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~

pring Sports Guide
nsi'de .T oday's Sentinel

e

100~¥ ~

J•rinted on
Rec)rled l\'ewsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'-~~~,·-· _. .

~ www.anydailyscntincl.com

Middleport water project continues

OBITUARIES
•

Page AS
• Eric Nelson Arnold

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT 0 MY OAIL'(SENTINEL.COM

r

SPORTS

u.,.-

• Wahama rallies
past Lady Raiders.
See Page 81

MIDDLEPORT - Excavated
streets, du~t and detours have all
been par for the course during
Middleport's $3.5 million \Vater
improvement project which is on
schedule. according to .\1ayor
Mike Gerlach.
Yesterday, motorists were once
again detoured through downtown
while worker:; put in a containment

shut-off valve on ''the tee." Though
motorists are suffering a small
inconvenience now, thanks to the
containment \alve, only streets.
instead of whole neighborhoods,
will be shui off if a major leak
occurs in the future.
Gerlach guessed about 90 percent
of the water line replacement work
has been completed with workers
still needing to go back to put in
valves and hydranb. Workers are
also pressurit.ing and sanitizing the

new two-inch water lines which
explains the occasional "fountain''
in the middle of village streets.
according to Gerlach. These small
"fountains" of water are actually
part of the pressurizing and sanitizing process.
After the plumbing is completed
and the hot mix ready. paving will
begin though only the "trenches" or
work areas will be paved over not entire streets.
"The project is on schedule,"

Gerlach reiterated. ''So far there
have been no major hiccups at
all ...the project is moving along
quite well."
As for what Gerlach feels this
"$3.5 million gift" will mean to
Middleport, he said: ''We have a
new water well, which is good and
gjves us a guarantee we can provide adequate water to our people ... this will save us in the long

Please see Water, AS

Columbia Gas
introduces
Easter11 band celebrates 1\!lusic in the Schools lvlontll new pricing

Musical replay of Olympics

B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH

S ENTINEL S TAFF

HOEfLICHCMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

REESDVILLE
The
20 I 0 Winter Olympics may
be over but the Eastern
Elementary Band directed by
Cris Kuhn did a replay of
conte:-.ts using musical instruments in observance of
Music in the Schools Month.
The event took place
Saturda) in the school gymnasium with first and second year
band members - those in the
fifth and sixth grades - partiCipating in individual, pairs
and small group events.
The) played songs relating
to specJfic Olympic events
I :ncluding the downhill skiing
which required students to
play scales up and down from
memory; ski jumping which
• Around Ohio.
featured big jump~ from note
See Page A2
to note: four-man bobsled
songs
requiring four players
• Easter Services.
performing together.
See Page A3
The complete listing of
• Coach can't motivate
events, perfonned on musical
instruments. in addition to those
team. See Page A3
named above included Mogus,
• Local Briefs.
snowboard halfpipe. figure
skating airs, figure skating
See Page AS
school figures, two man bob~
• Family Medicine:
sled. skeleton, snowboard ~iant
When styes get in your
slolaom. figure skatmg indtvidual and freestyle skating.
eyes. See Page A6
The creativity event featured
• Scientist: FDA
studenb composing and titling
suppressed imag1ng
an original song and then playing it before a judge.
safety concerns.
In addition to making music
See Page A6
the two fifth grade classes and
• CDC: Not too late to
three six grade cJa,ses formed
get swine flu vaccination. teams. with each team working
to&lt;&gt;ether to create an original
See Page A6
Te~un Cre·st. The cre-;ts identified teams and were worn on
the back of each rnember·s
shirt during the competition.
-===== Judges for the event were
former band memoer:-. Taylor
W
, EATHER
Ruo;;sell and Andre\\ Bissell.
and current band section
leader~ Hannah West and
Darci Bissell.
Gold, silver, and bronze
1 medab were awarded in each
event based upon the highest
scores assigned by the judges,
Marlene Kuhn and ~ancy
Washter. Larissa Riddle and
Hannah Adams organized and
distributed the medals to the
winning students.

· =·

MOSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM '

1

I

Please see Gas, AS

Eastern Local
Board awards
personnel
contracts

Submitted photos

Top: This sixth grade Blue Team wear their medals
with pride. From the left they are Kourtney
Lawrence, Holly Johnson, Megan Douglas, Emily
Sinclair, Abby Causey ~nd Ty Bissell.

B Y C HARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

Above: The fifth grade Purple·Team members who
competed in several activities pose for a picture.
They are from the left, Alexis Moon, Sabrina Lauer,
Abbey Porter, Grace Adams, Brooke Bearhs.

Beth Shaver, executive
director of the Meigs
County Council on Aging.
said because of the gram,
the county has better tools
to keep feeding seniors for
years to come.
"This grant will help us
provide the next meal to
many of our clients in need
and will trulv make a difference for the. seniors of
Meigs County. Much of our
kitchen equipment is over
20 years old and in desperate need of replacement.
This grant make that possible. The new equipment
will make our operations

REEDSVILLE
Se\ era! contracts including
one for three wars to
Shawn Bush, principal of
the Middle S~hool. were
awarded during a recent
meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
Other supplemental and
pupil actiYity contracts for
the 2009-10 school year
went to Josh Fogle. varsitY
track coach: Pam Douthiti.
varsity softball C~)ach:
Kristen Dettwller, ass1stant
softball
coach;
Brian
Cummings, assist softball
coach: Brian BO\\en, varsity
baseball '-·oach: and Pat
Ne\vland. assistant varsity
baseball coach .
Pupil activity contracts
were awarded to Fred
Connen. assistant \ arsity
track "coach. and Ken
Amsban. assistant \·arsity
basebali coach. Added to
the substitute teachers list
for the rest of this s~hool
year were Syh ia Mickunas
and Helen Slack.
Sari Suttle and Alicia lhle
were hired as substitute
secretarie!' pending proper

Please see Kitchen, AS

Please see Eastern, AS

Right: Matthew Frank performs in one of the
competitions as Andrew Bisssell jud.ges ~is
musical skill while Brandon Coleman, h1s assistance looks on.

High: Lower 70s.
Low: Mid 40s.

LET'S GET COOK I NG!

New equipment for senior center
Bv BETH SERGENT

INDEX
2 S El~J10~S -

Calendars
•

..

sifieds

BSERGENTCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
12 PAGES

A3

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

.

82-4

Comics

B Section

{( :u u o Ohio Valley Puhlish ing Co.

. lli.I!IJI,I!I!1.!1!11 .

COLUMBUS
Columbia Gas of Ohio is
introducing a new natural
gas commodity pricing
mechanism for its cu:-.tomers who purchase gas ·
directly from the company.
beginning with the April
billing cvcle.
The 'standard Service
Offer (SSO) price replaces
the Gas Cost Reco\ ery
(GCR) charge for customers
who have not selected an
alternative supplier through
Columbia's
Customer
CHOICESM frogram.
The April SSO price of
$0.5772 per 100 cubic feet
(Ccf) will be in effect from
March 30 through April 28,
2010. Based on thi~ price.
the typical residential customer using 88 Ccf of natural gas 'W:0uld see a total
Aprifbill,of about $79. The
total
bill
includes
Columbia Gas deli\ er)
charges and taxes.
Columbia's SSO pnce
will be adjusted each month
to reflect natural !!:as market
prices on the Ne\\ York
Mercantile
Exchange
(.NY.MEX). Just like the
GCR price. the SSO price
represents Columbia's actual cost of acquiring natural

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Sharon Matson, nutrition director for the Meigs County
Ct&gt;uncil on Aging, stands at the new steamer purchased
with a grant from the Walmart Foundation. Several ot~er
kitchen items were purchased to be used at the Me1gs
Senior Center and for the Meals on Wheels program

POMEROY __:_ Thanks to
an $1 1.500 grant from the
Walma!'t Foundation. the
kitchen which provides the
food for the local seniors
and the Meals on Wheels
program has received some
much needed, much updated equipment.
The grant purchased a
much-needed double convection oven. steamer. commercial microwave, proofing oven and insulated food
carriers, all of which were
described as ''critical'' to
serving seniors who participate in the meals program.

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Around Ohio
Marine from Ohio dies in Africa

Wednesday, March 3 1,

Feds: Christian militia needed to be 'taken down'
B Y MIKE H OUSEHOLDER
AND C OREY WILLIAMS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

S fH'BE-.i\VJLLl: lAP) -The Department of Defense
has .mnounccJ that a U.s. l\1arinc form Ohio has died in a

DETROIT - It started
··non hostile II1Ctdent" m Afdca.
inside a trailer home in mral
ll1c !'0\cmmcnt s.Jid Iuesday that .20-)car-old Lance Cpl. Michigan, where a small
Rand\ I leek of 'jteubcn\ illc died Sunday in Djibouti, Africa. ' family gathered before bed
lied. gradu.tted from !Iarrison Central High School in for prayer. Years later. the priCadlz. Famil) members ~ay he t!&gt; Slll'\J\'ed by a daughter, a vate devotions had evolved
fe\\ "eeks old. who he nc\ cr met.
into a small militia of
He wa&lt;, n-;signed to the 2nd Light Annoi'cd ''Christian wan·ion;" preparRcconnai-,sance Bnllahon. 2nd ~Iarine Division. II Marine ing to fight the Antichri.,t.
h,pedittOnary l'orce at Camp Lejeune. N.C.
l he changes in David
I he defense department say), the incident is under inves- Brian Stone's personal thettg,ttlon.
ology partly destroyed his
marriage, his forml.,. wife
:-.ays, and prosecutors claim
Poll: Fisher leads Brunner
they later led him to hatch a
plot to kill police officers
in Ohio.Senate primary
a violent act the militia
COLl ~1Rl S (AP)
A ne\\ poll has Lt. Gov. Lee hoped would touch off an
I i"her out in front of SecreUtr) of Stute Jennifer Brunner uprising against the go\ernbut suggest&lt;, Ohio'~ Democratic U.S. Senate primary is :-.till ment.
..111) hod)'&lt;, guess.
''The time had come that
1 h sun e) of Democratic \otcrs relea~ed Tuesday by ' we ne:dcd lo arrest., th;m
Qumnipmc l'niversit) has 33 percent backing Fisher and and take them down. lJ.S.
26 percent ta\ oring Brunner.
1 At_tOf!l~Y Bamara McQuade
But 40 percent are undecided and 65 percent of those who 1 S&lt;~td. I u~sday Ill an llltcrno\\ -;upport a candidate say they could change their mind.
v1ew \\ tth The As~octated
fhe poll~ters sav the race remains volatile and that Press.
.
h!&gt;het 's lead shou idn 't be so surprising. gn·en that he's
Prosecutor:- helle\ e. that
~tone. 44. of Clayton, •~ the
been adl\ e in Ohio politics longer than Brunner.
The ~une) of 978 Oh10 likely Democratic primar~· vot- n~~l~ader of the Hutar~c
ers \\as conducted March 25 :!X und has a margin ot error nul1t1a: a name the group s
of plus or minus 3.1 percentage point:-.
Web Site :-.a)~ ~hey cre~tte~
to mean ''Chnstian "amor. '
He was among eight memCrossover voters must
bers arrested during a series
of weekend raids in three
pledge to new party
~ l idwestern states, which
federal officials said the\
COl U!\1Bl S CAP)
Some count) elections boards ~ay canied
out after monitoring
absentee ballot mailings for Ohio's May primary may be the group
since last summer
ael.J\Cd .t da) or t\\0 becau~e of a new di rective regarding and leaming
they planned to
'oten. \\ ho s\\ itch parties.
On T·riday. the state's top elections official told her los;al launch their attack next
counterpalls to have such cro:-sovcr voters sign a form stat· month.
A ninth defendant ing the) supp011 their nev. party's principles.
Stone's
Jo~hua Matthew
Democr.ttic Secretal) of State Jennifer says her directive Stone - ~on,
tumed
in
'&gt;impl) underlmes extsting -.tate law. Repuhlicans charge late Monday nighthimself
following
')he's tr) ing to make it tougher for people to change parties an hours-long standoff with
and \Ole in the Democratic U.S. Senate primary, in which FBI agents and police near a
Brunner is a candidate.
wooded area southwest of
Llecuonc, boards say they're scrambling to include the Detroit· the group had used
torm.., \\ ith prim,uy absentee ballot:-. which many counties for training. He and the othhad planned to begin mailing on Tuesday.
ers face charge~ that include
seditious conspiracy. or plotAppliance rebates go quickly
ting to lev) war against the
COLL:MBt:S cAP)
Officials say most of the appliance rcb.nes Oh10 began offering on Friday arc already
-.poken for. including all the rebates for dishwashers.
111c Ohio Oepat1mcnt of Development says rc:-.idcnts
\\ ho \\ant to bu) a ne\\. energy efficient dishwasher and
recel\ c ~ 100 back from the -.tate now go on a waiting list
for any rebate-, th.tt \\Cre re-;erved but go unu:-eu.
Through federal ~timulus funds. the state offered close to
!JO.OOO rebates on purcha~cs of replacement home dish\\J-.hers. rcfngerators. washing machines. gas heaters anu
electric heat pump water heater~.
Ohioans who make a reservation either online (at
Ohm\pplianceRehate.com) or by phone (at I-R88-686x896l ha\c 72 hours to make their purchase and claim their
rebate before it goes back into the pool .

2010

u.s.

Each of the suspects has
requested a public defender,

and bond hemings are
o;chedulcd for Wednesday.
Donna Stone. 44. said her
ex-husband cre-ated the
legal problems now htced
by her stepson, Joshua
Stone, and her 19-year-old
son, David Bnan Stone Jr.,
by involving them Ill a militia that grew ()Ut of his faith.
" I honestly feel, and
think. their dad never told
either of :hose boys what
they were getting into," she
o;aid. "This a bunch of
garbage. these charges.
There is no way my son
\vould do these things."
Donna Stone said she met
David Brian Stone in the
late 1990s in a J\&lt;1eijer groCCI) superstore where she
worked. He courted her and
soon afterward, \ihc and her
son, Sean Sletten, mo\ ed
into his small trai ler in
Lcnawee County. near the
Ohio state line. The bovs
were raised as brothers, atid
David Brian Stone legally
adopted Sean, whose name
was changed to David Brian
Stone Jr.
Both boys were homcschuokd and at night. thefamily would pray together.
''David would preach out
of the Bible," said Donna
Stone, \\ho said she wa~
married to Da\ id Brian
Stone for about six year-..
''He \Vould start at the beginning of Genesis and go to
Revelations. He didn't l!et
into Re\elations because V.·e
didn't agree on it. David said
ll was supposed to be different. He had his O\\ n views.
That's when I thought 1t was
time for me to go."
The Hutaree Web site
yuotes se\'eral Bible pas·
sage.s and declares: "We
believe that one da). as
prophecy says. there w1ll be
an Anti-Christ . ... Jesus
wanted us to be readv to
defend oursehe~ using the
sword and stay alive using
equipment."
Chip Berlet. a senior analyst with Political Research

Associates, ~~ think tank
based in Somerville, Ma~s .•
said Hutaree's online writings suggest the group fits
inlt) a Chri.,tian apocalyptic
ideology that helieves the
l '.S. govcmment . IS "in
league With Satan" and ''the
chief a~ent of Satan is the
Antichnst.'"
"In this particular reading
of apocalyptiC prophecy.
there's a huge hartlc
between good and evil,''
said Berlet, whose group
studies right-wing extremists. "Powerful. political
elected official'&gt; ... are conspiring \\ ith Satan to build a
one-world government.''
!\ttcQuade downplayed the
role rel igwus Ideology
played in the group's alleged
plans. saying the ''most troubling'' finding of their investigation into the Hutaree
were the details of their
alleged plot. Prosecutors
have said the militia planned
to make a false 911 call, kill
responding police officers
and then u~c n bomb to kill
n'iany more at the funeral.

"What we were focused on
here is thc1r conduct, not on
their religiOn . And what they
have talked about is being
very
anti-government,''
McQuade said. "They
this ·new world order'
the) thouQllt that it
JOb to fig~ht against
ment - the federal un"'"...,'-'
ment Ill particular."
The group was preparing
to carry out an attack sometime in April , prosecutors
said, after months of paramilitary training that began
in 2008 and included learning how to shoot guns and
make bombs. Authorities
seized guns ia the raids but
~ ould not say whether they
found explosives.
The Hutarec Web site does
not hst specific grievances
ag.unst law enforcement aDd
the government. The site fe.atures a picture of 17 people in
camouflage. all holding
!!Un~. and includes videos bf
armed men mnning through
the woods . Each wears a
shoulder patch that bears a
eros~ and two red spears.

·~i&gt;lrllqtotlyi~ cOIIIlhltllltudatulld 110iolcred' c:ri latisfad'l&lt;ycrdlSCOtt
otqlllnd Cd lor luD deflill..t di!dolmel.

•

Census workers to
visit homeless camps
CINCINNATI (AP)
U.S. Census workers\\ ill get help
trom deputized -;o(..ial \Vorkers as they vbit Cincinnati area
home'css c.tmps for th1s year's national count.
Cen&lt;,u-.; takers have been to shelter:-., soup kitchens and
other place., &lt;,en ing the homeless, and plan to go out in the
earl) morning hour~ Wedne~day to dozens of places where
people gather for the night.
E-.xccutive Director Josh Spring of the Greater Cincinnati
Coahtwn for the Homeles~ say:- outreach w()rkers have
heen lettmg homele&lt;&gt;s people know the count was coming,
so they wouldn't be surprised by the vbitors.
The ~\\orn-m social worker:- will be bound by privacy laws.
Stm1lar count~ .tre going on acros~ the nation. with everythmg from federal funuing to congres:-ional representation
potentiall) .tt -;take.

Fleeing motorist jumps
fence into prison
CLEVhl Al\:1) (AP) - Police say a motorist tleeing officers. m Cle\eland rtbandoned his car and jumped a fence
landmg in what turned out to be a prison yard.
Garfield Heights police say the chase started in their suburb ectrl) Monday O\Cr ·a traffic 'iolation and reached
-..pecds of 90 mph.
After a race through several communities. police say the
dn\er and a pctssenger bolted from the car and headed for a
fence. apparently not realizing it was on the outside of the
qate women's prison in Cleveland.

Holzer Clinic is pleased to announce the addition of
accomplished Nephrologist, Gopi K. Gundu~alla, MD.
Or. Gopi is certified in Nephrology by the American
Board of Internal Medicine. Dr. Gopi's specialties
include:
•Diagnosis &amp; Management
of Kidney Diseases
· Kidney Transplantation
. Dialysts Therapy
• Acid-base Kidney Disorders
·Electrolyte Disorders

. Nephrolithiasis
(K1dney Stones)
. Hypertension
(H1gh Blood Pressure)
. Acute Kidney Disease
. End-stage Renal D1sease

Now Accepting New Patients

740.446.5763
.

\

HOLZER
Cl..JINIC

�'1r!HilE

The Daily Sent!nel

PageA3

IB3E

Wednesday, March 31,

2010

EASTER BUNNY VISIT

EAsTER SERVICES
Thursday, April1
POMEKOY - Mass of the Lord's Supper. 7:30p.m.,
by Pro~~ss1on and Visits to the Repositorv
9-11 a.m .. Sacred Heart Church
•
CHESTER- Live Easter drama "A breath of Heaven"
at Mere) Mission. Chester Church. 7 p.m. at the church.
RACINE
Maundy Thursday service 6 p.m.,
Bethany l'nitcd Method1st Church.
'

Friday, April 2
POf\'lEROY - Stations of the Cross, noon, Sacred
Hem1 Church, with ministers of Meigs Ministerial
AssociatiOn assisting Rev. Walter E. Heinz. pastor.
Confessions heard at I p.m.
POMEROY - Liturgv of the Passion and Death of
Christ. 7:30 p.m., Sacred Heart Church.
RACINE - Good Friday service , 7:30p.m .. CannelSutton United l\lcthodist Church.

Sunday, April 4
TUPPERS PLAINS - Easter Sunrise Service (The
Rose), St. Paul United Methodist Church, St. Rt. 7,
Tuppers Plains. 6:30 a.m. For more infonnation call
Connie Rankin at 740-667-6329.
·

LONG BOTrOM - Long Bottom United Methodist
urch Sunnsc Service. 7 a.m.; Sunda) School. 9:30
.m. and worship service. 10:30 a.m. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT- Easter sunrise service will be held
.tt 6:30 a.m. on ApJil 3 \\ ith a breakfast before Sunday
school and church service.

I

• .

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Church of Christ choir
and drama team \\ill present an Easter drama at the 6 a.m.
sunrise sen icc a the church, 427 Main St .• Middlepot1.
presentation written by Nathan Jeffer~. Breakfast to follow; Wor....hip service, 8:15a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
RACINE - Southern Charge United Methodist
Church Easter Sunda) services are as follows: Morning
Star, Sunrise breakfast, 8:30a.m. with worship. 10 a.m.;
Bethanv, -,unrise service at 7 a.m. with breakfast at 8
a.m. mid worship, 9 a.m.; Carmel-Sutton. Sunrise ser' ice at 7 a.m. at the Carmel Sutton Fellowship building
with brea~fast foliO\\ ing; Worship service at II a.m. at
the Worsh1p Center.

Clubs and
organizations

up their pride from there.
Communit\
invoh cment
may end
being the ke) to
your succes~.

Dear Dr. Brothers: I just
landed a job as coach for a
high-school
basketball
, team. Due to the team's

up

history of not ever makin!!
it to the playoffs. my new
Dr. Joyce
job is by no means easy.
Brothers
but I look at it as a challenge. Turns out I migfit be
the only one. 1'\o matter
how much I try. I just can't
get my team going. They
perhaps some
just seem to have no sp1rit ile e2o~
exhibition games with
whatsoever and no desire to
neighborhood teams or
change. Wouldn't vou think
charitv fundraisers against
being the lowest-ranking opponents
they can ~urel)
team in the area would be
beat would begin to raise
enough to motivate them-:&gt; their ~tatus.
_ R.L.
A series of experiments at
Dear R.L.: Motivation is Cornell Unh er~•t) and puba hard thinv to get a handle lished in the Joumal of
on someti;;es. It could be E\pcrimental
Social
that the fact that your team Psychology seems to conhas nothing to lose and firm that the higher a
nowhere to go but up isn't group's status. the more
really \'Cry motivatino to the moti,ated the) will be to
· · .'d
:: •
mdt~ 1 ual member:-..I'hey sta) on top. It is the poten~~1a; ~eel branded \\ 11~ a tial lo~s of status to a team
loser l~bcl and therefore or group they feel is inferior
are less. hkely to W?rk as a that keeps groups and orgateam 1mprove t~~1r ~t~tus. ninltlons on their toes.
It rna~ be that the:) r~ccd to accordin!! to the findin!!s in
expenen~e the feelmg of this study. Being the underbemg wmners before th.e) dog docsn ·t carr) the same
can find the key to cont_ln- \veight. as there is no status
ued success. So anythmg beu1g threatened.just a lessyou. can do to have th~m attractive label to lose. So
ach1eve some easy \\ ms get your team in a position
might help boost their frag- to win ~omething. and build

t?

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I just
~ot out of a contracting job
111 iraq. It was very hard
· '~ork. and I've seen 'en
horrible thing~. Now that
I'm back on
~oil , I'm
finding it hard to get any
kind of job. This might have
~omething to do with the
larc:e faci~l tattoo I have on
my nght cheek. I got it
0\erseas while in Iraq. and I
don't so much regret it as I
resent doors bei•)g shut in
my face. I'm really not that
bad of a c:uv. HO\\ can I
make people "tess judgmental toward me? - A.T.
Dear A.T.: It used to be
that on!\ sailor:-. com icb
and
niotorcvcle gangs
tattoos.
And
sported
although their popularit)
has \\'a\ed and "aned during the past few years as
the \ outh culture has gone
fron1 fad to fad. there is no
doubt that v. e see tattoos in
all walks of life and on all
types of people to a degree
that was unheard of just a
couple of decades ago. So
you are not alone. The
problem is that you haw

U.S.

taken the tattoo thin£ far
beyond what most people
are
comfortable
\\ith .
There ·s a \\hole class of
people who have them onl)
in "secret" places. unaccessible to the ca:-.ual obsen er.
Then there arc those who
ha\'e the one traditional tattoo on the uppcr arm . But
more and more people
seem to be thrO\\ inc caut10n to the '' ind and havinc:
multtple tattoos all 0\ er
their bodtes.
The face. thouc:h. seems
to be one of the -last frontiers. and manv tattoo
artist-- v. ill not con~tder face
work. Unle~~ ;ou ha\e it
remowd. you probably w1ll
ha,·e to resign 'ourself to
\\Orkin!! in a~ficid in which
t ..moo~ ~are considered cool.
or one m whtch 'ou ha ,·e
no contact '' ith the public
and the emplo) er doesn't
mind, or one in whkh ;ou
are \our O\\ n boss. That
still iea\ cs plent) of choice:- stemming from a bic: one
vou made about ''here~to be
tattooed. It real!; "on't
help. at this point. to be
won·) ing about the pa~t put your thinking cap on.
and get coin!!.

(cT20JOb.'': Kim; Feature'
Syndicate

Meigs County Forecast

Church events

Birthdays

e\ ening ... Becoming, light
and \ariable.
Thursdav••. Sunn). Highs
around RO. South wind~ 5 to
10 mph.
Thursday night ...Clear.
Lows in the upper 40~.
South '' i nd~ 5 to I 0 mph.

We~lve

Debt Problems

Dini.n g with Diabetes
Who should attend:
All diabetics and their family

Pomeroy, OH

Contact Andrew Brumfield
at 7 40-992-6626
for more information.

reduclaonl with the credit cord
• We con arrange one
qffordqble monthly payment

Learn about how nutrition affects diabetes,
cooking demonstrations, Receive diabetic recipes.

Time:6-apm
Cost: FREE
Location: courthouse Annex

• We're~ 01 negotooltng
componaes

What: Dining with Diabetes Classes
When: Apri18,13,15

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Coach can't motivate team

p.m.; through March 31, 7
p.m. each evening. Nursery
provided. More information,
Monday, April 5
call 992-5334.
SYRACUSE Sutton
Thursday, Aprll1
Township Trustees regular
CHESTER Chester
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse
Shade
Historical
Village Hall.
Asshocicathion 7 p.m. mheeting
at t e
ester court ouse.
TUPPE~S PLA.I~S VFW Lad1es Aux1~1ary, 7 ~
p.m., at T~ppers Pl~ms hall.
Friday, Apnl 2
Monday, April 5
PO.MEROY PERl _74
POMEROY
Meigs mertmg at 1 p.m. at MeigS
Band Boosters, 6 p.m. in the Mu berry Center. John
band room. New officers to Musser and Paul Reed to
be nominated, plans dis- talk about economic develcussed for variety show and opment in Meigs County.
POMEROY _
Revival
band banquet. Band parents
services
will
be
held
at the
and other asked to attend.
Carleton
Church,
7
p.m.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Cancer Initiative, April 2. 3 and 4 with David
regular meeting, noon, con- Rahamut to speak at the
ference
room,
Meigs April 3 service. Special
music will be featured each
County Health Department.
night. Pastor Robert vance
Thursday, April 8
ELLSTON- The Gallia- invites the public.
Saturday April 3
kson-Meigs-Vinton Solid
PORTLAND ' - Easter
Waste Management District
Board of Directors, 3:30 egg hunt at the Portland
p.m .• district office, Wellston. Community Center, 1 p.m.
for children through 12
years of age.
HARRISONVILLE
Easter egg hunt, 6 p.m. at
Wednesday .•• Sunn\.
Wednesday, March 31
Harrisonville
firehouse. Warmer with highs in the
POMEROY- Revival, Mt.
Refreshments. Pictures with
Hermon Church, located off Easter Bunny. Hunt for ages lower 70s. Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Route 7 on Texas Road, turn
12 and under.
Wednesda)
night. ..
at 36411 Wickham Road.
Mostly clear. Lows in the
Clifford B. Coleman, evangemid 40s. Southea~t winds
list, through March 31, 7 p.m.
around 5 mph in the
each evening. More informaWednesday, March 31
tion call 985-4220.
POMEROY Maxene
MIDDLEPORT- Revival,
Hope Baptist Church, 570 Goeglein will observe her
Grant St., Middleport, Rev. 85th birthday on March 31.
Gary Ellis, pastor; Rev. Gary Cards may be sent to her at
Bowlin, evangelist. Sunday, 35610 Flatwoods Road,
March 28, 11 a.m. and 6 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
CAll NOW and get an

ublic meetings

.

ASK DR.. BROTHEI{.S

r....--------------------...1 I
unity Calendar

.

The Easter bunn~ made a v1s1t to the Me1gs Semor Center Tuesday morning just in time to watch the seniors scramble
around the place m search of colored eggs, each filled with candy, some with a coupon to claim a prize. The egg hunt is
an annual event .sponsored by Overbrook Center for the seniors. The Center provided more than 200 colorful plastic eggs,
and plenty of pnzes for the hunt. Here the bunny (Debbie Jones) looks over the shoulders of Virgil Parsons and JoAnn
Eads, to see what they got in the eggs they found.

RACII'\E
St. John Lutheran Church on Pine Gro\le
Road. sunme and Easter service, 8 a.m., breakfast to
follov..

• Save money Get out of
debt FASTER thun you con
on your own

advocate on your side!
• Avoad bo~kruptcy and maintain

your dignaty
• Havo on advocate deal wath
your credotors

If you hove
over $ 12,000 in debt,

CALL NOW!

Friday and Friday night ...
Clear. Hi!!h" in the lower 80~.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Saturday•••Sunny. High~
in the lower 80s.
Saturday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
Sunday...Mostly sunny. A

chance of shO\\ er" in th~
morning, ~ot a~ \\arm "ith
highs around 70. Chan~e of
raii1 30 pcrccm.
Sunda) night through
Tuesday... Partl)
cloudy.
Lo\\'s in the mid 40s. Hi!!hs
around 70.
~

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PageA4

·The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, March 3 1,

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

B v CHARLES BABINGTON

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX (740) 992-2157

ASSOCIATED PRESS

www.mydallysentinel.com
Democratic groups tried Tuesday to
make a campaign issue out of ne'' s
thnt the national Republican Pat1y
spl'nt $1 ,94(, at a l-.ex-lhemcd
Californi:-t nightclub. hut GOP
acth ists said party ~:hainnun Michael
Steele will Wl';tthel the huhbuh.
The
Rcpuhlkan
Natrona!
Committee fired a staffer who helped
organize the .Jan. 31 visit to Voyeur
Hollywood West,\\ hich features topless dancers. bondage outfits and
erottc themes. It said it will recoup
the money from a donor who paid the
tab and was rcimburseoby the part)
on l'cb. 4.
The ep1~ode raises new questions
about Steele's O\ersight of the R.KC.
But part) officiab said Steele knew
nothmg of the mghtclub \isit by a
group of )Otmg Republicans, \\hich
was listed in a federally required
financial disclosure report, and they
promised to tighten accountmg practice .
'I he
Democratic
Senatorial
Campaign
Committee
pressed
numerous GOP candidates to say
whether Steele should remain as head
of the NRC. But GOP acth ists pre~
dictcu the matter would hlow over
soon
"I don't think there's going to be
an&gt;'one who wants to challenge him."
said Washington-based consultant
John Feehel)', who ha advised evera! Republican candidates and officeholders. Steele generally has done a
good job of catering to lhe needs of
RNC members, Feehel) said.
Ne\\ Mexico-based GOP con,ultant Eddie Mahe said "it \\Ould be the
height of stupidity"' to dump a party
chairman se\en months before a
national election, C\en if some party
donors might be grumblmg.
An RNC memo released Tuesdav
said the nightclub visit involved "'e':_
cral members of the Young Eagle-.
group who had been in Los Angeles
for a meeting. The memo. from RNC

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager~News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
CcmJ!.ress slwll mtlk t• uo Iaili respectiu,l? au
establislrmcut of rd({!iorr, or prolribitirr.{! the free
e.wrcisr tllt'reo..f; cJr abrid.{!illJ!. tire freedom of speeclr,
or of tire prt·ss; or tire ri._(!llt of tiiC people peaceably
f() assemble, aud to Jlttitiorr tlzc Gor,ernmeut
.for a redrt•ss of grievarrus.
Constitution

T()I)AY IN HI ST ORY
Today 1s Wednesday, March 31, the 90th day of 2010.
There are 275 days left 1n the year.
Today's Highlight m H1story.
On March 31, 1968, at the conclusion of a nationally
broadcast address on Vietnam, President Lyndon B.
Johnson stunned h1s audience by declaring, "I shall not
seek and I will not accept, the nomination of my party for
another term as your President."
On th1s date·
In 1492. Kmg Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spam
1ssued an ed1ct expelling Jews from Spamsh soil, except
those w. hng to convert to Chnstlanity.
In 1880 Wabash Ind .. became the first town in the
world to be 1llummated by electncallighting.
In 1889, French engmeer Gustave Eiffel un•urled the
French tncolor from atop the E1ffel Tower, officially mark~
rng 1ts complet1on.
In 1917, the Unrted States took possession of the
Vtrgrn Islands from Denmark.
In 1933, Congress approved, and President Franklin
0 Roosevelt s1gned, the Emergency Conservation Work
Act wh1ch created the Civilian Conservation Corps.
In 1943 the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical
"Oklahoma1" opened on Broadway.
In 1945, the Tennessee Wtlliams play "Tf)e Glass
Menagene opened on Broadway.
In 1949, Newfoundland (now called Newfoundland and
Labrador) entered confederation as Canada's tenth
provrnce.
In 1976, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that
Karen Ann Qurnlan, who was In a persistent vegetative
state, could be disconnected from her resp1rator.
(Qwnlan. who remarned unconsc1ous, dred in 1985.)

Not out if woods yet in Iraq

LETTE R S T O T H E EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

l

News

Editor: Charlene Hoefl1ch Ext 12
• Reporter: B •an Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Ben· Se•gent Ext 13

(usPs 213-960)

Advertising
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell
740-446 2342 Ext 17
, Rotall: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
• Retail: Brenda Davis, Ext 16
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10

:J

Circulation
Circulation Manager , 740-446·2342

Ext '1

1
,~:

General Manager
C.llarlene Hoell ch fxt 12
E·mnll:
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Despite New~ll'eek :\ a'tonishing
stnry announc1ng "Victor) at
Last.'' the n:sults of the Iraqi election
could dcstahil itc the country, a"' they
did five )Car:- ago.
In 2005 , thl' di:-affcctcd Sunnis
hoyt:otted the 'otc and res011ed to
violence during and after the long
interregnum in whi~:h Iraqi factions
bickered and bargained to form a
government. Burned hy under-representation in the Iraqi parhament as a
result of their ho) cott, the Sunnis participated this time around. So C\ er)thing should tum out better, right?
Not likelv.
Despite the 'eneer of multi-ethnosectarian election grouping,. Iraqis
still vote mostly along ethno-:-ectarian lines. A foreign po\\er imposing a
foreign system of democracy at gunpoint
al\\ ays have ::.evcral major
problems in a country :-uch as Iraq.
All of these ha\e to do'' ith underl)ing societrtl force~ that undermine the
supcrstt11Cturc of democral'}'. rendering it artificial.
T he first is that htston: -.hmv"' that
democracy i~ most likei) to survive
in countries that haw reached a certain l'l:onomic lcv~·l and have thus
developed a powerful middle class.
Iraq - the victim of the most grinding economic sanctimls in \\orld history. three devastating "ars smce
1980, and ethnn-sl'Ctarian rebellion tb
far back as the eye can see - ha:secn its economy plummet past the
point \\here democracy is like!) to
prove sustainable.
Second. l rnq. since bccommg indeCO\ er

Letters to the edtto• should bo ltJTIIIed to 300 words. All letters are
.JbJecl to od•t•ng, IT'ust bo stgned and mclude address and telephone
number "Jo .ms1gnod letters Will be published letters should be 1n
good taste addresstng tssues not personaltltes "Thank You• letters
w•tl 'lOt be accepted lor pubhcatton.

t
:t
t

b&gt;

ARe up,,,

Thought for Today: " What Is It to be a gentleman?
The first to thank and the last to complain." Serbian pro verb.

r

$3.7 million in debt.
Under Steele's leadership. the RNC
is pressing for more freedom in how
it raises money~ it is challcngi
a
2002 law prohibiting it and
Democratic Partv ti·om collecting
contnbution~ from corporations a
other~ known as soft money. Steele
said last week that the GOP will take
the case to the Supreme Court.
Some Republican officials and
donors have complained about
Steele's spending dec1sions, saying
the party should devote eve!) U\ ail~
able dollar to II) ing to win House and
Senate races this fall. He held this
year's four-da~ wmter meeting at a
beachfront hotel in Ha\\aii, although
It often takes place in Washington.
Some donors grumbled \\hen
Steele ~pent more lhan S 18,000 to
redecorate his office. Steele. a former
Maryland lieutenant go,emor. also
has received substantial fees for making speeches. e\en though the RNC
pays him a full-time salal).
Some Republicans also ha\e questioned whether the R!'\C is O\ erpa)ing the finance director Steele lured.
Republican
consultant
Robert
Bickhart. Bickhart and his firm have
taken in at least $411 .568 from the
RNC :-;ince Steele hired him last summer. That is far more than the roughly $136,000 the RNC hao; paid Ste(A
during the 2009-10 cycle and riv~
President Barack Obama 's annual
pav of around $400.000 .
Much of the most Ia' ish spending
the major political parties i assoCiated \dth fundrahers . which often
tar!!et \\ ealthv people .
The RNC s{&gt;ent$144.549 for room~
at the Four Sea~ons Resort in Jackson
Hole. Wvo .. in 2009. On March 19
2009, it spent $31.980 for catenng b)
the Breaker~ Palm Beach in Florida.
The Rl'\C paid $18.361 O\er the
past l-.everal month~ to the "Tin)
Je\\el Box" in Washington for "office
"'upplies.'' which may-have included
trinkets or gifts for bi!! donors. It
spent $13.62-2 at Dylan·~ Candy Bar
in New York City.

KoUSl"G stARtS

In 1995 Mextcan-Amencan stnger Selena Quintamlla-

ader Services

chief of staff Ken McKa). did not
name the fired staffer, hut said the
person h.td been warned that such
activities did not quahfy for reim~
bursement.
A Republican official ~aid the
~taft~:r fired \\as Allison Meyers. who
hcadl'd the Young Eagles, which tricl-1
to recruit major GOP donorl-1 45 and
younger. The official spoke only on
the condition of anonymity in order
to discuss a party personnel matter.
The RNC sent $1 ,946 on Feb. 4 to
Erik Brown of Ornngc, Calif., the
donor-vendor\\ ho billed the GOP for
the club visit on behalf of the attendees. McKay said Brown has agreed
to return the money. Bro.,.,n did not
respond to messages seeking comment.
Since No, ember, the RNC has paid
Bro\\n·s
company,
Dynamic
Marketing Inc .• about $19,000 for
pnnting and direct-mail services,
campaign ~pending reports show. He
has contributed severn! thousand dollars to the party.
R;-..;c -.pokesman Doug Heye tncd
to distance Brown from the chief
blame. saying it was unf011unate "that
a loyal GOP donor who ha~ recruited
other donors became involved in this
incident \\ hilc merely trym~ to help
\\hat turned out to be the 1mproper
request of a -.taffer who IS no longer
\\ ith the committee."
The most recent Jinanc1al disclosure report said the RNC spent more
than $17 ,()(XJ for private planes in
February and nearly $13,000 for car
service&lt;&gt;. Heye said such en ices are
used only when needed.
McKa) 's memo says the R.NC is
committed to u ing donors' funds
efficient!) and re ponsibl).
Steele's "upporters ~av he has
brought a refreshing frankness and
energy to the party'&lt;; leadership.
The Rl"C ended Februal) about
$2.5 million ahead of its Democratic
rival. The RI'\C had about $9.5 mill ion on hand and no dcht: the
Democratic r'\ational Committee
reponed $10.7 million in the bank but

·nus Re~9Ms

Perez 23 was shot to death in Corpus Christi, Texas, by
the founder o~ her fan club, Yolanda Saldivar, who was
convtcted of murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Ten years ago: The U.N. Security Council decided to
let Iraq spend more money to repair its oil industry - an
investment rntended to boost the amount of food and
med1crne Baghdad could buy through the U.N. humanitanan program.
Ftve years ago: Tern Schtavo, 41 died at a hospice in
Prnellas Park, Fla., 13 days after her feeding tube was
removed rn a wrenchrng right~to-die dispute that had
engulfed the courts. Congress and the White House and
drvrded the country. A damning report by a presidentral
commrss•on concluded the Umted States knew ''disturbrngly l.ttle" about nuclear and biological threats from
dangerous adversaries. The World Bank approved Paul
Wolfowrtz as its new president. South Carolina defeated
Sa1nt Joseph's, 60-57, rn the NIT championship game.
Chicken entrepreneur Frank Perdue died in Salisbury,
'Md at age 84
One year ago: Presrdent Barack Obama arrived in
London w1th his wrfe, Michelle, at the start of a trip to
Europe, h1s frrst JOUrney across the Atlantic since taking
off1ce. The Israeli Knesset approved Benjamin
Netanyahu's new government. Former Argentine
President Raul Alfonsm d1ed at age 82.

Cor rection Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
l-Ou MSon concc•n 1n all stone 1s to Publ shed Tuesday tl'rough Friday, 111
be accunto If you know of an error Court Stroel Por-~eroy, Ol'lo. Seconda tory ~ tl'o newsrooll' at (740) class postage paid at Pomeroy.
992 2'56
Member: The Assoc•ated Press and
tlle Oh o Newspaper A~oc.auor
t
Our main number is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
uons to The Dally Sent.nel. ~0. Box
729 Pomeroy Oh.o 45769 ·
Department extensions arc:

2010

GOP: Steele will survive sex club flub

The Daily Sentinel

l"hc First Amendment to the U. S.

--~~:--~~~~

'l

''ill

Ivan
Eland

pendent of Briti"h rule. has largely
been ruled b\ a :-eric"' of dictator:-. the
latest of'' hich was Saddam Hu'"'ein.
As demon-.trated b\ Prime ~1 inister
:":ouri al-;\1aliki's invocation of his
title a:- Commandcr~in-Chief of Iraqi
:-ecurit\ force" and his demand for an
electoral recount (c,en before the
official re"'ulh were announced),
Iraq·, political cul\ure is still one of
threah. intimidation. and a~cu:-ation.
Thi"' j, a fact that can't he changed
just b~ holding a few ~kction"-.
Third and mo"'t tmpottant. the
under\) ing ethno·sectarian fis'&gt;.lll'e"' i n
the countrv remkr a "-llcces~ful ll'dcr~
al sy-.tcn1 of government almost
impossible. Sud1 a ~y:-tcm reyuire~
close cooperation between thl' nation~
ill. provincial, and local levels, which
is very difficult \\hen groups fight for
power at all k\ l.'ls on an ethno·sl'Ctarian ba,is. A Yen loo~c and Iill)t\'
deccntrnlizcd confcdcrati1ln might be
a better form of gm·emmcnt for a
fractured I I~lJ.
The results of the recent election
indtcate a VCI) clo ...c race bet\\ cen
Prime .Minister nl~.\1alilo.i"s faction.
\\ hich was supported main I) b)

·Shi'a. and Ayad AJia,,i"s group
\\ hich "as pnmaril~ backed b)
Sunni"-. Since the majorit) Shi'i \Ole
has been split. it b pos"'ible that
Alia\\ i could tl) to form the ne:-.t go\crnment If tha&lt; happens, the Shi'a
and the Kurd~
long oppres..,ed b)
the minorit\ Sunnis - micht ,ulttcipate that recumng. and the) could
react violent)\'.
I f instead ai-M aliki ends up tl) ing
to form a government. then the
Sunnb could again feel politicall)
mar~inalized. reicnitinc their m~ur·
gene). Also. return~ indicate a tr?n£
,howin!! bv the antt-Amencan rad1cal
Shi'i ~1uqtada ai~Sadr. '' hich could
aJ,o cau"'e a major problem for alMaliki 'ince he helped rcpre!; alSadr', n · .as in Basra and el.;,e~
\\here. The i\.Lrd"'- no\\ Je..,.., unified
- are a \\ l. cu.rd.
Lastlv. no matter ''hat final co.11ition end:- up controlling the lmqi go'·
crnment, the dose ekction
mean another protracted inten-cg
before that negotiated grouping
r hc gap could be tilled "ith more
ethno-sectarian strife.
Thus. it is too early for the U.S.
el ite's
self-congratulation
that
Jemocracv ha"' finallv been s&lt;llidificd
in Iraq. Defeat ~ould- )et be snatched
from the jaws of victory after l' .S
forces le~ne .•1nd even befon.· that it
the latest election b as dc..,tnbililing
as was the one in 2005.
( Jmn Eland i.\ the awhor O/
"Partitioninrt for Peace: t\11 E\it
Strategy for Iraq'' and a ::OeiiWI
Fellow at the lndependem Institute.)

�- ~-~--~---- ----

Wednesday, March 31,

2010

Obituaries

The Daily Sen tine] • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Atom smasher will help reveal 'the beginning'

Eric Nelson Amold
Eric Nelson Arnold. 3R. Yorktown, Va .. passed away on
March 23, 2010.
He was bo~n in Gallipolis on.Aug. I, 1971 to Jerry N.
Arnold and Lmda L. Madara. Enc was the most wonderful
father and husband. He graduated from Denbigh High
Sc~ool . in 1989 and attended Chri:-.topher Newport
~tllverslty. He wm~ked at Douglas At)uatics for over 15
ears before becomtng 0\\ ncr and Pres1dent of the company in 2006. Eric put his life into the company and the
~n~ployees that he_Iped n.1ake Douglas Aquatics the success
1t ts today. He believed m every person and their ability to
be the best that they could be. He was also involved in several c~mununity dubs a~d civi~ organ_izations including the
Amencan Red Cross, lor wh1ch Enc taught classes and
made numerous donations. Eric was involved in the York
County Youth Football League as a coach for the YorkS7aford Bulldogs. He was loved and respected by all the
k1ds and parents who had the pleawre to work with him. In
his personal time. Enc loved spending time with his friends
, and family. He loved playing basketball or hanging out at
the beach to play volleyball with friends. Other interests
included golfing. s\\ imming. boating. fishing and football.
Eric is survived by his loving wife, Rebecca Arnold;
two children. Taylor Straus and Hunter Arnold; his father,
Jerry Arnold (former!) of Pomeroy) and wife Peggy
Arnold: ~is mother, Linda Madara (formerly of Pomeroy)
and husband Gary Madara: his paternal grandmother,
Lorena Arnold and maternal grandmother Hope Moore.
both of Pomeroy; father·in-law, Sherman Hayden; brother. Jeffrey Madara; and sister. Leslie Demaske. her husband Devin and their son. lsaal'.
He was preceded in death hy his mother-in-law, I .inda
Hayden: paternal grandfather. Edgar Arnold; and maternal
grandfather. Russell :VIoorc.
Tue~day.

•

tloca1 Briefs
Clothing give-away
SYRACUSE - A clothing give-away will be held a the
Syracuse Community Church on Friday, April 9 beginning
at 9:30a.m.

Gospel sing set

I

--------------

POMEROY -There will be a gospel sing beginning at 6:30
p.m. at the Mulbcny Community Center. Featured singers will
be John Dolley and Bryclc. Hanging Rock Junction. and Ne\\
Songs. A love offering will be taken for God's N.E.T.

GENEVA (AP) - The
world's lat·geq atom smasher threw together minuscule
particles racing at unheard
of spt:eus in couuitions simulating those just after the
Big Bang - a succes~ that
kick--started a mega-b1llion
dollar experiment that could
one day explain how the
universe began.
Scientists
cheered
Tue~day's historic cra'&gt;h of
two proton beams, producing three times more force
than researchers had crl.!ated
before and marking a milestone for the $10 billion
Large Hadron Collider.
"This is a huge step
toward unra\ cling Genesis
Chapter I , Verse I - what
happened in the beginning.''
physicist Michio Kaku told
The As~ociated Press.
''This is a Genesis
machine. It'll help to recreate
the most glorious event in the
history of the universe."
Tuesday's smashup transfotms the I 5-year-old collider
from an engineeling project
in te."t phao;e to the world's
largest ongoing experiment.
.experts say. The crash that
occun-ed on a subatomic scale
is more about shaping our
understanding of how the univer:--e was created than immediate improvements to tech·
nology in our daily lives.
The power produced will
ramp up even more in the
future as scientists at the
European Organization for
Nuclear Research. or CERN.

watch for elusive particles
that have been more theorited than seen on Earth.
The consequence~ of finding those mysterious particles could "affect our conception of who we are in the
universe," said Kaku. cofounder of string ncld thco•Y and author of the book
"Ph):--ics of the Impossible."
Physici~ts, u~ually prone
to caution and nuanc.:e,
tripped OV.!r them~elves in
superlatives praising the
importance of the Large
Hadron Collider and the -.ignificance of its generating
regular science experiments.
"This is the Jurassic Park
for patticle physicists," said
Phil Schewe. a spokesman
for the American Institute of
Physics. He called the collider a time machine. "Some
of the particles they are
making. now or are about to
make haven't been around
for 14 billion years.''
The first step in simulating the moments after the
Big Bang nearly 14 billion
years ago was to produce a
tiny bang. The most potent
force on the tiny atomic
level that man has ever created came Tuesday.
Two beams of protons were
sent hurtling in opposite
directions toward each other
in a 17-mile (27-kilometer)
tunnel below the SwissFrench border - the coldest
place in the universe at '&gt;lightly above absolute zero.
CERN used powerful super-

conducting magnets to force
the two beams to cross; two of
the protons collided, producing 7 triUion electron volt:..
It's bizarrely both a
record high and a small
amount of energy.
It's a record on the atomby-atom basi'&gt; that physicists use to measure pure
energy, Schewe said. Bv
comparison. burning an
atom of wood or any other
chemical reaction on an
atom scale produces one
electron volt. Splitting a single uranium atom in a
nuclear reaction produces l
million electron volts. Thts
produces - on an atom-byatom scale - 7 million
times more power than a
~ingle atom in a 'nuclear
reaction, Schewe ~aid.
The reason this is safe has
to do with the amount of
particles in the collider.
Tuesday's success involved
just two protons making
energy. instead of pounds o~f
uranium. Schewe said.
Kaku, a professor at City
College of New York.
described the amount of
energy produced as less than
the total energy made by
two mosquitoes crashing.
The successful collision
was viewed by scientists
watching monitors, who
cheered the result~.
"That's it! They've had a
collision," sa1d Oliver
Buchmueller of Imperial
College in London.
Across the world, at the

California Institute of
Technology in Los Angeles,
researchers and !&gt;tudents
watched
reports
from
Switzerland.
"It marks the beginning of
a new era of exploration in a
new range of energy." said
physics professor Harvey
Ne\\man.
"Experiment~ are collecting their first physics data
- historic moment here!'' a
scientist tweeted on CERN's
official Twitter account.
"Nature does it all the
time with cosmic rays (and
with higher energy), but this
is the first time thh. is done
in Laboratory!" said another
tweet.
t'\ow the beams will
become stronger. more
densely packed with hundreds of billions of protons.
and run daily for two years
to give scientbts manv
more chances to find eh.isive particles. Even then.
the particles are so tiny that
relatively few protons t. iII
collide at each point where
the beams cross in front of
cathedral-sized detectors.
The data generated is
expected to reve&lt;fl even more
about the unanswered questions of particle physics. such
as the existence of antimatter
and the search for the Higgs
boson. a h) pothetical particle
- often called the God particle - that scientists theorize
gives mass to other particles
and thus to other objects and
creatures in the universe.

Water
from Page At

run. Also. these lines that
arc being put in are replacing old. brittle. leaking
ones which means the customer wins."
Another major benefit for
POMEROY -The golf scramble for seniors \\Jll begin residents, as Gerlach sees it,
are the installation of ne\\
Friday at the Pine Hills Golf Course. Tee time IS 9 a.m.
fire hydrant~ "'hich mean
more protecuon
.. We \\ill double the
amount of h) drants we have
UNDATED - An accident involving a vehicle which no\v \\ htch will lo\\ er
rolled over was reported Tuesday afternoon in the homeowner's insurance.''
area. One \\oman was flown by air medical heli- Gerlach said, adding the
for treatment of her injuries.
hydranh are upgraded v. ith
crashes were reported on Monday in the Rutland quick, ~nap-on fittings and
and Albany areas, one on Ohio 124, the other in the area of will be connected to stx.
County Road One and Lieving Road One person was inch water line to pro\ ide
flown by atr medical helicopter for treatment of their adequate pressure.
injuries after the acc1dent on Ohio 124.
No other details were available about these incidents. which
are being inve...tigated by the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

Workers finish
installing containment shut-off
valves on ''the
tee" in
Middleport. In
the event of a
water leak, this
type of valve will
allow village
workers to shut
off streets as
opposed to
whole sections
of town when
making repairs.

Senior golf scramble beginning
Accidents reported

Local Stocks

•

AEP (NYSE) - 34.42
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 53.55
Big Lots (NYSE) - 37.37
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 31.31
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 37.23
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 14.26
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.25
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.66
City Holding (NASDAQ) -34.05
Collins (NYSE) - 63.13
DuPont (NYSE) - 37.78
US Bank (NYSE) - 25.86
General Electric (NYSE) - 18.30
r1ey-Davldson (NYSE) - 28.53
Morgan (NYSE) - 44.58
oger (NYSE) - 21.44
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 25.88
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 56.20
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·

DAQ)- 22.59
BBT (NYSE) - 31 .97
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 16.71
Pepsico (NYSE)- 66.77
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.52
Rockwell (NYSE) - 56.16
Rocky Boo~ (NASDAQ) - 9.67
Royal Dutch Shell- 57.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 109.32
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.91
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.02
WesBanco (NYSE)- 16.47
Worthington (NYSE) - 17.15
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for March 30, 2010, provided by Edward Jones flnan·
cial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174~Member SIPC.

Kitchen from Page AI
more efficient and also help
with our catering services
that supplement the senior
nutrition programs.''
In more practical terms,
the new steamer will cook
vegetables without boiling
which can often cook some
of the minerals and vitamins
out of the vegetables. The
proofer oven ~allows yeast
items. such as bread, to rise
more quickly while the double convection ~lVen• facilitates even more baking.
"The new equipment
makes everything easier.''
Sharon Matson, nutrition
director of the MCCoA said.
ore we had only one

working oven, and now
having two means we can
increase baking."
Last year. many Meals on
Wheels programs v.ere
forced to change or reduce
their services but the \Val mart
Foundation stepped in to
help. This year. the Walmart
Foundation is spending more
than S2 million nationwide to
make sure Meals on Wheels
programs have the equipment
they need to maintain their
operations into the future.
Also. recently added at
the senior center kitchen
was a salad buffet purchased through an excess
equipment auction.

gas. By law. this cost is
passed along to Columbia's
retail customers on a dollarfor-dollar basis. at zero
profit
to
Columbia.
Monthly SSO price information will be available at
the company':-. web site at
ColumbiaGasOhio.com.
Columbia's direct sales
customers will not have to
take anv action as a result of
thi~ change. Customers paying the GCR charge will
· automatically become SSO
customers
"Columbia Gas of Ohio is
still in the gas supply busi-

Beth Sergent/photo

Gas from Page At
ness." said Columbia Gas of sen an alternative supplier
Ohio
President
Jack through the CHOICE® proPartridge. ''All of the gas gram. or who participate in
supply options which exist- their community's natural
ed before will remain in gas aggregation program.
place. including the option will continue to pay the
of buying gas directly from price offered by their current supplier. CHOICE®
Columbia."
Columbia Gas. of Ohio customers may choose to
will continue to maintain return to Columbia's SSO
its pipeline system. respond rate at any time. but should
to emergencies. answer review their supplier concustomer calls. offer pay- tract for any cancellation
ment plans. read meters fees. SSO customers will.
and senti bills to all cus- have the option to switch to
tomers. regardless of their a CHOICE® supplier at
any time.
gas supplier.
Under the SSO system.
Customers who have cho-

Columbia will buy natural
gas from suppliers selected
through an annual wholesale gas s!-lppl) auction. The
first auct1on was held Feb.
23. and the Public Utilities
of
Ohio
Commission
(PUCO) approved the
results on Feb. 24. The auction resulted in a Retail
Price Adjustment of $1.93
per thousand cubic feet
(Mcf). or $0.193 per Ccf,
which will be added to the
NYMEX monthly settlement price to determine the
SSO. The May SSO price
\\ill be set on April 28.

Eastern from Page At
I certification for the remain-

der of the .s~:hool year as
was Sunshine Russell ~s a
substitute teacher aide. The
board also ·approved bus
drivers Carolyn Ritchie and
Connie Osborne to transport a student to the Ohio
State School of the Deaf in
Columbus.
An agreement with Ohio
University f;om Aug. 1.
2010 to June I. 2011 for
provision of athletic training services at a cost of
$10,100 was approved by

the Board, as was a contract
with A-I Sanitation to provide trash removal sen ices
from April. 2010 to March
31. 2012.
In other action the Board
acknowledged the donation
of a shelter house with storage facility from the Eastern
Elementary Parent Teacher
Organization. It was noted
that the structure cost
$10.820.88 and that labor
was provided by Eastern
Local School
District
employees.

The Board approved a
resolution
accepting
amounts and rates as determined by the Budget
Commission and authorized
the necessary tax le' ies to
the county auditor for fiscal
year 2010-20 I !.Changes to
the permanent appropria-

tion
resolution
were
approved for submission to
the county auditor. as were
the chaperones for the
senior trip.
~ext meeting will be
April 21. 6:30 p.m in the
Libran
Elementarv
Conference Room.
•

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..

�PageA6

The Daily Sen ti nel

\.Vedncsday, March

Farnily IVIedicine

Wherl sf);es get in )'Our eyes
Bv M ARTHA A. SIMPSON,
D.O., M. B.A.
ASSOCIA,-E PROFE'SSOR
OF FAMILY MEDICINE
OHIO UNIV[;RSITY COLLEGE OF
OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

Question: Lntcly I've
been gelling these red
bumps on my eyelids, and
my mother keeps calltng
them "pig sties." She told
me to put hot compresses ~.m
them, and this usually
works. Lately. they're not
going away. and I think I'm
going to go to the doctor.
Do I need to? What cau~es
these? What cnn I do to treat
or prevent them?
Ans\\ er: What you nrc
describmg is called n "stye'',
not a ..pig sty" (the medical
condition can be spelled
with or Without the ''e" nt
the end). The official medical term for n St) e is a
hordeolum. J'hey occur
,., 11\!n an oil glnnd - called
n meibomian gland - in the
eyelid becomes inflamed or
infected. At that point, they
well up, much like a punpte, and ti1ey usually feel
warm to the touch.
An internal stye occurs
when a meibomian gland
under the surface of the skin
becomes infected, and an
external stye occurs ''hen
the base of the C) clash gets
infected, lea\ ing a red lump
on the cd,se of the eyelid.
Most phys1cians do not distinguish bet"een • the two
since the treatment is the
same for both.
Your eyelids have man)
functions. but primarily.
iheir job is to open and close
in order to clean and lubri-cate) our ey ec;. There are oil
glands on the edge of the
upper and lower eyelids that
produce the nece!&gt;sary lubricant for ) our eye~.
Unfor1unatcl). bacteria can
get mto these glands and
cau~c mnammatton and
infection Thts leads to
st) s. '' ht\:h are btt ltke
bo1ls th. t &lt;x,{ ur on ) our
C)ehds.
An expenenced ph) s1ctan
can diagnose a st)C JUst by
lookmg at it. Usually. no
addttional testmg 1s neces-

Scientist: FDA suppressed imaging safety concerns
BY M ATTHEW

P ERRONE

sary. You are right to apply
ASSOCIATED PRESS
warm compresses to treat
these. I "ould recommend
WASJIIl'&lt;GTUl'\
A foryou usc a warm compress mer Food and Drug
&lt;~bout four times a day. Jf Administration o;cientist said
the styes don't respond in a Tuesday hi:. job was elimiday or so. you m.1y need to nated after he raised conseen physician to g.ct anti hi- rem-. about the risks of radiptic eye ointment. Do not ation exposure lrom highever attempt to drain a stye grade medical scanning.
b) ~qucezing it or poking it
lk .Julian Nichoh1s 'swd at
with a sterilized needle. It is a public hearing that he and
ah' ays hest to leave them other H)A staffers "were
alone except for hot packs pressured to change their sciand medications. Squee;dng entific opmion,'' after the)
can spread infection into the opposed the appro\ tll of a cr
tissue around your C) e. scanner for routine colon can
\\hich can lead to serious cer screening. Nichol&lt;~s said
medical conditions. Pokin~ that he objected to exposmg
can do the same. plus 1t othCTWISC healthy patient~ to
opens the risk of :-.eriously , the cancer risks of rad1atton.
damaging your e)e.
After FDA officials pu~hed
While styes will usually ahead wtth plans to clear the
heal and go away on their device. Nicholas. no" a
own or" ith a little antibiot- ph) &lt;;icwn at the 'Scripps
ic ointment. the) ,omet1mes Cltnic in San Diego. said he
do not drain if the oil gland and eight other staffers raised
becomes fully blocked. their concems with the diviWhen this occurs. we call it sion's top director Dr. Jeffre)
a chalazion. This kind of Shuren last September. The
infection may need to be device apparently is still
drained by a licensed oph- under review.
thalmologist.
"Scientific nnd regulatory
One thing that "ill help review process for medical
prevent styes i:. to avoid devices was being distorted
pulling on your eyelashes. by managers who were not
Sometime:. exce:-.:&gt;ivc or old following
the
Ia\\ s."
mascara can contribute to Nicholas said. A month later
the development of a stye. N~cholas' posi.ttOn was terMost importantly, al\\a\s mmated. he sa1d.
"ash your hands befo.re
Nicholas docs not think
touchmg the ared around there \\US undue influence by
)OUr e~·es.
the manufactu~cr in his
Styes are a relathely ~uster. but that ~ts more ~au­
common occurrence. but t1ous stance \\US tn oppos1t1on
not ever) one gets them. to that off·DA h.ighct ups.
Some chronic condition
The allegallons about
like diabetes and chronic suppression of sctenllfic
dandruff increase their like- dissent come at an inopporlihood. h sounds as though tune time for the &lt;~gene).
your stve" come often
The f·DA announced an
enough • and sta) long effort to imprmc .:.canning
enough.' to "arrant ntten- · saf~t)' m. Febru~ry after three
tion from ) ot.r family j Caltfom1a hospttnh. rc1~oryed
ph) sician.
hundreds of acute radtat1~n
Family Medtcme® i.\ a overdoses last )Car. wtth
~~ et'kl\ column. General
man) p&lt;~ttenl'&gt; repo11ing lost
nu~dtcal questtm:s can bt
hair and skm redness
scm to Martha A. Simpwn.
Tue&lt;.dJ) 's mee11n '' s
D0
M 8 A.
Oluo de 1 ned to ktd, t t 1 t
L mH nm
Collt r;e oJ
!'lp.. n fhc .. •en&lt;:)
0Heopathu
Medtcme. seeJ.an • mput holT' ph) 1
Commwucarwn
O{ftce, \:tan.., and mJnufacturers on
Athens. 0/uo 45701. or additional ~afcty t.:ontrob
fanulrmedicine@oucom.olu and training to tmpro\e CT
ou .edu.
canners and other mcd1c I
1maging de\ tees
Hundred'&gt; of !'!lUdic'&gt; ' ..
hnked certam t) pe of r dtJ
lion. including the t) pc u.-.cd
in medical imaging. to cancer
that can surface decades later.
FDA medicdl re\ tC\\er Dr.

CDC: Not too late to
get swine flu vaccination
BY MIKE

STOBBE •

ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA
Health
officials arc renewing_ their
push for Americans to get
S\vine flu vaccinations following a recent uptick in
hospital cases in Georgia
No other state has had
such an increase in hospitalizations. and overall swine
flu illnesses and deaths ha\e
been down for months. But
m the past two weeks. 70 to
80 people m Georgia ha\ e
been ho pnalized '' ith
S\\ inc flu - the most since
September, according to the
Georgia Department of
Community Health.
Most were unvaccinated
adults and many had preexisting conditions tbat
made them more ~usceptible
to swine flu, federal health
officials said Monday.
Georgia has one of the
lower vaccination rates for
swine flu in the country.
said Dr. t\nne Sdlllchat. a
flu expert with the Centers
for Di ease Control and
Prevention, although she
declined to elaborate.
Swine flu first was first
identified last Apnl and it
hit the country in two" aves
- a smaller spnng \\ave
and then a larger fall wave.
Flu activity hac; been declming since November. and
health officials have had to
push harder and harder to
get people mtcrested in getting some of the tens of millions of unused dose".
"Many Amcncans arc still
vulnerable becnuse they
haven't gotten vaccinated
yet," saitl U.S. Surgeon
General
Dr.
J{e~ina
Benjarn in, who jomcd
Schuchat in n l\londav teleconference with repottcrs.
About
~6
million
Ame1 icans have been vaccinated in a campaign that
began in October.
If a third wave of 11lncss
occurs. it likel) would be in
pockets where fc" people
were previously infected or

got
flu
shot!'.,
said
Univer Jty of Michigan flu
expert Dr. Arnold Monto.
The Georgia ho:-.pitahzauons were in areas of the
state that were not hard hit
last year, Schuchat said.
Swtne flu ha~ sickened
'about
60
mill ion
Amencans. hospitalized
265,000 and killed about
12,000. The U.S. death toll
from the new HINI virus.
declared a global epidemic.
1s about one-third of the
·estimated deaths from a regular flu season. But it ''as a
fearsome threat because
children and teens are much
more vulnerable to it than
seasonal flu.

Robert Smuh, a colle.tgue of
Nicholas \\ ho dlso presented
at Tuesday's publtc meeting,
said he hoped the fDA
would learn a les!&gt;on from
Nicholas' testimon).
"Science must not be
ignored, suppres~ed or distorted as that endangers the
puhlic,'' Smith told the audience.
Smith, \\ho still works for
the agency. supported
Nicholn5 · conclus1on th.tt
CT scanmng for colon cancer '&gt;hould be reJected on
!&gt;afety grounds.
Agency spokesman Dick
Thompson ~aid in a statement
the FDA's inspet'lor geneml
looked into allegations of
retaliation against agenc) sCIentists and did not pursue further action or invest1gat1011.
The agency's policies do not
allow staffers to be penalized
for expressing scientific
'iews, he added.
"It is not uncommon for
scientists. both internal and
external to the agenc). to
di~agree on the safety and
effectiveness of products
under re' iew or on the steps
needed to achieve public
health goals,'' said the FDA
statement.
N1cholas Sdid, ho\\ever,
he ha~ ne\er been contacted
nnd i-; Mill waitin~ to henr
from the FDA's 111 pector.
He stres e~ that the inspector's juri diction is cnminal
investigation!&gt;, not alleg.ttions of Improper conduct.
As a rc' tewer of medical
de\'Jce applications, Nicholas
repeated!) rejected a manufacturers· rcque~t to market a
cr scnnner specifically for
colon cancer screemng.
Accordin£ to Nicholas.
bet\\ een
and 2 percent of
cancers are CJU'led by Cf
scanning. and he did not ''ant
to sef! scanning used when a
convention&lt;~)
colono'&gt;copy
could be u.:;ed instead.
C'T
scans
prO\ 1Je
d t. .ed three d1M..
nal
of the

rj

ri-.ks of cr scanning.
"I hope ) ou under~tand
that the failure to include a
w.trning on the label will
mean that patients Will
undoubtcdh develop abdominal cancer: and leukemia,"
Nichol.ts ~rote "It may not
happen tomOITOW, but yes.
sadly it \\ 11l happen."
N1cholns said he Wao;
ridiculed b) agency man
age1s for "raising the bugaboo ot r.~diation."
Mcd1cal experts arc some
'What divided over the u'&gt;e
tulne'is of the so called \ 1r
tun! colonoscop). \\ hich wu'&gt;
de'&gt;lgned as a les.:.·invac;l'&lt;e
altcmau' e to colonoscop).
The American Cancer
Societ) and the American
College o' Radtolog)' endorse
the procedure for itc; potential
to boost screening for colon
cancer, the countr) 's o;econd
leadmg ctncer killer.
But ~ome in'&gt;urerc; anti the
government's O\\n Med1care
program refuse to pay for
the procedure. que-.tioning
its effectivenc!'.s and the
rationale of exposing
health) patients to radiation.

Supporters of the procedure
-.ay that \ irtual colonoscopres
use )o\\ le' els of radiation
that don't threaten older
patient&lt;; who get colonoscopies. Radiation exposure
that cauM!c; cancer accum
late!'. mer a lifetime.
younger people the lll()l)t
ri~k population for screening.
"When we look at VIrtual
colonoscopy, the benefits of
detecting polyps ~ar outwe1gh
the theoretical nsk the to"'
amounts of radiation 'WOUld
have on people of that n~e."
said Dr. Michael Macan of
Ne" York Uni,ersity's
Langone Medical Center.
cr scans became popular
because they offer a quick.
rel:ttl\ely cheap ''ay to get
an almost surgical 'icw of
the bod&gt;. Doctors are free to
u:.e them ao;; they choo&lt;;e, but
FDA apprO\ at for specific
indications allo"'s companies to tout those uses in
marketing material&lt;;.
The average American's
radiation exposure has near1) doubled in the last three
decades. largely due to CT
tests. according to the FDA.

CLUf {OR
WfDM~DAY, IJARCII 9t~t

"The Old Cival War Soldier
can almost see it"

cr

n '

ne r) 4 Jt t
ac.cordmg to the FDA.
:-.J tcholas smd H)\ ru .,
1) barred from n
nutacturer or
g t e detml
auon
In a June :!009 lettd tv
'&gt;emor managers. !\tcholas
stressed that pattents should
be \\ arned of the radtatlOn

Pt.ruf Rl.UDIBfR:
•lgg It 116t If 1 ¢~of bullfltn • fgg Ill not et eptlrata tttfW!tt
'fgg It fllll ilfflde 1 meTHntde objatt ' You IIIII not llMd dlggltrg trJolt
• You will liDI nesd to ellmb Dt uta 1 ltddet

Preschool Registration
The Athens-Meigs Educational Sel'\ke
Center Preschool registration for the
20 I 0-2011 school year w11l be held

, '

Monday, May 3, 2010 at
Bradbury Learning Center
Appointments arc necessary.
To chedule nn appointment contact

Betsy at
740-992-2165.

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31, 2010

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• Page 2

31, 2010

Talented, but young, the Eagles
201 0 Eastern Eagles
look to defend TVC Hocking crown
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio After a season in which the
baseball and softball team ·
both achieved perlect league
record , the Eastern Eagle
baseball teams is preparing to
repeat.
The ba eball Eagles earned a
10-0 league mark. going 19-6
overall in the 2009 season.
The team won the TVC

Hocking title and a sectional and first team all-district.
Senior Titus Pierce returns to
championship.
The team made it a sweep of the team following a 2009 sealeague awards. landing five on son that earned him the
the All-TVC team, and winning Defensive MVP award.
Eastern head coach Brian
Coach of the Year, Offensive
MVP. and Defensive MVP. in Bowen. now in his lOth season,
2009 seniors was named Coach of the Year
the league.
Derek Griffm, Zach Hendrix, in the TVC Hocking and the
and Ben Buckley, were named . all-district Coach of the Year.
to the All-TVC team, with Bowen has compiled a 132-87
Griffin earning Offensive MVP
honors, as well as being named
Please see Eacrles, Pacre 5
to the Coaches All-Ohio team
•
•

2010 Eastern·Eagles Baseball Schedule
30
I

3
5
8
10
12
14
15
16

Marcl1

at South Gallia

AJui1

vs Mi11er
at Adena (DJO
at Federal Hocking
vs Southern
at Belpre (DH)
at Waterford
v Buffalo
v Tnmhle
at Wahama

5 p.m.
5p.m
1 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
1:!:30 p.m.
5 p.m.
., p m.
., p m.
5 p.m.

19
21
22

23
26
28
29

at MiJier
vs Parkersburg
vs Federal Hocking
vs South Gallia
at, outhern
at Buffalo
vs Waterford

Mal:

3

at Trimble

5

at Parker~burg
at Meig
Athen (DH)

7

8

5 p.m.
5 p.m.

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.
5 p.m.
5pm.
5 p.m
5 p.m •
n

Andrew Bcncdum
Nik Brannon
Titu Pierce
Sam Rucker
Greg Barringer
Colin Connolly
Trenton Deem
Tyler Hendri
Freddy Hernandez
Dalton Riebel
Ryan Shook
John Tenogila
Jay Warner
Lonnie We tfall
Chris Amshary
Jake Brannon
Arik Horner
Luke Kime
Tyler Miller
Jacob Parker
Aaron Shamp
Marshall Aancstad
Max Carnahan
Tim Elam
Ethan • rottingham
Derick Powell
Joey Seowdcn
Josh Shook
Kyle Young

GJ:wk

Position

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

C
CF!P
RF/P

Jr.
Jr.

Jr.
So.

o.
So.
o.
So.
So.
o.

Fr.
Fr.
~·r.

l·r.
J r.
lr.

Fr.
h.

38
SS/3B
C/OF
OF
SS
28
OF
2B/JB

38/l 8/P
lB
I B/P
OF
2B/OF
3B
2B/OF
OF
C
Of

OF
2B/ F
Of
IB
Of•

SS

28101·

He d Coach: Bnan Bowen (10th ea on)

.

•

�Wednesday, March

• Page 3

31, 2010

2010 eigs
arauders
Roster
I
.i

4

o
~

10
12
13
14

15
16

17
~2

30

Ju tin 1)'er;

lrca

\1cKmn~"v

Caleb Davt
•
Ju tin Cottenll
(olton Ste\\-art
R)'an Pa)ne
Austin Sa)'re
1 athan Roth!!cb
Zach Sayre ~
Jose Whitlatch
Joe Powell
R)an Jeffer;
R) an fa) lor
Heath Dettwiller

Head Coach:
Jeremy Grimm
(6th season)

Marauders looking for
improvement in 201 0 season
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

ROCKSPRINGS. Ohio
After a 6-6
league finish a year ago. the Meigs
Marauders baseball team is looking to
improve in the upcoming season.
Meigs will be under the direction of
head coach Jeremy Grimm in his sixth
season \VJth the Maroon and Gold.
The Marauders had three Ali-TVC
selections last season. £\\o of whom are

no longer with the team following graduation. 2009 seniors Brvan Delong and
Clay Bolin were all-league selection~.
while Core\ Hutton and Jason Moms
\\ill also be missed after graduatmg.
Delong was first team all-district, and
Bolin was a second team selection.
Caleb Davis. a senior, is the lone allleague selection returning to the dinmond for the Marauders baseball team
Please see Improvement. Page 5

Sen ing) ou 'incc 194f• 'ith Russell Sto" cr Cand)
q ua lit) pt·cs··r·aptiotl
-;en ic'c (,.r·eeflng
•
·
·ard s
...
at compctitiH• pdce .
Jirn Shore Figurines

We honor most thit·d
pa•·t) prescription plans.

LuLu Bt.~ads
Full Line of l\1t.•dical Suppl

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Good Luck
Eastern, Meigs
Southern &amp; Wahama
&amp; Supply
Co.

Valley
555 Park Stre

t • tiddleport.
.1.

740-992-66 I

�\Vednesday, March 31,

• Page 4

2010

20 0 So hern Tornadoes Tor adoes k o
distric title behi,
a e a Roster
experienced p·tc ing

Mm:ffi

29 at \\ah.un.t
~'
Rt i.:r \~II )

5 p.m
5 p.m.

April
~

..j.

5
0
7

9
10
II
12

13
I-l-

l.16
18
19

20
22

2-1-

Du tin ( u tcr
John Gra)
Enc Buzza d
Ethan tarttn
Je. Ritchie
1arcu Hill
Gref! Jenkin
De\In Dillard
Ta\lor Deem
Jordon 'ra) lor
Daniel Jone
Cole Graham
Dylan Bas
Adam Warden
Michael Manuel
Kyle Cunningham
Adam Pape
Dustin Sal ·er
Daniel Jenkm
athan Richard.
Daniel Ramthun

So.
Fr.
Jr
So
Sr.
So.
Sr.
So.
'r.
Sr
Jr.
Fr.
So.
Jr.
Sr.
Sr.
Fr.
Sr.
Jr.
Fr_
Fr

P OFOf 2B

1

r-Or

-2B-P
C- B-Of
P-C-Of
OF-(
OF
SS-P
IB-38
OF
OF-IB
IB-P
OF
P-1. -OF
P-1 F-OF
P-I• f
C-1 rF
I B-38
(-Of
P-I F

Head Coach: R. an Lemley &lt;8th eason)

BY SARAH HAWLEY
:'dA LEY MYuA YTRIBUNE

OM

R Cl E. Ohio
With the
enttre pitching taff returning
from a
ea.on ago. the
outhem Tomadoe ba eball
team look to continue with the
:-.ucce. of the past ea on·.
After a .:00 record in the
2009 ea on, the
outhern
Tomadoe went deep into the
po t ea on, winning both the
~ectional and di tri t titles.
Southern fell to
ewark
Catholic in it-; regional semifinal conte t.
Southern will agam be under
the direction of head coach
Ryan Lemle). in hi eioht eaon.
The Tomadoe I t fi e pia)er from Ia t eru n · team to
graduauon. one of whom \\as
an all-Ohio -;ele tion in 2009.

J D. Whittin ton ' a
the
team\ .til-Ohio honoree, -while
Zach A h. Brad Brown. Chri
Holter. and John Br.mer wer
&lt;Ill ke)' contributor.., t the team.
There are e en cmor leading the Purple and Gold thi
ea on. ~md an e pcnenced
pitching taff
nior Jordon
Ta\lor ha been an AIJ-TVC
eiection the pre\ iou two ea, on . and wa a 20 9 second
team all-distnct pick. 1ichael
Manuel, a enior. \\a a 2009
II-T C honoree and eamed
an honorable mention all-di trict el ction. Other senior.
providing Jeader&lt;&gt;hip are Je..,se
Ritchie. Greg Jenkms, Taylor
Deem, K) le Cunnmgham, and
Du tm Sal er.
There are . e eral fre hmen
looking to make an impact of

Please see Pitching. Page 5

5pm
\ ~ outh Web teqDH)

.tt Trimble

'0011

5
7
8
9
12
I~

15
16

17
19
21
22
26
29

' \\atcrford
at 'outh Galha
at Ea tern
at \ hiteoak
' Miller
' Wahama
at fed Hock.
\'\ 1cig
at Oak Hill Tau
'""Trimble
\ outh Gallia
at Waterford
\sEa tern
at 1iller

5p.m
5 p.m.

5p.m.
5 p.m.
5p.m.
roan

5p.m.
5p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.

el .York (DH I
11 a.m
' Fed. Hock.
5 pl1t.
at Ri er alley 5 p.m.
' \\ellston (Dl-1)
5 pl1l.
at

3
4

Mu

5p.m.
5p.m.
:p.m.

�n

day, March

• Page 5

31. 2010

provement

2010 Meigs
Schedule

from Page3
d '-"til b · looked to as a le.tdcr on the
D.t\IS wt~-; a first team ,111-di tril:t
ctJon 111 "' 09. Justin Cotterill and
Ill J f~ r \\til also be key leader for
2010 :vl.trauders. All three of these
tr \\ill contribute in theu O\\n

l1 Jd

March
29 " Marietta
~1

at Gallia

cademy

5 p.m
5 p.m.

AJu:il

5
6
8
9
10
12
13

16
17
19
20

at Ra,en wood (DH) 4 p.m.
at Well ton
5 p.m.
v&lt;; . 'el on ille- York
5 p.m.
at Athens
5 p.m.
at Point Plcas,mt
5 p.m.
\s fedeml Hock. (DH) oon
\ s Belpre
- p.m.
at Alexandt::r
p.m.
at outhern
5 p.m.
at Shcrdan (DH)
II a.m.
at Vinton ( aunt)
5 pm.
v Well ton
-p.m.
at ·el on 1flc- York
5 p.m.
' Vinton ( ounty
5 p.m.
at Bea r · Fi ld ' Libert)
Union
lO a.m

'· then
at Belpre
'· Gallia
ademy
s lc ander

4
7

Pitching
from Page4
t am thi st.:ason, along \\ ith sopho-

ho ''ill compete for \arsil)
playmg time.
'I hr e expectations for the upcoming
,, on arc to finish above .500. compete
1'01 a league title, and play well at tournament time. fn addition, the team
w.lllts to continue the suc~.:ess or recent

Eagles
from Page 2
record in his previous seasons.
The Eagles return seven lettermen in
seniors
Andrew
Benedum,
Nik
Brannon. and Pierce, juniors Greg
Barringer. Tyler Hendrix. and John
I'cnoglia, and sophomore
Chris
msbary. Pierce wm. a fir,st team alldistrict selection. while Benedum was a
ccond team selection.
The Eagles look to be competitive

Mal:

vs Point Plea ant
vs Ea tern

When you think of Community you think
of friends, neighbors and volunteersthat's who we are at Farmers Bank.
Visit one of our offices near you today!
Friends. Neighbors. Volunteers.

It's Who
We Are!

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
p.m.
p.m.
5p.m.

-p.m.

seasons.
League pia) will be tough ... Eastern
and Federal H kine ha\e to be
favorite .. Trimble \\ill al o be much
impro,ed." Lemle) commented.
Lemle \\ill be a .. is ted h\ • ick:
Dert\\ iller, Bill Berrv. and Zach Ash.
The league and n~m-lcague ~chcdule
will he difficult for the Tornadoes, as
they face Wuhama, South Web~tcr.
WhiteOak. South Gallia. Meigs. and
Wellston. Southern will abo be participating in the Oak Hill Tournament in
mid-April.
against team in tht: league and the tournament. The team is "talented but inexperier:ced" according to Bowen. but
there IS a good deal of depth and competition. The expectation is for the
team to continually improve thro ughout
the season.
Bowen will be assisted by Ken
Amsbary. Pat Newland, and Jacob
Warner.
The Green and White will face tough
camp tition in the upcoming season as
they face non-league opponents dena.
Buffalo. Meigs, and Parkersburg. and
future league opponent.
Belpre.
Wahama, and South Gallia.

Have a great time
and enjOy the games!

Pomeroy
Tuppers Plams
Gallipolis
Mason
Po1nt Pleasant

Fanners
Bank

(740)992-2136
(740)667-3161
(740)446-2265
(304)773-6400
(304)674-8200

www.fbsc.com

�\Vednesday, larch 31,

• Page 6

2010

2010
Schedule
Muo:h

10 at South Gallia 5 p.m .

AJn:il

\ Mrller
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
2. \" Wahmnc~
3 v R.Valley (Dlll
Noon
)
at ~ cd. Hod.
5 p.m.
6 .1! Waham.t
5 p.m.
X \ s Southll11
5 p.m.
9 \:-. Wan'Cn
5 p.m.
10 at Belpte (DHJ

12:30
12
14
I 'l
16
Il
19
20
2~
J&gt;
29

at Waterlnrd
5 p.m .
' bed . Hock
5 p.m.
' Trimble
5 p.m.
.tt \all "([&gt;HJ1B
at S .til•&gt; (DH &gt;1 B
..tt hiler
'l p.m
~)' . \alley
) p.m.
\ s Stouth Galha ) p.m.
at Southet-ra
5 p.m .
\s W&lt;tkliord
5 p.m

J

at Trimble

M£u:_

Lady Eagles ready to defend
TVC Hocking title
Cummins. Megan Carnahan.
Ca sie Randolph. Turley, and
Rawson. Turlev was first
TUPPERS PLAit'S. Ohio team all-district. "Rawson and
- Following a story book Cummins were ·econd team
2009 campaign. the Eastern selection .. and Randolph was
Lady Eagles are looking for a named honorable mention.
The seniors and juniors will
repeat.
Eastern comes off a perfect be looked to as the leaders of
10-0 T C Hocking season, the team. and have stepped
going 15-4 overall in the 2009 into that role nicely in the presea on. The Ladv Eagles season.
1 here are a Jot of VOUil!!
return the TVC "Hocking
Coach of the Year. Offen. i\e gtrl on the team this ;easo;
MVP, and Defensive MVP in that are doing well in the presea. on. The youngt:r pia) er.
Coach Pam Douthitt.
llie
will be important to helping
Raw on. and Kase. Turley. the team in several areas of
re pecthely.
the game. There is a lot of talDouthitt i · in her 29th ea- ent among the younger girl
on a. head coach of the Lady dnd the\ will contribute
Eagle::.. ompiling a 367-186 throughout the ea~ on.
record in her pre\ ious ca
The pitching
taff has
son
1mprmed for th1 ~ eason. \\lth
The Lady Eagle lo t only a three pla) er rotation now a
one pht)er. Hope Bland. tr m po ibility
Ia t ea on . Bland was J. four
E pe~ tation are h1gh for
year team member.
the team , \\Jth Douthitt
F \ e All-T\ C pia) ers return addmg. "'we ha\e orne e perienc
pJa~mg
Lj
1b
• lA wittl
).1
B Y S AR AH HAWLEY

SHAWLEYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

together. so our exp~:ctations
are a little higher this ) ear."
""The girl have been working
very hard and it is a pleasure
to have this group of athletes." Douthitt stated.
The team ·s goal for the
upcoming season
i
to
improve with e\er) game and
to make noise wlkn it is tournament time. Last season.
the Ladv Eagle. were 1\no~:ked
out in the district tournament
following a 1-0. 13 inning Joo.,s
to Leeo.,b~rg Fairfield. ~
La. t ea on' league tttle
wa the 7th m . chool history,
\\ hile the Lady Eagle · earned
their 14th ectional crown.
Ea tern ism ·earch of its fir~ t
di-.;trict title ·me the 2003 ca-;on
The Ltdy Eagles face a
tough challenge thi
cason
w 1th non-league conte ts
a gam 1 S)'mme
\'&lt;illey.
Warren. Belpre. and Wahama.
a well ,t.., competing m an
diWd)'
comp tttrvc: TVC

Ioc~~

5 p.m.

2010 Eastern Lady
Eagles Softball
Roster
No..

Nanlf

Gnl!k

fosition

3
4
7

Hayley Gillian
Kiki Oo.,borne
Jenah amp on
Brenna Holter
Megan Carnahan
Britney Morrison
Brooke Johnson
Shanda Welch
ami Cummins
Kau~: Dur t
Ton Goble
Kelsey ~lyer.
Ca ~ie Randolph
Allie Raw on
K.t..,~.: Turley
Cheyenne D 1czr
Breanna Ben&lt;;ley

So.

OF
OF
P-INF
OF
2B

10
II
12
)"

14

18
20

21
.,..,

28
30
31

33
~4

Fr.
So.
So.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
Fr.
Sr.
• 0.

Fr.
So.

So.
Jr.
Sr

• a.
So.

Head Coach: Pam Douthitt (29th

ss

~

OF
IB-DH
P-JNF
OF
.)B

C'-Of
IB

cp

OF-I rp
p
a on)

, , ~~~----~--~~~~~--------~--------~----~

�Wednesday, March 31,

• Page 7

2010

2010 Ohio Valley Publishing
Composite Schedule
Wedn~ay~~1

Baseball
Ironton &amp; Joe at South Gatr.a. 5 p "'
Me1gs at Galha Academy 5 p n
Wator1ord t Wahama. 5 p.m
R1ver Valley at Southe,l", 5 p.M
Softball
Ironton
Jc at South Galha 5 p.rr
gs at C
Academy 5 p M
Wayne at Pomt P ea ~:r 5 30 p '11.
Watertord at Wahama 5 p m
R1ver Valley at SouL'lerr, 5 p.
Girls Tennis
Herb Hoover at Pt Pleasant, 4 p.rr.
Boys Tennis
Gallia at Pt Pleasant, 4 30 p.M.

Tb.urs.d.ay, As2!]1 1
Baseball
Solitt" Galha at Oak Hil 5 p rr
Pain Pleas.? a Wayne 7 p rr
Wood Co Chr at Wahama (DHJ
4 .;()p.M.
tv111ler atE s er1, &lt;; p.rn.
&lt;;outt&gt;ern at Trimble 5 p.M.
Softball
Wahama at South Galha. 5 pr
Miller at Eastern 5 p.rn
Soul~ er11 at Tr•mble , p.M.
V1nton County at Meigs 5 p m
Track.
Southern at Waterford. 4:30 p.m.
Galha Academy. Hannan. Pomt
Pleasant at Carlos Akers Memonal,
Cabell Midland

frid.ay,_Aw:iU
Baseball
Mergs at Ravenswood (DH). 4 p m
f't Pleasant at Herb. Hoover 7 p n
Elk Valley Ct&gt;r at Hannar, 6 p.m.
Softball
, S1ssonvJUe at Pomt Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Easter11, 6 p.m.
Tnmble HI Me1gs. 5 p.l'1.
Sa~
Baseball
East at South Gama (DH), 1 p.M.
Charleston Cath. at Wahama, 1 p.m.
Gania Academy at Jackson (DH), 1
p.m.
Eastern at Adena (DH). 1 p.m.
South Webster at Southern (DH),
Noon
Softball
Sc1otoville East at South Gallia (DH),
1 p.m.
Gall1a at Jackson (DH). 1 p.m.
Herb. Hoover at Pt Pleasant, 1 p.m.
River Valley at Eastern (DH), Noon
Track
Eastern, River Valley, Southern,
South Gallia at Rocky Boot
Invitational (Nelsonville· York), 10
a.m.
Monday. April 5
Baseball
Me1gs at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant at Gallia. 5 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hockmg. 5 p.m.
Watertord at Southern, 5 p.m.
Hannan at South Gallia, 5 p.m ,
South Point at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball
Pt. Pleasant at Gallia, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Water1ord at Southern. 5 p.m.
Me1gs at Wellston. 5 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Gallia Academy at Ironton. 4:30 p.m.

Iu.esday. April 6
Baseball
South Gallla at Sy. Valley, 5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Chas. Cath . at Pt. Pleasant. 1 p.m.
Manetta at Gallia Academy. 5 p.m.
Cross Lanes Chr at Hannan (OH), 4
p.m
Softball
Oak_ Hill at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Manetta at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Ravenswood at Pt. Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Eastern at Wahama. 6 p.m.
Roane County at Southern, 5 p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Track

EasteM M.e1gs, Soli':'lern, So~,;'"l
Gatna at Eastern Ouad, 4 30 p.I'T'
Hannan, Porr! Pleasar. a' 01ck
Darby ClassiC, i=-Oca
Galha Academy 1 Log~n, 5 p n
~c!ay._AJ,lll!.1

Baseball
Soc
'n at South GaiiJa 5 p.m.
Ro ne County • • Pt Pleasant, 2 p '"11
Warama • Tnmb :l 5 p m
GaiDa Academv ;:: lrortor '&gt; p.m.
Fi1Irland at R1ver Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball
Southern at South Gallia, 5 p.n.
Gallla Ac&lt;..demy at Ironton. 5 p.m.
Polnl Pleasant at Best of Best, TBA
Ihurslfay.Aonl 8
Baseball
Jle gs at Athens 5 I' m
~ bertv/Gl n DanE' at P Pleasar •
prr
Roane Co at Waharra (DH), Noor
Soutt"ern at Eastern. '&gt; p m
Softball
ornt P'ea~nt at TolsiS, 5.30 p.'1l.
Soult"em at Eastern 5 p m
Mergs at Athens. 5 p.m.
BoysTenn!s
Pt Plec.&gt;ant at Galha 4·30 p fT'
F.rJday.Ami!J!
Baseball
Me1gs at Point Pleasant, 5 p.m.
Wahama at St Mary's, 1 p.m.
Hannan at W.lhamson. 5:30 p.m
SC'utt er't at Whrteoak. 5 p.rr.
Riv::· Valley at Chesapeake. 5 p m
Softball
Warren at Eastern, 5 p m.
Track
GaiiJa Academy at Chesapeake. TBA
Girls Tennis
Pt Pleasant at St Mary's, 4:30 p.m
Boys Tennis
Pt Pleasant at St. Mary's, 4.30 p.m.
Gallla Academy at Minford, 4.30 p m

BEST WISHES

South Galha at Rock H·u. 5 p.'11
Galha at Chesapeake. 5 p.m.
W1nf1eld at Po1nt Pleasant 5.30 p.'Tl
w~ha
at Southern, 5 m.
MelfjS at Alexander, 5 p m
Track
Meigs. SotJth Gallia at Jackso:l
Quad. 4 30 1'11"
f;y,; ·" H nnan Pornt Plea r•
F'otl"l Plea '1t Quad 4 30 p !'1.
Southen at Be.,:·e 4:30p.m
Girls Tennis
Pt PI ~ nt at Ravenswood. 4 ::,o
pm
Boys Tennis
PI Pleasant at Ravenswood. 4 30
p'11

r

FOR ASUCCESSFUL

Wel:!ne.sdn.Amil14

Baseball
Wat:
a 1! South G-" ra 5 p
PI Pleasant at R.wenswood 5 lO I' "'1.
JackSOn at Gal Acade"'Y 5 p 1
Bu~lo at Easter l, 5 p.m
R1ver Valley e.• Rock Hill. 5 p.n
Softball
u&lt;:~Ckson at Gallla Academy r; p.M.
Me1gs at W thama 5 p m
Federal Hock1ng at Eastern. 5 p &lt;n.
RJVer Valley at ROCk Hill, 5 p r
Boys Tennis
Galha at Wheelersburg 4 3&lt;' I) rr

'.

-

-.=c-~

·. ' k·.:

.

;:&lt;.~.

'.;.,..;::

--. ~

.~

' '

,

Itrnrsday, AQriL1.5
Baseball
Harvest Chr at South Gallia, 5 p M.
Buffalo at Wahama. 5:30 p '11.
Tnmble at Eastern 5 p.m.
Southern at federal Hocking, 5 p &lt;n
Softball
Sor..'h Gallra at Coa Grove 5 p. '11.
Po1nt Pleasant at Waharra 4 30 p.m.
Tnmbte at Eastern 5 p.m
Soutt&gt;e•n at FederaL HocKmg, 5 p.M.
Girls Tennis
Sissonvrlle at Pt Pleasant. 4.30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
S1ssonvrlle at Pt. Pleasant. 4 30 p.m.
Gall!a AcadeMy at Logan, 4:30p.m.

S&lt;rturday.~

Baseball
South Gallia at Clay (OH). Noon
Fed Hock at Meigs (DH), Noon
PI Pleasant at Vinton Co.(OH), Noon
Portsmouth at Gallia (DH), 3 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre (OH). 12:30 p.m.
Southern at Hannan (DH), t 1 a.m .
R1ver Valley at Wellston (DH), Noon
Softball
South Gallia at East Tornament, TBA
Portsmouth at Gallia (OH). 3 p.m.
Po1nt Pleasant at Best of Best. TBA
Eastern at Belpre (DH), 12:30 p.m.
Fedock at Meigs (DH), Noon
Track
Eastern, Southern at Belpre Shnne
Relays, 10 a.m.
Monday...Ap.t:il12
Baseball
Belpre at Mergs. 5 p.m
Po1nt Pleasant at Wahama. 5:30p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan. 5 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m.
Softball
Gallia Academy at Logan, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5 p.m .
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley
(Ritter Park), 4 15 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Point Pleasant at Spring Valley
(Ritter Park), 4 15 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 4:30
p.m.
Tuesday. April 13
Baseball
South Gallia at Rock Hill, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant. 7 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 5 p.m.
Hannan at HWllington St Joe, 5 p.m.
Softball

Erlday._AJillill
Baseball
South Gallia at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Southern, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Jackson at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Galha at Fa~rland, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Symmes Valley (DH), TBA
Me1gs at Southern, 5 p.m.
JaCkson at R1ver Valley. 5 p.m.
Track
South Gailia at GIOvanni's lnvitahonal
(Coal Grove), 4:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ritchie County
Gallia Academy, Meigs at Oak Hill
Invitational, 4:30 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Poca at Point Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Poca, R1tch1e County at Point
Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.

Satlm1ay..AQriUZ
Baseball
Meigs at Sheridan (OH), 11 a.m
Pl. Pleasant at Chapmanville, 2 p.m.
Wahama at Williamstown (DH),
Noon
Ironton at Gallia (OH). 1 p.m.
Hannan at Van. M1dland Tra1l, 1 p.m.
Southern at Oak Hill Tour.. Noon
River Valley at lr. St. Joe (DH), Noon
Softball
Ironton at Gallia (OH), 1 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Magnolia, 2 p.m.
Eastern at Symmes Valley (DH), TBA
Track
Eastern, River Valley at Warren, 10
a.m.
Southern at Unioto. 10 a.m.
Gallia Academy at Parkersburg
Invitational, TBA
• • Monday..A~L19

Please see Schedule,
Page 9

Since 1872

member FDIC

�Wednesday, March 31,

• Page 8

2010

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�Wednesday, March 31,

Schedule
from Page 7
Tuesday. APril20
Baseball
Oak H1ll at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Wellston at Metgs, 5 p m.
Pt. Pleasant at RiVer Valley. 5·30 p.m.
Waharna at Charleston Cath., 6 p.m
Galha Acad ~ at Manetta, 5 P m.
Softball
South Gallta at Oak Hill 5 p.rr
Galha Academy at Marietta, 5 p m
Wahama at Chas. Gath (DHJ, 5·30 p.m
Symmes Valley at Eastern, 5 p.rr.
Wellston at Me1gs, 5 p.m.
Track
Gallia Acadomy. South Galha at Jackson
Quad. 4.30 p.m.
Hannan, Po1nt Pleasant at Po1nt Pleasant
Quad
Eastern at Nelsonville-York. 4:30p.m.
River Valley (boys) at Wheelersburg, 4·30
p.m.
Girls Tennis
R1tchie Co. at Pt. Pleasant, 4:30·p m.
Wednesday. Apri1J!1
Baseball
South Galllll at Southern, 5 p.m.
Waharna at Man. 5·30 p.m.
Gallia at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Parkersburg at Eastern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Galha at Southern, 5 p.m.
Gallia at Portsmouth, 5 p.m.
Po1nt Pleasant at Poca, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Roane County, 5 p.m.
R1ver Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
•
Track
Meigs, Southern at Athens, 4:30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
at Lucasville Valley, 4:30 p.m.
Ibursday. April 22
Baseball
Fairland at South Gallia, 5 p.m

• Page 9

2010
Me1g at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.
Poca at Pomt Pleasant. 7 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m
Southern at Walertord. 5 p.m.
Softball
Fatrland at South Galha, 5 p.m
Waharna at Po1nt Pleasant, 4 30 p.m.
Southern at Watertord, 5 p.m
Meigs at Nelsonville York, 5 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Pt Pleasant at Herb. Hoover, 4:30 p.m
Boys Tennis
Portsmolth at Galha, 4:30 p.m
Friday, April23
Baseball
South Galllll c• Eastern 5 p 'Tl
Vmton County at Me1gs. 5 p m
S1ssonvtlle at Pomt Pleasant 7 p.r.J.
Wahama at Buffalo. 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
R1ver Valley at Fairland. 5 p.m.
Softball
South G ll1a at Eastern. 5 p.m
Tols1a at Pomt Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
R1ver Valley at Fa~rland. 5 p.m.
Track
Meigs. South Gallia at Fa~rland lnvttattonal,
4:30p.m.
Girls Tennis
Point Pleasant at Scott. 5 p.m
Boys Tennis
Point Pleasant at Scott, 5 p.m.

SalimJaY.~

Baseball.
Me1gs at Beavers F1eld vs Liberty Umon, 10
a.m.
Belpre at Wahama (DH), 11 a.m.
Athens at Galha (DH), 1 p.m.
Hannan at Harvest Chr (DH), 2 p.m.
Softball
Athens at Gallia (DH), 1 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant at Chapmanville, 2 p.m.
Wirt Co. at Southern (DH), Noon
Track
River Valley at Paul Wood Memonal, Point
Pleasant. 10 a.m.
Eastern. Gallia at Marietta, 10 a.m.
Girts Tennis
Chapmanville at Pt. Pleasant, 11 a.m.
Boys Tennis

Chapmanvlile at Pt. Pleasant, 11 a m
Portsmouth, Chillicothe at Galha Academy.
11 a rn.
Mortday. April 26
Baseball
Athens at Me1gs. 5 p.m.
Ponti Pleasant at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Gatlia Ar:ademy at Warren, 5 p.m.
Eo stern at Southern. 5 p.m
South Galha at Hannan, 5 p m.
Chesapeake at River Valley, S p rn
Softball
Galha Academy at Warren, 5 p.n.
Roane County at Wahama 5 p rr
E'astern at Southern, 5 p. rn
Athens at Me1gs, 5 p.m.
Chesapeake at RiVer Valley, 5 p m
Boys Tenms
Galha at Manetta, 4:30 p m.
~.Apr1L21

Baseball
South Gallia at Harvest Chr, 5 p.m
Me1gs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Ravenswood. 5:30 p.m.
Galha Academy at Fairland, 5 p.m
Van at Hannan. 5 p.m.
R1ver Valley at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Softball
Coal Grove at South Gatha, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Fa~rland. 5 p.m.
Trimble at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.
Me1gs at Belpre, 5 p.m.
RJVer Valley at Tnmble. 5 p.m.
Track
Eastern, Southern, South Galll3 at Eastern
Quad. 4:30p.m.
Gallia at Pt. Pleasant. 5:30 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Athens at Gallia Academy, 4:30 p.m.
~nesday.~

Baseball
South Gallia at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Gall1a Academy at Meigs. 5 p.m.
Po1nt Pleasant at Nitro, 6:30 p.m.
Eastern at Buffalo, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball

. Kelly R
h, C, CC P, ATC
Certified Chiropracttc Sports Physician

South GaiiJa at Wahama 5 p.m.
Galha Academy at Me1gs. 5 p.'Tl
Po1nt Pleasant at Wayne, 5:30 p m
Coal Grove at R1ver Valley, 5 p m.
Jhur~day,

APril 2.9

Baseball
Alexander at Meigs, 5 p.m
Pt. Pleasant at Roane Co., 5 p m.
Watertord at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Cross Lanes Chr at Hannan. 6 p m
Southern a! Miller. 5 p n
Rock Hill at fl1ver Valley 5 p n.
Softball
Green a South Galha 5 p rn
Buffalo at Wa~!Tla, 5 30 p m
Waterford at Eastern. 5 p fTI
Southern at M1ller, 5 p m
A(exander at Me1gs 5 p m
Rock Hdl at R1ver Valley, 5 p. 'Tl
Track
MeJQS at Vtnton Co. 1:111. 4:30 p 'll
f.lli!ay..AQrl1.30
Baseball
Eastern at South Galha, 5 p m.
R1ver Valley at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Softball
Eastern at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Wahama. 5 p.m.
Track
Easte[n, Southern, South Gallia at Federal
Hocking lrlllitabonal, 4:30 p.m.
Pomt Pleasant· at Gazette Relays, UC
Stadium
Hannan at Ripley Invitational
Gallia. Rlllet' VaDey at South Point, 5 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Jackson at Galha, 4:30 p.m.

saturday._May_,!
Baseball
Cross Lanes Chr. at South Galll3, 1 p.m
Tnmble at Wahama (OH). Noon
Harvest Chr. at Hannan (DH), 2 p.m
Southern at Nels.· York (DH). 11 a.m.
M1ller at R1ver Valley (DH), Noon
Softball
Wahama at Trimble (DH), Noon
Southern at Nels.·York (DH), 11 am.
M1ller at River Valley (DH), Noon

Track
Po1nt Pteasarl at Gazette Relays. UC
Stad1um
Eastern at Morgan 10 a.m.
Southern at logan. 10 am
Monday, .May 3
Baseball
River Valley at Pt. Pleasart, 5·30 p.m.
Logan at Gallla Academy. 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble. 5 p m
Federal Hocking at Southern 5 p.M.
Softball
..ogan at Galha Acadeny, 5 p m
Pom Pleasant at Scott 6 p m
Eastern at Tr ble 5 p rr.
federal Hock1fl9 at Southern, 5 p m
Waharna at Metg 5 p ~
F!llrland at RIVOr Va ley 5 rr
Girls Tennis
POint Pleasant at SJSSOillllle 5 p 'Tl.
Boys Tennis
Po1nt Pleasart at S1ssonvifie 5 p.rn,.
Galli a at PortsfTIOuth, 4 30 p m.
Iuesday,.May 4
Baseball
Southern at River Valley, 5 p.m.
Softball
Meigs at P01nt Pleasant. 5 p.m.
Southern at River Valley. 5 p.m.
Track
Gallia, S Gallia at Coal Groo.oe. 4:30p.m.
Eastern at Vinton County, 4:30 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake 5 p.m.
Wednesday...Ma-5
Baseball
Rock Hill at South Gall13. 5 p.m.
Po1nt Pleasant at R1pley, 6 p m.
Gallia Academy at SEOAL Day
Champ1ons. 5 p.m
Eastern at Parkersburg. 5 p.m.
Softball
Rock Hill at South Galha, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at SEOAL Day
Champions, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Jackson, 5 p.m.
Boys Tennis
• Logan at Gallia Academy. 4:30 p.m.
Track
Gallia at Circleville lnv, 4c30 p.m .

of

of

�Wednesday, March 31,

• Page 10

2010

2010 Lady
Tornadoes
Softball
Brooke Chad\\-ell
Chcvene Dunn
Chchi Ritch1e
Breanna Taylor
Limhay Teaford
Lynl(·e Tucker
Stcphame Befl) m.m
\ad:t Counts
Bohbi Ham
Kate!\ n Hill
Kdse"y tranr
Cierra Bement
Kell) Humphrey
Morgan McMillan
Hope Teaford
Maggie Cummms
Kyrie Swann
Christa Berryman
Jaclyn Mees
Tedra Sayre

Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.
So
So.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.

Head Coach:
Katie Dick--on
(l st ea on)

Lady Tornadoes start season with new coach
Teaford, will be returning to
SHAWLEYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
lead the team along with honorable mention all-district
RACINE, Ohio The player
Lynzee
Tucker.
Southern Tornadoes will Taylor was also a first team
open the 2010 season under all-district selection and
the direction of first year Teaford was honorable menhead coach Katie Dickson, as tion in 2009.
they look to. improve on the
The 2010 Lady Tornadoes
13-12 (3-7 TVC Hocking) will look to the seniors to
record from a season ago.
lead the way, especially
Coach Dickson, who also Taylor, Teaford, and Tucker
headed the volleyball team who were dominant forces on
for the 2009-2010 year, will last season's team. There is
have
several
returning a lot of young talent to mix
seniors from the 2009 team. with the senior leadership of
Four players from last sea- the team for the upcoming
son's roster graduated fol- season.
lowing the 2009 season,
There will be four underincluding all-district second classmen on the full-time
team selection Chelsea Pape. varsity roster, with sophoOther graduating players mores Katelyn Hill and
were Emma Hunter, Sam Kelsey Strang, and freshmen
Patterson, and
Rochelle Maggie Cummins and Kyrie
Boso.
Swann. Other younger playTwo All-TVC team mem- er will also be stepping up on
bers from
last season, a game by game basi to fill
Breanna Taylor and Lindsay offensive and defensive roles
BY SARAH HAWLEY

as the need arises.
''Returning so many g1rls
from last season has helped
us to build on fundamentals
and develop a stronger head
game,'' Dickson stated. The
team is looking to build from
one game to the next, and
"the rest will fall into place''
according to Dickson.
"My goal is to teach every
aspect of the game I can and
develop the girls' love for
and ability to play competitively."
Dickson
added,
"Coach Kelly Pape left an
excellent foundation in these
girls and e are working hard
to build on . that."
In addition to an always
challenging league schedule,
the Lady Tornadoes will face
West Virginia opponents
Wahama. Roane County, and
Wirt County, as well as Ohio
teams R1ver Valley and
Meig~.

2010 Southern Schedule
March
29

31

at Wahama
vs River Valley

5 p.m.

5 p.m.

April
1

5
6
7

8
12
13

15

16

19
21

22
24

26
27
29

at Trimble
vs Waterford
vs Roane County
at South Gallia
at Eastern
vs Miller
vs Wahama
at Federal Hocking
vs Meigs
vs Trimble
v~ South. Gailia
at Waterford
vs Wirt County (DH)
vs Eastem
at Roane County
at Miller

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
·5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
Noon
5 p.m.
.) p.m.
5 p.m.

May
1
3
4

at Nelsonville- York (DH)
vs Federal Hocking
at River Valley
~

IJ a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m .

�Wednesday, March 31 ,

• Page 11

2010

2010 Meigs
Softball
Roster
3
4
:&gt;

6
H
9
II
12
14
I
16
21

Mt:n VanMeter INr
OF
Kastle Bal er
Of'-C
brin Patt~rson Or-P
Shanalle Smrth li';J
Mreki Bnrnes
OP
handra Stanley I ·1·- P
Tcs" Phelp
( -P
Emalee Gl.t
L f
Juh&lt;~ L antl
I F
I 1 a 1.tnt: \\ r P I F
Tr kia Smith
Ol
Kcl~ey Shuler

Head Coach: Steven
Wood (I t ea nnl

Lady Marauders prepare to
defend TVC Ohio title
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEYCMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

ROCKSPR I GS: Ohio
1 he
Meigs Lady Marauders enter the 20 lO
softball season as the defendmg T C
Ohio di ision champions. under ne\\
head coach Steven Wood.
Meigs a vcraged seven runs per
game last season, and gave up four
runs per game to earn a 12-6 overall

record and a 10-2 league record. The
league championship, the 13th in
school history, was the first for the
~Ieigs softball team since 2005.
The Lady Marauders lost two players from last season due to graduation. a well as TVC Ohio Coach of
the Year D::ne I·ifc. Of the graduating seniors for the 2009 team. Taylor

Good Luck
To All AtHa THatn~
°

OPEN
l.oh
7DAYS AWEEK
3tlfEilfJ.. 10:30am-9:00pm
C
1

Please see Defend, Page 15

228 West Main Pomeroy, O H
7 4 0-992:-54.3 2

�Wednesday, March

• Page 12

31,2010

Eastern
track up i
numbers
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAJLYTRIBUN- CO

TUPPERS PLAJ, , OhioThe Eastem track teams will
once again be a force to be
reckoned with as both the bo)S
and girls team return several
key participants from a season
ago.
Coach Joshua Fogle is 10 his
seventh . ea on at the helm of
the Eastern tmck program. and
is looking to take hi progmm
deep mto the po t cason.
The Eagle return two tate
qualifiers in Mike John on
(high jump) and Klint Connery
(400m). La t ea on' regwnal
qualifer
Emeri
Conner)
(800m). Kelly \ mebrcnne1
(di cu , 4x400m relay). and
BJ .• 1oore (4 800m rei l
also return. Johnson was
high JUmp champion at
rel!ional meet.
Departing scrior. from a
son ago included three regmn.Jl
qualifiers. 1org.m Bun ..., a a
regional qualifier m high jump,
with Keith Aeiker and Jo h
Hupp both qualifing a mem
bcr of the 4 ROO relay t~.:am.

Bovs

2010 Eastern Eagles Track Schedule
March
27

at Warren

10 a.m.

April

10
13
17
20
24

27
3
6

at NelsonviiJe-York I 0 a.m.
vs South Gallia
4:30p.m.

30

at Belpre
at Point Pleasant
at Warren
at Nelsonville- York
at Marietta
vs Southern
at Federal Hocking
(OGG Invitational)

10 a.m.
4:30p.m.
10 a.m.
4:30 p.m.
10 a.m.
4:30p.m.

Mu
I
4
12

14
4:30 p.m.

at Morgan
at Vinton County
at TVC Meet
(Vinton County)
at TVC Meet
(Vinton County)

10 a.m.
4:30p.m.
4 p.m.
4 p.m.

The boys team will be entering the season a the defending
TVC Hocking champion .
There are several new mem
ber to the track team, som of
whom have experience at the
junior high level. 'cwcomers
for the boys team that will
make a big impact immediate!
include Kyle Connery, Brayden
Pratt. and Zakk Heaton.
Boys team members for the
upcoming season are Paul
Morrison, ~1ike Johnson,
Devon Baum, Ryan Amos,
Klint Connery, Kyle Connery,
Brayden
Pratt.
Case
McKnight, Kelly Winebrenner,
Kendrick
Osborn.
J
Kelley, Tyler Cline.
Moore~ Tyler Sanders,
Heaton, Dylan Morris, Jesse
Woodyard, Jeffery Milhoan,
Tim Minear, Nathan Smith,
Shannon
Brown,
Travis
Edwards, and Garrett Ritchie.
GIRLS

There is an increase in numPlease see Track. Page 15

�Wednesday, March 31,2010

• Page 13 -

An increase
in numbers
bring high
hopes to
Southern
Track teams
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE,CQM

RACI"-E. Ohio
In his first
full eason a head track coach,
Brent Smith ha &lt;&gt;een an
increase in athletes commg out
for the team.
Last sea on. there were four
female thrower-; and four
female runners. while this season, there are 21 girl and 23
boys out for the high ·chool
track team.
Boy:-,
One kev lo s for the Southern
track program was Kyle Goode.
Goode was a 2009 district qualifier. and committed to run at
the UnheThity of Rio Grande.
Last . eason the boy • team sent
a -tx200m relJy team to the
regional meet Ia: t ea on. with
sprinter-; Sean C'oppick. Joey
Fore ter. Drev. Hoover. and
Andrew Young. Hoover was
tre only enior on the relay
team, with the Sean Coppick.
Forester and Young returning
for the :!010 eJSon.
Thi sea on· team ha.;; :.-evera! returning lettermen includmg
Sean Coppick, Young. Brad
Copp1ck. Dylan Roush. and
Colby Ro ebell) In addition,

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Sen lng Sou. .asltrn Ohio and th~ Big Bend area of \\tst \'lrglnla sJnc:e 1
Marty O'Br:&gt; • Q\n 20 years experlenc:e

�Wednesday, March 31,

• Page 14

2010

Marauders
prepare
track season
BY SARAH HAWLEY
.e. LE
lY
f'TR, ,NE _0 J

RO K. PRJ GS, Ohio
After 'radudtmc J4 athlete
from the bo c.; and p1rl track
team , coach \11 ke Kennedy
is lookmg to develop the
~ ounger partil'lpant-;.
Graduating senior-; from 1.1. t
sea on were Adnan Bolin.
Alex Cullums. Cat1e Wolfe.
Devan ouhb~. bmly field ,
Kimi
Swi her.
\1organ
Lente'&gt;,
N1cole
Andru'&gt;,
Whnn y John on, Andrew
O'Br~ant, Crockett Crow,
Ma,on ~1etts, and Zach Story.

Bovs

2010 Meigs Marauders Track Schedule
March

Miu:
16

30

at Point Plea ant

4:30p.m.

21
23

April
&lt;'

6
13

at Eastern
at Jackson

4:30pm.
4:30p.m.

29

at Oak Hill Invitational
4:30p.m.
at Athens
4:30p.m.
at f-airland Invitational
4:30p.m.
at Vinton County Invitational
4:30p.m.

8

at Nelsonv11le- York TBA
12
at TVC Meet, Vinton County
4 p.m.
14
at TVC Meet, Vinton County
4 p.m.

Thl! 2009 boys team took
2nd place at the TVC
Championships, with two
team member::- bringin!! home
indi' idual
championsh1
Metts won the shot put
di cu , while Jeremy
won the I OOm, 200m. • nd
400m dashes.
Senior
throwers
Tyler
Brothers and Tanner Hy.ell
will both be strong in the shot
put and discus for the upcoming season. They will be providing leadership for the
throwers.
Jeremy Smith
(sprinter) and Jacob Well
(hurdler/jumper) are back for
another sea-;on and working to
etum to competition shape.
While the team is young
they arc looking t accomplish
great things. There a two
freshmen ·printers JOining the
team w1th Dillon Boyer and
Billy Duvall. They will provide additional depth for the
relays.
Kennedy has fewer number-;
on the boys ~ide, but the e pericnce of the sophomores can
hopefully fill in for the depart
ed senior'&gt;. Cody Hanning
will head the distance crew,
with Jeffery Roush and
Turner pacin~ the sprintc
Blake Crmv 1s also working
hard and is dependable.
The main goal for the boys
program 1s to continue being
compctitivl: nnd develop good
habits for thl' younger athletes.
Please see Meigs. Page 15

�• Page 15

Wednesday, March 31,2010

Increase
from Page 13

Meigs

Schedule
April

1 at Waterford 4.30 p.m.

Southern will be adding a cross
3 at Rocl-.y Inv. 10 a.m.
country Jl-.,tricl chan1pion in
6 at Eastern
4:30 p.m.
Kodv Wolfe, and John Grav, .1
10 at Shnne Relays, Belpre
junior high state champion in
10 am.
the 800m.
I 'l. at Belpre
4. 10 p P1
Other team members include
17 at Unioto
10 am.
Tyler Del IS, Cha e Grah.1m,
21 at then
4:30 p.m.
Andrew
Ginther.
Ju-.,tin
27, at Eastern
4;30 p.m
Hettmger, Au.;tm Hill, Kris
30 at OGG hn itational.
Kleski, Justin Kimes. Jes c
Federal Hoc.:king 4:30 p.m
Lamar, Taylor Lemley. Zach
Manuel, Brandon Marcinl-.o.
May
Du~tin Smeck, Chris Sowders,
I at Logan
10 a.m.
Jeremiah Warden, and Tommy
12
at
TVC
MeetA
p.m.
Werry.
•
14 at TVC Meet.4 p.m.
Girls
After only eight team memwill bring a lot to the team.
b~;rs in th~: 2009 season, the
Team member in addition to
Lady Tornadoes track team had
seen that figure nearly triple for the returning letter winners are
Brittany Cogar, Cierm Curren.
U1e upcoming season.
The team is young. onh Kayla Do'-'&lt; elL Angelica Eynon,
Findley,
Amber
returning one senior and two Makayla
juniors. while the remainder of Hayman, Leeigh-Ann Hudson,
Marler.
Jennifer
the team will be underclassmen. Natalie
Megan
McGee.
Four lettermen from last season McCoy,
are returning. with Emily Ash. Morgan McMillan. Shelby
Emma Powell, Haley Linkous, ·Pickens, Stefanic Pyle', Olivia
Victoria Freeman. The Searls, Elizabeth Shuler, Kelsey
are a strong group that Strang. and Danielle Taylor.

Track
from Page U
~ers on the girls team, providmg the team with a great deal
of help. The girls have 17 ath!etes competing in the upcommg season.
Team members are Haley
Per?as, Karissa Connolly,
Whitney Putman, Audrionna
Pullins, Savannah Hawley,
Breanna
Hayman,
Emeri
Connery, Beverly Maxson,

·

Ashley
Putnam.
Baylee
Collins, Shawna Murphy.
Victoria Boso, Breea Buckley,
Danni Maxey, Ally Hendrix.
Zari Roush, and Niki Gilbride.
Fogle stated "this is the most
kids we have had out since I
started coaching, so it will be
nice to fill out most events."
The outlook for the upcoming
season is for each team to be
competitive in every meet they
compete in.
As with each year, the goal is
to keep as many athletes competing as far as possible in the
postseason.

There ar, onl i returnee
to the girls tearn thi sea on.
and all will need to he leader .
Oln ia BeHin (JUniOr) and
from Page 14
Dani Cullum. ( ophomore)
- will lead an inexperienced but
GIRLS
talented group of distance
The 2009 girl team placed runner~. A&lt;&gt;hle) Good will he
3rd
at
the
TVC the semor leader of the throwChampionship • and al o had er~ with.help from ophomorc
t'-'&lt;O Individual champiOn . Jaaman Fi h
\1arlee
Bolm won the lOOm and Hoffman and Late ha Klem.
300m hurdles. while Wolfe both ~ophomore::., wtll be filltook home title in the I OOm ing the oid left for the pnntand 400m dashes.
ers.

There are everal newcomer to the girl-; program for
thi ea on Mercade- George
'-'&lt;ill be competmg in the hu~r­
dle:o., and should ha\ e much
success with a lot of peed.
Shawnella Patter on will have
impact in the middle di tunce
and Rachel Bauer will compete m the pole ault.
··1 ha\ e a lot of faith in our
young group and I belie e that
we '-'&lt;til till f mi h in the top
fn e at the 1 VC l\1eet.'" stated
Kenned).

strong arm and olid glove to
the left side of the infield.
Erin Patterson. ~ smart
player with a strong arm, will
be a presence in left field.
"1icki Barnes will patrol right
field for the Maroon and
Gold, and will ha\-e . peed on
the base:. Barnes w a&lt;&gt; a
2009 honorable mention alldistrict and an AII-TVC
selection in the 2009 season.
Tricia Smith was a 2009 honorable
mention
all-state
selection and first team alldistrict. batting over .400 for
the sea on. S~he will anchor
the outfield. playing center,
and looks to repeat the uccess of last season.
Other returnee for the
Lady Marauder.
include
Chandra Stanley, Kelsey
Shuler. and Emalee Gla s.
Stanley will spend the m·a jority of the time at third base,
but may al o play fir t ba e.
Stanley also brings a lot of
power at the plate and is a
mart
defensive
player.
Shuler may see time in the
outfield, but bring speed and
quicknes to the base path
that is irreplaceable. &lt;JJass

is the lone sophomore on the
Meigs team, and v. ill spend
most of the rime at fir. t base.
j uha Lantz and Ka, tle
Balser are jumor:&gt; preparing
for their fir t 'arsitv . eason.
as well a~ t\\ o fresh~1en Tes
Phelp-., and Lisa 1arie Wise.
Phelp will be a catcher for
the Lady Marauders. and
Wise will see significant time
on the pitcher's mound.
The Lady Marauders have
set a goal to '' in their 14th
league title, in what will be a
tough league thi sea on Of
the opponents. Wood tated
'·Belpre returns key pla)'ers,
Wellston has a strong battery,
Athens had powerful offen e,
Alexander will be looking for
some payback, and Vinton
County and Nelsonville are
scary teams with talented rosters." Con i tent pitching
and solid defense will be a
key in the Lady Marauders
ability to win game .
The schedule for the 2010
eason includes non-league
contest.
against
Point
Plea ant. Wahama. Southern.
Trimble. Marietta. and Gallia
Academy.

Defend
from Page 11
Elliott, a 'hortstop. was the
TVC Ohio Offensive Most
Valuable Plaver, v. hi Jc Hailev
Ebersbach ~·a. an ercryday
pitcher and an All-TVC
selection.
Wood will be in his first
season a head of the Lady
Marauders, after serving as
an assistant the previous two
'easons. Wood was also an
assistant in 2000 and 200 I
and was the head coach at
Ea tern Pike for two seasons.
The 20 lO Lady Marauders
will have five seniors to provide veteran leadership on
the diamond. "If we are to
be successful thi eason. we
have to look to our seniors,"
tated Wood. Senior Meri
VanMeter returns to the team
as the Defensive MVP in the
TVC Ohio Ia t eason. and
will be a solid performer in
smart on the
the field and
ba es . Shanalle Smith will
be the starting shortstop for
the team, as she brings a

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�• Page 16

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

-Show Us Where It
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
· •
•
•
•
•
•
· You don't have to be a professional athlete to be
•
serious about sports. At Pleasant Valley Hospital,
we provide therapy to all athletes, including weekend •
•
warri~rs. Our therapy professionals take pride in
•
putting patients on the road to recovery.

urts.

Physical Therapy
Occupational Therapy
Speech Therapy
Aquatic Therapy
Massage Therapy
Accu-Spina Therapy
Manual Therapy
Orthopedic Care
Vestibular Program
Work Conditioning
Anodyne
Post-amputee
Neuromuscular Conditions
Sensory Integration Therapy
Vital Stem Therapy
Videofluoroscopy
Lymphedema Therapy
Low Vision Clinic
Autism Awareness &amp; Support

Four Convenient Locations.
Pleasant Valley
Outpatient Therapies
&amp; Wellness Center

• Pleasant Valley
Middleport
Therapy Center

2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

788 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 45760

304.675.8639

740.992.6479

Pleasant Valley
Therapy Center

• Pleasant Valley
Rehabilitation

628 South Church Street
Ripley, WV 25271

640 Sand Hill Road
Point Pleasant, WV 25550

304.372.7424

304.675.5250

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Jones plans for UCF. Page Jl6
Blue Angels fall to Fairland , Page 86

Wednesday, .J\;larch 31, 201 0

s( 1:11 uu1J
A acl-odul of upoorr rg high
y &amp;powng oveniS Involving llama
"'••~n and Gattoo courliee

Wlldrulldlly, Ntarch 31
••
Baseball
lrQnton St Joe at South Gnllta, 5 pIT'
Me gs at Gallln Academy, 5 p m
~terford nt W hamn 5 pIT'
Biller Valley a• Southern 5 p '11
•
Softbnll
~~ton St Joe at Soutt&gt; Gallia, 5 p"'
ll"" gs at Gal 1a Academy 5 p m
'Miyne at Polrt Pleasant, 5 30 p ~
~terford at Wahamn 5 p m
RiVer Va ey at Southern 5 p m
•
Girts Tennis
Oerbcrt Hoovc at Point P oasant 4 p r.1
Boys Tennis
8i Academy at Po nt Pleasant 4 30

Qrn

~

~Lady Eagles

·open season
with 13-1 win
BY SARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEVC MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

TUPPERS PLAINS. Ohio
Srori ng fi vc runs in the
first inning, the Ea~tcrn
y Eagles made thing!\
look easy
in n 13·1
\ ictof)
over
the
\isiting
t-

s

Turley

0

u t h

Galhn Lad)
Rebels on
Tuesda)
e\emng.
Eastern
starte r
K u s e \

Turley set
dov. n three
of the first
four South
Galha batten., whik'
gh ing up
one walk in
the fi~t.
The Ladv
Blackburn
Ea~les put
thetr bats to
work in the bottom of the
'"lth leadoff hitter
Morrison reaching
. Allie Ra\\ son

Wahama rallies past Lady Raiders, 7 ·6
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY 0 MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CO
M

Eagles soar past
South Galli a in
opener, 16-3
B Y BRYAN W ALTERS
BWALTERSOMYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

CHbSH IRE. Ohio Down one run going into
the fi nal
r - - -- -.. inning on
Tuesday
evening,
the Lad)
Falcons of
Wah am a
· rallied to
score four
runs
en
-~---~ rout to the
7-6 \ ictory
over River
Valley.
R i v e r
V a I Icy
pitcher
K atelyn
Birchfield
started of
the game
sitting
..-.-~---~ down the
fir!&gt;t
six
Wah a rna
batters, one by strikeout.
The Lady Raiders got the
bats working early, but
stranded tv.o base runners
tn the first inmng.
The Raiders scored two
runs in the second inning
on a pair of :-ingle by
Kelcie Carter and Beth
Misner and two walks off
of Wahama :.tarter Mariah
Van.\ 1atre.
In the top of the third. it
wa:-. the Lad) Falcons \Vho
hit the ball well. Wahama
scored three runs on a
walk, two singles by
Karista Ferguson and
Taylor Hysell~ and a error.
River Valley tied things at
three in the bottom of the
third inning on a pair of
hit&lt;; by Chynna Mershon

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
- Eastern baseball started
the 20 I0 season on a positive note Tuesday m~ht.
pound1ng
out eight
hits
en
route to a
16-3. f!\emning \ICtory O\er
nsiting
s0 ut h
Gallia during a nonconference
matchup in
.M e i g s
County
T h e
Eagles ( 10) the
defending

~__,..,..,~,..,..,__,

Please see Wahama, 86

T

Sarah Hawley/photo

~ahama

starter Manah VanMatre delivers a pitch during the second inning of Tuesday
-n1ght's non-conference softball contest against River Valley in Cheshire, Ohio.

V

@nio Valley Pride
''Without a vision firep eople perish....
~!rife the vision and make it plati1 so that tl1e one who reads it ma!l nm wit/7 it. "
Mark Cornellson/Lexlngton Herald·Leader/MCT

West Virginia's Joe Mazzulla, center, IS pumped as he is
congratulated by teammates Kevin Jones, left, and
Da'Sean Butler, right, during game action against Kentucky
in the NCAA East Regional.

201 QFinal Four has
team-oriented look
BY JOHN M ARSHALL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

John Wnll. despite hts
prodigious talent, 1sn't at the
Final Four. His Kentucky
Wildcats were knocked out a
game shott. Ohio State's
Evan Turner flamed out, too.
d earlier. Vi llanova's
Reynolds didn't even
close.
It'.; Final Four time and
the Still S Won't be OUt .
They'll be .1t home or in the
stands along with famous
alums such as Magic
Johnson , maybe Jay-Z or
some other celebrity.
In thetr place wil l be
teams.
Not four guys nnd a soonto-have-his-own-shoe- li ne
star. fi ve teammates who
f

rely on each other, need help
from those guys coming off
the bench.
This f mal Four ''ill be
''on by the final fivesome.
"The megastar that maybe
you normally &lt;;cern to find in
these Final Fours maybe
isn't there," .\lichican State
coach Tom lzzo ~sai d . "I
think it's refre!&gt;hing that
you'rc looki n ~ at four teams
th at 'team' 1s mavbe the
most important thing,"
Th is Final Pour tsn 't
devoid of star players. There
arc future pro::. and potential
pros on every team.
Duke has the trio of Kyle
Singler. ~ol an Smith and
Jon
Scheyer.
Durrell
Summers and Korie Lucious

Please see Team, 86
I

C

Hocking
champions
- \\asted
Pierce
!•ttle tl~e
m ptckmg
up where they left off a ) ear
ago. ~ending 10 batters to
the plate in the first inning
while jumping out to a 6-0
advantage after one com:
plete.
The Green and Whtte abo
scored three times in the
second to take a 9-0 cushion, then erupted for se\en
more runs in the third to
take a commanding 16-0
lead through three 'complete.
The visiting Rebels (0-1)
- who were held hitless
through the first three
innings - finally found
their rh) thm in the fourth,
a:- SGHS produced three
runs off of two hits and an
error to pull within 16-3
after three and a half
Please see Eagles, 86

Vision is foresight, with insight,
based on hindsight.
Join us as we look where the Tri-county. has been and use
the knowledge gained to plan for the future,
Setting our sights for tomorrow VISION 2010. will publish
on Apri130. If you are a business owner, industry.
tourist attraction or offer services of any kind to
tri-county residents, piau now to get involved in the .'•vision".
This unique annual Progress edition will publish April 30th
and be inserted into our three county newspapers.
This is your opportunity to reach all the 1'ri-County area for just pennies per houst'lwld.
This ~pccial section will aim he feattmd online at:
www.mydaily.5elltim•l.com
www.mydailyrcgi,ter.com
trww.mydailytribune.com

The Daily Sentinel t!!:IJC tJoint t)Icasant l\cnistcr tCIJc ®alhpolis 1Jaih' [:rib nne
740446..2342
740 ..992 ..2155
740 ..675 ..]33

--·-

�~----------------------- --- ----------·--~----~·~

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
~ ~&lt;

I'

' I :I

.

"•

t

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.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

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POLICIES C&gt;No ~lley Publlsnlng retlfvw 1110 r!gtn to edit, rtjed, 0t cancel any Del 01 anv lime. Erron mu$1 be rcpolted oo the llrvt day of plbllce1Joo tncl the
Trlbln)o$tnllnel.flo;l•or 110111 be rnporwlble lor no more thin !hi coal ol the sptet occuplud by the onor and ooly !he nrwt ~101\ We wn nc1 be liable tor
any 108$ or axptrnre tllal fWIJ!latrom the puDIIcallon or oml•lon or en edwertlllliment Corre"lon WI be made .n the tlr1;t avoKable edltloo. • Bo~ numbeltc11
tre alwlye conlldentlll • Cwrenl1111t card epp eo ·All real Gltlltt Ddvenllefllento are aullject to t110 Fec!eral Fair Hauling Acto! 1968 • This new~PGP«
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CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals........................................................100
Announcements. . ......................................200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads .................................................1 210
Lost &amp; Found .............................................215
Memory/Thank You .................................... 220
Notices ......... ........................................ 225
Personals .................................................230
Wonted ............................................... 235
Services • ••.. .. .......... .. •.......................... 300
Appliance Service ................................... 302
Automotive ........................................ 304
Bulldmg Materials ....................................306
Business • .• ......................................... 308
Catering.......... . ...... •...............................310
Child/Elderly Core ................................... 312
Computers ..............................................314
Contractors .............................................. 316
Domesllcs/Janl1orla1 ................................... 318
Electrical .................................................. 320
FJnancial.......................................................322
Health ......................................................... 326
Hcatlng &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Homo Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lown Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Oanco/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectricfll .....................................340
Professional Services ................................342
Repairs ........................................................ 344
Roofing .....................................................346
Security ...................................................... 348
Tax/Accounting .......................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Financial ...................................................400
F nanclal Servlcos ....................................... 405
Insurance ......................................... 410
Money to Lend ..........................................415
Education • •
... .. ................................500
Business &amp; Trade Schoo1 ...........................505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................510
Lessons • • • .... • • ................................. 515
Personal
...................................... 520
Animals • ..•• .. ..................................... 600
Animal Supplies ..................................... 605
Horses .............................................. 610
Livestock .. ...... •. • ...............................615
Pets. • •...............................................620
Want to buy ....... a ...................................... 625
Agriculture ...............................................700
Farm Equipment .......................................705
Garden &amp; Produce .....................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Groin .............................. 715
Hunting &amp; Lond .......................................... 720
Want to buy................................................ 725
Merchandise .............................................. 900
Antiquos ...................................................... 905
Appliance ................ •................................ 910
Auctions .................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles ............................................... 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equtpment/Supplloa ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ..................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ...............................955
Kids Corner. .. .. .. ...............................960
Miscellaneous.. .. ... ........ .....................965
Wanl to buy
• • . ..........................970
Yard Sale • . • ........................................... 975

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Blcycles.................................,.................... 101 0
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ....................t ........ 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ............- ..........................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentai/Lease •• - ..- ........................... 2005
Autos .............................- .......................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commerclalllndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports Utlllty..............................................2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ........................, ............. 3000
·cemetery Plots.......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................3010
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale .........................................3025
Land (Acreage) ..............
3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentala ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Storage .......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng .............................4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales...............................- .........................4020
Supplies .....................................................4025
Want to Buy ...............................................4030
Resort Property ......................................... sooo
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment ...............................................6000
Accountlng/Financlal ................................6002
Admlnlstratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Cierk...":.........................................6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction ..............................................60 12
Drivers &amp; Oellvery .....................................6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agenclea .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................................6022
Food Servlcea ................................. ,.......... 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory .... ~ .................. 6034
Mechanlcs ..................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part·Time-Temporarles ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales........................................................... 6048
Technical Trades.-................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory .........................................6:&gt;52

v····......................

900

MotorcydN

l.lefchandise

04

Equipment / Supplies

Yamaha
Roadstat
1700•• 1ots of extras 6089
m1
S6000
CaR
740-446-9219

Cane M w copp: pan
8 5 Ill) lllO':le $1200 06 HO Road K11g Olas·

OBO To V1eW 6778 Un- SIC Chopper blue 5500
COI., p Ke
tlll
Ke new extras As!&lt;·
lllQ$13500 :rnl-2360
M iscellaneoul
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800.537-9528

2000

Automot1¥11

• Autos

Quahty Cars &amp; Trucks
F·ee· several p1eces of w/warral'ty all priced to
therfT'o pane gl~s appx. sell, 15 yrs. r bus1ness
22'x36" 740.992·6159
Cook Motors, 328 Jaol&lt;.·
son Pike •
SwlfT'mlflg pool Above Gallipolis,
OH
ground 4 yrs old Very 74().446.()103
good cond S750. Call ~~~~~==~
388·1122forfT'orelllfo
Want To Buy
·Wan!To Buy

Want to buy Junk C&lt;::-s
740.388·0884

~

Spring Special
onveway Seal Coat·

Abso ~e Top Dollar • s ·
c:otr'S
any
Real Es•·•,
'
10Kl14KI18K gold JOW· 3000
e ry dental gold
pre
1935
US
curre:x:y,
proof '111!lt
sets
dia·
For Sale By Owner
rnonds MTS Com Shop.
151 2nd Avenue Gal - ~06 Mabelline Or ~
polis 446-2842
po!Js 2BR 1BA F
Basement
Remodelod
Buymg St:hl Cha::'lSaws iotcher. 1 Car Garage
ary lund fo par&lt;.s &amp; re- Cent au All app stay
pa
runr~
o· rot S95 500 740-645·7965
740.794 1188
------------- - - - - - - - - - - ·1 2 Unit Apl. Complex.
Neeeded
1111medlatety 446.()390.
tnree 12·15K STv Wll"- ~=======
dow AC s Good working
Houses For Sale
ONLYt
Brenda
(740)
645-8114
3BA. 1BA 1 Car Ga·
- - - - - - - - - rage large yard, newly
01 or's ToWing. Now buy· rerT'odeled S54 000 1be·
1rg junK cars w MOtors or low appratsal) '67 Gra·
wout 740·388·0011 or t&gt;am Sl Rodney Village
74Q.441 7870
(740)446·4543
ve~ gold

1ng 8 Rcpa r
WI
do p:lvate duty
homecare for the e der'y
have over 25 yrs expenence, good references
Pau a
G lbrlde.
GUN SHOW GAWPO· 74().949·2741'
L S Holiday :'lll Apnl 10 74().444·2757
&amp; 11 Adm $400 6
TBLS S25 74().667.()412
ComputerJ

:P1Cfureslllaf
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.

DGli

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD HOTICED

Display Ads

Dally ln•Columm 9 a00 a.m.
Monday -friday tor Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday ln-&lt;:olumnc 9rOO a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Ducrlptlon • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbrc1111Uont
• Jndudc Ptlone Number And Address When Nulled
• Ads Should Run 7 Dll¥5

Wanted

f'or Sale 2 Crypls s1de
3rd row fi'OI"
bottOfT'!Spoclal BlOCk!
Cnapel of Hope ov
•demory Gardens. call
740.446-1969

Or Fox To

OeariAire~

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

Announcements

by s do

Jusr sAY

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

Word Ads

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

l\egister

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

ca II Today...

HOW TO WRIT£ AN AD

Meigs County, OH

Lawn Service
H B s Lawn Care Harvey
Brown 740.388-8588 or
339.()()24 Insured Free
Est1111ates
Lawn
Care
SeMCe,
MOWing, TnmrT'1ng, Free
estimates.
Call
740·441·1333
or
740·645·0546

Security

Pels

AQI

Easter • Sa e- Tay
pupPies
CKC
vet
checked Shots wo.-'Tled
ta
dOCked deWClaws
rel'loved &amp; pretty as a
plct~.ore Just 1n me lo
Easter
1
cl'ooota•e:
w/vr.l to lema 0 , 1 all
chocolate male, 1 b ck
w appncot
fT'ale
Fe·
rnalos $300, Males S250,
7
7 7
40·992· 00
·- - - - - - - - 5 week old baby rabbits
S10 00
C1i
740.388.0191

Free Home Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services.
Call1·888-274-3888
Tax / Accounting

M &amp; A Lawn Care, Free
Estimates
Call
(740)
339·2533
Need your lllw" nowed
weekly? Pt Pleasant &amp;
Ga polls area Call Robert (5021 370-6299
Other Services
Pet
CrematJors
74().446-3745

AMERICAN TAX.
BELIEF
Settle IRS Taxes for
a fraction of what
you owe. If you owe
over $15,000 In back
taxes call now for a
free consultation.
1-877·258·5142

Call
Fin~

400

PIBECTV
For the best TV
experience, upgrade
from cable to
DlrecTV today I
Packages start at
$2.9.99
1·866·541.()834

QJ.Sl:UtEIW.OBK
Save up to 40% off
your cable bllll Call
dish Network today!
1·877·274·2471

J..itruo.ck
Are You Protected?
An identity Is stolen
every 3 seconds.
Call Llfelock now to
protect your family
free for 30-daysl
1-877-481-4882
Promocode:

Money To Lend

Business &amp; Trade

School

'lONAGE

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Cal Today 74().446-4367
1-800.214.()452

Get reliable phone
service from Vonage
Call Today!
1-877·673·3136

pal!)poliaCaree.-::o~e eel
Accredl!ed Membc!r "«~
tng Council lo lndependenl

Ccllegeund Scllools 12748

600

Animals

Pet1
Profeasional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unloss We W1nl
1·888·582·3345

~ree·

3 Blue Tlck pups,
74().742.()507

Yard Sale

House for sale t 13 4th
Ave BelOW $30 000 1fT'·
Cl"est-•· talte SR 248 to mediate possessiOn Rll
Re be Rd fOlloW Signs 1740144 '·5165
Apr 1&amp;2
Land (Acreage)
Rd belor
Wooded
acreage
res den!!a or ccrvnercial

=-==-=;;;;;;.==
deve!op;ne:ll

so

HOMESTEAOE:R
CARGO'CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSE:NECK FLATBED
S3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAI;.ER NVEN·
TORY AT
WW\VCARM CHAEL·
TRAILERSCOM
740·446·3825

Hugo 4 family yard sale
at l'lutland P...rk Friday
Apnl 2nd Rain or st&gt;1ne,
boys &amp; g r s brand name

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

clott&gt;es.
L life
Tikes
Apartments/
Kitchen,
toys.
anhque
Townhouses
dresser bJkes &amp; tons
,_.._o_
ra___
and 2 bedroom apts •
Thurs ! Fr. 9• 1111 ?, turn1shed
and
unfur·
mshed. and houses '"
Route 7 2 fT'IIes nortt- of Pomeroy and M ddlepon
Cl"ester
table
chaus secun:y, depos t requ red
rrc nacs clolh ng, lots &amp; no pets. 74().992·2218
lots or miSC
2BR APTCiose to Ho
5 Farn
Garage Sate zer Hospital on SR 160
2
Ap lsi &amp; l2nd
Miles CIA. (740) 441.()19-4
east of Porter on 554 ~~~.....;.;~-..-.~
Ball}'
g ~
boys 2BR apts 6 m f 01" Ho!
womesr's. "llOlS doth· zer so;ne ut •es pd or
ann
a·~
'19 ~s of ~se.'lo d ........
aances
...
$450/mo
+
dcp
,;.goodS
------~ 740-418·5288
or
Huge Yard Sale Apr 1 &amp; 988-6130
" G
T
Cen ~-............--~~
"'
reer~ .errace.
• CONVENIENTLY
LO.
tenary
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORO.

...,....,---."'!"

Yard Sae Frday 4·2·,0,
8 00. 4 00 460 21'd Ave
Kids name bral'd clOth·
Have you pncod a Johr ng
household
rtel'lS
Deere lately? You 11 bO Low Prices
surprsedl Check out our
used
1nvcNory
at
www CAREQ com
Ct
m'crael
Equ1pfT'ent ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
74().446·2412
Campers RVs &amp;
STIHL Stlles &amp; Service
TrailerJ
Now Available at C"rml·
chaal
Equ pmont RV
Carmichael
ServiCe a1
740.446·2412
~~==~=== Tra ers
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain 74().446-3825

Free to good homo, gray
F.
k1tten,
call
740.949·3408
• between
PUMPING 5·7pm
SEPTIC
Reg
German
Gallia
Co
OH
and AKC
pupptes. M xed rourd
Mason Co
VN. Ron Shepard
4x4
Evans
Jackson
01-' btack/lan bom 2·25 10 sale
S400. Call74().367·7433
740·446-2412
800.537·9528

c.

acres of land compnsed of half m
fro tage. rural wale
approx
30 acres
woods.
Located
on
JOI'es Ad at V n:on, OH
For
mfo
contact
513·656-9743

ICC$

F-ee to good ho:ne
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the Oh o Oivt· spayed beagle l'l x good
wlkids 8 hOI.:;e broken
s100 ol AoanCI8 Ins• tu·
Ca 174().446-355;2
lions Olface of Co.,sumer
Alfa1rs BEFORE you rcr.. I
Agnculture
nance yo~.r hOfT'e or otr 700
tain a loBI\ BEWARE of
•equests for any argo
payMents
of
advance
Farm Equipment
fees or 1nsurarce. Call
2615
Bush Hog Deck
the Off1ce of Consumer
Cha1n
Guards
Alf1ars
toll
!reo
at R1ngs,
1·866·278.0003 to cam Aircraft loam·h led uros
If tl'le fT'Ortgage broker or Good Shape sa ooo Call
lender JS properly li- 740.367·7787
censed. (ThiS IS a pubIC
- - - - - - -.........
~
service
announ&lt;:CI'lcrt EBY,
INTEGRITY,
lrOI"l the OhiO Valley KIEFER BUILT,
Publish ng Company)
VALLEY
HORSE IVE
STOCK
TRAILERS
MAX
EOUIP·
500
Education LOAD
MENT
TRAILERS
CARGO
EXPRESS
8

10

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

AKC M mature Sct'rau·
ze s 2 partl fT'ae While
ct'ocalale
1 c.'1oca ~
M • ct-oca Ia F whe
on .crest &amp; back fc •
parents
on
premiSeS
tak .ng depos t
C
to
see 74().441 1657 Also
stud &amp; groom g serv·

-======-=

I

;:::;;;;;;======

-====-=-===

ABLE' 11
apart·
ments,
and. or
s:nah
houses lor renl •
4
7 0-441·1111 lor calion &amp; mformat1on
Free Rent Special !II
2&amp;3BR ' apts S395 and
up, Control Air WiD
hookup,
tenant
pays
eleclnc
Call between
the hours of 8A.SP
EHO
Elim VIew Apll.
(304)882·3017

Grae~ous Living t and 2
Bedroom Apts 81 Vi ge
Manor
nnd
Rtvers de
Apts 11 Middleport. trom
bales 1or RV Scvtce at Carmr- S387
to
$625
~
4x5 ct'a I
Tra ers 740.992-5064
Eq
74().446-3825
Housing Opponu ty

�Wednesday, March 31, 2001

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Twin RIVOrs Tower oS accepting applications for
waiUng 1st for HUD subSidiZed, 1·BR apao1ment
lor tho cldorly/dis31Jied.
call &amp;75·6679

Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wOOd Dr , from $4 t t to
$606
740·446·2568.
Equal Hooslng Opportu·
Oily This tnshtut1on Is an
Eqoal Opportumty Pro·
vlder Md Employer

G)
BR and bath. first
IT'orths rent &amp; depos1t.
required No
and
clean.
1·0245

Jordan Landing Apart·
menta
3 br. available all ~lee­
Inc, no pets • Ask About
Our Rem Spocials • call
tor deta11s 304·674·0023
or 304-610·0776

Modern 1BR apt
~N~4":'th.o...;A.;,v;;,;o;..
. -M":'I-dd-le_po_rt_, 740-4 46' 0390
2 br furrtshed apt .. dep.
rot
illo
pets,
740·992·0165
N 3rd Ave Middleport,
1 br fl.rn1shed apt No
fets
dep
&amp;
ref ,
740·992.0165
Apartment available now
Rlverbend
Apts.
New
jiaven WV Now accept·
mg
appllca~ors
lor
HUD-subSJd1zod,
one
·Bedroom Apts Utd1Ues
Included Based on 30%
of adJu.. ted ncome Call
304·882 3121,
ava1able
for Senior and D1sabled
people
&amp;

Hou... For Rent

Call

3 br. 10 New Haven WV
$400 00
a mon
-t
$400.00 dep. no pets
304·682·3652
House for rent·4 bed·
room, washer &amp; dryer,
stove &amp; ret., $475 mo. ph
740-590·1900
4 Rms + Ba Stovo &amp;
lndge 50 Ohve St. No
pets. $450/mo + dop.
446·3945.
N1ce 1BR house In Galli·
polls. Walk to everything
you need. Very cloan
Unit, With new pa1nt
$275 per mo/$100 sec.
dep. Sorry, no pets. Call
Wayne for 1nformahon
404·456·3802.

NICo 2BR completely furoiShod S600 -t elect 4000
$600 dep 446·9585 or
446·9595
Spring
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 740·446·1599.
Commercial

~=~=====

Manufactured
Housing
Lots

Tra11er lot for Rent • Ad·
d1son P1ke • $150/mo,
sec dep same
Cell
446-3644 for application.

2·3
Bedroom
Mobuo
Rentals
Homes for Rent. {740)
446·1279.
2·2BR Mobile
=======~ $400/ma+$400
Hou... For Rent
AddiSOn,
1
~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==== 367·7025
2 br. in Pt Pleasant wl.·
ter &amp; trash 1ncludod call 2BR Mob1le Home, Wabetween
1Oam-5pm ter, sewer, trash pd. No
304·675·3952.
pets Johnson's Mob1le
Home Park. 446·3160

Ge• Your Message Ac.-oss With A Oa ty Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Basket Games
April 1, 2010
20 for $20
Doors open at 5:00
Games start at 6:00

Carleton School
in Syracuse
All proceeds go to Ohto River
Players
Call740·949·2008 for pre-sale

Help Wanted

HISTOTECHNOLOCiiST

Valley Hospital is currently
ng resumes for a
full-time
Histotechnologist Three years experience
Licensed
Histotechnologist
preferred.
through ASCP.
Send resumes to:

3Br MObile home
country
740-256-6574
3BR 2BA $475/rno -t
$475
dep.
Excollent
cond. 740-367-7762
Double Wide, 3BR, 2BA,
$575 rent, $575 dep.
HUD·ok,
17228
Chatham Ave. 645·1646
Mobile Home 2 BR, ' SA
on farm $500 per month,
inc.
uld.
Call (540)
60°0
729-133t
Employment
Mobile homes lor rent 10
the Pt Pleasant area call
304·675·3423
before ~~~~~~~~
9'30pm
Child/Eiderfy Care
Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre 5% down. $525
mo. WAC Near Holzer Posrt10n open at Darst
Adult Group HOf1'le f rst,
740-446-3570.
second &amp; third sh11ts,
740·992·5023
Sales

Help Wanted· General

AVON All Areas! To Bltf Quahtv C ntrol earn ~P 10
or Sell Shl:'foy Spears S100 00 per da~ e\ I mg
rei
$IO!'t&gt; traJnmg pro304·675-1429
' &lt;led no exp rcquued .~II

Help Wanted

WANTED: Part-time pos1t1on
available to a~sist individuals with
developmental
disabilities
in
.\iliddleport g am - 3 pm Sat/Sun.
S1ust have high school diploma or
GED. valid dri,·er's license. three
years good Jriving experience and
adequate automobile insurance.
£8.97/hr. after training. Send
me to: Buckeye Community
s, P.O Box 604, Jackson,
OH
45640. . Deadline
for
applicants:
4/6/10. '
Preemployment drug testing.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Public Notice

Public Notice

Mcigl&gt; County Juvenile Court
reports the following Title IV-E
reimhurseml.!nts and expenditures for
the calendar year 2009:

The

Reimbursement revenue: ............... ..
..................................... $10H.693.52

Tra111ing and related expenses ........ ..
............................................ $737.00

Placement-related expense ............. ..
..................................... $12.705.44

Residential placements .. $J9,260.00
Drug Testing supplies .......... $484.75
to-rdated expense ........... $338.54
m Administration .. $5.000.00
Mileage ................................ $649.65
Salaries and rel.ued expenses ......... ..
........................................ $10,124.45
Contractural Service~ ..... $13,441.43
Mentonng &amp; R~creation ..... $981 .83
Utililics ................................ $237 .67
Mise Ofticc E.\pcnse ...........$25.38

Tnlal cxpemlitt1rcs ......... $R3,986.14

(J

Classifleds

JJt;rV

~~~~~~~~

iiiR~oom~~Ari:tt~elld~a:;nt~tJ;;;;;;f;;r.,le;;

NOTICE TO CONTRAC· DEPARTMENT OF NAT·
HO:iday .n
Ga po s TORS
URAL RESOURCES
OH Apply In person no Sealed proposals for 2045 MORSE ROAD
phol"e calls please
the paving of Brick BUILDING H, THIRD
Street and Civic Center FLOOR
Drive in the village of COLUMBUS,
OHIO
Rutland, Meigs County, 43229·6693
Ohio will be received until APRIL 21,2010 AT
by the Meigs County 1:30 P.M., and opened
Commissioners at their thereafter for furnish·
off e at the Court· lng the materials and
ouse Pomeroy. Ohio performing the labor
45
until 1:00 P.M ., for the execution and
Wedr.esday, April 14, construction of:
2010 and then at 1:15 FRY LANDSLIDE
PM. at said office MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
opened and read aloud PROJECT
NUMBER
for the following:
MB·Sb-75
Paving of Civic Center In accordance with the
Drive and Brick Streets plans and specificalocated in the Village of tions prepared by the
Rutland, Meigs County DEPARTMENT OF NAT·
Ohio. Specifications URAL RESOURCES,
are provided In the bid DIVISION OF MINERAL
packet.
RESOURCES
MAN·
Specifications. and bid AGEMENT,
COLUM·
forms may be secured BUS.
OHIO.
at the office of Meigs PROPOSALS WILL BE
County Commission· OPENED IN THE SEC·
ers,
Courthouse, OND FLOOR CONFER·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769· ENCE ROOM OF 2045
Phone # 740-992·2895. (BUILDING H·2) OF
A deposit of
o THE
FOUNTAIN
dollars will be required SQUARE OFFICES OF
for each set of plans THE OHIO DEPART·
and specifications.
MENT OF NATURAL
Each bid must be ac· RESOURCES.
The
companied by either a United States Office of
bid bond In an amount Surface Mining Recta·
of 1oo•c. of the bid mation and Enforce·
amount with a surety ment is supplying
satisfactory to the 1oo• 0 of the funds lor
aforesaid
Meigs this project. The con·
County Commission· structlon completion
ers
or by certified date for this project is
check, cashiers check, September 30, 2010.
or letter of credit upon THE ESTIMATE FOR
a solvent bank In the THIS PROJECT AS DE·
amount of not less than TERMINED BY THE Dl·
L
10% of the bid amount VISION OF MINERAL
in favor of the afore· RESOURCES
MANsaid
Meigs County AGEMENT
IS
Commissioners . Bid 588,323.02.
Bonds shall be accom· A MANDATORY pre-bid
panied by Proof of Au· meeting will be held on
thorlty of the official or APRIL 7, 2010 AT 10:00
agent
signing
the A.M., at the project site.
band.
It Is the Intent of the
Bids shall be sealed DMRM to commence
and marked as Bid for the pre-bid meeting at
Rutland Village Street the designated time.
and Prior to commence·
Improvements
mailed or delivered to: ment of the meeting, ao
slgn·ln
Meigs County Cammis· attendance
s i a n e r s forrn shall be distrlb·
Courthouse uted among the con·
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 tractors present. This
Attention of bidders is form will be collected
called to all of the re· by DMRM staff when
qulrements contained the pre-bid meeting bein this bid packet. par· gins. Only those con·
ticularly to the Federal tractors signed in prior
Labor Standards Pravi· to collection of the
sions and Davis·Bacan form who remain In at·
Wages. various insur- tendance through the
ance
requirements, discussion of the plans
various equal opportu· and detailed specifica·
nity provisions. and the tions shall be deemed
requirement for a pay· present for the purpose
ment bond and per· of determining e'igibil·
formance bond for ity for bid subm,ssion
1OO~o of the contract acc\ptance. Partlcipa·
tion In the site viewing
price.
No bidder may with· subsequent to the
draw his bid within completion of the disthirty (30) days after cussion of the detailed
the actual date ol the specifications will not
opening thereof. The be required in estab·
Meigs County Commls· fishing attendance. NO
SMART BUY DEALS ON YARD SAl£
stoners reserve the PLANS OR SPECIFICA·
rtrlll'lniiiiii'IY W&amp;Z rtrlll'lniiiiii'IY
right to reject any or TIONS WILL BE SOLD
..-cur•u. 1 c.t, TI'IICU. 811t11111111_..
AT
JHE
PRE·BID
all bids.
.......... 11Vt,4-........ . . , ....
Tom Anderson. Presi- MEETING.
$11101 S&amp;eoo Etc. 1. . ..... 4 .... 8 Ayt
Copies of the plans,
dent
4 ..... IUIYI 4 .... 41111YS
Meigs County Commls· specifications, and proposal forms will be for·
Slaners
5
warded
from
the
(3)24, 31' (4) 3
Division of Mineral Re·
sources Management,
Department of Natural
Public Notice
Resources, upon re·
NOTICE TO BIDDERS celpt of a check or
Sealed proposals will money order In the
amount of S31.00 made
be received at the:
DIVISION OF MINERAL payable to the Oh10 De·
RESOURCES
MAN· partment of Natural Re·
sources (ODNR) and
AGEMENT

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The Daily Sentinel

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"""''"='"~""'-;

mailed to ODNR, Divi·
sion of Mineral Re·
sources Management,
11296 East Pike Road.
Cambridge. Ohio 43725
Attention:
Dona
St.Ciair
{Telephone
Number: (740) 439·
3640). Plans and spec·
ificatians become the
property
of
the
prospective
bidders
and no refunds will be
made. For Information
regarding the project.
the primary c'lntact
person is the Project
Engineer, Brady John·
son; his absence you
may contact the ProJect Officer, Barb Flow·
ers or the Design
Engineer, Bryan Brunton. They all can be
reached in the Athens
District Office (740)
592·3748.
Each proposal must be
accompanied by a BID
GUARANTY, meeting
the requirements of
Section 153.54 of the
Ohio Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS ARE
ADVISED THAT EQUAL
EMPLOYMENT
OP·
PORTUNITY CONDI·
ARE
TIONS
APPLICABLE TO THIS
PROPOSAL IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH THE
PROVISIONS OF SEC·
TIONS 153.59 AND
125.111 OF THE OHIO
REVISED CODE. THIS
PROJECT IS SUBJECT
TO A 501o EDGE PAR·
TICIPATION GOAL IN
ACCORDANCE WITH
THE PROVISIONS OF
O.R.C.
SECTION
123.152 AND O.A.C.
123:2-16·08.
WAGE
RATES ESTABLISHED
IN
ACCORDANCE
WITH SECTION 1513.18
AND 1513.37 OF THE
REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO APPLICABLE TO
THIS PROPOSAL.
Sealed proposals shall
be delivered to the ad·
dress given at the top
of Notice To B1dders.
No bidder may with·
draw his bid within
sixty (60) days after the
actual date of the opening thereof.
The Dtrector of Natural
Resources
reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids, or to accept
the bid which embraces such combination
alternate
proposals as may pro·
mote the best Interest
af the State.
APPROVED FOR PUB·
LICATION IN The Daily
Sentinel, legal Notice
Dept, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
on
WEDNESDAY,
March 24, 2010, and
WEDNESDAY, March
31, 2010.
(3) 24,31

GetAJump
on
SAVINGS

�Page 84 • 1 he Daily Sen tinel

PUBL IC
NOT ICES

Wednesday, March 31 , 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

l'uhllc l'utlu·s In N t' '&gt; " l'"l'&lt;'ni.
Your Right to Kuo'&gt; , Ut!lh er•ctl IUght t o ' o ur Oonr.

SHERIFF'S
SALE, EMPTOR. PROSPEC· 67093 State Route 124 Middleport, OH 45760 Salem, and Bounded
t:ASE NO 09 CV 116, TIVE
PURCHASERS Reedsville, OH 45n2
Prior Deed Reference: and described as fol·
flEOPLES BANK, NA· ARE
URGED
TO Prior Deed Reference: OR Vol. 110, pg 691
lows:
~IONAL ASSOCIATION, CHECK FOR LIENS IN OR Book 182 Page 657· Property Appraised at: Being in Section 5,
YOUNG'S
J&amp;L
$22,500
Town 8, Range 15 of
PUBLIC 658
t'LAINTIFF, VS. TARI M. THE
J3ASS AND MARK A RECORDS OF MEIGS Property Appraised at: Terms of Sale: Cannot the Ohio Company's
Construction
Commercial &amp; Residenaal
be sold lor less than purchase and being in • Vinyl Siding
~ASS, ET AL., DEFEN· COUNTY, OHIO.
$35,000
• Room addition~ • Roofing • C
'DANTS, COURT OF ATTORNEY
FOR Terms of Sale: Cannot 213rds for the ap· the unincorporated VIl• Room AddlttOr&gt;l &amp;
• Replacement
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hun;e
COMMON
PLEAS, PLAINTIFF:
be sold for less than praised value. 1Oo/o lage Of Dexter;
Remodeling
Windows
~EIGS COUNTY, OHIO. Jennifer L. Sheets, LIT· 2/3rds for the ap· down on day of sale, Beginning 40 Feet
Burn~ • \'in)" I &amp; Wood Fencing
•NewG11r1g..
By virtue of on Order TLE &amp; SHEETS LLP, praised value. 10% case or certified check, South of the Southwest ·Roofing
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Foundationc;
• Roofing &amp; Gu11111
bI Sale Issued out of 211·213 E. Second down on day of sale, balance due on conflr· corner of lot 14; thence ·Decks
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
'Bald Court In the above Street, Pomeroy, OH case or certified check, matlon of sale.
South following the ·Garages
• Patio and Porch Otckl
47239 Ri ebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
fiction, Robort E. Boo· 45769, Telephone: (740) balance due on conflr· The appraisal did not East Line of the public ·Pole Buildings
wv 036725
InClude an Interior ex- highway about 19 rods
);!le, the Shorlff of Meigs 992·6689
matlon of sale.
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
•
Room
Additions
V.C. YOUNG Ill
County, Ohio, will ex· (3), 17, 24, 31
The appraisal did In- amination of the house. to where on ash tree
Full)
in,urcd
Owner:
'1'12-t. ! l ~ 7~11-~'11 ·111 '1~
pose to sell at public
elude an Interior exam- Robert S. Beegle, once ~ood , about 18
Pomeroy. Ohio
I rtl'l"timah·' · 25+ \Car..l''IX'ricnre
James Keesee II
Meigs County Sheriff
inches In diameter;
action on tho front
!nation of the house.
30 Veara Loc:nt E•pcrlenee
''"I anillatrd "llh \hlo.~ \l.trcu•m lloctfiDJ! &amp; Rrmodt·hn~•
thence east to the censteps of tho Meigs
Public Notice
Robert S.
Beegle, Julia Steelman
742·2332
- Wtnler S •als Attorney for the Plain· ter of leading creek;
Meigs County Sheriff
County Courthouse In
tiff, Lerner Sampson thence up the center of
Meigs Sheriff Sale of Real Es· Amanda Romanello
Pomeroy,
MIKE MARCUM
said creek to a point 20
t:ounty, Ohio, on Fri· tate
Attorney for the Plain· end Rothfuss
flay April 9, 2010, at Case Number 09CV105 tiff, Lerner Sampson PO Box 5480 Cincin- feet south of the center
ROOFING &amp; RrMOilii.ING fo .
nati, OH 45201-5480 of an Iron bridge;
~0:00 a.m , the follow· BAC Home Loans Ser- and Rothfuss
Rubber Roofing. Room Additions. Dcc:ks. S'"lingles.
thence west to the
Jng lands and tene· vlclng, L.P. fka Coun- PO Box 5480 Clncln· (513)241-3100
Siding, Windowa. Pole Barns. Gar&amp;IJ".
place of beginning,
Jnents:
trywldc Home Loans natl, OH 45201-5480 (3) 17, 24,31
Insurance Won. Residential &amp; Commetcial
containing 1 acre, more
Being a part of a 152 Servicing, L.P.
(513)241·3100
74 24
Licensed &amp; Bonded
o- 5-0437
30 Ycare
or less.
ecres. more or less, Vs
(3) 17, 24, 31
Free Estimates
Expencncc
Public
Notice
SubJect to 1991 and
b-act of land as trans· Charles W. Hawk, et al.
ferred to Harry Russell Court of Common - - - - - - - - ,- - - - - - - - 1992 taxes.
Sheriff Sales
Property
Address: Rankin Cleaning &amp;
Public Notice
and Bertlna M. Mozingo Please, Meigs County,
Case Number 08cv156 35268 Dexter Road,
Refuse 1'railcr
as recorded In Deed Ohio.
Book 253 at Page 485, In pursuance of end Sheriff Sale of Real Es· HSBC Bank National Langsville, Ohio 45741
"Chnst Dm en
\(that's easy on your wallet)
Number:
Association as Trustee Parcel
Meigs
County order of sole to me dl· tate
famtlr Operated
):!ecorder 's
Office, reeled from said court Case Number 09CV133 for SG Morgtage Secu· 1300706000
Hometown Insurance Center
We'll clean 11 up. haul
Meigs County, Ohio, In the above entitled CltiMortgage, Inc. sue· rltles Trust 2005-0PT1 Case Number: 09CV124
I~-II awn), Or BOTH 1
Sale
Date:
04/0912010
Asset
Backed
Certill·
·New Homes
also being a part of action, I will expose to cessor by merger to
Da,id
740-541
·.~11(•7
Appraisal:
$20,000.00
t=roction No. 31, Town· sale at public auction ABN AMRO Mortgage cates, Series 2005·
• Garages
Plaintiff:
Beneficial
OPT1
s hlp-6-North, Range· on the front steps of Group, Inc.
• Complete
Ohio Inc.
Plaintiff
~ 4-West,
Rutland the Mclgs County Court Vs
Defendant:
Norman
Remodeling
Township,
Meigs House on Friday, April Floyd Hickman aka VI
Hamilton
J;:ounty, State of Ohio 9th, 2010 at 10:00a.m. Floyd C. Hickman, et al. Marilyn Howery Et al
Attorney for Plaintiff:
t~nd more particularly of sold day, the follow- Court
of Common Defendants
i'escrlbcd as follows: lng described real es· Please, Melgs County, Court of Common Phillip Barragate
~
Stop &amp; Compare
Pleas, Meigs County, Held at: Front Steps of
1 Beginning at a point toto:
Ohio.
Meigs County Court
,n the centerline of Parcel One· SITUATED In pursuance of and Ohio
'Township Road 156 IN THE TOWNSHIP OF order of sale to me dl· In pursuance of an House, at 10:00 a.m.
,said point being the OLIVE,
IN
THE rected from said court order of sale to me dl· (3) 17, 24, 31
Total Construction
Replacement
most easterly corner of COUNTY OF MEIGS In the above entitled reeled from said court
.,0.--tte;..;.C.;.._al;;../_to:...D;..;o..;,..;;,;
lt:...A.;.:Il..;.;.:_ _ _ ~
In
the
above
entitled
\\indo"
and
a 1 70 acre, more or AND STATE OF OHIO: action, I will expose to
(ONSTRUffiON
0\\Der
Public Notice
iess, tract as described BEING IN THE EAST sale at public auction action, I will expose to
\'in) I iding
Pole Barns/Metal Roofs
Am) Veteran
l n Deed Book 246 at PART OF LOT 1161 on the front steps of sale at public auction at
Remodeling,
Specialists, LTD
Ftre &amp; \\ ater Dama!!"e
page 629;
TOWN 4, RANGE 11 OF the Meigs County Court the Meigs County Court Sheriff Sales
Tom \\ olfe
Roofs, Garages,
Of)" alURepatr
c Thence leaving said OHIO
COMPANY'S House on Friday, April House on Friday, April Case Number 09CV017
(740) 742-2563
740-416-2575
Pole Buildings,
tenterline and along PURCHASE; BEGIN· 9, 2010 at 10:00a.m. of 9th, 2010 at 10 am, of JPMorgan Chase Bank,
• iding • \in) I
the boundary of said NING AT THE OHIO said day, the following said day, tho following as Trustee, on behalf of
Siding, Decks,
\\indo\\
• ~1etal
CITHomc
Equity
Loan
described
real
estate;
i.70 acre, more or less, RIVER AT THE NORTH· described real estate:
Drywall, Additions
and Shinglr Roofs
t ract the following EAST CORNER OF Exhibit ' A' • Legal De· Situated In the County Trust 2002·1
of Meigs; In the State of Plaintiff
and New Homes.
three courses:
LANDS OF GRANT L. scription
• Decks • Additions
1. North 33 deg. 40' 49" BORING AND ERIKA H. Situated In the County Ohio, end In the Town- vs
Insured- Free
•Eicctril:al
Speelman
aka
Marlon
West a distance of BORING AND SOUTH· of Meigs, In the state of ship of Columbia, and
Estimates
• Plumbing
and
de· Marlon D. Speelman,
159.50 feet to a 518" EAST CORNER OF Ohio and in the Town· bounded
ETAL
• Pole Uarns
iron pin set;
LANDS OF RAYMOND ship of Salisbury and scribed as follows:
2 North 23 dog. 58' 55" ROWE
BAKER ; bounded
and
de· Commencing In the Defendants
center of the K. &amp; Meigs County
West a distance of THENCE
ALONG scribed as follows :
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
245.00 feet to a 518" RIVER
8
RODS: Beginning at the corner O.R.R. tract where the Common Pleas
81\.i'IKS
Iron pi n set;
THENCE WEST 12 of two streets at the center of State Route By virtue of an order of
3. South 83 dog. 10' RODS TO AN IRON PIN northwest corner of a 143 Crosses said R.R. sale to me directed by CO:"iSTRlT TIO:'\
Cell: 740-416-5047
co.
27" West a distance of IN MIDDLE OF STATE two acre lot being the tract; thence proceed· the Court of Common
Owners:
email:
15.28 feet to a point in HIGHWAY
124; corner of the two lng In a westerly direc- Pleas, of Meigs County,
Pomero). Ohio
Jon Van Meter &amp;
mentioned tion along the center of I will offer for sale at
the centerline of a THENCE ALONG THE streets
jrshadfrm@aol.com
Commercial•
Paul
Rowe
creek;
MIDDLE
OF
SAID above; thence south 65 state route 143 to the public auction in Meigs
Rcsidentioll
RODS; degrees east eleven Western edge of the K. County Court House,
Thence leaving said ROAD
8
• Free E'tim11tc'
boundary line and THENCE EAST 12 rods; thence south 35 &amp; O.R.R. tract; thence Pomeroy, Ohio on Fri·
along the centerline of RODS TO THE PLACE degrees west eight (8) In a westerly direction day, April 9th, 2010 at
(740) 99l·5HU9
said creek the follow- OF BEGINNING, CON· rods; thence north 65 along tho center Of 10 a.m., on said day, Cu,tom Home Bu1ldmg
the
following
described
State
Route
143,
420
ing three courses:
TAINING 6110 OF AN degrees west eleven
Steel Frame Bu· dmgs
1. North 65 dog. 19' 30'' ACRE MORE OR LESS, (11) rods to the Street feet to a point In the real estate to wit :
Buddmg Remodel
OumpTruck
Woat o distance of AND
BEING
THE loading to the Bone center of State Route Sltuoted In the County
General rcp:ur
Sen ice
114.53 feet to a point; NORTHEAST PART OF Hollow Road; thence 143, being the true of Meigs, In the State of
2. North 03 dcg. 48' 54" A TRACT OF LAND north 35 degrees east place of beginning; Ohio and In the Town"'"' " .bankscclb~om
We do dri\ e\\ II) s
West a distance of CONVEYED BY PAUL seven (7) rods to the thence In a northerly di- ship of Ollve.
, Limestone • Grm el
KIBBLE TO GRANT L. place of beginning, rection 30 feet to on Situated In Olive Town·
48.62 feet to a point;
Top Soil • Hll l&gt;lrt
3. North 23 deg. 40' 20" BORING AND ERIKA containing one hall Iron steko; thence N. 22 ship, Town 3 North,
West a dlstanee of BORING BY WAR· (112) acre of land, being deg. 30' E. 198.92 foet Range 11 West, Meigs
740-985-4422
RANTY DEED OF DATE the same more or less, to an Iron stake; thence County, Ohio, and
96.56 feet to a point;
Thence leaving said APRIL 27, 1950 AND 112 acre belonging to N. 1 deg. E. 410.78 feet being port of the Wolf
as
centerline North 62 RECORED IN DEED Margaret Bolt Is In 100 to an Iron stoke; thence Subdivision
740-856-2609
deg. 17 45" East pass· BOOK 165 PAGE 519 acre lot No, 309: also a N. 3 deg. W. 704.94 feet recorded In Cabinet 1·
Cell
ing through a 518" Iron DEED RECORDS OF right of way around to an Iron stake; thence B, of the Plat Records
pin set;
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO. Daniel Russell barn N. 81 deg. W. 496.37 In the Recorder's Office
Thence South 30 deg. EXCEPTING AN EASE· twelve (12) feet wide to feet to an Iron stoke set of Meigs County, Ohio,
35' 18" East a distance MEI'lT
PREVIOUSLY the said half acre lot: In the western bound· and being described as
Stanley Treeof 275.05 feet to a 518" SOLD TO THE STATE said right of way to be ary line of the real es· follows:
Trimming
described
In Lot 13 subject to all refron pin set on the OF OHIO, FOR A MORE In force until ssld tate
boundary of a 2.0 aero, PARTICULAR
DE· Daniel Russell shall volume 254, page 675, strictions and condi·
&amp;
Removal
more or less, tract as SCRIPTION SEE EASE· see fit to make an out· Meigs County deed lions aa shown on the
•
Prompt
and Quniit)
:'t:O\\
Selhng:
Is
recorded
plat
which
recorded In Deed Book MENT RECORDS IN let on the north side of recorda; thence In a
• ford[\:. _:..IOIOTCI'llfl
\\ ork
286 at page 895;
MEIGS
COUNTY said hall (1/2) acre lot. southerly direction with In Cabinet 1·B of the
Parts • Engmes .
Thence along said RECORDER'S OFFICE. Also the following real the western boundary Plat records In the
• Reasonable Rnte'
Tmn~fer C.tscs &amp;
boundary the following REFERENCE
DEED: estate, situated In the line of said real estate Recorder's Office of
Fre'h :\urlh &lt;.~rolina
*Insured
H&amp;H
fran,rrussions
BOOK 136, PAGE 819, Township of Salisbury, to the center of state Meigs County, Ohio.
two courses:
SHRI:\11'
•F:.,pcnenced
Further
subject
to
an
143:
thence
In
a
•
Aftermarket
route
1. South 62 dog. 17' BOOK 86, PAGE 929, County o1 Meigs and
t740) 742 -25113
Guttering
agreement
to
modify
References
southerly
and
easterly
Replacement
Sheet
A~
at
table!
45' West a distance of MEIGS COUNTY OFFI· State of Ohio, and
l.artt, MtU frozm..lkad• OD
Seamless Gutters
195.50 feet to a 518" CIAL RECORDS; VOL· bounded
and
de- direction along the ti!n· covenant, as more fully Metal &amp; Components
S10 per ib C:~&gt;h onl)
Call Gal) St&lt;~nle) @
shown
In
Vol.
327.
Page
Roofmg
S
d
ng
Gutters
ter of State Route 143
For AU Makes of \-rh1dc.&lt;
UME 255, PAGE 617, scribed as follows ;
Iron pin set;
Pm11s requ!Rt:i n '-~
740-59
1-8044
Insured &amp; Bonded
Racme. Ohto
2. South 27 dog. 16' MEIGS COUNTY DEED Being In one hundred to the place of begin· 485 of the Meigs
Shipments arrJ\C C\CI"'t
Plea.~e lea\e message
741)-653-9657
7.W-9-l9-l956
21 "
East
passing RECORDS.
acre lot No. 309, town nlng, containing 14.3 County Deed Records.
Othe fnrl \
through a 518" Iron pin AUDITOR 'S PARCEL No. 1 and Range No. acres, more or less, Parcel Number: 09·
set at a distance of NO. 09-00447.000
13, beginning at the being approximately 9495-001
I.E\\ IS
:\IICHAEL'S
300.00 feet and going a PARCEL TWO: SITU· northeast corner of 4.2 acres In traction 5 Currently set forth In
CO\CRETE
Deed
Volume
98,
Page
10.1
acres
In
Frac·
and
SER\"tn: CE:\"1ER
total distance of 326.81 ATE IN THE TOWNSHIP Daniel Russell's land;
l'O\STRl'('"l'IO~
1555 :\H: ,\n•.
feet to a point In the OF OLIVE, COUNTY OF thence south 35 de- tion 4. cans for this de- 701 , Recorded 11·29·
centerline of Township MEIGS, AND STATE OF grees 00' west 145.5 scription provided by 99. Commonly known
l'unu~ nl\. 011
Concrete Removal
as: 62899 State Route
Road #56;
OHIO, TO-WIT: BEING feet along the east line the grantor.
• Otl ,&gt;;: hiler change
llew Construction, Room Add.•
and Replacement
Thence along said cen- IN TOWN 14, RANGE of said land; thence Prior Instrument Refer· 124, Long Bottom, OH
• Tunc~ps
Roofing. Sldnglu. llatal, Rubber,
All
Types
terllne South 35 deg. 111, SECTIONS 134, 19, north 59 degrees 35' ence: Deed dated July 45743.
• Broke Sel"\ tee
• Concrete Work,
12.' 40 · Wests distance 110 AND IN 160 ACRE west 148 feet to the 15, 2005, filed Augusta, Appraised at $135,000
• AC Recharge
Con crete Work
Mimimum
bid
2005,
recorded
In
Ofll·
Any 'l'ypa raa~odallag , Decks
of 84.66 feet to the prln- LOT 1161 , AND BEGIN· southeast corner of
•
Mmor
exhau;;t
29 \'t·ar1o E'perienl"e
clpal point of beginning NING AT THE SOUTH· Wesley Stewart's lot; clal Records Volume $76,667.00
repmr • TJie Repair
Phoaa! 740-887-o&amp;IB
Page
525, Terms of Sale:
containing
2.6852 WEST CORNER OF thence north 35 de· 218;
• Tmn,mi'&lt;Ston Hiler
C..l740447-3842
Office, Deposit, a Cashier's
acres, more or less, LANDS OF SAID ROY grees oo· West 132 feet Recorder's
&amp;. I-1utd Change
Check or Certified
31 yrs up. Free Est. Fully In sured
ON THE along the east line of Meigs County, Ohio
740-992-6971
subject to all legal BARBER
• General Mechamc
easements and rights· EAST SIDE OF STATE Wesley Stewart's lot to Current Owners' Name: Funds, In the amount of
Owners:
\\Ork
of-way.
HIGHWAY
#124; the north line of Daniel Rodney Howery and ten percent (10%) of the
17-lOI 992-119 10
Tim Cremeans &amp; Roger Sellers
appraised
value
at
the
Marilyn
Howery
NORTH Russell's land; thence
Bearing were derived THENCE
Address: time of sale. The refrom magnetic taken ALONG THE EAST south 65 degrees 00' Property
maining balance shal
October 15, 1991
SIDE OF SAID HIGH· east 149 feet along the 30468 St. Rt. 143
The above description WAY 7 RODS TO AN north line of said land Albany, OH 45710Par- be paid within (30) days
Number:
05· of the date of sale. The
was prepared from an IRON PIN; THENCE to the place of begin· cel
deposit shall be foractual survey made on EAST FOUR (4) RODS ning, containing 47/100 00351 .000 and
Roofing, ~~~~ or,.
felted upon failure to
05..()()352.000
the 15th day of Octo· TO THE OHIO RIVER ; acres.
Sofiu. 0.:-ck,. Door, .
29625 Bashan Road
ber, 1991 , by C. THENCE
SOUTH Also the following real Appraised At: $90,000 pay the balance wi!hln
\ \ mdO\\S , l :kdnC,
Racine, OH 45771
Thomas Smith, Ohio ALONG THE OHIO estate, situated In Sal· Terms of sale: 10% of (30) days of the date of
Plumbmg. Dl) \\ d!l
sale.
the
appraised
value
Professional Surveyor RIVER 7 RODS TO X lsbury Township, Meigs
740-949-2217
Remodeling.
Room
SHERIFF
Robert
Beefailure
to
com·
and
that
#6844.
MARK ON STONE; County Ohio. In 100
Add1tton
Reference Deed: Vol· THENCE
WEST
4 acre lot No. 309 Town 1 plete the sale will result gle
Sizes
5'
x
10'
ume 193, Page 889, RODS TO THE PLACE and Range No. 13, de· In the forfeiture of the (740)992-3371
Local Contractor
to 10' X 30'
Thomas Novack
deposit.
Meigs County Official OF BEGINNING, CON· scribed as follows:
740·367-0544
Attorney
for
Plaintiff
Angela
D.
Kirk
Records.
TAINING 28 SQUARE Beginning on the east
3700 Corporal Dr. Suite
Frl'C E'tinmlc'
side of Bone Hollow (00751n)
Aud1tor 's Parcel No.: RODS.
11..00756.001
BEING THE SOUTH Road ; south 35 de· Manley D. Kochalskl 120
7
40-367· 0536
Columbus, OH 43231
The above described PART OF A 1·112 ACRE grees 00' west 115.5 LLC
614-818-2573
real estate Is sold " as TRACT OF LAND CON· feet from the northwest P.O. Box 165028
(3)17, 24, 31
Is" without warranties VEYED BY HERB~T corner of Wesley Stew· Columbus, OH 43216
,\ t ,.' Com trucrion and
or covenants.
ROOD, AND WIFE, "'rO art's lot; thence south 614-22.2-4921
Rrplaetment l 'inyl ll mdo~ts
Fax:
614·220.5613
PROPERTY ADDRESS: ROY
BARBER BY 35 degrees 00' west 21
adm @mdk·
34608 Corn Hollow Rd., WARRANTY DEED OF feet along said road; Email :
on
· COliTRACTOR WINDOW SUPPlY
OATE MAY 19, 1938. thence In an easterly llc.com
Rutland, OH 45n5.
CURRENT
OWNER: AND RECORDED IN direction, parallel to the Attorney for Plaintiff
&amp; MANUFACTURING, UC
Tarl M. Bass and Mark DEED BOOK 146, AT south line of said lot, 85 (3) 17, 24, 31
AND SIDING INSTAllATION
A. Bass.
PAGE 202, OF THE feet; thence north 35
REAL ESTATE AP· DEED RECORDS OF degrees 00' east 21 feet
\\ r \prcwl1~c 111 Rrplaccmtllt \\7ndoiH
Public Notice
AT: MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO, to the south line of said
PRAISED
For Oldtr Holtlr' ,( Trmlen
.$20,000.00. The real REFERENCE
TO lot; thence In a westerly
TERMS
OF
SALE:
Ten
estate cannot be sold WHICH IS HEREBY direction along the
!or less than 213rds the MADE.
south line of said lot 85 J)ercent of the highest
7~11-667·1L\116
tlppralsed value. The REFERENCE
DEED: feet to the place of be· bid, cash or certified
Fu\: 7~0-M7·tL\29
fppralsal does Include BOOK 136, PAGE 819; ginning,
containing check, due on the day
of sale, balance due
Toll Free: ll77-~1K·I!I911
1n Interior examination BOOK 63, PAGE 717, 41100 acre&amp;.
.Qf any structures, II MEIGS COUNTY OFFI· Parcel
No:
14· upon confirmation of
1.my, on the real estate. CIAL RECORDS; VOL· 01582.000
&amp;
14· the aele by the Meigs
County Court of Com·
PSI CONSTRUCTION
7ERMS OF SALE: 10% UME 255 , PAGE 619, 01583.000
pown on day of sale, MEIGS COUNTY DEED Prior Deed Reference: mon Pleas, the deed
Room
Addition~. Rem1"1el ' \fetal &amp;
will be lsaued upon the
(:ash or certified check, RECORDS.
OR Vol. 110, pg 691
Shtngle
Roof,
. :\ey, Honk, 'll. 1 g. Dc.:k •
balance
being
paid.
S~alance due on
AUDITOR 'S PARCEL Parcel Number: 14·
Bathroom Remodeling L·~ ,,l. ,\: In ured
NO. 09..()()449.000
01582.000
&amp;
14· Legal Description:
confirmation of sale.
Situated In the County
~LL SHERIFF'S SALES Parcel Number: 09· 01583.000
Rick Prire • 17 )r'. Ewcril'nrr
CPERATE UNDER THE 00447, 09-00449
Property Located at: of Meigs, State ol Ohio
WV1040954
Cell740-416·2960 740.992~730
and
Township
of
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT Property Located at: 39489 Bradbury Road

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�Wednesday, March 30, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
45 Relaxed
1 Totaled
46 O h1o city
7 "T he jig

-I"
11 Moon
miSSIOn
12 Sh tp of
1492
13Wyomtng
range
14 Physics
bit
15 A fncan
exp anse
17 Fail to fail
20 Rocker
setting
23 Film 's
Lupino
24 Start without a key
26 Director's
cry
27 Symbol of
wisdom
28 Sailing
site
29 Ex checks
31 Slugger
• W illiams
32 Barber's
atd
33 Secretagent TV
show of
the '60s
34 Fly or flea
37 Raccoon
feature
39 "Shoo!"
43 Pot
starter
44 State
w ithout
proof

Mort Walker
DINNER AT
THE PLAZA?
THETHe'ATER?

I WAS THINKING OF
GETTING A HOT DOG
FROM THAT CART
IN THE PARI&lt;

CRUISE~

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

DOWN
1 Scoundrel
2 Big
galoot
3 Negating
word

4 L1pst1ck's
kin
5 Radius
partner
6 Luxurious
7 Consecutively
81ndran
lute
players
9 O ne, for
Juan
10 Grier of
"Jackie
B rown"

161n a f itting
way
17 Print units
18 Grown-up
19 Swift and
others
21 Move
furtively
22 Potent ·
24 Cou rt
sport
25 Possess
30 Zoo
favorite

33 Florence's
home
35 Old
oath
36 Rum
mixer
37 W est of
films
38 Santa - ,
California
40 Drenched
41 In the
past
42 Hankering

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Scna $4.75 (chccxlm o.) to
Thomas Josept• Book 1. 1'0 Box 536415 Orlando, Fl32853-6475

,,

THELOCKHORNS

~

10

William Hoest
w..w.thelockhOms.eom

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker
l JU~"f !-\AVe: IO GAY

B€AI.)Iy tG ONL.Y GKtN·
l?E::€P, 601" CtJIEN€%
COIV\E::G F~O/'JI.
Wt-r!4tN.

WI-\A-r" A r...oVE;LY BAI3Y
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C~A~MtNG !-\OW t;f-\£'0

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W(J&lt;VG.G A'f'

'"I

~OPE

YOU'VE LEARNED YOUR LESSON, LEROY ...
NEVER JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS MOVIE."

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
hy Dave Gree n

9 8
' 4

5

I

I

5

2

8

DENNIS THE MENACE

2 6 3 1

Hank Ketchum

Dith,ulty Level

***

2
1
7

5

6
"Oh yeah! I gotta bring a rabbit costume
to wear in the play today. Lucky I
remembered, Isn't It?"

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for \\~dnesday, MMch 31,2010:
Thio; year, p;uineNtips prO\e lobe instrumenf.&lt;ll.
Unusual cre.lli\·itv and,, homed-in intellect mix lo help
you come up \\1th ,, lot of ideas ,md solution-; and help
you relax. If you clre single, you tumble into a passionale re)Jtionship. Expect a spark or two. If you are
attached. the two of vou find a ~w inten"il): C:&gt;eit to
draw dose[ TAL'RCS ha~ a very ni~ st); !e.
'T7re Stm·s Slrow tire Kind of Day \vu71 fl,rre· 5-Dymmtit~
4.Po&lt;itnoe; 3-Auemge; 2"'"~,;o; 1-Difficult
ARIES (Man:h 21·April19)
**** 'ti.JU (\Juki be entrenched in a ~rbin mind:&gt;el and not know il. An ,,rgument might l.'e the beginmng of J more d)namic partneThhip, whether you are
open lo il or not. Let another pel'&gt;On know th.1t he or
~e is &lt;~ppn&gt;&lt;ic~led. Tonight: Dinner for two.

7 6
7
3
9
2

3

•

TAURUS (April20-~1.1)' 20)

I

I
3
5 8 7 4
J 31
'"

0

"

IE l

~

v

B9 6 ~
t6 ~ 9 £ G9
~ 9' £ G L v is
~ B 9 £ ~ L v
r., L 6 v 9 £ G
I ~IG 9 B9 6
~ G 17 ~ 6' 8 1£
f
i'
9 9 16 17 9 L
£ 9 L Gr ~ 9
"

L

~

~

~

I

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

£ 9 G
L 17 B
6 9 ~
9 G6
~ B 9
v£L
~

1

9 L 9
~

G

~

B6

£

v

**** Othe~ could be unuo.;uallv fom·ard and
din&gt;ct. Cle.uly, they want what they \..·ant If you
express your feelings, e\en anget;. for \\·h.1!e,·er re.t-.on.
the other p.uty sees you as gentle, sweet .md caring.
Y(JU might really rlt'ed to play the Bull ~mg red.
'lbrught: Rel,»- "ith a triend.
G EMINI (~fa) 2l·June20)
**** Cse yt'ur \\1t and ene'b1' to ,m:'Omplish
what you 1\anL Why not exp"""" your caring through
actionc;, if thcJt·IS edsier? Don't judge othel'$ cJnd their
st.ltement:-;. You actuc1lly L'lruld be hurting youNt&gt;lt
unne.:essaril}. Tonight: Put your feet up.
CANCER (June 21-Juh 22)
***** You c,lru'lOl ff.in youNt&gt;lf in when you
seem so full oi t:'~rgy ,md 1deus. Do qukkl~ nix a b.1d
idea or a high risk A friomd dt&gt;mon..;trates hb or her CiiT·
ing. lhis peN.m lends hb or her support lo near!) any
pn'lffl you mme up w1th. ltm.ight. liw it up.
LFO Quly 23 Aug. 22)
*** Your independent stre.lk rome; out.
UndeNt.md wh.ll is going on behind the ~~e;. but
.Uso be ~n,itiw to the a&lt;'ling JXl" ers. Rethink a dt'l.'i·
sit1n that invokes your WLlrk ,md d,uJy life.
Communimtion could be stitlt:'d. 1onight: Happ) to
he,,dhome.
ViRGO (Aug. 2J.Sept. 22)
***** Li"ten well. Ac;k the right que:;tJon~.
Com t&gt;l'iJtions open up a nt&gt;w pt'Npt&gt;clive. Relax .md
detach imm &lt;l pmbk&gt;m. Trust th,1t ~ ou will find tht'
·•olulion. Expen~ (truld build. c~ your c:'re,,ti,ity

,,

when turning do1m a I'L&lt;k Tllnight Catch up ,,;th your
friend ....
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
***** Someone dearly *oes out of hi..~ or her
WdV Relate to thi" individual, out ftx:us. A situation tm
the· per.;onal or dome;l:ic front could be ~ating cl Jot of
pres..,ure. Transfonn what b happening, and use it to
empower yourself. Rememl't:'r, you are not changing
anyone! Tllnight Buy a treJt on the way home.
SCORPIO (&lt;.Xt. 23-:\o, 21)
**** Your in..,tincts point the way. );,Ju ..,!ill might
.mtagonize '&gt;Omro~ you need in }our prof~ional life.
Thb pe~m 1.., proud and might not f,1rgin~ ea"il). Pick
and choose vour word." with L'"&lt;'lre Someone demm...trates his or her feelin~. Be S&lt;!n...,itiw. Tonight
\\rute,·er knock&lt; vour sock_., off.
SAGfiTARlUS \;\ov. 22-Dec 21)
*** A'&gt;Sume a low profile, l,;th the e:xreption of a
tru'ited a.;-;ociJ!e ..1t \\ ork. You also might run into a
fri~dly pel'&gt;On or tw,, while running errand'. l~1ke
c;ome much-needed lime to think and re,-.m,p 1dt&gt;a..... At
this point. vou an&gt; likely to piC:.. up miom1ation that is
U"U,lll) not .wailablt' Tonight: S..Tee~l your can....
CAPRI COR.'\ tD.!c. 22-Jan. N)
***** A.;k vou!'i&lt;:'lf if vou are readv to ffiact
some ch.mgt'!;. Friends I\ill ~upport yo.ru on your path,
en&gt;n ii they thin!.; you are off-lw·~. A p.utner's argu·
m~t.1tiYe n.1tun&gt; might be a dired retledlon of hb or
her insecuritv. Relax "ith !hie; }'t:'NJn. Tm1e \\ill ht&gt;lp.
Tonight Onlv what you 1,·ant.
AQ LARlUS (J,m. 20-Feb. 18)
*** lht.&gt;re might be days or lime; yoo "·ant to
dud... l\o nutter whid'l \\ av ~ ou tum. vou nught not
be content with the n&gt;.,uJt'&gt;. 0,~ fri~d.., Jnd p..utners
l'Ould l't:' ,u~ument.1ti\ e. A !xN. or lugher·up could be
ridmg you h,lni. lhe instinct to cocoon might not l't:'
th.'lt iar off. 'lbnight: Buming the midnight oil.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Man:h .20)
***** Though people are certainh 'erl-..11 and
other a'&gt;S&lt;.X'liltes .w pu"h'; \ ou seem to be able to
detad1 ,md get ,, look &lt;1! th.! l'Ig p1,'ture. Communicate
to a ra'E!p!i\ e audit&gt;lK'=' e\ ,lctly wh.:1t i.e; on your mind.
),m'JI gain ...uppprt ,md ._,, m mo1" tn"l~t. "lonight Let
HlUr mind rel.tx t&lt;l (}Xxi mu..,i.:.
/•tijudrnt B1sar r:; &lt;~t tl:..·lnlcrutt
,/ l:ttp:i, &gt;rt'l'l ~1('•/t&lt;clmd&gt;t,\•lrrom

�Pa ge B6 • 'The Daily Sentirwl

www. mydailyscntincl.com

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Jones plans to follow Donovan's road map at UCF
ORLANDO, 1-la. &lt;AP)
- Donnie Jonco;' plan .tt
Central Flonda i!&gt; to tollo\\
the map Bill) Dono\ an
laid out ''hen the tv.o
arrived at Horida.
He's not kidding. either.
After being introduced
as the Knight-;' ne'' coach
l'uesd,\\. Jones "u1d th~
first thi~1g he plans to do is
drhe around the o;tatt' to
strengthen recruiting rL'Iationships. That's the same
thing Duno\an dtd at
Florida, wh~re Jones was
an assistant for II years
under the Gators' coach.
"You got to get people
on campus. It's like havmg
a Mercedes that's parked
in the garage. A lot of people ha' en 't seen it ridmg
around town," Jones said.
high-le,el
Attracting
recruits is the nev. coach'
top priori!).
The Knights lul\e lacked
top talent for several seasons, .t big reason why
Kirk Spera\\ \\as fired
after 17 years despite
being the program's •.,.. inn ingest coach. 'I hey're
coming off a di~appointing
15-17 season and haven't
made the NCAA' tournarncnt since 2005.
That's a troubling trend
for UCF. a bustling school
in the heart of Florida that

has ballooned into the
third-lt~rgcst unJ\ero;ity tn
the count1) '' ith more than
53,000 students. l Cl has
built a new on-c.tmpus
football stadium, basket
ball arena and upgraded
facilities 111 the pa:-.t fe\\
)Cars but is '&gt;till lagging
behind in the most impur
tant Cdtegory in sports:
winning.
"Everybody ~ays tht:
~leeping giant. Well, it's
tim~ to wukc up th~ ~lccp­
ing giant," Joneo.; said.
"Why not u~? Why not
no'' Y" he satd.
Before Jones can sign his
five-year deal ""ith UCF,
he said he has to work out
the details of his bu) out at
Marshall. He said that
shouldn't be a problem
desp1te Marshall being a
nval Conference USA program.
Jump-starting t:CF could
be much more difficult.
The Knights have seemlllgly always lost out on
recruiting to the state's
more established programs
- Florida. !-lorida State,
Miami and South Florida
- and have struggled in
conference since movmg
from the Atlantic Sun in
2005. For a school with
goal of moving to the Big
East
if
conferences
expand, the Knight~ need

to start showing results.
UCF athletiC director
Ke11h 1 rihble demed that
he referenced the school is
hoping to move to a BCS
conference .1s a way to lure
Jones from
Marshall.
Instead. he said he has
stmpler go~lls for now.
"1 mentioned that we
need to win Conference
USA," Tribble satd.
Making the 1110\l' wasn't
something Jones did swtft
ly.
He said he agoni7ed over
decision
because
the
almost all of h1s fah1ily
lnes in West Virginia. He
had seemed to turn things
around and has deep tics
with the program, going
back to when he "as an
assistant coach at Marshall
before foiiO\\Ing Dono\ an
to florida in I 996.
Joneo; sa1d he spoke with
Donovan throughout the
process seekit.lg ad\ice. He
said
Donovan.
who
coached the Thundering
llerd from 1994-96. f1rst
qut.'stioncd why he v. ould
ll'avc Marshall.
"He has a lot of allegiance to ~turshall. So at
first thought he asked.
'Why?' Once he understood. he knew the abilit)
of thi'&gt; school and where it
was headed, and he \\as

Wahama
from Page BI
and Misner.
Neither team added
unother run until the bottom of the sixth. when
River Valley's Carter
cored the go ahead run.
The Lady Raiderc; led 4-3
going into the seventh
inning.
In the top of the seventh,
Wahama's first two batters. Ferguson and Kauln
Young, got on and later
sc01cd with Young be1ng
the go ahead run. Base
hits by H) sell and Kali
Harris allov. ed an addluonal two runs to cross
the plate. \\ith Hysell and
Alex Wood scoring the
sixth and seventh runs for
the Red and White.
The Lad) Raiders added
a pmr of runs 1n the bottom of the mning as
Chynna Mershon and
Emily VanSickle each
scored and Misner added
her fourth hit of the contest. A fly ball to right
field ended the Lady
Raiders comeback. nnd
sealed the 7-6 victory for
Wnhama.
VanMatre
Wah am a's
pitched a complete game.
giving up '&gt;even hits. five

Team
from PageBJ
have turned it up in the tournament for Mich1gan State.
Gordon Ha) ward has been
the man at Butler, Da'Scan
Butler Da' man for West
Virginia.
All arc great players.
capable of taking over a
game at any time.
'l11ey' re just not top-~f­
the-marquec guys. hke
No11h C:trolina's Tyler
Hansbrough last year,
Derrick Rose of .. Memphis
the year before.
These fmal Four teams
are straight off a Red
Auerbach
fundamentals
video, playing defense. set
ting screens. getting eve!)one imolved.
Without a true one-anddone-style star, it's the onl)
way they were able to reach
the final weekend in
lndwnapolis.
"Nobody's pia) ing perfect
- nobody's even coming
close to play111g perfect.''
Butler coach Brad Stevcno;;
said. "But the team that
sticks to thL•tr plan. that docs
what they do as well as they
can for 40 minutes has a
great chance of winning.''
~lichigan State has what
may be the one bona fide
star on the four rosters.
Problem is, Kalin Lucas
ruptured hi&lt;&gt; Achilles' tendon m a second-round game
against Mul)'land and will

Blue Angels drop
opener to Fairland, 2·1

excited for that. Obviouo;ly,
he wanted me to be
happ) ," Jones sa1d.
AI read). Jones satd he
BY BRYAN WALTERS
.md Donovan ha\e talked
BWA TEA GI,!VOAILYTR
fCOM
about playing the G.ttor'&gt;
across town at the Orlando
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Magic's ne\\ arena next So much for a grand
season. That would be the entrance.
I-airland produced three
first time Donov,m played
in the Magic's home SJnce
nf its fhe
he took the job to coach
htl!. in the
sec n 11 d
the NBA franchise and
thcn abruptly announced
inn ing ,
he would return to !·lorida
w h 1 c h
dnyo; later.
resulted in
That's just an example of
t\\ o runs
that ultihow fast Jones is hoping to
m a te I)
move at UCF.
He went 55-41 the la~t
allowed the
three seasons at Marshall.
L a d Y
including a 24-10 mark
Dragons to
this season. But he's lookpull off a
2-1 upset
ing fof\\ ard to getting back
0\ er
host
to his Horida roots.
Jones v. as a relentless
G a I I i a
Acudemy
recn.hter who helped bu1ld
in the sedthe foundation for the
Gators'
back-to-back
'&gt;On opener
for
both
national titles and three
c 1 u b s
Final !·our appearances.
ruesday ut
lfc can draw the parallel&lt;.;
~emorial
ut UCF. a program with litField.
tic ba,ketball success in a
Saunders
The Blue
Angels (0-1) - pia) ing
football-c.razed ~tate.
"It remmds me '&gt;0 much their t irst game c~c; defcndn.f what v.e had whet.l w~ ing Southeastern Ohio
f1rst came to Plonda.
Athletic League champiJones said. "I don't know ons
ran into a bu11.saw
why that can't happen in FHS starter Sashe
here."
Burcham, who allov. ed
onl) fi\e hits and one
earned run O\er her 'ie\ en
mnmgs of work in the circle
Burcham, the winning
p1tcher of record an the
conte'&gt;t. also struck out 10
Angels m the contest.
I Not to be outdone,
1 GAHS starter Amy Noe
abo v. ent the distance in
the loss
allo\\ ing five
htts and two earned runs
1 v.hile fannmg three and
1 walktng one. GAHS committed three errors in the
setback, one more than the
vJsitors' total of three.
Both teams found their
offensive rhythm in the
second mning. starting
with the Lady Dragons.
The guests started the
innmg v. ith a leadoff .sin-

I

glc b) Amber Bias. then
B1a~ advanced to second
on a sacrifice by Stormie
Sp1t-'"er. Hallie Woodall
followed by bringing Bias
home with an RBI double
tor a 1-0 advantage.
T\\ o
batters
Ia
Chcl-;ea Stavely doubled
in Woodall
to gtve
Fairland a 2-0 edge after
an inning and a half of
play.
' Jhe Blue Angels retaliated with a run 1n their half
of the third. as Heather
Ward started the rail} \\ith
a one-out double to left
fteld. Two batters later,
Alh Saunders delivered an
RBI double to left
allowing Ward to score
and make it a 2-1 contest
through t\\ o complete.
Both offenses went to a
after
that,
standstill
although GAHS had a fe\\
opportunitie.., late to knot
things up. The hosts left a
runner stranded at second
in both the fourth and ~ixth
innings, and also left runner" at second and third in
the fifth.
Fa1rland only had on.
major offensive threa
after the second inning,
but the Lady Dragons
came away empty-handed
in the fourth after loadmg
the bases wtth only one
out.
Ward led the Angels v. ith
t\\O hib. while Saunders.
Courtne\ Shrher and
Morgan ·Daniels pro\ 1ded
the other afeties in the
~etback.

Sta\ el\. Bias, Woodall,
Keri Ptn.kerman and Chloe
Sta\ eh each had a hit for
the 'ictors.
The Blue Angels return
to action today v. hen they
host ~1ei1!.s at Memorial
Field for non-conference
matchup at 5 p.m.

a

FAIRLAND 2 ,
GALLIA ACADEMY 1
f' ·tard 020 000 0
Gall po s 010 ope 0
WP - Sast&gt;e Burcham

N:&gt;e

Osborne. and
Ra\\ son. all scored m the
innin!!.
South Gallia got ns only
from Page Bl
t\\&lt;:&gt; hits of the game in the
fifth inning. v. ith a pair of
reached on a '' alk. before a ~ingles by Blackburn and
Turley knocked in t\\ o run~. Tori Duncan. Blackburn
A double b) ~1egan
cored the Lad' Rebels onl)
Carnahan allowed Turle) ...run
on the single bv Tori
and Tori Goble to score. Duncan.
""
•
v. ith
Brooke Johnson
Morrison. Holter, and
adding n single. ~1nrrison Carnahan each had two hits
walked m her second nt bat
the Lady Eagles. '' ith
of the mnmg. sending for·
Osborne. Raw~on. Turle).
C.trnahan in to score.
Randolph. Cummins. and
Turley struck out two Johnson each added one hit.
Lady Rehels in the second Blackburn and Tori Duncan
mmng. '' 1th Courtne) each had one hit for South
Blackburn fl) ing out to lead Gallia.
off the inning.
' Turley earned the victol).
Ea tern added mo runs in p1tching three scoreles
the second innmg on four mnings and strikmg out
hits, includmg ,\ tv. o-run se,en~ Canada) took the
homer by Turle) \\ h1ch lo s for South Gallia.
scored Brenna Holter. ing out three.
Eastern hosts Miller on
Turle) added t\\ o more
stnkeout~ in the third Thursda)
m the TVC
Hocking opener. \\ hile
inning.
The Lad) Eagles scored South Ga1!ia hosts Ironton
three in the bottom of the St. Joe on \\'cdne:sdav. Both
third. \\ ith Juts b) Morrison games begin at 5 p.tn.
and Holter and a walk to
EASTERN 13,
1 Raw~on.
S
OUTH
Sami Cummms ft'IJL'vcd S Galha 000 01GALLIA 11 2 6
Turll') in the top of thl' Easter'l
523 3x
13 12 2
fourth inning. sitting dtm n
SOUTH GALLIA (0·1)
Ct&gt;andra
three strmght Sl)Uth G.tllin Canaday
and Ton Duncan
batters. I astcm .tdded three EASTERN (1-0): Kasey Turloy Sam
hits in the fourth inn111g. by Cummms {4) end AH1e Rawson
Kild Osborne. Rrl\\ son. and WP- Tur ey. LP- Canaday
Cassie Randolph. Jenah HR Turley {2'ld rn ng one o one out

Eastern

Sarah Hawley/photo

Wahama third baseman Kaula Young prepare to field a ball as River Valley's Noelle
Mershon breaks toward home. The Lady Falcons defeated River Valley 7-6 in the game.

walks. and ~triking out
o;even to earn the win. The
Lady Raider~ Birchfield
pitched seven innings,
allowing seven hib. two
walks, and striking out
three.
Ferguson. Hy~ell, and
Harris each had two hit~
for the Ladv Falcons, with
Young
adding
one.

Misner was a perfect 4-4
from the plate. with
Noelle Mershon. Carter,
and Chynna Ylershon each
ha\ ing one ba~e hit. All
14 hits in the contest \\ere
singles.
Wahama
hosts
Waterford on Wednesda)
at 5 p.m .. while the Lady
Raiderc; pia) at Southern

on Wednesday at 5 p.m.

spend the ''eekend in a
walkmg boot.
The Spartans had to
scratch and claw their "ay
through mjuries and conflicts during the season. and
they've rallied around each
other again since Lucas'
injul)'. Lucious has made a
seamless slide into Lucas·
playmaking role .. Summ~r~
hns turned up hts sconng
and the rest of the players
have picked up the slack any
way they can.
"They're a joy to watch as
a coach and a bear to prepare for," Stevens satd.
The Bulldogs have been
the epitome of the team concept.
Hayward has been the
main co~ in Butler's NCAA
run. but 11'::. the continuity of
1ts team - every player
from last year's roster is
back and a connected-b)a-string cohcsi,eness at
both ends of the floor that
got the Bulldogs this far.
Butler has followed the
mtd-major gameplan to perfection and now gets a shot
at the hig bo) -;, m its homctown,'no k~:-..
.
"'I hb is a very ~rectal
story for ~utkr a!1d
deservedly so. lno "atd.
"It's not out of the cloud~
because they were ptckcd in
the top 10 all year. I mean. if
1 wasn't playmg them, I dcfmitely would be a fan. I can
promise you that.''
Mike Krtyzewski\ Duke
teams have always been
team-first and this year IS no
exception.

Scheyer, Smith
and
Smgler are the Blue De\ il ·
go-to gu) s. It's just that the)
seem to go to a different one
e\ el) night.
Sche)er \\ent 1-for-11 in
the econd round against
California, but Smith and
Singler m.tde up for it b)
scoring 37 combined points.
\Vhen Singler missed evel)'
shot in the regional final
against
Baylor, Smith
scored a carl'cr-high 29
points and Schl') er broke
fn:e of hi-.. slwoting slump.
h1tting five 3-pointcrs on the
wav to 20 points.
None IS a superstar in his
own right. but they form a
three-headed headliner that
has tradition-rich Duke back
in the Final Four for the first
time "ince 200 L
"They haven't been gh en
credit along their careers for
''hat the) arc doing or for
"hat they are tr) ing to
accomplio;h,'' Krzyze\\ ki
said. "I'm really pleased for
them."
West Virginia ha~ a singular star in Butler, the athletic senior who can reel off
pomt~ 111 butll'hl':- and has a
knack for coming through in
big monwnts Hut ler 's a
likelv future. pro, hut l'\L'n
hl' ticcds hL'Ip sometimes.
particularly co~rly in the
NCAA tournament \\hen hl'
""as struggling to find his
shot.
And ''hen the shots aren't
falling for nn)One- West
Virginia isn't a pm1icularly
good shooting team
the
Mountaineers can tum to

thetr defen~e. Coach Bob
Huggins preaches a gritty.
) ou-can 't-score-against-u
approach to e\ Cl) P? sesSIOn and the Mountameer
hme bou!!ht in. riding their
defense into the Final Four
for the first thne since 1959.
"I think to ad\ ance in this
tournament. ) ou ha\ e to be
able to defend." Hug!!ins
said. "But I think that';'~ all
the t1me. People do it differt.'nt \\ays. but (it's the

W AHAMA 7,
RIVER V ALLEY
Wc!'lama
R Valley

003 000 4
021 001 2

-

6

773
675

WAHAMA (2·3) Mar.al! VanMatre ard
Kali Hams
R VER VALLEY (0·1)
Kate Y'l
Birch' e d arod Emily Va~S1ckte

WP -VanMatre LP -

B1rcl'! etd

defcn~c)."

Yep. this is going to he a
little different Final Four
than we're used to.
But. in a \\U), ma)bc It's
fitting.
This ha-.. been a strange
-:.:CAA tournament. filled
with up ...ets. unexpected collapse~ b) b1g-name temm.
nms deep into the bracket b)
a ri~ing tide of mid-majors
be
The final gam~
played in basketball rich
Indiana. where the teamfir~t concept seems to be a
pa11 of the state constitution.
And ''hat better place to
fini&lt;;h it off. in lntlianapoli'&gt;.
not far from Hinkle
Fiddhouse. where the ultimate little-team-that-could
stnr) ("Hoosiers") was
lilmed.
"It's going to mal--t· for a
gol)d Finnl l·nur 111 a diffcrent \\a\," lno said. ''It
might be refreshing and
cnjo) able tt) \\ at~h teams
that .tre going to ha\ e to rei)
on each other to ad' anee .1
little bll mort• than ma) be
one per-..on."

''ill

Samp~on,

\\ alks O\ er four innings
''bile striking out t\\ o.
~ik
Brannon. John
Tenol!lia
and
Chri
from Page Ul
Amsban led the Eacle
\\ ith t\\ h1t:-. apiece, l"olinnings.
Neither team. ho\\ C\ er. lowed b) T) ler Hendrix and
~cored agam the re t of the Andrew Bcnedum v. ith one
safet) each. Am.;bar) dro\ c
\\ ::t\ and the Eagle '' ent on
to •cl.tim the mere) -rule in a team-be~t six
decision after tht• end of the '' hik Tenol!lia addl'd t
RBis to thc\\'inning cau~e.
l&lt;)p of thl' fifth.
Cory Haner kd the
hilS starter l'itus Pierce
Rebels
"1th two hits, \\ hik
\\ent three innings on the
nmutHI fot the \ ictor~. HL'ath \\ hite ,md Dann)
:din\\ ing one c.mted run and :'vtatnl') ead1 added a :::.afet)
foLir hit'i, P1crce
\\ ho in the los~.
struck out the s1ue in each
E ASTERN 16,
of the fitst t\\0 innings S
OUTH
G ALLIA 3
fanned sc' en und '' alked
/CrO for the \ ICtOr).
S Galla
000 30
343
168,
Greg Burgess \\ cnt the Eastor'l 637 Ox
entire \\,1) for the Rebels. WP - Titus Perce LP - Greg
.tiiO\\ ing eight hit and 12 Bu·gess

Eagles

o

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