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                  <text>Eastern students go
olo &amp; ensemble, A3

Printed on 100%
Recycled ~c~ sprint

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CIC donates Rio building to county

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Delores Jeffers

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ATF nabs
alleged
bomber

ARv MICHELLE MILLER

~EWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
CHESHIRE
A
Cheshire man is reportedly
in federal custody for
allegedly attempting t
blow up a mobile home in
Ravenswood, W.Va.
Sgt. Richard Harrison of
the Gallia County Sheriff's
Office assisted Bureau of
AlcohoL Tobacco. Firearms
and Explosives (ATF)
agents in the arrest of
Lawrence Lee III, 19. at
approximately 9:30 p.m.
Tuesday at a Cook Road
residence. Harrison located
Lee in the woods outside of
the residence.
Lee was taken into custody by ATF agents and
booked into the West
Virginia South Central
Regional Jail at 12:31 a.m.
on Wednesday.
No further information
was available.

•===

MIDDLEPORT - . The Meigs County
Department of Job and Family Services will
have a little more room to work on developing
Meigs County's workforce thanks to the
Community lmp~ovement Corporation.
The CIC. which was represented by Paul
Reed yesterday at the Meigs County
Commissioners' meeting. transferred the deed
to the county for the building which currently
houses the University of Rio Grande's
Crossroads program in Middleport.
The Rio Grande programs currently housed
in the building will remain but the Meigs
County Department of Job and Family
Services will take over the first floor for its
employment center. DJFS Director Chris
Shank said this will provide a "one stop shopping" point for residents in Meigs County who
wish to take advantage of the workforce development programs offered by the department.
Reed said the CIC donated the property to
the county because it will create more job
opportunities for residents which fits in with
the organization's mission to encourage economic development in the region.
''This will give the DJFS some much needed
room and will be used to hopefully create more
jobs,'' Meigs County Commission President
Tom Anderson said.
Other business from yesterday's meeting:
Commissioners approved the low bid from
York Paving Company. Athens, for $21.330
for paving Brick Street and Civic Center
Drive in Rutland. Anderson said at last week's
meeting when the bid's were opened, he misread the bid from Shelly Company of
Thornville as being $18,700. Shelly's correct
bi~ price was $24,924. The project is being
pa1d for through county Community
Development Block Grant funds.
Comn:issioners approved an appropriation
request m the amount of $4.000 for the Meigs
County-Council on Aging which is half of the
MCcOA's appropriations.

SPORTS

·~===
WEATHER

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - Meigs
High School and Gallia
Academy are two of seven
schools who will benefit
from a $2.6 million grant
from the National Science
Foundation for "The Boat
of Knowledge in the
Science
(Books)
Classroom'' project.
Announcement of the
five-year grant for special
projects to be carried out in
the schools \Vas made
Ohio
Wednesday
by
University In addition to
Meigs and Gallia Academy.
other schools to benefit
from this special science
program are Marietta High
School.
Athens
High
School. Alexander High
School. Federal Hocking
High School and Trimble
High School.
The grant money will
fund a federal push to
encourage more young
Beth Sargent/photo Americans to pursue highPaul Reed (front left) of the Community Improvement Corporation pre- demand careers in science.
sents Chris Shank (front right) of the Meigs County Department of Job technology. engineering
and Family Services with the deed to the Middleport building which and math (STEM), engihouses the University of Rio Grande's Crossroads Program. The pro- ' neering and science gradugram ':'ill stay but will be joined by DJFS and its employment center., ate. As part of the p_rogr~m
Also p1ctured, back row (from left) Meigs County Commissioners Tom studen~s from the umv.ers1ty
Anderson, Mike Bartrum, Mick Davenport. The CIC donated the build- and. scten~e tea~hers 111 the
ing to the county.
• part1c1patmg h1gh schools
will board a boat on the
Ohio River this summer to
conduct water quality
research and learn new
skills to engage area teens
in science.
The goal. according to a
release from the University.

"A Night in the
Spotlight" will be
the theme of the
Eastern High
school prom to be
held from 8 to
11:30 p.m.
Saturday night.
Candidates, left to
right, for queen
are Amanda Wolfe,
Hannah Hysell and
Mandy Roush, and
for king, Andrew
Benedum, Nik
Brannon and
Jacob Boston.
Valet parking and
a red carpet processional for those
attending the prom
will begin at 7 p.m.
in front r, the high
schooL Parking in
front of the school
is reserved for students attending
the prom, and others are to park in
the student lot at
the side or behind
the schooL

Please see Grant, AS

Meigs leads
census
participation
Census takers to
knock on doors May 1
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Meigs
County currently leads all
counties in Southeast Ohio
when it comes to participation mailing back census
~ forms.
County
' · Meigs
Department of Job and
Familv Services Director
Chris· Shank told Meig:-.
County Commissioners yesterday that currently l\leigs'
participation rate is at 76
percent
compared
to
Hocking at 74 percent.
Gallia. Jackson and Vinton
all at 73 percent and Athens
at 68 percent.

Submitted photo

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

Autism Awareness Day slated for Saturday ~"!~:~i~~~~B~~:::8~ifid
B Y HOPE ROUSH

I NDEX

.

HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

!s~ifieds

B3-4

illlCS

Editorials '
Sports

NSA gra~t
to benefit
Meigs/Gallia
schools

Eastern prom set for Saturday

• Southern rallies
past Lady Rebels.
See Page 81

2 SECTIONS -

:·. ·.' ~v:w:w.mydail~scntincl.com

Bs

A4
B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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

.

GALLIPOLIS - Today,
one in J50 individuals are
being diagno;;ed with
autism. making it more
common . than pediatric
cancer.
'lo stress the importance
of.~o knowing what exactly
autism is, the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Autism
Support Group is hosting an
Autism Awareness Day on
Saturday. The event is slated to run from 1-2:30 p.m.
at Will Power Tumbling.
located at 5 Commerce
Drive in Gallipolis. Ohio.
According to Heather
Cundiff, MS. CCC-SLP and

event organizer. the Autism
Awareness Day is geared
toward both autistic children and parents of autistic
children. The event is free
to residents of the tri-county
area. and will feature a wide
variety of activities as wep
as information on autism.
Cundiff described the
event as being a chance for
parents of autistic children
to connect as well as help
each other. According to
Cundiff. the PVH Autism
Support Group, which was
started
last year. is
designed for parents of
autistic children to offer
suppprt to one another.
''The group tries to come
together once a month or

every other month, and we
try to have a topic." Cundiff
said. "The group is needed
because it's important for
parents to know that there
are other parents going
through similar situations
- they can bounce ideas off
each other or help each
other. The group helps with
their day to day life."
She added that the group
has sponsored other events
besides the upcoming
Autism Awareness Day.
such as a Christmas function.
According to Cucdiff.
both the group and Auti!-.m
Awareness Day are important because more and
more children arc being

--

diagnosed with autism each site, also reported the folday. Autism is a complex lowing participation rates
neurobioligical disorder per villages in ~1eigs
that typically lasts through- County: Rutland. 78 perout a person's lifetime. lt cent. Pomeroy. 71 percent.
also impairs a person's Middleport. 70 percent.
percent,
ability to communicate and Racine. · 68
relate to others. In addition, Syracuse · '! 7 perce~t: .
autism is associated with
To\~nshtp. parttctpatton
rigid routines and repetitive rates 111 ~vle1gs County are:
percent.
behaviors. such as obses- Lebanon . 82
sively arrangi ng object~ or Ch~ster 80 perc.ent. Orange.
following very specific I Letart. , ~edfot ~, R~tt!~nd
routines. Symptoms of and Sa)&lt;:m. 7) pa:ent.
autism can range from mild I C?.l~m~ta. 7~- pen:e~~·
to quite severe. and each SuplO .a~d ~It\ e. 77 .P~:t­
case of autism is different cent. S.tltsbUJ Y· 73 peH.:ent.
Cundiff said.
· Sutton. 7~ p_ercent.
For more information on
:o~l llllSSlon~rs
we~e •
the
upcomin~
Autiwl ph:ased to he.tl~ S~an k. s
Awareness Dt;\', com;ICI report as parttctpatton tn
Cundiff at 304-6.75-8639.
Please see Census, AS

�----

LiOXCAL

The Daily Sentinel

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PageA2

TA1fJE

Thursday, April22, 2010

OU-COM receives
over $1.8 million

J

Area physicians to benefit
"Establishino

SENTINEL STAFF

Eric McClain, left, and Lynford Lovell

Locals win karate events
RACINE - Lynford Lovell and
Eric McClain successfully competed
in the 30th annual Tri-State Karate
and Jujitsu Championships in
Charleston. W.Va.
McClain. after-school tutor and
intervention teacher in the Southern
Local School District, and instructor at
the
All-American
Dojo
in
Ravenswood, W.Va. competed in the
black belt men's heavyweight grappling division, where he defeated his
opponent by submission.

the Southern Local 21st Century afterschool program. tutoring students in
the basic art of Karate.
Lynford Lovell, senior instructor in
Ravenswood, W.Va. won second place
in weapons kata. first place in ope hand kata. and second in fighting combat. By winning first place in openhand kata Lovell competed for kata
grand champion. Lovell's accomplishments were highlighted by the fact the
demanding victories came over competitors some 20 years his junior.

The matches consist of five non-stop
minutes of action. an event that
requires acute mental focus and ph;sical stamina. McClain also competed
in RandorL which consists of kicks.
punches. throws. and grappling. He
took first place in the competition. and
with two first-place finishes was
awarded Grand Champion of the event
in his division.
McClain also won second in Black
Belt men's karate fighting and openhand kata. He is a sp,ecial instructor in

Columbus resident faces Somali torture claim
Ahmed fled Somalia in 1989 just
ahead of being arrested again, living
later in Italy and then London, where
COLUMBUS - A former Somali he received political asylum and
military colonel now living in Ohio became a citizen. according to the
ordered the detention ami torture of a lawsuit.
lawyer and human rights advocate in
For his pa1t. Magan left Somalia
Somalia in 1988. an ordeal that per- after the government collapsed in
manently crippled the victim. accord- 1991 and eventually came to the
ing to a federal lawsuit filed United States and then Columbus
Wednesday.
where he joined his wife, Evans said.
A man outside Magan's apartment at
The lawsuit claims Abdi Aden
Magan of Columbus authorized the first said he was Magan, then said he
torture of Abukar Hassan Ahmed wasn't and declined to comment
when Magan served as investigations Wednesdpy after he was shown the
chief of the National Security Service lawsuit. A message was left at his
of Somalia, a force dubbed tl;le apartment and at a phone listing for
him. Court records did not list an
''Gestapo of Somalia."
Ahmed, now retired in London, says attorney for him.
Columbus has the country's secondthe three months of torture he endured
make it painful for him to sit and largest population of Soml:llis after the
injured his bladder so much that he is Minneapolis area. Many emigrated
from refugee camps in Kenya. attractincontinent.
Ahmed suffered from "threatened ed by Ohio's low cost of living and, at
infliction of severe physical pain or least in the 1990s, plentiful jobs.
suffering, the threat of imminent
The lawsuit was filed under the
death. and the resulting psychological Alien To1t Statute, an 18th-century
damage that persists to this day,'' the law which can allow damages for violations of international law, and the
lawsuit said.
The suit in U.S. District Court seeks Torture Victims Protection Act that
unspecified damages from Magan, who permits non-citizens to seek damages
served under Somali dictator Mohamed for torture and illegal killings abroad if
the alleged perpetrators Jive in or have
Siad Ban-e, according to the filing.
The allegations are a chance for assets in the U.S.
The complaint alleges that under
Ahmed to tell the world what happened to him. said Andrea Evans. legal Magan, the security forces "systematidirector of the Center for Justice &amp; cally targeted ordinary citizens perAccountability. a San Francisco-based ceived as opponents of the Barre
center that has brought a number of regime and subjected them to prolonged arbitrary detention, brutal
similar lawsuits.
"We see 1t as a much broader call for interrogation, and torture.''
The suit said Ahmed was arrested
justice than just financial gain," Evans
said. "It really is kind of telling histo- on Nov. 20. 1988. detained and
accused of being a contributing writer
ry flCCurately."
BY ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

to Amnesty International. a human
rights group that had advocated on
behalf of Ahmed years earlier when
he was in prison.
Ahmed was also accused of being a
member of a rebel group protesting
the Barre regime. Authorities held
Ahmed in a windo~·less cell on a
starvation diet with no toilet and
interrogated him day and night,
according to the lawsuit.
On Feb. 8, 1988, two military officers who said they were acting on
Magan's authority tortured Ahmed by
beating and choking him and crushing
his genitals with iron instruments, the
lawsuit said.
Ahmed was released in March 1989,
then harassed by security officers for
four months before fleeing the country, according to the complaint.
Similar lawsuits have been brought
in recent years against ex-military
officials living in the U.S. and accused
of torture in Bosnia, El Salvador.
Haiti, Liberia and Peru.
The U.S. Supreme Court is debating
the merits of a lawsuit involving
alleged wrongdoing by another.
Somali government official from the
same era. That case has broad implications for the future of such lawsuits.
At issue is whether foreign officials, not just countries and their
agencies, receive immunity in federal
court from being sued for their
actions while in power.
Mohamed Ali Samantar was defense
minister and prime minister of
Somalia in the 1980s and early 1990s
under Barre. He now lives in Virginia
and is being sued by victims who say
he was responsible for killings, rapes
and torture, including waterboarding.

a

hea- ·

MDSNEWS@ MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

informatio~ te;hnology s

ATtiENS - An organization led by the Ohio
University
College
of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUCOM) will receive more
than $1.8 million to assist
404 primary care physicians
in 19 Southeastern Ohio
counties with implementing
electronic medical records
for their pract1ces.
The Appalachian Health
Information
Exchange
(AHIE). which includes
OU-COM and I 9 other
health care organizations,
was among seven regional
sites in the state to receive a
total of $26.8 million in federal stimulus funds to assist
in the implementation of the
state's health information
technology initiative. Gov.
Ted Strickland recently
announced.

tem in Ohio is a critical st
in loweting cost and improving the quality of care,"
Strickland said. "Providers'
who participate in this valu-·
able initiative will help to
lower costs, improve quality
and save lives:·
Jack Brose, dean of OUCOM, said, "AHIE partners
have had an important vision ,
for improving patient safety
and the quality of the care
they receive in the region.'
This is a concrete way OUCOM provides its expertise
to address a pressing need ~
faced by our primary care·t
doctors and their patients and·
to help our communities." .
AHIE will use the new·
funding to provide consulting services and training to'
physicians on how to implement electronic medical
systems in their practices. ,

i

1

Activists want Ohio •
plant to be fish-friendly
TOLEDO
(AP)
FirstEnergy
Corp.,
is
Electricity generating plants installing gate-like devices 1
that suck water out of lakes that the company hopes wilr
and rivers are coming under cut down on the 46 million•
attack by environmentalists adult fish that die each year.
who call them "fish-killing at the power plant in Toledo. ~
How well the idea will·
machines."
Activists in Ohio want work isn't known.
The company thinks the:
regulators to force the operator of a plant along Lake $500.000 fix could reduce
Erie to install costly fish kills by close to 80 perFirstEnergy·
changes that would stop cent, said
millions of fish from being spokesman Mark Durbin.
killed each year. But the
utility• that operates the
plant says the changes could
drive up electricity rates.
Hundreds of power plants
and factories around the
nation use water from
river's, lakes, oceans and
creeks
to
cool
their
machines. Older plants use
systems that trap millions of ·
fish in screens and ~uck in
smaller aquatic organisms.
Two states - New York
and California - now are
considering
prqposals
~ FREE 24/7 Live Technical Support ;
designed to limit the fish
~ Unlimited Hours, No Contram!
kills. Some plants in other
~ 10 E·mail Addresses
states have been forced to
~ FREE Spom Protedion
make changes.
~ Invoice Billing Available
~ Reliable Access Since 1994
The power plant in Ohio sits
at the mouth of the Maumee
River. one of Lake Erie's main
tributaries that's a prime spot
for spawning walleye and
near some of the lake's most
popular fishing spots.
www.core.com
Its owner. Akron-based

1-877-267-3266 .

Von age~
FREE UNLIMITED Calls Aroqnd the World

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Around Ohio
Ohio extends
appliance
rebate offer
COLUMBUS (AP)
Ohlo has extended its popular rebate program on
kitchen and laundry appliances while redistributing
more than $400 ,000 in
unused refrigerator rebate
money.
Those funds will be ·
made available to people
on waiting li sts for the
state's money-back deals
on new, energy-saving
dishwashers and clothes
washers.
The rebate offers on
those appliances ended
Monday. but the Ohio
Department
of
Development said Tuesday
lit would keep them going.
Last month, the state
began providing more than
$10 mill ion in rebates on
the aupliances and water

heaters, using federal stimulus funds.
Close to $2 million in
rebate money is still available. with most of that
reserved for people who
buy Energy Star cert1fled
water heaters. That part of
the program has a May 24
deadline.

Cleveland
schools
to cut 10 pet.
of jobs
CLEVELAND (AP)
The school board in
Cleveland has voted to
slash almost 800 employees, including 545 teachers. in hopes of heading off
a nearly $53 million
deficit.
. The layoffs approved at
meeting
an
emotional
Tuesday would eliminate
about 10 percent of the di~-

trict's work force.
Cleveland schools CEO
Eugene Sanders said teachers could lessen the blow by
considering
concessions
such as pay cuts.
The school board's 6-2
vote came despite pleas
from parents and teachers
who said the layoffs would
result in larger class sizes
that would be detrimental to
students. Before the public
portion of the meeting. the
school board met behind
closed doors while teachers
stood up and sang protest
songs.
Following the vote, the
district distributed lists of
employees to be cut.

Authorities:
Man had
napalm bomb
CLEVELAND (AP) A suburban Cleveland man
who police say was keep-

I

•

ing a homemade .,napalm
bomb, other explosn·es and
assault weapons has pleaded not guilty to dozens of
charges.
Thirt)-year-old Matthew
Fairfield of North Olmsted
was arraigned Tuesday.
more than a week after he
was arrested by members of
a mortgage fraud task force.
Prosecutors say detectives
discovered the arsenal in
two homes Fairfield was
renting.
He was indicted last week
on multiple counts of possession of a dangerous ordnance and other charges.
Fairfield remained jailed
Wednesday on $1 million
·
bond.
A spokesman for the
county prosecutor's office
says the case grew out of a
mortgage fraud inn~stiga­
tion but says the explosives are not re luted to
mortgage
fraud.
He
declined to comment at
length.

..

Call: 1.877.673.3136

I

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April

22, 2010

Wooley Bullies &amp; Eastern students go solo &amp; ensemble
More 4-H Club -

POMEROY - A discussion on havin~ a comm!Jnity·
, A ien and g1ving the food
"Wwn to the needy was held
at the recent meeting of the
Wooley Bullies &amp; More 4-H
Club held at the home of
advisor's Rod Beegle and
Amy Ritchie. Three advisors
and 19 members attended.
Items discussed were that

everyone was to learn the 4H pledge, skillathon dates
in
dates.
and
tag
Refreshments of cake and
lemonade were served by
Alice
and
Kayla
Hawthorne. The next meeting will be May 16 at the
home of the advisors. Each
member is to take plants for
the community garden.

Reedsville's John claims
Super Pro championship
REEDSVILLE Jeff
Johnson
of Reedsville
recently claimed the national championship in Super
Pro truck drag racing at the
national finals held at
Norwalk.
Johnson has been a regular
in the MCG/Chrysler Classic
Points series, driving his
familiar
orange
"Fast
Forward" Dodge Dakota

I
I

pickup with Mopar power.
Johnson came out of the ini- 1
tial race in Columbus, with a
slim point lead over former champ Randy Duncan. From
there he faced off against
Duncan in Pittsburgh. Pa. '
and won again. He picked up
points at Martin, Mich., and
other venues along the way
setting up a duel at Norwalk
in the National finals

!

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Reasons for teelUlge depression
Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm
not a parent myself. but in
talking with a friend· of
mine who has teenage kids,
I found out that a middleschool student in our town
Dr. Joyce
committed suicide recentlv.
Brothers
It :-.eems like depression and
suicide in teenagers is getting more common every
day. When I was in school, I
don't think I ever heard
about depression. Why are trouble like this. Neither my
so
many
teenagers husband nor I drink, and we
depressed'?
And
do want to keep our kids away
depressed teens become from alcohol as much as
possible. What's the best
depressed adults? - N.P.
Dear N.P.: Today, suicide way for me and my husband
is the third most common to be good role models, and
cause of death for people to steer our kids away from
between ages 15 and 24. drinking?- E.G.
Dear E.G.: Every child,
'le some teens certainlv
especially
once he or she
more at risk for depresgets
to
be
middleand highn and suicide, some
school age. is responsible
experts agree that teen suifor his or her own choices.
cide has become more combut you as parents can have
mon in the past five years,
a lot of influence when it
after dropping in the 1990s.
comes to alcohol and drugs.
In reality, no single cause is You can't completely shelter
to blame, but.there are m1;1ny
your kids from the existence
factors that might contribute of alcohol or drugs in their
to teen depression. Not just I ives. While you don't drink,
genetics, traumatic events they will be exposed to alcoor family history, but the hol in other ways in their
general environment a teen community, especially as
grows up in can be impor- they get older. You should
tant in whether he or she introduce them to situations
develops depression.
in which drinking is an
Teens are apt to think adults-only activity that can
they're invincible, that be perfectly acceptable
nothing can ever go wrong, when done responsibly. If
and then when they do feel you try to keep them away
psychological pain. they are from the real world too
more easily overwhelmed much. they won't be able to
by helplessness. The preva- handle the reality of alcohol
lence of depression in teens when confronted by it.
may also stem from how
In addition to explicit
children are raised, with alcohol use. you should be
unrealistic
expectations aware of your kids" social
about their own happiness. lives. Make sure you know
Chronic stre!;;s also can trig- who they're with and where
depression and other they're going. Check with
od disorders, and teach- other parents to see if
•
ing children how to cope in there's any chance of drugs
this turbulent world is or alcohol being present
important. There is cause when your kids spend time
for hope, though: If teens with their friends. You can
~re able to seek help, 80
encourage sobriety and
percent of them can be suc- 'remove the temptation to
eessfully treated for depres- drink by encouraging your
sion. With proper treatment, kids to have their friends
depression does not sen- over to your house. where
tence a teen to a lifetime of you can supervise the situasuffering.
tion. If you can make a
•••
strong rule against drinking.
Dear Dr. Brothers: My and also foster loving and
sister's oldest son recently respectful family relationgot in trouble with drinking ships, your kids will have
at his high school. I· have little reason to push the limiwo middle-school-age chil- its with drugs and alcohol.
(c) 2010 by King Features
dren myself. and I really
don't want them to get in Syndicate

Submitted photo

Recently these students from Eastern Middle School participated in the solo &amp; ensemble competition at Ohio University.
Students m grades seven-nine performed a prepared solo before a judge who rated the individual performance on overall tone, intonation, technique and interpretation of the music. Ten student performances were rated superior, defined as
"an outstanding performance with very few technical errors and exemplifying a truly musical expression. This rating should
be reserved for the truly outstanding performance." Eight student performances were rated excellent, defined as "an
unusual performance in many respects, but not worthy of the highest rating due to minor defects irl performance or inef-.
fective interpretation." Two students received ratings of good, "an acceptable performance but not outstanding, showing
accomplishment and marked promise, but lacking one or more essential qualities." Pictured outside Glidden Hall, the
School of Music at Ohio University. are front row (from left) Nathan Russell (tuba). Dustin Frost (trumpet), Willow Adams
(flute), Jessica Sampson (clarinet), Haley Bissell (clarinet}, Kendra Fick (flute}, Mallory Mcintyre (alto sax); back row (from
left) Benji Sampson (tympani), Josh Parker (snare drum}, Brandon Coleman (clarinet), Amber Moodispaugh (tenor sax)_,
Rachael Markworth (clarinet), Julie Weddle (flute), Larissa Riddle, David Frank(trombone), David Warner (tympani}, Jack
Kuhn (~rombone). Casey Ridenour (trumpet) was not present for the photo.

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday .•• Mostly
sunny. A slight chance of
shov,;ers m the afternoon.
Highs m the lower 70s.
West winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Thursday night. ..Partly
cloud)
in
the
evening ...Then
clearing.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Friday...Mostly sunny. A
slight chance of showers in

the afternoon. Highs in the
upper 60s. East winds
around 5 mph. Chance of
rain 20 percent.
friday
night. ..Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. A chance of thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the lower 50s. East
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday...A chance of
thunderstorms. Showers
likely... Mainly in the after-

noon. Highs in the mid the lower 70s. Chance of
70s. Chance of rain 60 per- rain 50 percent.
cent.
Sunday night ...A chance
Saturday
night... of thunder~torms in the
Shower~ and thunderstorms
evening. Mo&lt;&gt;tly cloudy.
likely m the evening ... Then with a chance of sho\\crs.,
showers likely with a Lows in the lower 50s
chance of thunderstom1s Chance of rain 40 percent.
.Monday... Mostly cloudy
after midnight. Lows in the
mid 50l&gt;. Chance of rain 60 in
the
morning ...Then
percent.
becoming partly sunny. A
Sunday...Mo~tly cloudy chance of showers. Highs in
with a chance of showers the lower 70s. Chance of
and thunderstom1s. Highs in -rain 40 percent.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Thursday, April 22
POMEROY- Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District Board of Supervisor,
regular meeting, 11:30 a.m.
at district office, 33101
Hiland Road.
POMEROY- Meigs High
School parent-teacher conferences, 4 to 7 p.m. at the
high school. Discussion will
be on student progress and
performance.
POMEROY- Retirement
seminar at the Senior
Citizens Center, 5 to 7 p.m.
with Judge Scott Powell presenting information on wills,
durable power of attorney,
living will, trusts and reverse
mortgages.
Saturday, April 24
· POMEROY- Free health
screenings at the Mulberry
Community Center 9 to 11
a.m.
No
appointment
required. Includes non-fasting total cholesterol and
blood glucose, bone density, body mass index. blood
pressure, health education.
Monday, April 26
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education.
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,

School
Southern
High
media room.
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9 a.m.
at the office, 117, Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy.

Clubs and
·organizations
Thursday, April 22
POMEROY
Meigs
Col}nty Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon,
Trinity
Church,
Pomeroy. Michael Gerlach
to speak on history of Big
Bend area. Luncheon reservations due Tuesday, 992·
3214. Guests welcome.
Take paper products and
other items for women's
shelter.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville 0. E. S. # 255
7:30
annual inspection,
p.m.
at
Harrisonville
Masonic building.
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains VFW, Post
9053, 7 p.m. at the hall.
REEDSVILLE
Riverview Garden Club,
7:30 p.m. at St. Paul United
Methodist
Church
in
Tuppers Plains. Hostesses,

Kila Frank, Janice Young,
Janet Connolly and Debbie
Gilmore.
SYRACUSE Meigs
County
Women's
Republican Party, regular
6:30
p.m.,
meeting,
Carleton School, refreshments served, call 9853537 or 696-1 042 for more
information.
GALLIPOLIS - Ewings
Chapter Sons of the
American Revolution will
meet at Our House, 1st
Avenue, Gallipolis, 6 p.m.
cost of candlelight meal,
$15 with reservations to be
made with Bill Beegle, 740446·2152.

Church event
Saturday, April 24
ALFRED - The Alfred
United Methodist Church
annual open to the public
breakfast. Serving begins at
6:30 . a.m. with donations
accepted followed by an auc-

tion of baked goods and miscellaneous items at 10 a.m.
Sunday, April 25
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Nazarene Church, perfor·
mance by kUnder Autumn"
at 6 p.m., love offering will
be taken.
POMEROY Gospel
concert 7 p.m.at the New
Beginnings U.M. Church tn
Pomeroy. Singers wiH include
Joe McCloud, the River
Blend Quartet, D.J. Kreseen,
the Sundermans, and the
Grimms. Ught refreshments .•

Other events

Thursday, April 22
POMEROY
Free
Composting Workshop, 6·
8:30 p.m., OSU Me1gs
County Extension office,
Hal
Kneen
discussing
opportunities for people to
learn about the benefits of
composting, how to compost, and different methods
of composting.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 33.95
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 58.76
land Inc. (NYSE) - 60.11
lots (NYSE) - 39.23
•
Evans (NASDAQ) - 33.19
l;lorgWarner (NYSE) - 39.66
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
.;... 14.49
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.85
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.14
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 36.05
Collins (NYSE) - 65.99
DuPont (NYSE) - 39.07
US Bank (NYSE)- 27.94
General Electric (NYSE)- 19.03
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 34.23
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 45.35
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.50
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 28.03
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)- 60.19
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·

DAQ)- 20.62
BBT (NYSE) - 35.11
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 17.58
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.98
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.81
Rockwell (NYSE) - 60.42
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 10.20
Royal Dutch Shell - 61.55
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 108.35
WII·Mart (NYSE) - 54.47
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.44
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 18.42
Worthington (NYSEI - 15.87
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for April 21, 201 0, provided by Edward Jones flnan·
clal advisors Isaac Mills In
Galllpolla at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. PJember SIPC.

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The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Apri122, 2010 •

The Daily Sentinel.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

IN C@@ILIQ)1'M\N
WE TRWT§T
§A\CCll-ll§
~
.

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

"

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of the press; or th~ right of the people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition the Government
for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to· the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, April 22, the 112th day of 2010.
There are 253 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 22, 1970, millions of Americans concerned
about the environment observed the first "Earth Day."
On this date:
In 1864, Congress authorized the use of the phrase "In
God We Trust" on U.S. coins.
In 1889, the Oklahoma Land Rush began at noon as
thousands of homesteaders staked claims.
In 1898, with the United States and Spain on the verge
of formally declaring war, the U.S. Navy began blockading Cuban ports. Congress authorized creation of the 1st
U.S. Volunteer Cavalry, also known as the "Rough
Riders."
•
In 1930, the United States, Britain and Japan signed
the London Naval Treaty, which regulated submarine
warfare and limited shipbuilding.
In 1938, 45 workers were killed in a coal mine explosion at Keen Mountain in Buchanan County, Va.
In 1944, during World War II, U.S. forces began invading Japanese-held New Guinea with amphibious landings at Hollandia and Aitape.
In 1954, the publicly televised sessions of the Senate
Army-McCarthy hearings began.
In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson opened the
New York World's Fair.
In 1990, pro-Iranian kidnappers in Lebanon freed
American hostage Robert Polhill after nearly 39 months
of captivity.
In 1994, Richard M. Nixon, the 37th president of the
United States, died at a New York hospital four days after
suffering a stroke; he was 81.
Ten years ago: In a dramatic pre-dawn raid, armed
immigration agents seized Elian Gonzalez from his relatives' home in Miami; Elian was reunited with his father
at Andrews Air Force Base near Washington. Broadway
producer Alexander Cohen died in New York at age 79.
Five years ago: Zacarias Moussaoui pleaded guilty in
a federal courtroom outside Washington, D.C. to conspiring with the September 11th hijackers to kHI
Americans. President George W. Bush named General
Peter Pace to be the new chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff.
One year ago: President Barack Obama marked Earth
Day with a pitch for his energy plan, calling for a "new era
of energy exploration in America" during a visit to
Newton, Iowa. The FDA said 17-year-old girls could get
"morning after" birth control without a prescription.
Derrick Rose of the Chicago Bulls won the NBA's rookie
of the year award. British-born movie director Ken
Annakin ("Swiss Family Robinson") died in Beverly Hills,
Calif. at age 94. Oscar-winning British cinematographer
Jack Cardiff ("Black Narcissus") died in Ely,
Cambridgeshire, England at age 94.

Health care riform will be strain on Ohio
In the contentious· debate over the
federal health care bill recently
approved by Democrats in Congress
and signed by President Barack
Obama, you may have heard supporters cite numbers from
the
Congressional Budget Office to argue
that the proposal is fiscally-neutral.
In reality, the new law just passes the
buck to the states. many of which are
already struggling to balance their
budgets.
In Ohio, for· instance, where state
leaders are expected to face a $4 to $8
billion structural deficit during the
next budget process in 2011. the. federal health care package requires that
we expand Medicaid eligibility to
individuals under the age of 65 who
have incomes up to 133 percent of the
federal poverty level. An analysis by
state officials found that this change
will grow Medicaid enrollment in
Ohio by 25 percent, bringing an additional 554,000 Ohioans into the program.
Ohio already spends $4.5 billion
per year in state funds to provide
Medicaid services to low-income
Ohioans. and the new federal health
care rules will force Ohio taxpayers
to shell out hundreds of millions of
dollars more for the program over the
next decade. According to estimates
released by the National Governors
Association and the National
Conference of State Legislatures,
Ohio may have to provide an additional $350 million in Medicaid payments beginning in 2017 through
2019 under the health care overhaul.
This means t at without a huge tax
increase, there will be less state
money to fund education, prisons.
libraries, local governments and other
necessary services.
The health care bill may be budget-

Thought for Today: "Life is one long process of
getting tired." - Samuel Butler, British author
(1835-1902).

John
Carey

neutral for the federal government,
but it is not budget-neutral for the
state of Ohio.
While there are noble goals driving
the health care effort in Washington,
D.C. , 1 believe the plan carries anumber of unfair consequences for state
and local governments, Ohio businesses and individuals.
For example, Ohioans who earn
above 133 percent of the federal
poverty level will be required to buy
insurance in the private market even
if they can't afford it, or they will
have to pay a penalty that could reach
several hpndred dollars per year for
some households. At the same time,
those who are unable or unwilling to
work \viii receive care for free
through the government.
In addition, the federal health care
law includes a number of new taxes,
fees and other costly mandates on
businesses, which threaten to stifle
economic development, force some
companies to shut down or discourage others from hiring new workers.
For instance, employers who fail to
provide health insurance for eligible
employees could be fined $2,000 or
more per full-time worker.
Current!). no person who watks
into a hospital. whether they are
insured or uninsured. is denied treatment. Hospitals are then reimbursed
for this uncompensated care by the

federal government. However. the
feds will begin to cut payments for .
uncompensated care over the next .,
several years. based on the assumption that all Americans will have
some type of health insurance, which
is highly unlikely. If their assumptiOn
is not con·ect, hospitals \viii have to
absorb these costs.
Further. the federal government is
forcing changes under their health .;
care overhaul to programs that Ohio .,
has already addressed in a more eiTicient manner. such as coverage for
high-risk patients. young adults and
children.
I may be accused of just saying
"no" to health care reform. and that is .
okay. It is my job to speak out again:;~
a plan which I believe \-Viii be bad fo~
my constituents. Ohio has succes.sful- ·
ly partnered with the federal govern- '
ment over the years to help reform &gt;{
Medicaid and provide greater access
to health coverage for those in need.
But, with passage of the federal
health care bill late last month. lead- &lt;~
ers in Washington are now forcing a •
policy on our state that will put a sig- ~
nificant strain our already tight bud- ~
get, raise costs for individuals and
businesses and limit the rights of
every Ohioan to make their own •
health care choices. I believe that is
wrong.
.
If you have any questions, thoughh
or concerns about a state issue. or if
you need assistance working with a
state government agency. please
write to me: Senator John A. Carey.
Ohio Senate, Statehouse. Columbus.
Ohio 43215 or call my office at &lt;614) ••T
466-8156. I also encourage you to ·
visit my page on the Ohio Senate
website at www.ohiosenate .gov/johncarey.

·.

J

•
,.

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be accurate. If you know of an error Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) class postage paid at Pomeroy.
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Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

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�Thursday, Apri122, 2010

C&gt;bituaries
Delores Jeffers
Delores Jeffers, 54, of
Dayton and formerly of
Minersville, went to be with
our Lord, Sunday, April 18 at
Miami Valley Hospital in
ton due to a massive
t attack. In her passing,
• ores was surrounded by
her family and friends.
Delores was born at
Mason, W.Va. on Dec. 5,
1955 to the late Bill and
Audria Jeffers. In addition to
her parents, she was preceded
in death by maternal grandparents Ben and Pearl Kesterson, paternal grandparents,
John and Violia Jeffers, niece Trina Bachtel and Trina's
infant son, Trey.
Delores is survived by her sisters, Bea (Bachtel) and
Jerry Davis, Goldboro, NC, Carole Bachtel, South Point,
Susie and Ronnie Casto. Pomeroy; brothers. Ronnie and
Diane Bachtel. Chester, and Bill Jeffers, Dayton, who was
not only her brother but her best friend; and three nieces,
two nephews, 14 great nieces and nephews. Delores also
left behind many special friends who touched her heart in
many ways.
Delores attended Southern High School before moving to
Dayton where she then attended Rets Tech Center, graduating as an electrical engineer. After graduation, she became
a teacher at Rets Tech Center. After leaving her teaching
career. Delores worked at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
as an engineer on the flight simulator. After employment
there, she went back to school and received her Realtor's
license. She was employed in Dayton for Tom Fortner,
Broker, Realtor as head of the RDO department.
•
memorial service was held yesterday.

Local Briefs
Free health screenings
POMEROY - Free health screenings will be offered a
the Mulberry Community Center, 9 to 11 a·.m. Saturday. No
appointment is required.
The tests will include non-fasting total cholesterol and
blood glucose, bone density, body mass index, blood pressure and will also offer a vruiety of health education stations.

Removal·time
POMEROY - For those who have items in winter storage on the Rock Springs fairgrounds, the time for removal
is Saturday, April 24. from 9 to 11 a.m. This includes items
such as boats, jet skis, and campers, according to Debbie
Watson, secretary of the Meigs County Agricultural Society.

Boi I advisory issued
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains-Chester
er District has issued a boil advisory for Meigs County,
on Township. for several roads.
hey are Roy Jones Road, Snowball Hill Road,
Amberger Road, Forest Run Road from the intersection of
Minersville Hill Road to the intersection of Amberger
Road, Minersville Hill Road, Welshtown Road, Yost Road,
Bailey Road, Court Street Road, Morning Star Road from
the intersection of Pine Grove road to the intersection of
U.S. 33, Pine Grove Road between the intersection of
Amberger Road and Morning Star Road.
When a boil order is in effect, Donald C. Poole, General
Manager of the Water District, advises resident who are
affected to boil their cooking and drinking water for three
minutes before consuming.
The reason for the outage is to do unscheduled mainte~
nance work on the mainline. The boil advisory will be in
effect until4 p.m. Thursday.

:-

Jntel chief: Small terror
groups are key challenge
WASHINGTON (AP) - Small and disparate groups of
ten-orists and individuals radicalized by militants over the
Internet will be major challenges for the U.S, intelligence
community in coming years, the nation's top intelligence
adviser said Wednesday.
National Intelligence Director Dennis Blair said he is
fident U.S. spy agencies can detect and prevent a Sept.
•
style attack. But stopping smaller, more piecemeal
attacks will be harder, he said.
"We've got to raise our game," Blair told reporters at the
DNI headquarters in northern Virginia.
Radicalization is becoming a bigger problem, he said,
including efforts aimed at Americans attracted to extremist
ideologies through the Internet.
Blair's comments come as the intelligence community and
other government agencies are still contending with criticism
in the wake of the Christmas Day airliner attack. The incident is seen as a strong indicator of the kind of smalL quickly designed plots that could pose trouble in the future.
Intelligence agencies are also dealing with the fallout
from the devastating suicide bombiqg inside a CIA base in
Afghanistan that killed seven agency employees last
December.
Counterterrorism officials say that as al-Qaida's
Pakistan-based core struggles to get financing and recruits,
smaller offshoots in places like Somalia and Yemen are
gaining support and followers. Those franchises are more
likely to plot and wage smaller, less sophisticated attacks
that are harder to detect and prevent.

GrantrromP;geAl
provide teachers more hands-on training in conducting
analyzing
research data. which they will use in the class•
room for STEM education. The high school students will
Ptfticipate in the research virtually; the boat will remotely
tlf~smit research data to classrooms via the internet.
'The Ohio River is right in these students' backyards, but
they may not know much about it." said Tiao Chang, a professor of civil engineering at Ohio University and leader of
the new project.
"By touching on something familiar in their lives, however, we will encourage them to become more interested in
science."
The grant also funds nine graduate fellowships with an
annual stipend of $30,000 each. plus four quarters of
tuition waivers.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Earth Day: No more burning rivers, but new threats:
Bv S ETH BoRENSTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Pollution before the first
Earth Day was not only visible, it was in your face:
Cleveland's
Cuyahoga
River caught fire. An oil
t-.pill fouled 30 miles of
Southern California beaches. And thick smog choked
many cities' skies.
Not anymore.
Forty years after that first
Earth Day on April 22,
1970, smog levels nationwide have dropped by about
a quarter. and lead levels in
the air are down more than
90 percent. Formerly fetid
lakes and burning rivers are
now open to swimmers.
The challenges to the
planet today are largely
invisible - and therefore
tougher to tackle.
''To c;uggest that we've
made progress is not to say
the problem is over," said
William Ruckelshaus, who
in 1970 became the first
head of the Environmental
Protection Agency. "What
we've done is shift from the
very visible kinds of issues
to those that are a lot more
subtle today.''
Issues such as climate
change are less obvious to the
naked eye. Since the first
Ea1th Day, carbon dioxide
levels in the air have
increased by 19 percent,
pushing the average 'annual
world temperature up about I
degree Falu·enheit, according
to the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration.
''We've cleaned up what
you can see and left everything else in limbo," said
Kathleen Rogers. president
of the Eatth Day Network.

Improvements took shape
in the form of the Clean Air
Act. the Clean Water Act and
changes in the way businesses treat the environment, said
Denis Hayes. Those reforms.
he added. grew out of the
first Earti"\ Day. an event
Hayes helped coordinate.
"'It is the most powerful,
sweeping.
society-wide
change America has had
since the New Deal,'' Hayes
said. ''The air is cleaner
despite the fact that we have
twice as many vehicles traveling twice as many miles."
Nancy Sutley, head of the
White House Council on
Environmental Quality, said
progress in the past 40 years
is about more than just laws.
It's also about innovation
that made cleaner cars. And
that innovation, Sutley said,
"is going to be the answer
for tackling climate change."
No
place
illustrates
progress more than the
Cuyahoga River.
Cleveland's main river
used to periodically catch
fire. On June 22, 1969. trash
and an oil slick ignited. The
river bumed for half an hour,
drawing national attention to
water pollution nationwide.
People didn't swim in the
river at the time, and anyone
who fell in needed to be
checked by a doctor.
''The river bubbled like a
cauldron. There were all
kinds of chemicals in there,
and that was what was bubbling at the bottom." said
Wayne Bratton, a boat captain then and now. and the
first president of the
Cleveland
Harbor
Conservation Committee.
On Tuesday, Wayne
Bratton was aboard his boat.
The Holiday. He looked

cally difficult. said Russell
Train. chief environmental
adviser in 1970 to President
Richard Nixon.
"Back in the '70s, people
felt the threat of environmental mistakes and misbehavior." Train said. "There
wa~ a real threat to your
health and people knew that.
Today. people will accept
that as a general principle,
but don't feel any immediate
threat from climate change
or indirect source pollution
from farmers.'"
Last month was the
hottest March on record
worldwide. It was 1.4
degrees warmer than March
1970. according to NOAA.
The average temperatures
for the last 40 years are
higher than the rest of the
130 years of record-keeping. said Deke Arndt, head
of climate monitoring at
NOAA's National Climate
Data Center.
And. this week, German
scientists published an
analysis in the scientific
journal Nature that says the
greenhouse gas agreement
reached by some international leaders last December
in Copenhagen would lead
to a 10 to 20 percent
increase in carbon dioxide,
levels in 2020.
That puts "in dire peril" .
chances for I imiting the
effects of warming. the
researchers said.
Still. the White House's
Sutley is optimistic. ·
"The Cuyahoga River is.,
not on fire anymore. and air.
quality in Los Angeles is not
as bad as it was 40 years ago. '
I think people get those connections.'' Sutley said.
··People get that something is
changing about our climate."

over the starboard side at
Collision
Bend
and
described by telephone
what he saw: "I'm looking
at a lot of ~ulls, there's a
loon, a lot of black heron."
People now fish in the
river, which holds 60 species.
There's a spiffy amphitheater
on the river bank, which
never would have been built
when the water had a dreadful stench, Bratton said.
It's not just the Cuyahoga.
In I 957. the Pub I ic Health
Service
declared
the
Potomac River unsafe for
swimming. Now Rogers
lets her children swim in it.
"I don't even wash them
off any more,'' she said.
In Los Angeles in the
1960s and 1970s. the joke
was that if. you moved in
during the summer you
wouldn't notice the nearby
mountains until the winter.
Nqw peak smog levels are
only one-third as high as 40
years ago. he said.
"Unfortunately, it leads
some people to think that
we don't have a problem
any more.'' said Sam
Atwood. spokesman for the
South Coast Air Quality
Management District.
The region still has 6.000
yearly premature deaths
linked to unseen tiny particles
in the air that cause heart and
lung problems. Atwood said.
In 1970, Ruckelshaus said,
about 85 percent of pollution
was from places like factories or power plants that the
government could regulate.
Now such sites account for
only 15 percent, with most
pollution coming from
sources like farms that are
harder to control.
That makes fixing the
remaining problems politi-

Ariz. court discovers original OK Corral papers .·
B v JoNATHAN J. C ooPER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX - A missing
handwritten transcript from
a coroner's inquest done
after the legendary gunfight
at the OK Corral has resurfaced in a dusty box more
than 125 years after the
most famous shootout in
Wild West history.
The document had been
missing for decades - last
seen when it was photocopied in the 1960s.
It was found when court
clerks stumbled on the box
while reorganizing files in
an old jail storage room in
Bisbee, about 20 miles
south of Tombstone, the
Arizona frontier
town
where the gunbattle took
place.
Stuffed inside the box was
a modem manila envelope
marked ''keep" with the
date 1881.
The inquest was done
after lawmen Wyatt Earp,
his two brothers and Doc
Holliday confro~ted a gang
of drunken outlaws, sparking a 30-second gunbattle in
the streets of Tombstone
that killed Frank and Tom
McLaury and Bill Clanton.
It made folk heroes of
Earp and Holliday and
inspired numerous movies
about the untamed Old
West.
Officials showed off just
one page of the transcript on
Wednesday - a thick sheet
of paper with blue lines and
sloppy cursive writing in
d~k ink. It appeared to contain the beginning of testimony by William Claiborn,
identified by a historian as a

friend of the three dead outlaws.
"I was present on the afternoon of Oct. 26th '81 when
the shooting commenced
between out1aw parties," the
testimony reads.
Court officials
have
turned the document over to
state archivists. Experts will
immediately begin peeling
away tape, restoring the
paper and ink, and digitizing the pages.
The first pages could show
up on the library's website
for historians to review as
soon as next week.
It's unlikely the transcript
will prov,de any shattering
revelations about the gunfight, since historians have
already reviewed photocopies and the inquest was
covered in detail by newspapers at the time.
Still, historians have long
argued over who fired first
and whether Tom McLaury
was armed when he was
shot. Earp and the other
lawmen said they were
defending
themselves.
Friends of the outlaws
called it murder.
Wild West fans still argue
over who was right, even
though a judge and grand
jury found insufficient evidence to try Holliday and
the Earp brothers.
History buffs said the
transcript is en! ightening
nonetheless because it has
the potential to clear up
fuzzy passages and reveal
small notes that don't
appear in the photocopies.
"They were handled by
the people of that moment,
and they're the actual artifact that encaps1:1lated that

the cerisus determines the
funding formulas for the
county. The more participation, the more chances to
meet the county's needs
with funding.
Shank also said begin ning May 1, residents who
have not returned their
form by April 16 will be
visited by a US Census
Bureau employee, officially called an enumerator or
census taker. to collect the
information in person. This
process will continue until
the end of July.
According to Shank, residences will be approached
up to six times quring vari~
ous times of the day by
workers and once contact is
made with a resident. those
census takers will never ask

to enter a resident's home or
for their social security number. All the census workers
carry official. government
badges with their name.
Residents are well within
their rights to ask for a picture identification from
another source to confirm
the census taker's identity.
Some census takers might
carry a US Census Workers'
bag. For more detailed information, residents can call the
Detroit Regional Census
Center to confirm the census
taker is employed by the
bureau at 313-396-5200.
Shank told commissioners
during the 2000 census.
Meigs County had a pruticipation rate of 65 percent with
the national participation rate
having been 75 percent.

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you'll find some more:··
Roberts said. "Maybe there
will be something else that·.
we've all been dying to get
our hands on."
•
Lundin is convinced that~
somewhere in her court- ·
house are records of the
inquest for Johnny Ringo,
another legendary outlaw. •
"These things aren't some-,
thing you can go search for.'' • •
she said . "You really just.~,
have to watch for them.''

time
period,''
said
GladysAnn Wells, Arizona
State Librarian.
The document is legible,
but the paper has darkened
to an amber beer color and
is brittle like a potato chip,
said Cochise County Court
Clerk Denise Lundin. The
handwriting can be difficult
to read because the court
reporter was rapidly taking
notes, she said.
The inquest was done by
coroner
Henry
M.
Matthews.
Even if the document
doesn't reveal new information, the discovery helps
historians feel more comfortable with the record,
said Gary Robertson, a Wild
West historian and author of
the book '·Doc Holliday, the
Life and the Legend." But
most importantly, it sparks
the imagination.
"Every time you find one
it gives you hope that maybe

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PageA6

IT QCCP

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April

22, 2010

Second place: " Roots Run Weak" by Constance Fowler

MSWCD photo
contest winners •
announced ·

First place: "Racine Locks and Dam" by Joyce Manual

POMEROY - Winners in the "The Power of Water''
photo contest sponsored by the Meigs Soil and Water
Con,ervMton 'Oistrict and the Leading Creek Watershed
Group have been selected.
·
Joyce Manual took first with her entry ti tled "Racine
Locks and Dam." Second place went to Constance Fowler
with her entry. "Roots Run Weak." and Josephine Hill took
third with "Power of Water Paddle Wheel.'' Manuel also
won fourth place with a picture of the Phillip Sporn power
plant and fifth went to Lucas Hunter for his photo called
"Ice." The three top winners receiyed cash prizes.
Announcement of the winners was made Saturday at the
annual Leading Creek Stream Sweep. The contest was
open to people of all ages.
Rair.a Fulks , Leading Creek Watershed Coordinator.
rep011ed that a point system based on attributes like focus.
lighting. and creativity was used to select the winners. She
noted that the contest now in its sixth year has benefited
from donations made bv Farmers Bank. Home National
Bank and Ohio Valley Bank.
All photo entries can be viewed at the Meigs SWCD. at
the MSWCD's annual banquet and at the Meigs SWCD
booth during, the 29 I 0 Meigs County Fair.
"Next) ear we will have another new theme to spark yo- creativity.'' said Fulks. suggesting residents "kee19 th
eyes open for that perfect photo of Meigs County's waters.
Thi rd place: "Power of Water Paddle Wheel" by Josephine Hill

Seniors offered free health screening
SHADE - Free health
screenings. information and
chair massages are being
offered to area adults durin!!
a Rural Senior Outreach
event Friday,April23. from
9 a.m. to noon at the Shade
Senior Center on Route 33
in Shade.
The screenings will be
conducted by the Ohio
University College of
Osteopathic Medicine (OUDepartment
of
COM)
Geriatric Medicine and
Gerontology in conjunction
OU-COM's
with
Community
Health
Programs unit.
Although the event focuses on older. adults, anyone
over the age of 18 can participate in the free health

screenings, whJch include
blood pressure, hearing and
non-fasting glucose and
cholesterol. Lipid panel
screenings - for cholesterol, triglyceride and both
high-density and low-density lipid levels (HDL and
LDL) - all require 12
hours of fasting.
Information on nutrition,
dtabctcs and other health
issues will be avatlablc
along with uni\ersity and
community health profe..,sionals. including OUCOM nurses. a masseuse.
representatives from both
Lifeline of Ohio and Senior
Beat. nutritionist" from the
ARHI Diabetes Center at
OU-CO!vf. and a speech and
hcanng specwlist from the

Ohio Universnv School of
Speech and Hearing .
"This ts an inter-professional approach." said
Deborah ~tcyer,- Ph.D .•
R.i'&lt; ., assistant professor of
geriatrics and administrator
for
the
OU-C0~1
Department of Geriatric
Medicine and Gerontology.
··we involve students and
faculty
from
Ohio
Umverstty and medical professionals from as many
discipltnes, programs and
agencies as possible. It's a
great service for seniors and
oppmtunity for medical
studentc; to gain hands-on
experience in a rural environment. while· interacting
with a 'ariety of health
providers.''

an

Skyline Speedway April 23:
Twin 30's rescheduled
STEWART Skyline
Speedway in Stewart will
once again make a bid at
opening the gates for the
20 I0 racing season with the
rescheduled "Twin 30's" for
Outlaw splints and Al\1RA
Late Models this Friday.
April 23. Regular racing will
take place in the AMRA
ivtodified ranks, Pure Stocks.
and PWD Pour Cylinders.
The headlinmg "Spring Thaw
30's'' will each pay $1,500 to
\Vin and $200 to start.
Many local drivers from
Meigs and Gallia Counties
compete each and every
week in each of the tiYc
classc&lt;; that race weekly at
Skyline every Friday night
through October.
The time has come for
what should be the most
exciting weekly spnnt car
~cries in Amenca. Cars and
drivers from the local ranks
and adjoining states have
~how interest in taking home
the winners share of the high

dollar point fund. Combine
that excitement with the hot
bed of stock car racmg and a
mini-mega event unfolds for
Friday's ~1pener.
The Ohio Valley Sprint
Car Association (OVSCA)
is a 410 Sprint Car Series
which sanctions 410 Outl&lt;m
style sprint car racing
regionally in the Ohio-West
Virginia area ~A ithin two
hours of the Charleston,
W.Va. area. The .~anct10nmg
bodv was born durin2 the
off-season prior to the ~20 I 0
racing season in an effort to
promote and provide !&gt;print
car racing teams \\•ithin a
uniform set of rules: and
stabilize purses for the bettennent of the sport of 410
sprint car racing The orga-

nizatiun abo offers sprint
car teams an alternative to
uc;e a tire brand, namelv
Hoosier Tire-;, in contrast t()
track tire deals that command the use of other tire
brands. The racing season
for the OVSCA runs from
April through October.
Skyline has also expanded ih outreach to fan-, and
dri\(:rs with a FacebooJ.;
page, which will announce
updates along with the
Skyline website.
For further il!f'ormarion
viYit
www.skyline\fU'edll'ay.net or rail 304-SJY441 0 or the twck phone at
740-662-4111. Fur infornwtion on the Ohio Valle\'
Spri11t (' Ar A ~sociation mil
J04-5..J2-8322.

There is no charge for any
o;;ervices at the outreach
event. Meyer said.
Funding for the event is
provtded~in pa11. by a grant
from the Health Resources
and Service Administration
of Case Western Reserve
Geriatric Education Center.
of which OG-COM is a
member. and by OUCOM's Community Health
Programs unit.

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

Inside

-pa

--

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.Eastern competes at NYHS meet, Page B2
Roane Co. defeats Wahama, Page B6

Thursday, April22, 2010

.

Lady Tornadoes rally
past South Gallia, 9·7

41&lt;:,AL SCHEDULE
I ROY - A schedule of upcommg high
ty sporting events mvolv1ng teams
Mason and Galha counties.

Ih.ursday...AQriL 2Z
Baseball
Fa1r1anc1 at Soutn Gallia. 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonvtlle·York, 5 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Softball
Fairland at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Point Pleasant, 4:30 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonvtlle·York. 5 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Pomt Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 4:30
p.m.
Boys Tennis
Flortsmouth at Gallia Academy, 4:30
p.m.

E!id.ily. Aprll.13
Baseball
South Gallia at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant. 7 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Softball
South Gallia at Eastern, 5 p.m.
'folsia at Point Pleasant, 5:30p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 5 p.m.
Track
Meigs. South Gallia at Fairland
Invitational. 4:30 p.m.
Girls Tennis
Pleasant at Scott, 5 p.m.
Boys Tennis
Pleasant at Scott. 5 p.m.
•

Lady Eagles
soar past
. Waterford

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE. Ohio - Down
seven runs before sending a
hitter to the plate. the
Southern Lady Tornadoes
(6-5) battled back. winning
I by a final score of 9-7 over
the visiting South Gallia
Lady Rebels.
The Lady Rebels sent 12
I batters to the plate. in the top
of the first inning, bringing
seven around to score.
; Tayler Duncan led off the
game with a single. followed by a Chandra
Canaday single. a walk to
Samantha Hammond, and a
double
to
Courtney
B1ackburn, all prior the
Southern recording the first
out of the game. Morgan
Gillilaf1d and Tori Duncan
each
walked,
Marilyn
Turner hit a single, Tayler
1

Swann

Strang

Duncan drew a walk in her
second plate appearance and
Canaday hit another single.
Tayler Duncan, Canaday,
Hammond,
Blackburn.
Gilliland, Tori Duncan, and
Turner each crossed the
plate in the inning.
Trailing 7-0, Southern
drew a pair of two out walks
in the bottom half of the first
inning, one each to Lindsay

~outhern.'s Lynzee Tucker hit~ a pitch thrown by South Gallia pitcher Chandra Canaday,

Please see Rally, 86

nght, dunng Wednesday eventng s contest between the two teams as South Gallia catcher Tori Duncan sets up behind the plate.

Sarah Hawley/photo

Cleveland
Browns Jerome
Harrison (right)
straight-arms
Cincinnati
Bengals
Chinedum
Ndukwe in the •
third quarter at
Cleveland
Browns
Stadium on
Sunday,
October 4,
2009, in
Cleveland, '
Ohio. The
Browns will
pick seventh
overall on
Thursday night,
while the
Bengals own
the 21st selection in the first
round of the
three-day draft.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
The Eastern softball
team
put
itself back
into contention for
the
TriV a I I e y
Conference
Hocking
Division
t i t I e
Wednesday
Turley
· night after
knocking
~,....--...,..---, off leagueleading
Waterford
by an 8-2
margin at
D
o
n
Jackson
Field
in
Me i g s
County.
The Lady
Gillian
Eagles ( 154) avenged
a 5-2 road setback back to
the Lady Wildcats (12-5)
back on April 12 ana also
moved into a tie for first
place with WHS. Both programs currently possess a 61 record in TVC Hocking
-

Please see Eastern, 81

Big Reds
blast
!astern, 9-1
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
'

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
Visiting Parkersburg
established
an early 5-0
I e a d
through
two innings
and never
looked
b a c ·k
Wednesday
night during a 9-1
victory
o v e r
Eastern in a
non-confer-

e n c e
matchup in
Me i g s
County.
T h e
Eagles (64) trailed
wire-to,
wire in the
Carnahan
contest. as
the
Big
Reds outhit the hosts by an
11-7 margin. EHS also committed the only two errors in
the game. one of which led
to a run for PHS.
Parkersburg stormed out

Please see Eagles, 86
\

j

Mike Cardew/
Akron Beacon
JournaVMCT

Browns want to avoid Bengals look to upgrade
· first-round miscue passing game at TE, WR
BEREA, Ohio (AP) Slipping on his reading
glasses. Cleveland president
Mike Holmgren scanned the
names of the Browns' firstround draft picks since 1999.
Tim Couch. Courtney
Brown. Gerard Warren.
William Green. Jeff Faine.
Kellen Winslow. Braylon
Edwards.
Kamerion
Wimbley. Brady Quinn. Joe
Thomas. Alex Mack.
After
his
review,
Holmgren offered a candid
assessment.
"That's a bad list," he said.
Of the 11 selections, only
Thomas, Cleveland's Pro
Bowl left offensive tackle
and Mack, who had a strong

rookie season at center in 2009,
remain on
t
h
e
Browns'
NOTEBOOK roster. The
other nine
h a v e
moved on. Some were forced
to retire early because of
injuries while others were
traded for a variety of reasons.
"I remember the first time I
saw that (list), it was about a
month ago," said Holmgren,
hired by the Browns in
December. "A list like that is

Please see Browns, 82

Tornadoes breeze by
South Gallia, 15-5
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAIJ..YTRIBUNE COM

RACINE, Ohio - The
Southern Tornadoes defeated South Gallia by a score
of 15-5 in a six inning game
on Wednesday evening.
South Gallia scored first,
taking a 1-0 lead in the top
of the first inning with
Grant Simpson scoring the
Rebel run following a lead
off walk. Brandon Harrison
hit an RBI double to score
Simpson.
Southern's first five hitters scored in the home half
of the first inning. with a
single by T~ylor Deem,
Michael Manuel being hit
by a pitch, Jordan Taylor
hitting a single, Danny
Ramthun doubling, and
Jesse Ritchie hitting a sin-

Ritchie

Taylor

gle. Dustin Salser hit an
RBI sacrifice fly. Southern
added two more runs in the
second and two in the third,
with Eric Buzzard and
Deem each scoring in the
second and the third.
The Rebels scored four
runs during a fourth inning
rally that brought the score
to 9-5. advantage Southern.

Please see Southern, 81

CINCINNATI (AP) Out in Los Angeles, Chad
Ochocinco tried to get the
timing down on a quickstep
routine that he hoped would
keep him on "Dancing with
the Stars" for another week.
Back in Cincinnati, his
Bengals teammates worked
out without him. trying to
get the timing down on their
pass routes so they can get
back into the playoffs for a
second straight year.
What do they think about
the receiver who's more into
the rumba these days?
"Urn, he's got to work on
his hip action," offensive
lineman Bobbie Williams
said. "He looks a' little stiff.
Hopefully, he's working on

that
along with
getting
ready for
t h 1 s
upcoming
NOTEBOOK season.
"But
I
d o n ' t
know. I don't know about
Ocho. I don't know."
Here's one thing the
Bengals know: It won't be
too long before Ochocinco
can waltz away. And this
might be the time to start
preparing for that day.
They've got Ochocinco and
several other starters on both
offense and defense heading

Please see 8engals, 82

2010NFL

DRAFrORDER
FIRST ROUND
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

St. Louis Rams
Detroit Ltons
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Washington Redskins
Kansas City Chtefs
Seattle Seahawks
Cleveland Browns
Oakland Ratders
Buffalo Bills
Jacksonville Jaguars
Denver Broncos
Miami Dolphtns
San Francisco 49ers
Seattle Seahawks
New York Giants
Tennessee Tttans
San F'rancisco 49ers
Pittsburgh Stealers

7.
8.

9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.

Fctl~;on:;

19.

Ath:111tct

20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31
32.

Houston Texans
Cincinnati Bengals
New England Patnots
Green Bay Packers
Philadelphia Eagles
Baltimore Ravens
Arizona Cardinals
Dallas Cowboys
San Otego Chargers
New York Jets
Minnesota Vikings
Indianapolis Colts
New Orleans Samts

Rounds 2·3 on Friday and
Rounds 4·7 on Saturday.

CLEVELAND
Round 1. 7 (7th overall)
Round 2: 6 (38)
Round 3: 7 (71 ). 21 (85), 28 (92)
Round 5:3 (134), 15 (146), 29 (160)
Round 6:8 (1n). 17 (186)

CINCINNATI
Round
Round
Round
Round
Round
Round
Round

1:21 (21st overall)
2: 22 (54)
3: 20 (84), 32 (96)
4:22 (120), 33 (131)
5: 21 (152)
6: 22 (191)
7: 21 (228)

PITTSBURGH
Round 1 18 (18th overall)
Round 2: 2El (52)
Round 3: 18 (82)
Round 4: 18 (116)
Round 5: 20{151), 24 (155), 33 (164),
35 (166)
Round 6: 19 (188)
Round 7: 35 (242)

Order is subject to change before or
durmg the draft due to trades.

Southern
starting pitcher
Kyle
Cunningham
delivers a pitch
during the first
inning of
Wednesday
evening's
non-league
contest against
the visiting
South Gallia
Rebels.
Cunningham
pitched four
innings, striking
out nine, and
walking one,
as the
Tornadoes
defeated South
Gallia 15-5.
Sarah Hawley/
photo

�. --- -. ---. ---~

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

GAHS competes at Parkersburg
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

PARKERSBURG. W.Va.
- The Gallia Academy
track teams competed at the
Clear Channel Radio/Russ
Parsons Ill\ itational held
Saturday at Parkersburg
High School.
Peyton Adkins placed first
in the 3200m run. the only
first place finisher for the
GAHS track teams.
Adkins placed second in
the 1600m ·run. with bovs·
team members Caleb Ct:aft
(pole vault) and T) ler
Campbell (long jump) abo
placing second.
Third place finishers for
the girls' team were Kara
J ack~on (1OOm and 200m
dashes), Samantha Barnes
(800m run and long jump).
Allie Troester (shot put).
and Natal ic Close (discus).

Eastern
from Page Bl
play with three league
games remaining.
Eastern outhit the guests
by a 9-6 margin and also
committed only one en·or in
the contest. WHS. conversely. made five errors in
the setback.
however.
Waterford.
struck first blood in the top
of the first as Lawler led off
the game wtth a single.
Lawler later scored on~ an
RBI single by Welch. allowing the guests to take an
early 1-0 advantage.
The Lady Eagles retaliated with two runs in the second. Kasey Turley led the
inning off Wtth a double.
Cummms
then
Sami
reached safely on an error to
give EHS two basrrunners
with nobody out.
Megan Carnahan reached
on a two-out error to load
the bases. then Hayley
Gillian smgled to plate both
Cheyenne Doczi (courtesy
runner for Turley) and
Cummins for a 2- I edge
through two full frames.
Allie Rawson added a
solo homer in the third for a
3-1 Eastern lead. thl!n three
errors and another Gillian
single allo\ved Tori Goble
to score in the fourth for a

Bengals
from Page Bl
into final year of their contracts. which will be in the
back of evervone ·s minds
when Cincinn~Hi starts making draft picks on Thursday.
"I think (owner Mike
Brown) always has that in
mind as we go into the
draft:· coach Marvin Lewis
said. "He and I talk about
that quite a bit. That's the
little thing that sits above
our head as we move forward."
It's a sign of improvement
that the Bengals can think
long-term as they approach
the draft. In years past,
they've been looking to fill
a number of holes. This offseason, they've spent a lot
of time and money keeping
their roster intact after a.
playoff season - certainly
not the norm around these
parts.
The Bengals went 10-6
last year. ran the table in the
AFC North for the first time
in their history and reached
the playoffs for only the
second time since I 991.
Even though they lost to the
Jets in their first playoff
game. they decided that the
team was good enough to
keep around.
There's been only one
significant change in the
starting lineup - Antonio
Bryant replaces Laveranues
Coles as Ochocinco 's complementary receiver. With
most starting spots filled.
the Bengals are looking
long-term in this draft.
"It's great," quarterback
Carson Palmer said. ''It's
nice to not have four or five
spots where we're like. 'Oh.
we need to find somebody
to play and we need to find
them now."'
Receiver and tight end
have been two of the
biggest problems lately. The
Bengals signed Coles after
T.J. HoushmandLadeh left.
but he was so unproductive
that they let him go after
one season. Bryant was

Jackson (400m dash). Brl·a
Close (I OOm hurdles). and
Troester (discus) each
earned fourth place.
Third place finishers for
the Blue De\ ils \\ere Jared
Golden
(discus),
the
4x HlOm relay team of Ethan
tvloore.
Seth
Amos,
Austin
Campbell,
and
Wilson. and the 4x200m
relay team of Moore, Amos.
Joe Jenkins, and Wilson.
Wilson place fout1h in the
IOOm dash and Jonathan
Caldwell finished fourth in
the 300m hurdks.
The Blue Angels placed
thtrd in the team competition with a total of 7 I. point~,
with Akron Buchtel winning
the meet w•th I I 0 points.
The Blue Devils placed
sixth with a total of 46
points. Logan High School
(W.Va.) won the boys' event
with I 33 points.
4- I edge.
Rawson walked to lead
off the fifth, then Turley
blasted a two-run homer for
a 6- I cushion. Cummins
followed with a triple. then
Brooke Johnson produced
an RBI double for a 7- J
lead.
Carnahan
later
grounded out. allowing
Johnson to score for an 8~ I
edge.
WHS produced two singles and a run in the top of
the seventh. but never came
closer than the final six-run
outcome.
Turley was the wmning
pitcher of record, allowing
just .six hits and two walks
over seven innings while
striking out six. Lawler took
the los'S after allowing nine
hits and one walk over six
frames while fanning three.
Turley led the offense
with three hits. followed bv
Gillian \Vith two hits and
team-high three RBis.
Rawson.
Cummins.
Johnson and Brenna Holter
also added a safety apiece to
the winning cause.
Lawler Jed WHS with two
hits, followed bv Wallace.
Welch. Tornes 'and Reed
with one safety each.

a

EASTERN

. . .--.=-------------·--.
.

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

8, WATERFORD 2

Watertord 100 000 1 265
Eastern
021 140 x - 8 9 1
WP - Kasey Turley; LP- M. Lawler
HR - E: Allie Rawson (third mning,
nobody on, one out): Kasey Turley (fif1t&gt;
1nning. one on, nobody out).

their top free agent acquisition, but there's still an
unproven cast behind him
and Ochocinco.
And the outlook can
change drastically after this
season.
the
last
on
Ochocinco 's c6ntract. He
tried to get the Bengals to
trade him two years ago and
failed. He was more upbeat
last year. when he had his
sixth Pro Bowl season and
led the team with 72 catches
for 1.047 yards and nine
touchdowns.
The offseason has been an
on-camera blur - coyering
the Super Bowl for his
social media. dancing on
network television. setting
up a reality dating show on
cable. Givef\ his contract
status and the lack of a
receiver capable of replacing him. it wouldn't be a
su'fprise if the Bengals took
a receiver in one of the early
rounds.
"I've heard the same
things you guys have heard
- a receiver'. a tight end.''
Palmer said. "I don't know
what we're going to do. But
there ·s not l·ea!Iy a drastic
need per se. other than a
couple of spots here or
there."
Tight end stands out. The
Bengals lost their top t\VO
early in training camp last
year - Reggie Kelly tore
the Achilles' tendon in his
left leg and Ben Utecht suffered season-ending concussion. Third-round pick
Chase Coffman struggled
\vith his blocking and didn't
play last season.
They have to figure
something out at that spot.
The Bengals wound up
using an extra offensive
linen)an to block last season. an approach that doesn't help the passing game .
·. Otherwise. they're in
good shape.
"I think we're in a good
spot that way. not going
into the draft saying.
'We've really got an empty
chair at one spot.'" Lewis
said. "We're able to let our
draft board pick our players
as we go.''

Thursday, April22, 2010

Eastern track claims first in 5 events at NYHS meet
Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

NELSONVILLE. Ohio
- The Eastern Ea!!les track
team took first ~place in
three girl's events and two
boys cYcnts on Tuesday
cveninu at the NelsonvilleYork n~ect
Emeri Connery took first
in the 4.00m dash. Ashley
Putnam won the shot put.
Klint Connery placed first
in the lOOm dash. Mike
Johnson won the high jump.
and the girls' 4x200m relay
team or Emcri Connery.
Beverly Maxson, Karissa
Connolly. and Savannah
Hawley placed first.
On
the
girls side.
Audrionna Pullins placed
second in the long jump.
Haley Perdas placed second
in the dbcus. and the
4x lOOm. 4x400m., and

E. Connery

Putnam

4xROOm relay teams placed
second. Maxson. Hawley.
Emcri Connery. and Pullins.
were the 4xl00m runner,
Emeri Connery. Hawley.
Maxson. and Victoria Bo.so
were the 4x400m runners.
and Boso. Nikki Gilbride.
Breea Buckley, and Baylee
Collins were the 4x800m
team member,.
Hawley placed third in
the 200m dash, with

Johnson

Kl. Connery

Breanna· Hayman (300m
hurdles) and Boso (800m
run) finishing fourth.
For the boys· team.
Johnson placed second in
the 300m hurdles, Jeffer;
Milhoan finished second in
the discus. and Tyler Cline
placed second in the shot
put. The 4x I OOm relay
team of Kelly Winebrenner,
Klint Connery. Ryan Amos.
and Milhoan, the 4x200m

relay team of Zakk Heaton 1
Klint
Connery.
Winebrenner. and Johnson,
and the 4x800m relay team
of B .J. Moore. Brayden
Pratt. Devon Baum. and
Travis Edwards, each took
second place.
•
Winebrenner (I OOm and
discus), Klint Conn~
(200m). Johnson (I
jump). and Milhoan (sho
put) each took third' place,
and Baum finished fourth in
the 200m dash.
·
In the team competitioni
tha Lady Eagles place third;
with 67 points. Warren won
the girls event with 134
points. followed by Belpre
\Vith 68 points.
In the boys' competition:
Eastern tied for secon&lt;t
place with Belpre with ~
total of 76 points. Warren
also won the boys event:
this time with 91 points.

White Falcons flies by Hillbilli~s, 6-3!
1

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@ MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MAN, W.Va. - A pair of
homeruns lifted the Wahama
White Falcons past the Man
Hillbillies on Wednesday
evening, by a score of 6-3.
Wahama scored two runs
in the top of the first inning
with a two run. two out
homerun by Ethan McGrew.
Man scored three runs in the
second inning. with two
coming on a two run home-

Browns
from Page Bl
telling. You would hope that
your No. l picks are the
foundation of your football
team 'and the only decisions
that you have to make 011
those guys is contractually
as they approach their unre.stricted free agency year.
'That is the perfect secnario. You know things are
~·

going to hahpen and you
might lose a p ayer because of
free agency in this day and
ae:e. But. 110 that's not a good
1isr...
...
The Browns· inability to
select intelligently _ they've
had some bad luck. too·- in
the draft's opening round
since '99 has doomed the
franchise.leading to a succession of'double-d]git loss seasons, coaching changes and
front-office overhauls. If not
for Cleveland's ineptitude.
Holmgren would probably
still be enjoying semiretirement in Seattle.
But the Super Bowl-winning coach was brought to
Cleveland to fix the damage.
and it's extensive. Last season. the Browns ranked dead
last in the NFL in total offense
and were 31st out of 32 in
total defense. There are holes
everywhere.
''It's like. I have two

I

four more in the top of the
Man was led in hits by
third. with Tyler Rou~h hit- Simpson with two hits and
'
ting a lead off homerun to two RBis.
Wahama travels to Buffalo
get the scoring started. ·
~ Anthony B~nd pitched b on Friday evening at 5 p.m.;
complete game, walking one
WAHAMA 6, M AN 3 •
and striking out five. ,
Wahama 204 000 0 - 6 6 2
Bond had two hits to lead Man
030 000 0 - 3 8 2 :
WAHAMA (15-4) Anthony Bond and
the White Falcons. Roush. Ethan
McGrew.
Zack Warth, McGrew. and MAN (n/a) Steven Craddock, Jacob
McGrew
Roush
(4). and Duke Vance.
•
Tyler Kitchen each had one Rigg1ns
WP - Bond; LP - Craddock.
,
hit in the game. McGrew HR: W: Ethan McGrew (1st mnong, ono •
two out), Tyler Roush (3rd inning:
run by Jordan Simpson.
had three RBls and Bond on.
nobody on, nobody out). M. Jordan
The White Falcons added added two.
S1mpson (2nd 1nning. one on, two out). •
thumbs and there are five stuff." Heckert said. "That's
holes in the dike." Holmgren what we are looking for.
said • "How are we l:"ooin';;. to When you arc picking ~a guy
do this?"
in the top 10, you are expectCleveland's first draft ing a guy to be a player and be
under Holmgren and ne\v a guy that's going t&lt;;&gt; be on
general
manager
Tom your team for hopefully I 5
Heckett is an imp01tant one. years.
The Browns are coming off a
"That's what we expect."
miserable 5-1 I season that
If the Bradford deal doesn't
was only semi-salvaged by a go down. and ifs a long shot.
four-game winning streak to the Browns are believed to
end Etic Mangini's first year have their sights set on gifted
as coach.
Tennessee safety Etic Berry. a
·
h
It's time to begm anot er player branded "The Sure
turnaround.
Thing" in a recent Sports
The Browns will enter this Illustrated piece. Beny. who
year ·s three-day draft rumed had I 4 interceptions and three
with 10 picks _ No. 7 over- touchdowns during his career
all. three in the third round with the Volunteers. could be
d fi
f h n 9?
d the kind of defensive playan tve 0 t e trst - - m1
Hecket1 acknowledg:d t?e maker Cleveland has lacked
team has had. trade talks wtth for years.
1 the ~t ..Loms Rams about
The Browns may have to
movmg mt&lt;;&gt; the No. I spot move up to get him since the
and selectt!lg quarterback Kansas City Chiefs are
Sam Bradtord. a pl~yer rep01tedly .smitten\\ ith Ben)',
Holmgren has.. called the who can also play comerback.
whole. package.
With its second pick.
Whtle that swap could be a
tough one to pull off. Heckert. Cleveland may focus on a
wh~ cat~e to Cle~eland a!'t~r future quat1erback. The
fout s~asons as Phtladell_)~ta s Browns will enter next season
GM. IS confident th~t tt the with veteran Jake Ddhomme
Bro':'·ns stay put .they 11. get a at QB. but he's only a tempoql!altty playe!· wtth thet~ top rary fix. Colt McCoy is
ptck ..TI1~Y wlll expect htm to expected to be around in the
second round atld Holmgren
start m hts first s~~on.
"If you are draftmg a guy at likes the Texas. QB 's intanginumber seven he better be bles.
The knock on McCoy has
able to play and he better be a
good guy and he better be a been a lack of run1 strength.
leader. he better be all that but Holmgren is more con~

cemed about the ball arriving
on target as opposed to hov.~
fast or how far tt travels.
.
"I've had the privilege o£
coaching a guy wh9 threw it
as hard as anybody in Brett
(Favre) and the guy that
everybody said didn't have
the rocket arm but may have
been the best quarterback
who ever lived in Joe
Montana." Holmgren said.
'Tve had a real positive
experience
with
arm
strength. Having a rocket
isn't the No. 1 thing. Colt
falls somewhere in the middle. but he's really . _
impressive young guy."
Holmgren isn't the first
Browns executive to gush
about a potential pick, and he
won't be the last.
He knows his legacy in
Cleveland will be defined by
wins and losses, playoff
appearances and perhaps the
Browns· first \'is it to a Super
Bo\1.1.
To accomplish his goals,
Holmgren needs the right
players. He can't have firstround busts like so many in
Cleveland the past ll years.
Holmgren and Heckert
\Vant tO Start a new list.
•·J hope that 10 years from
now." Holmgren ~aid. "I'd
hope we look at it and say.
'Hey. that's why they are 1
here."'

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

10

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�The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Thursday, April22, 2010

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Motorcycles .................................. ,............ 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease ......: ..............................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utltlty .............................................. 2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................301 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
IJ'/ant to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commerclat ................................................ 351 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers........................................................401 0
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accountlng1Financlal ................................ 6002
Admlnistratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashier/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Conatructlon.............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatton ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumbtng ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General ...............- ................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/SI.Ipervtsory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs.,................................................6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal .......................................................6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Reateurants ............................................... 6044
Salea........................................................... 6048
Technlcel Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

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CLASSIFIED INDEX .
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
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Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
ft'UiSini~SS ....................................................... 308
ng ........................................................ 310
ld/Eiderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ......................................, ........... 316
Domestics/Janitorial ...................................318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financlal .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Services.............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrlcal .....................................340
Professional Servlces.................................342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
TaxiAccounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352
Flnanclal .......................................................400
Financial Servtces .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Equipment..........................................705
&amp; Produce •......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
ntlng &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
, Antiques ....................................................... 905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supptles ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 CoaVWood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner ................................................. 960
Mlscellaneous ..............................................965
Want to buy.................................................. 970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

_VISA

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Your Ad,

200

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
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www.mydailyregister.com

Security

600

Animals

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

AMERICAN TAX
RELIEF
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
400

Financ1al

Financial Services

CREDIT CARE
RELIEF
Buried in Credit Card
Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your free
consultations.
1·877-264-8031
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Divi·
sion of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
free
at
Affiars
toll
1·866-278·0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This is a public
se1V1Ce
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
1-800·214·0452
galloooliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accradol'"9 Councillor Independent

Colleges and Schools 12748

Horses
1/2 Welch Poriy, 1/2
Cluarter Horse 8yr old.
3reen broke. $250 OBO.
24 ft. sw1mming pool,
~verything
inc.
$600
:::&gt;BO. 740·590·9095
Uvestock

Miscellaneous
317-Silver
Washington
Quarters, Nice &amp; Clean,
$3.50 ea; Also Federal
ReseJVe Note, U.S. Cur·
rency, Five Hundred Dol:
lar
Bill,
1934·Series,
·scarce•
$895.
740-533·3870.
--------Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron

RV
CONVENIENTLY
LO·,
Se!Vice at Carmichael CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
Trailers
ABLE! Townhouse apart740-446·3825
ments.
andior
small
houses for rent. Call
RV SeJVice at Carmi· 740·441·1111 for applichael
Trailers cation &amp; Information.
740·446·3825
Free Rent Special !!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and •
Motorcydes
up. Central Air, WiD
tenant
pays
07 Yamaha V Star Sil- hookup,
Call between'
verado 650, Saddlebags electric.
and windshield, blk, 1200 the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
mi. exc. cond. $4700.
Ellm View Apts.
446·6688 or 339-4221.
(304)882-3017

2000
• Automollve Twin Rivers Tower i!; d(;·
_Ev_a_n_s_1_·s_o_o_-5_3_7_·-95_2_8_
cepting applications to~
Ladies diamond dtnner
waiting list for HUD sub·
ring. 36 diamonds tw.
stdized, 1·BR apartmen~
2.50. In yellow 14 ct wt
for lhe elderly/disabled.'
gold
mounting.
Value Quality Cars &amp; Trucks call 675-6679
$3500 in 1988 asking wlwarranty all priced to
sell, 15 yrs. in business.
Male
Pomeranian. $2000. (740) 612-2161
Parti-color Free to good Ladies round diamond Cook Motors. 328 JackBR and bath. first
home.
Housebroke. cluster ring. 7 diamonds. son Pike.
OH months rent &amp; deposit,
Gallipolis.
740·853·0926.
T.W. let 1n 10ct yellow
references reqUlfed, No
740·446·01 03.
gold. Retail $1000. Ask·
Pets
and
clean
Reg., female Boxer pup- ing
$750.
(740)
. 740-441-0245
Trucks
pies, wormed, 9 wks. old.
612-2161.
Beautiful 1BR apartment
Call 740-446-7217.
87 Dodge Dakota. 85 1n the country freshly'
Large Estate Sale Don
SuOldsmobile Cutlass
painted very clean W D
and Ruth Carter, 106
700
Agriculture
pre me. 2 Wheel Car
hook up ntce country set·
Mabeline
Dr.-Gallipolis
Call
trailer for sale.
ling only 10 mins from.
April 22 3 to 7 PM, April
446-3243 after 5.
town. Must see to appre23 &amp; 24 9 AM to 6 PM.
Farm Equipment
Cash
only.
Real Estate ciate. Water pd. $375/mo'
614·595·7773 ·
or
Crocks, 3000
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Antiques-Jars.
Sales
740·645-5953
Glassware.
Furniture.
KIEFER j:lUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Pottery, Tools. Collecti·
N 4th Ave., Middleport.'
STOCK
TRAILERS, bles &amp; More. Household
For Sale By Owner
2 br. furnished apt. , dep.•
Tables,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP· Items-TV's.
&amp;
ref.
No
pets.
MENT
TRAILERS, Chairs, Beds. Couches. 106 Mabelline Dr. Gallt· 740-992·0165
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp; Lamps. Stereo, Dishes, polls. 2BR. 1BA. Full Apartment available now
Bedding, Tools, Comput- Basement.
Remodeled
HOMESTEADER
Riverbend
Apts.
New
ers"&amp; More.
kitchen. 1 Car Garage.
CARGO/CONCESSION
Haven WV. Now accept·
Cent. air. All arp. stay
TRAILERS
B+W
tng
applications
for
Want To Buy
$89.900. 74D-64s-nas.
GOOSENECK FLATBED
HUD·subsidiZed,
one
$3999. VIEW OUR EN· Absolute Top Dollar • silBedroom Apls . Uhltt1es
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· ver/gold
c01ns.
any 12 Unit Apt. Complex. InCluded. Based on 30°o
TORY AT
of adjusted income. Call
10K/14K/18K gold jew- 446·0390.
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
304·882·3121 ,
avatlable
elry. dental gold, pre
TRAILERS.COM
1935
US
currency. Garage Apartment for for Senior and Disabled
740·446-3825
prool!mint
sets,
dia- sale Approx. 810 sq. ft. people.
monds, MTS Coin Shop. garage 32x38 oversized
Have you priced a John 151 2nd Avenue Galli- tot to build house Laktn
Deere lately? You'll be polis. 446·2842
wv
$65000.00
surprised! Check out our
304·687·8213
used
inventory
at Oiler's Towing. Now buy·
www.CAREQ.com.
Car- ing junk cars w/motors or
Houses For Sale
michael
Equipment w/out. 740-388·0011 or
BEAUTIFUL 1 &amp; 2 BR
740-446-2412
740·441·7870.
2006 3BR 2.5BA Green APTS.. Jackson Estates.
Twp. Living Room w/Fife 52
Westwood
Dr
STIHL Sales &amp; SeiViCe
Yard Sale
Place.
Family
Room, 740·446·2568.
Equa~
Now Available at Carmi·
Separate Dining Room, Houstng
OpportuOity.
chael
Equipment 31 Burdette Addt. tools
Spacious
Kitchen This 1nstitution IS an
740·446·2412
toys jewlery clotl'les tires
w/GrAnite Countertop &amp; equal opportumty pro·
chairs size 33 albums
Island in the Middle &amp; vtder and employer.
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain electronics
9·2
April
Hardwood
Cabinets.
22,29&amp;30
Laundry Room 72'x27' w/ Grac1ous Living 1 and 2
Mixed round bales for
sale.
4x4
and
4x5. - - - - - - - - - 27'x50" Attached Garage Bedroom Apts. at Village
Garage Sale Fn &amp; Sat. 3.5 Car. Beautiful Vtew tn Manor
and
RlversldO
740 446 2412
•
"
11874 St Rt 160 Vinton. Country w/2.38 Acres. Apts
1n
Middleport
OH. Across from Old Pnced
to
sell
PH 740-992·5064
Equa~
900
Merchandise North Gallia High School
740-339·2780. Must see Houstng
Opportunity.
Large 4 Family Yard to appreciate. No realtors This 1nst1tution is an
Sale at Rodney Comm. and no land contracts. equal opportuntty pro·
Furniture
vider and employer.
Bldg. from 9 - 4 Fri. &amp; Serious callers only
Sat.. April 23 &amp; 24.
Modem
1BR apt Calf
Blue Sofa &amp; Matching
Something for everyone.
House for sale 2 bed- 740-446·0390
Recliner·$200.
White

Polled
Hereford
Bulls
:lark red 10·12 mths
1/2angus 1/2 hereford 2
years old 304·882·2774
Pets

til

4pc. BR Suit w/ Full Size
Box Springs &amp; Mattress.
$300. All in good condi·
lion. 740·446·9780.

Moving out sale, Fri·Sun,
4123·25. 1·5pm at 46
Deente Dr. Jackson Pike
next to John Deere.

rooms on 209 21st street
1n
Pt.
Pleasant
304 ·67 4·0259
$30,000.00

·-- ----

New 2 BR apt. WiD.
Hookup.
Rio/Jackson
area $525/mo + dep
Call 740-645·1286

...

__

...

~.

�~__,...__,.__,_~---·~---.....~

Rentals

Spring
Valley
Green
Apanrnents 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at S470
Month. 740-446-1599.

~~~~~~~

=

Houses For Rent

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;=
1
Bedroom
House
S2751de·
$275/month,
posit + ut1ht10S. Call
740·256·6661

2 Br Gallipolis Ferry 740
973-8999 $400.00
$400.00 deposit

mth

6000

Employment

2 BA Mobile Home, All
Elec,
spaciOus,
NO
PETS. New Deck, stor·
Child/ Elderly Care
ago bldg., S4501mo (wa·
ter, trash, Inc.) 128 Dol- Become a Foster Parent·
phtn St.(740) 446-4234 S3o-S48 a day lor caring
or (740) 208·7861
for a ctild 0.18 In your
_ _ _....,.___ home. Foster
parents
2 br. mobile home tn can be single or marned.
Racine, rent $325, dep. Requirerrents
over
$325, No pots, years .21-pass
a
cnmmal
tease, No calls after check·compl~te
tram1ng
9pm, 740·992·5097
that begins at Albany,
April 24. Call Oas1s lor
Sales
more information toll free
;;:;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1·877·325·1558.

3 BR Farmhouse near
Add1son. Remodeled. LP
Furnace. No 1ns1de pets.
$525/mo + dep. (740)
367-7760.

Driven &amp; Delivery

Trailer Lot for Rent • Ad·
dison Pike • $150/mo,
sec dep same.
Call
446·3644 for application.
Rentals
3BR Tra1ter for Rent
$350/mo+ulll. $300 dep.
HUD Approved. (740)
742·2896.

Help ~anted · General

Medical

Do you wake up exCited
about go1ng to work
every day? Are you ella!·
lenged by the work you
do? II not JOimng the
101.5 80~ FM rad10
sales team could be the
best move you'll ever
make. We're look1ng for
the nght person With a
passion for l'olplng local
businesses succeed tr a
competitive market. Out·
s1de sates expene:-~co Is
preferred but not roquired. Email your re·
sume
today
to,
pn.aace@connorsseuL·
media com. Connoisseur

Tak1ng appriCations for
HHA, FT PT or PAN for
the Galha area
Call
or
740.446-3808
1·80G-759·5383

J&amp;L
Construction

.... w

w

w

....... -

New 3BR, ~BA
as tow as $241.68
per mo. and 1563.00
down. WAC

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Running
Speciality
Cargo for Midwest Car·
ner.
Apply
R dR
k
www. ar true .com
866·204-il006
~~~~~~~

I

He P Wanted • General

Gallia-Me1gs
CommuOIIy
Achon
IS seeking a
part-limo 11 month Pro·
gram Assistant. PosthOn
wlll require a depend·
able, accurate, detailed
onented person wtth ex·
perience tn M:crosoft Ex·
I H' h sch I d pto
cc . lg
oo ' ma
or GED w1th two years
off10e
expenencc
roqUired. Oavts·Bacon Act
WH 347
oxpenencc
a
plus. Applications With
resumes Will be accepted

Local Law Fim seeking
RecpVLe;Jal Asst. Please
send resumes to CLA
Box100 c/o, Pt Pleasant
Register 200 Malr St. Pt.
PI
wv 25550
easant
until 3:30 p.m on May J,
2010 at the Choshtre of·
- - - - - - - f'ce. GMCAA IS an Equal
Accepting applications or Opportun1ty Employer.
resumes for Subway art·
ist at new location. Apply
Medical
on line @ www.parmar· ~;;;;;;;;;~==:::;;;;;;;:;;;;;
stores.com or apply in Registered
Nurse
for growing dt·
person M·F between 10 • needed
1 @ 15289 Huntington alysts facility in Pt. Pleas·
Rd., Galipolis Ferry, WV ant. Fax resume to (304)
or call740·525·0497.
675·1505

The Middleport American Legion

Longaberger Basket Bingo
Food, Popular Longaberger
Pottery and Baskets

... THE ·
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks, Shingles,
Siding. Windows, Pole Barns. Garages.
Insurance Work, Residential &amp; Commercial
740·245-0437
Licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years
Free Estimates
Experience

Rankin Cleaning &amp;
Refu~e 'I railer
''Chri.st Dri1·e11,

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Family Opcratt'(/"
We'll clean it up, haul
it away, or BOTH!

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Da\id 740-541-3867

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

.Home

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

Insurance
Great coverage and
superior service
(that's easy on your wallet)
HometoWn Insurance Center
~lnaurancecenter.com

304-773-1111
JtErie
~

Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

Insurance·
~'

Total Construction

1-0..;;..:.ne=c....:al::..l.:.:to:.:.:D.:.:o:.::.....=lt.::.
A:..:.ll.:...:..:._ _ _ ~

Pole Barns/Metal Roof~
Fire &amp; Water Damage
DrywallfRepair

0\\ner
Amy \eter.n
Tom \\'1&gt;lfe
740·41 (r-2575

• Siding • \'in) I
\\indo\\\ • \Ictal
and Shingle Roof~
• Deck' • Additions
•Eltctrical
•Plumbing
• Pule Barns

740-742-3411

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

BA:'oi'KS
CO~STRVCTIO:"'

co.

@allipoli.s #lailv UI:ribunr

740·992·3934

(740) 446-2342

or Stacy Hawk at Fruth Pharmacy
in Pomeroy
Hurry and get your tickets in
advance for the chance to win
The Ohio State University Basket
Buddy set

Butlj:ling. Remodeling
General rep r

The· Daily Sentinel

W\\ n.bank,cclb.com

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740·416·5047
email:
jrshadfrm @aol.com

· R.L. Hollon
Trucking

(740) 992-2155

i3oint ~lrasant

''"' ;rffilialrd "ith \likr \larcuru Rc.ooOng &amp; Rt·nmdrlinl!l

740·992-1671

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

Cost $20.00 tor 20 games
Special Games $5.00 Each
Contact: Jane or Jerry Hawley at

299 Mill St. Middleport, OH

J'Jl-C.21~

MIKE MARCUM

Pomero}. Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Cu,tom Home Bmldmg
Steel frame Bu1ldmgs

Doors open at Noon Games
Begin at 2:00

7olU-5'JI -11195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years lout Expenence
- Wirier S lois -

1

(ONSTRUOlON

For more information, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

Sunday, April 25, 201 0

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740· 416-1834
Full) insured
Free estimates • 25+ years experience

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING Co.

CLASSIFIED$

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

Fmmdation~

MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

V.C. YOUNG Ill

SUNSET

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
section to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.

• Room additions • Roofing • Gr•ragcs
• General Remodeling • Poll' &amp; Uor~e
Barns • Vin)l &amp;. Wood Fcndug

· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
•New G.-ages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Rooting &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

742·2332

THE

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel
BULLETIN BOARD

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

·Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II

Drivers: CDL·A Teams &amp; Media is an Equal Op·
0/0's Eam Top Dollar _
po_rt_
un-ity_ E
_m
_p_lo-ye_r._ _

4 Bedroom 2 Bath house
on Rt 33 Mt
Alto
$725.00
call
740·446-3570
304·532·6059
_ _...;.......;..;.;..._ _
-NI00
-1B.,.R_h_ou
_s_
e-ln~
Gal-.11·
"The ProctoMIIe
Difference•
polis. Walk to everything
$1 and a deed Is all you
you need. Very clean
need to own your dream
unit, with new paInt.
homo. can Nowl
1
S275 per moiS 00 sec.
Freedom Homes
dep. Sorry, no pets, Call
888•565 -o 167
Wayre lor information
404-456-3802
Will build on your land as
..._.....,.......,...,...~~~ low as S499;mo., Call
Manulactured 740.446·3570.
4000
Housmg

Lots

-

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhou11s

w

l.~rnistrr

Dump Truck
Sen icc
We do drhe"a)~
Limestone • Gra'cl
Top Soil• fill Dirt

t-lal'a 16u~ ~~fnatfy Atl ;LI?r !!Ute
www.t:bnbel'~kcabinetry.com

740-985-4422

(304) 675-1333

740-856-2609

--~~

740.44692

2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Cell

LEWIS
CONCimTE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Years Expericnct•

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Nl/ti4?1R?

lrsared
Free htimar.:s

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prom?t and Quality

Work
*Rea~{lnabl~ Rate~

*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gat) Stanle) @

740-:&gt;91-8044
Plea:-c leave messal!e

SHRI'\11'
(74111742-2563

Seamless Gutters
Rool:ng. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

l..a.r'Jc.ftt'\U rrozrn,hod\OD

SI0 per lb Cnsh &lt;'llh
Pr:otrs n. ~1rct! m ' &lt;C
Sb1pments am\c &lt;'~')
other Fnda\

•• construcq

Classlfieds
PI co

:Frt'Sh 1'-iorth Carolina

H&amp;H
Guttering

*Im.urcd

Qll

Pole Buns, Garages,
New Consbuction, Room Add.,
Roofing, Shingles, Metal, Rubber,
Concrete Work,
Any Type remodeling, Decks

-

newspaper d

Phone:74~7~18
• llcHISI' \\Indo\\

Ne;f\J

.

• A•·•·•·t&gt;t••cl h~ Allln~lll1111H'S
• A II \Vork t;uur·nntcccl
•l.ut~l\11~ (h\llt'tl &amp; Op1'111lt•d

1\ Do-it-yourself classified ads

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

v

v

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~t·pltlfl'lll&lt;'lll

• :\Jil·rm-,.. ( 'ut 1 u Onh••· • \1nhilt• Sen u·•o;;

Do-it-yourself convenience
Easy to use
Upload photos and graphics
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7 great packages to choose from
SUPER

SAVER

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"-""'
86'01-$1,000
4 ....,10111Y8

SMART BUY DEALS ON

WHEB.Z

4 ._., 14 ~~~~~

$20.99 $29.99

4 linea, 46 diiYI

5

45.99 ' 534.99

The Daily Sentinel
www.mydailysentinel.com

'.

YARD SALE

for prtvate pat'ty
For pr!Yitl party
llllllltlllld multlmerciiiiiMIIsa, 1
cara, Truckl,
tiiii•Y lales
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Thursday, April 22, 2010

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85 .-r

www.mydailysentinel.com

IBBL~O~N~D~IE~----------------DD;.ea~n~~Yco~u~n;gii!DDe~n~is~L~e~b~ru~n~fiF~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§§~§§~~~~-~
CROSSWORD

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Pro
votes
5 Oigression
1 o Theater
box
11 Fits in
12 Advantage
13 Hollywood
workers
14 Crusoe,
for one
16 Retreat
20 Swift
23 H
lookalike
24 Oklahoma
city
25 Vagabond
27 Bar
choice
28 Sandy
spots
29 Promotional
item
32 Illegal
passenger
36 Beau
39 Not
recorded
40 Mean
41 1982
Disney
film
42 Deputized
bunch
43 Evergreen
shrubs

Mort Walker
I GOTTA G~T MORE

W~YAREYOU

E:ATING
SO FAST, SARGE~ 60
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BEFORE HE RUNS

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FUNKY WINKERBEAN

JOSEPH
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co-star
2 Luke's
teacher
3 Quiche
base
4 Is furious
5 Pond
growth
6 "Bye!"
7 Travel
stop
8 Banned
bug-killer
9 Snaky
shape
11 Lewd
15 Opera
set in
Egypt
17 Dress in
18 "Don't
look -!''

... .

Todav·s Answers
19 Puppy
30 Senator
sounds
Kefauver
20 Without a 31 Be
date
pen1tent
21 Hungarian 33 Piano
• dog
part
22 Alt
34 Swear
25 Turn to
35 Longings
slush
36 Use a
26 K1ngs
straw
and
37 First
queens
numero
28 Foil,
38"- been
real!"
e.g.

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 75 (chcck/m o.)

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HI &amp; LOIS

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Brian and Greg Walker

.•. UM ..•

SORRY. It IAKEG
A W/111.-E FoR

HeARt?

NA681NC7 1'0
GINI&lt; IN.

HAVE: You
AI'Jy'1}l/NG

r•vc. GAJD?

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"I DIDN'T MARRY LEROY FOR. HIS MONEY ...
I DID IT FOR. THE CLOSET SPACE."

Patrick McDonnell

tJI1UTTS

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

-·

It's up to us to save the world for tomorrow:
it's up to you and me.
.Jane Goodall

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

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recall his car."

Ketchum

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DENNIS THE MENACE

"li

by Dave Green

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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for 1'hursda}; April 22. 2UJO:
This year, express your anger in an appropriate man·
ner. You could be overwhelmed by events in your ~r­
sonal and I o- domestic life. Confu~ion often ...urrounds
interactioos. Bone up on those skills, learning to confirm and affirm. If you are single, you will experience
the possibility of a meaningful relationshi_p through a
friend~hip. If you are attached, the two of you enjoy
socializing. Do more of il LEO can be testy.
'17zc Slctrs Show the Kind cf Dt~t You'll Hm•'; 5 Dywmuc;
4-Prr.."itivc; 3-A&lt;•crage; 2-So-&gt;o; 1·Difftcult
ARIES (M,mh 21-April19)
****A mi~unde~t.anding could threaten ch.ms to
the best-laid plans. \\"hen f,,dng a setb,1ck, get back on
your feet and find another path to the same point
'!&lt;:might: Kick up your heeb. Start the weekend earlr
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
****The Bull i&lt;; in prin1e form, as long as he or
she is not m a strange situation. You like to do everything well. When on new turf, you might make a slip or
two. Know t:1at you are normal. Know that thio; is as il
should be. Giw your.;elf the space to be human.
Tonight: At t.ome relaxing.
GE:vtiNI (lv!ay 21-June 20)
Keep conver~tions moving. You might
not be C\1m.fort.able with e1·ervthing you hear, but make
that OK Sometimes people don't think before they
speak. '!'his oould be one of those times.&amp;&gt; \\illing to
understand another person's distress. Tomght: Ch,lt up
aslom1.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
****Be sensitive to yourneeds. You go to
extremes, either being very self-indulgent or wry stoic.
Though you tend to !min)$ ba.:k and forth like a pendu
lum, attempt to stay on nuddle ground. Your stability is
more importmt in relating than you re,1lize. Tlmight:
Just hang in rhere.
LEO Uuly 23-Aug. 22)
*****Many can sense when you walk in the
room. Confusion can surround work or someone \'(lU
put on ,1 pedesi&lt;LI. You might feel out of ~rts ao.; you see
.,;tualions de1·eloping, but you might not be sure oi
your role in the problem. It is there. 1bnight: Let go oi
toddy cmd live in the now.
\liRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
***You could be angrier than you acknowledge.
Wh,ll occurs could be the ~ull oi suppn:&gt;ssed anger,
whether it is a health issue or a problem with someon .

*****

HOROSCOPE

Ground out. \-enter and find out what is really ailing
you. Tonight; ldlk to someone who sees life much dif·
ferently from you.
LIBRA (Sept. 21-0ct. 22)
****A friend keeps hammering for the same
thing over and 01 er. You might be fed up. ,md the wa)'
you express this feeling depends on you. If what thi~
person sugge!&gt;is is fe,1sible, why not go for it? Tonight
Only where the action is.
SCORPIO (Od. 23-l\'o\. 21)
** l':o one can be more stubborn than Ms. or Mr.
Scorp. Tod,1}; you could pro\·e that fact once more!
Perhclps t.'lking c1Ction to in~lrument change would be
more worthwhile. Your creativity
. seemc; to be on the
dmmswing, probably bemuse you are not dealing with
some strong feelings, and are holding them back.
Tonight: Count on ,mother late one.
SAGITrARIUS (Kov. 22-Dec. 21)
**
If you can keep your pers~ii,·e, nothing
too challenging will come in your direction. Many peopie seem to he aliing out of char.1cter, causing feelings
lo ari&lt;;e. Step back ,md pretend you ,,re w,11cfung ,, play.
What you see might e,·en be funny' Tonight: Try a new
spot a new place, a new type of cuisine or maybee\ en
cl new site on the Internet.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19)
***** i\o one likes being dict.1led to, esreaally
our Goat. A J-"'&lt;lrtner fed" th.1l you need lo follow hi-- or
her pre-scripted game plcm. How you reject thb pero.;on's ideas and the level of diplomacy you u;e define
the outmme. Be careful! Tonight Li&lt;;len more. 0JserYe
L&lt;lrefulh.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-feb. IS)
*****Deter to those around vou. Rather than
being criticized or being crilic.1L just know th.1t the is~ue
in question bout of your hand.~. "What a relief" might
be the re~pon_se.l\'ow &lt;&gt;o oii and do what you love or
want to do. Can't dt'\.ide' Indulge yourself Tonight:
Accept an in\ it,llion.
PISCES(r-eb. 19-l\larch 20)
**** TaclJe your work or must-do li~t. You will
feel best if you don't ~it on your duff. In f,1ct, it could be
amazing what you .'Ire capable of clL''COmplbhing i.i you
just do. Gi,·e up o\·erilnclly.-:in); for ,,t leit~t cl day
.
'[bnighl: Stay physical.

***

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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www. mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April

22, 2010

Roane County rallies past Lady F~lcons, 10·9
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

SPENCER, W.Va. -

Th~

Wahama !-.Oftb;lll tt&gt;am let

one slip away on the road
WedJlcsday night. as Roane
c,mnt\ o;corcd three times in
its t 1n:d at-bat to rallv bacK
for a I 0-9 non con1~crencc
deci-.ion over the Lady
Falcons.
The visiting Lady Falcons
(6-13) trailed 2-0 after one
inning of play and were
dO\vn J-1 through three
complete, but the i1ost Lady
Raiders tacked on four mo)·e
runs to increase that advantage to 7-1 after five full

Ferguson

Harris
I

frames.
WHS, however, erupted
for eight runs in the top of
the sixth
~llowmg thL'
guest-; to take their only lead
of the night at 9-7.

Alex ·Wood was rcpla~ed
l y \uriah Van~at1e in the
l.in:ll :. , ' •
t.
, hottom o1 the 51Xth. and
VanMatre rct1rcd RCHS m
Ol'der - preservtng the twom cushion headed into the
l)al frame
V
111
w,,.., tillable to
p m'l c~ ,m) msur,mce run-.
in ih half of the seventh.
then the hoc;ts rallied for
three scores m the final atbat to \Vrap up the comeback.
.
Ihe l adv l·alcon-. won the
adv,mtage"in hits ( 13 to 8)
and cornmitted fewer errors
(5 to 4)' in the contest.
VanMatre ended up takmg

the losing decision. while
w·" the winning_
,
11 .. of '\,;ord for Roane
County.
Kari-.ta Fergu-.on pa&lt;:ed
Wahama with four hits &lt;ll1d
three RBis, followed by Kali
Harris, Taylor H)sell and
Ka..,tle Balser \\ itl, two hit"
em:h. Wood. VanMatre and
Kaul.t Young rounded things
out with one sat~ty ap1ece.
Williams and Matthewson
both had two hit~ to pace the
Lady Rmdcr~.
Dfl\1..,

ROANE COUNTY
,WAHAMA 9

10,

Waharna 001 008 0 - 9 13 4
Roare Co 201 130 3 - 10 8 5
WP - Dav•s. LP - M&lt;:''lah VanMatre.

Reds add Joe Morgan ·as special adviser
CINCINNATI (AP) Dunng his ESPN baseball
telecasts. Hall of Fame second baseman Joe ~forgan
has often expressed concern
about the diminishin!! numper of black youths playing
baseball. He's going to try to
do something about it with
his funm:t team.
Morgan signed on to help
the Cincinnati Reds as a special adviser on Wednesday.
working primarily with its
communit\ outreach and
diversity programs. He also
will be a\'ailable to give
advtce on player m01tters.
though that will be a small
component of his part-time
job.
"1. m not here to make
baseball decisions." Morgan
said. ''I'm on the air a lot and
I recognize the fact that
African-American participation in Major League
Baseball is going down. And
it's very easy for me to sit on
televi::.ion and talk about it. I
'Vanted to help try to change
that:·
·
The 66-vear-old Morgan
\Vas the catalyst of the Big
Red Machine's offense. winning back-to-back MYP
awards
while
leading

Cincinnati to World Series
d1&lt;1mpionships in 1975-76.
He retired in 1984, ran some
businesses in California and
became an ESPN ba,.eball
analyst.
Morgan said his work with
the Reds won·t affect his job
at ESPN. which has given
him pc:rmi~sion to be a gut;st.
occasionally on the team's
broadcasts. Although it
could be potentially awk:\Vard, given his role as television analyst. Morgan said
his advisory role to Reds
general
manager
Walt
Jocketty .is no different than
\Vhat he does with other
teams.
"If Walt wants to ask me
something about a Red-.
player. I'll be glad to
ans\ver:· Morgan said. "If
vou want to know the truth.
I've been doing that with
teams for 100 vears. I have
owners call me and ask me
about players I have· nt least
three owners who call me
and ask me abou\ players
quite often. 1 don't talk
about other players. I talk
about their players."
Morgan is the latest former Reds star to work with
the ballclub. Ha;l of f•ame

Rohert"on earns MSC Pitcher award
LOL'ISVILLE, Ky. - Ryan Robertson of the University
of Rio Grande has been selected as- the Mid-South
Conference Baseball Pitcher of the Week. the conference
announced on Monday.
•
The MS~ ~·eekly award i.s the fir.st for Robert~on t
season. Th1-. IS the second ttme a Rw Grande player has
collected an ~SC weeklv award. Senior third baseman
Tyler Schunk won the Player of the Week honor. March 22.
Robertson. a native of Waverly, Ohio. fired a completegame. two-hit shutout again..,! NAlA No. 21 Campbellsville
to eam MSC Pitcher of the Week honors. Robertson
stn1~k out seven and walked only two in the 2-0 victory.
He Improved to 9- I on the season.
The nine wins tie him for first in the conference.
Robenson is fifth in the MSC in innings pitched (58.2) and
is st!venth in strikeouts (52). .
No. 25 Rio Grande is 39-8 overall this season and 19-5 in
the MSC.

catc.her Johnny Bench has to stop in mid-sentence for Smith earns MSC Softball Pitcher award
been a special con:-.ult~ull for .20 seconds when talking
WUISVILLE, Ky. ~· The University of Rio Grande's
years, and Enc Dm 1s and about how he hopes his
Mario Soto work with pia) work in the communit) will Anna Smith is the Mid-South Conference Softball Pitcher
of the Week. the conference announced on Monday.
ero., as special as~istants. Ken make a difference.
The pitcher of the week award is the second of the seaGrif~ey Sr. also has been a
''It's. very easy to sit on
spectal a&lt;;ststant m the play- telcvtslon and Sa) there are son for Smith. She captured the honor previously on
er de\ clopment depa11ment. three temm that don't have I March 8. Senior centerfielder Leah l Iamman also garnered
.\1organ has appeared at any African-American play- an !VISC Player of the Week honor last week.
Smith collected two wins and a save last week while
Reus -.priug twiuiugs He ers." t\lurgart o;aid. "It's very
allowing
just one run to earn MSC Pitcher of the Week hont·eccntly called chief operat easy to say on television 1
ing officer Phillip CastL'llini there are 17 teams that have ' ors. The Ross. Ohio, native, scattered four hits while allowabout a bigger and more two or Jcs~. This allows me ing ju~t a single unearned mn in her 16 innings of work.
The sophomore tallied 20 strikeouts whil~ hurling a p.
defined role with the team. to tl') to do something about
noting his intcre-.t in pro- it. Obviously it's an emo- of complete-game shutouts.
Smith is second in the MSC in innings pitched (165).
moting baseball among tiona! issue. I've been concernecl about this for a long third in strikeouts (152), and fifth in wins (14).
minorities.
"'Ilm, was a dtfferent kind time:·
I Rio Grande is 26-18 overall and 15-11 in the Mid-South
of phone call th came from
Since Bob Castellini Conference.
Joe. one that genuinely bought controlling interest
\\anted to reach out and sec in the team in 2005, he has
what he could do to help the . tried to reconnect with for- '
Cmcinnati Reels." Castellini mer ~tan,. Jocketty has tri d
satd.
to get them involved a'\ well
l'vlorgan has maintained as pat1 of his effort to dig the
ties to the (Jty. He ·s current- franchise out of nine strai!!ht
ly building a car dealership losmg seasons.
~
in Cincmnati and plans to
"I look fon' ard to picking
visit more often.
his brain about different sit-~
"It'-. not a full-time thing uations. about different playfor me." Morgan ~aid. "I ers." Juckett) said. "One of
guess you want to say it's u the things I've said from the
labor nf love for me being very beginning is we 'rc tryinvolved in the community. ing to ~hange the culture
This has kind of been my here. trying to turn things
back to the days of the Big
second home."
Morgan teared up and had Red l\1achine."

Blue Devils tame Marietta, 5-1
TRIBUNE STAFF
MDTSPQRTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

MARTETTA, Ohio- The
Gallia Academy baseball
team never trailed and produced twice as man) hits as
host Marietta on Tuesday
night during a 5- I non-conference
victory
in
Washington County.
The visiting Blue Devils
( 12-3) found themseleves
tied with the Tigers at one
apiece after one complete,
but GAHS rallied two runs
in the top of the third for a
commanding 3-1
edge

Rally
from Page Bl

'

Teaford and Lynzee Tucker.
Maggie Cummins and
Kyrie Swann each singled,
bringing
Teaford
and
Tucker in to score the Lady
Tornadoes first runs of the
game.
South Gallia looked to
score again in the second
inning. with a lead off double by Blackburn. but three
consecutive outs by the
Lady
Tornadoes
left
Blackburn on' third base.
South Gallia again put its
lead off hitter on base in the
third, with Tori Duncan
drawing a walk. but she was
left on base. The Lady
Rebels pitcher Canaday set
down the three straight
Southern batters in the second and third innings, leaving the score 7-2 after three
innings.
The Lady Rebels had a
pair of base runners m the
fourth inning following a
walk to Ellie Bostic and a
double to Gilliland. Bostic
was tagged out between
third base and home plate
attempting to score on the
Gilliland double. Southern
had a pair of singles to lead
off the home half of the
fourth
inning,
with
Cummins and Swann each
having hits. Turner provided the only Lady Rebel hit
of the fifth inning.
The Lady ~Tornadoes
scored three runs in the bottom of the fifth inning, with
a single by Chelsea Ritchie
and Breanna Taylor. and

sixth innings, ultimately
wrapping up the four-run
Jcci-;Jon.
John Troester was the\\ inning pitcher ot re~ord.
allowmg one earned run and
two walks over seven
mnings of \\Ork and abo
struck out six.
Brooker took the loss for
!\1arietta,
aiiO\\ ing . fh e
Troester
Eastman
earned runs and nine hits
over six innings of \Vork.
through three full frames
Brooker also struck out eight
The Devils - who outhit and walked zero. Hupp
MHS by a 9-4 margin
p1tched a perfect inning of
went on to add to insurance relief in the o;eventh.
runs in both the tifth and
Tyler Eastman led the

Devib with three hits, followed by Kyle DingL'ss \\ ith
two hits and a team-best
RB!s.
Caleb
three
Wamimont, Terry Smith.
Casev Denbow and Ben
Saunders provided the· other
safeties for the \'ictors.
Satterfield.
Grose!,
Bronski and Hirschfield had
the lone hit-. for the hosts.
Both teams committed one
error in the contest.
GALLIA ACADEMY
MARIETTA

Gallipolis 102 011 o
Marietta
100 000 0
WP -John Troester LP

5,

1
~

-

59 1
14 1

Brooker.

-

Sarah Hawley/photo

Southern second baseman Ethan Martin throws out a runner at first base during Wednesday evening's game against
South Gallia.

Southern
fromPageBl

I Bryce Clary. Greg Burgess.
Levi Ellis, and Simpson
each scoring. The Purple
and Gold added one run in
the bottom of the fourth.
with
Ritchie
coming
around to score after a lead
off single.
Southern scored two
more in the fifth. with
Ethan Martin and Ritchie
each sc01·in!!, and added
three more i~1 the sixth to
\\in by mercy rule. Martin.
Ritchie. and Daniel Jenkins
scored in the sixth.
South Gallia had five hits
in the game. with a double
by Harrison. and singles by
Simpson. Heath ·white,
Clary. and Chris Fooce.
Kyle
Cunningfiam.
Rttchie, and Taylor each
and three hits in the !!ame. ·
Taylor had a double and
two
singles,
while
Cunningham and Ritchie

doubles by Kelsey Strang
and Teaford.
Cummins
added the third double of
the inning. \Vith Taylor,
Strang, and Teaford each
coming around to score.
South Gallia hac the ba::.e!:i
loaded in the sixth inning,
following walks to Canadav
and BoSi:ic. and Gillilancl
reaching after being hit by a
pitch. but again did not
score.
Down 7-5. the Lady
Tornadoes used three consecutive smgles to start the
inning, followed bv a
Strang triple, and three
more singles to score four
runs in the bottom of the
sixth inning.
Ch~;:yene
Dunn, Katelyn Hill, and
Ritchie provided the first
three singles. with ;rucker.
Cummins. and Swann hitting the other three.
from Page Bl
The Lady Rebels had one
on in the top of the ~eventh,
I to a 4·0 advantage after a
with a lead off walk to Tori
half-inning of play. then the
Duncan. but the Southern
guests added another run in
defense held the Lady
the second \.vhen an error
Rebels without a run for the
and three walks came back
sixth straight inning followto bite the Eagles - giving
ing the seven run first. •
PHS a 5-0 cushion throueh
Canaday and Turner t!ach
two complete.
~
hit two singles for the Lady
The score stayed that way
Rebels. with Gilliland and
until the bottom of . the
Blackburn each hitting a
fmu1h. when EHS produced
double. and Tay k·r Duncan
Sarah Hawley/photo
its only run of the game.
hitting a single.
Southern was led at the Southern pitcher Maggie Cummins throws a pitch during Titus Pierce led the innin~
off with a walk, then Jo~h
plate by Cummins wtth four Wednesday evening's game against South Gallia.
hits. includin!! a double. walking two. and allowmg tra\ els to Waterford on Shook deli\'ered a two-out
RBI single to center Swann hit tlrree singles, 16 hits
Thursday.
allowing Pierce to s~ore for
Strang had a double and
Cummms earned the \\ m,
a 5- ~ contest through four
triple, Ritchie hit a pair of pitching seven Innings.
SOUTHERN 9,
full frames.
~
singles, Teafnrd had a dou- striking out four and walk
SOUTH GALLIA 7
S Ga111a
700 000 0
773
Eastern never came closer
ble, Taylor. Tucker. Dunn. mg eight.
200 034 x
9 16 3
the rest of the way, as
and Hill ea~h hit singles.
South . Gallm
hosts Southerl'l
SOUTH GALLlA ('1/a). CMndra
Fichtelman delivered a solo
Canaday p1tched a com- Fairland
Canaaay
arc
Torr
Duncan
on Thursda)
Tl- ,..RN 16·5) Magnle CurT'M rs
homer in the fifth for a 6-1
plete game for the Lady evemng and Eastern on SOIJ
and Lyl'lze-e "'ucKE r
edge. PHS added three
Rebels. striking out two. Friday evening. Southern WP - 0Jmmms LP - C naday

Eagles

each hit three singles.
Deem had two singles.
Daniel Jenkins hit a triple,
Ramthun. Buzzard, and
Martin each hit a double.
tvlanuel and Adam Warden
each hit a single.
Cunningham earned the
win, pitching four innings,
striking out nine, walking
two. and allo\ving four hits.
Dustin Custer pitched two
scoreless innings in relief.
Cory Haner pitched a
complete game for the
Rebels. str.iking out three.
walking five. and hitting
three batters.
South
Gallia
ho-.ts
Fairland on Thursday and
Eastern on Friday. while
Southern
travels
to
Waterford on Thursday. •
SOUTHERN 15,
SOUTH GALLIA 5
S Gallia
Southern

100
522

400
123

-

55 1
15 17 4

SOUTH GALLIA (n/a): Cory Haner, and
Lev• Ellis and Andy Welch (6).
SOUTHERN (9-4). Kyle Cunningham'
and Dustin Custer (5), and Dustin
Salser and Jesse RitChie (4)
WP
Cunningham· LP- Haner

more runs in the sixth to
wrap up the eight-run outcome.
Pierce was the losing
p1t~her of record. allowing
six ..runs. seven hits and
seven walks over five
innings of work. Pierce also
struck out four in the setback. Gold was the winning
pitcher after striking out
sev17n and walking four over
seven innin!!s.
.Nik Bn\nnon Jed the
Eagles with three hits.
lowed bv Shook, Andr
Benedun1, Chris Amsba
and !\•lax Carnahan with one
safety apiece. Brunicardi
paced PHS with three hits,
while Burns added two
safeties in the triumph.

f.-

PARKERSBURG
EASTERN 1
P'burg
Eastern

410 013 0
000 100 0

-

9,
9 11 0
172

WP --Gold; LP- T1tus P1erce.
H8 P F1chtelman (fifth mn1ng,
nobody on one out)

•

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