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Emp o~ eof
eMonth,A6

ports Guide

Inside Today's Sentinel

Printed on 100%
Rcqdcd N&lt;·\lsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

OBI'IUARIES
Page AS

• Robert Bowles
• M1chael E. Roberts

Meigs Local rece·ves major
grants for sc ool programs
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MVDA l YSENTINELCOM

Missing

POMEROY - Major
funding for the Meigs
Local School District
from
two
separate
I sources was reported by
Superintendent
Rusty
Bookman at a meeting of
the Board of Education
Tuesday night.
SENTINEL STAFF
Bookman reported that
MOSNEWS MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Me1gs Local was a winner in the national "Race
POMEROY The to the Top'' contest and
Pomeroy
Police would receive about
Department reports a
Racine woman. which a
family member reported
missing this week; is no
longer missing.
"She returned home of
her own free will," a
spokesperson for the
department said about
Sandra E. (Proffitt) Manis,
34. of Pine Grove Road.
No other detnils about
the incident were provided.

woman
und

$520,000 for chool programs. Ohio \\on $40
million from a $4 3 billion educational inttiative
to be distributed among
the school winners.
A
second
award.
Improving
Literacy
through Libraries Grant,
also federal, comes to the
district in the amount of
$348.749. It was noted
by Bookman that the
money must be spent
between September 20 I 0
and August 20 II and is
to be spent primarily on

technology,
library
hooks, and expanded
access with very little to
go into salaries. All
school sites in the district
will benefit from the
additional
funding,
Bookman said.
As for perso~nel decisions made at the meeting, the resignation of
Julie Randolph as sixth
grade math teacher at the
Meigs Middle School
was
accepted,
and

Please see Meigs, AS

Charlene Hoefllch/photo

The Rev. Brian Dunham, representing the Meigs
County Ministerial Association, presents a letter of
commendation to the Meigs Local Board of
Education, Barbara Musser, president, for "leaving
Sundays open for the choice of worship and other
family activities."

Pomeroy
purchasing
I land for
Isecond fire
istation .
1

Biker's death
in charity
race ruled.
micide

triathlt,n. 7k runners and
walkers at noon at the
London
Pool
in
Syracuse.
Rockit1'
Reggie Robinson will
announce the winners.
Organizers arc also providing free admission to
the pool on its closmg
da). 1 he pool party is
from 1-4 p.m.
Rules are as follows:
Triathlon
participant
mu be 16 years of c~ge or
older and must have parent

POMEROY - This
week Pomero"y Village
Council voted to purcha e the property for a
proposed second fire station, though the vote
wasn't unanimous and
the discussion beforehand was at times,
tumultuous.
Councilwoman Ruth
Spaun voted against purchasing the property for
$50,000
while
Councilmen
Pete
Barnhart.
George
Stewart, Jim Sisson,
Jackie Welker and Vic
Young voted for purchasing the property on
Nye Avenue. Spaun
objected to the purchase
because, as she put it.
"future dollars are being
spent right now.··
Mayor John Musser
and Fire Chief Rick
Blaettnar have said the
property, new building,
improvements to the
Butternut Station and
oon:.olidating the debt on
Pumper One will cost
around $700.000 total
and all be financed with
funds from existing fire
levies which total four
mills. All of these projects are being consolidated into one loan to
ultimately save money
by having one loan payment. Blaettnar. who
pointed out to council he
always stays within his
budget, said financing
the debt for 20 years
would make it "1inancially easier" but he hoped to
have the loan paid off
"well before 15 years."
Spaun was concerned
about one or more of the
levies being defeated in
the future and therefore
that future income dwindling to pay for tqe pr~
jects. Spaun told counc1l
she'd checked with the
Meigs County Auditor's
Office to see how ,much
the levies bring in annually. which she said was
estimated
to
total
$47,000. Resident Dan
Morns said 20 years of
tax collection, assuming
the levies stay intact and
b1ing in their estimated
collection,
totals
$940,000.
Morris asked whether
the fire department might
be "cutting itself thin'' by

Please see Triathlon, AS

Please ~ee Station, AS

Mighty '81 Pan

euniti to honor te

WEATHER

First Sprint Triathlon set for Saturday

2 SI-:cTIONS- 12 PAGES

BY BETH SERGENT

A.'3
B

3-4

Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Sports B Section
2010

Ohio V II ~Pub hmg Co.

~.J !,1.!.11

4

BY BETH SERGENT

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENT NELCOM

LOGAN (AP) - A
coroner has ruled the
death of an Oh10 biker hit
by a pickup truck during
a chanty race a homicide.
Hockmg
County
Coroner Dave Cummin
said Wednesday that his
medical ntling in 57-)earold Michelle Kazlausky's
death is not a legal action
and just means she "died
because of another person's
actions.''
Brian J. Reed/photo
Authorities v.•i II deterMembers
of
the
Pomeroy
Panthers
'61
team
and
their
friends
reunite
at
Sonny's
in
Pomeroy.
mine if charges are filed.
The State Highway
Patrol sa) s Kazlausky, of
Reynoldsburg, was near
Logan in a bike tour raising
money for cancer research
when a truck driven by 57- I
year-old Ervin Blackston.
of Rockbridge, hit her.
The
patrol
says
Stewart and Ray Jewell. Stewart Without injuries, Coach Chancey
Bv FRED W. CRow Ill
Black ton failed to heed
SPECIAL TO THE DAllY SEN'TINa
was a linebacker deluxe, who could easily have gone seven and
a trooper's stop signal.
attended the reunion in a wheel- three in his· first ) ear.
vestlgators
were
POMEROY
Charles chair due to a spinal cord injury.
The second surprised honoree
.'!ckin~ for possible
Chancey's first head football
In
was
starting guard, Ray "Murph"
1961,
Pomeroy
led
Gallipolis
• rake fmlure.
coaching job was for the mighty 12 to 0 at halftime and early in the Jewell. who was too ill to attend.
1961 Pomeroy Purple Panther!'. third quarter, Roger injured his Several teammates visited him at
The late Alex Cilo had resi~ned knee and had to sit out the remain- his house. After the sentimental
and the young coach tmm der of the game, causing the meeting broke up, he was prec;ent
Marshall University came to Panthers to lose to Gallipolis on the ed with a card of hope and prayers.
final play of the game, 14 to 12.
Pomeroy, full of vim and vinegar.
Players all remembered Ray':-.
Gallipolis's extra point was run grunts, as he gave maximum effort.
Then, Pomeroy competed in the
eight-team
S.E.O.A.L., with over the JX&gt;sition where Roger would
The third honoree was hard-hitNelsonville, Middleport, Jackson, have been playing. Coach Chancey ting fullback Gene Hester from
Athens. Gallipolis, Wellston, and has said many times that Roger was Florida. Most had not seen him
Logan. The highlight of the year one of the toughest players, pound since 1962, when he married
was a 60-to-14 thumping of the for pound, he ever coached.
Asenath Tracey. Wetzgnll Street
Snce most players played both resident, and left town for a sucMiddleport Yellow Jackets.
Recently, several members of the M'ays, the loss of Stewart and Rick cessful career as a stockbroker.
1961 team met at what used to be Crow, broken leg. Ray Pullins,
He was accompanted by his httle
their favorite eating place. "Joes,'' neck slashed on goal line pylon: brother, Ronme. Jn addition to his
now known as "Sonny's." The and 280-pound tackle Ebe1 great play, Gene was remembered
High: 81
event
was to surprise and honor two Stowe, greatly contributed to
Low: 55
Please see Panthers, AS
long-ume Meigs residents Roger Meigs' 14 to 12 loss to Logan.

INDEX

D.,.

~

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - The area's
first Sprint Triathlon will
hear the sound of the
starting
gun
this
Saturday. Aug. 28, begin
at Star Mill Park and end
with some laps in the
London Pool.
Race registration is at 8
a.m. with the race time at
9 a.m. at Star Mill Park,
rain or shine. For those
wishing to participate in
the race but not the

triathlon portion. there
are
other
options.
Registration options . arc
as
follows:
Single
Triathlon ($30 pre-registration. $40 race day registration). Team l'riathlon
($60 pre-registration, $70
race day registration), 7K
Run ($15 pre-registration, $20 raee day registration). 7K W(\lk ($15
pre-registration, $20 race
day registration). One
Mile Fun Walk (S5 preregislmtion, $10 race duy
registration). Race day

registrations do not guarantee a free T-shirt and
there is no shirt· included
for those participating in
the One Mile Fun Walk.
The route will be well
marked with water stations, signs, police and
EMS available.
Proceeds
from
Saturday's event benefit
the Southern Fitness
Center which is open free
to the public from 6-9
p.m .. Monday-Thursday.
Awards will be given
to solo and
team

"

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August26,2010

Final credit card Electric 'Buckeye Bullet' aims for speed record
law provisions go~ live
Bv

PAUL Fov
ASSOCIATED PRESS

If you've ever paid a
penalty for sending in your
credit card payment late.
the following news might
spark your interest: On
August 22, 2010. the
Federal Reserve Board
implemented the third and
fmal stage of the Credit
Card
Accountability.
Responsibility
and
Disclosure (CARD) Act of
2009. which fundamentalJason Alderman
ly changes how credit card
agreements now operate.
Probably the most sig- enter a debt repayment
nificant of these latest workout plan and don't
changes is that the Fed comply with its terms; 01
has placed caps on you're over 60 days late
amounts that can be .making at least the minicharged for late credit mum monthly payment.
card bill payments:
• Card issuers must
• Generally. the first provide 45 days' advance
late payment fee cannot notice before raising the
exceed $25.
APR on new transactions
• However, if someone or making other signifimakes more than one late cant account changes.
payment in a six-month Also. you· re allowed to
period, the fee can rise to cancel the card before
$35 for every subsequent these changes take effect
offense.
and pay off the balance at
•
• Late fees can no the old rate.
longer exceed the mini• Credit card statemum amount owed. So, ments must be mailed at
for example if your mini- least 21 days before the
mum payment due is $15 balance is due. Also, payand you miss the dead- ments must be credited as
line, your late fee for the on-time if received by 5
month cannot exceed $15. p.m. on the due date
Other changes include:
• When one card carConsumers cannot be ries balances at different
charged multiple penalty interest rates - such as
fees for any single trans- one rate for purchases
action. So, for example. and another for balance
if your payment check transfers payments
bounces. you cannot be must be applied to the
charged both a returned highest-rate balance first.
check fee and a late fee.
• Over-the-limit fees
Cardholders can no cannot be charged unless
longer be charged an you have previously
"inactivity fee" for not agreed (opted in) to allow
using the account for new charges over your credit
purchases.
limit.
If your credit card
• Card issuers may no
issuer tincreases your longer factor in average
card's annual percentage daily balances from a prerate (APR). it must spell vious billing cycle that
out why. Plus. if your wasn 't fully paid off when
APR has been increased calculating current intersince January l. 2009. the est charges (known as
issuer must review that "double-cycle billing").
decision after six months
For further details
and, if appropriate, reduce about CARD Act provithe rate within 45 days sions, visit www.federalor provide written notice reservc.gov. They also
why the increase should have a great guide that
still apply.
explains how credit cards
Other CARD Act work (www.federalrechanges that already serve.gov/creditcard). A
went into effect earlier final suggestion: Always
in the year include:
read all mailings from
• The APR on new your card issuers to
credit card accounts can- ensure you ' re up-to-date
not be increased during on any account changes.
the first year unless: A
(Jason Alderman directs
clearly disclosed intro- VIsa j· jinancial educatwn
ductory period (teaser prop,rams. To Follow Jason
, rate) ends; it's a variable- Alderman on TwiTter:
rate card tied to an index www.twitter.com/Practical
that has increased: you Money.)

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.33
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 52.20
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 45.88
Big Lola (NYSE) - 30.48
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.45
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 43.59
Century Alum (NASDAQ) 11.56
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.38
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 3.45
City Holding (NASDAQ) 28.16
Collins (NYSE) - 53.55
DuPont (NYSE) - 39.71
US Bank (NYSE) - 21.23
Gen Electric (NYSE)- 14.57
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 24.18
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 36.23
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.69
Ltd B111nds (NYSE) - 24.52
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 53.03

OVBC (NASDAQ)- 19.50
BBT (NYSE) - 22.26
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 11.74
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.57
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.05
Rockwell (NYSE) - 49.88
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 7.56
Royal Dutch Shell - 53.26
SeanJ Holding (NASDAQ) 64.85
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 51.55
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.11
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 14.99
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.25
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactlonsforAugust25,2010,pnr
vlded by Edward Jones financial
adVIaonJ Isaac Mills In Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 67~174. Member SIPC.

SALT LAKE CITY A team of Ohio State
University students that
set out to build the fastest
electric car on the planet
is heading home with a
broken clutch and a big
grin.
The Buckeye Bullet
w·as clocked on Utah':.
Bonneville Salt Flats at
speeds a\eraging 307
mph. which could set a
new record if it is verified by the governing
body of motors ports. The
old record for an electric
car was 246 mph.
"We've been at this
for 16 years now and
have our newest lithium-ion powered vehicle
out... team manager
David Cooke said by
cell phone from the salt

NEW YORK (AP) Eight years ago, Sharif
El-Gamal was just another ambitious striver from
Brooklyn, casting about
for career leads and
dreaming of a grander
future in real estate.
A handful of modest
deals later. he's sitting on
one of the most politically charged projects in
recent city history: a plan
to build a 13-story
Islamic cultural center,
health club and mosque
300 yards from the World
Trade Center memorial.
At age 37. El-Gamal
now finds himself being
castigated daily on network television as everxthing from an insensitive
agitator to an Islamic
supremacist.
The whirlwind has. by
all appearances, caught
him b) surprise.
El-Gamal
referred
interview.requests for this
article to his publicist.
who said he needed more
time to gather information. In the few interviews
he has done. he has insisted that when he set out to

Thursday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
81. North wind between
5 and 9 mph.
Thursday

Night:

Mostly clear, with a low
around 55. North wind
between 3 and 6 mph.
fo'riday: Sunny. with a
high near 82. Calm
wind becoming northeast between 6 and 9
mph.
Friday Night: Clear,
with a low around 52.
Light northeast wind.

:t~UM~-"

1'&gt;\)A'l

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-ro

OPERA~G HOURS:
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Frklaof
CI:;Joan - 4:oopen

'S.atlW'da'f

1ti:OOam -

\7.:00f*l

owner whose Egyptian
parents were killed on an
EgyptAir flight th~
plummeted into thW
Atlantic Ocean in 1999.
El-Gamal said he came
from a fairly nonreligious family but became
more devout after the
Sept. 11 attacks.
In an interview with
New York magazine, he
said that after the attacks,
he "just felt like praying." He began attending
a downtown mosque,
then found a second one
run by the imam who is
no\\ his partner in the
proposed Islamic center,
Feisal Abdul Rauf.
The inspirations for EIGamal's current. controversial project lay not
overseas, he said, but
uptown.
When he moved to
Manhattan ·s West Side in
2007, he and his wife
joine!j
the
Jewish
Community Center
Manhattan, which
popular health club
hosts lectures, art exhibitions and film and music
festivals.

Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 87.

a high near 91.

around 62.

Saturday -

Night:

Tuesda)

Mostly clear, with a low

Clear, with a low around
60.
Sunday: Sunny, with a
high near 89.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
59.
Monday: Sunny. with •
a high near 89.

Monday

Night:

Mostly clear. with a low
around 61.
Thesday: Sunny, with

Night:

Wednesday: Sunny,
with a high near 90.

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son of a Polish mother
and Egyptian father, ElGamal spent time as a
child in Liberia and
Egypt, where he said his
father
worked
for
Chemical Bank. but he
gr.aduated from New
Hyde Park High School
on Long Island.
El-Gamal took classes
at several New York colleges but never got a
degree, then married a
Long Island woman.
In an interview with
The New York Observer.
El-Gamal said he got into
real estate as a residential
sales broker, then moved
into commercial sales and
in 2006 began putting
together a few deals of
his own with money he
borrowed from banks.
relatives and friends.
Today. his business
portfolio is small by New
York
standards.
It
includes a handful of
apartment buildings and
a mid-size commercial
building in Manhattan,
which he bought with
partners
and
which
included a medical clinic

u......,wTft~~

aa--.

L;u·gest. selection ofE.-Een:.ise Equipn:aent
.in Meigs Co1.a..ty.

buy a· building for the
YMCA-style center four
years ago, he never gave a
thought to its proximity to
1!round zero.
~ Even after criticism of
the project moved from
the right-wing blogosphere to mainstream
newspapers and television, he appeared to take.
the hostility lightly.
Sounding more like
Donald Trump than an
Islamic ideologue. he
told the cable news channel NY 1 in a recent interview that the controversy
might actually help
fundraising for the center, which he said would
be "an iconic building''
and which has a project
ed cost of over $100 rnjJ.
lion.
''Absolutely:· he said,
grinning broadly. ··1 want
to thanl&lt; everyone for
taking so much interest in
this project.''
That kind of sarcasm is
classic New York, and
El-Gamal has taken pains
to claim a classic city
background, too.
The blond. blue-eyed

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oFF£F.\NGc
\..lf-.t..,... Mana9_lMl,

national
motorsports
body. the Federation
lnternationale
de
L' Automobile.
"It takes a lot of power
and a huge battery
"
for an electric car
attain high speeds,
said.
It could take a few
weeks for the PIA to ratify the Buckeye Bullet's
record. But there was no
doubt it broke the previous record. set in 1999 by
Pat Rummerfield. who
conceded defeat and congratulated the Buckeye
team, Petrali said.
A professional driver
drove the Buckeye Bullet
on runs Monday and
Tuesday. Track sensors
measured the vehicle's
speed. The fastest run at
307.905 mph on Tuesday
was an average of backand-forth runs.

Meigs County Forecast

.JC"'.J\.. ____

.,-nan an~

"They ha\ e just kicked
the butt of every car company in the world,'. said
Louise Ann Moeth. an
observer who has written
books on racing history
at Utah's vast salt flats.
It wasn't hard to beat
an 11-year~old electric
speed
record
with
improvements in battery
technology. The Buckeye
Bullet used nearly 1,600
compact lithium-ion batteries, the kind that
power laptops.
The record might have
been broken years earlier,
but electric cars are an
obscure category in auto
racing and few are interested in developing a battery-powered streamliner
when piston-driven cars
go much faster. said
Dave Petrali. chief steward for U.S. Auto Club
and a timer for the inter-

Mosque developer claims a classic NYC background

992-2681
M"eonal

tlnts, about I 00 miles
west of Salt Lake City.
"Our vehicle was capable of going much
faster.··
The effort to reach
higher speeds ended after
three runs Tuesday, when
a clutch that connects the
powerful motor to a gearbox ripped apart. The
team tned to install a new
clutch overnight but
couldn't get the old one
off. Test runs started
Monday
at
slower
speeds.
''Now its time to pack
up our pits and head back
to Ohio!" the Buckeye
Bullet
team
said
Wednesday on its blog.
The car was designed
by Ohio State's Center
Automotive
for
Research, which is refining technology for electric cars of the future.

~

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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 26,

Josh Napper Scholarship Bike Run

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Thursday, Aug. 26

POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors
11 :30 a.m. at the district
office at 33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy.
Monday, Aug. 30

RACINE - Southern
Local
Board
of
Education, regular session, 8 p.m., high school
media center.

Church events
Thursday, Aug. 26

Submitted photo

family of Josh Napper, killed earlier this year in the Upper Big Branch Mine disaster, remembered him with
the first Josh Napper Scholarship Bike Run. Attending the run were many of Josh's friends and family as well
as bikers from several states. Nearly 100 bikers participated in the event, which organizers hope will be annual. Proceeds will benefit a senior at Meigs High School.

RACINE - Revival at
the Bald Knob Freedom
Gospel Mission, Aug. 26,
27 and 28, 7 p.m. Singing
and preaching.
MIDDLEPORT
services,
Revival
Middleport First Baptist
Church,
7
p.m.
Thursday, Friday and
Saturday. Pastor Bill
Zuspan
speaking,
Special music, Forgiven
Again Trio on Thursday,
Forever Blesses on
Friday,
and
The
Concords on Saturday.
Public invited.
Friday, Aug. 27

Bar~inger
ALFRED Alfred
United
Methodist
Women met recently at
the church with a program
presented
by
President
Mary
Jo
Barringer.
The UMW Purpose
was read and secretary's
and treasurer's reports
given. Barringer pick~d
Sandi Hartman, a deaconess of Columbus, Ga.,

presents UMW program

for the' prayer calendar
birthday card. Janice
Weber will have the
September card.
Members
discussed
items for the Festival of
Sharing, Oct. 9, at
Otterbein College. Kits
can be left at the district
office. Sept. 17. at the
annual UMW meeting on
Sept. 18, and no later
than Sept. 26 at the

church.
Barringer
read,
"Children's Bible in a
Nutshell: Through the
Eyes of a Child." She
also had the program,
"Pledge Service: What
Gift Shall I Bring?" The
focus scripture was I
Corinthians 12:4-7. The
leader and member read
a litany and closing
prayer.
The
group

decided to send a donation to missions.
Helen Wolf offered
prayer before refreshments,
served
by
Barringer.
The next meeting will
be Sept. 14. Attending
were Barringer, Weber,
and Wolf, and Ruth
Brooks,
Mary
Jo
Barringer, and Sarah
Cal well.

2010

POMEROY - Noah's
Ark Outdoor Drama, 7:30
p.m., Aug. 27-29, Hillside
Baptist Church, free
admission .•
Sunday, Aug. 29

CHESTER - Hymn
sing, 6 p.m., Chester
Church of Nazarene,
Jarvrs Family, Smeeks
Family, others.
Sunday, Sept. 5

"POMEROY
Homecoming at First
Baptist Church, Pomeroy,
10:30 a. m , with the
French
Chorders
Quartet.

Birthdays
Saturday, Aug. 28

Sunday, Sept. 5

RACINE Mildred
Shuler will be celebrating
her 97th birthday on
Sept. 5. Cards may be
sent to her at 44826
Resort Road, Racine,
Ohio 45771.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Aug. 26

POMEROY - Alpha
Iota Masters Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will hold their beginning
day activities with a luncheon 11:30 a.m. at the
Wild Horse Cafe.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Tuppers
Plains Post home.
Tuesday, Aug. 31

POMEROY - OhKan
Coin Club will meet at
6:30p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library. Poster for coin
show wiU be available.
MIDDLEPORT
Athens-Meigs Scottish
Rite Cfub, regular meeting, 6:30 p.m., Middleport
Masonic LodQe, refreshments served~
Wednesday, Sept. 1

CHESTER - Open ,
meeting for the public,
Chester Garden Club,
with Craig Matheney as
speaker, 7 p.m., Chester
United Methodist Church.
Refreshments.
Door
prizes.

scouraged child isn't succeeding in school
Dear Dr. Brothers: I

feel so bad for my little
nephew. He is 10 years
old, and a great little
guy. He's full of life and
enthusiastic about everything. But lately he has
been moping around,
and I see his confidence .
slipping. He seems discouraged much of the
time. He doesn't seem to
have the ability to understand . or absorb the
material at school, even
though he seems to be as
smatt as the next kid.
There is some testing
going on, but in the
meantime. can 1 help
him somehow? - P.G.
Dear P.G.: It is quite
sad to see a child suffering - if only self-esteem
were something we could
a bandage on and tell
. child it will be OK
n. I'm sure your
nephew doesn't really
know what the problem
is - and I hope the tests
will help clarify what's
going on with him - but
you can be sure it is not
because he is lazy, doesn't care or can't succeed.
So if you can let him
know that you are proud
of his attempts to succeed
despite the difficulties he
has been having, and
invite him to talk about
his feelings, that might
go a long way toward
helping him overcome
his discouraged state of
mind.
It also might be helpful
for you to. spend some
time with him trying to
discover and encourage
his own special talents.
He is at an age where he
can start developing
some interests outside of
...,...,.,.,,uu•u. and if he
in the right directhose interests can
become passions and
possibly even a career
someday. Just because he
isn't good at reading or maybe it's math or science - doesn't mean he
can't take an interest in
something that will light
a spark inside. He may be
excited by any number of
things, from athletics to

i

reminds them of their
parents' stodgy generation. But this generation
of baby boomer senior
citizens didn.'t really fit
that mold - they never
really grew. up, the way
their own parents did,
and therefore a lot of
what they enjoy and
think is important may
actually appeal to their
children
and
their
· Dr. Joyce Brothers
friends. And it sounds
like a few older friends
music to art to nature. He wouldn't bother you, but
may have it in him to be I can see how it might be
a magician or a lifeguard a bit uncomfortable to be
or a forensic scientist. So the only 30-something in
the crowd, except for
start exploring.
your -date - who does•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: '1 n't notice.
In a perfect world, no
am seeing a guy who is a
lot of fun and has lots of one would care about
friends. We are both in anyone else's age, race,
our mid-30s and enjoy gender and so forth. But
messing around together. in this case, you probably
But I notice that almost wouldn't be uncomforteveryone in his social cir- able if your friend had at
cle - which is full of least a good balance of
artsy types - is pretty all ages of companions.
close to Social Security The fact that he gravi
age! They are all very tates toward older folks
energetic, productive, might stem from somefun, hip and all that. but thing to do with his lack
does it seem odd to you? of relationships with his
I feel strange sometimes own parents. It seems an
when we hang out with easy answer, but somethis much older set. Plus, times the most obvious is
he doesn't even talk to the best bet - could it be
his own parents. - D.C. that he is substituting all
Dear D.C.: I wouldn't these older people for the
use the word "odd," but I pare~ts he may feel he
must say it is a bit never had, or at least
unusual. Most young doesn't have today?·
people don't like to hang
(c) 2010 by King
out with anyone who Features Syndicate

1910-2010
I

PRESCHOOL REGISTRATION
The Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center Preschool registration
for the 201 0·2011 school year
will be held Monday, August 30, 2010
at Eastern Local Administrative
Office and
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an·a~pointment
contact ~etsy at 740-992·2165
•

RACINE

&amp;

SYRACUSE

eG t

'

RACINE - Charles
Bush will be 90 on Aug.
28. Birthday cards may
be sent to him at 49740
McKenzie Ridge Road,
Racine, 45771. A reception in his honor will be
held from 1-4 p.m., at
Racine American Legion
Hall.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

.

,.

,

•

G)

-t.LNOER

Serving tbe Community; Past, Present &amp; Future

Racme and Syracuse locations ... Checking, Sa\ mgs, Home &amp; Auto Loan~. Electrom hmds
Transfer. M~ney Market, CD's. Wire I'ranslers, Visa Cards, D1re~:t Deposit, ATM Cards.
Christmas Club, Notary. Ret1rement Accounh, In-house Hookkeeping. Internet 'Banking &amp;
Online Bill Pay!

..

�-

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Pagei\4.

The Daily Sentinel

Thurs day, August

The Daily Sentinel

26, 2 0 10

'N6Rev~

111 Court Street • Pomeroy. Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·.FAX (740) 992-2157

TOAA~it\e

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Re.l~1oti r1

Sammy M. Lopez

rAet·\0-rAte

Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich

LA\.K$! ·

General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cotr.~ress shall make 110 law respectitrg atr
establislmwrt of rel(~iotr, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridgin.~ the freedom of
speech, or of the pressj or tile right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petitiotJ tlae
Goverummt for a redress of griel'atJces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

GOP civil war good for Dems?
BY CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Th~

School Lunch Program:•
A nudge in the right direction

A R~publican civil war is raging, with righterthan-thou conservatives dominating ever more
primaries in a fight for the party's soul. And the
Democrats hope to benefit.
The latest e.JCamples of conservative insurgents'
clout came Tuesday at opposite ends of the country. In Florida, political newcomer Rick Scott beat
longtime congressman and state Attorney General
Bill McCollwn for the GOP gubernatorial nomination. And in· Ala~ka. tea party activists and
Sarah Palin pushed Sen. Lisa Murkowski to the
brink of defeat, depending on absentee ballot
counts in her race against outsider Joe Miller.
The GOP is likely to survive its bittet intrapruty
battle.s in such states as Alaska and Utah, even if
voters oust veteran senators in both. B.ut tea partybacked candidates might be a godsend to desperate Democrats elsewhere - in Nevada, Florida
and perhaps Kentucky, where the Democrats portray GOP nominees as too extreme for their states.
)f Murkowski joins Sen. Bob Bennett, R-Utah,
as a victim of p&lt;uty activists who demand ideological purity. other Rcpublic:ms are still likely to win
in November. though Minority. Leader Mitch
McConnell, R-Ky., would have to deal with more
maverick members who are loathe to compromise.
The Republican Pruty's chief danger lies in battleground states such as Florida and Nevaaa. where
great opportunities might slip away. President
Barack Obam11 and his Democrats see a silver lining
amid political troubles driven by high unemployment and a stubbornly slow economic recovery.
• The White House has tried to link the
Republican Party with the fledgling conservativelibertarian tea party coalition - and demonize the
combmation as too extreme for the country.
That's "the Republican tea party'' that's "offering
more of the past but on steroids" and is ··out of step
with where the American people are," Vice President
Joe Biden told the party's rank and file last week.
Nevada Republican&lt;&gt;' nomination of tea party
favorite Sharron Angle may save ~en. Harry Reid.
the Democratic leader. His popularity has fallen
sharply among state voter!&gt;, but Demdcrats say
Angle's comments are scaring voters away from
her and back toward him.
White House Communications Director Dan
Pfeiffer said Republicans are hurting their chances
this fall ''by nominating candidates well outside
the mainstream.''
But Washington-based Republican adviser Kevin
Madden sees some good news in his party's intraparty clashes. Conservative voters are energized, he
said, and they will remain so through November.
when many Democrats are like!) to be dispirited.
' Polls show non-establishment candidates either
ahead or in striking distance, Madden said. More
importantly. he said, voter this fall won't care so
much about libertarian-leaning comments about
Social Security or other issues.
This election "is about one big thing," Madden
.said. "lt's about the economy."'
And that issue will play into the hands of GOP
candidates, he said. whether they are establishment figures or not.

B Y DANIEL B RINDIS
EARTH DAY NElWORK

If you blinked, you might have
missed Senator Blanche Lincoln
change what your .child likely eats·
for lunch at scbool. Recently, in
the wake ofEJena"kagan's confumation, the Senate qmckly and
unanimously passed Lincotn 's
Healthy, Hunger Free Kids Act.
After years of negotiations and
a recent push from Michelle
Obama, the proposal received 30
seconds of floor time, which was
more than enough for it to pass
without any objection. The Act
will reauthorize the federal school
lunch program before the
September 30 deadline. and it will
also take initial steps to make
school lunches healthier. safer.
and more accessible.
Although it receives a splinter
of the attention given to tfte two
wars. healthcare, and the economy, the school lunch program has
a huge impact on America. More
than half of U.S. children are eligible for Federal School Lunches
and the purchasing power impacts
the way our food is grown and
consumed. Within schools this
means that the lunches served
under the school lunch program
are served to everybody. In a cafeteria there is no "poor" section or
"privileged" section - it is the
same food, same kitchen (that is,
when there is a kitchen on premises). Unless you pack your son or
daughter's lunch, this proposal
mandates what your children are
•
eating.
Studies show that ktds' ability
to learn and the nutritional value
of the food they cat goes hand in
hand. You don't have to read the
academic literature about this ask your local teacher what it's
like to teach a class that just consumed French fries and surplus
beef served in gobs of undtstin-

guishable "brown sauce ...
Besides encumbering attentionspans. the current school lunch
system presents a serious problem: obesity. Children currently
enrolled in tbe fede ral school
lunch program are more likely to
be obese than children who are
not enrolled. Overall, 30 percent
of American children are obese.
We are all stakeholders in this
crisis. Obesity is a major factor in
our ballooning healthcare costs
because increased diabetes and
cardiac disease are drains on
Medicare, Medicaid and private
plans. Obesity not only impacts
our pocketbooks. but it also presents a National Security ~,;um.:c.:tn
- almost one third of young
adults 17-24 years old are too
obese to serve in the military. This
is a problem that we need to
address now. Each year we don't
address obesity. we neglect another class of young Americans.
Doing anything in the Senate
these days is no small feat considering the fierce political climate,
the bottlenecked Senate calendar,
and the 60-plus vote mentality.
The proposal passed mainly
because the $4.6 billion bill was
completely paid for by taking
away money from other programs. Almost half of the funding
comes from Food Stamps (the
SNAP program).
The proposal is a step in the
right direction, but the new
changes are slight. It adds 6 cents
per meal. per child (now a pittance $2.38 per meal). There is
also some language that strengthens food safety. mandates wellness education. and sets guidelines for all food sold during
school hours (a Ia carte and vending). The proposal provides funding for school gardens. which is
important because they provide
physical activity, food, and wellness education simultaneously.

The Daily. Sentinel
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I

The proposal does not go far
enough though. We are missing an
opportunity for real solutions to
our broken food system.
Next month, the House will
soon address the school lunch
issue. Their proposal is slightly
more ambitious and provides
more resources - $8 billion and
more meals to more children.
Still, this proposal's increase (also
6 cents) IS still nowhere near the
additional $1-$2 more that nutrition experts estimate is necessary
to bring school lunch standards up
to par.
At the end of the day, neither
proposal addresses other fundamental issues with school
es. Nutritional standards
enforced and in most schools,
fruits and vegetables are a distant
reality.
Every year we delay in aggres:-.ively addressing school lunches.
we neglect another class of 5 million children who are beholden to
the same unhealthy food. Our students are not learning how to eat
and enjpy healthy food. Instead
they have been fed food influenced heavily by a fast food culture. Are chicken nuggets and
French fries really the model of
nutrition we want our children to
follow? We cannot afford to wait
another tive years to make important changes in children's nutrition. The young are where our
nation's obesity crisis begins and in our schools we need to
make nutrition a lesson for life.
(Daniel Brindis IS the director
of policy for Earth Day Network.
Earth Day Network j· Gre-en
Schools
initiatires
inclt.
reforming school lunches in or.
to promote local and sustainable
agnculture, fight obesity, and
de\·elop students' understanding
of where their food comes from
and their place in the eco-system.)

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www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday,August26,2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

For the Record

Obituaries

-re_po_rt_e_d-.h-er_d_e_b-it-c-ar_d__A_c...:.t_S_o_u_rc_e_...,C:""'o_m_p_a_n_y--de_c_e_a-se_d_,_t_o_M_ary--E-ll-en

Michael Eugene Roberts

911

had been stolen and a use reported a house on
denied.
Sharon Hollow Road had
Michael
Eugene
I POMEROY - Meigs
• Larry Dillon, Hudson been entered and a furRoberts. 47. of Zanesville
County 911 answered the Road. Reedsville. report- nace and hot water heater
passed
away
on
following calls for mcd- ed theft of a Chicago had been stolen someWednesday, A.tw. 25. 20 I 0
ical assistance:
ROO-watt generator from time before Aug. 22.
Thesday
his garage.
Beegle asked anyone
his residence.
ie was born in St.
8:14 a.m .. Broderick
• Seth Hill, Stiversville with infonnation about
•
uis. Mo. on Jan. 29.
Hollow Road, obstetrics; ' Road, Portland, reported the incidents to contact
1963. He graduated from
8:33 a.m., East Memorial his building was entered his office, 992-3371.
Philo High School in
Drive, hemorrhage; 9: 18 Monday and a generator,
1981, and had worked for
a.m..
Ohio
6R I. pressure washer, weed
the American Cancer
Reedsville,
difficulty trimmer, chain saw and
Society in Columbus, did
breathing: 10:45 a.m.. other items were stolen.
POMEROY
computer programming in
Corn Hollow Road, fall.
•
Rebecca
Alley. Recorder
Kay
Hill
Zanesville and was most
12:21
p.m..
East Bucktown Road. Racine. reported the following
recently employed by
Memorial Drive, chest reported Tuesday mom- transfers in the public
Rod's Tire Town as Office Manager and m sales. He pain:
12:24
p.m.. ing that her son ·s Suzuki real estate records:
loved people and never met a stranger.
Welshtown Road, chest four-wheeler had been
• Merrill L. Lama,
He is survived by his father. Michael M. (Patti) pain; 8:21 p.m.. Beech
t 1
T
L
R' h d
Roberts of Duncan Falls: his mother. Janet Hysell I Street. pain; 9:54 p.m.. :-; ~ en. Dave
Cline, L~mR'rdgw~~~a·~~le~~e a~.
Roberts of Zanesville; his best friend and loving sts- East Memorial Drive, Reedsville. reported that Ridgway, deed. Olive;
ter. Dream a (Larry) Vineyard of Zanesville; a "step" difficulty
breathing: when he went to a work- Wellspring Retreat to
daughter. Danica Pingle_ of Dres~en; a step-br~ther. 10:40 p.m., Third St~eet, site on Success Road his David D. Williams,
Brad (Jodi) Pagath ot Zane~v1lle; a step-SlSte_r. Syracuse,
abdommal 18 _foot tool trailer and Colleen S . Williams,
Anoie (Tim Coss) Joseph of Duncan Falls; his pain.
tools had been stolen.
deed, Scipio; Ronald
gra~dmother. Alice Stoneking of Cambridge. and
Wednesday
• Carl Payne, Letart Carman,
Sandra
G.
Aunt Mona Jean Jacks of Springfield: step nieces
12:58 a.m .• Welshtown Township,
Racine, C
PUG 1
and nephews. Hannah and Graham Vineyard of Road. difficulty breath- reported a Husky tool kit d a~ani&gt;~1G
1 ~ n~~
Zanesv11le. Mariah and Carrigan Pagath of ing; 3:16 a.m., Powell stolen from his front Gee~rke H. Hart~ j~mie
Zanesville. Quade and Tyler Joseph of Duncan Street, medical alarm.
porch.
M H
d d B d~ d
Falls; friends and neighbors, Julie and Sonia; and
• Cody Tuckef, Rowe M~rjo~~· A.e~u~st ~o J~~~
special caregivers. Michelle anp Jeannie.
Road Ract'ne reported C. Durst, ..teed, Sutton.
He was preceded in death by his lovi~g gra~dJ?ar•
•
t"
ents, Rev. Leroy and Lucille Hysell Htett, Wtlbam
the catalytic converter
• Wellspring Retreat to
"Bt'll" Roberts. and Charlie Stoneking.
POMEROY - Sheriff from 2003 Chevrolet had Stanley A. Molnar, deed,
n lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions R o bert B eeg Ie reporte d been rem Oved While the Scl.pl·o·, Rya11 C · Foster
· .
Charcot-Marie-Tooth Association 2700 Chestnut the following complaints car was parked at the Rhonda L. Foster. to
•
Street Chester, Pa .. 19013 or at \vww.C-M-T.org.
to his office:
Park and Ride on County Union Trades Federal,
Visitation will be from 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m.,
• Teresa Bell. Morning Road 35.
sheriff's deed, Scipio;
Friday. Aug. 27.2010 at The Sn~uffer Funeral Ho~e. Star
Road,
Racine,
• Amanda Stout with Helen
F.
Witherell.

Recorder

Sherl"ff

Barwise.
James
E.
Witherell, Jr., certificate
of transfer of one-third
interest,
Salisbury;
Trustees of St. James to
Trustees of Carleton
Church, judgment entry.
• Allen Tripp to
Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District, right of
way. Orange; Larry
Laudermilt,
Jr.
to
Virginia DeMoss. deed,
Rutland;
Norman
McCain. deceased, to
Sherry McCain Tysinger,
Faith McCain Wade,
Amber McCain Cain,
and Audelle McCain,
certificate of transfer,
Orange;
Wendolyn
Windon
to
Brian
Windon, deed, Chester;
Jerry E. Gilkey. Sr., to
John E. Blake, deed,
Village of Middleport.
B. David Douglass to
Meigs County Hunt Club,
deed, Scipio; Meigs
County
Agricultural
Society
to
Horizon
Chillicothe, easement,
Chester·,
Kenneth
Wiggins, deceased, to
Margaret Faye Wiggins,
affidavit of transfer,
Sutton; Joseph W. Gray,
Angela K. Gray, Angela
K. Patterson, to Corey
Gray, deed, Letart.

1150W.MilitaryRo~.Zanes~l~.Afu~rale~~e ~~~~~~-~~---~~------~~~~~-~~~~~~~--~~

will follow at 8 p.m. in the _Snouffer. ~uneral Home
Chapel with Pastor Dan Nevtlle otfictatmg.
To send a note of condolence please visit
www.snoufferfuneralhome.com or call our caring
staff at 450-8000.

Robert 'Chessie' Bowles
Robert "Chessie" Bowles passed away Wednesday,
Aug. 25. 2010 at the Imogene Dolan Jones Hospice
House of Huntington, W.Va.
He was born on Jan. 8. 1934 to the late Josiah and
Edith (Downey) Bowles in Athens. Mr. Bowles was a
member of the Pomeroy Church of Christ and he
enjoyed his CB.
He is survived by his wife of 49 years Mary
Bowles; his son. Mike and JackJe Bowles; grandchildren, Jenny and Keith Taylor, Nicholas Bowles.
Dwight and ':icky Icenhower and Kayla_ Icenhower;
great grandchtldren, Colton Burns and Mmdy Taylor;
brothers. Joseph and Richard Bowles; and several
nieces and nephews.
.
.
is preceded in death by hts parents and a stster
Bowles.
A graveside service will be held at ll a.m .. Friday.
Aug. 27. 20 I 0 at the Cherry Ridge Cemetery.
Arrangements are being handled by the Anderson
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
An on line registry i:o available by logging onto
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

TrJ•athlon from Page Al

permission/signature if
under the age of 18; all
participants with any type
of medical condition
should be cleared from a
physician before en~aging
in any physical activtty; all
participants under the age
of 18 must have parent
signature/permission; runners/walkers 7K (4.34
miles) map provided in
packet; triathlon runners
will begin five minutes
before 7K runners/walkers; all team triathlon runners must report to the

Britany A. Buckner was
hired to fill the position.
Hired on supplemental
contracts for the school
year \Vere Casey Manley,
Middle School cheerleader advisor: Peter
Martindale. high school
from Page At
wrestling; Chuck Knopp,
7th grade girls basketfor changing his hip pads once again be together as ball; Brent Bissell. 8th
on the sideline by having family. friends and team- grade girls basketball,
teammates suniotmding mates after 49 years.
Matt Williamson, Middle
In addition to the honor school cross country.
him to block tne fans'
guest Gene Hester, Roger Chris Shank. 7th grade
view.
The terun remembered Stewart, Ray Jewell and boys basketball, Ryan
their lost terunmates David Coach Charles Chancey Hill. 7th grade boys basBaker. Vietnrun casualty those attending were: Gary ketball volunteer, and
Thomas Lind, Dwight Moore, Rudy Stewart. Matt Williamson, 8th
Carl, Ray Pullins, Ronald John Shasteen, Mick grade boys basketball.
Carr. Allen Hrunm. Tom Davenport, Carson Crow.
Employed as mentors
Shasteen. Michael Fultz. Rick Crow. Roy Arms. for the year were Vicki
Marion Stowe. Robert Larry Marshall, Tom Hughes. Jennifer Henson,
Smith. David Reed. and Grueser, Hank Cleland. and Denise Arnold.
assistant coach Russell Sonny Gloeckner, Bob
Teachers put on the subRonnie stitute Jist were Peggy
Moore. Also remembered Winebrenner,
e Mary Amberger, Hester, Dale Humphreys, Bailey. Renee Barton,
Werry.
Terry Eric
ly Grueser.. Larry Mike
Brown.
Anna
Ohlinger, Norman Price. Buckalew. Ilse BmTis,
omas, and Dor Coates.
Bartrum, Paul Janice Cady. Marissa
Prayer for our own Mike
seriously ill and lost Gerard and Tom Anderson. Cantrell. l'ercsa Carr.
(Fred W Crow Ill LS Leland Carver, Cynthia
teammates, friends and
family
was
had. Judge of the Court of Civale, Fred Connery. Jr.,
Everyone remembered Common Pleas, and a Janice Curry, William
how fortunate they are to member of the '~] team.) Downie. Jr.• Marge Fetty,
Emily Finsterwald, John
Flemming, Betty Fulks.
Brey
Gheen.
V!cki
Griffin. Suzanne Hanmng,
from Page At
Brian Howard, Gregory
taking on the debt'? He from Salisbury Township Jeffers. Jill Johnson, Janel
also said if the oldest truck for SJ ,200 per year. In Kennedy, Mona Knapp.
Others hired were John
was a '94 and they're built addition, he said the
Megan
to last for around 20 years. department receives grants Krawsczyn,
Lawhorn,
Angela
to
pay
for
equipment.
etc.
"based upon your figures
Linda
you're going to need and that's money which McDaniel.
Michael
another truck'?" Blaettnar doesn't have to be spent McMannus.
McMatt-Dunn,
Allen
said at this time they out of the fire fund.
weren't having any trouble with Pumper 3 (the
oldest truck) but the
department would not be
able to buy another truck
until after it pays off the
posed 20-year loan.
aettnar and Musser
• so said in addition to
levy money, la'it year the
fire department began
billing insurance companies for accidents with
$30,000 in invoices out at
the moment and $6-7,000
collected - these funds
can also be used to pay
down the debt. Blaettnar
said the department also
receives donations and a
fire protection contract

Panthers

Station

Syracuse London Pool to
finish with team; bikers
will ride 14 miles and bikers will begin at Racine
Star Mill Park, ride to
Dwight Hill Farms, and
reverse route back to end
at Syracuse London Pool.
Biker must wait until
your team member has
finished the 7K course
before beginning at the
designated start area and
tag your team mate; bikers must be 16 years of
age or older and must
have
parent

Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an appointment
contact Betsy at 740·992·2165

the five-foot end and consist of four laps I eight
lengths, swimmer must
touch the ends of the pool
before turning for lap
For the finish the runner, biker and swimmer
must tag for the finish at
designated area "the winner circle" that swimmer
will be oriented to before
swimming.

If
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For more information
contact Junie Maynard at
949-4222 ext. 1129 or at
junie .maynard@southemlocal.net.

Meigs from Page At
Midcap. Holly Murphy,
Linda Myers. Andrea
Pepper.
Gay
Perrin.
Samantha Pierce. Shannon
Plummer, Aleta Polley.
Michael
RinaldiEichenberg,
Nahan
Robinettte,
Edward
Safranek,
Amanda
Schwarze!,
Samantha
Shaffner, Shana Snyder,
Beverly Davis, David
Stafford, Ladona Stephens,
Rachel Stoltzfus, Elizabeth
Wilfong, Jason Wtlliruns.
Jan Wyatt and Barry
McCoy.
The .Board adopted the
Family
and
Civic
Engagement Plan and
appointed the following to
the engagement team:
Therapist.
Woodland
Centers: Counselor, Bethel
Counseling Services and
Health Recovery Services;
probation officer. Meigs
County Juvenile Court;
deputy director, GJM
ADMHB; psychologist,
Riverbend
Behavioral
Health; social worker,
Heidi DeLong; literacy
coach, Lorri Lightle; cur-

INGELS

CARPET
VinYl noorhtg $
StardDg at

595
per

laminate Flooring
Sbrdllgat

PRESCHOOL REGISTRATION
The Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center Preschool registration
for the 201 0·2011 school year
will be held Thursday, August 26, 2010
at Carleton School for children
ages 21/2-5

permission/signature; no
Ipods or headphones on
the bike course; helmets
are mandatory on the bike
course;
transportation·
from the pool to Star Mill
Park must be self provided or e-mail in advance to
have someone pick you
up at London Pool after
dropping off your bike.
Swimmers swimming
200 meters must wait
until the biker has compll:ted the bike course
before beginning the
swim which will start at

l

per
Sq. Ft.

Berber Carpet
StarUngat

$695 ~yd

riculum
supervisor.
The letter further stated
Michael Barnett, and 'that the organizations
supervisor. Sandra Clonch. appreciates the Meigs
The Rev. Brian Dunham Local School Board for
and the Rev. Len Powell "placing an emphas1s on
representing the Meigs these shared values to proCounty
Ministerial vide a healthy environment
Association and
the for the overall developMiddleport Ministerial ment of children and youth
Association attended the in this school district."
meeting to present a letter
Board members at the
of commendation to the meeting were Roger
school district for ··recog- Abbott, Ron Logan, 1
nizing and respecting Ryan Mahr, Larry Thcker .
Sunday as a day of rest."
and Barbara Musser.
~

~------------------------~'

Von age·
FREE UNLIMITED Calls Around the World .

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 26,

F;nnily 1\tledicine

Slzin splints: A good
reason to buy new shoes
BY MARTHA A. SIMPSON,

D.O.,

M.B.A.

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF FAMILY MEDICINE

OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

2010

Holzer Health Systems to celebrate
1OOth anniversary with picnic
Public invited to event Sept. 11 at Gallipolis City Park
a.m. and a 1-mile run/walk
to begin at R:05 a.m. Both
the walk and race will
GALLIPOLIS
begin at the Holzer Clinic
Holzer llcalth Systems Sycamore Branch. The
will host "Picnic in the ' we-registration deadline is
Park'' to celebrate its Au?. 27: There is a fee for
lOOth anniversary on rcgtstrat1on.
Saturday, Sept. II at
No dogs are allowed
Gallipolis City Park
and no child care will be
Activities slated for the provided. The first I 00
day include the Charles participants registered will
E. Holzer, Jr.. MD. recehe a commemorative
Commemorative Run, t-shirt and prizes will be
health screenings provid- awarded to top runners
ed by HMC Comm mity and walkers. Registration
Health and Wellness, fom1s are available at
comhoJe toumamen and www.holzer.org.
karaoke contest.
Following the run, a
The commemorathe memorial sen ice, led by
Director
of
run will start the day off HMC
Fred
with a 5K nm to begin at 8 Chaplaincy
SENTINEL STAFF

Williams, will be held in
recogmt1on of I.J/11.
Health screenings, includ
ing non-fasting choles
terol, glucose m~d blood
pressure, will be available
from 9-11 a.m. I he HMC
Wellncss Wagon will be
in the park to offer screenings a&lt;; well as provide
health infonnation for any
interested.
The double elimination
comhole tournament wiJl
be limited to 20 teams and
is set to begin at 10 a.m.
Prizes will be awarded to
the top two teams. Teams
are encouraged to sign up
as soon as possible. There
is a fee for registration.
A karaoke "Holzer

Idol'' contest will be
during the event as
Question: My daughter recently joined the track
with the public encourteam. and after a few practices she began complaining
aged to participate and
of pain in the front of her lower legs. The trainer says
observe. The contest will
this is cnused b) shin splints. and he advised her to ice
begin at noon and will
her legs. Should I take her to the doctor'? Is there anyaward prize~ to t.he conthing besides ice to take care of this? She seems to be
testants who receive the
in quite a bit of discomfort.
most applause. The
Answer: Shin splints are a common cause of pain
crowd will decide the
in the front of the lower leg jn nmners, aggressive
winners of the canteen.
walkers. and people who engage in aerobic. weightIn addition to these
bearing exerc1se. fhe medical name for the condition
activities, inflatabJes and
is medial tibial stress syndrome.
a cookout will be availShin splints are the result of inflammation caused by
able free of charge for all
stress - or pulling - at the point where connective
in attendance from 11
tissues are attached to the shinbone. Shin splints can
a.m.-2
p.m.
be quite painful, but with re t, ice and modification in
For infomwtwn or to
the running or exerci e routine, they will get better.
1~g1ster for an) of the
A 1najor cau"e of shin splints is wearing footwear
e1eJlts, please call (740) •
that is improper for your feet or the activity. Not
441-3973 or (740) 446everyone walks squarely tm their feet. and this can
5901.
lead to abnom1al stresses on the shinbones since most
of the muscles in the teet attach to the lower leg,
Footwear that is worn out or does not have the arch
support that your foot needs can cause shin splints.
Also running downhill or on an uneven or slanted surface can cause undue strain on the shin.
Your daughter's trainer is probably correct in his
diagnosis of shin splints, but a visit to the doctor may
be reassuring. The pain from shin splints can be quite
severe. and you doctor can advise you if medication is
needed. Infrequently. a stress fracture can occur in the
tibia and can be mistaken for shin splints.
Aside from applying ice to the inflamed area and
wearing proper footwear with plenty of support. rest
and anti-mflammatory medications such as ibuprofen.
can help. Your daughter may find some relief in elevatin¥ her legs to help reduce swelling.
Switching to non-weight bearing exercise for a
while, can aid in the recovery of the inflamed tissues,
and when the legs are healthy again, stretching and
specific stren~th training exercises can be incorporated to help strengthen the legs.
Once the acute inflammtition has calmed down,
building up to the previous distance gradually is best.
Encourage her to stay on level ground as much as possible and avoid hard Slllfaces.
_•
And finally, back to shoes. Properly fitted footwear
is essential for the treatnrent of shin splints. [
Generally. podiatrists can create shoe orthotics to help
prevent shin splints. and often, these can be switched
from one pair of );hoes to another. There also are shoe
stores that specialize in evnluating feet so that you can
get the most supportive shoe for the activity. fittetl
specificnlly to your feet.
Family Medicine® is a weeki\' column. General
medical questwm can be \CIIlto l\1/artha.A. Szmpson,
D.O.. M.B.A .. 0/uo Unh·enitv College ofOsteopathic
Medicine, Communicat1011 Office, Athem. Ohio
Submitted
45701. or familvmedicine@oucom.ohiou.edu.
Julie H1ll-Durst phys1cal therapist, of Middleport, center, was recently named the Pleasant Valley Hospita
MDSNEWS MYOAILYSENTINE COM

Headed to ER? Some
post waits by text, billboard
BY lAURAN NEERGAARD

"Employee of the Month. She was acknowledged for her "excellent customer serv1ce and ability to make
patients feel comfortable when visiting the Middleport Clinic where she has worked for over four years. She 1s
also cred1ted with helpmg her patients understand the process and progression of the treatment. She and her
husband, Jim, have th•ee children, Cole Durst, 10, Alexa Russell, 7 and Josle Durst, 4. Making the presentation to Durst are Debra Long, Director of Wellness and Rehabilitation Services, and AI Lawson, President and
Chief Execut1ve Officer of PVH. She will receive a $50 award, a congratulatory certif1cate and VIP parking, and
in addition will be entered in the facility's Customer Service Employee of the Year recognition.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

r

WASHINGTON - Need an X-ray or stitches?
Online, via text message or flashi.n~ on a billboard.
some emergency rooms are advert1sm~ how long the
dreaded wait for care will be. with estimates updated
every few minutes.
It's a marketing move aimed at less urgent patients,
not the true emergencies that automatically go to the
front of the line anyway - and shouldn't waste precious minutes checking the wait.
"If you're in a car accident. you're not going to flip
open your iPhone and see what the wait times are,"
cautions Dr. Sandra Schneider, president-elect of the
American College of Emergency Physicians.
Despite that fledgling trend, ERs are getting busier.
forcing them to try innovative tactics to cut delays such as stationing doctors at the front door to ~et a
~
jump-start on certain patients.
~nd in 2012, hospitals are supposed to begin
reporting to Medicare how fast their ERs move certain patients through, a first step at incre~sing quality
of care across the board.
·''The longer people stay in the emergency department, the more likely they're going to have complications, deaths. If they're elderly, they're more likely to end up in &lt;1 nursing home,'' says Dr. Nick
Jouriles, emergency medicine chief at Akron
General Hospital in Ohio, among the hospitals that
post estimated wait times.
ER visits hit a new high of more than 123 million in
2008, up from 117 million :1 year s:arlier, says preliminary data released this month by the Centers for
Disease Control and Preve1ition. A disturbing report
last year from Congress' investigative arm found too
often, patients who should have been seen immediate,
ly waited nearly a half hour. Add in tests and treatment.
and a trip to the ER can easily last three or four hours.
So why post wait tunes that might encourage
people who otherwise could have tried an urgentcare center?
There are no statistics on how many hospitals
advertise wait times. although they tend to have
multiple ERs in a region, usualJy the suburbs. The
idea: People with less urgent conditions - maybe
they need stitches for a cut - might drive a bit farther for a shorter wait, possibly helping a hospital
chain spread the load without losing easier cases to
competitors.
Akron .Genen1l, for instance, has four medical centers about a half-hour apart. One afternoon last week,
the posted wait from check-in to seeing a physician at
the main downtown campus was 53 minutes. while
suburban locations were less than 20. Jouriles is
begmning a study to see if the postings make a difference in patient volume, the total time spent in the ER
and satisfaction.
"They're on their Blackberries in the waiting
room." matching the posted wait to the clock, he savs.
"Not a single patient today, I bet. is going to be 53
minutes" exactly - because that's an avera~e of
some who got lll in 5 minutes and others who cooled
their heels over an hour.

--:.'!""~"

.. -

~~-~--.

r

.

.. ..

. -.. ,.

-'"""'f'.- ..,.. ··-.

.

-·~

-

·. · -M~~gs County Fair "Th«;tnk YOU"
Show Appreciation To Your Fair Buy~
with A "Thank You" Ad ln.The ...

Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy,OH
or call (740) 992-2155 for details
* Ads must be paid for in advance.

Sincere thanks
r- -------------

111111!
1 Col. x 2"

$17.30
Sunday
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1'¥

2 Col. x 4"
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Thanks

2 Col. x 5"
$86.50
STS
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1 Col. x 3"
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STS
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2 Col. x 2"
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J

��2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

.

.

.

.

2010 Meigs Marauders Football Team
.

.

.

• Page 2

.

.

.

.

.

Meigs Marauders look to rebuild in 20 0 season
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POMEROY, Ohio - Veteran Meigs
football coach Mike Chancey, faces a
rebuilding year going into the 2010
football campaign. Chancey must
find players to fill the shoes of several departed key seniors.
Among them are two record breakers in the backfield. Among those
graduated included the TVC's Most
Valuable Player Jeremy Smith and the
schools leading career passer in Jacob
Well. Other key players graduated
include Cody Laudermilt, Tyler
Brothers, Tanner Hysell, Caleb Davis
and Colby Hayes.
The Marauders must replace seven
starters on both sides of the ball. On
offense the Marauders will go with
either Cameron Bolin (6-3, 160 sr) or
Zach Sayre 6-foot, 180, jr, at quarterback. Bolin was the Marauders starting end last season, but fractured his
leg in the season's first conference
game at Athens and missed the rest of

the season.
Charlie Barrett (5-10, 190, Jr) or
Billy Duvall (5-4, 150, so) are battling for time at fullback, the tailback
will be Jeffery Roush (5-11, 170. Jr)
or Sayre. Roush injured his shoulder
in the scrimmage last week against
Gallipolis, and his status is unknown.
At wingback Colton Stewart (6-3,
170, sr) or Christian Mugrage a 5-10,
145 pound senior will get the nod.
The ends will be Bolin or Dillion
Boyer a 5-6, 155 pound sophomore,
with Stewart or Blake Crow (6-2,
190, jr) at tight end.
Jess Smith (6-4, 195, jr) moves
from guard, to over the ball at center,
the guards will be Joe Powell (5-10,
220, sr), Michael Little (6-2, 205, sr)
or Crow. The tackles will be Anthony
Rowe (5-9, 250, sr), Zach Sheets (6foot, 250,jr), Will Folmer (5-10, 250,
sr) or Robby Cundiff (6-1, 270, Jr)
and A.J. McCollum (5-8, 255, so) all
battling for playing time.
On defense the nose tackle will be
either Dillon Parsley (5-10, 195, sr)

or Little. The tackles will be Rowe,
Folmer or McCollum. Smith, Stewart
or Powell will be the defensive ends.
The linebackers will be Crow and
Barrett, with Sayre, Roush or Boyer
at the cornerback slots. The safety
will be Bolin and Mugrage.
Mugrage will be the punter, and
either he or Barrett will handle place
kicking duties.
Chancey is entering his 18th year at
his alma mater, Mike has compiled a
94-76 record overall. "I feel the TVC
is just like last year, and is up for
grabs," the veteran coach said.
"Athens and Nelsonville-York is
going to be strong, and Alexander is
going to be real good. Plus Wellston
has most of their players back."
Chancey went on to say, "This is a
good group of kids, they play together and give great effort. But we must
overcome a lack of experience at several positions."
The 2010 schedule ·has a different
look for Meigs since long time rival
Belpre has moved to the Hocking

Division.
The Marauders will open up with
three straight games against teams
from the Ohio Valley Conference in
Coal Grove, Fairland and River
Valley all at home. Meigs will hit the
road for two straight traveling to
Minford to play the Falcons for the
first time ever, and the next week also
a new opponent in county rival
Southern . The will return home for a
homecoming game against Athens,
after that they will travel to
Nelsonville-York. Meigs will then
retuUl home to play Wellston before
ending the season with a pair of road
games against Vinton County and
Alexander.
Assisting with the Marauders
this season will be Rick Ch
Derek Miller, Tyson Lee, Eddie Fife,
and Eric Cullums and new to the staff
this season in longtime N .F.L. veteran
Mike Bartrum.

I

I

j

�2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 3

2010 Meigs Marauders Football Team Roster
.w.t...

No..

~

.Gr.

Ht..

1
2
3
5
6

Christian Mugrage
Di !lion Boyer
Dennis Teaford
Alex Morris
Brett Casto
Cameron Bolin
Quentez Garnes
Ben Reed
Jordan Hutton
Damon Jones
Jack Unbankes
Zach Sayre
Zach Powell
Charlie Barrett
Chris Jones
Billy Duvall
Jeffery Roush
Cole Turner
Devon Cundiff
Cohen Walters
Dillol1 Parsley
Taylor Rowe
Heath Dettwiller
Williams Folmer
Cody White
Michael Little

12
lO
9
10
9
12
12
11
9
9
9
I1
12
ll
10
10
I1
II
9
9
12
9
12
12
9
12

145
5-10
5-6
155
6-1
190
6-l
155
6-0
200
6-3
160
6-1
160
6-0
150
190
5-8
5-10
160
5-7
140
6-0
180
5-11
150
5-10
190
5-Jl
180
5-4
150
5-1 I
170
5-5
120
5-7
135
5-7
130
5-10
195
190'
5-6
6-1
210
5-lO • 250
5-10
160
6-2
205

7.
8
9

11
12
13
14
20
21
23
25
26
33
. 35
40
42
44
45
50
51
52

f.Qs..

No..

~

.Gr.

Ht:.

.w.t...

f.Qs..

E
QB/E
QB/E
E
QB
QB/E
E
E
RB ..
QB/E
E
QB/E
E
RB

53
57
58
59
60
62
63
64
65
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
77
79
80
81
84
86

Zach Sheets
Robbie Cundiff
Cody Stewart
Anthony Rowe
Garrett Lascelles
Blaine Perry
Travis Kimes
Garrett Cundiff
Ryan Caruthers
Jesse Smith
Dustyn Lee
Blake Crow
Joe Powell
Mark Sheets
Ryan Brothers
A .J. McColl urn
Steven Barcus
Chris Folmer
Morgan Tucker
Colton Stewart
Christian Romine
Cody Oliver
J arret Durst

11
11
10
12
9
9
9
9
10
II
11

6-0
6-1
6-1
5-9
5-4
6-1
5-6
5-7
6-'0
6-4
5-9
6-2
5-10
6-8
6-0
5-8
6-4
6-2
6-4
6-3
5-8
6-0
5-10

250
270
205
250
170.
190
165
185
215
195
180
190
220
220
300
255
350
275
220
170
130
175
150

T
T
G
T
G
G
C/G
T
G
C/G
G
G
G
T
T
T
T
T
T
E
E
E
E

RB
RB
RB
E/R
E
E
RB
RB/QB
E/RB
T

c
G

11
12
10
9
10
11

lO
9
12
9
10
9

Head coach:
Mike Chancey (18th season)

Meigs Football Schedule
AUGUST

27

vs Coal Grove

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

vs Fairland
at River Valley
at Minford
at Southern

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
29

vs Athens
at Nels-York
vs Wellston
at Vinton Co
at Alexander

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

PROGRAMS:
• Business Management
• Early Childhood Development
• General Studies/ Transfer M odllle
• Information Technology
• Power Plant Technology

BERNARD V. FULTZ CENTER
FOR HIGHER EDUCATION
42377 Charles Chancey Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
For more information
contact: '
Dennis Eichinger
740-992-1880
dennis@rio.edu
Rebecca Long
Ext#7425
rlong@rio.edu

Adjacent to the Mei'gs Mi'ddle School and
Meigs High School Campuses

Your FUTURE within REACH

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER·

'

�..

'

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 4

Meigs County Fall Schedules
Volleyball

12 vs Alexander
14 at Athens

Eastern
.•

I
2
4
7
9
13
15
16
20
21
23
27
28
30

SEPTEMBER

vs Wahama
at Trimble
at Athens Invitational
vs Belpre
vs. Waterford
at Wahama
at Meigs
at Federal Hocking
at Belpre
vs South Gallia
at Miller
vs Gallia Academy
vs Southern
v Trimble

6p.m.
6p.m .
TBA
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6p.m. ·
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

OcTOBER

4
5
7

vs Meigs
at Watetford
vs Federal Hocking
11 at South Gallia
12 vs Miller
14 at Southern

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m. ·
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Meigs

6p.m.
6p.m.

Southern

Meigs

AUGUST

AUGUST

31 vs River Valley

6 p.m.

vs Nelsonville-York
at Federal Hocking
vs Gallia Academy
at Vinton County
vs Athens
vs Eastern
at Wellston
vs South Gallia
at Alexander
at Trimble
at Warren, Belpre
vs Vinton County
at RVHS, Southern

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
11 a.m.
6p.m.
5:30p.m.

OcTOBER

4
5
6
7
1J

at Eastern
at Nel on ville-York
at Southern
vs Wellston
vs River Valley

6 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 P·!ll·
6 p.m.

25 at Vinton County

2
7
9

13
15
16
20
23
27
28
29
30

at Miller
vs South Gallia
vs Trimble
at Belpre
vs Wahama
at Waterford
at Well ton
vs Federal Hocking
vs Belpre
at Eastern
at RVHS, Meigs
v~ Miller

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

24 at Federal Hocking
26 vs Waterford
31 at Trimble

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.m.
5:30p.m.
6p.m.

4
7
1J
18
23

at
at
at
at
at

Warren Scenic Hills
Gallia Invitational
Athens Invitational
Logan Chase
Jackson Invitational

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

SEPTEMBER

2
7
14
15
16
20
21
23
25

4:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

SEPTEMBER

TBA
TBA .
TBA
TBA
TBA

vs Miller
vs Trimble
vs Federal Hocking
at Miller
vs Southern
at Waterford
vs Wahama
at Belpre
at Riverside Inv.

5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m. ·
11 a.m.

Meigs

OCTOBER
AUGUST

2 Meet at Home
TBA
6 at Alexander Invitational TBA
13 at TVC Championship TBA

17
19
23
26
30

·southern

OCTOBER

at Athens
vs Alexander
vs Nelsonville-York
at Vinton County
at Wellston

.AUGUST
SEPTEMBER

4
5
6
7
11
"12
14

at South Gallia
at Trimble
vs Meigs
vs Waterford
at Wahama
at Federal Hocking
vs Eastern·

6p.m.
6· p.m.
6 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

SEPTEMBER

2
7
8
9
14
15
16
20
21
22
25
28
29

6 at Alexander
13 at TVC Meet

Cross Country
Eastern
4:30p.m.
10 a.m.

SEPTEMBER

4
8
11
18
25

at Warren
at Gallia Academy
at Athens
at Logan
at La.ncaster
at Rio Grande

4'
11
18
25

at Warren Scenic Hills 10
at Athens Invitational
10
at Fairland Invitational · io
at Bob Real Invitational 10

a.m.
a.m.
a.m.
a.m:

2
8
14
16
21

vs Athens
vs. Wellston
at Alexander
vs Vinton County
at Nelsonville-York

Southern
AUGUST

OCTOBER

12
17
19
24
26
30

vs Belpre
vs Eastern
at Waterford
at Miller
vs Federal Hocking
at Wahama

Golf

SEPTEMBER

Eastern

2
7

9a.m.
5:30p.m.
9:30a.m.
11 a.m.
9:30a.m.

11 at Waterford 'rnvitational8 a.m.

Noon

12 at Wahama
17 at Southern
19 vs Belpre

OCTOBER

2

.

SEPTEMBER

2 at Pickerington Inv.
10 a.m.
4:30p.m.
7 at Logan Invitational
13 at TVC Meet (Athens) 4:30p.m.

AUGUST

_25 at Vinton County
28 at Marietta

25 at Vinton County
5 p.m.
28 a~rOt;ghton Memorial 10 a.m.

13

AUGUST

2p.m.
Sp.m.

5 p.ni.

14
16
20
21
23

vs Trimble
vs Wahama
at Trimble
vs Miller
at Eastern
at Federal Hocking
at Belpre
vs Waterford

Visit 'us online at WUJW. mydailysentinel.com

...

-·'

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

S

WIS

• Page 5

S

M.eigs High School
Eastern High School
Southern High School
· DURING THE ·2010 Fall SPORTS SEASON'
.

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and other equipment
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Thursday, August 26,2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

!I

• Page 6

'
/

2010 Easter~ Eagles·Football Team

Eagles aiming ·for continued success on 201 0 gridiron
Tipton - who enters his 44th season
as a head football coach - has plans
on seeing how close these Eagles can
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio
come to all of those things this seaEastern football climbed over .500 son.
last season for the first time since the
"We have a lot of experienced play2004 campaign, finishing the year ers, so we feel we can compete for the
just three spots away from a playoff league title," Tjpton said. "We want
berth with a 6-4 overall record.
to be respectful to the game, but we
The Eagles also had the program's also .want to be physical and be smart.
best Tri-Valley Conference Hocking We are going to pride ourselves on
Division finish since 2004 after plac- going from the snap. to the whistle.:'
ing second with a 3-2 mark.
The Eagles with have more players
. Now the Green and White, with 20 on the roster this year, with a total of
letterwinners returning for the 2010 3:? for 2010 ·_ but 20 of thos players
season, have at least one more goal in will come from the sophomore and
mind - match the 2001 team as the freshmen ciasses.
last EHS class to have two straight
EHS will also have six key losses to
winning campaigns.
graduation to replace in Mike
And if things go really well, they Johnsonu Jeff Milhoan, Dakota
may even join the 2000 squad that Collins, Kelly Winebrenner, Casey
last won the TVC Hocking title.
McKnight and Tyler Sanders. All six
But those are big ifs headed into were major contributors -to last year's
this fall, especially with Belpre, successes, particularly Johnson and
South Gallia and Wahama joining the Milhoan - a pair of All-Ohio players
championship chase.
in Division VI.
Second-year EHS coach Dick
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

But with numerous starters and 11
seniors to guide the way, Tipton is
confident that these Eagles will be
able to pick up right where they left
off a year ago.
However, Tipton also notes that
nothing is ever in stone during the
course of a football season.
"I'm looking for the seniors to be
the leaders of this group, and I'm
looking for everyone else to. ster up
and do their duties," Tipton said.
"Even though we have a lot of people
back, all positions are open and competition will decide who plays.
"The more competitive we are in
practice with one another, the deeper
a football team we will be. And jf we
turn into a deep football team, we can
detinit~ly be an effective football
team - especially as injuries come
along throughout the year."
Returning from a year ago are
seniors Brayden Pratt, Tyler Hendrix,
Ryan Shook, Klint Connery, Ryan
Amos, Kyle Connery, Brad Stone,

Michael Scyoc, Tim: Markworth and
Lonnie Westfall, juniors Tyler Cline
and Paul Morrison, and sophomores
Kirk Pullins, J\.lex Amos, Joey
Scowden, Randal Davis, Dylan
Morris, Tim Minear, Garrett Ritchie
and Ethan Nottingham.
·
Pratt and Klint Connery were also
All-Ohio selections a ybar ago at
quarterback and runningback, respectively, while Hendrix was an honorable mention all-district selection.
That trio will again serve as a dangerous offensive threat for the Eagles
this fall.
·
A majority of the returnees saw
valuable minutes on both sides of the
ball, which will also pay huge dividends this year.
The newcomers to the varsity roster
are senior John Tegnolia, sophomores
Max Carnahan, Josh Shook and
Marshall Aanestad, and freshmen
Cody Rayburn, Chase Cook, Tyler
Barber, Zack Scowden, Zach

Please see Eagles, Page 15

�• Page 7 -

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

· 2010 Eastern Eagles Football Team Roster
rfu.~

m. m.

Gr.

~

Nft.~

Ht..

m.

2
3
5
9
10
11
12
13
20
22
26
30
32
33
36
41
44
45

6-0
5-10
5-0
6-0
5-11
5-8
6-0
5-7

10
12
9
9
10

WR-DB
QB-DB
RB-DB
QB-DB
QB-DB
WR-DB
RB-DB
RB-DB
RB-DBILB
RB-LB
RB-DB
TE-LB
RB-DB
RB-DBILB
WR-DBILB
WR-DB
OL-LB
RB-LB

55
63
64
66
70

5-10
6-0
5-11

225
10
215
10
210
11
160 9
215 • 9
12
195
225
10
302
12
310
11
240
9
250
12
170. 10
160
10
170
10
260
12

Max Carnahan
Brayden Pratt
· Cody Rayburn
Chase Cook
Kirk Pullins
Alex Amos
Tyler Barber
Zack Scowden
Tyler Hendrix
Ryan Shook
Klint Connery
Joey Scowden
Josh Shook
Ryan Amos
Kyle Connery
Zach Browning
Mark Gibbs
Brad Stone

5-10

5-8
5-7
5-11
5-7
5-10
5-11

5-10
5-10
5-9

165
175
140
180
150
155
160
140
175
180
165
180
150
185
170
150
160
170

lO

9
9
12
12
12
10
10
12
12
9
9
12

72

73
75
77
78
79
80
81
88
90

Randal Davis
Dylan Morris
Tyler CHne
Thunder Clonch
Roger Bunce
Michael Scyoc
Tim Minear
Tim Markworth
Paul Morrison
Wyatt Westfall
Lonnie Westfall
Garrett Ritchie
Ethan Nottingham
Marshall Aanestad
John Tegnolia

5-lO

6-0
6-1
5-10
6-1
6-0
5-11
6-1
6-3
5-10
6- I
6-3

GL

Head Coach:
Dick Tipton (2nd season)

~

OL-DL
OL-DL
OL-DL
OL-LB
. OL-DL
OL-DL
OL-DL
OL-DL
OL-DL
C-DL
C-DL
WR-DB
RB-DB
WR-DB
TE-DL

Eastern Football Schedule
AUGUST

27

at Alexander

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

vs Miller
at Wahama
at Waterford
vs South Gallia

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
30

at Belpre
vs Trimble
at Ports. East
at Fed Hock
vs Southern

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

Good Luck
To All Our·

'THE END
Of bant&lt;ers· nours

Teams!

IS NEAT&lt;.!

)- Meigs High School
)- Eastern High School
)- Southern High School

Rur:Jning
La~e?

if they're
not open befor~ 9

Open

we~reopen

8am.-8pm.
EveryDay

.~t:it 8

OHIO
VALLEY
BANK.

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 8

2010 Southern Tornadoes Football Team

Wickline takes over the Southern Football team for
. 2010
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE. Ohio
When the
Southern football team begins the
2010 sea on, it will be under the
direction of first year head coach
Kyle Wickline, who replaces Dennis
Teaford who coached the past four
seasons .
Wickline and the Tornadoe will be
faced with the tough task of replacing
several starters from last season's 5-5
team. Graduated players Michael
Manuel. Greg Jenkins, Ta) lor
Lemley. Jordon Taylor,~ tin Sab-er,
Justin Kimes, Sean Coppick, and
Brad Coppick, each played key role
for the offense and defense of the
Tornadoe .

The

opening roster for the
has 21 play~r . including
SIX seniOrs.
With the youth of. the team, especially at the quacterback and wide
receiver positions. the six seniors,
Zach ManueL Dani~l Jenkins, Tesse
Cope, Adam Warden, Joey Forester,
and Eric Buzzard will be looked to as
the leader.s and main contributors on
the team.
Underclassmen will have to step in
a play supporting roles for the team to
improve throughout the season.
The newcomers for the upcoming
season include not only players, but
some of the coaching staff as well.
"Being a first year head coach, all the
players are newcomers to our program. We are, as coaches, still feel-

~ornad?es

ing our way around. There are some
bright spot in camp with all the
groups, not Just one or two,"
Wickline said.
On the offensive side, quarterbacks
are Daniel Ramthun and Trenton
Deem. runningback are Eric Buzzard
and Tyler Barton. wide receivers
include Zac Beegle, John Gray, and
Hunter Johnson. and tight end
Jeremiah Warden.
Linemen on both ides of the ball
are Daniel Jenkins, A~stin Barton.
Zach Manuel, Joey Forester, Casey
Pickens, Joe Smith. Austin Hill.
De\in Dillard, Adam Warden, Zach
Davis, Wyatt Jarrell, Jesse Cope, and
Robert Hendrix. · ·
"We are laying the groundwork to
develop a successful program based

on discipline. hard work. and fundamentalS:' Wickline stated as his main
goal for ~he team.
Taking things one day or week at a
time, and improving with each day
will be a key for the youthful
Tornadoes as they begin the season.
"Prepare, work hard, play hard, and
get better, if we as a team do those
things we meet our expectations for
our season," said Wickline.
The Purple and Gold will be facing
an expanded league schedule this
son, with the addition of Sou
Gallia, Wahama, and Belpre to th
TVC Hocking. Southern will open
the ·season at Symmes Valley against
the non-league opponent, and will
face Meigs in a week 5 non-league
match at home.

�2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 9

2010 Southern Tornadoes Football Team Roster
NiL

rianr

&amp;!£.

.GL

1
2
4
7
9
25
34
50
52
62
64
66
67
68
69
73
75
75
77
78
85

Zac Beegle
John Gray
Daniel Ramthun
Hunter Johnson
Trenton Deem
Tyler Barton
Eric Buzzard
Daniel Jenkins
Austin Barton
Zach Manuel
Joey Forester
Casey Pickens
Joe Smith
Austin Hill
Devin Dillard
Adam Warden
Zach Davis
Wyatt Jarrell
Jesse Cope
Robert Hendrix
Jeremiah Warden

WR/DB
WR/DB
QB/DB
WR/DB
QB/DB
RB/DB
RB/DB
OLIDL
OLIDL
OL!LB
OL/DL
OL/DL
OL/DL
OLIDL
OL/DL
OLILB
OLIDL
OL/DL
OLILB
OLIDL
TE/DE

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

Southern Football Schedule
AUGUST

27 at Symmes Valley
SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

·

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30.p.m.
7:30p.m.
_ 7:30p.m.

Call740.992.3381 or.visit dcmusser.com

228 W Main, Pomeroy
·992-5432

Rmusser
IMJ.~M~~

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Insurance-

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Serving Gallia County Since 1950 • Now Serving Meigs County

Duting th~ 2010 ~~agon!
www.rockspringsskiJlednursing.com
36759 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, OH

7 40-992-6606

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

When times are tough,
we make things easier

Dine in or
grab some
'supper to go"!

Rocksprings

vs Wahama
vs Miller
at Waterford
vs Trimble
at Eastern

1
8
15
22
30

~0.

Head coach:

~C

vs South Gallia
at Be~re
vs Fe Hock
vs Meigs
OcTOBER

Kyle Wickline (lst season)

//JJ//Ja
:w·

7:30p.m.

~
L..::.J
tOUAL H()l.IMoi(J
a~t-PO'-TUH.tTY

990 State Route 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631
740-446-1960

33105 Hiland RD Suite 1
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-2318

hiurance~nyand ~ ~Natlonwtde

C2006Nalonwlde t.UJ&amp;t
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Hc:ln'a olfic::e: Coiurrtlus. OH 432:15--2220. NatiOnWide, ile NatiOnwide Frat1"181'1"81and On 'lout Side are ilderaUy
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undetwnung guidelines. review and~ .

�20~0

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Fall Sports Preview

• Page 10

Golf Roste
Bovs
Treay McKinney
Gunner McKinney
Gage Weisenmuller
Dillan Andrews
Paul Gibbs
Chase Hayes
Jacob Sizemore
Braden Spencer

•

So.
So.
So.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.
Fr.

GIRLS

Jennifer Robinson
Kassandra Mullins
Alyssa Cremeans
·Natalie Michael
Rachel Bauer
Autumn Williams

Jr.
Jr.
So.
So.
So.
So.

Head coach:
Tom Cremeans (2nd season)

Meigs Golf
Schedule
2010 Meigs Marauders Golf Team

2010 Meigs Golf begins first girls team at school
Bv

DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio - Meigs
golf coach Tom Cremeans must
replace his entire eight member golf
team, after graduation depleted his
squad. But a large group of underclassmen and the addition of a girl's
team have things looking up for the
maroon and gold.
The boy's squad consists of freshmen Jacob Sizemore, Dillian

Andrews and Paul Gibbs. To go along
with sophomores Treay McKinney,
Gunner McKinney, Chase Hayes and
Gage Weisenmuller.
In their first match, Trey McKinney
fired a 48, Sizemore a 54, Gunner
McKinney a 62, Gibbs each a 70,
Andrews a 60 and Weisenmuller a 70.
In the other match a tri-match with
Athens and Fairfield Christian Trey
McKinney fired a 58, Sizemore a 54,
Andrews a 60, Hayes and Gunner

McKinney ~ach a 62, and Gibbs a 70.
Playing on the first ever Meigs Golf
team are sophomores Natalie
Michael, Rachel Bauer, Autumn
Williams and Alyssa Cremeans.
Along with juniors Jennifer Robinson
and Kassandra Mullins.
Cremeans stated that Steve and
Sandy Clay the new owners .of the
Pine Hills Golf Course have really
been helpful as the Marauders prepare to hit the links.

TVC Ohio Matches
AUGUST

17
19
23
26
30

atAthens
vs Alexander
vs Nelsonville-York
at Vinton County
at Wellston
SEPTEMBER

2
8
14
16
21

vs Athens
vs Wellston
at Alexander
vs Vinton County
at Nelsonville-York

�.
~hursday,

August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 11

2010 Southern
Golf Team
Andrew Roseberry
· Dyllan Roush
Chase Graham
Cole Graham
Brandon Marcinko
Adam Pape
Trenton Cook

Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

So.
So.
So.

Fr.

Head coach:
Mick Winebrenner (7th year)

2010 Southern Tornadoes Golf Team

Southern golf ·reloads for:
-the 201 0 season
Bv

Brandon Marcinko, and Trenton Cook
have not played before and are working
hard to improve.
RACINE, Ohio - With the loss of
Head coach Mick Winebrenner (7th
six players from last season, the season) expects the team to improve as
Southern golf team will 'be forced to the season progresses after a rough start
reload and rebuild for the 2010 cam- with the young team. Winebrenner
paign.
hopes the team will become competitive
Dep.arting players included four-year by tournament time.
starter Taylor Deem, three-year starter .
The goal set for the team is to "have
Nathan Roush, and one-year starters the players work hard and do the best
Cyle Rec;s, Kris Kleski, John Powell , they can each match , and have a good
and Colby Roseberry.
time," Winebrenner said.
The Tornadoes return two players,
Looking at the bigger league picture,
"Waterford,
Andrew Roseberry and Dyllan Roush , Winebrenner
added,
who will be leaders as the only two Belpre, and Eastern should be. the
favorites. Wabama is always competigolfers with varsity experience.
Newcomers to the varsity program tive."
Southern will be competing in the
include Cole Graham, who player·
reserve last year and is much improved. 1'VC Hocking, which has expanded to
Adam Pape, who suffered an injury and add Belpre and Wahama in golf for the
cannot play football this year, shows . upcoming season. South Gallia has also
promise as a golfer and is currently in joined the league, but will not play a
the number two spot. Chase Graham, complete league schedule.
SARAH HAWLEY

SHAWLEY@MYD~ILYTRIBUNE.COM

Good Luck
to All
Area Teams
in the
2010-2011
Season!

I

! : New
Owners

Steve &amp; Sandy
Clay

~/

Lush Greens
Excellent Fairways

_.f Dayrtght
OpeU.· ·~
to Dark

, ·schedule
your
tournaments
with us
We'd Love
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Pome

Ohio • 740-992-6312

�2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Eastern Eagles Golf Team

• Page 12

2010 Eastern Lady Eagles Golf Team

Interest leads .to two golf teams at Eastern·for 201 0
•

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

TUPPERS PLAINS. Ohio
Out ide of eventual champion
Waterford (10-0). no Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Di\ i ion• golf
program had more uccess than
Ea tern Ia t year - \\hich fini hed as
the runner-up at 8-2.
Thi · ) ear. no TVC Hocking program \l:ill ha\'e a man) participant
as the Green and White - who will
ha\e 19 pla)er total - not to mention abo) team and a girl team.
Rather or not that v. ill turn into a
league champion hip i yet to be
een. e peciall. \\ ith the addition of
Belpre and Wahama to tht! league.
But one thing is certain. pov.er in
number
ertainly ha\ e the Eagles·
golf program beaded in a po itive
direction.
Third-\ear EH
coac . Rand\
a hter- i loo ing for ard to the
up om in., ea on and\\ hat tt could be
for arm" of lm ter .
· e ha e a \eteran team and a fe
apa le newcomer • and we xpe t to
be in con en ton for he lea!!ue and
ectional title thi ca on '' - a htcr
at d . ·• e Y. ill al
ha e a 0 nl golf
program
r he fir t
he

..

,#

Lady Eagles
have several
matches
scheduled
with other
girls teams.
·· I t ' s
going to be
· a very exciting golf eason for Eastern High School."
Of the 19 participant - 12 boys
and even girl · - on the var ity roster thi · fall. a total of II golfer are
returning from la t • ear· squad. The
Eagle will ha\e eight letterwinners
returning. v. hile the Lady Eagles have
three participant coming back from a
ea on ago.
Starting on the boys side, the
Ea!!l~ v. ill have a trJO of Ali-TVC
Hocking performer back to help lead
the title cha e - a well as five additional player back from last year·~
quad.
Comim! back from last fall are
enior Ja~y ~ arner, junior Chri&lt;&gt;tian
Am bar . Chn Bi ell and Luke
Kime , and ophomores Sam Collin ,
. Derick Powell. Tim Elam and Kyle
Young.

ease see

1

e 25

•

Eastern Eagles Golf
BOYS
Jay Warner
Chri tian Amsbary
Chris Bissell
Luke Kimes
Sam Collins
Derick Powell
Tim Elam
K)le Young
David Warner
Jack Kuhn
Tyler Hensley
Josh Parker

GIRLS
12

Megan Carnahan
Jessica Cleland
Ashley Miller
Samantha Cline
Hannah Hawley
Cassidy Cleland .
Jenna Burdette

11
II
J1
10
10
10
10
9
9
9
9

12
12

12
9

9
9
9

Head Coach:
Randy Wachter (3rd s~ason)

Getvour

PO IS

online

�I

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 13

Ohio Valley Publishing Fall Schedules
Thursday, August 26

•

Point
Pleasant
at
Invitational , 10:45 a.m.

Hurrican·e
Wednesday, September 1

Golf
.
Gallia Acad. , R. Valley. at Cliffside, ·
Soccer
,
Volleyball
4:30p.m.
·
Point Pleasant (G) at Midland Trail ,
Wahama at Eastern , 6 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern , 5 p.m.
11 a.m.
Golf
Federal Hocking at Southern, 5 p.m .
Weir at Point Pleasant (B) ~ I :30 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 4:30p.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 5 p.m .
South Gallia, Pt. Pleasant at Cliffside,
~onday,August30
Thursday, September 2
4:30p.m.
.
Miller at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Minford, 5:30
Volleyball
Cardinal Conference at Scarlet Oaks,
1 p.m.
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 5: l 5 p.m ..
Soccer
River VaHey at Trimble, 9 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Belpre at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Sissonville at Pt. Pleasant (G), 6 p.m.
Wahama at Cliffside, 4:30p.m.
Nelsonville-York at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Sissonville at Pt. Pleasant ('B), 8 p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 5:30p.m.
Golf
Wahama at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Friday, August 27
Gallia . Acaaemy, River Valley,
· Golf
Wahama at Cliffside, 4:30p.m.
Football
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Logan, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at' Athens, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 5 p.m.
Trimble at S~mthern, 5 p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Coal Grove at Meigs, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.
South Gallia, Point Pleasant at
Eastern at Alexander, 7:30 p.m.
Portsmouth East at South _Gallia, 7:30
Hidden Valley, 4:30p.m.
Soccer
Wahatna at Belpre, 4:30 p.m.
Ironton St. Joe at OVCS, 6 p.rp..
P-~~uthern ·at Symmes Valley,•7:30 p.m.
. Soccer
Thesday, Augqst 31
River Valley at Federal Hocking, 7:30
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 5 p.m.
Volleyball ·
Hannan at Williamson, 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant (G) at Huntington St.
Gallia Academy, River Valley at Joe, 5:30p.m.
Volleyball
OVCS at Point Pleasant (B), 8 p.m.
Fairland, 5:30p.m.
River Valley at Southern, 6 p.m.
Adams C~unty at OVCS, 6:30p.m.
Friday, September 3
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Saturday, August 28
Golf
Football
_Gallia Academy at Cliffside, 4:30
Hillsboro at Gallia Academy, 7:30
.
Volleyball
South Gallia at Waterford, Noon
p.m.
p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Fairland at Meigs, 7:30p.m .
Mi11er at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy, _Eastern, Southern at
Soccer
South Gallia at Southern, 7:30p.m . .
Marietta'; 10 a.m.
.
. _,Point Pleasant (B) at Gallia Academy,
Wahama at Trimble, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Symmes Valley, 7:30
River Valley, Ed Sayre Memorial 5:30p.m.
Meet, 9 a.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant (G), 6:15p.m. p.m.

Point Pleasant at Tolsia, 7:30p.m.
Meadow Bridge at Hannan,1:30 p.m.
Volleyball
OVCS at Covenant, 6 p.m.
Saturday,September 4
Volleyball
Eastern at Athens, TBA _
Wahama at Buffalo, 10 a.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Geico (Cabell
Midland H.S.), TBA
Eastern, Southern, Meigs at Warren, 9 ·
a.m.
Point Pleasa·nt at Chick-Fil-A
Invitational, 9 a.m.
· Thesday. September 7
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Warren, 5:15p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Southern, 6 p.m .
.Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Chapmanville, 6
p.m.
Covenant at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Te'ays Valley Christian, 7
p.m.
.Golf
Trimble at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Wahama;South Gallia at Southern, 5
p.m. .
.
River Valley at Point Pleasant, 4:30
p.m.
Cross Country

Please see Schedule. Page 15

.

f3esl tJiluck 1his Semt~n!
Best of Luck to
All Area Schools!
333 Page.Street ~ Middleport, OH (740)992-6472
www.overbrookrehabllitationcenter.com

Eagles • Tornadoes • Marauders
White Falcons

·summerfield.S ~estautant
St. Rt. #248 • Chester, Ohio
740-985-3857

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 14

2010 Fall Sports Preview

2010 Meigs
olleyball Roste
1
3
5
7
8
9
10
ll
12
15
22
34

Emily Kinnan
OSH/MH So.
Chelsea Patterson DS
Sr.
Jordan Anderson DS
Sr.
Emalee Glass
Setter
Jr.
Miranda Grueser Libero
Sr.
Kelsey Shuler
DS
Sr.
Chandra Stanley OSHIMH Sr.
Shellie Bailey
OSH
Sr.
Alaine Arnold
MH
Sr.
Alison Brown
OSH/MH Jr.
Valerie Conde
DS
Sr.
Morgan Howard MH
Sr.
Head coach:
Rick Ash (23rd season)

2010.Meigs
olleyball Schedul
2010 Meigs Lady Marauders Volleyball Team

Lady Marauders have high expectations for 201 0
Alison
Brown, both
juniors and
sophomore
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio -Veteran
E m i l y
Meigs Marauder volleyball coach
Kinnan .
Rick Ash returns · nine players from
Bailey is
last years team· that finished with a
coming off
15-7 mark overall and 8-4 in the Ohio
k n e e
Division of the TVC. Of those four
surgery that
losses in the conference, all four came
ended her
at the hands of the top teams in the
basketball
conference in Athen and Alexander.
season
early
last
season
and
Anderson
Meig however must replace two
who
played
at
Meigs
as
a
freshman,
key players lost to graduation, they
are Tricia Smith and Meri VanMeter, her family moved out of state and she
both Tricia and Mcri were three year returns to end her career where it
started.
starters.
"We return nine players from last
The nine returning seniors include
year
's team," the veteran coach aid.
Shellie Bailey, Miranda Grueser,
Chandra ·stanley, Morgan Howard, "Most of them have started since their
Valerie Conde, Chelsea Patter on , sophomore years. We graduated only
Alaine Arnold, Jordan Ander on and three players in the last two years,
(Smith, Van Meter and Catie Wolfe in
Kelsey Shuler.
Joining those veteran players , are 2008). All three were good back row
underclassmen Emalee Glass and players, our goal is to find players to
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

step up and perform on the back row.
The setters and hitters have all
returned.
Emalee Glass is back at setter for
her third season, Bailey and Howard
return for their fourth season and are·
helped at the net by Stanley and
Brown, all four were dominate at
times on the net last season," Ash
said . .
"Newcomer Jordan Anderson will
contribute to the back row, Kinnan
and Shuler are both up from the junior
varsity, and Kinnan will split time on
j.v. and varsity this season.
Ash went on to say, "Volleyball is a
team game, fir..st the pass, then the set
and finally the hit. Each person we put.
on the court must cohtribute to get the
job done."
The Marauders should once again
battle for the TVC Ohio crown, but
Meigs has the Lady Bulldogs of
Athens and powerful Alexander to
battle for the top spot.

SEPTEMBER •

2
.7
8
9
14
15
16
20
21
22

vs Nelsonville-York
at Federal Hocking
vs Gallia Academy
at Vinton County
vs Athens
vs Eastem
at Wellston
vs South Gallia
at Alexander
at Trimble .
25 at Warren, Belpre
28 vs Vinton County
29 at RVHS, Southern

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
.,6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

11 a.m.

6p.m.
5:30pm

OcTOBER

4
5
6
7
11
12
14

at Eastern
at Nelsonville-York
at Southern
vs Wellston
vs River Valley
vs Alexander
atAthens

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
.,6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

-

I

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

Schedule
from Page 13
Gallia Academy,- Eastern, Meigs,
River Valley, Point Pleasant at Coach's
Corner Ihv. (Gallia Academy), 5:30
p.m.
Soccer
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant (G) at Cross Lanes
Christian, 5 p.m.
·
OVCS at Ironton St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, September 8
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Symmes Valley at South Gallia, 6
p.m.

Golf
Eastern at Fort Frye, 5 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Thursday, September 9

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 15

5:30p.m.
. Soccer
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point -Pleasant (B),
6p.m.
Friday, September 10

Thursday, September 16

Golf
Gallia Academy, River Valley, Point
Pleasant, at Wahama, 4 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
South Gallia at Jackson, 4:30p.m.

/

Football
Wellston ar Gallia Academy, 7:30
p.m.
Meigs at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, 7:30p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 7:30p.m.
S'issonville at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
Volleyball
OVCS at Adams County, 6:30p.m.
Saturday, September 11
Football
Green at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Volleyball
South GaUia, Fairland at Oak Hill,
Noon

Cross Country
Volleyball
Gallia
Academy,
Eastern, Southern,
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
Meigs,
River
Valley
at Athens, 9:30
Waterford at Eastern, 6 p.m.
p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Cabell ¥idland, 10
· a.m.
Meigs at Vinton County, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Co~l Grove, 5:30p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Monday, September 13
Sissonville at Point Pleasant, 5:30
p.m.
.
Volleyball
Grace Christian at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Vinton County, 6
p.m.
Golf
Eastern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy, River VaHey at
Southern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Jackson, 4:30 p.m.
Southeastern at River Valley, 5:30
South Gallia at Meigs, 4:30p.m.
p.m. ,
Point Pleasant, Belpre at Wahama,
South Gallia at Trimble, 6 p.m.
4:30p.m.
OVCS, Hannan at Point Pleasant,

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SEHil&lt;:l "" MU:l..ch:Lns'

• ~.......to.
... Si.te w;;;a~

Thesday, September 14
Volleyball
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Trimble_, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South· Gallia, 6
p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point pleasant, 6
p.m.
St. Joe at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Sherman at Ha_nnan, 6:30p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Piketon, TBA

Golf
Gallia Academy, River Valley, South
Gallia at Cliffside, 4:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 5 p.m.
Trimble, Point Pleasant at Wahama,
4:30p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:30p.m.
Ra\lenswood at Point Pleasant (G),
6:30p.m.
·
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant (B), 7
p.m.
Wednesday, September 15
Volleyball
Eastern at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Southern, 6 p.m.

Golf

Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, 5:15
p.m.
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 6 p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
South Gallia at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
St. Joseph Central at Hannan, 7 p.m.

Golf
Southern at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 4:30p.m.
Point Pleasant, Huntington St. Joe at
Twin Silo, 4:30p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Logan, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant (G) at Poca, 6 p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant
(B), 6 p.m.
Belpre at OVCS, 5 p.m. _
Friday, Septemb.cr_ll
Football
Gallia Academy at Marietta, 7:30
p.m.
Meigs at Minford, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Waterford, 7:30p.m.
Miller at South Gallia, 7:30p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 7:30
p.m.
Belpre at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Fort Frye at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
South Point at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
Soccer
OVCS at Calvary, 5:30p.m.
Saturday, September 18

Eastern at Miller, 5 p.m.

Please see Schedule. Page 19

Makin Memories
t.Ue-de~

SCRAPBOOK STORE
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Mon. thru Fri. 10-5 Sat. 9-5

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

• Page 16

2010 Fall Sports Preview

2010 Southern
Lady _Tornadoe~
ROSTER

~

Position

G.r.a.d.e

Bobbi Harris

2010 Southern Lady Tornadoes Volleyball Team

Lady Tornadoes look for improvement in 2010
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RACINE, Ohio- With six returning
letter winners and a strong junior class ,
the Southern Lady Tornadoes volleyb~ll team looks to improve on last season's 4-14 (I-9 TVC Hoc1:ing) record.
A new year brings a new team for the
Lady Tornadoes who will have to mix
experience and youth to form a winning combination for the 2010 eason.
Southern has at total of 23 players in.
the high school volleyball program to
open the season, with four seniors,
eight juniors, four sophomores, and
seven freshmen.
Head coach Katie Dickson looks to
improve on communication and the
use of team instead of outstanding
individuals. The team will look to
develop game situations into a routine
by improving individual stats , including passing, serving, blocking, kills,

and digs.
Southern will have to replace seven
players , Breanna Taylor, Ashley
Walker, Katie Woods, Gabby Johnson,
Lipdsay Teaford, Kayla Stevens, ari.d
Stephanie Shamblin, who graduated
from the 2009 team.
Southern returns six letter winners,
including Ali 7TVC honoree Courtney
Thomas. Other returning players are .
senior Bobbi Harris and juniors Kelsey
Strang, Katelyn Hill, Emily Ash, and
Hope Teaford.
Dickson, in her second season, will
be looking to the strong group of
juniors as well as Harris to lead the
team in the upcoming season. Other
seniors are Vada Mae Counts, Michelle
Ours, Stephanie Berryman. Dickson
will be assisted by JV coach Ryan
Lemley.
A big group of freshman will provide
strength at the net and at the setter
position, a place the team lacked depth

in a year ago.
With the experienced players returning and the newcomers to the court,
Dickson looks for the team to gain a
better understanding of coverages ,
transitions, and strategy, as well as
developing a more aggressive
approach on offense.
Southern made an early exit in the
postseason in 2009, dropping the opening round sectional contest against
Miller.
The Lady Tornadoes will face a
much different TVC Hocking in the
upcoming- season, with the addition of
South Gallia, Wahama, and Belpre in
the conference.
Southern will host non-league opponent River Valley in the season opener
on Aug. 31, before beginning its league
schedule on Sept. 2 at Miller. Nonleague cont~sts for the Lady Tornadoes
also include Wellston and Meigs.

Sr.
Front Row
Vad.a Mae Counts
Back Row
Sr.
Michelle Ours
Back Row
Sr.
Stephanie Berryman
Sr.
Back Row
Kelsey Strang
Front Row
Jr.
Kate!yn Hill
Front Row
Jr.
Courtney Thomas
Setter
Jr.
Amber Hayman
Front Row
Jr.
Jessica Riffle
Front Row
Jr.
Emily Ash
Back Row
Jr.
Hope Teaford
Back Row
Jr.
Morgan McMillan
Front/Back Row J.r.
Angie Eynon
Front/Back Row So.
Shelby Pickens
Front Row
So.
Makayla Findley
Back Row
So.
Maggie Cummins
Front/Back Row So.
Darien Diddle
. Front Row
Fr.
Katie Jenkins
Setter
Fr.
Lacey Hupp
Setter
Fr.
Jordan Huddleston
Fwnt Row/Setter Fr.
Baylee Hupp
Front Row
Fr.
Joyce Weddle
Back Row
Fr.
Celestia Hendrix
Front Row
Fr.
Head Coach:
Katie Dickson (2nd season)

.,.,

t

f

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 17

''Get Back in Action ''at our
S turday Sports Clinics
8 m-llam
-.Aug st 28th-October 30th
Gallipolis
Sycaniore Branch
.,.

•

.

I

.

�, ~------------~-------

t

Thursday, August 26,2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 18

2010 EHS
volleyball
ROSTER

N!b Nm:nt

Gr. f!)s.

2
4
5
10
11
12

11
10
11
11
11

13

2010 Eastern Lady Eagles Volleyball Team

Eastern volleyball aiming for similar
success in new league
Caldwell - who took 2008 off as
BWALTERS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
head coach after six years previously
- knows that the road to the TVC
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio - Over Hocking crown will not be any easithe last 13 seasons, Eastern volley- er to win, particularly with a 16ball has been part of 12 Tri-Valley game league format.
Conference Hocking Division chamHe also notes that if it ain't broke,
pionships - outright or shared.
don't fix it.
Only in 2008, when Waterford won
"The league title has never been
the outright crown, did the Lady easy to win, even with six teams, and
Eagles fail to call themselves TVC I think this year will be an even
champs.
stronger testament to that. There are
Last year, Eastern returned to glory going to be some really competitive
by winning the title outright teams gunning for us and that
which also served as the last season crown," Caldwell said. "I've always
in which the TVC Hocking would had the policy that if you work hard
consist of six schools.
and play together every day and get
· Not that wearing a bull 's-eye is better every day, then those things
anything new to the Green and will be rewarded as the season proWhite, but with the addition of gresses.
Belpre, Wahama and South Gallia to
"We are going to have to work
an already tough TVC Hocking extra hard at all of those things this
schedule will only make the target on year because we have six extra
Eastern's back that much bigger.
league games that have valuable
Second-year EHS coach Howie
BY BRYAN WALTERS

·-

meaning, so our (and everyone
else's) focus will be tested just a little more."
The Lady Eagles are corning off a
22-4 season that saw the program
win its first-ever game at regionals
after five previous attempts. All six
of those district titles have come
under the guidance of Caldwell, who
has amassed a 212-48 overall record
in 12 seasons as a volleyball coach.
Some big pieces of that squad are
also missing, as Karissa Connolly,
Kasey Turley, Lauren Cummings,
Sarni Cummins and Whitney Putman
were lost to graduation.
Connolly was the TVC Hocking's
Most Valuable Player last season and
District 13 player of the year as a setter, while Turley was also an allleague and all-district performer.
Cummings, Cummins and Putman
were also multi-year letterwinners

Please see Success, Page 25

15
20
22
24

31

32

Jamie Swatzel
Breanna Hayman
Janae Boyles
Brenna Holter
Kiki Osborne
Bay lee Collins
Beverly Maxson
Britney Morrison
Ally Hendrix
Autumn Trussell
Kelsey Myers
Brooke Johnson
Shawn~ Murphy

11

12
12
10
11

11
11
10

MH

s

BR
OH
OH
BR
OH
OH
MH
BR
OH
BR
BR

Head Coach:
Howie Caldwell (2nd season)
SCHEDUI;.E

SEPTEMBE~

1
2
4
7

9.

13
15

16
20
21
23
27
28
30

vs Wahama
at Trimble
at Athens Invitational
vs Belpre
vs Waterford
atWahama
at Meigs
at Federal Hocking
at Belpre
vs South Gallia
at Miller
vs Galli a Academy
vs Southern
vs Trimble

6p.m.
6p.m.
TBA
6p.rn.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

OcroBE;R
4
5
7

ll

12
14

vs Meigs
at Waterford ·
vs Federal Hocking
at South Gallia
vs Miller
at Southern

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.rn.
6p.m.
6 .m.

�2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

p.m.
•
South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 6 p.m. ·
River Valley at Rock Hill, 5:30p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 5:30p.m.
Hannan at Cross Lanes Christian, 6
p.m.

Schedule
from Page 15
· Football
Hannan at Burch, 7:30 p .. m

Golf
Gallia Academy at SEOAL Match,
TBA
Wahani.a at Eai!tern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant, Poca at Scarlet Oaks,
4p.m.

.
Volleyball
River Valley at Ironton Invitational,
TBA
Cross County
&amp;iver
Valley
at
Northwest
Invitational, 10 a.m.
Point Pleasant at Ripley Covered
Bridge Inv., 10 a.m, ·
Southern at Fairland Invitational, 10
a.m.

Soccer
Chillicothe at Gallia f.cademy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at OVCS, 5 p.m.

Golf
Eastern at Zane Trace, 2 p.m. ·

Wednesday, September 22
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River Valley, 5:30
p.m.
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Wahama, 6 p.m .

Monday, September 20
.
•

Volleyball
Eastern at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wellst~n, 6 p.m. 1
South Galha at Meigs, 6 p.in.
Miller at Wahama, 6 p.m. ·
Chesapeake at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Valley at Hannan, 6:30p.m.

• Page 19

Golf
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 5 p.m.
South Gallia, Federal Hocking, Point
·
Pleasant at Wahama, 4:30p.m.
Soccer
Marietta at GalliaAcademy, 6:30p.m.
Point Pleasant (G) at Sissonville, 5
p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at Sissonville, 8
p.m.
Friday, September 24
Football
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs at Southern, 7:3.0 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Wahama at Waterford, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
Vinton County at Point Pleasant, 7:30
p.m.
Buffalo at H'annan, 7:30p.m.

Golf .
River Valley at OVC Championships,
9 a.m.
Saturday, September 25

Golf
Wahama at Eastern, 4:30p.m.
Thursday, September 23
Volleyball
Marietta at Galli a Academy, 5: 15 p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Southern, 6 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poe~, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Hannan, 6:30p.m.
Burch at Hannan, 6 p.m.

Soccer
Point Pleasant (B) at Winfield, 5 p.m.
Thesday, September 21 ·

Cross Country
Meigs, River Valley at Jackson
Invitational, 4:30p.m.

Volleyball
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5: 15

R·Z·Z·ISU·IU

1953

:trDr8maa
9 ,- A.I»ou
.
.

Rea-ag - ~Cooling
., .... .... _..,. . , ... ..,.;.;w.

Soccer
OVCS at Teays Valley Christian, 4
p.m.
Monday, September 27
Volleyball ·
Gallia Academy at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Belpre at South~rn. 6 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 6 p.m.
South Gallia, Symmes Valley at
Fairland, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
Lincoln at Hannan, 6 p.m.
Thesday, September 28
Volleyball
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 5:15p.m.
Southern at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Chesapeake at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
South Gallia at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Huntington St. Joe,
6p.m.
Hannan at Elk Valley (Tri), 5:30p.m.
Soccer .
Gallia Academy at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Lincoln at Point Pleasant (G), 6:30
p.m.
Wednesday, September 29

Golf
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
River Valley at Chesapeake, 4 p.m.
Wahama at Miller, 4:30.p.m.

SINCE

Volleyball
Meigs, Belpre at Warren, 11 a.m.
Trimble at South Gallia, Noon

Invitational, 10 a.m.

-·

,o.._~-~~~~ir

Cross Country
Gallia Academy, Southern at
Lancaster, lO .a.m.
Eastern, River Valley at Rio Grande,
9:30a.m.
Point Pleasant at' Calhoun Co., ·9:30
a.m.

Golf
Gallia Academy at Sectional
Previews, 8 a.m.
Eastern, South Gallia, Wahama, Point
Pleasant at Riverside High School

Volleyball
Southern, Meigs at River Valley, 5:30
p.m. .
.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Thursday, September 30
Volleyball
,
Warren at Gallia Academy, 5:15. p.m:
Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.

Please see Schedule, Page 23

The New Owners of the

Middleport Flower Shop
would like to wish all area marching bands &amp; teams
a successful season!

/

.'
Debbie (Alkire) Sparkman &amp; Undo (Chapman) Birtcher
1993 Meigs Band Alumni
784 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 45760

(740) 992-3533
middleportflowershop@frontier.com
Mon-Fri 9 am- 6
Sat. 9 am -12

..

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 20

l
1

2010 Meigs Marauders Cross Country Team

Veteran runners lead Meigs cross·country tea
The team welcomes freshmen Jacob
Pierce, Brandon Mahr, Derik Hill and
Tara Walzer-Kuharic. "These newROCKSPRINGS, Ohio - Meigs comers have been working hard in the
Marauder cross country coach Mike preseason,"
Kennedy
said.
Kennedy has been busy preparing his "Hopefully they will improve
squad for the upcoming season. The throughout the year. They know there
girls' squad lost only Dawn Bis ell to is no pressure on them to carry this
graduation, but three other girls experienced group, but can really
decided not to run for personal rea- contribute in the second half."
sons. Meanwhile the boys only lost
"2009 was a bit of a disappointgraduated senior Jacob Riffle.
ment," Kennedy went on to ay. "But
The returning group of sophomores with a great glimpse of the future of
will lead the girls' team, paced by last Meigs CC. We had a tremendous
year's standout Shawnella Patterson. group of freshman girls come out, but
Emma Perrin and Maggie Smith have due to illness and injury we only finshowed lots of focuS this preseason. ished third in the TVC meet. We realJunior Olivia Cleek returns for her ly look to improve on that this year as
second year and according to Coach each of these girls had moments of
Kennedy has improved 10-fold over greatness last years. It's just a matter
this time last year, and senior of putting good performances togethShannon-Walzer Kuharic will help er at the right time. The boy struggled
guide her younger counterparts.
to have a full team last season, but
On the boys' side, juniors Cody has added three freshmen and should
Hanning, and Steven Mahr lead the contend at every meet."
way. Sophomore Jared Williams
Kennedy concluded, "The main
seems to have learned much from the thing for these athletes to do this year
older boys' work ethic and it has is to push their limits without causing
shown so far. The teams lone senior injury. They are a very talented bunch
Jeremiah Myers continues to improve and we just want to be there at the
and inspire the team.
BY DAVE HARRIS

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Please see Runners, Page 15

Meigs Cross Country Rosters
Girls Team
Shannon Walzer-Kuharic
Olivia Cleek
Rachel Bauer
Vanessa Crane
Allyson Davis
Shana Gorslene
Shawnella Patterson
Emma Perrin
Tess Phelps
Maggie Smith
Morgan Ru sell
Tara Walzer-Kuharic

12
11
10
10
lO
10
10
10
10
10

9
9

Boys Team
Jeremiah Myers
Cody Hanning
Steven Mahr
Jared Williamson
Derik Hill
Brandon Mahr·
Jacob Pierce

12
11
11
lO
9
9
9

Head coach:
Mike Kennedy (26th season)

�.
l

I

Thursday, August 26,2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 21

.Lady Eagles ha e high expe~tations for 2010
Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio - The
Eastern Cross Country program is
once again a small group of only
females.
Regardless of the size, only three
runners, the expectations are still
high for sixth year head coach Josh
Fogle.
Fogle's team returns both runners
from last season, and adds one additional runner.
Senior Emeri Connery was both the
Tri Valley Conference and district
runner up in 2009, finishing 19th at
the tegional meet. She was also and
all-district cross country selection in
2009. Connery was also a regional
qualifier the past three seasons for the
Lady Eagles track team, and the past·
two years for the cross country team.
Sophomore Nikki Gilbride also
returns for the Lady Eagles. Gilbride

Please see Lady Eagles, Page 25

Eastern
_Cross CountrY
ltmeri Connery
Shelby Smith
Nikki Gilbride

Sr.
. Jr.
So.

Head coach:
Josh Fogle (6th season)

2010 Eastern Lady Eagles Cross Country
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�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 22

2010 Southern Tori!adoes Cross Country Team

,Youthful Tornadoes look for continued success in 2010
Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
RACINE, Ohio - The Southern
Tornadoes Cross Country team
looks to continue the success of
2009 program in 2010.
Last season, Southern placed third
at the di trict competition, qualified
for the regional meet, and took
home an individual district title with
then freshman Kody Wolfe. Wolfe
earned all-district honors la t season.
Wolfe returns to lead the 2010
team along with sophomore Jennifer
McCoy and junior Andrew Ginther.
The Tornadoes lost two run.ners
from last season, with Colby
Roseberry (all-district 2009) and
Dylan Roush as the only seniors a
year ago.
Incoming freshmen Trenton Cook
and Chris Yeater each run and the
junior high level last year, having
excellent sea ons.
Returnees from last season are

Chase Graham, Andrew Ginther,
Kody Wolfe, Justin Hettinger,
Tommy Werry, and Jennifer McCoy.
Following the trip to regionals in
2009, this years team wants to make
a return trip. This time the expectatiO!JS are for a higher finish, with
• several athletes setting personal
g·oals to finish near the top.
Head coach Richard Cooksey's
(5th season) main goal for th.e team
is "for everyone to finish the season
healthy and to lower their individual
times every competition."
Cooksey ·has three areas for the
athletes to focus on. He stated, "this
year's athletes have committed
themselves to improving as -a team,
helping their teammates and
improving themselves." Cooksey
added that the team is excited and
has worked hard to prepare for the
upcoming season.
The Tornadoes will compete in
meets at Vinton County, Marietta,
Warren, Athens, Fairland, Lancaster,
Pickerington, and Logan.

Southern Cross Country
Chase Graham

Jr.

Andrew Ginther

Jr.

KodyWolfe

So.

Tommy Werry

So.

Justin Hettinger

So.

Jennifer McCoy

So.

Kyrie Swann

So.

Chris Yeater

fr.

Trenton Cook

Fr.

Head coach:
Richard Cooksey (6th season)

�2010 Fall Sp.o rts Preview

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Schedule
from Page 19
Miller at Southern, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Lincoln, 5:30p.m.
OVCS at Teays Valley, 6 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 6:30p.m.
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant
(G), 7:45 p.m.
Williamstown at Point Pleasant (B), 6
p.m.
Cross Country
Point Pleasant at George Washington
Invitational, TBA
Friday, October 1

Eastern, Southern at Pickerington
North, 10 a.m.
Meet at Meigs, 4:30 p.m.
Soccer
Gallia Academy at Point Pleasant (B),
7p.m.
Monday, October 4
Volleyball
River Valley at Gallia Academy, 5:30
p.m.
Meigs at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Buffalo at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Hannan, 6:30p.m.
Thesday, October 5
Volleyball
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Valley, 6:30p.m.

Soccer
Point Pleasant (B) at Charleston
Catholic, 7 p.m.
Thursday, October 7
Volleyball
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 5:15
p.m.
Federal Hocking at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Waterford at Southern, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Rock Hill at River Valley, 5:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Herbert Hoover, 6
p.m.
Hannan at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Meigs, Southern at Logan, TBA
Soccer
Logan at Gallia Academy, 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at Ironton St. Joe, 6
p.m.
South Point at OVCS, 5:30 p.m.

Football
Gallia Academy at Logan, 7:30p.m.
Athens at Meigs, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 7:30p.m.Friday, October 8
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, 7:30
Soccer
.m.
Gallia Academy at Warren, 6:30p.m.
Football
Southern at Waham:a, 7:30p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant (G),
Chillicothe at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Fairl_and at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
·6:30p.m.
· p.m.
Point Pleasant at Wayne, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at Williamstown, 5
Fayetteville-Perry_ at Hannan, 7:30 p.m.
Trimble at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
p.m.
Belpre_at South Gallia, 7:30p.m.
Miller at Southern, 7:30p.m.
'Yednesday,
October
6
Soccer
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 7:30
Calvary at OVCS, 5:30p.m.
p.m.
,
Volleyball
River Valley at Chesapeake, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Southern, 6 p.m.
Saturday, October 2
Poca at Point Pleasant, 7:30p.m.
Trimble at Wahama, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Federal Hocking, 6
Volleyball
Volleyball
p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan, 10 a.m.
• Teays Valley at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Waterford at South Gallia, Noon
Cross Country
Soccer
Eastern,
Southern, Meigs
at
Cross Country
Teays Valley at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Alexander, 4:30p.m.
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Point Pleasant at Charleston Catholic
Piketon, T.BA
Saturday, October 9
Invitational, TBA

We support our local sports teams
and are proud of them for a job well done!

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Serviug The Public Since 1907

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• Page 23
•
Volleyball
Eastern at Miller, TBA
Hannan at Tolsia, 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Gallia Academy at Les Esinenhart
(Thomas Worthington), TBA
Monday, October 11
Volleyball
Eastern at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Southern at Wahama, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Meigs, 6 p.m.
OVCS at St. Joe, 6 p.m.
Hannan at Burch, 5:30p.m.
Thesday, October 12
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at Ports_rnouth, 5:15
p.m.
Miller at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Southern at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Tolsia at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Cross Lanes Christian at Hannan, 6
p.m:
Cross Country
Point
Pleasant
at
Cardinal··
Conference, TBA
Soccer
Spring Valley at Point Pleasant (G), 6
p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at Herbert Hoover,
6p.m.
OVCS at Belpre, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, October 13
Volleyball
River Valley at Jackson, 5:30 p.m.
Federal Hocking at Wahama, 6 p.m.

Please see Schedule, Page 24

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Another title would put OSU in elite CC?mpany
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - There's a
spot in the history books awaiting the 2010
Ohio State Buckeyes.
Thing is, their coach doesn't want them
to give it a econd thought.
Only Woody Hayes' powerhouse Ohio
State squads of 1972-77 ever captured all
or a piece of six straight ·conference titles.
The Buckeyes, winners of three outright
and two shared titles in the last five years,
could do it again this fall.
Coach Jim Tressel, entering his lOth
year on the job, is wary of using a Buckeye
Six-Pack as motivation.
· "It might mean something to that guy
who's been here four or five years," he
said. Then he added, "If that becomes a
focal point at all, I'm sure that's not the
way any of us should be thinking."
To Tressel, looking ahead spells doom.
The Buckeyes are stacked with talent,
with nine starters back on offense and five
on defense. The schedule isn't a killer,
despite the dangerous Miami Hurricanes
coming to Columbus in Week 2, along
with road tests against conference bullies
Iowa and Wisconsin.
But Tressel says it's far too early to start
comparing his current Buckeyes with
those legendary teams from the '70s that
included Archie Griffm, Pete Johnson,
Cornelius Greene, Tom Cousineau and
Tim Fox.
"You have those discussions about
str:eaks and accomplishments and all those
kinds of things when seasons are over, and
hopefully not ~g them," he said.
Quarterback Terrelle Pryor, coming off
an MVP performance in the Rose Bowl,
believes be and his teammates not only
have the talent but the togetherness to
make it six in a row.
"If you're willing to make that play for
the guy next to you, that's the biggest
thing," said the junior. "We compete like
crazy here and we're all willing to get better. Guys are always out after the workouts, doing extra lifting and doing extra
running and just getting their technique
down. Stuff like that. Working on their
hands, gtiys catching 500 balls a week."
Pryor had an up:and-down 2009 season,
stepping into the background to hand off
to runnmg backs Brandon Saine and Dan
Herron after injuring a knee late in the
campaign. Arthroscopic surgery _in
February cleaned up t:l).e knee and has him
bristling to get going this fall .
"It's night-and-day fram last year until
now," be said. "It's amazing to me and I'm
just getting anxious."
Pryor became the first Ohio State quarterback to lead the team in rushing since
the school started keeping records back in
the '40s. He also completed 57 percent of

his passes for
161 yards a
game, for 18
touchdowns
with 11 interceptions.
He may be
the triggerman but he
bas lots surrounding
him. His favorite receivers are both back.
DeVier Posey had 60 catches for 838
yards and eight touchdowns with Dane
Sanzenbacher adding 36 receptions for
570 yards (15.8 per catch) and six scores.
Saine (739 yards, 5.1 per carry) and
Herron (600 yards, 3.9 per) are both back.
So is fullback Zach Boren, linemen J.B.
Sbugarts; Bryant Browning, Mike
Brewster and Zach's big brother, Justin
Boren. That leaves just one spot on the
line, the one filled last year by left tackle
Jim Cordle, and the tight end spot vacated
by Jake Ballard, to be filled.
There are more losses on defense, but
the core players return. Cameron Heyward
will anchor the line from his end spot,
from which he had 6.5 sacks and 10 tackles for minus yardage in last year's 11-2
season. Mobile and active Ross Homan
and Brian Rolle are back for their senior
seasons at linebacker. Chimdi Cbekwa and
Devon Torrence once again hold down the
comer positions. .
Tressel will rely on promising but
unproven young players such as John
Simon, Solomon Thomas and Nathan
Williams up front, Etienne Sabino in the
linebacker spot held by the graduated
Austin Spitler, and Jermale Hines and
Orhian Johnson, among others, plugging
the holes at safety.
"As excited as I am about the older
group, the younaer guys are an unknown.,"
said Tressel, 94-21 overall and 59-13 m
the Big Ten during his Ohio State tenure.
"I think they're talented. I, think our
biggest concern is still figuring out who
we are as a whole. I think we know who
we are from a core, but whq are we as a
whole group?' 1
After a Thursday night opener against
Marshall- on Sept. 2, the Buckeyes host
those 'Canes in the first of a home-andhome series on Sept. 11. They open Big
Ten play against ~linois. and ~di~na
before a big test at W1sconsm and re1gnmg
Big Ten offensive player of the year John
Clay. Purdue, which stunned the Buckeyes
in West Lafayette, Ind., last year, comes
next, this time at Ohio Stadium.
Ohio State closes out the year with
home games against Penn State and
Michigan, with a major showdown at
Iowa in between.

Schedule
from Page 23
Cross Country
Eastern , Southern, Meigs at TVC
Meet (Athens), 4:30p.m.
Thursday, October 14
Volleyball
GaUia Academy at Marietta, 5:15
p.m.
Eastern at Southern, 6 p.m. ·
Meigs at Athens, 6 p.m.
Teays Valley Christian at Point
Pleasant; 6 p.m.
Elk Valley at Hannan, 6:30p.m.
. Soccer
Gallia Academy at Chillicothe, 6:30
p.m.
,
Winfield at Point Pleasant (B), 6 p.m.
Friday, October 15

• Page 24
Thursday, October 21

•

·Volleyball
Wahama, Chapmanville at Point
.
Pleasant, 6:30 p.m.
Wood County at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Yalley at Hannan, 6:30p.m.
Soccer
Wood County at OVCS , 5 p.m.
Friday, October 22
Football
Gallia Academy at Warren, 7:30p.m .
Meigs at Vinton County, 7:30p.m.
Eas(em at Federal Hocking, 7:30p .m.
South Gallia at Waterford , 7:30p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Rock Hill at River ValJey, 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Scott, 7:30p.m.
Volleyball
Grace Christian at Hannah, 6 p.m.

.

Monday, October 25

Volleyball
Football
Huntington St. Joe at Point Pleasant
Portsmouth at Gallia Acad~my, 7:30 6p.m.
·
·
p.m.
.
.
Cross Lanes at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Wellston at Meigs, 7:30p.m.
Eastern at Portsmouth East, 7:30p.m.
Soccer
South Gallia at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Cross Lanes at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grov~, 7:30p.m. ·
Thesday, October 26
Point Pleasant at Ravenswood, 7:30
p.m.
Volleyball
Hannan at Van, 7:30p.m.
Point Pleasant at Sissonville, 6 p.m.
Saturday, October 16

Friday, October 29

Volleyball
South Gallia at Miller, Noon

Football
Jackson at GalliaAcademy, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Alexander, 7:30p.m.
Cross Country
South Gallia at Symmes Valley, 7:30
SEOAL Meet at Gallia Academy, p.m.
TBA.
Wahama at Miller, 7:30p.m.
South Point at River Valley, 7:30p.m.
Monday, October 18
•Point Ple&lt;fsanr at Herbert Hoover,
·7:30p .m.
Volleyball
Poca at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Saturday, October 30
OVCS at Chesapeake, 5:30p.m.
Football
Thesday, October 19
-Southern at Eastern, 7:30p.m.
Hannan at Montcalm, 7:30p.m.
Volleyball .
P9int Pleasant at Wayne, 6 p .m.
Friday, November 5
Hannan at Sherman, 6:30p.m ..
Football
Wednesday, October 20
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30p.m.
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Volleyball
p.m.
Hannan at St. Joseph Central, 6 p.m.
Gilmer County at Hannan, 7:38p.m.

••

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

Interest
from Page 12
Warner, Amsbary and Bissell were
all-league selection in 2009 and will
be aiming for similar honors again
this fall.
Four freshmen - David Warner,
Jack Kuhn, Tyler Hensley and Josh
Parker - round out the Eagle roster,
but a few are likely to make some
contributions on this already deep
!'earn.
·
A trio of seniors return from a year
ago on the girls side, as Megan
Carnahan, Jessica Cleland and Ashley
Miller will all have varsity knowledge to pass along to the rest of the
girls squad. Carnahan and Cleland are
both in their third year with the program, while Miller will be entering

~·

•

Success .
from Page 18

with the program.
That kind of experience and leadership will be hard to replace, but
Caldwell will have seven letterwinners back to this season's 13-player
roster.
And with that kind of experience
, back to lead the, way, the venerable
mentor has a squad that he is very
comfortable with headed into the
season.
"We have had always had the philosophy that we will go as far as our
seniors will take us and we've also
had the policy that you are only as
good as your team, so we must continue· to push one another in practice.
"This group of girls really understand both of these things, and most
of them know what is expected and
what it will take to get there."
Returning from a year ago are
seniors Beverly Maxson and Britney
Morrison, as well as juniors Brenna
Holter, Jamie Swatzel, Brooke
Johnson, Baylee Collins and Kelsey
Myers.
Maxson, Morrison, Holter and
Swatzel are returning starters, while
Johnson, Collins and Meyers saw
valuable time last season as substi-

2010 Fall Sports Preview
her second varsity season.
Four freshmen - Samantha Cline,
Hannah Hawley, Cassidy Cleland and
Jenna Burdette - will all be making
their varsity debut on the links, and
all will likely play a major part in the
success of the team scores.
Even with high hopes entering the
2010 campaign, Wachter is still trying to keep a even keel on the progression of_ his program. What's
important, as he says, is. that each
player is better at the end of the year
than at the beginning.
"Our main goal this year is for each
player to play to the best of their abilities and improve week to week,"
Wacpter said. "If each one of them
does that, it will help the teams
achieve their full potential."
Eastern will play its home matches
at Pine Hills Golf Course in Pomeroy,
Ohio. ·
tutes.
Both Max·son and Holter - a pair
of all-league selections a year ago return to the outside hitting spot
along with Morrison and Meyers.
Johnson and Collins will return to
the back row, while Swatzel will
mover from outside to middle hitter
this season.
The six varsity newcomers are
juniors Autumn Trussell and Janae
Boyles, as well as sophomores Kiki
.Osbo'rne, Breanna Hayman, Allie
Hendrix and Shawna Murphy.
Murphy, Trussell and Boyles all
bring needed depth to the back row, .
while Osborne and Hendrix fill the
same need up front.
Hayman, who played the setter last
season on the JV squad, will be taking over the primary setting role this
season.
As previously mentioned, there
will be nothing easy about defending
last year's TVC Hocking title.
Caldwell, however, wants his
troops to focus less on the new
league and more on the work ethic
that has landed them so much success ()ver the last 13 seasons, all the
way through the postseason.
"We want to duplicate last year's
. success and try . and take it a step or
two further," Caldwell said. "We'll
have to keep working harder than
everyone else to make that happen."

Lady Eagles
from Page 21
placed 13th in the TVC last season.
The one newcomer to the team is
junior Shelby Smith.
"Expectations are always high
whether you have a full team or three

Runners
from Page20
important times. Some of these individuals are good enough to grab TVC

Eagles
frQmPage6
Browning, Mark Gibbs, Thunder
Clonch, Roger_ Bunce and Wyatt
Westfall.
On offense, Pratt, Cook and Pullins
will compete at the quarterback position, while Carnahan, Browning,
Ritchie, Aanestad, Alex Amos and
Kyle Connery will all be vying for
time at wideout. Tegnolia and Joey
Scowden will both be battling for
time at tight end.
Rayburn,- Barber, Hendrix, Stone,
Nottingham, Ryan Shook, Klint
Connery, Josh Shook and Ryan Amos
are battling for carries at runningback, while Gibbs, Davis, Morris,
Cline, Clonch, Bunce, Scyoc, Minear,

• Page 25
individual girls," Fogle said. "We
have put in more summer miles this
year, so we are looking forward to
seeing the results in the upcoming
season."
"The goal going into every year is
to be a faster, smarter runner .than the
year before." Fogle added "it's
always nice when you are still competing the first weekend in
November."
awards or even qualify for the regional meet, but they must be healthy to
do so. As a team, they should all look
to i!Tiprove their place in the TVC and
district meets. They are still young
and want to keep some of the other
teams looking over their shoulders
for a few more years."
Markworth,
Morrison,
Lonnie
Westfall and Wyatt Westfall will battle for spots on the offensive line.
Tegnolia, Davis, Morris, Cline,
Bunce, Soyoc, Minear, Markworth,
Morrison, Lonnie Westfall and Wyatt
Westfall are battling for spots on the
defensive
front,
while
Cook,
Hendrix', Scowden, Gibbs, Stone,
Clonch, Ryan Shook, Kyle Connery
and Ryan Amos battling for time at
linebacker.
Carnahan, Pratt, Rayburn Cook,
Pullins, Barber, Scowden, Hendrix,
Browning, Ritchie, Nottingham,
Aanestad, Alex Amos, Klint Connery,
Josh Shook, Ryan Amos and Kyle
Connery ·will be competing for time
in the secondary.
_ Eastern kicks the season off at 7:30
p.m. on Friday when it . travels to
. Albany for a non-conference matcfmp
with Alexander.

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 26

Wahama Football Schedule
AUGUST

27

OPEN

3
17
24

at Trimble
vs Eastern
vs Belpre
at Waterford

1
8
15
22
29

vs Southern
at Fed Hock
vs South Gallia
vs Hannan
at Miller

5

vs Buffalo

SEPTEMBER

10

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

NOVEMBER

7:30p.m.

2010 Wahama White Falcons Football Team

White Falcons competitng in TVC Hocking in 201 0
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

MASON, W.Va. -For the first time in
several years the Wahama White Falcon
football program will incorporate an
added ob_Jeetive to its list of 2010 goals
when the Bend Area team becomes a
member of the Tri-Valley Conference
Hocking Division.
Coach Ed Cromley's White Falcons
became the ninth member of the Ohio
based, all-spot;ts, conference earlier this
spring and will begin play on September
03,2010, when the local eleven vtsits two
time returning TVC champion Trimble.
Belpre and South Gallia will join Wahama
as newcomers to the established Hocking
Division conference which includes
Waterford, Miller, Trimble, Federal
Hocking, Eastern and Southern.
Only two of the 2010 TVC gridiron
opponents will be complete strangers to
Wahama as the White Falcons faced
Southern, Eastem, South Gallia and
Waterford in 2009 while Federal Hocking
and WHS have met 18 times during the

past 25 years with their last get-together
coming during the 2007 campaign. The
Bend Area team competed against
Trimble in the 2004 and 2005 seasons.
Belpre is a relative unknown to Wahama
football with only one encounter taking
place way back in 1979 while the White
Falcons and Miller have never met on the
gridiron.
Graduation seized some talented football players from last years 8-3 playoff
team with three year starting quarterback
William Zuspan and 1,000 yard rusher
Micaiah Branch exiting the high school
scene. Also gone will be tight end Colin
Pierce, linemen Kevin Klingensmith and
Jordan Decker and linebacker Matt
Dangerfield.
Cromley and his coaching staff of Joe
Johnson, Dave Ban:, Tom Cullen, Rick
Kearns, Donnie VanMeter and Aaron
Faulk welcomed seven seniors, 20
juniors, three ophomores and 10 freshmen as potential replacements to try and
fill the roles of a talented 2009 senior
class. Intense battles are also being held
for some nine returning regulars to retain

their starting responsibilities when the
2010 season opener gets underway.
Returning starters include seruor running back Ryan Lee (5-9 165) who scored
14 touchdowns and ran for 1034 yards
last year with a team high four pass mterceptions. Senior split-end Tyler Kitchen
(6-2 175) returns after grabbing 19 receptions for 215 yards. and a touchdown m
2009. Senior linebacker Elijah Honaker
(6-0 170) is back after-posting an impressive year as the second leading tackler for
the White Falcons behind Branch. Senior
tackle Ryan Anderson (5-9 250) is expected to anchor the Falcons front line along
with returning regulars in junior Jarnin
Branch (5-11 270),junior Jeremy Cundiff
(5-9 180) and junior Evan Smith (5-8
215).
Junior defensive end-fullback Anthony
Grimm (6-2 190) returns after running for
149 yards in 27 carries last year while
junior wide receiver Issac Lee (6-1 170)
caught seven passes for 169 yards and a
couple of toochdowns in addttion to running for 271 yards in 36 attempts during
the Bend Area teams playoff season in

2009.
While the loss of a three-year starter at
quarterback might be a huge question
mark for most teams Cromley and his
staff believes sophomore Trenton Gibbs
(6-0 160) is the answer. Gibbs gained
some valuable exposure to football on the
varsity level in 2009 as a back-up signal
caller to Zuspan. Gibbs is a dual threat
who completed four of 15 r.asses for 128
yards and a touchdown while running for
86 yards in only 15 carries a season ago.
The projected starting eleven for the
White Falcons include Gibbs at quarterback.with junior Tyler Roush (5-9 155) as
his backup. Ryan Lee and Issac Lee will
be the running backs with sophomore
Crandal Neal (5-9 160) backing the brother duo up. Anthony Grimm is perched at
the fullback position with sophomore
Wamsley (5-11 175) figuring to get
reps at fullback. Elijah Honaker will
the tight end slot with junior Matt Stewart
(6-0 165) also getting looks by the WHS
coaching staff. Tyler Kitchen will· be the
split-end along wtthjunior Joey Kimes (510 155).

.I

�r
J

2010 Wahama Football Roster
~

~

~

Player .

2
3
4
5
7
8
10

E
B
B
B
QB
QB

11

B
E
E
B
B
B
B
E
E
B
FB
FB
B
E
E
B
T
T
G
T
G
T
G

Hunter Oliver
Zac Warth
Kane Roush
Isaac Lee
Wyatt Zuspan
Tyler Roush
Elijah Honaker
Trenton Gibbs
Joey Kimes
D. J. Gibbs
Ryan Lee
J.R. Jewell
Colton Neal
Crandal Neal
Andres Moya
Jake Buzzard
Clay VanMeter
Zach Wamsley
Anthony Grimm
Jeremiah Hoffman
Matt Stewart ·
Tyler Kit~hen
Josh Haddox
Martel Oshel
Chris Hoffman
Jeremy Cundiff
Evan Smith
Chris Stone
Corey Duncan
Colton McKinney
Tyler Nutter
Tygert Phalin
Jonathan Hoffman
Erik Grueser
Mason McCormick
Wesley HarrisQ.n
Kyle McCormick
Lane Sparks
Ryan Anderson
J~unin Branch

12
14
15
20
21
23
26
27
28
34
35
36
37
50
51
52
55
56
59
60
61
62
63
64
66
67
68
71
72
77

E

c
G
c

G
G
G

0

T

T

c

m
145
140
140
!50
150
155
175
170
155
155
170
160
155
160
150"
130
140
175
200
175
165.
195
160
205
185
200
195
200
240.
150
195
200
.. 190
180
140
190
155
195
240
270

'Hi.
6-0
5-10
5-8
6-1
5-9
5-9
6-2.
6-0
5-10
5-10
5-8
6-0
5-11
5-9
5-10
5-7
5-10
5-ll
6-2
5-9
6-0
6-2
5-6
6-1
5-8
5-9
5-6
6-0
5-7
5-6
6-0

5-10
5-10
6-1
5-2
5-9
5-6
5-5
5-9

5-10

Gr.
11
11
9
ll
9
I1
12
10
11
11
12
11
9
10
11

11
11
10
ll
12

Jl
12
9
11
9
11
11
11

. The interior line should find Branch at
center with junior Jonathan Hoffman (510 190) as his understudy while Cundiff
and McKinney will be the guards with
freshman Wesley Harrison (5-9 190)
working his way onto the Falcons depth
chart at a guard position. Ryan Anderson
and Evan Smith will be the guards with
senior Tygert Phalin (5-10 200) figuring
in the interior line mix.
Defensively stanch, Smith, McKinney
and junior Chris Stone (6-0 200) are
working out at tackle with Honaker,
Stewart and McKinney comprising the
outside linebacker crew. The mside linebackers will come from Wamsley, Neal
and junior J.R. Jewell (6-0 160).
.
The comers are junior Zac Warth (5-10
140), I sac Lee and Kimes with the safety
being Ryan Lee along with ~unior Clay
VanMeter (5-10 140) as t e backup.
Kitchen will handle the punting duties
with freshman Josh Haddox (5-6 160)
getting a long look at kicking off.
Wahama head coach Ed Cromley will
be entering his 16th year at the helm of the
White Falcon football program. The highly successful grid mentor has compiled a
remarkable 110-57 record at the Bend
Area school. His WHS teams have
advanced to the Class A post-season playoffs a total of 10 times while two of his
teams advanced to the final four.

1

t

"The league is impartant to us in that it
reves us an added goal to capture the
ague title as well as our goal of making
the West Virginia Class A tlayoffs," said
Cromley. "The LKC con erence began
mandatory scheduling so it was becoming
very difficult for us to fmd teams to play
without travelin~ two and three hours
away so the TV was like a savior to us
and our fans by permitting us join their
organization. We are familiar with most of
our TVC opponents and I believe the
league will be competitive for us,"
Cromley said.
Wahama will open the season on the
road at Trimble which has claimed the
TVC title in each of the past two years.
The Tomcats are considered the cream of
the crop in the Hocking Division with five
first place TVC football titles and four
second place finishes in the past 10 years.
Several preseason polls have Trimble as
the top pick to capture its third consecutive Hocking Division football title with
Wahama a close second.
"People are talking about our opener
being for the· league championship,"
Cromley said. "If will be an important
game but only because it is our first game.
It is a long season and anything can happen. We have already established our
goals so we will go out and try and play
our best and see what happens."

11

11
9
12
11
9
9
9
12

9-

12
11

Head coach: Ed Cromley (16th season)

/

• Page 27

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday, August 26,2010

I

..........,

Friends.
Neighbors.
Volunteers.

It's Who

We Arel

Farmers

Bank~~

E-mail us your
sports news
and photos!
mdssports@ mydailysentinel.com
~

I

l"

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Pr.eview

• Page 28

010Waham
Volleyball
RosTER

N!!.elam
0
3
4

5
7

8
9
10
.}}

12

14
15
16
17

19
21
22
23
33
42
45
47

2010 Wahama Lady Falcons Volleyball Team

Wahama prepares for first season·
of varsity volleyballBY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. - With Wahama
entering the TVC Hocking, changes
are taking place.
One change to the athletic department is the addition of a varsity
volleyball team.
For the first time the Lady Falcons will have a varsity fall sport introduced to the school and
sport program of their own, com- community, sparking interest in the
peting against eight league oppo- younger girls in the school district
nent , including cross river rivals
and beginning programs with
Southern and Eastern.
.
Head coach Matt VanMeter is tak- younger groups to help the sport
ing the helm of the first year team, succeed.
The seniors on the team, Molly
with 22 players to begin the season.
Larck,
Alex Wood, Katie Davis,
The goal for the Lady Falcons
Ally
Gagnon,
Kali Harri , and
first volleyball season is to get the

Kastle Balser, will be looked to as
the leaders of the young team.
They will be looked to for not only
leadership on the team, but bestowing a winning attitude upon the rest
of the team. A never give up attitude and a great deal of determination will be omething the leaders
will need to show in the team's first
year.
Wahama will be playing a in difficult TVC Hocking against defending champion Ea tern, Waterford,
Southern, Federal Hocking, Miller,
Trimble, and fellow newcomers
South Gallia and B~lpre. The Lady
Falcons non-conference schedule
includes
Point Pleasant and
Buffalo.

£Qs..

GL

Setter
·Emily Casto
Molly Larck
Setter
Brittan) Stewart Hitter
Bunni Peters
Hitter
Deanna Sayre
Back
Kali Harris
Back
Back
Ally Gagnon
Sierra Carmichael Hitter
Setter
Paige Gardner
Hitter
Alex Wood
Amber Pauley
Hitter ·
Casey Gilbert
Back
MacKenzee Redman
Hitter
Hitter
Lacey Varian
Kastle Balser
Libera
Allicia White
Setter
Mackenzie Gabritsch
Hitter
Katlin Clarke
Hitter
Back
Hannah Port~r
Katie Davis
Hitter
Brittney Ashworth Back
Michaela Olson Back

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

Head Coach:
Matt VanMeter (1st year)
SCHEDULE

September

1
2
4
8
9

13
14
15
20
ill
22
27
28
30

at Eastern
at South Gallia
at Buffalo
at Waterford
vs Belpre
vs Eastern
at Trimble
at Southern
at Miller
at Federal Hocking
vs Waterford
vs Miller
vs South Gallia
at Belpre

.

6p.m.
6p.m.
10 a.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.in.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

October

vs Buffalo
vs Trimble
....
vs Southern
13 vs Federal Hocking
21 at Point, Chapmanville

4
6
ll

6p.m.
6p.m .
6p.m.
6 p.m.
6:30p.m

�Thursday,August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

.
\

• Page 29

Wahama Golf
Roster

j

Matt Arnold
Kevin Back
Austin Ohlinger
Dakota Sisk
Caroline Thompson
Samuel Gordon
Preston Wudnall
Stephen Underwood
Morgan Nottingham
Michael MacKnight

Sr.
Jr.
Jr. ·
So.
So.
So.
So. ,
So.
Fr.
Fr.

Head coach: Bob Blessing

2010 Wahama White Falcons Golf Team

·wahama golfers -look for
improvement .as 2010 begins
Bv

SARAH HAWLEY

$HAWLEY@MYDAILYTR1Bt,JNE.COM

MASON, W.Va. - The White
Falcons golf team will be joining the
TVC Hocking for the upcoming season competing against seven conference opponents.
The Wahama Golf team returns two
starters and a total of five lettermen
from the 2009 team. David Greene and
Brandon Johnson each three-year
starters graduated after least season,
leaving two spots to fill. Returning
. starters include Kevin Back and Matt
Arnold.
Kevin Back (junior) and Dakota
Sisk (sophomore) will be looked to as
the leaders on this season's team .
her main contributors wil-l be
muel Gordon, Caroline Thompson,
•
and any of the four freshmen.
Sisk was a regional tournament participant in 2009, finishing tied for the
final state tournament berth, before
losing in ~he playoff.

All four of the freshmen, Morgan
Nottingham, Michael Hendricks,
Benjamin Foreman, and Michael
MacKnight, have played at the junior
high level for three years. According
to head coach Bob Ble~sing, "all have
considerable talent and, after and
adj~stment period to varsity competition, could be major contributors to
this year's team."
In addition to the freshmen, new- comers ·include · junior Austin
Ohlinger, and sophomores Prestbn
Wudnall and Stephen Underwood.
Blessing admits, "we will probably
take our lumps the first part of the season, but will improve for the latter part
of the year." Part of the reason for
this will be the adjustment and pressure placed on the young team by
playing in conference for the first
time.
. The main goal for the upcoming season is to improve throug~~ut tl~e year
in order to be competitive m the
regional and state tournament.

�-Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 30

Temple, NIU favorites in Mid-American Conference ra
BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Expan ion changed the landscape of
college football this summer.
Yet the Mid-American Conference
holds fast, nestled between the bigmoney programs in the Big Ten, Big
East and Big 12.
Not even MAC commissioner Dr. Jon
A. Steinbrecher knows what's ahead.
"I can't begin to predict what the
future holds," he said. "We're a stable
conference. Would any movement create an opportunity for us? Time will
tell."
The pecking order on the football
field is also difficult to forecast.
Temple has emerged as a MAC
power in just three years in the conference under coach Al Golden. Long a
college football laughingstock, the
Owls are now overwhelming favorites
to win the Eastern Division.
"This i ollr most talented team, but
the best players don't always make the
best teams,'' Golden told reporters during MAC media say.
·Ohio, last year's East champions, has
become a consistent contender under
coach Frank Solich.
In the Western Division, Central
Michigan has been the team to beat in
recent years, but it's a transition year
fvr the Chippewas. CMU is replacing
head coach Butch Jones and record-setting quarterback Dan LeFevour.
EAST:

record (.508) since Bill Hess left in
1977 .... Bobcats passed for 23 TDs and
ran for nine.
KENT STATE -Key players: RB
Eugene Jarvis, QB Spencer Keith, WR
Tyshon Goode, S Brian Lainhart, LB
Cob rani Mixon. Returning starters: 8
offense, 8 defense.
Notes: Jarvis received sixth year
from NCAA after lacerating his kidney
(he was born with only one) last season. With 3,426 rushing yards, needs
564 to break Astron Whatley's school
record .... Golden Flashes loaded at RB
with Jacquise Terry and Ore Archer
behind Jarvis .... Keith, fully recovered
from shoulder separation, added 30
pounds .... (53 catches, 5 TDs in '09) best of bunch.
BOWLING GREEN - Key players: RB Willie Geter, WR Adrian
Hodges, DE Angelo Magnone, DB
Adrien Spencer. Returning starters: 4
offense, 4 defense.
Notes: Geter ran for 705 yards in '09.
... Falcons must replace QB Tyler
Sheehan, who took nearly every snap·
the last three seasons, and WR Freddie
Barnes who caught NCAA record 155
passes last year.... Hodges was second
TEMPLE - Key players: RB on team with 46 catches .... Five of first
Bernard Pierce, QB Chester Stewart, seven games on road.
MIAMI (OHIO) - Key· players:
DB Jaiquawn Jarrett, DE Adrian
Robinson, LB Elijah Joseph. Returning QB Zac Dysert, WR Armand Robinson,
LT Brandon Brooks. Returning starters:
starters: 8 offense, 9 defense.
Notes: The Owls are coming off first 8 offense, 9 defense.
Notes: Went 1-11 in first season
winning season since 1990, first bowl
game since 1979 .... Pierce being pro- under Michael Haywood, ex-Notre
offensive
coordinator.
moted·as serious Reisman Trophy can- Dame
didate. He ru hed for 1,361 yards and RedHawks went outside the "Cradle of
16 TDs last year.... Stewart and Owls Coaches" for first time in more than 50
years to hire Haywood .... Opens seawere lllth in the nation in passing.
OHIO - Key players: QB Boo son at Florida; also plays Colorado
Jackson, WR/KR LaVon Brazill, DB State, Missouri, Cincinnati .... Dysert
threw for 2,611 yards, including 426
Gerald Moore, LB Noah Keller.
Notes: Lost in MAC title game to yards against Temple ... Offensive line
CMU 20-10; liaven't won league title returns intact.
B_UFFALO - Key players: RBs
since 1968. ... Much depends on
rebound of Jackson, who played just Brandon Therrnilus and Ike Nduka, DB
two games because of injury .... Frank Davonte Shannon, LBs Justin Winters
Solich has school's. best coaching and Scott Pettigrew. Returning starters:

6 offense. 8 defense.
Notes: Jeff Quinn, who helped devise
spread offense for Cincinnati, takes
over as head coach following Turner
Gill's exit to Kansas .... QBs unsettled
following Zach Maynard 2s abrupt offseason departure. Jerry Davis, Alex
Dennison competing for job.
Shannon is three-time, first-team AllMAC selection.
AKRON Key players: WR
Jeremy LaFrance, QBs Patrick Nicely
and Matt Rodgers, LB Brian Wagner.
Returning starters: 6 offense, 7 defense.
Notes: Rob Ianello takes over as head
coach after serving as assistant at Notre
Dame .... With InfoCision Stadium as a
recruiting tool, Ianello landed some top
players in his first class. ... Nicely
appears to have edge over Rodgers ,
who tore knee ligament last year. ...
Ianello has installed a pro-style offense
- Zips averaged 19.2 points in 2009
- and switched defense to conventional 4-3.
WEST:
NORTHERN ILLINOIS - Key
players: TB Chad Spann, QBs
DeMarcus Grady and Chandler
Harnish, S Tracy Wilson, LB Pat
Schiller. Returning starters: 6 offense,
11 defense .
Notes: Defense tops in MAC, 30th in
nation last fall Wilson had team-best 93
tackles .... Grady topped QB depth
chart after spring, but battle expected
with a healthy Harnish (143-of-223 for
1,670 yards, 11 TDs) .... Spann rushed
for 1,038 yards, 19 TDs in '09 .... Sacks
leader and DE Jake Coffman, 26-yearold former Marjne, decided to return to
program in June after saying in January
that be was leaving.
CENTRAL MICHIGAN - Key
phyers: QB Ryan Radcliff, RB Zurlon
Tipton, LT Jeff Olsen, LB Nick Bellore.
Returning starters: 7 offense, 5 defense.
Notes: Radcliff replaces LeFevour,
who left with the FBS record of 150
TDs running and passing.
Chippewas also lost top RB and two
star WRs. .. . CMU lost a second
straight head coach to Cincinnati. New
man Dan Enos was toJ1 offensive assistant and recruiter at Michigan State, but
hasn't been a-head coach .... Enos plans
to get rid of Central's spread offense
and mix in pro-style attack .... Lorenzo

White Jr., whose father played with
Enos at MSU, is a candidate to start at
CB.
WESTERN MICHIGAN - Key
Players: QB Alex Carder, LT Anthony
Parker, S Jamail Berry, RB Aaron
Winchester. Returning starters: 7
offense, 6 defense.
Notes: Carder, more of a runner, will
have to take big step forward to replace
Tim Hiller, who left program with
every major passing record.
Winchester, who rushed for 165 yards
last season, takes over for 1,000-yard
rusher Brandon West. ... Defense is
being rebuilt, including four new assistants. At least three returning starters
could become backups.
TOLEDO - Key players: RB
Morgan Williams, WR Eric Page, C
Kevin Kowalski, LB Archie Donald.
Returning starters: 6 offense, 6 defense.
Notes: Austin Dantin has edge at
replacing four-year QB Aaron
t
after winning two of three starts
season .... Page was top freshman
in nation in catches (82) and recei
yards (1,159). ~-Williams has nearly
1 ,500 rushing yards in two seasons and
leads deep field of backs. ... Rockets'
nonconference schedule includes Boise
State, Arizona, Purdue.
BALL STATE - Key players: RB
MiQuale Lewis, WR Briggs Orsbon, S
Sean Baker, LB Davyd Jones.
Returning . starters: 10 offense, 6
defense. ~
Notes: Lewis rushed for schoolrecord 1,736 yards in '08, and NCAA
granted him an additional year because
of '07 injury that forced him to miss
last eight games .... Lewis and Orsbon
are two biggest links from Cardinals'
record-setting offense two years ago ....
Baker projected as NFL-caliber FS.
EASTERN MICHIGAN - Key
Players: LT Bridger Buche, QB Alex
Gillett, DE Devon Davis, S Latarrius
Thomas. Returning starters: 8 offense,
7 defense.
· Notes: Went 0-12 in '09 and had
fewer than 70 players on the roster during spring camp .... Coach Ron Engl•..
says Gillett, starting QB as a frosh
year, should probably be starting at .
... Defense allowed 38.2 points per
game .... Army might be EMU's best
chance at a win, in the opener. ...
Program has new $3 .9-million indoor
practice facility.

i

�&gt;

t

)"

·Page 31

2010 Fall Sports Preview

Thursday,August26,2010

~

Tri Valley Conference Football Schedules
TVC Ohio Division
MEIGS

8
15
22
29 .

vs Meigs
at Vinton Co
vs Alexander
vs Athens

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

AUGUST

27

vs Coal Grove

7:30p.m.

VINTON COUNTY

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

AUGUST

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
29

vs Athens
at Nels-York
vs Wellston
at Vinton Co
at Alexander

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
·7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

ALEXANDER

27

at Unioto

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

17
24

vs Piketon
at Jackson
vs Waverly
at Point Pleasant

1
8
15
22
29

vs Alexander
at Athens
vs Nels-York
vs Meigs
at Wellston

3
10

vs Eastern

17
24

at Huntington Ross 7:30p.m.
at Unioto
7:30p.m.
vs Frontier
7:30p.m.
vs River Valley '"
7:~0 p.m._

1
8
15
22
29

at Vinton Co
at Wellston
vs Athens
at Nels-York
vsMeigs

10

•27

•

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

ATHENS

8p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3
10
18
24

vs Minford
at Gallia Academy
at Oak Hill
at Fairland

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

vs Nels-York
vs Alexander
at Meigs
at Athens
vs Vinton Co

vs Gallia Academy

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

3
10

17
24

7:30p.m.
at Coal Grove
vs Warren
7:30p.m.
at Chillicothe
7:30p.m.
vs Parkersburg South7:30 p:m.
OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
29

at Meigs
vs Vinton Co
at Alexander
vs Wellston
at Nels-York

(:30 p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

NELSONVILLE-YORK
AUGUST

27

VS

Trimble

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3
17
24

vs Newark Catholic
at Berne Union
vs Bishop Ready
at St Clairsville

1

at Wellston

10

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

TVC Hocking Division
EASTERN

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30 p.~.

WAHAMA

27

at Alexander

3.
10
17
24

vs Miller
at Wahama
at Waterford
vs South Gallia
at Belpre
vs Trimble
at Ports. East
at Fed Hock
vs Southern

7:30p.m.
7:3·0 p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

SOUTH GALLIA
AUGUST

vs Ports. East

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

MILLER

.

AUGUST

27

vs Waterford

7:30p.m .

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

at Eastern
vs Crooksville
at South· Gallia
vs Trimble

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

2
at Fairfield CA
8 · at Southern
"15 vsFed Hock
22 · at Belpre
29 vs Wahama

7p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

TRIMBLE

3
10

17
24

at Trimble
vs Eastern
vs Belpre
at Waterford

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m. ·
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

1
8
15
22
29

vs Southern
at Fed Hock
vs South Gallia
vs ~Hannan

at Miller

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

NOVEMBER

.
27

vs South Gallia
vs Wahama
at Miller
vs Eastern
at Trimble

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

5

vs Buffalo

7:30p.m.

7:30p.m.

AUGUST

27

at Nels-York

3
10
17
24

vs Wahama
at South Gallia
vs Coal Grove
at Miller

at Warren

vs Waterford
at Eastern
vs Belpre
at Southern
vs Fed Hock

vs Shenandoafl
vs Southern
atWahama
vs Fed Hock

1
8·
15
22
29

vs Eastern
at South Gallia
at Trimble
vs Miller
at Waterford

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

WATERFORD

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
• 29

AUGUST

27

.7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

BELPRE

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
30

1
8
15
22
29

OPEN

SEPTEMBER.

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.

vs South Gallia
at Belpre
vs Fed Hock
vs Meigs

vs Wahama
1
8
vs Miller
15 at Waterford
.22 ·vs Trimble
30 at Eastern

AUGUST

. 27

17
14

vs Waterford
at Ports . East
at Southern
at Belpre

10

7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

7:30p.m.

AUGUST

AUGUST

27

at Symmes Valley

vs River Valley
SEPTEMBER

SOUTHERN

OCTOBER

1
8
15
22
29

AUGUST

27

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m . •
7:30p.m.

OCTOBER

AUGUST

vs Jackson

fEDERAL HOCKtNG

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p .m.
·7:30p.m.

AUGUST

WELLSTON

28

'22

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

3

at Fed Hock
vs Belpre
at Wahama
vs Waterford
at Symmes Valley

29

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.

1
8
15

7:30p.m .
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

AUGUST

27

at Southern
vs Trimble
vs Miller
at Eastern
OCTOBER

SEPTEMBER

vs Faii:land
3
10 at River Valley
17 at Minford
24 . at Southern

SEPTEMBER

3
10
17
24

AUGUST

27

at Miller

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

3
10
17
24

at Fed Hock
at Fort Frye
vs Eastern
vs Wahama

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

1
8
15
22
29

at Trimble
vs Green
vs Southern
at South Gallia
vs Belpre

OCTOBER

7:30p.m.

SEPTEMBER

7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30 p.JI,l.

OCTOBER

7:30p.m .
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.
7:30p.m.

::-

�Thursday, August 26, 2010

2010 Fall Sports Preview

• Page 32

•

.'

1910

I

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Present

re

i

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Big Hen sJ10n ing matu rit~. Page B2
Holmgren ern begins in Clc,eland, Page B6

Thursday, August 26,2010
•

PlzEP (;()LF ItOUNl)UP

Eagles defeat Federal Hocking golfers
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTS@MI'OAILVSENT NELCoM

BELPRE, Ohio- The
Eastern bo) ~ golf team
defeated
Federal
Hocking b) a score of
181 219 at Oxbow Golf
Course.
l'he Eagles •were lead
b) co-medalists Christian
Amsbary and Chns
Bissell with matchin~
rounds of 39.
Luke
Kimes shot a 48 and Kyle
Young had a 55 to round
out the scoring fpr the
Eagles. Also playing
were Derick Powell with
a 57 and Tim Elam with a

60.

Federal Hocking was
lead b) Tyler Clemens
with a 51.
Ea~tern
hosts
Waterford on 11lllrsday at
5p.m.
lADY CADETS OUTLAST
EASTERN, MEIGS
IN GOLF

BELPRE. Ohio
Host Fort Frye pwved to
be too much for both the
Eastern and Meig' girls:
golf teams to handle on
Tuesday afternoon. as the
Lady Cadets posted a 7stroke victory during a
non-conference tri-match

at Oxbow Country Club
in Washington County.
FFHS posted a winning
team score of 261, finishing seven shots better
than the runner-up Lady
Eagles with a 268. The
Lady Marauder~ - .,.,ho
defeated EHS in a dual
just 24 hours earlier finished third with a team
tally ot 274.
Maggie Huck led the
Lady Cadet~ and all
golfers with a low round
of 60. which earned her
medalist honors on the
day. Morgan Dyar was
next' with a 62, followed
by Brittany Lowe and
McCaul Schilling with

vMEROY - A achedu o of upcom ng
r. gh school vara ty sport ng events
1nvo1v1111 1 ms I
Meigs and Ga a
CO:.

OS

respective rounds of 67
and 72.
Megan Carnahan and
Sam Cline both led
Eastern with rounds of
61, followed by Jenna
Burdette with 71 and
Ashle) Miller \\ ith 75.
Cassidy Cleland and
Hanna Hawley abo had
respecth e rounds of 77
and !H.
Alyssa Cremeans and
1\:atalie Michael both had
matching 62s to lead
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
MHS.
followed
by
SHAWl.fV@MVDA LYTR 8UNE.COM
Jennifer Robinson with
70
and
Kassandra
SOUTH POINT, Ohio
Mullins with HO. Autumn
- The Gallia Academy
Williams also fired an H3 l Blue Devil.; soccer team
for the Lady Marauders.
(1-0) opener the 2010
season on
Tuesday
evening
with
a

GAHS opens
season with
15-1 victory

g a m e

'Ihl.!mlaY,.AllgiiJ1.26

a~ainst

Golf

s ~0

Gru a Acade~ RMlr Va ey at
Cl ffside 4 30 p M
Waterlord at Eastern 5 p""
Fodera 1-iock ng at Southern 5
pm
Me gs at V ton County 5 p m
South Ga a Pomt P easant at
Cl ffsldc 4 30 p rr1
M er at Wahama, 4 30 p M
Card nal C&lt;\nlcrenco at Scarlet
1 pr"
Soccer
OVCS at Gall a Academy 6 p "'
SlssonVIIe at Port Ploesont (G) 6
pm
S ssonVllle at Polrt Pleasant (6) 8
pm

w

Oaks,

FtlifaY.AUSlYI!.U
Football
Gall a Acadorry at Atrons 7 30

pm.
Coal Grovo at Mo1gs 7 30 p m
Eastern at Alex der 7 30 p 'Tl
Portsmouth East at South Ga a
730pm
Souttlern at Sy mes V. cry, 7 30
pm
&lt;l"'er V ley at Federal Hock ng
pm •
ar •w.
730pm
Volleyball
Adams Cou ty at OVCS 6 30 p m
Spturday, August 28
Volleyball
South G a at Waterford Noon
Cross Country
Gall a Acadt:"'rf Eastern Souther
atMarctta lOaM
Rrver Val oy Ed Sayre Memo al
Meet9am
Pomt
at HurrJcano
lnvttalional 10 45 a m
Soccer
Po1nt Pleasant (G) at Midland Trail

Pleasant

11 8.11'
We1r at Potnt Pleasant (B), 1 30
p.m

Reds blow
n lead,
then beat SF
in 12 innings
SAN

FRANCISCO

For the
c· .· ..
R d bl ,_

(AP)

1 n~H:~ll11aJ~• 1 tl~a~

di~~'t

mgm 1ostn~ le gamef
\tl n1(
ou~~ d atlte~
13
' ant a squan. edre
"
vantane
exac
same
and fell to Colorado, the
Reds wound up "th
win
bare)
wt a
Sa~d by ~nul Janish's
tying sin"Ie in the ninth
inning. co the
Reds
regrouped and rallied
past the San Francisco
Giants 12-11 Wednesday
on Joey Votta's tiebreaking single in the 12th.
Votta hit a pair of
e runs and .lonny
s hit his IOOth
shot that nave the
Reds their huge lead
going into the bottom of
the fifth. The Giant-:;
came back and Aubrey
Huff's sacrifice fly
capped a six-run burst in
the eighth that put them
ahead II 10.
A two base throwing
error by third baseman
I
Pease
see Re d s. 86

•

u t h

Point.
A f

Rodger Mallison/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT

Cincinnati Bengals Chad Ochocinco (85) and Terrell Owens (81) faced the Dallas Cowboys at the annual Hall
of Fame football game tn Canton, Ohio, Sunday, August 8. The Cowboys faced the Cincinnati Bengals.

Bengals think 2 diva receivers not too many
CINCINNATI (AP)
They call themselves
Batman and Robin. They
twt:et each other constantly. They com·pete for
ratings on their cable
reality shows.
So far, the pairing of
receivers Terrell Owens
and Chad Ochocinco has
been a real crowd pleaser,
drawing a lot of fans to
"' training camp. Can it
work when the season
starts and one starts getting the ball more than
the other'!
Are two divas too
much?
The Cincinnati Bengals
are about to find out. And

their season could depend like T.O. ·- y"all don't
even understand what's
upon the answer.
Owner ~ike Brown going to happen this
launched his own little year,'' Ochocinco said. "I
reality show 'when he think to myself: When's
signed Owens to a one- the last time you had two
year deal at the start of receivers on the same
camp, bringing another field of this caliber on the
big-play receiver - and same team at the same
another big ego - into a time'! This is going to be
locker room that's been a scary.''
As long as it's \Vorkcareer rehab center for
players who create prob- able, the defending AFC
lems with their misdeed North champion~ will be
in good shape to try to
or their mouths.
Chris Henry. Cedric defend their title.
1 hey went 6-0 in the
Benson. Larry Johnson.
division last season, a
Adam "Pacman'' Jones.
Now, cue up the 1'.0.- franchise first. despite
having one of the
And-Ocho Show.
"Just having somebody league ·s worst passing

games. An up-and-coming defense kept things
close, and coach Marvin
Lew1s' decision to go to a
run-based offense got the
Bengals to the playoffs
for only the second time
since 1990.
There, the shortcoming
was unmasked.
The New York Jets beat
them 37-0 in the final
game of the regular sea
son, then came to
Cincinnati and beat them
at their own game in the
playoffs. l'he main difference: New York could
throw the ball a little.

Please see Bengals, Bl

h

t e r
a t

G A H S
head coach
J 0 s h
Simmons
described
as a rouoh
start in the
first five
minute's,
the team
Wederrey~ scored
three goals
in the first
15 minutes of the game.
Gallia Academy held a 60 halftime lead over the
Pointers.
The
Blue
Devils
outscored South Point 91 in the second half of
play for the 15-1 victory.
Semors ' Lawrence
Wedemey~r and Jonathan
Caldwell each had a hat
trick in the game. Cody
Robinson and Zach
Stewart each added two
goals. \\ hile Case).
Denbow, Jared Lester.
Chris K) ger, Caleb
McKitrick, and Tyler
Stewart each added one
goal.
Denbow h..d four
assists to lead the Blue
Devils. McKitrick had
two assists, Kelle Craft,
Robinson, Zac.h Stewart.
and Tyler Stewart each
had one asstst. Freshman
Tyler Stewart's assist was
on the goal by older
brother Zach Stewart.
The lone South Point
score game on a shot by
Morgan Wells.
Gallia Academ) host
Ohio Valley Christian in
the horne opener on
Thursday, Aug. 26, at 6
p.m.

Chieftains named preseason SEOAL favorites in football
BY CRAIG DUNN
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LOGAN
While
not everyone is con\ inced Logan is going
to win an unprecedent·
e d sevent h -consecutive
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League football championship this
fall. the Chieftains are
still
the
odds-on
favorites.
The six-time defending champions are predieted to win it all in a
poll co1iducted among
newspaper, radio and
Internet personnel who
cover the SEOAL.
len of the 14 participating SEOAL scribes
p1ckcd Logan. with
many remarking the
I charnpi_onship .goes to
the Ch1efs until some
one else proves they
can be knocked off.
l he Purple &amp; White
take a 34-game SEOAL
winning streak
equalling the league
record set by Ironton

from 1973 to 1977 .
,·
,,
Into thctr Sept. 17
league
opener
at
Jackson.
However, most voters
also felt the league may
be more balanced this
•
season t han ·tt ' s bc~n 1n
se'veral years. 1 hree
voters pkked a VCJ)'
talented
Portsmouth
tea~n to det~rone the
Chtefs and still another
selected Jacks~n .to
come throug_h With Its
fir~t crown sm.ce 1998.
1 hose four fmt-place
votes are two fewer
than_
t~e
Chiefs
recetved 111 polls conducted the previous
three. seasons combincd.
Logan garnered 94 of
a possible 9H points to
earn the top spot, fol·
lowed by Portsmouth
(82) and Jackson (67).
followed by Warren
(56), Gnllia Academy
(41 ). Chillicothe (38)
and Manetta ( 14).
Votes were tabulated
on a 7-6-5-4-3-2-1

basis for first through
., .
.
se-venth places.
_AI~ fo~r voters \~ho
d1dn t ptck the Ch1efs
accorded them secondplace
votes.
Portsmouth was tabbed
f or sec~n d on e1g
· ht b a1lots, third on one and
fourth on t\\O more;
Jackson received one
s~cond-place ~ote and
etght for t~1rd, and
Warren was p1c~ed seco~d by one scnbe and
th1rd ~y t~o others. .
Ga!hpohs had a pa1r
of thmi place votes and
Chillicothe _received
one nod for th1rd place.
Every game is important. obviously, but
using the media poll as
a guide, you can circle
these games - Logan
at Portsmouth (Oct.
22), Logan at Jackson
(Sept. 17), Jackson at
Portsmouth (Oct. 1 ).
Logan at Warren (Oct.
8),
Warren
at
Portsmouth (Sept. 17)
and Warren at Jackson
(Sept. 24) - as key

contests this season.
.
..
. .; AI
1wa.st
t,l 11• '
SLO.. •
~ned1a pred1ctcd
ftn
1sh of Logan, Ironton,
C h i I I i c o t h e ,
Portsmouth, Gallipolis,
Marietta, Jackson and
warren. Lognn (5 -0)
and Ironton (5-1),
which left the ShOAL
after
the . 2~09 10
scl~ool rear, chd mdeed
fimsh f~rst and seco~d,
respecuvely,
whl]e
Jackson
(4-2) .~nd
Ports~1outh (4-2) t1ed
for th1rd, ~arren (2 3)
and Gallipolis (2-3)
~~nishcd deadlo.cked 1M
fifth. and Manetta (05) and Chillicothe (0-6)
tied for seventh.
The SEOAL plays a
complete single-roundrobin schedule this fall
for the first t_imc since
2005, the frnal year
before the conference
expanded
to
10
schools.
Next fall, waih the
pending departure of
Marietta for the East
Central Ohio League,

a

Results from the
SEOAI media poll,
I.!Ondul·ted among 8
punel of ne.,,spaper
r&lt;ldiO nnd lnten;et' per2
&lt;&gt;onnel who cO\er the
lea •ue are as follows,
\'vtth fir' t place \Otes ·111
(Mrenthe 15 . Votes are
tabulated on a 7 6-5 4
3 2-1. ba..;is. \\ !th e~ch
team" tot,1l pomts listed·
I. Logan ( 10)
94
2. Portsmouth (3) 82
3. Jackson (I)
67
4 Warren
56
5 Gania Acudemy4 1
6. ChillicoU1e
38
7. Marietta
14
Chillicothe.
Ga ll ia
Academy,
Jackson,
Logan, Portsmouth and
Warren will play a single round-robin s Iate
the final five weeks of
the regular season.

Craig Dunn i,\ the
editor of the
I ogan Oailv News in
L£?ga11, Ohio . •

sport~

•

�----~-------~-~-

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

11tursday, August 26, 2oi.o

Interview: Woods' ex· Cowher: Roethlisberger finally showing maturity
wife went 'through hell'
r\EW YORK (AP)
Piusburgh Steelers
coach Bill Cowher says it
was hard to Bet through to
Ben Roethh ... bergcr after
the quarterback had so
much suc~ess early in his
career.
Yet Cmvher believes the
sexual assault investigation that led to a six·game
suspension
for
Roethlisbergcr was a "slap
in the face" that has led to
some much-needed maturity.
In an interview with The
Associated Pre~s on
Tuesday,
Cowher
described
how
Roethlisbcrger used to
respond to advice about
his otT-field behavior.
"'But \\e're winninn
.c
games. \Ve're winnmg
championships.'" Cowher
recounted. ·•'What do )Oll
mean? Isn't that what
we're here to do'?'"
··Yeah," Cowher said,
"but there's more to it than
Form~r

NANCY ARMOUR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Elin Norde~ren said she
never had an mkling.
She said she never hit
her famous husband with a
golf club.
She said she's never felt
so sad and devastated, and
hopes she never will
again.
All this and more from
the woman the \\Orld has
waited to hear from since
that Thanksgiving njght in
November that shattered
her marria$e and the carefully cratted image of
Tiger Woods.
"I've been through
hell... Nordegren said in art
interview with People
magazine
released
Wednesday. two days after
she and Woods \\ere officially divorced. "It's hard
to think you have this life.
and then all of a sudden was it a lie? You're stru&amp;gling because it wasn t
real. But I survived. It was
hard, but it didn't kill me."
She and the couple's
children.
3-year-old
daughter Sam and 18month-old son Charlie.
have settled a mile from
her ex-husband in a rented, five-bedroom house in
a gated community in
Windennere, Fla. where Woods needs her
permission to get past the
guard. The two are sharing
custody of their children.
She credits therapy and
long runs with helpmg her
deal with the last nine
months, and she also kept
a journal of her thoughts
and emotions. "I haven't
gone back to read what I
wrote in December and
Januruy; I'm afraid to,"
she said.
,
She has not watched
"one minute of golf." But
she can lau8h at things
now,
callmg
those
"Saturday Ni~ht Live" and
"South Park' parodies of
her "pretty hysterical"
(though totally untrue).
"She's been amazincr,''
said Mia Pamevik, for
whom Nordeeren "as
working as a n,mny "hen
she met Woods more than
a decade ago. "She has
held her head high. To go
through a divorce is not
easy for anybod). To go
through what she's gone
through is not humane.''
She is not, however.
without scars. In the days
before the divorce was
finalized,
Nordegren 's
ion~, blonde hair began
falJmg out:
"She's held her head
hi&amp;h. She has not caved
in.' said Parnevik, wife of
pro golfer Jes~r Pamevik.
'She's not sa1d bad things
about him. and that's kind
of an easy game to get
into."
The
Swedish-born
Nordegren has always
guarded her privac) a~
fiercely as Woods. if not
more so. Even in happier
times she was r-Mely quoted. She kept to herself at
golf tournaments, staying
well beyond' the ropes and
once turning away when
she noticed photographers
taking her p1cture.
Years ago. a reporter
mentioned that he had
never seen her on the 18th
green after Woods won a
tournament.
"That's just not my personality," she said.
But the car crash outside
the couple's Florida home
shattered any hopes she
had of a normal life for her
and her children.
The world knew the
tawdry details of Woods'
philandering, and many
wondered 1f Nordegrcn
had a hand in the accident.
perhaps going after him in
a fit of raoe when she
caught him. e
"This was one of the
things I had the hardest
time with people 'thinking," Nordegren said.
"There was never any violence inside or outside our
home. The speculation
that I would have used a
golf club to hit him is just
truly ridiculous."
The interview with
People. conducted at her
home over four visits lasting a total of 19 hours, wi II
be her only one, she said.
Nordegren approached
People, and magazine
spokeswoman Claudia

•

DiRomualdo said no one
was paid for the story.
Nordeeren would not disclose the amount of the
divorce settlement but did
say ''money ~.:an 't buy happiness or put my family
back together."
Nordegren said she had
never suspected Woods of
cheating. She hadn't traveled as much the last tew
years, busy with the couple's children and her psychology classes at Rollins
College. .
"I felt stupid
things were re\ ealed hO\v could I not have
anything?"
known
,ordegren said. "The
word betra) al isn't strong
enough. I felt like my
whole world had fallen
apart. It seemed that my
"' orld &lt;L'i I thought it was
had never existed. I felt
embarrassed for having
been so deceived. I felt that."
betrayed b) many people
"It's the whole body of
around me."
work. It's you as a person,
Still. Nordegren said the what kind of legacy you
coupl~ tried for months to
want to leave," he added.
reconcile. Woods even ''1 really think he underspent two months in thera- stands that now.··
PY at a Mississippi clinic
Cowher
coached
111 hopes of saving the
Roethlisberger during the
marriage. The child of quarterback'~ first three
divorced parents herself. seasons - in Year 2. he
Nordegren said ~he ~ant­ became the youngest at the
ed her children to have a position to win a Super
•·core family," a happily Bo\\ I.
Roethlisbcq~er
married mother and father. picked up another nng
Nordegren leaned heav- under Mike Tomlin after
ily on her family during Cowher retired, only to
the tunnoil. Twm stster put his stellar career in
Josetin. a London-based jeopardy.
attorney, was part of her
legal team. and her mother. Barbro Holmberg. traveled to Florida to be with
her daughter.
But even that was not
from Page Bl
without drama. Holmberg.
who has very low blood
pressure. collapsed and
Owens watched that
had to be taken to the hos- 24-14 Jets playoff win on
pital during a Dt:cember 1 television and saw the
visit after the flu swel?t problem. He knew "hat
through
Nordegren s the Bengals needed to fix
house.
it.
lu the end, Norde~en
111ey needed him.
said she decided that a
''I could see there was
marriage "without trust something
missing,"
and lme'' wasn't good for Owens said. "With that
an) One.
being said. I put my elf
••t am now going to do here. With this or2anizamy very best to show them tion. they've been~on the
that alone and happ) is cusp of some great
better than being in a rela- things, and I think there
tionship where there is no needed to be some pieces
trust.'' she said.
to get them O\ t:r the
No" she is on her own. hump."
just her and the children.
The Bengal~ broke
Nordegren said she still their . 14-season playoff
believes he'll wind up as
the "best golfer that ever drought in 2005 with a
high-tech passing game
lived."
that
overcame an average
Just don't expect her to
They got back to
be watchin~. "Forgiveness defense.
the
playoffs
last season
takes time.· and she's stiJJ
with
the
formula
working on it. Nordegren
reversed.
said.
Cincinnati's young"She should get a lot of
credit for how she por- and-improving defense
tra)ed herseiC Parne,·ik finished fourth in yards
said. "The integrity and allowed and sixth in
respect. that's her - not points last season, and
expects to be even better.
him.''

Bengals

2006. lie also is being
sued h) a \\Oman who
says he ra~d her in 200R
at a l..ake 'Jahoc hotel-casino. Roethlisberger denies
the accusation and was not
charged. He has claimed
counter-damages in a lawsuit.
Some people mature
Rot:thlisberger was not later than others. Cowher
chart~ed after a Georgia
said, and he believes
college student accused Roethlisberger is a late
him of sexual assault. but bloomer.
commiSSIOner
Roger
"There\ no question as.
Goodell still suspended a player he's always been
him tor the fli'St six ~ames a great pla)er," Cowher
of the season. citm~ a said. "But there's a lot
··pattern of behav1or" more to this professionally
embarrassing to the NFL.
than that. It's how you
Roethlisberger has said carry your...elf off the Jield.
Cowher was one of the I think he: realizes that
people he turned to for now. I really think )ou're
ad\ 1ce as ht: tried to get his going to see a different
life back on track. and that · per.;on."
the t~o are now closer
Even
\\ithout
than ever before.
Roethlisberger to start the
•·Just like with your chil- season, Cowher thinks his
dren, sometimes when you former team will be just
say things to them: 'Yeah. tine because the coaches
right.· They have all the have time to pn:pare for
answers," Cowher said the suspension, which
''All of a sudden. the older could be rc:duccd to four
they get: ·Maybe he's right games.
"I know a lot of players
about that.'
"I think Ben has had a on that team. They need to
chance to reflect a lot. I hear that they can't do
think he's a good person. something." Cowher said.
While it's unfortunate. I "That always seems to be
think it may be an eye- the impetw, to say. 'OK,
opener to htm. kind of a we'll sho\\ you."'
slap in the face."
Since Cowher retired
Before the Georgia case. after the 2006 season. the
there were earlier inci- rest of the NFL has wondents. too. Roethlisberger dcred \\hether he'll show
was badly injured in a he can coach again. His
motorcycle accident while name seems to come up
riding without a helmet or whenever there is an opena pennit after his first in~, and Cowher 1sn 't
Super Bowl victory in gomg to quell that ta k.

'

''I certainly will look
into situations with open
ears." he said.
For now. he's an analyst
for CBS. which al!ows
him to stay close to the
game if he does choose to
coach.again -or lets him
fulfijJ his football crav·
witHout returning to
field. At the network
NFL media day Thesday,
he said his new colleagues
have become family, just
like it was with the
Steelers. and he'd only
leave for an ideal situation.
''I'm not sitting there
lobbying for any one
team." Co~ her said. "You
know what? I always
thought. you 'II know.
When the time comes,
you'll know. Right now
the season's starting. and
my thoughts aren't on
coaching. My thoughts are
on trying to give great
coverage."
The familiarity of football season offers comfort
for Cowher, whose his
wife. Kaye. died of skin
cancer a month ago.
Cowher said he never considered taking time off.
"As all our family's
doing right now, we're all
kind of moving on wit.
our lives. It's the way m
wife would have wanted
it,'' he said. 'Tm just very
thankful for everybod) in
America who reached out.
sent e-mails. texts, the
donations they've made to
a couple of charities. It's
been very heartfelt. very
sincere. I couldn't be more
grateful."

The Bengals have one of a season might pia) out. never previously accomthe best sets of comer- Not this year.
plished by a Bengals
backs ih Leon Hall and
"I think we're deeper, team. Jn its 42-year histoJohnathan Joseph. a more athletic," Zimmer ry. Cincinnati has never
young linebacking group said. " I feel really good won back-to-back diviled by Keith Rivers and about this group of guys. sion titles. The Bengals
Rey Maualuga, and a We have to go out and have made the playoffs in
defensive line that returns play up to our expecta- consecutive seasons only .
its top sacker.
tions, but I'm really once. in 198 1-82.
Antwan Odom was tied excited. This could be a
"This is an exciting
for the NFL lead with pretty special group.''
year and time," Palmer
eight sacks when he tore
The offensi\e line said. 'This organization
his right Achilles· tendon returns intact. so there\ has done a great job to
on Oct. 18. A sign of how reason to believe Cedric bring back and improve
much the Bengals missed Benson could have on what we did last ye.
him: Odom was still the another big season. He 'Now the ball's in o
team's sack leader when ran for I 00 yards a fran- court as far as the playe
the season ended. He has chise-record six times are concerned. I think
recovered ahead of last season. and set a we· re better than we were
schedule. though he team playoff record b) last year across the
missed time in training going for 169 yards m the board."
camp with a sore knee.
If the) can keep Palmer
loss to the Jets.
The Bengals kept the
Again. it comes back to health) and keep from
starting defense intact how v. ell they pass.
getting on each other's
and added depth in the
,Last year, the Bengals nerves - don't forget the
offseason. giving it a finished 26th in passing. two-diva question - the
chance to be even better. unable to get many deep Bengals might be able to
" I think everybody has completions
because break another lengthy
a sense of that," Odom Ochocinr;o was the only streak
of
futili ty.
said. "With what we did deep threat. That's why Cincinnati hasn't won a
last year. I think this year the Bengals dmfted pass- playoff game since 1990,
is just another stepping catching
tight
end going 0-2 since.
"It's like a little dream
stone to get to where we Jermaine Gresham and
want to be - that's the signed receivers Antonio team,'' Ochocinco said.
"With what we have on
best defense in the "'lFL ·• Bryant and Owens.
Coordinator
Mike
If the passing game paper, if we don't win a
Zimmer usually tempers picks up. they'll have a Super Bowl this year. it's
his enthusiasm about how chance to do something a shame."

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POLICIES Olio 'olll!Q1 Publllhii'G . , . _ h llglt to eel It, ntjtcl, 01-lany ad II any 1!11)1. ErTOII mUIII bt rtpCrted on IIIII llrat Cla"f 01 j!Wllclllon ll1d 1hl
Trlbu1f.Sert nei-Reg!:tcr 1'10 be rwpo~Wlllft lor no m«alllllllhl cost of 1hl 'I*C occupied by the trlOf Wid only IIIII llrlllrwniOn. Wt ahd nc1 bt bailie for
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BEFORE you refinance
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BEWARE of
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304·675-4027
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puppy on White Ad
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Aug 16th after storm
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fAS~LBS..
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1-866-541·0834
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you do business w1th
1-888-692·5739
people you know and
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through the ma1l untrl
you have mvestrga11ng SUMMER SPECIAL
the offenng.
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Get your gun permit 2. Gutters cleaned
. call now for conceal repa1red &amp; installed
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Real Estate
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Commercial

2 miles south of For Sale By Owner
Tuppers Pta1ns, Aug.
6 apts$147.000
27th 9-5, a little for
rent $2030 mo. 740e'veryone, Grate res.
446-0390
: ;.-: Recr~ational
1000
·.Vehicles Farm for sale in
putnam Co., WV 105
acres
w/public
u111ities. Minerals sold
ATVs
withe
land.
Exc.
02
Honda
450 woodlands
for
Forman.
07 360 hunting.
Several
Kawasaki
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snow plow, tra ler to on
property,
but
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740·386·8760
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Campers I RVs &amp;
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Trailers
654-6312
2005 Jayco Eagle
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======

sleeps six Excellent
condition
Asking
$19.900.
See
photos
at
www.carmichaeltmile
740446
m&amp;Qill
"
2412

Home for sale 3 Br,
2ba. formal dimng,
new
siding,
w/appliances close to
RV school. Details at
www.orvb.comf740·
366-0569

Motorcycles

Appliances

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7 miles from Vinton
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2BA,
garden
tub.,dimng room, lg
living
rrn., u1illty
room. all appliances
including
washer/dryer,
24
pool,
above
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small
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cars,suv. 90 day wa
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740·446-7278
- -u-al-,ty- -C
- ars
-&amp; sale For more info
0
vis1t www.orvb.com
Trucks wtwarranty all f7 40-256·6011
priced to sell, 15 yrs
1n bLsiness &lt;1ook
land (Acreoge)
Motors, 328 Jackson
Ptke,
GallipoliS, OH 740· 5 Acres for sale.
446-0103.
Elec.,
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&amp;
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2003 Neon Ssp, air, from Pt Pleassant in
$3,200 OBO 256· th country. 304-6741539 and 2009 PT 4658
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Real Estate
3500
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o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2007

HD Hentage
Washer &amp; Dryer for Softall 4,695 miles·
sale $100.00 740- Showroom
cond.
645-8599
$16,000 negotiable
740-446-0121
Equipment I
Supplies
Automotive
2000
Must
gol
Salon
Equipment for sale
Autos
reasonable 740·645·
8599

Black
Beauty
sandblast sand S6
per 100-tb bag, ten
or more $5 each.
_ _
304 773 5332
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In atock. Call
Ron Evana 1·800537·9528
8-sets of white tail
deer antlers on skull
plates, some score in
the 150's &amp; 160's.
These are unique &amp;
heavy, should see
$800. Fellows doni
drag your feet on
these, call quick.
740-533-3870

2001 Buick Lesabre,
55.000
miles,
1
Apartments/
owner, bmpr to bmpr
Town houses
100°o warranty 304· --=~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
675·6555 or 740· 2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hosprtal on SR
•
208 0028
Vent free natural gas ------~- 160 CIA (740) 441·
log
heater
mac 0 1ler's Towing. Now 0194
39.000 BTU. Also buytng junk cars ·
cO_
N_
V,..
EN
_l...,
EN""'
TL~Y~­
Approx 1,800 Belden w/motors or w/out. LOCATED
&amp;
Bnck. brown
mix 740·388-0011
or AFFORDABLE!
nassau full range 740-441 ·7870
No Townhouse
740·446·7203
or Sunday calls.
apartments,
and/or
352-201·2580
~~~~~~= small tx&gt;uses lor rent.
Parts &amp;Acceasories Call 740-441-1111 lor
PAINT
PLUS
application
&amp;
HARDWARE
Pre- JVC 12 Disk Changer 1nlormatron
Season Sdle on all Car Stereo wrth Cnss
non-vented
gas &amp; AMtFM Radio $70.00 Free Rent Special
II!
heates (save 20°o off Call740-339-0303
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
reg pnce) 3 plaque
Trudts
up, CCntral Arr, WfO
un-vented gas heater
hookup, rcnant pays
reg. price $154.99 1996 Ford Bronco electric. Call between
sale price $123.9g XLT 108.000 m11es the hours of 8A·8P
Blue
&amp;
Special pnces on Carohra
EHO
Pittsburgh Prunt &amp; Stiver EXC Cond
Ellm View Apts.
tlems 740-446-2728
(304)882-3017
other
thoughout store 304·
2002 Ford F150 XLT Jordan Landing Apts·
675-4084
V8 AT 2WD 45000 Now leastng 1,2, 3
-::;;;;;;;;Y;;;a;;;rd=Sa;;l;;e;;;;;= m res 1 9wner bmpr and 4 bedroom units
to
bmpr
100°o No pets Ask for rent
Garage sale· Ewing warranty.
304·675· spectats.
304-61 0·
basement, 300 4th 6555 or 740·208· 0776 or 304-674·
St., Pomeroy
0023
0028

==;;;;;;;;;;;===

==:;:;;==.,;;;;;;;;;;;

••
•'

�-----~-~----------~-~--

-·---~--

Apartments/

Apartments/

Townhou~es

Townhou~es

apartment

tor

the

elderly disabled
675-6679

2nd floor 2 BR
apartment,
overlooking Gall1polis
City
Park,
L.R ,
k1tchen/dimng area, 1
112
BA,
washer/dryer $600.
mon + dep 7 40-4464425 or 740-4462325

•

Rentals

Tara Townhouse Apt
2BR 1 5 SA, back
Houses For Rent
pat1o
pool
playground No pets 2 BR apt, Rodney
$450 rent 740-645- area also 2 Br house
8599
on Kemon NO pets,
dep &amp; ref req call
Valley
V•ew 740-446-1271
or
Apartments
800 740-709-1657
State Route 325 - - - - - - Th urman, OH 45685 House for rent 2 BR 2
740-245-9170.
1·2 BA energy effictent
Bedroom apartments home w/ uttlity room
With
appliances &amp; 20'x20' garage.
furntshed, on s1te Green twp. $600
laundry factlity. Call mon + dep 740-446for details or ptck up 0666
application at rental : : : : : : : : : : : : : :
office. Possibility of 2 BR 1BA 88 Gartield
rental
asststance. $425 mon $400 dep
Equal
Housmg + utilities Hud ok
Opportunity · TOO 740 645 1646
419-526-0466. Th1s BR,
BA,
full
3
1
institut1on ts an Equal
Opportunity porv1der basement, stove &amp;
and Employer. .,
refng fum., gas heat,
cnetral A/C, garage.
No Smoking, No
pets. S600 mon. +
dep. N ce locat1on.
Easy access to Po1nt
and Gallipolis Call
446-3667
3 br 1 bath house &amp;
mobtle home for rent
In Racme, 740-949ARSTMONTH
2237
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS.
1BR $375/month in
$385&amp;
Syracuse
Depos1t,
UP, Sec. Dep $300 HUD approved no
&amp; up,
pets. 304-675-5332
A/C, WID hook-up, weekends/740-591ten0265
ant pays electric.
Manufactured ·
EHO
4000
Housing
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
Rentals
Middleport
Beech
St., 2 br furmshed
apt., ut1l. pd, deptref,
No pets, 740-9920165

Add1son Area 2Br
motble
home
$550/mo + S550/dep
367.0654 or 645'3592

Mtddleport N 4th
Ave , 2 room efhency
apt,
No
pets
dep/ref,
740-9920165

14X70 mobile home
3BR $450 + utilities
Aeflsecunty
depoSJt,No
Pets
614-364-2042
.....
- - for
3Br- 2 ........
BA mobtle

14x70 trailer, 3 br. 2
bath, m Syract.lse,
$475 a mo. plus
dep /ut1l~ No pets.
740-992-7680, 740416-n03

Mobile home for rent.
304-675-3423 before
8.30 pm

BRAND

NEW PAIS IS currently
,
accepting
foreclosure 3br 2ba applications for the
ready to move 1nto
$39.900 00 Call 740- loll~wtny
postlions Direct
_
446 3093
Care A part-lime
position for Ripley
Handy Man Special. WV
providing
Used 3 bedroom, 2 community
skill
bath. $2995 tncludes training
with
an
delivery. Call Nikki individual
wtth
740-385-4367
MR/00. Mon, Thurs.
Fri 9am-noon, Tues
Nice used 3 bedroom &amp; Wed 7am-1pm;
home.
$ 4,995 Direct Care Partlime position for
Including
delivery.
Call Inez 740 _385 _ Point Pleasant WV
providtng
243 4
• - ...,......~~~ restdenttaltcommunlt
y sk1ll tratmng with an
mdividual
with
MRIOD.
Mon-Fn,
vanous day and
Drivers &amp; Delivery evenmg shifts, Direct
.
care
Part-t1me
Tractor tra1ler 0 nver
needed. Must have positiOns for Mason
prOViding
Hazmat.
Send WV
resume to Human restdentiaflcommunit
Resources Po Box y ,sktll training wtlh
w1th
705 Pomeroy Oh 1ndividuals
MRIOD
Mon-Fn,
45769.
various day
and
evening shtfts
Wanted
Delivery
For all poSllions:
Dnver.- Must have
High school dtploma
valid drivers license, or GED required.
good driving record &amp; Criminal background
pass a background check required. Must
check. Job requires have
reliable
heavy
lifting
&amp; transportation
and
assemblng medical valid auto insurance.
equipment Must be Haur1y rate starting
dependable &amp; trust at $8-$9.50 baaed
worthy. Knowledge of on
expertence.
the HMe business a Apply
online
at
plus. Stop In at 1616 http://www.palswv.co
Eastern Ave
for m or call 304-373application.
1011.

rent $500 mon &amp;
2BR 1BA furnished dep
Newly
Apt m New Haven. remodled 740-367$400 depostt, $450 7762 or 740-645• rent. 304-882-2523
0460
Taking applications
for 2BR mobile. Very
good condition. No
pets. $395 mon &amp;
dep 740-446-3617

....--~--­
Dominos Pizza now
hiring safe drivers.
Apply in person all
locations

c

Education

!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Are you mterested in
Sales
a rewardtng positton?

Ltquid asphalt drivers
needed in
Point
Pleasant area. Must
be 21 yrs old or
older. Must have
Class fl. COL W1th
Hazmat
and
endorsement
TWIC card. Good
MVR. Local trips.
800-598-6122.

FIND A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Driver• &amp; Delivery

Dnvers needed. COL
Drivers Wlllmg to
dnve for local readymix
company
Is
Expenence
preferred but not
necessary
Driver
Spr ng 'Ia ley Green
must be wllhng to do
Apartments 1 BA at 2 br mcb1le home tn pre-matntenance on
$395+~ BR at $470 Rac1ne $325 a mo. trucks
and
$325 dep., 1 yr
Month 446-1599.
equipment,
lease, No pets, No yard/plant and other
Commercial
calls after 9pm, 740- miscellaneous
992-5097
chores. Expenence
Commercial buildmg
operating equipment
tor rent 740-446- - - - - - - 6565
2BR mobile $400 and extra skills such
mon. $500 dep. 304- as welding a plus.
Downtown
office, .
_
Starttng pay based
849 2932
pnvate parking lot.
on experience and
$400 mon We pay - - - - - - - driving
record.Call
water &amp; trash. Ava 3 BR Mobtle 4 rent
_ _
304 773 5519
Sept.
1st
740- Pt. Pleasant area
4461761
304-675-3818

Twm R1vers Tower s Clean
newly
aocepHng appUcntion redecorated
1BR
tor wa ling list tor HUD
deposit
subsidiZed
1 BR
304-675-

..

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

!!!!!!!!!=====~

Thursday, August 26, 201 0

Help WantedGeneral
Part
time
help
needed for local dry
cleaner. Must have
valid dnvers license
and be dependable
740-446-9585
~......~---­
The Galha, Jackson,
Metgs &amp; V1nton Jotnt
Waste
Solid
Management D1strict ~ializiTXJ in Inrurarre Jets ilx::ltxl.in;,
IS
acceptmg
stonn, wW &amp; water damage.
applications for the
Roan h:Xiitions, Rem:xieling, Metal &amp;
full ttme, unclassifted
Shingle Roofs, New Hares, Siding,
posttion of District
Decks, Bathroan Rem:xleling.
Director
This
poSitiOn
is •
Licensed &amp; InsurOO
responsible for all
phases of the day to
day operations of the
WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960
solid waste district,
1nclud1ng
the
740-992-0730
recycling
center
Interested applicants
;.t-740-992-3061
must possess the
u 20+ )TS exp
abthty
to
communicate, . both
&amp;
wntten and vert&gt;ally,
wtth many vanables.
define and solve
problems, collect and
Tanldes~
analyze
data,
establish
budgets,
pohcy deve:opment
and
personnel
management/labor
relations. A salary Flat 45.00 hrl) Rate+ 10.00 'I np Chrg.
range starting at ._____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-----!
$55,000 and a full
range of benefits are
offered
Applicants
should
have
a
Bachelor's Degree or
equivalent
work
expenence m the
* Prompt and Quality Work
f1eld
Job
Reasonable Rates
descnplions
are
Insured
Experienced
available
and
apphcat1ons should
References A,·ailable!
be submitted to Tom
Call Gary Stanley
Anderson, Chatrman
121 Fairfane Drive,
Ceu7
OH
Middleport,
Please leave message
45760 Deadline to
submit an application
and
resume
is
RAVENSWOOD
September 15, 2010.
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Rick Price • 17 yrs. Experience

HRS Repa

Services Mo t Heating
Cooling S) stem (including
Heatpump ) and Controls
Hot Water Heater
Change-outs{ Replacements.
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
*

*

*

40-591-8044

Maintenance /
Domestic
Part time maintance
personal
wanted.
or
304-610-0776
_ _
304 674 0023
Medical

If ,..e can't help yop »e will
find you the help you need
Auto Accidents • \-\ork
Injuri~ • .:-.ieck &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder, Arm, Hip &amp; Leg
Pain • Headaches • .Ma~a&amp;e
Therapy • Acupuncture
New Extended hours: M·F:
Dr. Kelly K.
Sat. &amp; et·enings emagmde.1
Jones, D.C.
l' .

~~~===~==

OPHTHALMIC
MEDICAL
ASSISTANT
will
train,
optical
background a plus
888.763.2393/soea2
009@gmail.com

•

;..

. ....

Formerly Robies Construction

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED
33 Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458
O"ncr: Sam Smith. Mason, WV

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• :o;c,~ Garages • Electric-.U &amp;
Plumbing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vin) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and

Porch Decks

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-621.5 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

ROBfRT BISSfLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

LEWIS
CONCRETE CO~STRUCTIO~
Concrete Removal and Replacement
AU Types Of Concrete Work

30 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

304-273-5321
·

Insured

Free Estimates

316 Washington St. - Ravenswood

eat£ Marcum Constmclion

' Commercial &amp; Residential
fuG • Room addition~ • Roormg •

.--G-e-tA_J_u_m_p__,

• Gcner.ll Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hol"&gt;e
Ram' • Yin) I &amp; \\ood Fencing

on
SAVINGS

foundations
M lKE W. MARt::UM,

Employment
Agenciea

~iN

ER

47239 Riebel~-. I.axJ Ibl:tan, (E
740-985-4141
JI0-416-1834
Full~ insurt'd
Free l''limates - 2!' ~ ~·t'ar. expl'rience

===-====
Assemblers needed
for A.M. shift at local
Manufacturing
Company. Must have
HS
Oiploma/GED,
clean
background
and
pass
drug
screen.
$9.25/pay.
Qualified candidates
call Kelly Services 1·
800-295-9470.

o\ ol uffiliafl-d • ilh \likr \larrum

Roofin~

,\ RI'IIIOdrlingo

IFIEDS

MPLOYMENT

240

Stay Informed...

\!r:l)c &lt;!f&gt;aUipolig illailp ~ribune
'O:~e ~oint ~leasant ~egi91er

The Daily Sentinel

With so many
choices, . it's easy to ·
get carried avvay
vvith our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!
f

�-··--·---- - - - -

-·--~

Thursda~August26,2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD

Tom Batiuk
APPARWfl-4, 'I'M II-IE.
PER5a.l OtJ
fH£ Pl..AAlEf.

L.A~f ~AN£

I
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS .:JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Hazards
1 Pond life 44 Eric Clap6 Unton hit
bending
11 Magician's DOWN
cry
1 Gardner
12 Piano
of "Mopiece
gambo"
13 The
2 High hit
Yokum
3 Speakboy
easies
14 Tart fruit
4 Out of the 17 Molten
rentals
15 Stuff
wind
rock
33 Skating
thrown
5 Made of
18 Stellar
spot
overboard
clay
hunter
34 'Who's the
17 Cow call
6 Kick
20 Bar order
Boss?"
19 Spell
back
21 .Nepall,
role
20 Ravtne
7 Article
e.g.
35 Way off
23 Out of
8 Candy
22 Accords
36 Yale
bed
counter
24 Plopped
student
25 Maggie
buy
down
37-Aiamos
and Bart's 9 Court25 Baseball's 39 Snaky
sister
room oath
Gehrig
swimmer
26 Bar order 10 Fox hole 27 Plant part 40 Nutrition28 Reformer 16 Remits
31 Prom
label abbr.
Lucretta
NI!W CROSSWORD BOOK! :;en&lt;! S4 75 (checklm.O.) to
29 Pamter
lhomas
Book 'l. PO flo~ 536475 Orlando, R 3?853-6475
Georges
30 Solution:
II
Abbr.
31 Pewter
component
32 Officeholders
33 Pioneering rap
trio
35 Oscar's
roommate
38 Weatherman AI
41 Unescorted
42 "Baby,Your
Loving"

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

@HARKS HAVE SEEN ON THE
PL M.&amp;ET ANO PART OF OUR
ECOSYSTEM FOR

'f00

MlLLlON ~EARS!

"'I FEEL. I'VE BEEN NAGGED IN ABSENTIA."

0
0

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim -Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

I--

2-So-sv; 1-Difficu/t

.

6

~

DENNIS THE MENACE

f-IlM SOMf;; COOKIE'S AS SOON A$ HE" WP.L.KS IN,

MARTJ.lA. ~E' CAN"T' ~OW THilif" I-lORN Wrtll HI5

.£'

I~

J

5
9

9VII

J

9

I

1

Dtfltculty J.e,cl

I~

6

7 5

Hank Ketchum

e.
"'

3 4
5

"Don't bother mel It's the last day of
vacation and I have 101 postcards
to wrltel"

~
~

4

3

9

MOUT\-1 FUL.L.. ''

The Stars Shaw the Kind oj Dcry You'll.
I Im~: 5-Dynamic; 4-flc~'&gt;itirc; 3·Arwage;

by Dave Gr~ct~

8 7
8 4

** *

2 7
4 7

IIAPPY BITUIIOAY for lhursday,
Aug. 26, 2010:
Ihis year, you move m ,, new direction beca~cOfinput and ~Lltion..,hip::.
with those" ho arc close. You might
find or fL'el th.1t you arc alwavs on
your own. You always have been; you
just might not have known it. Lcam to
be dependent on only yourself. If you
are single, many exciting pt'Ople could
mosey through your life. Love~
intense and unprcdictable. Don't try to
anchor someone in. Let him or her be
free if you value the bond. If you are
attached, your significant other could
bcrome \"Cry unprcdictablc.l)on't take
his or her action'&gt; pcrsorullly. "Ihc relationship could cncour.,gc you to transform as well. ARtf..&lt;; reads you cold.

!

li..

a .~&gt;

. . . . P':&gt; I .&lt;ttn~tiJ!&lt;I

6 £ G B
~ 6 9 9
£ v ~ L
v 9
9
v 9 £
B 6
9
£ ~
L G
6 v

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
***Your in'itincts guide you. The
unexpected wcavL-s through your
daily life. You gain new ino.;ights and
knowledge from events and JX!ople. A
dL&gt;tached yet ~rvant attitude pays
off. Tonight: Chill, then decide. ·
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
**** l)on"t 10M• your focus when
.someone surprises V\lU. You could be
shaking your head for quite a while
about what is going on. lnvc-.tigate
and understand what is motivating
others. Flex. 1onight: Ym1 nt-ed some
dov.mtime.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20)
**** Others follow your lead.
You might be far mnn• flexible than
you think. Many pt:.'Oplc are .unazed at
how you adju~t to thC vici situdcs of
life. Take thC lead once more in ,.,turm\·
waters. Tonight Be ~ady to join
'
friends. lf the invitation doe:m't rome,
you make the first move.
CANCER Ounc 21-Julv 22)
****Reach out for ~)mt•onc at a
dist.mce. You might not believe some
of the information and nl•ws heading
in your direction. The unexpected
plays a role. Listen, but .1lso detach in
order to get to the bottom line.
'Jonight: Could be working late.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
****A partner move:. forw&lt;~rd
with idea". \I\'hat someone suggc:;~
rould be shocking, if nothing else.
Understand \\hat is h.tppcning \\ ith
this person, and look for solutions.
Don't trust anyone with your finc1ncial
decisions. lonight: f"ollow the music.

vmGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** You \\ill want to defer to
others. Understand what is going on
behind the~~--..., with a partner: You
might \\"ilnt to detach from someone
\•;ho alway:. i.., "haking up the status
quo. You might not want to tolerate
this uproaf. lonight Just don't be
alone.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** You \viii be left holding down
the fort if no one else can or will An
element of disntptiqn and change
floats through your da}: forcing your
hand. Be willing to incorporate new
technology. 1bnight: Stretch and take a
walk. then decide what appeals to
you.
SCORPIO (Ocl23-Nov. 21)
*****You have the adaptability
and creativity to move past an immediate issue. You discover that others
could be floored, whereas your mind
Ls delighted by challenges. A child or
lovt'Ci one could act up. Tonight Join
in on some fun. Still, make it an early
night.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** Ii...tcn to new:. that romes
forward. You might need to make an
adJUStment You could make a major
change in your domestic or pp-sonal
life, should yt&gt;u dt.'Cide to. You might
opt to work from home. Tonight
I lang out close to home.
CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22-Jan.l9)
**** !he unexpc&lt;:ted occurs
while just Qoing through your daily
life. You m1ght be distracted, but not
for long. A situation invigorates you.
Clear out c.db and catch up on news,
even 1f it is Jared with gossip! Tonight:
liang out.
AQUARIUS Oan. ~Feb. 18)
*****You could be viewing a
ri'ik diffcn:ntly from many who surround you. C".ct to the bottom of a
problem, knowing a situation is wide
open. A partner might be uncomfortable with your forus. lbnight Head
out to a loc.1l spot.
PISCES (h'b. 19·March 20)
***** You might be surprised
by everything th.1t heads in your
direction. Others find you a bit off or
flak)\ Listen to your inner voice, as
yotran· going to be pu....hed in a J1C\\."
din.'Ction.1onight: Do your thing, and
buy yourself a much·nt.'I..'Cicd treat

Jncqurlinr Bzxur ~~ on the Internet
at http://www.jncquelinebigar.amz.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
_..

__

•

li .

�....

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

Page B6 • TI1e D"ily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

~--~~~--~

Thursday, August

26, 2010

Holmgren era begins in Cleveland Browns LB Fujita wants to
save Louisiana wetlands

CLEVELAND (AP)
- Someone has been
following Eric Mangm1
around all summer.
A':j the second-year
Cleveland coach walks
from practice field to
practice field at tht•
team's training complex,
there's a guy driving a
golf cart - his right foot
immobilized in a walkin~
boot - trailing .Mangin•
like some demented sideline stalker.
Mike Holmgren keeps
his distance, but is never
far a\\ay.
He nnw watches over
the beleaguered Browns.
Hired as team president
in December by owner
Randy Lemer to revive a
once-pn)ud
franchise
fallep on hard time!.,
Holmgren's first act as
Cleveland's big bo s was
to retain Mangini. whose
fate seemed sealed when
the Browns started 1-1 I
last season.
But a four-game winmng streak to close the
year saved Mangini. who
insists he doesn't fed
threatened
by
Holmgren's reputation.
"The only time you get
intimidated is if vou art.:
insecure in the Job that
you arc doing." Mangini
said. ''I feel very comfortable and confident in
how we approach things
and I also like the fact
that Mike can add value
and I can ask for his feedback and it's going to be
meaningfuL I'm a big
feedback gu)'. I'm glad
Mike is here.''
So are Cleveland fans.
who have had to stomach
mostly unwatchable football since the Brown..,·
expansion rebirth in
1999. Holmgren. who
orchestrated the Packers·
resurgence in Green Bay
and made the Seattle
relevant,
Seahawks
believes he can bring the
Browns back, too.
In time.
''Yuu cau't fix cvcJ?thing in one year." smd
Holmgren. who is still
recovering from foot
surgery. ''You never can,
but f'm pleased that
\\e'"e managed to execute a little of our plan
already."
Holmgren's plan - at
least the one he's made
public - for fixmg the
Brov, nc; is to leave the
coaching to Mangini and
his staff, which stayed
intact from last season. ·
But if Cleveland struggles early or ir the team is
, shrouded in the type of
drama that plagu~d it for
months last season,
there\ speculation that
Holmgren would retrieve
his \\ histle and coach
a!!ain.
-Holmgren admits the
coaching bug hasn't quite
left his system.
"That's a work in
progress:· the 62-year-

Reds
from Page Bl
Pablo S&lt;tndoval on Drew
Stubbs·
one-out
grounder in the Reds
ninth set up Janish's single.
Votta had four hits and
four RBis as Cincinnati
avoided a sweep. Miguel
Cairo doubled
and
scored on VottQ's twoout smgle in the 12th off
Barry Zito (8-9). making
his second career relief
appearance.
Ryan Hanigan and
Stubbs also homered for
Cincinnati. The Reds
homered three times in
the first inning. and the
slugfest put an exclamation mark on the highestscoring
t h rce-game
series at AT&amp;T Park.
The Giants scored at
least II runs in three
straight games for the
first time since June
195.3. The Reds' rally
· spoiled what would've
been the biggest comeback in franchise history.
·The NL hast-leading
Braves weren't so fortunate in their 12-1 0 loss at
Coors Field. The major

old llolmgren said. " I
\Vatch the game and I'm
seeing things and wond~!ring. 'What would m)
next call be?' I'm looking
at things as a coach~
Maybe that will never
change. l don't know.
''But I'm ::.tickin!! to
my promise that I made
to Eric - that I am going
to ~elP. him.''
Wh1le Man~ini insists
he doesn't tee I added
pressure with Holmgren
around, 1t's impossible to
1gnore the influence the
Super
Bowl-winning
coach has had on the
organization since· his
Hoi mgren 's
arrival.
mammoth pre~ence is all
over the Browns' headquartt.:rs.
In January, Holmgren
hired Tom Heckert. formerly with Philadelphia.
as the Browns g~neral
manager and brought in
good friend Gil Haskell
as a 'enior adviser. He
also
named
Keith
Gilbertson. who wa~ with
h1m in Seattle, a~ the
team's director of pro
personnel.
Haskell and Gilberbon
attend coache'' meetings,
but Holmgren insist·
they are not spies but
sounding boards with
immense NFL experience for Mangini to use.
"It's not like they're in
there reporting to me.''
Holmgren said. ''They're
in there to be a part of
this thing. That's all
healthy, it's good. No one
is feeling threatened. no
one is feeling like they're
being watched. You can't
work that way. and so
that's the kind of environment I hope is set up:·
Installing proven football executives was
Holmgren's first objective. his second was to
fix Cleveland's quarterback mess. \\ hich plummeted to ne'' depths Ja~t
season when both Brady
Quinn
and
Derek
Anderson took turns
starting and failing miserably.
Holmgren
releaseu
Anderson, traded Quinn
to Denver and signed 35year-old free agent Jake
Delhomme. a move initially panned but one that
now appears promising.
Cut after a horrible
2009 season in Carolina,
Delhomme's
career
shows signs of reviving
with tiYC Browns. who
have had eight different
quarterbacks start their
season opener since '99.
Delhomme threw 18
interceptions last season
league record for the
biggest comeback is 12
runs, most recently by
Cleveland against Seattle
in 200 I. The NL mark is
I I, last done by Houston
against St. Louis in
1994.
J~rancisco

.

Cordero (44) pitched the final two
innings.
Juan Uribe's three-run
homer in the eighth
sparked the Giants.~late
rally as the first six hitters reached base. Jose
Guillen and Sandoval
singled ahead of Uribe's
shot. Cudy Ross and
Mike Fontenot singled
ahead of Andres Torres'
two-run double. Torres
later scored on Huff's
medium flv.
Reds starter Homer
Bailey lasted 5 l-3
innings and was in line
for his third straight start
since coming off the disabled list on Aug. 15.
Giants rookie Madison
Bumga• ner had his worst
outing in the majors.
allowing eight runs in 2
2-3 innmgs.
The Reds hit three
home runs in the first
inning. taking a 4-0 lead.
Votto hit·a two-nm shot,
while
Gomes
and
Hanigan went back-to-

before a hand 111jmy
landed him on tnjured
reserve. But he's healthy,
and a change of c;cenery
BEREA. Ohio (AP) knees and trugg.le to stand
may have been all the lik
Soon Fujita arrived in New had a drrunat1c effect on
able Louisianan needed.
Orleans a few months after him.
"This has been perfect llurricanc Katrina ble\\
"We all watched the
CNN covera~e nnd we
for me,'' said Delhommc. through the city.
·
Five .1vears have pao;sed. saw the floodmo.., and \\e
who s1gned
a two year
contract with Cleveland. but Fujita can recall seeing saw all the terror of it, but
• d
k
the stom1's lethal and long- we didn't knmv wh~it got
I rca II Y tne
..world
ta c: t1lC l,·ts·t•'•lg '•n1p,·tct as ,·t· J.t J·ust tlla t way.''IlC 5aJ&lt;· I· ·• I1en I
on mv Inshoulders
·
happened.
got there, I learned qukkly
"ft looked like a bomb that it wasn't just the
last year and that d dn 't
do any good. But starting v.,•ent off," the Cleveland stbrm, it was more the wetover at a new (&gt;lace has Browns lmebac
·
ker said lands and how depleted
really helped. I keep say- before
practice they were and how that led
ing it over and over. but Wednesda).
"Driving to the disaster afterwetrd.''
it's been fresh, it's been around the 9th Ward for
Fujita . &lt;;aid the film
fun. That's what makes it the first time. it felt like' I "Hurricane on the Bayou''
so enjo)'able for me."
was in a third-world coun- also touched him to acL
A renowned quarter- try. It was devastating "I've always been a little
back guru. Holmgren, unbelievable and n1ind- bit of an environmentnlwho hns coached Hall of boggJino.''
1st;' said Fujita, who gmd0
Famers Joe Montana and
Ft-tjita played four years uated from California\\ ith
Steve Young as we I as in New Orleans. winning a a degree in political ciBrett Favre. belie' es Super Bowl title last sea- ence and later earned his
Delhomme's
addition son with the Saints. whose master's in education. "I
will make a huge differ- V!Ctory brought some don't think people underence for the Browns.
needed healmg. And stapd how Important the
''He's a great leader.'' although he signed as a wetlands are as the city's
said Holmgren, who also free &lt;~gent with Cleveland • first lines of defense. They
March. the 31-year-old's talk ahout how every 45
broug l11 ·m sea 1mw ks QB in
heat1 is still back in the mmutes another football
Seneca Wallace to back
tiekl worth of wetlands is
up Dclhomme. "The Bayou.
·
New Orleans. with its depleted. And, for evcrl_
1
1
1 11 1
1
~u~s 0\C ~ ~ . )CCHLJ~t.: ~e vibrant lifestyle, unique mile of wetlands that s
~ndudes e\ c•) body. He s atchitecture and resilient depleted. that elJ.uals about
JUSt what 1 hoped l~e people, left an indelible another foot of storm
would ~e. H~ can still mark on Fujita. He loved surf!C. rhat's what is going
pl~y a httle btl, too, but the city and wanted to give to 1ead to the downfall ot'
thts team needed some somethino back, so he the city if they don't get it
body at that position to I began a .;r.;onaJ campai!m corrected."
kind of unite people.''
to help save the Gulf
Fujita has always beeri
Delhomme can't do it region'&lt;; threatened wet- sociallY con&lt;;cious. Hb
alone,
though. lands' - long before the interest in helping others.
Cleveland's oftense was grasses and marslles would gre\\ during his college
years in Berkeley. \\here
ranked dead last in the be drenched in BP's oil.
league last season, and
Fujita. donated S25p00 he was around mam '' ho
still Jacks playmakers out of hts pl~Y,Off eammgs were active and aware.
Running back Jemme to two l.p~JSJ~a groups
"People who thought
Harrison (561 yard~ in that srx:nahze m coastal Globally.'' he &lt;;aid. 'They
his final three games) restoratiOn. I~ June. he tnink b1g picture."
But it was as a. young
showed potential to be an returned to New O!leans
every down back. but 1 and ~clped ?rgamzc: .~ linebat•ker with Kansas
there are still questions fm~dnuser to a1d the sp11l s City that Fujita's uppreciaabout his durability cle.Hmp.
.
tion for service grew He
. :
So what sparked thts was influenced by veternn
Se~&lt;~nd-~ear
. WJ~c Califomia kid, adopted by teammates Tony Gonzalez.
receiVers . ~loh,unn~cd a white mother and Trent Green and Tony
Mas~atJUOJ and Bnan Japanese-American father: Rich&lt;trdson. who donated
Rob•sk•e need ~&lt;&gt;.de vel- to devote time and effort to time and money t(,l local
op. and Mangm• must a !?,lace he hm·dly knew? charities and causes.
figure out a way to .get Fujita said that seeing New
'''1l1ey were guys I
Pro Bowl return specwl- Orleans knocked to its looked up. to. they were
ist Joshua Cribbs more

reall.y mvolved in the commumty with causes they
believed in and it was an
inspimtion to me.'' he said.
Fujita has also been a
strong ad' ocate for
cancer awareness
rescarch fnllowing his
mother •leien·~ two scares
with the disease. and he's
looking into several
Cleveland-area charities to
SUpiXl11.
He wishes more professional athlete'&gt; would use
their celebrity status as n
platfonn to help others.
'The window of opportunit) in the NFL is pretty
short and the time to do
something where people
are pa) ing attention and
people care what you have
to sa) is pretty small.'' he
c;aid. "J feel an obli!!ation
to do thmgs J believe~in.''
Fujita and his wife,
Jacl) n, have twin daughters. The family has relocated to Ohio, but he
intends to maintain a residem:e in New Orleans.
''Hopefully. forever.'' he
said.
While in Ohio. th~
Fujitas have been rentit
their home. The curren
tenants? They work for a
consulting company that
was advising BPon ho\\ to
clean up the massive oil
spill.
''ObVIOUsly.
they
weren't doing a good job
for a while.'' Fujita said
with a chuckle.
He tumed serious.
though. when talking
about the environmentai
imp:tct on the Gulf region.
which could be dealt
another shot if the forecasts for an active hurricane sea~on are correct. A
severe stom1 could push
the oil in the wetlands
deeper toward the mainland and potentially cause
further destruction and
contamination.

I

I

touch~$.
The Brown~'

dt:ft:nsc
should be improved by
new linebackers Scott
Fujita and Chris Gocong
along with cornerback:~
Sheldon Brown and Joe
Haden. the club's firstround draft pick.
A 'good start could be
crucial to their c;easo1 and Mangini's future.
Holmgren ic; promising
patience. but 1t's never
been one of strong
points.
"It's important for me
to see us take the next
step and get better. I hnvc
to see improvementt"
Holmgren said. "'I hat s
what I'm going to be
looking at. It's a series of
steps, but if \\e can get
over this first hump and
get people around here
feeling good about their
football team, that\
huge.··
And maybe essential
for Mangini.
back. The Reds hit consecutive homers for the
ejghth time this season
nnd the second um.e in a
week.
Freddy Sanchez doubled in a run for the
Giants in the second, but
Stubbs' two-run slwt in
third highlighted another
four-run inning.
Votto added a ~olo
homer in the third and
Bailey singled home a
run in the fifth.
Pat Burrell's two-nm
single made it 10-3 in the
fifth. fontenot drove in a
run and Uribe sc..:urt:d un
a wild pitch in the sixth.
N01'ES: Reds 2B
Brandon Phillips left the
game an inning after getting hit by n pitch from
Santiago Casilln in the
fifth. ... f•om1er Giants
closer Robh Nen w~s a
visitor to the Reds' dub·
house before the game
and was greeted enthusiastically .tt the door hy
Darren Baker. the 11year-old son of manager
Dusty Baker.... Sanchcz
was I ~for-2 and linished
9-for- I 1 111 the series ....
Sandoval recorded three
hits for the 1Oth time. all
at home .. Zito pitched
a scoreless inning of
relief on Aug. 5, 2007.

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