurdles (15.92 seconds)

.

and
300m
hurdles
(46.16) events.
RYHS ,also just missed
out on sending two relay
teams to regionab. as
both the 4x~200m and
4x400m squads placed
fifth.
The 4x200 team of J ai
Nai
Fields. Ashley
Rucl-er. Kelsey Sands
and Aubrie Rice posted a
time of I :56.53. while
the 4x400 team of Ha2:er.
Sands. Fields and Rlley
Hollingsworth had •
mark of 4:21.09.
The lone Meigs girl to
qualify for regiona[, was
Rachel Bauer. \\ ho
placed (ourth in the pole
\'UUit with a height of
se\'en feet e\'en.
Complete results of the
2010
Divi..,ion
II
Southeast District Track
and
Field
Championships
are
available on the web at
~ '' w.baumspage.com

,
•

•
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="569">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10020">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="12050">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12049">
              <text>May 26, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="208">
      <name>spencer</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
