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0 U-Miami:
Showd(lWD at The
Sho ,B

Financial ad .·..,.. . . . . .
from Jason
Alderman, A3

1'11intcd on JOoq
Rcc) dcd c" print
-

aD.,

50 CENTS • Vo'l. _5~ 4 o.

6

OSU Roads Scholars' make Meigs stop

0BITUARIFS
Page AS

Bv BETH SERGENT

• Garnet I. (Snyder)
Burdette

SSERGENT@MYDAllYSEiffi•IELCOM

Stroke
support group
GALLIPOLIS

The

Strok-e SurviHJrs Support
Group will meet at I p.m.,
nu~sday, ScP.t.

7 at Bossard
Memorial Lihnuy, 7 Spmce
in Gallipolis. fur mfor• ltion, contact Lia Barte at
(740) 925-3788.

Man to Man
support group
RIO GRANDE! - Ken
Moore, director pf the
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, will be the gueo;t
speaker for the next Man
to Man cancer &lt;;uppon
group meeting. The group
ts scheduled to meet at 7
p.m., Thursdc~y, Sept. 9 in
the board room located in
the Davis Uni\ crsity
Center on the campus of
the University of Rio
Grande For informatton,
contact James Allen at
(740) 709-6214, or Jun
Coua 740) 441 1647

POMEROY - For the first
time 111 tts 13 year history.
Ohio State Unhersity's annual
"Roads Scholars" Tour &lt;;topped
in Meigs County recently.
Pao;sengers on the two-day
road trip through Southeast
Ohio included .,c,:nior OSU
lc,,dcrs alon~ with new faculty
.llld admimstrativc leaders.
Participants toured key partncr ship sites supported by the
unhero;ity to see first-hand the
reach and impact teaching.
research. and service have on
communitieo; and residents
acro!&gt;s the state.
The OSU bus .-..topped at the
Mulberry Community Center
for a recept1on and a round-

t~b~e which s~"' the. 'i&lt;;itors
VIS!t four lec~rnmg ~tat10ns featunng - the Mc1gs County
Cancer lmtiati\e's Think Pink
program, a breast cancer education a~Jd screening program;
Get Beh111d Your Health, a colorectal cancer media campaign
in Appalachia Ohio; Walk by
J·aith. a faith-based initiati\e to
promote.: health in Appalachia;
H
va~ci r~c acceptan~e and
:n h1labi11ty rn Appalachta.
The :VI ergs County 'hit was
hosted by MCCI and the
Appalachra
Community
Cancer Network. Snowville
Creamery representatives were
also on hand to pass out milk
amples and discuss the creamcry's gro"' ing bu&lt;aness featuring Ohio gra s-grazed co"' s.
'"These tours t~re a remark-

PY

ably effective way to help our
new faculty \cry. qui~kly
understand the urmers1ty's
enormous impact in the lives
of Ohioan&lt;;," Ohio State
~resident E Gordon Gee said
m a statement. "From our
growing partnerships "'ith
Ohio University in Atheno; to
our flourishing business incubator at the university's South

Gee first initiated the Roads

Centers in Piketon, we ha~c
much good work to see Ill
Southeast Ohio."
As the &lt;;tate's flagship landgrant mstitution of higher
learning. OSU attempts to
for~e pannerships in each of
Oh10 's 88 count1es and works
aggressively to address Ohio s
emerging needs and create
opportunities for growth and
progress. In addition to the

Scholars Tours in 1997, and
since then, nearly 800 new faculty have traveled to all pans
of the state to better under~
stand how its partnerships have
impro\ed hves and strengthened the state's economy. One
of the president's strategic
goal for the university is
enhancing its work with Ohio's
communities.

STEI~NWHEEL
l~IVERFEST

Easternlocal.com:
'1 0-11 year off to
good start ·

PARADE

BY BRIAN J . REED
BREED MYDAILYSEtmNELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS -Just over 850 students are
ttendmg the Eastern elementary, middle and high
hool this year. The school year began Aug. 25 and
&lt;; penntendent Rick Edwards told parents and comumt) members the year has been going smoothly.
Ed" ards and the d1stnct relic-. heavily on the dis
tnct's comprehen i\e internet home to communicate
"'tth the community ln the district's back to school
newc;letter, posted online at WW\\.easternlocal.com.
Ed\l.urds re\le\l.ed the back-to- chool experience for
the ne\1. ) ear. He c;aid the annual open house. held just
before tudents returned to clas e . was a ..huge success.'' The open house ic; an opportunity for students
and parent to meet teacher . recei\·e room assignments an.d schedule • and ocialize, "connect and
reconnect," Ed"' ards said.
The school district's new web ite allows anvone to
keep posted on district actt\ itics. The Eagle Enquirer
newsletter is mailable at the site. as are fonns for parents, spons information and even an alumni area with
a space to post photos. Class reunions can be public~zed on the site. as is a directory of registered alum-

Invasive plant
workshop
.LE-Th

Furnace Coopcrnti\e
\\\:ed Management learn i
offering a f'n:i: lnv.L&lt;.ive Plant
Identification and Control
Wod."'\hop on \\ednesdax.
Sept. 15. The \1, odshop \I.ill
meet from 5·30-7·30 p.m at
South Galha High School.
55 Old Hann..ill1'racc Road
in Merccf\ illc. "Io ~ister.
oontact Annemaric Smith at
(740) 589-9914 or e-mail
Anncmarie Smith @dnr.state
.oh.us.

m.

Alumni choir
practice

Teachers can create online classroom sites and par- •
ents can access those site to communicate with the
teacher.

MASON, W.Va. -The
Wahama Alumni choir will
hold a practice on Sept. 19
and Sept. 26 in the band
room at the high school at
4 p.m. to prepare for
Homecomin~ set for Oct.
I. All alumru choir members nrc urged to attend.
r infonnation, contact
x Howard at 304-88240 or 304-593-3932.

WEATIIER

Southern approves
personnel
BY BETH

All art pieces mu~t be read) to hang
and everything except paintings on
gallery canvas, including cnnvas board.
must he framed, McClure said.
Photographs. watercolor and dra\\ ings
must be mated, framed, and h:l\ e a pmtccti\l' cmer, ~uch as glass or ple~d­
glass. Photographs must be an original
t.tken by the arttst no smaller than 5 x7.
Tite entries "'ill be judged and en h
prizes ~tnd ribbons will be ~marded. The

RACINE - The Southern Local Board of
Education at a recent meeting appro.. ed personnel
matters for the 20 10-1 I school year.
The folio\\ ing county al?pro\ ed certified substitutes
\\ere appro' ed: Peg~y Bmley, Deborah Sayre, Megan
I Lawhon, Marge Fetty, Anna Buckalew, Evelyn
Stan!e), Landona Stephens. Janice Curry, Renee
Barton. Amanda Schwarze). Ron Logan, John
Gleming. Usc Burris. ~Iarissa Cantrell. John
Krawscz) n. William Do"' nie. Eric Brown, Samantha
Shaffner, Angela ~1cDaniel. Belt) Fulks, Michael
~1cMath-Dunn. Bre) Gheen, Tere~a Carr. Elizabeth
Wilfong, Shannon Plummer. Jill Johnson, Carolyn
CrO\\ ncr, Holly Murphy, Suzanne Heald. Leland
Caner, Jason \\ illi,uns, Nathan Robinette, Janel
Kennedy. Rachel Stolt1.fus. Andrea Pepper. Brian
Ho,,ard. Fred Conner). Delore Wolfe. Jan Wyatt.
The follo\\ing count) apprO\ed ubstitute aides
were appro\cd: Stephanie Allen, Launa Teaford.
Amanda Schwarze), Janel Kennedy. Cannel Evans.
Carrie Carpenter. Robin Wcrr), Connie Soulsby,
Sheila McKmney. Pamela Foreman, Pamela Codner,
Julie Zirkle.
The follmdng cia ificd substitute \\ere apprO\ed:
Shane Ha) nJ.m, secret.U): Eric WiJ..,on and ·cody
Patterson, custodians; Keith\\ hitlach, school bus dri\er: Billie Jo Hayc~. cla sitied sub.
•
The followmg supplC'mental contract~ and salaries
were appro' cd: Don Dudding. high school student
council, $550, the Echo nd' i. or, $500. LPDC committee, $500, mentor teacher, $1.200, district website,
$1,500; ~kg ,Guinther. lead mentor. $1.200 plus $_150
per mcntor/mcntcc; Billlkcgk, \\ork study coordmator, $3,000; Dunicl Otto, LPDC committee. $500:
Bnrbara I a" renee, LPDC committee, $500, mentor
tt?achcr. $1.200; Donna Sa)TC, LPDC committee,
$500; Tricin Me 'icklc. mentor teacher. $1,200: Nick
Dett\\ iller, sc' cnth grade volleyball. $1.400. eighth
grade \Olleyball. $1.400.

Please see Art. A3

Please see Southern. Al

Sentinel file photo
Smokey Bear was a guest at the 2009 Sternwheel Riverfest fire truck parade. This
year's parade, set for Sept. 16, will be the 10th annual.
,

BY CHARLENE HOEFl;tCH
liOEr:t.;CH MYDAILYSE."'T NELCOM

2 SHCl'IONS- 12 PAGF.S

Calendars
~las~ifieds

~OffilCS
Editorials
Sports

B Section

21110 Ohio \'llllev Pubh

hmg Co

~J,I !1!1,11,1I.

SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSE'/TlNELCOM

Art in the Park show Sept. 25

INDEX

stop
at
the
Mulberry
Community Center, this year's
Roads Scholars Tour visited
the uni .. ersity's South Centers
business incubator and extens1on center, Ohio University,
Marietta H1gh School The
W1lds, Octagon Earthw~rl)s in
Newark and the Ohio State
Ne\l.ark campus.

MIDDLEPORT- Plans are mO\mg
forward for the annual Riverbend Ans
Council's annual Art m the Park exhibit to take place on Sept. 25, I 0 a.m. to 4
p.m. in Diles Park in Middlepon.
Rhojean McClure. chainnan. reminds
exhibitors that 1t is time to get their
entries registered. The deadline to regi ter is Sept. 15. Entry form \\ ith fee
of $2 per piece to be exhibited are to be
matled to the Ri,erbend Arts Council,
P. 0. Box 27. Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Checks are to be made payable to the
Riverbend Arts Council.With que tions
or for registration fonns call Rhojean
McClure at (740) 992 3842.
'I11~ Ar1 in the Park proJeCt is suppor1ed in part by a $2.250 srant from
the Ohio River Border initiatl\l'. a joint
project of the Ohio Arh Council and the
West Vir~inia Commission on the Arts.
A portion of the grant was designated
f01 funding a children's summer program in July called "Art Ad\enture"
held in Middleport, Ma&lt;;on, W. Va. and
Pomeroy. Bobbi DeLong of Pomeroy
wu the art instructor for-the children's

classes. A d1splay of projects completetf
b) in the three ses ions held will be featured nt the An in the Park shO\\.
McClure addses that in the e\ent of
rain, the show
be held in the
Ri\ crbend Arts Council building at 290
N. Second A\e .. in Middleport.
The categories for exhibit are oil. aetylic
and watercolor paintings. dra" ing to
include graphite. charcoal, colored pencils.
pastels. nnd ink and a category for mixed
mediums such as watercolor "'ith ink
lines. a collage or oil O\ er aCT) lie paint.
The classes fordhotography, "'here
computer enhance photo are not permitted, ,u-e landscape and other than

''ill

llmd,c.tpe.

•

�PageA2

TI1e Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 7,

2010

Obama pledges to work for a thriving middle class
BY DARLENE
SUPERVILLE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINCiTON
A
economy need
buo;tlmg Mmn Street
and a thrh ing middle
class. not just a healthy
stock market, President
Burack Ob,una said in
paying tribute to the
Americ.m worker.
In hb v. eekly radio
mld Internet .tddres ,
Obama on Saturday outhned v.hnt he\ done to
help the mtddle clac;s, a
~roup he says h.t&lt;; been
squeezed the most during the recession.
stron~

He spoke of etTort to
create jobs, . make college more affordable,
help the middle class
build retirement nest
eggs. cut taxes on these
families and stop health
insur.tnce companies
from refusing to cover
people with pre-existing
medical ~ondittons
Labor [)ay is about
more than grilling food
and spending tim with
family and fr.iends,
Ohama said
"It's also a day to
honor the American
"orker
to reaffirm
our comnutment to the
great Amcncnn middle

class that has, for generations, made our economy the em y of the
world." he said.
But Ohuma said that,
for a decade, middleclass families have
experienced stagnant
incomes, and declining
economil' security while
tax breaks were given to
compauies that shifted
jobs overseas and Wall
Street firms reaped huge
profits.
"So this Labor Day,
"e should recommit
ourselves to our timehonored Htlues and to
this fundamental tntth:
To heal our economy, we

need more than a health) their workmg days are
"The
more
time
stock market, we need done," he said. ''And small-business owners
buc;tling Main Streets over the last two years, spend pushing paper,
and a grow111g, thrivmg that has meant taking on the less time they have
umldlc clc~ss,'' Obama some powct1 ul intcrcstc; to focus on creating
said. "That's why I will who had been dominat- jobs," Davis said.
keep working day by d.ty mg the agenda in
He highlighted
to restore opportumty, W.l&lt;;hington for far too lation he introduced
economic security and long."
would require Congress
that bao;ic American
In
the
weekly to vote on every major
dream fo1 our families Repubhcan message, new rule before it can
and future generation~." Rep. Gc=uff Davb, R- take effect.
''We're fighting to Ky. cnticizcd nearly
"The sooner we rein
build an economy In 200 pending rules and in the red-tape factory
which mtddle class fam- regulatiOn':&gt; as a threat to in Washington, D.C.,
i IJcs can afford to send job creation. Davis ~aid the soonet small busitheir kids to college, many of the mandates nesses can get back to
buy a home. save for would cost small-busi- creating JObs and helpretirement, and achte\ e ness owners who don't ing more Americans
some measure of eco- have the money or ume find an honest day's
nomic secunty when to comply wtth them.
work.'' he said.

.

Israel pushes for new settlement construction
BY MATTI FRIEDMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

JERUSALEM
hrael's hard-lme foreign
niinister -;aid Monday
that his party will try to
block any extension of
Israel's settlement slowdO\\n, a mo\e that coulii
derail
the
recently
launched Mideast peace
negotiations.
Avigdor Lieberman
satd the Israeli gO\ernment must keep ats
promise to voters that
tlle I 0-month slowdown.
declared last November
under U.S. pre'\Sure in
order to draw the
Palestinian to the negotiating table, v. Ill end as
cheduled at the end of
tlie month.
The Sept. 26 deadline
1
a challenge for the
fragile talkc; launched m
Washington last week.
The Palestinian-; say
they will quit the talks if
c;ettlement construction
a-.:celeratc . but not endln [} the low do\\ n could
potentiall) brmg dov. n
the lsraeh government
Mimster
Prime

Benjamin Nctanyahu has
)Ct to say how he wtll
handle the deadline.
"A promise is a
promise,"
Lieberman
told lsr.tel Radio. "We
will not agree to any
extension."
"I promise that if
there's a propo al that
"e don't accept it will
not pass," he added.
Lieberman's Yisrael
Beitenu party is a key
member of Israel's governing coalition. which
ic; led by Netanyahu's
Likud party.
It holds 15 scats in
parliament, making it the •
second-lar~est member
of the coa!JtJon and gJvmg at the ab1hty to rob
the go\ ernment of its
pnrUamcntary nHIJOrity
1f it pulls out. Other
coalition panners, and
members of Netan) ahu 's
own party. also _fa\Or
resummg constructiOn.
In a s1gn that compromi c was pos ible. howc,er. Lieberman told the
daily Yedtot Ahronot
that he v.ould not qmt
the coalmnn C\ien 1f he
does not get h1s "ay.

"We will not leave or Lieberman, known for
bting down the govern• blunt nnd often unprement. We will fight from dictable language, is
the inside for v. haJ we perhaps lsrael'c; moc;t
believe." he told the polarizmg politician. A
paper.
resident of a West Bank
At the summit mark- settlement himself, he
ing the relaunch of peace has absented himself
talks in Washington last from acthe imolvement
week, Netanynhu used in the ~;&gt;eace talks, which
unu ually v. arm lnn- are bemg conducted by
guage
about
the Netanyahu's office.
Pale~tinian
leader hip
Vice Prime Minister
and the chances for Silvan Shalom, a promimember
of
peace. But the Israeli nent
foreign minister has Nctanyahu· part). sa1d
been vocal in his pes- extending the slowdown
simism.
would po e a "huge danSpeaking to diplomats ger" to the coalition.
in Jerusalem on Monday.
"Within the coalition,
Lieberman said lhe stat- there is a huge majority
ed goal of the talks- a against it.'' Shalom told
peace agreement within reporters late Sunday.
one year - was unreal- He said the i.;sue could
istic.
only be resolved through
The Israeli gO\'Cfll· negotiations.
ment says construction
Netanyahu is eeking a
in ettlements continued "ay to get through the
during previous rounds Sept. 26 deadline v. ithof peace t,llks. and that out dismantlin~ his
building does not com· coalition. alienatmg the
promise a future deal.
Palestinian!&gt; or angenng
Lteberman's party ran the U.S. adn11mstmuon
on a platform that que - \\ h1ch I'&gt; b. km the
d
ttoned the loyalty of • talk and h
hrael" one fifth Arab ume and p h
mmority.
and m theu -;u

Netanyahu is slated to
P~llec;tinian
meet
President
Mahmoud
Abbas for a second
round of talks next \\eck
in Egypt and Jerusalem.
U.S. Secretary of State
H11lary Clinton is also
scheduled t" attend.
About 300,000 Israelis
li\e in ~est Bank settlements, among the temtory'-; some 2.5 million
Palestinians. In addition,
almost 200.000 Israelis
h\c in ca t Jerusalem.
the section of the holy
cJty claimed by the
Palcsunians.
The Palestinians and
the international com·
munity &lt;;ay the settlemente; are ob tacles to
peace because they eat
up land the Palestimans
want for a future state.
The slowdown has cut
the con truction in the
settlements, though the
extent of the drop is the
ubject of disagreement.
According to official
gO\ernmcnt statistics
r eased last v.eek, a
t
ot only fi, e new
Jmf!- proJects v.ere
n tn c;ettlements 111

the fir-;t half of 2010,
compared to 673 in the
first half of 2009.
Israeli
advocacy
groups tracking settlement construction dispute tho e numbers.
The group Peace Now
says building has begun
on around 450 ne' A
housing units since th.
slowdown went into
effect Ia t November,
around 300 of them in
violation of the terms
of the freeze. Peace
Now says those numbers mark a drop of
about 50 percent in new
projects.
Settlement expert Dror
Etkes aid government
statistics how the number of units under construction overall in the
lirst quarter of this year
was :!.517, a drop of
only p percent compared to the last quarter
of 2009.
Groups critical of settlement building say if
the slowdo" n is revoked
now it v. ill have had
nearlv no effect on settlement construction in
the long term.

U.S. expects to subsidize Afghan training for years
BY DE~MOND BUTLER
ASSOCIATED PR SS

WASHINGTO:"l
The
l,;mted
States
expect-; to spend about $6
billion a year traming and
supportmg Afghan troops
and pohce after it begins
pulling out ats own combat troops m 20 II , The
Associated Press has
learned.
The pre\ iousl) undisclo ed estimates of U.S.
spending through 2015.
detailed in :l NATO training mission document,
;1fe an admowledgment
rhat Afghanistan will
remain larl?el) dependent
on the Umted States for
~ts secunty.
That reality could
become problematic for
the Obama admini tration as it continues to
~eck
money
for
Afghanistan
from
Congress at a time of
increasing)) tight bud-

gets.
In Bru,sels, a NATO
official ard Monday that
alltance commander Gen.
Oa\ id Petracus asked for
2.000 more soldiers, with
nearly half to be trainer&lt;;
for the rapidly expanding
Afghan security forces.
The NATO offici.tl
requested
anonymity
becauc;e he was not
authorized to speak on
the subject.
The training mission
document, rc\ aewed by·
the AP, outlines large
scale inl'1 a)\tntcture pro·
Jects including a military
hoc.pital and military and
police academies aimed
at "establishing enduring
mstitutionc." &lt;1nd "creating irreversible momentum.''
Spending for training is
projected to taper off
from $11.6 bilhon next
year to an a\ crage of $6.2
billion over the following
four years. Much of the

refleCts f re eeable luture Th
reduction
reduced spending on l'ATO document ho\\
that the U.S v. ill end up
infrastructure.
The
administration footmg most of the b1ll
The Obam,i admimsrecently announced that
it intends to ramp up the tration h&lt;1s boosted the
in
total Afghan army and training mission
police force from nearly preparation for next
250.000 toda) to more )car's dra"do,-.n, The
than 300,000 by late next United States pent 0\er
year. The mission will be $10 btllion on training
largely p.1id for by the between 2003 and 2009
United Swtcs, with and expects to spend
smaller
contributions about the same thts year
from NATO allies. The and next alone.
The hc,td of the NATO
projected mulubillion
dollar cost of maintain- traimng misston, U.S Lt
ing tho e forces would be Gen . Bill Caldwell. says
inconceivable
for bolstering Afghani tan'!'.
Afghanistan's
small security force is cost
economy without foreign efficient.
"It v. ill always be more
aid.
One of the arguments cxpenshe to have a coaliagainst
dramaticall) tion force doing somemcreasing the size of thing than an Afghan
Afghan securit) forces, counterpart," Calc~w ell
aid in a v. rittcn rcspon~c
even during George \V.
Bush's administration, to questions from AP.
Caldv.cll said that he is
\\as that the Afghan government would be unable scnsiti' c to the concet n
to pay for them for the that the United States is

•

rcating dependence and Illiteracy. corruption and
t-; looking for \\a) s of desertion among Afghan
forces.
cuttin~ co~b.
With much skeptici m
"Thr" dependency i-;
o;;omething that we think in Congres , the levels of
.tbout all the time," he financing outlined in the
said "We kno" the soon- dol.!ument are not guaraner the Afghan systems are teed. While the roughly
up and running the soon- $6 billion annual cost
er coahtton force&lt;; can would not be an enortransttton res{'onsibilities mous line in the defense
to the soveretgn govern- budget. the administration~is facing pressure to
ment."
Todd Harrison. an ana- shrink the fedeml deficit.
E'en Caldv. ell ha!-i prel) st v. ith the Center for
Strategic and Budgetaf) dicted that desertion and
Assessments. says it will injul)' rates are so high
be difficult to \\Can the among Afghan forces
Afghan security forces that NATO will have to
recruit and train 141,000
quickly.
"\\'e rct~ll) do ha\e a people to ensure it ha
long ''a) to go before the 56,000 additional
thts v. inds do" n.'' he personnel needed next
fall.
smd.
As money for infraCald\\ ell ha&lt;; said th.1t
he aims to have Afghan structure tapers off. moA
securit) force!'. at suffi- of the projected spendi~~
cient numbers to begin a i to retain force by payU.S. wathdrawal by ing salarie • food and
October 201 I. rhe mis- housing.
sion has had to deal v. ith

Mud buries Guatemala bus, second slide kills rescuers
BY MOISES CASTILLO
ASSOCIA'l'ED PRESS

NAHUALA,
G.uatemala When news
came over the radio that a
tandslide h.1d buried t\\ o
pickup trucks .md a hu&lt;;
a tong a major high" .1y,
S!Jagustino Pascual Tuy
:)nd others 111shed to the
rescue, picks and sho\iels
111 hand.
Digging through the
mud, they managed to
extract several people
alive, includtng Pascual
Tuy's
nephew.
Suddenly the mountatn
above began crackling
and a second cascade ol
rock and earth swept
(lver
the . gathered
crowd. turning many
would-be rescuer into
vict1ms themselves.
Torrenttal mins from a
tropical depression satu·
mted the g10uml in parts
Guatcm.tla . and
f
tulcashcd more thun u

•

'There are c;e\eral hillPa.,cual Tuy s.1id there
pokesman
dozen landslides 0\ er the Protection
"eekend, killing at least l'a' id de Leon said. "It i" had been se\eral land- sides that are loose and
38 people and lea\ ing difficult and dangerous to slide along the Inter-· could fall. So we ask the
many more unaccounted continue" ith the search." American higlmay in the population to not go out,
Pascual Tuy. a Nahuala la~t year, and Huthorities to a\oid mo\ mg alon~ the
for.
high" ays,'' Colom satd.
ofiicer. said he kne" of the danger.
police
Firefighters confirmed
All told. there v.erc 15
"Last year there \\ ao; n
.11 lea 1 20 dead m the 'il- shouted a warning as the
landslides at different
1.1ge of N.thuala. where mountain began to crum- •landslide there. I5 d.l)
the twin slides hit a sec- ble the second time, but a~o there v. u.; a land- spot~ along the Intertion of the Inter-American moments Iuter the slide shde," he said. "But nov. a American highwa) in .\
48-hour
period,
high\\ ay. /\bout 50 more buried a number of res- big one came."
President Alvaro Colom Communi 1.' .1 t ions
"'ere believed buried cuers. He ran for his life
Guillenno
under ton of rubble, and the mud only caught 'tsited the area and said Mmister
v.ould
be C.t!'ltillo said.
Monda)
regional fire department hi~ legs.
Hea' y r.lins from a
"The mountain was declared a national day of
Maj. Otto Mazariegos
de pres ion ha\ c
tropical
mourning.
He
al
o
noise
like
an
making
said.
''Under the earth there earthquake, hut people ordered orfil'tals to close pelted Guatcn1.1la for
, 'e' eri
'a) s
is a bus that carried we "ouldn 't leave," Pa~cual the roml
don't know how many Tuy aid. "They were
people, and there are being stubborn and didn't
those who tried to help get out."
His nephew \\U.s in critthe victims of the first
'
'I .
ical condition.
s l ·,a
tuC.,. M al'.artcgos
salt
Down the same road,
Continuing bad weather
forced authorities to sus- closer to Guatemala City,
pend
rescue efforts another slide panially
Sunday afternoon for fear buried another bus and
of a third deadly land- killed at least 12 J)\!ople.
II high pric ed
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PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, Septentber 7,

Community Calendar
Tuesday, Sept. 7
S'l RACL Sl
S)racu~e Board of Pubhc
Affairs. regulc~I meeting,
7 p.m .. 'illage hall.
MIDDLEPORT
A iddlepoit Lodge 363,
~gular meetin~. 7:30
p.m . Fricnd'\hip and
night.
Aw.trds
Refreshments at 6:30
p.m. Take non-peri shable
food items f01 the food
pantry.
Thursday, Sept. 9

ASK DR... BitOTHERS

CHESTER - Shade
R1ver Lodge 453 7:30
at
the
hall.
r..m.
Refreshments.
Saturday, Sept. 11

POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chaptei
DAR, noon ut the Wild
l)orse Cnfe. Installation
of officers and DAR
update::. hy S.E. District
Director, Roberta Grady
Cook.

Meigs
County
Agncultural Society will
meet at 7:30 p.m. m the
Coonhunters Buildm~ on
Spnng'i
the
Rock
Fairgrounds.

Jhe

POMJ ROY
Annual
Harvest f•estival, St. John
Lutheran Church, Pine
Grove Road, 11 a.m.
worship, potluck at noon.

Tuesday, Sept. 14

Birthdays

TUPPERS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, 7 p.m., at
the office.
Church events

Monday, Sept. 13

POMEROY -

Sunday, Sept. 12

P,ml E. Hoffman will
cclcbiate hts 90th birthday Sept. II. A reception
m his honor will be held
from 2 to 4 p.m. at his
home. 37460 Sumner
Rd., Pomeroy.

Slash your phone hills

Jason Alderman
-

Sometune'l J miss the
days before cell phones,
email and 'oicemail.
Sure, they ve simplified
our lhe in many ways
- remember how fru trating 1t ''as trying to
reach people before
answering machines? On
the dov. nside, though,
not only do we often feel
compelled to be acce tble 24-7, but it' ex penhe. After factoring in
Internet en ice and cable
or satellite TV, you might
be paymg thousands of
dollars a year to keep
your famtly wired and
v.Ircles .
Here are a fe" co tavmg ups that might
help·
Examme your home
phone btll for en:1ces

Candidates
lead poll
COLUMBUS (AP) A poll by J'he Columbus
Drspatc!J
say
Republican candidate
have double digit lead
in the Ohio race for go\ernor and U.S. Senate.
17Je Drspatch 's poll
found that GOP governor
hopeful John Kasich
leads Gov. Ted Strickland
by 12 points, and
Republican U.S. Sen.ttc
candidate Roh Portman
has a 13-point ad\ anta&amp;e
over his Democrat1c
opponent Lee fisher.
Forty-nine percent of
those sun eyed up port
Kasich in the race for the
governor's eat, compared to 37 percent for
mcumbent
Gov.
&amp;trickland. In the race to
U.S.
Sen.
succeed
George Voinovich, 50
A.!rcent of Ohioans
W acked Portman and 37
percent supported Fisher.
The Drspatch polled
1,622 registered voters
who said they intent to
vote in the 2010 election.
The poll was conducted
between Aug. 25 and
Friday and has a margin
of error of 2.2 percentage
points.

Biden
celebrates
in Toledo

you may ha\ e stgned up
for but arcn t using, such
as cctll waiting, call forwarding or caller ID.
Dropping them could
save $100 a year or more,
depending on your plan.
If you have good cell
phone reception at home,
try using your cell for
long-distance calls. But
be ure to ~tay within
your monthly minute
allowance oi your bill
will skyrocket. When in
douht,
check
your
remainin~ minutes at
your earners website or
by calling or texting their
"remaining
balance"
code.
More and more folks
are dropping their land
line altogether. relying
solely on cell phones.
Ju&lt;&gt;t be ure it's always
fully charged -beware of
extended power failures.
And note that in an emer- ·
gency, 911 operators may
not be able to track your
loc,HJOn if you're unable
to &lt;;peak. as they can with
a land line.
Another possible route
1s using a service that Jet
you make free or lowcost calls (often, includin¥ international calls)
u mg your Internet
broadband connection.
talk about research and
development tax. credits
for bu messes.
Biden was in Toledo
two weeks ago to talk
about the state of the U.S.
auto industry.

Cordray
pleased
Craigslist
removed adult
services
COLU!\1BUS (AP) Ohio's Attorney General
Richard Cordray suys
he's
pleased
that
Craigslist apparently shut
down its adult services
ection, a week and a half
after a group of state
attorneys
general
demanded the section be
closed.
Cra1gslist replaced the
adult services section on
Saturday v. ith a black bar
that says "censored."
Cordray and other state
attorneys general have
said
there
weren't
enough protections to
block potentially illegal
ads that promote prostitution and child' traffick-

lllP.·J'he Ohio AG also says
there's more to be done
to prevent people from
misusing the online service to promote human
traffickin~.

Craigshst CEO Jim
Buckmaster said in a
May blog posting that the
TOLEDO
Vice company'&lt;; ads were no
Prestdent Joe Biden cam- worse than those pubpaigned with Ohio Gov. lished by the alternati\ e
Ted Strickland at a Labor newspaper chain Village
Day parade in Toledo Voice Media
Monday morning
his
second visit to the city in
two weeks.
Biden druted across the
parade route and greeted
holding politicHI
s in &lt;1 state where
rats arc trailing
Republicans hy double
digits in races lor governor and U.S. Senote.
Strickland says he
The Daily
hopes hoth Bielen and
Sentinel
President BUJ ack Obama
· will continue to visit
Ohio often before the
Subscribe today
November
election.
740.992 2156
Obama will travel to
Cleveland Wednesday to

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

I

2010

Some popular versions
include Skype, Vona~e
and Google V01ce. You 11
need to buy certain
equipment upfront to
enable the connection
and monthly and/or perminute charges may
apply.
In addition, many cable
TV carriers offer competitively priced digital
phone service via therr
broadband connection.
Be aware that with eithei
of these types of broadband phone service you
risk Iosmg coverage during power failures, so it's
wi e to ha\ e a cell phone
as backup.
You may be able to
lower your overall communications bil
by
bundling home phone,
cell phone, TV and
Internet services together
through one carrier. Plus.
it's com enient to p 1y
only one monthly bill.
Just make sure you're not
being restncted on services you want or overpaying fot those you
don't; and do the m.tth on
rates after the introducto·
ry period, 1f one apphes
A few more tips
• Watch for offers made
to new customer and a k
to be gr~en the arne deal

- or threaten to take
your business elsewhere.
• Using a prepaid
phone card for long-distance calls from home
may be cheaper per
minute than coverage
through ) our phone company.
• Ask if your employer
has a cell phone plan discount for employees.
• bxplore family calling/tex.ting plans in
which you can c;hare minutes among family members.
• Add up your famtly's
monthly calling and texting charges and see if
the carrier's unlimited
minutes plan is more
ufTmdable.
Comparing all the e
opuons may seem like a
lot of work, but you
could save hundreds of
dollars a year by choosing the n~t plans. Plus.
you may JUSt realize that
you're wasting too much
valuable time on the
phone, watchmg television and surfing the
Internet.
(Jason
Alderman
directs Vic;u financial
educat10n programs. To
Folio\\ Jason Alderman
on 1'\\ ttter \\ v. w twat
t r com/Prncttc M

Southern
from PageAl
The follo\\ m~ v. ere
hired for the tutonng program held during the day
and pa1d from IDEA
ARRA fund and general
fund dollars (141 days) at
a pay rate of $70 per day
for the teacher and $7.30
per hour for aides: teachers, Patti Struble (56
days), Delores Wolfe (84
days), Kyle Wickline,
Katie Dickson, Evelyn
Stanley. Craig Knight,
Beth Sha\er, Tcresa'Carr;
aides, Carmel Evans,
Launa Teaford. Pam
Foreman
(Mor;tdays.
Wedne d.~ys).
Da\\ n Hill was hired to
provide Title 1 en ices to
the high school nt a rote
of $70 per day for 175
days; the po ition 1s temporary and ~rant funded.
Other busmess:
The Board approved
payment of estimated
cost (70 percent) to the
A t he n s - Me i~ s
Service
Educational
Center for excess co t in
of
the
amount

233.246 51.
Approved purchase of
activity passes for all
employees for free
adnuss10n to all home,
JUnior high and enior
high school athletic
e' ents during the 2010ll season- pass is good
for employee only.
Approved revbed, ternporary appropriations in
the amount of $9.9 million.
Approved
Charles
Bush for gmduation on
Aug. 28, 2010 by meeting the reqmrements set
forth in Board Policy
9800,
High School
Diplomas to World War
11, Korean Conflict and
Vietnam
Conflict
Veterans.
All Board member
"ere present for the
meeting
as
were
Superintendent
Tony
Deem, Treasurer Roy
Johnson. The next Board
meeting is at 8 p.m ..
Mondav. Sept. 27 in the
high school media room.

There n1ust be some
111isun dersta11ding
Dear l&gt;r. Umthers: A
few months ago, my husband and I took our daughter out of school f01 three
weeks. She's &lt;Ul excellent
student, so !'.he would h:we
no problem kecpmg up and I really wanted her to
spend some time with her
grandmother, who most
likely will not make 1t
through the year's end
When we returned from
upstate, we found that all
these homble rumors had
started up. People v.ere saying she had nn abortion!
How do I deal with such
ugly lies? C W.
Dear C.W.: It i mterestmg that you are plugged
mto the high-school gossip
circuit. I v.ould be fa&lt;cinated to know how this happens to be. as it can be very
valuable for you to know
what IS going on in order to
keep the lines of communication with your daughter
open. It almost sounds as if
these rumors may have
been circulated among the
parents mthcr than the kids
- after all, endmg or
avoiding a pregnancy today
IS a much impler matter
than it used to be. w1th
morning after pills helping
to cut down on teen pregnancy rate . Abortion
themseh es continue to be
legal, nnd do not requrre
len~thy rccO\ery penods.
So It c;ounds as though your
rumor is bac;ed on someone's concept of an abortion from days gone by.
It probably is not u eful
to try to tmck down the
source of the mmor. But
you can talk with your
daughter about whether
there are bullies or "frenemies" or just mean people
out there who would want
hurt her. And there's nn
\ n btgger t ue here. one
}OU rna) want to discus
\\ tth your daughter. 1 he
gettmg a reputation for
being promi cuous? Let
your daughter know that
)OU are on her tde. That's
about all you can do at thi
point, but it w1ll help if she
knowc; you are sticking up
for the tn,Jth.
Dear Dr. Brothers: Our
family's deep. dark secret is
that there is a long history
of child abuse that seems to
pass through each succcs-

Dr. Joyce Brothers
sive generation. Recently. I
noticed bruises on the ann
of my nephew. When I confronted my sister about It.
she told me it was no big
deal, that her son just
wouldn't listen. I was
shocked by her answer,
because that's exactly what
our dad used to say. Her
behaVIor is really freaking
me out. Can this vicious
cycle ever be broken? L.B.
I&gt;car L.B.: Of course it
can be broken, but you arc
correct when you note that
the cycle of abuse is one
that often is handed down
through the family tree. It js
only natural that an adult
will tend to treat his or her
own child the way he or sl1e
was treated as a youngster.
It i n't even a conscio~
deci ion, many tunes; it is
~ust the way things are done
m the family. and no othec
way is even '311 option.
You tna) be interested in
a study recently conducted
at Southern Methodist
Umversity, in which abusive mothers were given an
intens.ive course of inhome training that was
desi&amp;ned to help them learn
specific skills in deahng
with their children. At the
end of the study, fewer than
6 percent of the families
were referred to Child
Protective Services, as
opposed to 28 percent of a
control group not gi\ en the
training. Perhap you .can
offer to help your s1ster
with modeling some
apP.ropriate responses to
child-reanng problems. or
find others in your community who could do the
arne. She needs the tools
and resources to learn that
there is another v.ay.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

Baptists enjoy picnic outing

MIDDLEPORT
Davis. Kenneth and Sue
.Morgan,
Pastor Billy Zuspan of' ~mboden,
the Middleport First Renee, and Aleena Doczi,
Baptist Church, nnd hi
Brynda and Hunter
wife Lori hosted a con- Faulk, Matt, Trudy, and
gregational picnic last Aubree Lyons, Connie
Sunday night at their Johnson,
John
and
home.
Glenna Riebel. Errol and
There \\ere games and Vicki Russell. Ralph and
a haynde along with Arielle Russell, Faye
singing b) the choir nnd Wallace, Craig and
Wehrung,
others attending with Texanna
Lawrence Eblin nccom- Derrick
Metheney.
panying on hi guitar. A Jaykob Eplion. Bill and
worship ervice conclud- Linda Zuspan. Rebecca
ed the gathering of the and Kay lynn Wem cr.
congregation,
family Becky Coleman, Lee and
members and guests.
Debbie Bumgarner. Patty
Attending besides the Paugh, and Em) Cyru~.
ho ts, therr !\(m, Bryce,
The picnic followed
and Eblin were Danny, the church's three day
Venedia. and Mark rcvtval with Pastor
McCloud. Brvant Young. Zuspnn speaking and the
Debbie Dingey, Anna, Forgiven Agaih Trio.
Wyatt, and Maddie Forever Blessed, the
from PageAl
Shope, Chns, Olivia, Concord::; and. Cadence
criteria used in the judg- cash. while the re. erve Cameron, and E~an Weaver a-. the smgers.
ing will be com~OsitiOn, best of show will receh e
per~pective, indtviduali- a ro ette and $20.
All art must be pre-regty, control of the medium, presentatiOn, control Istered and delhered to
of color and values. a the Train Depot at Dile
clear sen e of the light Park between 2 and 6 p.m.
source, and kno\\ ledge of on Sept 23 On the da) of
the how, art need' to be
the subJect matter.
First, second and th1rd picked up by 5:30 p.m.
The av. ard wimung art
places in e,,ch category
~Settle Out Over Due Taxes for Less
will be a\\arded cash piece&lt;; \\ ill be a part of a
prizes. A best of ho\\ month-long exhibit at the
~Stop Wage Garnishments and Bank levies
winner will receive a Fanners Bank in Mason,
~ Filing (Business &amp;Personal Taxes)
rosette ribbon und $25 in W.Va .. and Pomeroy.

Art

Do you owe over
10K to the IRS?
~State &amp;Federal/ Full Representation

CAL NOW!

888-692-5739
(!fast ,,R~

�PageJ\4.

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 7,

Future biring .will mainly
bentjit the high-skilled

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

BY CHRISTOPHER 5.

RUGABER
AND MICHAEL LIEDTKE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con.~rus sllall make 110 law rtSJJecting an
estt~blislrmetlt of relixiou, or prolr{bitiug tire free

t•.wrciu tlrereoj; or ,lbridJ!i"g tlrefreedom of
spt'fclr, or af tire press; M tlu riglrt '!.f the people
pe,rceabl}' to assemble) tmd to petition tire
Gor•ermueut for a retlress l!f.~rie,.,wces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Report: Money can buy you
happiness, to a point
BY

RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
ASSOCIATED PRESS

1 hey ay money can't buy hnppmess. They're
wrong.
At lea t up to a point.
People's emotional \\ell being
happiness mcrea es along \\ ith their income up to about
75.000, researchers report in 1\Jesday's edition
of J&gt;ro~.:eedings of the National Academy of
Sc1ences.
For folks making less thnn that. said Angus
Deaton. an economist at the Center for Health and
Wellbeing at Pnnceton Universit), "Stuff is so in
your f.tce it's hard to be happ). It mterferes with
your enjoyment."
Deaton and Daniel Kahneman re\ ie\\ed surveys
of 450,000 American conducted in 2008 and
2009 for the Gallup-Healthways Well Being
Index that included questions on people's day-toda) happmess and the1r O\ ern II hte satisfaction.
Happine s got better as income rose but the
effect leveled out at $75.000. Deaton o;aid. On the
other h,md the1r overall sense of u ce s or\\ ell
bem ~.:ontmued to n e n thetr eanun s gre"
be)ond that pomt
"GI\111 people more mcome be)ond 75K ts not
gomg to do much for the1r dati) mood ... but 1t 1s
gomg to make them feel the) ha"e a better life."
Deaton smd 111 an intervtew.
Not surprising!), someone who moves from a
$100.000 a-year job to one paying $200,000 reallles an impro\ed sense of success. 1 hat doesn't
nece .;;anly mean they are hnppier da) to day,
Deaton md.
The result.;; v.ere similar for other measures.
Deaton &lt;&gt;md For example. people were really happier on weekends. but thetr deeper sense of wellbemg d1dn't change.
Kahneman, a Nobel Prize'' inmng psychologist.
and Deaton undertook the study to Jearn more
about economic gro" th and policy.
Some have questioned the value of growth to
indrviduals, and Deaton said the) were far from
dcflmti\ ely resolving that question.
But he added. "Working on this paper has
brought me a lot of emotional well-being. As an
econom1st I tend to think money is good for you,
and am pleased to find some e\Jdence for that.''
0\erall, the researchers said, "as in other studIes ol well-being. we found that most people \\ere
quite happy and satisfied w1th their lives.''
.
Comparing their life-satisfaction results With
those of other countnes. the researchers o;aid the
United States ranked mnth after the Scandinavian
countnes, Canada, the Netherlands, Switzerland
and Ne\\ Zealand.
1be research was supported by the Gallup
Organiz.atton and the Nat1onal Institute on Aging.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader 5ervi.oes
Correction Polley
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to be accurate 11 you know of an
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2010

1

Whenever companies start hir
ing freely again, JOb-seekers with
specialized skills and education
will have plenty of good opportunities. Others will face a choice.
Take a job with ]ow pay - or
none at all.
Job creation will likely remain
weak for months or even years.
But once employers do step up
hiring. some economists expect
job openings to fall mninly mto
two categories of roughly equal
numbers
• Professional fields with higher
pay. Think lawyers, research scientists and software engmeer .
• Lower-skill and lower-paying
jobs, like home health care :udes
and store clerks.
And those in between? Their
outlook is bleaker. Economists
foresee fewer moderately pmd
factory supervisors. postal workers and office administrators.
That's the sobering message
American workers face as they
celebrate Labor Day at a time of
high unemployment, cant hiring
and a widespread loss of job security. Not until 2014 or later is the
nation expected to have regained
all, or nearly all. the 8.4 million
jobs lost to the recession. Millions
of lost jobs in real estate, for
example, aren't likely to be
restored this decade. if ever.
On Friday, the government smd
the August unemployment rate
ticked up to 9.6 percent. Not
enough jobs were created to
absorb the growing number of
people seeking work. The unem•ployment rate has exceeded 9 percent 1or 16 months. the longest
such stretch in nearl) 30 years
The cnsic; po es a thre t to
nd
Pre 1dent Barack Obam
\\h e
Democrat m Congre
hold on the Hou e nd
n te
appears to be at mere~ mg n k
because of' oter discontent.
E\en when the JOb market p1ck
up. many people w1ll be left
part,
behind. The threat stem
from the economy's con mumg
shift from one driven by manufactunng to one fueled by sef\ 1ce
mdustnes.
Pay for future service-sector
jobs wtll tend to vary from vel)
high to very low. At the arne
time, the number of middleincome serv1ce-~ector job will
shrink, according to gO\ ernment
projections. Any job that can be
autom:tted or outsourccd overseas
is likely to continue to decline.
The service sector's growth
could also ma~nity the nation's
income inequality. with more people either affluent or financtnlly
queezed. The nation isn't educntin~ enough people for the higherkilled servtce-sector job of the
future, economist!\ warn.
"There will be jobs," says
Lnwrence Katz. a Hnn·ard econo
mist. "The big question is what
they are going to pay. and what
krnd of lives the~· will allm\ pcopie to lead? 'Ilus -...;ill be a big
1ssue for how broad a m1ddle class
we are going to have.''
On one point there's broad
agreement: Of 8 million-plus jobs
lost to the recession - in fields
like manufacturing, real estnte
and financial services - man).
perhnps mo:st, aren·~ comin~ bnc~.
In their place wrll be JObs Ill
henlth care. infonnation technology and statistic~~ analy~is. So~te
of the new p&lt;hltlons w11l requ1re

complex .;;kills or higher education. Others won't
but they
won't pay very much, either.
"Our occupatiOnal structure is
really becommg bifurcated," says
R1chard Florida. a professor at
Unhersity of Toronto. "We're
becoming more of a di\ ided
nation by the work '' e do."
By 2018, the government forecasts a net total of 15.3 million
new job'\. If that proves tiUe,
unemployment would drop far
closer to a histoncal norm of 5
percent.
Nearly all the ne"' JObs wlll be
m the ~ervice &lt;,ector. the Labor
Department says. The nat1on 's 78
million baby boomer-; "'ill need
more health care sef\ 1~cs ns they
age. for examP.le. Demand for
medical JObs w1ll rise. And mno
vations m h1gh technology and
alternative energy are lrkely to
spur growth in occupations that
don't yet exist.
Hiring can't come fast enough
for the 14 9 m1llion unemplo)ed
Americans Counting part-tinJe
employees who \\ ould prefer fulltime jobs. plus out-of work people who have stopped lookmg for
JObs. the number of "underemployed" 1s 26.2 million
Manufacturing hac; shed 2 nullion job:s since the recessiOn
began. Constructton has lost 1.9
million,
financial
services
651,000.
But the biggest factor has been
the bust in real estate The 'anished JObs rnnge from con~truc­
tion \\Orkers and lurmture makers
to loan offtcers, appratsers and
Mood) ·s
material supphe~
Analytics estimates the total number of housing-related JObr. lost at
2.4 million When you include
commercml real estate. the number IS far h1gher
One of them 1 \1artha E cobar.
\\h I
th
her 1350.m office
1organ ( hase
1
( t\, Cahl She
" one o 16 Jan t r.;;, mostl) single mothers who Jo t Jobs as part
of the real e te crunch that's
d .
squeezed I
Some of t
trnveled to New
York on lltu J)' to try to presure JPMorgan to get its cleaning
contractor to take them back,
gi .. en that the bank earned $8 1
billion dunng the first half of th1
yea~
·
"I don't kno" what I am gomg
to do if I can't get my JOb back."
Escobar. 41. said.
JPMorgan Chase poke~man
Gar) Kishner said the bank has no
say o\'er the la)of'fs. '' hich he
smd are handled by the building's
cleaning contractor.
On top of real e tate related JOb
lo ses. manufacturing is likely to
keep shedding JObs. ending
IO\\ er-skllled
'' ork m er.;;eas.
Million:-. who ''orked in tho e
fields "ill need to find JObs m
higher-sk1 lied or lO\\ er-pay mg
occupations.
•.
.
''The bio fear IS the COII11ll) IS
simply not preparing workers for
the kind of skills that the country
is going to need." sa) s Gautam
CEO
of
Godh\\ani,
Simp!) Hired.com. ,,. h1ch track
JOb listings.
Sector like!) to t;ro" fa test.
according to econonust and go"
ernment projection . me:
• HEALTH CARE
The sector 1s expected to be the
leadinut&gt; J'ob I:'&gt;"Cnenltllr, adding 4
million by 2018, accordmg to
Labor Department data. An aging
population reqUires more doctors

and nurses, physical therapi&lt;&gt;ts,
home health aides c~nd pharma
ci.;;ts.
•
Many of these jobs will pay
well. PhysJC~ll therap1&lt;;ts avera ed
abatit $76,000 Ia t year. accordm •
to the depc~rtment s data. Other
pa) far le s. Home health care
aides earned an average of JU t
$21.600.
Home health CHre and personal
care aides are expected to add
about 900,000 jobs by 2018 - 50
percent more than m 2008
Jennifer Gamboa ol Body
Dynamics Inc, an Arlington, Va
based phys1cal therapy firm, say
the dri\e to redu~e health care
costs should benefit her profes
sion, "hich can tre;1t pain les'
than
c;urger).
expcnstvely
Gamboa plans to add two
employees m the next )ear.
• INFORMA'IION J l!CHNOL
OGY: Technolog) could be an
economic elixir as computers ruH.l
online networks expand wa) s A
automate sen 1ces, distnbtW
medm and commumcate.
Companies \\ill need people to
build and secure those netv. arks.
That should boost the number of
programmers. network administrators and securit)' specialio;ts by
45 percent to 2.1 million by 2018,
the gO\ ernment forecasts. Must of
these jobs will pro,.ide aboveaverage pay.
Technology pay averaged
$84.400 in 2008 - nearly double
the average prh ate-sector pay of
$45.400. according to an analysi&lt;&gt;
of the most recent full-year data
b) the 1echAmerica foundation,
a research group.
• NEW INDUSTRIES: Deepak
Advani, an lBM executive. has a
title he says didn't exist tive years
ago: "Vice president of predictive
analytics"
Companies and government
acoencies ha' e amas5ed data on
~ha'&gt; ior' ranging from .;;hopping
habits to cnminal activity.
PredictJ\ e analytics is the art
determining \\hat to do with tl
data. Ho'' should workers' tm
be deployed? How best to target
customers'? Such jobs could grow
20 percent by 2018. the govern
ment predicts.
Still. econonusts S.'l) more
be needed to boost JOb growth.
The answer rna) be ome technological breakthrough akin to the
personal computer or the Internet.
"Most big booms come from a
particular ector that moves the
rest of the economy," said
Richard Freeman, a Harvard labor
economist.
Technology spurred JOb growth
after the 1982 and 1991 reces
sions. 1bc PC became revolutiona!) in the early 19 0 . Internet
use exploded after the Mosaic
\\eb brO\\ er wa introduced in
1994. Housrng e\entually lifted
emplo)mcnt after the 2001 dotcom bust.
"lbere's a lack of clarity on
what the next bi~ thing is going lo
be th1s tune," md Da' td Card, an
economics professor at t.
lJni.,ersity of California
l nttl there is, man) people WI
ha'&gt;e to lower expectations ,md
lh mg standards a the) en.ter
fields "ith les~ pa) and less JOb
stability. said Dan Finnigan, C~~O
of online emplO) ment sef\ 1ce
Job' ite.
"People \\ ho arc unemplo)ed
have to cmhrnce th1s future that
the) are going to have man)
jobs,'' he said. "We will always be
working on the next gtg." •

.r

''ill

�Tuesday, Septcmbe1· 7,

2010

www.mydailyscntincl.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Deaths
Camet I. (Snyder) Burdette
Gamet I. (Snyder) Burdette, 91. Letart. W.Va., died
Saturday, Sept 4, 20 I0. Funeml sen ices will be '"teld
at 10 n.m , The day. Sept. 7. 20 I0, at Crow-Hussell
Funeral Home \\ ith Re\. Richard Nca e officiating.
Family and friends \\ill gather aflcr the en ice at the
burg ~1emorial Gardens, Parkcrc;burg, W Va.,
graveside sen ice at 12:30 p.m.. V1sitation \\as
MonJay.

For the Record
Common ])leas
POMEROY - The folio\\ mg were filed in the
record of Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch:
Domestic
• Action for dissolution. with children, by Kelly L.
Bartlett, LaiT) E. Bartlett.

1OOth Anniversary:
Holzer Health
Systems to host
picnic in the park
Williams, will be held in
recognition of 9/11.
Health
screeningc;,
including
non-fasung
GALLIPOLIS
Holzer Health Systems chole terol, glucose and
will host "Picnic in the blood pressure, \\ill be
Park'' to celebrate its mailuble from 9-11 a.m.
IOOth nnni\ersc~ry on The HMC Wellness
Saturday, Sept 1 I at Wagon " ill be in the park
to offer screenings a'&gt;
Gallipolis C1ty Park.
Activities slated for the \\ell as prO\ ide health
mfonnation for any mterday include the Charle
E. Hol7er. Jr.. MD, e ted.
The double-eliminaCommemorative Run,
health screenings prO\ id- tion cornhole tournament
ed by HMC Community '' ill be 1i mlled to 20
Health and Wellness, teams and is set to begin
cornhole tournament and at 10 a.m. Prizes will be
awarded to the top two
karaoke contest.
The commemorative teams. Teams are encourAndrew Carter/photos
run will start the day otT aged to sign up as soon as T:he fourth annual Harvest Moon Pow Wow was held over Labor Day weekend in Gallipolis City Park. The celwith a 5K run to begm at po sible. !here is a fee
ebration of Nat1ve Amencan culture and heritage drew large crowds to Downtown Gallipolis all three days.
8 a.m. c~nd a 1-mile for registration.
A karaoke "Holzer
run/walk to begm at 8:05
a.m. Both the "alk and Idol'' contest ''ill be held
race will begm at the dunng the e\ent as \\ell,
Holzer Chntc S\Camore '' 1th the public encourBranch. The pre:registro- aged to participate and
deadline is Aug 27. ob erve. The conte~t \\ 1ll
is a fee for regis- begin at noon and will
'It bnngc; m our ances- including je\\ell)'. wood entiation between the
BY ANDREW CARTER
award prize to the conon.
tral roots to the area.'' crafts and other ~oods. t\\ o. So. the) went ahead
No dog arc allowed te tants \\ ho recei\e the
Abrahamson
said \\ere also set up m the and added 'son· to the
and no child care will be mo t applause. The
People can see how park. 'athe Amcncan end of the name. So it
GALLIPOLIS
A
provided The first I00 crowd w1ll decide the celebrallon of
up
being
att\e naU\ e' once celebrated food \\aS also a\ atlable '' ound
Abmhamson."
participants reg1stered winner~ of the contest
Amencan culture and and brought together for ale.
Abrahamson said it
Abrahamson satd he
In addition to the e heritage came to a con- people of different
will recei\ c a commemorative t-sh1rt and prize actl\ ities. intlatables and clu ion a the sun dtppcd nations It g1ves a time traces his own heritage was many years before
will be awarded to top a cookout will be a\ ad- toward the tree line on for e\el) body to di cuss back to the Cherokee he disco,ered his the
runners and walker . able free of charge for all Labor Day ,1s the fourth i"&gt;sues and trade !!OOdS nation. He al o had an root of his family name
anecdote and from that time has
RegistratiOn forms are in attendance from II annual Hanest Moon and dance and celebmte mtercsting
about hO\\ his' family been able to trace his
available at W\\ w.hol7.- a.m.-2 P·l}l·
Pow Wow ended ito;; Mother Earth.''
.
family\ genealogy. He
l•or mformatton or to three-da)
The weekend's events name came to be.
er.org.
run
Ill
"!\1y great-great gwnd- said many Cherokee
Following the run, a register for hny of the Gallipolio; C1ty P.trk.
centered around drummemorial service, led by events, call (740) 441Accord1ng to Tom mer" and Juncers. many father, Abraham, v.a~ up dcscendanh that he has
HMC
Director
of 3973 or (740) 446-590 I. Abrahmmon. one nf the of whom were dre~~ed in in Michigan; he was one met ha\c related similar
Chaplaincy
Fred
authentic of the ones that went stone'&gt; of discovery to
organizers of the e\ent, colorful,
13
to
15
Nuthc regali.t. The artistic drum north," he suid. "He had hi" own.
The pow \\ow ''as
A met ican nations were for the event \\a~ a group worked in a logging
represented by tho e called Red Circle. The camp. When they fonned sponsored by the .Nati\e
Education
'' ho participated in the co-host drum wa" a a community up there in American
pO\\ \\0\\ th1c; past \\CCk- group called Sky Ha\\ k. Mtchigan. the) had to A sociauon. Inc.. the
end. He &lt;ud the pow Both drum~ ori!!inate register for the commu- Ohio Arts Council and
WO\\
1s
unportant from northern OhiO and nity. So, they had the Ohio Ri,er Border
their
own Abraham, my great-great lmttathe. Abraham ...on
bccau"e it allows Nathe brought
grandfather. and hts on, said many local busiAmericans .md those of dancers.
\endor selling Nathe my great grandfather, but nesses also contributed
natt\ e ancestry to keep
American merchandi e. they had to ha\e a dif1cr- to the pO\\ \\ O\\.
their tradittons alh e
comec; out to support the
SENTINEL STAFF
fir t-e,er Mothmah 5K.
e wEWSctMYD.tJI.YSEtmNaCOM
The race is designed to
POINT PLEASANT, be a fun e\ent and \\e
W.Va. - The annual welcome all participants
Mothman Feo;tival is from competitive runners
shower~. Mostl) cloudy,
l\1esda)': Sunny, \\ 1th a calm.
to those who ''ish to
right around the corner.
with
a high near 83.
Thursday:
Mo~tly
Several new events walk,'' Roush said. "We high ncar 90. Culm wind
Chance
of precipitation
unny,
with
a
high
near
79.
becoming
south\\CSt
hope
to
sec
C\
eryonc
out
have been mlded to this
is
30
percent.
Thursday
Ni~ht:
year':s festival, including on Sept. I8 for the 5K between 12 and 15 mph.
Sunda~ Night: Part!)
Tuesda) Night: A Pat1ly cloudy, with a low
the
Mothmun
the inaugural Mothmun and
cloud). \\ ith :1 hm
5K run/walk. The event FestiHtl. 1t \\ill be a great slight chance of showers. around 52.
Friday: Partly sunny, around 58.
is slated to take place at time to get in some exer- then a ch,mcc of shtl\\ ers
Monda): Sunny. '' ith
with
a high near 81.
ms
after
and
thunderstot
cise
as
well
as
cnjo)
what
8:30 a.m. on Saturday.
Frida)
~if!ht:
A a high ncar 81.
II p.m. Mostly cloudy,
the festival has to offer."
Sept. 18.
Daniel
Row,h. '' ith a low around 61. chance of shO\\ ers and
The 3.1 mile race will
Southwest wind between thunder torm~ l\1o~tty
Mothman
5K
co-dtrector,
begin on Mnin St. across
from
Tu-Endie-Wei also encouraged resi- 5 and 8 mph. Chance of cloudy, with a Joy; around
State Park, run through dents to participate. He precipitation is 40 per- 61. Chance of precipitaNe\\
r,unfall tion is 30 percent.
town and end at the described the 5K as an cent.
Saturday: A chance of
Mothman Statue, locat- effort to help the amounts of Jco;s than a
o;ho"•
ers and thundertenth
of
an
inch,
except
Mothm.tn
Festhal
grow
.
ed at Gunn Park The
Mothman higher amount~ posstblc o;torni . Mostly cloud),
"The
event is open to all ages.
\\Jth a high nt!ar 85.
Festhal is a great e\ent in thunder torn1s.
Serious runners, jogger
Chance
of precipitation
Wedncsda):
Mo.-..tly
and
brings
a
lot
of
people
and walkers are all welcome to participate. to Point Pleasant each sunn), \\ tth a high ne,u IS 40 percent.
Saturday Night: A
Prizes will be awarded year. We \\anted to intro- 80. Light wind becoming
to the top overall male duce another activity for west bet\\ ccn II ,md 14 chance of showers and
33105 HILAND RD. SUITE I
thunderstorm:.. Mostly
and female finishers as the festhal with the mph.
7 40-992-2318
Wednesday
ight: cloudy, with a low around
well ns the top age Mothmnn 5K," he said.
Race registration will ~lostl) clear. with n low 66. Chance of precipitap winners. Age
Nationwide~
ps arc: 19 and take place at 7:30 a.m. at around 50 Wec;t wind tion ts 30 percent.
Sunday:
A
chance
of
around
(l
mph
bccom111g
the
start
line.
Ehtry
forms
under; 20-29; 30-39: 40On Your Side ..
49; and 50 plus. All p:tr- &lt;trc a\ailablc at the Point
ticipants will recei,·c a Plcusant Ohio Valley
ay. September 9.
post-rucc goody bag. In Hank Branch, Point
· Pomeroy
addition, the lir~t 50 Plea~ant Register oftice,
entrants will n::cci\C a l- Pleasant Valley Hospttal
Food
Soft DMnks
Wellncsc; Center and
:-hirt.
mydallysentlnel.com
Hope Roush, Mothman Harm Steak House.
For more informa5K director, encouraged
everyone to take part in tion, call 740-645online
news
8465 or e-mail moththe event.
"I hope the commumty mnn5k@l ahoo.com

Pow wow honors Native American
culture, heritage

Inaugural
Mothman 5K
set for Sept. 18

Meigs County Forecast

cUSTOME"IJ
1\Yt'RECIATIOII
DAY
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The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 7,

2010

.Boehner balances GOP factions
B Y CHARLES
BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PIIESS

WASHINGTON
John Boehner could \\ nlk
do\\ n most Americ.m
~trcets \\ 1thout turning a
head.
But the perpetually
tanned, cham-smoking
Oh10an might be the next
House speaker and a huge
force in national politics,
trying to man.tge an
increasingly libertarianleaning Republican caucus while leading the
opposition to President
Burack Obama's policies.
For those who know
Bochner, th(' lluestion is
which ver&lt;&gt;tOn of the
House Republican leader
will emerge as speaker if
the GOP tukes at least 40
seats from Democrab in
November.
Will it he the policyminded Ia\\ maker \\ ho
sometime hO\\ s hiparti!&gt;an tendencie . uch as
when he worked with the
late Sen. Ted Kennedy.
D-Mass., on major education bill ?
Or \\ill it be the fiery
partisan of recent months
who shouted "hell no" to
Chama's health care hill
und who thrc\\ the
Democrats· rna sive economic sumulu bill to the
House floor in a theatrical
rebuke'?
Boehner left little doubt
that the president and
other Democrats will face
fierce rest tance in the
House if he is speaker.
st~lfting with a push to
dismantle Obama·s hardfought health care Ia\\.
"We're going to do
ever)'thing \\e can to prevent this lav. from bemg
Implemented. w1d 1 mean
everything," Boehner srud
m a recent mten ie\\. "I
thmk it \\ill rum health

sv Juue CARR

care and b,mkrupt the
country."
In tn1th, Ob,una's veto
powers will nMke it \lrtually impossible to repeal
the law. Still. Bochner
said, he \\ould use every
p.trliamentary and appropniltions trick available.
mcluding making sure
"they don't gel the funds
to hire employees to
implement the law ..
Bochner, 60, has been
raising his prolile 111
1ccent dnys. g1\ ing wellpublicized speeche~ in
Cle\eland
and
Milwaukee criticizing
Obama's economic and
military policies.
Still. he kno\\ s he
\\on't become a household name O\Crnight. H1s
ramped-up schedule is
mainly a signal to GOP
colleagues and pohtical
insiders that he's ready to
assume lcadershtp of the
House - ar1d 111 some
respects, the entire party
- if voters end four
years of Democratic
House control and Rep
Nancy Pelosi's speakership.
J·or Bochner. leading a
full-throated Republican
oppo.,it1on to Obama and
congressional Democrats
might be the easy part.
His bigger challenge
looms on his right.
Restless and uncompromisingly conservathe
Republicans probably
wJII expand their ranks
after tea part) lo) ali t
win some race No\. 2
Boehner already has a
somewhat wary alliance
with several younger and
more dogmflttc GOP
member . They include
Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia, the party's second-ranking
House
leader.
Cantor and h\ o col-'
league - Rep Ke' m

McCarthy of California
Republican strategist
and Paul Ryan of and
lobbyist
John
Wi cono;in - arc pub- J·cchery. who worked for
lishing a Rcpublkan former Speaker Dennis
manifesto, "Young Guns: Jlustert,
R-111., &lt;;aid
A New Generation of Boehner
have to
Con sen at1ve Leaders," cope with "a bunch • of
which is promoted by a rambunctious new memflashy video.
bers." He pred1cts partiThere's one glaring san gridlock, hut he said
omission in the hoopla Boehner can effectively
0\er the book: any refer- lead his party and its
ence to Boehner.
young cadre of fireRepublicans say there's breathers.
little chance of a coup
"He provides adult
attempt if the GOP takes leadership," Fechcry said.
control of the House. But
On
the
surface,
expectations have soared Bochner is a Wa hington
so high that e\ery leader- throwback. He loves golf
hip post, includmg .md cocktails. He is
Cantor's. could be in play genial and courteous to
if they fall short.
almost everyone, includHouse mentbcrs elect ing
rep&lt;&gt;J1ers'
and
their respective party Democratic staffers. He
leaders. The maJority constantly
smoke
party's
top
leader Barclay cigarettes, even
becomes the speaker, during meetings in his
who wields cnonnous Capitol office. And he
influence over le~i,Jation maintains a remarkably
and follows the vtce pres- deep tan. \\hich Obama
ident ih the line of presi- and others ha\e gently
dential succession.
mocked.
Boehner scoffs at sugThe second of 12 chilgestions that the "young dren in a Catholic'faroily
guns'' might undermine from Cincinnati, Boehner
his leadership
played high school foot"They are some of our ball and helped at his
bri~htest, most cnerfather·s bar and restau~et1c members:· he said
rant. He worked his way
111 a telephone interview
through college, somecampaign times as a janitor, gradubetween
stop for House candi- ating
from
Xavier
dates in the Dakotas. He University at age 27. He
praised. \\ ithout fully rose to the top of a plasRyan's Hes distribution compaendorsing,
much-debated propos- ny,
and
entered
als to replace the corpo- Republican politics in his
rate income tax with a hometown.
consumption tax and to
While clearly a consertransform
Medicare \ative. Boehner has
over time into a voucher sometimes worked with
program that wouldn't Democratc; to enact
legislation.
keep pace w1th ri ing major
health care co t
Notable
examples
Ryan's road map "is include his 200 I collabovery
good
work," ration with Kennedy and
Uochncr said. He added Rep. George Miller, Dthat he doesn't agree Calif., now a top Pelosi
\\ Jth e\ erything Ryan all). to pass President
Ge rge \\ Bush'
•o
propo eo;

will

Child Left Behind education bill.
In 2008, Boehner was
embarrassed when he
failed to corral enough
GOP votes to help the
Democratic majority pass
an early version of the
financial bailout bill. The
Dow plunged 780 points
that day.
The often-emotional
GOP leader seemed to
choke back tears when he
asked colleagues • to
search their souls for the
nation's best interests.
The episode might suggest that Bochner is a bit
less rigidly partisan than '
some of his fellow GOP
leaders. Mo-;t House
Republicans opposed the
bailout bill that he
backed.
Hastert, as spealer, had
a "majority of the majority" rule. He would not
push major legislation
unless most of his GOP
caucus supported it, rendering the Democratic
minority almost superfluous.
Boehner says he would
want to "make sure our
team is supportive" of big
bills. but he stopped short
of embracing Hastert's
rule. "All members
should have a role in the
legislative
process,"
Boehner said.
Even a whiff of bipartisan cooperation angers
some tea party supporters, and Boehner might
clash with the newest and
most ideologtcal House
Republicans. But in other
respects. they might be
kindred souls.
Boehner entered the
House in 1991 as a windo\\ s-rattling reformer.
He JOined the "Gang of
Seven" that i~sted on
naming all 355 members
\\ 1th overdrafts at the
Hou e Bank. a damaging

eanda1.
And he has long
opposed earmark spending, which ome lawmakers use to steer pet projects to their districts. It's
a favonte conservati
target this year.
Boehner was a key ally
of Rep. Newt Gingrich
the. firebrand
when
Georgia lawmaker led the
1994 Republican revolution that ended four
decades of Democratic
House control. But
Boehner lost his leadership post in the tunnoil
that followed the speaker's downfall in 1998.
Boehner spent years quietly cultivating friendships with colleagues and
planning his return to
power, which came in
2005.
Now possibly on the
cusp of nationwide recognition and clout, Boehner
is a solid chotec for a
Republican Party that
must hame s and direct
its emotions if it is to
regain the ground it lost
in the last two elections,
aid Rep. Jack Kingst.
R-Ga.
Kingston. an 18-yeat
House veteran who has
had hh own turns in the
GOP leadership, said
Boehner "is a known
quantity. He's not going
to be saying anything stupid or doing anything stupid.''
Boehner may lack
Gingrich's revolutionary
1..eal and intellectual bent,
Kingston said. but he has
a steadier ¥rasp of intramural politiCS.
"He'd be better able to
manage that ne\\. hardenergy reform crowd than
Newt," Kmgston said,
adding that the House "is
a political body. not an
ideological body."

SM~ri~~~~~ ~ee!l:gA~o~~O,~~eSh ~~~s~e~~pr~~~ !~.~~mo!~?~o•-ror-profi• pn,··

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
Pri' ate, nonprofit colleges in Ohro and 11
other
states
ha\ e
launched a nc\\ web tool
to help students find pri' ate loans for school.
C. Todd Jone1&gt;. an Ohio
official who helped
develop the \\ eb ite
called The Marketplace,
atd students can find it
d.tuntmg to shop for bank
or credit union loans
needed to fill the gap
between
government
grants or scholarships
and the cost of attending
college.
"The big difference in
this is that it \\ill nO\\
aiiO\\ a transparent marketplace \\here student:-.
can find out how much
they are going to be
charged for their loan
before they make a loan
application, and the&gt;'
won't have their crcd1t
mting dinged live times."
aid Jones, president of
the
Association
of

Unnersit1es of Ohio.
Jones
s.tid
The
Marketplace
sen ice
saves lenders overhead
costs so they're able to
elimmate
fees
and
markups that can surprise
student borrowers.
The online loan comparison and shopping
sen ice is operating in
Ohio,
Californi.t,
l\1aryland,
Oregon.
Pennsylvania, New York,
Indiana,
Michigan,
Kentucky, Mis issippi,
Tennessee and Alabama.
Jones said he and his
counterparts
in
California and Maryland
conceived the \\eb tool
about two years .tgo and
hired
0\ erturc
of
Technologies
Bethesda. Md .. to build
it.
It was at about that
time that the surging pri\ate college loan market
stalled.
satd
Justin
Dracger, president of the
National Association of
Student Finnncial Aid
Administrators.

College Boara. a membcrship organization of
colleges and umversities.
pnvate loan 'olume hrt
$24 billion 10 constant
dollars during the 200708 school year- making
up about a quarter of all
college borrowing then declined by 50 percent the next year.
'"In the last t\\O years
we've seen a precipitous
drop in pri\ate borrowing
to where it's .trotmd 13
percent,'' Draeger said.
"That
drop
wasn't
because of a decrease in
demand. It \\as because,
like the rest of the financinl market, the private
student loan market \\as
eizing up.''
For pri\ate colleges,
whose students do the
most borrov. ing. that':.
particularly troubling.
The latest data compiled by the College
Board show 72 percent of
students at not-fur-profit,
four-year colleges take
on debt- and more of it
when finishing a

am. That•scompared t
percent of student!~
public, four-year um\er
s1ttes. In 2007-08, half as
many public unhersity
graduates compared to
graduates of prh•ate, nonprofit institutions had
accrued debt of $30,500
or more. the board found.
Before the web portal
\\as available, ~tudents
were left to navigate
tlo1ens of financial in\titution websites to compare loan terms, !&gt;aid
Da\\ n Knepper. director
of financial aid at the
Um\ ersity of Rio Grande
and
Rio
Grande
Community
College.
She's referred between
I 00 and 150 student'&gt; to
the website this year. she
said.
Sarah Matthew. a student
at
Duquesne
Unhersity in Pittsburgh,
said the pri,ate loan she
ecured through The
~1arketplace made it possible for her to attend an
accelerated
~econddegree nur ing program

chooJ.
"It v. as very difficult to
get a loan,'' :-.aid
Matthe\\,
of
We~t
V1rginia. ''I'm 27 years
old. I've never had a student loan before so I really don't have much of a
credit history to go on.
You really don't think
about that all through
college. how your credit
rate looks."
In Ohio, the site aims
to help students at its 51
pri\ate, nonprofit institutions. including in,titutions such as Wittenberg.
Case Western Reserve
and Xavier universities
and Oberlin, Kenyon and
Hiram colleges.
Concern over accessibility to loans in Ohio
was compounded by the
fact that the state's signature need-based aid
program. the Ohio
College
Opportunity
Grant. wa drastically
cut during the h1s: buuget cycle, Jones said.
Some ~rant mone) 1s
still avatlable to student.,

Ohio officials consider regulating youth sports
COLUMBUS (AP)State officials and athletic organizations ..ay it's
time to think ahout regu:
lating youth sports programs outside schools.
This change in attitude
The
comes
after
Columbus Di-;patch published a five-part series
that explored a yearround, $5 billion youth
sports industry. The
newspaper reported that
largely
unregulated
sports programs arc
pushing some children
too hard and pressuring
families to spend big
money traveling the
country fm ~ames, specialized traimng and the
pursuit of elusive college
scholarships.

"We ha\c done a disservice to our children
and
their
families,
because we have ullowed
the structure to grow into
what it is," Ohio State
Univer;ity athletic director Gene Smith said. "We
have had all these cottage
industries pop up and
convince families they
have
to
fly
to
Connecticut or go to
Vegas to compete a~ainst
the best. I think It's a
flawed system."
Ohio High School
Athletic Association officials have outlined tandards for youth sports to
protect hundreds of thousmuts of children who
participate in ),ports programs outside schools.

With more money. officmls said they could perform backsround chech.
establish hnancial guic.lclines and develop a train!n~ program to prevent
IDJUnes.
Youth sports programs
are currently run by nonorganizations,
profit
companies, cities and
individuals.
Some youth :.port
groups arc willing to
meet with the high school
association to c.liscuss
ideas for standards and
regulations.
Dublin Youth Athletics
athletic director Jim Link
said it make sense that
the high school association wants to prO\ ide
leadership.

Visit us online at
myda llysentlnel.com

Your online sou1·cejor news

schools. Jones mdr but
not as much. BY the
association'S estfmate.
need-based state aid to
full-time undergraduates
at independent colleges
fell from $4,992 in
2008-09 to $2,256 in
2009-lO.
Officials empha:.ize
that students should
secure all the government-backed grants and
scholarships they can
before ever turning to a
pnvate loan.
"Your private nonfederalloans are the loans of
last re:.ort;' said Cindy
Bailey. a senior policy
analyst at the College
Board. '"What keep:. us
up at night i that they get
lured into the private
market before they find
out about the federal
market."
The Marketplace ".A
)oite
walks studenW
through government programs first, Jones said.
\On the Internet: The
~larketplace, www.overturemarketplace.com.)

THA~K

YOU

Home
National Bank

aid officials should
"It's a good idea
options
to
because they·,e got explore
structure,'' said Jim Link, improve youth sports
athletic director for programs.
"When too great of an
Dublin Youth Athletics.
an organi1..ation he has emphasb is placed on
been with for 28 vcars. excelling and winning"It', something I would \\ hether to be compctilisten to, see what th e for a schohtr'&gt;hip or a
they've gut in mind, and professional career there can be '&gt;eriou!&gt; conce if it makes ~ense.''
But others - like the sequences, including perMid-Ohio Select Soccer manent injury or too
1\laka)la
League president Jim much stress ft)r a younf.
to
handle,·
Sturm- said there's no person
Findley
necc.l for a uniform set of Strickland said.
standards in youth sports.
" I don't ee an overarching need for that,"
Stum1 said. "That 'ery
\\ell may b(' a proverbial
solution in search of a
September 16th • 7-9 pm
problem."
Boarding a P omeroy l ...t&gt;n e at 6:30 pm
•Gov. Ted Strickland

for purchasing my
Resene Grand
Champion Goat.

Sternwheel
Dinner Cruise

Spon~ored

b) The Ladies of the Meigs Co. RepubUcan Part)

$20.00 Per Person (Only 150 tickets available

�Inside

Bl

Hail) l\lail poll, Page B2
Rio Grnnde Athlctks, Page b6

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

tt&gt;CAL
POMERoY

SCHEDULE
A. ac!&gt; dulo ol upcorr1ng

high llchool varsity eporl/ng evontt
lnvolvlnlj coams lrom MOlDS Mosor . nnd
Gnllla counllea
~

Seotombilr 7

Volleyball
Gall a Aca at Warr "" 5 15 p m
Be pre at Eastern 6 p m
South G lla at Southom 6 p m
Meigs at Fodoral Hock "9 6 p m
River Valloy at Ches 5 30 p r1

Pt. Pleasant at Chapmruw

o 6pm

Cove e1t at OVCS 6 p m
Hanna at Teays Va ley Chr 7 p m
Golf
Trimble at Eastern s p m
Wahama South Ga ta at Sol.!hern
5 prr
RIVer Valloy at Pt. PI
t 4 JO ~m
Cross Country
Ga !a Academy EJ 1ern M gs
Rtver Va ley Po :'ll P easal"l at
Coach's Corner lnv (Ga
Academy) 5 30 p r.1
Soccer

Jackson at Ga a Acadt-ny s p m
Pomt Pleasant (G) at C•oss Lanes
Ctmstiar&gt; 5 p !'11
OVCS at Ironton St ..oe 6 p '11
W.m!nm!IIY~.tomli:OLQ

Volleyball
•

Galha Academy at Me gs. 6 p m
hama at Waterford Gp m
roes Valley at S Gall a 6 p m
GoH
Eastern at Fort Frye 5 p m
Wellston at Me gs s p m
Ibumday. SeDtomber 9

Volleybtlll

Adkins wins Class AA·A race at Geico Invite
score by placing 57th
overall.
Holley
bliLabeth
ONA. W. V&lt;t.
A total
(24:36)
and
Katie
of 28lJ competitors
Dunlap (28: 17) also had
including both cross
respective finishes of
countr) programs from
66th and I 08th for the
Gallin Academy and
Blue Angels.
Pomt Pleasant - took·
Andrea Porter - the
part in the Class AA-A
~~~e Lady Knight to par
Dh i'&gt;ion of the 20 I 0
t1c1pate m the event Adkins
Watts
Geico Cla~!&gt;ic held
fimc;hed 31st overall
Saturday afternoon at and Berkeley Spnngc; '' ith a time of 22:36.
Cabell M1dland High
TI1ere were 159 com(124) in the contest,
Scl)ool m C'lbell Count)'.
while Scott ( 162) round- petitors in the boys conGallia Academy junior
test and the top three
Peyton Adkins came ed out the top five in the teams were Fairland
nwa) as the indh idual team category.
(97), Grafton ( 134) and
Adkms posted a "in- Phillip Barbour ( 156).
champion in the varsity
girls e\ ent - leading ning time ot JC): 12, win Gallia Academy finished
the Blue Angels to a ning the 130-cnmpetitor 17th overall with a score
fourth pla.::e overall tin- event by nine se"onds. ol 452, "'hilt: Point
ish in the team competi- :\lckenna Warner was Plca~-nnt was 19th in the
tion. Point Pleasant haJ next for GAllS. finish- 23-team field with 476.
only one female com- ing seventh ovcrnll with
.Matt Watts led the
a time of 21 :06. !\lad1son Blue Devils by finishinu
petitor in the event.
fhe Angels - who Holley (22:37) was 12th with a time of
po!"&gt;tcd a team score of 32ml. Samantha Barnes 17:44. while Quenton
127
trailed onl) (23:39) was 51st and McKinniss was next in
champion Fain iew (76), Hannah Watts (24:0 I) 1OOth with a mark of
Phillip Barbour (106) rounded out the team 21.14. Timmy Warner
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTfRS MYDAILYTAIBUNE: COM

(21 :47) wns
l 08th,
Logan Cireenlee 123:14)
was I 28th and Ben Bush
(23:40) rounded out the
team ~c.orc by placing
I 34th overall.
Case) Lawrance was
also 141st for the Blue
Devils with a time of
23:58.
Ryan Bonecutter led
the Big Black Knights
by finishing 73rd with a
time of 20:06. while
Riken Nowlin was 92nd
with a mark of 20:54.
Caleb Riffle (21:21) was
I03rd,
Elijah
(21 ·31)
McClanahan
was 106th and Guy
Fisher (23:34) ·rounded
out the team score by
finishing 132nd overall~
Logan Burch was also
153rd for PPHS with a
time of 27:43.
Junior Tanner Mattie
of Fairland won the individual crown WJth a time
ot 16·39.

Logan al G a Ac:ld my 5 l5 p m
Water1ord at Ea tern. 6 p
T'lmble a1 Southern 6 p m
MeigS at V nton County 6 p m
RJYer VaHey at Coa Grovo 5 30
pm
Belpre at Wa ama 6 p m
Slssonvil e at Po t Pleasant 5 30
p.m
Grace Christ an 1Hannan 6 p m
Golf
Ga Ill Academy RIVer var ey at
Jackson 4 30 p m
South Ga a at Me1g 4 30 p m
Pornt Pleasant. Belpre at Wa~ama
430prn
Socoer
Warren at G&amp;IIIS Ac:ldorny. S p rr
Herbert Hoover at Po rt Pleasant
(B) 6 pm

Blodgett,
Wolfe win
at home
SENTINEL STAFF
AI Dlaz/Miaml Herald
BIDW~LL,

M1am1 s Roscoe Parrish catches a touchdown pass 1n front of Oh1o State defender Michael Doss 1n the f1rst
quarter of the Fiesta Bowl on January 3, 2003, 1n Tempe, Anz. The Buckeyes will face Miam1 on Saturday in
a rematch of the 2003 game.

Ohio Valley'-; Trent
Wolte and
K a t i c
Blodgett
took
top
honors at
CORAL
GABLES,
the barly Join. (AP) - Ohio State
B i r J and Miami no longer
Invitation - nt~ed to pretend otherat held at wise.
Mnrshall
and
R i ,. e r Florida A&amp;~1. they \\ere
Blodgett V a I I e y merely warmup acts.
H i g h
The true early test for
$&lt;;hool.
the
Buckeyes
.and
w 0 1 f c Hurncanes comes next
p 1 a c e d Saturday - against one
. h
another.
filrst 10 1 e
Both No 2 Ohio State
bo) s race and No. 13 :'-.1ianu
wuh
a opened their season with
tunc
of eeril)
similar
v. ins
20:22.19. Thursda) night Both
w i n n i n g offenses racked up exactWolfe
by 15 c;ec- Iy 45 points, and neither
onds over defense allov.ed a point.
Wheelers-burg's Brian Marshall's lone touchStiers. Chris Goodrich down came on a blocked
(22:07.03) placed ninth field goal •return. v. hile
for the Raiders. Jamil Florida A&amp;~t fell victim
Stepney (22:59.76) was to the Hurricanes' first
13th.
Jared shutout sint.:e :2006.
IJ o I I i n g s " o r t h 1 So now. the hype can
(23:31.82) placed 14th. hegin building.
and Aaron !Iarrison
The Hurricanes &lt;1·0)
(25:53.73) was 18th.
and Buckeyes (I 0) meet
Blodgett was first in Sept. II at Columbus.
the girls race with a

Ri\er

Ohio State, Miami already thinking showdown
Ohio, the first time
they've played sin-:c the
2003 Piesta Bowl where
Ohio State dcmcd .vliami
scconJ
straight
its
national title. And the
current s1des. although
.:;ome players were in elementar) school when
that title game was heiJ.
started buzzing about at
momentc; after their
reo;pective opening-night
rQUts were in the books.
"It'" going to be a more
difficult '' orld next
\\eek." Ohio State coach
Jim Tressel said.
Countered
M i.uni
coach Randy Shannon.
\\ ho ''ants no part of the
ob\ ious
comparison
be tv. cen this matchup
and the one that decided
the national title eight
season~ ago: "Games arc
games. and they go nml
come. You just have to
enjoy the times you pl:t)
in them and keep moving
on."

Whether Shannon likes
it or not, this one might
carry more weight than
'ju~t any nm-of-the-mill
non-eonfcrcnee game.
Ohio State is touted b)
mam as a true national
championship contender.
while t-.•liami thinks its
among the team" that
could break into that picture b) season's end.
While there's 'irtuall) an
entire sea5&gt;on left to be
pia) eci, whatever happen&lt;; next Saturday might
go a long way tO\\ ard
making
either
the
Buck e) e~ ·or Hurricane ... •
Bov.l
Championship
Serie~ plan~ a reality.
"You get the feeling
that team feeb like
the\ 're back on thl' rise
like the) ,,.ere in the
e:irl\. 2000s." said Ohio
State linebacker Brian
Rolle, who returned an
interception for a touchdown against :\1arshall.
"\Ve'\c got to pia) our

brand of football. and nt
the end of the game next
\\et:k we'll be able to
asse-.s \\here '' e are.''
Rolle's name likely is
to
1nan)
familiar
Hurricanes fans.
He's from Immokalee.
Fla., a Collier County
town best knov.n for
farming and football.
Rolle's fn"orite team
gro" ing up "'as Miami,
and he ''anted to play for
the Hurricanes at one
ume. And hi cou in.
Antrel Rolle. \\a on the
field that night in Arizona
''hen Ohio State beat the
Hurricanes 31-24 in double-0\ ertime for the
national title.
Mn) be
ironically.
Antrel Rolle \\as the first
:'-.llami pln)t'r to wrap his
anns around come1 back
Glenn Sharpe in ct.•kbration after the Hurricanes
thought the) -.topped
Please see OSU, Bl

m~:~~6:: pia::~~~~~~ Debalski takes lead in Riverside Senior League
for the Lady Raiders.
S ENTINEL STAFF
with Keyanna Ward MOSSPOOTSOMYDAILYS:'ITNELCOM
(26:33.56) was seventh,
and Carissa Wolfe
MASON. W.Va. - Ed
Debalski of Riple).
(29:45.21) wac; 13th.
Wheelersburg took W.Va .• has taken a 10
first place in the boys point lead in the 20 I 0
event with team score I Riverside Senior Men's
27. R i.ver Volley v. as C1!llf l.eas:ue. His total. of
cond With a team total 1.)_110 pomts lea~s ~h&lt;:k
· 52.
In the gn·ls Wmehrenncr With. IllS
event Alexander tonk 1 tolill of 141.0 pOints.
first ~ith a score of 30. 1 Do~1 C1~rbi!1 ofC?allipolis,
' with
Wheelersburg O!uo. 1s 111 t.hml. place
placing -;econd with a w1th 140.5 ,rou~ts to~ the
RiVt.'r ~c..:ond halt ot the ...010
total ol 31.
.d
h
season.
Va II ey d 1 .not ave a
,
f \ 1o ta 1 u 1· ov 1 p1ayers
1
1
team score Jn t lC gu s \\ ithstood the near I00
event.
degree heat on Tuesday
C?mplcte results nre making up 18 teams of
available
at four players and three
teams of three players.
www.baumspage.com

I

•

1nc closest to the pin Butch Bookman 111.0
The IO\\ est core for
110.5
the da) was 59 (II under '' inners \\ere Jim Turley Earl Johnson
110.0
Bobb~
Joe
Rou
h
on
the
ninth
hole
and
par) b) the team of Carl
109.0
Stone. Willis Dudding. Tom Dotson on the 14th Bob Edgar
108.0
frank Bro'' n
Rick Northup. and C'uzz hole .•
107.0
Jack
~1aloncy
Lnudermilt
10:!.0
There was a fi,e wny 201 0 RIVERSIDE SENIOR Oa\e Seamon
102.0
Tom .Mci'\ccl)
LEAGUE STANDINGS
tie for second place "ith
1015
Tom F1sher
a score of 61 (9 under
91).5
151.0 · Skip John. on
par) bct\\Cen the teams of Ed Debalski
lJS.5
Jim
I urln.
.lack Mick Winebrenner 141.0 Bob Stc\\ art
140.5 Cun l..alllknnilt lJ8.5
Ckheltree, Craig Barn~.·s Don Corhin
97.5
135.5 Rick 1'\orthup
and Chuck II iggilh. Ken Bob Humphrc)
97.5
129.5 Curtis Grubh
Whitt.·d. Chuck Yeager. Claude Proffitt
97.0
Siebert
lkkher
126.5
Curtis Grubb and hank Carl Stone
l)7 .0
123.5 Jim Rluir
Brown, Tom Dotson, Ed Willis Duddmg
97.0
Wuldic
Don
122.5
Wilson. J'om McNeelv Ken Whited
97.0
120.5 Jim \litchell
and Jack Fox, Charlie Paul l\ laynard
96.0
119.5 Gar. .\1mton
Hargraves, Jim Blair and Chet Thomas
94.5
Jerr\
Arnold
119.5
Jlaskcl Jones, and Siel1t'rt Kenm Greene
Gerald
Kelt)
89~~
119.0
llaskel
Jones
Belcher, Gene Thomas,
8S..:l
113.0 Pat Williamson
Carl Cline and Ed Bob Hysell
88.5
Dick Dugan
111 .5
Bill Amott
Dcbalski.

Meigs County
CC teams
compete at
Warren Invite
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWAl.TERS@Lf'fOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

VINCEI\"T. Ohio - A
total of 242 varsity competitors Including
all
three
M e i g s
County
cross coun-

pro-

try

grams
took part in
the
24th
annual
Scenic Hills
.------. Lions Club
Invitational
h e I d
Saturday at
Warren
H i g h
School in
Washington County.
There
were 138
Connery runners and
17 teams in
the
boys
e\ ent, wh1ch resulted in
top-three team efforts from
Lancaster (32). Warren
(82) and Marietta (91 ).
Jared Wentz of Lancaster
was the top male finisher
v.ith a time of 17:12.8.
Southern's Kody Wolfe
'' ac; the runner-up with a
time of 17:20.7. helpino
the Tornadoes finish 14th
as a team "ith a score of
352. .\teig::; finished II th
overall w1th a team score
of294.
Me1gs was led by Cody
Hanning. who placed 31st
O\ t:rull "ith a timt: of
19:15.7. Steven Mahr wac;
next with a time of
19:573. placing 40th O\ernll.
Brandon
Mahr
(22: 11.7) was 76th. Jared
Williamson (22:27.8) was
82nd and Jeremiah 1\1) ers
rounded out the team score
by finishin~ 137th with a
hme of 27:,:,0.2.
Derik Hill was also
I38th for Meigs, finishing
v. ith a time of)4:32.2.
Andrew Ginther followed Wolfe for Southern.
platmg 94th with a time of
23;) 7.4. Cha~e Graham
(24:21.3) was 109th. Chris
Yeater (25:05.3) was I 18th
and I'renton Cook rounded
out the Tornadoes· score
bv finbhin!:! I34th with a
mark of 26:)8.7.
Eastern did not have a
male competitor in the
e\Cnt.
There were 104 runne~
and 12 teams in the girls
event, which resulted in
top-three team effort.&lt;; from
Marietta
(48),
East
Fairmont (85) and W~n
(99). Sarah Biehl of Fort
FT) e \\on the individual
e\ ent with a time of
20:53.8.
1ne Lady Marauders
v. ere the only Meigs
County school to record a
team :-core, which ended
uj&gt; being 259 for lith
p ace. Ea~tem had three
competitors.
while
Southern had just one runner.
Ea-.tern's
Emeri
Connel) was 15th overall
with a time of 22:55.7,
'' hile Southem's Jennifer
McCoy was 35th with a
mark of 24:44.1. The
Eastern duo of Nikki
Gilbride (26:31.7) and
Shelb) Smith (28:20.8)
al o had respective placements of 63rd and 76th.
Shawnella Patter.;on led
Meig~ \\ ith a time of
25:0S.9. fini»hing 41st
0\Crall. Emma Perrin was
next in 51 .::t "ith a time of
26:03.h. ~1a£,~ie Smith
(2R:07.4) \\U.S 7_nd. Olivia
Ckek (28.07.9) was 73rd
and res:s Phelps rounded
l)llt tlk' team score by finishing ~Oth with a mark of
28::;&lt;,.7,
l'hl' I ady Marauders
alst&gt; had efforts from
Shannl&gt;n Walzer-Kuharic
(31 :05.0) in 92nd, Tara
\\ alzer-Kuharic (31 :52.3)
in 94th, Raehel Bauer
(32:20.7) in 96th. Allyson
Da' i-s (34:0~.8) in 99th
and
Vanes~a
Crane
&lt;34:09.2) in IOOth place.

•

�Page n2 • ·n1e Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentincl.com

Tuesday, September 7,

2010

Charleston Daily Mail poll Rogers back practicing with Browns
All

ON
D

A.

0

:&gt;..()
1

1

~1

87
8
34

24
22

CLASS A
10

20
2..()

11

20
, 1

bO
1-0
11
11

lady Knights unlucky
against St. Joe, 4-0
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPOA

MYDA LY

NT N l COM

HUNTINGTON,
W.Va
The Point
Pteasant girls soccer
team suffered its ltfth
straight setback of the
~ oung season ·nmrsday
mght durin~ a 4 0 loss to
host Huntmgton Samt
Joseph during a non conMiranda
ference
matchup in Edwardo;.
J3
Thomp
on
made
Cabell Count).
saves
in
goal
for
Point
The Lady Kmghts fell
to 1-6 m ernII after the Pleasant.
Point returns to action
shutout deCI~IOn, thanks
irr part to a hat trick by I uesday when it hosts
the Lad) lnsh's Hannah Cro s Lanes at 7 p.m.

W.Va. plans 1-day
special youth hunt
S 0
l
T
H
Cl1ARL l·S rON, W.Vu
(AP)
West Virginw's
Dh ision of Natural
Resource~ i~ hopmg a
SJ?eCJ,tl youth huntmg
da) attr ct a ne\\ en
erntmn
p rttctp nt') t ,
the port
Dunn the one-da)
hunt on Oct 2. ktds ages
8 to 14 ''ill be aiiO\\ed
~ hunt an) small g.une
long a~
ammal. a
they're a~,;compamed by
a hcens d adult hunter
lq the pa t, the agenc)
ha offered a Similar

osu

fmm Page BI
Ohio State on fourth
down in the 1irst overtime. Then offil'Jal Terry
Porter's yellow penalty
flag sailed into the picture after he called
Sharpe for pass interfcrem:e, the &lt;!harnpionship
game continued. and the
Buckeyes eventually pre\mled.
"I \\~ts a little )oung.
but I remember it.''
Miami defcnsl\c lineman
Olh ier Vernon s~ud "It's
revenge time. Nobod) 's
fwgotten about it. I feel
li~e I was pia) ing that
game."
'Vernon wrts juo;t I 1
w}len that Ftesta BO\\ I
took place.
Still. he and the rest of
today'&lt;: Hurricanes :tre
convinced they can hnng
with the team that won
the Rose Bowl ln&lt;:t sea
son. And the team M~ami
eased past "I hursday
night th1nks the same.
Flonda A&amp;M conch
Joe 1 a) lor faced Miami
Ia t c;ea on ns \\ell. and
after hi" Rattlero; took
ihe1r 45..0 loss I hursday.
ht said the Hurricanes of
2010 are easily better
t,han the team that fin
ished 94 a year ugo.
"The) 're a year older.
out it's the arne guy._,..
Taylor said. "It\ experi(Qunrterb.tck)
ence.
Jacory Harris is n )car
older and more mature.
Their front !?roup, too,
nnd their rcccl\ ing corps
were rntcd one of the
ti)ps in the country. It's
legit. Their running
backs "rc fast. We couldn't catch up with them.
J.\nd the biggest thing i"
they're sho\\ing some
experience.··
Whtch they'll need
l)ext weekend, when

hunt for squirrels.
1 hi~ year the DNR
s&lt;~ys ktds can hunt squirrels. rabbits. grouse.
qu.u I. cro" "· CO) ore ,
foxeo;. bobcats. raccoon
tnd no\\ hoe hare
Deer, turke\. bear. boar
md mt ratory game
btrds are off hmitc;.
DNR biologist Scott
tells
the
\\&lt;1rncr
Charleston Gazette that
the aim 1s to re\ erse the
decline tn the number of
young hunters in \\est
Virttntd.
I05.000 or so fans pack
Ohio State's fabled
home.
"NO\\ 's the time to get
in that Miami mode.''
Brian Rolle said. "We
know we're going to play
a fast, spicy. swagger
team."

BhRI A. Ohio (AP) Juo;t like that, the
Browno;'
Cleveland
defense got a whole lot
bigger. b.tdder and bulki
cr.
Shaun Rogers came
back
l'hc mammoth nose
tackle, who missed traming camp and all four
~:xhibition games \\ htlc
~e~overing . from a. leg
tnJury sustamcd lrtst season that required surgery.
returned to practice
Monday. Browns coach
Brie Mangini said there's
a chance the 6-foot-4,
350-pounder could play
in Sunday's season open·
er nt Tampa Ba).
After spendtng most ot
the past month nding a
stationary bike or strctchmg on the side ns hie:
teammates went through
summer
two-a days.
Rogers returned to the
field as the Browns began
installing their game plan
for the Buccaneers.
During the 30 minute
period open to reporters,
Rogers dtd ngility drills
and No. 92 tlattencd n
few blocking dummtes
with powerful swipes of
h1s mn she anns.
Mangini said Rogers
\\ill be brought along
gradually this week, and
that he will work at both
nose tackle and defensh c
end.
When
Rogers
missed the final five
games last sea on, backup Aht) ba Rubm filled in
and played "ell ns the
Browns ended the )edr
with four straight wins.
It's
possible
the
Browns' defenshe front
could mclude Rogers and
Rubin thi" season.
"Rubin has earned the
ri~ht to play and Rubm
wdl play." Mangini sntd.
"He has done an excep
tiona) JOb I really have
enjo) ed "atchm
ht
gro\\ th and eemg hrm
develop
not JUSt s
player but as a pro. He
earned the nght to pl.t) o
that's .t good thin
becau e Shaun doe have
the abilit) to play no
ta-.IJe and defen'\1"\e end
'To be able to m1x gu) ")
m at d1flerent spoL'i g1\e
)Ou depth. it gi\es you a
chance to spell people
during the course of a
game and it also gh es
you some \ersatility in
tenns of matchups that
you \\ant against your
opponents'
offensive
linemen."
A three-time Pro Bowl
selection. Rogers missed
much of training camp

.

.

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon JoumaiiMCT

Cleveland Browns lineman Shaun Rogers blocks a second quarter f1eld goal
attempt by Houston Texans Kns Brown at Cleveland Stadtum on Sunday
November 23. 2008 rn Cleveland, Ohro Houston won the game 16·6.
·

last '\cason. But when the
:a on ktcked ~ff. he was
hl'i usual ~ommant self.
merpo\\enng guards and
centers and blocking field
goals and extra pomt~
before breakmg Ius leg tn
a . N.o\ ember game at
Cmcmnatt. The team. has
ne\er reveal:d ."pec1fics
nb_out Rogers IllJUt)
11tc Browns tee! fortu
nate to have Roger:; a\ ailable at all
I 1st week. he a\&lt;oided
a po ~tble NFL su penI{
for n of
n
e ) \\ e po
hen po e
ned
lo dl!d
mto Hopkmc; Atrp rt.
Jn,tead. commissiOner
R er Goodell fined hi
docked Roger; a
e paycheck- ro
h $400.000- fon 101
m • the le.tgue's personal
\;onduct poliC).
The off-field incident
- Roger&lt;; \\a'\ ordered to
enter a diversion program
to avoid a trial - didn't
help his reputation as
being troublesome and
selfish. He was acquired
,in a 2008 trade "ith
DetrOit, where Rogers
lacked con'\t5tenc) and

"as accu~ed ot loafing.
One of Man!,iini' core
coachmg princ1ples 1s a
team-first philosoph) He
believes the Browns have
a strong nucleu!) of veteran leader&lt;.;, and that
Rogers is one of them.
"J'\e gotten to kno\\
Shaun mer the last coupie of years and he husn 't
been m a ituatton where
the team has \\On a lot ol
games and that's somethin~ that's Important to
him .md th,tt' something
th t 1mponant to me.''
'\
1111 sa1d before prnc
~ow the thmgs that
lk about are hO\\ do
\\ chte\e that together.
What that like and \\hat
oes into that whole
roce s'1
One thmg that 1 like
hat Shaun does a lot and
does well i he'll talk to
the )Otmger guy . The)
may be try mo to figure
out how to do omething
and ren11) have no 1dea
"here to get the answer
from. They kmd of do
and Shallll will take them
through. He's very good
likethat,intennsofsharing hi experience '' ith
those gu)S. I hat, to me. is

tmportant from all of the
\eteran guys and the realI) good ones lea~e a JeoaC). not just of their pl~y.
but the other people that
they help make play bettcr...
Rogers was not available to the media following practice. He can be a
challenging interview.
and has rarely opened up
about his play or personal
life. But ask any of his
teammates. and they'll
tell you that Rogers is
lo) al and the perception
of him is some" hat twisted.
''He ·s a great guy.'' running
back
Jerome.
Harrison aid. "When he
first came here. he \\as at
the house every other
da). barbecuing and
hanging out. He's a 2:reat
teammate. He' a 2reat
father as \\ell to his little
daughter. He's a great
gu) in the locker room.
"A lot of guys on this
team are misunderstood.
But if he sat down and
talked to )OU, )Ou'JI find
that he's a big teddy
bear."
And a grizzly on
Sundays.

7

10

,

1'

13

POV "Oil, nd Htmntng11"
The Good Wife "Runntnq

•

�Tuesday, September 7, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Pictures tnot
hove been
lo~ &amp; Found
placed In ada at
Lost Female blk
the Gallipolis
huskey MISS ng from
Dolly Tribune
area of Wheaton &amp;
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w/1300 hrs 90"-' 1110
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Recreational Vehlclea ............-······-··-1000
ATV ........................ . .........................- -1005
Bicycles................................... ••••
. 1010
Boata/Acceaaorlu .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallere ..........................- 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Othor ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Alltomotlve - ............................................. 2000
Atrto Renllll!\.ease.......
....................2005
Autos........................ •• ••• • • ······-·-· 2010
Claaalc/Antlquea............... • . ....••...•••• 2015
Commerclal/lnduatrlal ............................ 2020
Parte &amp; Accesaorlaa ................................2025
Sporta Utility.......... •• .......... •............... 2030
Trucka .........................................................2035
Utility Trallera ............................................ 2040
Vane , ........................................................2045
Want to buy .............................................2050
Real Estate Salea ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plota ... . ...........................3005
Commercial......................... ........ -·- ..3010
Condomlniuma . .................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..... ......... . .............. ..3020
Houaes for Sale .........................................3025
Land (Acreage)..........................................3030
Lo18 ..........................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Eatete Rentala ...................................3500
Apartmenta!Townhousu ......................... 3505
Commercial........... ................................3510
Condomlnluma •••••••••••---·---···-·········3515
Housu for Rent ................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) •.•••••• -···· •• .. *_.........3525
Storage..................... , ......... -···-····3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Mnnufactured Housing ..............n ............. 4000
Lots............................................................. 4005
Movera........................................................4010
Rentals .................................... ............... 4015
Sales .. ,...................................................... 4020
Supplloa ...................................._ •• 4025
Want to Buy ........................................ 4030
Reaort Property. •...................................5000
Ruort Property lor aale ....................- 5025
Reaort Property for rent ... ......................5050
Employment............................................ .6000
Accounting/Financial ...............................6002
Admlnistratlve/Profeaslonal .....................6004
Cnahier/Cierk ............................................. 6006
ChlldJEiderly Caro ...........................J. •••••.•• S008
Clerical,..................................................... 8010
Conatruction............................. -·-· ••• 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ................................... 6014
Education.......................
............... 6016
Electrical Plumbing .......... .... .................6018
Employment Agenclea .............................6020
Entertalnment............................................6022
Food Servlcea............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 8028
Help anted· Goneral .................................. 6028
Law Enlorcement ...................................... G030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
M:lnagementiSupervlaory ........................ 6034
Mechenlca ..............................................6036
Medical ............... ...... .. ...............6038
Musical............................'"
..................6040
Part·Time·Tempororlee
.................. 6042
Reatauranta ........................... ................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Tredea ...... ..... ...................... 6050
Texallea/Factory .......................................8052

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LAgai•H·····. .........
......- - - - -100
Announcements ............... ....._ , __,
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B lrthday/A"nnlveraary ...........- ...................205
Happy Ada ...................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ~....... .................................. 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notlcea ......................................................... 225
Personala .....................................................230
Wanted ......- ............................................... 235
Servlcea ..................................................... 300
Appliance Service .......... -··-········· •• 302
Automotive···--·-·· ............·-··-······-·· 304
Building Materials - ---·-······306
Busln... ...... , • . • ..
--··-············308
Catering............................ • ............
.310
Child/Elderly Caro .......................................312
Computera ................................................... 314
Contractors..........................................~·· •.. 318
Domestlca/Janltorlal.................................318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320
Anc.nclal ..........................................322
Health. __.............................................. 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................328
Home lmprovementa 330
lnaursnco..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama ...................... ~.......... 336
Other Servlcoa .~ ......................................... 338
Plumblng!Eioctrlcal.....................................340
Proleaslonal Sarvlcea .................................342
Repalra............. .•• __ .......................... 344
Roofing .......................................................346
Security- ...................................................348
Tax/Accounting ................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment .................................352
Flnanclal .......................................................400
Financial Servlcea ......................................405
lnaurance ....... ~ ......................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Buslneaa &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trelnlng .......................- ....... 510
Lessons.............
.......- ••- •••515
Personal................................................ . . 520
Animals - ................................................600
Animal Supplloa ................ .........................605
Horees .......................................................... 610
Livestock............... •....................................615
Pata ............................................................... 620
Want to buy...... ..........................................825
Agriculture................ ..
.. ..................... 700
Farm Equipment....- ...................................70S
Garden &amp; Produce••••••••- .............................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Graln ..........................- 715
Hunting &amp; Lend ................................._ ... 720
Wantto buy.............................................- 725
Merchandlse ................................................900
Antlquea .......................................................005
Appliance ....................................................11110
Auctlona ....................................................... ll15
Bargain Basament.......................................020
Collectlblea ..................................................925
Computora ,.. •............................................. 1130
Equlpment/Suppllea ...: .............. .............035
Flea M.arketa.
, .....- .................. 1140
Fuel Oil Coai/Wood/Gaa .......................... 1145
Furniture.......... ..... ...... • ......................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ...... .............................955
Kld'a Corner........... ...., .............................. 980
Miacellanaoua.............................................. ll65
Want to buy....... ..
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Publishing
Joe's T v repa r on Va ley
most makes &amp; mod Comeany)
els House ca Is 304500
Education
675-1724

Security

AliT
Free Home
Security
$850 Value
with purchase of
alarm monitoring
aervicee from ADT
Security Servlcee,
Call1-888·274-3888

600

Ammals

Pets

Merchandise

1

John Deere 5210
tractor. 2950 hrs
excellent cond lion
$ 10,750 I lrm 740.
379-2789

AUiomotive

I

I

Equipment I

Supplie$
Kittens to giVeaway
Black Beauty sand·
good home only
blast sand $6 per
B!k/Wht and all black
100-ib bag, ten or
one call 740· 441 · more $5 each 304·
0797
773-5332
M nP n pups for sale
Miscellaneous
C KC
reg
ta Is
docked dewclawed Jet Aeration Motora
black tan markings
repelred , new &amp;
wormed 1st shots. rebuilt In atock Call
12 wl\s. 3 males 2
Ron Evnns 1-800·
lel"l'lales $150 740·
537-9528
367· 0210 n o ans
5 ploce bedroom
leave mess
su •e large refr gera·
Golden
Retrie ver t or tables &amp; other
(M) Mastiff (F) laun p eces,
740 949·
Dauchsund (M) br-bl, 3601
M n Schn auzer (M)
bllwh.
English
Yard Sale
Bulldogs
(MIF)
brlndlel1auns all AKC Yard sale Tue 7th,
reg puppies, 740· Wed 8th Thurs 9th,
10.5 1834 Georges
696-1 085
-=====~ Ck Ad lots of plus
siZe clothes
100
Agriculture

Farm Equipment

2000

3 Family yard sale
Sat 11th, 8-4 116
Kmeon Dr Gallipolis

1000

Recreational
Vehicles

Campen I RVs &amp;
Trail en

04 Cadillac Escalade
EXT Exc Cond 740446·7249
05 Hyundal XG 350
graylblk intenor Exc
Cond $5900 446·
8919 or 446-2651
2005' Buick Park
Avenue. senior lady
driven.
always
garaged,
leather
heated seats I ke
n ew
condition.
60 000
miles,
$10 900
740-541·
4323
Went To Buy
01 er's Towing Naw
buying junk cars
w/motors or w /out
740-386-001 1
or
74o-441·7670
NO
Sunday call
3000

Real Estate
Sales

Commercial
For Sole By Owner

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
For Sale By Owner
Farm for sale In put·
nam Co WV 105
acros wlpubllc utili·
lies Mmorals sold
w/the land
Exc
woOdlands for hunt·
mg Several house
sites House on prop·
arty but needs work
Aoil ng h•lls &amp; many
flat areas 15 mtn
from M 'ton, WV
$350,000
Contact
KOJth Chapman 304·
654 6312
Hou~t~a

For Sale

For sale by owner
modular home 4
acres country s tllng,
7 ml!es from Vinton
off of St AI 325 3BR
2BA garden tub ,dm·
lng room, lg living
rm ut•. ';y room, all
appliances includmg
washerldrye~.
24
above pool detached
30x56 3 bay garage,
$95 000 call 740·
742·1900
Land (Aaeage)

3500

Real Estate

Renta!s

Apartmenta/
Townhouaes
2BA APT Close to
Holzer Hospital on SA
160 CIA (740) 44 1
0194

CONVENIE'NTlY
LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE'
Townhouse
apartment
end or
sma l houset: for rent
Ca l 740-441 ·1111 for
appltcaliOn &amp; lntorma·
tlon

www.mydallysentinel.com

Apartmenh/

Apartments/
TownhouJea

Townhou~t~a

Froo Rent Special
New home m city,
Ill
• 2BR, 1BA,LR,DA,K
2&amp;3BA apts $395 and
Must have excellent
up Cefltral A r WID
hookup tenaflt pays
reference. Call for
electriC Cal between
deta•ls 446·2801
the hours ol 8A-6P
EHO
Jordan Land ng Apts· ·--~----Ellm VIew Apta.
Now leas ng 1 2 3 2-3 Br house In the
(304)882-3017
and 4 bedroom un ts country o" US33
TWin R v s Tower s No pets Ask for rent Pomeroy, pond &amp;
accept ng appllcatlors spec !liS 304 610· huge yard, saoo mo
for w Ung st lor HUO 0776 or 304·674· &amp; $800 secunty
depostt, Call 740·
sub idiZed 1 BR apart· 0023
Ment for the elderly d •
696·1106
Middleport N 4th - - - - - - abl
can 675 6679
Ave 2 room elf ency HOUSE FOR RENT
apt
No
pets CLOSE TO LOCKS
deplret
140 92 ON AT 2 CAU 304·
576 2642
0165

V I I I a g e
Administrator
Pomeroy, OH
(8) 25, 31 (9) 7
Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUB·
LICATION
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT OF
WOOO COUNTY,
OHIO
Wood
County
Clerk of Courts
One Courthouse
Square
Bowling
Green,
OH 43402
HSBC Mortgage
Services, Inc. vs.
Paul D. Drew, Jr.,
et ol
Coso No. 2010 CV
0342
Cameron
Lee
Drew, whoso last
known address Is
'2050 S.W. 33rd St.,
Capo Coral FL
33914,
and
If
deceased,
all
heirs, devisees,
legatees, execu·
tors, executrixes,
administrators,
admlnlstrotrlxos,
assignees,
Unknown
Spouse(s) of all
heirs, devisees,
legatees, exocu·
tors, executrixes,
administrators.
admlnlstratrlxes,
assignees
and
John
Doc,

Unknown Spouse
of Carmen Leo
Drew,
whoso
addresses
are
unknown,
will
hereby take notice
that on April 7,
2010,
HSBC
Mortgage
Services,
Inc.,
f1led Its Complaint
In Foreclosure and
Marshalling
of
Lions
In
tho
Common
Pleas
Court of Wood
County, Ohio, One
Courthouse
Square, Bowling
Green OH 43402
being Case No.
2010 cv 0342
against Paul D.
Drew, Jr., et at
praying for judg·
ment
In
tho
amount
of
$99,739.98
with
Interest thereon
according to the
terms of tho
note
from
December
1,
2009 until paid and
for foreclosure of
said
Mortgage
Oeod on the fol·
lowing described
real estate, of
which
said
Defendant, Paul D.
Drew, Jr. Is the
owner of:
Real estate local·
ed at 8924 Custar
Road, Custar, OH
43511
as
further
described
In
Plaintff's
mort·
gage recorded on
January
25, 2006 In Volume
2623, Pg. 171 of
the
Mortgage
Records of Wood
County, Ohio,
and
that
Defendants,
Cameran
Lee
Drew,
and
If
deceased,
all
heirs, devisees,
legatees, executors, executrixes,
administrators,
admlnistrntrlxes,
assignees,
Unknown
Spouse(s) of oil
heirs, devisees,
legatees, exocu·
tors, executrixes,
administrators,
admlnlstratrlxos,
assignees
and
John
Doe,
Unknown Spouse
of Cameren Leo
Drew be required
to set \Jp any Inter·
est they may hove
In said promises
or be
forover
barred, that upon

2BR
mon
appr
pets

Help Wanted·
General

·~H~O~M~E~~H;:;E~A~l~T;;;;;H
CARE
WORKER
Hrs. Vary 4 mother
Alzho1mer's Exp Red
Cross cert 1st aid
CPR req non mok
er &amp; background
check Bu1falo WV
Putnam Co WV Cal
304·545·8103

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

Maintenance I
Domestic

• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• Nc" G~tragc~ • l~lcctrlcnl &amp;
l'lumhing • Nnofing &amp; Gutters
• \in) I Siding &amp; Painting • Patio nnd
Porch Uccks WV 036725

~P;;;a;;;rt;;;t:::,m•e=m;;;a;;;J;;.;nt;;;,a..;;nc;;;,;e
personal
wantod
304·610·0776
or
304-674-()023

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Medical
~==~~=;;;;

Are you look ng to
advance your career
In the Home Health
field? Start :r~g pay
$12/hr, 11 Interested
call 740·350·4868

0 v e r b r o o k
Rehab1litat•on Center
is currently seekmg
someone with a'"Tram
the
Tramer
Ceruf cation to teach
CNA classes All
mterested applicants
should pick up an
application at 333
Pago
Street
M ddl
Oh
colntaectport, Micheloler
Gilmore, AN, DON at
7 4 0 • 9 9 2 • 6 4 72
Overbrook IS an EOE
and a PartiCipant 1n
the
Drug
Free
Workplace Program

I
1

992-62 15 740•591..0195

Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

SMITH
Concrete Services
Formerly Rohies Comtmclion

FAMilY OWNED AND OPERATED
33 Yenr F4xpcricm·e

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458

Fully insunod
Free e5limate; • 25+ ~ears nperienre
t\olaffillllcd "ldt Mltr Mamom llr.ufln,: 4 lln.odtllotct

I!OBfi!T BISSfLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Homemakers need·
ed for the areas
Souths•de Buffalo
Hannan &amp; M lton W I
Train
lmmed•ate
POSitiOn OVa :Jble
Must be CPR certJ·
ABODE
mobile $400 lied
$400 dep HUD Hea!thcare Sev•ce
No smoking no Inc 304-586·9441
304·849·2932 866·327.7262
Sales

~~~~~~=­
BRAND NEW foreclosure 3br 2ba
ready to move 1nto
$39 900 00 Call 740446-3093

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

...;,;;;,;,;iooiiooiio_ _ __

in

5000 Resort Property

6000

I

Eftlllloymant

ResCare 1S acceptin
applications for full·

PUBLIC
NOTICES
Public Notice
Sealed bids will be
accepted for fur·
nlshing all labor,
and
materials
equipment necessary to complete a
project known as
Emergency Power
Facilities at the
VIllage
of
Pomeroy
Water
Office, 660 East
Main
Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769 until 1 :00
PM on Friday,
September
10,
2010. The project
consists of the
supply nd Instal·
lallon of generators
at
the
Wastewater Plant
and
Collection
System.
Bid
specifications will
be available at the
Pomeroy
Water
Office.
The
Village
Council
reserves the right
to accept or reject
any or all bids.
Village
of
Pomeroy
Paul
Hellman,

Houaea For Rent

======;;o;;
1.BR $350/month tn
Nice 2BR apt $350 N1ce 2BR apt. appll· Syracuse
Deposn,
plus utilities. gallipolis ancos, w/d hookup, HUD approved, no
446·8919,446 2074 water pd, good loca- pets 304·675·5332
t10n on Centenary woekends/740·591·
2
3
Nlco
&amp; BR opt close to hospital t&gt;lo 0265
Galhpo!
$600 mo pets call after 5 740· • .....,.......,.....,,_,___
lncl w/Sig &amp; wash 44 5.9442
" r No p et s
e r/dry ..
740·591 5174
FIRST f••ONTH
~~----"
Tara Townhouse Apt
FREE
2BR 1 5 BA, back
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS
Rentals
patJo, pool play$385 &amp;
ground No pots UP, Sec Dep $300 2BR Mobile Home
s450 rent 740 •645•
&amp; up,
water, sower, trash
8599
NC, WID hook· up, pd
No pets.
ten·
Johnson's
Mob1le
Beaut1IuI 1BR apnrt
ant pays electric,
Home Park 740·446·
men! In tho country
EI-'O
3160
frashly pa1nted very
Ellm View Apts.
clean W/0 hook up
304-882-3017
14X70 mobile home
n•ce country cettlng ·---~-~- 3BR $450 + utihtles
only 10 mms Irom Middleport Beech St , R e 1 1 s e c u r 1 1 y
Pets
town Must see to 2 br fum1shed apt , deposii,No
apprec;3te Water pd utd pd, deplref, No 614-364·2042
$375/mo 614·595· pets, 740·992-()165
7773or740645 5953
For ront 2br 14x70
Clean new~ redeco·
2nd floor 2 BR apart· rnted 1BR reference all electnc 5 mf :lS
mont,
overlooking deposit, llO pets from Holzer. Call
740· 441 ·5141
Galhpohs C•ty Park, 304-675·5162
L R , kltchonld•n•ng -....,.........,.....,.....,_ ~-~~~-area. 1112 BA, wash· 1·2 BDRM APrs 1n N1ce 16x80, for rent,
er/dryer s600 mon "' PI Pleasant all uhll· 3 Bedroom,. 2 bath,
dep 740·446·4425 ties paid call 304· Country setting 740·
360-() 163
or 740-446·2325
339 3366 740·367·
0266
Pleasant
Valley Spong Valley Green
Apartments IS now Apnrtments 1 BR at ~3~B-r""'2- B
"""A
_ m
_o_b_ll_e_f_or
takmg applications $395+2 BR at $470 rent $500 mon &amp;
for 2. 3, &amp; 4 br HUD Month 446-1599
dep Newly remod·
S u b s Jd ' z e d
Commerct'al
ted 740·367·7762 or
Apartments.
~==;;;;;;;==:;;;;;;;;; 740 645·0460
APPIteat Ions
are Commercial bulld•ng
taken Monday thru for rent 7 4 o~• 46 • ~1~97~9~-·o"""a~k-b-ro_o_k
...
Th rusday 9 OOam· 6565
mob1lo home, 2BR,
1 00pm Off ICC IS - - - - - - - 1BA 1973 Travel
!ocate d at
1151
tra11er $1500 for
Evergreen
Dnve
Houses For Rent
both call 441·5701
Po1nt Pleasant WV
(304) 675·5806
Takmg applications
1BR fum•sl'ed house for 2BR mob1le Very
for rent. Good loca- good cond1t1on No
tton No pets 446· pets $395 mon &amp;
dop. 740-446·3617
1162

Tuesday, September 4, 2010

failure of sold
Defendants to pay
or to cause to be
paid said )udg·
ment within three
days from Its rendillon that an
Order of Sale be
issued to
the
Sheriff of Woad
County, Ohio, to
appraise, advor·
tise in the Dally
Sentinel and sell
sald real estate,
that the premises
be sold froo and
clear of all claims,
lions and Interest
of any of the par·
ties herein, that
the proceeds from
the sale of said
premises
be
applied to tho
Plaintiff's
Judg·
mont and for such
other relief to
which
HSBC
M o r t 9 a g e
Services, Inc. Ia
entitled.
Said Defendants
ere directed tp the
Complaint whereIn notice under the
fair debt collection
practice act Is
given.
Said Defendants
ore required to
answer
within
twenty-eight days
after the publica·
lion.
Said
Defendants
will
take notice that
you are required
to answer said
Complaint on or
before
the
12th
day of
October,201 0 ar
judgment will be
rendered accord·
lngly.
HSBC Mortgage
Services, Inc.
P 1a 1n t 1f 1 ,
Stephen D. Miles
VIncent A. lewis
Attorneys
for
Plaintiff
18 W. Monument
Avenue
Ohio
Dayton,
45402
(8) 31, (9) 7,14

100

Legals

Road Closing Notica
Chester Township
Silver Ridge Road
Township 253 Slip
repair Tuesday and
Wednesday
September 7 &amp; 8,
2010 7 OOAM 1111
5:00PM

Nursing
for
the
time Dtrector of
Gallipolis
and
Chesapeake loca·
tJons
Interested
applicants may apply
o n • I 1n e a t
ResCare com

'"~!~~~i;!~i!!!!;;~~;~~~~;;;;;:::::::::::::~~~~~il

====~=~
Drivers &amp; Delivery

Dnvers needed COL
Drivers Willing to
drive for local ready·
mix
company.
Experience 1s pre·
!erred but not necessary Dnver must be
Willing to do pre·
mamtenance
on
trucks and equtp·
ment yard/plant and
other miscellaneous
chores Expenence

E

T

240
Staff Dentist

operating equ pment
and extra skills such
as weld•ng a plus
Starling pay based
on expenence and
dnvmg record Call
304·773·5519

•

Employment
Agencies

·~=~===­
Assemblers needed
for 'A M shift at local
M 8 n u f 8 c 1u r 1n g
Company Must have

HS D ploma/GED,
clean background
and
pass
drug
screen. $9.25/pay.
Qualified cand1dates
call Kelly Sorvtces 1·
800•295•9470
~~==~==

Help Wanted.
General
=======
------Needed
Laborer
must be 25 or older
havve valid drivers
license/clean dnvmg
record Pass drug
test.
Dependable.
Some
weekends
$8 50 hr Fax resume
388.0824
_E_x_p-er-Je_n_c_e_d_ F"""I-or-al
Des gner &amp; Delivery
person Person must
know the area well.
Please
submit
resumes &amp; references to CL a Box
251 Gallipolis Ohio
45631
Nanny Needed, eves
3 to 4 hrs per day
5days a wk for aciiVJ·
ties &amp; light house
cloan•ng Must have
own transportation &amp;
references No smok·
mg. Call 740·710·
3100

Stay Informed...

miJr ~allipolls Dmlv tnbunr
~IJe l9otnt ff)lrasant i\rgistrr
The Daily Sentinel

�Tuesday, Sept~mber 7, 2010

BLONDIE

CROSSWORD

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Lyncist
1 Picture
Gershwin
puale
3 Obtained
7 Fall mo.
4 Bank rob11 Sur up
ber Willie
12 Huron
5 Chinese
ne1ghbor
or Thai
13 Place for
6 Departed
pract1ce
7 Hushswings
hush
15 Spud
8 Chunk of
16 Earth
history
orbiter
9 Greedy
18Bird
one
abode
1 0 Golf
21 Ahmo
support
feature
14 W1sh
22 Stnnged
granter
instru16 Chess
ment
turns
24 Gardner
17 Make
of mov1es
speeches
25 Phone bill 19 Sign of
add1t1on
indiHor26 Sunbeam
ence
27Begins
29 Attract
30Spotted
31 Hobo
attire
32 Plane
part
34 'Adaptatron" star
40 Clickable
picture
41 Land, as
a f1sh
42 Lecherous
43 Gofer's
job

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

20 S1gn of
sorrow
21 Owns
22 Buddhist
branch
23 Deli bread
25Last
28 Minute
part
29 Cavalry
sold1er
31 Stair part

33 Naked
34 Zero
35 R1nk
surface
36 Farm
grazer
37
mode
38 Martini
base
39 Concluslon

DOWN
1 Quick
puncti

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

MUTTS

•

..WE'L.L. TAKE IT."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

~CONCEPTIS

Bil Keane

SUDOKU

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuec;da},
St.&gt;pl7, 2010
Ilus ) e.:u; } ou often wa\ er between
nJm, profile and being 100 pem'Ilt out
there. To some of your cfo!;e friend'&gt; and
dSSOC!ates_ lhls beha\'lOr could bt&gt; ronfusmg. 'lou ru\ e a natural.unbt\ alence
about key partnerships with finanoal
ties. Remember to honor "ho you are
rap into your innate ingenull), ilnd
solutions ''ill appear If) ou are SlrWe,
you rould f.ul into,,' ery mlt&gt;n.c;e rela·
tiuno;h1p. Remember, 1t lclkt&gt;&lt;&gt; a }c.tr to
get to know someone. AftL'T you go
through the four seasons w 11h th1s person, dlen ITiclke a deo..'ilon. !t you are
attached, the h\ o of} ou rrugttt not be
SO t'.lS\ \\1th
other, unless YOU
return to the romantic pla) fulness of
daltng VIRGO often questions ) our

earn

moi.J\L"&gt;.

by Dave Green

H

1

9 2

1 he Stars SIIOli. the K. •1d ofDay \ou11
5 D111U11mc; 4-Posttrre, 3 Atl"mge, 2-

51~;

3

1 Difficult

ARIES (March 21-Apnl19)
You cnuld flJSs 11 ) ou don't get
) our desired results. You h.l\ e a strong
pOSition ctnd understand \\ h.lt t~ dmmg others. Creati\ ity emerge; m dLc;cu.,..
s1on.~ with :.Omeone \\ ho has clout yet ,,
tot.1Uy dilierent perspt."-'tl' e Tomght
Put \ uur feet up.
TAURUS (April20-M.:t) 20)
Funriel some of }Our 1de.:ts
mto your work. and 1t might makP
"ork more mtereo;ting ~me of you
m1r,ht dux~ to Oirt "ith an ofhre asso0(1h: adding some exlro z1p lh.1t wav.
Rca&lt;-h out for more infomlc\lion
&lt;.:ons1der s1gnmg up for tl&lt;,!Urc;c.
rorught: Fw-get ) our day JUb, let ) our
hrur dm\11.
GEl\11:'\1 (\Ia) 2l·June 20)
,_..,.....,.. (onslder workmg from homt:
1f you feel more romfortable and or
can acrompli-.h more the~ Re\1.'~ your
thinking about a boo; or key a$0&lt;.'1ate
)our pnorities are changmg Somet""~I'\C
.1t a dlSt.mce adds a touCh of ronfuSJon
mto the mix! Tonight M.1kc 1t relaxmg
CA:--;CER Oune 21 Julv 22}
Commumrollon rould bt'
•m k\\ arrl vet une\pecte..i mfom1J!lon
pto\ .-;to be enlighlenmg I:tk•') &lt;llH
lime a.c;sessing ,, situahon.
ou still
nught not h.t\ e all the r.wt&lt;;. S..&gt;ek out
ex-pt'rts Somrone m1ght be qu1lt' runtrolhng. lbnight: CatCh up on :t tnend's

***

*'*"* *

_

.........
...
_..,..,. .._..,..
-:Why can't I play school, too?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

..

• •

'.1)(6

6 G

I

~

~ s

B 9
~ p £ 1:.
i ~ 6 g
l' f- p G
~ L '----~ 9 9 £
·~

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r:

J

~

9 £
p G
g ~
£ 9
6 s
G L

?"':&gt;'I

L g p
6 ~ £
s G9
p s L
g- 9 ~
~ p 6

~Jtn.'!JJI(I

s
L

6
G

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£
8

6 9 £ G 17
G __, ~ t 6_ 1- s p £ L 8 9
£ 9 117 L 8 G 6 s ~
L

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-~

****

.IS'

news

LEO Qui) 23-Aug 22)

* * * J..:eep reaclUng out lor more

mformation. P"IIl..1nCES St.'\' m to be il ke)
IS~ue. De;igrt!Og a budget needs to
berome a h1gh pnoril). e..pt.'&lt;'lilll) one

,,

that is workable Someone at diStance
or an expert can be 'el'} helpful L1&lt;&gt;ten.
TorughL Pa) bills fir&gt;t
\1RGO (Aug 2.~St&gt;pt 22)
***..,_.* 'tour ent_'TID ts tugh. but
the dtoices ) ou make could be the result
of a conflicted pi'\JO.'SS. Pressure builcb
within a partner&lt;hip. The unt..'X)X'cted
to-;~ 'ou mto strong~ waters 'rap mto
your imagination for );()rutions. Tonight
Meet a friend for dumer.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0::L 22)
You m1ght feel shghll) on
edge, not knuwmg what to ex-pect.
Certain!) the unantiop..1ted keeps popping up, making olC('I)mplishing certam
task, difficult, at best. PI'OCl'SS an ISSUe
thatd~'t seem to lx gotng a\'") on a

** *

d~r~\el TorughtGofur~ex~a

Rand R.
SCORPIO (0.1. :?."l-1'\0\ 21 l
***Others aro.-pt your leaderili!p,
especialh as ~ ou are t.'enlt!n.xl and ha' e
e!lL'Ig)' on ) our te..1m A bramstorming
se;~ion lclps mto c1n mnate &lt;re:tti\11\,
whim }"u often don't m.mifest Revise
your schedule if rllo'1.'d be Ton~ght
Where people are.
SAGITfARIUS (1'\o\ 22 Dec. 21 J
Others look tu \ ou for a!'l&lt;:\\ ers
and leadership )ou nu~t not be happy
\\1th the Sllucltion. a-; thew 1~ an nnylicit
demand A child nught v..mt one Uung.
ronttastmg \\1th a t'.lmil~ member \\M
makes nearh the oppos1te dt&gt;mar~ti
Toru~t Bummg the nudnight oil
CAPRICORN (De&lt;- 22-Jan. 19)
**** Be \\1lling to dig up more
information and &amp;-'~ to the bottom of .m

***

j,,ut'. Ytlllr ...~..-of din'( hun could l••
key in nl.lking" de.: tSIOn lntemali7.e
diffeJent needs \\1thm }01.1 .uound you
and from others. Pl"(ll.."\.-'SS. .md you v.1ll
know whim wav to go. Torught Opt for
dtfferent plclllS

AQUARIUS O.:m 20-feb 18)

**"** t::kal \\1th kC) mdh iduals on

a Oll('-ttl&lt;me le\cl )ou l"OUld qUEStion
''hat 1~ best ultim.1teh. )ou arc JUgglmg
per&gt;&lt;lnal ronocms. ~~ting a

d~nund·

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instrumental dc..-:t'i!On lbmght An inti
m.lle dLsru Sl.On 0\ er dmnc r.
PISCES (rl.--b 19-:\1.udt20)
****'lou nught \\cUll to defer to a
ke) partner, friend or •ISS&lt;X'Mte .:md ha\ E'
a dt-..USSIOO \\ 1th hun ur her nuc; p?l'
son aJ\, cl)"S pro' 1d a lot of u~&lt;;Jghl &amp;,
rnrefu1 about In\ oh mg vour per;onal
tin.1nres m a da~on A met.'ting open"
a dOOt Tonight: Meet fnends

fUJI time B1gar rs llll the lut~met
~ l!ftp

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Jr1llpldUU'bl~ar.rom

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The Daily Sentinel

Defense comes up gtorMou
RedStorm men finish
fourth at Flyer SK
BY MAAK WILUAIII
SPECIAL TO Tl£ IIENTlNEl

KETIERING, Oh10 - The Umversity of Rio
Grande RedStonn men's cross country team began the
2010 season on Saturday morning at the Flyer 5 K
hosted by the Umversity of Dayton The teams were
d1vided into NCAA and Intercollegiate Div1sioos.
Rio Grande finished 4th in the Intercollegiate
Division (out of seven teams). :rhe RedStonn totaled
122 points.
Redshirt sophomore Nick Wilson was the top
RedStorm runner at the meet, fimshing in 20th posatton with a time of 15:43. Juruor Zane Miller was the
next fimsher for Rio Grande (84th overall) with a
time of 17.13.
Other RedStorm results: Junior Lucas Murphy.
t04th (17:53); JUnior Bryce Wilson, I 15th (18:25);
freshman Dylan Roush, an his farst collegiate race fi~
tshed I 19th (18:36) and juruor Jusun Hartley, I 21st
(18:52).
There were 139 runners in the event.
It was a first test for Rio Grande against Mid South
Conference favorite. NAIA No. 3 Shawnee State. and
the Bears got the best of the RedStorm, winning the
meet with a near~perfect score of 18.
Rio Grande will run at Ohio University next
Saturday (September 11) at 11 : 15 a.m.
REDSloRII WOMEN FINISH 5TH AT fLYER 5

K

K.ElTERING. Ohao - The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm women's cross country team began
die 20 I0 season on SatW'day morning at the Ayer 5 K
hosted by the Universaty of Dayton.
The teams were divaded anto N~A and
Intercollegiate Divtsions. Rto Grande finashed 5th in
lhe Intercollegiate Div1stou (out of eaght teams). The
RedStorm totaled 134 points
Redshtrt junjor Casste Mattia was the RedStonn
runner to cross the finish the line. Mattia covered the
3 1-mile course in 19:46.
Junior Kayla Renner was right behind Mattia in
49th position with a time of 19.49.
Other RedStorm results. sophomore Amy Lower.
99th (21 :33 ); semor Hillary Haines. I 35th (28:20);
JUnior Danielle Stockham. 138th (31 :56); and sophomore Holly Haines, I 39th (32:59).
Mid-South Conference rival Shawnee State fmashed 3rd with 70 points Rio Grande wall run at Ohio
University next Saturday (September 11) at 11·15
a.m
REDSloRM lUTZ SHAWNEI! 8TATI
RIO GRANDE. Ohto - If there was any fear of a
letdown for the No 4 rated Umversuy of Rio Grande
RedStorm men" soccer team on Saturday as lbey
faced Shawnee State, a team that tias never beaten
diem. that was put to rest very early in the game as the
RedStorm blitzed the Bears, 8-0 on Saturday mght in
a game that was played on Rio Grande's practice
pit~ h.

Rio Grande 4-0. 1-0 MSC) clacked on all cylioders
from the openmg wh1stle. The first goal didn't come
until the 19th nunute. but 1t was clear that tbe
RedStorm was gomg to be the aggressor on this
evenang.
Sophomore forward Richard lsbemer began the
scoring in the 19th manute on an assist from classmate
Scott Bibby.
Rio would score twice more before halftime to take
a 3-0 lead to the break. Sophomore forwardlmidfielder Oliver Hewitt-Fisher notched the first of two gOals
in heavy traffic in the 25th minute. Senior midfieldcr
Phil Stansfield was credited with an assist on the play.
Sophomore forwardlmidfielder Rafael Maccauro
came off the bench to score two goals in the game, the
first commg in the 40th minute to give Rio Grande a
3-nil advantage. lsbemer assasted on the goal.
It was an onslaught for Rio Grande in the second
half as the RedStorm scored five more times and
ended the match with 35 shots, 19 of which were on
goal.
Hewitt Fisher would find the back of the net again
tn the 52nd minute With the first of two assists going
to senior midfielder Dylan Williams.
B1bby would get in on the act. in the 54th minute
when he beat the SSU goalkeeper in an excellent oneon-one move to make the score 5-0 at the time in
favor of Rio Grande. Williams picked up his second
ISSist on the play.
Senior forward Ederson Lopes scored in the 69th
minute after receiving a nice feed from senior defender Steven O'Hara, which made the count 6-nil Rio
Grande.
Maccauro would score again on a penalty kick in
the 82 minute after Shawnee State's Cody Bond was
bit with a yellow card for taking Maccauro down
inside the 18 yard box.
The RedStorm closed the scoring in the 87th minute
on the first Rio Grande goal for Orlando Zapata.
Zapata nailed the goal from 30 yards out after getting
a (eed from O'Hara up the left side line.
Rio goalkeeper Jonathan Vascosi recorded one save
in picking has third shutout, of the season. Rio has not
allowed a goal through the first four matches of the
year.
URG WOMEN MLL 10 INDIANA TECH

CEDARVILLE, Ohio - The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm women•.-soccer team was blanked
for a second straight day, suffering a 4-0 loss on
Saturday at the hands of Indiana Tech.
The ~arne was played at Cedarville as a part of the
Cedarville Classic.
Rio Grande ( 1 2) was ~ again by very little
offense and by injury. After losil\8 sophomore Erica
feeman on Friday, the RedStorm lost another key
player, sophomore Mandi Thoma left the aame with
ao anjury on Saturday
Rio had two shots in the game.
Junior goalkeeper Mara HoweU had to deal with 26
shots from Indiana Tech. 16 01 which were en goal.
Howell managed to stop 12 of the attempts.
..Mara played teally well for us, 1f we had a ~layer
of the week candidate this week it would be bcr, • said
Rio Grande head coach ~ber Oliver

MORGANTOWN
W.Va. (AP)
West
Varguna IS accustomed to
sconng in bunches. Wllat
stood out alter the season
opener was an effon
unseen from its defenae
in quite some time.
The
Mountaineers
earned their first home
shutout wio in 13 yean
on Saturday, ~iving up
just 186 yards an a 31-0
victory over Coastal
Carolina.
''Having a shutout IS
huge for this ~ense.'"
senior defensave lineman
Chris Neild saJd. ..This is
the firstshutout that I've
been a pan of since I ve
been playing here. We
knew that we had to
come out fast and make a
statement and I thank we
did with thiS game.''
The
Mountaineers
returned nine staners on
defense this season, led
bY. a three-man front consisting of Neild, Julian
Miller and Scooter Berry,
so the result against an
FCS opponent wasn't too
surprising.
No. 25 West Virginia
also rolled out a new
defensive formation with
four linemen on passing
downs that includtd
junior college transfer
Bruce Irvin. Coastal
Carolina
quarterback
Zach MacDowall hurried

MowKiiaeerl
were
I&amp;Dable to rMtster any
sacb and forced ooly
two tumoven. They"ll
cbuceto~e

get•
~IJ(()..w
ondlltPri

It

..l"m pleulf wJth die

way our defeliae played,
aocl reacted and took control

many of his puses
often threw to apQta
whem he didn't have Ill)'
receivers
"We pUt so ~uch Pftt.
sure on that ~
011 third down that he hid
a bard time releasiaa 1be
baD,'' said West Vqinla
aafeues coach Sieve
Qunlap. "If we caa coodoue to do that. 1t makes

..xs

G(,... :.aame .,
West
Ylllldla ~h Bill
Ste•.att. ""l11e most
thina it tbat we
th reckJeaa
L
There
. . ~110111 and not
~:~"
~'~.the c:ollillOilS
-.e • a cost. Safety
Robed Saads, the Big
tbe aecondary coaehei . . . . ~leader
loot awfully smart."
...,...... bUrt a thumb
1be ponuit to tbe ball and Ilk riabt lboulcler on
also stiowed oo ~ ~ve playa iD the
clowns.
tWnl ~· Stewart
West Virginia wu
maltgned for allowina =~tbM Sands
six IOO-ylrd iodiviclual
Welt YIIJlnia earned
rushing efforts laSt sea- • lint t,lnitout amce a
son, INt eipt different 31-0 WID ill CiDciimati in
O)utal Car01ioa pl4yen tDOS lllcl itl fine home
combined fDr just 63 lbatout wiD..mce beating
yards.
R11t&amp;tD48.()m 1997.
Tfie. defense mi.ght be
Safety Terence Garvin.
a new starter, had 10 couoced qo for more such
tackles to match his total cffOIUI 1IOtil tM offense
for all of Jut season.
can ,at t8pdler a com.. We were flying plete~
around out there aDd' 1
Welt vu.inia IDd Only
thoutzht we loobct real 10..0 .t- Wftfme but
fast.K eild said.
ecored Oil dae of-tiS first
Maybe .oot fast eoau&amp;b four drivel tl die JeCOild
at
times
Tlie half. Oeao SIDida. mak-

Browns GM stands by pick of H
CLEVELAND (AP)
- The Browns understood that draftmg
Montario Hardesty was
risky. Now they know
bow risky.
Cleveland
general
manager Tom Heckert
said the team was comfortable WJth 1ts medical
reports and evaluations
of Hardesty. who tore his
left antenor cruc1ate ljp
ment aa the Browns final
ulnb lion
arne on
Thunday and IS out for
the season
Makin~ his pro debut
after ma sang traaniD&amp;
camp with a bone bnuse
in his nght knee
Hardesty tore ha ACL
while making a cut on a
routine 2-yard run.
Hardesty tore has nght
~CL an 2005 and needed
surgery during hts freshman season at Tennessee.
He slid into the second
round - the Browns
traded three picks to
select him at No. 59
overall - partly because
of his knee issues.
Heckert said the club
was confident in 1ts predraft medical evaluauons
of Hardesty, who ~
25 yards on seven Carries
with a touchdown before
getting hun.
"We spent a lot of tiOle
with our doctors and felt

comforta b 1 e
(draftinl
b im),
Heckert
said on a
telecon==== fer en c e
o
n
Monday. "It's a blow."
Heckert said docton
bebeve Hardesty wiU
make a fuU recovery aftCr
be hu saugery. wbiCb ' DOl yet beca ~

If.
We'

...._..

he s ~~ to come IIKt
and be f'iril." he said.
Heckert

would

DOt

oaament on wbelbcr

~sty

uaderweat

iaiciufl.-rt: ~

knee m 2006.

I don t waat to p1
Into lhal," be said. wtien
tbe subjeCt wu raised.
••J'm not real sure. I can't
answer that."
Heckert said be had no
regrets about Hardest)'
playing in Cleveland s
last preseason ~e. He
talked it over wtth coach
Eric Mangini and president Mike Holmgren and
all felt it was time to see
Hardesty play after he
was cleared by the team's
medical staff.
"Montario was on
board as weD," Heckat
wd. ..It was just one flf
those thangs that hap-

~"

With Hardesty, pojecteel u Clev.eland's stlrter,
out for tbe seuoa. the

Browns' ruaniq back
position is likely to be a
committee of Jerome
Harrison, Peyton Hillis
and James Davis, whose
roster spot appeared
uucenain
before
Hlldesty p burt.
Heckert ~ both
DaYJa and Hilb who
. . acquired from
Dea\'er in abc March
bWie for quarterbaclc
Bndy Qumo.
ODe day after fioalizlit&amp; his first 53-man rostJr since taking over in
Cleveland, Heckert had
Giber observations and
comments:
-He expects aose
tackle Shaun Rogen to
practice this week in
advance of the SepL 4
season opener at 'limpa
Bay. Rogers. a tluee-time
Pro
Bowler
and
Cleveland's best dlfensive player, missed all of
traimog e&amp;!DJ and the
four exhibitiOn while
recovering from a leg
injury.
-Heckert said Unobacker D'QYtell Jecktoo
may be ahead of ICbedule
as he recovers from a
strained cbeit muscle.
Jackson in~ his pee~

toraJ muscle Clorq
camp. It's 1M 8IP05ilie
muscle from tlae iie l'io

~~lastof~t=

CUJTeDtly 08 ~~
roster.
-The Browns will
continue to scaa the
waiver wire. H~ said
the club is l~.f9 add
a cornerback • Ufcty,
but he doesn't feel tJie
needs to upgrade at wide
receiver.
-Heckert said die
fioal roster decisiou
with Cleveland's
~ement team of

Manpa 81 Holmgren
went "very. very SIDOolhly. It wasn't 1~ 'I WIDt
this guy llld I want Ibis
JUY. ' You talk it out aad
decide wbal is ... for'

the football teiQJ.•
-He hopes to sip
safety ~UIJte,
waived on
• to
the practice sqaad be
clears waiven.
-Heckert -.lao't
make any~
about chis ~,..,
than to say Ill Weves
the Browos wil~.
··we thint we've
im~roved. . . · _think
were good..._..M
we will compdl1i fJW'#.Y
game," be ilkt. ..After
that. we'U baWl to wait
and see bow....._..,.•

Bengals pick Nugent as kicker, cut WR
CINCINNATI (AP) Mike Nu,ent won the
Cincinnati
Bengals'
kicking job on Saturday
after proving he had
recovered from a groin
injury that limited him
early in training camp.
The Bengals waived
kicker Dave Rayner.
who had a head-start in
the competition after
Nugent got hun. Nugent
finished strong, going 3
of 4 on field goal
attempts, mcluding two
from beyond ~0 yards
Nugent
replaces
Shayne Graham. who
left as a free agent after
seven
seasons
in
Cincinnati.

T h e
Benaals
a 1 s o
released
receiver
M at t
NamBOOK 1 on e s ,
===== wbo is
tr)'ing to
revive his troubled
career. Jones dido't play
in the NFL last year
after
Jacksonville
released him becallle of
off-field issues. Jones
signed a one-year,
$700,000
deal
io
February.

Jones
was
Jacksonville's
firstround pick in 2005. He
was
arrested
and

charged w1th cocaioe
possession iD 2008.
drawing a dne-game
suspensioo from the
NFL. The Jaguars
waived him after be was
jailed for violating his
plea agreement.
Jones cau.sbt only four
passes dunng the preseason.
As expected. cornerbact Adam •pacman"
Jones JMde the 1nm as a
third cornerback aod
~t returner. loDes also
1s trying to revive his
ClftJCr after • = a s t
season out Of 14
•
1be Beepls m.de 22
moves tO
to the 53man roster linut on

aet

Jaguars send S Nelson to Bangels for DB
CINCINNATI (AP)
The Cincinnati
Bengals got former
first round pick Regaie
Nelson
from
Jacksonville in a trade
of defensive backs on
Saturday.
The Jaguars receaved
comerbaclt David Joaes
and a conditional draft
ptok in the deal. completed after teams made
final cuts to get down to
the 53 man roster lim1t

Nelson was the 21st
overall pick in 2(X17 out
of Flonda. He had an
impressive rookie acason - 82 tackles, five
interceptions,
two
force4 •fumbles and a
sack. S1ncc thea. be •s
bad only two interceptions and bia tactlOs
total bas drop~

back and was ~rt of
nickel peas ctefelises
The t~·year stUter
lost bia JOb dUI ~.
playina at safety With
the reserves during pre-

seuon LIUJIOI,

Jones
England's
dnft pic
Division II
2007. The
claimed

Tlae ·Beaaals were

loolig for depth at
saf~y

iJtu

Olbral

W"aiiQa 4Unaaed lila·
in his ·left taee
He shifted ~ttiODS at
Jacbollville .tter start· durfDJ tbe preseason
ang as a roamma aafety. and waa placed on
He speat time at COI'DCI'· injurecl racne

._ts

\

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