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..

.

•
Jps &amp; B6 • The Daily SentueJ'

-.mydailysentinel.com

Fate of Titanic, its

Big names rule this NCAA tournament
Only one severe tumble
so far. and that was Blake
Griftl.n getting flipped onto
his back. Other than that
scary sight. make this
NCAA toumament a monster's ball.
Defending · champion
Kansas . Big East bombers
Louisville. Connecticut and
Pittsburgh. The Tobacco
Road twosome . Tyler
Hansbrougll and a bevy of
AU-American big men. Jim
B0eheim and a bunch of
cOacbcs with rings.
No room for the little guy
at this party. Siena. Butler,
Cleveland State? Not a
George Mason among 'em.
A year after every No . I
seed reached the Final
Four, so much for parity in
men's college basketball:
For !he first time , the top
lhree seeds in every region
advanced.
Hardly an upset, hardly
anyone upset at the selection committee. .
. "l'm .not an expert, but I
lhoilght this year, for some
reason, it seemed the easiest to pick 64 teams,"
Villanova coach Jay Wright
said before Monday's practice. "I thought it was pretty ·clear this year more than
most years: When you look
at how it's ended up, I think
they proven to themselves
they did a very good job."
So did any fan who
played the chalk in ths:ir
pools. ·.It worked for
President Barack Obama he correctly picked 14 of
.the 16 teams still competing.
· Griffin picked himself off
the floor and helped the
Sooners hammer Morgan
State. Oklahoma and its
s1ar now are surrounded by
power .teams from· proven
conferences.
"The teams that are all on
top ... have done a good Job
being the teams they ve
been all year and haven't
given up anything." Griffin

Wahama 's 'fully
named all-state
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Huntington St.
Joseph senior guard Jill
Pulley could not have
scripted the final days of
her high school basketball
career any better.
Pulley, who led the
Fighting Irish to their first
girls basketball title 10
days .ago. was honored us
the captain of the West
Virginia Class A all-state
first team.
It was the second straight
year that Pulley garnered
first-team notoriety and the
final of several awards for
the 5-9 guard from the
2008-09 basketball season.
In addition to this honor.
she was also named as. a
McDonald's All-American
nominee while. also making
the all-tournament team at
the state tournament earlier
this month.
Pulley averaged . 12
points and six rebounds on
a team that consistently had
four double-figure scorers.
but she took over the team
during the championship
run . . .
· In Huntington St. Joe's
six postseason contests,
Pulley averaged 18 points,
nine rebounds and 4.5
steals.
St. Joe teammate Dusti
Chapman also mad~ the
first team for the third con.secutive year after averaging 10 points, five assists·
and five steals.
'
In addition to the St. Joe
duo, Wahama senior Amber
Tully (24 .7 . points, 7.3
rebounds) and St . Marys
~ophomore
Kelsea
Fickiesen (22.6 points, 9.0
rebounds) also were repeat
selections to the first-team.
Fayetteville's
Cayla
Rhodes (20 points, 16.8
rebounds) and Pocahontas
County's Chelsea Gum
(12.5 points. 6.3 rebounds)
· received first-team accolades in their final high
school seasons.
Parker,5burg
Catholic
junior Maggie B~~lter
(17.1 _pomts . 4.1 ass1stsl
continued the strong trad1 ·
tion for the Crusaderettes
and Williamstown freshman Liz Flowers (21.2
points, 4.0 assists) burst
onto the scene to round out
the Class A first team .

said.
.
At No. 12_ Arizona is the
lowest seed left. Other than
that, it's No.5 Purdue.
And once again. March
Madness bet:omes a tale of
two tournaments: The first
wedcend is for the bracket
busters. then it's time for
bruising matcbups.
· AU those early forecasts
this event was wide open?
North Dakota State, East
Tennessee
State
and
Morehead State gave good
accounts. up to a point. But
going into the round of 16.
it's more like invitation
only.
Sure, Louisville lost to
Western Kentucky earlier
this season, Syracuse fell to
Cleveland
State
and
Gonzaga lost to Portland
Slate. That was before the
calendar flipped to this
month of mayhem.
"It's a little deceiving .
because there were a lot of
close games," Gonza~a
coach Mark Few satd
Monday. "A missed -shot
here or there and another
team could have broken
through."
Few said he thought the
pod system, which rewards.
top seeds by letting them
play closer to home. was a
ractor in them advancing.
He likes the concept. especially after the fourth-seeded Zags. from Spokane,
Wash ,, opened the tournament in Portland, Ore.
Siena gave it a good try.
beating Ohio State in overtime in the first round and
leading Louisville · with 7
1/2 minutes to go Sunday.
That's when coach Rick
Pitioo delivered a simple
message and his Cardinals.
the overall No. I ·seed.
tumed their panic into production.
"I said, This is not
pushover city, this is the
NCAA toumament. and we
played in the Big East for a
reason, to prepare us for
lhese moments,"' he said
after the 79-72 win.
Having made a nice dent

·-·

judge's bands, A2

8-ANAPOINT.Oilif.(AP)
- The Steelel'S get their
opening-night sho~case as
Super Bowl champlOIIS. The
oldest rivalry in fOotball has
a first-week reoewal in prime
time. An old AFL-style ·dou. bleheader closes out the
weekend.
Thai's how the NR. will
begin the 2009 season, starting with as juicy a matchup
as possible: Pittsburgh hosrlng the Tennessee Titans,
who merely had the league's
best record in 2008 and who
beat the Steelers 31-14 al
Heinz Field in the 15th game
£10pethe::mg . kickoff
is

AP plloto

.
. reacts du nng
. a second -round
Ouk.e coach Mike Krzyzewsk1
· against
men's NCAA college basket.ball tournament game
Texas in Greensboro, N.C., on Saturday.
in a national setting. it was lost. last year's title game to
time for the Saint~ to go Kansas in overtime.
Arizona. with its own
home to upstate New York.
"When I first got here championship pedigree,
everybody knew we were also has aspirations of win·one of the worst teams, ning twice this weekend
probably. in America," star making it to Ford Field in
Kenny Hasbrouck said. Detroit. This is the 25th
th w·td
"Now I'm proud to say we ·
straight
year
e I cats.
made it to the second made it to the tournament,
but their lowest seeding.
round."
.
Making it that far certain"I think they get them
ly won't satisfy the likes of right probably 99 percent of
Mike Krzyzewski, · Roy the time.· and in our case
Williams. Bill. Self, Jim
our record coming in,
Calhoun , Tom lzzo, Pitino lwith
· r·s · probably· .correct,''
or Boeheim - the seven
coach
Russ
coaches left in the tourna- Arizona
"But
once
you
Pennell
said.
ment who already have
won championships. John start playing the games,
Calipari is eager to join seeding. I think you can
them, too, after his throw it out a lot of times;
Memphis Tigers missed a because it really comes
slew of late foul shots and down to one-game seasons ."

Thursday night, Sept. 10 011
NBC. which also gets the
I 78th meeting between the
Bears and Packers, in Green
Bay on Sunday night; Sept.
13. ·
For those surprised that the
Cowboys. who open their
palatial new stadium this season, are not featured in a
night game in Week I, well,
baseball got in the way. So
Dallas. the NFL's biggest TV
draw. which is moving to
Arlt'ngton, 11exas, near the
Rangers' ballpark - the
Rangers ru:e home that weekend _ will have to wait until
the second week, when the
Cowboys are expected . to
host the Sunday oighter.
· "We have the chance to get
on the national game the second weekend wuh not being
able to get on the ~IJ'St w~· end." Cowboys v1ce prestdent Stephen Jones said
Mondatat the owners meetinjlS. " e're having to work
wuh tl)e ' league on some
things.''
The Cowboys .and Lions
· a1
gel to keep their trad'thon
Thanksgivmg hosting slots.
The Lions go back to meeting the Packers that day. a
rnatchup that occurred every
year from 1951-63 and .will
happen for the 19th time. The
Raiders will be. at .the
Cowboys following that, and
the NFL Network mght game
will feature the New )_'ork

Gianls at Denver.
"The 1banksgiving game
is a tradition and' we're proud
to have it and to continue it in.
the new stadium.- Jones said.
ult's very important to us .~
Commissioner
Roger
Goodell acknowledged tJ:tere
continues to be discussions
about
rotating
the
Thanksgiving aftemoon contesls.

••
..

.

SUJ.d, adding the league's
··
and broad t
compebtton
cas
committees were loolcing
into the matter.
. The Monday night doubleheader on ESPN on sept. 14
will feature Buffalo, with
Terrell Owens, at New
England. with, the Patriots
hope. a returning Tom Brady.
That game will be followed
by San Diego at Oaldand all original AFL franchises.
While the AFL began play
in 1960 and is not 50 years
old i.mtil 2010, the NFL has
chosen to observe the 50th
season o~lay blthose franchises.
ce ebratioo of
that
merged
·th league,
the NFLwhich
· 1966
and
·WI
m
. ·
be gan par
1 as· one enb't
ty m
1970, begms with the Sept.
14 doubleheader;
Goodell said he was hopeful a proposal for an expansion of the regular season to
either 17 or 18 games could ·
be presented to the owners at
the May league meetings in
Fort Lauderdale. The league
is considering dropping one
or two preseason games and
di th
1
bed
exten ng e regu ar sc ule, but remaining within the
current 20-game format,
although not likely before
. 2011 ·
· to do so will involve dis·
cusstons
wt'th the p1ayers
union and the league's media
panners. Of course, the collective bargaining asceernent
with the players exptres after
the ~010 season, so a longer
schedule is just one of many
issues in getting a deal done
with the NFLPA.

on

www.mydailysentinel.com
.

Bv BRIAN J. REm
SAEEOOMYOAILVSENllNEL.COM

POMEROY
Charles · S.
Williams, 39, of Wood County,
W.Va., has been charged with the
February murder of Doris Jackson
of Tllpf!Crs -Plains.
A cnminal complaint was filed
Tuesday in Meigs County Court,
charging Williams with a single
count of murder. Jackson, 83, was
. found strangled in .the dinin~ room
. of her Tuppers Plains subdivision
borne on Feb. 26.
·
A session of the Meigs County

now in the North. Central Regional
Jail in Greenwood, W.Va., on a
parole violation .. He and Garnes.
3.9. Pomeroy. were charged with
receiving stolen property and tampering with evidence last week.
Games is in jail in lie11 of a
$50.000 cash bond.
Relatives first reported Jackson
and her car missing on Feb. 23.
Her car was recovered in Athens a
week later. and the charges filed
last week against Williams and
·
. Garnes related to its theft.
Jackson's body was discovered in
the dining room of her home in the

Arbaugh Addition in Olive
Township by sheriff's deputies ellecuting a search warrant in search of
evidence relating to her whereabouts. An autopsy named strangulation. a stab wound and blunt trauma as the causes of death .
The Ohio State Highway P.atrol
cited Williams for failure to control
and driving under suspension the
day before deputies discovered
·Jackson's body. and Williams never
appeared on the charges. He was
not driving Jackson's vehicle,

Pluse see WIHia..s, AS

injured in .

altercation
BY Brnt' SERGENT
BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OsrruARIFS
··PageAS
&lt;.; Kathy Adkiris. 48
,o Dorothy RoUsh, 91

..

INSIDE
·. • f~Jnds poor
SeePageAl
Chartene Hoelllcl\lphoto

• Bookman completes·
· . Air Force basic training.

SeePageA3

Congregate meals are served at the Senior Citizens Center Monday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m: Last year
7,218 senior citizens enjoyed the luncheons prepared in the Center kitchen, as did 16,585 homebound seniors who
receill9d home-delivered meals.
·

-. Pleasant Valley
Hospital Health
Foundation.

S~ulus

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEfl.ICHO MVOAILYSENTINELCOM '

POMEROY -While the Economic
Recovery Bill includes $3.7.million in
funds to help feed Ohio's ~isadvantaged senior citizens. there is no timeline as to when the money will be distributed to the counties.
'
Mindy Caton, planner for the Area
Agency on Aging 8, said that the
Agency has received notification of
funding designated for. nutrition programs, but that's all.
,
Asked about when agencies, such as
the Meigs County Council -on Aging,
can ex peel some money from -the
recovery gran~. she said the "Area
Agency has no direction at this time as
to distribution of the mo~tey." .
··
She. added that the Older American
Acts Program Division of the Ohio
Department of Aging will release

SeePage AS
• WHOISSU8$
.1)eSSimistic global ~
· report. See Page A6
::. China calls for
· new global currency.
· .See Page A6
. .

!. .

fWtds target senior nutrition

·1 A •
•
·
ted' ,t0 beneifit
lYlelgS
program
exnec
.
.
r

SeePageA3

• Local Brie~.

.

WEA1HER
'
.

The new federal money. it has been
reported, is designed for providing
meals to. semors m need, to restore
more information. at ·the local' level nutrition services which may have
once they have had time to learn more · been cut. and to restore positions
about the distribution and reporting which may have been eliminated or
requirements.
· .
. reduced due to those cuts.
According to a release from the oftice
Good nutrition always plays a role
of U.S. Sen. Sherrod Brown, Ohio will in seniors maintaining their health and
receive $2,502,60 I in funds for the con- independence. Beth Shaver. director
gregate meals program, and $1,232,050 of the · Meigs County Council on
for the home delivered meals progmm. · Aging. ,said that the congregate meals
He said the funds are to be used to pro- and the hom'e delivered meals to
vide meals. to seniors in group st;tungs homebound seniors here is a "vital
and to those who are homebound.
pan of keeping seniors in their homes
Aging services .in Southeastern Ohio and out of costly nursing facilities."
have been hit hard by rising food costs
Last year the Meigs . County
at a time when demand for services is Council on Aging delivered 16,585
increasing due to the economic down- meals to homebound seniors. At the
.tum iind the growing number of older Center there were 7,218 congregate
adults. The need for more services is meals served. Shaver says the total
being felt by the Meigs County cost for nutrition services in 2008 in
Counci~ on Aging which _has an Meigs County was $350.453.
aggresSIVe volunteer fund-rUlsmg P.CO- Revenue for that program inCluded
gram to supplement state and federal
funding and local levy funds . .
. Ple•se see Nutrition, AS

.POMEROY - Pomeroy
Police Chief Mark E.
Proffitt wa~ injured yesterday when a suspect allegedly tried to tlee in their truck.
According to the Pomeroy
Police Department. Proffitt
was assisting Sgt. Brandy
King on an arrest Oil' Court
Street when a person passing
by told .Proffitt a woman drivmg a pickup on CoW1 Street
was driving without a license.
Proflitt approached the driver
of the small pickyp. Alicia
·Small. 28. Parkersburg.
W.Va. and asked her to shut
off her engine. Small allegedly refused to comply after a
second warning and when
Proffitt reached into the ·
truck's cab to shut off the
engine. Small allegedly twk
off in the vehicle. drdgging
Proffitt until he could free .
himself.
Small then tumed right
from Court onto West Main .
Street and was pursued by
Code Enforcement Officer
Man Smith and Proffitt who
had by then gotten back to his
cruiser. The two officers
eventually pinned Small in on
Second Street behind Farmers
_Bank. Small then allegedly
refused to get out of the vehicle and· was fmally removed
and arrested by Proffitt.
At press time charges
were still being tiled against
Small who is to appear in
Meigs County Coun today.
As for Proffitt. yesterday
evening he was at Pleasant
Valley Hospital for tests
and had possibly injured
his back.

MiddJeport
approves
Cakes needed; reaction slow to rise for auction $2 million.
'09 budget

We can help!
.. '

.

Grand I ury bas
been scheduled
for April I. While
those proceedings
are secret until
indictments are
· returned.
the
grand jury will
likely consider
the Williams case
and, perhaps, that
CINirle8 S.
of Williams' coWHllams
defendant oo lesser charges, James I.A:e Garnes. .
. Prosecuting J\ttOrlley Colleen S.
Williams
.
. said .Charles Williams is

Police chief

See. Page AS

...

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Th9 Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
'

The cak~ judging and from a box recipe. Jones
Debbie Jones is obviously a
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
little nervous. Jones said auction are part of the stressed cakes do not have to
Detella on Pllge AS
last year's 96 cakes brought March . for Meals "Drive be made from scratch. Cakes
POMEROY - Last year in around $5,500 for the Out Hunger" · campaign should be submitted in a dis- Bv BRIAN J. REED ·
there were 96 entries in the Meats on Wheels program wl'!ich . includes a spaghetti posable. non-returnable con- BREED@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
cak~ judging c91\test and
and with only eight cakes dinner. also held tomorrow tainer/pan .
MIDDLEPORT
aucuon held for the local registered for the contest, at the Meigs Senior Center.
This year the five cuke
'
. :-'
Middleport
Village Council
' :·
Meal~ on Wheels program, she ~s also obviously wor- Cakes are to be at the center categories are: Chocolate.
&gt;. .a SI!CPONS
18 PAGES
I . . this year, so far only eight ried the auction won't bring hy 3 p.m., dinner starts. at 6 which is any cake made adopted a 2009 budget in
' " .
cakes have been registered. in nearly that much. The p:m. and at 6:45 p.m . the with chocolate; cakes made excess of $2 million at
:Annie~s'Mailbox ·
.· With the cake judging ~nd . auction helps benefit the cake winners and auction with fruit or vegetables Monday evening:s regular
, .·•
aucuon tomorrow, Metgs · program whtch offers home will begin . .
Calen~ars
such as carrot. apple. meeting .
Entry into the cake contest
The · annual process of
County Senior Citizens delivere~ meals to, seniors
Pleaso
see
·c•kes.
AS
.
is
free
and
cakes
can
be
made
adopting
a vil1:1ge budget
Center Activities Director that quahfy.
.
Classifteds
began for Middlepon late
last year. when .temporary
(:omics
..
...
appropriations
were
approved, allowing the fiscal
Editotihls
officer
to pay bills ·and conJanuary·s
reading
of
14.9
after
posting
8
percent
in
for last month was released
BY. KEVIN KELLY
Obituaiies
As MOTNEWSOMYDAILYTRISUNE.COM Tuesday by the Ohio percent .
duct
tinm1cial
business while
January. Lawrence also rose
That placed Meigs among two-tenths of a percent from a final, b~dget .was prepared .
Department of Job and
Sports
.B Section
The v!llage now has a
GALLIPOLIS
An Family Services.
sill other counties with a job- 7.6 in January to 7.8 last
deadline
of April I to submonth.
Washington
County's
in Ohio's unemGallia County, which had less rate topping I5 percent
Weather
As increase
mit
its
permanent
budget to
ployment rate for· February been at 8.7 percent in unem- or more - Adams ( 16.1), rate rose six-tenths of a percen.t. froni 9.3 in January to County Auditor Mary Byer~ ~009 Ohio v.O.,. PubU.ht1111 eo. was reflected throughout ployment for January, rose Crawford (15.3). Huron 9.9 in February.
HiII. Fiscal Officer Susan
most of southeastern Ohio. nine-tenths of a percent to ( 18), Morgan ( 16.5). Ottawa
Baker said.
Howev.er,
decreases
were
.
.
where the jobless ligures for 9.6 percent in February. (16.6) and Van Wert (15.2).
The ' permanent budget
seen m two. area counties :
Gallia and Meigs counties Meigs County was reponed
Athens County saw a Jackson
dipped three-tenths includes a $627,944 general
also went up.
at 15 .2 percent. up three- slight increasl! in joblessness
Plene see Bud1et. AS
Plo•se s~ Jobless, A~
'County-by-county data . tenths of a . percent from with 8.2 percent in February
Bv BETH SERGENT

iNDEx

..

February jobless rates post increase for area

.

..,

'

tti~ ~

'

• Area students score
high in competition. ·

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

"We did · not feel it was

-~ate al this time." he

Attention Business Owners

_...
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Arts Council hears
consultation, A3

beasures in US

•

...... l

�)

PageA2
- TheDailySentinel
ACROSS mE . ATION Wubw dv.Mardlas,aoog
·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Probe finds
..
poor response
tn a Fi'iday,. Aug 15. 2006
:towage
file
the wCI.flt
of
·. complaints
w Allen, a 3ld class passenger on the
is

N

D...,. __

• U'l

~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Dealing
with
irresponsible
grandparents
••an •

. v&amp;t. so dlty:'re pDIIIiDg Oil ~ be asted me to kiss ooly wanl!ed to ~ pRDy .
SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS
the guilt.
him. The next day be coo- girls and ~ jol.es about - Dm Bootman. a 2007
Thr: older kids CUI 11110- fes.sed that be thinb be's unannt.:ti11e oaes. He was
graduate of Meigs High
DI.- AMir. I haven't age now, but they are Wllll). too young for msing.
cheap, and if be splurged to School and cl:w:mK:al engiseeD my in-laws siace we ing tbtU y~ siblings
Annie. to be banest, I was imptss a girl. be expected a
moved ll:nl6S the country DOl to go anywhere with the nemiiiS when be asked me to seAual return on his invest- neer major . at Ohio
1bn:e years. ago. They are ~ - My husband, tiss him beauoe it was my ment. He was ·marginally University. recently com.Cflll!i!JI in May ft.- a two-. who bas a selec:tive meJOOI)I fusl tiss. as well,lllld it was. handrome and bad a good pleted basic mililllry train· week visit aDd staying in and is an eternat optimist, n't ellaCtly lbe best. I'd never job, but OIK.-e you spent any · lllg with the 737th training
group at lai.tiand Air Force
our home with us and our wants to give them another admit tllalto bim, tboogh. ·
time with him. ]IOU realized Base in San Antonio. Texas.
·six dlildrm.
chance. Howe,er, cousins
I'm confused. If he his c.baracter was severeiJI
While there be was
Wheu we li11ed clo6H. the who live near lhem say tboupt be was too YOIIJI8. lacking.
trained
in the fundamental
pandparents insisted on they've ooly gotten w~.
why did he ask me to kiss
He is still alooe and can't skills necessary to be suctating our oldest kids oo
My hi!Sband and I must bim! Please don't judge us.. figun: out whr There are
but then they wort and woo 't be able to I just want straight aihice. men who can 1 fiDd dales cessful in an Expeditionary
Air Forte. This training
would igD&lt;R them, ~ supervise every minute. - laiAYt ill CaET•-h
because of some flaws. but included bask wu stills.
to ~ tbem or sometimes How do we discourage
IMr Ia LoYr. Why did niceness is not usually oae
. for2et they were along. One . these outings without you kiss him? BeCause you of them. - J.a a Doo....t mililllry discipline, physical
fitness, drill and · cere. cbildgUklst- twice -I ll offending tbem? (And they. wanted to try it and you lite
Dtlr JIB: This is wby IIIOIIies, Air fofte core valSenior AlnMn
a large city festival. When are easiiJI offended.) bim. He prollabiJI felt the we suggest that dateless . ues and a comprehensive
Din Bodl:niOM
· the police brought him DruM. Idle ht-Laws
same way. ~ut aftetWanl, be people ask their best friends .range of subjects. reluting to
bad, his grandparents badDNr O.twliag: · Inform may have gotten a bit anx- . and closest relali\'es to cri· will nx.-eive tedmical trainAir~life
.
•
ing at Ktiesler Air fo«e Base
missing. . dlt in_-laws that )IOU w!ll not ious about where it coold .tique them. There are times
li'tliOtic:ecJbe
While at Lack.land AFB. in Bilolli. Mississippi. There,
These grandparents also pernul the younger children lead and de;;ided be wasn't when oae needs to bear that
he seF11ed as the element be will n:ceiYe 32 weeks oi
doo 't communicate well. to lake individual outings. ready. That was wise. Wben brutal honesty.
leader for the 232nd flight ·
Nearly every day lhey get An older sibling must you aren't sure about these
A11a's Meilt.u is writ· of the 323rd Training advanced training as an air
tield systems recbnician. Air
into &amp;Jguments that end in accompany them. Then things, it's best 1101 to do 1111 ' ' l'.rll)' Mitdt~U flllll
sweariug and giving each ins.truc:t your children not 10 them. Or, it's po5Sible be !II~)' s..,., ~ ftli- Squadron. Bookman was lield systems rechnidans
~ized for his advanced
other the silent treatment fur go &amp;DJWtM:re with Gnmdma felt that he disappointed •
of 1M Au l,cn*rs phySical fitness q1.1alifying installs. relO&lt;:ates. deploys
and maintains fixed ~
hours. My kids bate being and tirlmdpa without your you, in which case, be may collra.. PIM.u t-Ml JOIU
, with them. When we moveil permission. No exception-; ask 118ain .when be galbets z:mo•s to alli~saail· him for the Air Forces mobile meteorological ~
Thunderbolt (hpoor gradu:. a~ar, we coold claim ~- for any reason. If the i!'- the COIIl1lge.
-ftUIA~I, fN' -WriN ate) status. Prior to gradua- na11igation systems.
Upon completion of ted~
. ; flictiDg schedules to avoid laws are offended, so be 11.
Dear Allllit: "Happy to: A••w's itleilbeT, P.O. · tion. he participated in the
nical training. Bookma•
:: the outinfs. Now the grand- Your children's welfare American Bachelor,N who Box llBJJO, C~, IL
Airman's run and the will return to Ohio an•
: · parents msist that during mlllit come first.
got dumped after 11 date or · 60611. To jilttl ollt _ ,
:· their visit they take each
·De.r Alu!R: I am having . two. reminds me of my alHHtt A1111i• 's Mail6ox, Airman's Coin CeremonJI . serve with the Ohio Ai~
child somewbere, to "get to trouble with my boyfriend. friend's brother. He whined Gild mlllf..,.s b)' -~r wbicb marls the ·transition Nationul Guanl at the ~
Engil)eering and lnstallatio•
: know them better" s.ince "Michael.» I'm in the ninth aboUt how girls didn't like CrN/ors S,&amp;M wriftrs of a traiDee to Airman.
Senior Airman Bookman Squadron in :Zanesville. .
:: !hey ba\'CD't seen them for Rrade and be's in the eighth. bim because be was "too aJUI CtlltNIIi.sts, risit tiH
· so long. Their health and We've been going out since nice." Well, be was nice Clfttrws Syllditat~ Web
. ·age may make this their last November, alld a few days when it benefited him. He ~ et www..enetrws.ro..

~!!

. facts coUectioo at a warehouse in Atlamta. After
yea.rs of litigatian overltle
wreck 1111d its al'tifa&lt;:ls, U.S.
District Judge Flebecca
Beach Smith is expeded to
rule soon on the largest
colklctioo of Trtanie' sal,.
vage. The judgment- in
one of the nation's tcp maritime courts _ is intended to
ensure the 5,900 l)ieces of
cl1ina. ship fittings and personal belongings WOI'l't end
up in a collector's hands or
in a London auction house.
whete someTttanic arttfacls ' - t8(1dad.

:
WASHINGTON - The
:::;
• La.llor Department regularly
bungles its handling of
•:omplaints from workers
who ~Y !herr ~ are
cheating tftem on overtime
• pay or committing other
• labor violations . .an underi cover investigation found.
'
The probe by tbe
Government Acc0110lability
Office SUJIS agency officials
often took too long to
respond to complaints.
failed to record them and. in
one instance, lied about
investigative work that was
A~&gt;..never performed.
. ''This investigation shows.
that the ·Department ol
Labor has left thousands of
actuul victims of wage theft
wbo sought feqeral government
assistance . with
nowhere to tum,~ GAO
investigator Gregory .Kutz
said·In rrepared testimOnJI. a
copy o which was obtained
by The Associated Press.
The House Education and
• labor .Committee ptans to
hold a bearing on the investigation Wednesday.
To test the agency 's intake
process, GAO investigators
posed as workers or companies on 10 occasions. Kutz
said the agency mishandled
nine out of 10 of the fake
complaints.
In one of the complaints.
a meat packer reported children usmg heavy machinery Bv ST£VE SzKOTAK
exhibitions." Its offering's
at a California compan.y · ASSOCIATED F'RESS WRITER
include sports memorabilia,
But four months later, offia traveling Star Trek
cials had not begun to
NORFOLK. Va.
homage and "Bodies," , an
. investigate and never even Nearly a cent~~~!' after the anatomy exhibit featuring
· recorded the complaint in a Titanic struck 1ce m the preserved human cadavers.
database. as required. ·
North Atlantic, a federal · RMST conducts traveling
Another case involved a judge in Virginia is poised displays of the Titlioic ani- In a Friday, Aug 15, 2008 file photo, currency, part of th4t artifa&lt;;ts collection of the Titanic,
caller. supposedly a conve- to preserve the largest col- facts, which the compan~ is shown at a wallhoose in Atlanta. ·
.
nience store clerk. who left
intern·ational waters to
lection of artifacts from the sar.s have been viewed.by 3
seven telephone messages opulent
oceanliner
and
prorrullion
people
worldwtde.
·
receive
such cloSe Scrutiny.
to complain about not
teet
the
ship's
resting
place·
last
month,
RMST
under"You
have a domestic
receiving a · paycheck. The
U.S.
District
Judge went a shake~: board · court and now the branches .
Wage. and Hou~ Division
Rebecca
Beach
Smith,
a
mar· and ~w its ·
resign of government working
staff never returned tbe calls
itime
jurist
wbo
considers
the
over
·
the
complUiy's
poor together to make sure . the
and never recorded the
performance. wreck itself continues to be ·
complaint.
. wreck an "international trea- financial ·
sure,"
is
·
expected
to
rule
according
to
Premier available in the future .for
Half the complaints were
within
weeks
that
the
salExhibitions
filings
with
the the public good," be said.
never even recorded in a
vaged
items
must
remain
Securities
and
Exchange
International protections
database, as required, lind
• two of the 10 were marked together and accessible .to the Commission and statements have been sought for the
That would ensure~ by dissident shareholders . . Titanic almost since the
as successful! y paid even public.
5,900
pieces
of china, ship Smith had expressed con- wreck was discovered.
though the fictitious workfittings
and
personal
belong- cems before the board shake- Ballard, who led the telllll
ers reported they had not
ings won't end up in a collec- up about RMST's ability 10 that found the ship, told a
been paid, Kutz said.
hliDds or in a London continue properly managing congressional bearing in
The investigation - con- tor's
auction house, where some the collection, considering the October
:
1985
ducted from July through
artifacts have landed. company's financial situation.
"Titanic is like a great
ibis month - follows up on Titanic
The judgment could also
No one fllllliiiar with the
be
. a similar study last )lear that en d the legal tussle that case or the artifacts has pyrlllllid which has
en
· found
the
Labor began when a telllll of deep- duestioned RMST •s han·
· found and mankind is about
· Department ill-equipped to sea ellplorers · found the
to enter it for the first time
ling of them.
h
respond to· worker com- world's most famous shipc
RMST is seeking limited since it wrui sealed. Has e
plamts .about labor viola- wreck. in 1985.
ownership of the artifacts as come to plunder or apprecitions.
·
The salvage . company, compensation for its salvage ate'? The people ofthe world
The latest probe found RMS Titanic Inc .. wants the efforts. In its court filing for clearly want the latter."
major flaws in the way the court to grant it limited a salvage award. the compaagency takes in and ownership of the artifacts.
ny put tl!e fair market value
the
processes complaints. The
At the same time, a cadre of the collection at $110.9
Sheet music for "Put Your Arms Around Me, Honey' from
Wage and Hour Division is of government lawyers is million . The same filing
the
Broadway production "Madame Sherry~ (1910) is
RMST
l11c .:
charged with enforcing fed- helping
Smith
shape states that RMST's costs h II p: 1./ W W W .I j I a II j C- shown as part of the artifacts collection of the Titanic at a
eral wage, hour, child labor covenants to strictly monitor associated with the recovery
warehouse in Atlanta.
·
and family medical leave future activity at the Titanic and conservation of the ani- o111i11e .com
laws.
wreck 2 112 miles beneath facts have exceeded revDemocrats blame the the surface of the Atlantic. enues froin their display.
Btish administration for Amid evidenee of the ship's
If the court agrees to
using shoddy enforcem~nt deterioration. experts and RMST's request, the compractices -and reducmg government lawyers say the pany could sell the entire
funding and staffing levels sanctity of the Titanic must collection to a museum with
of the Wage and Hour divi- be prop:rly. protected as a court approval.
·
sion . Republicans have memonal to the I ,522 people
Robert W. McFarland , an
called the investigations an who died when it went down. attorney
for
RMST.
attempt to score political
"For the most part, the declined to comment before
points and believe mc;&gt;re value of Titanic is 11s histo- Smith rules .
focus should be placed on ry - I!Dd not from s~me
Smith is drawing upon the
staff mismanagement .
pile of gold, s1lver and JeW- State Departme.nt and
Hilda Solis, the new labor els." said Ole Varmer, ·an NOAA to help craft the
se,retary: has ·pledged to attorney' in the international covenants to keep the artistep up enforcement at.·the law office of the National . facts preserved. intact as a
agency.
Oceanic and Atmospheric collection and available to
"I am committed to ensur· Administration,
whose the public·, and to guide
· in~ that every worker .is office has developed guide- future salvage operations at
Effective April 24, Rebecca Huston, D.O., will no longer nave a private
pa1d at least the minimum lines for the Titanic.
the Titanic wreck. by RMST.
office practice. Dr. Huston is a hospital medicine physician for inpatients
wage, that those. who work
BecauSe the Titanic sank in Ai a hearing in November,
at O'Bienes's Memorial Hospital in addition tQ providing primary care
overtime are properly com- international waters on April the no-nonsense judge made
pensated. that child labor 15, 1912, and the ship's own- clear the stakes.
services for patients at the Meigs Medical Center in Pomeroy and Health
laws are strictly enforced , ers are long gone. the wreck
"I am concerned that the
First Care Center in Athens. Dr. Huston will concentrate all of her efforts
and that every. worker is site and its artifacts have been Titanic is not only a nation·
provided a safe and health- subject to competing legal al treasure . but m .its own
with the hospitalist program at O'Bieness .
ful environment," Solis claims since an international way an international trea- ,
said.
.
team led ·by .oceanographer sure, and it needs protection
Solis said the Wage and Robert Brulard found it 24 and it needs to be moni- .
To have your patient records transferred to the medical practitioner of
Hour Division has already years ago. The courtroom sur- tored ," the judge told
your choice, please call (740) 594-7979. A list of physicians associated
begun the. proc~ss of adding vivor is RMS Titanic lnc.,also lawyers in the case.
with O'Bieness Memorial Hospital is posted at "Find a Physician" on the
!50 new mvesugators to 1ts k.oown as RMST, which gath- . Congress has expressed its
field offices to bolster ered the artifacts during six inter.est in preserving the
hospital's Web site at www.obleness.or1.
enforcement. Another I00 dives. Courts have declared it Titanic as a memorial. U.S.
investigators will come . on salvor-in-possession'- mean· lawmakers have not, howevto make sure contractors ing it has exclusive rights to er, implemented an agreeDr. Huston is encouragin$ her patients at the Meigs Medical Center to
funded by President Barack. salvage the Titanic - but ment with the · United
consider transferring to DoiJ1Ias Hunter, M.D., who is now accepting
Obama's economic stimulus have explicitly stated it does Kingdom, which has already
new patients at the Meigs Medical Center as well as at his practice in
plan life in compliance with not own the 5,900 artifacts or embraced a ban on unreguthe wreck. itself.
·
Ia ted salvage of the wreck.
the law.
Racine ..For an appointment with Dr. Hunter at the Meigs Medical Center,
J. Ashley Roach , a .retired
RMST is a subsidiary of
Those · additions are
call (740) 992-9158, or call (740) 949-2683 for an appointment at Hunter
expected to .help an agency Premier Exhibition~ Inc ., an State Department lawyer
that lost experienced per- · Atlanta company that bills who worked on the Titanic
Family Practice in Racine.
.sonnel over the past few itself as "a major provider case, said the Titanic is the
of museum-quality touring first major shipwreck in
years.

'"c:ursi.oos.

was

IS
in US

On

Net ·

Community Calendar

Arts Council hears consultation

-

Consultant Christy
• . Fambaugh, pi8Sident
. of Stategic Links, was
in Middleport on
behalf ollhe Ohio
Arts Council, Friday
and Saturday lo work
with membeiS of the
·~¥·
· R._
......_... Arts .
,...,IIIIWIKI
Counc:il on growth and
fund raising strat&amp;
gies. She will be
returning in May lor

year the Riverbetld
Arts Council was
awarded a grant t(l
hire a consultant The
money was provided
by the Governor's
Olfice of Appalacl1ia
from an Appalachian
Regional Commission
grant for use in assisting distressed counties In building the cultural capacity ol distressed counties.

organizations .

Pleasant Valley Hospital Health Foundation
A7 .

'
' fior ·2009 awandS
accepting
app['lCQ tzons

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Applications for
lhe Pleasant Valley Hospital
· Foundations
.Health
Scholars Progr•m . which
provides financial assis,
tance to local students
preparing for careers in the
. ·field of health care were
. ::placed in tbe .bigb schools
:·:of Meigs, Galba and Mason
:: ;countie~ recently. according
· :Oto
Charles
Lanham,
:: ~oundation chairman.

... ,

. .
are a1so
AppI1ca11ons
'I
bl
b
.
avat a .e
l
J
ca II mg
I' at 674. . T'11s
Georg1anna
7234. Lanhlllll says. '
The Foundation initiated
Ihe fiIDIInCia
· I Ill'd program
recognizing the serious
shortage of health care professionals that exists
throughout the nation,
including the Upper Obio
Valley and the state ·of
West Virginia, as well as
the increasing costs of
'

· hl.~her •ducatl
' on.
~
o be ell.gl'ble •or
,, fin·anr1·aJ
ass1'stance from the
~
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Health Foundation, an indiv1'dual must be u res1'dent of
Wesf
Mason
County,
Virginia or Gallia CouniJI or
Mei_gs County, Ohio, have
graduated from an accredited high school or possess a .
G.ED. certificate, and .been
aecepted for admission and
declared a major area of
'

study in a health care field
at an accredited institution
of
'" higher
v· education
· · Ohin· either
nest
lrgtma
A l' · or IO. be
pp
ICU!IOnS
·db
heFmustd ·
receiVe Y 1
oun atiOn
by Friday, April 3, 2009.
Letters of reference from
two people familiar with the
applicant's academic and/or
employment history. as well
as school transcripts must
also be sentto the Foundation
at One John Marshall Way,
Point Pleasant, WV 25550 by
that date.

.. .

. HOLZER
''.CLINIC
'

.,, A~TIC SURGERY SPECIAL \&lt;
.

.New State-of-the-Art
Ambulatory ~u•

''I '·

•

SOo/o
l"
.

'

• .\

t

.Fellowcruli degree on one
candidate. Refreshments. .
MIDDLEPORT - Alpha
IOTA Masters Sorority, reg·
ular meeting. II :30 a.m ..
Millie's Restaurant.
Monday, March 30
POMEROY - Ob-Kan
Coiri Club. regular meeting.
7 p.m.. Pomeroy Library.

Church events
Sunday, Man:b 29 '
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Church. 6:30
p.m.. singers John and
Velma . . Dolly,
Bryce!
Douglas.

Tbursctay, Matth 26
HARRISONVILLE Meigs County Women's
Republican Party. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday, March 2S
at Scipio Township fire
.
MIDDLEPORT
- Free
department. Door prizes and
community
dinner.
5-6:30
refreshments.
POMEROY - Annual p.m.. Middleport Churcl
meeting of United Fund for the Nazarene. Menu i
Meigs Count)l. 6 p.m .. sausage grnvy ll!ld biscuit
Pomeroy Libl'lll)'. Open to pancakes, scran1bled eggf4,
public.
sausage. bacon. juice; colt
fee and milk.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m . ut
the hall.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453, special
meeting, 7 p.m. for the purpose of conferring the

Other events

ChMiene HoellictllphGto

Rebe.cca Huston, ·D.O.

"

Clubs and

another session. Last

1. vOW

Public meetings
Thursday, MIU'cll26
Meigs
POMEROY Soil
IIDd
Water
Con..&lt;;ervation District Board
of Supervisors, II :30 a.m.
at the district office, 3310 I
Hiland Road.
Wednesd8y,Aprill
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular
meeting,
6:30
p.m ..
P:ageville Town Hall.

·

Notice to Patients of

•

Bookman completes .i
Air Force basic training

MD "•new Srs•11

sllown as part ot Itt&amp; arti-

: · ASSOCOOED PRESS WRITER

Wednesday, March as. 2009

,By Kmrt

shirt

lilaflic.

H•ou-.
"'- ...._

PageA3
I

~

~

BY mE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

o·

·Breast En
.TUmmy

liposu ·

\

~

VISit us
online at
www.rnydallysentlnel.com

Your online
source for news

•'MIM'Ioc-• l!'llfanl ~ . - )O.If'~ h~'
• 10 _.,. IOhSIICI 'Mih ~~tll'flt.lll'

• Ctistum Sliwl ~ • ~. WNf\tl 6 ~!

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Sutfvplo6X,_~)
Sit" Up OnNftll www.LociiNtt~

�••

OPINION

"lbe.Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
•

111 CGwt s.r..t • Pcu lllotf, ONo

(740) fJD-2156 • FAX (740} 99M157

com

,Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
o.n Goodrich
Publisher

\

,

. Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Coagrt.ss slt111J '""It~ 110 law Rsp«ting a11
ntdlisltmmt of .Yiigin, or prvlei6itill.f ill~
fort txm:ise tlenwf; or amd.fill.f tlet jrfftlom
of spucll, or of th~ prtss; or tltt rigltt oJ lilt
peqplt peactaNy to a.sst:mWt, aJ to petitin
tht Go""'"mmt for a mlre.ss ofgrinufiU$.
. ~ The First ArnendrriWlt to the U.S.. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Wednesday. March 25. the 84th day of 2009.
There are 2&amp; l days left in the year.
Today·s H i~hlight in History:
·
·
On Man:h ~5. 1965, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. led
25,000 marchers to th~ state capitol in Montgomery, Ala ..
to prote~t the dental ol voting nghts to blacks.
On this date:
In 1634. English colonists sent bv LOI'd Baltimore arrived
in present·day Maryland·. ·
·
·
.
In 1865. during the Civil War, Confeder.ite forces
att~cked Fort Stedmab in ViJ¥inia but were forced to withdraw by counteratta.~:king Umon troops.
In 1894. Jacob S. Coxey began leading an "army" of
unemployed from Massillon . . Ohio, to Washington to
_demand help from the federal government.
· In 1918, French composer Claude Debussy died in Paris.
_In 19ll . 146 people. mostly female immigrants. were
ktlled when fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist
Company in New York.
In 1947. a coal mine explosion in Centralia, Ill., claimed
Ill lives.
.
.
.
·
· . In 1957. the Treaty .of RQme established the European ·
.Economic Community.
·
·
• In 1975. King Faisal of Saudi Arabia was shot to death by
. u nephew with a history of mental illness. (The nephew was
.. beheaded in June 1975.)
·· In 1988. in New Yolj( City's so-called "Preppie Killer"
case. Robert Chambers Jr. pleaded guilty to first-degree
manslaughter m ihe death of 18-year-old Jennifer Levin.
(Chambers tteeived a sentence of 5 to 15 years in prison:
he was released in 2003.)
In 1990, 87 people. most of them Honduran and
Dominii:an immigrants, were killed when fire raced
through an illegal social dub in New York City .
. Ten years ~g~: NATO aircr~'t and miss~les blasted targets
. ~~ Yugoslavta tor a second· mght. d1rectmg much of their
hre on Koso~o. where fighting raged between Serbs and
ethmc Alban tans. Alexei Yagudin won the men's title for
the second time at the World Figure Skating
Championships held in Helsinki.
· Five years ago: Congress passed the Unborn Victims of
· Vio_lenceAct. making it a separate offense to harm a fetus
. dunng Vtolent federal crime. Til\) United States vetoed a
U.N. Security Council resolution condemning Israel's
:assassmallon of Hamas leader Ahmed Yassin. Russian
, _J:v~eni Plushenko won his third world tigure skating title.
defeating Fren~:h rival Brian Joubert.
· One year ago: The Defense Depanment said it had mistakenly shipped electrical fuses for an intercontinental ballistic missile to Taiwan. (Once the error wus discovered. the
military quickly recovered the four fuses.) Herh Peterson,
the inventor of McDonald's Egg McMutl'in, died in Santa
Barbara. Calif.. at age 89.
.
. Today 's Binhduys: Modeling agency tounder Eileen Ford
· 1s 87. Fomter astronaut James Lovell is 81. Feminist activist
and author Gloria Stei~em is 75. Singer Anita Bryant is 69.
Smget Mtha Frankhn 1s 67. Actor Paul Michael Glaser is 66.
Thought for Today: "In .every person. even in such as
appear most reckless. there 1s an mherent desire to attain balance ." - Jakob Wassemmnn. Gennan author(l873- 1934).

wednesday. March as, aoog

A

ccording 10 an article
in the Bol;ton Globe.
an informal poll
taken among 200 teenagers
has revealed that almost
half of them blame the pop ·
Kathryn
star Rihanna for her tteent
Lopez
beating. aHegedly by her
boyfriend. Chris Brown . .
It's just one survey. But
it \ very bad news. And
feminists are to blame.
by the numbef of women,
l don't say that 10 bash youni! and old. abu;;ed by
Gloria Steinem or whomev- men:'There isn't a hell hot
er the most easily blamed enougli tor men responsible
feminist would be at this for the injustice of abusing
poim. I say it so we can col- women .- Now there's an
lecti vety get our heads out appropriate reaction!
of the feminist fog in which
What has happened we've been lost
a.nd what Rihanna and Chris
.1apptteiate the kids want- have to do with Gloria - is
ing Rihanna to take some that by inventing oppression
responsibility for her situa- where there is none and
tion. She\ an adult. a.j'ter remaking woman in man 's
all. as is Brown .. If Riha.nna image. the se11.Ual and femiis getting beaten. she should nist revolutions have cQnget the heck away from the fused everyone. It's natur.tl
person responsible. And as a for us to e &gt;lpect men to probest-selling artist. she has tect women. a.nd women to
the finanl'ial freedom to expe~.·t some level of physie:&gt;;tricate herself from her cal protection. But in post·
trouble . But where's the modem America, those natoutrage over what Brown is . ural gender roles have been
a&lt;.·cused of doing?, There's upended by academic jarsomething off when so gon and political rhetoric.
. ma.ny po:ople blame the vic· The result is confusion.
tim, not the ltggressor.
And perhaps, too, a neoAs one male reader e- feminist backlash.
mailed me: "The only times
The need !'Or some return
l. can remember my father to sanity fomlS the subtext
hitting me was for fighting of an article in this month's
with my sisters. I resented it issut.&gt; of 0. the Oprah
as a child. but I told my Magazine. The article
father. shonly before he explores how some women
died at agt.&gt; 90, that it was find themselves abandoning
the best life lesson he taught heterosexual relationships
me of many:·
in favor of panners of their
He added: ·•1 am stunned own gender.

Parker. wrote~ ~For* past
academic desdlbes wb.at 30 years or so. males have
attracted her to a future been under sie-ge by a culfemale lover. "She got up ture that too often
and gave me the better seat. embraces the notion that
as if she wanted to take care men are to blame f01 all of
of me. I was strud: by that. life's iUs .... While women
... she took initiative a.nd have been cast as victims ...
was the most take-charge men have been quietly
person I'd ever met.~
. retreating into their caves."'
"Ibis article isn't about Sometimes. of coui'Se.
. closeted hOtD.OSexuality: it's women are .victim~;. There
n01 asserting that there's a are many Rihannas that do
vast population of women not have the escape hatch
who were born to be with of fame and we.alth. But
women, and are instead while feminists whine
lr.ipped in unfulfilling bet· about false pay gaps and
erosexual arr.rngements. oppression that doesn 't
No. _this article. despite its exist , we ignore the mess
celebmtion of unconven- that we created by rejecting
tional lifestyles. boils down nature and tradition We've
to something much more so confused ourse'lves that
orthodox: Femininity and almost I00 teenagers in
masculinity ' mix well Boston are excusing Chris
together. And women are Brown. Why wouldn 't
taking masculinity where they '~ Men and women are
they can get it. e•en if it's in equal, but we've condithe amts of a fellow female. tioned ourselves to expect a
Nonnally. one might dis- lot less of men. and maybe
miss an article that explains too much of women. Save
that "more women may be the Males needs a follow stepping out of the conven- up: A Woman's Memo to
tional gender box." - .but Her Sister Feminists: Let's
this is 0 magazine. The Call the Whole lbing Off.
piece, "Why Women Are Or instead of another book.
Leaving Men for Other why don't we just reboot?
Women;' appears in an Was it really that bad when
issue that fe11tures an exclu- men didn't have to .pretend
sive interview at the White to be what they weren't a.nd
House with Michelle women didn't have to tty to
Obama. This is mainstream reinvent · themselves to
stuff.
·
make up for what they lost'?
, Last
year.
author . (Kathryn Lopt&gt;:: is rhe edi·
Kathleen Parker published ror of National · Review
.a. book called Save the· Online (www.nationalreMales. What a perfect title. view.rom). She nm be conwhat a necessary cause. I tacted at klopt&gt;;:@ national·
thought at the time. As review.com).
One recently divoo:ed

Reader .Serv1ces
Correction Polley

· tusPs :!13-960)

Ohio \IIIIey Publishing Co.

Our main concem irl aU stories 1s 1o Publla~ed &amp;~Jery morning, Monday
be accurat~ . If you knQw of an error through Frld1y, 111 Court Street,

in a story. oatllhe newsroom al\740) Pomeroy, Ohio. SOCOO&lt;k;lass postage
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lalhyMdns
POMEROY - Kathy Ann Adkms; 48~ of Pomeroy,
passed away on March 21, 2009.
She was born on Feb. I. 1961 in Milwaukee. Wtsc.,
:~~~y Adkins of Pomeroy a.nd the late Mary
She is survived by her: daughter. Sbonna Halstead of
Morgantown, W.Va.; two grandchildten, Emma Miller and
Ayden W~ant falher, Randy Adkins of Pomeroy; brolher,
Tony Adkim of Augus~a. Ga.: sister. Bed:y (Howie)
Caldwell of Tuppers ~llUIS: nieces and ne~ws: Ashley.
JK'OI&gt; and Mlll'gan Adkins of Augusta.DIIrcy (Con«) Lind
of ~ayetteville. N:C .. and ·KeUy Winebrenner of Tuppers
Plams; great neJ!!Iew. Jordan Adkins; spteilll friends, betty
Lou J~. Tncta Rock a.nd Brian Jones of Grove City;
very spectal aunt. Linda Lou Adkins of Pomeroy: many
aunts. lll!c:tes. nte..""es. nephews, cousins a.nd ·frieDds.
~ addition to her mother, Mary Adkins. she was pteeded 111 death by her ~d~ts .
· ·
A memorial serviCe will be held at 5 p.m. on lbursday.
Man:h 26. 2009. at Victory Baptist Church iD Middlepxt
wtth Pastl)! James ~essee officiating .
Memonal dona.tttm may be made in care of: Bed:y
Caldwell, 40S78 Old Route 7. Reedsville. OH 45m.
A registry is available on-line at www.andersonmc. daniel.oom.
· .

record. persoaa~ achieve.
ment, and schoolloommunity acti~ities . The judges
seleded ooe boy and one
girl with liD altemate for
each. Eadl first-place winner receives a $1.000 scholarship, wbik the altemale
~ives. a S7SO scholarship.
BREC reported having an
excellent tield of entrants
this Jeal. wbich challenged
.the judges in selel:liDI
_ the
~ts of the"$1 m&gt; lllld
$150 sdlolarships. .
The first place SI ,000
winneF in the girl's category
wu Sandra M~ Del'lle of
Vinton County
High
School. She is the daughter
of Roy and Sharon DePue

Local Weather

David Hahn of Jacksoo

Hixh Sch.ool won first place

allllaSI~pin

!be boys di,visioo. He is the
SOli of Lorin and Bmlda
Hahn of Jactsoo.
The recipiellt&gt;oftbe $750
scholarships and llltemates

for the . statewide contest
were Katie Fellure of South
Gallia Higb Schpol and
Cteil BoJin of Meigs Hi!UI
Sdloo~. Katie is the daughter of Richard a.nd Becky
Fellure of Crown City a.nd
Cecil is the soo of Brent and
Camille Bolin of Rutland.
In addilion, the fuse-place
winners are eJi8ible to repre.
sene BREC in the statewide

OREC Scholarship Contest
held in Columbus on May
11. 2009. The awards are
$2.625, $1.835. $1575.
$1.470 $1365 a.nd $1 160.
ftrSt through sixth place.
This is a total of 12 possible
awards, si.' for boys a.nd sill
for girls.
The Z009 Touchstone
Energy Special Achievement
Scholarship went to Dustin
Wilson, a senior ai Symmes
Valley High School. He will
com~te. in Columbus on
April 28 for one of four first·
place prizes of $1550 in the
Special
Achievement
Scholarship contest. He is
the son of Danny a.nd Vickie
Wilson of Scottown. Ohio.

·Local Stocks

Friday...Putly . sunny.
Wedaesd•y •••Showers.
Highs in the upper 50s. Highs in'lhe lower 60s.
Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph.
Frid•y . ai...t •..Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
Chance of rain 80 peri:ent.
Wednesday
night... clumce of showers. .Lows in
•
Mostly
cloudy.
A
chance
of the lower 40s.
SALEM CENTER - DorOthy Louise Ganlner Roush,
S.turday..oCloudy with a
in
the
91. of Salem Center. died Sunday. March 22. 2009 at showers
50
percent chance of showevening
...
Then
a
slight
Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis.
Born Sept. 6, 1917 in Middleport. she was the daughter chance of showers after mid- ers. Highs around 70.
Saturday oight...Showers
of the late James and Maud Ma~ (Ma.nsfOJd) Gardner. 'night. Lows in the upper 40s.
likely.
Lows in !be. mid 40s.
Southeast
winds
5
to
10
mph.
Dorothy and her late husl&gt;a.nd. Oris. operated their dairy
Chance ot' rain 60 percent.
farm for numerous years and spent many SWIIJIIers travel- Chance of rain 50 percent.
Suuday aad Sunday
ing around the United States in their RV. She attended the · Tbursday••.Showers with
aight
••.Mostly
cloudy.
a
chance
of
thunderstorms.
Salem Center United Methodist Church a.nd was a joy to
.
.
. .· Highs around 60. Nortb Highs in lhe mid 50s. Lows
all that knew her.
In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance in the upper 30s.
husband. Oris Roush . two brothers. Charles a.nd Ernest of rain 80 percent.
. · Mond•y...Partly sunny.
Gardner and sister. Esther Vale. a nephew. James R. ~Bob" · Thursday Diaht".Mostly Highs in the lower 60s.
Vale and great niece Suzanne Vale Combs.
cloudy with a 30 percent
Monday aight . aad
She is survived by three nieces, JOaDne Vale Hoskins. chance of showers. Lows Tutsday ...Partly cloudy.
Nancy Vale Hildebrant and Dorothy VIlle Noble. In addi- around 40. North winds 5 to Lows in the mid 40s. Highs
tion, on the Roush side. Dorothy is survived by two broth- 10 mph.
in the lower 60s.
ers-in-law, Harold and Gareo Roush. three sisters-in-law,
Mary Jean. Sheila and Mary Roush. eight nitees. Nadine
Euler. Sharlene Hart. Dixie Waters. Pamela Wise, Barbara
Trout, Connie George, Nancy Hite and Krista River. seven
nephews. Nonnan, Wayne. Michael. Dillon, RQbert. Mark:
and Andy Roush. 27 great nie~.-es and nephews.
. · Title Ill . and NSIP of in town on Fridays is bringVisitation will he held from 10.11 a.m. tomorrow at $68.567, with the remain- · ing in another $550 a week
Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, followed by a graveside ing $281.886 ~'Oming from which goes directly into the
service at Letart Falls Cemetery with Pastor Carole Phillips levy proceeds, fi!Jlds l]lis- nutrition program. lbat
ofticiating. Memorial donations are requested to the chari- ing by volunteers, contribu- · fund raiser is handled by
lions. catering programs . volunteers with assistance
ty of the donor's choice. ·
'
·.
a.nd other project income. . from staff members.
According to the release
Shaver said a new program of delivering lunches from Brown, the $3 .7 mil"

Dolutlly Louise Cilnlla. .....

of Hamden.

AEP (NVSE) - "BZ1

34.21
Olllo Vloll!ly BMc Carp. (NAS.
DAQ) -21-M

Abo (NASNO) - 40.110
Mhllndlnc.(NYSE) - l.l9
Big Lola (NVSE) - 211.58
Boll E-. (NASDAQ) 21 ••
BcMvW. n,r (NVSE) - 20.89

BBT (NYSE) - 11.05
.,_,pin (NASDAQ) - 13.211
.....leo (NVSE) - 51.53
Prwnlet (NASDAQ) - 5.55
Rodlwalt (NVSE) - 24.54
Rodly Boob (NASEMQ) 3.43
'

Ceftlurv Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-1.11

ClwmpiDII (NASDAQ) - UO
a-ning Shops (NASDAQ)

-ua

C1tJ HCIIcllntl (NASDAQ)

. Rov-1 Dutch Shell - 4&amp;01

S..S Holding (NASDAQ) 44.04

-

27.51 .
. Collins (NYSE) - 33.12
· ~ (NYSE) - 22.71
US a.nk (N'ISE) - 14.95
GlnMlt (NVSE) - 2.32

Wal-lllart (NYSE) - 51.111

W.nciW's (NVSE) - 5.13

W.181nco (NYSE) - 21.110

· Worlllifltlon (NVSE) -

~tE~(NVSE)­

.10-40
llll'leW O.Wiclson (NYSE) -

13.4&amp;
.
JP lolofpn (NYSE) - 21.43
KJOQW (N'ISE)- 21.11
Umlllcl.,... (NYSE) - t.06
Narlalk Southern (NVSE) -

8.99
O.lly stock reports lrtl the 4
p.m. ET cloelng ~ ol
triMICtlont for March 24,
2001.. pnwklecl by EdwAld

. . _ flnlnclllldv._
. _ Mills In

Gallipolis 11

(740) 441-9'41 lnd ltllly
Mlrrero In PQint Pt111111t 11
(304) 674-0174. llemlllr SIPC.

Nutrition from,. At

Local Briefs

lion in funds from the eco- •
nomic recovery legislation
has been awarded to the
Ohio Department .of Jobs
and Family Services
which will in turn allocate
the
funds
to local
providers of the two programs.

·•we have an obli~ation to
ensure older Amencans do
not go hungry." said Brown.
"These funds will provide a
lifeline · to homebound .
seniors while ensuring tllat
other older Americans in
need have access to nutritious meals: ·

Budgetrrom Page At

·Free informational fair

fund appropriati~n .. Special sewer, recreation, cemetery. · ing for a proposed sewer will begin at that time.
Councn also:
water meter deposits and upgrade p£Qject, council
revenue awropttatlons • Approved payment of
funds set llSlde from specif- leak insurance in separate passed an emergency ordinance affirming the vii- bills in the . amount of
ic fllllding 8ources and used accounts.
.
In other business, council !age's sewer rate as 150 per- $21,496.12.
only for specific expendi•
Approved
the
mayo(s
appointed
Emerson
Heighton,
cent
of
the
water
rate.
No
tures were also included:
$155,785 for street mainte- Dan Thomas, Velma Rue, documentation was found in repon of fees and fines colnance, $7,214 for the Bob Pooler and Lawrence yillag~ ordinances suppon- lected in February. in the
amount of $21121 .
Mayor's Computer Fund, Powell to the board of zoning mg tlus rate structure.
Attending were Council
appeals.
Council
President
Village
Administrator
$62.133 for fue equipment.
Rae Moore recommended the Faymon Roberts said decora· Members Moore. Jean
and $228.475.81.
·
tions must he removed from Craig. Sandy Brown. Craig
Enterprise funds, used to .appointments.
As
part
of
the
process
of
village .cemeteri~s no later Wehrung. Shawn Rice. lll)d
operate services funded by
applymg
for
economic
stimthan
March 31 if they are to Julia i-lous·on, Mayor
user charges and other pubPOMEROY - Applications for the Brandi Thoma&amp; lic fees, include water, ulus funds and. other financ- be saved. Cemetery cleanup Michael Gerlach. and Baker.
Memorial Scholarship may be picked up at Meigs High
School or received in the mail by calling 992-6763 or 992noo.Eligible applicants must be a MHS senior or a gradfrom Page Al
uate attending college who participated in MHS track or
cross·country for u minimum of two ~ears. Applications
of a percent from 12.2 in . year - 217 .000 more been this high since May must be ready to learn new
must be returned to the selection commtttee by May 1..
Janu~ to 11.9 in February. unemployed in Ohio over 1984. when it was 9.6 per- skills and take a job that pays
cent. said Brian Haner. a less than what . they might
and Vmton dropped five- the last 12 months .
Cleveland
economist spokesman with the state's want. · said Bob Mercer.
tenths of a percent. from
Geo~e Zeller said some job and family services supervisor of the Musk.ingum
POMEROY ·- A meeting of junior class parents for 15.2 in January to 14.7 last parts of the state, including agency.
County ()pponunity Center
·
prom planning set for Thursday night has been cancelled month.
Few industries· in Ohio Columbus and Cleveland, · Improvement . in the in Zanesville.
and changed to 6:30 p.m. Monday night at the high were immune from job loss- have losi more jobs in state's employment picture
"The majority want to go
school. Anyone willing to help with the prom is asked to es last month that pushed finance and insurance than depends on how quickly back to work right away ...
attend. Jo Dunn prom advisor and can be reached at 992- the state's unemployment in manufacturing.
fedentl economic stimulus he said. ''A lot of people are
3058 or 9920-2986.
.
.
"What this means is that dollars begirt creating jobs continuing their job search
rate to a 25-year h1~h.
we
have two major prob- and whether restructuring in evt.&gt;n after they're hired .
Service, admimstrative
·and manufacturin~ areas lems in the ecQnomy here in the auto industry can regen- They're Jrying to get buck
lost the most Jobs in Ohio, and this has never erate jobs in the Midwest, to what they were eaming
before."
POMEROY- A spaghetti.luncheon will be served from Febroary. The only increas- happened before. at least Harter said.
(The Associated · Press
Auto
plant
shutdowns
in
II a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday at the Meigs County Museum es were in government, hos- since the '30s," he said.
contribmed
to this story).
Annex on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy. Cost for a full lun- pitality and construction, "There are the two main the Dayton area have taken
bases of the Ohio economy, away about 20,000 jobs in
cheon to include the spughetti, salad, gatlic bread, cupcake, DJFS reported last week.
Overall. the stale's unem- and we are losing jobs in the last decade. "We've hit
and pop or wuter is $5.
pretty close to .bottom." said
Carryout or delivery orders are being accepted but ployment rate was 9.4 per- large numbers in both."
~ndirson 'Md&gt;anie{
Manufacturing losses are Williamson, who oversees a
must be in by Thursday, 992-3810. Proceeds will go cent in February, the highest
driving the recession. he job training and placement
toward support of the Meigs County Historical Society since 1984.
~ f!IM".~f~_
Adlllm M.ct&gt;anleol
"We are seeing it hit all said, but Ohio's troubles go site that sees 2.000 people
and the Museum .
. &amp;r. Jame• A ndonte&gt;n , 1
walks of life." said Gary beyond factory slowdowns . each day. '
DIRECTORS
He said there ·are a few
"That's largely due to a
Williamson.
executive
director ofThe Job Center.u ripple effect from manufac- areas where people can find
Page Al
job training site in Dayton. · tunng," Zeller said. "When work: welders. health care
The number Qf workers we lost ·manufacturing jobs. workers and skilled machine
,....nStrvk" r.tt.,..J .t valJ•""
according to the citation agencies for work leading unemployed in Ohio in we lose retail jobs and we operators ure in demand. he
Middlepon l'lmleroy ·
filed in Meigs County to the arrests, and her February grew by 40.000 in also 'lose jobs in all other said. "It's not all doom and
992.m t 992·5-1+1
office staff.
Coun . .
gloom," he said.
one month to 566,000 people. industries.·
"'~· "· .ttndtrwal!lfWl-.it1.Nm
"We are especially grate"Murder is 11 special cuteOthers looking for , work
Ohio's February jobless
What's more startling is
gory felony in Ohio, and ful to agents of Ohio how much those numbers raie increased from 8.8 perrequires presentment to the Attorney General Richard. have climbed in just one cent in January. It hasn't
grand jury," Prosecutor Cordr.ay 's Bureau of
Williams said. "Additional Criminal Identification and
charges may be brought at Investigation for the untold
hours that they huve put in,
from Page At
th11t time ."
Jlpl'il2. 9.. 16, 23. 2009. 6-8 ptn
Once Williams is served and continue to put in, as
Jlnnex.
copies of the complaint well as Sheriff Robert E. applesauce, or spice. etc.; · Judges this yeilr are: Ed
Zatta,
Tom
Anderson.
Marty
·
and warrant from ·Ohto, he Beegle and his deputies. decorated cakes; any yel·
1)~
may willingly return to and all the other depart-· low or white cake: balled Cline, Lisa Averion, Sharon
•
Metgs County · to answer ments and agencies that cheesecake. for example Stewart, Frank Hellld. Mark
Who
SlroNid
Antnd:
.
Porter,
Teresa
Porter,
Scott
pumpkin,
New
York
fiuit,
the churge. Prosecutor have stepped up and
Anyon• who is a dia,tic or a cangivtr to a dia,lic.
style. chocolate. The last Powell. Adam McDaniel.
helped out.'
Williams said.
Jones
still
has
hopes
to
"We had deputies from category is new this year.
"If he refuses to come
Once again cakes will be have I00 cakes entered into
Washington
County Sheriff
buck volunturily. my office
judged
on appearance, tex- the auction sponsored by
will immediutely begm the Larry Minks· olfice come
Contact Andn!w Brumfteld at
process of obtuining a. gov- down to help out the night ture and taste. First and sec- The Vaughan Agency. Call
991·6626 tn n!glster or for
ernor's wurruntto requtre he the body wus discovered, ond place awards will be 992-2161 for more informamon! Information.
and. of course, it was the given in each category with tion. For those wishing to
he brought buck here."
attend
the
spaghetti
dinner.
· Registration deadline April 1st.
Prosecutor
Williams Athens Police Department champion and reserve
advance
tickets
are
$6
and
champion
being
chosen
·
that
found
her
car,"
acknowledged urea law
$7. at the door.
from first place cakes.
enforcement officers and Prosecutor Williams said.

. POMEROY - The Meigs County Community Coalition
is holding a free informational fair from 6-7 p.m. tomorrow
at the Univ~rsity of Rio Grande Fultz Center. The fair will
present free services and reSOlll'ces available. to families to
combat alcohol and drug abuse. There will be refreshments
and door prizes .Agencies planning to atteud include Health
Recovery. Meigs County Department of Job and Family
Services, Meigs County Health Department, Woodland
Centers, Family &amp; Children First Council, Meigs County
Juvenile Court.

Thomas scholarship applications

Jobless

Prom meeting date changed

Spaghetti luncheon

GUEST VIEW

Congress and {IIG.·What were they ·.thinking?
Bv BRUCE POSTLETHWAIT

The D~ily Sen.tinel

Area studen~ scor:e high in competition

Corifilsion reigns as tradition decays

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to tJie editor are welcome. Thev shvulcl be iess
.t~an 300 II'Vr~s. All letters are sttbject u/editing , mll$t be
s1gned. and mclude address ami telephone number. No
wzslg11NI letters will be published. Lmas should be in
good taste. ;u/dress!ng issues. not personalities. Leiters of
thanks to orgamzattons and individuals will not be accept·
' ·
·
A ll } i&gt;r p11bliwtion ..

The Daily Sentinel • Pap As

PageA4

. Our country ha~ estab-

hsh_ed legal practices for
Our nation has embarked h!Jstn~ss and pe~onal finanon a road never before truv - cml dtsnsters. It ts the bankelcd.
ruptcy _court. Muny bustThe Ut\ited States Federal n~sses trul every day. many
Govemment hus made the o~ th~m are suved by reor$adecision that AIG. an insur- m!!uuon under.the protection
an~e. c~mpany. was "too big · olthe coun.
.
to tall . Money from the tlj)(·
When a busme~s . comes
payers was given to AIG out of banlmtptcy, tt ts leanwith !lQ clear plun or er a~d bett.er able. to survt~e
requirement for repayment . p~fllably 1~ the luture. Th~s
T_he public outcry over this ts how a nation of laws ts
$lveuway was overwhelm- supposed to work . ~se t~e
mgly against it.
law, equally . upphed. m
Congress. including our upholdmg JUStice.
represelltHtive .
Charlie
AlG should huve been
Wtl son. voted to dvc the ~llowed to fml. lettmg the
mon~y to Alti. he &lt;tlso sup- wurt~ &lt;~pply U.S. law and,
ports other tux give-aways hopelully. save the ~ompuny
and · progrums . This · is the so they c?uld puy creditors
first time in Americun histo- equally Wtlh !unds uvuilable
ry the tux payer was asked to then or from future. earn~ng~ .
g1ve .,11oney to u privute
Our &lt;;:ongress mterlered
business because it wus ''too w1th thts proce~s. We the
big to ti•il."
·
tuxpuyer are _lett hold the
.We were told at the tinte the . empty bag . .Smce Co!liress
ICQR(JIIly wool~! fail if AIG saw .fit to mter~ene. every
went bankrupt. Now we have credttor, mcludmg execulearned that foreign banks ttves wtth employment
received the lion's· share of bonus duuses , had every
the bailout money. AIG got nght to expect payment as
the money. the economic the policy stated or the conslide continues d.owtiward.
truct ~pelled out .

The law of "unintended
consequences" took the
safet~ net away from AIG.
Foretgn banks got every
penny owed them. Nothing
could be negotiat~d to save
money. Congress JUSt threw
our money at a problem they
!l"d t·he¥ alone caused by
mterference.
I have contacted Charlie
Wtlson ·on . three .occasions
about thts tssue. Last summer, he tell my mput wus
valuable enough to call me
at mY home lor 11 45-minute
chat. He wus. upstanding
enough to adn~tt at that tune
hts support of ethano! was
tmsgutded by good mtenlions. Congress giving tax
incentives had made it. profituble to turn food into fuel.
They never thought of the
potenttal for skyrocketing
foodpnces as the result, but,
that ts what we got.
Lately f(IY emails to
Congressman Wilson have
gone ignored. My calls to his
office, speaking with his
head. of staff. resulted in
nothmg . I have asked
Charlie Wilson one polite
question.

. 1 asked to be shown the
clause, in the 18 enumerated
rights granted to the Federal
Government. he used to vote
in good conscience .for giving tllli.Pl!yer dollars to a private busmess because "it is
too big to fail."
The silence from his office
is deafening. The silence
from all of our elected federal representatives on that
issue is deafening . They
refuse to an swer because
what they are doing is
wrong. not just morally
wrong. but against the foundutton of restricted federal
powers. and they know it.
We as a nullon need to
decide what we are . Are we
a
Constitutional .
Representative
Republic
with minimal federal powers
spelled out. reserving the
remuinder to the states or the
people? Or, are we a nation
of situationul convenience.
where laws only apply to the
·people that make the elected
ones unhappy so they cun
force your compliance with
their agenda~
. (Bma
PoJtlethwait ·
resides in Middleport)·.

.

I

Williams ~rom

Cakes

1ltntng .Utth 1&gt;iabew
Courthouse
Old Dnfi.nnary

·-

�'

I

••

ARoUND THE WoRLD

The Daily Sentinel

PageA6

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Mum as, 2009

.

WHO issues
lb GIE&amp;CIIW KAtz

.

•!;'«"'TtD f'!ESS WRITER

BLETCHLEY
PARK.
Englaoo - During World
War D. the best br.UOs in
Britain cracked Germany'&gt;
~ secrets but never
~e their own code of
Silea;e.
" ~ow gray-haired and
I,ISIDg walking· sticks and at
Jeas.t one wheelchair. the
~endary code bre-&lt;lkers
te~ for a reunion
'1\iesday at, Bletchley P.ark.
wflere they labored in the
irim. blacked-out rooms
and played a key role in
defea_ting the Nazis.
,The ~'Ode breakers who
~k:ed here in anonymity
bel{led alter history. frusptmg Adolf H1tler s ambitions by giving Prime
Minister Winston Churchill
and his wartime Cabinet
crucial advance know ledge
'b f Germany's invusion
plans. defenses. and U-hoat
)llovements.
Age has not dimmed the
rode breakerS' fierce pride,
They don't boast - the
British don't do that - but
they know they saved lives.
: "Do you know what
Churchill called · i1s'l" said
Jean Valentine. 84. her blue
~yes flashing . "He l.'illled us
'the geese that laid the golden eggs but never cackled."'
· Tuesday's event was to
honor a rebuilt replica of the
Turing Bombe. the machine
invented by mathematician
· Alan Turing that was an
outsized forerunner of the
modern ~OmJ?uter. That
invention dec1phered · the
Germans· top-se&lt;:ret mes:
sages that were encoded by
the Nazis' t~pewriter-like .
Enigma machmes. ·
·
"It was like getting a
newspaper of German material every day," said Andrew
Hodges, author of a biogmphy about Turing. 'The war
would have been very different without it ,"
The real heroes were the

~Now I feel much more
excited about it than I ever
did when l was working
on it.~
The secret activities at
Bletchley Park pro11ided the
setting for the 2001 romantic thriller "Enigma," which
starred Oscar-winner Kate
Winslet, as. well as other
movies and ~py oovels.
Tbe focus Tuesday was
on fact, not fiction, and on
the real li11es shaped within
these walls. For many. the
•reunion and the re~uilt
replica of the Turing Bombe
brought back a flood of
memories .
All the Turing Bombe
machines were destroY.ed
after the war on Churchill's
orders. because of sec.urity
'concern$, but the replica
has been painstalingly
rebuilt. a process that took
l3 years. It was briefly
APptdo switched on Tuesday, tumWar veterans Ruth Bourne, left, and Jean Valentine, .who served in Women's Roval ing back the years.
•
Navy Service during World War II, stand in front of a replica of the Turing Bornbe
"It's a ple~ure 10 see the
.machine, that played a crucial part in cracking the Nazi, Enigma code, lit Blatchley machine because that is my
Park, England, Tuesday. The original machine was destroyed after the war but vol\ln- wife ·s legacy," said retired
leers rebuilt the replica that receil(ed a special Engineering Heritage Award on Tuesday Brig. Patrick Erskineto mark its place in history.
·
' Thlloch, 90, remembering
.
bls wife, Pegu, who died
hundreds of mathemati- they were pfohibited from ~lltc~.~Sill.d.w~a .. ~years ago..._ was an
clans.
cryptographerS, talking about their top- su~fVISOl · wOuld say Job . ,11JJNClor an.d ,.,~t dozens
crosswonl puzzle at1ciona~ secret work. But · those liP· That meant they ~. Of· ladies bow to use that
dos. chess 111asters and other r~stric!ions began being managed to ~.another . machine . It was ·mywife's
experts.~ ho spent their days hfted 10 the 1970s. allow- message for the military.
big thing · in life. even
and nights operating the ing them to tell their
"That gave us enormous · though she always played it
machines at Bletchley Park, friends and family what satisfaction,"
Valentine down."
about 40 miles northwest of they had really done during said.
He credits two people for
London.
the war.
The pleasure was fleeting, the. success of the codeThey knew they would
Finally. the geese could however, because there was breaking · operation:
be targeted by waves of truly cackle - but !@eli· always another message Cburchill. for his determiGerman bombers if word tional British reserve kept waiti_ng to be decrypted. nation, and Turingt the early
of their location leaked. them from sayin~ too much. The JO~··was never. fint~ed computer whiz.
That never happened.
"We really d1dn 't k:now - untll · the Nw reg1me
Erskine-Tulloc:h endorsalthough three bombs did what we were doing other cotlapsed;~:"
.
es the widely held ~iew
land nearby. It is believed than breaking German . Ruth~. 83, sa1d the that the success of the
the target was u nearby codes," said Valentine, a lifting Of:secrecy rules has Bletchley Park code brea1train station. not Bletchley teenager during the war. allowe9 ,many of the 'code ers saved an untold numbe,r
Park its!:}lf.
·.. You weren't supposed to breakers to finally learn of lives by hastening the
Their work provided cru- ask questions. You weren't ho-:y imponant the operation 1\llied victory. . .
ciul inforn1ation in the supposed to . know wbat tru_ly, ~as at a _hme when
"The great lhiDg 1s that
Battle of the Atlantic, the was in the message~. ·N9 Bntatn s very eJustence was the Germans never realized
desert campaign against one knew · anything \!lboul threatened.
we'd broken their code," he
German F1eld Marshal what anyone else was
"We've researched and . said. "OtheN&gt;ise'they would
Erwin Rommel and the doing . It was strictly com- found out an enormous have done somethin~ about
partmentali:zed."
preparations for D-Day.
amount about how impor- it. They thought 11 was
For decades after the war.
The sep,se of accomplish- tant this was," she said. unbreakable." ..

.

,

pessimistic
global TB report
RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)
- The Dlllllhef of people
infected With both tuben:u-

Wedne5day, Man:b 25,2009

lo&amp;s and HlV is twice what
researchers
plev:iously
thought, top health officials
said Tuesday.
The
Wo'r:ld
Health
Organization's annual report
on TB, presented ill Rio,
indicates that there were
137 milliOII cases of people
with bod! TB and HIV ill
2007, the latest year for
which statistics ate available. About 700,11Xl pe&lt;!ple
were illfected with bolb ill
2006. according to a report
released by WHO last year.
Researchers attribute the
numbers mostly to more
widespread testing and
reporu~. They say direct
informaoon on the HIV status llllOil$ TB patients is
now available from 64
nations - up from just 13
nations in recent years.
More reporting is also coming from Africa, where 79
percent of the dual-illfection
cases were reported.
.
In 2007, 1.3 million people died from TB, while
another 465,000 people who
had ooth TB and HJV died,
About 15 million people
died in Z006 · from TB,
according to WHO's report
last year. It was not clear
how many of those who died
also were illfected with HIV.
WHO researcbers said the
new data means HIV-positive
people are about 20 times
more likely than HIV-negative people to develop TB in
coontries where HIV is at
epiderilic levels, and between
26 and 37 times more likely
to develop TB where HIV
prevalence is lower.
·The WHO's annual report
had other pessimistic points:
an eltpected $1.6 bilJion gap
in funding needed to fight
the disease this year and an
inc.rease in the number of
cases of drug-resistant TB.

Lady Knights
win home opener

over Poca, S.t·

~mplete.

:Mullens and Emily Jones
both singled to start the
thlnl inning rally, then
~da Thompson drove
boih in with a smgle for the
thiee-run cushion.
:.'Anna Sommer and
Jennifer Wickline also
· ild4Jed singles in the si1tth,
' Ui'owing the Lady Knights
. t&amp;: extend their lead to 5-1
Biter six frames.
· ·\Vyant - · who went the
distance in the circle for the
victors - wrapped things
I!P quicldy in the seventh.
allowing the hosts lo prevail
Wliile p1ckin!l up the winning decis1on . Wyant
allowed zero earned runs
and gave up j1,1st three hi$&amp;
over seven mning~; walking
six and fanning seven in the
process.
· ·
B. Harrison - who prodUced two of Poe:a's three
hits - was the losing pitch·
·
· er of record.
Sommer, Thompson arid
Mullens each paced Point
with two hits, followed by
Wickline, Cottrill, W;Yant
and Jones with one ap1ece:
Both teams committed four
errors in the contest.
Point Pleasant returns to
action this weekend at the
Murphysboro Lady Warrior
Invitational, where the Lady
Knights will play two
games · apiece on both
Thursday and Friday. PPHS
will also play in a minimum
of two games on Saturday
during the championship
round.

BeiJi~

Iems :_ and by extension ly bold m recent mon~s in
"
the .dollar - can wreak express in~ concern about .
· BEIJING - China is havoc on nations around the Washington's financial mancalling for a new global cur- world. China is in a bind. To agement and pushi~~g .for
n!llcy to replace the domi- keep the value of its curren- global . economic ctlanges.
ilant dollar. showing u cy steady - some say That reflects both its relative ·
growing assertiveness on undervalued - the Chinese financial health and growing
revampmg the world econo- government has to recycle concern ·that increased globmy ahead of next week's 1ts huge trade surpluses. and alization means missteps .
London summit on the the biggest. most ·liquid abroad could harm its own
financial crisis. .
option for investing them is economy.
The surprise froposal by U.S. govemment debt. .
Zhou's comments are also
Beijing's centra bank govTo better insulate coun- :part of China's longstanding
ernor reflects unease about · tries from the ills of one push to reform the IMF,
its vast holdings of U.S, country or one currency, World Sank and · global
govemment bonds and adds Zhou said the lMF should financial system to give
to Chinese pressure to over- .:reate a "reserve currency" greater voice to China and
haul a global tinancial sys- based on shares in the body other developing economies
tflin dominated by the dollar held .by its 185 member - another theme that will
and Western governments. nutions. known as special be heard from China. Brazil.
Both the United States and drdwing ri~hts. or SDRs.
Russia and India at the sumt,he
European · Union
He said 11 also should be · mit of Group of 20 major
brushed off the idea.
used for trade . pricing com- economies next week.
The world economic crisis modities and accounting.
"Ovenlue reforms should
shows the "inherent vulneru- not
just
government give proper representation to
bilities and systemic risks in finance.
and mcrease the say of the
the existing · international
In Washington. U.S. emerging and developing
monetary system." Gov. Treasury Secretary Timothy economies." Yi Xianrong, a
Zhou Xiaochuan said in an Geithner and . Federal researcher with the Institute
~ssay released Monday by Reserve· Chairman Beri of Economics and Finances
the bank. He recommended Bernunke appeured to dis- at the Chinese Academy of
creating a currency made up miss Chinn's proposal dur- Social Sciences. a governa basket of global currencies ing a congressional hearing nient think-tank. wrote in
' and controlled by the Tuesday.
the government newspaper
International Monetary Fund
The two key U.S. eco- China Daily.
'
and said it would help ,"t,o nomic officials were asked
"Proper representation
achieve the objective of safe- by
Ree.
Michele and u bigger voice for the
guarding global economic Bachmann. R,-Minn .. if they developing countries are
and financial stability."
would , "categorically the need of the hour. For
Zhou did not mention the renounce the United .StateS'.~ instance. being the world's
dollar by nume . But in an moving away from the .dol• ·third-largest economy and
11nusual step, the essay was lur and ~oing . to a globa•~ •· ·the largest foreign reserves
published in both Chinese · currency,' and both said : holder, China should get
and English. malcing clear it they would.
its due place In the maneCameron Rodgers
was meant for a foreign
And
the
European tary body."
Easter
audience.
Union's top economy offi•
Another idea Yi raised
China has long been cial said the dollar's role as was that t~e U.S. and
~
uneasy about relying on the the international reserve Europe should give up their
dollur for the bulk of its currency is secure de~pite traditional pnvileges of
..,,,
trade and to store foreign China's proposaL
appointing the heads of the
reserves. Premier Wen
"Everybody agrees also World Bank and the IMF.
Jiabao publicly appealed to that the present world
The idea of u creating a ,~·&gt;,.&gt;· Mail to or Drop off at The Daily Sentinel
Washington this month to reserve currencv. the dollar, new global reserve curren111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
avoid any response to the is there and will continue to cy isn't n~w . But analysts '.~" t
r ~ ' '"....
crisis thut might weaken the be there for 11 long period of say the proposal isn't likely
dollar and the value of time," EU Commissioner to gain much traction
Beijing's estimated $1 tril- Joaquin ~lmuniu suid becuuse it faces major
•••••••••••••••••••
lion in Treasuries und other Tttesduy after u meeting of obstacles. It would re&lt;juire
•
Child's Name
U.S. government debt.
the European Commission.. ncceptam;e from nations
For decades. the dollar
Zhou also c;il.led for that have long used the dolFrom
has been the world's most · changing how SDRs are Jar and hold huge stockpiles
w,idely used .:urren~y. Many valued. Currently. they are of t~e U.S. currency.
Your Name
I
govemmenu; hold a hiQ/e bused on the value nf four
"There has been for
I Address
portion of their reserves 111 currencies - the dollar. decades tulk about creating
I
dollars. Crude oil nnd muny euro. yen and British an internlllionul reserve curI
commodities ure priced in pound . "The basket of cur- rency and it htiS never renlly
I
I
Phone#
dollars ,. Business deals rcnc ies forming the basis pro~res sed." said Michael
I
nround the world are done for SDR Vijluation should Petits. u finance professor at
Ads Must Be Prepaid
I
in ,:lollnrs.
be expunded to include qtr· Peking
Univ~rsity's
But the finunl'iul crisis rc nci es of all major Guunghua
School
of
has
highlighted
how economies." he wmte.
Munagemen1 .
eustNESS WRITER

Sentinel

GREETING!!

PoiNT PLeASANT 5, PocA 1
Poco
I'Oint

-,

POINT PlEASANT (1-2): Tasso Wyant
and Devil Cottrill.
WP - wy&amp;nt: lP - Horflscn,

Manhit·by

Stallworth wasn't
in crosswalk
::MIAMI (AP)- A pedestrian· wasn't in a crosswalk
s¥l\en · Cleveland . Browns
~ide
receiver
Donie
!,)attworth hit a:nd killed him
with his Bentley, according
to a report released Tuesday
~Y- pohce _in Miami Beach.
· : According to the report,
Stattworth told officers he
tf(shed his lights to try to
w~ 59-yea~-old Mario
~eyes, a constniction crane
operator who was rushing to
catch a bus after getting .off
work around 7:15 a;m.
Miucll 14.
: : Police said Stallworth was
driving about '50 mph in a 40
mph zone. They are investiing whether alcohol
yed a role in the accident.
·
charges have been filed
pjlainst Stallworth pending
tile outcome of blood tests.
: A police diagram shows
that Reyes was hit in the far.
left lane of the six-lane
MacAnhur Causeway not in a nearby crosswalk.
Stallworth stopped . a few
feet away.

,)'&lt;

'E

•
.,.

... .....

.

.,~

....

in the
championship
game of
the Big
East
. men's
NCAA .
college .
basketball
· tournament
Saturday,
March 14,
at
Madison
Square
Garden In
.New York.
LouisviHe

won 76-

66.

·

AP photo

na its muscle

East
Bv DAN GELSTON
AP SPORTS WRITER

The three No. I seeds
were only a start , The bruising, bohemoth Big East has
·Jived up to the hyr as the
beast of the NCA tournament.
The Big East tournament
officially ended two weeks
ago in New York. Take a
look at those offi~;e brackets,
and the teams still standing
entering the NCAA tournament's second weekend
mnk:e it seem like the party
is still going long after the
lights were dimmed at
Madison Square Garden.

Five teams still playing
and a shot at placing four
teams in the Final Four have
put the rest of the field on
notice that the path to a
national chUil)pionship goes
through this overpowering
conference.
"I would have been really
shocked if some of these
guys got upset," Villanova
coach Jay Wright said.
Connecticut. Louisville
and Pittsburgh are the three
top seeds still playing.
Villanova and Syracuse are
No. 3 seeds as a record five
teams from pne conference
in the Sweet 16 have given
the tournament a decided

Big East tlavor.
·
The Panthers and Wildcats
could meet in the East
Regionul nnal, while the
Orange (South). Cardinals
(Midwest) and Huskies
(West) are spreud mnong the
other three regionals, making a rugged all-conference
Final Four a legitimate possibility.
·
''There ·s no other league
in the country like the Bijl
East." UConn forward Jeff
Adrien said. "We ju~t go out
there every game and .try to
take each other's heads off.
I'm tor .real when I sriy that."
The Big East. which has
16 basketball members.

could send three teams to the
Final Four for the- first time
. since
Villanova.
Georgetown and St. John's
got there in 1985. Memphis
State was the only party
crusher thut season.
Led by coach Rollie
Massimino and his appetizing use of pasta and clam
sauce us a motivational tool,
the 1985 Wildcats beat
Georgetown in "The Perfect
Game" for their only nation·
nl championship. ·
, Massimino
said
on
Tuesday that he was rooting
tor another Big East battle in
PIHH IH 111 Ellt. 81

Point baseball
picks up ftrst win
BY BR'tAN WALT£RS

BWAlTERSOM'YQAilYTRIBUNE.COM
POINT PLEASANT What goes around. comes
around.

.
Twenty-four hours .after

dropping their season and
home
opener
to
Chapmanville bv a 4-1 COUDt.
the f'&gt;oim Pleasai11 Big Blacks
baseball team returned the
fa,·or to visiting Roane
Count'/ Tuesday durini a 4-1
triumph in non-conference
action.
Point Plea."l\11t (1-1) never
trailed in the contest while
picking up its tirst win of the
spring. despite stranding 10
baserunners and producing
only one earned mn.
PPHS took a 1-0 lead in the
bottom of the second as a
pickoff attempt by Roane
starter Billy Traub allowed
Titus Russell to ·score from
third .
Roane County countered
with a mn of its own in the
third. as Matt Brohurd produced 1111 RBI hit to knot
things up at one apiece.
Things .stayed that way
unul the bottom of the fifth.
when D.W. Henlman doubled to give the hosts a runner
in scoring position. Herdman
later scored in that frame.
giving Point a 2-l advantage
through five complete. ·
The Big Blacks udded two
insttranl.'e runs in the si1tth,
including an RBI single from
Eric Veith to mnk:e it a threenm contest headed into the
finale.
· Henlman - who went the
distance tor Point while pick:ing up the winning dec1sion
- closed out the side in the
seventh. allowing the hosts
their tirst triumph of the season. Herdman - behind a
solid defense - surrendered
· only thfee walks and struck
out one over his seven
innin~;s of work.
Bes1des Veith. Russell and
Herdmnn. Justin Weav~r provided the other hit for the vktors. Justin Cavendar also
scored once in the decision.
PPHS committed only one
error, compared to four by the
guests.
.
Roane County's biggest
threat came in the lifth. wnen
they stranded two baserunners during lhat one-all tie,
Brohard paced RCHS with
two hits in the setback. Traub
was credited with the loss, as
the Raiders used three pitchers over six frames.
.Point Pleasant returns to
the diamond Thursday when
it travels to Buffalo for u nonconference matchup ut 5:30
p.m.
POINT PLEASANT 4,
ROANE COUNTY 1
Roane
Point

001 QOO 0
010 012 x

-

14 4

441

ROANE COUNTY (nla•: Bll~ Traub.

Matt leo (3L Jared Reed in and Alex
Mace.
D.W.
.POINT PLEASANT ll·n
Herdman and B.J. Lloyd.
WP - Herdman : LP- Traub

.""

Cavaliers rtinning down history
INDEPENDENCE ·(AP)
- Owners of the NBA's
best record and a second
Central Division title, the
Cleveland Cavaliers are
making jumpers.
And h1story. ·
They're leading the
Boston Cehics oy four
g·ames for the Eastern
Conference's best record
and hold a l 1/2-gume
advantage on the Los
Angeles Lakers for crucial
home-court
advantage
tlu:oughout the playoffs.
They're riding a moe-game
winning streak, and with
their neltt victory ·- . No. S8
- they will set a franchise
record for most ·wins in a
season.
T~e Cavs, so bad before
LeBron James urrived·, have·
never been better.
Ben Wallace had no idea.
"Ever?'' Wallace asked
after practice on Tuesday
when told of the impending
wins mark. "Ever-ever?"
Ever.
"Well, then that's ~roba ­
bly go in~ to happen, .' Big
Ben pred tcted .
Not probably. Definitely.
With an incomparable 32-

- - ---------•

Another Division IV
honor went lo · Eastern
junior Jake Lynch. who led
the Eagles (13-10) in scoring with 13.3 points per
game and · a 44 percent
average from three-point
range . Lynch was a major
piece to Eastern's advancement to 1he district final.
The final local honoree
Copplck
went to Gallia Academy
onlble mention in D-4. · senior Kyle Mitchell. who
Coppick . averoged 10.4 led the Blue Devils in both
points and shot 53 percent scoring
( 11.5) ' and
from the field this season. rebounding (7.o) while
Both Harris :md Coppick guiding the Devils to a 9were vital parts to 13 ovemU rinish. Mitchell
Sou them ·s district chwnpi· also posted silt double-douonship and 16-7 overall bles and five games of 20campaign.
or-more points this winter.

second
half
against
Syracuse

.

Dad

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

-1H
- 5104

Cool.

.

•

0010000
202 001 •

FOCI. (nlo): B. Harrison and , Jem\6

0

, Happy
Love, Mom

BY 8lrtAN WALTERS
BWALTEIIS·II'I!~IlYTRIBUNE.CQII

COLUMBUS - A total
of four boys from the Ohio
POINT PLEASANT Valley Publishing area
The Point Pleasant girls were selected to the
sOftball team picked up its Associ11ted Press All-Ohio
first win of the season girts basketball teams for
Thesday nildlt durin8 a COD- · the 2008-09 campaign in 11
vincing · S-1 lriumpb o11er . four-'di11ision process.
MltctleU
f"qca during the home open- . None of the four were
er for the reigning Oiss AA nominated to the top-three
state champions.
·
teams. but one earned a led the Tornadoes in scor-The Uidy Knights ( t-2) special mention honor ing this season - a11eraged
went to work earl~ on, plat- while three others were. 14.6 points per game while
idi a pair of runs m the first name_d horiorable mention. connecting on 50 lrifectas
~g to establish a lead · Southern senior Bryan during the regular season .
they would never relin- Harris was the highest bonHarris was not the only
llllish. A pair of singles by o~ from the ~a. earning · Southern player selected as.
Devin Cottrill and Tessa ' SJI:CI:i~ mention ~onors in well.. as junior Sean
W)'ant - followed by a sin- · Dlvtston IV. Hams - who Copp1cl,; was selected hon~~ from Mo~gan Mullens
.,::.. allowed PPHS to estab~that early edge.
:-The visiting Lady Dots Louisville
coach
OOulltered with a run in the
Rick
lop of the third to cut their
Pitino
deficit in half, but Point
shouts
retaliated with two more
scores in its half of the third
from the
for a commanding 4-1
bench
a!l)'antage through three during the

''
-"'•· .. ..._.,.1, ' "-~,:t ,..._ S:: . 4N tl{Hll.f ... ,.,. • a,.;..t.!l. I Q~··!''1~~I'J'II';"!'r.!?,\"!"(!:"';~1'8ltll!ll~~~~~~~~7,!("~-;'::"""-:;'~~~~-':'!;':"1

.. ::Actual Size tx3
_.:~\t Person per ad
!··1Run date Sun.,
12,2009
. :.Deadline Wed.
·j:Apnla, 2oo9

Four local boys named AJI..Qbjo in hoops

B'f EIRwl WALTIRS
BWAI.:TEASelti'OAA.YTIIIIIUIIE.COM

·B'f~hina
calls fo~.:!l~w
g~9.Pa!~~~no&amp; been. ~. ~~a
Joe McDoNALD
America's economic prob- ·
u · ~·-=,~·~...~
AP

'

l record at home. and ei~ht championship.''
oftheirneltt 12 games ins1de Title talk seemed farthe friendly confines of fetched earlier this month
Quicken Loans Arena. when the Cuvs played poorCleveland's other rock and lyon a West Coast trip . They
roll structure, the Cavs Hke- fell behind in games against
ly will smash the previous the Los Angeles Clippers.
club record of 57 wins.set by Phoenix and Sacramento
the 1988-89 Cavs and the and needed late mllies to
1991-92 edition.
win . Their defense wus
In fact. if the Cuvs. who rugged and there seemed to
host the New .Jersey Nets on be a general lack of focus .
Wednesday n'ight. can run
But in their la~t five
the table at home and finish garrles. four · of ·them ut
40-l. they'll match the home. the Cavs have tight1985-86 Boston Celtics for ened things up.
the best home record in
"Nothing is wrong right
league history. ·
now." James said. "But we
And three more wins will can't allow something to slip
put them. at the exalted 60- and we started to on that
win platea\1, a line usually West· Coast trip. But we ' ve
reserved for gf!)Utness.
, gotten it back. We 'ye gotten
Not bad for 11 team that better in every aspect of our
won 45 regular,seuson game offensively and dcfengames a yeur ago.
·
sively. and now it's just
"To win 60 games is going out there and winning
hard." Cavs coach Mike games;"
Brown said. "Not muny
Two seasons after making
teams can say· they've done the finals for the first time,
it. I had the good lo11une to the Cavaliers. 12-1 in March
do that once in Indiana and and u league-best I7-2 since
once in San Antonio. It was the Al!·Stnr break. have a
a han! time to get there. but legitim:1te shot at dethroning
if we do get there, it doesn't the Celtics, who were
guarantee us what our main
goal is, and that's to win a
PIHse IH CIIVS1 81

,
AP photo
Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James drives to IIJe basket as
he splits the defense of New Jersey Nets' Brook Lopez. left,
and Vince Carter, right, during the third quarter of an NBA
basketball game Sunday In East Rutherford. N.J.

�•-.nayc'r

Big East
fnoPaceBI
Detroit.

~~.very ~ely coold han..

pen. Massuruoo wd~l
thi.nt it's very COO\pw'llble.
Back. in '&amp;5. there were just
some really ~players tbal
were playing. Thefe are great
players now. but we bad
(Chris) Mullin and (Plltrick:)
Ewing_ and (Ed) Pinckney
and (Harold) Pressley and
that kind of group. Just a
gJeat cooglooien!.te of peo. pie. It wOuld be a tremen. dous tribute ...
The '8$ Final Four
remains the benchmart.. for
anv cooferem:e.
''The s.tandard for the tournarneru ri!tht now is whal we
did in 198$ and until someone surpasses that. I would
have to say tha.t '85 is the
best tha.t we've ever been.''
said Big East commissioner
Mike tranghese.
·
Still, Tnmghese w~ &lt;tu!ck.
to note that sending ailything
less would not diminiSh the
season.
"It's only happened ODCe
in the history of i:ollege basketball, so wny should we all
of a sudden be held to that
standard? It's ridiculous," he
slid. "I just want us to play
· well ana if we play well.
: we 'II
a team tliere ."
· Loutsville coach Rick.
Pitino called the 2008-09
season the best in the Big
East's 30-year history. .
"You have so many teams
that potentially could get to
the Final Four and win a
national champioitship," he
said.
..
Unlike UConn's lopsided
smackdown of Chattanooga,
this week's Big East show·
down is no slam dunk.
With three teams left in
· three regionals (Kansas.
Missouri. Oklahoma) . the
Big 12 has a9-3 rewrd and a
shot at sending three to the
Final Four. Both the Atlantic
Coast and Big Ten confer- ences started with seven
teams and each has two still
playing.
Kansas coach Bill Self.
who led the Jayhawks to the
national championship last
season. believes other con·
tendef&gt; are ready to crash the
Big East~y.
·
"In order for our league to
really put a stamp on 1t and
not have everybOdy talking
about other leagues going
into next year, we need to go

6et

ahead and . validate that by
performing weU this weekend ... &amp;If said.
The Big East wa&amp; nearly a&amp;
tlawless as Villanova was in
that '85 title game.
Marquette was knocked out
in the second round and West
Varginia w~ bounced in the
fusi
. • rnak.inR the Big
. Eust a
Sl!lldlin2 I f-2. Eig!il of the
liig East's II vio..-rories have
been by double- ~8its.
'"l'his year. rightfully so.
the talk bas becil Big "East.
and it !.hould 'be die Bi
Eust," Self said. "It was b~
far the superiQr league in our
country. oo questioo."
It's not just the number of
wim the Big East racked up.
but bow they've r:nostly
romped. Take a look. at an
those "W'"" marked in ink
on
brackets and you'll

your

see scores more appropriate

for IIOII..:ont'erence tuneup
games than "One Shining
Moment'' highlights.
UConn dominatl:d its two ·
game" by a combined 82
points
and
blasted ·
Chilttanooga in the thirdlargest blowout in tournament history. Villanova was
threatened by American
before turning on the pres- ·
sun: and takiiiR two games
by 43 points. Syracuse also
won bOth games by double
digits to advance into the
roUnd of 16.
. Of the Big East teams left
DlaY!nt. only PittsburJh and
Loilisville SW"Vived major
stms. The Panthers were
nearly sboclted by No. 16
seed East Tennessee State in
the first round and beat
Oklahoma State by eight
J!Oi!tts.
The Cardinals. the overall
No. I seed, had to work to
hold off a talented Siena
team in the second round.
Pitino believed the close call
only made Louisville more
tournament tough the rest of
.
theway.
"You never know with the
teams that are getting
(blowout wins) how they're
going to feel in a close game
lind that's why I· thought
Siena was good for us,"
Pitino said.
Slugging it out every game
in the Big East was almost '
like trying to get through a
regiomil . 'fl1e Wildcats are a
three seed. ·but went 1-3
against the other conference
top seeds. They lmocked off
Pittsburgh , lost twice to
Louisville and lost to
Connecticut, Still, they
haven't had a two-game los.
ing streak all season. •

Cavs
fromPigtBl
pushed to se,·en games by
Cleveland in last year's
Eastern semitinals.
James bas the Cavs and
their f~~DS dreaming big.
The dear leader to win
his first · MVP award,
James bas become the
game's best all-around
player. Not only b~ he
become u unstoppable
offensive force - be "s
averaging 29.S points. 8.8
rebounds and 8.S ISSists in
March - be has worked so
hard bo his. defense that
he's inching toward being ·
tbe league's. ~mier stopper. too.
Michael Jordan all over

agllill .
.
Along with an bility to
blod;. shots that mere IOOf·
tals can't toucb.. James bias
taken it upoo himself to
guard the oilier teoun •s best
scorer during crunch time,
an ~ignment he wasn't
alwa:ys willing to accept.
~Defensively
be's a&amp;
quiet. and stroll¥ a&amp; anybod.Y.at ~s ~lion or any
posmoo. . Punland eoacb
Nate McMillan. ~He bas
the ability to be the best.for now. lame~· sole
goal is ~o get the Cavaliers
a title i.nd end the d ty of
Cleveland's cllampiooSbip
droushl which extends
back to 1964.
Bef01e the season started, James felt .that Ills
team. bolste.red by the
addition of point guard Mo
Williams. would dllllenge

to play tbe WIIIJI we've been
playin~ on the road aDd at
closing in on 60 wins with home. tt's a little bit better
four weel.s remaining tban I think. we all thought.
"But rm happy we're in
before the playoffs.
~At the start of the sea- this (&gt;OSition. We w1111t to
son. no. I don't think we take 11 one !:aJIIC' at a llme
would have ~~ we'd and not wony about what
be in this pos.iboo." be win&amp; we· re going to get .
said. ~I could sa~ we But we want to get as
would be really &amp;QOO. But many a.s possible.~
Boston. Never did be' think

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local Ohio Valley
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mail; Qtribune

API

(740) 992·2155

1 ... r-.I &lt;C """ a paapcor ~ ­
'V'c•-...- .R.Iaht. t-c:. -.c. ... e»'-'Y .., L » e l l v o r u d A . l a h .. •~ '"'--·~.- I:Jioc•c-.,.-..

Robert E. Bttgle
Mtlga County Sherlll
Anorn~y tor the Plain·
till
LtrMr Slmpaon •
Rothtu"
PO Box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·
5480
513-241-3100
(31 11, 18, 25

gr8ta 30 mlnutta Well Being all of Lot No.
128 IMt along the c.n- ~ (121 In the Orlg.
tar 01 uld roed; thence lnal Plllt and Survey ot
North 81 dtgreea 50 the VIllage of Mkkll..
mlnutet Eaat 888 1111 port, 1\ltlga County,
to thl place of begin· Ohio, 11ld Lot No.
nlng, containing e. 15 Twelve (121 !Mina on
ecrea.
lhl Etthldt of Second
Current
Owner: Street IM-n Walnut
Mltahlll • Staphanlll and Coal Stretle In uld
Welker etal
VIllage, and lor • more
Property at: 29330 Oak definite reference Ia
Grove Rd.
·
hlre!Jy mtdt to thl Plat
1
Public Notlct
Rtclnt, Ohio il5n1
of the Survey of the
Prior Deed RateranCM:· ume.
Shtrlll Sllta
Volume 203. Page an Being the tame propCau Number 08cV082 Appral~ II $45,000
erty ~;~~nveyed to by
Cltl Mortgege In
Terma ol 1111: Cannot Ella Harry to Maude
Plaintill
bl aold tor Iau than Ryan by deed dated
va
213rda oflht appraised May 31 , 1135, and
Mitchell · Walker • value. 10% down on recorded In book 139 of
Stephanie Walker
day of ult, - h or Cll" the Deed Recordil of
Detendanta
. tilled check, balance Mtlga.County, Ohio, at
Court of Common. due on confirmation of Page 482.
Pleat, Melga County, aale.
Being the 11me R•l
Ohio
The appralaal did not Estate conveyed to Lll·
ln pureuance of an Include an lnttrlor ex· llan Loulu Cowie by
ordaroltalato medl· amlnallonof1hehouea. Lewla E. Burford by
recledlromllldcourt Robert E. Beegle, dttdrecordtdlnDeed
In the above enthlad . Mtlga County Shariff
Book 170, Page 40 of
acUon, I will upou to Attorney tor the Plein· thl Melga County Deed
aale It public auction 1111
Recorda.
on the front atepa of Manley, Deaa Kochllakl Reference Deed: Vol·
lhtMtlgaCOIIntyCourt LLC
umt 287, !'age 281,
Houae on Friday, April PO Box 1&amp;5028
Mtlga County Dead
17, 2009 at 10 a.m. of ColumbUa, OH 43218
Recorda. Audltor'a p.,..
uld day, the following 11+222-4121
eel No. tS-01188.'000
dlacriiMCI realoallte: (3) 11, 18,25
Subject to all 111111,
EXHIBITA
taumenta and rlghla·
Legal Deacrlpllon:
ot-way ol record.
Situated In tho State ol
Public Notice
PARCEL
NUMBER:
Ohio, County of Molga
1501188000
In the Townahlp of Sut· ShoriH Sll11
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
ton:
Caao Nu"!IMr 08CV098 244 North Second Av·
Tho following da· Qhlo Valley Bank
enuo Middleport, OH
aarlbed realeatato, tit· Plel.ntltt·
45780
uattd In Section 17, va
Current Owner: Jamea
Townahlp ot Sunon:
Jamaa R • Krlatln c. R. Acrea Jr. • Krlatln C.
Beginning at a aouth· Acree tt 11
Acrea
weal corner ota 38.12 Detendanta
Property at: 244 North
acre tract of land Court ot Common Second Ave.
recorded In Deed Book Pltaa, Melga County, . Middleport, Ohio 45780
Numblr214, pa,t ·307, Ohio
PrlorDiedRtltrenctt:
Deed Recorda o Malga In purauanco ot an Volumt 287, Pagt28t
County, Ohio; Thlnca order oltaleto me dl· Appralaed at $110,000
North 1 degreea 12 reeled from uld court Terma of Salt: Cannot
mlnut• Wttt 880.7 In the lbovo llnlltled bl aold lor 1111 than
IHI to an Iron marker action, I will expoit to 213rda olthe apprilaed
to thl beginning of ~n 1111 at public auction value. 10% down on
agreed line 11 d1- on the lront atepa of day of ule, caah or cel"
aorlbed heraln; thanca the Mtlga County Court tilled check, balance
aouth 75 degma · 32 Houaa on Prlday, April .dua on oonllrmatlon of
mlnutaa Weal 521.1 IS, 2909 at 10 o.m., of 1111.
l•t along uld agreed 11ld dey, thllollowlng Thl appral11l did not
llnato the center oltht dtaarlbed · mlt~late: lnaludo on Interior ex·
croll rood ; thence 38 I!XHIIIT A
emlnetlon of the houae.
degreea 30 mlnutaa Situated In the County Robert 1!. Beegle,
weal 403.5 taat along of Malga, In lha State of Mtlga County Bherlll
tht center ot 11ld road; Ohio, and In tht Village Anorney tor the Pltln·
thence Boulh 17 d.. ot Middleport:
tiH

:r-.lc:atl c ~ M

12111

(304) 675-1333

Frank • Wooldridge
Co.
eoo PH~ St.
Columbua. Ohio 4320e
614-221·1882
(31 18. 25, (41 1

and Pl"lft!l an Iron pin recorded In Vol. 260,
at 30.00 IMt tor 1 total Page 565 of the Ottd
dla- ol 330.00 IMt Recorda ot Mtlga
to an Iron pin; thence County, Ohio, thence
N. 74 dig. 51' 00" Wttt North 1 deg. 55.' 57"
along aline, 132.001Ht Eta! along the wutllna
to an Iron pin; lhiiiCI of 11ld Fowlllr property
N. 15 dtg. 01' 00" Eta! 31 teet; thence South
Public Notlct
along a fine and paaa· 74 deg. 59" East about
lng an Iron pin 11300.00 588 ft. to an Iron pin,
Sherlll Sal•
teet lor a total dlatance thence 25 deg. Eaat
Caae Numbtr08CV079 of 330.00 IHt to the 356.79 teet to an Iron
Beneficial Ohio Inc.
.point of beginning and pin: and thence North
Plalnllll
containing 1.000 ecrea.
deg. Ealt 330 teatto
va
There Ia alto granted 1 railroad aplkt, tht
v-11111 L. Tlylor Et al
and conveyed herewith place of beginning. ·
Detendanta
·
, an euement lor ,the Current Owner: Yalma
Court of Common purpoaee . ol lngreaa L. Taylor etal
Piau, Melga County, and egreea along, over Property at: 37295 St.
Ohio
and acroaa lhtlollow- Rt. 124
In pureuance of an lng deecrlbed tract of Mlddlllport, OH
ordei of aalt to me dl· land,·l!l-wlt:
PPI 11.01125000
reeled lrolft uld court Sltueted In the County Prior deed reterencea: .
In .the above entitled of Meigs, State of Ohio, Volume He, Page 713
action, I will expoaa to and Townahlp at Rut· Appralaed at $80,000
aale at public auction land, In Slcllon 1, Town Terma ot Sale: Cennot
on the front atepe of 6, Range14 olthe OhiO 1M aold tor 1111 'than
thiMelgtCountyCourt Company's Purchaae 213rdaoltheapprelaed
HouaeonFrlday, Aprll and more partlculerly value. 10% down on
24, 2009· at 10 a.m.. ol dttcriiMd aalollowa: day ofaale, cash or cel"
llld day, thllollowlng Commencing lor refer· !Iliad chock, balance
deacrlbad raaltalate: · ence 11 a point In the duo on confirmation of
EXHIBIT "A"
northwtlt corner ot aala.
SltuatelnlhiVIIIagtol aald Section 1;thenct Tho appreleal did not
Pomeroy,
Molga Eut along the North Include an Interior ••·
County, Ohio. ·
Uno of aald Section 1, amlnatlon olthe houae.
Situate In Section 1, 1808 teat, more or leu RoiMrt E. Beeglo,
Town 8, Range 14, Rut· to a . point: thence Melgo County Shorllt
land Townahlp, Malga South 11nd parallel w"h .t,Horney lor the plain·
County, State of Ohfo, the Woat Uno of aald till
and baing mqre tully Section 1, 792 loot, Stephen 0. Mlloa
deacrlbed 11 follows ; more or 1111, to 1 roll· 18 W. Monument Av·
Commencing all point rood 'aplke In tha Inter· enuo
In tho northwest corner aectlon of the oxlatlng Dayton, OH 45402
of oald Section One; centerline of State 937...81·1900
thence eaat along the Route 124 and the ex· · (31 16, 25 (41 1
North Uno of aald Sec· latlng centerline of
lion 1888 toot more or Townehlp Road 174
Jump
leu to 1 point; thence (Shotgun
Hollow
on
aouth and parallel to Roadj;thencoSoulh25
the weat line of aold dega. Eaat along tho
SAVINGS
Section, 850 1111 more centerline ot u ld
or ltta to 1 railroad Townahlp Road 174
aplkt In the grantora (Shotgun Hollow Roedl
north property line and 510.81teat to a railroad
the exllllng c11nterllno aplke, tha truo place of
of Btata Routt NumiMr beginning lor tha "''"
124, aald point alao mant hereby conveyed;
being the real point of ·thence South 25 dage.
beginning lor the land 1111 30 '"'' thana•
herein
dncrl~ad ; Iouth ea doga. Woat
thence
74 deg. Ill' SID IMt; thtnce North
00" l!tat along tha aa ~ga . Weal about.
grantora north property 381 teat: thence North
llna and thl exlatlng 74 dega. 51' W..tabout
centarllne of State 588 IHtto.tha waatllne
Route 124, 132.00 IHt. ol 1 tract ·ol land con·
Shop
to 1 railroad aplko; veyed to Reymond J.
thence 11. 1S deg. 01' Fowler . 1nd Patsy R. Classlfledsl
00" Wttt along a line Fowler
by
daed .__ _ _....;.._ _.

' BII1IKII¥/Ann-.., .................................. 105
Hllppy Ada....................................................210
Lotlt. Found .......................................,....... 215
MemorylrhMk vau .....~....~.......................... 220

Notl-......................................................... UI

...,....ta .........................o........................... 230

_,ted ........................................................ 235
...,..., ......................~............................... 300
Applllnoe a.Nioe ....................................... 301

Automotive .................................................. ao.
Bulkllftll MI-a .....................................;: 1108
au.-.- ..........................".......................... 301

~~:· .. ~··:."''"'"'""'"" " '" '""""~..............310

Chi~C.N ....................................... 31a

~01\111

v.hk: ................................~. 1000
A'TY .......... ................................................... 1001

lllayotea...................................................... 1010

BolltW'Acceeaortee .................................... 1011

C.mperllllla a. Tnollllre ............................. 1020

Motorcyctee ............................................... 1021 ·

Othw ..........................................................1030
W.nt to buy ...............................................1a.

Autamotlve ................................................ IOOO
Auto Aen..llleeM.....................................2001
A.uao. ..........................................................2010
ChllllciAntlquoo ....................................:.. 2011
ComiMirclelllndullrlat ..............................2020
lterta a Ac~ ....................... ..........2021
Sporta Utlltty ........................... ................... 2030

'ftuoke .........................................................2031
Computere ................................................... a1• · Utility Trllltera .................. .......................... 2040
Contractara ......................................·............ 311 · v.ne ............................................................ 2045
Dorrieelloe.\lanttott.l................................... 311 want to buy .. ............................................. 2010
1~1 ...................................................... uo """' ..,... a.&amp;ee ..................................\... 3000
Plnanolai ....... ;............ .. ................................. 32J c.n.tery Plo............................................ 3001
.................................................................. sa Comnwrclai. ............... ~ ...............................3010
COOIIftll ....................................... ue ~lnlurna .......................................... 3015
Noma linprD .._,Ia 330
.... by .....................................3020
tntu...- ..................................................... saa Houeea tor .............................................aoaa
Lawn ... ulaa ............................................... A4 &amp;..nd (Aa,....)........................ ..................3030
Mualc/DenOIIDreme .................................... Lota ............................................................3031
Olhtr lltrYI-............................................. W.nt to buy ................................................ 3040
Pl-tng/Eltctrtcal ..................................... MO R..t
Rontala ...................................3eoo
..-olonallltrYI-................................. 342 Apar1mont.rrown~oueoo ......................... 35011
... pa1ta ............... ........................................... 34:4· Comrnarclal ... ............................ .. ............... 3810
Rooflng ......................................................... 34t Condamlnlum• ................... .......................3S11
laourhy ........................................................
HouHe tor ~ ................·........................ 3120
Tlx/Aocountlng ........................................,... 350 Land (A&lt;rH00) ......................................,.... 352S
Travet/En..,oln- .................................. 352 Blof'801 .......................;...............................353S
Flnancla1.......................................................400 Want to Ront .............................................. 3640
Flnonol•lllervl-.. :.................................... &lt;108 Mtnuf..:tulld Houolng ............................. 4000
lneuranca .. .................................................. 410 Lo.......... .. ... ................................................ coos
Monl)l to ~ .. ,...................:....................... 11 M -... .....................................................4010
500 Rentllo ....................................................... 4015
auelneee • ,....... &amp;c:lttooi ...........................IQl lelee: ........................................... , .............. 4020
lnatrucllon &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 511l 8upplllle...................................... ;.............. LMIOI\I ............................... ......................... S15 W•nt ~ Buy ............................................... 4030
~1 ...... ..... .. .............................. 1.,, ........ sao
tt.aort Proparty .................. ... .. .................;IOOO
Anlmale .~ ........ .............................................. IOO
RMCHt .Property tor ............................... 1021
Anlmal8uppllaa .. ~............................... ........ eos Aeaort Property for rent ........................... SOlO
HotMe .......................................................... l10 lmployment ............................................... sooo
Ll-toak......................................................I1S Aooountlno/Pinancl•l ................................ aooz
Pat8 ...............................................................UO Admlftllll'lltlvWP'f'OMUIOnll .....................~
want to buy.................................................. l25 CllhltriCitrk.........;...................................IOOI
Agrlcuiju ..................................................... 700 Chll-.ly Care ..................................... 11008
Form Equlpl'(llnt ...........:..................,...........705 Cterlool ....................................................... 5010
O.rden a Produce .......................................710 · Con•tructlon .......... ....... ... .................. ~....... 8012

-Inti•

Eo-

*

l!d-.. . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . .

A

Hey, F'Md, Saacl, Or1ln ...................... ,........ 711
Huntlna • L1nd ............:.............................. 720

want to buy.................................................. ns
Merohandi•······· ......................................... IOO
Antlq-....................................................... 1105
Applf1nae ........... :......................................... 110

Auctlona ....................................................... 815

.

. .rgaln

a..arnant.......... .....................,....... lii:O

ColleottbiH .................................................. 825
Computera .... ................................................ t30
· 1 lqu~DnW\Wuppllea ....................................m
. . ,... l&amp;.rketa ....................... ,........................ MO
' l'uatOIICOIIIWood/0............................... 145

a.

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

Wt

CLASSIFIED INDEX

L.egl;l.t ...........................................................100
Ani'MIURDin.nla .......................................... aoo

as

,_.

....ont,

Joint .tllea~ant "eui~ter

' Fumltur. ...................................................... SIIIO

HObby/Hunt a. lport .................................... 855
Kkl'a Cornar ........ ... ................................. ..... MO

Mleoeltaneoue.............................................. MS

Want to buy,................................................. 870

Drlvera a Delivery .....................................101•
lduoatfon ....................... ............................I011

lltcti'ICIII Plumblng ................................... 5011
lmpfoVn'teftl Aeeno.................................eoao
lntertetnmont ............................................ IIOU
Pood

~to.a ............................................ I024

Oo•om,.,.nt a. F-ral JOba .................... 50211

Help anted- Gener111 .............................. .... toae
Lew Entarcemont ...................................... e~

Malnt.nanow'Dorneetlc ..........................;.. eou
M•n•aomon118uparvloory ........................ 5034
Mechanlca ......................... .........................eosa
Modloal .......................... ,............................ 8038
Mualcal ....................................................... 8040
P•rt·Tim•Temporarleo .............................5042
Reatauranta ............................................... 8044
Salaa .............................. .... ......... ................ l041
. , TochniCil Tr•doo ....................................... 5050

Ylf'CI .... .......... .................. ......................... 17~,·. .~:\i Ta•tla..lfaatory ......................................... &amp;012

l

f

''I

-

_

~
- -::::::;
. ........._ . . . . . . . . . . . . , •• 1' .. . ,

dishes. borldl ,..ights,
somelhing lot ove&lt;yone.
· W..tn.sdoy Thru Satur·
8-7

edllenytllM.
Errore llutt

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

I!

Indoor Yoving Sale 5
Miles Soutn on Route 7. t and 2 lledroom opts.,

rtjact or CIIICI2 ..,

..
,...,
..
.........,.,

addecUoyowdcsslftedads
llorden$3.00/perad
GNphlcs SOC for small

s1.00for larve

...__ ,....,.·--·---................. _ _ ......... &amp;

tZ

a• ... b l lc

so:

==!!,!171~~12M!!!_-_ _ __

Now you conllave borden and IJraphlcs

The Daily Sentinel

s-

.l\egi,ter

112-2157

. (740) 446-2342

pipe
llnaa
meter
hou-. pumpa, and
pump houMa IMiong·
lng to the Btrel 011 •
011 C01p0ratlon In conntcll!lll with and IMing
1 part ollhe pipe llnM
coming acroaa the
Ohio River from Weal
VIrginia, thlreiMing no
exception whatever.
Slid pipe linea to run
through the center ot
the aald 25 tootatrlp ao
that the aldt1 of alld
atrlp will 1M parallel
with uld pipe linea.
and alao reurvlng and
excepting In the former
grantor and hla p,..
deaoora In title. Their
htlre. auccitaaora and
111lgna. a elrlp of land
25 teat wide from thl
n•reat public road to
the 25 toot atrlp olland
along the pipe linea 11
hertlnblloreprovldtd,
excepting and reatrv·
lng to thl former
grantora and hla pradactaaora, In title thllr
helra, auccaaaora and
aulgnaandallthetl-,tRill and l n - t of
tho Blrea Gat and 011
Corporation
tormar
grantor onhtr In law Qr
fn oqulty of In 11nd to
the' aolci. premlall toaelher with alllhl prlv·
ftag11
and
appurtonancaa to tho
ume IMionglng, Alao.
excepting all coal. gao,
oil and other mlntrala
In an under' the abovo
deacrlbad realoatlla.
Percel NumiMr 20·
00388.000
Current Owner: Wtndy
J. Thomeaelll
Propertyat:2702Thlrd
St. Syracuat, OH
PPI 211-00388
20-00311
Prior deed rtlerencee:
Volume 248, Paga701
Appft!lled at141,000
Tllrma of Bale: Cannot
bl aold tor leaa .than
213d of the appraised
value. I 0% down on
day ofaale, Cllh oroal"
tlllod chock, balance
due on conllrmttlon of
nit.
The appralnl did not
Include tn lntarlor ••·
!lllllnlllon of the hoiiH.

www.~;•• :IIMI.com
www.~~l I Loom

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

..

Sherlll 511• · ·
way or In ·any 1111nner
Cut Numller 08cV07e prevent the tree and
"-opiU Bank NA
unobltructed
uat
Pllllnllll
thereof by all partl11
va
entitled to uH the
Wendy Thoma et al
ume and turthlr ex·
Delendanta
ceptlng 11nd re11rvlng
· Court of Common to thl C.H. Wllllama.
Plllat, Mtlgt County, Truat•, hla auccet·
Ohio.
aora and aaalgna, all
In pureuance of an coal, olland gaalnd all
. order of aale to 1111 dl· other mlneralaiMnNth
· rected from aald coUrt tha aurtact and the
In thl above ent"lt ac. right to mine the ume.
lion, 1 will expoae to Sub)tct to all legal
ule at public auction -mente and ltaatt.
on tha front atepa ot Parcel NumiMr 211thl Melga County Court 00388.000
Houae on Friday, April Tracl2:
17, 2001 at 10 a.m., of Situate In the County of
eald day, the following Mtlga. In the State of
dalcrlbed I'MI eatate: Ohio, In the VIllage of
The tOIIowl"l! .de- SyracuM,
and
scribed real mate· In bounded and d..
thl County at M'tlga, In acriiMCI t1 tollowa:
1111 StateoiOhloand In hlng In 100 Acra Lot
1111 VIllage of SyrecuM: No•.294. In the VIllage
Tract I:
of Syracuea, Sunon
SHuatelnlhiCountyol Townthlp.Beglnnlngln
Melga. In the Statti of thl center ot Stalf
Ohio, In thl Vlllege at Route No. 124, a thl
Syrecuaa.
end Southeut cornw of
bounded
and cJe. Wlllla Leadingham 087
scribed •• tollowe: acre lot, recorded In
Being In Syrecuae VII· Volume 1n, Page 887,
lege, In 100 Acre Lot' Mtlga County Deed
294, SUlton Township, Recorda, ukf South•
Melgl. Ohio. Beginning ••t aorn~r balng100
at thl center of State ltlll!llelarly along the
Highway No. 124 with center ·ot State Routo
the lntereecilon olthe No•.1241rom lhlaenter
center ol Worecheater of Worchtttlr Street;
Street: lhence North Thence South 87' 50'
250 ltll; thence Etal· Eaat 147.8 1t11 along
erly parallel with
thl center of Stela
Highway No. 124.100 Route ~o. 1.24; thonae
teet: thence South 250 North 3
Welt 280
teat to the center of. IHI JIIIAing over an
State Highway No. 124; Iron pipe :and a con·
thence Wtattrly along crete blat of a hold
the centtr of Stitt down tor a ahlckla lln.o
Hlghwty No. 124 to the lor Well No.I with
pltct .of blglnnlng, rocker erm In bate;
containing 0.57 oltnd thence North 17' 37'
acre; excepting and,.. Wttt 132 1111 to the
aarvlng however to Northttat comer of
C.H. Williams. TruaiH llld .87 ecrelot thence
hit auccoaaora, II· llcMh along thl 1111
algna, llcenata, vial· line of the alkl087 ecre
tore, and all pereona lot to the place of betor hla IMnellt or ad- ginning, oontalnlng.IO
VIntage, 1 road or right olen aore; IXCIPTING
of way about 20 teat In and reaarvlng to the
width running aero" lor-grantor, and hla
or through the Weaterly predeooaaora In tit!•·
aide of the above d.. their helra, auooe11or,
acrlbad pramlau, no and taalgna 1 atrlp of
one to In any manner ground In lea almplt25
obltruct any portion ot 1t11 wide runnlngtlong
aald rotd or right ot Ill praNnl axlatlng

wer n
www.~.com

"

----

l

~

call

and

untur~

nished. and houses In
Pomer&lt;&gt;y and Mi&lt;ldiOclort.
security deposit required,
no pets. 740-992-2218

�:P+ B4 • The Daily Sotin~l

w.ckllltlly, Fifth

___..,
•

P\' · 111

, aoo sra., Roule 325

. u_. 3:5BR.
2:3 BA &lt;» P'OI&gt;OfiY. phon II. Thomas. E&gt;.ecu,
Many llcor p/011s! Easy twe Dirvctor. Southern
Financing! We own the Ohio Sclu11011S. Inc.. PO
bonk.
Can
today• Boa 145. Gatlipolts, Ohte
~15-6774
4S63 t. You may also tax

. Thu""an. OhiO 45685

~~"':"~-""!!'~

C"'"*'f

/IJ

V!llloy View Apertments

1•:ust11G

Gov't

Flllds

a¥- . . . .
ID

741&gt;441:2970

The -.,., County Ooy
Rapon Ce- ~ seetong
a part-time Dey Report
Of!icer. Jot&gt; dllhes ,,
.dude but not hm 1ted to
case , management, ol-

or -

-·

--::~~~~-' AA" CcurnJy l.ivng

P&lt;JsolbiNty o1 ...ntal

.._,,..,.,, dola
II3Cl&lt;r&gt;g ol

10: enby.

lrWI

-tics.

ass· tala.

Equal Housin~t
Oppo"""l)'

3 Of 4 8tOroom 2 Ball!
()oner r i F"ICliii1C8
Call to be p., Qualitiod

T00141~

740-423:9128

~StitubOn IS aft

lllot oftefs · - """' Please

petitive

benefils.

--::BE='sr='B=uv=--NEW Doublowi&lt;JO!

Provider and Employer"

PlUS we have

S37.119
-lllpoa

MIDWEST HOMES
740-121-2150

m~midWesrhome.com

~~~~'""!"~~
~

=:::.
::~~s=::
cepting

Fair Greens
Country Club

to

25550.0..... for sub:
mission Is April 3. 2Ul9
MCDFIC Is a Equal Op:
now ac, ponunilJ4 Employer.

Caehi!w / &lt;:loft
Gashoer -

EQUal Oppor1unity

-t

...a ......,..

and MCDFIC. 225 6111 SlrMI
Pt
W'l

-

.....,...
at
o:.OCJ&lt;J
Shop.

Ohen to the public!

;~~==;::
· Law l!&amp;lw
.t

foacl Sow 1'

The
Vlllege
ol
Rio
Grande $ now accepting ·
FOCJ&lt;J
SONice
Wor1&lt;&amp;r OWIIcations lor ll&gt;e po$i2
needed part-time. on-call bon of part-time Polie.e
tor SDQexo. Appty In per- Offk:er. Apphca!ions may

Out of County Membership
Only $450/yr,
1322 Country pub Road,
Jackson, OH 45640

ean

age,
pd.) time.
Need call740-446:3358
1 ladles to setl
S4251rent.· ...
, t:tr $42!&gt;...,.
- - - - - - - AYOfl
dop.

740:367,0547

Sl'Nimo~

Blink

bed. l

-1.

R~PQ!

\.5t~

.ulr,

$350.fmonth

Syracuse.

b!Alh.

down, 15

g~

APR ) tOr
IIOO-O~I,W.6 eA. ROZ7

ye"W'.

. , . Proctorville
Difterence.·
$1 and a dOed is aU~
need to own your dream
home. Cafl Nowt
Freedom Homes

l i~tin~ s

.

for pan time poSition (14
hrs. or more a week) a1
Acquisitions Fine Jewelry
151 2nd Ave .. Gallipolis.
No pl'lclne calls pleaSit.

Service Technician posi-

t1oo available lor diesol
and hyftulics. ExperienC'8
necessary.

·&amp;
Bene~ts. Fax. resume to
74Q-44&amp;9104 or e-mail
AVONI All A"'asl To Buy 10 LLCOCAREO.c;oM

or seu Shiney
304-675:1429

in

Deposit, HUO
No
Pe\5

OWIOVed.
304-675:5332
: 74():591 :0265

~-----Now accepting re&amp;Umas

::.~~=~==
lbcltaoOc:s

Healt!11Retirement

·-

Sjleam

-ends ;;;;~;:=- =-~--· --- Sodo•o Food SaNK:es at
~
FTMusttarmbe woabrilleer - Rio Grande University Is
Accountant:
Full:time
.
to drive now taking appllca~ons

: 2 BA house In Galtipetis position with busy a&lt;:-- tractor. lfliiOI'J~
cattle for a cook. Must have ex·
W/0
c011n.
S400/mo counting oltice in GaiHilO' and crop lam11ng. Call perlenc9. apply WI person

S200tdep. You pay all
utilities. No section a 'or
HUO.

Call

Wayne

404-456-3802 •
~4

BR.

lis for immediate emplo~ 74()..352-0SSO
mont.
dog"'"
-• ~
.
~.. - · ~•t ,~m to
anu experience reQuired.
'""' ,_..,. -.~.Musl have good ~rgan:
-tough eco:-lc
lzatlonal skills an0 tile
dmos?
ability to wottc. independ-

2.5 baths. in
home
available ently with strong atten·
1st.
Gas heat. tion to cletail. Please
$85()1mo + dep. You pay send resume and refer·

· town
Ap ril

1

utililies. Call 446,3644
for apptication.
::::""::":-.:"-.~~!""'!'
3Br 2 baths &amp; 2Bd 1 bath
near Porter. 388,1100

ences to
gallipolisaa:ounlan!O

gmail.com
or mail to CLA

101 . PO
Bo• 469. Gollipolls. OH

-40hourslto """"""- -lly?

at

the

cafeteria..

Can

mako Ull to $1"8
~ 5 per
h

r.

R.LHOUON
TRUCKING

o.ptnd

0

Help
Wlntecl ____
Help
Wanted
___
:..:.;..,;.;.:::.;.;,:.:_
::.,::,.,;.;.::.;.;:.:__

r------~-----.

08 RECilmRED NURSES
Pleasant Valley is currently accepting
resumes for 08 Registered Nurses,
Applicants must have a current West
VIrginia license. Previous OB experience,
Send resumes to:

(5 Pl&gt;lniS)

New &amp; U.od Tilts.
We buy used tires.

computer wheel
alignments . We also
do Duel's. light
mechanic work.
complete service oil
changes. small engine
repair.
We servi« and
winterize boats and

• J to ••
&amp;K

&gt;---

CVTTING EDGE

l&gt;Nier: Soullt
VUlnerable: Nei~

BAND .

w...

CONSTR\JCTION .

Pus
Pus

Pus

co.

..._...,,OIIIa

LAWN CARE
Com udal&amp;
Rui•t ·w ·
Free£stim'les
• Lawa MaiDteuMt

C
udal•
. Re!Wz..W.
•l'rte E•Y aCes

• Landsl'MJII!oi
•PowerW....,.
·Still Culetoa

Custom H&lt;Jcne 8uildl111
S~&lt;el Frame Buildi"'&gt;

(7411)~

{7411) 517-5432
Jtff Stttllem
(74t) 5174813

Opening lead: + J

FRANKl EARNEST

To ball out
when very weak

J ~USIC &amp;l

-~. I SllggiStld lllot.jCU trtal all
-~~~ Howtvor, for
lilt curlauo, lr&gt;J111111ter11 pi&amp;Vft hlvt •
aytllm for stcppng In I pii1IICOrt ,.-.
•~~~»idol 1011 QPIIIIr have minimum
111ndolor lhllr ldlar1L
Afttr I ~ ...
,. ,........
. . ,. U1i:t 1

~EVIEW

Building. Remodeling
Geocnl o:polr

···~

RV's.

"'*"·

(740) 992:5344
Mon-Fri
8:00 11m 4:30pm
Sat. 8:00am, 12
Wt , .••• ,rour

two-IMI
W IIIPOiCior rtCidl
tither ll1e fllUIIIt lUll Of ~ no-lnlnll.
Wll- II the t:hllpor, ~ W11111 of 1
bet! IWld ond onl'/ Foul Clllll In hla
major. (Witte tt.. In 111t major, ne ..Oklit
tl'tll IIi~ wltlch 11 fardng for ono rotl'ld,
but may ill doni Witlll ..... hind.)
~!his rapaotdilr's rebid, apnr ·
bklit 1ht Citelptlt c:an1r1t:t In wntc11 hils

2

PhM?rt Valley HospiQI
c/o Hu111111 Resources
.
2520 Valley Dr., PL Plentnt. WV 25550

...... nt••&amp;rr ...

, or ctll (304) 675-4l40
F.lx to (304) ll5-6t75 or
tpply on-line at www.pullq.ll!'f

"''*"

~~u-.~~~~.a,

YOo•MOO.l GALS!!

IN THAT LAST LI'L BIT O'GOSSIP,

OH1.'l'OU GOT
. . MORe'N
JEST A

DID I JE5T HEAR

M'l' NAME

MENTIONED ?

YOU HAD STAR Blt.t.IN' II

_ ...

wiling tc IUblide. In tltia CIMI. that Is
!!liM clube, and no ono has onylhlng
more!oldel
Willi llldl lilt diamond lid&lt;. Hew
would j(!U pllh lilt play?
-that wtwo haiiiS ...... btlrg trtal·
Ill liS IJIII1•forolrg, !he final wculd PrablbiV ill Ill"'" no:trutr'!) lly
North. Thll woukl lalt by several tridCS
becluso declartr would have no ruscn
to QtMS ctubs. even Wille delense dk!n't take 111t first five tricks wrtll ane
spade and lour diamonds.
Lefs SL.IlPOM t11e defende11 play ltlree
rounds of dlomonds. With ll1e spade ace .
miss!~ I(!U must hold yO&lt;Jt trump los:
em lo just one. The best play ISlo stall
bj cashlrg yotll' club ace. wno honor
appeal$, 1o1ct an lfWrY to dummy· in
spades and lead Iowan! !he club queen.
However, when tile king drops 110m
WKI. get Into !he dummy In spades and
llnesse East out of his dull jack to bring

MiWfiCN,'

AA/EOE

LUC::'f !!

Loolc no 1\ll'lllerl
Tha solulton IS jull I
pllo:ce call-yl

w. poy up to St2.25/llr
111w ollc monllll
Hiring Full Tim&amp;
Po~nons (2,11 'pml
L Onsite Ooctor
l

THE BORN LOSER

' Weekly pay &amp;
Bonuses
1 Fun &amp; Professional

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Working Environment

•Jon Vert Meter •
Paul Rowe

lnfoCision named one of
the Top 5 Employers In
111e Sta., or Ohiol

Jt;ou ~CULt&gt; L\!1~TO Wl\tt..T"
T\\1~ ~iiC.LE. St&gt;.'(~- ~IKN

Cell: 74&amp;:416-5047
email:

Owners: .

1 Complett;~

Benefits
Package

-

t:...
• 10 9 5
• 10 8 3
e A K 13
&amp; J TS

• Qt
•A-KQJ
• TI
• "Q 10 3 t

Hours
7:00-- 8:00pm

un

Pomeroy,OH

lw-eot
&amp; A 7 I 4.
• t. $l

Jetl912t7

WiHIIII .
U.ant GIMI
Dirt- Ac-lille

3

't 4

• Q. 5

........ C»t.-s1'11

Wtdo...._rs·

L&amp; L Tire Ban
441187 Wi.... Rd.

.' ...
•

291125 9 1"1&amp; Road

•
servKe

74&amp;985

:--:18

Hi!' s Self
Storage

Snnset
Homes .

74Q-286-4242

son at tl'\e UnNersity or DEl pk:ked up at tne Vii·
Rio Grande.
lage ·Munic1pal Building
Apartments , 2BR. 1.5 For Sale 2 br. 1 ba. sin,
Dea&lt;lline lor applications
bell!. bad&lt; patio. pqol, ~wide
$2000.00 ltolp W..... , G••al i$ AQriJ 3rd. 2009 at 5
playgrwnct, (trash. ..,., ~ call "'1'
1)111.
------- ------Townhouse

"i~1 ~t&gt; l\o\E. OillE.R FO~

,..~\~\(.11.\J~\)~ SltJUU&gt;
N¥i. eltW.ft-:1'1' ~~ &amp;.t&gt;
FO!t: ""-EIR Wille ~i. _,.......,
~'t' \JK.' 1'\'Ht,tp;,:

~'t'WE.Il£~~!

jrshaclfml®aol.com

home an overtrick.
Don't kll this oppOrtunity
pass

YOU by!

A!&gt;cly Todayl

2 or 3 BR. ,1

bath reatly
to move in or use hitch to
move trailer. 2 BA, bath·
room, kitchen accesso·
rles, WID, like new heat·
ing 6 IVC Sl7 ,000.

1-IIC,PAVU
._
Eat 2457
h. .
__

NEA Crossword Puule

Phillip
Alder

your land Is 'f'U' crec:Jt 2009. SOS IS an Equal with upewituce in the
en-J 1o,~n
Cl\&gt;I&gt;Oo1UI&gt;ily
Empioyer crim•nal juojlce sysoem.

awlicaliorut renbll

lW'a

The Daily SentiMI • Pege 85

ltylllllillll.com

BRIDGE

Flr!t time ooyers wno -·CNI&gt;h.org.
a-- progrom
irll11f:
own land or fllmil',l land b
for submtssion •s lit6t8d IPflic:;lnts mus1
:(): down no closing cost 4:00 pm on Motcll 31 , have a - r s dogl90

: H llodroom Apanments
wrtll owliaroces fum1She&lt;l
On si.. laundr! lacllit;.
, Call lor details or cick Ull

"This

www.myd

ALLEVOOP

, I

' '

25, . .

·s...,

~Astro- .

. ·~·
I,..
.
Now Selling:
• Font &amp; Motorcraft
Pnns • Engines.
d

·

WGraph
A S.O.LIVA ~11P~E ~
HO'ol ARE '{OU !.UP,

Transmissions ·
• Aftennarkei

!"AliT

PO':&gt;ED 'ro GET TH"T,

Sheet

l"AtiT
PI'. tiT
l"I&lt;I'IT

-·-))

larp,MYKn-,_.,lndl•

SI0 per lb Cash only

!::;;F;ree;;Es;tlma;;•e;s

MHI2-tm

r------..

1: HIWE A FEE~I Nl?.
THAT~ NOT G.Ot'*'
TP ~E A PR.O&amp;LEt1.

P"'OIT

Pmr: i5 required ilt advance
Shipments. ~\le every

PUBLIC NOTICE
• tlong ttld Rutbtrford
NOTICE: Ia hereby Road, South 83 citgiven that on Salurclty, g~a t 0 mlnutta 40
March 28, 2G09 at10:00 aeconda Wtat, t dl•
a.m,, t public aalt will lance ol 54.41 felt,
be held at 211 W Sac- thence North 16 dtond St., Pomeroy. greta 26 ml!lulll 04
Ohio, The Farmera MConds Wtst, t dla·
Bank 1llld Stvlnga lance ot 33.11 felt,
ComJ)Iny Ia aalllng lor thence North 32 de:' 19
cuh In htnd or certl· greea 31 minutes 11
)'till'S E,.perieitce
lied check the follow- ~econda West, a dlaDavid Lewis
lng collatel'll:
lance ol 84,38 teet,
A,. .,.. _ ..., l
7"""""
2 6., '
2004 Dodge Caravan thence North 51 dt1D4GP24R74B57444S greta 37 minutes' 47
Insured
1
Tlw Fwmera hnk and seconds Wtat, dis·
Savings
ComJ)Iny, lance ol 182.68 lett to
Pomeroy, Ohio, r• the point ol beginning'
aervu the right to bid !hence, laavlng ._ld
a this sale, tnd to wtth· road South 33 c~eg,...
draw the above colla!, 08 minutes 15 aeconda
tral prior to aale. Weal, a dlttanct of
Further, The Farmers 284.21 !eel to an Iron
Bank and Savings pin nt ot t lenc•llne·
• New Homes
ComJ)Iny .....,,.... tho thence North 10 ~
• Garages
right to reject any or all gr- 45 minutes 24
bide oubmllled, ·
aeconda Weal, a dis·
• Complete
The above dttcrlbed lance ol 147.34 fell to
Remodeling
collatartl 'will be sold an Iron pin HI n"r i
"11 It-where Ia", with hickory ti'M; thence
no txprelltd or lm, South 87 dtgrttl It
pllad war111n1y given, mlnutea 56 HConda
Stop &amp; Compare
For lurtherlnlormttlon, Eaat, t distance ol
or lor an tppQintment 307,83 ltttto t point In . .• • • • • •
to l.n tPitl colltteral, Rulhtrlord Ro.cl, p....
prior to 1111 dtte con· lng tn Iron pin set tt CORNER STONE
!tel Cyndlt or Ken at 212,84 IHt; htnct,
992,2138.
••ant~ aald t'Oid South CONSTRUCTION
(3) 25, 26, 27
51 degrtta 37 mlnu...
Rooting, Siding,
44 HCondt
hatfelt
• dlt·
_..;..._ _ _ _ _ IInce
ol 275.88
to
Soffit,~.
_Pu.;.b.;.ll;;;.c.;.;N;;;.ot::lce;:__ the point of beginning;
Doors, Windows,
aald deacrtbed trtct EIIICtrlc, Plumbing.
ShtriH Salta
conttlnlng :u1 ecrea.
Drywall,
Ctae Number 08cv033 Cumont Owner: Ntncy
Remodeling,
Room
Welle Ftrvo Btnk NA Perry at tl
AdditiollS
Pltlntlll
Property tt: 26.505
VI '
Rutherford Rd., Albony,
loc:ll Contractor
Nancy Perry It 11
OH 45710
740..367.0544
Delendtnlt
. PPI 05-00571 .001
FrteEatlmeiH
Court ol Common Ptlor dttd relertnctt:
740..367.0536
Pleas, Malga County, Volume 57, Pege539
Ohio
.
Appraised 11 $50,000
In · pureutnce ol an T•rmt ol Sale: Cannot
order ol sale to me dl· bo sold lor less than
reeled !rom Hid court 213rda of lhe appraised
In the above entitled value. 10% down on
action, I will ·expQae lo day of sale, cash or
salt at public auction certllltd check, btl·
on the front stepa of anct due on conllrma·
the Meigs Counly tlon' Of tall,
·
Court Houn on Friday, The appraisal did not
May 1at, 2009 at 10 tncludt an Interior ex·
J&amp;L
a.m., ot tald day, the amlnttlon
· ol the
following deacrlbed houae.
raalestate:
Robert E. Beegle, Construction
• Vinyl Siding
The following rill ea· Mligl County SheriH
tate altulltd In Section Attorney tor the Plain, · Rtplactmerft
36, T.9, R. 15, Columbia IIH
Window•
Townthlp,
Melgt Lemar, Sampton &amp; • Roollhg
County, Ohio tnd being Rolhlun
more J)lrtlcularly d• 120 1. Fourth It, 8th 'Deckt
·Garagee
tcrlbtd II IOIIOWI:
Floor
Commencing allhe In· Cincinnati, OH 45202· • Pole Bulldlnga
• Room Addltlona
lllltctlon of Ruther, 4007
•
lord Ro.cl (1\Np. Rd, 11)' 513:241:3100
Owner: ·
with the center ol Rae, (3) 25 (4) 1, a
Jam.. Kee-11
Creek, thence
742·2332

byLulac..~ orr-~~ na~Rtttom Q!JliiiiiOnl 1r1 11m01.11~.

Elt't Ill* ll N CCI* llllllllcl" lnQIIIIr

r...,·,

~:

* IIlii oresent

oOQIII/4 w

".KVP VDCA WFNSFC, OlE WF BiNUA EWF :
FNZEW. " • NCCF AFJEVC " BFIIFOZNEF
FNZEW PNR FSFZR PNR. " • YVWC PFCSFZ
PREV IOUS SOLUTION : ' II we wail lor !he moment when everything.
absolutely evoryltirg is relldy, we shall never begin.', Ntll Tutgentll'

'==~' s~~(l~-l!"E~s·
IWltM b1 ClAY L
~IW!

WOlD
&amp;AMI

-----'"-

0 blr
harron9e letters of the
scntrnblod ._m be:
low to forr11 blr simplt ~'·

&lt;11rur•Utc:

Transfer Cases &amp;

740:44H333

CELEBRnY CIPHER

P'II&gt;IIT

PEANUTS
Call: MARCUM

CONSTRUCTION

For: • Chain Lin~ Fencing &amp; Wood
Fencing • Room Additions • Garages
• Vinyl and Wood Siding • Rooting
• Pole Barns • Patio 's. Porches and Decks

POINT OUT TO I-IlM
I-lOW NEATL'( I STA'f
INSIDE TI-lE LINES..

'f'ES. SIR, MR. PRINCIPAL ..
M'( TeACIIER SENT ME
TO SEE 'fOU..
.

r----..

IllER •111. IWIEI
4n39 Riebel Road. Long Bottom. OH

740-985-4141
Cell: 740,416:1834
Not atlihued with Mike MIU'l:um Roofmg &amp;

lS+ tars ex rie•ct

Remodeli~

Fru EUi-.s

COW and BOY
CA.LLING TO OllOEJ1 THE
LATEST 1)6TAL~T
OF THE liETTtl' PAll
SOCIETY. I NEED IPEP.S.
PEOPLE. WHA.T'S GONNA
MAKE US SIJNf BIG·

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamiess Gutters
Roollng, Siding, Guttem
tnsu.W &amp; f1onded

TWO WORDS: C11tl ~
LIKE M~ llJT WITH
ATWIST, lfS AWitt&amp;,
SEE1 IHP.VE CIIWS.

(_ _...,.;:,__ ,

THIS 1MYLOOK LIKE
I'IJE GU.EO Po. TEXTING
DEVICE TO MY Fom\EAD

~TECHNICALLY

MONEYi'

Care Specialis~

,..,____~

IHP.VE.

BUT IN CON..lJNCTION WITH

P. SYSTEM OF MIRI&lt;ORS.
FOI!EHEAD

TIME CASH

740:653,9657

Of&lt;. THIS 1MYLOOK LIKE P.
LAPTOP I'VE GLUED TO MY ...

STOOS
TO

Soottl.. Swain

ISA Cmllled Arborlsl, .
Ctrlllled Or-ntal 1:
l.aocbc•pe l'rofeliliklnlt
Holtlpolls, 011
7411-446-lOIS
Replacement

Windows and
VInyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) .742-2563
• Siding • VInyl
Windows • Met•t
and Shingle Roofs
• J&gt;Kks • Addltlons
•Eiettrkal

• PlumblnR
• Pole Barns

your lmermost goals

·
GEMINI (May 2hk.me 20) - When you
are hopeful about your desires and '
expectalions, you will strive to tftt ways

to achle.ve them. Remember, unles.s
you're optlml.stic about the tutu.-.. you
won't evt'n tfy.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) - Make a
concened effort to start anew by scrap·
. ping those projects or kteas that simply
aren't working: travalln a new direCtion.
wlttl a naw plan of action.
LEO IJu~ 23·""9· 221 - You are likoty
to put beh ind ~ the blunders ~ ·va
made and s1art to put .to work the lessons
~ou've teamed. It'll be one of the
smartest things you've .war done.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 221 - Today
might otrer a · new beginning wben It
COrMS to your financial affalra It you're
willing to take it. Even It It's dlttlcuh or
things start off slow, be of stout heart
beceust It can lead to something good.
LIBRA (Sept. 23,Qct. 231 - OOo't troat
llghtty any agreement another Is o~rlng
you. Study it cartlulty to make sure lhat
there a111 no flies in the ointment and It
gives
a chance to grow. It could be
your ttcket to su~ss .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - There's
no better time of the ~ear tor new begin-

:::;;;..;:"":;J

GARFIELD
t Tl.fOU6HT CHA!SIN&lt;Oo MICI

ANP 11 TAI&lt;a5 A BIGr MAN •

TO APh\11' HE'&amp; WRONG/

WA!S WHA'I' CA1'!S PIP. •.

I I' I I lz
K 0 C' Y
I'

Al SAT
j&gt;

I"

.
Q
\

"'

Looking at my windshield, l
· llflllised that it was invented to
give police a place 10 put

.
~r.P..;s;...:.,.r.rR..;:c....:r..,.....l parking???"·". .
I I. I I I G
\

i

8

N

7

Complere rite chuckle Quo!ed
by

h1Kn~ lr\

the m1u1ng word.s

you dl!'.'eiop rem 11ep
I
3 I'
PRINT NUM8ERFO lElTUS t
l
IN THESE SQUARES

e ~~r:~~~~ER

lElTERS TO

No 3 below.

r rl

I I I I I I I.

SCRMHHS AN~W E R~ }124/09

Jacket - Humid ~. Decoy-- Gcmal - CAN on II
Afamous comic once·said. ·tife is a great big canvas
and you should throw all the paint you CA:\ .m ll"
ARLO &amp; JANIS
•

nings than spring . wtt.n you're in tun411
w ith Mo"tt141r Nature,· you'll succeed -

Kn ~'wlt'&lt; lt w .JlJi l·

'

• chai"Q on something Mw in the veer
llhead: - that's wlw.t the tutu,. le an
Clbout. l.tal&lt;o tho moot ol opponunltles
thlt come ~r way, •specially It they
orr.r dfterwlt eJtperlences.
ARIES (Maroh 21,April t91 - Today
. coukt bt • new· start It you wilt think In
thlt vein, bur dan, do so unleSS you can
Mgln your new path with a positive
mlndnt. Only then wiP your tuture be
bright
.
TAURUS (April 20:May 201 - Toko th«
time to flgu,.. out wayt to make your
d,..ms or hopeS come true. Nothing
new will nappen until vou make some
kind ol concerted effort toward reaching

vou

TEXT lNG

"1\11 Cm'il f()(' Ytmr Trrts "
t ' ~lt'!IL'rh t·d
Tr .u n, •d .HHI l n .. ~a,•d

A F A C E D ·1

~·-·­

' ly--Osol
Don't be loruful of going~ olono or taking

even with thai exercise or health program YW've put oH tor too long.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23,0oc . 21 I Some pleasurable socLal ex~riences
may be In the offing where you could
meet and make several new friends who
will widen your cireta at Interests consld·
erabty.
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22:Jan. 191 - Thal
matter o11er whleh you've been 190f11zlng
tor some time will finally be put to ·rest
betaun of a new and fresh dw.ctlon VOU
decide to take. You'll be glad you did.

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20:Fob.

191 - You

may linally make that much-needed
breakthrough on a revis ion you've been
working on. EverythlnQ wm be crystal
clear btca~se you'll get a handle on a
hlh perspectW..
PISCE'S !Fob. 20:Mal&lt;h 201- Give cr!:
· ority to shuatlonl thl1 ootild tan.n your

Stanley Tree-Trimming
&amp; Removal

wallet o.cause you're ~w In a cycle ht
could product greater material galna

•Promp.t and Quality
Work ,

~n UIUIL It

coukt mu.n 1 new begin.

nlng lor you.

*Reusonllble Rutes
' Insured
•Experienced
References Available!
Cull Gttt')' Stanley @
740,591:8044

SOUP TO NUTZ

Pleuse leuve messu e

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New llomes , Siding, Del:ks,
Bathroom RemocMing , Lkensecl &amp; Insured
~'vi;

''1\1'1,,

ll'il:hl llt•,'l hll

, lll'l'l'!l HI

•,

'
---,- ---:-----:----~----------~----------_:_'

�•

•

;.~B6·The Daily Sentinel

www .mydai.lyseotinelJ:Om

Wd

'
de)l,.~ll.201ll

.....
AEPHonors MGM
Detachment 118o, A2

•

•

JIM'S FARM
EQUIPMENT. INC.

s..-RCIIIn&lt;i

Not Another
Senior Play, A6

•.

. . . .II.

ZlSO Eastern Avenue
Galtip&gt;lis, OH

Racine house fire ruled as 'arson'

SPORTS

740-446-9/1/

.

.

Itt Bmt SE onr

'

a.ea'deutlll QIISell,~ Camnill directly

'.

amJSS. lhe S!Rel

the inside of th- home-.
said of the fire, lidding the .from the deportment at 300 Jones said the Wolfe.&amp; were
in'&lt;~~QG . turned up Fifth Street. hoole of FIN bome at the time the fire
. RAONE ~ A Tuesday "!&gt;utlkient evide~* to and Regina Wolfe-.
·
began and n~ia~urie.&amp;
were
oigbt OOu.se ti.re in Racine s.upf1Qft llw: fire' W.&amp;-HieliberJoaes. IIJidCanmiU both reported. The'·
has been determined as ately set.
coofirti1ed the f~re staned which had
11 fire"arson': by the oifice of lhe
A.t:rolding. tl:l Racine Fm: on the tlont porcb and did fighters responding. was
Ohio Fire Marshal, accord- Chief Jamie Jones.. lhe fire · ~e hl:avy e.\terior dam- on scene foe over two
ing to spokesperson Shane departme.nt received lhe call age to \bat porch. Jones hours . Jones said the inves·
Cartmill.
at~ !,):46 p.m. :Tuesday · said the.re was some smok.e tigator froai the 0100 Fu:e
I!SEAGENTOIII'I~LVSENTlNELCQM

OKLAHOMA

rs waoaay better
than fast food.
It's Wendy's

-we have ruled out all

~-

_:·::::::::::::::::::::~ · ::::::::·:::.:: ::,

Boston C 5S

------

~

Ft1 . Msm 27

)..... ~--- ... ,........................ .,..... ~---

~

~

,I

and light water damage to

Marsnal's ot'fil·e was on

......••••.J

on Williams
extradition
Bv

BSERGENTOMYCAJLYSENTlNEL.COM

0Bm.JARIES

Play-in.garM
Da)IOO. Olio

... ----····---······-· --·· ....l

1'- Allbam a 9 . 43 __i

Page AS

,~-~~-~!~-~{-~ ]

.: Robert L Nickels.
••' ..

INSIDE .

Elliott,s

.......

317 St. Rt. 7 • Gallipolis, OH

740-446-8051•1-800-377~2532

Powell's

• Family Medcine:
Tattoos have low medical
risk, high risk of regret .
SeePageAl

Foodfair·
700 Eaat Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

• MSWCD announces
coloring contest winners.
SeePageAl

740-992-5252

Riverview Garden Club
· · meelS. See Page A3
I

•

------.A..---.
~

BEND AREA

250 Columbus, Rd., Athens

740·59-HONDA

S&amp;S
, 301 .Viand St. Pt. Pleasant, WV

CHIIIOMACTIC

Auto • Co•mrn:ial • RrsitknliGI

CfNTfR

(304) 675-7963Window Tillling
Car Audio
~ Truck Accessori1s

1065 Second Street

Toll Free 1-877·772-8993

H04 Jadson Avenue
Point PIIISIInt. WV

675·4472

CONNECTICUT

•

• O'Bieness offering
· health screenings.
See Page A3 '
• Hunley on display
$lUring annual Civil War
WeekencL See Page AS.
• Annual Pinewood
Delby Saturday at MHS.
See Page A6

•

WEATIIER

POMEROY ~ Meigs
County
. Prosecuting
· Attorney
Colleen
S.
Williams said she does not
yet k.now if Charles' S.
William.~ will waive e.\tradilion and appear on a mur- ·
der charge in Meigs County
·Court, or if a governor's
warrant will be required.
· Williams · was charged
TueSday with murder in the
Feb.
23
strangulation
death
of
D o r i s
Jack.son.
Tuppers
Plains. Last
week, he and
a co-jlefen·
dant, James
Lee Garnes,
Pomeroy.
were each charged with tampering with evidence .and
receiving stolen property.
Williams is now in jail in
Greenwood. W.Va. on
parole violation charges. He
can waive elltradition and
appear on the charges. or
refuse.lf he does not waive
elltradition,
Prosecutor
Williams said she will seek
a governor's warrant requiring his appearance here.
Prosecutor. Williams said
Wednesday she and her staff
will talle the lead in the pros·
ecution of the case, but may
rely on the Ohio Attorney
General's office for technical
assistan~-e and other support.

REEDSV lLLE ~ ' At
around I a.m.· yesterday
mornil'lg Meigs EMS was
notified of a structure fire at
53018 Lydia R011d in otl~e
Township which ullimately
destroyed a double-wide
.and glll'llge, leaving a family
without a borne.
According
to Olive
Township
Fire
Chief
Clarence Atherton, the fire
occurred at the residence of
Clwllne IIMII~ aotD
Jeff Vogt and family who Suwe Musser, left. ol the Meigs local Enrichment and Meigs Local Superintendent W~liam
were home at the time the Buckley show- the preliminary drawings for lhe proposed athletic complex at Meigs High
fire began. Athetton _.sll.id School to ~ of Education me.mbers, from tfle left, Ron Logan, t.any Ttleker, ·Roger
Vo$1 and his wife both Abbott, !lnd Scott Walton.
nottced "flaslting" in lhe
window and saw their front
porch ablaze.
· Atherton said despite the
residents trying to fight the
fm: with water hoses, when
the first fire truck got there,
the fire had basically
aspects of the project, what
Tom. E. Cremenns was
e·n~ulfed the double-wide Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
money
has
already
been
trailer and adjacent garage . · HOEFt.ICHOMYO.!oi~YSENTINet..COM
nired as the Meigs Middle
raised. what pledges have Sc~ool golf coach. Sheila E.
He added that windy condiPOMEROY
Steve been made. and what yet Roush a a substitute .persontions only caused the fire to
the
Meigs
Local needs to be raised to move al assistant for the remainMusser
of
spread faster.
Enrichment
Foundation
forward.
. der of the school year to be
Atherton estimated the
(MLEF)
gave
an
update
on
He
also
asked
the
Board
used on an us- needed basis,
doube-wide trailer was 28proposed
athletic
comto
authorize
ihe
Foundation
·
lhe
and Samantha Shaffner.
feet wide by 92-feet long
and the garage was around plex project to be construct- ''to market a levy to fill the · Gina Pines. Josh Ramey aod
30 feet by .28 feet with a ed at Meigs High School at fund:raising gap as well as Kellie Dawk.ins as substibreezeway connecting the . Tuesday night's meeting of provide needed funds for tute teachers to be used on
two strucl\ires. Atherton the Meigs Local Board of district asset purcnases" and an as-needed busis.
·to draft "an agreement
said the fire appears to have Education.
Approved us volunteer
Musser presented the under whicn the MLEF assistant c011ches in sports
PIIISIHIFift.AS
preliminary would lease the property . effective this season were
architect's
drawing of the proposed during construction." The Vince Reiber and Mike
facilities. He suggested a Board took no action on . Kloes. basebalL and Steven
cooperntive effort of the either proposal. (See relmed WOOd. softball.
Meigs Local School Board, story Fridny)
·
of
The resignations
the Band Boosters. the
Personnel matters handled Thomas Werry as auto
Athletic Boosters and the at the meeting included mechanics teacher for the
Meigs Local Enrichment awarding administrative con- purpose of retirement. and
Foundation principals in the tracts to Kristin Baer. a five Amy Lee as a special edupreparation of a business · year con~ct as principal at cation teacner and Middle
Bv BRIAN J. REED
plan "for OP.timizing use of Meigs Primary SchooL and school basketball coach
6REEOGMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM
the new factlity as a revenue · Susnn Climer. u lh~ year
were a~'fepted.
~.:ontract as assistant principal
generator."
MIDDLEPORT - The
He discussed fimmcial al Meigs High SchooL
Maae HI ICNinl. AS
Bv BETH SERGENT
Village of Middleport
BSERGENTOMVOAILYSENTINELCOM
selected the engineering
firm of ATS, based in West
POMEROY
A
Chester, to compleie design
Pmkersbur~. W.Va. woman
and engineering work on STAFF .REPORT
is facing six criminal charges
its proposed economic MOSNEWSOMYOAI~YSENTINEL.CDM
after a police chase on
stimulus projects - · if
Tuesday sent Pomerov
· funding is awarded.
CHESHIRE .
AEP
Police Chief Mark. E. Proffitt
to Pleasant Valley Hospital .
The village has proposed Ohio's Gavin Plant will ho$t
On Tuesday, Aliciu Small.
millions in proje~.:ts through u full-scllle emergency man-·
28. Wl\S driving ll small
the American Recovery and ugement "mock disa$ler"
Reinvestment Act:
drill on Satl!rday. March 2~.
pkkup truck on Court Street
from
8:3.0
a.m.
to
noon
on
and
was approucned by
• $570,00 for a new Wlller
,.
well, pumping system, the plant property in
Proffitt 10 shut off her
engine after ne was alerted
pipes, controls, and other Cnesh1re.
More tnan 20 local. state
necessury fittings .
S!uall allegedly did not
and
federal
agencies
nnd
• $3,671 ,000 for to libunhave a valid opo:-rutor's
don ll test wells drilled in businesses will participate
lil·ense . With Smull still in
the flood plain Iinder direc- in the drill authoriied by the
the pickup truck. Proffitt
tion of the village's fonner State Emergency Response
stood outside the vehicle .
engineering firm. Floyd .Commission (SERC).
and asked Small a second
During the drill, tne Ohio ..
Browne Group. 21,850 linrime to shut off the engine
ear feet of new wmer lines, Highway Patrol will close ~
though
she
allegedly
c~ I!Gefllclvphoto
and replacement of defec- State Route 554 in Cheshire. EMA committee members. from the left, David Harris, Bob refused to comply. Proffitt
The Patrol will direct local
tive fire hydrants. ·
Byer, Meigs EMA dire&lt;:tor, Joe Bolin, and Lt. Richard Grau then reached in to shut the
• · $4.5 million for con- traftlc to Roush Lane around of the State Highway Patrol discuss the mock disaster drill engine off when Small
struction of sewer upgrudes the drill .area. State Route 7 to be held at the Gavin plant Saturday.
allegedly took off in tne
at the Park Street and Mill wHl remain opel).
veh1cle. dmgging Proffitt'
"The purpose of the drill Munagement
Street lift stations; and
Agency and Mason (W.Va.) counties until he could free himself.
capacity improvemt!nts to is to coordumle the efforts (EMA).
"The . SERC will participate in the evem
Smull then turned right
of emergency responders
tne village treatment plant.
and ·coordimlle emergency from Court Street onto West
requires
each
.:ounty
to
.;onAlthougn no projects and sup!)llrt organizations in duct a full-scale drill once responders
from
their Main ·Street m1d was· pursued
have been given 11 go·aheud . order to .be prepared for an every four year$ ."
respel·tive t\reus. The Ohio by Code EniOO."~o:ment Officer
for construction, the village actual event." said Bob
Emergency management Emergency Management Matt Smith wno was in a
Byer. director,
Meigs
Please Sll ~Jects, AS
County
Emergency ugencies from Meigs. Galliu
Pluse~e~DriiLAS
"••se ... Chue.AS

Engineering
finn chosen
for proposed .
stimulus projects

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Tbe Brown Iowrance Agency
SllvitW. COIIIty SlatMD •No.S..~ IIWgiCOIIIty
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INGELS
CARPET.
.992-7028

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William Hussell
licensed Associate

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110 S 2nd Stteet/P.O.

Tel . JCM.77J.59oQ
fill 304-773-603&lt;1
Cell 304-812·2325

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PURDUE

Bo~t

588

800-446-0842
· 252 Upper River Rd
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Detalltl on Plge A3

INDEX

""'• 'a SECOONS -

I

12 PAGES

~alendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

83-4

Annie's Mailbox

Fl

"••sa ... waa.--.as
Suspect facing
charges after
police chase

Mock disaster drill scheduled at Gavin

11usseM lnluranee N;JenCJ

Mason, ·wv 25260

BauH J. REED

6REEOOMYO.!oiLYSENTINEL.COM ·

Itt BEnt SiERGarT

Taylor Motors

AS

No word yet

fatnily's
home

1108 }uckson Pike (Spring Vulley PIIIZIJ)
Gu/liDfllis. OH 74!H4J-1611
9713 CH&amp;D Rd. (Off Sr. Rr. 327)
Juckson, OH 740-286-2700

M s lHIArl

Prosecutor:

·desb-oys

-~

..c..................................., Momgan St 7•
' ' RobertMoo1s€2 , r·--·......... ······ ·· ····-

almost

Fire

·

--, usc 69

,

,

responded

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Mlchlglill St 11
.........- .......... ... :.... ...... ,
-~

and

scene yesterday fOI' abool
two hours.
• Cartmill said lhe evidence
l"Oltected at the Sl'l:ne will
be submitted to the Stare
Fire ~arshal Forensic Lab
in Reynoldsburg for further
testing. Cartmill added tile
ollke may p~&gt;SSibly have 111

.Comics
. .

Bs

Editorials
.
Obituaries
..

A4

Sports

As
B Section

Weather
~· 11009 Ohio Valley

Publlshlna eo.

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..

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