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                  <text>Toyota recalls
won't 'totally' fix
sudden surges, A2

Marauders fall to
Nelsonville-York, Bt

•

l'rintcd on 100%
.Se\\Sprint

Rec~cled

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES
Page AS

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@ MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

SPORTS
• Raiders upset Wellston.
See Page 81

D.,-

Village exchanging cell phones for radios
More efficient, less cost

• Martha Chevalier

~

MIDDLEPORT - The
communications system for
the
Middleport Public
Works Department will be
changed in part from cell
phones to radios.

Action to make the
change was taken at
Monday night's meeting of
t\fiddleport Village Council
\Vhich voted unanimou~ly
for the change recommended by Faymon Roberts. village administrator. That
change.
according
to

Roberts. will save the village $225 per month or
$2700 per year.
Moore added that new
regulations 1111posed by the
IRS and on-going safety
concerns ahout talklll1! on
cell phones while driving
vehicles were also among
the reasons he was recommending the change.
His ... recommendations

include keeping two cell
phones. one for Don Hysell.
field supervisor. and one for
the operator on call.
It was pointed out by
Moore that currently the
public works department
averages about $300 per
month cell phone bill for
five phones leaving four
employees still without village cell phones. Some of

those employees. he said.
do not have personal cell
phones so during the day it
is hard to reach them which
results in a waste of time
and fuel to determine their
locations.
As for recommendations
in setting up the new system. Moore said currently

Please see Radios, AS

Meigs nearly
dead last in
health rankings
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE
• Emergency HEAP
ending in March.
~ Page A3
...,-ci'Bieness offering
breastfeeding class.

Submitted photos

See Page A3

Jacob McElroy, Gage Barrett and Bostic Eason wearing the crowns they made in celebration of being
"100 days smarter:'

• States eye ban
on public release
of 911 calls.

indergarten
family night

See Page AS

WEATIIER

•

High: Upper 30s.
Low: Mid 20s .

Travis Bentz weighing 100 items as a part of the fun
math program.

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

HOPE FOR HAITI
12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B2-4

Meigs concert to
benefit Haitian town
BY BETH SERGENT

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

liJ!IJI,I !I! 1. !1!11

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - While the world's eyes
were focused on Port-au-Prince in the aftermath
of the earthquake that shook HmtL the southern
Haitian town of Jacmel languished for supplies.
but a local church has decided to step in and
fund the need.
Oasis Church Meigs is planning "Hope for
Haiti." a night of worship. music. evangehsm.
prayer and service from 6-9 p.m .. Sunday. Feb.

Please see Benefit, AS

•

In celebr&lt;ttion of being ''I 00 days
smarter" these Meigs Local k.inderga11en
students and their parents enjoyed a night
of fun math activitie~ to mark a hundred
days in school.
As each of the students arrived at the
school they were given a "passport''
which wa~ stamped as they traveled
·through the kindergarten rooms completing various math activities. The focus of
the fun acti\ ities was on the number 100.
After taking their journey to each
kindergarten room, the students displayed
their completed passport and as a rev. ard
for participation received a new book.

Chad Dodson,
pastor of Oasis
Church and musician, will be performing at the
Hope for Haiti
event which
beings at .6 p.m.,
Sunday, Feb. 28
at Meigs Middle
School. The event
is free though
donations of supplies and money
will be accepted
for distribution to
Haitian earthquake victims.
Submitted photo

POMEROY - Scioto County brought
up the rear. at least in one factor reported
in a study to determine Ohio's healthy
counties. saving Meigs County from coming in dead last.
Out of Ohio's 88 counties, Meigs
County came in 87th on health factors and
84th on illness and death in a national
study by the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and the University of
Wisconsin. The study ranks the health of
every county in the United States. considering factors such as: smoking. obesity.
binge drinking. access to primary care
providers, rates of high school graduation,
rates of violent crime. air pollution levels,
liquor store density, unemployment rates
and number of children living in pove11y.
Delaware Countv was crowned the
"healthiest" in Ohio .
As for what factors and influences on
local health most significantly contributed
to Meigs County's ranking. Health
Commissioner Larry Marshall said in his
opinion economic status is the number
one factor.
"Money provides access to health care.
not only hospital care but public health
also ... that's a problem here," Marshall
said. "Even before the economy went

Please see Health, AS

Southern board
approves personnel
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE -At its most recent meeting.
the Southern Local Board of Education
approved personnel and make-up days
due to excessive calamity days taken durin!! inclement weather.
Approved for hiring on supplemental
contracts for the 20 I0 fall sports season
arc: Ryan Lemley. assistant football coach,
$2.100: Blian Weaver. assistant football
coach. $2. 100; Rick Buzzard. assistant
football coach. $1.400: Richard Cooksey.
cross countn coach. $2 .I 00: Katie
Dickson. varsity volleyball coach. $2.100:
Dan DeZordo. reserve vollevball coach,
$1 .400: Kelly Grueser, Sean Grueser. volunteer junior high football coaches. The
Board also accepted the resignation of
Kelly Pape as varsity softball coach.
The follov. ·ing certified substitutes were
approved: Stephanie Filson. Britney
Freeman. Michael Ramthun.
Zach Ash was approved as a volunteer
assistant JV baseball coach for the 20 I0
season. The resignation of Maggie Smith
from the ASK program \Vas accepted.
Vicki Northup \Vas approved to receive a
Safe School stipend payment of $500.
made in two. $250 payments.

Please see Southern, AS

�------~---

-------

B v BRUCE S MITH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CF-JARLESTON, S.C.
. About 350 people who got
sick a week into a
' Caribbean cruise were
responding well to medicine. the cruise line said
Tuesday.
Celebrity Crui::.e spokeswoman Cynthia Martinez
said 326 of the more than
I ,800 passengers on the
Celebrity Mercury began
complaining Sunday of
· upset stomachs. vomiting
and diaiThea. Martinez says
27 of the nearly 850 crew
members also reported
symptorT,Js.
The ship left Charleston
on Feb. 15. State officials
said there has been an outbreak in norovirus cases
across South Carolina but
. that it is not possible to say
· if that's what led to the
ship's illne~ses.
\1rutinez says the crew is
conducting ·'enhanced cleaning'' of the ship to prevent
the spread of the illness.
An extra doctor and two
~ nurses came aboru·d in St.
Kitts, in the Leeward Islands,
and will sail to Charleston.
arriving eru·Jy Friday.
It's not clear what caused
the outbreak. Norovirus is
often to blame for similar
symptoms sweeping closed
· quruters like those on cruise
ships. but a detennination
will have to until samples
are tested.
Samples from ill passengers and crew are being sent
to the Centers for Disease
CDC
Control,
said
spokesman Jay Dempsey. He
said workers from the
agency's Vessel Sanitation
Program will meet the ship
when it arrives in Charleston.
The workers wi11 conduct
an environmental assessment of the ship to determine the cause of the illness. he added.
According to the CDC
Web site, there were two
outbreaks of norovirus,
which causes stomach flu,
last winter on the Celebrity
Mercury. In all, the agency
investigated 15 outbreaks of
1
gastrointestinal illnesses on
cruise ships calling at
American ports.
This year an estimated
1
14.3 million passengers are
expected to take cruises,
· according to the C1uise Lines
- International Association, an
industry trade group.
The Mercury embarked
· from a state where health
officials have reported twice
· as many cases of norovims
as normal this winter.
"We have been taken
aback at how many people
are getting sick with this
virus," said Adam Myrick, a
spokesman for the South
Carolina Department of
Health and Environmental
Control.
lf it turns out to be the
virus, it's no surprise it
spread quickly aboard ship
because the virus stays on
surfaces like doorknobs,
handrails and sink fixtures
for a long time, he said.
.. Any time you have tight
spaces ami shru·ed surfaces,
this virus can spread fast,"
' Myrick said.
The South Carolina cruise
· industry is growing and the
Mercury sailing earlier this
' month began Charleston's
' first yeru·-round cruising sea. son. There will be 67 cruise
calls in the cit)' this year.
The Celebrity Mercury
· has six more departures set
· from Charleston during the
coming months, including a
16-night trip through the
Panama Canal ending in
Los Angeles.
. Later this spring, Carnival
· Cruise Lines will perma, nently base its 2,056-passenger Carnival Fantasy in
Charleston.
As the industry grows, the
· South Carolina State Ports
· Authority is pursuing plans
. to open a new cruise temlinal and open another halfmile of Charleston\ historic
waterfront to the public.
1\ recent study commissioned by lhe authority
shows cruises will mean
$37 million to the South
Carolina economy this year.

···-· - - ..----

-~----~ -

--- - ~~~,

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Cruise line:
·350 sick
.aboard ship
in Caribbean

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

VVednesday, February24, 2010

Toyota recalls won't 'totally' fix sudden surges
B v TOM R AUM AND
STEPHEN MANNING
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Massive recalls of popular
Toyota cars and trucks still
may ''not totally" solve
frightening problems of
sudden. unintended accelercompany's
ation,
the
American sales chief conceded Tuesday, a day before
the Japanese president of
the
world's
largest
automaker must conti·ont
angry U.S. lawmaker~.
House members hstened
in rapt silence Tuesday to the
tearful testimony of a
woman whose car unaccountably surged to 100
mph, then they pressed
James Lentz, president of
Toyota Motor Sales USA
Inc., on the company's
efforts to find and fix the
acceleration problems actions many suggested
were too late and too limited.
Lentz apologized repeatedly for safety defects that
led to recalls of some 8.5
million Toyota cars and
trucks. and he acknowledged the changes the company is making probably
aren't the end of the story.
Putting remaining doubts
to rest is of vital importance to millions more
Toyota owners in the
United States and elsewhere, who have continued
to drive but with serious
concerns about their cars.
Toyota sales have suffered,
too. and a small army of
dealers showed up on
Capitol Hill Tuesday. arguing that this week's highprofile hearings are unfairly targeting their company.
"We are vigilant and we
continue to look for potential causes," Lentz told the
House
Energy
and
Commerce Committee.
That search had better
continue, a number of lawmakers said. openly questioning Toyota's insistence
that the problems are
mechanical. not linked to
the vehicles' sophisticated
electronics.
Without a more vigorous
investigation of the possibility that electronics are
involved, Texas Republican
Rep. Joe Barton said of
Toyota's probe: "In my
opinion, it's a sham."
The U.S. government is
pursuing the electronics
question, Transportation
Secretary Ray LaHood told
the panel. "We're going to
go into the weeds on that"
and come up with answers.
LaHood said. He said the
company's recalls were
important but ''we don't
maintain that they answer
every question."
Lentz's appearance set the
stage for Toyota's president
- Akio Toyoda, grandson
of. the company's founder
- to apologize in person on
Wednesday.
Toyoda will accept "full
responsibility" for the halting steps that led to tbe
recall, according to prepared testimony released in
advance. He also will offer
his condolences over the
deaths of four San Diego,
Calif., family members in a
crash of their Toyota in late
August.
"I will do everything in
my power to ensure that
such a tragedy never happens again," Toyoda will
tell the House Government
Oversight Committee. "My
name is on every cru·. You
have my personal commitment that Toyota will work
vigorously and unceasingly
to restore the trust of our
customers.''
"Quite frankly, I fear the
pace at which we have
grown may have been too
quick" and led to safety
defects at the heart of the
recall, Toyoda says in his
prepared testimony.
There were repeated displays of emotion at
Tuesday's daylong hearing
- both from the Tennessee
woman who survived a
2006 sudden acceleration
incident when she was
unable to control her runaway Lexus and from Lentz
himself, who choked up
while discussing the death
of his own brother more
than 20 years ago in a car
accident.
"I know what those families go through." Lentz said.

Marlin Levi son/Minneapolis Star Tribune/MCT

Graciela Gulbranson, of M innetonka, Minnesota, stands outside her car, February 17. Last summer, she was backing her
2002 Toyota Camry down her driveway when it accelerated at full throttle and shot across the street and into the neighbor's yard. It hit a tree, which kept it from hitting the house .

Rhonda
Smith,
of
Sevierville. Tenn., said her
Lexus raced out of control
to speeds up to 100 miles an
hour. and that nothing she
did to try to stop it worked
- including braking and
shifting into neutral. "I
prayed to God to help me,"
she said, fighting back tears.
"After six miles, God
intervened" and slowed the
car. Smith said. She said she
was finally able to pull off
the road onto a median and
turn off the engine. She said
it took a long time for
Toyota to respond to her
complaints and even then it
was dismissive .
''Shame on you . Toyota.
for being so greedy," Smith
said as Lentz sat grimfaced with other Toyota
officials in the first row of
the committee room awaiting his turn to testify. She
directed a second "shame
on you'' at federal highway
safety regulators "for not
doing your job."
'·Listening to Mrs. Smith.
I'm embarrassed for what
happened," Lentz said .
Pressed by committee members as to why Toyota had
not had its technicians pour
over the Smith car to determine what actually caused
the malfunction, Lentz said
he wasn't sure where the car
was now but "We're going
to go down and talk to them
and get the car so that they
feel satisfied. I want her and
her husband to feel safe
about driving our products."
LaHood, the transportation secretary, told the panel
the U.S. government knew
the exact whereabouts of
the car and would share the
information with Toyota.
"All of this has been a big
wake-up call for Toyota."
LaHood said.
Toyota has recalled some
8.5 million vehicles worldwide- more than 6 million
in the United States - since
last fall because of unintended acceleration problems in multiple models and
braking issues in the Prius
hybrid. It is also investigating steering concerns in
Corollas. People with
Toyotas have complained of
their vehicles speeding out
of control despite efforts to
slow down, sometimes
resulting in deadly crashes.
The
government
has
received complaints of 34
1

deaths linked to sudden analyzed the electronics stepping away from i e
acceleration of Toyota vehi- systems and eliminated Energy and Comm
cles since 2000.
electronics as a possible inquiry and won't take pa1 1
Congressional panels are cause of sudden unintended House votes on its recomasking whether computer- acceleration when. in fact, mendations due to financ ial
ized modern automotive the only such review was a connections to Toyota,
electronics designed to flawed study conducted by whose North American headmake cars more efficient a company retained by quarters is in her district.
can sometimes make them Toyota's lawyers."
Harman's husband foundless safe.
Tracking down an electri - ed an audio equipment comLentz said that "two spe- cal problem can be far pany that suppJjes Toyota.
cific mechanical causes" mvre difficu lt, expensive In addition . the Harmans
were to blame for the sud- and time-consuming than have held stock in the
den accelerations - mis- finding a mechanical prob- Japanese automaker. includplaced floor mats and stick- lem. Electrical problems ing at least $115.000 wotth
ing accelerator pedals. He can have more than one in 2008, the year covered by
insisted electronic systems source. and they can come her latest financial discloconnected to the gas pedal from inside or outside the sure report. Harman's fi nanand fuel line were not to car. Mechanical problems cial ties to Toyota were fitst
blrune, based on tests made often leave clues such as reported by The Associated
by the company in the physical damage, where Press. Her decision was
United States and Japan.
electronic troubles can be made
public
Tuesday
Lentz said that. while the hidden in software or leave evening.
compru1y had not expressly no trace at all.
Meanwhile, more than
ruled out an electronics
Stupak
suggested
a 100 Toyota dealers lobbied
malfunction. "We have not decade-old law intended to Congress on Tuesday, quesfound a malfunction., in the give federa
regulators tioning the ability of the
electronics of an} of the more tools to track vehicle government to be impartial
cars at issue. He cited ··fail- safety defects needs to be given its bailouts of General
safe mechanisms·• in the strengthened.
Motors and Chrysler§
cars that were designed to
Lentz told the committee left it with a majority
shut off or reduce engine his company had ··not lived ership stake in Gene
power "in the event of a sys- up to the high standards our Motors and a smaller stake
tem failure.''
customers and the public in Chrysler.
But when pressed by have come to expect from
''That's hard for me as a
Energy and Commerce Toyota.··
citizen to understand why
Committee
Chairman
"Put simply, it has taken my tax dollars are going in
Henry Waxman, D-Calif., us too long to come to grips that
direction ."
Paul
on whether he could say with a rare but serious set of Atkinson, a Houston-area
with certainty that the fixes safety issues. despite all of
dealer. said.
now being undertaken our good faith efforts,'' said Toyota
(Associated
Press writers
would completely eliminate the president and chief
Larry
lvlargasak,
Ken
the problems, Lentz hesitat- operating officer of Toyota
Thomas,
Alan
Fram
and
ed a moment and then Motor Sales USA. Inc.
Sharon
Theimer
in
replied: "Not totally.''
Later, outside the briefing Washingron
and
Tom
Still. he said chances of room, Lentz was asked by
unintended accelerations reporters whether anybod} Krisher in Detroir contribwed to rhis story.)
would be "very, very slim'' should be fired at Toyota.
once the recalls were com''Right now I think the
plete. Lentz also said main focus is let's get the
Toyota was putting in new customers' cars fixed, let's
controls so brakes would figure out what went wrong.
oven·ide the gas pedal on We are going to be a much
almost all of its new vehi- more transparent company,''
cles and a majority of its he said. ··we have to go
vehicles already on the back and regroup top-toroad.
bottom."
House investigators who
He said Toyota had
reviewed Toyota's customer already completed fixes on
call database found that 70 800.000 vehicles and that
percent of the complaints of most customers seemed
sudden acceleration were "extremely satisfied."
for vehicles that are not subToyota has plants in the
ject to the recalls over floor states of several lawmakers
Frame that newspaper
mats or sticky pedals,
photo or pnnlll on a
who are investigating the
mug or mouse pad.
Rep. Bart Stupak, D- recall. One of them. Rep.
Mich., chairman of an Jane Harman . D-Calif.. is
www .mydailysentinel.com
Energy and Commerce subcommittee
investigating
Toyota's recalls. said the
"misled
the
company
American public by saying
that they and other indepenJ\YJBg:£t.zfi:ui1~
dent sources had thoroughly
8ruu.p/~c Cd f/ u.u 2'ff

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�- - --------

-------

-~~-~--

'

PageA3

_The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,February24,2010

Emergency HEAP ending in March

ASK DR.. BR.OTHER.S

·Boss has problem
with moral compass
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

CHESHIRE Gallia
Meigs C.A.A.'&gt;:. Emergency
HBAP Program. which
began on Nov. 2. 2009. will
end March 31. 2010.
according to an announcement by Sandra Edwards.
Emergency
Services
Director. Tuesday.
"We are taking calls for
appointments bi-weekly and
booking two weeks in
advance. However. an
appointment
may
not
extend a scheduled utility
shut~off." said Edwards.
Eligible households must
be at or below 200% of the
federal poverty guidelines.
which has been increased
this program year. and will
assist more clients.
Emergency HEAP provides assistance to households that have had utilities

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm a
A

Dear

Dr.

Brothers:

~1ere ·s been a lot of talk in

. the ne\VS recently about people in positions of power
-acting in morally reprehensible ways. On a personal
level, my boss '-- who is a
powerful person within our
• company - \Vas discovered
having an affair with a
• younger staff member after
· repeatedly telling us that
relationships within the
.company were severely
frowned upon. How can
these people be so hypocritical and behave so badly? Is
there anything we can do to
::Change this attitude? - B.T.
•: Dear B.T.: It turns out
:}hat the old saying '·Power
corrupts; absolULe pO\ver
.. ·corrupts absolutely'" may be
more tmc than we suspect, -ed. While I can't attribute
·"your hoss 's inappropriate
behavior entirely to the cormptmg influence of power.
. certainly may have played
part. New research pub. .shed in · the journal
Psychological
Science
' shows that people in power
.make stricter moral judgments of others but are
much less judgmental about
their own behavior. These
people are prone to take the
moral high ground but then
not practice \Vhat they
.preach. Like with a lot of
celebrities, and even promi' nent businesspeople and
politicians. the private
behavior of powerful people
doesn't always live up to
•. their public stance on certain issues. We all can think
of a politician who espouses
family values while cheating on his wife. or a CEO
\Vho received go\'ernment
money while ~rewarding
himself with a larger bonm•.
Unfortunately. it's hard to
come up with any one solu' tion to help bring people ·s
lie and private lives into
nment. In your boss's
..
, e. his dishonesty with his
co-workers and the people
who trusted him could have
consequences not only for
, his career, but for his per• sonal life as well. Hopefully
he will learn from his mistake in this regard and not
repeat this mistake in the
future.

Thursday, Feb. 25
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District
Board
of
Supervisors, 11 :30 a.m. at
the district office, 33101
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Friday, Feb. 26
GREAT
BEND
banon
Township
stees, regular meeting, 7
m., township building.
Wednesday, March 3
HARRISONVILLE
Scipio Township Trustees,
6:30
p.m.
at
the
Harrisonville Fire House.

t

Clubs and
organizations
Wednesday,Feb.24
POMEROY
Meigs
County Republican Party,
special meeting to discuss
final plans for Lincoln Day
Dinner, 7:30 p.m.. Meigs
County Courthouse.
Thursday, Feb. 25
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
Masters, 11 :30 p.m. at
Millie's Restaurant.
REEDSVILLE
. Riverview Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. at the Reedsville
United Methodist Church
building.
Monday, March 1
OMEROY Meigs
unty Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon, conference
room,
Meigs
County Health Department.

8:30 to I0:45 a.m. and from
I to 3:30 p.m .. Monday
through Thursday (Tuesday
Thursday
in
Middleport). For those who
are employed. the agency
offers evening appointments until 5:30 in some
instances. As in previous
years, the CAA operate~
under the appointment system
to
apply
for
Emergency HEAP. Contact
992-6629 (Meigs County)
and 367-7341
(Gallia
County) on the pre-determined call-in dates of 2/2n.
3/12. and 3/26 to schedule
an appointment.
For further information.
contact the Cheshire Ofticc
at 367-7341 or 992-6629.
Sandra
Edwards.
Emergency
Services
Division Director.

O'Bieness offering breastfeeding class

Heartland Publications restructuring moves forward
Company files amended plan of reorganization

~;J,~~fiilt~~~ ~:~.::;~~ Ohio child support collections drop amid recession
(c) 2010 by King Fearures
Syndicale

COLUMBUS (AP) Collections for child support have dropped about
$15 million over the past
year as Ohio parents struggle to make payments amid
the recession, and officials
expect numbers to get lower
as unemployment benefits
run out.
Last month. more than
$13 million of the state's
child support was taken
from
unemployment
checks. an amount that
could take a hit when thou1 d
k
d r
san s 0 · unemp oye wor ers are expected to lose benefits in coming weeks without an extension by
Congress.
"It's a huge concern." said
Jeff Aldridge. deputy director of the state office of
child support. "If there is no
further extension. those
people will roll off unemployment and will have no
money to make support
payments.''
In Franklin County, which
includes Columbus. officials expect child support
payments to decline by

open at 4:30 p.m. Sloppy
joes, cole slaw, macaroni
salad and desserts.

Youth events
Saturday, Feb. 27
HARRISONVILLE - The
Harrisonville Youth League
will host youth league ball
signups from noon-2 p.m.
for more information call
742-2525.

Card showers
Monday, March 1
MIDDLEPORT - Floyd
and Esther Carson will
celebrate
their
74th
anniversary (officially on
Feb. 29), cards can be
sent
to
them
c/o
Overbrook Rehabilita!ion
Center. 333 Page Street.
Room 308, Middleport.

about $1 million and more
families to turn to food
stamps and other welfare
assistance.
"We're going to see collections plummet when
unemployment benefits run
out," said Susan Brown.
director of the Franklin
County Child Support
Enforcement Agency.
She said the agency asks
parents to let it know when
they loose a job so the
amount they owe can be
lowered.
Jerry Newsome, 43, of
Columbus. t's d1'vorced "'t'th
"'

two children. He moved in
with his mother and stepfather after losing his job last
spring when the Wonder
Bread bakery where he
~orked closed.
Newsome told WBNS-TV
he was upset and embarrassed when he had to ask
officials to lower the amount
of child support he\
required to pay. He said
unemployment left him \\'ith
"next to nothing" to live on
after he paid his child support and msurance costs.
He said his obligation
d
d b b
f ·
roppe
Y a out hal . and

Other events

The Gallia County American Red
Cross will conduct training on how
to perform cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (CPR) on adults,
infants and children. The training
will take place at the Gavin plant
in Cheshire on Saturday,
March 6, 2010.

&amp;!JoHIO
Req111r~ quahl)lng C~nl"*'! Gnd GYOiid 110)0( Ctecfil C.Otd 'ioli.fGIIOI'(Cooofrt SIOrt
"'i"'ttd. Call lor lull dtto~s and il'!lllobn«.

t.

be ·s relie,·ed but also upset
that he cannot give hb. exwife more.
While statewide fi !!Ures
dropped $15 million l'rom
Januat) 2009 to January
2010. data compiled by The
Columbus Dispatch shows
collections dropped more
than $27 million in one recent
month. from December 2009
to January 2010.
While the number of
child-support
orders
increased by 16.000 in
2009. but the amount parents were required to pay
dropped by $3 million.

Red Cross Offers
FREE
CPR Training at AEP's Gavin Plant

The class begins at 8 a.m. and
will last approximately four hours.
This training is free and open to
all interested persons ages 13
and above, but participants must
preregister with the Gallia Cou~ty
Red Cross. Call446-8555 to
register, or for more information
about the training. Class size is

t.

Friday, Feb. 26
• MIDDLEPORT Free
community dinner, 5 p.m.,
' Middleport Church of Christ
Family Life Center. Doors

lines represent the 200%
calculation and are revised
annually. Allowable annual
income for a I person
household is $21,660.2 persons $29,140, 3 persons
$36.620. 4 persons $44 .I 00,
5 persons $51,580. and 6
persons
$59.060.
Households with more than
six members should add an
additional $7.480 to the
yearly income.
Both Emergency HEAP
and Regular HEAP applications can be completed at
the Gallia C.A.A. Heap
Office. 859 3rd Avenue .
Gallipolis, Central Office.
8010 N. SR 7. Cheshire or
the
Meigs
C.A.A.
HMG!Heap Office . at 122
N. 2nd Street. Middleport.
Applications will be
taken by appointment from

new saleswoman at a small
company, and I'm worried
that my boss may be interested in me romimtically. l
have a boyfriend, and
regardless. my boss is much
older, and it would be totally inappropriate. It seems
like he always has excuses
for talking to me or singling
me out, ... and while ~he's
nc\ cr done anything explicit. it still makes me a little
uncomfortabl,~::. Am I just
being paranoid?. How can I
te II whether he's just friendly. or ready to step over the
line? - J.N.
Dear J .N .: First. whatever your boss's intentions
are. if his actions are making you uncomfortable. you
ha\'e c\'ery right to ask him
to stop or change his behavATHENS - O'Bleness Room 010.
breast pump, and other
Michele
Biddlestone.
ior. You can talk to him
Hospital
in
The class. which ts issues such as maintenance O'Bieness'
international
directly. or take it up with Memorial
the huma11 resources depart- Athens will offer a class offered in addition to the of milk supply, and board certified lactation
will
lead
ment in your company. designed especially for hospital's regular breast- resources and products consultant.
feeding
course.
covers
a
working
mothers
who
that
are
especially
helpful
Breastfeeding
Class
for
the
There are some clues.
wide variety of topics to nursing mothers who Working Mother. The class
though. than can tip you off breastfeed their babies.
Breastfeeding Class for unique to working mothers work. Those who attend is free. and no registration is
·as to whether your boss is
the
Working Mother will who breastfeed including: the class will also have the required. For more infonnaharb01ing a secret attraction
to you. ~If he's constantly be held from 5:30 p.m. preparing to go back to opportunity to see a tion or for a schedule of
7:30
p.m. work, returning to work . demonstration of the vari- classes. contact Michele
talking to you about his per- until
Wednesday.
March
3.
in pumping
and
storing ous breast pumps now Biddlestone at (740) 592sonal life. and asking you
9364.
about yours. he might be O'Bleness' Lower Level breast milk. choosing a available on the market.
interested in more than a
purely professional relation~hip. Keep in mind that you
don't have to answer his
personal questions - yoll
can wave them off by giv~ng
Carolina, Ohio. Oklahoma.
vague answers and gettmg
Tennessee. Virginia and
back to work.
·
second-lien lenders.
emerge from Chapter 1 I West Virginia. The compaIf your bo!)s routinely
CLINTON, Conn.
ny reaches more than
Sachs
has
also
Goldman
protection.
calls you or contacts you Heartland
Publications.
250.000
print subscribers
"We are pleased that the
outside the office. it should LLC. which operates 50 withdrawn its previous
each
week
and many others
to
the agreement with our lenders
be for work-related issues. paid-circulation newspa- objections
via
interactive
Web sites.
Disclosure
Statement,
and
significantly streamlines the
If his messages are urgent pers and numerous free or
Additional information
no
other
objections
to
the
Chapter
II
process
and
and work-related. you have controlled
distribution
the
company's
less to worry about. products in nine states. Disclosure Statement · or keeps the company on track about
restructuring
may
be found
Procedures to complete the reorganizaRegardless of when he calls. toda~· . announced that the Solicitation
online
at
have
been
filed.
which
tion
in
early
April.''
said
though, you should am;wer r~qu1s1te number of firstwith a professional _
hen. lenders, led by GE pave the way for the hear- . Michael C. Bush, president http://chapterll .epi4s) stems .com/heartland pub) icarather than a familiar or per- · Capt tal as ag~nt. support ing Feb. 26 to obtain Court and chief executive officer.
tions
or by calling (866)
approval
on
these
imporFrom
its
headquarters
in
sonal - tone and greeting the C?mpany s. al!lended
222-1116
or. internationally.
tant
documents.
Clinton,
Conn.,
the
Folio\\
ing
compato keep him at a distance. Pl_an of Reorgamzauon and
282-2-WO.
Giving you gifts, asking you Disclosure _Statement. The such approval, impaired ny operates 50 paid-circula- (646)
Information
about
the comcreditors
will
vote
on
the
numertion
newspapers
and
to work late or work over- Company IS hopeful that
Plan.
after
which
the
pany
and
its
publications
ous
free
or
controlled
distritime with him alone, or 1 the. amend~d !llaterials,
spending more time hover-~ w~11ch arebemg ftled tod~y. Company will seek confir- bution products in Georgia. can be found at www.hearting over you and :rour Will be acceptable to 1ts mation from the Court• and Kentucky. North and South landpu blications .com.
workspace than he spends
working at his own all are 1 ---.....-------------------------------------=----

..Community Calendar
Public meetings

disconnected, face the
threat of disconnection or
have lO days or less supply
of bulk fuel. Edwards said
the program allows a onetime payment of up to$ I75
per heating season to
restore or retain home heating services for AEP or
Columbia Gas and up to
$250 for BREC and Knox
Energy. For propane and
fuel oil clients, the payment
may be up to $600 (200
gallon!)) for propane/bottled gas or fuel oil. Clients
heating with wood or coal
will be assisted up to $350.
Homeowners or renters
may qualify.
The following income
levels by household size
should be used to determine
eligibility. according to the .
CAA. These income guide-

Gavin Plant/Cheshire, Ohio

limited and will be filled on a firstcall, first-served basis.
The American Red Cross CPR
program is designed to give
people the confidence to respond
in an emergency situation with
skills that can save a life. This
course provides participants with
basic emergency techniques so
that they can respond to breathing
and cardiac emergencies in adults
and children.
•

Call 446-8555 to register
for the free CPR training
class.

+

American
Red Cross

�r-~------------------------~--~----~--------------~--------------------------------------------~

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

' Vedncsday, February 24 ,

The Daily Sentinel

~~\ 1~lW!{ 1\\et'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

cou~~~~~G

www.mydailysentinel.com

A~M&amp;

Ohio Valley Pu.blishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

,.

2010

oo~~eRe!!

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
slwll mak£• Jill fall' re$pectin.~ an
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Cau.'.!l't'SS

a str

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The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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News

are

1~t GOP HAS
Bt[OMt T~~ ~~RTY
Of NOIII

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debt and keep its funding costs low.
Unfortunate!), the purchase of government :-.ecuritics (public debt) by
the Fed leads to what economists call
a "monetization·· of that debt. Sellers
of the . . e~.:uritie., get "new mone),''
from the Fed and that new mone\
normally works its WH) into the ecotl·
Otn) and rai . . es price:-. for almost
e\ervthllH! incluuing intcre-.t rate~.
The n:&lt;LtltuH! infl~ttion (nr C\en the
anticipation ofin abo star1s a 'icicm~
cycle of dollar depreciation th:tt
makes it even harder (at existing
intere'\t rate") to sell U.S. deht
abroad. Atain. as rates increase on
more and n10re debt. the interest and
reiundmg burden gro\\ s exponential]), and the once unthinkable becon.
at least debatable.
Depressing as it i~. ~owever .. t •
ll.S. currenc) and debt/fundmg ttuation is actuailv in reasonable shape
(as measured.· ::-.ay. by recent creditdefault swap spread-.) at lea t \\hen
compared to near basket-case countries such as Ireland. Spain. Portugal.
and especially Greece.
A pa11icularl) dangerous examp~e
b Japan. where go,·crnrnent debt IS
currently an astounding 200 percent
of its GDP and is expected tl) rise to
230 pl'rcent by 201:2. But none of this
should make U.S. government bondholders at all ::-.mug since default... on
'·soverei~n debt" a·broacl could start a
contagion that could swamp all boats
Stav tuned.

rfJominick T. Armentano is
Professor Emeritln in Economic\ m
the Univenity of Hartford. Conn.,
and a Reuarch Fellow at the
Independent lnsriwte in Oakland,
CtJ/i{.J

NO.

7

Published Tuesday through Friday. 111
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Member: The Associated Press and
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Postmaster: Send address correc·
!Jons to The Dally Sen!tnel. PO Box!
729 Pomc·oy Oh10 45769.
I

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Editor: Charlene Hoefltch, Ext 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed, E~t. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent E:xt 13

T. A RMENTANO

interest on the national debt.
So far this ha5. riot been an msurThe economic landscape still looks mountable problem despite the fact
prclly gloomy despite (because of?) that in FY 2009, the interest cost to
massive increases in federal govern- "carry'' the t; .S. public debt was $383
ment spending by Congrc-.s~ Want billion. (For a frame of reference. the
something else to \\ orry about? What b~dget for NASA last year wa&lt;; $19
if your &lt;~ovcrnmcnt suddenly went billton.) The carr) mg cost~ b) year·
'"helly up~ on some or all of its public 20 19 are estimated to be more than
debt lOU's?
$700 billion.
Impossible' you say? i\ot rcall).
But the5e htstorkal cost5. and proWhen individuals or husines~es jections are based on conservath e
have long-run expenses that exceed gues~es about deficits and interest
.mtic1pated mcome - and have nei- rates. What 1f annual deficits nov.
ther capnal nor savings to fill in the become trillion dollar holes (as the\
gap - they often declare bankruptcy. have) and rising interest rates (a&lt;,
And though it is rare. even some city lik.el)) force goYernment') to pa) far
government&lt;; (i.e .. Vallejo. Calif.) more to fund thelf increasing debt'?
ha\e been plunged recent!) into
The analog) here \\ ould be to a
msohenc) and bankruptcy, and some credit card holder who already has
state go\ ernments (\\orth he a\ y pen- debt. spends more this month them
sion costs) might consider it. But last. accumulating e\en more debt
could it happen to our own federal and. in addition, faces increasing paygovernment?
ments,every month because of higher
Most economists ha\ e ah\ avs · intere::-t rates. It become~ an tmposstregarded this po::-.sibility as nearh ble situation.
unthinkable. After all. the U.S. govIn the case of ever-tncreasing pub
ernment has never defaulted on a he debt,'\\ here does the ne'' money
penny of its debt obligations in over come from to ··can-y" this increasing
220 years. What this means is that burden? Federal ta.xes v.ould have to
when the Treasury sold government be increased to cxtraon.linarv levels;
bonds. the bondholders have ahvays but this effort would pro\·e seirreceived their interest payment and defeating since it would like!)
hav~.: always had their original princidestro\ incentives and the cconom)
pal returned at maturity. In that sense. to boot.
lJ .S. government bonds have been
Another possible debt/default sce100 percent safe.
nario. and just as depressing, is that
There arc several ways that C'.S. the Federal Reserve contmues to purdebt could become riskv and unsafe e hase more and more t; .S. go' ern
and increase the likelihood of a gen- ment debt. When the Fed purchases
eral or partial default. The most obvi- government securities in the. ·'open
ou5. problem \\ould be that Congress market" it tends to pu h bond prices
becomes unwilling or unable to raise up and interest rates do\\n. making it
taxes sufficient to pay. by Jaw. the ea::.ter for the TreasUI) to market nev.;
B Y D OMINICK

The Daily Sentinel

Our main number Is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

•

Could US. difault on its debt?

Letters to the ed1tor should be limtted to 300 words. All letters are
subject to ed.!:ng, must be signed and 1nclude address and telephone
number. No unstgned letters wtll be published. letters should be in
good taste, oddressmg tssues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters
w111 not bo accepted for publicatior

Our ma1n contern In all stones IS to
be accurate. II you know of an error
m a story, call 1M newsrooM at (740)
992-2156

'

0

LETTERS TO THE ED I T OR

Correctic;n Policy

c

I&gt;

"'

Today ts Wednesday, Feb. 24, the 5~th day of 2010.
There are 31 0 days left m the year.
Today's Highlight tn History:
On Feb. 24, 1868, the House of Representatives
impeached President Andrew Johnson following his
attempted dismissal of Secretary of War Edwin M.
Stanton; Johnson was later acquitted by the Senate.
On this date.
In 1582. Pope Gregory XIII issued a papal bull, or
edict, outlining his calendar reforms. (The Gregorian
Calendar is the calendar in general use today.)
In 1803, 1n its Marbury v. Madison decision, the
Supreme Court established judicial review of the consti·
tutionality of statutes.
In 1821 , Mex1can rebels proclaimed the "Plan de
lguala," the1r declaration of independence from Spain.
In 1863, Arizona was organized as a territory.
In 1920. the German Workers Party, which later
became the Nazi Party. met in Munich to adopt its platform.
In 1942, tho Voice of America went on the air for the
first ttme.
In 1980, the U.S. hockey team defeated Finland, 4-2.
to cl.nch the gold medal at the Winter Olympic Games in
Lake Placid, N.Y.
In 1983, a congress1onal commission released a
report condemnmg the internment of JapaneseAmericans durmg World War II as a "grave injustice."
In 1990, magazine publisher Malcolm Forbes died in
Far H1lls, N.J. at age 70. Fifties balladeer Johnnie Ray
died m Los Angeles at age 63
Ten years ago· The state of Texas executed Betty lou
Beets, 62, by rnject1on for murdenng her fifth husband
after Governor George W. Bush refused to mtervene.
The UN. Security Council approved a U.S -drafted plan
to send an observer force into Congo to momtor a fragile cease·f•re. Pope John Paul II arnved rn Egypt on a pilgrimage to retrace some of the most epic passages from
the Bible
Five years ago. Pope John Paul II U[lderwent an operation to rnsert a tube 1n h1s throat to relieve his breathing
problems hours after he was rushed back to the hospital for the second time in a month with flu-like symptoms.
One year ago. In the f1rst prime-time speech of his
term, President Barack Obama appeared before
Congress to sketch an agenda that began with jobs,
then broadened quickly to include a stable credit system,
better schools, health care reform, reliable domestic
sources of energy and an end to the war in Iraq. Earlier
in the day, Obama held an 80-minute private talk with
Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Abe Vigoda is 89. Actor
Steven Htll is 88. Actor James Farentino is 72. Sen.
Joseph Lteberman (1-Conn.) 1s 68. Actor Edward Jam~s
Olmos is 63. Singer-writer-producer Rupert Holmes IS
63. Rock singer-mus1c1an George Thorogood is 60.
Apple CEO Steve Jobs is 55. News anchor Paula Zahn
IS 54.
Thought for Today: "It is the Individual who is n':'t
interested In his fellow men who has the greatest dtfficulties in life and provides the greatest injury to
others. It Is from among su~h individuals that .all
human failures spring." - Alfred Adler, Austrran
psychoanalyst (1870-1937).

Reader Services

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TC)J)AY IN 1-I I STOR.Y

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..

,,\J;

;a

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- _.. _ -·
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�-~-----

VVednesday,Februar)'24,20tO

Martha Chevalier
Martha Chevalier. 87. of Portland. Ohio. passed away
\londa\". Feb. 22.2010. at her residence.
She \\·as born Dec. 9. 1922. in Reedsville. daughter of the
late Archie and Emma Mae Randolph Barber. . . .
She is survived by several nieces and nephews.
• In addition to her parents. she was preceded in death by
. er husband. Paul Chevalier and a son. Gary Chevalier.
Services will be held 1 p.m. Thursday. Feb. 25. 2010 at
•
: Eden United Brethren Church. Reedsville. with Pastor
: Adam Will officiating. Bmial will be in the Randolph
• Cemetery.
: Friends may call at the church one hour prior to the ser: vice on Thursday. You can sign the online guest book at
· \'-·ww.whiteschwar Lelfuneralhome.com.

:Local Briefs
Phillips meeting rescheduled
POMEROY - Rep. Debbie Phillips (D-Athens) has
• rescheduled the time of her March 25 visit to Pomeroy. The
: original meetine was to be held at 6:30 p.m., March 25 at
: the Pomeroy Library. That meeting has been rescheduled
· for 7 p.m .. March 25 at the new Pomeroy Village Hall in
: council's chambers.

Correction
PO:VIEROY
Darin Roach. son-in-law and survivor of
: the late Judy K. ~elson. had his first name incorrectly
spelled in 1\l'elson 's obituary in Tuesday's The Daily

enrinel.

:Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 33.72
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 52.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 45.30
Big Lots (NYSE) - 31.33
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.48
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 37.47
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 12.74
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.12
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.56
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 31.62
Collins (NYSE) - 54.31
DuPont (NYSE) - 33.68
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.27
Gannett (NYSE) - 14.80
General Electric (NYSE)- 15.95
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 24.05
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.88
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.69
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 21.03
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 50.68

•

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 22.92
BBT (NYSE)- 27.75
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 14.22
Pepsico (NYSE)- 61.78
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.85
Rockwell (NYSE) - 53.25
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.15
Royal Dutch Shell - 54.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 93.80
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.62
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.87
WesBanco (NYSE)- 14.63
Worthington (NYSE) - 15.73
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Feb. 23, 2010, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

RadiOSrromPageAl

the ;\1iddleport Police Department has a spare channel
(channel 8) which they have agreed to let the Public Works
Department use since it would not affect the police department's safety or productivity.
Moore said that Lt. Mony Wood had contacted several
radio distributors for the police department and recommends Comm USA as the best value for the Public Works
Department.
Moore's recommendation is for two base stations. one at
the water office. and the second at the village garage. three
truck radios. nine hand held radios (one for each field
employee) , and a repeater station at the lagoon plant for a
total one-time cost of $4.459.69. He said this is a one-time
· cost with no monthly fees and the village will own all
equipment and be responsible for any maintenance.
Council member Jean Craig commended the &lt;:treet department workers for their work of removing snow. It was
reported that 100 tons of salt has been used so far this year.
and that currently the village has about 60 tons on hand.
Jon Buck of American Electric Power met with Council
to discuss renewal of a franchise agreement to allow AEP
to work in the community doing corrective or other work
geared to maintaining or improving service. Buck said the
agreement does not prevent the village from securing energy elsewhere. The first reading of a 25-year agreement to
, that effect with AEP was given by Council.
' Mayor Michael Gerlach noted that planning is continuing
ward converting a wing of the old Middleport Elementary
• chool into a jail. Lt. Wood gave a report on activity over
the past two years noting the increase in inmates held in the
Middleport facility, particularly female. and the numbers
• which come from outside the county resulting in revenue.
:, He said in 2008 125 males were booked into the ail. but
: that no outside inmates were held due to insurance reasons.
: In 2009 his report showed 257 males and 14 females being
; book into the jail for a total of 271 inmates with a total
·'billing to other depattment of S 16,500. This year. so far,
there have been 10 males and 14 females booked in and as
' of Feb. 22 around $2,500 is to be billed. The jail began
: accepting females in November. 2009.
· Council voted to hire Randy Smith for a part-time police' man's position. The current part-time person will be moved
up to fill-time position created by a resignation.
' In other business Council member Craig Wehrung talked
briefly about erosion along th~ banks of the Ohio in
Middleport and suggested the Corps of Engineers be contacted about the possibility of some corrective work.
Council moved into executive session to discuss pending
legal matters. Attending the meeting were Mayor Gerlach.
' Clerkrrreasurer Susan Baker. and Council members. Rae
Moon.!, J_ulia Huston. Craig Wehrung. Jean Craig. and
Shawn R1cc.

e

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

States eye ban on public release of 911 calls

Obituaries

.

...

SouthernrromPageAt

The Board approved March 3 I. April I. 5, and 6 as make
up days due to excessive calamity days. Southern has
missed nine days of school this year (the state allows five)
'due to inclement weather and must make up four days.
April 2 was approved as a professional waiver day.
The Board approved a contract with Holzer Clinic for
$5,000 for athletic trainer services for the 20 I 0-11 school year.
Permanent appropriations in the amount of $9.9 million
were approved.
Board members present at the meeting were Denny
Evans. Dennie Hill. Paul Harris. John Hoback.
The next r~gular meeting of the SLBOE is set for 8 p.m ..
March 22 in the high school media room.

Bv DESIREE HUNTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MONTGOMERY. Ala. Linda Casey dialed 911 and
screamed. ''Oh. God!" over
and over again into the
phone aftet finding her
daughter beaten to death in
the driveway of their North
Carolina home.
Later that day. she heard
the 911 recording on the
local news and vomited.
"This was not only the
most painful thing I have
ever been through , it should
have been the most private."
she said in an e-mail.
Because of situations like
Casey's, lawmakers m
Alabama.
Ohio
and
Wisconsin are deciding
whether to bar the public
release of 911 calls.
Missouri. Pennsylvania.
Rhode Island and Wyoming
already keep such recordings
private. But generally, most
states consider emergency
calls public records available
on request. with exceptions
sometimes made for privacy
reasons or to protect a police
investigation.
"Nationally there is a
growing concern about the
release of audiotapes that
don't involve newsworthy
people or events - just
things that people like to
hear because of their sensational nature.'' said Sonny
Brasfield. executive director of the Association of
Count) Commissions of
Alabama. which drafted
legislation in the state to bar
the release of 911 recordmgs. "'There is a concern
nationally that these kinds
of things are having a chilling effect on people's willingness to call 91 J ."
Open-government advo-

cates disagree and say that
prohibiting the release of
the recordings takes away a
valuable tool that has
exposed botched calls.
For example. a Detroit
dispatcher in 2006 scolded a
5-year-old boy for '"playing
on the phone" while his
mother lay unconscious.
When police arrived. the
boy's mother was dead. In a
2008 call in Memphis .
Tenn., a 911 operator asked.
"What's your emergency?"
then fell asleep.
''It's crucial that we're
able to hear how our public
safety calls are being handled." said David Cuillier,
chairman of the Society of
Professional Journalists'
Freedom of Information
Committee.
The public release of audio
has also led to accolades for
dispatchers who have helped
save lives. and helped vindicate operators accused of
mishandling a call.
In states where 911 calls
are made available to the
public, news organizations
generally make their own
case-by-case decisions on
whether to air a recording.
taking into consideration
issues of taste, sensitivity
and news value.
··we strongly believe that
91 1 recordings should be
public record because they
can reflect on the performance of public agencies."
said Thomas Kent, standards
editor of The Associated
Press. "It certainly can be
hard to listen to 911 recordings. and we use them very
sparingly on the air and
online. Our decision to use
such recordings depends primarily on their relevance to
important news. not the
atmospherics."

Cuillier. a professor at
Arizona State University's
School of Journalism. said
the answer is better self-regulation by the media.
"I see this all around the
country. There 'II be a media
outlet that maybe goes a little too far. - pushes the
boundaries on something and people do not I ike that,"
he said. "And then you'll
have demands that it be
taken down. you 'II have a
backlash, you '11 have legislation that makes it all
secret."
WSPA. the Spa11anburg.
S.C.. TV station that aired
Casey's 911 call in 2008.
apologized a day later and
removed the recording from
its Web site.
"That 911 call was me
realizing my daughter was
dead:· Casey said. "I did
not care to share that with
the world and that private
moment of grief should
never have been used to sell
papers. or up ratings."
Brasfield cited one particularly upsetting example
from Alabama involving a
call made by a boy whose
grandmother was being
mauled by a dog.
Gary Allen. editor of an
online magazine for dispatchers. said new technology makes it easier than
ever to splice and copy 911
calls. And cell phone calls
are more dramatic and onthe-spot. making the audio
i rTesisti ble.
Celebrity 9 I 1 calls have
proved to be enormously
popular,
as
illustrated
recently by cases involving
Tiger Woods and Charlie
Sheen.
··In general. the issue has
boiled down to the need for
people to feel that they can

National
EmerRencv
Numbers
Associcaimi:
WH'w.nena .org

Highs in the mid 30s.
Friday
night ..•Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of snow showers.
Cold with lows in the mid
20s.
Saturday...Mostly cloudy
with a chance of snow showers. A chance of rain showers
in the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 30s. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Saturday oight ...Mostly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the mid 20s.

Sunday...Mostly cloudy.
A chance of rain and snow
showers in the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Chance of precipitation 30
percent.
Sunda)' night ...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of snow
showers in the evening. Cold
\Vith lows in the mid 20s.
Chance of snow 30 percent.
.Monday
through
Tuesday...Mostly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 40s.
Lows in the mid 20s.

call 911 ut any time and
their situation won't be
splashed across the media.
either creating emban·assment or emotional harm,"
said Allen. u fonner dispatcher for 20 years who
now
\\orks
\vith
WW\\.9lldispatch.com. "On
the other side of that is the
very legitimate and obvious
public concern that everyone involved in 91 J is doing
their job correctly. I think
it's pretty clear that the public has a right to know \vhat
is happening in a communication center."
Nancy Morgan wants
every state to ban handing
out the 911 recordings. The
Florida woman's daughter
and son-in-law were murdered by a friend-turnedstalker in :was. and her
granddaughter - 5 at the
time - called 911 to report
that her parents were dead.
Morgan said the call was
played over and over on TV
and radio but she managed
to avoid hearing it for two
years, until she went on a
national TV show to speak
out about stalking. The producers included the audio
without telling her.
"It was devastating to
me," "he said. 'T d worked
through a lot of my grief
issues. but to do things like
that and trigger painful
bsues is not appropriate.
I\'ow I can't get that out of
my head." ~

On the Net:
Society of Professional
Journalists: \\'Wiv.spj.org
National
Center for
Victims
of
Crime:
WH'W./lC\'C

.org

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday•..Cloudy. A
slight chance of snow showers with patchy freezing
drizzle
in
the
moming ...Then a chance of
rain and snow showers in
the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 30s. We~t winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
precipitation 50 percent.
Wednesday night ...Snow
likely. Total snow accumulation of 3 to 5 inches possible. Cold with lows in the
mid 20s. West winds 5 to 10

mph. Chance of snow 70
percent.
Thursday...Cioudy with a
50 percent chance of snO\\i
showers. Brisk with highs in
the mid 30s. West wind~ 15
to 20 mph \lv'ith gusts up to
30 mph.
Thursday night ...Cioudy
with a 40 percent chance of
snow showers. Cold with
lows in the lower 20s. West
\\'inds lO to 15 mph with
gusts up to 25 mph.
Friday...Mostly cloudy.

Health from Page Al
south. we had challenges
here in terms of access to
dollars and health care.''
Other factors Marshall
considered as contributing
to Meigs' low ranking were
high school drop rates. cigarette smoking. drug abuse,
unhealthy eating habits
which contribute to obesity
in children, heart disease
and diabetes. Marshall also
pointed out the need for
safe. affordable housing for
the ··economically challenged" and the lack of an
emergency care facility. All
of these factors seem to feed
off the other. presenting
challenges in Meigs Count)
that more affluent counties.
such as Delaware. never
have to face and if they did.
there are funds to fix what's
broken.
··If you look at Dela\.\ arc

County and why they're
number one ... they're affluent," Marshall said. "They
have a large population that
works in Columbus at professional jobs. a high tax
base and can afford to
do/fund things up there in
terms of public health."
Marshall did see a positive in the report which
ranked Meigs· overall
environment in the 50s out
of 88 counties. Marshall
said this ranking was probably negatively affected
due to the impact of old
coal mines on waterways. a
problem currently being
taken on by organizations
such as the Leading Creek
Watershed.
·'The problem with that
kind of survey is the data
was a few years old for one
thing."
Marshall
said.

"People sit in a room and
crunch numbers without
talking to people. We have
challenges but we have people in this county that are
actively working together to
remedy the problems we
have. There was nothing
new in this report. We recognize we have problems
and have lack of access to
resources but we're still trying to focus on what's good
here in terms of people.
relationships and work
ethic."
According to the Johnson
Foundation: ''Researchers
used five measures to assess
the level of overall health or
'health outcomes' by county: the rate of people dying
before age 75: the percentage of people who reported
being in fair or poor health;
the number of days people

reported being in poor physical health; number of days
in poor mental health: and
the rate of low-birth weight
infants. Researchers then •
looked at factors that affect
people's health within four
categories: health behaviors.~clinical care. social and
economic factors. and phys·
ical environment."
As for Marshall. he feels
the bottom line is ''jobs and
access to financial resource~
to allow people to seek out
their health care:·
With nearly 16 percent
unemployment. it's unlikely
a solution of jobs and access
to financial resources are
going to surface anytime
soon in Meigs Count).

Internet
"~SERVING_JPQ_M~ROY .

Benefit from Page At
28 at Meigs Middle School.
to benefit the small. forgotten tov.n. Oasis is partnering with nationaL non-profit organization The Hands
and Feet Project in Franklin.
Tenn. to get supplies directly to the people of Jacmel.
The event is free.
Pastor Chad Dodson of
Oasis and Director of Bands
at Southern Local. said the
church felt by partnering
with The Hands and Feet
Projc!ct.
organized
by
Grammy Award winner
Audio Adrenaline. was a
legitimate way to reach people who ··weren't getting a
whole lot of assistance ...
Dodson said though the
church has several local
outreach programs it plans
on continuing. Oasis wanted to contribute globally.
Dodson said in addition to
sponsoring children interna-

tionally. the church wanted
to reach an even larger
group in need.
"Haiti was in shambles
before the disaster but the
earthquake heightened our
awareness of the needs of
the people now:· Dodson
said.
"Hope for Haiti" will be
accepting the following
supplies which will then be
distributed by The Hands
and Feet Project to the people of Jacmel: tents. tarps.
ropes. flashlights. blankets.
diapers. formula. clothing.
shoes. toys, books. nonperishable food items. medical
supplies.
Dodson said monetary
donations arc also needed
and the transfer of any of
these financial donations
will be handled through a
local banking organization
and a representative. will be

on hand during the ~vent to
explain the specifics of how
that transfer will be handled. Dodson said like the
supplies. the cash will go
directly to the affected people in Southern Haiti.
··we're doing this because
th1s is a moment where we
'ia\.\ a need and wanted to
meet that need," Dodson
explained.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - Ctitics
of Ohio's plan for a passenger train system have
denounced it as a boondoggle and a money pit, and the
project appears to be surrounded by political posturing as it heads to a vote this
spring.
Gov. Ted Strickland, a
Democrat who lobbied the
White House hard to get
$400 million in stimulus
money for the project, has
decried detractors as cheerleaders
for
failure.
Republican state lawmakers
have been particularly outspoken, raising legitimate
questions but often ignoring
credible answers.
Plans call for a 79-mph
startup rail service that
would run on freight tracks
connecting
Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton and
Cincinnati, beginning in
2012. It would serve as a
down payment on a future
110-mph service, with
branches connecting to a
Chicago-based
Midwest
corridor and cities on the
East Coast.
If anything, Ohio is playing catch-up. Fifteen states
already have contracts with
Amtrak to operate the kind
of startup, conventional
speed service that Ohio is
after. and Amtrak ridership
is rising nationwide.
Yet Strickland, who is

side company should have
been in charge.
In fact, the ridership
analysis was done by
AECOM Technology Corp.,
an international engineering
firm hired by Amtrak to
avoid the appearance of a
of
interest.
conflict
AECOM. based in Los
Angeles,
is
helping
California develop its proposed high-speed train system.
The ridership estimate for
Ohio is reasonable, given
the 6 million people who
Jive along the nul COlTidor
and its concentration of colleges.
said
Joe
Schwietetman. a professor
at DePaul University who
studies urban transportation.
Senate President Bill
Harris, a Republican, said
last week he remained concerned about how Ohio was
going to come up with the
estimated $17 million annual
operating subsidy, even
though
the
state
Transportation Deprutment
has repeatedly outlined revenue streams, including
advertising and federal
grants that the agency
already has within its budget.
Republicans say they
want to make sure the state
isn't on the hook for unexpected costs. Taxpayers can
appreciate that sentiment,
and the onus is on state rail
planners to deliver a sound
financial plan.
There's no outcry over

Ohio's other expensive tt·ansportation projects, including
a $1 .6 billion reconstt·uction
of lnterstate 90 in Cleveland
and a $1 .6 billion reconfiguration of Interstates 70/71 in
Columbus.
And few lawmakers want
to talk about the struggle to
keep up with highway costs.
The state's 28-cent per gallon gas tax, which pays for
building and maintaining
roads. isn't indexed for
inflation and hasn't been
raised in five years.
Sometime in late March
the train project is expected
to go before the state
Control1ing Board for
approval.
Democrats control the
board 4-3, but they will
one
need
at
least
Republican to vote yes
because Senate Republicans
placed an amendment in
Ohio's transp01tation budget last year requiring a
supermajority vote.
Two Republicans on the
Sen.
David
board,
Goodman and Sen. John
Carey, said their votes will
reflect the collective will of
the Senate GOP Caucus.
That leaves Republican
state Rep. Jay Hottinger,
who describes himself as a
rail skeptic but says he's
willing to work with the
governor.
··r don't desire for this to
be a partisan issue because I
don't believe it is one,"
Hottinger said. 114

For NASA no easy answer for next space destination
BY S ETH BORENSTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Where to next?
It's a simple question that
NASA can't answer so easily anymore. The veteran
space shuttle fleet is months
from being mothballed and
the White House has nixed a
previous plan to fly to the
moon.
For the first time in
decades, NASA has no specific space destination for
its next stop, although it has
lots of places it wants to go.
Future space flight, NASA
officials say, now depends
on new rocket science and
where it can take us.
That uncertainty may not
sit well with Congress,
which will be grilling
NASA chief Charles Bolden
Wednesday
and
on
Thursday in the first hearings since the George W.
Bush moon mission was
.shelved.
There are only a few
places in space where
humans can go in the next
couple of decades. NASA
wants to go to all of them,
with the ultimate destination, as always, being Mars.
"The suite of destinations
has not changed over time,"
NASA deputy administrator
Lori Garver said in an interview. "The moon, asteroids,
Mars - if you're going to
go anywhere - is where we
are going."
But with any itinerary
there is a first stop. So what
4s that?
. Check back in a couple of
years. That's when new
technology should be developed enough to answer that
question, Garver said.
.President Barack Obama
plans to divert billions of
dollars from the Bush moon
plan toward developing better rocketry.
"The best way to get anywhere ... is really invest in
technologies that will
reduce the cost. reduce the
time, reduce the risk and so
forth," Garver said.
Some of those technologies seem like science fiction. The possibilities noted
by experts inside and outside of NASA include the
equivalent of an in-orbit gas
station,
electric-hybrid
rockets, nuclear thermal
rockets, inflatable parts for
spaceships, and methods of
beaming power between
Earth and space.
Former astronaut Franklin
Chang-Diaz, who has developed a new type of electric
propulsion engine called
VASIMR that the NASA
leadership mentions specifically, said this new emphasis is especially welcome
because six years ago
NASA killed its advanced

rocket technology program.
"We clearly need the technology leap if we really
want to go to Mars,'' ChangDiaz said. "We are not
going to Mars on chemical
rockets."
Chemical rockets are
what has always been used
to get into space and they
require carrying lots of
expensive fuel. Electric
propulsion would get better
mileage, but versions so far
don't have nearly enough
thrust to get off Earth.
To some critics. however,
technology isn't as important as a destination. Sen.
Bill Nelson, D-Fla., who
will
be
chairing
Wednesday's Senate subcommittee hearing, plans to
push for some kind of commitment and specific plan
of action.
''The president is the only
one that can lead the space
program, and he ought to set
a goal," Nelson said in an email. "He needs to say
where we're going and let
NASA design the architecture to do it."
Former NASA associate
administrator Alan Stern
said he's waiting to hear
what NASA officials outline in the Capitol Hill hearings, but he too has concerns about not having a
precise destination.
"We need a destination
and a timetable and that's
really lacking," Stern said.
He said that relying on technology to dictate a location
"sounds like a program to
nowhere."
Because human spaceflight is about inspiration,
science and international
cooperation, Stern said,
"you need a specific destination, a proper noun .
something that's capitalized."
The outline for much of
NASA's
future
was
sketched out by an independent spaceflight panel the
White House appointed last
year. Led by retired
Lockheed Martin Chairman
Norman Augustine, the
panel laid out options,
including canceling an
immediate return to the
moon and instead proposing
a "flexible path."
Panel member Chris
Chyba, a professor of astrophysics and public affairs at
Princeton University, said
just because the flexible
path doesn't point to a specific starting point doesn't

...

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VVednesday,February24,201~

Fact Check: Politics creep into Ohio rail debate
facing re-election. created
confusion last spring by
putting a $250 million price
tag on the initial Clevelandto-Cincinnati leg - well
before Amtrak had completed an exhaustive study.
Once Amtrak released its
report in September. the
state asked the White House
for $564 million.
Now the state is making
revisions to get the project
within the $400 million
awarded in January.
Sttickland also said the
project can create 8.000
jobs. but that can't be
proved. The figure is based
on a formula used by the
U.S.
Department
of
Commerce to estimate job
growth tied to new rail
investments.
But it is true that train
projects have sparked economic development in other
states. In Saco. Maine, a
developer is spending $110
million to turn an old mill
into condos and an office
park next to a new Amtrak
station.
Republicans demanded
from the outset to know
who would ride the trains
and how much money the
service would make. Then
they trashed Amtrak when it
provided answers.
State Sen. Jon Husted said
estimates
showing
a
478,000 ridership were
exaggerated. State Sen. Tom
Patton suggested Amtrak
was biased and said an out-

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

B v M ATT LEINGANG

-

mean it's without a goal.
'·You begin by saying
what your goal is, not what
your destination is," Chyba
said. ''And the goal is the
human expansion into the
solar system."
The spaceflight panel
charted a possible roadmap.
based on the easiest trips
first, such as a flight to the
moon but no landing. Next
might be any of a handful of
points in space where the
gravitational pull between
the Eruth and the moon. or
the Earth and the sun are
equal. Such locations are
of engineering
places
importance because future
space telescopes and other
science satellites are slated
to go there and this would
allow astronauts to repair
them. But they risk ridicule
as flights to nowhere.
Chyba said.
Then the panel suggested
landing on a near-Earth
asteroid, followed by flights
to and around Mars and
landing on a Martian moon.
The panel also noted that
landing on Earth's moon is
"an obvious altemative'' to
Mars, maybe after an asteroid mission and serving as a
possible traini g stop for
other flights. The space
agency also might still opt
to go to the moon before
anywhere else. NASA's
Garver said.
Several experts believe
the most sensible place for
astronauts to go ftrst is an
asteroid.
''If the goal is ultimately
the human exploration of
Mars," landing on an object
near Earth is a logical first
step because it's easier, says
Donald Yeomans, chief of
NASA's near Earth object
program.
What asteroids offer is a
Jack of gravity, making it
easy to leave. Landing on
lru·ger objects, such as the
moon and Mars. would
require the extra but expensive thrust that chemical
rockets provide, demonstrating the need for a
hybrid vehicle.
Visiting an asteroid wo~&gt; ,
have the appeal of
place new, would pn
legitimate scientific stuuJ
and could even help scientists figure out how to save
Earth from some future
killer asteroid, Stern said.
Another of the key points
in future spaceflight will be
the ability to stop in space to
refuel or even switch vehi1

cles, said NASA's new chief
technologist Bobby Braun.
The future for NASA is
not about future space destinations. contends MIT
astronautics professor Ed
Crawley, a member of the
White
House-appointed
panel.
"lt's about the journey,"
he said. "It's a joumey of
technology. It's a journey of
discovery. It's a journey of
capability. It's a journey
away from the cradle. At
some point we have to learn
how to leave the planet.''

Ohio Briefs
Ohio St. gets tax break
to invest in neighborhoods
COLUMBUS (AP)- Columbus city officials have
announced plans to give the Ohio State University
Medical Center an income tax rebate in return for the
university's investment of $10 mill ion into east side
neighborhoods over 10 years.
The office of Mayor Michael Coleman said Tuesday
that a $1 billion planned expansion at Ohio State
University Medical Center will create 6,000 jobs and
bring $77 million in income tax over the next 15 years.
The medical center has a hospital on the east side.
The university plans to use money saved from the
tax rebate to acquire and renovate houses on the east
side, offer down-payment assistance and create a $1
million project that involves clergy in promoting
healthy lifestyles.
The university plans to conduct a study and get resident input before planning other initiatives.

Ohio man builds
snow castle to propose
PARMA (AP) - An Ohio woman has received a
marriage proposal like something out of a frosty fairy
tale, in a castle her boyfriend built from snow.
Ryan Knotek says he wanted to pop the question to
Christi Lombardo in a way that was special and
would give her a story nobody else had. So, he made
blocks out of snow in the Cleveland suburb of Parma,
where they live, and assembled a one-room, one story
palace complete with pointed spires on the roof.
On the inside, Knotek set up candles, rose petals,
wine - and a portable heater.
The cold castle and all the trimmings were warmly
received by Lombardo when she arrived on Sunday.
She answered the proposal with a yes.

Man admits ripping off
Ohio-based motorcycle club
LANCASTER (AP) -A Montana lawyer and motorcycle enthusiast has pleaded guilty in Ohio to stealing
$100,000 from the American Motorcyclist Association.
Dal Smilie on Monday apologized for humiliating
his family and the AMA, the nation's biggest motorcycle membership organization.
The 62-year-old Smilie is a former chief lawyer for
the Montana Department of Administration and was a
member of the Pickerington, Ohio-based motorcycle
group's board of directors for 25 years.
He says he logged 2 .5 million miles traveling for
the AMA but overstated his expenses. He pleaded
guilty to grand theft and receiving stolen property. A
spokesman for the club says Smilie stole from the
AMA for at least six years and that the theft was discovered in 2007 after an internal review.
A judge sentenced Smilie to three years and eight
months in prison but suspended the sentence in lieu of
two years of community control and a $1,000 fine.
Smilie repaid the AMA before be was charged.

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Inside

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------------ ·-----

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Blue De' ils fall to Athens, Page B6

CaYs end skid,l'age B6

\Vednesday. February 24,2-010

~~ ~c=~~~o~~~~:hlgh

school vruslty sporting events Involving
teams lrom Mo1gs and Galha counties
Wlldnm~day~February 24

Boys Basketball
South Galha at New Boston. 6 p m
Rwer Valley at Chesapeake, 6 p.m.

Tornadoes outlast South Gallia, 72-50 Ravenswood
BY SARAH HAWLEY

scored six points, Lt•vi Ellis
lwd four points, and Bryce
Clary and AJ. McDaniel
scored two points each.
Southern
shot
24-55
(.436) from the field, includmg 6-14 (.429) from threepomt range. The Rebels
were 20-57 (.351) from the
field and 4-17 (.235) from
the
three-point
arc.
Southem wa~ 18-26 (.692)
at the free throw line and the
Rebels were 4-8 (.500).
Colby Roseberry and Rees
led the purple and gold in
rebound with eight each
and Dalton :\1atney grabbed
nine boards to lead the
Rebels. Rees had six assists
for the Tornadoes and Ellis
fwd threl.! for the Rebels.
Gallia wa~ kd by Rccs had seven steals to lead
Matney with 22 Southern and llarrison had
Harrison had 14
Danny
Matney Please see Southern, 86

SHAWLEYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

friday, F.ebr~ry 26
Boys Basketball
Poant Pleasant at Wayne. 6 p m
Hunt•ngton St. Joe at Hannan, 6 p.m
Symmes Val ey at South Galla 6 p m

OVP SH::llO!'o'AI.
BASKETBAI.l. TOUR:\Al\m,,·
SCHEDULES

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Wednesday, fel!nw'Y 23
Class A - At Cabeii·Midland HS
Wahama vs Chas Catholic, 6 p.m
Ihutaday•.febrwuy 25
Division IV - At Jackson HS

D1stnet sem1fmals
(3) Fairf•cld vs (2) Easten, 8 p rn.

BOYS BASKETBALL
Wedne.aday, february 24
Division IV - At Wellston HS
(8) Ironton St. Joe vs (1) Eastern 6:15
p.m

•

Snturday. fJtbfWlCY.21
Division Ill - At Athens HS

Sectional Flll81s
(10) RIVer Val cy vs (2) Aloxander. 7 p m

ma.day. ~n.2
Division IV - At Wellston HS

SectJonal FllllJls

E'astern·lronton SJ W1f'ncr vs Tr mbla- ,
Symmes Val cy v.rnner, 6 15 p 1'1\
(3) Southern vs (2) Prke Eastern, 8 p m.

Tuesday results
BOYS BASKETBALL

Ravenswood
68.
Point
Pleasant 65 OT
River Valley 38, Wellston 36
Athens 58, Gallipolis 23
Southern 72, S Gallia 50
Nels-York 63, Meigs 49
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Class AA secttonal
69,
Pomt

Ravenswood
Pleasant 27

SPORTS BRIEFS

..Syracuse. Youth
W eague s1gnups
SYRACUSE. Ohio Signups for the Syracuse
Youth League will be held
Saturday. Feb. 27 from II
'
a.m. to f"'
2 p.m.
S
. at the
Syracuse ·tre: tatton.
.
For m~re lll~ormatton
contact Eber P1ckens at
740-992-5564 or 740-4164430.

MYL baseballsoftball signups
~11DDLEPORT. Ohio The Middleport Youth
League \\ill be holding
ba~eball
and
softball
signups on Saturday, Feb.
27, and Saturdav. March 6.
at the Middleport Council
Chambers from 10 a.m.
il2 p.m.
'he signup fees arc $25
r child or $40 per family. and a late fee \Vilt be
charged to anyone who
' wants to signup after
March 6.
For more information,
contact Dave Boyd at
(740) 590-0438 or Tonya
Coleman at (740) 9925481.

Kyger Creek
'Ball Association
ADDAVILLE. Ohio The Kyger Creek Ball
Association will ho1d
&amp;ignups
at
Addavi11e
Elementary School on
!uesday, Feb. 23, and
Wednesd&lt;~~. Feb. 24 from
6-8 p.m. and Saturday,
Feb. 27 t'rom 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
: A final signup will be
d on Tul.!~day. March 9.
n 6-7 p.m. at the River
a ley Middle School during the annual bonn! meet-

l

ing.

t Kidsagesmustof 4-12
be between
as of
~e

f&lt;pril 30,2010, to ~•gnup.
1.. For more information.
~all Adam Loveday at
~40-367-7133 or email
tcrdbaseball@"yahoo.com
nr on facehook under
~CRI?
Baseball
A.ssoc1atwn.

'

Marauders fall to Nelsonville-York in sectional tourney
BY SARAH HAWLEY

tops Knights
in OT, 68-65
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWA.LTfRSOMYDAILYTAIBUNE COM

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - For the second
.-------.straight
evening,
the Point
Pleasant
boys basketball
team found
itself in a
one-possession
outc o m e
Deal
against
a
s t a t e ranked
team.
Tuesday
night. however. wasn't
as
reward in!!
for the hoSt

SHAWLEYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

THE PLAL'\S. Ohio -The Mei!!s Marauders ()18) fell to Nebonville-York
for the third time this sea~on
on Tucsdav evening, 63-49,
in the Division III Sectional
Tournament.
The Marauders got as
. - - - - - -..... close
as
two points
toward the
end of the
first period,
but
thl.!
Buckeyes
took
the
lead out to
five at 15JO to end
the
fir~t
Smith
period .
Nelsonville-York continue
to set the pace in the ~econd
quarter. a~ the Buckeyes
outscored Meigs 17-9 in the
period. Nelsonville- York
too~ a 32-! 9Iead at the half
~ebonv•!le- York. extend1 ed tts lead m the. thtrd quartcr,
oubconng
the
u
a U de..
'l'he
15 _8 .
.vtar,
IS
Buckeyes led 47-27 going
mto the final period. The
Marauders rally wa~ not
enough, as they outscored
Nels&lt;~nvillc-York 22-16 in
the fourth quarter. The

Please see Meigs, 86

B 1a c k
Knights
after dropping
a
heartbreaking 68-65 overtime decision to No. 3
Raven~wood during a nonconference matchup in
Mason Count).
The Black Knight~, (I OIl) - who defeated No. JO
Chapmanville just 24 hours
earlier - gave the reigning
Class AA st~lte champion
Red Devils ( 17-2) quite a
battle. as both teams went
through multiple ties and
lead changes throughout the
course of the contest.
PPHS jumped out to a
small 14-1 2 edge after eight
minutes of play, onl) to
have the gue ts rally back
with an 18-15 second quarter 'purr for a slim
Ravenswood 30-29 lead at
the intem1ission.
Both squad~ traded 12
points apiece in the third
canto. allo\\ing RHS to take
a 42-41 edge into the finale.
Point rallied \\ ith a 20-19
run in the fourth, which
knotted things up at 61 at
the end of regulation.
The Red Devils went on
to
outscore the hosts 7-4 in
Sarah Hawley/photo
the
extra four-minute se~·
Meigs' Seth Wells shoots the ball over a Nelsonville-York defender during Tuesday
sion
to pick up the threeevening's sectional tournament contest at Wellston High School.
point decision.
Both T) ler Deal and
Jacob Templeton led the
Knights with 14 points
apiece. follO\\ed by Drake
Nolan with J3 and Nathan
Wedge with 12 markers.
Templeton abo had a double-double effort '' ith a
team-hi!:!h 12 rebounds.
Jacob\Vamsley and Cod)
Greathouse both added four
poinb each, while JeWaan
William~ followed
with
three markers. Kylcnn
Cri!'&gt;h! rounded out the ~cor­
ing with one point. PPIIS
was 15-of-18 at the free
throw line for 83 percent.
Luke :V1urray led RHS
with a game-high 28 points,
folio\\ ed by R) an Benson
with 18 and Cole Starcher
\\ ith
nine
markers.
Ravenswood was 8-of- J6 at
the charity stripe for 50 percenl.
Point Pleasant alvaged
an e\ ening ~plit with a 6142 victory in the junior varsity conte. . t. Anthony Perry
led the JV Knights w1th 21
points.
Point Pleasant returns to
action Friday night when it
Sarah Hawley/photo travels to Wayne for a
Conference
River Valley senior Cody McAvena (14) dribbles past a pair of Wellston defenders as team- Cardinal
mate Parker Hollingsworth (20) watches on during the second half of Tuesday night's matchup at 5:45p.m.
Division Ill sectional semifinal contest at Athens High School in The Plains. The Raiders
RAVENSWOOD 68, POINT
won their f~rst postseason contest since 2006 with a 38-36 v1ctory over the Golden
Rockets.
PLEASANT 65 OT

Raiders rally past Wellston, 38-36
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

THE PLAIKS. Ohio- A
23-14 second half surge
allowed lOth-~eeded River
Valley to overcome a 10point first half deficit
Tuesday night to claim n
dramatic 38-36 victory over
seventh·seedcd Wellston in
a Division III boys basketball sectional semifinal at
Athens High School.
The
Raiders
(4-14)
snapped a six-game losing
skid while picking up their
fir!.t postsea~on triumph in
four vears. datim! back to
when' the Silver and Black
defeated Oak Hill 66-51 in
a sectional semifinal at
Athens High School on
February 21, 2006.
RVHS Jed only three
times in the contest, with
two of those coming in the
opening period at 2-0 and
8-7. The Golden Rockets
(7-12), however, closed the
final I :20 of the first with a
7-0 surge, allowing WHS to
take a 14-8 advantage after
eight minutes of play.
The Blue and Gold continued their rhythm into the
second canto, going on a 40 run to take their first of
two double-di!!it leads at
18-8. Wellston ~also led 2010 midwa) in the 5oecond.
but the Raiders closed the
half on a 5-2 run to cut the
halftime deficit to 22-15.
River Valle\ then \\ ent to
work in the· second half,
going on a 14-7 charge in
the third quarter to knot

things up at 29 entering tht'
finale. RVHS then scored
fi\e straight to open up the
fourth for it~ bigge~t lead ot
the night at 34-29 "ith 4:40
left in regulation.
Wcllo;ton pulled back to
within 36-34 \\ ith 26 seconds rem,limng, endmg a
2:40 score1eso; drought in
the process. The Rockets
ne\ er came closer. as both

teams traded baskets over
the remainder of regulation
to wrap up the contl'St.
River Valle), with the
\ ictor). ad\ anccs to the D3 secuonal final at AHS on
Saturda) at 7 p.m .. where it
w1ll take on ~econd &lt;&gt;ceded
Alexander. The game was
original!) scheduled for 3
p.m.. but "as rno\ cd
because the Alexander girb

are playing at the same time
on Saturda).
The Raiders connected on
14-of-42
held
goal
attempts for 33 percent.
111cluding 3-of-12 from
three pomt territor) for 25
percent. \\ HS - \\ luch has
on I) one tournament \\in
(2006) since 1ts l&lt;~'t sec-

Please see Raiders, 86

R'wood
PolO!

12 18 12 19 7
14 15 12 20 4

-

68
65

RAVENSWOOD (17·2) Bobby Rymer 3
6 Mark DaVIS 2 ().1 4 lack Mart n I
0-3 3. luke Murrey 11 5·1 28 Cole
Starcher 4 1·1 9 Ryan Benson 7 2-4 18
TOTALS 28 8-16 68 Threo-po~nt goas
4 (Bensor 2, Mart n Mu~ray)
PO NT PLEASANT (10-11) Kylor.'l
Cnste o 1·2 1 Dmke No an 3 7·7 13.
Ty'er Deal G0.0 14 Natnan Wedge 4 o0 12 JeWaan Wr hams 1 1·2 3, Jacob
Templeton 6 2·3 14, Cody Greathouse 0
4-4 4 Jacob Wamsley 2 0.0 4 TOTALS
22 15·18 65 Tf'tree-po nt goals 6
(Wedge 4, Deal 2)
(H)

"

�---___.........

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

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
I
I

-

-

..

Wednesday, February 24, 201 0

'I
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In One Week With Us
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200

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SA 692 area answers to
M ssy 74()..698·2311
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO rec·
ommends ti"at you do
bus1ness with people you
know. and NOT to send
money through the mall
unt11 you have mvestigatlng the offenng.
cures a
have been
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Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

300
Real
Estat
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ubJect to the Federa
air Housmg Act o
1968.
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetin
EOE standards.
We
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knowingly accept an
dvertisement
i
iolation of the law.

Announcements

Services

m

Computers

To (304) 675-5234

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

• Stllrt Your Ad• With A keyword • Include Complete
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• Include Phone Number And Addrese When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 OaVI

All Display: 12 Noon 2
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Sunday Displays 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Papc1

Now you can have borders and Qraphics
added to your classified ads
_( ~~
Borders$3.00/perad
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Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

POUC!ES Ohio Yalley PwiiShlf'G ri!Mf- lhe right to ediT. reft&lt;;t. or cancel any lid at any lime Errore moa~ be reporo!d on the IIrat &lt;lay or ptAIIIcatloo an&lt;l
Trlb...Sen&amp;lnei-Regt•er wtll be reeporelble lor no more then lho cost olthe apaa: occupied by the error and only the 1 n11 lntertlon. We ahlll nat be llablt lor
any loac or ·~ fl'lat !88ultt1rom the p~bllcatton or omiiiGion of an adurtleomtnt Correction wtll be mldo In the 11rst avanable edition. • Box numbtf Ida
aro alwaya con!ldenllal • C~Krefll 1111e card appllae. • All real oato1e ll&lt;lwertlwmmta are eubJect to the Fecteral Fair Housing Ac:l o11968 • This
accepts only llo/p warted aas meetii'Q EOE IIIJncfards. We will nol knOtili'QI)' ac:crept any lldvtrtiiiii'Q In vlolllllon of the law Will 001 be rnponalblt lor
ad taken over the pllene

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Apartments/
Townhouaes

1999 29 Rockwood Ultra
Ute Camper, Make Good
RNe:-bank Carr~pe• or
Set Up In Ca"'pgrOWld
Everyth rg
Wor'11ed
When Winterized t.ast
Fa I 4 New Tres May
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up
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e ectnc
Ca between
the ho1.rs of 8A·8P
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(304)882·3017

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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ......................................................1010
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other .......................................................... 1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalllease .....................................2005
Autos ..........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utility..............................................2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Saies ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal................................................301 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclal................................................351 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage).......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4C30
Resort Property ......................................... sooo
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................ 6002
Admlnistratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ........................................., ......... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agenclea ..............................6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Ma intenance/Domestlc ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlca ..................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 8040
Part-Time-Temporarlea .............................6042
Reatauranta ............................................... 6044
Salea ...........................................................6048
Technjcal Tradea ....................................... 6050
Textllea/Factory .........................................6052

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services from ADT
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Pets

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Trudcs

AKC
YoriOe
ready
740-416·7294
Toy Poodles lor sale,
CKC, vet checked, ta1ls 900
Merchandise
docked, dewclaws removed,
shots
and
wormed. colors are cho·
Auctions
cholate and black, males
$300, terrales $350 and Auction Of Aulomobllesup. 740-992·7007
Pomeroy Police Depart·
Beagle
m1x
puppieS ment has two cru1sers lor
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go sale A m mmum b d of
740-379-2282
SBOO lor the 2000 Ford
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6wks
mum b d of SSOO for the
S100. Caii74Q-446-4707
1999 Ford Crow~ Voc
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Shep. pups top blood· the Mun C1P8 Bu dirg lone, parents 01'1 prem ses cated at 660 East Man
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Free to good home 1
male Tn- Colored Beagle
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NOTICE Borrow Smart. 379·2282
Contact the Oh1o Dtvislon of Financial lnst1tu·
Agnculture
liOns OffiCO of Consumer 70°
Affa1rs BEFORE you refinance your home or obta n e loan BEWARE of
Fann Equipment
requests for any large
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advance paymerts of EBY,
tees or
sul'l!nce. Call KIEFER BUILT,
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TRAILERS
Alfi3"S
toll
free
at STOCK
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EQUIP·
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TRAILERS
II the mo..gage broker or MENT
lender is properly h· CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
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Uncond11i0nal hfet1me
guarantee Local references fum1shed. Estab·
lished 1975 Call 24 Hrs
740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Cremat1ons.
Pet
740-446-3745

Or Fax

* A II ads must be prepalc.r

Home Improvements

Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................21 0
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Matorials ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janitorlal ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnanclal .......................................................322
Health ...........................................................326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Serv1ce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcnl .....................................340
Professional Services .................................342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roofing ........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting .............................- ........... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnanclol .......................................................400
Financial Services....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 51 o
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horse&amp;~ ......................................................... 61 0
Livestock ......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
Farm Equipment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed. Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques .......................................................905
Appliance ..................................................... 91 0
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectibles ..................................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles....................................935
Flea Marketa ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coaf./Volood/Gaa ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kld'a Corner................................................. 960
Miacellaneoua..............................................965
Went to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale .....................................................975

ctU:J~Afr!

l\egt5tef

/)ear/A~,

Da1ly In-Column: ~hOO a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday Jn ·Column: 9t00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Building Materials
AMAZING OPPORTUNITYI
Steel
Arch Buildings. 2
Display
buildings
lett! Qualify for a
new building thousands
below
COST.
Potential
for you to earn
money
1·866-352-0469.

Meigs County, OH

Websites.

or Fax To(740) 992·2157

erron~ln an

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reJect or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must
eported on the firs
ay of pub!lcatio
nd the Tribune
entinei-Register wtl
e responsible lor n
ore than the cost o
he space occupie
y the error end onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
hal results from th
ublication
mission
of
dvertlsement.
orrections will
ade
in the firs
vailable edition.

·'

'. -~'1.-~

(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

)

www.mydallytnbune.com
www.mydallysentinel com
www.myd allyreg 1ster.com

Sentinel

\!rribune

Word Ads

«POLICIES«

.&gt; &gt;F·:~

\!rribtttte Sentinel - l\egister
CLASSIFIED

'" r

•:
I

___

Modern
446·3736

1BA

Apt

~003 Dodge DakNa truck 4 MOdern
1BR apt Cal1
dr, e&gt;1 cab. \'X bedlmer. 740·446-0390
cle.m
a'king
S12 ,10()
Valley
Green
740 441·'613
da)'· Spnng
Apartments 1 BA at
5395+2 BR at $470
Real Estate Month. 741&gt;-446-1599
3000
Sales
Tara
Townhouse
ApanmeniS
2BR 1 5
bath back palo pool
For Sale By Owner
playground (trash sew·
12 Unit Apl Complex. age wate pd )No pets
a lowed
$450/rent
446-0390.
S450/sec
d p
Ca
14()-645-8599
Houses For Sale

4 BR 2 BA approx 3000

sq It hardwood hoors 2

Houaes For Rent

S 2 Houses 3 BR 1 BA
17 acres S550 3 BR 1
&lt;740 BA B g House $750
740-256-6004
lond
{Acreage)
Seasoned I rewood
2·3BR Houses
All Hardwood
Looklf'g lor 1()()-400 acr- on Locust S! n
740·853-2439
or ers of hunting land lor S500/mo ea Oep req
74D-446·9204
lease.
Jeff No pels 74D-388·8277
304·984·9358,
Paul
Salem
Miscellaneous
304·549·1589
&amp; de·
Jet Aeration Motors
$550
Real Estate posu.
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
3500
740·698·6498
Rentals
In stock. Call Ron
4 Rms .. Ba Stove &amp;
Evans 1·800·537-9528
fridge 50 Ohve S! No
pets. $450/mo + dep
Apartments/
House-mov ng
446-3945
Townhouses
complete
bedroom cort'p ete set I br 2 br dpl near d~&gt; l~&gt;n 5 BR 3.5 BA ut ty carkitchen d shes &amp; g ass I'! P &lt;= I util pd HlD port b-ge detached 2
trun!&lt;.s 8 track players a. ptlo.o
ca· gar poo central H
pet&gt;
c:~l
Ch dren s WICker rocker 304 360-0163
&amp; A c ose to hosp1ta
ant1que rocker wlla1-no1
Rel't $1000 Dep S1000
stand smoke stand m r- 1 af'C 2 bedroom ap:s Pets w dep Ref Req
ror oak claw fool p al'o lurniSI&gt;ed
and
unfur- Ca 74D-446-3481
stoo
concen &amp; gem n shed and hoL.Ses tn
rot er
organs
miJCit Pomeroy and Middleport C ean 3BR Bnck Ga •
m sc
everyot'e
wel- secunty depos t requ red po s S650.mO+dep No
pets or smok.ng (740)
come- antique &amp; flea ro pets 74D-992-2218
446-9209
Markel dea ors also wei- 1&amp;2 BR Apts close to
como, call740-992-4197
Manufactured
hosp1ta + new sChools 4000
Housmg
c ean &amp; qu1et Re'..-Dep
req 74D-794-0831
2 br apartment w k t
lots
Wont To Buy
app.,alc &amp; gas furnace
W D hookup located 1n
eva I·
Absolute Top Dollar • 611· Pt
Pleasant
ver gold
coins
any
10KI14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935
us currency
proof m1nt
sets,
diS·
monds, MTS Cotn Shop
151 2nd Avenue Galltpohs. 446·2842

car

gar.

SA

7

149·900
s339
2108

304-675-6375
or
804 677 8621
•
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
zer Hosp1tal on SA 160
CJA. (740) 441·0194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE! Townhouse
ments
and or
houses lor rent
~~~~~~~~; 74()-441-1111 for app •
!!!
cation &amp; ntormaton
Campers/ RVa &amp;
~""!""'~~--~
Trollers
Gracious Living 1 artd 2
Bedroom Apts at Vi age
1968
Chevro et
,.,o- Manor
and
Rivers de
tortoome
everyt/1 ng Apts n Mad aport !rom
works &amp;
runs great $327
to
S592
S1800 oo 304·593·5383
740-992·5064.
Eoua
Hous ng Opportunity.

2BR Ideal lor 1 or 2
pie S300/month
femces, No Pets
CALLS
after
740-441-0181

peo·
ReNO
7pm

Mob e home for rent
Hud accept call be·
fore 9pm
304-675-3423

Own a New 3BR 2 BA
w 1 acre 6% down S525
mo WAC Near Ho zer
740-446·3570

'

�-~-..--------------~~~~-----------:----~-~--~--- - - --- - -~----- - -

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

--·-·
-·-·-·

Get Your Massage Across W1th A Daily Senhnel

...

~

----·

• Sales

1993 Lexington Manor 2
br. mob1le home, all electric,
$5,000,
740-698·6405

AA New 4 Bedrooms

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

·-·-·--

Racine Youth League
Meeting
Feb. 27 1:00 pm
Racine Legion Hall

PnlY S44.9J.Il

2010 Singlew1de
Incredible $19,995
mymldwesthomes.com
740 828.2750
New 3BR, 2BA
as low as $241.68
per mo. and 1563.00
down. WAC
740·446·3570
"The Proctorville
Difference·
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now'
Freedom Homes
688·565-0 167
Trade 1n your old single·
w1de tor a new home. 0
money down 446·3570.

6000

Employment

Announcements

Announcements

Child/Elderly Care

FRANCHISE
OPPORTUNITY
You may qualify to own

Babysitter needed
for 7 yr. old in or around
New Haven WV
area
catr 304-882·3129 after
Spm.

PETLAND GALLIPOLIS
• A Great Location (Next to Walmart)
• Complete Training
• Exclu-;ive Products
• Financing Assistan.ce for Qualified
Candidates

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Dnver wanted FT lor van
route. pick·up &amp; drop off
dry cleamng. P/U appli·
cations @ Spec1al Care
Cleaners 1743 Centen·
ary Rd.

Call (800) 221-5935

for more information
www.petland.com
•

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

NURSE PRACTITIONER
Valley Hospital is currently
resumes for a
Nurse
Practitioner for an acute clinic setting.
-,,.,+,tt,r-::at•nn as a Family Nurse Practitioner
One to two years related
experience preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
Or fax: 304-675-6975, or' apply on-line
at www.pvalley.org

Help Wanted

Now accepting applications
for part-time mailroom
workers. Valid drivers
license.
driving
Good
record required.
Apply 8:00 am to 1:00 pm
Thesday thru Friday
Attn: Tommy Long
Q9aUipolis jl\ailp m:rthunr
740-446-2342 Ext.16
Help Wanted

Liquid Asphalt Drivers
needed. in Pt. Pleasant
'area must be 21 yrs. old
or older. must haveCiass
A COL With Hazmat En·
dorsement
and
good
MVR, local trips
call 1·800·598·6122 for
More info.

Regional
Dump
and
Pneumatic Tanker Driv·
ers.
R&amp;J Truck1ng Company
in
Marietta
OH.
is
searching for qualified
applicants must be at
least 23yrs. have m1ni·
mum of 1 yr. of safe
commerclal dnv1ng expe·
nence In a truck, Hazmat
certification. clean MVR
and good JOb stability.
We
offer
compet•tive
benefits plus 401 K and
vacation pay.
Contact
Denms
at
1·800·462-9365 to apply
or
go
to
www.rjtrucking.com.
E.O.E.

Education

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

The Athens-Meigs Edu·
catonal Service Center is
seeking a HEAD START
TEACHER AIDE for the
Gallia
County
Early
Childhood &amp; Fam1ly Center Mimmum of High
School graduate or GED.
CDA and prev1ous expe·
rience In early childhood
setting preferred. This
pos1tion has Board ap·
proved benefits. Submit
letter of interest, resume,
and references to John
D. Costanzo, Superinten·
dent, Athens-Meigs ESC,
39105 Bradbury Road,
Middleport. Ohio 45760.
Application
Deadline:
Feb. 26 noon
The
AMESC IS an Equal Opportunity
Employer/Pro·
vider.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Want Htra Cash???
Newspaper Routes
Available Gallipolis,
Meigs and Mason Areas
Must be reliable and
have own
transportation.
~allipohs

IDailp 'Ornhune

laoint l~leasant .Begister
The Daily Sentinel

Contact
Michael Pearson
~aUipoli1)

- - -- - -- ----

www.mydailysentinel.com

\!tribune
CLASSIFIED
BULLETIN BOARD ----13 column mch weekdays.
'22 coiumn lr.cll Sunoay
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

- - --- - - - - - -

il8ailp Z!Cribune
740-446-2342 ext. 11

Education

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Help Wan.Jd- General

Help Wanted· General

ADMINISTRATIVE
Account
Resolution
POSITION
VACANCY Specialist
The following position FT in Gallipoh!l. Exp. with
w1ll be open for the aged and denied claims
2010·2011 sctlool year, as well as wnting ep·
beginning July 29, 2010. peals as necessary. Exp.
Those interested in ap· w/ all payors preferred.
plying for this position Must have great commushould submit all applica: n1cation skills and prior
tlon documents to Jack medical billing experi·
w. Payton, Superinten· ence. Great pay and
dent, as soon as possi· benefits. Please forward
ble.POSITION:
Athlebc resumes
to:
DirectorDJSTRtCT:
catina,beoder4tna first·
Gallipolis
C1ty
School source,com or fax to:
DistrictCOUNTY"
Gal· 614·367·2400
liaADM:
2400APPLI·
CATION
DEADLINE: Asst./
Receptionist
As soon as possible or needed for local dentist
until
rilledSALARY: off1ce 1n Pt Pleasant
Commensurate with edu· area. need some knowl·
catioolexperienceCONedge of computers ,
TRACT LENGTH:
202 phones and good cus·
work
daysCONTACT: tamer skills. Will train for
Jack w. Payton, Super- position. please send re·
1ntendent
Gallipolis city sume to :
School District
61 State Dental Office 3984 In·
Street
Gallipolis. OH dian Creek Ad Elkview
45631·1131
(Phone) .-w..
v~2-.s.-o7;.;1.;..-~~~740·446·3211
(Fax) AVON! All Areas! To Buy
740·446·64331nterested
or Sell Shirley Spears
applicants
must have 304·675·1429
valid licensure from the
Career Opportunity!!
Ohio Department of Edu·
we currently have 10
cation and experience in
positions available.
adm1nistrahon, Ohio High
School Athletic Associa· Make calls for the major
lion
ruleslguidelines.Ap- Non-profit organizations
pticants are asked to
and help to make a dif·
submit the following:
1.
terence!
Application
2.
Letter
Excellent benefits pack·
of 1nterest 3. Resume
age
4.
Copy(ies) of ODE
401 K
Certification/licensure
On·Site Physic1an
5
College Transcripts Weekly Bonus Incentive
6.
NTE/Praxis scores
(if applicable)
7.
BCI
We care about our em·
certificate of background
ployees and want to
check (if applicable or
show you what makes
upon offer of employlnfoCision a great place
ment)
8.
Three (3)
to work.
letters of recommenda·
lion
Call Today!
ADMINISTRATIVE
PO·
Interview Tomorrow!
SITION VACANCY The
Start Next Weeki
following position is open
and will be filled immedi1·888-IMC·PAYU
ately, beginning July 22,
REMEMBER EXT 1931
2010.
Those interested
Apply online:
in applying tor this posi· http:/{jobs.lnlocision.com
lion should submit an apFull nme Positions
plication to Jack W. Pay·
Available!
ton,
Supenntendent.
within
the
posting
Recruit new members to
penod.POSITION:
jo1n NRA
High
School
Princ1·
Call current NRA mempaiSCHOOL
Gallia
bers raising money and
Academy High SchooiD·
!STRICT:
Gallipolis . renewing memberships
School
District·
City
fnfoCislon offers:
COUNTY:
GalliaADM:
Professional Work Envi2400APPLICATION
ronment
DEADLINE:
As soon
as poss1ble or until filled· Excellent Benefits Package
SALARY;
Commensu·
Paid Tra1ning
rate with education/expeWeekly Pay and Bonus
nenceCONTRACT
Opportunities
LENGTH:
222 work
daysCONTACT'
Jack
W Payton, Superinten· Call and Schedule Your
Interview:
dent
Gallipolis city
1-888-tMC·PAYU ext.
School District
61 State
2331
Street
Gallipol•s, OH
http://jobs.ln1oclslon.c
4563'1-1131
(Phone)
om
740·446·3211
(Fax)
740·446·64331nterested
Hallmark
Store,
59
applicants
must have Ohio River Plaza, will
interviewing
lor
valid certification from be
the Ohio Department of sales assoc. between
Educallon and experi· 11:00am ·1:00pm Fri·
ence
in day Feb. 26th
administration Applicants
are asked to submit the Need 5 ladies to sell
following:
1.
Applica· Avon. Call 446·3358.
tion 2.
Letter of Inter·
est
3.
Resume
4.
Copy(ies) of ODE Certifi·
cation/Licensure
5.
College Transcripts
6.
NTE/Praxls scores (if applicable) 7
BCt &amp; FBI
background checks
8.
Three (3) letters of rae·
ommendation

LAB TECtiNtCIAN
Seeking temporary work·
ers Interested in Plant
Lab work. 40hr. work
week anticipated. Over·
time rriay be required,
must have min1mum of a
2 yr ass1ciate degree In
chemistry, phySICS, biOI·
ogy or eqUivalent. Must
have a moderate degree
of
knowledge of skill neces·
sary to preform work w1th
standard
laboratory,
chemical
analyzing
equipmant, operation of
water treatment equip·
ment, and coal sampling.
Entry level wage rate @
approx. $16.00 per hr.
with moderate benefit
package being offered.
Interested
candidates
are to submit resumes to
: 614·716-2272.
law Enforcement

~Th•e=V•il•la;;;;ge=o;;;;f;;;;S;;;;y;;;;ra;;;;cu;;;;;;;;;se
is now accepting appllca·
tions for part time patrolman, applications can be
picked up at Village Hall,
2581 3rd St., Syracuse,
Oh, deadline is March 2.
2010, tor more 1nfo call
740·992:7777

Management /
Supervisory

Management /
Supervisory

Program DlrectorEchoing
Meadows
Residential
Center
a
Christ1an
based 36 bed ICF-MR
facility tor devetopmen·
tally disabled adults. 1s
accepting
resumes and
applications for Program
Director. Th1s position
will oversee the
Pro·
gramming
Department
and IS a member of the
LeaderShip Team. Posi·
tlon requires a Bache·
lors Degree in Soc1al
Serv1ces,
Rehabi11tat•on
or Human Services re·
lated f1eld or a Degree
and Licensure as a Reg·
istered Nurse. Prior man·
agement
expenence
and two years prior ex·
perience work1ng with
persons with
develop·
mental
disabilities re·
q01red. CPR and Cert1fi·
cation In First Aide will
be reqUired prior to or
within 60 days of hire.
PoSition requires a dam·
onstrated
Christian
background and a dem·
onstrated ability to fulfill
the mission and purpose
of the Ministry. Position
also requires a valid
Ohio Drivers License and

a basic knowledge and
ability to operate Microsoft office products, the
Internet, email and gen·
eral olf•ce equ1pment.
Th1s is a salaried pos1tion
tnat offers a full beneht
package. Interested indl·
v1duats should submit re·
sume w1th cover letter
and salary requirements
or an application to
Echoing Meadows Rest·
dent1al Center, 319 West
Un.on
Street.
Athef'ls
Ohio, 45701. Resumes
and appllcatJOns will be
accepted
until
2·25·10.Echoing
Mead·
ows, a part of Echoing
Hills Village, Inc. is an
equal ·opportunity em·
player
Medical
Res1dent

ASSIStants
No Experience
Necessary' Apply in per·
son at K•mes Nursing &amp;
Rehab Center 1n Athens
~eedt'ld 1

... THf
NfWSPAPfR
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Management /
Supervisory
Director of Maintenance
Echoing Meadows Resi·
dential Center a Chris·
tian
based
36
bed
ICF·MR facility tor developmentally
disabled
adults, is accepting re·
sumas and applications
for a Full Time Mamte·
nance Director. This position will oversee the
Maintenance Department
and is a mamber of the
Leadership Team. Posi·
lion reqUires a High
School Diploma or GED
A degree or certification
10 engineering,
draft1ng.
architecture, construction
or related field preferred.
Basic eng1neering skills
such as bluepnnt read·
ing, schematic read1ng,
eqUipment manuals. and
instructional
materials,
and demonstrated apti·
tude w1th HVAC, electrical, ptumb1ng and gen·
erat constructJon skills
required
Demonstrated
knowledge and experi·
ence w1th Standard Precautions, Infection Con·
trot,
Environmental
Safety,
OSHA.,
Fire
Safety. City, County and
State building code in·
spection rules and facility
systems reqwed. Prior
supervisory
expenence
also required Prior expe·
rience work1ng is a
health care environment
and/or
with
disabled
adults preferred. A valid
Ohio Driver's license and
good driving record is required. Must have cure·
ent COL or able to obtain
withins
.90
days.
Copmputer literacy also
required. This position IS
a salaried pos1t1on and
offers a full benefit pack·
age. Interested Individuals should submit resume with cover later
and salary requirements
or an application to
Echo1ng Meadows Resi·
dential Center. 319 West
Union
Street,
Athens,
Oh1o, 45701
Reusmes
and qpptications will be
accepted until2·25·10

PUBLIC
NOTICES
Legal Notice
In The Court Of Common Please, Meigs
County Ohio
Case No 09DLT001
Oron Dungee, Dana
Dungee, State of Ohio
Dept.
of Taxation,
Manning,
Ronald
Sharon Manning, Glendon Mynes, Catherine
Mynas, John/Jane Doe
1-3 will take notice that
on November 30, 2009
plaintiff Peggy Yost,
Meigs County Treasurer flied a petition for
tax foreclosure against
them In the Court of
Common Pleas, Meigs
County Ohio third floor
of the County Courthouse the same being
Case No. 09DLT001 in
said Court, praying that
plaintiff be found to
have a good and valid
first lien on certain
premises taxes, assessments and penal·
ties,
that
all
defendants, be required to set forth their
claims or be forever
barred from asserting
them, that plaintiff be
paid within a reasonable time, to be named
by the Court, the equity
or redemption of defendants, be foreclosed
and Order of Sale issued to the Sheriff directing him to sell said
premises in the manner
provided
by
R.C.
5721.19. ParceiiD I 0500161.000. A complete
legal description can
be found at the Meigs
County Recorder's Offlee at Volume 283,
Page 61 of the Meigs
County Records.
This cause will be
heard Of! April 26, 2010

at 11:00 am or as soon
thereafter as meets the
convenience of the
Court. Interested parties have 28 days to respond to the Complaint
for Tax Foreclosure.
Answers are to be filed
with the Meigs County
Clerk of Courts, Third
Floor of the County
Courthouse, Pomeroy,
OH 45769
2/10, 17, 24, 313/10, 17

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale
Case Number 08CV078
US Bank FWA
Flrstar Bank
Plaintiff
VS

Robert E. Boring Et at
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dlrected from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the
Meigs
County
Court House on Friday,
February 26,2010 at 10
a.m., of said day, the
following
described
real estate:
Exhibit A- Legal Description
Situated in the State
of Ohio, County of
Meigs and in the Viilage of Harrisonville:
PARCELNO. 1:
Being Lots Numbered
Seven (7) and Eight (8)
of Dunlap's Addition, to
the said VIllage of Harrisonville,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
PARCEL No. 2:

Lot No. Nine (9) in Dunlap's Addition to the
Village of Harrisonville.
Also the following
being in Fraction 7,
Town 7, Range 14, In
the Ohio Company's
Purchase, beginning at
the northwest corner of
Lot No. 9 in Dunlap's
Addition to the Village
of Harrisonville: thence
North 69. West 100
feet; thence 21 ' East
75 feet to the place of
beginning, containing
one-half acre, more or
less.
Current Owner: Robert
E. Boring et al
Property at: 38397
State Rt. 684
Pomeroy, Ohio
PP# 17-00427.000, 1700426.000,
170 0 4 2 8 • 0 0 0 ,
·17-00425.000
Prior deed reference:
Volume 107, Page 555
Appraised at $35,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, balance due on conflrmation of sale.
The appraisal did not
include an interior examinatlon of the house.
Robert
E.
Beegle.
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the plaintiff
Lerner Sampson &amp;
Rothfuss
PO Box 54801
Cincinnati, OH 452015480
513-241·3100
(2) 10, 17. 24

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

'

'

.·:
'

�PUBLIC
NOTICES
Sheriff Sales
Case Number 09CV013
13runer Land Company,
Jnc.

In a full and accurate
title search.
aka 38780 Little Forest
Road, ReedsviJie, Ohio
~lalntlff
45772
PPN 09·0067.0000
vs
-Everett L. Gilmore Et al EXHIBIT B
BRUNER COLEMAN
Defendants
PROTECTIVE
Court of Common FARM
Pleas, Meigs County, COVENANTS
Ohio
1) The following protec·
In pursuance of an tlve covenants are
order of sale to me dl· covenants running with
reeled from said court the land, and shall con·
in the above entitled tlnue in full force and
action, I will expose to effect until January 01,
sale at public auction 2075 (through injunc·
on the front steps of tlon or otherwise) by
!he Meigs County Court any owner acquiring
+louse on Friday, Feb· any part of the land ac·
ruary 26, 2010 at 10 quired by the under·
a.m., of said day, the signed
in
Olive
1ollowing
described Township by Deed
real estate:
recorded In O.R. Vol.
EXHIBIT A
182 Pg. 3 in the land
of
Meigs
:Situated In the Town· records
ship of Olive, County of County, Ohio.
1&gt;'!elgs, and State of 2.) No more than two
Ohio.
residences per tract
\1\nd known as being In shall be permitted.
)he Northwest Quarter 3.) Any mobile home
of Section 8, Range 11 placed on said property
~est,
Township 4 shall be 5 years or less
North, of The Ohio at time of placement
Company First Pur· shall contain a ml~
i:hase:, and being mum of 700 square feet
de· and shall be under
bounded
and
'Scribed as follows:
skirted at time of place·
Commencing for refer· ment.
ence at an iron pin set 4.) No inoperative or
;~t the Northwest corner unlicensed
vehicles
of the Northeast Quar· may be placed on said
ter of Section 8 and lot. No accumulation of
being at the Southeast discarded personal ef·
corner of 160 acre Lot feels, debris, waste,
'1166, and being at the garbage or any un·
Southwest corner of sightly obJects or mat·
100 acre Lot 104 (Note: ter will be permitted on
Reference bearing on any lot.
the North line of the 5.) No noxious or offen·
Northwest Quarter of slve activity shall be
Section 8 and the carried on upon any lot.
South line of 160 acre 6.) Before Occupancy
lot 1166 used as North of any house Or mobile
86 deg. 47' 43" East.
home, a sewage dis·
:rhence, with the North r,osal system shall be
line of Section 8, South nstalled in conformity
86 deg. 47' 43" West a with the minimum stan·
distance of 312.62 feet dards required by the
to an Iron pin set being County
Board
of
the true point of begin· Health.
nlng for this descrip· 7.) Before any con·
tion;
structlon takes place,
Thence, from said point purchaser must con·
of beginning and leav· tact the local govern·
ing the section line, ment authority to make
South 03 deg. 57' 15" sure they are in compll·
East a distance of ance with the local
692.47 feet to an iron laws.
pin
set,
passing 8.) No swine shall be
through an iron pin set permitted on the above
at a distance of plus premises. Larger do·
379 00 feet;
mestlc farm animals
Thence South 87 deg. (Including but not lim·
06' 34" West a distance lted to horses, cattle.
of 1,059.47 feet to a sheep, goats' and lla·
point In the centerline mas) are permitted. The
of Township Road No. pasture shall not be
274 (Little Forest Run over grazed but shall
Road), passing through be healthy and thick,
two Iron pins set at dis· and weeds shall be
lances of plus 929.47 controlled. Noise and
feet and plus 1.029.47 odors from any animal
shall be controlled so
feet, respectively;
Thence, with the cen· that neither shall be of·
terllne of Township fenslve to adjoining
Road No. 274, the fol· neighbors.
lowing two courses:
9.) All lots are for resi·
I. North 36 deg. 00' oo·• dential, agricultural or
West a distance of recreational purposes,
396.00 feet to a point; (though the lot owner
2. Thence North 31 deg. may store equipment
oo· 28" West a distance and material used In a
of 399.89 feet to a point business in a well con·
m the North line of Sec· structed
enclosed
tlon 8;
building on the prop·
Thence, leaving the erty). The property is
road with the North line not to be used for comenterprises
of Section 8, North 86 mercia!
deg. 47' 43" East a dis· (with customers com·
lance of 1,451.41 feet to lng and going) with the
the point of beginning, exception of churches,
passing through an riding stables, horse
iron pin set at a dis· farm, cattle farm, or
lance of plus 30.00 feet; truck farm (fruits and
Containing
20.017 vegetables.)
acres, more or less.
10.) Dogs, cats and
Subject to all legal other household pets
right-of-ways,
ease· shall not be bred or
ment,
restrictions, maintained for comreservations, and zon· mercial purposes. 11.)
lng regulations of No shack, tent, camper,
record.
school bus, or recreSubject to the right-of· ational vehicles shall
way of Township Road be used as a residence,
No. 274.
either temporary or
Subject to the 100· Year permanent.
Flood Plain rostrlc· 12.) Any residence
lions, if applicable.
erected on said lots
Subject to a 50.00 feet shall be at least 700
wide easement bemg square feet of Indoor
reserved unto the heated area (excluding
grantors (Bruner Land ·basement and garage)
Company, Inc.), their and shall have a fin·
heirs, and or assigns, ·IShed siding such as
forever. Said easement rustic wood, frame.
being for the purpose brick veneer, press
of running utilities to board, or contempo·
other parcels of land on rary siding.
or near Township Road 13.) Any building or
No. 274. Said ease· structure placed on
ments runs in a North· said property shall be
South direction across set back a minimum of
the West end of 'the 75 feet from the center
above-described prop· of the existing road un·
erty with the West line less a lesser set-back
of said easement being is requested by public
the centerline of Town· authority.
ship Road 1'-{o. 274. 14.) Where protective
Containing 0.914
covenants and Meigs
acres, more or less, of• County of Olive Town·
easement.
ship Zoning Ordi·
All Iron pins set are nnnces are In conflict,
518" x 30" rebar capped the stricter requirement
and labeled "Claus will prevail.
6456".
15.) Invalidation of any
A plat of the above de- of these covenants by
scribed survey has judgment of court
been submitted for tile order shall, In no way
at the County Engi· affect any of the other
neer's Office.
provisions, which shall
The bearings In this de· remain in full force and
scription are for angle effect.
calculations only and 16.) Nothing contained
are based on the North herein shall be con·
line of the Northwest strued as creating any
Quarter of Section 8 obligation on the part
and the South line of of Bruner Land Com·
~60 acre lot 1166 used pany, Inc., to enforce
as North 86 dcg. 47' 43" these
Protective
);ast.
Covenants.
:rhe above description 17.) The purchasers of
}lrepared by Roger W. this farm, for them·
Claus, Registered Sur· selves, their heirs and
veyor No. 6456 based assigns, by the accept·
on an actual field sur· ance of the conveyance
vey of November 24, of this farm, agree to be
~003; said survey being bound
by
the
subject to any facts covenants contained
"that may be disclosed herein and are the pri·

Wednesday, February 24, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

.. uhllc Nntlct•s In
c•n spupcr·s.
'\our IUj!ht tu Knu\\. l&gt;dh L'rL·d Right to'\ our Dnor.

mary enforcers of
these covenants.
Prior deed reference
Vol. 182, page 459,
Meigs County Official
Records
Land Installment Con'·
tract Vol., 198, Page
459, Meigs County Offl·
cial Records
Current Owner: Everett
Gilmore et al
Property at: 38780 Lit·
tie
Forest
Rd.,
Reedsville, OH
PP# 09·00670.000
Prior Deed References:
Volume 182, Page 459
Volume 198, Page 459
Appraised at 520,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
2/3rds of the appraised
value. 10% down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check. bal·
once due on confirma·
lion of sale.
The appraisal did in·
elude an Interior exam·
lnation of the house.
E.
Beegle,
Robert
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
David Bennett· Alter·
ney
126 N 9th St.
Cambridge. OH 43725
740·439-2719
(2) 10. 17. 24
-------Public Notice
-------Sheriff Sales
Case Number 08CV151
LaSalle Bank National
Association
Plaintiff
vs
Angela S. Spires et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
rected from said court
In the above entitled
action. 1 will expose to
sale at public auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, Feb.
26, 2010 at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Situated in Rutland
Township,
Meigs
County, Ohio, bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Beginning at a point in
the West side of Side
hill Ro::Jd, which is also
the northeast corner of
the 100 acre tract
owned
by
these
grantors from which
this parcel Is taken;
:said point Is also the
northeast comer of the
A.H. Plummer land as
stated In the deed from
Nicholas Grueser and
Margie Grueser to Ray·
mond 0. Lambert and
Lucille Lambert; thence
south 205 deg. 270 feet;
thence south 180 deg.
70 feet; thence in a
westerly direction 270
deg. 440 feet; thence
290 deg. 900 feet at
which point it Inter·
sects with the old Earl
Warren property line;
thence along the old
Earl Warren boundary
and the Raymond 0.
Lambert boundary In
an easterly direction
1526 feet to the place of
beginning, containing
8.5 &lt;&gt;cres. more or less.
Prior Instrument Refer·
ence: Deed dated October 4, 2006, filed
October 10,
2006,
recorded in Official
Records Voi&amp;Jme 242.
Page 429, Recorder's
Office. Meigs County,
Ohio
Current
Owners'
Names:
John M. Spires and An·
gela S. Spires
Property Address:
36741 Dye Road, Rut·
land, OH 45775
Parcel
Number:
1100600000
Appraised At:
$55,000
Terms of Sale:
10% of the appraised
value and that failure to
complete the sale will
result in the forfeiture
o! the deposit.
Current Owner: Angela
S. Spires et al
Property at: 36741 Dye
Rd.
Rutland, OH
PP# 11-00600.000
Prior Deed References:
Volume 242 Page 429
Appraised at 555,000
Terms of Sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 10°o down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, bal·
ance due on conflrma·
tion of sale.
The appraisal did not
include an interior ex·
ami nation of the house.
Robert
E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
Manley Deas Kochalskl
LLC
PO Box 165028
Columbus, OH43216·
5028
614·222-4921
(2) 10, 17, 24
~~-~~~~l

11

Reodyour
newspaper and learn

something today!

POBox 165028
Columbus, OH43216
614·222-4921
Case (2) 10, 17, 24

Public Notice

Sheriff Sales
Number 0Bcv148
Chase Home Finance,
LLC
Plaintiff
vs
David L. Cottrill et al
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas. Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me dl·
reeled from said court
In the above entitled
action, I will expose to
sale at publfc auction
on the front steps of
the Meigs County Court
House on Friday, March
5th, 2010, at 10 a.m., of
said day, the following
described real estate:
Street Address:
31330 Painter Ridge
Road, Vinton, OH 45686
Parcel
Number:
1301064MOO
and
1300422002
Legal Description: Situ·
ated in the County of
Meigs, Township of
Salem, and State of
Ohio:
Being a part of land
that is now or formerly
in the name of Ronald
D. and Judy A. Hagerty
as recorded in Official
Record 103, Page 731
of the Meigs County
Recorder's Office, said
being situated I~ the
Northeast quarter of
the southwest quarter
of Section 25, T-B·N, R·
15· W, and bounded
and described as fol·
lows:
Beginning for refer·
ence on set 5/8" Iron
pin with a plastic lden·
tificatlon cap, taken to
be the northeast comer
of the southeast quar·
ter of Section 25;
thence along the east
line of the Southwest
quarter of Section 25,
S. 9 deg. 42 min. 17
sec. W. a distance of
768.56 feet to a 518"
iron pin with a plastic
Identification cap set
being the principal
place of beginning of
the tract herein de·
scribed; thence contln·
ulng along the east line
of the southwest quar·
ter of Section 25., S. 9
deg, 42 min. 17 sec. W.,
a distance of 342.00
feet to a 5/8" Iron pin
with a plastic identlfica·
lion cap set; thence
leaving the east line of
the southwest quarter
and with a line through
the grantor's property,
N. 80 deg. 18 min. 58
sec. W., passing a 518 •
iron pin
with a plastic ldentlfica·
lion cap set at 883.16
feet, going a total dis·
tance of 933.16 feet to
an Iron spike set (60
penny nail) In the cen·
ter of Painter Ridge
Road (County Road I);
thence along the center
of Painter Ridge Road
the following two (2)
courses: 1.) N. 2 deg. 14
min. 1 sec. W. a dis·
lance of 283.87 feet to a
point, and 2.) N. 3 deg 4
min, 22 sec. E. a dis·
tance of 64.68 feet to an
Iron spike set; thence
leaving the center of
Painter Ridge Road and
with a line through the
grantor's property, S.
80 deg. 18 min. 58 sec.
E. passing a 518" Iron
pin with a plastic iden·
tificatlon cap set at
50.00 feet, going a total
distance ot 999.35 feet
to the principal place of
beginning. Containing
7.606 acres, more or
less, and being subject
to the right of way of
Painter Ridge Road
(County Road I) and all
other easements of
record. Being a part of
Tax Parcel No. 13·
00422·000. All 518" Iron
pins with plastic ldentl·
flcatlon caps set are
stamped "SHARRETT·
8019." All Iron pins are
set being 5/8" by 32
Inches. Ail bearings
based on the east line
of the southwest quar·
ter of Section 25, being
S. 9 deg. 42 min. 17
sec. W., and are for the
determination of an·
gles only. The above
described tract was
surveyed by Paul R.
Sharrett, Ohio Profes·
sional Surveyor No.
8019, May 18, 2000.
Current Owner: David
L. Cottril et al
Property at: 31330
Painter Rdg. Rd.
Vinton, OH 45686
PP# 13·0164MOO
13·00422.002 Mobile
Home and Land
Prior deed references:
Volume 185, Page 337
Appraised at $75,000
Terms of sale: Cannot
be sold for less than
213rds of the appraised
value. 1Oo/o down on
day of sale, cash or
certified check, bal·
ance due on conflrma·
lion of sale.
The appraisal did not
Include an Interior ex·
amination of the house.
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney for the Plain·
tiff
Manley Deas Kochalskl
LLC

Public Notice
SHERIFF SALES CASE
NUMBER 09CV052 THE
BANK OF NEW YORK
MELLON PLAINTIFF VS
RICK &amp; LUNSFORD ET
AL
DEFENDANTS
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO. IN
PURSUANCE OF AN
ORDER OF SALE TO
ME DIRECTED FROM
SAID COURT IN THE
ABOVE ENTITLED AC·
TION, I WILL EXPOSE
TO SALE AT PUBLIC
AUCTION ON THE
FRONT STEPS OF THE
MEIGS
COUNTY
COURT HOUSE ON
FRIDAY, MARCH 5,
2010 AT 10 AM, OF
SAID DAY, THE FOL·
LOWING DESCRIBED
REAL ESTATE: Street
Address:
Parcel NUMBER:
Legal Description:
29610 Sharon Hollow
Road, 0 TR 134 Sharon
Hollow Road, Portland,
OH 45770 .'
0700307000
and
0700307001 Parcel No.
1:
Situated in Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County, and State of
Ohio: In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 Acre
lot 1177 and being
more particularly de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing at the
northeast comer of
said
Section
35;
Thence West 1600 feet,
more or less; thence
South 2025 feet, more
or less, to a point in
Township Road 134
(Sharon Road); thence
leaving the road N. 32
deg. 45' E. 166.06 feet
to an Iron pin found;
thence s. 82 deg. 30' E,
617.93 feet to an iron
pin set (passing an iron
pin set at 387.76 feet);
thence N. 53 deg. II' 03"

E.
131.3 3 feet to an iron
pin set at the point of
beginning of the tract
herein
described;
thence N. 53 deg. 11'
03" E. 191.41 feet to an
Iron pin found; thence
S. 0 deg. 35' 11 ~ E.
292.13 feet (passing an
Iron pin set at 254.73
feet) to a point in the
center of Sharon Road;
thence along the road
s. 65 deg. 15' 44" w.
106.75 feet; Thence S.
52 deg. 49' 46" W. 70.98
feet;
thence leaving the road
N. 0 deg. 35' 11'' W.
264.98 feet (passing an
iron pin set at 25.00
feet) to the point of be·
ginning,
containing
0.9686 acres.
Parcel No.2:
Situated in Lebanon
Township,
Meigs
County, and State of
Ohio: In Section 35,
Town 2, Range 11 and
being part of 160 acre
lot 1177 and being
more particularly de·
scribed as follows:
Commencing· at the
Northeast comer of
said Section 35; thence
West 1600 feet, more or
less; thence South
2025 feet, more or less.
to a point in township
134 (Sharon
road
Road); thence leaving
the road N, 32 deg. 45'
E. 166.09 feet to an iron
pin found; thence S. 82
deg. 30' E. 387.76 feet
to an Iron pin set at the
point of beginning of
the tract herein de·
scribed; thence contln·
uing S. 82 deg. 30' E.
230.17 feet to an iron
pin set; thence N. 53
deg. 11' 03" E. 131.33
feet to an Iron pin set;
thence S. 0 deg. 35' 11"
E. 264.98 feet to the
center of Sharon Road;

J&amp;L
Construction
·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

• Room udditions • Routing • (.ornges
• ( ;cnc•·al Remodeling • Poll· &amp; Horse
Barns • \in) I &amp; \\nod Fencing

·Room Additions &amp;
ROftlOdOIIng
· Now Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Aooflng &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Docks

Foundlltimt&lt;;
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

wv 036725

740·9&amp;5·4141

V.C. YOUNG Ill
CJCJ2.(,2J s 7-IU-SIJ J.u

' '="

740·416·1834

Full) insured
Free l'Stimatcs · 25+ )C:tr!&gt; l'Xpait·twt·

Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
- Wrnter S
lals -

1\ot .1ffiliah·d '"ith \l1kl· \Ianum

H•"'nnt: . \.

N:• nul(lt 1111!!1

Great coverage and
superior service
(that's easy on your wallet)

740o446,92

Hometown Insurance Center

2459 St. Rt. 160 ·Gallipolis
CALl FOR FREE ESTIMATES

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

740-742-3411
SEAL IT
CO:\Sl Rl C"l 10:'11

Rooting- Siding·
Painting· Gutters •
Decks· Etc.
For Fast Courtcou~

304-773-1111

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
· Complete
Remodeling

!tjErie
~""g

Insurance'"
~.

Total Construction

1-0-n-e_C_a..;;.ll...;;.to~D...:o...:l...:tA...:/.:..1;..::.;;.._ _ _ ~

740-992-1671

Pole Bam,~letal Roof~;
Fire &amp; \\ater Damage

Stop &amp; Compare

Dl') waiiJRepi..!lf

0\\nCI
Anl) \eter.m

Tom \\olfc
7411-416-2575

Replacement
Winchm s and
\in) I Siding

Spedulists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

Scr. icc l·rec
Estirmttt's &amp;

• Siding • \'in) I
• 1\ lrtal
and Shingle Roof,
• Deck~ • Addi1io1h

affordahlc Pnces.
Call Dennio.; Bn) d
740-992-2029

• l'lumhing
• Pole Barn~

Public Notice

~lnsui'III'IC.ecent.r.corn

•

\\indo\\~

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

•hltdrkal

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

ROOFING

&amp; REMODU.IN&lt;i (O.

Rubber Roofing. Room Additions. Decks. Shingles
Siding. Windows. Pole Barns. Garages.
Insurance Work. Residential &amp; Commerc•al
74t)-245-0437
licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years
Free Estimates
Expcncnc

PSI CONSTRUCTION

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

Room A.udillons. Remodehne. Metal &amp;
Shmgle Roofs. Ne\\ Home . s;(Jmg. Deck:..
Bathroom Remodelin!!. Licen~ed &amp; insured
Rick Price· 17) r11. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740-416·2960 740-992·0730

H&amp;H
Guttering

R.\:"iKS

CO:\STRl C 110~

co.

Sea.111ess Gutters

Roolrng Std ng Gutters

l'umerm. 011

• 011 &amp; f1ltcr '-h.mgc
• runt Ups
• Hr.tkc Set&gt; tee

Rc'iidcntial

-&amp;-p~ ~ 1tcd"

• Frce fc;timutcs
(7401992-5009
Cu~ton• Ht'" c Butld ng
Steel ft~me Butld ng~
But!dmg R modeling

1'\u\\ S&lt;;!lllll!!.
• ford &amp; Mororcrnft
Part • En£tlles.
rrnn~fer Cast:' &amp;
Tran~nu"ion~

• Altemurkct

Replacement Shet:l
\1etal &amp; CtHnponentI'N \II \lake' of \duck'

R.t,lll.:.Ohill

\\ork
174111 t)I)2.(191U

LI•:WIS
('ONCRETE
( 'ONSTIU '('TIO:'Il
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
-\II f) JM.'S or
( oncrde \\ork
29 'cars I Xfll'ricnrc

Da' id Le\\ is
740-992-6971

General rcp;ur

"" \\,hank~lclh,(om

Free Estinlta lor
• Backhoe • Treacl*la
• Brush 110111n1
• Portable Bandmll
Tree Trimming • Betting
Poles &amp; Trusm

Call740·982·8572

7~11·9~9-1956
I

Hill's Self
Storage

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Roofing, Stdmg
Sofftt Decks.
Doors. Wmdows,
Electnc, Plumbmg,
Drywall,
Remodelmg, Room

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local Contractor

Hours
7:00 am • 8:00 pm

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Pomcro~.

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Insured 8 Bonded

29625 Bashan Road
Racme OH 45771

SER\'1('1-: ( 'E'\"1 ER
1!'55 '\'E \H·.

email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

MIKE MARCUM

BAD CREDIT?
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(passing an Iron pin set
at 239.98 feet), thence
along the center of the
Road S 52 deg 49' 46"
866-564·8679
W.83.15feet thenceN
LUV HOMES
87 deg. 53 12 W
187.71 feet to an iron
pin set; thence N. 77
deg. 00' II" W. 117.51
feet to an Iron pin sot;
thence leaving the road
Dump 'I ruck
N. 7 deg 52' 44" E.
l'n icc
235.42 feet to the point
of beginning, contain·
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ing 2.0000 acres. Be the
l.imcstom· • (;rani
same more or less, but
lilp Soil • Fill J&gt;irt
subject to all legal
highways.
740-9~5-4422
CURRENT
OWNER:
RICK E LUNSFORD ET
AL PROPERTY AT
740-856-26()9
:29610 SHARON HOL·
Cell
LOW RD. TR 134
PP#0700307.000
0700307.001
PRIOR
Stanley TreeDEED REFERENCES:
VOLUME 113, PAGE
Trimming
333 APPRAISED AT
$85,000.00 TERMS OF
&amp; Removal
SALE: CANNOT BE
l'romptund
Qualtt}
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Work
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PRAISED VALUE. 10% I tRe son.tblc Rates
DOWN ON DAY OF I 'Insured
SALE, CASH OR CER·
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ANCE
DUE
ON Relerente'\ A\ tlable 1
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OF ( ,111 Gtil) St.,nlcy ca
SALE.
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AP·
7W 591 S~4
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lc.l\ c message
CLUDE AN INTERIOR
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HOUSE. ROBERT E. R&lt;H'SII STREET
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MIJ Ruu'h St.
TORNEY FOR THE
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5028 614·222·4921
(2) 10, 17, 24

Cell: 740·416·5047

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- - - · ·-··

~

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

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, February 24, 201 0

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

THIS HAS TO BE THE
M06i INEFFICIENT
CAMP IN THE ARMY!

Tom Batiuk

~AGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

JOSEPH
39 Piper of
rhyme
40 German
river
41 Ties the
knot
DOWN
1 Audacious
2 Tire type
3 Disinclined
4 Hair
goop
5 A lot of
6 Harmonious
7 Checked
(out)
8 Hig hstrung

THELOCKHORNS
H I &amp; LOIS

--··-· --··

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Toot one's
own horn
5 Rainbow
maker
9 Gushed
11 Simpleton
12 Designer
Simpson
13 Take. as
advice
14 Knight
title
15 Combinations of
two songs
17 Cannabis
extract
19 Maiden
name
label
20 Dog line
21 Nap s1te
22 Release
24 Take to
court
26 Chopper
part
29 Program,
for short
30 Doc's
friend
32 Giides
along
3 4 Tall tale
3 5 Court
event
36 Plain silly
38Made
over

Mort Walker

FUNKY W INKERBEAN

~·------ - - - ----

18 Robust
21 One
and the
other
23 Grapevine
talk
24 Didn't
punish

player
30 Lacking
locks
31 Lewd
looks
33 Salon
concern
37 Fresh

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

t.OOI&lt; AI IHIG
CUI€.f/OV5E?: '0-IA/
CAM~': ON -r;4e

MARI&lt;G-1', 1

"WHY WOULD I WANT MORE COMPUTER SKILLS?
I ALREADY KNOW HOW TO U5E AN ATM."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

C1\D, WHAT CO
'(OU 11-IINK OF
1H~%~~?

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

2 8 4

1
5 6

•

7
8 4

7
6

9
5
8 5 9

" I hope I get better m arks this decade
t h an I did last decade."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

1 3 2
3
5
3
1
4 1 9 7 2
Dilficutty Level ***

Bl8 G L
17 9 ~ B
9 L 6 9
L G 8 ~
9 ~ 17 +--G
6 s ,9 8
8 17 19 6
G6 L 9
~ 9 9 17

f-

6 I ~ 17
G 9 --8
17 8 B
9 6 9
L B- 6
9 17 G
~ L 9
8 9 ~
BG L

---

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, Feb. 24,
2010:
You could be taken aback by all the opportunities
that head in your direction this year. You often feel
pulled between your feelings and ) our goals. You
will see them in opposition to each other and try to
juggle them. A strong possibility this vear will be
the ability to merge both. You are in the first year of
an 11-year luck cycle. Start it well. If you are ~ingle,
you will have your choice oi suitors. If vou are
attached, the l \\'0 of you could act like fovebirds
again. CAI'\CER understands and apprt!riates your
depth. Enjoy the bond that forms or already exists.
Tile Stars Silou• tile Kiud of Dav You 'II Hm•e; 5-

Dynamic; 4-Posilive; 3-Avenige; i-So-~o; 1-Difficu/l
ARIES (March 21-April19)

224

9 9
L 6
G ~
B 17
8 9-

--+-

~

L

9 G
17 B
6 8

**** Your sensilivity to a domestic, personal
or real-estate issue needs to come out. In some fashion, you might need lo revamp your thinking, or try
another person's logic on for sue. Tonight: Happy
at home.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***** Feelings flow; ideas flourish. A great
brai.nst01ming session can evoh·e as long as you
aren't locked in lo any one idea. You'll find a gettogether- whether it b friends or a busine% meeting. Communication happens. Tonight. Hang out
with pals.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
**** Know when enough is enough. You
might ha\·e been trying to negotiate a financial
agreement. Just when you think you see eye to eye
with someone, there is a change. Perhaps you want
to be less proactive. Tonight: Treat yourself well
CANCER Qune 21-Julv 22)
**** You might be pushed beyond your normal le\'el and are wondering how to handle a per
son&lt;tl matter. Lighten up about someone at a distance. In some fashion, you might be O\'erwhelmed
by this person or the possibilities provided by him
or her. Tonight: Conjure up a dream.
LEO Quly 23·Aug. 22)
*** Take your time making a deci-;ion. 1\'ot
e\ eryone has to agree with you, nor will they. Still,
you seek out diverse feedback from \'arious key
people. Your mind could be on o\'erload by the end
of the day. Tonight: Get a good night's sleep.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22\
*"**** Being focused might be cl good quality,
a!&gt; so much could be tos~ed into your path. Tt) not
to push too hard when determining which course to
lake. A discussion or meeting pro\ ides serious,
\'i,lble options. You have a lot to cho~e from.
Tonight: Where crowds ,m~.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
•
*** Continue on your chosen p.lth, but don't be
surprised by all the suggestions and stops on the
wav. H seems as if even·one wanls lo ,1dd in his or
her" two cenlc;. Learn h~w lo ~ay "no" nicely, or
maybe "later." Tonight: Burning the candle at both
ends.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1\'u\'. 21)
***** Your creali\it)' ~urges. espedally il you
detach from a draining situation or one that triggers
you. Ideas start popping up out of the blue. A new
friend made right now could be most interesting.
Tonight: Follow the music.
SAGITIARIUS (i\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** *A p.1rtner continues to dominate You
might need to determine what you must ha\'e control 0\er and establish effective boundaries. A t&lt;lmil)1
member's changing moodc; could h.we you shaking
your he,ld. Tonight: Be a duo.
CAPRICO RN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***** Return messages, ask questions ,md get.
a project off the back burner. Your understanding of
how others work will add strength to your ideas.
You carmot say "no" to an in\'itation. It b too c1lluring! Tonight: So man) choices.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. 15)
*** Toss \'ourself into e,Kh projed or meeting.
With intense fOCus. you'll get through a lot of work. •
1'\e'' w.lys of making money or inl'Teasing your
stature appear. You might wonder which way to go.
Tonight: Do something just for you.
PISCES (feb. 19-\llarch 20)
***** You could be di-;tracted by )'l)Ur emotions. Dealing with c\ sit\hltiOn is import.mt. and you
will wme out on lop of your game. Excitement sur-·
rounds your ideas, &lt;tnd }uu might oven,·helm others if you blurlthem out Tonight: let your mind go.
jacqutlme BisJr L&lt; ,., 1M Intt'mr:l
allrttp://11'117L'.iatqutlmeblgar.n.mr

.

�.... .......... ..

.-~--~--

~

~~

..

~~~--~~~~~

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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

www .mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

James, Jamison
end Cavs' skid with
win vs. Hornets

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Gallia Academy head coach Jim Osborne huddle up with his team during Saturday's game at River Valley High School.
The Blue Devils concluded their season on Tuesday with a sectional tournament loss to Athens.

Blue Devils fall to Athens, 48-23
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSO MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

LOGAN. Ohio - For only
the ~econd time in the last II
year~. the Gallia Academy
boys basketball program will
not have a postseason win
after suffering a 48-23 setback
to Athens in Division II sectional semifinal at Logan High
School's
Jim ~ Myers
GymmLsium.
The seventh-seeded Blue
Devils (7-14) - who last
went winless in the toumament during the 2005-06 campaign - \vere simply outmatched by the host Bulldogs
( 19-1 ), a' second-seeded AHS
shot 50 percent from the field
en route to the 25-point triumph.
The Green and Gold - who
finished II th in the AP
Division ri poll - jumped out

a

to a small 7-5 advantage after
eight minutes of play, but then
followed \vith a 31-8 charge
over the next two frames to
establish a commanding 3X-13
lead headed into the finale.
Athens also led 23-9 at the
mte1mission. Both teams
closed regulation by trading
10 points apiece.
GAHS connected on 8-of45 field goal attempts for 18
percent, mcluding a 2-of- 17
effort tram three-point tcn·itory for 12 percent. Athens, conversely. was 21-of-42 from the
field (50 percent) and went 4of-11 from three-point mnge
for 36 percent.
Both teams had 31 rebounds
in the contest. Galli a Academy
committed 19 tumovers in the
loss. two less than the
Bulldogs' total of 17.
Nick Mitchell led the Devils
with five points. followed b)

John Troester with four markers. Ethan Moore. Jared
Golden. Tyler Eastman and
Nathaniel Gordon all added
three points. while Jordan
Comwell rounded things out
with t\VO points. The guests
were 5-of-11 at the free throw
line for 46 percent.
Dean ~1affin paced AHS
with a game-hi~h 13 points.
followed by Con Butcher with
eight
markers.
Frank
Valentour and Collin Pfaff
both added seven to the winning cause. Athens was 2-of-8
at the chruity stripe for 25 percent.
Athens advances to Fridav's
sectional final at Lo!.!an High
SchooL where it will take on
third-seeded Warren at 7 p.m.
The Bulldogs also captured
their 18th consecutive win of
the season.
It was the final baJ-.kctball

game for GAHS seniors
Corey Eberhard. Jordan
CornwelL Nick Mitchell. Nate
Allison. Chuck Calvert. John
Troester
and
Nathaniel
Gordon.
ATHENS 48,
GALLIA ACADEMY
GaDipohs
Athens

5
7

23

4 4 10- 23
16 15 10- 48

(7) GALLIA ACADEMY (7·14): Jordan
Cornwell 1 o-&lt;&gt; 2, Ethan Moore 1 0.0 3,
Chuck Calvert 0 0.0 0, Jared Golden 1 1-4
3, John Troester 1 2·2 4, NICk Mrtchell2 (}{)
5, Corey Eberhard 0 (}{) 0. Joe Jenkins 0 00 Cody Billings o-&lt;&gt; Nate AliSOil
0 0, Austin Wdson 0 (}{) 0. Tyler Eastman 1
1-3 3, Nathaniel Gordon 1 1·2 3 TOTALS: 8
5-11 23 Three·po&amp;nt goals 2 (Moore,

o.

o

o.

o o.

MrtcheD).
(2) ATHENS (1!H)· Cori Butcher 4 0-1 8,
Frank Valentour 3 1·2 7, Collin Pfaff 3 0-1 7,
Dean Maffin s (}{) 13. Joe Stanley 0 (}{) o.
Joe Germano 1 o-&lt;&gt; 2, Jimmy Herpy 1 (}{)
2. Ben McAdoo 1 1·2 3 Trey Hams 2 o-&lt;&gt; 4,
Johnny Young 1 (}{) 2, V111nie Aider 0 0-1 0.
lan Frampton o o-&lt;&gt; 0. lan Dixon 0 0-1 0.
TOTALS: 21 2·8 48. Three-po1nt goals. 4
(Mallin 3. Pfaf! 1).

Meigs
fromPageBI
Buckeyes won by a final of
63-49.
The Marauders were led
in scoring by Jesse Smith
with 14 points. Colton
Stewart added 11 points,
Tanner Hysell bad seven
points. Cody Mattox and
Seth Wells each scored six
point~.
and
Dijuan
Robinson
added
five
points.
Smith and Hysell each
grabbed seven rebounds to
lead
the
Marauder~.
Robinson had two assists,
and Smith had six steals to
lead Meigs.
~elsonville- York was led
in scoring by Dillon Stalhng
with 15 points.
Daniel
Kline. Jared Dexter. and
Kyle .Moore each scored
eight points, and Mychal
Mitchell
and
Connor
Bunting scored six points.
Tyler Goodin had four
points, followed by Casey
Cox. Garrison Breeze, Alec
S\\ ingle. and Justin Kurt!.
\\ ith t\\ o points each.
The Buckeyes had previously defeated Meigs by
scores of 58-55 and 67-53.
Meigs has a makeup contest with River Valley on
Monday at 6 p.m. at Meigs
High School.
NELSONVILLE-YORK
MEIGS 49

63,

10 9 8 22 15, 17 15 16 -

49
63

Me gs
NY

MEIGS (1·18). Darrel Goff 0 0·1 0
Ryan Payne 0 0-0 0. Jesse Sm1th 5 3·8

Raiders
from Page Bl
tiona! title in 2003 - wu~
15-of-42 shooting for 36
percent, including 1-of-12
from three-point range for
eight percent.
Cody Smith led the
Raiders with 12 points, followed by Cody McAvcna
with I 0 and Dominique

CLEVELAND (AP) Antawn Jamison rubbed
lotion into his forearms
and let out a sigh of relief.
Finally, he remembered
what it felt like to win
again.
Jamison scored 18 points
in his first start for
Cleveland, LeBron James
added 20 points and 13
assists and the Cavaliers
escaped Tuesday with a
105-95 win over the New
Orleans Hornets to end a
three-game losing streak.
Cleveland hadn't won
since acquiring Jamison
from Washington at last
week's trade deadline.
"It feels good to get
one," Jami::;on said ...It
wasn't pretty, but those are
the games you have to find
a way to get a victory and
we found a way to do that."
New Orleans rookies
Marcus Thornton
and
Darren Collison combined
for 59 points, including a
franchise-record 23 from
Thornton in the second
quarter.
Thornton finished with a
career-high 37 points and
set two other team records:
most points by a rookie
and most points off the
bench. He hit his first five
shots and 10 of 13 in the
second as the Hornets
scored 40 points in the
quarter.
'"It was reall) something,'' Hornets coach Jeff
Bower said. ''He was
aggressive coming off
screens and confident
when he went up to shoot."
Thornton, a secondround pick out of LSU.
entered sixth in the NBA
among rookies with a 10.8point scoring average. He
nearly equaled his previous
career high of 25 just in the
second quarter.
··1 would rather have a
'W."' Thornton said. "The
records mean something.
but they would mean more
if we had won."
Collison was just as good
for New Orleans. Subbing
for an injured Chris Paul.
he scored 22 points and
added 10 assists. Collison
has a\·eraged 23.7 points
over his last seven games.
while he and Thornton
zipped around Cavs guards
most of the night as
Cleveland continues to
struggle with its defense.
"We're definite!) not
where we want to be
(defensively) right now,"
Ca' aliers coach Mike
Brown said. "Everybody
feels it and we· ve got to
fight through it:·
The Cavaliers' defense
tightened when it had to in
the fourth. particularly on
Thornton. He didn't score
over the final 8:27 and didn't have a basket from the
floor over the final 9:55 as
Delonte West and James
did a better job of getting
up in his face.
"Their defense really
stiffened and made it hard
for us to get clean looks.''
Bower said. "They made it
hard for some of our cuts
to be run and to get the ball
moved cleanly. They ·re an
outstanding defensive team
and they did a good job on
those late possessions.''
Cleveland was struggling
to put the Hornets away
when Mo Williams. struggling to find his touch
since returning from a
shoulder injury. broke an

89-all tie with a 3-pointer
\vith 4: J 3 to play. West followed with a block of
Thornton, then came down
to the other end and
knocked down another 3 to
stretch the Cavaliers' lead
to 95-89.
James took it from there~
hitting a 3-pointer and finishing a three-point play in
the final two minutes to
give Cleveland its first wirt
since the All-Star break.
James, though. certain!)
doesn't seem worried by
Cleveland's recent struggles. Two of the three
teams Cleveland lost to Denver and Orlando - are
in first place in their
respective divisions.
"There's 82 games in the
regular sea~on. You'll ha.
ups and downs.'' Jam
said. "We''e had way more
ups than downs. We have
the best record in the
Eastern Conference and
one of the best records in
the league. You can go two
or three games where you
don't win a game. That's
not our worries.
Jamison started in place
of J .J. Hickson in his first
home
game.
Hickson
missed the game with flu~
like symptoms. but Brown
was leaning toward starting Jamison anyway after
easing him into the rotation
by bringing him off the
bench for his first two
games.
Jamison made an immediate impression, hitting
his first shot of the game
and later catching a nolook pass from James and
finishing with a one-han.ded dunk, hanging on
rim long enough for tea
mate Anderson Varejao to
wrap his arms around hif11
and catch him in the third
quarter.
"We lost (three) games iq
a row and thoueht it wa~
the end of th~ world:
Jamison said. "I've never.
been part of that before.
It's a good feeling. It's
what championship basket~
ball is all about."
~
NOTES:
ShaquiiiJ
O'Neal scored 20 pointJ
for Cleveland. two shv ol
his ~cason high .... ·The
Cavaliers are askin~ fans
to arrive earlv for the
March 5 gan1e againstI
Detroit to help set the
Guinness World Record fot!
'·largest gathering of pea~
pie wearing tleece blan-i
kets.'' Each fan wil
receive
a
Cavalied
Snuggie \\hich the)
asked to \vcar for the f
five minutes of the ga ,
A
representati\ e
o(
Guinness will be on hand
to certify the record .... Md
Williams is 9 of 33 frorrl
the floor since returnin~
from his shoulder injury... :
F Leon Powe was activ~
for the first time this sea..
son. He has been recoverl
ing from offseason knee
surgery.... Peja Stojakovi(!
previously
held
tht;
Hornets record for point~
in a quarter when he scored
22 in the first agains~
Charlotte on Nov. 14~
2007.
~

·u··

Sarah Hawley/photo

Meigs Colton Stewart shoots over Nelsonville· York's Conner Bunting during Tuesday's
tournament contest. Meigs Jesse Smrth boxes out on the potential rebound.
14 D11uan Aobmson 1 3-4 5, Cody
Mattox 3 0-0 6, Cotton Stewart 4 3·5 11 ,
Soth Wells 3 0.1 6, Tanner Hysoll3 1·2
7, Conner Swartz 0 0·0 0. TOTALS: 19
10·21 49. Three·point goats· 1 (Smith)

Peck with eight markers.
Trey Noble added six
points to the winning
cause,
while
Parker
Hollingsworth
rounded
things out with two markers.
RVHS outrebounded the
Rockets 28-20 and committed onl) 12 turnovers.
one less than Wellston's
total of 13. The guests
were also 7-of-ll at the
free throw line for 64 per-

NELSONVILLE·YORK (9·11)' Mychal
Mitchell 3 0·0 6, Nathan Dean 0 0-0 0,
Casey Cox 0 2·2 2, Joe Frazrer 0 0-0 0
Damel Kfine 3 1·3 8, TYler Goodm t 1·3
4. Dillon Stalling 7 o.o 15. Jarod Dexter

cent.
Jaylen Prater puccd
WHS with 12 point~. all of
which came in the first
quarter. Prater did not
attempt another shot after
the opening eight minutes.
Austin Osborne and Cod)
Wilkett followed wrth six
markers apiece. Wellston
was 5-of-8 at 1hc charitv
stripe for 63 percent.
·
RIVER VALLEY

38,

4 0.1 8, Garnson Breeze 1 0-1 2 Kyle
Moore 4 0.0 8, Conner Bunting 3 0·1 6
Alec SWingle 1 0-0 2. Justin Kurtz 1 0-0
2 TOTALS; 28 4·11 63. Throe·polnl
goals: 3 (Kline, Goodin, Stalling).

WELLSTON
A Valley
Wellston

8

7

14 8

36

14 9
7 7

-

38
36

{10) RIVER VALLEY (4·14)·Trey Noblo
2 2·2 6, Cody McAvena 3 3-4 10,
Parker Hollingsworth 1 0..() 2 Aaron
Hamson 0 0·0 0. Kyle Bryant 0 0-0
Dommique Peck 3 2·5 8, Cody Sm1th 5
0-0 12 TOTALS 14 7·11 38 Three·
point goals. 3 (SIT'IIh 2 McAvena)
(7} WELLSTON (7·12) Jeff Matteson 1
D-0 2, Austin Osborno 3 0·0 6, Cody
Wilkett 3 0·0 6, Austin Cra1g 0 0·0 0,
Kyle Love 1 0·0 3, Ryan Darnell 2 1·2
5. Seth Weikert 0 0-0 0, Jaylen Prater
4 4-6 12, Nigel Courts t 0·0 2, Dakota
Brown 0 0·0 0. TOTALS 48 5·8 69.
Three·polnt goals 1 (love).

o.

~

Southern
from Page Bl
four steals for South Gallia.
The win for the Tornadoes
sets up a sectional final
matchup with Pike Eastern.
the team formallv headed
by Southern's current head
coach.
Jeff
Caldwell.
Southcm will play at 8 p.m.
on Tuesda). March 2. at
Wellston Htgh School.
SOUTHERN 72,
SOUTH GALLIA 50
SGallia
Southern
SOUTH

12 11 15 12 -

50
15 19 16 22 -- 72
GALLIA

(8·11)

Brandon

Harr son 5 2·3 14 levt Ells 2 0.0 4:
Bryce Clary 1 0-2 2, A.J McOan el 1 Oj
0 2 Danny Matney 3 ().() 6, Da tori
Matney 9 2·3 22. Cory Haner 0 0.0 01
Jaylan Nolan 0 0.0 0, David Michael 0 oJ
0 0, John Johnson o 0-0 0, Michael
Parcell 0 0-0 0, Cody Rhodes 0 0.0 o,
TOTALS: 21 4·8 50 Throe-point goalsl
4 (Dalton Matney 2, Harnson 2)
~
SOUTHERN (15·4): Cyle Rees 6 5· 1
20. Taylor Deem 2 0·0 4, Sean Cop
4 0-0 8, Colby Roseberry 3, 0·
Andrew Roseberry 1 1·2 3, M1ch
Manuel 7 7·8 24. Zach Manuel 1 5-6 7~
Marcus H11l 0 (}{) 0, Ethan Marlin 0 00 TOTALS: 24 18·26 72 Three-pom
goals 6 (Rees 3 Mtehael Manuel 3) •

Team ststlsticsllndVidual /eadars :
F1eld goals SG 20·57 ( 351), S 24-55
( 436): Threo·po nt goals SG 4-1;:
( 235), S 6·14 ( 429), Free throws. SG 4l
8 (.500), S 18·26 ( 692), Total rebounds
SG 29 (Dalton Matney 9). S 32 (Col~
Roseberry 8, Rees B) Oftens1v;,j
rebounds. SG 14 (Ellis 5), S 10 (Rees 3l
Colby Roseberry 3, Michael Manuel 3)1
Ass1sts: SG 9 (Elhs 3), S 16 (Rees 6)1
Steals: SG 7 (Hamson 4)
13 (ReeSI
7); TJrnovers. SG t9. S 12; Team fouls'
SG21,S12

s

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