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                  <text>'Sharing Hope'
winning name for
O'Bleness boutique, A3

National Honor
·Society inductees, A6

~

Printed on 100%
Recycled NeW!iprlnt ~·

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio ·
,)0 Cl·.l'\TS • \'ol. :JR. :'\o. :!tO

SPORTS

ll I· SJ) \\ . \I\\ .). :! tiel&lt;)

" " " '" "1." 1'" "," ''I ' " '"

•

·• James wins MVP.
SeePageBl

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Voters in
the Village of Pomeroy .have
the only election in Meigs
County Tuesday, and will
decide on an increase in the
age income tax and a prosal that will allow the vilge to participate in a natural gas aggregation program.

t

Polls in the, village are
opel' frOm 6:30a.m. to 7:30
p.m.-today. All voters in the
village cast their ballots at
the Mulberry · Community
.Center, regardless of their
. polling precinct.
·Rita Smith, Director of the
Meigs County Board of
Elections, said Monday there
have been only eight absentee
ballots cast during the early

· votillg period, which began $80,000 per year, and could gas at a reduced f&lt;lle to the
30 days prior to election day. prevent layoffs and other benefit of natural gas residential
customers.
The proposed one-quarter budget-cutting measures.
percent increase would raise
A second issue wouhtper- Participation in the program
the total income tax paid by mit the village to parcticipate woufd be voluntary.
There are two candidates
vote,rs to I .25 percent of . in a gas aggregation proPomeroy
Village
income.
· .gram, allowing the village to for
Mayor John Musser has act as head of a buying group Council, Republican George .
estimated the increase, for residents who wish to Stewart and Democrat
which would go into effect • participate in the program. Victor C. Young III. Those
June I,. would increase Under tl:le program, the vii- candidates will advance to
income tax revenue by !age could purchase· natur~ the fall general election.

DNA testing

procedure to
be determined
next week

'•

Bv BRIAN

J. REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENJINEL.COM

JN'SIDE
• US supports reducing
:climate-warming gases.
.See Page A2
·~ For the Record.
.See Page AS
• Two hurt in overnight

.Ohio plant explOsion. ·
· See Page AS:. , ,.' . . :
.
·• Middle~~~~ :

.

.,.~... +hi""'. '.•.~a ·~.
' · ·:·1•!,;it
,. .•~AII:.W.~'~..,.~u

• .~· aliey receives

~'Tor~MegaMillions
. sale.' See Page_A6 ·.

Meigs prom held·
on riverboat
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

POMEROY - Hundreds of
pepple turned , out Saturday
evening to watch as more than
300 students in formal · attire
·stepped onto the red carpet which
led to "The Blennerhasset" for the·
first-eve·r · Meigs High School
·prom ·held on a sternwheel cruis~
ing the Ohio River. .
After being announced each
.couple stepped onto the red carpet for the .stroll down to the
le:vee through lighted trees and
other decorations. The creativity
of some students was expressed
in their attire wearing hats or
carrying canes, while others .
chose a novel mode of travel to

• Southern FFA news.
See Page A6

..
WEATIIER
'

get there, like old cars, go1f carts
and fire trucks.
The boat was decorated in blue
and white witli a theme banner,
"A Night under a Thousand
Stars." The 2009 Prom king and ·
queen were announced during the
three-hd'Ur cruise. Selected. by
vote of the students were Adrian
Bolin and Chad Bonnett. Others
in the court were Laura Gheen,
Catie Wolfe, Lucreshia Howard,
Jamie
Bailey · and
Kerh
VanReeth, Josh Cleland, Clay
Bolin, Mason Metts, · Crockett
Crow, and Ernie Welsh.
After returning to the levee, students went to the high school for
Submitted photo
an after-prom party held in . the
·
c
had
Bonnett
and
Adrian
Bolin
were selected
gymnasium from midnight . to
the 2009 MHS prom king and queen.
2:30 p.m.

Dlltalle on Page A&amp;

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM

•

INDEX

.

2 ·8ECJ10NS -12 PAGFS

~nie;s Mailbox

A3

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

•

Comics
•

Bs

Editorials

A4

'

'

B Section

Sports

Chart.ne Hoefllch/photo

Weather

A6

© 2009 ohio valley PubllshiDJ eo.

,

ll
.

·
4879

11111111
1811

•

Corporate donors for this year's Meigs County Relay for
Life have donated over $9,000 to the event. Pictured in the
front row (from left) are Courtney Sim, JoAnn Crisp,
Matthew Beha, all of Relay, Patty Eblin of Swisher &amp; Lohse;
back row (from left) Mark Groves of Farmers Bank, Steve
Beha of Relay and Beha lnsurant;:e Agency. Groves, Eblin
and Beha represent .so.me of the many corporate donors
wht will be recogniz~d at this year's Relay on Friday.
•

POMEROY - The 2009
Meigs County Relay for
Life begins at 6 p.m. on
Friday
and continues
through noon on Saturday at
Springs
the
Rock
Fairgrounds.
The 'Relay' will be rain or
shine event since it will be
held in the Thompson ~
Rousli Building.
An itinerary for this .
year's Relay is as .follows: 5
p.m., ·survivors registration;
6 p.m., welc'ome, opening
ceremony; salute to the
American Flag , National
Anthem by Karen Griffith;
introduction of parade survivors; 6:30p.m. , survivors
reception hosted by Rae
. Moore, 6:45 p.m. recognition of teams: 7:15 p.m.,
Still Standing ~ 8 p.m. Alexis
Hill ; 8:30 p.m. recognition

AMP meeting
to focus on
new regulations
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Of sponsors; 8:45 p.m.
Tammy Matson and Sharon
Hawley; 9:20 p.m. recogni.
tion of caregivers.
At dusk the luminary service will begin with a
prayer by the Rev. Fr.
Walter Heinz 'and Brenda
Phalin .singing. Sharon
Harvey, nurse from Holzer
Cancer Care will speak.
Jerri Hill will sing, and
there will be the lighting of
the candle of hope and a lap
in silence, and a lap in
silence.
·
At lO p.m . moonlight
madness will begin. On
Saturday from 7 to 9 a.m.
breakfast will be served by
the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club, attd at II a.m.
to noon the closing program
will be held.
Steve Beha, sponsorship
chairperson for Relay said

Please see Relay, AS

Pl.-se see AMP, As

'Relay' on Friday

'•

Pleate see Testlnc. AS

RACINE ~ The upcoming meeting/hearing on a
draft {!Crmit modification .to
Amencan Municipal PowerOhio's air permit will focus
on federal regulations that
were not in existence when
the air permit was made
final fn February 2008'.
The agency who approved
the final air permit, the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency, will be the ones considering the draft modification to apply Maximum
Achievable
Control
Technology (MACT) to
AMP-Ohio's project. The
original permit used the
guidelines of the Clean Air
Mercury Rule (CAMR), a
federal law which was also
overturned last year. The previous air permit was written
assuming the mercury rule
was still in place. MACI'
requirements are applicable
to the emissions of Hazardous
air pollutants such as mercury, hydrogen chloride,
hydrogen fluoride, etc.
Rod Windle, who is with
the Ohio EPA's division of
air pollution, said there will
be no increases in permitted
mercury emission when

.

.

POMEROY - A ruling
on the means of testing DNA
evidence in the murder trial
of Charles Williams will not
be made until Prosecuting
Attorney Colleen Williams
and defense counsel · agree
ort a laboratory and testing
procedures.
Attorneys Charles Knight
and William Eachus, representing Charles Williams,
filed a motion shortly after ·
they were appointed to rep·
resent him, asking that the
defense be peimitted to be
present duriQg the testing of
a blood sample found on a
pair of Williams' boots. It is
necessary that the defense
teani's own DNA expert be
present, Knight and Eachus
assert, because the sample
will be destroyed when the
Ohio Buteau of Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation performs its
test.
At a hearing on pending
motions held before Judge
. Fred W. Crow lll Monday,
Prosecutor Williams proVided the defense team with a
list of independent DNA
laboratories which could
perform the test. The BCI,
Prosecutor . Williams said,
does·not permit observers in
its DNA lab, but will pay for
the cost of a test by an ouh
side laboratory.

•

•

�'

I

,.

..

I

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

US supports reducing .
climate-warming gases·
were disappointed.
"We cannot hesitate as a
third .of our future global
UNITED NATIONS
. warming emissions hang in
The Obama administration the balance. We need action
called hydrofluorocarbons - and U.S. leadership widely used in refrigerators this year," said · Alexan~er
and au conditioners "a very von Bismarck, ·execuhve
significant" threat to eli- director
of
the
mate change Monday, and Environmental Investigation
. expressed a preference for Agency, a nonprofit watchdrastiCally reducing HFCs dog group ip Washin~ton
that ate promoted under the that frrst pitched the 1\lea
U.N.'s ozone treaty rather two years ago.
than phasing them out
Only about 2 percent of
entirely.
the globe's climate-warmBut a senior State ing . ga~es are currently
Oepartment ·
official .'HFCs, but those are
stopped short of endorsing expected to grow to up .to
a · formal proposal last · about a third of all greenweek by the two small . house gases about two to
island
nations
of four decades from now
Micronesia and Mauritius because of.their promotion
to alter the ozone treaty for a host of household
known as the Montreal
d
Protocol by cutting HFCs goods that once use
CFCs.
by 90 percent by 2030.
Some
manufacturers,
The treaty promotes the however, have already
use of HFCs, a class of
•
AP photci
begun to replace HFCs
greenhouse gases , with so-called natural
President Barack Obama, speaks about tax reform as Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. left, and Com~issioner of the powerful
to replace ozone-depleting
d
Internal Revenue Service Douglas Shulman right, loo.k on in the Grand Foyer of the Wh1te House tn Washington, Monday. chlorofluorocarbons, or -refrigerants such_as hy roCFCs, that have now been carbons, ammoma or car•
virtually eliminated. But bon dioxide. Companies
Delaware-base(!
while · HFCs do not bartn like
the ozone layer, they a,re DuPont Fluorochemi'cals,
BY STEPHEN 0HLEMACHER
Obama's plan would on overseas profits, saying
Obama's plan would:
especially potent green- one of only five U.S. manASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
impose billions of dollars in it would make American
• Prevent companies from house gases _ up to 10,000 . ufa~:turers of' . HFCs, .say
new taxes on many of the companies less competitive. writing
off
domestic times more so than carbon tl)_ey supp~rt . a gfobal
WASHINGTON
nation's largest corpora"We're · talking about expenses that.help generate . dioxide.
"phaS(l·down" of HFCs to
President Barack Obama lions, including Google, American jobs at American profits abroad - until those
Micronesia
and abQut one-fifth of theu curpromised
sternly
on · General Electric, Hewlett- companies and their abiliiy profits are returned to the Mauritius
wanted
to rent use.
Mnnday to crack down on Packard, Intel and Johnson to compete overseas," si/.id U.S. and subjected tp include ao HFCs phase-out
Th~ U.S. market for
companies "that ship jobs &amp; Johnson, tax experts said. John J. Castellani, president Americ.an
taxes.
For in the oione treaty discus- HFCs is estimated at $1 bitoverseas" and duck U.S. But it falls well short of the of the Business Roundtable. instance,
administrative sions
planned . for lion, about a third to onetaxes with offshore havens. 'broad overhaul of the tax
At issue is the way the tasks performed in · New November, calling it a dire · half what it is globally.
It won't be easy. system that will probably U.S. taxes the overseas York for a London office matter of survival for their
Senate Foreign Relations
Democrats have been fight- have to wait until at least profits of American compa- would not be tax deductible island inhabitants as · sea Chairman John Kerry said
ing - and losing - this next year - after Congress nies . Under current law, in the United States.
levels rise.
Monday that "HFCs are
battle since· John F. deals with health care and American corporations with · • Prohibit companies from
The deadline for making significantly more powerKennedy made a similar energy.
subsidiaries in foreign receiving foreign tax credits such a proposal was this ful greenhouse gases than
proposal in 1961.
.
In exchange for the countries can defer paying on income that is not sub- week.
.
carbon dioxide, and the
Oba~1a 's proposal to close
increased taxes· some com- U.S. taxes on the profits of · ject to U.S·. taxes.
Officials at the State damage is only going to;~
tax loopholes was a reliable panies would liave to pay, those subsidiaries until the
• End a provision that. lets Department,
!he grow if we don't act in the
applause line during the Obama agreed to make per- money is transferred back to . U.S. companies legally shift Envirol)mental Protecl)on :short term."
·
presidential campaign, but it manent a research tax credit this country. ·
income from one foreign Agency and the Dyfense
He said in reaction to
got a lukewarm response that would provide firms
·If companies leave the subsidiary to another, mak- Department. had all backed the administration's Jetter
·. Monday from Capito.! Hill. about $75 billion in breaks money Qverseas, where cor- . ing:the taxes they owe to the a redu.ction of HFCs, but the that President B'arack
Sen. Max Baucus of over the next 10 years. The porate tax rates in most United States "disappear."
idea n,m· into so!lle resis- Obama now "clearly rec~
Montana. the Democratic cre4if'currently is to expire countries are lower than in
Former
President tan~e m the Wh1te House ognizes · the impact of
chairman· of the Senate at the end ofthe .year.
the U.S., they can avoid Kennedy failed to end the · dun?11 a. year. when_ the HFCs, and I'm confidenl
Finance Committee, said the
Obama has widespread American taxes on those tax deferral system in 1961, admtms_trauon ~~ ~onstder- . he'll work with Congres~
plan needed further study, support in Congress to .Profits indefinitely. If the · despite telling·Congress the mg all1ts negotlatmg chipS
find a way . to addre~s
even though similar ideas crack down on tax evaders . money is brought to the U.S. could no longer ·afford for the ~uccessor .to the 10
this growing challenge m
have been around for years. who illegally hide assets in . U.S., corporations can sub- it. The system also survived Kyoto ~hmate treaty that . the best and quickest way
The president 's plim tax havens. But he faces tract foreign taxes already · overhaul efforts in the expues m_2012.
possible."
would limit the ability of stiff opposition - even paid.
1970s and 1980s.
.. Th_e Un).ted States ran out
Last week, Kerry had
U.S . companies. to defer · within his own party _ to
The U.S. has il top·corpoRep. Charles Rangel, of tn~e . to complete the ioined with another lead~
paying U.S. taxes on over- increasing taxes on the legal rate income tax rate of 35 :chairman of the tax-writing . analysts needed ·to under- &lt;
D
S
.
.seas profits. At the same transactions of U.S. multi- percent, which is among the House Ways and Means stand the potential impacts mg . emocrat, . enate
:rime , Obama would step up national companies.
· highest in the developed Committee, proposed a sim- of such an approach or to Envuonment Ch~uwon:an
efforts to go after evaders
"To the extent the presi- world. However, most cor- · ilar ·measure to limit the consider how amending the Barbara Boxer, m urgmg
who abuse offshore tax dent continues on the road porate income is taxed at deductions of U.S. multina- · Montreal Protocol to Obama . to expres_s strong
shelters.
of cracking down on tax much lower rates because of tionals in 2007. But Rangel, addi-ess HFCs would affect support for usmg the
Obama said his plan abuse, he can count on my deductions and credits.
a Democrat from New York, negotiations' ... with respect ozone treaty to . phase
would raise $210 billion support," said Sen. Chuck
In 2004, large corpora- . tied his proposal to lower- . to the post-2012 _period," down HFCs by 85 percent
over the next 10 years, Grass ley of Iowa, the top tioils paid an average effec- ing the overall corporate tax Daniel Reifsnyder, a deputy by 2030 · . .
.
though no tax increases Republican on the Senate tive tax rate of 25.2 percent rate.
·
assistant secretary for envt•
In dcontrast t~ thedJ'ro:
:would go into effect until Fioance Committee. "But if · on dom~stic · income,
On Monday, he welcomed ronment and sustainable kose · ·, · ·. . P ase- Wn,
::2011. That's an average of he's using tax shelters as a · according t~ a Government Obama's plan.
development wrote in a leteifsnyder noted that a prec
$21 billion a year, less than stalking horse to raise taxes Accountability
Office
"For too long, our tax ter to . U.N.
Ozone · liminary ~PA a?alysis i$
a 2 percent nick in a federal on corporations at the cost report last year. Fo~ foreign Jaws have rewarded compa- Secretariat
Marco based on stepwise reduc:budget deficit that is pro- ofU.S,jobs,he'lllose me." -income, the effecttve U.S. nies that invest and keep GonZalez.
lions" which would reduee
jected to hit $1.2 trillion in
A coalition of business tax .rate \NilS about 4 percent, their money overseas and
"We plan · to continue HFCs· by 85 by 2039.
2010.
.groups has already stepped the report saicl. That figure turned.a.blind eye to the use actively studyin~ and ana- Legislation before th~
: Lost revenue isn't the up lobbying efforts to kill does not include taxes paid of tax havens by the lyzing this issue,' he wrote. House_a~dy calls for U.S.
:Only problem, Obama says. attempts to increase taxes to foreign countries.
wealthy," Rangel said.
Proponents of th,e idea reductions m HFCs.
He contends the current sys·
tern gives companies an
·incentive to invest overseas
:rather than creating jobs in
the U.S.
: "It's a tax code that says
you .should pay Jowe_r taxes
•
if you create a JOb m
Bangalore, India , than if
you create one in Buffalo,
N.Y. ," Obama said Monday.
The business community
argues the deferral system
helps them compete against
foreign companies that pay
taxes only in the countries
where they generate profits.
The bottom line?
~'Nobody should miss the
. ~/
fact that this is about revenue," said Raymond
Wiacek, head of the tax
practice at . the law firm
Jones Day. ''These companies have the money. and
·,
the U.S. government needs
the money.'' . ·
Obama also proposed a
'
package of disc,Iosure · and
enforcement · measures
designed to malte .it harder
for financial institutions to
carry
Hall
help wealthy individuals
evade taxes in overseas .
accounts. Obama said the
government is hiring nearly
800 new IRS agents to
8Jld,
enforce .the tax code.
"I want to see our comparidiculously affordable prices.
nies remain the most competitive in the world,"
Obama said at a White
Call or v181t the Department o£
House announcement. "But
Pla.st1c .Sarsery learn morel
the way to make sure that
-PERFECT FOR MOTHER'S DAYhappens is not to reward our
74o-446-sus
companies for moving jobs
9o Jac'kson PD:e, G&amp;ll1polis, Qbt!"
off our shores or transferring profits to overseas tax
havens."

HOLZER .
CLINIC

•

lntroduc~ng
•

our .new

Medi-Spa!
P aJl

. .

..

. Bv K4THY Mtrdieu. .·
• AND MARCY
Su'oAA .
..
•

.·

• ...

.

·'

'

··. l

De~tr :Annie: ·I am a teenager, but

in a few years, .

· I will be aw~y at college. I am conCerned, however,
because Mom has a boyfriend with a major ~ger
problem, and he throws !imtrums and gets abustve .
· ~om has been in this relationsbip for a few years,
ilnd.I'm afraid when !leave he wiU ,do. sonie senous
damage and I won't be .there tri p(lltect her. She has
. bee)\ going to therapy, but it,sJoeSn~t seem to be .
. ·• helpmg. I love my mother very fi!UCh and want t!'~e . •
·, best for her. How can l convtnce .herto get away.. ,,
·frOm this man? - . Con~rnea Dall&amp;hter · · •·
. ·
.. Del!)i Concerned: . ]~ . it.vt:ry difficqlt for· some::
. " womel)iO get o~t pf ~' .aojl~i:;'~ n:latio~bj~, and
. . . longer they ljTe 'tnvolvj)d, t~ moretlley bel~vc; tbe_y ·, .
,
Submltttld photo ·
, .' deserve to be: treated poody,.lt's gooiJJJtl!t Mom 18
Susan Kozak, lt;Jft, O'Bieness volunteer resources manager, discusses head coverings Vlilh boutique contest winner Bette
·. • gettin$ t~erapy; She obviol!Bl¥ 'needs .it, and w~
. hope tt will help her fhtd,away 'Qut..'W.e JrnOW ~ou ... Baker; who selected the name "Sharing Hope."
are worried 'a,bout 'her; but,}'t:Ju.are •n!)t responsible ..
. for her choic,es. If yQJ.! wimess ihi~ p'ian being phys,; icalty .a~e to yourmother·oqf•he shoQI3 cool~ · ·
·•. after you, call the ,police imme.?i;!te~y. :You also ~n ·
ATHENS - "Sharing with many
activities; ready for patients to wear ·called Look Good ... Feel
·cOJitact ..the National. DomestiC VtOleoce Hothne .
Hope" has been selected as including serving as presi- home. Women can request a Better® (LGFB), which is
(ndvh.org) aH~80Q-7WJ7SAFH. (l~Sc:lp-799-7233)
the name for the new bou- dent of the Sew 'n' Sews head covering exchange and aimed at helping women who
. · .and ask if there ts anythmg more yo1J can. do. · .
tique at the Castrop Center Quilt Guild and as a mem- can either keep or return have . appearance changes
· Dear Annie: SOmething una~ptable l~liappen· of O'Bleness Memorial beroftheOhYouQuilters. head coverings at a later during cancer treatment . In
' :. ing with two diffe\'Cnt ,.a,sl!al fri~ild&amp;., One is a·man
Hospital.
Other 'entrants expressed date. Donations of new or the LG~ session, held from
1 .whose wife is in.a nt\):singhomewi~ d~ine~tia. ~·..
· Bette Baker of Athens appreciation for the boutique gently-used head coverings 5 pm. to 7 p.m., Whiteman
. othilt is a )\'OI;PllR ·WJjOSe ,hi\Sbl!ild I,S I!I a ntmtng:.
chose the winning name and and other cancer support pro- are welcomed.
.
· shows women how to cope
.· 1Jioin~ ilfter' iebilitati·ng s\f()ke. Th,e spouses are&lt;
won
a
cash
prize
of
$100,
grams
at
O'Bieness.
Several
·
Appointments
for
private
with skin changes and hair
''dat't'ng \_,. ' •· ~-- ·t ' · 'i • '
, · ~ ... ~l, \ -~~·.-t,'- 11 ·
,t '
•
- ..,_ ·_
Whic~ was provided by
mentioned that they had fam- head-covering fittinf ses- Joss u~ cosmetics and skin
· , '11le ma.n hiis no children ·and. is:'flllrly low-key . Shak1r Sarwar, M.D., med- ·ily members who had cancer sions can be schedu ed. In care p ucts donated by the
. .. · with his :U~tivities : The.woman; however, i~lilf.e. a;.: ical oncologist and director and that they knew the impor- addition, a lice11$ed cosme- cosmetics industry. Each
· . ' lov~sickl;lllPPY· Herch~dreil.~l~l;lJI&amp;ers,andthey . of O'Bieness' Oncology . tance of helping patients with tologist , ·
Shannon woman. is given a free kit of
· •seem uncomfortable w1th the·sJtuat!on;-l ·kjlow she . Suite. A committee selected cancer regrun a normal life.
Whiteman, is available to cosmetics to take home.
· iS Ioneiy, oand,1/e~l.$Qrr)' fpr het,' but ~nkly,_ I am .; the winning itame from 125 The boutique was created · meet and assiSt women on , To join a LGFB s~ssion,
embarrassed to be herfnend. A1Jother fnend tned to..
entries from men and to meet the needs of women the · third Tuesday of each call the American Cancer
talk:to her aliotit this·, but she- i~ .100 .';in· love'' to liswomen in the community.
experiencing hair Joss as the month at the Castrop Center. Society at (800) 395-5665,
.. t¢n to ~;eason : I know I shouldMMOB.llnd I llffi; but
Baker said she decided to result of cancer treatment.
Whiteman helps women and press 0. For more mforwhat is }.'ouropinion?May~I'mjgstpla~ing bY. an
enter the contest because The boutique is a private fit- choose the head ~overing marion about LGFB, ·the
. old-fash1oned rule book, - Momma·Do·Rite . . . '•
wanted to honor a friend ·ting room that provides an they prefer and gives tips on head-covering fitting ses· _Dear M;o~ma: As lop$ .I[S .f!le ;~usbal,l4s and ,·., she
who recently died from can- . assortment of head cover- canng for the head .covering. sion, or to make an appointwtves are takl!lg;care.of theu nufS.!D~•'h.ome spgu~s · .cer. A retired administrative ings - including wigs; The Tuesday fitting sessions ment at Sharing. Hope, call
,., a,od visiting· 'o{ten,· "'(e hav~r no obJ~tio)1 to .their
assistant for the provost's scarves and hats - at no · immediately follow a pro- Susan Kozak, O'Bleness
's~pdlng· l\Jl ·il.yenihl! .oqt .with :a·ffie!id. ;\¥~. ~oncur,
office at Ohio University,. charge. The wigs halVe been grain · sponsored by the volunteer resources managhowevet, thjltiit•is fnappropriate fqr;_t~n&amp; .,couple •!Xi,: . · Baker said she. keeps busy cleaned an&lt;) styled and are Amerjcan Cancer· Society er,.at (740) 592-9270.
• flaun~ a loy~ affair: espe~ialli ~~ll~;th~,e llf~ ch1~; :.
.dren mv,olved. However, yo1,13f.e a 1)3S!liil fnend, · ,
'
0
••.
&lt; '30 yem, · ~disagree !rith y0 ur ''tespon.se to ."J.us! · · ·
"" Cunous," who ask¢&lt;1 ·•f she Should . attend her ex~
. Refreshments at 6:30 p.m. through May 10. Monty
Friday, May 8
· htisba:nq's fimeraL You'~lso i1ite~~~6~enew ~fe .. ·
Thursday, May 7
Hurst, evangelist, with the
LONG BOTTOM
as ,th.e ~.'stepmoth. e~.'! If-'!h_.e n.jlW
·· .•.'ft.fe elped, . raued, ·
TUPPERS PLAINS Hurst Family providing spe- Faith Full Gospel Church, · ·
yo.nilg children from the .fll'st ·fl11Jl'Ilage.- then·she ·1.~ .
Thesday, May 5
Auxiliary,
VFW
9053
,
7
cial
music. Rev. Charles State Route 124, singing by
t)J.eit,stePni9tber,, ~u~ii( . ihey '\y~te ·~WI) up, when . · •
REEDSVILLE - Olive
p.m.
at
the
hall.
Mc~enzie,
pastor, 992- the Peacemakers, 7 p.m. at
•
Dad r,e;marned, as mme were; s.lre~s simply Da~··S ··.
Township Trustees, 6:30
the church. ·
2952.
w'ife..these ~hildret,vh,i.l¥e ~ 11)9iher-1l.?d ~~~ .is still ;} p.m., township garage.·
•· •alive,,My childr¢n.re~er totheu;Jatper .s Wife aSJ!!St · ·
Wednesday, May 6
'·,.·thai and· cal~ her by.)lerJir~t natpeif.
P· . ' _. .. ·
PAGEVILLE - SCipio
. "' · ·U' sl)e.was ·.i)lamed;to t)l~:lnl!nanJi b&lt;;)re hisdul· .:
Township Trustees, regular
Wednesday, May 7
·· dren, there is a long lind seriQlis connection; and she '
meeting,
6::30
p.m.,
TUPPERS PLAINS • should b~ able to attend 'the fUneral: Jf my ex-hus- .. . Pageville Town Hall.
American Red Cross blood' blind dies before me,l plan to attend&gt;Oot ofrespect .
POMEROY - Meigs mobile, 9:30a.m. to 2 p.m.,
fot:his pres.en~ wi~e, I will,l;le 'as inconspicuous. as
County Board of Health ,. Eastern High · School.
.. possible and stay ni the rear 9f the church, But· f
regular meeting, 5 p.m., Sponsored by Student
Intend to be there not only fdr myself, but to. help
conference room Meigs Council.
• my .children a11d gtaJidchildren tlir00 gh that nm~ ..~ . , County
Health

the; .

Hope'

a

~%~··:···-' · ;_

1~ ~:/~::~t~!~~~·~t;~Z~ ~'-a¢ed i~r;

·Community Calendar
Public meetings

b.

· Other events

Lin:\ng Moth~r
· ·. .·. ·• · ,
· .. · · .
. .Dear , Mot~er~ The word "st~pl)lother" trf~rf to ·

Dep~rtmenr.

Birthday~
POMEROY
Meigs
•\he \&gt;loman, f?:ad, has nlfU;r!C~i w~Wtl)er _Y.O!! .lf.ke: 1t or . . Commissioners; l p.m.
Friday, May 8
,.. n~ : The restnction·on. ~x,wlves attflDdmg th.e funer• . ·'· Wednesday, instead , of
RUTLAND
- Kenneth
:i;,.J:!!Js t(you_r preseno~·: wlU c"os¢ ~; d,isru,ptioll ·an4 , Thursday.
Kent, Sr., Rutland, will cel,; rna~ tlie Widow stiesse~~Ifyou. ar~ certam ypu ~a.n ·.
ebrate
his 80th birthday.
, ·' avoid lhat, and your chi!dten o,yant. you there, Jt s ·
Cards may be sent to 34843
New Lima Rd ., Rutland,
Ohio 45775.
·. Land!!TS column. Pll!ase e-mail.your fiUestions to
'l:'uesday, May 5
, anniesmailbox@comca$/.net, or:write to:. Annie's
MIDDLEPORT
.
· Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL 6(1611, To
Stated
meeting
of
. , flntl out more aboUI Annie's. M~ilbox, ~mf r~Dtl
Thesday, May 5
Middleport Masonic Lodge
,, fea!Ures by othflr: Creators Syn,drctt"e .writ.er$ aru/
#363, · 7:30 p.m., at
POMEROY - Revival
. · c.at:tiJO!.*.ir~ts, .visit fht Ci'eatiJn Sy~rcate We~ Pf'k'
Masonic Temple. Work in services at the Calvary
"' ai
www.creatdrs~om
•.
,,
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·
.
·
.
;
..
,
.
.
· Fellow craft degree. All Pilgrim Chapel, State Route
,.
.'·
. . ., :';;;
..·: ·' \
;·
'
. ;-.; ..
Masons
invited. .143, Pomeroy, · 7 · p.m,
~

-~::~~~!tt:::i:. ~~~;~~!~w~f Mitj:~

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

·,

'

.

'

"

.

All S~les included
IBn 7/l6" Pad w/purchase of Carpet ·
WE,No Obligation Quotes·
fBH Removal of Old Carpet
fBH Furniture Moving

'

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.•

.

•
•

Showyour Graduates how proud
you .are of their aCcomplishments.
.
.

/

0

fJ

-

-

•

Graduate ads to be published in our
Graduate 2009 supplement on
Friday, May 15.
Deadline for ads and photos will be May 8.

'

We now
a full line of
natural" skin ·care products
including soaps. lotions.
cremes
gelees at

t.o

•

•

2009

Hope she will
find her w,ay out

BY JOHN HEILPRIN

overseas tax

Tuesday, May 5,

ANN IE'S MAlLBOX

ASSOCIATEO PRESS WAITER

us

.

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PageA3

BYTHEBEND

·The Daily Sentinel

eongratuladons
BRANDON
We're proud of ~I
f.ove, Mom &amp;. [)a

The Daily Sentinel
..... n, or mail photo, ad·copy and check to the

The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box 729, 111 Court St., Pomeory, OH 45769

Actual ad size: 1 column x 3_1nches

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

740~992-2155'

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PageA2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

US supports reducing .
climate-warming gases·
were disappointed.
"We cannot hesitate as a
third .of our future global
UNITED NATIONS
. warming emissions hang in
The Obama administration the balance. We need action
called hydrofluorocarbons - and U.S. leadership widely used in refrigerators this year," said · Alexan~er
and au conditioners "a very von Bismarck, ·execuhve
significant" threat to eli- director
of
the
mate change Monday, and Environmental Investigation
. expressed a preference for Agency, a nonprofit watchdrastiCally reducing HFCs dog group ip Washin~ton
that ate promoted under the that frrst pitched the 1\lea
U.N.'s ozone treaty rather two years ago.
than phasing them out
Only about 2 percent of
entirely.
the globe's climate-warmBut a senior State ing . ga~es are currently
Oepartment ·
official .'HFCs, but those are
stopped short of endorsing expected to grow to up .to
a · formal proposal last · about a third of all greenweek by the two small . house gases about two to
island
nations
of four decades from now
Micronesia and Mauritius because of.their promotion
to alter the ozone treaty for a host of household
known as the Montreal
d
Protocol by cutting HFCs goods that once use
CFCs.
by 90 percent by 2030.
Some
manufacturers,
The treaty promotes the however, have already
use of HFCs, a class of
•
AP photci
begun to replace HFCs
greenhouse gases , with so-called natural
President Barack Obama, speaks about tax reform as Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner. left, and Com~issioner of the powerful
to replace ozone-depleting
d
Internal Revenue Service Douglas Shulman right, loo.k on in the Grand Foyer of the Wh1te House tn Washington, Monday. chlorofluorocarbons, or -refrigerants such_as hy roCFCs, that have now been carbons, ammoma or car•
virtually eliminated. But bon dioxide. Companies
Delaware-base(!
while · HFCs do not bartn like
the ozone layer, they a,re DuPont Fluorochemi'cals,
BY STEPHEN 0HLEMACHER
Obama's plan would on overseas profits, saying
Obama's plan would:
especially potent green- one of only five U.S. manASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
impose billions of dollars in it would make American
• Prevent companies from house gases _ up to 10,000 . ufa~:turers of' . HFCs, .say
new taxes on many of the companies less competitive. writing
off
domestic times more so than carbon tl)_ey supp~rt . a gfobal
WASHINGTON
nation's largest corpora"We're · talking about expenses that.help generate . dioxide.
"phaS(l·down" of HFCs to
President Barack Obama lions, including Google, American jobs at American profits abroad - until those
Micronesia
and abQut one-fifth of theu curpromised
sternly
on · General Electric, Hewlett- companies and their abiliiy profits are returned to the Mauritius
wanted
to rent use.
Mnnday to crack down on Packard, Intel and Johnson to compete overseas," si/.id U.S. and subjected tp include ao HFCs phase-out
Th~ U.S. market for
companies "that ship jobs &amp; Johnson, tax experts said. John J. Castellani, president Americ.an
taxes.
For in the oione treaty discus- HFCs is estimated at $1 bitoverseas" and duck U.S. But it falls well short of the of the Business Roundtable. instance,
administrative sions
planned . for lion, about a third to onetaxes with offshore havens. 'broad overhaul of the tax
At issue is the way the tasks performed in · New November, calling it a dire · half what it is globally.
It won't be easy. system that will probably U.S. taxes the overseas York for a London office matter of survival for their
Senate Foreign Relations
Democrats have been fight- have to wait until at least profits of American compa- would not be tax deductible island inhabitants as · sea Chairman John Kerry said
ing - and losing - this next year - after Congress nies . Under current law, in the United States.
levels rise.
Monday that "HFCs are
battle since· John F. deals with health care and American corporations with · • Prohibit companies from
The deadline for making significantly more powerKennedy made a similar energy.
subsidiaries in foreign receiving foreign tax credits such a proposal was this ful greenhouse gases than
proposal in 1961.
.
In exchange for the countries can defer paying on income that is not sub- week.
.
carbon dioxide, and the
Oba~1a 's proposal to close
increased taxes· some com- U.S. taxes on the profits of · ject to U.S·. taxes.
Officials at the State damage is only going to;~
tax loopholes was a reliable panies would liave to pay, those subsidiaries until the
• End a provision that. lets Department,
!he grow if we don't act in the
applause line during the Obama agreed to make per- money is transferred back to . U.S. companies legally shift Envirol)mental Protecl)on :short term."
·
presidential campaign, but it manent a research tax credit this country. ·
income from one foreign Agency and the Dyfense
He said in reaction to
got a lukewarm response that would provide firms
·If companies leave the subsidiary to another, mak- Department. had all backed the administration's Jetter
·. Monday from Capito.! Hill. about $75 billion in breaks money Qverseas, where cor- . ing:the taxes they owe to the a redu.ction of HFCs, but the that President B'arack
Sen. Max Baucus of over the next 10 years. The porate tax rates in most United States "disappear."
idea n,m· into so!lle resis- Obama now "clearly rec~
Montana. the Democratic cre4if'currently is to expire countries are lower than in
Former
President tan~e m the Wh1te House ognizes · the impact of
chairman· of the Senate at the end ofthe .year.
the U.S., they can avoid Kennedy failed to end the · dun?11 a. year. when_ the HFCs, and I'm confidenl
Finance Committee, said the
Obama has widespread American taxes on those tax deferral system in 1961, admtms_trauon ~~ ~onstder- . he'll work with Congres~
plan needed further study, support in Congress to .Profits indefinitely. If the · despite telling·Congress the mg all1ts negotlatmg chipS
find a way . to addre~s
even though similar ideas crack down on tax evaders . money is brought to the U.S. could no longer ·afford for the ~uccessor .to the 10
this growing challenge m
have been around for years. who illegally hide assets in . U.S., corporations can sub- it. The system also survived Kyoto ~hmate treaty that . the best and quickest way
The president 's plim tax havens. But he faces tract foreign taxes already · overhaul efforts in the expues m_2012.
possible."
would limit the ability of stiff opposition - even paid.
1970s and 1980s.
.. Th_e Un).ted States ran out
Last week, Kerry had
U.S . companies. to defer · within his own party _ to
The U.S. has il top·corpoRep. Charles Rangel, of tn~e . to complete the ioined with another lead~
paying U.S. taxes on over- increasing taxes on the legal rate income tax rate of 35 :chairman of the tax-writing . analysts needed ·to under- &lt;
D
S
.
.seas profits. At the same transactions of U.S. multi- percent, which is among the House Ways and Means stand the potential impacts mg . emocrat, . enate
:rime , Obama would step up national companies.
· highest in the developed Committee, proposed a sim- of such an approach or to Envuonment Ch~uwon:an
efforts to go after evaders
"To the extent the presi- world. However, most cor- · ilar ·measure to limit the consider how amending the Barbara Boxer, m urgmg
who abuse offshore tax dent continues on the road porate income is taxed at deductions of U.S. multina- · Montreal Protocol to Obama . to expres_s strong
shelters.
of cracking down on tax much lower rates because of tionals in 2007. But Rangel, addi-ess HFCs would affect support for usmg the
Obama said his plan abuse, he can count on my deductions and credits.
a Democrat from New York, negotiations' ... with respect ozone treaty to . phase
would raise $210 billion support," said Sen. Chuck
In 2004, large corpora- . tied his proposal to lower- . to the post-2012 _period," down HFCs by 85 percent
over the next 10 years, Grass ley of Iowa, the top tioils paid an average effec- ing the overall corporate tax Daniel Reifsnyder, a deputy by 2030 · . .
.
though no tax increases Republican on the Senate tive tax rate of 25.2 percent rate.
·
assistant secretary for envt•
In dcontrast t~ thedJ'ro:
:would go into effect until Fioance Committee. "But if · on dom~stic · income,
On Monday, he welcomed ronment and sustainable kose · ·, · ·. . P ase- Wn,
::2011. That's an average of he's using tax shelters as a · according t~ a Government Obama's plan.
development wrote in a leteifsnyder noted that a prec
$21 billion a year, less than stalking horse to raise taxes Accountability
Office
"For too long, our tax ter to . U.N.
Ozone · liminary ~PA a?alysis i$
a 2 percent nick in a federal on corporations at the cost report last year. Fo~ foreign Jaws have rewarded compa- Secretariat
Marco based on stepwise reduc:budget deficit that is pro- ofU.S,jobs,he'lllose me." -income, the effecttve U.S. nies that invest and keep GonZalez.
lions" which would reduee
jected to hit $1.2 trillion in
A coalition of business tax .rate \NilS about 4 percent, their money overseas and
"We plan · to continue HFCs· by 85 by 2039.
2010.
.groups has already stepped the report saicl. That figure turned.a.blind eye to the use actively studyin~ and ana- Legislation before th~
: Lost revenue isn't the up lobbying efforts to kill does not include taxes paid of tax havens by the lyzing this issue,' he wrote. House_a~dy calls for U.S.
:Only problem, Obama says. attempts to increase taxes to foreign countries.
wealthy," Rangel said.
Proponents of th,e idea reductions m HFCs.
He contends the current sys·
tern gives companies an
·incentive to invest overseas
:rather than creating jobs in
the U.S.
: "It's a tax code that says
you .should pay Jowe_r taxes
•
if you create a JOb m
Bangalore, India , than if
you create one in Buffalo,
N.Y. ," Obama said Monday.
The business community
argues the deferral system
helps them compete against
foreign companies that pay
taxes only in the countries
where they generate profits.
The bottom line?
~'Nobody should miss the
. ~/
fact that this is about revenue," said Raymond
Wiacek, head of the tax
practice at . the law firm
Jones Day. ''These companies have the money. and
·,
the U.S. government needs
the money.'' . ·
Obama also proposed a
'
package of disc,Iosure · and
enforcement · measures
designed to malte .it harder
for financial institutions to
carry
Hall
help wealthy individuals
evade taxes in overseas .
accounts. Obama said the
government is hiring nearly
800 new IRS agents to
8Jld,
enforce .the tax code.
"I want to see our comparidiculously affordable prices.
nies remain the most competitive in the world,"
Obama said at a White
Call or v181t the Department o£
House announcement. "But
Pla.st1c .Sarsery learn morel
the way to make sure that
-PERFECT FOR MOTHER'S DAYhappens is not to reward our
74o-446-sus
companies for moving jobs
9o Jac'kson PD:e, G&amp;ll1polis, Qbt!"
off our shores or transferring profits to overseas tax
havens."

HOLZER .
CLINIC

•

lntroduc~ng
•

our .new

Medi-Spa!
P aJl

. .

..

. Bv K4THY Mtrdieu. .·
• AND MARCY
Su'oAA .
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• ...

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··. l

De~tr :Annie: ·I am a teenager, but

in a few years, .

· I will be aw~y at college. I am conCerned, however,
because Mom has a boyfriend with a major ~ger
problem, and he throws !imtrums and gets abustve .
· ~om has been in this relationsbip for a few years,
ilnd.I'm afraid when !leave he wiU ,do. sonie senous
damage and I won't be .there tri p(lltect her. She has
. bee)\ going to therapy, but it,sJoeSn~t seem to be .
. ·• helpmg. I love my mother very fi!UCh and want t!'~e . •
·, best for her. How can l convtnce .herto get away.. ,,
·frOm this man? - . Con~rnea Dall&amp;hter · · •·
. ·
.. Del!)i Concerned: . ]~ . it.vt:ry difficqlt for· some::
. " womel)iO get o~t pf ~' .aojl~i:;'~ n:latio~bj~, and
. . . longer they ljTe 'tnvolvj)d, t~ moretlley bel~vc; tbe_y ·, .
,
Submltttld photo ·
, .' deserve to be: treated poody,.lt's gooiJJJtl!t Mom 18
Susan Kozak, lt;Jft, O'Bieness volunteer resources manager, discusses head coverings Vlilh boutique contest winner Bette
·. • gettin$ t~erapy; She obviol!Bl¥ 'needs .it, and w~
. hope tt will help her fhtd,away 'Qut..'W.e JrnOW ~ou ... Baker; who selected the name "Sharing Hope."
are worried 'a,bout 'her; but,}'t:Ju.are •n!)t responsible ..
. for her choic,es. If yQJ.! wimess ihi~ p'ian being phys,; icalty .a~e to yourmother·oqf•he shoQI3 cool~ · ·
·•. after you, call the ,police imme.?i;!te~y. :You also ~n ·
ATHENS - "Sharing with many
activities; ready for patients to wear ·called Look Good ... Feel
·cOJitact ..the National. DomestiC VtOleoce Hothne .
Hope" has been selected as including serving as presi- home. Women can request a Better® (LGFB), which is
(ndvh.org) aH~80Q-7WJ7SAFH. (l~Sc:lp-799-7233)
the name for the new bou- dent of the Sew 'n' Sews head covering exchange and aimed at helping women who
. · .and ask if there ts anythmg more yo1J can. do. · .
tique at the Castrop Center Quilt Guild and as a mem- can either keep or return have . appearance changes
· Dear Annie: SOmething una~ptable l~liappen· of O'Bleness Memorial beroftheOhYouQuilters. head coverings at a later during cancer treatment . In
' :. ing with two diffe\'Cnt ,.a,sl!al fri~ild&amp;., One is a·man
Hospital.
Other 'entrants expressed date. Donations of new or the LG~ session, held from
1 .whose wife is in.a nt\):singhomewi~ d~ine~tia. ~·..
· Bette Baker of Athens appreciation for the boutique gently-used head coverings 5 pm. to 7 p.m., Whiteman
. othilt is a )\'OI;PllR ·WJjOSe ,hi\Sbl!ild I,S I!I a ntmtng:.
chose the winning name and and other cancer support pro- are welcomed.
.
· shows women how to cope
.· 1Jioin~ ilfter' iebilitati·ng s\f()ke. Th,e spouses are&lt;
won
a
cash
prize
of
$100,
grams
at
O'Bieness.
Several
·
Appointments
for
private
with skin changes and hair
''dat't'ng \_,. ' •· ~-- ·t ' · 'i • '
, · ~ ... ~l, \ -~~·.-t,'- 11 ·
,t '
•
- ..,_ ·_
Whic~ was provided by
mentioned that they had fam- head-covering fittinf ses- Joss u~ cosmetics and skin
· , '11le ma.n hiis no children ·and. is:'flllrly low-key . Shak1r Sarwar, M.D., med- ·ily members who had cancer sions can be schedu ed. In care p ucts donated by the
. .. · with his :U~tivities : The.woman; however, i~lilf.e. a;.: ical oncologist and director and that they knew the impor- addition, a lice11$ed cosme- cosmetics industry. Each
· . ' lov~sickl;lllPPY· Herch~dreil.~l~l;lJI&amp;ers,andthey . of O'Bieness' Oncology . tance of helping patients with tologist , ·
Shannon woman. is given a free kit of
· •seem uncomfortable w1th the·sJtuat!on;-l ·kjlow she . Suite. A committee selected cancer regrun a normal life.
Whiteman, is available to cosmetics to take home.
· iS Ioneiy, oand,1/e~l.$Qrr)' fpr het,' but ~nkly,_ I am .; the winning itame from 125 The boutique was created · meet and assiSt women on , To join a LGFB s~ssion,
embarrassed to be herfnend. A1Jother fnend tned to..
entries from men and to meet the needs of women the · third Tuesday of each call the American Cancer
talk:to her aliotit this·, but she- i~ .100 .';in· love'' to liswomen in the community.
experiencing hair Joss as the month at the Castrop Center. Society at (800) 395-5665,
.. t¢n to ~;eason : I know I shouldMMOB.llnd I llffi; but
Baker said she decided to result of cancer treatment.
Whiteman helps women and press 0. For more mforwhat is }.'ouropinion?May~I'mjgstpla~ing bY. an
enter the contest because The boutique is a private fit- choose the head ~overing marion about LGFB, ·the
. old-fash1oned rule book, - Momma·Do·Rite . . . '•
wanted to honor a friend ·ting room that provides an they prefer and gives tips on head-covering fitting ses· _Dear M;o~ma: As lop$ .I[S .f!le ;~usbal,l4s and ,·., she
who recently died from can- . assortment of head cover- canng for the head .covering. sion, or to make an appointwtves are takl!lg;care.of theu nufS.!D~•'h.ome spgu~s · .cer. A retired administrative ings - including wigs; The Tuesday fitting sessions ment at Sharing. Hope, call
,., a,od visiting· 'o{ten,· "'(e hav~r no obJ~tio)1 to .their
assistant for the provost's scarves and hats - at no · immediately follow a pro- Susan Kozak, O'Bleness
's~pdlng· l\Jl ·il.yenihl! .oqt .with :a·ffie!id. ;\¥~. ~oncur,
office at Ohio University,. charge. The wigs halVe been grain · sponsored by the volunteer resources managhowevet, thjltiit•is fnappropriate fqr;_t~n&amp; .,couple •!Xi,: . · Baker said she. keeps busy cleaned an&lt;) styled and are Amerjcan Cancer· Society er,.at (740) 592-9270.
• flaun~ a loy~ affair: espe~ialli ~~ll~;th~,e llf~ ch1~; :.
.dren mv,olved. However, yo1,13f.e a 1)3S!liil fnend, · ,
'
0
••.
&lt; '30 yem, · ~disagree !rith y0 ur ''tespon.se to ."J.us! · · ·
"" Cunous," who ask¢&lt;1 ·•f she Should . attend her ex~
. Refreshments at 6:30 p.m. through May 10. Monty
Friday, May 8
· htisba:nq's fimeraL You'~lso i1ite~~~6~enew ~fe .. ·
Thursday, May 7
Hurst, evangelist, with the
LONG BOTTOM
as ,th.e ~.'stepmoth. e~.'! If-'!h_.e n.jlW
·· .•.'ft.fe elped, . raued, ·
TUPPERS PLAINS Hurst Family providing spe- Faith Full Gospel Church, · ·
yo.nilg children from the .fll'st ·fl11Jl'Ilage.- then·she ·1.~ .
Thesday, May 5
Auxiliary,
VFW
9053
,
7
cial
music. Rev. Charles State Route 124, singing by
t)J.eit,stePni9tber,, ~u~ii( . ihey '\y~te ·~WI) up, when . · •
REEDSVILLE - Olive
p.m.
at
the
hall.
Mc~enzie,
pastor, 992- the Peacemakers, 7 p.m. at
•
Dad r,e;marned, as mme were; s.lre~s simply Da~··S ··.
Township Trustees, 6:30
the church. ·
2952.
w'ife..these ~hildret,vh,i.l¥e ~ 11)9iher-1l.?d ~~~ .is still ;} p.m., township garage.·
•· •alive,,My childr¢n.re~er totheu;Jatper .s Wife aSJ!!St · ·
Wednesday, May 6
'·,.·thai and· cal~ her by.)lerJir~t natpeif.
P· . ' _. .. ·
PAGEVILLE - SCipio
. "' · ·U' sl)e.was ·.i)lamed;to t)l~:lnl!nanJi b&lt;;)re hisdul· .:
Township Trustees, regular
Wednesday, May 7
·· dren, there is a long lind seriQlis connection; and she '
meeting,
6::30
p.m.,
TUPPERS PLAINS • should b~ able to attend 'the fUneral: Jf my ex-hus- .. . Pageville Town Hall.
American Red Cross blood' blind dies before me,l plan to attend&gt;Oot ofrespect .
POMEROY - Meigs mobile, 9:30a.m. to 2 p.m.,
fot:his pres.en~ wi~e, I will,l;le 'as inconspicuous. as
County Board of Health ,. Eastern High · School.
.. possible and stay ni the rear 9f the church, But· f
regular meeting, 5 p.m., Sponsored by Student
Intend to be there not only fdr myself, but to. help
conference room Meigs Council.
• my .children a11d gtaJidchildren tlir00 gh that nm~ ..~ . , County
Health

the; .

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•\he \&gt;loman, f?:ad, has nlfU;r!C~i w~Wtl)er _Y.O!! .lf.ke: 1t or . . Commissioners; l p.m.
Friday, May 8
,.. n~ : The restnction·on. ~x,wlves attflDdmg th.e funer• . ·'· Wednesday, instead , of
RUTLAND
- Kenneth
:i;,.J:!!Js t(you_r preseno~·: wlU c"os¢ ~; d,isru,ptioll ·an4 , Thursday.
Kent, Sr., Rutland, will cel,; rna~ tlie Widow stiesse~~Ifyou. ar~ certam ypu ~a.n ·.
ebrate
his 80th birthday.
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,, fea!Ures by othflr: Creators Syn,drctt"e .writ.er$ aru/
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POMEROY - Revival
. · c.at:tiJO!.*.ir~ts, .visit fht Ci'eatiJn Sy~rcate We~ Pf'k'
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overseas tax

Tuesday, May 5,

ANN IE'S MAlLBOX

ASSOCIATEO PRESS WAITER

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�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Obama
should
halt
Democrats'
(torture'ftenzy
The Daily Sentinel

If President Barack
and their media supporters requests will come - from
111 Covrt Street · Pomeroy, Ohio ·
a&gt;;ert that documents with- the public, from Congress,
Obama really meant what
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
held by the Obama adminis- from the courts - and more
he told CIA officers on
tration would reveal signifi· information is sore to be
April 16 - "this is a time
www.mydallysentlnel.com
for retlection. not retribucant other intelligence released."
The administration has
gains.
tion" - then he needs to
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Morton
snuff out the witch-hunt
Even Obam&lt;~ 's national announced that it plans to
Kondracke intelligence director, Dennis release interrogation phoatmosphere that his subseDan Goodrich
quent actions have created
Blair. acknowledged in an tos, which will further
Publisher
internal memo - but then inflame the issue.·
over the issue 9.f ''torture."
So what should Obama
redacted for public . con"Nothing will be gained
Charlene Hoeflich
sumption - that "high- do to 'limit the damage,
by spending our time and
energy
laying
blame
for
the
value information" came assuming he really wants
Obama
said.
"[
do
worry
General Ma,nager-News Editor
to? He can't say a lot past," he added in his letter about this getting so politi- from the interrogation$.
Moreover,
Bush
supportlike ruling out prosecutions
to CIA employees.
cized that we cannot funcWhen he wrote tl\e letter, tion effectively. and it ham- eis say top Congh·ssional - because he would be
Obama already had decided pers our ability to carry our leaders - mcluding Pelosi. accused of politically
Congress shall make no law respecting an
on the first step that has led fritical national-security a former ranking member of influencing the Justice
. .establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
to an orgy of demands for pperations." .
the House Intelligence Department.
But he can say, whenever
retribution
against
former
Committee
- were fully
He
ought
to
worry.
:free exercise thereof; pr abridging the freedom
asked,
"I've discontinue4
officials of the Bush 'admin- Thanks to him, the ques- briefed on the interrogation
' of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
IStration - .the release of tions of whether "enhanced . techniques and did not harsh interrogations. My
.: people peaceably to assemble, and .. to petition . top-secret
administration is conductJustice interrogation'; really conSti- object'to them .
ing a review of interroga.
memos
justifytutes
"torture,"
whether
it
Department
Conceivably,
a
truly
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
mg use of "enhanced inter- was or wasn't effective in · bipartisan 9/11-style com- tion procedures. Legal
rogalion· techniques" on stopping tetrorist attacks mission headed by the likes action is in the hands of the
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution selec •cJ high-level · terror- and who ·knew about the ·of former ~ecretary of State Justice Department.
"I'm opposed to public
ISIS.
policy all are now intensely James· Baker and former
Rep. Lee Hamilton , D-lnd., hearings and a .vindictive
Obama stipulated. that politicized. ·
CIA personnel who fol·
MoveOn.org and others could conduct an investiga, inquiry that will jeopardize
on.
the left are demanding , tion and deliv~r a credible the effectiveness of the
Today is Tuesday, May 5, the !25th day of 2009. There lowed Justice's legal advice
:are 240 days left in the year,
would not be prosecuted. appointment of a special report on the extent of harsh intelligence commpnity.
And on Apri I 19, White prosecutr to go after Bush interrogations. their intelli- The Senate Intelligence
House Chief of Staff Rahm administ at ion officials.
: Today's Highlight in History:
gence product , the effec- Committee · is the proper
. On May 5, 1961 , astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became Emanuel stated on . tete viSenat
Judiciary tiveness of tamer question- place for an inquiry .:• ·
America's tirst space traveler as he made a 15-minute subor- sion what should have been Chairman Patrick Leahy, D- ing techniques and the
Actually, his internal
bital flight in a capsule launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. administration
policy: Vt., and Speaker NanL"y Congressional clearances review just might conclude
On this date:
·
,;those who devised policy Pelosi. D-Calif., want a involvt!d.
·
- in secret - that some
In 1818, political philosopher Karl Marx was born in .. should not be prosecuted, bipartisan "truth commisThe problem is that a high-value terrorists should
Prussia.
·
·
.
either."
sion" appointed, although "truth commission" created be subjected to harsh quesIn 1821.• Napoleon Bonaparte, 51, died in exile on the
But two days later, they make it clear that they by this Congress is likely to' tioning . in rare circumisland of St. Helena.
Obama opened the door .to already know the "truth": hold public · hearings in stances.
In 1862, Mexican forces· loyal to Benito Juarez defeated prosecution of "those who that "torture··. was commit- which CIA officers · are
And, wit~ luck, the
French troops sent by Napoleon Ill in the Battle of Puebla. formulated those legal deci- ted, was not effective and called as witnesses and Justice Department · will
ln 1891, Carnegie Hall (then named "Music Hal)") had sions," saying the matter violated the law - though. required to hire lawrers to conclude that prosecutions
its official' opening night in New York Ci!Y·
was in the hands of which law is not entirely counsel them even 1f they · are not called for - certainIn 1904, Cy Young pitched the American League's first Attorney General Eric clear.
are granted immunity.
ly not of lawyers who gave
perfect game as the Boston Americans defeated the Holder.
In the meantime. there's
It likely would tum into a their best opinions or of
Philadelphia Athletics 3-Q.
Actually, he opened a intense pushback from "witch hunt" commission high-ranking Bush officials
In 1925 , schoolteacher John T. Scopes wus charged in tloodgate of recrimination. Republicans. former VIce that does as much damage detenilined that a 9/11-style
Tennessee with violating a state law that prohibited teach- Now. one danger is that the President Dick Cheney in to U.S. intelligence as the attack should never occur
ing the theory of evolution . (Scopes was found guilty. but dispute will 1\Jrther intlame .the ·tead, ctmrging that the Senate investigation headed again.
,
his conviction was later set aside.)
·
partisart passions that Obama
administration · by former Sen. Frank
And
the
Senate
In 1942, during World War II, Japauese forces landed on Obama has utterly failed to failed to release memos Church, D-Idaho. did in the Intelligence C:::ommittee is
the Philippine island of Corregidor.
· .
dampe1i in his first 100 demonstrating that water- 1970s.
the right place for a closed: In 1955, WestGemmny became a fully sovereign state. The days. even though doing so boarding, sleep deprivation , Already; according to for- door inquiry leading to a
baseball musical "Damn Yankees" opened on Broadway.
was one of the chief prom is- · slapping and uncomfortable mer CIA director Mike sober public report months
In 1981, Irish Republican Anny liunger-striker Bobby 1:s of his campaign.
confinement produced intel- Hayden , "offrcers are say- from now - in the meanSands died at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland in his
But the greater danger ·is ligence that saved American ing. 'the things . l'm doing time, cooling the fevered
66th day without food.
that investigations, public lives.
now - will this (investiga, atmosphere.
In 2000. the tightest alignment in 38 years of Mercury, hearings, . grand jury proThe memos themselves tiori) happen to me in five
Obama said that "keepVenus, Mars. Jupiter, Saturn, the ·sun and the· moon -as ce.edings and potential pros- assert . that the waterboard- . years because of what I'm in~ AmeriCa safe" is his top
seen from Earth -.took place.
ecutions will damage the ing of 9/11 mastermiml doing now?~. "
pnority, the one concern.
Ten years ago: President Bill Clinton began a morale- morale and diminish the Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
In his own April 16 letter that keeps him awake at
boosting trip to Europe that included n·visit to Ram stein Air · effectiveness of the intelli- led to the capture of the to his employees, CIA night. America is not made
Base in Germany, where he met the 'three American sol- · geilce community that · ringleader of a plot to tly an . director Leon ·Panetta ·- ' safer by partisan witchdiers just released by Yugoslavia. The first Kosovo Obama acknowledges is airplane into the Los who opposed Obama's hunts.
refugees brought to the United States, 453 of them, arrived esse·ntial
to
keeping Angeles Library Tower, the release of the Justice
(Morton Kondracke is
at Fort Dix in New Jersey.
America safe. .
. talle~t building on the West memos - warned that "tl:lis executive editor of RoU
Five years ago: Seeking to calm international outrage,
Even as he ·allowed for · Coast.
·
is not the end of the road on Call, the newspaper oj
President Georg&lt;: W, Bush acknowledged mistakes but possible
prosecutions.
But former Bush aides these
matters :
More Capitol Hill).
stopped short of an apology as he condemned the abuse and .:_~_:.--------~----------------_.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
deaths of Iraqi prisoners at the hands of U.S. soldiers during appearances on two Arabic-language TV networks.
Picasso's 1905 painting "Boy with a Pipe" sold for $104
million at Sotheby's in New York , breaking the record at
I hat time for an auctioned painting.
President Barack Obama,
(of
the
Geneva these .Jaws and treaties. proOne year ago: Three men were arrested and beaten by having released t~e official
and shall fessor Jordan Paust - in his
Conventions)
Philadelphia police officers·after a vehicle chase in.a scene Bush l!dministration policy
pring such persons, regard- essential book Beyond the .
videotaped by a TV news helicopter. (No charge~ have directiv~s on "enhanced
less of their nationality, Law (Cambridge University
been filed against the officers; however, the three men have interrogations"
(known
before its owri cou11s ."
Press) - documents ·that
been ordered to stand trial on attempted murder charges for worldwide as torture}.
You . hear that. Mr. "not.since the Nazi era have
Nat
a triple shooting earlier that night.) irvine Robbins, co- briefly adm.itted they
President?
so many lawyers been so
founder of the Baskin-Robbins ice cream ·chain , died in showed "us losing our
Hentoff
Moreover, Article 3 of · clearly involved -in internaRancho Mirage, Calif.. at age 90.
moral bearings" (April 21 ).
the
1949
Geneva tional crimes concerning the
Today's Birthdays: Actress Pat Carroll is 82. AFL-C!O But he will not prosecute
Conventions, which has treatment and interrogatim\
president John J. Sweeney is 75. Saxophonist Ace Cannon CIA implementers of those
been made part of our law, of persons detained during
is 75. Country singer-musician Roni Stoneman is 71. Actor policies. Nor will he call for
requires that any person war ...
Michael Murphy is 71 .
an investigation of the high- ratified, I remind the presi- whether a prisoner of .war,
"(These were lawyers)
Thought for Today: "When in doubt, duck."- Malcolm level officials and Justice dent that under Article 6 of unprivileged belligerent, directly advising how to
Forbes, American publisher (1919-1990).
Department lawyers who the U.S. c'on,titutiori, "all terrorist or noncombatant, deny protections in the
.
.wthorized those excruciat- treaties made, or which is guaranteed freedom future, (and such) denials
shall be made , under
LETTERS TO THE
mgly detailed techniques . . Authority of the United . from ·"cruel treatment .and · are violations of the laws of
Why? Concerning them,
torture" . and "outrage s war arid (of) war crimes."· .
EDITOR
"There are," he says, "a host States, shall be the supreme upon personal dignity, in
Paust adds: "The full truth ,
law of the land."
· particular, humiliating and about
conspiratorial and
of
very
complicated
issues
To
begin:
The
U.N.
·Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev sho11/d be less
involved
."
degrading
treatment
,"
complicit
involvemen(, and
than 3()() words. A/1/erters are subject to . editing. must be
Mr: President , allow me ConventiQ,Il
Against including denial of process the embrace of what (forsigned, and include address and telephone number. No
Torture an&gt;! Other Cruel, in case of triaL·
mer) Vice President Cheney
Degrading
u11sign~d letters will be published. Letters should be in to uncomplicate - for you Inhuman
guarantees,
Mr.
·.These
has correetly described as
other · i'nterested Treatment or Punishment ·
good taste, addressing issues. /lOt personalities. Letters of and
Americans
the
actual.
President,
apply
"in
a)l
cir'the dark side,' remains
thanks to organizations and i11dividuals will not be accept- specific U.S.Iaws and inter-· is the primary international
cumstances"
and
;'at
any
partly
hidden."
.
ed for publication.
national treaties the CIA has .· .Jaw on torture. Signed by time and in any place ·whatBut, President Obama,
Ronald Reagan in 1988, it
systematically violated dur- was ratiried by the Senate soever."". Maybe when pro- more and more of the truth
through
ing interrogation of terror- 111
· 1994 • 1t states: •·Eac h fessor Barack Obama was will . break
teaching
constitutional
law
because,
as
.YOU
said
o~
ism suspects. But weren't State Party , (sigilatory)
at
the
University
of
April
16,
"the
United
the CIA operators acting shall ensure that all acts of
Reader Services
&lt;usPs 213-9601
with.Jegal approval from the torture. are offenses under Chicago, he did not have States js a nation of laws."
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
very
top . of the chain of its criminal law." We have occasion to teach a course Yet you keep saying you
oUr main concern in all stories .is to Published every morning, Monday
comroond?
done that in the U.S. War in international tre~tties that prefer to "look forward and
1hrough Friday, 111. Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
On April 22',. the Senate Crimes Act ( 1996) and the have become embedded in no~ engag_e in retrib~tion."
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a.stor;, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
~Jemg believable agalit as a
Armed
Services Torture Victims Protection U.S. law.
992·2156.
Mtmbclr: The Associated Press and
Committee, after a very Act (1991).
And ·former constitution- nation of Jaws Js "retributhe Ohio Newspaper Association:
The Convention Against al law litigator . Glenn tion,.? .
extended
investigation,
Pottmaater: Send address correcOur matn number Is
As John Conyers, chairreleased
an
answer
to
that
Torture
adds - very sign if- Greenwald (Salon, April
tion s to The Daily Sen!lne4, P.O. Bm:
(740) 992-2156.
use of the Nuremberg icantly for the current 17) reminds us of the man of the House Judiciary
729, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
Department extensions are:
of
the Committee, promises (The
Defense. ("We were follow- debate here - that "No Charter
Subs~ription Rates
ing order&gt;.'')
exceptional circumstances International Tribunal at · New York Times , April 18):
By carrier or motor route
"The fact is," the report what&gt;oewr. whether a state Nuremberg (Article 8). in "If our leaders are found to
News
4weeks ...• .... • ...•. 11.30
Ecittor: Charlene HoefUch, Ew:t 12
made
clear. "that senior of war or a threat or war, which we were involved . have violated the strict laws
52 weeks ............ ~128.85
Aeportor: Brian Reed. Ext 1•
ofticials in the United States internal political l't"tability 'The fact
that the against torture, either by
Dally ...................50'
A!lpOI'Ier: Belh Sergent Ext 13
gove1,11ment solicited infor- or any other public emer- Defendant acted pursuant ordering those techniques
Se,llor Citizen rates
26 weeks .....• : •.....'59.61
mation on how to use ~ency, may be invoked as a . to order of his Government without proper legal author52 weeks ............'116.90
aggressive
techniques, rede- JUstification of torture. ... or of a superior shall not ity or by knowingly crafting
· Advertising
&amp;lbscribel's shoukt remit in adWooe
fined the law to create the · An order from a superior free him from responsibili- fictions to justify, they
()utalde s.aa.a: D8ve Harris, Ext. 15 &lt;hd t&lt;&gt; The Ooiy Sentinel. No sub·
appearance
of their memos officer or a public authority . ty, but may be considered should be criminally prose"
sdtiption
by
mail
permitted
in
areas
OUtakle S....: Brenda DltVIS, E•t 16
·
where
home
carrier
service
is
avaUable.
and
authorized may not be invoked as a jus- in mitigation of punish- cuted."
legality,
cr.aJCirc.: Judy aarl&lt;. Ext. 1o
their use against detainees." tiflcation of torture.''
ment if the Tribunal deter" · To be continued.
Mall Subscription
There was never a lawful
We have also signed the mines thai justice so
(Nar Hell/off is a nationGeneral Manager
Inside Meigs County
basis for torture.
Genova
Conventions. requires." But there WAS a ally renowned authority on
12
35 26
Charlene Hoeflicll. Ext 12
-'
·
This. therefore. is the whose Article 146 mandate~ much-praised tribunal at the First Amendment and
26 Weeks
Weeks ............
...... ...
.~70.70
52 Weeks . . . . . .
. .. ' 140.11 'I
first of an in termi ttent that each contracting. party Nuremberg. and that the Bill of Rights. He is a
E-mail :
I
,erie'
on what lhe&gt;e war "shall be unJer the nhl iga- defense didn't work there. member of the Reporters
mdsnews Omydailysehtlnel.com
Oulalde Meigs County
' crime; were. and under tion to search for persons
With regard to the autho- Committee for Freedom oj
12 Weeks · · · · · · · · · · · · -'56 ·55
which
laws.
In
citing
violqalleged
to
have
committed,
rizi
ng Justice Department the Press, a11d the Cato
Web:
26 Weeks ............ ' 113.60
.
f
.
.
I
h
d d t b
lions
o
mternat1ona
or
to
ave
or
ere
o
e
who creatively Institute, where · Ire is a
lawyers
52
Weeks
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
:.
_
.'227
21
www.mydailvsenttnel.com
treaties we have signed and · committed, grave !&gt;reaches invented ways to leap over senior fellow).

TODAY IN HISTORY

·US. still a nation of laws, not men?·

The Daily Sentinel

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Tu~~Mays,2oo9

Local Briefs
.

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www.mydallysentinel.com
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OPWC meeting

MARIETTA - District IS Ohio Public Works
Commission will meet at 10 a.m. on May 20 at the Holiday
Inn, Marlena, to appoint township representatives and their
alternates to serve on the District 18 Public Works
Integrating Committee. They will serve three-year terms.
One township trustee from each township board has a
vote. Township trustees who wish to be represented in the
SCIP/Issue 2 process should attend and vote. Questions
should be directed to Michelle Hyer, 374-9436. ·

Swarz I Swartz reunion planned
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A Schwarz/Schwartz family reunion for the descendants of George Heinrich
Schwarz and Johanna Maria Friederika Hartlieb Schwarz
of .Meura. Schwartzburg, Rudolstaddt, Germany will be
h~ldfrom 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Saturday, J~ly 18_at the West
Vltgmm State Farm Museum. The reumon will be hosted
by Darlene Schwarz Haer and Sharon Schwart Pafford,
descendants of Louis "Luey"· Schwarz. Check the website
home.jetbroadband .com/-dpafford for reunion information, forms and activities. Also contact Haer at dhaer@suddenlink.net or 304-675-6002 or Pafford at s_pafford@jetbroadband.com or 540-721-2830.

Family life dinner set
POMEROY - A family life dinner will be held at the
Woodman Hall on State Route 833, Pomeroy, at 6:30 p.m.
on Saturday, May 9. The camp will provide ham, chicken,
rolls and beverages. Those attending are asked to take a covered dish to share. There will~ a drawing for a door prize:)

For the Record
Payment approved
POMEROY - Meeting last week, Meigs County
· Commissioners approved payment of bills in the amount of
$114,059.04, and accepted a bid for bituminous materials
for May, from Asphalt Materials, Inc., Marietta.
.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions for dissolution were filed 'in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Bobbie Parker,
Murray .City, and James Parker, Pomeroy; Sandra Gail
McCloud, Pomeroy, and Darrick Eugene McCloud,
Middleport; Brenda J. Wetzel, Parkersb~rg, W.Va., and
David F. Wetzel, Reedsville; Christine Ann Gilkey, Shade,
and Tony Eldon Gilkey, Shade; and William Racer,
Pomeroy, and l\1isti R~cer, Marion.
.
·
· Dissolutions were granted to Jenny S. Nutter and James
T. Nutter, Joy Ann Barron and Lance William Barron. and
Pamela Tatterson and Stephen R.Tauerson.

.

Sentenced

POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
County Cominon Pleas Court:
· . ·. . ·
· .
·
• Keith J. Nakao, two years on charges of breakmg and
entering and forgery.
· ·.
· • Rochelle Gloeckner, one year, with credit for eight days
served, on a charge of receiving stolen property. .. :
' • Alison Woods, one year, suspended, for posseSSion of
cocaine. Standard and special tenns of community controJ...

Arraigned
POMEROY - Kenneth Robie was arraigned in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on two counts of non-support
of dependents. Bond was set at .$1 ,000 personal recognizance, $;1 ,000 surety, and $10,000 appearance bond.
Christopher T~noglia was appointed counseL Trial was set
for July 14.
·

Foreclosures

Two hurt in overnight Ohio plant explosion.
WEST · CARROLLTON
(AP) - An explosion early
Monday at a . solvent-recycling plant that caused a massive frre visible for miles and
injured two workers was
accidental, investigators said . .
The Division, of State Fire
Marshal said the explosion
at V~olia .Environmental
Services in this Dayton suburb was caused when a leak
of ignitable liquid came in
contact with gas-fired boilers.
"The whole sky was noth·
ing but flames," nearby resident Bryan Huff told
WHIO-TV. .

.

POMEROY - Foreclosure actions were filed in Meigs
.
County Common Pleas Court by Ohio Valley Bank,·
Gallipolis, against John P. Roderus, Gallipolis, and others;
Green Tree Servicing, Rapid City, SD., against Belinda L.
According to · the proseDalton, Rutland, and others; and Home National Bank, cutor, DNA · testing · Racine, against Gerald M. Watson; Ree?sville, and others. unlike other types of laboratory testlng - taliles
days, and it is not feasable
for a defense expert to be
present. Eachus said having
one tesl completed for both
state and defense denies the
: DAYTON (AP) - Tlie uniform of.a Mexican pilot who defendant a right to cross
flew alongside U.S. forces in World War II has b~en donat- examine the; expert and preed to the National Museum of the U.S. Arr Force m Dayton. vents the · defense team ·
· The pilot served with the 20lst Mexican Fighter Squadron, from protecting their
also known as the Aztec Ea~les, a un!t that P!Uvided tactical client's nghts.
support to !]te U.S. Army A1r Forces 58th Fl.ghter q~oup 111
Crow indicated he would
the Pacific. The squadron was the only m1htary unit from not rule. against a . defense
Mexico ever to serve outside the country's borders.
expert being present for test· M\lseum spokeswoman Sarah Parke . says the M~xican
J?ilot's uniform; hat and boots will be added later thts year
to an exhibit that spotlights artifacts from World War ll's
Allied and Axis powers.

Mexican uniform given
to US Air Force museum

Relay £rom P~eAt
all of last year's Relay the local Meigs County
Corporate Donors continued community," Beha said.
. their commitment to the
The 2009 Meigs County
2009 Relay for Life of Relay for Life Corporate
Meigs County and that ~our Donor
List
includes:
businesses became first time Platinum, Powell's Food
corpcirate donors this year.
Fair; Gold, AEP Gavin, AEP
Donations raised through Mountaineer, AEP Sporn,
Relay for Life support the DV Weber Construction,
American Cancer Society's . FarmersBank,HolzerCenter
efforts to fund groundbreak-· for Cancer Care, Holzer
. ing cancer research, advo- Clinic, Holzer. Medical
cate for all people to have Center, Karr Contracting,
access to quafity cancer O'Bieness Health Systems,
care, and offer free _jlro- PDK Construction: Silver,
grains and se.yices to Beha Insurance Agency,improve the quahty of hfe Downing Childs Insurance,
f6r people facing cancer and Family Healthcare, Inc.,
Home National Bank, Meigs
their families.
"Despite the economic · Industries, Inc., Middleportchallenges of today, throu,gh Pomeroy Rotary, Swisher &amp;
their donations, these Me1gs Lohse; others, Meigs County
County businesses and ' Agricultural Society, Shade
agencies contiime to be River
Coon
Hunters
committed to the Relay for Association, WYVK K92
Life of Meigs County and to FM . ·
·

. incorporating MACT regulations as opposed to guidelines used for CAMR.
Windle said AMP-Ohio voluntarily took emission limi·tations they believed to be
equivalent to MACT just in
case the CAMR was vacated, so by virtue of volunteering for those restrictions, proposed emissions
wound up basically being at
the same level as current
MACT guidelines.
. Windle said the meeting is
meant to .be informational as
far as how the new. rules
work and provide an oppnrtunity for public comment
on the analysis which· was
perfonned as well as a look
at different emission control
options. Windle said the
meeting also gives the public an opportunity to speak
on what they feel the answer
should be in this situation.
The meeting/hearing is
scheduled for 6:30 p.m.,

Agency, said officials let the
· The blast shook homes so · Chief Jack Keister.
"He came walking out of · fire bum and did not put
hard in the community
south of Dayton that one the wo()(js about three hours water on it to prevent the
neighbor said framed pic- · into the fire," Keister said.
spread of chemicals into a .
One of the two victims was nearby stream.
tures fell off his wall.
"I saw a black plume of hospitalized, while the other .. "The monitoring they're
doittg (of air and water)
smoke rising north of the :-vas·treated and rele;!Sed.
no111 doesn't cause·any
right
Six.
employees
at
the
site
.
city," said Tim Gaffney,
another resident. "I didn't were transferring solvents concern;" he said.
Veolia
Environmental
know there was· an industri- from one tank to another
al plant in this area, and l when they noticed a vapor Service is the world's
was.afraid abig jet had gone leak, which was bel(jlved' to largest waste-servic~ com- .
down~·
have · resulted in the explo- pany, with 92,500 employOne plant worker had first- sion ·near storage, tanks ees in 42 countries, acc.ord~
and secoitd-degree bUI,llS and · behind a laboratQry build- . i':lg to the companY.'s W~h
site. Its other sites m Oh1o
the other, who suffered a leg ·ing,,K.eister said. ·. . ·
Jeff Jordan, director of the include Huber Heights, ·
iJijury, was initially thought
to . be dead, said West Montgomery
County Miamitown, Medina an.;i
Carrollton Fire Department .Emergency _Management North Jackson.
'

Testing trom Page At
ing, but said he. would not
grant payment of the
expert's fees if the testing
takes days as the prosecutor
indicated yesterday. The
prosecutor and defense team
will choose a lab for the testing, and 8ecure a copy of the
lab's protocol for testing
DNA evidence, and Crow
will rule on the matter at a
hewjng on May 13.
Crow approved payment
of $1 ,000 each to ·a defense
psycholo~ist and a mitigation specmlist requested by
the defense. Prosecutor

Williams said a psychological evaluation is unwarranted, because the defendant
has not filed a not guilty by
reason ·of insanity or
claimed incompetency, but
Eachus said the testmg is
necessary because
of
Williams' medical history
of psychiatric treatment.
· He 'said information
included in the state's dis-.
covery response makes the
need for psychological evaluation "obvious:· because it
indicates Williams has
undergone multiple treat-

ments for l'sychological and
physical disorders..
·
Williams was escorted ·
into the courtroom yesterday by Sheriff Robert
Beegle, Pomeroy Police
Chief Mark Proffitt, two
sheriff's de~uties, two
Pomeroy pollee officers,'
three Ohio State Highway
Patrol troopers and the cou-rt
bailiff. He is charged with
the robbery and murder of
Doris Jackson, Tuppers
Plains, in late February.
His trial has been set for
July J.

•

AMP from Page At
June 2 at the Southern · EPA Southeast Ohio District
Elementary School cafetori- Office at the above address
um. A presiding officer will during normal business
. be present and may limit hours. Call 740-385-8501
oral testimony to ensure that for more information.
For more information on
all parties are heard.' All
interested persons are .enti- the proJiosed modification
tled to attend or be repre- go to Ohio EPA's website at
sented and give written or http://www.epa .state .oh .us/
oral comments on the draft pic/amp-ohio.html.
AMP-Ohio's final air per. permit at the hearing.
mit
is currently being
Written comments must be
received by the Ohio EPA at appealed before the Ohio
Review
the close of business on Environmental
Appeals
Commission
with a
June 5. Comments received·
after this date will not be hearing scheduled in August
considered to be part of the A prehearing conference on
official · record. Written the appeal of AMP-Ohip's
comments may be submit- final air permit-to-install
ted at the hearing or sent to: issued by the Ohio EPA is
Dean
Ponchak, Ohio scheduled for 10 a.m., July
Environmental Protection 27 while the de novo hearing
Agency, Southeast Ohio is scheduled for 10 a.m.,
District Office, 2195 Front Aug.. 3 - Aug. 21 in
Columbus. The air permit is
Street, Logan, 43138.
Further information con- being appealed by Natural
cerning this application may Resources Defense Council,
Environmental
be secured for inspection Ohio
from Ponchak of the Ohio Council, Sierra Club and

National Parks Conservation.
A prehearing conference
has been set for 10 a.m.,
Jan. 20, 2010 in regards to
!he appeal before ERAC of
AMP.-Ohio's ·
National
Discharge
Pollutant
Elimination System penrut.
The appeal was filed by the
NRDC, OEC and Sierra
Club. The actual de novo
hearing on the appeal is
scheduled for .10 a.m., Jan.
25-Jim. · 29, 2010 in
Columbus.

llldin~oa· ~nie£

Punera( ~---

Adarn. M&lt;:D&amp;nlel
4t. J..-ne• A'*non
DIRECTOR$

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4
Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Obama
should
halt
Democrats'
(torture'ftenzy
The Daily Sentinel

If President Barack
and their media supporters requests will come - from
111 Covrt Street · Pomeroy, Ohio ·
a&gt;;ert that documents with- the public, from Congress,
Obama really meant what
(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157
held by the Obama adminis- from the courts - and more
he told CIA officers on
tration would reveal signifi· information is sore to be
April 16 - "this is a time
www.mydallysentlnel.com
for retlection. not retribucant other intelligence released."
The administration has
gains.
tion" - then he needs to
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Morton
snuff out the witch-hunt
Even Obam&lt;~ 's national announced that it plans to
Kondracke intelligence director, Dennis release interrogation phoatmosphere that his subseDan Goodrich
quent actions have created
Blair. acknowledged in an tos, which will further
Publisher
internal memo - but then inflame the issue.·
over the issue 9.f ''torture."
So what should Obama
redacted for public . con"Nothing will be gained
Charlene Hoeflich
sumption - that "high- do to 'limit the damage,
by spending our time and
energy
laying
blame
for
the
value information" came assuming he really wants
Obama
said.
"[
do
worry
General Ma,nager-News Editor
to? He can't say a lot past," he added in his letter about this getting so politi- from the interrogation$.
Moreover,
Bush
supportlike ruling out prosecutions
to CIA employees.
cized that we cannot funcWhen he wrote tl\e letter, tion effectively. and it ham- eis say top Congh·ssional - because he would be
Obama already had decided pers our ability to carry our leaders - mcluding Pelosi. accused of politically
Congress shall make no law respecting an
on the first step that has led fritical national-security a former ranking member of influencing the Justice
. .establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
to an orgy of demands for pperations." .
the House Intelligence Department.
But he can say, whenever
retribution
against
former
Committee
- were fully
He
ought
to
worry.
:free exercise thereof; pr abridging the freedom
asked,
"I've discontinue4
officials of the Bush 'admin- Thanks to him, the ques- briefed on the interrogation
' of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
IStration - .the release of tions of whether "enhanced . techniques and did not harsh interrogations. My
.: people peaceably to assemble, and .. to petition . top-secret
administration is conductJustice interrogation'; really conSti- object'to them .
ing a review of interroga.
memos
justifytutes
"torture,"
whether
it
Department
Conceivably,
a
truly
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
mg use of "enhanced inter- was or wasn't effective in · bipartisan 9/11-style com- tion procedures. Legal
rogalion· techniques" on stopping tetrorist attacks mission headed by the likes action is in the hands of the
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution selec •cJ high-level · terror- and who ·knew about the ·of former ~ecretary of State Justice Department.
"I'm opposed to public
ISIS.
policy all are now intensely James· Baker and former
Rep. Lee Hamilton , D-lnd., hearings and a .vindictive
Obama stipulated. that politicized. ·
CIA personnel who fol·
MoveOn.org and others could conduct an investiga, inquiry that will jeopardize
on.
the left are demanding , tion and deliv~r a credible the effectiveness of the
Today is Tuesday, May 5, the !25th day of 2009. There lowed Justice's legal advice
:are 240 days left in the year,
would not be prosecuted. appointment of a special report on the extent of harsh intelligence commpnity.
And on Apri I 19, White prosecutr to go after Bush interrogations. their intelli- The Senate Intelligence
House Chief of Staff Rahm administ at ion officials.
: Today's Highlight in History:
gence product , the effec- Committee · is the proper
. On May 5, 1961 , astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. became Emanuel stated on . tete viSenat
Judiciary tiveness of tamer question- place for an inquiry .:• ·
America's tirst space traveler as he made a 15-minute subor- sion what should have been Chairman Patrick Leahy, D- ing techniques and the
Actually, his internal
bital flight in a capsule launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. administration
policy: Vt., and Speaker NanL"y Congressional clearances review just might conclude
On this date:
·
,;those who devised policy Pelosi. D-Calif., want a involvt!d.
·
- in secret - that some
In 1818, political philosopher Karl Marx was born in .. should not be prosecuted, bipartisan "truth commisThe problem is that a high-value terrorists should
Prussia.
·
·
.
either."
sion" appointed, although "truth commission" created be subjected to harsh quesIn 1821.• Napoleon Bonaparte, 51, died in exile on the
But two days later, they make it clear that they by this Congress is likely to' tioning . in rare circumisland of St. Helena.
Obama opened the door .to already know the "truth": hold public · hearings in stances.
In 1862, Mexican forces· loyal to Benito Juarez defeated prosecution of "those who that "torture··. was commit- which CIA officers · are
And, wit~ luck, the
French troops sent by Napoleon Ill in the Battle of Puebla. formulated those legal deci- ted, was not effective and called as witnesses and Justice Department · will
ln 1891, Carnegie Hall (then named "Music Hal)") had sions," saying the matter violated the law - though. required to hire lawrers to conclude that prosecutions
its official' opening night in New York Ci!Y·
was in the hands of which law is not entirely counsel them even 1f they · are not called for - certainIn 1904, Cy Young pitched the American League's first Attorney General Eric clear.
are granted immunity.
ly not of lawyers who gave
perfect game as the Boston Americans defeated the Holder.
In the meantime. there's
It likely would tum into a their best opinions or of
Philadelphia Athletics 3-Q.
Actually, he opened a intense pushback from "witch hunt" commission high-ranking Bush officials
In 1925 , schoolteacher John T. Scopes wus charged in tloodgate of recrimination. Republicans. former VIce that does as much damage detenilined that a 9/11-style
Tennessee with violating a state law that prohibited teach- Now. one danger is that the President Dick Cheney in to U.S. intelligence as the attack should never occur
ing the theory of evolution . (Scopes was found guilty. but dispute will 1\Jrther intlame .the ·tead, ctmrging that the Senate investigation headed again.
,
his conviction was later set aside.)
·
partisart passions that Obama
administration · by former Sen. Frank
And
the
Senate
In 1942, during World War II, Japauese forces landed on Obama has utterly failed to failed to release memos Church, D-Idaho. did in the Intelligence C:::ommittee is
the Philippine island of Corregidor.
· .
dampe1i in his first 100 demonstrating that water- 1970s.
the right place for a closed: In 1955, WestGemmny became a fully sovereign state. The days. even though doing so boarding, sleep deprivation , Already; according to for- door inquiry leading to a
baseball musical "Damn Yankees" opened on Broadway.
was one of the chief prom is- · slapping and uncomfortable mer CIA director Mike sober public report months
In 1981, Irish Republican Anny liunger-striker Bobby 1:s of his campaign.
confinement produced intel- Hayden , "offrcers are say- from now - in the meanSands died at the Maze Prison in Northern Ireland in his
But the greater danger ·is ligence that saved American ing. 'the things . l'm doing time, cooling the fevered
66th day without food.
that investigations, public lives.
now - will this (investiga, atmosphere.
In 2000. the tightest alignment in 38 years of Mercury, hearings, . grand jury proThe memos themselves tiori) happen to me in five
Obama said that "keepVenus, Mars. Jupiter, Saturn, the ·sun and the· moon -as ce.edings and potential pros- assert . that the waterboard- . years because of what I'm in~ AmeriCa safe" is his top
seen from Earth -.took place.
ecutions will damage the ing of 9/11 mastermiml doing now?~. "
pnority, the one concern.
Ten years ago: President Bill Clinton began a morale- morale and diminish the Khalid Sheikh Mohammed
In his own April 16 letter that keeps him awake at
boosting trip to Europe that included n·visit to Ram stein Air · effectiveness of the intelli- led to the capture of the to his employees, CIA night. America is not made
Base in Germany, where he met the 'three American sol- · geilce community that · ringleader of a plot to tly an . director Leon ·Panetta ·- ' safer by partisan witchdiers just released by Yugoslavia. The first Kosovo Obama acknowledges is airplane into the Los who opposed Obama's hunts.
refugees brought to the United States, 453 of them, arrived esse·ntial
to
keeping Angeles Library Tower, the release of the Justice
(Morton Kondracke is
at Fort Dix in New Jersey.
America safe. .
. talle~t building on the West memos - warned that "tl:lis executive editor of RoU
Five years ago: Seeking to calm international outrage,
Even as he ·allowed for · Coast.
·
is not the end of the road on Call, the newspaper oj
President Georg&lt;: W, Bush acknowledged mistakes but possible
prosecutions.
But former Bush aides these
matters :
More Capitol Hill).
stopped short of an apology as he condemned the abuse and .:_~_:.--------~----------------_.:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __
deaths of Iraqi prisoners at the hands of U.S. soldiers during appearances on two Arabic-language TV networks.
Picasso's 1905 painting "Boy with a Pipe" sold for $104
million at Sotheby's in New York , breaking the record at
I hat time for an auctioned painting.
President Barack Obama,
(of
the
Geneva these .Jaws and treaties. proOne year ago: Three men were arrested and beaten by having released t~e official
and shall fessor Jordan Paust - in his
Conventions)
Philadelphia police officers·after a vehicle chase in.a scene Bush l!dministration policy
pring such persons, regard- essential book Beyond the .
videotaped by a TV news helicopter. (No charge~ have directiv~s on "enhanced
less of their nationality, Law (Cambridge University
been filed against the officers; however, the three men have interrogations"
(known
before its owri cou11s ."
Press) - documents ·that
been ordered to stand trial on attempted murder charges for worldwide as torture}.
You . hear that. Mr. "not.since the Nazi era have
Nat
a triple shooting earlier that night.) irvine Robbins, co- briefly adm.itted they
President?
so many lawyers been so
founder of the Baskin-Robbins ice cream ·chain , died in showed "us losing our
Hentoff
Moreover, Article 3 of · clearly involved -in internaRancho Mirage, Calif.. at age 90.
moral bearings" (April 21 ).
the
1949
Geneva tional crimes concerning the
Today's Birthdays: Actress Pat Carroll is 82. AFL-C!O But he will not prosecute
Conventions, which has treatment and interrogatim\
president John J. Sweeney is 75. Saxophonist Ace Cannon CIA implementers of those
been made part of our law, of persons detained during
is 75. Country singer-musician Roni Stoneman is 71. Actor policies. Nor will he call for
requires that any person war ...
Michael Murphy is 71 .
an investigation of the high- ratified, I remind the presi- whether a prisoner of .war,
"(These were lawyers)
Thought for Today: "When in doubt, duck."- Malcolm level officials and Justice dent that under Article 6 of unprivileged belligerent, directly advising how to
Forbes, American publisher (1919-1990).
Department lawyers who the U.S. c'on,titutiori, "all terrorist or noncombatant, deny protections in the
.
.wthorized those excruciat- treaties made, or which is guaranteed freedom future, (and such) denials
shall be made , under
LETTERS TO THE
mgly detailed techniques . . Authority of the United . from ·"cruel treatment .and · are violations of the laws of
Why? Concerning them,
torture" . and "outrage s war arid (of) war crimes."· .
EDITOR
"There are," he says, "a host States, shall be the supreme upon personal dignity, in
Paust adds: "The full truth ,
law of the land."
· particular, humiliating and about
conspiratorial and
of
very
complicated
issues
To
begin:
The
U.N.
·Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev sho11/d be less
involved
."
degrading
treatment
,"
complicit
involvemen(, and
than 3()() words. A/1/erters are subject to . editing. must be
Mr: President , allow me ConventiQ,Il
Against including denial of process the embrace of what (forsigned, and include address and telephone number. No
Torture an&gt;! Other Cruel, in case of triaL·
mer) Vice President Cheney
Degrading
u11sign~d letters will be published. Letters should be in to uncomplicate - for you Inhuman
guarantees,
Mr.
·.These
has correetly described as
other · i'nterested Treatment or Punishment ·
good taste, addressing issues. /lOt personalities. Letters of and
Americans
the
actual.
President,
apply
"in
a)l
cir'the dark side,' remains
thanks to organizations and i11dividuals will not be accept- specific U.S.Iaws and inter-· is the primary international
cumstances"
and
;'at
any
partly
hidden."
.
ed for publication.
national treaties the CIA has .· .Jaw on torture. Signed by time and in any place ·whatBut, President Obama,
Ronald Reagan in 1988, it
systematically violated dur- was ratiried by the Senate soever."". Maybe when pro- more and more of the truth
through
ing interrogation of terror- 111
· 1994 • 1t states: •·Eac h fessor Barack Obama was will . break
teaching
constitutional
law
because,
as
.YOU
said
o~
ism suspects. But weren't State Party , (sigilatory)
at
the
University
of
April
16,
"the
United
the CIA operators acting shall ensure that all acts of
Reader Services
&lt;usPs 213-9601
with.Jegal approval from the torture. are offenses under Chicago, he did not have States js a nation of laws."
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
very
top . of the chain of its criminal law." We have occasion to teach a course Yet you keep saying you
oUr main concern in all stories .is to Published every morning, Monday
comroond?
done that in the U.S. War in international tre~tties that prefer to "look forward and
1hrough Friday, 111. Court Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
On April 22',. the Senate Crimes Act ( 1996) and the have become embedded in no~ engag_e in retrib~tion."
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a.stor;, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
~Jemg believable agalit as a
Armed
Services Torture Victims Protection U.S. law.
992·2156.
Mtmbclr: The Associated Press and
Committee, after a very Act (1991).
And ·former constitution- nation of Jaws Js "retributhe Ohio Newspaper Association:
The Convention Against al law litigator . Glenn tion,.? .
extended
investigation,
Pottmaater: Send address correcOur matn number Is
As John Conyers, chairreleased
an
answer
to
that
Torture
adds - very sign if- Greenwald (Salon, April
tion s to The Daily Sen!lne4, P.O. Bm:
(740) 992-2156.
use of the Nuremberg icantly for the current 17) reminds us of the man of the House Judiciary
729, Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
Department extensions are:
of
the Committee, promises (The
Defense. ("We were follow- debate here - that "No Charter
Subs~ription Rates
ing order&gt;.'')
exceptional circumstances International Tribunal at · New York Times , April 18):
By carrier or motor route
"The fact is," the report what&gt;oewr. whether a state Nuremberg (Article 8). in "If our leaders are found to
News
4weeks ...• .... • ...•. 11.30
Ecittor: Charlene HoefUch, Ew:t 12
made
clear. "that senior of war or a threat or war, which we were involved . have violated the strict laws
52 weeks ............ ~128.85
Aeportor: Brian Reed. Ext 1•
ofticials in the United States internal political l't"tability 'The fact
that the against torture, either by
Dally ...................50'
A!lpOI'Ier: Belh Sergent Ext 13
gove1,11ment solicited infor- or any other public emer- Defendant acted pursuant ordering those techniques
Se,llor Citizen rates
26 weeks .....• : •.....'59.61
mation on how to use ~ency, may be invoked as a . to order of his Government without proper legal author52 weeks ............'116.90
aggressive
techniques, rede- JUstification of torture. ... or of a superior shall not ity or by knowingly crafting
· Advertising
&amp;lbscribel's shoukt remit in adWooe
fined the law to create the · An order from a superior free him from responsibili- fictions to justify, they
()utalde s.aa.a: D8ve Harris, Ext. 15 &lt;hd t&lt;&gt; The Ooiy Sentinel. No sub·
appearance
of their memos officer or a public authority . ty, but may be considered should be criminally prose"
sdtiption
by
mail
permitted
in
areas
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TODAY IN HISTORY

·US. still a nation of laws, not men?·

The Daily Sentinel

5

••

Tu~~Mays,2oo9

Local Briefs
.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydallysentinel.com
I

I

OPWC meeting

MARIETTA - District IS Ohio Public Works
Commission will meet at 10 a.m. on May 20 at the Holiday
Inn, Marlena, to appoint township representatives and their
alternates to serve on the District 18 Public Works
Integrating Committee. They will serve three-year terms.
One township trustee from each township board has a
vote. Township trustees who wish to be represented in the
SCIP/Issue 2 process should attend and vote. Questions
should be directed to Michelle Hyer, 374-9436. ·

Swarz I Swartz reunion planned
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - A Schwarz/Schwartz family reunion for the descendants of George Heinrich
Schwarz and Johanna Maria Friederika Hartlieb Schwarz
of .Meura. Schwartzburg, Rudolstaddt, Germany will be
h~ldfrom 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Saturday, J~ly 18_at the West
Vltgmm State Farm Museum. The reumon will be hosted
by Darlene Schwarz Haer and Sharon Schwart Pafford,
descendants of Louis "Luey"· Schwarz. Check the website
home.jetbroadband .com/-dpafford for reunion information, forms and activities. Also contact Haer at dhaer@suddenlink.net or 304-675-6002 or Pafford at s_pafford@jetbroadband.com or 540-721-2830.

Family life dinner set
POMEROY - A family life dinner will be held at the
Woodman Hall on State Route 833, Pomeroy, at 6:30 p.m.
on Saturday, May 9. The camp will provide ham, chicken,
rolls and beverages. Those attending are asked to take a covered dish to share. There will~ a drawing for a door prize:)

For the Record
Payment approved
POMEROY - Meeting last week, Meigs County
· Commissioners approved payment of bills in the amount of
$114,059.04, and accepted a bid for bituminous materials
for May, from Asphalt Materials, Inc., Marietta.
.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions for dissolution were filed 'in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Bobbie Parker,
Murray .City, and James Parker, Pomeroy; Sandra Gail
McCloud, Pomeroy, and Darrick Eugene McCloud,
Middleport; Brenda J. Wetzel, Parkersb~rg, W.Va., and
David F. Wetzel, Reedsville; Christine Ann Gilkey, Shade,
and Tony Eldon Gilkey, Shade; and William Racer,
Pomeroy, and l\1isti R~cer, Marion.
.
·
· Dissolutions were granted to Jenny S. Nutter and James
T. Nutter, Joy Ann Barron and Lance William Barron. and
Pamela Tatterson and Stephen R.Tauerson.

.

Sentenced

POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
County Cominon Pleas Court:
· . ·. . ·
· .
·
• Keith J. Nakao, two years on charges of breakmg and
entering and forgery.
· ·.
· • Rochelle Gloeckner, one year, with credit for eight days
served, on a charge of receiving stolen property. .. :
' • Alison Woods, one year, suspended, for posseSSion of
cocaine. Standard and special tenns of community controJ...

Arraigned
POMEROY - Kenneth Robie was arraigned in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on two counts of non-support
of dependents. Bond was set at .$1 ,000 personal recognizance, $;1 ,000 surety, and $10,000 appearance bond.
Christopher T~noglia was appointed counseL Trial was set
for July 14.
·

Foreclosures

Two hurt in overnight Ohio plant explosion.
WEST · CARROLLTON
(AP) - An explosion early
Monday at a . solvent-recycling plant that caused a massive frre visible for miles and
injured two workers was
accidental, investigators said . .
The Division, of State Fire
Marshal said the explosion
at V~olia .Environmental
Services in this Dayton suburb was caused when a leak
of ignitable liquid came in
contact with gas-fired boilers.
"The whole sky was noth·
ing but flames," nearby resident Bryan Huff told
WHIO-TV. .

.

POMEROY - Foreclosure actions were filed in Meigs
.
County Common Pleas Court by Ohio Valley Bank,·
Gallipolis, against John P. Roderus, Gallipolis, and others;
Green Tree Servicing, Rapid City, SD., against Belinda L.
According to · the proseDalton, Rutland, and others; and Home National Bank, cutor, DNA · testing · Racine, against Gerald M. Watson; Ree?sville, and others. unlike other types of laboratory testlng - taliles
days, and it is not feasable
for a defense expert to be
present. Eachus said having
one tesl completed for both
state and defense denies the
: DAYTON (AP) - Tlie uniform of.a Mexican pilot who defendant a right to cross
flew alongside U.S. forces in World War II has b~en donat- examine the; expert and preed to the National Museum of the U.S. Arr Force m Dayton. vents the · defense team ·
· The pilot served with the 20lst Mexican Fighter Squadron, from protecting their
also known as the Aztec Ea~les, a un!t that P!Uvided tactical client's nghts.
support to !]te U.S. Army A1r Forces 58th Fl.ghter q~oup 111
Crow indicated he would
the Pacific. The squadron was the only m1htary unit from not rule. against a . defense
Mexico ever to serve outside the country's borders.
expert being present for test· M\lseum spokeswoman Sarah Parke . says the M~xican
J?ilot's uniform; hat and boots will be added later thts year
to an exhibit that spotlights artifacts from World War ll's
Allied and Axis powers.

Mexican uniform given
to US Air Force museum

Relay £rom P~eAt
all of last year's Relay the local Meigs County
Corporate Donors continued community," Beha said.
. their commitment to the
The 2009 Meigs County
2009 Relay for Life of Relay for Life Corporate
Meigs County and that ~our Donor
List
includes:
businesses became first time Platinum, Powell's Food
corpcirate donors this year.
Fair; Gold, AEP Gavin, AEP
Donations raised through Mountaineer, AEP Sporn,
Relay for Life support the DV Weber Construction,
American Cancer Society's . FarmersBank,HolzerCenter
efforts to fund groundbreak-· for Cancer Care, Holzer
. ing cancer research, advo- Clinic, Holzer. Medical
cate for all people to have Center, Karr Contracting,
access to quafity cancer O'Bieness Health Systems,
care, and offer free _jlro- PDK Construction: Silver,
grains and se.yices to Beha Insurance Agency,improve the quahty of hfe Downing Childs Insurance,
f6r people facing cancer and Family Healthcare, Inc.,
Home National Bank, Meigs
their families.
"Despite the economic · Industries, Inc., Middleportchallenges of today, throu,gh Pomeroy Rotary, Swisher &amp;
their donations, these Me1gs Lohse; others, Meigs County
County businesses and ' Agricultural Society, Shade
agencies contiime to be River
Coon
Hunters
committed to the Relay for Association, WYVK K92
Life of Meigs County and to FM . ·
·

. incorporating MACT regulations as opposed to guidelines used for CAMR.
Windle said AMP-Ohio voluntarily took emission limi·tations they believed to be
equivalent to MACT just in
case the CAMR was vacated, so by virtue of volunteering for those restrictions, proposed emissions
wound up basically being at
the same level as current
MACT guidelines.
. Windle said the meeting is
meant to .be informational as
far as how the new. rules
work and provide an oppnrtunity for public comment
on the analysis which· was
perfonned as well as a look
at different emission control
options. Windle said the
meeting also gives the public an opportunity to speak
on what they feel the answer
should be in this situation.
The meeting/hearing is
scheduled for 6:30 p.m.,

Agency, said officials let the
· The blast shook homes so · Chief Jack Keister.
"He came walking out of · fire bum and did not put
hard in the community
south of Dayton that one the wo()(js about three hours water on it to prevent the
neighbor said framed pic- · into the fire," Keister said.
spread of chemicals into a .
One of the two victims was nearby stream.
tures fell off his wall.
"I saw a black plume of hospitalized, while the other .. "The monitoring they're
doittg (of air and water)
smoke rising north of the :-vas·treated and rele;!Sed.
no111 doesn't cause·any
right
Six.
employees
at
the
site
.
city," said Tim Gaffney,
another resident. "I didn't were transferring solvents concern;" he said.
Veolia
Environmental
know there was· an industri- from one tank to another
al plant in this area, and l when they noticed a vapor Service is the world's
was.afraid abig jet had gone leak, which was bel(jlved' to largest waste-servic~ com- .
down~·
have · resulted in the explo- pany, with 92,500 employOne plant worker had first- sion ·near storage, tanks ees in 42 countries, acc.ord~
and secoitd-degree bUI,llS and · behind a laboratQry build- . i':lg to the companY.'s W~h
site. Its other sites m Oh1o
the other, who suffered a leg ·ing,,K.eister said. ·. . ·
Jeff Jordan, director of the include Huber Heights, ·
iJijury, was initially thought
to . be dead, said West Montgomery
County Miamitown, Medina an.;i
Carrollton Fire Department .Emergency _Management North Jackson.
'

Testing trom Page At
ing, but said he. would not
grant payment of the
expert's fees if the testing
takes days as the prosecutor
indicated yesterday. The
prosecutor and defense team
will choose a lab for the testing, and 8ecure a copy of the
lab's protocol for testing
DNA evidence, and Crow
will rule on the matter at a
hewjng on May 13.
Crow approved payment
of $1 ,000 each to ·a defense
psycholo~ist and a mitigation specmlist requested by
the defense. Prosecutor

Williams said a psychological evaluation is unwarranted, because the defendant
has not filed a not guilty by
reason ·of insanity or
claimed incompetency, but
Eachus said the testmg is
necessary because
of
Williams' medical history
of psychiatric treatment.
· He 'said information
included in the state's dis-.
covery response makes the
need for psychological evaluation "obvious:· because it
indicates Williams has
undergone multiple treat-

ments for l'sychological and
physical disorders..
·
Williams was escorted ·
into the courtroom yesterday by Sheriff Robert
Beegle, Pomeroy Police
Chief Mark Proffitt, two
sheriff's de~uties, two
Pomeroy pollee officers,'
three Ohio State Highway
Patrol troopers and the cou-rt
bailiff. He is charged with
the robbery and murder of
Doris Jackson, Tuppers
Plains, in late February.
His trial has been set for
July J.

•

AMP from Page At
June 2 at the Southern · EPA Southeast Ohio District
Elementary School cafetori- Office at the above address
um. A presiding officer will during normal business
. be present and may limit hours. Call 740-385-8501
oral testimony to ensure that for more information.
For more information on
all parties are heard.' All
interested persons are .enti- the proJiosed modification
tled to attend or be repre- go to Ohio EPA's website at
sented and give written or http://www.epa .state .oh .us/
oral comments on the draft pic/amp-ohio.html.
AMP-Ohio's final air per. permit at the hearing.
mit
is currently being
Written comments must be
received by the Ohio EPA at appealed before the Ohio
Review
the close of business on Environmental
Appeals
Commission
with a
June 5. Comments received·
after this date will not be hearing scheduled in August
considered to be part of the A prehearing conference on
official · record. Written the appeal of AMP-Ohip's
comments may be submit- final air permit-to-install
ted at the hearing or sent to: issued by the Ohio EPA is
Dean
Ponchak, Ohio scheduled for 10 a.m., July
Environmental Protection 27 while the de novo hearing
Agency, Southeast Ohio is scheduled for 10 a.m.,
District Office, 2195 Front Aug.. 3 - Aug. 21 in
Columbus. The air permit is
Street, Logan, 43138.
Further information con- being appealed by Natural
cerning this application may Resources Defense Council,
Environmental
be secured for inspection Ohio
from Ponchak of the Ohio Council, Sierra Club and

National Parks Conservation.
A prehearing conference
has been set for 10 a.m.,
Jan. 20, 2010 in regards to
!he appeal before ERAC of
AMP.-Ohio's ·
National
Discharge
Pollutant
Elimination System penrut.
The appeal was filed by the
NRDC, OEC and Sierra
Club. The actual de novo
hearing on the appeal is
scheduled for .10 a.m., Jan.
25-Jim. · 29, 2010 in
Columbus.

llldin~oa· ~nie£

Punera( ~---

Adarn. M&lt;:D&amp;nlel
4t. J..-ne• A'*non
DIRECTOR$

�Page A~

LOCAL.• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Ohio crash survivor graduates, Page Bl .

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Stewart-Haas' surprise, Page B6

Bowling alley ~eives ·
$75K for Mega Millions sale

NATIONAL ·HONOR
SOCIEI'Y
INDUCI'f.FS
·
·

announcement of any of the
CHILLICOTHE (AP) An Ohio bowli.ng alley has jackpot winners coming
received $75,000 for selling forward.
Shawnee Lanes owner
a Mega Millions lottery
Walter Highland received
ticket worth $75 million.
Tile ticket sold at Shawnee his check from the Ohio
Lanes in Chillicothe was one Lottery over the weekend.
flis · son, Pat Highland,
of three that had all the win,
ning numbers in Friday's ·says the bowling alley in
$225 million drawing. The southern Ohio is in its 50th
grand prize will be shared anniversary year and will use
with holders of matching some of its prize money for
tickets sold in California and annual renovations done
Virginia.
each summer. He wasn't sure
There has been no how the rest would be spent.

Local Weather

Charle"" Hoefllchlphoto

Local Stocks

'

Education plan subject of teachers' meeting
POMEROY
Dr.
Frances Gib,er; retired
teacher and college professor spoke about the new
education plan for Ohio at
the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Retireu
Teachers.
- The group met at Trinity ·
Church. Ladies of the
church served the luncheon ·
to 13 m\:mbers and two
guests.
.
Gibser told of the components and spoke about
each of them. Component'
of Gov. Strickland's proposed education 'plan are a

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Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.34
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 31.43
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

2 1st-century
learning Flag. Maxine Whitehead led of
the
Chester/Shade
environment , .expanded devotions, "Spri ng," and a Historical
Association,
learning opportunity, high- reading by Helen Keller, telling of the restoration of
quality educators, measur- " Rejoice with Spring. She the Chester Academy,. He
ing Ohio's students against closed with a prayer, "We asked if members might
..
the world. school district Thank Thee."
know where to find items
.i•ccountability and effecDave Warner entertained for the school room.
tive funding for a 21st- the group with two songs.
Debbie Roush · donated
century system of educa.Secretary's minutes were door prizes which went to
read. Cards were signed for Barbara Beegle , Dorothy
tion.
Downie
and Chaney, Connie Enslen,
She said the Ohio House Rachael
·
is introducing a substitute Martha Vennari.
. Gay · Perrin , . Charlene
bill to reYamp ·the ~roposed
A pamphlet endorsing Rutherford and Whitehead.
bill, so we all wa1t to see Bob Stein for · the STRS
The next meeting will be
how it will tum out.
Board was given each mem- May 21 at the Riverside
Gay Perrin, president, ber.
Golf Course Clubhouse.
opened the mee1ing with the . The president read a letter
Pledge to the American from J1m Stewart, president
&gt;. •

'

'''•

'

L~-

'

'•

'·

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General Electric (NYSE) ...,13.10 · p.m. ET ·ctoalng quot" of Iran•
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'

We remember

those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.· .

On Sunday, May 24, w~ will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the samp~ below:

July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

.

May God's angels
guide you and

Submtued

Middleport White Sox took third place. in tlie Pomeroy Little League tournament:
Darst, Ray Johnson, Christian Spaun,· James Morrison, Gino· Casci, Justin .Coe,
Ferguson, Tyson Herman, Blake Johnson:' Ray Johnson, Rich Coe, Coach Ron Casci,
Shawn Coleman, Matt Foster, and Ryan Foster.

protect you

throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews arul

If you wish, select one of the following FREE vel'8eS ~low lo
accompany your tribute.
t. We hold you in our lhoughiS and memories forever.
2. May God cmdle you in His anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never forgo11en. May God hold you in lhe palm of
His hand
4. Thank you for lhe wondelful days we shared 1oge1her. My praye"
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were swrel.llong Ill set you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery s_till inspire us all. and lhe memory of your
smilcfills us wilh joy and laughter.
·
l. Though oul of sigh!, you'll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bullhe limes we shared wi,ll ~ways remain.
9. May God's angels guide you and pro1ec1 you lhroughoullime.
10. You were alight in our life that bums foreve1 in our bearts.
II. May God's gracesshine over you for all time.
·
·12. You are in our !hough~ and P"Y"" from morning lo nigh! and from
year to year.

lamily

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest ~lemories

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769 ..
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 12 Noon

r---------------------------···-·-··-·-·-··-·-·
.. 1
I •
.
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Sunday, May 24th.

Southern FFA news
The Southern FFA recently competed at the Multi·
county Environthon held at Lake Hope. The envirothon consisted of five parts. There is forestry,
soils, aquatics, wildlife, and current environmental
issues. The team consisted of (pictured above)
Eric Perry, Ryan Lain Beegle, Rusty Carnahan,
and Ryan Lee Beegle. Also, Olivia Searls (pic- ·
lured at left) competed at the district 1 0 public
speaking contest. Olivia received a silver rating en
reciting the FFA Creed.
Submitted photos

I

\

~ameofdeceased

-----------------------!

IN umber of selected v e r s e - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
jD~te o~ binh

}rom _

Thesday, May 5, 2009

Local teams looking at intriguing tournament draws
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

three-time reigning SEOAL
South Division champion
Gallia Academy brought
home the highest seeding - earning a number two ih the
Division II draw. GAHS will
host No. 7 Jackson (7c 10) in
a sectional semifinal at
Memorial
Field
on
Wednesday, May 13, at 5
p.m.
Meigs - which won the
TVC Ohio ·title this spring
- also earned a sectional
semifinal home game in
Division II. as the Lady
Marauders (ll-4) will host
No. 6 Athens (7-8) on
Wednesday, May 13, at .5
p.m.
.
.
The winners of the Gallia

crowned

Eastern
takes two
from Raiders

JACKSON - There will
not be two Division IV baseball teams from Meigs
Count:y in the regional tournament tjlis year, and many
other intriguing postseason
possibilities were deter- ·
mined Sunday afternoon
during the 2009 southeast
district .baseball and softball
tournament - seeding meetIRVING, Texas (AP) Gove~ment investigators ings held at Jackson High
began sorting through the School.
Dallas Cowboys' flattened
. The respective baseball
practice facility Mond;~y, and softball teams from
tryiflg to figure out why Gallia Academy, Meigs_,
fierce winds sent the tent. · River Valley, Eastern, South
like structure crashing down Gallia and Southern now
· 4uring a rookie workout know when and where their
session.
.
tournaments will . begin, as
· Twelve people were hurt,
including Cowboys special
teams
coac.h
Joe
DeCamillis, who was set to
have surgery on his fracAKRON (AP) - On one
tured cerv1cal vertebrae
Monday.Themostseriously of the biggest days of his
injured was Rich Behm, the life, LeBron James took the
team's 33-year-old scouting long way home.
·
assistant who was pernnaOnce inside his home· ,
nently paralyzed from the town's city ' limits, James
waist down after his spine pulled his high-powered
was severed. Greg Gaither, Ferrari off I. 77 and drove
~5. had surgery on his frac- the back roads to St.
tured right leg and was Vincent-St. Mary High
expected to get out of the School, his alma mater.
hospital this week.
Turning on Maple Street,
Inspectors were at the col- he went past his first house
lapse site Monday, said on Hickory. Then, it was
Elizabeth Todd, a spokes- 'past the one on Silver
woman . fo{ · the U.S. Street, whe{e his mother,
Occupational Safety and Gloria, began raising him
Health , Administration. by herself. James · visited
OSHA, which investigates The Boondocks, where he
workplace accidents, has six and his friends first dribbled
months to make a report, on the playgrounds.
she said.
James ·retraced the steps
.. Records obtained by The on Monday. His path to
AsSQciated Press .show the NBA superstardom.
city . of Irving granted the
An unstoppable offensive
Cowboys' request to replace force who became an elite .
tl!e fabric roof last y~t. five defender this. season, James ,;
years after !he structure was . claimed the league MVP, ·
built. The ieam.listed itself receiving the. award in the ·
as the contractor for the roof gym where he first became
replacement,' but Cowboys a star.
spokesman Rich Dalrymple
"This is a place where all
said the team would not my dreams started and
comment about the work.
h'
I th ht th · ld
ou~
ey cou
ere
The rec. ords do not' sb.ow w
become real,' James said.
the ·cowboys sought an . "There's really not a better
inspection of the facility place ."
after replacing the · roof,
The Ohio kid anointed
although city code requires King James as a teena~er
it, according to Gary Miller, has a new crown.
Irving's director of planning
An , MVP vote some
and inspections.
·
expected to be close was
"In a penect world, another. slam dunk by ·
· there's some report from an James. He received 109 of a
installation company or an possible 121 · first-place
engineer . in there, but ·we votes to easily outdistance
don't have it," Miller said.
Kobe Bryant of the Los
The company that built Angeles Lakers. James
the facility Summit totaled 1,172 points in halStructures
LLC
of loting by media members in
Allentown, .Pa. - issued a the U.S. and Canad.a.
statement that said · proper · . Bryant.• last year's winner,
engineenng was used dur- · got two first-place votes and
ing the original constru~tion · finiShed with 698 points.
arid the installation of the Miami guard.Dwyane Wade
-oew roof. Summit president was third with 680 poirits
APphoto
Nathan Stobbe said he was and was named . first on.
. in Irving on Monday, work" seven ballots. Orlando cen- Cleveland C.avaliers' Le!3rori James poses with his trophy-after being named the NBA Most
ing with team and local offiValuable Player during a ceremony at James' alma mater, Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary High
. cials to "fully assess this
Please see James, 81
School in Akron on Monday. .
·
.
·
.
severe weather event." The
complilly said it has few
answers so far about prePrep Track and Field Roundup
cisely what happened.
About 70 people, includins ·21 piayers at a rookie
. mmicamp, were inside
wheri the storm hit. Winds
of firsts in both th.e 100 in the lOOm hurdles with a
STAFF REPORTS
were clocked at 64 mph, · 1
MOSSPORTSIMYCAIL.YSENTINEL.COM
meter dash ( 12.78 seconds) time of 16.46 seconds.
mph.shy of the threshold for
and in the long jump ( 16· . Lauren Adkins also placed
a · weak tornado. A
PARKERSBURG - It feet, 1.5 inches) . G~iger - fourth in the 1600m run
"microbu·rst" may have was a day full of mixed was also part of the win- with a time of 5:39.34.
pushed the wind beyond 70 results for · the · Gallia ning 4x200m relay team · The Blue De,vils musrnph at the top of !lie struc- Academy trac)&lt;: and field along with Brea pose, tered only three pmnts durture, National WeatheT team Friday at the 2009 Kara Jackson and Tonia ing the 12 events 'held on
Service officials said
Erickson/Camden-Clark Logan -· that posted a the boys side, with Tyler ·
. ' Behm , DeCamillis and Invitational, as the Blue mark of 1:46.8.
Campbell bringing home
Qaither were standing on Angels easily strolled to
Freshman Peyton Adkins fifth in the boys long jump
!he field wheR the $4 mil· the 1.2-team · girls title was the other lone champi· with a distance of 18-5.
Iion structure gave way, while the boys finished on , posting a winning time Gallia Academy's other
Sending framfWOrk, lights dead-last in the 16-team of 5:23.ll in the 1600m point came in the 4x200m
and other debris crashing to
boys competition that was event. The 4x800m relay relay, as the quartet of
!be ground.
cut
I? 12 of 17 events due . team - consisting of Campbell, Austin Wilson ,
·: None of the players were
to
ralo.
Adkins, Lauren Adkins, Ethan Moore and Cory
hurt. Coaches, support staff
.
The
Blue
Angels
posted
Samantha Barnes and Straight placed sixth with a
and media were also in the
. no-frills building. essential- five first-place efforts in McK~nna Warner - also time of I :37.52.
Parkersburg won the
ly a 100-yard football field the 12-event competition, posted a winning time of
posting
a
team
score
of
91
9:50.15.
boys
competition with 51
'!"ith a few more . yards of
points
more
titan
double
Jackson
was
a
runner-up
points
,
followed
by
clearance all the way
what , runner-up in the lOOm dash with a Fairmont Senior (42), John
around. The roof was 80 bf
Parkersburg (44.5) posted. time of 12.83 seconds, Marshall
(37),
Tyler
feet high.
Wheeling
Park
and
Cabell
while
Allie
Troester
posted
Consolidated
(32)
and
Media were restricted
Midland
tied
for
third
with
a
pair
of
runner-.
u
ps
in
both
Parkersburg
South
(31)
to
from the Cowboys headquarters for at least a week 42 points, while John the shot put (37-1) and dis- round out the .top-five.
Complete results are
because of ongoing work Marshall rounded out the cus (105-11).
Natalie Close also fin- available on the web at
that is scheduled to take top-five with 35 points.
Senior Alexis Geiger ished third in the shot put www.runwv.com
place in the aftermath of the
was the lone multi-winner with a heave of 35-10,
Please see track, B1
Please ue cowboys. 81
individually 1 posting a pair while Brea Close was third

Investigation of
Cowboys facility
collapse begins

...

wellas who will be waiting tournament each of the last earned a boll!e game in the
for !bern. ·
two postseasons, but thin post~eason. The Blue Devils
. Starting in ba_,~ ball, the would not happen this year (12-8) earned a. four-seed
Easte.rn Eagles were the only because - if both teams win and will host No. 5 Athens
program of the 12 in the two games - they woulu (11-4) on Monday. May II,
Ohio Valley P1,1blishing area meet in the district cham pi- · at 5 p.m. The Marauders (9to bring home a number orle onship.
8) earned the siJ&lt;-seed and
seed from the meeting . The
Seventh-seeded
South will travel to No. 3 Marietta
Ell,gles (14-3) will host the Gallia (6-6) opens its D-4 ( 12-6) on Monday, May 11.
winner of the 8-9 Oak postseason in a sectional at 5 p.m.
Hi.ii/Miller matchup on semifinal · home
game
River Valley (3-16) was
Thursday, · May 14, in the against No. 10 Waterford (1- the lone Division 111 repreDivision IV sectional final at 14) oJLMonday. May II, at 5 sentative from our area ..The
5 p.!Thl'
p.m. The winner would Raiders were a 10-seed and
Southern (10-6) atso advance to the sectional . will travel to Albany for a
earned a home game in the final to take on second-seed- sectional semifinal against
D-4 sectional finals •. as the ed and host Symmes Valley No.7 and host Alexander (Sthird-seeded Tornadoes will (9-1) on Thursday, May 14. 9) on Tuesday, May 12, at 5
host sixth-seeded Pike· at 5 p.m.
p.m. The winner will travel
Eastern at Star Mill Park on
Both Gallia Academy and to No.2 Wellston (12-4) for
Thursday. May 14, at 5 p.m. Meigs n.eed two wins apiece the sectional final on Friday,
Both EHS and SHS have · to advance to distrkt play in May 15. at 5 p.m.
·
advanced to the regional Division II, but only GAHS
On the girls side of things,

Please see Draw, 81

STAFF REPORT
MDSSPORTSOMVOAIL.YSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern baseball did. little
wrong Saturday afternoon
during a. non-conference
doubleheader against visiting · River Valley, ·pounding
out a collective 33 hits and
23 runs over ll innings· ell
route to 13-3 and 10-0 vic"
tories .
The Eagles (14-5) trailed
only once on the entire day
- a 3-2 deficit after two
innings in game one - but
responded with II unanswered runs over the next
two frames to claim a 13-3
decision in five in~ings.
EHS pitching limited the
Raiders (3-16) to just four
hits overall - three of
which came in the three-run
second. The hosts also had
20 hits overall from nine
different players.
.
Zach Hendrix, Jay Warner
and Andrew Benedum led
EHS with three hits apiece . .
followed by Tyler Hendrix,
Titus Pierce, Kyle Connery,
Greg
Barringer
and
Christian Amsbary with two
safeties each. Nick Brannon
. - who was the winning
pitcher of record - also
had one hit.
Tyler Smith led the guests
with two hits, while Trey
Noble and Zack Polcyn
added the other safeties.
Matt Goodrich pitched four
innings in the loss. Eastern
committed the only two
errors in the ·opener.
Eastern held RVHS to just
three hits in the nightcap,
while seven different Eagles
produced . 13 safeties over
six innings in the 10-0
finale. Leading 8-0 with two
out and two on il\ the sixth,
Please see

Eastem, 81

Blue Angels dominate in Parkersburg

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.50 PER LISTING • $151F PICTURE INCLUDED
FiB out the fonn below and drop off to

I

•

•

Tuesday... Partly sunny. 60s.
Southe.ast
winds
Highs in the mid. 70s. East around 5 mph. Chance of
winds around 5 mph.
rain 60 percent. · ·
Tuesday night .•• Mostly · Wedoesday
night.:.
cloudy. A chance of showers Cloudy with showers likely
in the evening ... Then a with a . chance of thunderslight chance of showers storms. Lows in the up~
after midnight. Lows in the 40s , Southwest . wmds
upper 40s. East winds around 5 mph. Chance of
around 5 mph in the rain 60 percent.
·
evenin~ ... Becoming light · Thurs~ay .... Mostl.Y
and var1able. Chance of ram cloudy. H1ghs 1D the m1d
30 percent..
70s.
Wednesday ... Cloudy
Thursday nlght ...Cloudy
with showers likely with a with a .chance of showerS.
slight chance of thunder- Lows in ·the mid 50s.
storms. Highs in the upper Chance of rain 40 pen'ent.

Ten Meigs High School students were inducted into the National Honor Society in ceremonies held Friday. Accepted into
)he honorary group were from the left, front Alexanctria Patterson, Scott Kennedy, Tyler Andrews, Travis Dunham, and
,.,egan Smith, and back, Lauren Barnes, Chelsey Davis, Darby Gilmore, Annisha Kopec, and Dawn Bissell. Principal
~!eve Ohlinger gave 'the pledge to the new members. Music for the ceremony was played by Marauder band members
directed by Toney Dingess.
·

.

Bl

-The Daily Sentinel ·

Dale of passing - - - - - - 1 1 1

__:__ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
~hone---,---------------1
Make Check Payable to THE OAILY.SENTINEL

L-----------------~-------•

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•

•

Gallia
Academy's
Alexis Geiger lin·
ishes off
the li(lal
leg of the
4x200
meter
relay event
' held last
week at
the
Jackson
· Invitational
in
Jackson. :
Submitted.
photo

�Page A~

LOCAL.• STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Ohio crash survivor graduates, Page Bl .

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Stewart-Haas' surprise, Page B6

Bowling alley ~eives ·
$75K for Mega Millions sale

NATIONAL ·HONOR
SOCIEI'Y
INDUCI'f.FS
·
·

announcement of any of the
CHILLICOTHE (AP) An Ohio bowli.ng alley has jackpot winners coming
received $75,000 for selling forward.
Shawnee Lanes owner
a Mega Millions lottery
Walter Highland received
ticket worth $75 million.
Tile ticket sold at Shawnee his check from the Ohio
Lanes in Chillicothe was one Lottery over the weekend.
flis · son, Pat Highland,
of three that had all the win,
ning numbers in Friday's ·says the bowling alley in
$225 million drawing. The southern Ohio is in its 50th
grand prize will be shared anniversary year and will use
with holders of matching some of its prize money for
tickets sold in California and annual renovations done
Virginia.
each summer. He wasn't sure
There has been no how the rest would be spent.

Local Weather

Charle"" Hoefllchlphoto

Local Stocks

'

Education plan subject of teachers' meeting
POMEROY
Dr.
Frances Gib,er; retired
teacher and college professor spoke about the new
education plan for Ohio at
the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Retireu
Teachers.
- The group met at Trinity ·
Church. Ladies of the
church served the luncheon ·
to 13 m\:mbers and two
guests.
.
Gibser told of the components and spoke about
each of them. Component'
of Gov. Strickland's proposed education 'plan are a

AEP (NYSE) - 26.n
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Al!hland Inc. (NYSE) - 28.03
Big Lola (NYSE) - 28.35
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.34
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 31.43
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)

2 1st-century
learning Flag. Maxine Whitehead led of
the
Chester/Shade
environment , .expanded devotions, "Spri ng," and a Historical
Association,
learning opportunity, high- reading by Helen Keller, telling of the restoration of
quality educators, measur- " Rejoice with Spring. She the Chester Academy,. He
ing Ohio's students against closed with a prayer, "We asked if members might
..
the world. school district Thank Thee."
know where to find items
.i•ccountability and effecDave Warner entertained for the school room.
tive funding for a 21st- the group with two songs.
Debbie Roush · donated
century system of educa.Secretary's minutes were door prizes which went to
read. Cards were signed for Barbara Beegle , Dorothy
tion.
Downie
and Chaney, Connie Enslen,
She said the Ohio House Rachael
·
is introducing a substitute Martha Vennari.
. Gay · Perrin , . Charlene
bill to reYamp ·the ~roposed
A pamphlet endorsing Rutherford and Whitehead.
bill, so we all wa1t to see Bob Stein for · the STRS
The next meeting will be
how it will tum out.
Board was given each mem- May 21 at the Riverside
Gay Perrin, president, ber.
Golf Course Clubhouse.
opened the mee1ing with the . The president read a letter
Pledge to the American from J1m Stewart, president
&gt;. •

'

'''•

'

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'

'•

'·

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Dally ltock repone ere the 4 ,
General Electric (NYSE) ...,13.10 · p.m. ET ·ctoalng quot" of Iran•
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JP Morgan (NYSE) - 35.79
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:·

.

'

We remember

those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.· .

On Sunday, May 24, w~ will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the samp~ below:

July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

.

May God's angels
guide you and

Submtued

Middleport White Sox took third place. in tlie Pomeroy Little League tournament:
Darst, Ray Johnson, Christian Spaun,· James Morrison, Gino· Casci, Justin .Coe,
Ferguson, Tyson Herman, Blake Johnson:' Ray Johnson, Rich Coe, Coach Ron Casci,
Shawn Coleman, Matt Foster, and Ryan Foster.

protect you

throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews arul

If you wish, select one of the following FREE vel'8eS ~low lo
accompany your tribute.
t. We hold you in our lhoughiS and memories forever.
2. May God cmdle you in His anns, now and forever.
3. Forever missed, never forgo11en. May God hold you in lhe palm of
His hand
4. Thank you for lhe wondelful days we shared 1oge1her. My praye"
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were swrel.llong Ill set you again in God's
heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery s_till inspire us all. and lhe memory of your
smilcfills us wilh joy and laughter.
·
l. Though oul of sigh!, you'll forever be in my heart and mind.
8. The days may come and go, bullhe limes we shared wi,ll ~ways remain.
9. May God's angels guide you and pro1ec1 you lhroughoullime.
10. You were alight in our life that bums foreve1 in our bearts.
II. May God's gracesshine over you for all time.
·
·12. You are in our !hough~ and P"Y"" from morning lo nigh! and from
year to year.

lamily

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest ~lemories

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769 ..
DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 12 Noon

r---------------------------···-·-··-·-·-··-·-·
.. 1
I •
.
Please publish my tribute in the special Memory Page on Sunday, May 24th.

Southern FFA news
The Southern FFA recently competed at the Multi·
county Environthon held at Lake Hope. The envirothon consisted of five parts. There is forestry,
soils, aquatics, wildlife, and current environmental
issues. The team consisted of (pictured above)
Eric Perry, Ryan Lain Beegle, Rusty Carnahan,
and Ryan Lee Beegle. Also, Olivia Searls (pic- ·
lured at left) competed at the district 1 0 public
speaking contest. Olivia received a silver rating en
reciting the FFA Creed.
Submitted photos

I

\

~ameofdeceased

-----------------------!

IN umber of selected v e r s e - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
jD~te o~ binh

}rom _

Thesday, May 5, 2009

Local teams looking at intriguing tournament draws
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

three-time reigning SEOAL
South Division champion
Gallia Academy brought
home the highest seeding - earning a number two ih the
Division II draw. GAHS will
host No. 7 Jackson (7c 10) in
a sectional semifinal at
Memorial
Field
on
Wednesday, May 13, at 5
p.m.
Meigs - which won the
TVC Ohio ·title this spring
- also earned a sectional
semifinal home game in
Division II. as the Lady
Marauders (ll-4) will host
No. 6 Athens (7-8) on
Wednesday, May 13, at .5
p.m.
.
.
The winners of the Gallia

crowned

Eastern
takes two
from Raiders

JACKSON - There will
not be two Division IV baseball teams from Meigs
Count:y in the regional tournament tjlis year, and many
other intriguing postseason
possibilities were deter- ·
mined Sunday afternoon
during the 2009 southeast
district .baseball and softball
tournament - seeding meetIRVING, Texas (AP) Gove~ment investigators ings held at Jackson High
began sorting through the School.
Dallas Cowboys' flattened
. The respective baseball
practice facility Mond;~y, and softball teams from
tryiflg to figure out why Gallia Academy, Meigs_,
fierce winds sent the tent. · River Valley, Eastern, South
like structure crashing down Gallia and Southern now
· 4uring a rookie workout know when and where their
session.
.
tournaments will . begin, as
· Twelve people were hurt,
including Cowboys special
teams
coac.h
Joe
DeCamillis, who was set to
have surgery on his fracAKRON (AP) - On one
tured cerv1cal vertebrae
Monday.Themostseriously of the biggest days of his
injured was Rich Behm, the life, LeBron James took the
team's 33-year-old scouting long way home.
·
assistant who was pernnaOnce inside his home· ,
nently paralyzed from the town's city ' limits, James
waist down after his spine pulled his high-powered
was severed. Greg Gaither, Ferrari off I. 77 and drove
~5. had surgery on his frac- the back roads to St.
tured right leg and was Vincent-St. Mary High
expected to get out of the School, his alma mater.
hospital this week.
Turning on Maple Street,
Inspectors were at the col- he went past his first house
lapse site Monday, said on Hickory. Then, it was
Elizabeth Todd, a spokes- 'past the one on Silver
woman . fo{ · the U.S. Street, whe{e his mother,
Occupational Safety and Gloria, began raising him
Health , Administration. by herself. James · visited
OSHA, which investigates The Boondocks, where he
workplace accidents, has six and his friends first dribbled
months to make a report, on the playgrounds.
she said.
James ·retraced the steps
.. Records obtained by The on Monday. His path to
AsSQciated Press .show the NBA superstardom.
city . of Irving granted the
An unstoppable offensive
Cowboys' request to replace force who became an elite .
tl!e fabric roof last y~t. five defender this. season, James ,;
years after !he structure was . claimed the league MVP, ·
built. The ieam.listed itself receiving the. award in the ·
as the contractor for the roof gym where he first became
replacement,' but Cowboys a star.
spokesman Rich Dalrymple
"This is a place where all
said the team would not my dreams started and
comment about the work.
h'
I th ht th · ld
ou~
ey cou
ere
The rec. ords do not' sb.ow w
become real,' James said.
the ·cowboys sought an . "There's really not a better
inspection of the facility place ."
after replacing the · roof,
The Ohio kid anointed
although city code requires King James as a teena~er
it, according to Gary Miller, has a new crown.
Irving's director of planning
An , MVP vote some
and inspections.
·
expected to be close was
"In a penect world, another. slam dunk by ·
· there's some report from an James. He received 109 of a
installation company or an possible 121 · first-place
engineer . in there, but ·we votes to easily outdistance
don't have it," Miller said.
Kobe Bryant of the Los
The company that built Angeles Lakers. James
the facility Summit totaled 1,172 points in halStructures
LLC
of loting by media members in
Allentown, .Pa. - issued a the U.S. and Canad.a.
statement that said · proper · . Bryant.• last year's winner,
engineenng was used dur- · got two first-place votes and
ing the original constru~tion · finiShed with 698 points.
arid the installation of the Miami guard.Dwyane Wade
-oew roof. Summit president was third with 680 poirits
APphoto
Nathan Stobbe said he was and was named . first on.
. in Irving on Monday, work" seven ballots. Orlando cen- Cleveland C.avaliers' Le!3rori James poses with his trophy-after being named the NBA Most
ing with team and local offiValuable Player during a ceremony at James' alma mater, Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary High
. cials to "fully assess this
Please see James, 81
School in Akron on Monday. .
·
.
·
.
severe weather event." The
complilly said it has few
answers so far about prePrep Track and Field Roundup
cisely what happened.
About 70 people, includins ·21 piayers at a rookie
. mmicamp, were inside
wheri the storm hit. Winds
of firsts in both th.e 100 in the lOOm hurdles with a
STAFF REPORTS
were clocked at 64 mph, · 1
MOSSPORTSIMYCAIL.YSENTINEL.COM
meter dash ( 12.78 seconds) time of 16.46 seconds.
mph.shy of the threshold for
and in the long jump ( 16· . Lauren Adkins also placed
a · weak tornado. A
PARKERSBURG - It feet, 1.5 inches) . G~iger - fourth in the 1600m run
"microbu·rst" may have was a day full of mixed was also part of the win- with a time of 5:39.34.
pushed the wind beyond 70 results for · the · Gallia ning 4x200m relay team · The Blue De,vils musrnph at the top of !lie struc- Academy trac)&lt;: and field along with Brea pose, tered only three pmnts durture, National WeatheT team Friday at the 2009 Kara Jackson and Tonia ing the 12 events 'held on
Service officials said
Erickson/Camden-Clark Logan -· that posted a the boys side, with Tyler ·
. ' Behm , DeCamillis and Invitational, as the Blue mark of 1:46.8.
Campbell bringing home
Qaither were standing on Angels easily strolled to
Freshman Peyton Adkins fifth in the boys long jump
!he field wheR the $4 mil· the 1.2-team · girls title was the other lone champi· with a distance of 18-5.
Iion structure gave way, while the boys finished on , posting a winning time Gallia Academy's other
Sending framfWOrk, lights dead-last in the 16-team of 5:23.ll in the 1600m point came in the 4x200m
and other debris crashing to
boys competition that was event. The 4x800m relay relay, as the quartet of
!be ground.
cut
I? 12 of 17 events due . team - consisting of Campbell, Austin Wilson ,
·: None of the players were
to
ralo.
Adkins, Lauren Adkins, Ethan Moore and Cory
hurt. Coaches, support staff
.
The
Blue
Angels
posted
Samantha Barnes and Straight placed sixth with a
and media were also in the
. no-frills building. essential- five first-place efforts in McK~nna Warner - also time of I :37.52.
Parkersburg won the
ly a 100-yard football field the 12-event competition, posted a winning time of
posting
a
team
score
of
91
9:50.15.
boys
competition with 51
'!"ith a few more . yards of
points
more
titan
double
Jackson
was
a
runner-up
points
,
followed
by
clearance all the way
what , runner-up in the lOOm dash with a Fairmont Senior (42), John
around. The roof was 80 bf
Parkersburg (44.5) posted. time of 12.83 seconds, Marshall
(37),
Tyler
feet high.
Wheeling
Park
and
Cabell
while
Allie
Troester
posted
Consolidated
(32)
and
Media were restricted
Midland
tied
for
third
with
a
pair
of
runner-.
u
ps
in
both
Parkersburg
South
(31)
to
from the Cowboys headquarters for at least a week 42 points, while John the shot put (37-1) and dis- round out the .top-five.
Complete results are
because of ongoing work Marshall rounded out the cus (105-11).
Natalie Close also fin- available on the web at
that is scheduled to take top-five with 35 points.
Senior Alexis Geiger ished third in the shot put www.runwv.com
place in the aftermath of the
was the lone multi-winner with a heave of 35-10,
Please see track, B1
Please ue cowboys. 81
individually 1 posting a pair while Brea Close was third

Investigation of
Cowboys facility
collapse begins

...

wellas who will be waiting tournament each of the last earned a boll!e game in the
for !bern. ·
two postseasons, but thin post~eason. The Blue Devils
. Starting in ba_,~ ball, the would not happen this year (12-8) earned a. four-seed
Easte.rn Eagles were the only because - if both teams win and will host No. 5 Athens
program of the 12 in the two games - they woulu (11-4) on Monday. May II,
Ohio Valley P1,1blishing area meet in the district cham pi- · at 5 p.m. The Marauders (9to bring home a number orle onship.
8) earned the siJ&lt;-seed and
seed from the meeting . The
Seventh-seeded
South will travel to No. 3 Marietta
Ell,gles (14-3) will host the Gallia (6-6) opens its D-4 ( 12-6) on Monday, May 11.
winner of the 8-9 Oak postseason in a sectional at 5 p.m.
Hi.ii/Miller matchup on semifinal · home
game
River Valley (3-16) was
Thursday, · May 14, in the against No. 10 Waterford (1- the lone Division 111 repreDivision IV sectional final at 14) oJLMonday. May II, at 5 sentative from our area ..The
5 p.!Thl'
p.m. The winner would Raiders were a 10-seed and
Southern (10-6) atso advance to the sectional . will travel to Albany for a
earned a home game in the final to take on second-seed- sectional semifinal against
D-4 sectional finals •. as the ed and host Symmes Valley No.7 and host Alexander (Sthird-seeded Tornadoes will (9-1) on Thursday, May 14. 9) on Tuesday, May 12, at 5
host sixth-seeded Pike· at 5 p.m.
p.m. The winner will travel
Eastern at Star Mill Park on
Both Gallia Academy and to No.2 Wellston (12-4) for
Thursday. May 14, at 5 p.m. Meigs n.eed two wins apiece the sectional final on Friday,
Both EHS and SHS have · to advance to distrkt play in May 15. at 5 p.m.
·
advanced to the regional Division II, but only GAHS
On the girls side of things,

Please see Draw, 81

STAFF REPORT
MDSSPORTSOMVOAIL.YSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern baseball did. little
wrong Saturday afternoon
during a. non-conference
doubleheader against visiting · River Valley, ·pounding
out a collective 33 hits and
23 runs over ll innings· ell
route to 13-3 and 10-0 vic"
tories .
The Eagles (14-5) trailed
only once on the entire day
- a 3-2 deficit after two
innings in game one - but
responded with II unanswered runs over the next
two frames to claim a 13-3
decision in five in~ings.
EHS pitching limited the
Raiders (3-16) to just four
hits overall - three of
which came in the three-run
second. The hosts also had
20 hits overall from nine
different players.
.
Zach Hendrix, Jay Warner
and Andrew Benedum led
EHS with three hits apiece . .
followed by Tyler Hendrix,
Titus Pierce, Kyle Connery,
Greg
Barringer
and
Christian Amsbary with two
safeties each. Nick Brannon
. - who was the winning
pitcher of record - also
had one hit.
Tyler Smith led the guests
with two hits, while Trey
Noble and Zack Polcyn
added the other safeties.
Matt Goodrich pitched four
innings in the loss. Eastern
committed the only two
errors in the ·opener.
Eastern held RVHS to just
three hits in the nightcap,
while seven different Eagles
produced . 13 safeties over
six innings in the 10-0
finale. Leading 8-0 with two
out and two on il\ the sixth,
Please see

Eastem, 81

Blue Angels dominate in Parkersburg

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Tuesday... Partly sunny. 60s.
Southe.ast
winds
Highs in the mid. 70s. East around 5 mph. Chance of
winds around 5 mph.
rain 60 percent. · ·
Tuesday night .•• Mostly · Wedoesday
night.:.
cloudy. A chance of showers Cloudy with showers likely
in the evening ... Then a with a . chance of thunderslight chance of showers storms. Lows in the up~
after midnight. Lows in the 40s , Southwest . wmds
upper 40s. East winds around 5 mph. Chance of
around 5 mph in the rain 60 percent.
·
evenin~ ... Becoming light · Thurs~ay .... Mostl.Y
and var1able. Chance of ram cloudy. H1ghs 1D the m1d
30 percent..
70s.
Wednesday ... Cloudy
Thursday nlght ...Cloudy
with showers likely with a with a .chance of showerS.
slight chance of thunder- Lows in ·the mid 50s.
storms. Highs in the upper Chance of rain 40 pen'ent.

Ten Meigs High School students were inducted into the National Honor Society in ceremonies held Friday. Accepted into
)he honorary group were from the left, front Alexanctria Patterson, Scott Kennedy, Tyler Andrews, Travis Dunham, and
,.,egan Smith, and back, Lauren Barnes, Chelsey Davis, Darby Gilmore, Annisha Kopec, and Dawn Bissell. Principal
~!eve Ohlinger gave 'the pledge to the new members. Music for the ceremony was played by Marauder band members
directed by Toney Dingess.
·

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Gallia
Academy's
Alexis Geiger lin·
ishes off
the li(lal
leg of the
4x200
meter
relay event
' held last
week at
the
Jackson
· Invitational
in
Jackson. :
Submitted.
photo

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, Mays, 2009

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLA .S SIFIED

·Survivor of Ohio baseball tea111 bus crash
BLUFFrON (AP) - Two
) ~ars ago. Tm1 Berta wa'i
f1ghting to sun 1ve head
lllJUnes that left him in a
cuma followmg a. bus crash
that killed five Bluffton
UniverSity baseball players .
A year later. he was learning to Wdlk and read again.
Now he's a college graduate and plannmg to go to
nursing school.
"When they told me I
would never do it, that just
fueled me. because 1f you
tell m~ , 'You're not ever
going to do this,' well . I'm
' goi ng to do it ," he sa1d.
Doctors didn't think Berta.
24. of Ida , Mich .. would ever
walk again·, let alone fin1sh
the four courses he needed to
get his b1ology degree.
He was just two months
from graduating in March
20Q7 when the Flondabound bus he was on with
the team plunged off a freeway overpass m Atlanta. Of
those who survived, Berta's

Eastern
fromPageBl
Connery · delivered a bases·
clearing smgle to set the
mercy-rule into effect.
Brannon
and
Zach
Hendrix led EHS with three
h1ts apiece: followed by
Connery with two. Pierce,
Amsbary and Tyler Hendnx
also had a safety apiece in
the win. Zach Hendrix was
the wmning pitcher of

Draw
from PageBl
Academy &lt;nd Meigs contests will meet in the sectional final on Saturday,
May 16. at I p.m. The outcomes of those two semtfinals will determmed where
the final will be played.
Two other locals
Eastern. and Southern
won· t have to wait for a
possible matchup. as the
two Meigs· County schools
v.lll face off 111 D1vis1on IV
sectional final right out of
the gates. The Lady Eagles
(10-3) earned a No. 3 seed
and will host the sixth-seeded Lady Tornadoes (6-12)
on Saturday. May 16, at I

injune&gt; were the worst
He ,uffered critical damage
to areas of hi&gt; bmm that control his muscles and speech.
He al&gt;o broke all of his rib'&gt;
on the left side. his collar\&gt;one
and a shoulder blade.
. He eventually recovered
and learned to walk agam.
He completed his degree by
taking classes online.
On Sunday, Berta walked
onto a stage at Bluffton
wearing a cap and gown and
received a standing ovation.
University president James
Harder said it seemed hke a
miracle that Berta was able to
graduate. "Based on h1s own
strength and his own determination he's achieved his diploma, but he's also inspired all
of us." Harder said.
Berta was a catcher his
first two years at Bluffton
bef&lt;!re he decided to concentrate on school and tootball.
But he stayed involved with
the baseball team as a student coach. That's why he

was wuh the team when the
bu; crashed
The
National
TransportatiOn Safety Board
later said that confusing
highway Signs and dnver
error contributed to the accident. Investigators sa1d the
bus driver who also died in
the crash along w1th his wife
mistook an exit ramp for a
regular highway lane, crashing the bus into a concrete
barrier before il flipped off
th\) ·overpass and fell 30 feet
back onto Interstate 75 .
Doctors weren't sure Berta
would live through the mght.
He spent more than three
months in hospitals in
Atlanta and Oluo before
going home.
He still goes to therapy
three times a week and says
he 'II keef) with it until his
therapists are med of'seeing
him.
"Every single day I make
small gains and they're waiting for that day when they

record.
Smith, Polcyn · and Jacob
Brown each had a single for
the guests. Smith was the
losing pitcher for RVHS.

meter dash. Racing against 13 other girls, Isaac placed
a strong third with a time of I :06.7, a tight spot behind
the second place time of I :06.3. Isaac's contribution
from Page Bl
made up about three-fourths of the squad's total
points.
.
Making strides for the Raider track team, Dee! took
RVHS COMPETES AT lYDiARD CLASSIC
strong finishes in both the shot put and the discus
throw. Out of 20 other competitors, Dee! strongarmed
SOUTH POINT - The Silver and Black track teams a first place finish in the shot put, reaching a distance
travelled to South Point Friday evening to compete in of 46-04.5 . Deel followed up that success with a secthe Arthur Lydiard Classic. While the overall perfor- ond place finish in the discus throw, hurling the discus
mance at the meet was not as strong as the Raiders 136-03.
would have hoped, there were two standout athletes
-Both the Lady Raider and Raider track and field
that contributed a· great deal to. tlieir teams' totals . . tejlms are gearing up to compete Tuesday at the
Those indivduals were Stephanie Isaac and Zak Dee!. ' Chesapeake Relays in Chesapeake, starting at 4:30
Isaac faced tough competition in her event- the 400 p.m.

EASTERN

13, RIVER VALLEY 3

A Valley o;JO

00

-

3 40

Eastern

61&lt;

-

1'3 20 2

205

WP - Srannon, LP - GoOdrich.
EASTERN

10, RIVER ,VALLEY 0

A Valley 000

000 -

Eastern 201

052 ...- 10 13 0

WP - Z Hendrix; LF' -

033
Smith

p.m.
South Gallia also fmds
itself in a D-4 sectional
fmal, but the seventh-seeded Lady Rebels (4-10) will
be on the road as they travel
to Willow Wood to battle
second-seeded
Sym1l)es
Valley (13-5) on Saturday.
May 16, at I p.m.
The Lady Raiders (3-15)
- the lone D-3 softball program - earned a No. 10
seed and will travel to
Belpre for sectional semifi nal agamst No. 7 Belpre (67) on Monday, May II, at 5
p.m. The winner will play at
No. 2 Trimble (12-4) on
Friday, May 15, at 5 p.m.
Complete listings of all of
the 2009 baseball and softball bmckets for the south&gt;
east district are available on
the web at www.seodab.org

Tim Berta, a survivor of the
Blufjton baseball
team bus crash in
March 2007,
reacts during his
graduation in
Bluffton. Ohio on
Sunday. Two years
ago, Berta was
fighting to survive
head injuries that
left him In a coma
following a bUs
crash that killed
five fellow baseball
players.

James
from PageBl

.,'

.I

I

ter Dwight Howard (328)
was fourth followed by
New Orleans guard Chns
Paul ( 192).
The race was never in
doubt. It was James all
along.
"I'm 24 years old and
I'm receiving this award.!
never thought it would
happen this fast," he sa1d.
standing under three state
title banners he helped win
for the Fighting Irish. "I
never dreamed about bemg
MVP, but if I said 1 didn't
enJoy thts award I'd be
lying . Hard work pays off
and dreams do come true ."
James is the f1rst
Cavaliers player to win the
award. He averaged 28.4
pomts. 7.6 rebounds and 7.2
ass1sts this season , his sixth
as a pro. He also finished
second in voting for defensive player of the year, making him perhaps the
league's most dominant
two-way
player since
Michael Jordan.
Along with a trophy,
James was given a new car,
which he donated to a local
chartty.
After learning he won,
James knew be wanted to
share it with family and
friends. He knew there was
on! y one place to do it: At
his beloved St. V., !he
school where he was a high
school phenom.
As James - . who got a
police escort for the final
:miles - drove up about an
·hour before the ceremony in
:h1s metallic gray $225,000
·car with WITNES vanity
license plates, a crowd
chanting "M-V·P" rushed
into the street outside the
school.
The scene was more ci vii
later when James took the
stage and was serenaded by
hundreds of students sitting
111 the same bleachers he
used to.

I

.

I

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
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(304) 675-1333
871i-52:M

will take doesn't
don't see any more improveHe plans to start nursing
really
matter.
ment and that's not going to school at Lourdes College
"The impossible just takes
happen as of right now," he near Toledo either this fall or
a little b1t longer," Berta
said. "It just keeps gettmg next year.
better and better as I go on." . How long his next step said.

weather practices consider- was negligent in the design
ing the collapse in Irving.
and construction of a mem"Our facility was put to brane-covered building that
the test this past fall when collapsed in 2003 after a
fromPageBl
Hurricane Ike hit the Texas ma).or
snowstorm
in
gulf coast," he said in a Philadelphia. The building
statement. "Our buildings was constructed for the'
acc1dent.
Summit lists on its Web withstood the high winds Philadelphia Regional Port
site several other facilities it and our football team was Authority.
City of Irving construebuilt, including one at Texas not in the facility at that
A&amp;M and one for the New time."
lion records list OklahomaEngland Patriots. The com- , At the University of New based
Manhattan
pany also built the Wi ndstar Mexico. which also has a Construction Group as the
Casino just across the Sumnlit-built football prac- contractor for the Cowboys'
Texas-Ok ahoma border.
tice facility, associate ath- facility and Summit as the
The A&amp;M facility 1s· a letic director Scott Dotson structural
engineer.
$35.6 million project that said the collapse hasn't gen- Manhattan is the general
includes both a football erated significant concerns contractor for the new
practice fac1llty and an there .
• Cowboys stadium that will
indoor track . A&amp;M athletic
He said the school's facil- . open next season in
director Bill Byrne said the ity "has been tested· with Arlington.
.
school has had no problems some strong winds and held
Bob Bowen, Manhattan's
with the project, comr.leted up."
executive vice president,
late last year, but wlll reA Pennsylvania court said his company helped
evaluate 1ts policy on bad ruled in 2006 that Summit protect the outdoor practice

•

field from damage during
construction but all the
planning and other work
was done by Summit.
In a 2003 letter to thenIrving Fire Chief Paul
White, Cowboys director of
football operations Bruce
Mays described the planned
facility as "a semi-permanent structure supported by
lightweight steel trusses and
clad with a fire resistant
polymer fabric."
Mays said preliminary
discussions between the
team and the city had concluded the buildmg was "a
unique type of structure and
there could be a vllriety of
interpretations as to what
standards should be applied
in evaluatinl!l the structure
to comply w1th building and
fire codes."

He showed it all year, espe- seasons of at least 27 points, I on Tuesday·.
mom, who struggled to raise
"My missiOn hasn't been her only son.
cially with histeam's suc- six rebounds and six assists.
·The 'other is Robertson, completed," James said. "I
"I don't know how you
cess."
still
I
have
a
lot
of
things
I
did
it," James said.
whose
versatile
game
is
the
Focused from the start,
Better than anyone,
the 6-foot-8, 250-pound one to which James' is most want to 'do this season. I
want to have another cele- Gloria James understood
James sharpened his already often compared.
• her son's trip through his
formidable skills this seaJames nearly ave~aged a bration in June."
his
longtime
girlold neighborhoods.
With
triple-double - 32 point~.
son.
"It didn't surprise me,'.'
H~ started a career-high
11.3 rebounds and 7.5 friend, Savannah, and their
81 games and set personal assists - as the top-seeded two sons sitting up front, she said. "He has never forbests in field-goal (49) and Cavaliers breezed through James thanked his family, gotten where he came
free-throw (79) percentages the first round of the play- friends and former team- from."
Soon, it was time for
as .well as blocks (93). offs, sweeping DetrOit in mates during a touching
James became the second four games. Cleveland hosts · speech. Promising not to James to head home, a place
player to po~t five straight the Atlanta Hawks in Game cry, he spoke fondly of his he never left.

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Office Hours M, W, F
9AM·5PM

I

u..tQ.t~
www.comrct.com

Fann Equlpmont

Yonl

Salo

Ha'e you priced a John Garage Sale at Dale
Oeere lately? You'l ba HMs. 1018 Yellowbush
surprised! Check oul our Road, Racine on May
used
Inventory
at 7-8 from
9-4, dishwww.CAAEO com
Car- washer, table &amp; chairs,
miChael
EqUipment new quilts, new BarbleS,
740-4-46·2412
old dishes, anllque tabte
......,....,.._...,....,._ and rockers, raeliOS, lOts
snHL Sales &amp; Service of misc. All proceeds go
Now Available at Carmi- · to RACOIBrace Memo•
chael
Equipment rtQI
scholaiShlp
lund.
740-446-2412
Thanks tor yor suPport
Zt•tM lraclor les5 lhun 300 · - - - - - - hr,,•li-4l Mhp.~ u1&gt;er 4-wh
d1 Zernr looder-§pear Sche•
benmatter nllary mou.et 7
ft cul 6 disc 304 - 6 ?S-IS~
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
,
~ nd ear com $160 .00
I.:Jrou
"
a 992
ton,7603your
sac"s
740

:;;·= ==

~-;:;~
·

Community
Yard sale
Gunvllle Ad Leon WV
May ,7&amp;8, 9-5 6 mites of
sales
May 5 &amp; &amp; at 3622 Bula'·
111e P~e 1 mile lrom
Shone, Club 8am • 1
Boys clothes Size 8 16,
car
speakers,
sump
pump, truck tool bmc
~Yard~~S~I~-~-~Th-

•
a8
ur
May 4, 5, 6, 1 at 1863

.

Automotlve ................................................ 2000
tluto R•ntaVLeau•.••.•...
2006 ,
~utos .......................................................... 2010
Cleaefc/An11quea •• _...... ,................, ............ 2015
Commerc::lelllndu•trlal. .................~ ........... 2020

Child/Elderly Cere ......... ,............................. 312
CompUtera ., ................. .. .........-................... 314
CDoantraclltollrsJ...n...lt"o"r'•'•"•'''"""'""""'''''""""""''"'n 33t168
mea c •
............................. · ...
Electrical ..................................................... : 0
Financial ...................... -................................ 2
He•lth ..................... _..................................... 326
Heettftg &amp; eoallng ....., ........... - .................... 328
Ho~ lmprovemen1a 330
lneurance. .................................................... 33 2
LawnServlc• ......... _.... ............................... 334

Personal ............................. ,., .. _,.... .. . .....

Apa~monll

?,...~

Agn c ltllfe

• ~P!::'cC:::~,....~~~.~~~.::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::2~ w~~=~~-~.~~~~.:::::::·.:::::::··.::::::::::::·.:::·.·.·.:::::::::::
~t~0:.,3s5
er1tona 8.....................................................
an1 to buy ........................,.... .................
Wanted •.•. ., ................................................. 235
• servlcea ... ....,............................................ ~ 00
·~ Appllanc• 8 ervlce .................... -.................. 3 0 2
Automotive ............................................. 304
Building Materlafe ....................................... 30S

IIII'-...::.4U

IC&gt; 21109 by NEA, Inc.

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

: L~ale ........................................................... 100
• Announcement ...................... -.................... 200
.. Blrthday/Annlvereary .................................. 205
Happy Ada ................ ,................................... 21P
,. Loal &amp; Found ................................... _.,......... 215

j

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Pob

=="""'""'"=;;;;;;;;;

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Contact the OhiO D1vi-

'

0

~""""i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

~

.no

•

run month of rent.
Currently renting 1 &amp; 2
6R Units SpaciOUS l!oor
plans, ranch &amp; townnome style flYing, play·
ground &amp; basketball
court, on-site laundry It
1ac11ity. 24 ~remer·
gency mamtenance,
quiet country location
close to ma1or medical
lacllit18&amp;, pharmacies.
grocery store just
minutes away from
other major shopping In
the area
Honoyouckle Hilla

-=--"""'..

lond

Borrow

Townhau101

C11p lt'lls AD ancttake It
w1th you when you visit
our community to get
this special discount.
$50 00 off your 1st

School

Ftranci.ll

pictures
are not

Apartmonb/
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;8G0-;;:53~7-9;5;;2;8~~~~ Please call 446·4tn
400

Any

968.
newspape
ccepts only hal
lilted ads mlttln
OE standards.

,.-----,--~----"':':':--:-:"":"..,.._-:-'"!"'1

Bualnou &amp; Trado

,n

Ik d
Esta
~lsements
a
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

Educahor

kitncarlyle@comcaot.net

know, and NOT to send :.7;4().44;;;;6·,37,;;4;;,5""'""'""'"
money through the ma11 ~
unt1l you fiave tnvest1gatProfetlional Services
mg lha offenng
TURNED DOWN ON
C rBS a
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Wm!
have been
1·888·582·3345
d
,,
d
at
p1ace
a S
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PUMPING
the Gallipolis
Getlla co
oH and
D II T 'b
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8 Y rt une
Evans
Jackson,
OH

rate car

Real

50 0

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

man aboul 2 monlhs ago
Lawn Semco
a ~ece of JE&gt;welry, call Jo ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,....
galhpohacariercoHege iW
Accredited Member AccreditIdentify 740-446-4807
Jim's Lawn Mamtenance,
Ing Counc11for lndependenl
mowing mulching and
Notices
much more Insured •. tree Cotlegee and Schools 12748
~~=-~~~~~ esllmales. 740·395·33W
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
600
AnmHis
PUBLISHING co, rae·
Other StrACill
ommends that you do ~=~'-'-"""-="~
business w1tt1 people you Pet
Cremat1ons.
Call
1 ~--L _L

Box number ads ar
!Ways conftdentlat.
&lt;,

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.!;!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...,.

Homo tmprovemonb
Baoomenl

Ohio Valley

y
nd

.,._OCIOYfiltd., ...

Pric~

• Awld _-rcmatlont
• lnc:I11H Pho•e Number And AlldrW WhM NMtlled
• Adt S..ldd Ran J Olys

ShoUld Include Thoe Items
To llelp Get Responae...

be,.,....

POUCl!t oti11 ~ Publilhlrv , . . . . lhl right to ldk. ..;.c:t ar __. '" • • qtJfnl. lrran mue
Dn N
Tr1~rilnel~ 'Mtl 1M' rlfiPON!bJ• tor no morett.n U. 00111 of . .
tmM' tnd only the ftf111 lnllrttDn.
I"J fOM ot ~ thli ttttltll frotrl tht publk:tt!On or OIIIIIUin Of .,.Willi.,..._ C01•1:=-1on will bt lftllit In,._ Hftt 11¥ ...UlttdMIOn. •
•r• ,._,. oonM. . IIL • CU"rem m• Cll'd -wlln. · All ,., - - . .want...... n ai:ljlc:l ti:l tht fltldnl Flk' Howlnt Ac:t ot • • •
~~ only hitlp •rHd adt mtttlf111 !OI . .I'IItlrdt. W. will r1Gt l.nowfnuiJ ~ IOf ld¥tdhll"l ln 11lolldton o11M IIW Wttl ~ bl rttpOnllblt lor
.rrort In an ltd Ulbrl o-.• tM phOne

Wa A Keyword • Jftdude Co"'pkt.

DeKrlptk&gt;n • lnc:IMde A

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

... .

GallIa

· All

The setting was fitting for
James. who earlier this year
had the words "Loyalty"
and ''Family" tattooed vertically along his rih cage.
In tjle past, the MVP trophy has been presented at
team practice facilities or
arenas. But James wa1,1ted a
special location.
League spokesman Brian
Mcintyre said the intimate
ceremony was unlike any
before.
"When he heard what
LeBron wanted to do, we
gave it about a second's
thought, and said that's a
great idea," he said. "This
was wonderful."
James
credited
his
Cavahers teammates. who
attended the ceremony
along with coach Mike
Brown, for raising their
games in Cleveland's best
season ever. The Cavs went
66-1 ~. 39-2 at home and
earned the top seed in the
playoffs - a franchise
first.
"Individual
accolades
come when team success
happens," James said. "You
look at those 14 guys over
there, I got the award
because of them. They put
in the work."
James invtted his team:
mates to the podi urn and
presented each with an
expensive camera.
"This award is going to be
like the both of ours. but
J'm going to keep it at my
house," he cracked.
At 24 years, 106 days on
the final day of tbe regular
season, James is the
youngest player to win the
award since Moses Malone
(24 years, 16 days) in 197879 . Wes Unseld was 23
when he won 11 in 1968-69.
James vied all season for
MVP honors with Bryant
and Wade, his teammates on
the U.S . gold medalist
Olympic team last summer.
"He deserved it," Wade
said . "I said all year, I
thought LeBron was the
MVP of this league .' He's a
guy who every year is going
to be in that conversation ....

~ter

AP Photo/The Lima
Newt, Gavin Jac"-on

Track

Cowboys

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

l f'll(l

H li . 1&lt;l1r

--

-;;;;0~=~~--

Vondo- wanted at Roo
·~

' ""'"''...
For Sate by owner 75
acres w/ horse bam
50'x120', plus SO'x20' al·
tached garage, country
sl}ie hOuse 11 yrs old,
cedar siding-hltlden 1n
the pines, Spring Valley
area-Galljpotis,
Ohio.
3br, 2 bath, LR, DR, FA,
eat In kit. screened
porch, ~less sun porch, 4
dedcs, hot tub, 2 car ga·
rage, heat pump wl gas,
AC, 2 gas FP's, elrcle dr,
storage bldg Call for dl·
rectlons
740·44t-953t
.. 1--..
•• 3IJn or
or ce11 740 ""'"'
bsl 1 p1
go to ORVB
we te ot cs at
;;www;;;;;,;
. ;;;;,;,;;;·c;;;o;;;m!!!!!!'!!!!!!!
Hou* For Sale
---=-~""'!~-~
Bed 2 Balh HUO
homesl0nly$1991amon.,

;

1 and 2 bedroom apts •
fumlshed
and
unfurnished, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Mlddlepon,
secunty deposit required,
no pets. 740-992·22t8
18R Apt, WID hookups,
satellite TV Incl. w/rent,
close to hospital Call
740·339·9492

~:o-~---~
2BR A.PT.Ciose to Hotzer Hospital on SR 160

CIA. (740) 441•0194

Houooo For lonl
U'J9/ml) 1 4 bed. 2 ba1h.
8 '"' "'""' ' 1"' down 11
ye11r~ K% APR) for h§fmt;s
S00_.620·4946 e11 R027

5 room house at 44 Olive
St. Has stove/refrldge
5425/rent plus deposit,

6 3 45
~N°::.P.::8:;:15:;,;4;;4;;,
·.::.9:;;:;;,~~

Nice clean economical 2
br w!basement &amp;. garage
S Prk Dr ref I dep no
noiS:,_,3,04;;;·1"67"i5m·5,;16"2;-;.·= ·
s
o town. priVate, 1 1/
ere
tawn
screene
orch overlooking water
BR i bath, saparat
arage w/ loll Lease.
check,' references
6501month $650 de
sll .+ utllllles A,a,labl
446·492? o

Apartment available now
Rlverben&lt;l Apls. New
Haven V'N. Now accepl·
1ng
appllcatl(lns
for ~~~~:;:;:;~
HUD·subsldlzad,
one
M .li~Ullc!ured
Bedroom Apts. Utilities ~OO O
HnusllllJ
mcluded. Based on 30%
of adJUSted Income Call
304·682-3121,
available """"'"""""'""'""'""""
for Senior and Disabled
Rllllfala

ti) ~OJ&gt;Ie.

~2"!Brl""'wii0a!"le"riilaniid~l!"r•"'•h~ln·
cludect No pats At John·
s'on's Mobile Home Park
Call740·+645·0506

~~-~~~~

2 bedroom

2 bath ftailer

and/or
small tor rent Ntce &amp; clean,
tor rent Catt ,$450 month $450 de·
~
garage,
wrap
around 74().441·1111 lor Sp!JII· posit 367·7762
19n Airstream Argossy ........... h, on 25 acres. 10 cation &amp; Information
28 ft
d r dy t0 .....,...,,
Saloo
go ~P~~Q con
ea
mmutes below Gallipohs
ELLM VIEW APTS
Big Oak- Kllchen to much
,
Redmond
16x72
$4700 S04-882·39S9 or to list bulh 10 last 2&amp;3BR aod up, Cenlral 1999
cetl304-675-0045
Air, WID hookup, tenant 3br 2ba wlf~replace must
740-645•5928
.
mo·- 304 675 2897
~ys eleclnc EHO Elm
'"
·
·
·
_ _ _...,..;;.._ _ House In Hartford, WV, "'""
RV
$7S,OOO
OBO VIew
Apls Country tlvmg 3, 4, &amp; 5
$225,000

tor

a

3001( tnents,

"'"!~"'T.;Riilon;ii';i;i;;;;;;;;.=- homo. 3500 Sq Ft. Blg houses

Flea Market. Rio Mini
Man paOung lot Every
weekend $
for Fri.
20
Sat, Sun or $10 a day
Table provlcl~d tor extra
space $5 Spec8s lim·
11ed! JUst getting started! Serv1ce at Carmichael "'(7~40;:14.;,44~·~138~6~~:::::"' _
13:!!:04:::)8•8":'2·~30::1:::7~~~
Call
Wmslon
Sheets Trailers
4 8 d 2 Bath! 0 1
LEASING Jordan
:_:74;;;0;;·3;;:,67;;;9;;·9;255;,,,~ 740·446·3825
$25,C:X,·
for
tiSII~~ LandlnJ), 2 &amp; 36A Avail·
~·620·4946 a• R019
able No Pats 1ienanl
MIICIIaneoua
AV Serv1ce at Carmi· UVV"
"
•-"!ii~;;;;~;,..;;;
ResponSible, for Rent &amp;
chael
Tmlle,.
Land (Acnagol
Eleclr~ 304-674·0023 or
Jet Aeration Motors • ~74:0.~4~46~-38=25~~== ;;~;i;;ii·~--~ 304-6 17•9986
refMired, new rebuilt
60 Acres whh older a --:...~:::-~--=
In ltOC:II:. Call Ron
MatolqdN
3 br., $400 a mo. PIus
Be&lt;;rroom brick home. 5
Evans1~D0-537-9528
Harley Hugger 1200 mlle:s west of Jadcson dep &amp; ulibti9S, no pets,
92
•
m
' "•s, call for de· Call740·418·2421
3rd
St.
Racine.
21
000
Mollohan's Carpet "OtJalm:r
741r247-429Z
ity at Low Pnces• 13•6• ta1ls. mea 304·675-&amp;411 Alo Grande • 1.8 Acres
Berber "arpel tn sl~k on or 304·674·3070
on paved road. 1 112 N 3rd Ave 1n Middle"
U\i
sale Now Easrem A~e
mile lrom U.S.
35. port, 1 br fum1shod apt ,
Gallipol45 IQ 44 6-7444
County
water
Mobile ref. &amp; dep , no pets,
home
o.k"
$12,500. 740.9.92·0165
For sate Honda Genera·
_
_
366 755 5596
a ......UIIful •pta. ol Jo-"·
tor · EM3500 SX, elec
Auto•
~
'""'
start
$750 00 ;;;;;;""'~""";;.;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
aon Estates. Q2 West304-675·1259
Suv's, TruckS, CarS full
wood Dr . from $365 to
70446 2568
size and compacts, an
$560
"
~ot II Tub F OUI~II Top Wllh warranty. PliceS
Equal tlousing Opportuue ty,
rae
very, sta.n1ng at 1900 Stop or
Ap l11•.t,/
nfty Ttus 1nsti1ution t9 an
Slwe 50%. Tiki TUbe. Call Cook MOtors 32S ~~~J~u~w;al~tu:III~M;;..~ Equal Opportufilly Pfo606-328..()777
Jackson
Pika
:
'ide
~r~an d~E~m pl~
oy~e":'r~~
Modem lBA apt. Call
03
6
Want To Buy
740-44 ·01
Grecloua Living 1 and 2
740
-446-0390
Bedroom Apts at V1ttage
Absolute Top Dollar • 511" •95
- M·orcu·ry-S-ab-lo$t_7_50 '!'Twr"'··n~R~w-ers--l''"CYNO-r
Manor and
Rlv&amp;t$1de
ver/gold
COinS,
any cau 740 _446 _481 s .
AptS 1n Middleport, from
10K/14K/18K gold JeW·
ceptlng apphca~ons for S327
to
$59.2.
elry dental gold pre
Cl • /An&amp;.!
waiting tlst for HL!D sub,
GISIC
nques
siCIIZed, 1-BA apartment 740-992-5064
Equal
1935
US
currency, ;;;;;;;~""''i-;i;;i;,;;;.;_ for the elderly/dasabled Houstng Opportunity.
proollm1nt
sets.
d1a· 72 Ford Tonno, garage cat1GlS·eS79
monds, MTS Co1n Shop kept, clasSIC, all ong1nat.
Island VIEIW Motel haS
151 2nd AVenue. Galli· $12,500
OBO,
~
vacancies
$35.00/Nighl
poliS. 446·2642
(740)444·1366
7~&lt;16-0406

Now

=

River fronl 3br 2 full
battls, basement water
and sewer pd Central
AC $600 soc dep $600
renl 740·446·3481

~

Far

House at 12.00 Noon on
May 9, 2009 Buckeye
aBA 2 bath $349 ~r ~~~~:-::--~
Htlls Career Cenla!, Rio ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;;;;;; monlh 446-3093
"'"' CONVENIENTLY
LO·
~~.;.;;;::-;;,;:;-~~ CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Grande.
OhiO
(740)
Great
Deal
asking ABLEI Townhou!e apart·

Campen/ RV• &amp;

Condominium•

""'=""'""'""'""'""""
~30::;4:;:·6::,74::,;·0~2;::5;:;9·~~~
SaJo I• ,..._., 11.------...l

~

Flea Markets

Tara
TO'Nnhouse
Apartments - 2BA , i .5
bath, back patio. pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
age,
water
pd.)
$425Jrent,
$425/sec
dop Call740·645·85~9

2bron 2tel Slreel PI
Pleasant
$350.00 · +
5350.00
'
dep

~;1o P&lt;;

~~"'All"""ctli;i;on""'s;;;o;;;iii
o=•~;:;::,;~,.:;":~pm~C~h~U~rch~~R~d
~~~oc~llo;/:~ 1Tstngs
AUCTION·
MOdl.llar
•
8()0-620-4946 ex T4et

24S-5334

secondllh1rd

floor
apt.
overlooking
GaH1pol1s City Pa~ and
River
L A den, lrg
Kitchen-dining area with
alt new appliances &amp;
cupboards, 3 eA . 2
baths,
laundry
area
$900 per montn
Call
446-2325 or 446-4425

-------

a

bedrooms. Owner will f!·
nance Call today for prequabflcatiOn

"'18;;88;o:l2:;,;t;:,5·;:,57~7.;.4-"':"="

SBR
ountry hv1ng- 3·
2·3 llA oo property
Many floor plans' Easy
Flna.nclngl We own the .
•
bank
can
today!
866-215-5774

=c·

•

;;,;;;;~~~-'!'""-·
"The Proc1orville
Difference"
$1 and a deed 1s all you

need to own your dream
home Call Now 1
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167

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

r

A Jump

on
SAVINGS

s

00 00

•IS·ac--

W

Il.'l~S;~ii~
Shop
Ctosslfleds!

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Tuesday, Mays, 2009

~ribune

- Sentinel - l\e
CLA .S SIFIED

·Survivor of Ohio baseball tea111 bus crash
BLUFFrON (AP) - Two
) ~ars ago. Tm1 Berta wa'i
f1ghting to sun 1ve head
lllJUnes that left him in a
cuma followmg a. bus crash
that killed five Bluffton
UniverSity baseball players .
A year later. he was learning to Wdlk and read again.
Now he's a college graduate and plannmg to go to
nursing school.
"When they told me I
would never do it, that just
fueled me. because 1f you
tell m~ , 'You're not ever
going to do this,' well . I'm
' goi ng to do it ," he sa1d.
Doctors didn't think Berta.
24. of Ida , Mich .. would ever
walk again·, let alone fin1sh
the four courses he needed to
get his b1ology degree.
He was just two months
from graduating in March
20Q7 when the Flondabound bus he was on with
the team plunged off a freeway overpass m Atlanta. Of
those who survived, Berta's

Eastern
fromPageBl
Connery · delivered a bases·
clearing smgle to set the
mercy-rule into effect.
Brannon
and
Zach
Hendrix led EHS with three
h1ts apiece: followed by
Connery with two. Pierce,
Amsbary and Tyler Hendnx
also had a safety apiece in
the win. Zach Hendrix was
the wmning pitcher of

Draw
from PageBl
Academy &lt;nd Meigs contests will meet in the sectional final on Saturday,
May 16. at I p.m. The outcomes of those two semtfinals will determmed where
the final will be played.
Two other locals
Eastern. and Southern
won· t have to wait for a
possible matchup. as the
two Meigs· County schools
v.lll face off 111 D1vis1on IV
sectional final right out of
the gates. The Lady Eagles
(10-3) earned a No. 3 seed
and will host the sixth-seeded Lady Tornadoes (6-12)
on Saturday. May 16, at I

injune&gt; were the worst
He ,uffered critical damage
to areas of hi&gt; bmm that control his muscles and speech.
He al&gt;o broke all of his rib'&gt;
on the left side. his collar\&gt;one
and a shoulder blade.
. He eventually recovered
and learned to walk agam.
He completed his degree by
taking classes online.
On Sunday, Berta walked
onto a stage at Bluffton
wearing a cap and gown and
received a standing ovation.
University president James
Harder said it seemed hke a
miracle that Berta was able to
graduate. "Based on h1s own
strength and his own determination he's achieved his diploma, but he's also inspired all
of us." Harder said.
Berta was a catcher his
first two years at Bluffton
bef&lt;!re he decided to concentrate on school and tootball.
But he stayed involved with
the baseball team as a student coach. That's why he

was wuh the team when the
bu; crashed
The
National
TransportatiOn Safety Board
later said that confusing
highway Signs and dnver
error contributed to the accident. Investigators sa1d the
bus driver who also died in
the crash along w1th his wife
mistook an exit ramp for a
regular highway lane, crashing the bus into a concrete
barrier before il flipped off
th\) ·overpass and fell 30 feet
back onto Interstate 75 .
Doctors weren't sure Berta
would live through the mght.
He spent more than three
months in hospitals in
Atlanta and Oluo before
going home.
He still goes to therapy
three times a week and says
he 'II keef) with it until his
therapists are med of'seeing
him.
"Every single day I make
small gains and they're waiting for that day when they

record.
Smith, Polcyn · and Jacob
Brown each had a single for
the guests. Smith was the
losing pitcher for RVHS.

meter dash. Racing against 13 other girls, Isaac placed
a strong third with a time of I :06.7, a tight spot behind
the second place time of I :06.3. Isaac's contribution
from Page Bl
made up about three-fourths of the squad's total
points.
.
Making strides for the Raider track team, Dee! took
RVHS COMPETES AT lYDiARD CLASSIC
strong finishes in both the shot put and the discus
throw. Out of 20 other competitors, Dee! strongarmed
SOUTH POINT - The Silver and Black track teams a first place finish in the shot put, reaching a distance
travelled to South Point Friday evening to compete in of 46-04.5 . Deel followed up that success with a secthe Arthur Lydiard Classic. While the overall perfor- ond place finish in the discus throw, hurling the discus
mance at the meet was not as strong as the Raiders 136-03.
would have hoped, there were two standout athletes
-Both the Lady Raider and Raider track and field
that contributed a· great deal to. tlieir teams' totals . . tejlms are gearing up to compete Tuesday at the
Those indivduals were Stephanie Isaac and Zak Dee!. ' Chesapeake Relays in Chesapeake, starting at 4:30
Isaac faced tough competition in her event- the 400 p.m.

EASTERN

13, RIVER VALLEY 3

A Valley o;JO

00

-

3 40

Eastern

61&lt;

-

1'3 20 2

205

WP - Srannon, LP - GoOdrich.
EASTERN

10, RIVER ,VALLEY 0

A Valley 000

000 -

Eastern 201

052 ...- 10 13 0

WP - Z Hendrix; LF' -

033
Smith

p.m.
South Gallia also fmds
itself in a D-4 sectional
fmal, but the seventh-seeded Lady Rebels (4-10) will
be on the road as they travel
to Willow Wood to battle
second-seeded
Sym1l)es
Valley (13-5) on Saturday.
May 16, at I p.m.
The Lady Raiders (3-15)
- the lone D-3 softball program - earned a No. 10
seed and will travel to
Belpre for sectional semifi nal agamst No. 7 Belpre (67) on Monday, May II, at 5
p.m. The winner will play at
No. 2 Trimble (12-4) on
Friday, May 15, at 5 p.m.
Complete listings of all of
the 2009 baseball and softball bmckets for the south&gt;
east district are available on
the web at www.seodab.org

Tim Berta, a survivor of the
Blufjton baseball
team bus crash in
March 2007,
reacts during his
graduation in
Bluffton. Ohio on
Sunday. Two years
ago, Berta was
fighting to survive
head injuries that
left him In a coma
following a bUs
crash that killed
five fellow baseball
players.

James
from PageBl

.,'

.I

I

ter Dwight Howard (328)
was fourth followed by
New Orleans guard Chns
Paul ( 192).
The race was never in
doubt. It was James all
along.
"I'm 24 years old and
I'm receiving this award.!
never thought it would
happen this fast," he sa1d.
standing under three state
title banners he helped win
for the Fighting Irish. "I
never dreamed about bemg
MVP, but if I said 1 didn't
enJoy thts award I'd be
lying . Hard work pays off
and dreams do come true ."
James is the f1rst
Cavaliers player to win the
award. He averaged 28.4
pomts. 7.6 rebounds and 7.2
ass1sts this season , his sixth
as a pro. He also finished
second in voting for defensive player of the year, making him perhaps the
league's most dominant
two-way
player since
Michael Jordan.
Along with a trophy,
James was given a new car,
which he donated to a local
chartty.
After learning he won,
James knew be wanted to
share it with family and
friends. He knew there was
on! y one place to do it: At
his beloved St. V., !he
school where he was a high
school phenom.
As James - . who got a
police escort for the final
:miles - drove up about an
·hour before the ceremony in
:h1s metallic gray $225,000
·car with WITNES vanity
license plates, a crowd
chanting "M-V·P" rushed
into the street outside the
school.
The scene was more ci vii
later when James took the
stage and was serenaded by
hundreds of students sitting
111 the same bleachers he
used to.

I

.

I

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
mdt~l··~ir d~=~ytriOOlle.com REACH OVER 28~,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YO.UB AD NOW ONLINE

Wel:!sltes:
www.mydallylrlbune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com

..

www.mydallyreglster.com

l\egi~ter

(304) 675-1333
871i-52:M

will take doesn't
don't see any more improveHe plans to start nursing
really
matter.
ment and that's not going to school at Lourdes College
"The impossible just takes
happen as of right now," he near Toledo either this fall or
a little b1t longer," Berta
said. "It just keeps gettmg next year.
better and better as I go on." . How long his next step said.

weather practices consider- was negligent in the design
ing the collapse in Irving.
and construction of a mem"Our facility was put to brane-covered building that
the test this past fall when collapsed in 2003 after a
fromPageBl
Hurricane Ike hit the Texas ma).or
snowstorm
in
gulf coast," he said in a Philadelphia. The building
statement. "Our buildings was constructed for the'
acc1dent.
Summit lists on its Web withstood the high winds Philadelphia Regional Port
site several other facilities it and our football team was Authority.
City of Irving construebuilt, including one at Texas not in the facility at that
A&amp;M and one for the New time."
lion records list OklahomaEngland Patriots. The com- , At the University of New based
Manhattan
pany also built the Wi ndstar Mexico. which also has a Construction Group as the
Casino just across the Sumnlit-built football prac- contractor for the Cowboys'
Texas-Ok ahoma border.
tice facility, associate ath- facility and Summit as the
The A&amp;M facility 1s· a letic director Scott Dotson structural
engineer.
$35.6 million project that said the collapse hasn't gen- Manhattan is the general
includes both a football erated significant concerns contractor for the new
practice fac1llty and an there .
• Cowboys stadium that will
indoor track . A&amp;M athletic
He said the school's facil- . open next season in
director Bill Byrne said the ity "has been tested· with Arlington.
.
school has had no problems some strong winds and held
Bob Bowen, Manhattan's
with the project, comr.leted up."
executive vice president,
late last year, but wlll reA Pennsylvania court said his company helped
evaluate 1ts policy on bad ruled in 2006 that Summit protect the outdoor practice

•

field from damage during
construction but all the
planning and other work
was done by Summit.
In a 2003 letter to thenIrving Fire Chief Paul
White, Cowboys director of
football operations Bruce
Mays described the planned
facility as "a semi-permanent structure supported by
lightweight steel trusses and
clad with a fire resistant
polymer fabric."
Mays said preliminary
discussions between the
team and the city had concluded the buildmg was "a
unique type of structure and
there could be a vllriety of
interpretations as to what
standards should be applied
in evaluatinl!l the structure
to comply w1th building and
fire codes."

He showed it all year, espe- seasons of at least 27 points, I on Tuesday·.
mom, who struggled to raise
"My missiOn hasn't been her only son.
cially with histeam's suc- six rebounds and six assists.
·The 'other is Robertson, completed," James said. "I
"I don't know how you
cess."
still
I
have
a
lot
of
things
I
did
it," James said.
whose
versatile
game
is
the
Focused from the start,
Better than anyone,
the 6-foot-8, 250-pound one to which James' is most want to 'do this season. I
want to have another cele- Gloria James understood
James sharpened his already often compared.
• her son's trip through his
formidable skills this seaJames nearly ave~aged a bration in June."
his
longtime
girlold neighborhoods.
With
triple-double - 32 point~.
son.
"It didn't surprise me,'.'
H~ started a career-high
11.3 rebounds and 7.5 friend, Savannah, and their
81 games and set personal assists - as the top-seeded two sons sitting up front, she said. "He has never forbests in field-goal (49) and Cavaliers breezed through James thanked his family, gotten where he came
free-throw (79) percentages the first round of the play- friends and former team- from."
Soon, it was time for
as .well as blocks (93). offs, sweeping DetrOit in mates during a touching
James became the second four games. Cleveland hosts · speech. Promising not to James to head home, a place
player to po~t five straight the Atlanta Hawks in Game cry, he spoke fondly of his he never left.

YOUR.CWSJfiED LIHE.AD NOTICED
i'

Now you can have borders and graphics ·
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HOY( T.O WlUJE AN AD

• Start YoMr Adt

Succestful Ada

f.!!!!!~~~:'~ ,.,;,~~~~

«POLICIES«

~tlshlng reserves

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Enors Must B

Lost- Black l-ab WJWhl!e
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Waterproofing
Uncondttoonalltfeltme
guarantee Local refer·
ences furnished Est9bhshed 1975 Call 24 Hrs
740'-446·0870. Rogers

eported on lhe firs

Found at Gallipolis Wal-

Basement Watarerooling

of

p~blicltlo

the

Trtbun
wll

ntlnei·Reglster

responsible for n
re than the coat o
he space occupte
the error and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable fo
1
ny 088 or expens
hal resuhs frORI lh
bJicatlon
o
of
a
mission

e~lsement.
orrectlona will
ade In lh&amp; firs
vallableedldon.

m)JSt be picked

Within 30 dayS.
that

l.

~

will b

p C e Up
discarded.

e

Monoy To
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Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal! Today! 740-446-4367
1·800·214-0452

TUESDAY ~fELEVISION GUIDE

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bloodlmes,
Priced
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(740)286-5395
or
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~

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lor someone Wflh restau·
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We
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Afla1rs BEFORE you tefi·
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requests for any large
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toll
tree
at
1·666·27&amp;-0000 to learn
tf the mortgage broker or
lender IS property U·
censad (This is a public
se!V1ce
announcement
from lhe Ohio Valley
PubHshlng Company)

(;OOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR ENTIRE TRAILER INVENTORY AT
w-NW CARMICHAEL..
TRAILERS COM
74"448
v· 3825

Recreational Vehlclee ................ _.............. 1 000
ATV ....................................................... ...... 1005
Blcyc::lea ... ................................................... 1010
Baat&amp;/Accea.arlea .................................... 101!1
camperiRVa a Trallera ............................ 1020

u

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

~~:!~~:~:.~::·.~·.:::::::::::::·.:::::::::::::::·:.::::::::::::::::~ =~~:"0~~~~-~.~~~~~:::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::~g~g

Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Tr•ller. ... ............................... ,......... 2040
Vw••,.,•·,.....b...................................................... 22040505
a
o uy ..................................... _,.......
Real Eetate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Pfota :............... -...... ,.................... 3005
commercial. ................ ~ .............................3010
Condomlnfums ....................................--····3Dl5
For Sale by Owner ..................................... 3020
Houaas for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land(Acreage) ...............-....................... 3030

PlumblngfEiectrlcai ..................................... :WO
Profea•lonal Servlaea ................................. 342
RoRopoolllnrog... ...... ,............................. ,................. 343448
.............................................,...........
SeGurlty .....................-................................. 348
Tloi&lt;/Accountlng ........................................... 350
1'raveVEntorlalnm..-.t .................................. 352
FFIInanct,oll.S
........,........... .__ ,,, ............................. ~.
nanc a erv en ...................-... -.............. .....,
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend............................................ 415
Education ............................ ······--···-······- ... 500
Buelneaa &amp; Trade Schooi ........................... SOS
lnstruct:ton &amp; Training ............ -................ =~~
Lesaona.•-................. _...... ,.................. l"' """s•o

Agriculture ............................................... 700
Farm Equl~ment ...................:... .................705

Real atate Rentala ................................... 3500
Aparlmenteii'Qwnhousea ......................... 3505
CoComndomemrcln'"tul.m
...o..........................................33551105
...........................................
fioua. . totR.,t .. -..................................~•. 3520
Land (Acraogo) ......................................... 3fi25'
Storage ..... ................................................. 3535
WMont ,•o Rtentd...H
••.•.•...,...g.................... ........... 34540000
anu ac ure
aua n ......................,__....
Lota .............................................................. 400&amp;
Movers .................................... ...... ,........-•••.4010
Rentala .......... _......................................_.. ,.4015
Selea ...........................................................4020
:ppllea .................................................. ::~:
ant 10 8uy ..................- ...........................
Resort Property ......................... -· .• ,.... 5000
Resort property tor sale .......................... 5025
Resort Property tqr rent ..................... ...... 5050
Employmenl... . ..... _._, __ ...................... 6000
Accountlng1Financiel ................................ 6002
AdmlnlatratiVeiProfeaaJonal ....... --............ 6004
Caehlar/Cierk ............................................. 8006
ChllcliEiderly Care ,.... ................................ 6008
Clerical ....... _........ ._ .................................. 6010

Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
want to buy...............................- .............. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
An11quea............................... ..... .. .... ........ 90s
Apptlance ............ t . .... _...... .... .... ~ ................ 91 0
Aucuona .........: ................................. .' ..... -915

Educatlon .................. ................................. 8016
Ektctrlcat PIUmblng ........................_.. ........ 60t8
Employmcm1 Ag•ncle•···•"'" '"'"'"'""'"""""'""B020
Enterlalnment ............... - ..............._......... 8022
Fooct S.rvlcaa ...... .................................... .. eo24
Government a F~ere1 Joba .................... 6026

~~~~~,~~=~-~-~-~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~t·i~"b·~y:::::::::·.:.:::: :·:::::;::::·::::::::::::::::::~=

Anlmala ..................., ................................... 600
Animal Suppliea .......................................... 605
Hor..a ........................................................ 610
Llve•toek ....................................................6 ~

6
Plata............................................................
went to buy ........ ..................................... r... e2.5

~:~;~, =~~~~--~·:::;::::::::;::::.:::::.~::::::~~~ g~~=~r~i~e;:.;::::::~:::::::.-:::::::::::::::::::::::1:

~:r~~t~b~::.~.~~~:::::~::: ::·::::::::::::::::::::::::::rs ~ ~:~'::::.~~-~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

..
Comput•ra ......................_........................... 930 Maintenancer'Domutlc ............................. 603;J:
Equlpmentl$upplle&amp;....................................935 MsnagemenVSupervfaory ........................ 6034
Flea Markets ........................... ,... -.. · .. ·- 940 Mechanics ......................................... 6036
Fuel 011 co.,I/YIIood/Gaa ............................. i45 Madlcail ................... .................................. 6038
Fumlture ............................. r ... .. .. ... . 950 , Musical ........... ................................ 6040
Hobby/Hunt a. Sport ....................................955 Part-Time-Temporaries ............................ 6042
Kld 'a comer ..........., ............. .................. ,•• 960 Reateuranho ...... ... ..... ... -..............._........ 6044
Ml•c•Uan-.ou• ... · ............. ......................... 965 Setea ........-................................................. 6048
Want to buy .............................. --·· ............ ,.970 Technical Trad•• ........................... -..~ .... ~... 6050
Y•rd S.lo .....................,.............................. 97&amp; T•xtii•IIFoctory ......................................... eos•

•

S-5

266 Colonial Dnve t1t3
Bidwell, OhiO 45614
740·446·3344
Office Hours M, W, F
9AM·5PM

I

u..tQ.t~
www.comrct.com

Fann Equlpmont

Yonl

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Car- washer, table &amp; chairs,
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Thanks tor yor suPport
Zt•tM lraclor les5 lhun 300 · - - - - - - hr,,•li-4l Mhp.~ u1&gt;er 4-wh
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Community
Yard sale
Gunvllle Ad Leon WV
May ,7&amp;8, 9-5 6 mites of
sales
May 5 &amp; &amp; at 3622 Bula'·
111e P~e 1 mile lrom
Shone, Club 8am • 1
Boys clothes Size 8 16,
car
speakers,
sump
pump, truck tool bmc
~Yard~~S~I~-~-~Th-

•
a8
ur
May 4, 5, 6, 1 at 1863

.

Automotlve ................................................ 2000
tluto R•ntaVLeau•.••.•...
2006 ,
~utos .......................................................... 2010
Cleaefc/An11quea •• _...... ,................, ............ 2015
Commerc::lelllndu•trlal. .................~ ........... 2020

Child/Elderly Cere ......... ,............................. 312
CompUtera ., ................. .. .........-................... 314
CDoantraclltollrsJ...n...lt"o"r'•'•"•'''"""'""""'''''""""""''"'n 33t168
mea c •
............................. · ...
Electrical ..................................................... : 0
Financial ...................... -................................ 2
He•lth ..................... _..................................... 326
Heettftg &amp; eoallng ....., ........... - .................... 328
Ho~ lmprovemen1a 330
lneurance. .................................................... 33 2
LawnServlc• ......... _.... ............................... 334

Personal ............................. ,., .. _,.... .. . .....

Apa~monll

?,...~

Agn c ltllfe

• ~P!::'cC:::~,....~~~.~~~.::::::: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::2~ w~~=~~-~.~~~~.:::::::·.:::::::··.::::::::::::·.:::·.·.·.:::::::::::
~t~0:.,3s5
er1tona 8.....................................................
an1 to buy ........................,.... .................
Wanted •.•. ., ................................................. 235
• servlcea ... ....,............................................ ~ 00
·~ Appllanc• 8 ervlce .................... -.................. 3 0 2
Automotive ............................................. 304
Building Materlafe ....................................... 30S

IIII'-...::.4U

IC&gt; 21109 by NEA, Inc.

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

: L~ale ........................................................... 100
• Announcement ...................... -.................... 200
.. Blrthday/Annlvereary .................................. 205
Happy Ada ................ ,................................... 21P
,. Loal &amp; Found ................................... _.,......... 215

j

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Pob

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Wa A Keyword • Jftdude Co"'pkt.

DeKrlptk&gt;n • lnc:IMde A

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

... .

GallIa

· All

The setting was fitting for
James. who earlier this year
had the words "Loyalty"
and ''Family" tattooed vertically along his rih cage.
In tjle past, the MVP trophy has been presented at
team practice facilities or
arenas. But James wa1,1ted a
special location.
League spokesman Brian
Mcintyre said the intimate
ceremony was unlike any
before.
"When he heard what
LeBron wanted to do, we
gave it about a second's
thought, and said that's a
great idea," he said. "This
was wonderful."
James
credited
his
Cavahers teammates. who
attended the ceremony
along with coach Mike
Brown, for raising their
games in Cleveland's best
season ever. The Cavs went
66-1 ~. 39-2 at home and
earned the top seed in the
playoffs - a franchise
first.
"Individual
accolades
come when team success
happens," James said. "You
look at those 14 guys over
there, I got the award
because of them. They put
in the work."
James invtted his team:
mates to the podi urn and
presented each with an
expensive camera.
"This award is going to be
like the both of ours. but
J'm going to keep it at my
house," he cracked.
At 24 years, 106 days on
the final day of tbe regular
season, James is the
youngest player to win the
award since Moses Malone
(24 years, 16 days) in 197879 . Wes Unseld was 23
when he won 11 in 1968-69.
James vied all season for
MVP honors with Bryant
and Wade, his teammates on
the U.S . gold medalist
Olympic team last summer.
"He deserved it," Wade
said . "I said all year, I
thought LeBron was the
MVP of this league .' He's a
guy who every year is going
to be in that conversation ....

~ter

AP Photo/The Lima
Newt, Gavin Jac"-on

Track

Cowboys

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

l f'll(l

H li . 1&lt;l1r

--

-;;;;0~=~~--

Vondo- wanted at Roo
·~

' ""'"''...
For Sate by owner 75
acres w/ horse bam
50'x120', plus SO'x20' al·
tached garage, country
sl}ie hOuse 11 yrs old,
cedar siding-hltlden 1n
the pines, Spring Valley
area-Galljpotis,
Ohio.
3br, 2 bath, LR, DR, FA,
eat In kit. screened
porch, ~less sun porch, 4
dedcs, hot tub, 2 car ga·
rage, heat pump wl gas,
AC, 2 gas FP's, elrcle dr,
storage bldg Call for dl·
rectlons
740·44t-953t
.. 1--..
•• 3IJn or
or ce11 740 ""'"'
bsl 1 p1
go to ORVB
we te ot cs at
;;www;;;;;,;
. ;;;;,;,;;;·c;;;o;;;m!!!!!!'!!!!!!!
Hou* For Sale
---=-~""'!~-~
Bed 2 Balh HUO
homesl0nly$1991amon.,

;

1 and 2 bedroom apts •
fumlshed
and
unfurnished, and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Mlddlepon,
secunty deposit required,
no pets. 740-992·22t8
18R Apt, WID hookups,
satellite TV Incl. w/rent,
close to hospital Call
740·339·9492

~:o-~---~
2BR A.PT.Ciose to Hotzer Hospital on SR 160

CIA. (740) 441•0194

Houooo For lonl
U'J9/ml) 1 4 bed. 2 ba1h.
8 '"' "'""' ' 1"' down 11
ye11r~ K% APR) for h§fmt;s
S00_.620·4946 e11 R027

5 room house at 44 Olive
St. Has stove/refrldge
5425/rent plus deposit,

6 3 45
~N°::.P.::8:;:15:;,;4;;4;;,
·.::.9:;;:;;,~~

Nice clean economical 2
br w!basement &amp;. garage
S Prk Dr ref I dep no
noiS:,_,3,04;;;·1"67"i5m·5,;16"2;-;.·= ·
s
o town. priVate, 1 1/
ere
tawn
screene
orch overlooking water
BR i bath, saparat
arage w/ loll Lease.
check,' references
6501month $650 de
sll .+ utllllles A,a,labl
446·492? o

Apartment available now
Rlverben&lt;l Apls. New
Haven V'N. Now accepl·
1ng
appllcatl(lns
for ~~~~:;:;:;~
HUD·subsldlzad,
one
M .li~Ullc!ured
Bedroom Apts. Utilities ~OO O
HnusllllJ
mcluded. Based on 30%
of adJUSted Income Call
304·682-3121,
available """"'"""""'""'""'""""
for Senior and Disabled
Rllllfala

ti) ~OJ&gt;Ie.

~2"!Brl""'wii0a!"le"riilaniid~l!"r•"'•h~ln·
cludect No pats At John·
s'on's Mobile Home Park
Call740·+645·0506

~~-~~~~

2 bedroom

2 bath ftailer

and/or
small tor rent Ntce &amp; clean,
tor rent Catt ,$450 month $450 de·
~
garage,
wrap
around 74().441·1111 lor Sp!JII· posit 367·7762
19n Airstream Argossy ........... h, on 25 acres. 10 cation &amp; Information
28 ft
d r dy t0 .....,...,,
Saloo
go ~P~~Q con
ea
mmutes below Gallipohs
ELLM VIEW APTS
Big Oak- Kllchen to much
,
Redmond
16x72
$4700 S04-882·39S9 or to list bulh 10 last 2&amp;3BR aod up, Cenlral 1999
cetl304-675-0045
Air, WID hookup, tenant 3br 2ba wlf~replace must
740-645•5928
.
mo·- 304 675 2897
~ys eleclnc EHO Elm
'"
·
·
·
_ _ _...,..;;.._ _ House In Hartford, WV, "'""
RV
$7S,OOO
OBO VIew
Apls Country tlvmg 3, 4, &amp; 5
$225,000

tor

a

3001( tnents,

"'"!~"'T.;Riilon;ii';i;i;;;;;;;;.=- homo. 3500 Sq Ft. Blg houses

Flea Market. Rio Mini
Man paOung lot Every
weekend $
for Fri.
20
Sat, Sun or $10 a day
Table provlcl~d tor extra
space $5 Spec8s lim·
11ed! JUst getting started! Serv1ce at Carmichael "'(7~40;:14.;,44~·~138~6~~:::::"' _
13:!!:04:::)8•8":'2·~30::1:::7~~~
Call
Wmslon
Sheets Trailers
4 8 d 2 Bath! 0 1
LEASING Jordan
:_:74;;;0;;·3;;:,67;;;9;;·9;255;,,,~ 740·446·3825
$25,C:X,·
for
tiSII~~ LandlnJ), 2 &amp; 36A Avail·
~·620·4946 a• R019
able No Pats 1ienanl
MIICIIaneoua
AV Serv1ce at Carmi· UVV"
"
•-"!ii~;;;;~;,..;;;
ResponSible, for Rent &amp;
chael
Tmlle,.
Land (Acnagol
Eleclr~ 304-674·0023 or
Jet Aeration Motors • ~74:0.~4~46~-38=25~~== ;;~;i;;ii·~--~ 304-6 17•9986
refMired, new rebuilt
60 Acres whh older a --:...~:::-~--=
In ltOC:II:. Call Ron
MatolqdN
3 br., $400 a mo. PIus
Be&lt;;rroom brick home. 5
Evans1~D0-537-9528
Harley Hugger 1200 mlle:s west of Jadcson dep &amp; ulibti9S, no pets,
92
•
m
' "•s, call for de· Call740·418·2421
3rd
St.
Racine.
21
000
Mollohan's Carpet "OtJalm:r
741r247-429Z
ity at Low Pnces• 13•6• ta1ls. mea 304·675-&amp;411 Alo Grande • 1.8 Acres
Berber "arpel tn sl~k on or 304·674·3070
on paved road. 1 112 N 3rd Ave 1n Middle"
U\i
sale Now Easrem A~e
mile lrom U.S.
35. port, 1 br fum1shod apt ,
Gallipol45 IQ 44 6-7444
County
water
Mobile ref. &amp; dep , no pets,
home
o.k"
$12,500. 740.9.92·0165
For sate Honda Genera·
_
_
366 755 5596
a ......UIIful •pta. ol Jo-"·
tor · EM3500 SX, elec
Auto•
~
'""'
start
$750 00 ;;;;;;""'~""";;.;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
aon Estates. Q2 West304-675·1259
Suv's, TruckS, CarS full
wood Dr . from $365 to
70446 2568
size and compacts, an
$560
"
~ot II Tub F OUI~II Top Wllh warranty. PliceS
Equal tlousing Opportuue ty,
rae
very, sta.n1ng at 1900 Stop or
Ap l11•.t,/
nfty Ttus 1nsti1ution t9 an
Slwe 50%. Tiki TUbe. Call Cook MOtors 32S ~~~J~u~w;al~tu:III~M;;..~ Equal Opportufilly Pfo606-328..()777
Jackson
Pika
:
'ide
~r~an d~E~m pl~
oy~e":'r~~
Modem lBA apt. Call
03
6
Want To Buy
740-44 ·01
Grecloua Living 1 and 2
740
-446-0390
Bedroom Apts at V1ttage
Absolute Top Dollar • 511" •95
- M·orcu·ry-S-ab-lo$t_7_50 '!'Twr"'··n~R~w-ers--l''"CYNO-r
Manor and
Rlv&amp;t$1de
ver/gold
COinS,
any cau 740 _446 _481 s .
AptS 1n Middleport, from
10K/14K/18K gold JeW·
ceptlng apphca~ons for S327
to
$59.2.
elry dental gold pre
Cl • /An&amp;.!
waiting tlst for HL!D sub,
GISIC
nques
siCIIZed, 1-BA apartment 740-992-5064
Equal
1935
US
currency, ;;;;;;;~""''i-;i;;i;,;;;.;_ for the elderly/dasabled Houstng Opportunity.
proollm1nt
sets.
d1a· 72 Ford Tonno, garage cat1GlS·eS79
monds, MTS Co1n Shop kept, clasSIC, all ong1nat.
Island VIEIW Motel haS
151 2nd AVenue. Galli· $12,500
OBO,
~
vacancies
$35.00/Nighl
poliS. 446·2642
(740)444·1366
7~&lt;16-0406

Now

=

River fronl 3br 2 full
battls, basement water
and sewer pd Central
AC $600 soc dep $600
renl 740·446·3481

~

Far

House at 12.00 Noon on
May 9, 2009 Buckeye
aBA 2 bath $349 ~r ~~~~:-::--~
Htlls Career Cenla!, Rio ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,:;;;;;;; monlh 446-3093
"'"' CONVENIENTLY
LO·
~~.;.;;;::-;;,;:;-~~ CATEO
&amp;
AFFORD·
Grande.
OhiO
(740)
Great
Deal
asking ABLEI Townhou!e apart·

Campen/ RV• &amp;

Condominium•

""'=""'""'""'""'""""
~30::;4:;:·6::,74::,;·0~2;::5;:;9·~~~
SaJo I• ,..._., 11.------...l

~

Flea Markets

Tara
TO'Nnhouse
Apartments - 2BA , i .5
bath, back patio. pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
age,
water
pd.)
$425Jrent,
$425/sec
dop Call740·645·85~9

2bron 2tel Slreel PI
Pleasant
$350.00 · +
5350.00
'
dep

~;1o P&lt;;

~~"'All"""ctli;i;on""'s;;;o;;;iii
o=•~;:;::,;~,.:;":~pm~C~h~U~rch~~R~d
~~~oc~llo;/:~ 1Tstngs
AUCTION·
MOdl.llar
•
8()0-620-4946 ex T4et

24S-5334

secondllh1rd

floor
apt.
overlooking
GaH1pol1s City Pa~ and
River
L A den, lrg
Kitchen-dining area with
alt new appliances &amp;
cupboards, 3 eA . 2
baths,
laundry
area
$900 per montn
Call
446-2325 or 446-4425

-------

a

bedrooms. Owner will f!·
nance Call today for prequabflcatiOn

"'18;;88;o:l2:;,;t;:,5·;:,57~7.;.4-"':"="

SBR
ountry hv1ng- 3·
2·3 llA oo property
Many floor plans' Easy
Flna.nclngl We own the .
•
bank
can
today!
866-215-5774

=c·

•

;;,;;;;~~~-'!'""-·
"The Proc1orville
Difference"
$1 and a deed 1s all you

need to own your dream
home Call Now 1
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167

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

r

A Jump

on
SAVINGS

s

00 00

•IS·ac--

W

Il.'l~S;~ii~
Shop
Ctosslfleds!

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Card of Thanks

Thank you to
everyone
wh~

remembered
me on my
birthdayYour
thoughtfulness
is greatly
. appreciated.
Elva Dean
Barnitz 41(

"•

6000

www. my~ailysentinel.com
Clerical·

Ernp'O~ men!

Immediate open•ng ror
Cter~eal Worker - rruJSI
AccounHng Financial be a Nolary Off tee work.
must wor+;. on Saturdays
Actountant:
Fu!l-hme Call 740-44&amp;.7529
posrtion with llusy accounting off100 1n Galhpolis lor •mmed•ate employ- ---=.;;E,;;duc~oti~iot~n~=
meot Accovnllng Clegree •
and expener\Ce reqwed
Must have good organ- Program
'SUbstitutes
JzatK&gt;nal Sk1lls and the needed 10 work at Carteab1lity to work mctepeod- ton School &amp; Meigs ln·
ently With strong ali:en- duStnes Will be work.tng
lion to detail. Please With ch•ldren aoo aduJts
send resume and refer· With developmental dts
ences to
abthltes Must have a
valid OhiO orvers Ll·
gallipolisaccountant@
cense and High Schoot
gmail.com
Diploma or GED. Submit
or ma11 to CLA tOt, PO application 01 resume to.
Box 469. GaiGpolis. OH Calieton
SchooUMetgS
r
' 56
..:.3_1-.=~:---, Industries

I

SHOP
.

WANTED: Fun-ttme positton avaitabte 10 asstsl m·
dividua!S wittl mental retardatiOO at a group
home 111 Btdwelt3-11 p
Sun;
3 30-11 p
MfTwWITh High school
dtploma/GED. vahd driver·s license and three
years good driving .e~r:pertence. $8.Wu .• after
trainmg,. Excellent benefit
package.
Pre-emptoy·
ment Drug Testflg Send
tesume
to:
Buckeye
Community
Services,

t-an-463-6247
Mention ext. 2659

~~-------=

D1n Bustefs IS look.lng tor
someone to clean Monday &amp; Thursday's from
10:30P~
· ' 1:30AM,
clnver license,. drug test
and background ct1eck
required. 868-517·2549

Now hinog management
tor full serviCe casual
d1rnng tor local restaurant. Send resumes to
CLA Box 100, PO Box
469,
Galltpohs .
Oh

PO Box 307

Need

·fords low·.as ·"

·a
·
·.
.
"
..
5•
~·;Jj •

.. •••

.

.·

.

.

to

sell

Avon caii74Q.446-3358
Fora
Beller Employment
Opportunily!

f!8S$ ,pn tttis @~ge
.....

7 ladies

NEA
, ACROSS
Phillip

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

""""'==,.,==
IOStitUIIOO

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
· PLEAS
MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
VANDERBILT MORT·
GAGE AND FINANCE,
INC.
PlelniiH
vs:
TALMADGE D. LEWIS,
A/KIA
T. LEWIS, at al
Defendants
Case No. OllCV186
Judge: Crow
Legal Notice
Wenda Lee ·. Morris,
whose taat. known ad·
dreao lo 50475 Bigley
Ridge Road, Long
BOUom, OH 45743, will
take nollce ·lhat on the
2nd of March, 2009
Plaintiff flied Ita
Amended Complalntin
CasoNumber08CV186
In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court,
alleging that Dolen·
dent(s) have or claim to
have an Interest In the
real estate commonly
known as 50475 Bigley
RldgeRoad,LongBot·
tom, oH 45743, and
aloo known as Parcel

(513) 744·9600
ACTIONS . WERE IS· PERSON WHO WAS A
(513) 744-9602 Facalm· SUED, BY THE OHIO PARTY TO A PRO·
lie
.
ENVIRONMENTAL CEEDING
BEFORE
(4) 20, 27; (5) 4
PROTECTION AGENCY THE DIRECTOR BY FIL·
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. lNG
AN
APPEAL
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
Public Notice
THE ADOPTION, MODI· NOTICE OF THE FINAL
ACATION, OR REPEAL ACTION. PURSUANT
NOTICE TO BIDDERS OF ORDERS (OTHER TO OHIO REVISED
STATE OF OHIO
THAN
EMERGENCY CODE
SECTION
DEPARTMENT
OF ORDERS); THE IS· 3745.07, A FINAL AC·
TRANSPORTATION
SUANCE,
DENIAL, TION ISSUING, DENY·
Columb&lt;ls, Ohio
MODIFICATION OR Rl'· lNG,
MODIFYING,
Office ol Contracts
VOCATION OF Ll· REVOKING, OR RE•
Legal Copy Numbar: CENSES,
PERMITS, NEWING A PERMIT, 1..1·
091013
.
LEASES, VARIANCES, CENSE, OR VARIANCE
sealed proposals will OR
.CERTIFICATES: WHICH IS NOT PRE·
be accepted from pre·. AND THE APPROVAL CED£D BY A· PRO·
qualified bidders at the OR DISAPPROVAL OF POSED ACTION, MAY
ODOTOHice of Con· PLANS AND SPECIFI· BE APPEALED TO THE
tracts until 10:00 a.m. CATIONS. "DRAFT AC· ERAC BY FILING AN
on May 20, 2009. Pro· TIONS" ARE WRITTEN APPEAL WITHIN 30
joel 091013 Is located STATEMENTS OF THE DAYS OF ISSUANCE
In Meigs County, SR 7· DIRECTOR OF ENVI· OF THE FINAL ACTION.
.11.35 and Is a proven· RONMENTALPROTEC· ERAC APPEALS, AC·.
live
melnttnance liON' S (DIRECl'OR'S) COMPANIED BY A $70
PROJECT. THE DATE INTENT WITH RE· FILING FEE WHICH
SET FOR COMPlE· SPECT TO THE IS· THE COMMISSION IN
TION OF THIS WORK SUANCE,
· DENIAL, ITS DISCRETION MAY
SHALL BE AS SET ETC. OF A
REDUCE IF BY AFFI·
FORTH IN THE BID· PERMIT,
LICENSE, DAVIT THE APPEL·
DING .
PROPOSAL. ORDER, ETC. INTER· I.
A
N
T
PLANS AND SPECIFI· ESTEDPERSONSMAY DEMONST ·RATES
CATIONS ARE ON FILE· suBMIT
WRITTEN THAT PAYMENT OF
IN THE DEPARTMENT COMMENTS OR RE· THE FULL AMOUNT OF

WITH · RESPECT TO WITHIN 3 DAVS AFTER
THE ISSUANCE, DE· · FILING THE APPEAL
NIAL, MODIFICATION, WITH THE ERAC.
REVOCATION, OR RE· FINAL ISSUANCE OF
NEWAL OF A PERMIT, OAC CHAPTER 3745LICENSE, OR VARI· 31 MODIFICATION TO
ANCE. WRITTEN COM· PERMIT· TO· IN$TALL
MENTS
AND AND OPERATE
REQUESTS FOR A ALLIED
CORPORA·
PUBLIC MEETING RE· TION PLANT IS
GAROING A PRO· 49947 SR 337
POSED ACTION MAV RACINE, OH
BE
SUBMITTED ACTION
DATE :
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF 0412012009
NOTICE OF THE PRQ. FACILITY DESCRIP·
POSED ACTION. AN TION: AIR
ADJUDICATION HEAR· IDENTIFICATION NO.
lNG MAY BE HELD ON P0104382
A PROPOSED ACTION CHAPTER 31 MOOIF!·
IF A HEARING RE, CATION OF · .PTI 06·
QUEST OR oBJEC· 07186,
ISSUED
TION IS RECEIVED BY 12116/2003,
FOR
THE OEPA WITHIN 30 P9010NLY, TO · IN· •
DAYS OF ISSUANCE CREASE ALLOWABLE
OF THE PROPOSED EMISSIONS DUE TO
ACTION.
WRITTEN USAGE OF SLAG IN
COMMENTS,
RE· THE AGGREGATE MIX,
QUESTS FOR PUBLIC AN
INCREASE
IN
MEETINGS, AND AQ. ANUAL P.RODUCTION,
JUDICATION HEARING AND THE USE OF AS· .
REQUESTS MUST BE . SOCATED
WITH
SENT TO: HEARING THESE CHANGES:
CLERK, OHIO ENVI· APPLICATION
RE·
RONMENTAL PROTEC· CEIVED FOR AIR PER·
TION AGENCY, P.O. MIT"
BOX 104.9 , COLUM· APPLE GROVE PLANT
BUS, OHIO 432161048 SR 338, RACINE, OHIO .
(TELEPHONE: 814-644· ACTION
DATE:
2129). "FINAL AC· 04120/2009
TIONS: ARE ACTIONS FACILITY DESCRIP·
OF THE DIRECTOR TION : AIR
WHICH ARE EFFEC· IDENTIFICATION NO.
TIVE UPON ISSUANCE A0037185
OR A STATED EFFEC· THIS APPLICATION IS
TIVE
DATE.
PUR· TO PROPOSE THE AQ.
SUANT
TO
OHIO DillON TWO PRODUC·
REVISED CODE SEC· TIDN EQUIPMENT TO
TION 3745.04. A FINAL THE OPERATION IN
ACTION MAY BE AP· ORDER TO IMPROVE
PEALED TO THE ENYI· PRODUCTION EFFI·
RONMENTAL REVIEW CIENCY.
APPEALS
COMMIS· (5) 5
SION (ERAC) BY A

L &amp; L l "lre Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy, 0"'

Trucking

(5 Points)

Dump Truck

New &amp; Used Tire&gt;.
We buy used tires.
Room Additions &amp; ·
ctlmputer.whecl
Remodeling
alignmems. We also
New Garages
Electrical &amp;
do Duel's. light
Plumbing
~eL·hani~,.· work.
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
complete scryice oil
• VInyl Siding &amp;
change~. small engi ne
Painting
repmr.
• Patio and Porch

.

•

.

. We sCn·ice and

..

winteri~e

t AJ 98

s3

•

'

boats :md

...

Pass

Limestone, Coal,

Compost: Top Soil

. (740) 991-500'1 :

V.C. YOUNG Ill

8:00am-4:30 pm
Sat. 8:00 am - 12

30 Years Local Expcr•w·r.e
FU LLY INSURFD

We appreciate yo11t
usiuess

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Dump truck

Experienced
Heavy
.Equipment Mechanic •
Night Shift and Experi~
anced . Tractor
Trailer
Mechanic.
Competitive
Wages, good benefits.
Serid resume to Sands
Hill Mining LLC. P.O.
Ba.: 650, Hamden.· OH
45634
or
·call
740·384·421 1 to requesl
an appliCatlor1·

Hal'dwood Cabillea'J Aid FIIJ'IIHure

..

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpols

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag·Lime

Service Tecllnician posl·
tion available lor diesel
and hydraulics. EKperience
necessary.
Health/Retirement
&amp;
Benefits. Fax resume to
740·446-9104 or e·marl
1oUC@CAREo.coM

1

I

I '/ "'
.
11.. '

Al.J"rOI'VlOTIVE

O..Wlt tAIIeno&amp;mON .II'!IIYS

.s ..~••, ""' 1/Hd .
Now Selling: .
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft

Pans • Engines.
Transfer Cases &amp;
Trunsrni~sion s .

• Afll'rmurket

LAWN CARE
Commercial &amp;

Residential
Free Estimntes
• Lawn Main'tella1,1ce
• Landscaping
• l»ower Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 517·5432
Jeff Stethem

R cpl acem~lll Sheet

Metal &amp; Com ponents
hw 11. 11 Ma Le~ of Vt•hicb

. R&lt;~l.'inc, Ohio
.' 740-,49-1956 .

(740) SIH.S83

Ohio 740-247·2019

Racine,

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;.
Paul Rowe

f'ree

lo\odicol
. Seamless Gutters
='=-"'""''""'== Roofing. Siding. Gutters
Overtroo&lt; RehabllitaUon
Insured &amp; Bonded
Center ~ currently ac·
740·653-9657
cepting appl~ations tor "=======~======::
part time LPN"s Available r
shifts
are 7A-7P &amp;
7NA. All in1ereS1ad ap- .
I I(
pllcants should pick up
an application at 333
Page · Street. Middleport,
Oh. For further informa·
J.
Uon. please contac1 Lucy .
ee remOV3 ;
antmg,
at (740) 992·6472. EOE
Jawn care, a ·nd all your
'
landsca·ping need
.

Nata's ....a

Service

Tr

· .

p

I

.

. r.-1-\WI"t' Clt-IC.O t:&gt;e:. r.\1&gt;\iO,
BRUIU!:&gt;!

.ohortenor

retort
51 ld
J companion
52 Scrop
·

of cloth
54 GuW 111.

caruoo

Siding. Windows.

~-&gt;olr

BAD CREDI T?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
1/./r • • II~ i ', ;1
C, ill : !1.1 f, rll i '' .
866·564-8679
;_LJ\1 ~H-',11

·VInyl Sldl~g
• Ropl.acement
Windows
• Roofing
Decks, Garages

.

~n

..
'

(740)742-2563

~

816 BROTHER ..

WHAT SHOULO

I PO?

OON'T DO
AN'I'TI·UN6..
JUST LIE THERE.
AND liJORRI'.. ·

• Room Additions • Patios

• Porches • Dec~ • Gumges.• H.orse Barns •
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
General Home Millntenance

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom , OH

740-985-4141
I

Free Estimalt!s

ROBlRT
BIS$Ell
DlllmUCTIIN
19 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimat~"

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • VInyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle RooFs
• De&lt;ks • Additions
•EI~clrl&lt;·al

• Plumbing

• Pole Barns

0

0

. &amp; Removal
*-Prompt und QLiality
Work

• Experienced .

References Available!

0!11 Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044
.Please

PSI CONSTRUCTION

The Daily Sentinel

Room Additions\ Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. Ne\\· Homes, Siding, Dftks,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bathroom R•modeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
WV110409A

G

Trimming

*Reasonable Rtttes
*Insured

Cell 7 W-·~ Hi 29fi0

I

I

710 q92 o, 1'l

•

I' 1 I I

.

pull

vlta~ to

~ &lt;&gt;ff w1111 tem~y ·members or (ela·

. ti~.

Outsl!:fers might not have what .. lt

GRIZZWELLS

I'Ll. ~E ~\di\oiT l'ACI&lt;. ...

I 'M 6oll'l.~ ot-1 A.

~~U~

'HII&lt;E

1·
... reminded over his victory,
that,
.
I -I Y I ..' .at nO timemis ·
.
more
than in time ·
A F E DA C I
j. 1·6 I .I I'. A Co;;i;;~
!he
by filling fhl'
·

S U R E 0 .,

Gloating

:

.

I

..

takes
stay23·Aug.
rh&amp; course.
LEO to
(July
22). -:- Important
knowledge can be acquired lllrough your

you immensely.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sep1. 22)- Oon't tlllnk
you can't come out on the plus side of
thti ledger. Just Jet your common sense
· and business Instincts guide ,you with
regard.to finanCial dealings.·
LIBRA {Sept. :23·0cl. · 23) .- Operate
!~pendently whenever vou can,
becS.u&amp;&amp; you wUI fare iar better on Your
own. There Js a gooD chance tnat othe~
HE MAKES CLICKING
will mtrely tie you down.
,
NOISES WITH HIS TONGUE,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) AND USES HIS AtlJTE HEArl·
Conditions may appear to be different for
lNG TO GAUGE WHERE HE
yoo, because that which you pursue. ~1ft
worX out wonder:lully. In reality, though, II
ISIN HISENVIRONMENT.
.wiR be your poSitive thinking that makes
I'MGONNA
it so.
TI1'/IT.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 2t ) Take adVantage of every opportuf')lty to
mingle with lots of people. The more you
see and are seen,.the more possibilities
tor benefits to develop through tlleee
A.oP-f~J associations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - An
!:~:::::::~:..~~~~~j ambitious goal is attainable, but It might ,
' - - - - - - ' L - - . . ; . . - - - - - - ' 1.
have to be dOne the hard way. As long as
you don't give up When the going gets
tough, you'll' fight through It and aocom·
pf istl your alms.
. •
I AM.1AKINCir 'r'OIJ
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb: 19) - By
Of'F MY BIJPPt,&gt; L15fl
keeping a flexible schedule, you will be ·
able to deal With une)Cpectad happening$
and changes. There is a ttrong cnanee
that · someltllng great wUI pop up, and
you'll want to participate.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II you
look hard enough, you will uncovef
0
something ·exciting that could develop
0
into additional eamings. Don't hesitate to
0
Investigate situations that look promisIng.
ARIES (M,rch 21·Ap~l 19) -Although
you like to function as an Independent
operatot', you 're apt to be more fortunate
In partr.lerehtp situations. Don't be lndll·
fl;trent If you know Joining a team will
work bEist.

.'

self~~~

di cult

of

V

"

in

&lt;ltucklo quoted
missing worcb

~~;;~:.;;~;:~~yo~u~d~ov~olo~p~from~J1~e~p!N~o~.3~bt~low;.

-::;

8. PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARE.S
6)

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS

GET ANSIN£R

·

TO .,
•

SCRAM·LETS ANSWE!t~ 511109

Helium.- Peony - World - Toddk ·· NEED it MO(ill
" You ·should ~member," · granriy said, "people need
happiness as much us clothiug, and some NEED i~ .t&gt;10RK"

ARLO&amp;JANIS
'CII.lCO DE. #.AYO.IS fJOT

~EXICAIJ llJOt.PUJDUJC~

--.::::DA~Y. --~

1

0
0

·m v friend
I

.

. iffiportanl ar endeavor, the .n*lre

WORRV ASOUT EVERt(THIN6
THAT'S EliEit J.IAPPENED
AND EIIER't'TIIIN6 '(()IJ
THINK Ml&lt;iiiT I-lAPPEN ..

..

• New Homes .

. Specialists, LTD

GAMI

4

from watching others and hOw they go

Stanley Tree-

WOlD

KHYSU

You'll

abou1 accomplishing lllelr arne will help

Replacement
Window~ and
Vinyl Siding

.

low to form foUr .slrnplt WQrdt.

powers of observation. What you team

Stop &amp; Compare

VWS'XGEFS

. T::~:t:~'S@\\~~-~t.tfS'
ldlled by ·cLAY R. POtl4N
Ofour
A:ecm·onge leH•rs of th4
scrambled wordt be·

. CANCER (June 21·July 221- The more

J48-992-1m

DXA

1PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' Siniggle is strengthening. Battling with evil gives us
;the·power to battle evil even·more · · OSsie Dal'is

but don't mix business with pleaeure.
Don't put any wrinkles In your rttlatJ~il·

[ CAN'T SLEEP,

• Garages
• Complete
·Remodeling

0 DMXXRJPXS. " •

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Enjoy as
many actlvitles as you .can. with lrle.nds,

.

25+ Jears experience

JOWNJPXS

FSJO

linger forever it you wait for optimal con·.
ttltloris before acting on your ambitious
objective.. You need to focus your efforts
on making things happen lor you.

t.o,..mw•rm"'·'m'"'"
$10 per II&gt; Cash only
Pmt Is requi"d ;, "'"""
Shipments arrive mry

Cell : 740-416-1834
affiliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Rerr,odeling

0 ZEIBJPXS , 0

Bernice Bide Osol

TAVRVS (April 20·May 20) -

~

Wood Fencing &amp;

R P M X S SA

GBFSS. GBEXLI:

business situations. You eouiQ be luckier
in these instances than if you're in a fixed
position. Keep mOiling.
'

742-2332 -;:~~;;;o~t;h•;r;Fr;id;•;;;

l~or:

E X ~ED. S ,

You'll be more on the go In the year
ahead, especially if the activities Involve

SHRIMP

• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II

Yes, four spades qm be made II West
· guesses the trumps, but why Mould he

•r

•

Wednesday, May 6, 2001

Fresh North Carolina

• Pole Bulldlngo

" G P fM W W S SA

eoo.

W~!r!, ·

:10 Y... ,.,,

~ IIIII( 1n.the cil)h•llanas for Sllother

Todays du&lt;J: Vequals 1.1

~Astro-

F xpt'IH'Ilc:&lt;~

Free Estim&lt;J!cs

.

friendly opponents?

(",,-lr&lt;tqt''&gt;
lll fiurance Worl&lt;:. Rcsllif'nl ,irl /&lt;, ("lrnmr•rrral

vcvnsr.d &amp; Cio1·ded

by Luis Campos

~ Ciphlll' ~lift creQ11tom quotata1s by 111110115 peoj:fe. !)lsi illd ~

North's double promised
~ shOrtage? And East·Wast can
make three no-trump. But plus 800 is
better than 400.something. Why not
take !h8 extra . points offered by your

tlnrn•,

740·245 04:Jl

. CELEBRITY tiPHER

pleased to pass.
West statts with three rounds or spades,
East overruffing 1M dummy. Then Easl
ahlf1s to tile heart lour, pe""ltllng the
defense to collect three tricks in that suit.
East Sliil has 1he diamond see an&lt;! a
trump trick to come for down three, plus

do that

liKE W. MARCUM••NER

Print and Online options
7 great packages to choose from

FIFTI\ Lf&gt;.:)T
I:&gt;It&gt;!'fl II"?

&gt;tubber Rool1ng. Room Addrlions. Oro.s :;tllnqlt"-&gt;

1
F II
u

v Do-it-yourself convenience
v Easy to use
v Upload photos and graphics

TOt:&gt;~'(?

Tf\l~K II iU.L 0~ W..'l

MIKE ivlARCUM
HOIIIIN(, &amp; Ht ~1111111 1~(, (II

Re.sident •.. and Commercial
1.,
Jns:ur·ed
y '

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and cli~k on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

1:£. IN&gt;..'I'O""'' '[

.frshadfrm@aol:com

s..

ClasaWie-de.

l"'o~, 1:) IH.I~CO

Cell: 74().416-5047
email:

r---:-:"::';-:"-0..., . - - - - - - - - . ,_____,.._,
H&amp;H
,lohnson'il Tree
J&amp;l
GuHering
Service .
Construction
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Insured.
Eslimules, 20yrs Exp.
748·441·9387
Rick Johnso 11 -0wn•r

,_

ace-king-ace for defense, should be

740-985·4422

&gt;&lt;
CUTTING EDGE

Redbl.
Dbt.

48 PUiow
cover
49 Too tho line
50 s.caatlc

F"' tile opening ~tie. lhls Is the ·tulo:
Either your lido buya the contract or the
OllPOrtfl1tl play In some1111ng doubted lor
penalty. Therefor•. an- are 1orcin!J
ar&lt;t aN doubles are for penalty.
In this daal, South bids two elllbf
QeoauM he has a preleronca among the
tllree unbid oulls. Now Wast. although
he has a good slx...,U spade auK,
alxiukl maka a torQng pa88. East, with
lotJrdocent elllbf,ls happy to double lor.
· penalties. And West. wKh a trump Md

.,.'\

THE BORN

.

Psss

cheer:

tte.f

service

740·985·4384

Eut

Obi.
Pass
Pass

::

4e Gref rival ·

partne~ react?
First. he lhoUd realize that he is marl&lt;ed
with a waak hand. Secor1&lt;1, p1111ner's
double asked him to expreSI his prefer·
enO. 8mong the ttwee unbid will. So. w
he has a preference, he shrud &amp;lq)rtas
K, even with no hi9h-.card polnl8. (And
with a long suit, ha may lump whtlout
prorniairtg tile normal 9·11 poln181or a
Jump adYani:e ot partner'a takaout dou·

040) 992 -5344
'VIon-Frl

992·6215
740·591-0195
Pomeroy Ohio

North

;.:!~film

After one of a suit • OOuble ·• redoOOie,
how should the advancer (doubler's

General repair
w•-w.bankscdb.com

or 7400-591-3726
Cell

West

=

22 Detondant'a 42 Borodln
answer
pri..:o
23

=·

How does advancer ·
react to redouble? ·

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings
BuildinJ!!. Remodeling

W,::c/..g ·

fi:;

QJD763

Pass

1 Dloguoll!d

24
lboitt 2
28 Rumor,
breed
25 Not twice
~y 3 Short·
26 R2D2'1
30 Be GIOol
ttmptrtd
owner
33 Uncoln"o ot._ 4 More
27 Nile wader
34 Sl!arl&lt;
lemony
29 Porapoy·
environ•
5 Golf tcorotr
chology
35 Gllumph
6
topic
36 102, Ia a
7 Bl . 30 EPA
centur1on
lroot
figuno
37 Pack firmly . 8 "Norma '-" 31 Low-fat
38 Priom maQ&lt; 9 Wallach or
spread
39 egorl
Ully"
32 NonsenseI
41 Michigan
10 llarahy area 34 lathmuo
. neighbor . 13 - Montond 39 Hawaii's
43 ·AIItlolnts
15 Complained
Mauna 47 Hilium or 19 Lilli
40 Tho Gnoll!

Opening lead: • A

Residential
• Froe Estimates

740-992-3220

KJ 9 8

9 86

,.

Soutk

Ans-1o Previous PUZJ!e

DOWN

ondorHr
21 Bllklra'

Dealer: West ·
Vulnerable: North·South

Commercial•

Call Walt or Sandy

20 Check

• 7.

•

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
co.
Pomeroy, Oblo

Service
.
We Haul GrJvel. ·

K 10 4

Sauth
•

Hours
7:00am· 8:00pm

S&amp;L

-r

6 12

• 6 32

RV·s.

vated and cOmmitted to , . - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - . . . . . ,
working effectively wi1h GRAND OPENING
senior management, the
Chester nre
Board of Directors and
Center&amp;
employees under his/her
Totai 'A uto
management.
Salary
Transmission
commensurate with exllepalr
perience.
To · apply, sent letter of
· Is your ch8ck
interest and res~e to:
engine light on?
Lender Position, PO Box
Come have It
4847, Athens, Oh 45701
sc•nned
for free
by Friday May 15, 2009.
Equal Opportunity Em·
Limited Time
player

v

• 6

111

perienced lender manager, Primary responsi-

v

•

••

lo 10' X 30'
::;-...~

740..367-0536

Athens County seeks eX·

fiND
Number 09·01484.oor OF TRANSPORTATION. QUEST A PUBLIC THE
F:EE wouLD
BARGAINS
of
the
Auditor 's (5) 5, 11
MEETING REt;I\RDING CAUSE
EXTR.EME
Rocordo
ol Meigs
DRAFT
ACTIONS. HARDSHIP, MUST BE
County, Ohio.
COMMENTS OR PUB· FILED WITH:
eNVI·
EVERY
Said parcel Is more
Public Notice
LIC MEETING RE· RONMENTAL REVIEW
.
QUESTS MUST BE APPEALS
COMMIS·
DAY
particularly · described
In Exhibit "A" attached IN
THE
COMMON SUBMITTED WITHIN 30 SION,
309 SOUTH
to Plaintiff's mortgage PLEAS COURT, PRO· DAYS OF NOTICE OF FOURTH
STREET,
fllad In Volume 231 , .BATE DIVISION MEIGS THE DRAFT ACTION. ROOM 222, COLUM·
IN.THE
· Pogo115, on the March COUNTY, OHIO
" PROPOSED .
Ac;· · BUS, OHIO 43215. A
20, 2006 In the IN THE MATTER OF TIONS" ARE WRITTEN COPY OF THE APPEAL
Roeorder'o OHico of SETTLEMENT OF AC· STATEMENTS OF THE MUST BE SERVED ON CLASSifiEOS
Meigs County, Ohio.
COUNTS, PROBATE DIRECTOR'S INTENT THE
DIRECTOR L---'---,-_:_,1
Tho Complaint further COURT
MEIGS
alleges that by r!lson of COUNTY, OHIO
default of tho .Dalen· Accounts and vouch·
dant(o),
ers of the following
Tolmadge D. Lewl~, named fiduciary has
lllk/a T. Lewis, In tho been flied In the Pro·
payment Of a promls· bale CoJJrt, Meigs
oory note according to County, Ohio tor ap·
Ita tenor, the conditions provaland settlement.
ofa mortgage deed ESTATE NO. 20062023given to II to eecure 2nd Annual account by
payment of tho ·Oaid Velda . Ann Parrish,
note and conveying guardian of the person
the premises deacribed and estate of Carrie M.
therein have been bro·· Wears, an lncompatent
ken and the same has person.
become
Unless OKCeptlons ore
absolute. The Com· filed thereto, said at·
plalntfurthor prsyathat count will be set for
tho
Detendant(s) hearing ·boloro oald
nomad above be ·re- Court on the 4th day of
qulrad to answer and June, 2009,' at 'which
sat up their Interest In lime sold account will
sold real eatato or· be be considered a~d con·
forever berrad from as· ttnued lrom day to day
oortlng the same, lor until llnally disposed
foreclosure of said of.
mortgage, the marshal· Any person Interested
lng ol any liens, and may lite written excep.
· tho ..le of said real e• tlon to seid account or
tale, and further that to madera pertaining to
tho proceeds of aald the execution of the
sol~ be applied to pay. trua~ not l~so than live
menl of Plaintiff's claim days prior to the date
In the proper order of set for hearing.
ha priority and for ouch J. S. Powell
othar and further relief Judge
11 II juot and equl· Common Pleas Court,
iablo. Tho Defondont(o) Probate Dlvlalon
nomad upon are re· Meigs County, Ohio
qulrad to anawer on or (5) 5
before the twenty·
eighth day following
Public Notice
tho loll date ol publica·
lion, On day of June 1,
2009, or a judgment PUBLIC NOTICE
may be rendered IS THE FOLLOWING AP·
proy... for herein.
PLICATIONS AND/OR
Robert'K. Hogan Attar· VERIFIED
COM·
nay for PlalntiH Javltch, PLAINTS WERE RE·
Block &amp; Rathbone, LLP CEIVED, AND THE
602 Main St, Sulle 500 FOLLOWING DRAFT,
Clnclnnoti.O.!i 45202
PROPOSED, OR FINAL

Q 9 8 5
K Q 10 2
.. A 5 -4
J!;ast

+

.Sizel5' X 1

Free Eallmatee

Supomoory

•

74Q.94g.2217

740-367-0544

os.os.fl

WeSt
• AKJS43
• A .J 7

49 Red Sox
rivol

50 Furteu
one
4 R53 Cuatomary
8 TKO official 55 Lab medium
11 llaroly make 56 lie pleyad
do
Obi·Wan
12 Honolulu'• 57 SauMltllnd
Marie
13 Sturdy loci&lt; 58 Farm
14 Expend
danian
16 Minor' I find 59 BLT
17 Sap
dr...lng
18 Informal
60 W:\1101'1.

• Q 10 .

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 4Sn1

Local Contractor

Management 1

Non•

Hill's Self
Storage

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks. ·
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
RemOdeling. Room
Additions

P.O. Box 604, Jackson.
OH 45640 or &amp;·mail to
beyeeseiV@yahoo.com.
Deadline for appliCants:
05107109. Equal Opportu·
nity Employer.

FJnancial·

Puzzle

Crossword

1 Ftylng
medium

Alder

Mechanics
Your Right to·_J(now, Delivered Righllo

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85
BRIDGE

OHerl
P:nblic Notices in N~:~~,~~::l

www.mydailysentlnel.com

·

bitities indude:
Now Hiring ALL Shifts ·• Supervise and manage
~ II branch operations! inEmployees ara needed , dud.ing supervision and
to prov1de customer
coaching for tow em·
service over the phone
ployees
•
• Make and service mort. Weekly Pay + Bonus
gage, commercial, arld
• Pa1d Train1ng:
mstallment loans
I
. Onsile Doctor
• Facilitate the or;e,mg
. c'omplete Benefits
of new deposit accol:'nts
Package
• Execute business development strategies, inLet us show you what
cluding 1tle enhancement
makes lnfoCtsion a great of customer rela~onships
place to worX!
via outbound calling and
community ouueactl pro1-888-IMC-PAVU
grams In the branch mafExL2454
ket area
Apply online:
The prel9rred candidate
http :l~obs.ln~oclslon.com
is a buslriess profes·
sional who is self-moll·

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

May 5, 2009

. Tuesday,

ALLEVOOP ·

Here's Your Chance

.

.

20 Olythlft Employees
Needed
Protussiooal.-ofhce-hke
atmospllere
,Conduc:tu''\9 lnterv1ews
Now

~456
;;;;:.31;;.·..,...,..,---

~Adv,rtise
your ·.
.

•

Holp Won~ · ~I

1310 Ca&lt;le1on Street

CLASSJFJEOS · Syracuse . Ohio 45770

j

Holp Won~ · Gonoral

Tueada~May5,2009

lf'fl ACTU.l.l.l.YA ~ll.lOR
HOLIDAY IU ME.li-ICO.

SOUPTONUTZ
---I

•

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Card of Thanks

Thank you to
everyone
wh~

remembered
me on my
birthdayYour
thoughtfulness
is greatly
. appreciated.
Elva Dean
Barnitz 41(

"•

6000

www. my~ailysentinel.com
Clerical·

Ernp'O~ men!

Immediate open•ng ror
Cter~eal Worker - rruJSI
AccounHng Financial be a Nolary Off tee work.
must wor+;. on Saturdays
Actountant:
Fu!l-hme Call 740-44&amp;.7529
posrtion with llusy accounting off100 1n Galhpolis lor •mmed•ate employ- ---=.;;E,;;duc~oti~iot~n~=
meot Accovnllng Clegree •
and expener\Ce reqwed
Must have good organ- Program
'SUbstitutes
JzatK&gt;nal Sk1lls and the needed 10 work at Carteab1lity to work mctepeod- ton School &amp; Meigs ln·
ently With strong ali:en- duStnes Will be work.tng
lion to detail. Please With ch•ldren aoo aduJts
send resume and refer· With developmental dts
ences to
abthltes Must have a
valid OhiO orvers Ll·
gallipolisaccountant@
cense and High Schoot
gmail.com
Diploma or GED. Submit
or ma11 to CLA tOt, PO application 01 resume to.
Box 469. GaiGpolis. OH Calieton
SchooUMetgS
r
' 56
..:.3_1-.=~:---, Industries

I

SHOP
.

WANTED: Fun-ttme positton avaitabte 10 asstsl m·
dividua!S wittl mental retardatiOO at a group
home 111 Btdwelt3-11 p
Sun;
3 30-11 p
MfTwWITh High school
dtploma/GED. vahd driver·s license and three
years good driving .e~r:pertence. $8.Wu .• after
trainmg,. Excellent benefit
package.
Pre-emptoy·
ment Drug Testflg Send
tesume
to:
Buckeye
Community
Services,

t-an-463-6247
Mention ext. 2659

~~-------=

D1n Bustefs IS look.lng tor
someone to clean Monday &amp; Thursday's from
10:30P~
· ' 1:30AM,
clnver license,. drug test
and background ct1eck
required. 868-517·2549

Now hinog management
tor full serviCe casual
d1rnng tor local restaurant. Send resumes to
CLA Box 100, PO Box
469,
Galltpohs .
Oh

PO Box 307

Need

·fords low·.as ·"

·a
·
·.
.
"
..
5•
~·;Jj •

.. •••

.

.·

.

.

to

sell

Avon caii74Q.446-3358
Fora
Beller Employment
Opportunily!

f!8S$ ,pn tttis @~ge
.....

7 ladies

NEA
, ACROSS
Phillip

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

""""'==,.,==
IOStitUIIOO

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON
· PLEAS
MEIGSCOUNTY,OHIO
VANDERBILT MORT·
GAGE AND FINANCE,
INC.
PlelniiH
vs:
TALMADGE D. LEWIS,
A/KIA
T. LEWIS, at al
Defendants
Case No. OllCV186
Judge: Crow
Legal Notice
Wenda Lee ·. Morris,
whose taat. known ad·
dreao lo 50475 Bigley
Ridge Road, Long
BOUom, OH 45743, will
take nollce ·lhat on the
2nd of March, 2009
Plaintiff flied Ita
Amended Complalntin
CasoNumber08CV186
In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court,
alleging that Dolen·
dent(s) have or claim to
have an Interest In the
real estate commonly
known as 50475 Bigley
RldgeRoad,LongBot·
tom, oH 45743, and
aloo known as Parcel

(513) 744·9600
ACTIONS . WERE IS· PERSON WHO WAS A
(513) 744-9602 Facalm· SUED, BY THE OHIO PARTY TO A PRO·
lie
.
ENVIRONMENTAL CEEDING
BEFORE
(4) 20, 27; (5) 4
PROTECTION AGENCY THE DIRECTOR BY FIL·
(OEPA) LAST WEEK. lNG
AN
APPEAL
"ACTIONS" INCLUDE WITHIN 30 DAYS OF
Public Notice
THE ADOPTION, MODI· NOTICE OF THE FINAL
ACATION, OR REPEAL ACTION. PURSUANT
NOTICE TO BIDDERS OF ORDERS (OTHER TO OHIO REVISED
STATE OF OHIO
THAN
EMERGENCY CODE
SECTION
DEPARTMENT
OF ORDERS); THE IS· 3745.07, A FINAL AC·
TRANSPORTATION
SUANCE,
DENIAL, TION ISSUING, DENY·
Columb&lt;ls, Ohio
MODIFICATION OR Rl'· lNG,
MODIFYING,
Office ol Contracts
VOCATION OF Ll· REVOKING, OR RE•
Legal Copy Numbar: CENSES,
PERMITS, NEWING A PERMIT, 1..1·
091013
.
LEASES, VARIANCES, CENSE, OR VARIANCE
sealed proposals will OR
.CERTIFICATES: WHICH IS NOT PRE·
be accepted from pre·. AND THE APPROVAL CED£D BY A· PRO·
qualified bidders at the OR DISAPPROVAL OF POSED ACTION, MAY
ODOTOHice of Con· PLANS AND SPECIFI· BE APPEALED TO THE
tracts until 10:00 a.m. CATIONS. "DRAFT AC· ERAC BY FILING AN
on May 20, 2009. Pro· TIONS" ARE WRITTEN APPEAL WITHIN 30
joel 091013 Is located STATEMENTS OF THE DAYS OF ISSUANCE
In Meigs County, SR 7· DIRECTOR OF ENVI· OF THE FINAL ACTION.
.11.35 and Is a proven· RONMENTALPROTEC· ERAC APPEALS, AC·.
live
melnttnance liON' S (DIRECl'OR'S) COMPANIED BY A $70
PROJECT. THE DATE INTENT WITH RE· FILING FEE WHICH
SET FOR COMPlE· SPECT TO THE IS· THE COMMISSION IN
TION OF THIS WORK SUANCE,
· DENIAL, ITS DISCRETION MAY
SHALL BE AS SET ETC. OF A
REDUCE IF BY AFFI·
FORTH IN THE BID· PERMIT,
LICENSE, DAVIT THE APPEL·
DING .
PROPOSAL. ORDER, ETC. INTER· I.
A
N
T
PLANS AND SPECIFI· ESTEDPERSONSMAY DEMONST ·RATES
CATIONS ARE ON FILE· suBMIT
WRITTEN THAT PAYMENT OF
IN THE DEPARTMENT COMMENTS OR RE· THE FULL AMOUNT OF

WITH · RESPECT TO WITHIN 3 DAVS AFTER
THE ISSUANCE, DE· · FILING THE APPEAL
NIAL, MODIFICATION, WITH THE ERAC.
REVOCATION, OR RE· FINAL ISSUANCE OF
NEWAL OF A PERMIT, OAC CHAPTER 3745LICENSE, OR VARI· 31 MODIFICATION TO
ANCE. WRITTEN COM· PERMIT· TO· IN$TALL
MENTS
AND AND OPERATE
REQUESTS FOR A ALLIED
CORPORA·
PUBLIC MEETING RE· TION PLANT IS
GAROING A PRO· 49947 SR 337
POSED ACTION MAV RACINE, OH
BE
SUBMITTED ACTION
DATE :
WITHIN 30 DAYS OF 0412012009
NOTICE OF THE PRQ. FACILITY DESCRIP·
POSED ACTION. AN TION: AIR
ADJUDICATION HEAR· IDENTIFICATION NO.
lNG MAY BE HELD ON P0104382
A PROPOSED ACTION CHAPTER 31 MOOIF!·
IF A HEARING RE, CATION OF · .PTI 06·
QUEST OR oBJEC· 07186,
ISSUED
TION IS RECEIVED BY 12116/2003,
FOR
THE OEPA WITHIN 30 P9010NLY, TO · IN· •
DAYS OF ISSUANCE CREASE ALLOWABLE
OF THE PROPOSED EMISSIONS DUE TO
ACTION.
WRITTEN USAGE OF SLAG IN
COMMENTS,
RE· THE AGGREGATE MIX,
QUESTS FOR PUBLIC AN
INCREASE
IN
MEETINGS, AND AQ. ANUAL P.RODUCTION,
JUDICATION HEARING AND THE USE OF AS· .
REQUESTS MUST BE . SOCATED
WITH
SENT TO: HEARING THESE CHANGES:
CLERK, OHIO ENVI· APPLICATION
RE·
RONMENTAL PROTEC· CEIVED FOR AIR PER·
TION AGENCY, P.O. MIT"
BOX 104.9 , COLUM· APPLE GROVE PLANT
BUS, OHIO 432161048 SR 338, RACINE, OHIO .
(TELEPHONE: 814-644· ACTION
DATE:
2129). "FINAL AC· 04120/2009
TIONS: ARE ACTIONS FACILITY DESCRIP·
OF THE DIRECTOR TION : AIR
WHICH ARE EFFEC· IDENTIFICATION NO.
TIVE UPON ISSUANCE A0037185
OR A STATED EFFEC· THIS APPLICATION IS
TIVE
DATE.
PUR· TO PROPOSE THE AQ.
SUANT
TO
OHIO DillON TWO PRODUC·
REVISED CODE SEC· TIDN EQUIPMENT TO
TION 3745.04. A FINAL THE OPERATION IN
ACTION MAY BE AP· ORDER TO IMPROVE
PEALED TO THE ENYI· PRODUCTION EFFI·
RONMENTAL REVIEW CIENCY.
APPEALS
COMMIS· (5) 5
SION (ERAC) BY A

L &amp; L l "lre Barn
44087 Wipple Rd.
Pomeroy, 0"'

Trucking

(5 Points)

Dump Truck

New &amp; Used Tire&gt;.
We buy used tires.
Room Additions &amp; ·
ctlmputer.whecl
Remodeling
alignmems. We also
New Garages
Electrical &amp;
do Duel's. light
Plumbing
~eL·hani~,.· work.
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
complete scryice oil
• VInyl Siding &amp;
change~. small engi ne
Painting
repmr.
• Patio and Porch

.

•

.

. We sCn·ice and

..

winteri~e

t AJ 98

s3

•

'

boats :md

...

Pass

Limestone, Coal,

Compost: Top Soil

. (740) 991-500'1 :

V.C. YOUNG Ill

8:00am-4:30 pm
Sat. 8:00 am - 12

30 Years Local Expcr•w·r.e
FU LLY INSURFD

We appreciate yo11t
usiuess

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING

Dump truck

Experienced
Heavy
.Equipment Mechanic •
Night Shift and Experi~
anced . Tractor
Trailer
Mechanic.
Competitive
Wages, good benefits.
Serid resume to Sands
Hill Mining LLC. P.O.
Ba.: 650, Hamden.· OH
45634
or
·call
740·384·421 1 to requesl
an appliCatlor1·

Hal'dwood Cabillea'J Aid FIIJ'IIHure

..

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpols

We do driveways
We Haul
Limestone- Gravel
Dirt· Ag·Lime

Service Tecllnician posl·
tion available lor diesel
and hydraulics. EKperience
necessary.
Health/Retirement
&amp;
Benefits. Fax resume to
740·446-9104 or e·marl
1oUC@CAREo.coM

1

I

I '/ "'
.
11.. '

Al.J"rOI'VlOTIVE

O..Wlt tAIIeno&amp;mON .II'!IIYS

.s ..~••, ""' 1/Hd .
Now Selling: .
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft

Pans • Engines.
Transfer Cases &amp;
Trunsrni~sion s .

• Afll'rmurket

LAWN CARE
Commercial &amp;

Residential
Free Estimntes
• Lawn Main'tella1,1ce
• Landscaping
• l»ower Washing
Seth Carleton
(740) 517·5432
Jeff Stethem

R cpl acem~lll Sheet

Metal &amp; Com ponents
hw 11. 11 Ma Le~ of Vt•hicb

. R&lt;~l.'inc, Ohio
.' 740-,49-1956 .

(740) SIH.S83

Ohio 740-247·2019

Racine,

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;.
Paul Rowe

f'ree

lo\odicol
. Seamless Gutters
='=-"'""''""'== Roofing. Siding. Gutters
Overtroo&lt; RehabllitaUon
Insured &amp; Bonded
Center ~ currently ac·
740·653-9657
cepting appl~ations tor "=======~======::
part time LPN"s Available r
shifts
are 7A-7P &amp;
7NA. All in1ereS1ad ap- .
I I(
pllcants should pick up
an application at 333
Page · Street. Middleport,
Oh. For further informa·
J.
Uon. please contac1 Lucy .
ee remOV3 ;
antmg,
at (740) 992·6472. EOE
Jawn care, a ·nd all your
'
landsca·ping need
.

Nata's ....a

Service

Tr

· .

p

I

.

. r.-1-\WI"t' Clt-IC.O t:&gt;e:. r.\1&gt;\iO,
BRUIU!:&gt;!

.ohortenor

retort
51 ld
J companion
52 Scrop
·

of cloth
54 GuW 111.

caruoo

Siding. Windows.

~-&gt;olr

BAD CREDI T?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
1/./r • • II~ i ', ;1
C, ill : !1.1 f, rll i '' .
866·564-8679
;_LJ\1 ~H-',11

·VInyl Sldl~g
• Ropl.acement
Windows
• Roofing
Decks, Garages

.

~n

..
'

(740)742-2563

~

816 BROTHER ..

WHAT SHOULO

I PO?

OON'T DO
AN'I'TI·UN6..
JUST LIE THERE.
AND liJORRI'.. ·

• Room Additions • Patios

• Porches • Dec~ • Gumges.• H.orse Barns •
&amp; Wood Siding • Roofing • Chain Link &amp;
General Home Millntenance

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom , OH

740-985-4141
I

Free Estimalt!s

ROBlRT
BIS$Ell
DlllmUCTIIN
19 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimat~"

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • VInyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle RooFs
• De&lt;ks • Additions
•EI~clrl&lt;·al

• Plumbing

• Pole Barns

0

0

. &amp; Removal
*-Prompt und QLiality
Work

• Experienced .

References Available!

0!11 Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044
.Please

PSI CONSTRUCTION

The Daily Sentinel

Room Additions\ Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. Ne\\· Homes, Siding, Dftks,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bathroom R•modeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
WV110409A

G

Trimming

*Reasonable Rtttes
*Insured

Cell 7 W-·~ Hi 29fi0

I

I

710 q92 o, 1'l

•

I' 1 I I

.

pull

vlta~ to

~ &lt;&gt;ff w1111 tem~y ·members or (ela·

. ti~.

Outsl!:fers might not have what .. lt

GRIZZWELLS

I'Ll. ~E ~\di\oiT l'ACI&lt;. ...

I 'M 6oll'l.~ ot-1 A.

~~U~

'HII&lt;E

1·
... reminded over his victory,
that,
.
I -I Y I ..' .at nO timemis ·
.
more
than in time ·
A F E DA C I
j. 1·6 I .I I'. A Co;;i;;~
!he
by filling fhl'
·

S U R E 0 .,

Gloating

:

.

I

..

takes
stay23·Aug.
rh&amp; course.
LEO to
(July
22). -:- Important
knowledge can be acquired lllrough your

you immensely.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sep1. 22)- Oon't tlllnk
you can't come out on the plus side of
thti ledger. Just Jet your common sense
· and business Instincts guide ,you with
regard.to finanCial dealings.·
LIBRA {Sept. :23·0cl. · 23) .- Operate
!~pendently whenever vou can,
becS.u&amp;&amp; you wUI fare iar better on Your
own. There Js a gooD chance tnat othe~
HE MAKES CLICKING
will mtrely tie you down.
,
NOISES WITH HIS TONGUE,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) AND USES HIS AtlJTE HEArl·
Conditions may appear to be different for
lNG TO GAUGE WHERE HE
yoo, because that which you pursue. ~1ft
worX out wonder:lully. In reality, though, II
ISIN HISENVIRONMENT.
.wiR be your poSitive thinking that makes
I'MGONNA
it so.
TI1'/IT.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec . 2t ) Take adVantage of every opportuf')lty to
mingle with lots of people. The more you
see and are seen,.the more possibilities
tor benefits to develop through tlleee
A.oP-f~J associations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - An
!:~:::::::~:..~~~~~j ambitious goal is attainable, but It might ,
' - - - - - - ' L - - . . ; . . - - - - - - ' 1.
have to be dOne the hard way. As long as
you don't give up When the going gets
tough, you'll' fight through It and aocom·
pf istl your alms.
. •
I AM.1AKINCir 'r'OIJ
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb: 19) - By
Of'F MY BIJPPt,&gt; L15fl
keeping a flexible schedule, you will be ·
able to deal With une)Cpectad happening$
and changes. There is a ttrong cnanee
that · someltllng great wUI pop up, and
you'll want to participate.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - II you
look hard enough, you will uncovef
0
something ·exciting that could develop
0
into additional eamings. Don't hesitate to
0
Investigate situations that look promisIng.
ARIES (M,rch 21·Ap~l 19) -Although
you like to function as an Independent
operatot', you 're apt to be more fortunate
In partr.lerehtp situations. Don't be lndll·
fl;trent If you know Joining a team will
work bEist.

.'

self~~~

di cult

of

V

"

in

&lt;ltucklo quoted
missing worcb

~~;;~:.;;~;:~~yo~u~d~ov~olo~p~from~J1~e~p!N~o~.3~bt~low;.

-::;

8. PRINT
NUMBERED lETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARE.S
6)

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS

GET ANSIN£R

·

TO .,
•

SCRAM·LETS ANSWE!t~ 511109

Helium.- Peony - World - Toddk ·· NEED it MO(ill
" You ·should ~member," · granriy said, "people need
happiness as much us clothiug, and some NEED i~ .t&gt;10RK"

ARLO&amp;JANIS
'CII.lCO DE. #.AYO.IS fJOT

~EXICAIJ llJOt.PUJDUJC~

--.::::DA~Y. --~

1

0
0

·m v friend
I

.

. iffiportanl ar endeavor, the .n*lre

WORRV ASOUT EVERt(THIN6
THAT'S EliEit J.IAPPENED
AND EIIER't'TIIIN6 '(()IJ
THINK Ml&lt;iiiT I-lAPPEN ..

..

• New Homes .

. Specialists, LTD

GAMI

4

from watching others and hOw they go

Stanley Tree-

WOlD

KHYSU

You'll

abou1 accomplishing lllelr arne will help

Replacement
Window~ and
Vinyl Siding

.

low to form foUr .slrnplt WQrdt.

powers of observation. What you team

Stop &amp; Compare

VWS'XGEFS

. T::~:t:~'S@\\~~-~t.tfS'
ldlled by ·cLAY R. POtl4N
Ofour
A:ecm·onge leH•rs of th4
scrambled wordt be·

. CANCER (June 21·July 221- The more

J48-992-1m

DXA

1PREVIOUS SOLUTION: ' Siniggle is strengthening. Battling with evil gives us
;the·power to battle evil even·more · · OSsie Dal'is

but don't mix business with pleaeure.
Don't put any wrinkles In your rttlatJ~il·

[ CAN'T SLEEP,

• Garages
• Complete
·Remodeling

0 DMXXRJPXS. " •

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)- Enjoy as
many actlvitles as you .can. with lrle.nds,

.

25+ Jears experience

JOWNJPXS

FSJO

linger forever it you wait for optimal con·.
ttltloris before acting on your ambitious
objective.. You need to focus your efforts
on making things happen lor you.

t.o,..mw•rm"'·'m'"'"
$10 per II&gt; Cash only
Pmt Is requi"d ;, "'"""
Shipments arrive mry

Cell : 740-416-1834
affiliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Rerr,odeling

0 ZEIBJPXS , 0

Bernice Bide Osol

TAVRVS (April 20·May 20) -

~

Wood Fencing &amp;

R P M X S SA

GBFSS. GBEXLI:

business situations. You eouiQ be luckier
in these instances than if you're in a fixed
position. Keep mOiling.
'

742-2332 -;:~~;;;o~t;h•;r;Fr;id;•;;;

l~or:

E X ~ED. S ,

You'll be more on the go In the year
ahead, especially if the activities Involve

SHRIMP

• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II

Yes, four spades qm be made II West
· guesses the trumps, but why Mould he

•r

•

Wednesday, May 6, 2001

Fresh North Carolina

• Pole Bulldlngo

" G P fM W W S SA

eoo.

W~!r!, ·

:10 Y... ,.,,

~ IIIII( 1n.the cil)h•llanas for Sllother

Todays du&lt;J: Vequals 1.1

~Astro-

F xpt'IH'Ilc:&lt;~

Free Estim&lt;J!cs

.

friendly opponents?

(",,-lr&lt;tqt''&gt;
lll fiurance Worl&lt;:. Rcsllif'nl ,irl /&lt;, ("lrnmr•rrral

vcvnsr.d &amp; Cio1·ded

by Luis Campos

~ Ciphlll' ~lift creQ11tom quotata1s by 111110115 peoj:fe. !)lsi illd ~

North's double promised
~ shOrtage? And East·Wast can
make three no-trump. But plus 800 is
better than 400.something. Why not
take !h8 extra . points offered by your

tlnrn•,

740·245 04:Jl

. CELEBRITY tiPHER

pleased to pass.
West statts with three rounds or spades,
East overruffing 1M dummy. Then Easl
ahlf1s to tile heart lour, pe""ltllng the
defense to collect three tricks in that suit.
East Sliil has 1he diamond see an&lt;! a
trump trick to come for down three, plus

do that

liKE W. MARCUM••NER

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Tf\l~K II iU.L 0~ W..'l

MIKE ivlARCUM
HOIIIIN(, &amp; Ht ~1111111 1~(, (II

Re.sident •.. and Commercial
1.,
Jns:ur·ed
y '

Save time and money. Go to www.mydailysentinel.com
and cli~k on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
to place your ad.

1:£. IN&gt;..'I'O""'' '[

.frshadfrm@aol:com

s..

ClasaWie-de.

l"'o~, 1:) IH.I~CO

Cell: 74().416-5047
email:

r---:-:"::';-:"-0..., . - - - - - - - - . ,_____,.._,
H&amp;H
,lohnson'il Tree
J&amp;l
GuHering
Service .
Construction
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Insured.
Eslimules, 20yrs Exp.
748·441·9387
Rick Johnso 11 -0wn•r

,_

ace-king-ace for defense, should be

740-985·4422

&gt;&lt;
CUTTING EDGE

Redbl.
Dbt.

48 PUiow
cover
49 Too tho line
50 s.caatlc

F"' tile opening ~tie. lhls Is the ·tulo:
Either your lido buya the contract or the
OllPOrtfl1tl play In some1111ng doubted lor
penalty. Therefor•. an- are 1orcin!J
ar&lt;t aN doubles are for penalty.
In this daal, South bids two elllbf
QeoauM he has a preleronca among the
tllree unbid oulls. Now Wast. although
he has a good slx...,U spade auK,
alxiukl maka a torQng pa88. East, with
lotJrdocent elllbf,ls happy to double lor.
· penalties. And West. wKh a trump Md

.,.'\

THE BORN

.

Psss

cheer:

tte.f

service

740·985·4384

Eut

Obi.
Pass
Pass

::

4e Gref rival ·

partne~ react?
First. he lhoUd realize that he is marl&lt;ed
with a waak hand. Secor1&lt;1, p1111ner's
double asked him to expreSI his prefer·
enO. 8mong the ttwee unbid will. So. w
he has a preference, he shrud &amp;lq)rtas
K, even with no hi9h-.card polnl8. (And
with a long suit, ha may lump whtlout
prorniairtg tile normal 9·11 poln181or a
Jump adYani:e ot partner'a takaout dou·

040) 992 -5344
'VIon-Frl

992·6215
740·591-0195
Pomeroy Ohio

North

;.:!~film

After one of a suit • OOuble ·• redoOOie,
how should the advancer (doubler's

General repair
w•-w.bankscdb.com

or 7400-591-3726
Cell

West

=

22 Detondant'a 42 Borodln
answer
pri..:o
23

=·

How does advancer ·
react to redouble? ·

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings
BuildinJ!!. Remodeling

W,::c/..g ·

fi:;

QJD763

Pass

1 Dloguoll!d

24
lboitt 2
28 Rumor,
breed
25 Not twice
~y 3 Short·
26 R2D2'1
30 Be GIOol
ttmptrtd
owner
33 Uncoln"o ot._ 4 More
27 Nile wader
34 Sl!arl&lt;
lemony
29 Porapoy·
environ•
5 Golf tcorotr
chology
35 Gllumph
6
topic
36 102, Ia a
7 Bl . 30 EPA
centur1on
lroot
figuno
37 Pack firmly . 8 "Norma '-" 31 Low-fat
38 Priom maQ&lt; 9 Wallach or
spread
39 egorl
Ully"
32 NonsenseI
41 Michigan
10 llarahy area 34 lathmuo
. neighbor . 13 - Montond 39 Hawaii's
43 ·AIItlolnts
15 Complained
Mauna 47 Hilium or 19 Lilli
40 Tho Gnoll!

Opening lead: • A

Residential
• Froe Estimates

740-992-3220

KJ 9 8

9 86

,.

Soutk

Ans-1o Previous PUZJ!e

DOWN

ondorHr
21 Bllklra'

Dealer: West ·
Vulnerable: North·South

Commercial•

Call Walt or Sandy

20 Check

• 7.

•

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
co.
Pomeroy, Oblo

Service
.
We Haul GrJvel. ·

K 10 4

Sauth
•

Hours
7:00am· 8:00pm

S&amp;L

-r

6 12

• 6 32

RV·s.

vated and cOmmitted to , . - - - - - - - - , . - - - - - - . . . . . ,
working effectively wi1h GRAND OPENING
senior management, the
Chester nre
Board of Directors and
Center&amp;
employees under his/her
Totai 'A uto
management.
Salary
Transmission
commensurate with exllepalr
perience.
To · apply, sent letter of
· Is your ch8ck
interest and res~e to:
engine light on?
Lender Position, PO Box
Come have It
4847, Athens, Oh 45701
sc•nned
for free
by Friday May 15, 2009.
Equal Opportunity Em·
Limited Time
player

v

• 6

111

perienced lender manager, Primary responsi-

v

•

••

lo 10' X 30'
::;-...~

740..367-0536

Athens County seeks eX·

fiND
Number 09·01484.oor OF TRANSPORTATION. QUEST A PUBLIC THE
F:EE wouLD
BARGAINS
of
the
Auditor 's (5) 5, 11
MEETING REt;I\RDING CAUSE
EXTR.EME
Rocordo
ol Meigs
DRAFT
ACTIONS. HARDSHIP, MUST BE
County, Ohio.
COMMENTS OR PUB· FILED WITH:
eNVI·
EVERY
Said parcel Is more
Public Notice
LIC MEETING RE· RONMENTAL REVIEW
.
QUESTS MUST BE APPEALS
COMMIS·
DAY
particularly · described
In Exhibit "A" attached IN
THE
COMMON SUBMITTED WITHIN 30 SION,
309 SOUTH
to Plaintiff's mortgage PLEAS COURT, PRO· DAYS OF NOTICE OF FOURTH
STREET,
fllad In Volume 231 , .BATE DIVISION MEIGS THE DRAFT ACTION. ROOM 222, COLUM·
IN.THE
· Pogo115, on the March COUNTY, OHIO
" PROPOSED .
Ac;· · BUS, OHIO 43215. A
20, 2006 In the IN THE MATTER OF TIONS" ARE WRITTEN COPY OF THE APPEAL
Roeorder'o OHico of SETTLEMENT OF AC· STATEMENTS OF THE MUST BE SERVED ON CLASSifiEOS
Meigs County, Ohio.
COUNTS, PROBATE DIRECTOR'S INTENT THE
DIRECTOR L---'---,-_:_,1
Tho Complaint further COURT
MEIGS
alleges that by r!lson of COUNTY, OHIO
default of tho .Dalen· Accounts and vouch·
dant(o),
ers of the following
Tolmadge D. Lewl~, named fiduciary has
lllk/a T. Lewis, In tho been flied In the Pro·
payment Of a promls· bale CoJJrt, Meigs
oory note according to County, Ohio tor ap·
Ita tenor, the conditions provaland settlement.
ofa mortgage deed ESTATE NO. 20062023given to II to eecure 2nd Annual account by
payment of tho ·Oaid Velda . Ann Parrish,
note and conveying guardian of the person
the premises deacribed and estate of Carrie M.
therein have been bro·· Wears, an lncompatent
ken and the same has person.
become
Unless OKCeptlons ore
absolute. The Com· filed thereto, said at·
plalntfurthor prsyathat count will be set for
tho
Detendant(s) hearing ·boloro oald
nomad above be ·re- Court on the 4th day of
qulrad to answer and June, 2009,' at 'which
sat up their Interest In lime sold account will
sold real eatato or· be be considered a~d con·
forever berrad from as· ttnued lrom day to day
oortlng the same, lor until llnally disposed
foreclosure of said of.
mortgage, the marshal· Any person Interested
lng ol any liens, and may lite written excep.
· tho ..le of said real e• tlon to seid account or
tale, and further that to madera pertaining to
tho proceeds of aald the execution of the
sol~ be applied to pay. trua~ not l~so than live
menl of Plaintiff's claim days prior to the date
In the proper order of set for hearing.
ha priority and for ouch J. S. Powell
othar and further relief Judge
11 II juot and equl· Common Pleas Court,
iablo. Tho Defondont(o) Probate Dlvlalon
nomad upon are re· Meigs County, Ohio
qulrad to anawer on or (5) 5
before the twenty·
eighth day following
Public Notice
tho loll date ol publica·
lion, On day of June 1,
2009, or a judgment PUBLIC NOTICE
may be rendered IS THE FOLLOWING AP·
proy... for herein.
PLICATIONS AND/OR
Robert'K. Hogan Attar· VERIFIED
COM·
nay for PlalntiH Javltch, PLAINTS WERE RE·
Block &amp; Rathbone, LLP CEIVED, AND THE
602 Main St, Sulle 500 FOLLOWING DRAFT,
Clnclnnoti.O.!i 45202
PROPOSED, OR FINAL

Q 9 8 5
K Q 10 2
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Free Eallmatee

Supomoory

•

74Q.94g.2217

740-367-0544

os.os.fl

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• AKJS43
• A .J 7

49 Red Sox
rivol

50 Furteu
one
4 R53 Cuatomary
8 TKO official 55 Lab medium
11 llaroly make 56 lie pleyad
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Obi·Wan
12 Honolulu'• 57 SauMltllnd
Marie
13 Sturdy loci&lt; 58 Farm
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danian
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P:nblic Notices in N~:~~,~~::l

www.mydailysentlnel.com

·

bitities indude:
Now Hiring ALL Shifts ·• Supervise and manage
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Tueada~May5,2009

lf'fl ACTU.l.l.l.YA ~ll.lOR
HOLIDAY IU ME.li-ICO.

SOUPTONUTZ
---I

•

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Bemanke more
optimistic, sees growth
in2009,A6

Student helps new
mothers for senior
project,A2

I

•
Printed·on 100%
R..,ycled Newsprint

Removal
of old
bridge
'..,.1,..
COU.ld
. t£tl\.e
weeks

SPORTS
·~· CaliS grciUOd Hawks.
SeePageBI .

·mu

..•.
.
media.. . According . to up : being admitted during
BY BRIAN J, REED .
!3AE~D OMYOAI~YSENTINEL.COM
Knigllfs motion; such cov- trial," Knight wrote in his
erage would Jain! the motion. "If the media were
POMEROY
prospective ·' jury.' venire permitted to cover these
Prosecuting ·
AUomey pool. . .
·
·
heari.ngs, the widespread
Colleen Williams has filed a . To date, only The Daily dissemination of such matmemorandum
opposing · Sentinel has provided coun- ters by the media would
Attorney Charles Knighrs rooiti .coverag~ of proceed- defeat the very purpose of
request that news reporters · ings in the case, from the these hearings. regardless of
be excluded from proceed- time of Williams' indict- .the outcome, and taint the
ings in the death. penalty ment in April.
.
prospective jury venire
murder, cas¢ against Charles . "As a practical matter, the pool."
S. Williams.
defense will seek to sup·"Obviously, ifthe defense
On May I, Knight filed a press or otherwise challenge is successful in suppressing
moti~n
.close pre-trial ·. or address certain evidence evidence, it should not be
to the news
not wind, · .made known to any poten-

'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Ray Bledsoe

INSIDE

~--

. •·4-H club meets.
SeePageAl
• Chester Alumni plan
banquet. See Page A2
• Locai .Briefs.
See Page A3 ,, . ,. ..·
, laoo 1'iansrers:'' ·'~ -•

.

~Page

A3

t, Offteial: Bailout returns

will ha\te conc.frtions.
See Page AS ·
• Meltdown 101: ISM
.. index turning from red to
.•. amber? See Page AS
• l'tealth insurers ask
gov't to police their
·industry. See Page A6
.'
• Helmets can prevent
braitl damage from
skateboarding falls.
See Page A7
• Experts: Mild swine flu
, . could quiCkly turn deadly.
.- See Page A7 .
• .• OH officials see
$600M current budget
shortfall. See Page AS

APphoto ·

Sean O'Hair pumps his fist after a birdie putt on the 16th
hole durinl! the fln.al round of the Quail Hollow
Championship golf tournament a\ Quail Hollow Club in
Charlotte, N.C., Sunday. O'Hair won the tournament at ·11
under par.

SMI willing to move one
of its races-t o Kentucky
CONCORD, N.C. (AP)- ond-tier Nationwide Series $75 millio~ expansion it
Speedway Motorspot1s Inc. race but has been unsuc~ess- hopes will make the track ·
offictals satd Monday they ful tn landtng a coveted worthy of a Cup race. The
have asR:ed NASCAR to add Sprint Cup date.
expansion ·will add 50,000
Kentucky to the 2010 Sprint
Kentucky's former owner- seats and an infield area
Cup Series schedule.
ship group filed a 2005 catering to motor homes that
: Any .chance SMI hus is antitrust lawsUit against would accommodate up to
conungent on the former NASCAR and International 600 vehicles.
owners of Kentucky Motor Speedway . · Corp. over
SMI also will build new
Sp~edway dropping . an Kentucky's failure. to secure . restrooms,
concession
antttrust lawsutt ugumst a Cup race . The sutt was dis- stands and souvenir shops.
NASCAR and -International missed in early 2008, but the
Speculation has put
Speedway Corp .. its sister case is on appeal.
Atlanta Motor Speedway at
.company,
NASCAR has said it will the top of the list of SMI .
S!\11 chairman Bruton not consider Kentucky for a tracks that could lose a date
Smtth, who traveled to the race until the suit is dropped. to accommodate Kentucky,
Kentucky Derby last week"As we have consistently but Marct~s Smith said it
e~d to mak~ a case for drop- said, no request wilj be con- would be wrong to assume
pmg the su1t. has so far been side red until the pendinglit- .that track has already been
unsuccessful in his effons.
igation
is
resolved." selected.
"We're trying to persuade NASCAR ·
S{'Okesman
Last year, SMI agreed to a
. lhese people to try to drop Ramsey Poston satd in an e- three-track swapping of
!hat appeal, and then they mail. "Funhermore, the win- dates that moved its fall race
are out of the way of dow
for
realignment up to the more coveted
NASC~R. and it woul?, requests is rapidly closing." Labor Day weekend slot. It's
Poston would not reveal assumed the race will not be
make tt much stmpler,
Smith said. "We haven't that deadline . Last year, plagued by the same weathbeen able to make that NASCAR
ruled
out ·er issues that made Atlanta a
DCCUT. J'!tere_'s on!7 two peo- Kentucky · for the 2009 difficult October/November
pie holdll!g tt ~P:
.
Spnnt Cup schedule in late sell, and its new holiday
. Sm1th ts wtllmg to gtve May.
weekend date will attract
SMJ would .likely have race fans who traditionally
up a race date at one of his
~even other facilities to t? put together an exten- spen~ Labor Day weekend at
get Kentucky on the stve realtgnment proposal Darhngton Raceway before ·
schedule . _He would not to get Kentucky on the that track lost the date to
reveal whtch track be ts schedule during a window California.
cons.tdenng , and SMI of favorable weather.
Atlanta's spJing race is
l'restdent Marcus Snllth Marcus Smith , said the still plagued b)' spotty
satd no dectsion has been Kentucky track's weather weather and sa~gtng allenmade on which track_ wind~w is similar to dance, but a stratght swap of
would lose a date tf Lowes Motor Sp~edway, that date with Kentucky
NASCAR adds Kentucky whtch hosts races 10 May would not work because
to tts 36-race schedule.
and October.
early March is not ideal con"We've done everything
Kentucky is the eighth ditions for a race in the
we need to make sure N ASCAR-sanctioned track Bluegrass state·.
Kentucky is not out of play in SMI's ponfolio, but the
Bruton Smith dismissed
in 2010." Marcus Smith onlyonewithoutaCuprace. speculation that his Jnfineon
satd. "It's son of a chess Wtth 'eating for 68,000 Raceway in Sonoma, Calif.
fans, it'; cu rrently the would take over Atlanta'~
· game from here ."
SMI agreed to' pay $78.3 largest ~enue that hosts a spring date and Kentucky
million last year for the track NatJOnwrde race but doesn't would as; ume lnfineon's
located in Sparta, which cur- have a Cup date.
late June spot on the schedrently hosts aNASCAR sec- SMI has signed off on a ule.

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VISIT OUR NEWEST LOCATION!

16 PAGES

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Comics
Editorials

As

Obituaries

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Sports

AS

, Weather

@ 2009 O~lo Valley J&gt;ubllahlns Co,

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~~

48

7a

Il lilt~~

1

81 1

·
,

the time of the sclieduled delivery on
Saturday. Suggested donations include
nonperishable fooil items like canned
meats and fish , canned soup, juice,
past11, beans, vegetables, os;reu! and
rice. Things in glass containers are discouraged because of possible breakage. Contributions of food may also be
taken to- the Pomeroy Post Office.
Friday Pomeroy Mayor John Musser
· signed a proclamation designatin_g
May 9 as National Food Collection
Day · and encouraged all Meigs
Countians to join with him in supporting the food program.

il!Jd

Library
programs .
·for.adults,

children
Summer reading
.
·to begin
'

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENrOMYOAJL~COM

POMEROY - . Hard to
believe but ·summer is
almmt here and so are the
M~igs
County District
Public Library's summer
reading programs for adults
and children.
This 2009 children's summer reading program has a
· of
"Be
theme
. .
.
Creative®Your Library!"
The free pr&lt;lgram is open to
STAFF REPORT
improve occupants' health
young people preschool age.
.MOSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COI,4 . and safety.
through adult with proD,istribution of funds is
grams, pri~e drawings, story
COLUMBUS - Gallia- expected to begin in June
hours, a reading club and
Meigs Community Action and continue over the next
more. Registration begins
Agency wm receive $1.8 three years. Funding is con~
on May 26 and this year
million ·in additional fund- tin gent upon approval of the
ki~s will be exploring the
ing
for , the
Home Home
Weatherization
worlds of music, dance , an
Weatherization Assistance Assistance Program plan by
and books.
Program, part of $266 mil- · the U.S. Department of
This year's adult summer
lion received statewide Energy. A public hearing
reading . program has a
through the American will provide an opportunity
tlieme of '~Master the Art of
Recovery and Reinvestment to comment on the plan on
Reading."
Registration for
Act.
May 6 in 'Columbus.
this free program also
The funds , administered
The Home Weatherization
begins on May 26 and
by the U.S. Department of Assist.Qnce Program, adminison June 8, continubegins
Energy, will be used to tered by the Ohio Deparunent
Brian J . Reed/photo ing through July 24. This
increase the energy efficien-. of
Development's
cy of homes owned or occu- Community Deve!Gpment . Meigs County Treasurer Peggy Yost and Recorder Kay Hill program is open to adult
pied
by
low-income Division and its Office of present $300, representing a donation from the Meigs patrons 18 years and up.
May is also "Get Caught
County Republican Party E~ecutive Committee, to Terri Fife
Ohioans, reduce household
of the American Cancer.Society's Relay for 'Life Committee.
energy expenditures and · Please see Funtllnc. A5
Please
Llbl'llry, AS

Gallia,. Meigs receive $1.8M
weatherization increase

1m&gt;EX

tial juror."

Pomeroy postai·workers
collecting food for needy
to contribute to pantries.
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTiNEL.COM
'·
. All of the food collected here
.
·.
·
' Saturday will be given to the M~igs
POMEROY - Saturday is National Cooperative Parish for distribution to
.FoOd Collection Day an4 again this . disadvantaged families . . Carder Jim
year Pomeroy letter carriers, both in , Pullins said that· hist year u total df
town and on rural routes, wHI be col- I ,62 I pounds of food was collected.
l~cting food donations to help feed the . This year since food pantries every.needy.
·
·
where , are reponing more rieed and
This · is the 16th year that the less to give, Pullins encouraged generPomeroy Post Office has participated ous donations from those who have
in the "Stamp Out Hunger" foOd drive food to give . .
of the National Association of Letter
He 'asked that donations be placed
Carriers. Last year nationally carriers near the mailbox for easy pickup by
collected
73. ~ million
pounds of food the carrier delivering the mail at about
.
.

.
.
Dellltll on hge A8

case

In a memorandum oppos- .·
ing
Knight's
motion ,
Prosecutor Williams said,
"the United Siates Supreme
Coun has held that the right
to attend criminal trials is
BETH SERGENT
implicitly guaranteed by the BY
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.CO/YI
First · Amendment. The
'
media representatives enjoy
POMEROY - Removal
the same right to access to of the remaining spans
criminal tnals as does the piers of the old Pomero~
public. Tl)e government is Mason Bridge could take 'tip
prohibited from closing to .six weeks once the first of ·
. Please see Williams, A5 four remaining bla~rs ·are ·
detonated, according to !lie
Ohio . Department
of
Transportation. ·
An ODOT spokesper&amp;On
said there are four remaining
"shots" of explosives to · ~
detollated, one for the W~s.l
Virginia span, one for tis
pier and· one for the Ohi_o
span and one for its pier.
The West Virginia span
will like.ly come down first
and once this . happens · it .
· may be a week or week •
. and-a-half before the ti~Xt
"shot" of explosives is d!)tQnated. Once this process
starts, it could take six
weeks or longer to finish the
project, depending on the
weather.
~
David Rose.• ,spokesper- .
son for ODOT's District 10,
said the agency had planned ..
to blast the West Virginia
side this week·' but due to
high water that has been
·. delayed.
. .
·
Rose said ODOT will
ootify The 'Daily Sentinel
when the . blasting is to'
occur and that traffic signs ·
would likely be put in place
to 1\lert motorists of any
·delays. Delays would consi.st · of traffic ])eing temporarily halted on · the
· 'Bridge of Honor during
blasting and when the Ohio
Charlene Hoetllchlphoto
Ple~ts• see Brldp, AS
· Pomeroy Mayor John Musser signs a proclamation designating Saturday as National Food Collection Day for the Pomeroy
Post Office. With him is letter carrier Jim' Pullins, left, and Pomeroy Postmaster Charles Meek.
.
·

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH .

WEATHER

·~
.

·Donating to Relay ·

~

~

•

sr

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