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                  <text>Conn. beer
deliveryman
kills 8, self, A2

Teammate: Fa
texted players s
he's done, B

•

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at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBITUARIES
Page AS

Southern bond issue passes

• Charles t:.ewis

Sheriff
reports new
counterfeit
~urrency
circulating
Bv BRIAN

J.

Tornadoes taste victory

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Meigs County Sheriff
Robe1t Beegle is investigating another rash of
counterfeit currency, this
time small bills.
Clerks at two bend-area
convenience stores identified the bills as counterfeit
and notified the deprutment, Beegle said. The
bills were examined and
determined fake, and an
investigation continues.
Beegle said three counterfeit bills have been
identified, two $5 bills
and a $10 bill. One bill
was identified at the TNT
Pit Stop Sunoco in downwn Middleport, the
1er at the 124 Mart outslde of Middleport.
Beegle said he inter• viewed the two women
who presented the bills.
and said one had been
given as change from WaiMart in Mason, W.Va.. and
the other had been collected as yard sale proceeds in
Rutland. They are not suspects, Beegle said, but they
are out their money. The
two fives were relinquished but a $10 identified as counterfeit was kept
by its owner, Beegle said.
The bills were identitied
as counterfeit by the use of
the felt pen designed for
that purpose, Beegle said.
In May, Beegle reported
circulation of $100 counterfeit currency. In that
case, ink was removed
from the front of $5 bills
and replacing it with an
image of a $100 bill. The
unterfeit detection pen
ecks only the paper, not
• hat is printed on the
paper, said Beegle.

maintenance levy for the new building
passed 556 to 532 votes, which broke
down into 51.1 percent in favor of the
RACINE - The Southern Local issue, 48.9 percent against the issue.
School District will have a new Southern Voter turnout was 32 perc~nt, a signifiHigh School in its future after the dis- cant improvement from the 18 percent
trict's bond issue passed by 24 votes dur- turnout in the. May primary when the
bond issue was defeated by 83 votes. In
ing yesterday's special election.
"This is an investment the people all, 1,089 bil.llots were cast out of 3,398
won't regret," Southern Superintendent registered voters within the six precincts.
There are 19 provisional ballots yet
Tony Deem said moments after a room
to
be counted into the final total but
full of supporters, many of them stu-.
dents of Southern Local, were celebrat- with the levy passing by 24 votes, the
number of provisionals will pot
ing the passage of the bond issue.
The 2. 7 mills bond issue and .5 mill
Please see Bond, AS
Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Beth Sergent/photo

Supporters of the Southern Local bond issue celebrate at the Meigs County Board of Elections
moments after learning voters had passed the bond
issue and maintenance levy by a mere 24 votes. The
bond issue will finance the public portion ($3.9 million)
of the new Southern High School which will receive
75 percent ($7.4 million) of its funding from the Ohio
School Facilities Commission.

Unemployment
payments ·
expected
Meigs County
residents to benefit
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

,

School supples
being colrected
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTII';ELCOM

POMEROY - With
Meigs County schools
sched~lled to open in
three weeks, concerned
organizations are gathering up school supplies to
give to children whose
parents can' t afford to
buy them.
The consensus is that
no child should begin
school without the supplies they need.
Last week the Meigs
Cooperative
Parish
began their drive to collect supplies and the first
to contribute was the
Bethany Church and the
Sonshine Circle of the
Racine area.
The groups' contribu-

tions were delivered to
the parish this week. It
included 38 backpacks,
along with many spiral
notebooks, loose leaf
notebooks with paper,
pencils, erasers, crayons,
folders, scissors, rulers.
pens, glue, and composition notebooks.
The supplies will be
distributed to students in
all three school districts.
There will be a pre-registration of students, a date
to be announced, prior to
the time of distribution.
Alva Clark, chairman
of the Meigs Cooperative
Parish, spoke of the great
need for school supplies
and encouraged individuals. churches and organizations to help in supplying that need.

Alva Clark (right) and Nancy Thoene move the donated school suppUes into the building in a grocery cart.
It took several trips.

Wilson touts coal during Gavin tour

High: 90
Low: 70

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

'

INDEX
2 SECDONS -

.

12 PAGES

alendars

~assifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

li.I.IJ ,I !!I.!I.

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos

Kathryn Hart and Ann Zirkle, right, along with Alva Clark, chairman of the Meigs Cooperative Parish, display
some of the school supplies contributed by Bethany Church and the Sonshine Circle.

I

CHESHIRE - U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson, DSt. Clairsville, visited
with management at the
Gen. James M. Gavin
Pla.nt on Tuesday to tour
the plant and discuss the
importance of coal-fired
electricity generation to ,
the nation's energy policy.
"I am coming out loud
and clear against additional regulations of
coal-fired
power
plants,., Wilson said,
adding he had recently
written a letter to the
Brian J. Reed/photo
U.S.
Environmental
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson discusses the importance of
Protection Agency to clean-coal electricity generation at a visit Tuesday to the
Please see Wilson, AS Gavin Plant.

POMEROY
Ohioans who ran out of
unemployment benefits
in May, June or July
should receive payment
for those benefits, which
were extended last month
by the·US Congress, by
the end of the week.
The Ohio Department
of Job and Family
Services reports approximately 155,000 Ohioans
will be affected by the
legislation which extended unemployment benefits to over two million
Americans. Chris Shank,
director of the MCDJFS
said on June 30, 149
Meigs County residents
were expected to lose
their unemployment benefits while 136 residents
were expected to lose
their benefits in July.
Shank said before the
legislation passed to
extend the benefits, his
staff tracked phone calls
received from those who
were set to lose their
unemployment benefits.
This tracking went on for
about two weeks in June.
In just a two week period. Shank said there were
15 to 20 inquiries about
other assistance, a slight
increase.
In tenus of applications
for food assistance. Shank
said in a two week period
in June, around 30 new
applications
were
processed. which is the
same amount of new
applications
normally
taken within one month at
the MCDJFS. Shank
attributed at least some of

Please see Benefits, AS

Meigs Cooperative
Parish responds to
God's NET comments
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH,~MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The Meigs Cooperative
Parish has responded to an article appearing in
The Daily Sentinel on July 29 regarding the
closing of God's NET. which has operated in
the Meigs Community Center for the past several years.
In that article the closing of God's NET was
attributed by Director Ron Vance to "a difficult
economy, reduction in grants and gifts from the
local community, and added expenses which
created an operating deficit that cannot be
resolved."
It goes on to say '"there are also issues be't\veen
the God's NETs board and that of the Meigs
Cooperative Parish. which provides space in the

Please see Parish, AS

�-------PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

VVednesday,August4,2010

NYC panel clears way for
mosque near ground zero
NEW YORK (AP) A city panel Tuesday
cleared the way for the
construction near ground
zero of a mosque that has
caused a political uproar
over religious freedom
and Sept. II even as
opponents vowed to
press their case in court.
The
Landmarks
Preservation Commission
voted unanimously. to
deny landmark status to a
building two blocks from
the World Trade Center
site that developers want
to tear down anti convert
into an Islamic community center and mosque.
The panel said the 152year-old lower Manhattan
building isn't distinctive
enough to be considered a
landmark.
The decision drew
praise
from
Mayor
Michael Bloomberg, who
stepped before cameras
on Governor's Island
with the Statue of Liberty
as a backdrop shortly
after the panel voted ~nd
called the mosque proJeCt
a key test of Americans'
commitment to religious
freedom.
"The World Trade
Center site will forever
hold a special place in
our city, in our hearts,"
said
Bloomberg.
a
Republican turned independent. "But we would
be untrue to the best part
of ourselves, and who we
are as New Yorkers and
Americans, if we said no
to a mosque in lower
Manhattan. '
The vote was a setback
for opponents of the
mosque, who say it disrespects the memory of
those killed at the hands
of Islamic terrorists on
Sept. 11, 200 l. Jeers and
shouts of "Shame on
you" could be heard after
the panel's vote.
TI1e American Ct:nter
for Law and Justice, a
conservative advocacy
group founded by the
Rev. Pat Robertson,
announced it would challenge the panel's decision in state court
Wednesday.
ACU attorney Brett
Joshpe said the group
would file a petition alleging that the landmarks
panel "acted arbitrarily
and abused its discretion."
The proposed mosque
has emerged as a national
political issue, with
prominent Republicans
from former Alaska Gov.
Sarah Palin to former
House Speaker Newt
Gingrich
lining
up
against it. The AntiDefamation League, the
nation's most prominent
Jewish civil rights group.
known for advocating
religious
freedom,
shocked many groups
when it spoke out against
the mosque last week.
The League said building the Islamic center "in
the shadow of the World
Trade Center· will cause
some victims more pain
- unnecessarily. - and
that is not right.''
Bloomberg
said
Tuesday that denying
religious freedom to
Muslims would play into
terrorists' hands. He said
firefighters and other
first responders who died
in the Sept. 11 attacks
had done so to protect the
U.S. Constitution.
"In rushing into those
burning buildings, not
one asked, 'What god do
you pray to? What beliefs
do
you
hold?"'
Bloomberg said of the
fir~t responders. "We do
not honor their lives by
denying the very constitutional rights they died
protecting.''

MCGRATII

Former Rep. Rick
Lazio, a Republican running for governor of New
York, attended the commission meeting with a
handful of opponents to
the mosque, which is
being developed by a
group called the Cordoba
Initiative.
"This is not about religion," Lazio said. "It's
about this particular
the
mosque
called
Cordoba Mosque, it's
about it being at ground
zero, it's about it being
spearheaded by an imam
who has associated himself with radical Islamic
causes and has made
comments that should
·every
single
chill
American, frankly."
Lazio said the group's
imam, Feisal Abdul
Rauf, had refused to call
the Palestinian group
Hamas a terrorist organization. Rauf also said in a
"60 Minutes" interview
televised shortly after
Sept. 11 that "United
States policies were an
accessory to the crime
that happened."
The Cordoba Initiative
says on its website that
its goal is to foster a better relationship between
the Muslim world and the
West, "steering the world
back to the course of
mutual recognition and
respect and away from
heightened tensions."
"We believe it will be a
place where f.!le countermomentum
against
extremism will begin," the
imam's wife, Daisy Khan,
told The Associated Press
Friday. "We are committed to peace.''
The center's board will
include members of other
religions, the project's
backers said. There also
will be a Sept. ll memorial to the victims of the
attack!), Khan said.
The commission's decision not to designate the
existing building as a
landmark means that the
developers can tear it
down and start from
scratch. • If the building
had been declared a landmark, they could have created a smaller mosque and
community center there.
A partner in the project, SoHo Properties,
bought the property for
nearly $5 million. Early
plans call .for a 13-story,
$100 million Islamic
center.
Cordoba wants to
transform the building
into a glass tower with a
swimming pool, basketball court, auditorium
and culinary school
besides the mosque. The
center. called Paric51,
also would have a lib:-ary,
art studios and meditation rooms.
Landmarks
Commissioner Stephen
Byrns said the building's
proximity to ground zero
and the fact it was struck
by airplane debris during
the Sept. 11 attacks don't
qualify it as a landmark.
"The
debris field
around ground zero was
widespread, apd one cannot designate hundreds
of buildings on that criterion alone," Byrns said.
SoHo Properties CEO
Sharif El-Gamal said he
was "deeply grateful to
the landmarks commission and to its staff"
Park5l spokesman Oz
Sultan said there was no
timeline for starting
demolition or construction, adding the building
phase was expected take
18 to 48 months.
"It's going to be something that fits in with the
New York skyline," he
said.

Tl~l:CK

&amp;

TI~ACTOR

SPECIALIZING IN

FORD • MASSY • LONG

Conn. beer deliveryman kills 8, self
BY STEPHEN SINGER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

MANCHESTER. Conn.
- A driver caught stealing
beer from the warehouse
where he worked agreed
to resign his job Thesday
and then as "cold as ice,"
one of his victims said,
went on a shooting rampage, killing eight people
and injuring two before
committing suicide.
Omar Thornton, 34,
pulled out a handgun
after a meeting in which
he was shown video evidence of the thefts and
was offered the chance to
quit or be fired.
"Then he went out on
this rampage.'' company
vice president Steve
Hollander
told
The
Associated Press. "He was
cool and calm. He didn't
yell. He was cold as ice.
He didn't protest when we
were meeting with him to
show him the video of him
stealing. He didn't contest
it. He didn't complain. He
didn't argue. He didn't
admit or deny anything.
He just agreed to resign.
And then he just unexplainably pulled out his
gun and started bla'iting."
Hollander said he
thinks Thornton had guns
stashed in his lunch box.
The executive said two
people standing right
near him were shot in the
head and killed, but he
was only grazed in the
jaw and the arm.
.
"He shot at me tw1ce
and hit me a couple
times. By just the grace of
God, I don't know how
he missed me," he said.
About 50 to 70 peopl~
were in the Hartford
Distributors warehouse
about 10 miles east of
Hartford during a shift
change when the gunman
opened fire around 7 a.m ..
said Brett Hollander,
Steve Hollander's cousin
and a member of the family that owns the distributorship. "I was on the
phone with 911 and then I
saw him running outside
of my office window.
shooting his gun. carrying
his lunch box, which must
have had his weapons in
it," Steve Hollander said.
"It doesn't seem real to
me now, it seems like I'm
watching a movie."
The shooting was over
in a matter of minutes.
The victims were found
all over the complex, and
authorities said they didn't know if Thornton
fired randomly or targeted specific co-workers.
After shooting his coworkers. Thornton called
his mother, said Joanne
Hannah. the mother of
Thornton's girlfriend.
"He wanted to say
goodbye and that he loved
everybody,'' she said.
Thornton was alive
when police got to the
scene but killed himself
before officers got to
him, Manchester Police
Chief Marc Montminy
said. A police sharpshooter had approval to
fire on Thornton when he
killed himself, an official
, with knowledge of the
scene told the AP on condition of anonymity
because he was not
authorized to discuss it.
Workers had flooded out

Mark Mlrko/Hartford CouranVMCT

A man wipes his eyes while walking with a Manchester Police officer in the aftermath of a shooting at Hartford Distributors, a family-owned beer and wine wholesaler, that left nine people dead in Manchester. Connecticut, on Tuesday.

of the building as three
teams of police officers
raced into it, Montminy
told the town's board of
directors Tuesday evening.
"Some were hiding in
the woods and some were
hiding under cars." he
said.
State police found
weapons in the suspect's
car, Montminy said. without providing details.
Steve Hollander said
Thornton killed "many
good people today for
absolutely no reason at
all, people who've never
said an unkind word to
him .... He was just shooting at anyone that was
near him and just cruelty
beyond cruelty.'' Hannah
said her daughter, Kristi,
had dated Thornton for
the past eight years.
Kristi Hannah did not
return calls for comment.
"Everybody's got a
breaking point," Joanne
Hannah said.
Thornton, who was
black, had complained of
racial harassment and
said he found a picture of
a noose and a racial epithet written on a bathroom wall. Hannah said.
Her daughter told her that
Thornton's supervisors
told him they would talk
to his co-workers.
Brett Hollander said. "l
can assure you there has
never been any racial discrimination at our company." A union official
said Thornton had not
filed a complaint of
racism with the union or
any government agency.
"This is a disgruntled
employee who shot a
of
people."
bunch
Teamsters
official
Christopher Roos said.
Thornton was not a
problem employee and
had not had any previous
disciplinary issues. said
Gregg Adler. a lawyer for
the Teamsters Local
I035. He said he was not
aware of how much beer
Thornton was alleged to
have stolen.
Kristi Hannah had been
with him Monday night
and had no indication he
was planning anything
violent, her mother said.
Joanne
Hannah
described Thornton as an
easygoing guy who liked
to play sports and video
games. She said he had a
pistol permit and had
planned to teach her

daughter how to use a gun.
Police declined to
release the names of
those killed.
Among the dead was
Bryan Cirigliano. 51, of
Newington. president of
Teamsters 1035, according
to the union. He had been
Thornton's representative
at 1\Jesday's disciplinary
hearing, the unjon said.
AnOther victim was
warehouse worker Doug
Scruton, 56, who had
worked there for nearly
30 years, said his wife,
O'Brien.
Mikal
Anticipating his upcoming retirement, the couple
had recently moved to a
retirement
home in
Middleton. N.H .. when:
he loved to visit the
White Mountains and
beaches. He stayed with
a friend in Connecticut
during the week. ''It was
part of our plan for him
to be able to retire in the
place that he loved. But
he's never going to be
able to enjoy that now.''
she said. "He was just the
sweetest, gentlest, kind
soul, and I can't believe
he's gone."
Bill Ackem1an, a 51vear-old warehouseman,
also was killed, said his
Stephanie
girlfriend,
Laurin.
"I was like, 'Where's
Billy. where's Billy'!' and
they said they hadn't seen
hin1. And then one tf his
co-workers told me ... that
he saw the shooter go to
where Billy's room is that
he works in." she said.
Ackerman.
who
enjoyed playing golf and
rooting for the Boston
Red Sox, had worked for
the company for about 20
years. she said.
The Hartford Courant
identified other victims as
Victor James. 59, of
Windsor;
Edwin
Kennison Jr., 49. of East
Hartford: and Cmig Pepin,
50. of South Windsor.
Steve Hollander was
treated
at
Hartford
Hospital and released.
Another person was being
treated there, but the hospital would not comment
on the patient's condition.
It was the nation's
deadliest shooting since
· 13 people were killed 31t
Fort Hood, Texas, m
November. A military
psychiatrist is charged
with 13 counts of pre-

lneditated murder and 32
counts of attempted premeditated murder in that
case. In Connecticut, a
state lottery work.
gunned down four supe
visors in 1998 before
committing suicide, and
six people were killed in
1974 in botched robbery
at a bakery in New
Britain. Two men were
convicted of that crime.
On Tuesday, a few
dozen
relatives
and
friends of the victims
gathered a few miles away
at Manchester High
School. Outside, people
talked, hugged and cried.
Police and fire vehicles
surrounded the warehouse, on a tree-lined road
in an industrial park just
west of a shopping mall.
A fire broke out shortly
after the shooting, but
police Ciidn't think it was
set.
Thornton
listed
Hoffman's Gun Center &amp;
Indoor
Range
in
Newington as one of his
interests on his Faceboo.
page. A company offici
declined to comment.
Thornton filed for
bankruptcy protection a
decade ago. His petition
in 2000 listed $4,850 in
assets, including a 1994
Chrysler Concorde, and
more than $15,000 in liabilities - primarily debt
on credit card and student
loan payments. His debts
were
discharged in
March 2001 and the case
was closed the following
month.
The
Connecticut
Commission on Human
Rights and Opportunities
said Hartford Distributors
has never had any complaints ftled against it.
The Hollander family
is widely respected in
Manchester. said state
Rep. Ryan Barry. a lifelong resident. He said the
family-owned Hartford
sponsor.
Distributors
local sports teams.
"Ten seconds before he
started shooting, if you
had asked me. does he
look like he's going to
react in any way? I would
have said no, he seems
calm," Steve Hollander
said. "It makes no sense
the people he killed. Why
would somebody do such
a thing? They were his
co-workers. they never ...
harmed him in any way."

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VVednesday,August4,2010

aneart family holds reunion
Kirkendall
from Staneart Family Trivia
PO~lEROY
Descendants of Joel and Wauseon, Ohio; largest game was played with
Lydia Still Staneart held family. Gene and Jeanie JoAnne Aburto being the
their reunion Saturday, Zimmerman with eight winner. Each family
, Jy 24. at John and offspring and four house- member identified which
represented; sibling of Joel and Lydia
· ie Largent's Juniper holds
dre Campgrounds in youngest parent, Teresa Staneart they originated
Counts with both daugh- from.
Vinton County.
Prizes were given for
Connie
Staneart ters present; youngest
Largent opened the annu- grandparents, Rolando the three guessing games
Hope • Saunders,
al reunion by reading the and JoAnne Aburto with to
granddaughter Peyton
Counts
and
"Meaning of the Flag" their
before those attending Natilia: married longest. Delany Zimmem1an.
Pickens reported on
recited the . Pledge of Albert and Clara Mae
and
Allegiance. Vera Luckett -Hutchison (65 years) and correspondence
and
Jeanie phone calls she received
Richardson gave the Gene
Zimmerman (58 years).
throughout the year.
blessing.
Oldest. Keith Gibbs They included Feme J.
The Staneart Family
group picture was taken Staneat1. age 89. and the Weissman. Evelyn White
after lunch. The reunion only person present bear- Jeffers and Bob Kautz for
album was shared as well ing the Staneart name. In Maurita Miller.
It was noted that
as other pictures from the his honor, the goup
past. One picture in par- declarded the gathering Wilbur Colburn, 99, died
ticular was of the John as Keith Staneart Day. June 1. His parents were
and
Amanda
\1ilton Staneart family at and presented him a cup Clyde
Colbum.
their home in Meigs bearing that inscription. Staneart
County. Another was A ceramic memory box Condolences will be sent
family members that was given to him and to his brother Carl
attended Ohio University everyone present wrote a Colburn. Get well cards
in the early 1900's. short note or remem- will also be sent to Lloyd
Marilyn
Those identified were: brance of him and placed Blackwood,
Staneart Allen, Brad
Enna Staneart (Stewart). in the box.
Golda Stilneart (Haines)
A display board with Luckett. Freda Smith and
nne! Enna Mae Gibbs pictures of Keith in his Maxine Staneart Leeds.
ancart).
younger years and his
It was announced that
•
&gt;aula Jean Staneart family was made by Lt. Col. Robett C. Allen
Pickens presided over the Paula Pickens and Vera (grandson of Cecil D.·
bu&lt;;ine5S meeting with Richardson. His daugh- Staneart) graduated July
Connie Staneart Largent ter,· Connie Stane~art · 23 with a Masters in
reading
last
year's Largent, read a poem, Strategic Studies from
"You're Special." His War College at Carlisle.
reunion notes.
Gifts were given for granddaughter Stephanie Pa. Contmumg with our
the following categories: Largent Cox was also patriotic theme, it was
Youngest, Lydia Mayers, present to celebrate with noted that today would
have been Ronald Keith
almost two; farthest trav- him on his special day.
The
traditional Staneart's 64h birthday.
eled, Bill and _Phyllis

Ronnie. a Marine. was
killed in action in
Vietnam on Oct. 4, 1966.
His sister, Connie, read a
historical page about the
Vietnam war in his memory. Paula shared a page
from her album at the
Vietnam
Veterans
Memorial in Washington,
DC as a tribute to the
deceased veteran.
Next year's reunion
will be held Saturday,
July 23, with the location
to be annunced. It was
voted to retain current
officers.
Forty-six were in attendance: Keith G. Staneart,
John and Connie Largent,
Stephanie Cox. Paula
Pickens, Vera Richardson,
Joyce and Joe Sheline,
Brandon
and
Hope
Saunders. Laura, Olivia.
Cassandra, Elijah and
Lydia Mayers, Rolando
and JoAnne Aburto and
Natilia Cordova, Ethan
Allen, Angela Allen,
Bobby Shutts, Reina
Moore. Albert, Clara Mae
and John Hutchison, Ruth
Fisher, Teresa. Raelyn
and Peyton Counts, Dale
Colebum.
Carleen
Woodruff, Marilyn and
Steve Snyder, Bill and
Phyllis
Kirkendall,
Bonnie Dinsmoor. Nick
russner. Gene, Jean.
Greg.
Jack,
Alex,
Blondel: Ashlea, Delaney
and
Rebecca
Zimmennan.

F othills Art Festival announced
JACKSON - Artist
regi$tratwn fonns for the
29th annual Foothills Art
festival are now available.
Scheduled to mn from
Friday, Oct.
15 to
Sunday, Oct. 17. the fes'll is a weekend full of
ual mts, live music.
and hands-on arts activi• ties presented free for the
mt ··e family.

The event takes place
in the lodge at Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp, 5 miles
northwest of Jackson
Artists are invited to
exhibit in the following
categories: oil/ccrylic,
pastel/drawing. photography, enhanced photography,
prints,
three
dimensional work, and
watercolor.
The show is profes-

sionally judged but not
juried. Artists of" all ages
and
experience
are
encouraged to enter, both
professional and amateur.
Entrants are limited to
four wqrks per category.
with an entry fee of $8
per piece, or $28 for four
pieces until the deadline
of Sept. 3. at which time
the fee becomes slightly
higher.
A total of $1.395 in
cash prizes will be
awarded. Dozens of pur~

Community Calendar
---------

Public
meetings
VVednesda~Aug.4

POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health
meets at 5 p.m. in the
health department conterence room.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
town hall
Thursday, Aug. 5
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
rd of Superyisors will
et in ,speclal session,
•
10 a.m. at the district
office at 33101 Hiland
Road to discuss employee health insurance.
Monday, Aug. 9
RAGIN~ Southern
Local
Board
of

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

Education, special session to hire personnel for
new school year, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.
Thursday, Aug. 12
The GJMV Solid Waste
Management
District
Board of Directors will
meet in regular session
on Thursday, August 12
at 3:30 p.m. at the district
office, 1056 S. New
Hampshire
Avenue,
Wellston, Ohio.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. 5
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association,
regular
meeting, 7 p.m., Chester
Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS Ladies Auxiliary, VFW, 7

p.m. at the Tuppers
Plains VFW hall.
Friday, Aug. 6
POMEROY PERl
74, meeting 1 p.m. at the
Mulberry
Community
Center. Lunch at 12:30
p.m. Michael Gerlach to
spea~ on the history of
Meigs County.
Saturday, Aug. 7
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
will meet in regular session with potluck supper
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m. All
craft, art, photography
and family activities contests will be judged.

Reunions
Saturday, Aug. 7
RACINE
74th
Stover/Casto Reunion,

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 36.25
Akzo (NASDAQ~ - 61.01 •
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 51.67
Big Lots (NYSE)- 34.18
Bob Evan~ (NASDAQ) 26.02
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 45.83
Century Aluminum (NAS·
DAQ)- 1,P:80
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.62
Charming $boP.S (NASDAQ)
-4.40
City Holdi'l9 (NASDAQ) 30.04
Collins (NYSE) - 58.06
DuPont (NYSE) - 41.43
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.22

_..--

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

Page

The Daily Sentinel

\t tists invited to exhibit

-

Gen Electric (NYSE)- 16.40
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) Harley-Davidson (NYSE) ·71.88
27.39
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 51.29
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 41.08
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.27
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.58
WesBanco (NYSE)- 17.60
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 25.52
Worthington (NYSE)- 14.76
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 57.43
Daily
stock reports are the 4
Ohio Valley Bane Corp (NAS.
p.m. ET closing quotes of
DAQ)- 19.75
BBT (NYSE) - 24.81
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.02
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.77
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.15
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.32
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 8.24
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.56

chase award donors will
select artwork during a

ASK DR. BR.OTHER.S

'Sorry' seems to
be the only word:
Dear Dr. Brothers: Jf
there's one thing I can't
stand, it's hearing someone constantly apologize.
I'd forgotten how much I
hated it until I caught up
with a friend from high
school. Within the first
two minutes, she apologized1 for something silly.
and then for the next
half-hour continued to
interject an "I'm sorry"
after almost every sentence. She would always
do this when we were
teens. and I would have
thought
she'd
have
grown out of it by now.
Wnat makes someone so
sorry? - T.C.
Dear T.C.: That is an
interesting question. and
one that probably has a
number of answers. At
the core might be the
need for reassurance that
the sorry person is liked
and is likable. By constantly apologizing for trivial things. and
probably for things over
which she actually has no
control but wants to take
responsibility for - she
projects the appearance
of being a caring, considerate and fair player in
the game of Jife. But
even beyond wanting to
project these sterling
qualities, she may feel
like a bit of a victim, and
by being sorry. she wants
to make sure no one is
mad at her and that
everything is fine. If she
is lucky. maybe some
people will even for2:ive

Dr. Joyce Brothers

preview reception on
Oct. I4 to which all 1
~
artists are invited.
her for her trespasses.
Foothills Art Festival is . and will feel sorry for her
a
program
of the on top of it!
Southern
Hills Arts
Why someone would
Council. Call the Council want to put herself in this
at 740 _286 _6355 , email kind of position is somewhat of a mystery at art @ shacmarkay.com. surely it has to do with a
or write Box 149.
Jackson, Ohio 45640 for low sense of self-worth
further information or or a person who is hauntentry fonns. Registration ed by guilt. possibly for
deadline is Sept. 3.
something large or small
that she once did and got
away with. Or guilt from
hurting someone, for
which she is still apologizing to all who will listen. But she simply may
12:30 p.m.. Star Mill be suffering from depresPark, bring basket, table, sion and/or anxiety both of which can magniservice provided.
fy
feelings of guilt in the
Sunday, Aug. 8
sufferer
and perhaps
ALBANY
86th
Hayes-Young and Holiday drive him or her to saying
School reunion, 1 p.m. he or she is sorry. If this
potluck dinner, at the old is the case, your friend
Holiday School grounds, almost certainly could
Gilkey Ridge. Bring pho- benefit from a course of
tos, genealogy informa- therapy and possibly
medication. Want to ask
tion, entertainment.
RACINE
37th her what's up?
•••
Annual Charles and
Dear Dr. Brothers: I do
Alma Snyder Reunion,
it every time. I psych
noon, Star Mill Park.
myself up for a new
movie from my favorite
director or a new CD from
my favorite band. only to
Saturday, Aug. 7
be severely disappointed
SYRACUSE - Gospel afterward. I've been like
sing, 6:30p.m., Syracuse this since I was a kid,
Community Church, per- always settin&amp; mys~lf up
formances by Mission for the next btg fall. This
Trio, Jerry and Diana is by no means a lifeFrederick, Brian &amp; Family threatening issue - I'm
Connection.
just wondering why I persist in always having high
expectations and if there is
anything I can do about it.
I'm sick of always being
so disappointed by everything. - F.D.

Dear
F.D.: High
expectations are not a
bad thing in them-;elvec;,
In fact, we usually are
told for most of our lives.
by teachers, parentc;,
mentors and supervio;ors.
that we should set our
goals, hopes and -- yes
expectations very
high. Then when we
reach our goals, we can
be so proud of our
accomplishments. But if
we find our high expectations constantly c;hortcircuited as we crash to
the ground. something
needs to be adjusted. A'l
you have found through- .
out your life, getting too
excited about something.
sometimes yields disappointing results. It is :
good to be a positive ·
person and an optimist,
who
thinks
things,
always will turn out:
well, but let's face it -you could be Jeaming'
something from each little episode in which
things turn out for the
worse.
What you ma) need to·,
pick up on a bit more i'&gt;,
the reality of lowered
expectations. I am not
saying to lower your
standards. or to settle, or 1•
anything that has to be
negative. What you need
to do is simply realign .
your expectations with .
reality. Make sure that:
what you hear people c;ay
is what they meant to
convey. Ask otherc; tf
they understand what
you want from them
before they go off .md.
disappoint you. Once you:
have a better grasp of .
reality, you will be better .
able to set your expectations. And when they are ·
occasionally disappointed, you can work to fine-·
tune what it is you are.
seeking from others and.~
from objects. Good luck
to you.
(c) 2010 by King

Features Syndicate

Church events

transactions for August 3,
2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member
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�Page·A4

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

VVednesday,August4,2010

Q.Which structure insults Ground Zero?

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

a.·

b.

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibitittg the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, attd to petition the
Govemment for a re4ress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Consumer spending flat in June
BY MARTIN CRUTSINGER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Consumers are saving more and being picky
about how they spend their money, new data show.
Personal spending was unchanged in June, the '
Commerce Department reported Tuesday. It was
the third straight month of lackluster consumer
demand. Incomes were also flat, the weakest
showing in nine months.
.
And the personal savings rate rose to 6.4. percent
of after-tax incomes in June. The savings rate is
now about three times the 2. J percent average for
all of 2007, before the recession began.
The disappointing report on spending and
income was among a raft of data released Tuesday
that confirmed the econop1y ended the April-toJune quarter on a weak note.
·
Factory orders dropped 1.2 percent in June to a
seasonally adjusted $406.4 billion, the Commerce
Department said. It was the second consecutive
decline after nine straight months of gains. Lower
demand for steel, construction machinery and aircraft dragged down the figure.
And the number of buyers who signed contracts
to purchase homes fell in June. The National
Association of Realtors says its seasonally adjusted index of sales agreements for previously occupied homes dipped 2.6 percent to a reading of
75.7. That was the lowest on records dating back
to 200 I and down nearly 19 percent from the
same month a year earlier.
Last week the government said economic growth
for the second quarter slowed to 2.4 percent. Many
analysts believe it will dip further in the second half
of the year as high unemployment, shaky consumer
confidence and renewed troubles in housing weigh
on the year-old economic recovery.
While income growth was flat in June, incomes did
post solid gains in April and May. But households
chose to save the extra money rather than spend it.
Higher savings restrain spending in the near tenn.
But the extra money helps households get control of
their bills and make purchases they can afford.
Consumer spending is closely monitored because
it accounts for 70 percent of total economic activity.
Economists are worried that the financial troubles weighing on households could cause spending to ebb even more in the second half of the
year. If spending is further restrained, businesses
will stay cautious about hiring.
The zero reading on income growth was weaker
than the 0.2 percent increase economists had
expected. It followed a 0.3 percent rise in May and
was the poorest showing since incomes were also
flat in September. Part of the weakness in June
reflected a decline in the number of temporary census workers, which subtracted $3.4 billion from
federal payrolls at an annual rate. A spurt in census
hiring in May had boosted government payrolls.
The zero reading on consumer spending was
also slightly weaker than economists had forecast.
It followed a small 0.1 percent rise in May and a
0.1 percent decline in April.
The weak economy is keeping a lid on inflation.
A price gauge tied to consumer spending dropped
by 0.1 percent in June. Prices are up just 1.4 percent over the past L2 months. ~ell within the
Federal Reserve's comfort zone for inflation.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Servl.ces
Correction Polley

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Last week, a tectonic shift took
place in the firmament of the War
of Ideas. Former House Speaker
Newt Gingrich directly and forcefully took on Shariah, the totalitarian theo-political-military program of authoritative Islam that
its adherents seek to impose on
the entire world. As he noted, the
United States is squarely in the
cross-hairs of Shariah's devotees.
In response, the usual suspects
- the multiculturally sensitive
elite that reflexively excuses the
Islamists joined by proponents of
the latters' stealth jihad. notably
elements
of
the
Muslim
Brotherhood (MB)
have
reflexively responded by accusing
the Speaker of ''bashing"
Mpslims. It is, of course, far easier to engage in ad hominem
attacks than contend with Newt's
characteristically thoughtful and
informed critique. It is also expedient to try to portray a focused
challenge to the beliefs and practices of a subset of the Islamic
faith as an assault on all Muslims.
In fact, it is not "bashing" all
Muslims if one points out that the
comprehensive doctrine to which
. some of them adhere is a threat to
our liberties, our government and
our way of life. Objectively, that
is the case; a global theocracy the end-state commanded by
Shariah
administering a
severely repressive, even barbaric
criminal code aimed at enforcing
submission by Muslims and nonMuslims alike is incompatible
with the U.S. Constitution.
As it happens, one man who has
expressly said he seeks to "bring
Shariah to America" is Feisal
Abdul Rauf, the imam currently
promoting construction of a 13story, $ LOO mil1ion mosque once
dubbed "Cordoba House" in
proximity to Ground Zero.
Speaker Gingrich has properly
and powerfully opposed that idea:
In an op.ed. in Human Events last
week, he wrote: ''lt is simply
grotesque to erect a mosque at the
site of the most visible and powerful symbol of the horrible consequences of radical lslamist ideology.... For radical lslarnists, the
mosque would become an icon of
triumph. encouraging them in
their challenge to our civilization."
Unfortunately, the problem is

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the U.S. government has identified as Brotherhood fronts: the
Islamic Society of North America
(ISNA) and . the International
Institute for Islamic Thought

Frank
Gaffney, Jr.

not merely the location of the
mosque. Rather, it lies with those
like Imam Rauf who are advancing the Muslim Brotherhood
- agenda that Mr. Gingrich calls
''creeping Shariah" and the MB
itself says is "to destroy Western
civilization from within.''
Rauf has myriad connections to'
the Muslim Brotherhood. His
father \Vas a prominent figure in
the organization back in Egypt in
the 1940s. After Gamal Nasser
cracked down on the organization, the elder Rauf fled first to
Kuwait. where Feisal was born,
then made his way to Malaysia
and ultimately America. Once in
New York, he bought up a third of
a city block on the Upper East
Side and built a large. Shariah
adherent mosque · and Islamic
Center on 96th Street. The
younger Rauf serves on the board
of that mosque.
Feisal Abdul Rauf also published in 2004 a book entitled ·
What's Right About Islam is
What:,·. Right about America. It is
in English, but intended for
Muslim audiences. Interestingly.
this book appeared under a different title in Malaysia (and in the
local lang!Jage, not in English).
The title has been changed, in an
instmctive way: A Call to Prayer
from the WTC Rubble: Islamic
Dawa in the Heart of America
Post 9111.
Now. dawa is the essence of
creeping Shariah. Dawa is all
about proselytizing. recruiting
and indoctrinating in the ways of
Shariah and the jihad l.t demands.
And, as the acknowledgements
page of the American version
indicates, ··a special non-commercial edition (of the book was published) to promote a proper understanding of Islam and common
ground between Islam and the
West.,. The organizations that
made that possible were two that

(IIIT).

As Debra Burlingame, sister of
the pilot of the aircraft that was
flown into the Pentagon on 9/11,
observes:
"No
,Muslim
cleric who
believes
in
'religious tolerance' and who purports to be a U.S. Constitutionembracing American, would ever.
ever give his book. his work, to
these two organizations for dissemination. This would be akin to
someone who makes racial equality their sole cause in life, donating their book to the KKK to
recruit members."
Then, there is another book by
Feisal Rauf: Islam: A Sacred Law
- What Every Muslim Should
Know About Shariah. It makes
clear the imam's affinity for the
Wahhabi and Salafi doctrines. AA
the New York Police Departmet. ,
documented in a major analysis
released two years &lt;JgO JlOd entitled Radicali:;ation in the West:
The Homegroa'Jl Threat, there is
an ominous connection between
' indoctrination
in
Wahhabi
mosques and Islamist "radicaliza'tion'' here.
In short, Imam Rauf is clear.
patticularly with Muslim audiences, that he seeks to impose
Shariah here in America. He is·no
moderate. To the contrary. he has
myriad ties to the Muslim
Brotherhood and its seditious.
Shariah program.' As a result. it
seems all-too·predictable that the
megamosque he seeks to build at
Ground Zero would be a beachhead for Shariah and a new, dangerous incubator of jihadism in
the heart of New York.
'
It is not "bashing" any Muslim
to point out these facts. To the
contrary. it would be the height of
irresponsibility not to take note
of, and act upon, them - first : . .
stopping the Ground Ze
Mosque. then by ensuring tha
America remains Shariah.free.
(Frank J. Gaffney. ll:, is president of the Center for Security
Policy. a columnist for the
Washington 'limes and host of the
nationally syndicated program.
Secure Freedom Radio.)

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156

Circulation Manager: 740·446·
2342, Ext. 11

·on (bashing) Muslims

\\

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----------------------------------------·------~----------~----·--~--------------~~--~~~~--~

VVednesday,August4,2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Strickland, attorney general push for DNA tests
COLUMBUS (AP) by the Ohio Innocence
DNA testing should be Project, which seeks to
done on evidence col- help prison inmates who
lected in the cases of claim to be innocent.
seven · men who have
"We believe that when
served time in Ohio pris- DNA testing has the genons, including one man uine and real potential to
currently on death row, clarify the guilt, innothe governor and attor- cence or identity of a
ney,
general
said person suspected or conTuesday in letters to victed of a crime, significant efforts should be
county prosecutors.
Gov. Ted Strickland made to accomplish that
and Attorney General testing," the let.ters say.
Richard Cordray asked "We make this request to
the prosecutors to make you only to promote, as
available evidence relat- best and fairly as we can,
ed to the convictions, confidence and certainty
which date from 1986 to in the administration of
1999.
justice."
The cases were brought
The requests follow a
to the attention of review of more than 300
Strickland and Cordray cases in which inmates'

Charles Lewis
~

Charles "Fuzzy" Lewis, 87, Chester Road,
Pomeroy, died Sunday, Aug. 1, 2010, at Rockmill
Rehabilitation Center, Carroll.
He was bornJune 16, 1923, in Waverly, son of the late
liam and Sarah Smith Lewis. He was a retired vetran of the U.S. Army. He attended Forest Run Baptist
· Church, and was a member of the VFW Post 9028,
American Legion and Disabled American Veterans.
His wife, Ruth Dorzen Lewis, Pomeroy, survives,
along with s~v~ral nieces, nephews and cousins.
Service will be at I p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 5, 2010,
Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy, with Pastor Joseph
L. Woods officiating. Burial will be at Beech Grove
Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Thursday
at the .funeral home.

For the Record
Meigs County 911 dispatched

LEBANON,
Ohio
(AP) - A judge heard
arguments Tuesday on
whether an Ohio man
should be acquitted or
possibly face a third trial
m the 2008 bathtub
drowning death of his
wife.
A jury found Ryan
Widmer, 29, now of
Mason, guilty of murder
in his first trial in 2009,
but that verdict was overturned after a judge
determined there was
jury misconduct. Jurors
in Widmer's May retrial
in the death of 24-yearold Sarah Widmer at the
couple's Cincinnati-area

Monday
10:07 a.m., Ohio 248, fever; 10:35 a.m., North
Front Street, Middleport, chest pain; 5:44p.m., East
Memorial Drive, high blood pressure; 6:08 p.m., East
Main Street, Pomeroy, fall; 10:43 p.m., Upper Ohio 7,
Cheshire, chest pain.
Tuesday
:59 a.m., Union Avenue, pain.
•

Benefits from Page At
this increase in applications in June to residents
concerned they were
going to exhaust their
unemployment benefits if
the legislation didn't pass.
"There are new applications corning in faster than
cases are closing, "Shank
said about the demand for
food assistance in Meigs
County overall.
Locally. the MCDJFS'
One Stop Employment
Training Center is attempting to assist the unemployed with finding both
training and employment.
Shank said from JanuaryJune 30, the center had
4,445 visitors and took

. 8 7 phone calls about

continuing
education,
training opportunities. help
updating resumes. etc.
Shank said many also took
advantage of the center's
computers to do free job
searches. The center is
located inside the MCDJFs buil~ing ~Middleport
thol!gh 1t w1ll soon be
moved next door into the
former University of Rio
Grande building. The center is open from 8 a.m. 4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday.
Call992-2117.
At the end of June, the
Ohio DJFS estimated
1,500 residents out of
Meigs County's labor
force of 9.500 residents
were without jobs.

Parish from Page Al

applications for DNA
testing were denied
before 2008. In 30 of the
cases, lawyers felt testing
was warranted, and it has
been granted in 18 of
those cases.
Among . the
cases
Strickland and Cordray
include in their requests
is that of death row
inmate Tyrone Noling,
who was convicted in
1996 of shooting to death
an elderly couple in their
Portage County home.
He seeks testing of a cigarette butt.
They also ask the
Summit County prosecutor to release evidence in
the ca&lt;;e of former Akron
police Capt. Douglas

Prade. Prade is serving20 years to life in prison
for the 1997 murder of
his wife, Margo Prade, an
Akron doctor. He seeks
testing of his wife's lab
coat and lab coat buttons,
bite marks left on her
arm, her fingernail clippings and a tennis
bracelet.
Of the seven men, the
only ones currently in
prison are Noling, Prade
and Martin Hatton, who
wus convicted of rape in
Pickaway County in
1997 but wants testing of
a rape kit collected from
his accuser. The letters
say three of the men are
no longer in prison and
one has died.

Judge to decide whether to acquit ·man in drowning

911
POMEROY these calls:

~

1

I

home were dismissed caused the second trial
after failing to reach a jury to deadlock could
unanimous verdict. •
prevent any jury from
If Warren County reaching a unanimous
Common Pleas Court verdict. He submitted
Judge Neal Bronson affidavits from three
denies Widmer's request members of the hung jury
for an acquittal, prosecu- saying that, based on
tors
will
determine their experience, they
whether to try him a third don't believe another
time.
jury could reach a unaniTuesday's arguments mous verdict. •
focused on standards
Prosecutors objected,
each side thinks Bronson but Bronson said he would
should apply in making ·consider the affidavits.
his decision.
Assistant Prosecutor
Defense lawyer Jay John Arnold said the state
Clark told the judge he has presented sufficient
should look at all the evi- evidence to support a
dence and determine conviction and the judge
whether factors that should consider the evi-

dence in the most "favorable light'' to the state.
Both sides in earlier
court filings introduced
new information intended to help their side. The
defense filed a document
it says shows · S~rah
Widmer had a previously
undisclosed heart condition that could h~ve led
to her drowning.
Prosecutors said in
their filings that a new
witness is prepared to testify at trial that Widmer
confessed to killing his
wife. The filings say the
witness contacted prosecutors after the second
jury was discharged.

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

Mei·gs County Fo~ecast
1. '

Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms, then showers
likely and possibly a
thunderstonn after 2 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 90. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New
rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch,
exceP.t higher amounts
possible in thunder-

storms.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers and
th~nderstorms. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 70. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
New
rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch,
exceP.t higher amounts
poss1ble in thunderstorms.

Thursday: Showers
and thunderstorms likely,
mainly after 2 p.m.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 90. Chance of
precipitation is 60 percent.
New
rainfall
amounts between a quarter and half of an inch
possible.
Thursday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstorms, mainly

before I a.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 68. North wind
between 3 and 8 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent. New rainfall amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an
inch, except higher
amounts possible in
thunderstorms.
Frida)·: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 84.

Bond

Mulberry
Cop1munity utilities
and
living
from Page At
Center." Cited among expenses when other
those issues was a signifi- sources are not available.
The Racine precinct had percent voter turnout total.
cant increase in rent paid
"The debt has been change the outcome.
the
heaviest turnout with
Yesterday's
numbers
The bond issue failed to
to the Meigs Cooperative reduced to $164,264 with
213
ballots
cast
were
unofficial,
and
and
a
pass
in all six precincts.
the
help
of
churches,
busiParish for space.
percent
voter The bond issue failed in
Alva Clark, Meigs nesses, organizations and included absentee bal- 37.37
Cooperative Parish execu- caring people throughout lots, with election results turnout total. Racine was the following precincts:
by
Racine Syracuse Village, 87
tive committee chairman, the county." the chairman to be finalized at 9 a.m., followed
Village with 187 ballots votes for the issue, 91
said in response that God's said. "Yet the operating Wednesday, Aug. 18.
Poll workers reported a cast and a 36.81 percent against; Lebanon, 63
NET has made it very clear expense is still there turnout
total; votes for the issue, 110
steady
turnout all day voter
$5,500
per
month
in
order
that they are not a part of
the Meigs Cooperative to keep the doors open for long with the Racine Minersville with 177 bal- against; Minersville, 87
Parish or any other min- all the ministries that now Village and Syracuse lots cast and 32.78 voter votes for the issue, 89
istry in Meigs County. exist within the Mulberry precincts running out of turnout total; Lebanon votes against.
The. bond issue passed
"The youth ministry oper- Community Center. The ballots at one point with 173 ballots cast and
28.6
voter
turnout
total
though
·they
were
in
the
following
ates from the Mulberry Co-op is not closing its
and
Syracuse
Village
also
restocked
by
a
representaprecincts:
Racine.
123
doors,
he
emphasized.
It
Community Center, but it
the
issue, 90
is not affiliated with any is a healthy ministry with tive of the Meigs County with 173 ballots cast and for
percent
voter against; Racine Village,
Board of Elections so all 29.18
your support."
organization,'' he said
turnout
total;
voters
who
wished
to
Letart
with 112 for the issue, 75
He
noted
that
from
July
As for the rental issue,
161 ballots cast and 28.5 against; Letart, 87 for
Clark said the Cooperative 1, 2009 to July 1, 2101 vote. could.
'
Parish recognizing the there were over 2562 famrtance of youth min- ilies receiving assistance
s, went into negotia- through food, hygiene
from Page At
with God's NET to products and other housebring them under the hold articles. In addition
"We should use more
umbrella of ministries of 115 families were helped oppose its new rules to better understand the
the Meigs Cooperative through the Meigs and regulating the disposal process, and to see up coal to make electriciParish which would elimi- Middleport Ministerial of coal ash and whether close what American ty,'' Wilson said prior to
nate the program as a sep- ·Association working with it should be considered Electric Power is doing his tour. "Energy is the
in his district.
key to our future, and
arate entity as well as the the Co-op which contin- hazardous.
Wilson
discussed
his
ues
its
work
with
GalliaWilson
said
coal
transthere
is no cheaper or
rental payment issue.
opposition
to
the
cap
and
Meigs
Community
Action
ported
by
riverboat
is
the'
more
simpler
means of
The proposal, according
electricity
to Clark, was for God's and the Department of simplest and most effi- trade legislation pro- providing
cient and cost-effective posed last year, designed than through the use of
NET to move into a small- Human Seryices.
The
Mulberry
Center,
means of producing elec- to reduce carbon emis- coal."
er room on the first floor,
In addressing the EPA's
have access to the kitchen according to Clark, will tricity, and said the Ohio sions from coal-fired
which power plants, which was proposal, Wilson and
to prepare food and a continue to have a youth River valley
space to serve meals, the ministry to serve the makes up his Sixth proposed by the House others in coal-producing
use of the gymn.asium for Pomeroy area within the j District should be an Democrats.
"There was only one
corridor"
events, and storage space Quadrant Ministries of the "energy
Meigs
Cooperative
Parish.
through
the
use
of
cleanDemocrat
in the Ohio
on the second floor.
However. he added, "We coal technology.
delegation to vote against
By going under the CoWilson said he was vis- cap and trade," Wilson
op umbrella, Clark said regret seeing God's NET
shutting
down
this
woniting
with AEP lenders at scud, "and you are look"Everythirtg would be
derful
youth
ministry."
the
Gallia
County plant ing at him."
free from rent and utilities
to God's NET. However,
according to Clark. God's
NET rejected this option
and wished to remam an
independent ministry." It
been announced that
operation will cease
Saturday.
Clark spoke about the
Cooperative Parish, a
restructuring program
underway to strengthen
the ministry in the county, the debt encountered
by the move into the old
school building and its
renovation, and the
Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 9-5
expenses of operating the
Sunday-closed
facility while assisting
people in need, not only
Visit us@www.weavingstitchesgiftshop.com &amp;
with food but sometimes

.
E

the issue, 77 against.
As for what's next,
Deem said the process of
"fully engaging the
architects and the public"
will commence during a
year-tong planning phase
to bring the new SHS
into existence. The bond
issue, which is for a maximum period of 37 years,
will generate $3.9 million (the local share) of a
$11.3 million project of
which the state of Ohio
will contribute $7.4 million, which is 75 percent
of the construction costs
of the new facility.

Wilso~

states have said classifying coal ash as hazardous
waste will end its recycling and uses in other
industries.
Wilson said yesterday
the EPA made a determi- ·
nation
during
the
Clinton administration
that the ash was not hazardous, and that determination should still be
considered valid.

f

Calll-888-696-2341

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The Daily Sentinel

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__

,._

JHIJEAJLTIHI

Are Americans now more honest about their weight?
Prevention.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
"It is possible people
are paying more attention
ATLANTA
Are to their weight and
Americans
becoming reporting it more accumore honest about their rately," said Dietz. direcweight?
tor of the CDC's
That theory could Division of Nutrition,
explain why the gap Physical Activity and
appears to be closing in Obesity.
what people say they
The new results are
weigh and what ,actual based on a telephone surmeasurements report.
vey of about 400,000
A new government people who were asked
telephone
survey their height and weight.
released Tuesday puts the CDC researchers then
adult obesity rate at near- calculate whether the
ly 27 percent and rising. person is obese, followA more scientific survey ing a standard formula
has already said the rate for body mass index.
is 34 percent and holding
Under the formula, a 5steady.
foot -4 woman is obese if
Experts believe the 27 she weighs 174 pounds
percent is probably an or more. a 5-foot-10 man
underestimate, because fits that description if he
it's based on what peo- weighs at least 209
ple say. People tend to pounds.
say they weigh less than
The study found that
they actually do and say nearly 27 percent of the
they are taller than they surveyed adults said they
are.
were obese in 2009, up
The fact that it's catch- from about 25.5 percent
ing ·up to the more in 2007, a small but staaccepted 34 percent esti-: tistically
significant
mate could suggest peo- increase.
ple are ·becoming more
Earlier this year, the
accurate when they talk CDC relpased results
about their girth. It's one from another st!Jdy that
explanation,
anyway, actually weighed and
said Dr. William Dietz, · measured 5.700 adults. It
of the Centers for found that 34 percent are
Disease Control and obese; results have been
BY MIKE STOBBE

similar in the last three found that in nine states
surveys.
at least 30 percent of the
The differing surveys adults were obese in
mean the CDC is repott- 2009. The states were
ing that obesity is Alabama,
Arkansas,
increasing- and that it's 'Louisiana,
Kentucky,
not.
Tennessee,
Missouri,
"We have somewhat Oklahoma. West Virginia
• data," and Mississippi, the
contradictory
because the studies were highest at 34 percent. In
done differently and sam- 2007, only Alabama,
pled different popula- Mississippi
and
tions. Dietz said.
Tennessee topped 30 perThere could be several cent.
No states met a nationreasons why the telephone survey produced al goal for 2010 of limitdi'fferent results, said Dr. ing obesity to 15 percent.
K.M. Venkat Narayan, Only Colorado and the
an Emory University District of Columbia
public health professor were lower than 20 perfamiliar with the two cent, and just barely.
studies.
Colorado's rate of
For example, the about 19 percent may be
phone survey included due in part to its hiking
only people with land- trails and recreational
line telephones. mean- culture. Another factor
ing others with cell may be its Rocky
phcsnes were not part of Mountain
altitudes,
the data, he said. It which require people to
could be that a signifi- burn more energy to do
cant number of people routine physical activiwho exclusively use cell ties, Dietz said during a
phones are obese and Tuesday teleconference
not counted.
with reporters.
As for people underreWashington's rate porting their height and just under 20 percent weight, "it's nqt so could be tied to common
much lying." but rather use of public transportathat they don't regularly tion there, or, to hig~er
get on a scale. Narayan rates of breast-feedmg
and fruit and vegetable
said.
The new report also consumption, he said.

K-9 PTSD? Some vets say dogs stressed by war, too
BY DAN ELLIOTT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PETERSON
AIR
FORCE BASE, Colo.
- Gina was a playful
2-year-old
German
shepherd when she
went to Iraq as a highly
trained bomb-sniffing
dog with the military,
conducting
door-todoor searches and witnessing all sorts of
noisy explosions.
She returned home to
Colorado cowering and
fearful. When her handlers tried to take her
into a building, she
would stiffen her legs
and resist. Once inside,
she would tuck her tail
beneath her body and
slink along the floor. She
would hide under furniture or in a corner to
avoid people.
A military veterinarian
diagnosed her with posttraumatic stress disorder
- a condition that some
experts say can afflict
dogs just like it does
humans.
"She showed all the
symptoms and she had
all the signs," said
Master Sgt. Eric Haynes,
the kennel master at
Peterson Air Force Base.
" She was terrified of
everybody and it was.
obviously a condition
that led her down that
road."
A year later, Gina is on
the mend. Frequent
walks among friendly
people and a gradual
reintroduction to the
noises of military life
have begun to overcome
her fears, Haynes said.
· Haynes describes her
progress as "outstanding."
"Pretty fabulous, actually,'' added Staff Sgt.
Melinda Miller. who's
been Gina's handler
since May. "She makes
me look pretty good."
PTSD is well-documented
among
American servicemen
and women returning
from wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, but its
existence in animals is
less clear-cut. Some
veterinarians say animals do experience it.
or a version of it.
BRENT WHALEY

"There is a condition in was once in a convoy their affection interfere
dogs which is almost pre- when another vehicle with good training.
cisely the same, if not was hit by an improvised Treating Gina like a
precisely the same, as . bomb.
human - for example,
PTSD in humans," said
Back home at Peterson, comforting her when
Nicholas Dodman. head Gina wanted nothing to she's frightened - can
of the animal behavior do with people.
leave her thinking that
program
at
Tufts
"She'd
withdrawn her handler is pleased
University's Cummings from society as a whole,'' when she's afraid.
"She's just gorgeous
School of Veterinary Haynes said.
Medicine.
Haynes, who has and I love her, but you
But some veterinari- worked with more than also have to balance it
ans dislike applying the 100 dogs in 12 years as a with - you have to do
diagnosis to animals, handler and kennel mas- · what's right," he said.
thinking it demeans ser- ter, said he has seen
Gina has resumed
vicemen and women, other dogs rattled by some of her duties.
Dodman said. He added trauma, but none as .searching cars for explothat he means no badly as Gina.
sives at Peterson or other
offense to military perHaynes and otheifhan- nearby military faci1Isonnel when he uses the dlers coaxed Gina on ties. Eventually, she may
term.
walks. sending someone be able to return to the
Jack Saul, a psycholo- ahead to pass out ~reats kind of hazardous duty
gist on the faculty at for bystanders to give she did in Iraq, but that's
Columbia University's her. They got her over at least a year away,
Mailman School of her fear of walking Haynes said.
Public Health, said through doors by sta''We're not planning on
PTSD is a diagnosis tioning someone she doing it anytime in the
developed for humans, knew on the other side near future because obvinot dogs.
to reward her with pats ously, we don't want to
"That's not to say that and play. They eased mess up everything
animals can't be trauma- her farther into build- we've already fixed," he
tized. It sounds like this ings with the same tech- said.
dog was traumatized nique.
Dodman said he doubts
''She started learning Gina can recover comfrom the experience of
extreme stress and fear," that everyone wasn't pletely.
Saul said. "That causes trying to get her,"
"lt's a fact that fears
an alteration in the ani- Haynes said. "She began once learned are never
Dodman
mal's nervous system acting
more
social unlearned,"
similar to an alteration of again."
said. "The best thing you
the nervous system in
On a sunny afternoon can do is apply new
humans."
last week, Gina dashed learning. which is what
The military defines across her training yard, (Gina's handlers are)
PTSD as a condition jumping over obstacles doing," he said.
Haynes acknowledged
that develops after a on command and deftly
life-threatening trauma. pushing a ball with her that's a concern, and
Victims suffer three forelegs and chest. On a although he hopes Gina
types of experiences visit to a store on base, recovers 100 percent he
long afterward. even in a she trotted calmly down doesn't know if she
safe environment. They the aisles and sat quietly will:
"Anytime someone has
repeatedly re-experience when a woman bent to
that much fear about anythe trauma in night- pet her.
mares or vivid memo"She's such a lovable thing, then obviously it
Miller
said, will be hard just to get it
ries. They avoid situa- dog,''
tions or feelings that describing how the 61- fixed." he said.
"But, I mean, we don't
remind them of the pound Gina will lie in her
event, and they feel lap. "I could literally really have many other
keyed up all the time.
hold this dog like a options," Haynes said.
"You can't really give up
When Gina returned to baby."
But
Haynes· said on them. They're your
Peterson last year after
her six-month deploy- they're careful not to let partner."
ment in Iraq, she was no
longer the "great little
pup" Haynes remembered.
She had been assigned
to an Am1y unit, and her
job was to search for
explosives after soldiers
entered a house. The
troops sometimes used
noisy, blinding "flashbang" grenades and
kicked down doors,
Haynes said, and Gina

You're pproved for
a New C.omputer

BRIAN WHALEY

40205 SR 681, Shade, Ohio 45776
740-992-7013. 740-992-5553

-......-..._...___........

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

PageA6
VVednesday,August4,2010

Family Medicine

Type ofanemia -guides
proper treatment choice .
Bv MARTHA A. SIMPSON,

D.O.,

M.B.A.

•

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FAMILY MEDICINE
OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

Question: My doctor says I'm anemic, and
she wants to do a bunch of te:;ts. I thought
women were anetilic from their periods. Why
. can't I just take iron without more tests'?
Answer: Contrary to popular belief, most
women do not become anemic from their periods. There are different types of anemia, all with
different causes and treatments.
Anemia occurs when your blood doesn't have
enough hemoglobin, a substance your body
makes from the iron in your diet. Hemoglobin
helps red blood cells carry oxygen from your
lungs to all patts of your body.
The symptoms of anemia vary depending on
the type and severity. They include fatigue.
weakness. low body temperature. pale skin.
-rapid heartbeat, shortness of breath, chest pain.
dizziness. numbness or coldness in your hands
and feet and headaches. Not everyone with anemia will have noticeable symptoms, however, if
mild anemia goes untreated, symptoms may
grow in number and severity.
The most common type of anemia in adults is
iron deficiency anemia. While it can sometimes be caused by very heavy menstrual
bleeding. it can occur in response to any type •
of blood loss. This type of anemia is also seen
in people who do not eat enough foods that are
high in iron, like dark green vegetables. red
meat, dried fruits (apricots, prunes and raisins).
lentils and beans.
To make an official diagnosis for iron deficiency anemia, your doctor may ask for blood
tests to determine the amount of iron in your
blood. She may also want a stool sample to see
if you have a gastrointestinal bleed. If you are
losing blood in your intestinal tract. she may
want to do a colonoscopy to look at your lower
intestines or an upper gastrointestinal
endoscopy to look at your stomach for bleeding ulcers.
Macrocytic anemia is another type, caused
by a deficiency of either vitamin B-12 or folic
acid. Low B-12 anemia is also called pernicious anemia. Common causes of this are a
very poor diet, gastric bypass surgery and medications that interfere with the absorption of
vitamin B. The B vitamins are absorbed in the
gastrointestinal tract, so if a large part of your
intestine has been bypassed or you take medication that blocks B vitamin absorption. you
won't be able to keep your hemoglobin levels
in the normal range. Low B-12 levels are also
sometimes seen in those who follow a strict •
vegetarian diet. On the other hand, low folic
acid is caused by not eating enough fruits and
vegetables.
Anemia can also be caused by some chronic
diseases such as some connective tissue disorders, cancer and low levels of thyroid hmmones.
Also. there are uncommon types of anemia that
occur when your body breaks down its own red
blood cells. Finally, there is a genetic type of
anemia.
As you can see, treating anemia is not a ··one
size fits all" proposition. Knowing the type and
cause of your anemia is crucial for proper care.
Once your test results are back, your physician
can counsel you about treatment options as well
as dietary intervention. if needed.
Familv Medicine® is a weeklv column.
Generai medical questions can be sent to
Martha A.' Simpson, D.O., M.B.A.. Ohio
University College of Osteopathic Medicine,
Communication Office, Athens, Ohio 45701, or
familynzedicitze@oucom.ohiou.edzt.

MSRA/ARA
Championship

RODEO
August 18, 2010
7:00pm
Mt:igs County Fair
Pomeroy, Ohio
Events:
Bull riding. Saddle bronc
riding, Barback bronc
riding, Calf roping, Steer
wcstling, Team roping, and
Cowgirl's barrel racing
Important information:
To enter this rodeo as a
LOCAL or Non-card holder
you must call on August 8,
2010 between I and 7 pm at
.
330-378-3955

• No Credit Check
• Build Y.our Credit
• Improve Your Credit
• Just $29.99/week for a year
• All you need is a bank account

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�------~----__,.,-....,.,-~ - - - -~-------

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Huskers buzz of Hig Ten, Page B2
Big East return intact, Page U6
LeUron thanks Aknm, not Clc\'cland, Page B6

POR· ·s

\Vcdncsday, ;\ugust 4, 2010

•====================================
Bengals TE Gresham
signs, practices
GEORGETO\V~.

Ky.
Tight end
Jermaine
Gresham
thinks he belon!!s at the
back of the line~ There's
no chance of that happening.
The
Cincinnati
Bengals'
fir•a-round
drqft pick finally arrived
at training Ci!mp on
Tuesday, signed his
five-year deal and hurried onto the practice
lield,
where he cauoht
a
.
0
lew passes. drew a few
rounds of applause and
missed a few blocks.
"I missed too many
blocks,'' he said. ''That"s
the one thing that stands
out."
He'll have a few days
to get into run-blocking
I mode before his first
(AP)

Sports Briefs
Eastern Fall
Sports passes

-

NFL game. He's expected play during the
presenson
Bengals ·
opener against Dallas in
the Hall of Fame game
on Sunday night. even
though he's missed six
days of camp and eight
practices.
''Knowing what I do
nnw going through the
week. he should have a
good opportunity to play
in the game Sunday
evening and go from
there." coach Marvin
Lewis said.
Even
befon:
he
showed up. Gresham
was listed as No. 1 on
the depth chart at tight
end. a departure from
Lewis' custom of listing

Please see Gresham, 86

AI Diaz/Miami Herald/MCT

In this Jan. 8, 2009, file photo, Oklahoma's Jermaine Gresham, right, hauls in a
Sam Bradford pass in front of Florida defender Brandon Hicks for a big gain in the
second quarter of the BCS National Championship game at Dolphin Stadium in
Miami, Florida. Gresham practiced with the Cincinnati Bengals for the first time on
Tuesday.

Zastudil's rehab coming along well

TUPPERS PLAINS.
Ohio - Eastern High
School now has five dtfBY JEFF 5CHUDEL
ferent fall sport" passes
JOURNAL REGISTER
available for the upcoming
2010 season. which arc on
BEREA, Ohio
sale at the EHS main
office from X:30 a.m. until • Browns punter Dave
3 pm. on Monday through Zastudtl is takin!! it slow
and easv during~ training
Fnday.
* Senior Pass: A pass camp as. he reco'Vers from
may be /mrchased for the surgery on his right patel20 10 fa! SjX&gt;t1s season for lar tendon.
$20. You must have a
Zastudil is in his ninth
Golden Buckeye Card to NFL season and fifth
purchase a pass and you with the Browns. During
must be a resident of the
EHS school district. The the tirst four summers.
pass is good for junior winning the punting job
high and bi~h &lt;&gt;chool vol- was a lock.
Zastudil was having
yball and tootball.
* Volleyball Pass: An one of the best seasons of
ult pass may be pur his career in 2009 until
chased for the 20 I0 vol- halfway through it. his
leyball season for $35. The ri.ght knee no longer gave
pass is good for all junior hun the support he needhigh and high school vol- ed to plant properly as a
leyball ~ames. You must left-footed punter. He
be a restdent of the EHS missed the final ei~ht
school district.
and was placed~on
* Football Pass: An games
injured
reserve with
adult pass may be pur~
seven
games
remaining.
chased for the 2010 f&lt;X&gt;IReggie
Hodges
finball season for $30. The
pass is g()(xl for all junior ished the season. and
high and high school li.&gt;ot- though he did not punt as
ball games. You must be a well as Zastudil. who
resident uf the EHS school stuck 25 of 49 punts
district.
instde the 20 (tying him
* Student Pass: !\ ~tu­ for the league lead when
dent pass may be pur he went onl.R.) and still
chased for the 20 l0 fall managed a 44.7 averal.!e.
sports season for $30. You Hodges earned the right
must be an Eastern student to compete with Zastudil
to purchase n pass and the ' in training camp after
pass is good for junior
high and ltieh school vol- a\eraging 39.8 yards a
punt.
leyball and iootball.
Plus. Hodges being in
* Adult Pass: An adult
pass rna) be purchased for camp is good for
ihe 2010 fall sports season Zastudil's rehab. Zastudil
r $65. You must be a res- was on the field only
!nt of the EHS school briefly for the evening
strict. The pass is good practice !vton,day.
for junior high and nigh
- schcx&gt;l volleyball and football.
Individual fame prices
for the 20 lu-ll · ~chool
yem· will be $5 per adult
and $3 per student - for
both htgh school and
{~mior h;gh home eH~nts at
MANKATO. Minn.
:HS.
I (AP)
A Minnesota
Vikings player said
Tuesday that Brett Pavre
MYLFall
has texted his teammates
Ball
and told them he plans to
retire.
MIDDLEPOR'I~ Ohio
Tight end Visanthe
- The Middleport Youth Shiancoe &lt;;aid he learned
League will be t"lolding of the mec;sages by talkFall Ball signups for both
boys and gtrls - ages 5- ing to several team16 - from noon until 3 mlttes, though he had not
p.m. on Snturday. August received any direct mes7, and Saturday. August sages from Favre.
"He told a couple guys
14. at the ~1iddlcport ball
on our team he's going
fields.
For tuore information, to retire.'' Shiancoe said
.J~~ct Dave Boyd at 590- after practice Tuesday
evening. " He hasn't told
me, but I'm going to
.
check
my phone."
~teeDCO·ed
Earlier Tuesday. a persoftball
son with knowledge of
the situation told The
MIDDLEPOR'J: Ohio As&lt;;ociatcd Press that
- The Middleport Youth Favre has informed the
League will be holding a Vikings he won't return
co-ed softball league Tor tor a second season. The
boys and girls - ages 13- person said Favre called
18 - throughout the
month of August. For coach Brad Childress
more information, contact and texted some players
Jackie Fox at 41 (~ 1261 or and team officials to say
Tanya Coleman at either his inJured left ankle is
not responding as well to
992-5481 or 416-1952.

Cleveland
has options
on defense
BEREA. Ohio (AP) Cleveland Browns defensive lineman Shaun
Rogers waddled up within range of the machine
that hurls practice passes
to wide receivers and set
his feet.
Footballs came off the
machine at a frightening
speed. and Rogers was
jlli&gt;t a few feet a\vay. But
he would dip one of his
mammoth hands into the
path of the ball and sna!!
it. like King Kong grab':
bing a plane circling a
skyscraper.
So far in training camp,
that's the only action that
Rogerr-. has seen for a
Brown&lt;&gt; defense that will
count
heavilv on his
Ed Suba JrJAkron Beacon Journai/MCT
intimidating presence on
In this November 4, 2007, file photo, Cleveland Browns holder Dave Zastudil (15)
the front ''all. Rogers is
celebrates with kicker Phil Dawson, after Dawson's 24-yard field goal gave the on the Pt:P list with a leg
Browns 33-30 overtime victory over the Seattle Seahawks at Cleveland Browns injury. It's just another
Stadium in Cleveland, Ohio.
point of concern for a
''I keep progressing.'' sure my (punting) voi- optimistic he'll "be ready team trying to tamp down
Zastudi I said. "I come ume doesn ·t 2et too to go" when the games as many question marks
begin to count. He I as possible.
out to practice and work htgh."
~
Zastudil said hi:&gt; goal is declined to explain
on technique things I
"We want to turn the
need to work on to get to be ready for the season exactly how he was hurt. page on last year, but \Ve
better. I'm trying to be opener on Sept. 12. in
want to carrv the same
smart about it and make Tampa. He said he is Please see Browns, Bl mentality as· we had at
the end of the season:'
veteran linebacker David
Bowens said. "'Right no\v
in camp we have the
mentality that we're
attacking. We're coming
out in September and
we're attacking. Teams
surgery and n.:habilitaare going to have to beat
tion as he had hoped.
us. We· re not going to
The person spoke on
find ways to lose games.''
condition of anonymity
The Browns were good
because no official
at
doing that a year ago.
announcements• were
In nine !!arne:- the
made.
offense didn't even surChildress said Favre
pass 12 first downs, an
had not told him directly
alamling lack of producthat he plans to retire as
tion that left even less
of Tuesday morning.
margin for error on an
The coach would not
alrcad)' stres:-ed defense.
confirm Favre's status
The Browns lost another
w1th the team. calling it
game by a point at
a "fluid situation.'' and
Detroit after time expired
he wt\s unavailable for
because of a defensive
after
the
comment
mterference penalty.
evening r.racticc. Owner
But a four-game winZygi Wtlf declined to
ning, streak to end the
comment.
se:bon left them at 5- I I.
"I'm not a big hearsay
Now the defense feels it's
person." Childress said.
ready to reach for some·•J gotta hear it from the
thing more.
horse's mouth.''
"I've talked to fans,
As always with thl' 40just at a restaurant or at
year-old star quarterthe airport. TI1ey do seem
back,
things could
optimtc;tic. True fans.
change. Favre and his
the)' 've been through tlle
agent. Bus Cook, did not
highs and lows. It's time
Joe Rimkus JrJMiaml Heratd/MCT
return messages from
to give (some success) to
A Minnesota Vikings fan holds a sign aski1g Brett them." linebacker Chris
the AP.
"( plead the fifth on Favre to play one more year dunng the fourtt' quarter
of the 2010 Pro Bowl on Sunday, January 31, at Sun
Please see Options, B
Please see Favre, Bl

Teammate: Favre texted
I
• he's done
payers
saying

signups

league

Life Stad1um in Miami Gardens. Florid.a.

'

�~~-~~~~~--

Page B2 •

-,- --- --· --·-- --- --·--

The Daily Sentinel

..

~~---"""7""--~-----"""!----"!1-~

www.mydailysentinel.com

BImN

Favre
from Page Bl
everything." defensive
end Jared Allen said. "I
love Brett and he
reserves the right to do
what he wants to do. We
obviously love him as a
teammate. We'd like to
have him back. But until
it's official, I'll believe it
when I see it.''
True enough. With
Favre, nothing ever
seems final. He told the
Vikings last year he
wouldn't
play.
but
changed his mind and
joined them immediately
after they broke training
camp. Childress even
drove to the airport to
pick him up for his 19th
NFL season. Camp this
year ends Ol} Aug. 12.
Star running back
Adrian Peterson said he
still hopes that Favre
will be handing him the
ball in the season opener
on Sept. 6 in New
Orleans. Peterson said
he exchanged text messages with Favre on
Tuesday but declined to
give details.
"I'm still up in the air
like you guys trying to
figure out what's going
to happen,'' Peterson
said. "I'm sure he'll
make the best decision
for him."
Every Minnesota player asked about Favre
reacted with hesitation
after three years of
answering
questions
about Favre's future.
''It's always back and
forth with Brett,'' said
quarterback
Tarvaris
Jackson. in line to get
the starting job if Favre
is gone. "It's his decision. He deserves the
opportunity to decide
when he's going to retire
or not, whether he wants
to retire or not. It's up to
him. Right now, I'm just
trying to focus on getting better."
Favre has considered
retiring every summer
since 2002. It led to an
ugly parting with the
Packers that got him
traded from Green Bay
to the Jets in 2008. After
a so-so season in New
York, he announced his
retirement in early 2009
for the second time. then
reconsidered and signed
with the Vikings.
He had one of his best
seasons last year, with
career be:.;ts in completion percentage (68.4 ),
quarterback
rating
(107.2) and fewest interf

"I think it will be a real
good addition. really
good people, they run a
good program and obviously it's going to be a
very competitive team,"
said Penn State coach
Joe Paterno. whose history against Nebraska
dates back to when he
was a Nittany Lions
assistant coach.
Nebraska brings five
national titles in football,
three Heisman trophies
and a loyal fan base to a
conference that was
looking for more exposure for its TV network.
The Huskers are leaving behind conference

affilia,tio!ls w}th Iowa
State, Mu;soun, Kansas,
Oklahoma and Kansas
State that date to the
1920s, and it has football
rivalries with the Tigers
an d J ay h aw k s th a t are
more than a century old.
Th
1
t d•
ere are on~-s an ing traditi'ons, nvalries,
that might be wiped out..
yet there arc also tantalizing possibilities in the
~
new con erence.
How does Nebraska·
Ohio State sound? What
about Penn State? Or
Michigan?
Tie Huskers have long
h'
·
· h M'
tstones Wtt
mnesota
and Iowa even though
they last played the
Gophers in '1990 and
Hawkeyes in 2000.
No rnattcr ,.,.ho they •re
1
·
't'
r
p aymg,
1 s sa1e to say
the Big Ten Network
wouldn't mind having
that game.
"I think adding a program of the scale and
quality of a Nebraska
does more to us than I
think anyone cari really
put into a specific, size
of a speciftc market,"
network president Mark
Silverman said. "I mean,
Nebraska is as big ticket
a football market nationally as there is. And
being able to show
Nebraska football games
on our network is going
to greatly increase the
relevance of the network
and the distribution of
the network nationally
over time, like few other

ceptions
(7).
while
throwing for 33 TDs and
4,202 yards to lead the
Vikings to an NFC
North title. He hurt his
left ankle in the NFC
championship loss to the
New Orleans Saints and
had arthroscopic surgery
in May.
Favre was under contract for $13 million this
season, but only if he
plays.
Nearly everyone had
assumed Favre would
return and he did nothing to discourage that.
He threw passes for a
second straight summer
with high school student:&gt; in Hattiesburg,
Miss .• joked about playing until he's 50 and said
playing another year
wouldn't worsen his
already-damaged ankle.
Packers
linebacker
Nick Barnett said he didn't know whether to
believe the latest news.
"It's like believing in
Santa Claus. You get
gifts. but you ain't seen
Santa Claus," he said.
"We'll see what happens
... If he does retire. congratulations. It's a welldeserved retirement. But

if he does come back.
we'll be gunning for him
the same way."
If Favre decide:.; to
actually retire it will end
one of the most storied
careers in NFL history.
A three-time league
MVP ( 1995-97). Favre
won the Super Bo,vl in
1997 with the Packers.
His 11 Pro Bowl appearances are the most ever
by a quarterback.
Indeed. Favre holds
most major NFL records
for
a
quarterback,
including career touchdowns (497). yards pass·
ing
(69,329);
wins
( 181 ); and seasons with
at least 3,000 yards passing (18). '
Of course, he also has
thrown the most interceptions (317) and been
sacked 503 times - a
long, long history of
wear and tear.
Many of Favre's sacks
came on scrambles. and
so rud the picks as he
fearlessly tried to force
the ball - underhanded,
left-handed. whatever
worked - where few. if
any, could put it. He's
always been a gunslinger and never mind-

CONFERENCE
h

.h

P Y· Wtt

a nine-game
league schedule possibly
. .
f
commg m a ew years.
Further
expansion
·
1 1
remams
a posst'b'l'ty
even though that's on the
back burner for now, and
Delany reiterated he
d
N
D
oesn't see otre arne
joining if the Big Ten
decides to grow again.
He also said again that
the league's name will
remain the same. even
.
Wtth I 2 teams.

ar~t~~d ~~~e ~~nf:~:~~

this week
_ II was change.
.
Specihca y. expansiOn.
~~~r;~ka~ large degree.

.-.~

VVednesday,August4,2010

Huskers the buzz of Big Ten with a year to go l
CHICAGO (AP) Not too long after
Nebraska joined the Big
Ten, Wisconsin coach
Bret
Bielema
approached the league
· h a request: H ow
wtt
about a Badgers-Huskers
fi · h 1
game to tnts t 1e season?
"lt was something 1
felt strongly about."
Bielema said. .. And I
·
ld b
thought tt wou
e neat.
So that's all there is to
it"
Iowa
coach
Kirk
Ferentz said fans around
his state would constant·
h ·
ly ask a b out p Iaymg t e1r
Big Red neighbors.
''I think that will probably take care of itself
now;· he said.
N e b ras k a won 't p 1ay
r
tb ll ·m th e B'tg 1ien
•OO a
until next season. but the
Huskers already have the
full attention of the Big
Ten, from its coaches to
its fans. By adding one
of the most storied programs, the Big Ten will
have 12 teams and enticing possibilities that go
with it.
A championship game
in football? Big Ten
commissioner
Jim
Delany expects there to
be one next season at a
site to be determined.
What about those sixteam divisions? Delany
hopes to hash that out in
the next 30-45 days.
Competitive balance and
rivalries will be considered along with geogra-

..---...

-----~----

sc~o_ols

AP source: Shaq,
Celtics negotiatl'ng deal

.. would. in my
opm10n.
On the tield, Nebraska 1
looks like a good tit. too.
The Boston C'eJtics are
Wi~consin
running making progress on a
back John Clay sees the deal that would bring
H us kers as " another twm
·
Shaquille
to the
defending O'Neal·~·.tstern
or ourselves" in work
~.::
h·
d
·
Conference champions, a
ct tc an attentiOn to person with knowlcd&lt;'e
details.
e"We can start up a of the nesotiations told
rivalry,'' he said. ''It'll be The Assoctatcd Press.
good experience for us to
The person spoke with
the AP on the condition
play each year, the 1ast of anonymity because the
game of the year.''
deal was not yet final.
That's something his
coach would love to see.
Earlier Tuesday, the
Wisconsin has played four-time NBA champion
Nebraska only five times said he will be in the
·
league next season and
and not smce I 974 even would rather retire than
though Badgers athletic play internationally.
director and longtime
The
-year-old
38
coach Barry Alvarez O'Neal spent last season
pl~yed there. Bielema with
the
Cleveland
· d to sc he d - Cavaliers. He won three
sa.'d t hey tne
u 1e a h orne-and -horne a NBA titles with the Los
few years ago but it Angeles Lakers and
never panned out.
another with the Miami
"Coach
Alvarez. Heat.
because of his history
But he has struggled to
and tradition of ,playing find a contract from a
at Nebraska. thought it team that can guarantee
would
be
a
neat
crossover game for us."
Bielema said.
In Iowa, Ferentz won't
have to answer that ques- I
tion
anymore.
The
from Page Bl
Hawkeyes and Nebraska
have played 41 times but 1
only six times since 1946 Gocong said. ''Just lookeven though they're in ing at our defense, it's so
neighboring states.
much skill. If we can put
"People in Iowa arc it all together, I thmk
certainly excited about we've got a real good
it,'' Ferentz said. "I think. chance.''
more important!). for the
Rogers may be the key
entire conference it's up front. Even when his
very positive."
injury mends, he could
be suspended for bringing a loaded weapon into
ed the label.
an airport. But on the
It cost the Vikings field. he can disrupt an
dearly in the NFC title offense by clogging the
game, when he threw an middle with his 350interccption in New pound frame and pushing
Orleans territory at the linemen into the backend of regulation that field. He'll likely be
prevented an attempt at a flanked
by
tackles
game-winning
field Robaire
Smith
and
goal. The Saints won in ~envon Co.le•~:m, _mak·
..
t'
mg fur a sohd ltrstlme of
"&gt;Ver 1me.
d f, e
" 11 kno
h
I leave
e ens ·
w ~ en .
Linebacker may be
th~ g~II_J;e. I m gomg to where the Browns are
mi:&gt;S •!· Favre told T~e deepest and best. The
Associated Press m front office pulled off
2007. wh~n the _annu~l some magic b) plucking
summer nte of tndect- outside linebacker Matt
sion was still novel. "I Roth off the waiver wire
know that. I'm not going from Miami and signing
to Sit her~ ?nd say, when free agent Scott Fujita,
I leave, tt s over and I who· played at New
fe!t hke l'v~ done e~ery- 1 Orleans
last
year.
thmg there ts to do.
Gocong and D'Qwcll
Cowboys quarterback Jackson will likely hold
Tony Romo. who grev.· down the inside lineup in Wisconsin as a backer
spots,
with
Favre fan. said he was Bowens moving around
surprised the veteran wherever needed in the
might hang it up after front seven. Eric Barton
playing so well last sea- will also be a factor.
son.
Defensive coordinator
"If it is (true). then \Ve Rob Ryan has a world of
were lucky enough to options.
watch an unbelievable
"Some arc going to
talent and great guy.·· have to play on special
Romo said. "But it"s bet- teams. so that's gomg to
ter to go the year before be a component of it,''
than a year too late:·
coach Eric Mangini said.

Options

I

•
him playing time, enough
money and a chance for
one more championship.
He has all-but ruled out
joining LeBron James in
Miami or a return to
Orlando, where he began
his career in 1992.
The Celtics have been
looking for big men
because
Kendrick
Perkins is expected to
miss at least half the season with a knee injury he
sustained in the NBA
finals.
Boston
has
already signed Jermaine
O'Neal.
"Some may play in the
sub-suited
defenses··
nickel and dime. goal
line, short-yardage and
more
run-specific
defenses. There could be
a lot of roles for a lot of
different people - and
meaningful toles.''
Jackson said all those
experienced linebackers
will not only improve
each of the parts but also
the whole.
"The more the better,"
he said. "With the competition, it's only going
to make myself better,
it's going to make Eric
Barton better, it's going
to make Chris Gocong
better. And it's going to
make the team better."
On the back end, Eric
Wright . and Sheldon
Brown will battle for cornerback spots with firstround draft pick Joe
Haden. Abram Elam and
T.J. Ward fill the safety
spot$.
•
Ryan has been drawin
up plays in the coaching
room like a mad scientist,
scheming up sets that
may get more active athletes, more playmakers
onto the field.
For
a
change,
Cleveland appears to
have some choices, not
only in personnel but
also in what that personnel can do.
"It doesn't matter
who's on the roster, it
doesn't matter who plays
what,.. Bowens said.
"That guy is expected to
do a job. Everyone has
evolved in the understandin~ that ego is all
set astde. Everyone's
here to do their job.
That's
how
we're
approaching it.''

-'

�.......--- -------

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&amp;
abandoned
mama
cat &amp; 8 kittens to
good homes. 304674-5980

Professional Services Free
puppies,
Boxer/Lab mix. m/f.
304-675-4156
TURNED DOWN ON
' SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We Win! White male cat to
1-888-582-3345
give away, inside
only
ntrd/declawed
304-674-5980
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galtla Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528

Security

so ITia.ny
es, it's easy to
carried avvay
vvith our
andise listings
classifieds!

Baseball
(over1/2
graphed
pictures
singles. plate
duck first
Civil
plates.
magazines,
babies,·
nascar
lane com1cs
videos, cds.
magazines
(hundreds).
4313

NOTICE Sorrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Drvtsion of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obta1n a
loan
BEWARE
of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or 1nsurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Aff1ars toll free at 1 ·
866-278-0003 to learn
1f the mortgage broker
or lender is properly ""!!!!!=~~"'1r'""=~
licensed. (This is a servtce
public
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Coll'pany)

300

'

Financial

Financial Services

Merchandise

WontTo Buy

LL

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment

3

Friday,
STIHL Sales &amp; Service Bradbury,
Now
Available
at Longaberger,
Carmichael Equipment cam., mega
740-446·2412

Aug. 5th
College
Free Hdme
Syracuse.
Pick
your
own
Security •
machine,
canning tomatoes &amp;
S850Value
clothes. toys,
papers @ $4 per
with purchase of
mise
alarm monitoring bucket. Please bring
services from ADT your own container.
Security Services. No Sunday Sales.
Woodcraft
Call1-888-274-3888 Troyers
171
Lakin
Rd.
Lawn Service
Gallipolis 9 miles
west of Gallipolis on
Hill'sBest Lawn Care now
FIND
StAt 141
Syracuse,
accepting new lawns
EVERYTHING
Longabergcr,
740-645-1488
housewares
YOU WANT
decor.,
OR NEED
Tomatoes top quality adult &amp; teen
Other Services
for canning or table Thurs &amp; Fn.
IN THE
$9 for 2511 box, &amp; 6th,
CLASSIFIEDS
Reedsville, call 740. cancels
Pel Cremations Call
378·6291
740-446-3745

ADT

Garden &amp; Produce

�v

-

a

~----~ ~- - · ..,----~--,-~-~~- ---,.._--:---:--o-'"""'":"-r:-----

WW}l".mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
~arirMIIh/
Tow11houN1

VaN! Sale

FriiSat., 9-?, 36005
Rocksprings
Rd., Free AentSpecial
!!!
Pomeroy , clothes,
furniture, mi~
2&amp;3BR a¢s $::Q5 and
-----~~~ up, Central Air, WID
Aug 4th, 5th, &amp; 6th, rookup, tenant pays
3-4, Spruce Run Rd ele:tri:: Call betv.oeen
ott Rt. 87. Watch for the rour'Sof SA..SP.

sgns . Lots of teba~
Ellrn v~~~ Apu. .
Items,
ma rn "1
(304 :88'2 .a01r
cbthes, some 11 ~ ......- .....- - - - new, andmisc iterns Tw1n RilleiS TCMoer IS
a::ceptlrg apph::ab)ns
Ran:-&lt;~bcoal
1000
\':tucle;. br wa~.tJrg list nr 1HUD
·BR
subsd1zed,
apartment br the
eld?rty.tHsabEd,
call
Cmnper./ltV• &amp; 675 -66 79

--

/t.f.rlltrrtwtlt/
Tow11hou...
and
2
BR
apartments for rent
near cbwntown Po1nt
Pleasant All utilities
paid No pets. Call
M4·28:&gt;.0163.

Ho.,.. Forlt.ftt

Salu

DrtMr1 &amp;. D•t..ry

Tv,o 3BR 14' wd9
moM:!
homes
$2,000 each Must
SEI..L OR TRADE
ASAP. Nee sound
units that nee:! some
minor repair. .?1:)4675-.3952daytirneM-

R9;;lional Dump an
Pneumatic
tanrar
Dri•!Grs. R&amp;J Truckmg
Company In Marietta
OH . is ~rching br
qua.ldie:J applicants
must have m lnirnum
of 1 yr of safe

.;. ;·F;.....~~~~~""

com meri:al driving
experience in a true k.
Hazmat cerif1cation,
clean MI!Randg:o:l
pb stability. We of)ar
competitive benefits
plus
401K
and
vacton pay. Contact
Dennis at 1.0C()-4€(29?65 to apply or g:.
to
\WNuftrucking.com
E.O E

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=o;;;;;;;= """

3 BR turn. house
close b power plant
In New Haven ~4773-9007
------2 BR, Rcdney area,
WID, IEf 4 stove inc,
NO pets, dep &amp; rEf.
rt:tj call 740·44&amp;
1271 or 740-7091657.

Aaoo11nti11J/
Finoncial

PSI CONSTRUCTION
storm, \'lind &amp; v1ater danage.
Roan lrldit:i.ons, Remcr.l.eling, lofetal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, Neo.·1 Hares, Siding,

Formerly Kobie:J Con:Jtraciion

fM!Il YOWNED AND OPERA TED

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;=
""'
Experif!nced
Tax
Decks, Bathrocm Remodeling.
33 Years Experience
Professional nee:::l:d
Trallel'll
r.icatred &amp; Insured
in Megs County.
2005 Jayco Eagle
Extra income, fiQ&gt;&lt;ible
)TS.
Goosen~k
Hitch,
hours,
helping
or
WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960
others, pos:;ible fullsleeps six. Excellent
For rent
1
BR time,
Owner:
Sam Smith, Mason. WV
ong:.ing
conditbn
Asking ~.A-tt-rac-tive-,---­
740-992 .0730
furnistred hotse on tra1ning.
Send ~-E!!ldu-c!!l_.!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,.----l-------------, ._____________.....
$19·000· SQ:! photos unfu rnishoo,
one Raccoon Rd $425.
rEsumes
or
at
be:Jroom apt. 2nd -t$225
l-740-992-3061
dep, indi;ati::lns of rntera~ :;F:;;;;;;I==;;:li;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;h;;;;;;;;;;
VNIWCarmjchaett@ila
u I -ti rne
e&lt;lC er~
fbor, corner SEcond Reference
20+ yrs exp
740. 4 4&amp; and Pine. No pets,
to. Daily Sentinel, Assistants.
M-F
~
rt:tjui!Ed. 740-44&amp;
2412
FO
Box
r.?it-17,
Daytime
Hours
Scn·icc~; ~1ost
&amp;
References rEQUire:J. 1759
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 $7.85/hr
Llmite:J
Rea
E.state Secunty
deposit,
• Room Additions &amp; Remodefutg
Sy~tcm
3000
Seasonal
Tax benefits.
. Send
Sale&gt; $..'\25 per month,
• New Qu~ges • Electriml &amp;
l and C'nntrob
water included call House br rent, 3BR, Professional nee:::l:d rEsume by Aug. 4,
Phunbing • Roofing &amp; ~u~s
425
Jackson
Pike,
no
n
Megs
eou
nty.
2010
to
Early
!!!!
740- 44&amp;4 425
or
1
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting ;paw and
J:ets, ret 19:1 uire:J, Earn Q&gt;&lt;tra Income, Education
For 6ale t, OWnw 740-44&amp;39?6.
Station
Replacement~.
:1075 mon - dep find a new carQ:!r, 817 .?JO\h St, Pt.
Porch Dec::ks WI/ 036726
6 apts $158.000
FIRST t.tOtiTH
740-446-4051
become
full-time Pleasant 1/1/1/ 25500
rent $2~ mo, 7 40FREE
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Extra nice 2 BR. asscc~te. We will CrEWieaders mnte:J
446-o39:&gt;
2&amp;38R APTS.
again~t
intakt!)
992-6215
740-591-01115
house 2 BA finishe:J train Send resume to v,ork with adults
$385&amp;
Pomeroy. Ohio
I
lm
45
00
llrl)
R.tle
+
10.00
l
rip
Chrg
or
ind1catons
of
with
developmental
-~Yea"" Loca E·'+'o;.11ero:.;.
UP, Sa:. Dep $3(X) basement, carport,
Hoii.IM Far Soale
Daily disabilities to provide
river V'li!IN. · Adults interEst b
&amp;up,
AIC, WID hook-up, only, no pets, no Sentinel, FO B:lx janitonal and lawn
smoking.
740-44&amp; r.?it-5, PomeiO)', Oh maintenanoe
ten House in Rutland, 2
45769
servces . Experif!nce
49::6
ant
pays
elooric,
bre:Jroom, $15,000,
pret!rre:J Must have
EHO
out of fbcd plain ,
House fOr rEnt2BR 2
·co~STRUCTIO~
a
vald Ohio driver's
Blm
'\Aew
.ApB.
740-.38 4-7008
BA energy Qffcent
license and ·high
304-382-3017
"'
Prompt
and
Quality
Work
home wl utility room AesCare HomeCare
dipbma or
Rea E.state .3br. apt. $400 &amp; 1 br &amp; 20'x20' garaga. Enjoy caring br the s::hool
*Reasonable Rates
3500
GED. Send resume
Rentals apt.
$.350
plus Green twp. $6:)0 el::lerly? • Care;;jivers b Megs Industries,
'1' I mured Experienced
utilities &amp; deposit., mon + dep 740-44&amp; nee:&gt;ad
in
Fbint Inc. P.O. B:JX .?1:)7,
References Available!
~~~~~~~ 3rd St Racine 740. &lt;X:a3
Pleasant, Lmn, and Syracuse,
OH
Call Gary Stanley
247-4292
P
I"
WI/
.3 BR house for rent.
lOY
areas 45779
Nee renovate:J 1 br. 1bbck
from &lt;bed pay &amp; benefits
Cell7
&amp;
apts. in Mic:l:lleport, , Washingbn
elem. Flexible
hours
Please leave m~e
ret. &amp; dep. rEqu 1re:J, Gallipolis
Driver.s
lioense
2BR APT.Ciose fD
IEQUire:J
e££r766- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==-Holzer Hospital on SFi' $400 per mo. water, 2BA,LR,FR,Lg
sewer kitchen, laundry rm, 9&amp;32 or .?1:)4-765- Are you intereste:J in . - - - - - - - - -...... - - - -....
100 CIA. (740) 441· trash,
740-41&amp; attache:J garage, ott ~.
a rewarding position?
RAVENSWOOD
1nclude::l,
0194
.a:e2
st parking, fenced - - - - - - - PAIS IS currently
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
accepting
rr
' h ,_
i1J.
Clean, efficient, 1 yard. $700 moil + Full-time
non
to t
IJ we can L c'll you We w
CONVENIENTLY
BR
·
dep &amp; ref .Available smokmg babysitter applcatbns
r he
11 i.hc h£lp you need
LOCATED
&amp;
'
conven~enUy Aug. 1oth 740-,3.39d
M
bllowing
Alltcwl\aidents •Wa-k
Con; rete Removal and Replacement
AFF,0 RDAB LE!
bcated. Reference. .,,..,..
nee:&gt;a in my ason positions.Direct
II\i uries • Nec::k &amp; Brack Pain•
·t
No
.......,.~
-==
Co.
home
.?1:)4-633Deposl ·
Townhouse
~-"'""' _ _ _ _, _ _ _
Care A part-time Shoulder, Arm, Hip &amp; Leg
~s Of ConeNte Work
apartments,
ard/or. .?1:)4-675-5162
.3 BR 1 112 Ba house 36fQ
posrtion br Rpley Pain • Heaiaches • Ma.age
30 Years Expe.-ienoo
small rouses br rent.· Spring Valley GrQ:!n for rEnt Carport, cntrl
V1N
PIO!Jding Therapy• Awpuncture
Caii74D-441-1111 for Apartments 1 BR at air $ro:&gt; mon + dep, =~~~~~~ community
skill
film 8:mukd h&lt;Jws; M -F:
applcation
&amp; $395..2 BR at $470 also
iBR
1 BA
Cle!'Ral
tra1n1ng
wrth
an
740-992-6971
lnbrmaton
Month. 44&amp;1599.
remodeiOO
house -==;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; indivdual
with
Insured
$400 mon + dep The M
Co .,, MRIDD. Mon, Thurs.
740-446-3481
by
ason
un,1 Fri 9am-noon, Tues &amp;
Free
Estimates
Help \Minted
Help W!nted
Day,...Report Center
7am- 1pm,
appt
t . is W"'"'
t=U
SGJE!Nng a par -time Direct Care Part"A place to Call Home"
Rental
homes Day
Rep:Jrt time
positon
br
FOSTER PARENTS NEEDED
available
call Assistant Job duties Point Pleasant VoJV
Wiseman
Real include but are not providing
IN YOUR COUNTY! II
Comnwrcio.l &amp; Rtsidcntial
Estate 7 40-4~3644 limite:J b answering IESidentiaVcornm •Jnit
• Roomaddlt1ons • Roo~ •
$30-$45 A day for the care
phone calls, filing, y .skill trainingwrth an
• Gen.EralRemodelln: • Pole &amp; Horse
of a dlild in your home
2 br. house, 1 br clif!nt
invoces, mdivdual
wrth
Bruns. VinYl &amp; Wood RmCl!l;
Can be single, married, or
apartment, tcth have database
\~rk,
'R)undaUons
"empty nest". Call oasis
central air &amp; heat, No assisting
with MR/00
Mon·Fn,
M JKB 'N. MARCUH, (I( H BR
pets or smoking, call operational
bud;;)2t 1.larbus day
and
to help a child find a place to
47239 ~i£bel Rd., Iatg BJttcJII, Q{
740-992-.3823
and assist.ing cl~ents. e~.~ening s hlfts; Direct
call home. Training begins at
Care
Part-time
7 40-985-4141
740-416-183 4
Albany
Pomeroy- 3 br. near lntereste:J applical"lts positions tor Mason
August 7 Call 1-877-325-1558
Billy l.ns u.~
super
, Value, must ha~.~e a h gh V1N
piOVding
for More information or
,
Free 1'5\lmates - 25 + yrurs experll!l.&lt;t!
stove/ref furnishe:J, s::hool diploma or rESidentiaVcoml"lunrt
(I ot :Ulitt.. \;d ,. rth M•i&lt;&gt;; lohrcu m R~•)Jin~ &amp; REillOO~b II))
to register fot training
wid
h·: okl-u p, t:tjuivalent, computer y skill trainmg with
$fm/mo, 740-992- skills,
and ind1vi::luals
with
68&amp;5
experience
with MRIDD.
Mon-Fri,
Help W!nted
Help \Minted
clercal
and varbus day
a.nd
tWOO Mmu'actured bud;;)2t ing
duties evenings hlfls
HciJs~ng
Please
send For all positbns:
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; rEsumes to MCDRC, Hgh school diploma
221 112 IUlain St., or GED re:tuire:J.
Point Pleasant WV Cnminal background
m:RBC'lOR OF HOMR CARB SKRVICBS
For rent 2BR 2BA 25500. Deadline br check rt:tjulroo. Must
Pl~asant Vall~y Hosp11d I is curr~ntty
mobile home. Spring submissbn is August have
relico.ble
acc~pting resumes for a Dir~ctDr of Hom~
Valley
area.
No 13• 2010· M CDRC is transportation
and
smoking, no pets. an Equal Opportunity vali::l auto insurance_
car~ S~IVIC~S. Hom~ Health ~xperience
Hourly rate s111rting
req uir~d Expenen ce in superv6ion and $500 mon $000 dep, Empby-er.
740-245-0087 after ~!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!!! at $8-$9.50 based
manag~ment of a Home care Agency
Spm
on
e&gt;q&gt;erience.

011

Ridi Prire. 17

304-773-5441
304-593-8458

Experienre

HRS Repair.

YOUNG'S

Heming
(including

CARPENTER SERVICE

Sta nlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Re moual

ROBfRT BISSfLL

Cooling
Heatpumps
Tankless Hot Warer Heater
Change-outs/
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps
cg

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

• New Homes• GaragES
• Complete RemodEling

*

40-591-8044

740-992-1671
Stop

Compart--

LEvVIS

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

CONCRE.TECONS1RUCTION

An

David Le·wis

(3ait l1larcum ConSiruclion

.,_~~~·' §ot Sontetfiing to sa~'l

tfi.at syec1'a{ Sonteone

Say ir- i11C{assifieds!

preferred.

Drtw"* It D•tv.ry

RN with Bach~lor's Degree. Must main1d1n
licensure in th~ slates of WV and Ohio.
Applir.anls actittely pursu 1ng a BSN w1R be
oonsidered. •

Nee 16x80, br rent,
.3 ~:lio:::&gt;m, 2 bath,
.......
Truck
drivers
Count ry
.oo:mlng.
740-3.39-,3.363 740. nee:&gt;ad. Flat beds
367-&lt;Xro6.
and dump trailers

Send resumes to·

For Rent 2 moble apply in person at couple to assist with submitted to the
935 Pinecrest Drive. operation of modern Fblice Depart. by
homes 2 BR no pets
)$
;G oo +
da1ry
to
include Aug 23,2010. This
1 425 1 4
'!!!Tr!"'a-.cto_r_t-ra..,il-er-d-rive-r
and
dep. 740-367· 7(J25

Plea&amp;m t VaJ.l.E¥ }{O;pital.
c/o HUman Rescurces

2520

~Dri\~

~~~d~~~:

pt Pleasant, 't!V 25550

Or fax: 304-675-6975, or anll.Y at-line
at ww,.s.wal ley. org

AA EOE
Help W!nted

I

Help \Minted

We have an innnediate
opening for a part-time
customer service position at
our Gallipolis location. A
successful applicant must be
people oriented, pleasant
telephone etiquette,
professional and dependable.
Must have experience in
computers, and enjoy
working with numbers, and
the ability to work well in a
fast paced attoosphere.
For employment
consider a ion,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
do Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Apply
online
at
http:llwww.paiS\W.co ~~~~~~~
m or call 304-373lAw EnforwiMI'It
_
1011
wrth
a
current
-E-ne-rgg-_t_c_pe_r_s_o_n-o-r ~aSume shc•ulrJ be

2Racme.
br mobile
in
$.325home
a ma,
$..'\25 dep, 1 yr
lease, No pets, No
calls after.9pm, 740.

992-~7

nee:&gt;ad, Ec:brsement,
must have
Hazmat
Send resume to
Human Resources,
F0
Box
705,
Pomeroy, Oh 457~

, Need a
Done?

Shop
The
Classifieds

c:~:: :~sonbeor

c:e m~~l

Housing
and utilities
to · Village
of
part of package.
Fax sending
Rb Grande
Polte
resume to ~4-37'2- Department, P::&gt;O&gt;
538~.
!?OJ&lt;
.343,
Ro
Grand Opening
Gr~nde, Oh 45674
J &amp; J lndustnes is
MediGGII
rEtcating its mapr ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;=:;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
me:Jical
device Fam itf
Me:Jicme
ot11ces in G-lllia &amp;
facility to Gallia Co.
•10 b 15 full time J.'lckson Cu sQ:!k
R~eption~tlback
posrtions
"4 day \~rk week
office, FTIPT, skills
"c5 hr shifts
rt:tjuire:l,
resume
"$14.25 to start
ol"lll' 740.441 -~
"$450}i.r,t(
Skilled
LPN'siR N's
Clerical,
Customer
n~ br peditric
servce, Repair.
home care in the
Must be neat in
ClOWn City area.
appearance. Must ba
Nght shrtt ;;~.v&lt;l.llabe
over 18 yrs ol::l Call
Tr&lt;och
&amp;
Q-tuba
740-44&amp;0057
or
e·.perience neede::l
~4-709-0016
Ema1l resume to
$350 sign on bonus
oont
miss jwilll~ms @pcn;&gt;ohioc
om or call e/.'()·518opportunitl/!!!
2273
9000

The llillagg o1 Rb
Grande 1s accepting
applcatbns
br
position of part-time
police
offcer
Applcants must be
OPOTA
cert1t1ed
lntereste:J indivtduals
shoul::l pick up an
appltatbn at the Ro
GrandQ
R:lllce
' Department in the
• MuniCipal Bu1tling at
174 East Colle;;Je st,
Ro Granda OH ThiS
com plete:J
1 applcaton
alc•ng

Serv1ce/Bus
Dwecttfy

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

..,
HolM lrt~p,...,.,..l'lt

Tankless Hotwater
Heaters, For 3BR, 1
or 2 B.A. Hms.
.starling @ $&amp;(~.
HAS REPAJR 740992-3061

~~~~~~~
Mi.twlklnMus
;;;R;;:'err;;:100
;;:_;;:e;;:l;;:wo=rk;;,;;:s;;:ma;;;:;;ll

pbs, ~nee pa1nting,
cdd pt:ls, CO!l::We.
:::D4 $13·f6tG ask nr
Matthew.

lr:=::;:;;:;=;:::;:::;:;:;:=:::::;:::;;;;:.;::::;::~;:;;:;::::~

.PUBLl c
N011CES

11IL~====================~
tiOTIC E BY PU BLICATIOtl:
m THE COt.tt.tOtl
PLEAS COURT OF
t.iEIGS
COutHY,
OHIO
Home
tiational
Bank , Plain 1 tf, us.
Sara Jordan, et al.,
DefendanB, Case
tio.10 CV065
To: The Unknown
Heirs, tlexl of Kin,
De~sees, Legatees,
.Administators,
Executors, Successors and AssiiJIS of
GaryA.Jordan aka
Gary Jordan, de·
ceased,
and lie Estate of
Gary A. Jordan aka
Gary Jordan,
whDllc names and
addresses are u nknown.
'Jbu are herebynotified that \OU haue
been named ()efen.
dants in lie action
entitled Home tlational Bank, Plaintiff, us. Gary A.
Jordan aka Gary
Jordan ,eta I., Defendants. This action
has been assigned
Case t~o. 10 CV065.
and is pending in
Uie Court of Common Pleas of Meigs
Coun~ Ohio. The
object of Die Complaint
demands
judgment against
the
Defendants,
Jordan,
Sara

Saman1fla Jordan, Die reel estate title
and The Unknown quieted and said
Heirs, tiexl of Kin, reel propertysold in
De~sees,Legatees, Die breclosure acAdministators. Ex- tion
and
all
ecutors, Succes- amou.nB due Plainsors and AssiiJIS of titfbe paid from Die
Gary A. Jordan aka proceeds of II e
Gary Jordan, de- sale.
ceased and Die Es- 'Jbu p1,.e re(Jlired to
tate of Gary A. answer U.e ComJordan aka Gary plaint1M1flin ~tv­
Jordan, fOf pur- eight (28) davs after
poses of foreclos- Die last publication
ing on Plaintiffs ofllis tlotice. v.tlich
securill/,in the sum will be published
of $23 ,923.D1 With once eech week br
interest thereon at Ulreer.Usuccesshe
tile rate of $7..3555 weeks.
The IQst
per day. unb'l fully publicaton will be
paid,plusand"cosB madeon the411 day
adwnced for fees of A.lgust,2010,and
accrued. in order to Die
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mortgage upon real will com Raen ce on
es111e locaed at 1flat dae. ~ fie
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Road, Reeds'lille, to'Bnswer.or opterOH 45772, (.Audi· wiserespond as retor's Parcet tlos.09- quesedby1fle01li'JA
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which is more fully and for Die retiefdedescribed in deed manded in theComrecorded in '\blume plaint,
204,
Page
899, Attorney br PlainMeigs County Offi. tiff: Douglas W. Utcial RecOfds, and tie, P.O. Box 686,
costs of1flis action; Pomerov,OH 45769,
that Die mortgage TetllJ)hone:
(740)
be foreclosed and 992-6689
thattheliensandlor (7)21,28,(8)4
intetests in or on
said proper~if any,
be marshalled and

�'

-

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BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

ME 6/..0B!S

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Poker
payment
5 Congo
setting
11 Ripped
12 Like some
showers
13 Track
shape
14 "Shoot"
15 Buddy
16 Leaves
17Ciumsy
sort
19Swindle
22 Cerberus'
place
24 Before
dawn
26 Press
27 Green
stone
28Small
amphibians
30 Diamond
side
31 Shoe
shade
32 Elementary
particle
34 Green
stroke
35 Cry from
Homer
38 Financially
solvent
41 Like some
cars
42 South
Dakota
capital
43 Had debts
44 Market
worker

JOSEPH
45 Writer
Rice
DOWN
1 Proton's
place
2 Telescope
sight
3 Ferret
out
4 Snaky
swimmer
S Monastery
head
S "Don't
move!"
7 Big trucks
8 Ceremony
words
9 Paint buy
1 0 Bar order
16 Director
Van Sant
18 PreEaster
time

19 Heightened
enforcement
20 Ye Shoppe
21 Russian
refusal
22 Intimation
23 Region
25 Open
a bit
29 Cube side
30 Diet
no-no

33Say
34 Chorizo
base
36 Farm
team
37 Jekyll's
evil half
38LAPD
alert
39 Fragrant
tree
40Summer
zodiac
sign
41 Big snake

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iii
0

*** Others test thcir limits.
Whether thL')' nrc coru;cious of it or not.
it makes no difference, as the experience b the same for you. Keep breaking pattl!ms, nnd detach from your traditional response. A chance to take the
lead in nn important endeavor happens- finnlly. 'li.might A force to be
dealt with.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0d. 22)
***** Rccogni7.e what is going
on behind the scenes through discussions with a key player. Don't act on
your knowledge just yet. ~ew information will be forthcOming. addin&amp; yet
another .,Jant to the situation. Tonight
Let your imagination go.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NO\: 21)
Hatl?: 5-Dylmmic; 4-Pc~-itil'C; 3-Average;
**** Likl' it or not, other:; contin2-So-&lt;;O; 1-Di.fftcult
ue to be dominant. lhis could feel like
a problem if you ll•t it. Remember, this
ARIES (March 21-April19)
is a passage, nnd you can change the
****Don't lose track of what is
· dynamic; in a New York minute. Feel
happening within your immt'&lt;iiate
better now? 'Jooight: l.)jnner for two.
5Urr0undings in the a.m. Choose to
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
say little, knowing you wiU have an
opportunity later. A change in attitude
**** Getting past a confusing
matter this morning h.1p~. even if
from others could pre,•cnt any comyou can't fmd the path. The unexpectments. Tonight: Midweek. break with
ed ocrurs, opening up SC\'eral dynamic
friends.
posstbilitics. Opt to ha,·e prople
TAURUS (April20-May 21)
around you, as you cnJO}' them so
'**'*Others might not get your
much. 1bnight: Acting like it is Friday
intent Perhaps you exhibit a Jack of
clarity. Right now you .1n.• honoring a
night?
different drummer. Othl•rs might be
CAPRICORN (lk'&lt;". 22-Jan. 19)
taken aback by thi.; new personality
****Your greatL&gt;:;t push needs to
trait You might wonder if y\lU have an be in the morning. when all creative
wheels seem tl) lx.&gt; on "go." On the
alternative. Tonight: Your treat.
other hand, you nught not even make
GEMINI (May 22-Junc 20)
it to wnrk. ns you could gct di-;tracted.
For the moment, ignore
Know that by the afternoon you oould
what goes on in the a.m. You will have
have way to(&gt; much to do. Tonight
a radical change of perspective by the
Gear out a project or run an errand or
afternoon. Remain sure of your.;elf
two.
when dealing \\ith others in the afterAQUARIUS Qan. 2Q-Feb. 18)
noon. You also could be more realistic.
I II IIIII Yo\1 might want to avoid
Tonight: Others seek }'t)U out, pronto.
dealing \\ith family but find it ilnpos-.iCANCER Oune 2l·July 22) ·
ble. Un tlw othl'r hnnd, you might
EmphasiZe what IS. If you get
want to hide out this morning and not
caught up in what you would like, you
be sl'cn &lt;1t tlw t&gt;ffin•. Hy the afternoon,
might experit.•nce a total barkfire_ A
you canha,·e a mud1 more uplx.&gt;.1t permeeting could prove to be more signif·
spt.'&lt;.'tiVl'. JOnight Let your hair down.
icant than you antidp&lt;~tcd. Remember,
PISCES {feb. 19-M~I\·h 20)
you don't Occd to make .1 dccbion
**** PL1y the cynic, but lbtcn
quickly. Tonight: Do your thing.
wdL Much mfonn.1tion heads in your
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
direction. How you undcr.&gt;tand what
Perhaps because you h.we
is happening affects nearly every other
such a Lionesque and dignified
ao.,"pcct of your lif&lt;.'. Smilt' and remain
approach is why people llt1turally
upbeat. Tonight Do some tough thinkcfefcr to you. Take action and do what
ing.
you fee(is nt.'Cdcd. You .scn..c the tides
as they tum in your favor later.
/llfqudint' Bi~ar zs em lilt:' lntmret
'lbnight Midweek bl\'ilk.
at htt]J://unr'l;'.jacqudiuebigar.cortz.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)

HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for
\'\ednesday, Aug. 4, 2010:
Happy birthday! You will want to
create more security through a higher
profile than in the past. You \\-ill make
your imprint on your community as
well as your prof~ional .1ssociates.
Through networking, you greet
unusual success and happiness. Be
open to friendship and creating much
more of what you wnnt. If you arc single, if and only if you decide to change
ihat status will someone float into
your life. Attached Leos find they are a
strong force in making the bond work.
Stav on the high road. GEMINI points
to the correct path.
The Sta~ Shaw tire Kind of Day You'll

vi

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****

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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www.mydailyscntinel.com

\1\'cdncsday, August 4 , 2010

Big East returns intact
after o~her realignments
NEWPORT. R.I. (AP) "Most of us didn't really
.-- In the Big East. the want to have that kind of
big news is there wi ll be change. We didn't think I
it was healthy for inter- !
no seismic shift.
After months of specu- collegiate athletics as a
lation about whether the group."
Certainly not for the
Big East wmild be
shrinking. growing or Big East's health.
maybe even disappearing
Marinatto would not
in the near future. the say what the Big East
conference is set to begin would have done if it lost
its 20th football season members for the second
with its membership time in the last I 0 years.
intact.
"I think aJJ of us \vere
"The Big East is making
contingency
stronger today in every plans for w'hat might hapway than it has ever pen if those scenarios
been ."
comtmsstoner played out... he said.
John Marinatto said dur- "Texas making the deciing Big Ea:st media day sion to stay '' ith the Big
Tuesdav in a seastde 12 allowed us to put
resort tC:l\vn not far from aside those contingency
~
the league office in plans.''
Back in 2003. the ACC
Providence.
Considering there \Vas lured Miami. Virginia
legitimate concern the Tech and Boston College
Big East would be away from the Big East.
Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon JournaVMCT
poached into oblivion as lt seemed like a death A HOME billboard in Akron, Ohio, part of the more than a player.org campaign to keep Lebron James in
other
conferences sentence for the league Cleveland, was cut up by angry fans Thursday, July 8, after James announced to a nationally televised audiexpanded, maintaining - at least as a football ence that he will leave the Cleveland Cavaliers and join the Miami Heat.
the status quo. has to conference. But the addiqualify as a surprising tions of Louisville. South
victory for the Marinatto Florida and Cincinnati
• not only limited the damand his conference.
When the Big Ten age, but' solidified the
announced in December league's status as an
it was considering expan- automatic qualifier in the
sion, it simply made Bowl
Championship
CLEVELA~D (AP)
month. The ad features
The ad appeared two Cleveland fans vowin!!
sense that the conference Series.
LeBron
James
has
photographs
of
James
at
days
after former Cav-; to "in a title before
might target Big East
"Any time a league
an
olive hi-; annual charity bike- player
Zydrunas James does.
school&lt;: as new memhers. goe-; through something extended
In sporting goods
Big East football might like they did back in branch to his Ohio a-thon, where he hands IJ !!auskas took out a
hometown
in
the
form
out
hundreds
of
bicycles
similar
ad
in
The
Plain
stores.
anti-James Tnot be able to match the 2003, the people that are
to
thank shirts have become popBa~
Ten
or
the able to be on the other of a full-page newspa- and joins a mile-long Dealer
So~ heastern Conference end of it when \OU come per ad. days before ride through downtown Cleveland fans for their ular, including one that
.n terms of tradition. fan out the other "side and making his first public Akron. Despite specula- support. A veteran who says ··we Are All
backup
to Quitnesses." That's a
interest or overall quality, you're still together. nat- appearance ~n Akron tion that James might played
since
leaving
for
·
the
skip
the
event.
he
has
Shaquille
O'Neal
last
bitter nod to a gigantic.
but it does have a urally there is going to be
said he p lans to show up sea::.on, llgauskas quick- downtown mural
foothold in some of the a bond," Rutgers athletic Miami Heat.
"Akron is my home, on Saturday.
ly followed his friend since taken down most fom1idable televi- director Tim Pernetti
and
the
central
focus
of
The
traditional
eightJames
to the Heat in that featured James with
sion markets in the coun- said.
try - most notably New
While the commission- my life.'' James wr&lt;'te in mile trek that follows July, in search of his his arms outstretched
Akron the ride has been can- first champion~hip ring. after tossing powder
York City.
er and the athletic direc- Tuesday's
Beacon
Journal.
"It':. celed this year.
Emotions arc still run- into the air under the
.
Rutgers.
Syracuse, tors monitored the poten"It was here where I ning
high
apwng heading: "We Are All
Pittsburgh
and tially monumental events where I started, and it's
Connecticut were all that were in the works where I will always first learned how to play Cleveland fans who felt WitneS'ses.,.
And last week. a basebasketball. and where I betrayed by. James. who
speculated to potentwlly back in June, coaches come back to."
Conspicuously absent met the people who was revered as "The ball fan \vearing •a
be. headed to the Big 'len. sue~ as Rutgers Greg
If and when was any- Sch1ano
and
Doug from the ad is any men- would become my life- King" in this city for tvliami Heat jersey \vith
body's guess and it Marrone sa) they were tion of Cleveland, home long friends and men- years. After James fled James' name on it was
to join escorted out of a
seemed as if everybody too busy with the busi- of the Cavaliers. the tors,'' James wrote in to Miam1
the
ad.
"Their
guidance.
Dwyane
Wade
and Cleveland Indians !!arne
team
that
James
was guessing.
ness of footbaiJ to give
encouragement
and
supChris
Bosh,
Cavs
owner
famously
dumped
in
a
after he was pelted\vi.
Even West Virginia much attention to the
much-maligned ESPI\: port will always be with Dan Gilbert sent off a beer and peanuts t
coach Bill Stewart won- melodrama.
scathmg
letter
to angry "pectators.
dered aloud during a teleThough
Schiano television special last me."
vision interview where admitted to checkin!! in
the Mountaineers would with his boss to find~ out
has
featured
wide rest of the receivers.
Bratkowski thought
land - Maybe the SEC? what was going on.
receh ers instead of tight
He flew in from the tight end stayed-in
''Maybe one call.'' he
Maybe the Atlantic Coast
ends for years. releg~at­ Oklahoma on Tuesday, shape dunng the holdsaid With a smile.
Conference?
from
}Jage
B1
ing them to more of a got the paperwork fin- out
With only eight footThen in June it was the
.blocking
role.
The ished, then rushed to the
"It's hard to tell in-one
Pac-1 0 that made the ball members. there has
ground shake in college been talk for years about rookies as backups until Bengals lost their top locker room to get into practice·." Bratkowsk1
sports.
Commissioner the Big East expanding to they've won a job. It's a two tight ends at the his 1\o. 84 jersey for a said. "You'll see O\ er
Larry Scott invited Texas nine schools simply to sign of how much the start of camp last year y.orkout in shoulder time - I'd say you give
and four other schools to create a balanced sched- Bengals are counting on when Reggie Kelly rup- pads on a hot. humid him three or four pracleave the Big 12 and ule with four home the 21st overall pick tured his left Achilles' afternoon. Tight ends tices and you· 11 be able
form a 16-team super games and four away.
from Oklahoma. who tendon and Ben Utecht coach Jonathan ll aycs to tell. But he looked
confereuce.
'
Laldy. there have been was surprised to learn suffered a major concus- had only a fev.· lllllllltes like he"s been doing
·
Ultimately, Texas and persistent rumors about. he's already at the front sion.
to try to update him on things. You can tell if·
crew stayed put. but the Memphis being invited of the line.
Third-round draft pick some of the things he someone 's
done
fallout
included into the league. The
Chase
Coffman
strugabsolutely
nothing.
and
had
missed
so
far
in
"That shouldn't be."
Colorado
and
Utah rumors have been so Gresham said. "That's gled in his transition camp.
it'~ obvious he"s ·been
agreeing to join the Pac- resilient they were a runfrom pass-catcher at
Gresham was in for doing something."
10 and Nebraska accept- ning joke among league 1 stuff that should be ~lissouri to blocker in about a third of the
Gresham worked out
earned,
and
I
haven't
ing an invite to the Big officials and media memthe
NFL,
splitting
the
with
quarterback Sam
snaps
during
practice.
earned anything here. I
bers during media dav.
Ten.
Bradford
the first
season
between
the
He
caught
a
touchdown
For
the
record. mean. I just got to camp inactiv~ and injured pass
The Big E.1st was left
from
Car;on overall pick in the draft
and
I
haven
'
t
earned
untouched. And while it Marinatto said no invite
in Norman. Okla.
lists. J.P. Foschi and Palmer
when
the remains to be seen if is forthcoming. but said anything. For right now,
Bradford
signed with
Daniel
Coats
cau!!ht
43
Bengal'
were
practicing
another round of musical the conference is always there's four guys ahead
the
Rams
last
Friday.
their
goal-line
offense
•
passes
combined
for
of
me,
and
they
del-erve
chairs is coming soon, looking into new ideas.
and
defen~e.
"I
worked
out wi1.
only
41
0
yards.
to
be
ahead
of
me
"We study eve!} thing
there is a general sense
The passing game fin"He hardly had any Sam. That helped out
among people in the from expansion to our because they've been
business that the storm own television network, putting in the time and ished 26th in the league, time with Jonathan. so lot.'' Gresham said. ··we
through
the and Gresham became a he was kind of dotng it knew we had to be in the
things that we need to do going
has passed.
pnority in the draft. The on the tly,'' offensive best shape we could to
he said. (camp)."
"I think we all. when internally.''
Bob come into both camps
The Bengals believe Bengals arc hoping his coordinator
the whole thing was over "Everything is on the
ability
to
get
open
in
the
Bratkowski
said.
''So
it and try to compete. We
he'll catch up fast and
... we breathed a sigh of table for us.''
relief that it ended where
And for now. the table bring their passing game middle of the field was a struggle. lie made got up early in the morn~
a long-missing dimen- forces defenses to focus some mistakes. but he ing and we'd throw. lift
it ended.'' Marinatto said. is set in the Big East.
less on Chad Ochocinco. did some things right as (\vcights). run. everysion.
thing."
Cincinnati's otTense Terrell Owens and the well."

James thanks Ohio hometown
fans with newspaper ad

•

Gresham

Pitt picked to win
Big East
.:-.lEWPORT. R.l. (AP)
- Pittsburgh was voted
the preseason favorite to
win the Big East in the
conference's media poll.
The Panthers received
22 of 24 first-place votes
and 190 points in the poll
released Tuesday. Pitt
was I 0-3 last season and
returns
12
:-;tarters,
including star running
back Dion Lewis and
defensive end Greg
Romeus. who was the
league's defensive player
of the year in 2009.
Cincinnati. the conference's two-time defend-

BIG

EAST
C'ONFERENC'E

ing champion. and West
Virginia tied for second
'in the voting. The
Mountaineers received
one lirst-place vote.
Connecticut received
the other tirst place vote
and was picked fourth.
Rutgers. South Florida.
Syracuse and Louisville
round out the rest of the
polL

Browns
from Page BJ
nor did he go into detail
about how extensive the
surgery was.
"I think it was just a
freak thing that built over
time and tl wa-; tune I got
it taken care of,.. Za!&gt;tudil
said. "Over time. I just
had some issues with the
patellar tendon and I had
to get surgery to help that
tendon out. I've been
rehabbing like crnzy.
"All the pressure is on
your plant leg. You're
pushing off. lt's like
dunking a basketball. As
long as you get it
warmed up real good and
keep your leg strong.
that's the best way to
keep that knee healthy."
Zastudil has punted
531 times in games and
countless times in prac-

David
but fewer players arc linebacker
running laps so far. That Bowen:,. defensive back
· doesn't mean Mangini is DeAngelo Smith. tackle
Coach Eric Mangini getting softer. It means John St. Clair. running
wants to come out of mistakes have been few. back Peyton Hillis. defentraining .camp with a Players are made to nm a sive lineman C.J. Mosley.
defensive
lineman
backup center for Alex lap for committing a Derrick Robin~on and
Mack. Billy Yates, rookie penalty or putting the cornerback
Coye
third-round draft choice ball on the ground.
Francies.
"Guys
have
stayed
Shawn Lauvao and· Pat
Defen:.i\e
lmeman
Murray have rotated in onsides more and kept the Shaun Rogers and runball
off
the
ground
more
and out when Mack gets
and that's a good thing," ning back Montario
a breather.
~
Hardesty are reco\'ering
"We've got quite a few Mangini said. "~obody's from inj uries. but were
guys working in those looking to have anybody · not on the bikes.
run laps unless it's part of
Smith·~ right legspots and one of them
conditioni ng."
wrapped. He llmpe
h;~s to distinguish himself
Running back Chris
and show he can do that.'' Jennin~s ran a lap around noticeabl). Bo\vens had a
Mangini said between a practice tield alter fum- wrap on his left leg.
S WIPE BY WRIGHT
practices Monday. "That bling the ball Monday
Cm1erbw.·k Eric Wright
will really help in tenns moming.
intercepted a deep pass
of making the· team and
Josh
Cribbs
and from Jake Delhomme
being on the 45 (game- .rvtohamed
Massaquoi during a huiT)'·Up portit'll
day roster.''
each dropped the ball and of practice ... Earlier durYates botched a snap ran a lap in the evening ing 11-on-11, Delhomme
Monday morning and practice.
hit Brian Robiskie on a
had to nm a lap.
deep route.
TOUR DE B EREA
Wright picked .a pas:.
L AP COUNT DOWN
Seven players were on
No one in the media is the cxerctse bikes during by Delhomme m the
evening practice.
keeping official numbers, the afternoon practice tice.

SEARCHING FOR
A CENTER

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            <elementText elementTextId="12196">
              <text>August 4, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
