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-0£2

[

Financial advice
from Jason
Alderman, A3

Crunp Beaver set
for Saturday, A3

~~;~r~~~~~J

Byer: Tornado damage estimate at $2 million
Bv BRIAN

AKRON (AP) - Vice
President Joe Biden campaigned for the re-election
of embattled Ohio Gov.
Ted Strickland and says
the party can win if a big
Democratic turnout overcomes low expectations.
Biden told a ballroom
audience Monday at the
iversity of Akron
t Strickland reflects
..
emocratic Party values fundamentally different than ~epublican
noiJ)inee John Kasich.
Biden acknowledged
high energy by tea party
members and conservative Republicans. But he
says a higher-than-expected Democratic turnout
can help the party maintain control of the House
and Senate.
Kasich led Strickland
by 17 percentage points
in the latest poll,
released last week by
Quinnipiac University.
Republican National
Committee spokesman
Ryan Tronovitch says
Biden's visit will remind
voters of job losses during
the Obama administration.

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

EDEN - Residents
of a community near
Reedsville need supplies like canopies, tents
and tools as they continue to recover from two
tornadoes that caused
damage to do1ens of
homes on Thursday.
Gov. Ted Strickland
visited the site on Friday.
and Rep. Debbie Phillips,
D-Athens. Senator Jimmy
Stewart. R-Aibany, and
representatives of state
and local agencies have
been on the scene assisting in the cleanup and
recovery efforts.
Officials estimate damages to homes and property will exceed $2 million.
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Robert Byer said
31 homes on Eden Ridge
Road and Ohio 124 were
destroyed, and as many as
30 more were seriously
damaged. Electricity and
telephone service, in some
cases, were disrupted by

the tornadoes.
Six people were treated
at Parkersburg, W.Va.,
hospitals for injuries they
suffered
during
the
Thursday storm, with two
cases classified as serious.
The storm system originated in Athens County,
and caused significant
property damage in
Athens and The Plains. ln
Meigs County, the damage was primarily isolated to the Eden Ridge
community. After traveling along Ohio 124 from
Eden Ridge to the Ohio
River, one of the two tornadoes crossed the Ohio
River and killed a man in
Belleville, W.Va.. a small
Wood County community just across the Ohio
from Sugar Camp.
An emergency center
has been set up at the Eden
United Brethren Church
on 124, and food and other
supplies are being provided to stom1 victims there
by local volunteers. The
disaster has brought help

David Harris/photos
A storm that swept
through eastern Meigs
County last Thur~day left
a trail of destruction in its
wake. Meigs County
Emergency Management
Agency Director Robert
Byer said 31 homes on .
Eden Ridge Road and
Ohio
124
were
destroyed, and as many
as 30 more were seriously damaged. He estimates the total damage
will exceed $2 million. Six
local residents suffered
injuries during the storm.

Please see Tornado, AS

Last-ditch tax
collection
effort precedes
subpoen.as

Marcellus
..Qrillers set up
• bwebsite
HARRISBURG, Pa.
(AP) - The industry
group for natural gas
drillers tapping the
lucrative
Marcellus
Shale formation· has a
new jobs website.
The Marcellus Shale
Coalition site launched
the new site on Friday.
The Patriot-News of
Harrisburg
reported
Monday that the group
lists about 600 jobs in
Pennsy1vania.

Bv BRIAN

WEATHER
~·

High: 87

Low: 63

INDEX
2 SECTIONS.- 12 PAGES

.

Please see Taxes, AS

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

Charlene Hoeflichlphotos
Fun for everyone was taking a cruise up and down the Ohio on the Sternwheeler Blennerhasset.

Riverfest wraps up Pomeroy's festival season
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY· - "One of
the biggest and probably the
best" was how Chairman
Mayor
· Juhn
Musser
described the three-day
Sternwheel Riverlest which
closed out Saturday night
with a giant fireworks display.
Riverlest was the last in a
string of summer festivals
and hundreds of people
turned out to enjoy the entertainment, cruise on the beautiful Ohio River aboard the
Blennerhasset Sternwheeler,
participate in a variety of
competitions. and to enjoy a
wide variety of festival
foods. The weather was

almost perlect for the threeday event.
Saturday was filled with
competitions with prizes going
to winners in every contest
Kevin Layne of Racine
again thi:s y~ar won th~ line
throwing contest sponsored
American
Electric
by
Power. Second place went
to Todd Smith and third to
David Banks
In the chili cookoff. winners in organizations were
Connolly Custom Design,
Tracie Connolly, first; K92
The Frog. Rief Hermann,
second. and Carpenters
Local 650, third. In the individual
contest
Robert
Johnson of Mason, W.Va.,
Team 3. took. first, Margaret

B Section

11:' 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

UJIJ. !1!1.!1!11
·-~------

Eskew of Grandma's Chili.
second, and Pete Peyton of
Fuzzy Pete's Chili, third.
The "People's Choice"
award
went
to
the
Carpenter's Local 650.
ln the "We've Got 'P'dlent"
competitions. the winners
were. in the kids under 18,
The Blues Brothers, Dan
Stewart and Nick Ingles, first.
Reid Shafe. second. and
Gregory McKnight, third.
Winners in the over 18 category were Bruce Gibson,
first. and Anna Darst. second.
Taking top pri1es in the chalk
drawing contest on Main
Street
sidewalks
were
Isabella Harmony in the

Fair animals
to· food bank
33 animals to feed locals
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - Though the Meigs
County Fair's Junior Livestock Sale wrapped
up a month ago. this week donated meat
from the sale will become available to local
food pantnes serviced by the Second Harvest
Foodbank of Southeastem Ohio in Logan.
Though the actual poundage figures aren't
available, Barbara Rountree of the food
bank, said the hanging weight of the . 33
donated animals totaled 4.749 pounds:
There were eight goats, four lambs, four
commercial feeders and 17 hogs donated to
the food bank by various buyers.
Rountree said this was the second year

Please see Riverfest, AS

Please see Food, AS

Fourth Annual Reunion on the River
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

alendars

REED

MIDDLEPORT - Over 500 delinquent
Middleport mcome tax accounts will
receive letters from the agency collecting
the tax- a last-ditch effort to collect before
the non-filers are bsued subpoenas.
In July, village council voted to pursue
unfiled income tax returns and unpaid taxes
through a subpoena program operated by the
Regional Income Tax Administration. Last

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Guido Joseph
Girolami
• Noma L. Schul .
•
Thor 'Jake' Carsey
• Opal Leona Mulford
• Sylvia Long

J.

BREED@MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Marauders of
every age, shape and color
(preferably maroon and gold)
will gather for the Fourth
Annual Reunion on the River,
Oct. 1-2.
The event, organized once
again by the Meigs Local Alumni
Association. will feature two
days of homecoming festivities.
F.riday's events begin with an
open invitation to all alumni and
community members to attend
School
the
Meigs High
Homecoming Pep Rally at 2
--------~-·~-----

p.m.. Friday, Oct. 1 inside the
recently renovated high school
gymnasium. Reserved seating is
available ..
Next up on Friday's itinerary
is the Family Fun Tailgate Party
from 5:30-7:30 p.m. outside
Marauder Stadium. MHS pregame homecoming festivities
take place at 6:30 p.m., the
Local
Alumni
Meigs
Association
will
present
Distinguished Alumni awards at
7:15 p.m., the homecoming
game between MHS and Athens
High School kicks of at 7:30
p.m., the Meigs Alumni Band
performs at half-time. all inside

Marauder Stadium.
Saturday's events take place
on the upper end of the Pomeroy
parking lot. K&amp;D Disc Jockey
Service will provide music from
10 a.m.-4 p.m .. food Yendors,
kids inflatables and games open
at I 0:30 a.m: The parade lineup
is at 12:30 p.m. at Marauder
Stadium. Organizers are hoping
for the largest parade in the
reunion ·s four-year history. All
Meigs Marauder Homecoming
Queens are invited to participate
as well and arc asked to wear
maroon and gold and their tiara.
if they still have it. Call Surah at
304-638-9725 for more infor-

mation. Show up at 12:30 p.m.
to enter floats or parade units.
enter them early by contacting
Melissa Ramsburg Colwell at
melissa.day.colwefi@ gmail.com
or call416-5697. 992-0565.
The parade steps off at 1 p.m.,
heads down Main Street and
ends with a performance by the
MHS Marauder Band on Court
Street immediately afterwards. A
balloon launch takes place at 2
p.m.,
a
performance
by
Marauder (alumni musical
group) takes place from 2:453:45 p.m. on the parking lot. the
Please see Reunion, AS

•

�Tuesday, September 21,2010

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Recession pain still real, despite end, Obama says
WASHINGTON (AP)
President
Barack
Oban1a said Monday he
doesn't care that the Gn:at
Recession
has
hccn
declared over by a group
of economists. For the millions of people who arc
out of work or otherwise
stmggling, he said. "it's
still very real for them."
Obarna denied that he
was anti-business or antiWall Street in his economiC proposab. commenting under close
questioning during a
town hall-style meeting
broadcast live on CNBC.
He offered a mixed
verdict on the growing
tea party. calling its skepticism of government
"heaJthy...That's in our
DNA. right'?"
But. he added, "The
challenge for the tea party
movement is to identify
specifically 'What would
you do?'" to help tum
around the economy and
produce jobs.
"It's not enough just to
say, 'Get control of gov
ernment.' 1 think it's
important for you to say,
'You know. I'm willing
to cut veterans' benetits
or Social Security benefits or I'm willing to sec
these taxes go up."'
The gmernment can't
simply cut taxes on the
nation's wealthiest people "and magically think
things are going to work

out,'' he said.
Focu.,ing on the poor
economic conditiOns that
existed when he took
oftice. Obama said. "The
hole was so deep that a
lot of people out there are
still hurting."
He spoke sh01tly after
the National Bureau of
Economic Research. a
private panel of economists that dates the beginnings and ends of recessions. said the downturn
that began in December
2007 ended in June 2009.
At 18 months. that makes
it the longest recession
since World War II.
"Something that took
ten years to create is going
to take a little more time to
solve.'' Obama said.
''Even though economists may say that the
recession ofticially ended
last year. ob\ iously for
the millions of people
\\ ho arc still out of work.
people who have seen
thcil home values decline.
pl!ople who are struggling
to pay the bills day to day,
it's still very real for
them.'' Obama said.
He participated in the
hour-long session before
heading to Pennsylvania
to raise money for
Democratic Senate candidate Joe Sestak. who is
locked in a tight race for
a seat considered a, mustwin for the president's
pruty. The seat is current-

ly in Democratic hands.
but polls sho\\ it to be a
tight race.
The group assembled
for the session included
large and small business
owners. teachers. students
and unemployed people.
A woman who said she
was the chief financial
officer for a veterans· service organization told
Obama,
m exhausted
of
defending
you,
defending your administration. defending the
mantle of change that I
voted for. and deeply disappointed with where we
are right now."
"ls this my new reality'?" she asked.
Obama told her, "My
goal is not to com ince
you that everything is
where it ought to be. It's
not." Still. Obama said
that things were "moving
in the right direction"
under policies he has put
in place.
·
Republican Party chief
Michael Steele panned
Obama's TV performance. "Once again,
President Obama trotted
out the same old worn-out
reassurances on the economy. but Americans arc
still waiting for the
promised recovery that
never arrived.'' Steele said.
A 30-year old Jaw
school gmduate who said
he couldn't find a job and
couldn't even make inter-

·-r

est payments on his student loans told Obama he
was inspired by Obama's
2008 campaign but "that
inspiration is dying away."
''The most important
thing we can do right
now is grow our economy," Obama said. "What
we can't do is go back to
the same old things we
were doing."
CNBC's John Harwood,
the moderator, asked
Obama if, he had any plans
to replace his two top economic
advisers
Treasury
Secretary
Timothy Geithner and
chief economic adviser
Lawrence
Summers.
House Republican leader
John Boehner has called
for Obama to fire both of
them, contending their
economic advice to him
has not been helpful.
Obama sidestepped a
direct answer but said,
"This is tough work that
they do."
"We're constantly asking,
'Is what we're doing working as well as it could?"'
Harwood a1 one point
asked Obama how serious he was about deficit
reduction. Polls show
that
Americans
are
deeply concerned about
the government's rising
deficit. and Republicans
have repeatedly tried to
make it a campaign issue,
calling for more government belt tightening.

"I can't gtve tax cuts to
the top 2 percent of
Americans ... and lower
the deficit at the same
time," Obama said. "At
some point. the numbers
just don't work."
'The first thing you do in
a hole is not dig it deeper."
Obama pressed his
effort to cast Democrats
as fighters for the middle
class and Republicans as
protectors of "millionaires and billionaires"
and special interests.
He has called on
Congress to allow Bushera tax cuts to expire on
schedule at the end of
this year for those with
household
incomes
above $250,000- but to
extend them for everybody else.
Obama says it would
cost $700 billion over ten
years to extend the cuts
for those in the upper
income range, a group
that makes up roughly 2
percent of taxpayers.
What Obama wants to do
would cost about $3 trillion over ten years.
A combination of the
Bush tax cuts, the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, a
reduction in tax revenues
because of the recession
and stimulus and bailout
spending by both the
Bush and Obama administrations has resulted in
an estimated $1.5 trillion
deficit for the budget

year that ends at the end
of September.
Obama was asked by
Harwood whether we was
willing to debate Boehner,
who would probab.
become House speaker
Republicans take back th
House of Representatives
in November.
He indicated such a
debate was unlikely. "It's
premature to say that
John Boehner is going to
be speaker of the House,"
Obama said.
A member of the audience who said he was a
hedge fund manager and
a Harvard Law School
classmate of Obama said
many on Wall Street feel
as if he's treating them
like a pinata "We certainly feel like we've been
whacked by a stick."
"If you're making a billion dollars a year after a
very bad financial crisis
where 8 million people
lost their jobs and small
businesses can't get
loans, then I think that
you shouldn't be feeling
put upon," Obama said.
"Most folks on Mai.
Street feel like they'v
been beat upon," he said,
and "there's a big chunk
of the country that feels I
have been too soft on Wall
Street. What I've tried to
do is just be practical."
He said his policies
have not been "extremist'' or "anti-business."

GOP divided on how to replace health overhaul law
WASHINGT01\J (AP)
Republicans
arc
promising to repeal and
replace President Barack
Obama's health care
overhaul if they win control of Congress. But
with what?
Not even they know.
Some have proposed
major changes to workplace coverage. even
turning Medicare into a
voucher plan. Many prefer small steps that tiptoe
around political land
mines. Others \\ant a
clean start.
"During the health care
debate there was just as
much dh is ion within
Republicans as there was
between the parties," said
Douglas Holtz-Eakin. a
leading adviser to 2008
GOP presidential candidate John McCain. "It
will be more visible now
that Republicans may be
in charge of one house
because those dh is ions
will come to the surface."
Republicans
appear
have better than even
odds of winning the
House. At least 75 scats
are competitive. the vast

majority
held
by
Democrats. according to
a recent Associated Press
analysis. The GOP only
has to win 40.
One of the first acts of
a Republican majority
would be a vote to repeal
what they dismiss as
"Obamacare." But they
haven't said much about
what would replace it.
A GOP bill rejected by
the Democrdtic-led House
last year i' the closest
thing to a starting point.
The Republican plan
would cO\ er an additional 3 million people by
2019, compared with
nearly 33 million under
the Obama health care
Ia\\. It would lower premiums modestly for
many small businesses
and for people buying
insurance directly. It
wouldn't
solve
the
nation's long-term cost
and coverage problems.
"On a scale of 1 to
1.000. it's about a 5,''
scoffs former Senate
Majority Leader Tom
Daschle,
a
senior
Democratic adviser.
Yet some Republican

proposals arc as far-reachas . anything
ing
Democrats have tried. A
budget crisis could push
them to the forefront
because lowering health
costs is critical to reducing record federal deficits.
Many of those ideas
come from Rep. Paul
Ryan. R-Wis .. one of a
group of younger lawmakers trying to energize
the party leadership.
Along with Sen. 1om
Coburn, R-Ok:la.. Ryan
sponsored legislation that
\\auld begin to \\can the
middle·class a\\ ay from
job-based coverage and
replace Medicaid \\ ith
priYatc insurance for
most low-income people.
The idea is to foster
personal responsibility,
on the theory that consumers will seck better
value for their health care
dollars and help drive
down costs.
Their plan would make
employer coverage taxable to the employee. but
that would be offset with
a tax credit available to
all Americans. It could be
used to buy coverage

individually or to keep a
plan at work. Some people
with
generous
employer coverage could
face higher taxes.
"We either embrace bold
reform or watch our future
collapse under a mountain
of debt.'' said Coburn.
In contrast to the
Democrats' health care
law. there would be no
federal mandate that individuals get coverage or
employers help pay for it.
The plan. however. is a
hard sell.
Any attempt to tamper
with the tax-free status of
employer health care is
certain to provoke an allout counterattack from
labor unions. That hasn't
deterred Ryan. He also
risks antagonizing the
seniors' lobby.
On his own, Ryan has
proposed
to convert
Medicare into a voucher
system. People who
become eligible starting
in 2021 would get a federal payment to buy private
insurance. Because of the
timing of the transition,
most baby boomers get to
keep the current govern-

ment-run program.
Ryan's ambitious proposals are drawing flak
from Democrats intent on
preserving the health care
law, and that's making
some GOP leaders nervous.
In an interview, Ryan
said he represents "a consensus of one person myself," not the official
GOP view. As senior
Republican on the House
Budget Committee, Ryan
says he's trying to promote discussion, not lay
down the agenda.
··Repealing Obamacare
is a step in the right
direction," said Ryan.
"It's not enough," he
added. "You have to
reform health care itself."
Repeal is not a surefire
proposition. Even if the
Senate
goes
along,
Obama could veto it, and
Republicans aren't likely
to have enough votes to
override. But they have a
backup plan that could
work: Use the congressional power of the purse
to deny the administration
funds to carry out the law.
For now. it looks like
Republicans are pushing

hard on the repeal part of
their slogan, but treading
gingerly when it comes
to replacing.
"There's only one
(idea) I can give you for
certain, and that's medical malpractice reform,"
said
Sen.
Chuck
Grassley, R-Iowa, a
leader on health care.
"The rest is pretty much
dependent on what ~
election does."
W'
Aside from placing limits on jury awards in malpractice cases, two other
tdeas seem to have consensus support among
Republicans: strengthening the prohibition against
the use of federal funds to
pay for abortions, and flyspeck oversight of the
Obama administration's
efforts to implement the
health care law.
If that's all, some conservatives will be disappointed.
"Republicans won't fix
health care if they just
replace Obamacare with
small-bore reforms," said
Michael Cannon, health
policy director for the
libertarian Cato Institute.

Powell says illegal immigrants do his home rePairs
WASHINGTON (AP)
Former Secretary of
State Colin Poweli says
illegal immigra~ts do
essential work 111 the
U.S. and he has firsthand knowledge of that
Former Secretary of
State Colin ~owell says
illegal imm1grants do
essential work in the
U.S. and he has firsthand knowledge of that
because they fix his
house.
Powell, a moderate
Republican , urged his
party Sunday to support
• immigration generally
because it is ' 'what's
keeping this country's
lifeblood moving for'ward."
In an inten iew with
NBC's
"Meet
the
Press,'' he said a path to
legal status should be
offered to illegal immigrants because they
"are doing things we
need done in this country."
He added: "They're
all over my house.
doing things whenever
1 call for repairs. and
I'm sure you've seen
them at your house.
We've got to find a way
to bring the.se people
out of the darkness and
give them some kind of
status."
Powell did not say
whether he's hired illc-

Sunday.
he
said
Republicans must not
become anti-immigration and sp.oke. in support of leg1slatton that
would give certain children of illegal immig~~nts a .way to become
c1t1zens 1f they ~ursue a
c~l~ege ed~catlon or
nuhtary service.
Immigration, he said.
offers .the
a chance
to mamtam a youthful
population in contrast
with the aging of
Europe and Japan.
Powell
also
said
"frin~e" element.s on
the nght are takmg a
low road when ~hey
label Obama a foreignborn Muslim and p~ddie other false theones
about
non-American
influences on the president's
char~cter.
Obama was born m the
U.S. and is Christ_ian.
"~et's attack htm o~
policy, not nonsense.
he said.
.
And he said the tea
party may !lot become
an
e~dunn~
force
unless 1t moves beyond
slogans and promotes
an agenda that people
"can see .. tou~h .. an.d
actually beheve m: Its
not enough. he sa1d. to
call for goals that most
Americans
support,
such as cont~olled federa!
spendmg
and

,u.s.

Former Secretary of State Colin Powell
gal immigrants directly
or they showed up with
contractors.
Powell was President
George W. Bush's firstterm secretary of state
and the nation's top
military officer in the
presidency of Bush's
father and in the early
months of the Clinton
administration. Despite
his Republican standing s father and in the
early months of the
Clinton admiJ.listration .
Despite his R'epublican
standing he \\as once

considered a formidable prospect for the
GOP presidential or
vice presidential nominations but stayed out
of contention he was
once considered a formidable prospect for
the GOP presidential or
vice presidential nominations but stayed out
of contention
he
endorsed
Democrat
Barack Obama in the
2008 presidential clcction .
In
lamenting
the
party's rightward drift
\

adherence
to
the giving up on the GO.
Constitutioq.
even in the face of a
The former secretary rightward drift, and
of state said he still says it might actuall.Y
sees Obama as a trans· help
Obama
If
formational figure. if Republicans win the
one who has lost some House in November
o~ his ability to connect and g~i~ respo':lsibility
with people..
,
~or dnvmg policy, !lot
Powell sa1d he s not JUSt
opposmg

PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigs County CDBG Community
Housing Improvement Project
Home Repair and Rehabilitation- Homeownership
EARLY PUBLIC NOTICE FLOOD PLAIN
DEVELOP:\tENT
Meigs County has received a CDBG 2010
Community Housing Improvement Program
grant that includes the repair and rehabilitation of
owner occupied housing units that will be locate8
at various sites throughout the county. Areas of
the project may be located in the base flood plain.
Federal regulations require that the public be
given the opportunity to comment on the
proposed project when located in the flood plain.
T he County is securing public perceptions of
possible adverse impacts that could result from
the project and possible minimization measures.
Send written comments to the Meigs County
Grants Office, 117 E. Memorial Drive, Suite 7,
Pomero}. Oh10 45769. Comments will be
received until 15 days from the date of this
publication.
Meigs County Commissioners
Tom Anderson. President

�--- -- - - . .

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~-

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----------

Monday, Sept. 28
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
Southern High School,
media center.
Thursday, Sept. 23
POMEROY The Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors, regular session, 11:30 a.m. at
the district office at 33101
Hiland Road.

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

Tuesday, September 21,

Community Calendar
CHESTER Shade River
Lodge 453 special meeting, 7 p.m. for purpose of
conferring the Entered
Apprentice Degree on one
candidate. Refreshments.
POMEROY Alpha Iota
Masters, · 11:30 a.m.,
KFC/Long John Silver's.
POMEROY
Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association, noon luncheon, Trinity Church.
Speaker from Edward
Jones on financial advice
for retirees. School supplies to be collected.
Lunch reservations by
Tuesday to 992-3214.
Guests welcome.
TUPPERS
PLAINS
VFW Post 9053, regular
meeting, 7 p.m., at the
hall.

___w
____

..,_..,.

p

The Daily Sentinel

· Pubrc
meetings

·._...-__.....--..,.._.._.....-~

2010

A SK DR. B ROT HERS
Bible Holiness Church,
revival, through Sept. 26.
Cary Thornton to speak.
Church
located
on
Roweville Road, Services
through Saturday, 7 p.m.,
Sunday, 9:30 a.m. and 6
p.m.

Stobart reunion will De
held 1 p.m. Racine Star
Mill Park.. Take covered
dish. Family and friends
invited.
RACINE
GideonRoush reunion, 1 p.m.,
Star Mill Park. Covered
dish.

Pre-wedding jitters
have .her worried

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
love my fiance and have
really enjoyed planning
my wedding with him.
Our parents approve, and
Other events
our friends are so excited
Birthdays
us. But somehow I feel
for
Wednesday; Sept. 22
like something is wrong,
POMEROY Free comFriday, Sept. 24
munity fellowship dinner at
WEST
COLUMBIA, and the closer the wedding
New Beginnings Church, W. VA Josephine Kirby of gets, the more nervous I
Second Street, Pomeroy. West Columbia, W.Va., is am becoming. I am really
4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
turning 92. Cards may be having visions of leaving
Dr. Joyce Brothers
MIDDLEPORT
Free sent to her at 16698 Ohio him at the altar and just
Road,
West running away. I don't
community dinner at River
know why. Is this normal?
Middleport Church of Columbia, 25287.
1 can't really talk about it psych myself up to avoid
Christ, 5 p.m. Doors open
Saturday, Sept. 25
at 4:30. Chicken, vegetaWEST
COLUMBIA, with anyone - I am so being a quitter? - L.T.
bles, rice and dessert.
W.VA. Elizabeth "Sis" ashamed. I know he doesDear L.T.: You sound
Roush of West Columbia, n't feel this way. - B.K
Tuesday, Sept. 21
very discouraged by your
W.Va. is turning 80. Cards
Dear B.K.: You seem past experiences, as well
CHESTER
Chester
Reunions
Council 323, D of A, 7:30 Church events
may be sent to her at PO really confused about as pretty down on yourhall.
Box 7, West Columbia, whether you should marry self. People who relapse
p.m.
at
the
Sunday, Sept. 26
Refreshments, 6:30.
Tuesday Sept. 21
your fiance, or marry at seem to be pretty ashamed
RACINE The Thomas 25287.
Thursday, Sept. 23
all, and whether now is the by their lack of persever- ,
. RACINE Pine Grove and Isabel (Weaver)
time. Yes, it is perfectly ance and willpower. It's as
normal to have pre-wed- though you know how to
ding jitters. It would be quit the cigarettes - you
very unusual to have none! even have done it successBut you should know fully - but you just can't
yourself well enough to be keep that feeling of deterable to tell if your nervous- mination going. You feel
ness is just part of wanting like a loser. and you don't
everything to go well on give yourself the credit .
your wedding day and not you deserve for trying
somehow getting messed again and again. And even
up - or something deep- if you do succeed, you
er. Some people who have know you could relapse.
a rather controlling per- again because you already
sonality find wedding have. It's a vicious cycle. ·
planning difficult because
Many in the field of psy- :
despite their best efforts, chology are viewing the
they find they can't control problem of relapses in a
every single thing. This new light. It seems that
makes them uncomfort- relapsing is so common as
able and nervous. Are you to be almost a normal part
one of these? If so, the of kicking an addiction or
inevimble process leading bad habit, and it isn't necto an inescapable conclu- essarily the death knell for
sion may be freaking you successful efforts that peoout!
ple tend to think it is.
But if what bothers you According to Psychology
goes beyond the wedding Today, a relapse often can
to thinking about your life point the way to a better '
with your fiance- I mean plan or an understanding
Submitted photo
thinking down the road, of how to overcome obstayears ahead - that also cles on the road to success ..
would
be
normal. The process of recovery
Marriage is supposed to be from many addictions can
olzer Hospice will host Camp Beaver, a bereavement camp for children, from 10 a.m.-4:30p.m., Saturday, a "rest of your life" thing, include relapses without
•
ept. 25 at the French Art Colony in Gallipolis. Designed for children and young adults ages 6-15, this one- and that is daunting. But ending in failure.
day camp will help participants to understand feelings associated with the death of a loved one, friend or pet. many brides find comfort
The children will share with each other and have fun while gaining an understanding of how loss and change in the idea that they will
affects their lives. They will also learn that the emotions they experience related to grief are normal respons- always be exclusively with
es to life events. Registration is required for the event. For information or to register a child, call (740) 446- the loved one. Others find
it horrifying, and those are
5074. Pictured are Shelly Ranegar, LSW, (lett) and Sharon Shull, AN, BSN, Director of Holzer Hospice.
the ones who should honestly
examine
their
chances of being a good
wife and finding happiness
in marriage. You need to
take time out for this conversation now.
• ••
Millionaires can probGifts to qualified $65,000 ($130,000/couDear Dr. Brothers: I
ably skip this column. political organizations, ple), as long as you
know how to quit smoking
Most likely they've such as political parties, don't make any other
~
- I've done it at least
already got a team of election campaign com- gifts to that beneficiary
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seven
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same
financial professionals mittees and political for five years.
,
~ Unlim~ed Hours, No Contracts!
goes for staying on a diet
There are two types of
advising them about the action
committees
~ 10 E·mail Addresses
mydailysentinel.com
and a number of other
best ways to pass along (PACs).
529 Plans:
~ FREE Sporn Protection
I
have
tried
to
do
in
things
Prepaid tuition plans,
their wealth. For the rest
Note that to qualify
~ Invoice Billing Available
order to be healthier or a
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of us, however. a quick for the $13,000 annual where you prepay and
better person in some way.
refresher course on how exclusion, your gifts lock-in future tuition at
It is almost as though I am
the IRS treats gifts must be of "present rates currently charged
interest" that is, there by in-state colleges.
a professional relapser! As
might prove helpful.
a result, I feel like it is
Separate from inheri- are no restrictions on
College savings
going to be impossible to
tances you might leave the recipient being able plans, where you conin your estate, you're to use the cash or prop- tribute to an account
succeed, even if 1 start off
www.core.com
A lso allowed to malce erty immediately; other- whose interest earnings
well . Is there some way to
grow
tax-free
until
wise,
they
count
toward
~ifts of up to $13,000
per year per person to the $1 million lifetime withdrawn to pay for
eligible expenses at any
an unlimited number of exclusion.
people before potentialRules for gift and college or university.
Sponsored by Point Pleasant Lions Club
To learn more about
ly triggering the federal estate taxes arc com529
Plans
including.
tax
9
:00AM .Saturday,October2,2010 -~-·
gift tax. (Married cou- plex, so read IRS
ples who file jointly can Publication 950 at implications, brokerage
#Registration 7:00am - 8:45 am•
..
together give $26,000 www.irs.gov for more fees, investment risk
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per recipient.) These details. Adding further and the potential impact
on city streets through scenic Point Pleasant, WV
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limits are periodically complexity, the gift tax on needs-based finanAwards: Both 5K &amp; 10K Runs ... T-Shirts to the first 200 entrants:
adjusted for inflation. rate for 2010 was cial aid, read the guides
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RETURN WITH CHECK TO:
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total of $1 million in Association
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gifts during your life- (www.fpaforfinan- that before making such
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the annual $13.000 good place to start your on track to fund your
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15K or 10K(Please Circle)
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own retirement. have
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Another way parents, adequate health insurI Name
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Last
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in, which for most of us grandparents and others ance, can pay off your·
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•
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of
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acceptance
of
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my
heirs,
my executors &amp;
Plan to fund children's and then become a
I assignees, waive &amp; release any &amp; all rights &amp; claims for damages I may have against The Lions
othfinancial
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on
education.
Gifts to your spouse
I Club. Battle Days representatives, Retail Merchants Assn., &amp;the City of Point Pleasant for all
Contributions up to the ers.
1 claim of damages, demands, actions whatsoever in any &amp; all injuries arising out of my participa·
(Jason
Alderman
Direct payments you $13,000 annual limit
1 tion in said event. Iattest that Iam physically fit &amp; have trained sufficiently for this event.
make for someone else's ($26,000/couple) will directs Visa· s financial
or
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VISit us
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1-877.267·3266 .

6th ANNUAL LIONS "RUN FOR SIGHT"

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PageA.f:

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esday, September 2 1, 2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make tto law respecting au
establisltmettt of religion, or prohibiting the f ree
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
p eaceably to assem ble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
T he First Amendment to the U.S. Constitutio n

nt U~ED10 PRAY FOR ~Ft awl C~ANGt=.,,
NOW, I Jv;T HOP~ SoMEBODY.WfLL GIVE ME c;oM£ d4A~."

SEC backs rules on company
debt-level disclosure
B Y M A RCY G ORDON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The recession is over!
So where 's the party?

Federal regulators voted Friday to propose new
rules that could make it' harder for public companies to disguise their level of debt.
The Securities and Exchange Commission is
proposing expanded disclosure requirements in
response to companies that temporarily trim their
debt at the end of quarters to make their financial
statements appear stronger. The practice. especially used by big banks and sometimes called '·window dress mg... is legal but regulators say it can
give investors a distorted picture of a bank's debt
and level of risk.
The SEC proposal would require all public
companies to report detailed information on their
short-tem1 borrowing every quarter. For financial
companies, there would be a stricter layer of
requirements: The average interest rate paid on
the loans would have to be calculated on a daily
basis and reported.
Financial finns currently are required to disclose their short-term borrowing only once a year.
The SEC commissioners voted 5-0 at a brief
meeting to propose the new rules and open them
to public comment for 60 days. They could be formally adopted sometime later, possibly with
changes.
Lehman Brothers used so-called repurchase
agreements as an accounting trick in the months
before its collapse two years ago into the biggest
bankruptcy in U.S. history. The demise of the Wall
Street titan triggered a panic in financial markets.
Lehman had put together complex transactions
that allowed the finn to sell billions in mortgage
securities at the end of a quarter - wiping them
off its balance sheet when regulators and shareholders were examining it - and then to quickly
buy them back. The repurchase agreements.
detailed in a report issued in March by a courtappointed examiner, were known as Repo 105.
SEC Chainnan Mary Schapiro said before the
vote on the proposed changes that "investors
would have better information about a company's
financing activities during the course of a (quar, ter) - not just a period-end snapshot."
Under the proposed mles. public companies
would be required to report the amount outstanding of their short-term borrowings at the end of
· each quarter and the average interest rate they
paid on the loans. They also would have to report
the average amount of borrowings outstanding
during the quarter and the average interest rate, as
well as the maximum amount outstanding.
Commissioner Luis Aguilar said the expanded
disclosure mles are helpful but won't necessarily
prevent deception by firms to make their balance
sheets appear less risky than they are.
''Rules on the books are not enough; they have
to be enforced," he said.

Bv JEA NNINE AVERSA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

It turns out the recession ended
more than a year ago.
Feeling better now?
The ·panel that determines the
timing of recessions concluded
Monday that this one ended technically, anyway - in June
2009, and lasted 18 months. The
duration makes it the longest
since World War II.
It may be over, but you won't
be hearing any cheers from the
millions of Americans who are
struggling to find a job. Or are
worried about the ones they have.
Or have lost their homes. Or are
behind on the mortgage.
"Every single one of the individuals ,who wrote the report
needs a serious reality check."
said Bob Johnson of the Queens
borough of New York, who is 46,
had worked in communications
and has been looking for a job for
more than three years.
Not that it's the fault of the acain this case the
demics National Bureau of Economic
Research, a group of economists
based in Cambridge, Mass. It's
their job to declare when recessions officially begin and end.
Their finding is one that economic historians spend a lot of
time pondering. Politicians care,
too. They don't want to be blamed
for downturns that happen on
their watch.
One of those politicians is
President Barack Obama, who
inherited the recession - it began
in December 2007, according to
the bureau. Obama found little
reason Monday to celebrate that it
had officially ended.
"The hole was so deep that a lot
of people out there are still hurting," the president. whose

Democratic Party faces a likely That's because it takes time for
setback in the midtenn elections. companies to gain confidence in
said at a town-hall meeting spon- the economy. know that customer
demand will last, and add jobs.
sored by CNBC.
Obama has made a point·of notBut for the past few recessions,
ing small signs of progress in the it's taken longer and longer for
economy, which is growing slow- unemployment to come do\vn. In
ly. Some Democrats have urged 1982. for exan1ple. unemployhim to stop boasting about any ment peaked the same month the
progress at all, for fear that it irks recessiOn ended. After the 2001
people who feel things aren't get- recession, the gap was 19 months.
ting better and makes politicians
Tlus time around, it's been 15
seem out of touch.
months, and economists don' t
For Melody BroQke. a 55-year- expect unemployment to come
old marriage and family coun- down significantly anytime soon .
selor in Lewisville, Texas, it didln part, that's because of how
n't feel in her household as if the the unemployment rate is calcurecession ended 15 months ago. lated. It's based on a survey of.
l-Jer household' finances wer.e in households. Only out-of-work
shambles at the time.
people who are looking for jobs
" It felt like the heat of it for us." are counted as unemployed.
Brooke said.
Those who have quit looking out
Her outlook is starting to bright- of discouragement aren't includ en. Her husband finally found ed. As the economy improves,
full-time work about a month ago. more of these people will start
And Brooke's counseling busi- looking for jobs and wilf be
ness is picking up: She's on track counted again as unemployed.
to make about $35,000 for the That will drive up the unemploy year.
ment rate. at least for a while.
For the rest of the country. the
To make its call on the end of a
statistics are familiar and grim. recession. the bureau looks at the
Since the recession began. 7.3 stats behind the gross domestic
million jobs have disappeared. product. which measures the total
Nearly 2.5 million homes have value of the economy. Plus. it
been repossessed. Unemployment reviews incomes. employment
is at 9.6 percent.
and industrial activity.
Since the technical end of the
The bureau pointed out that a
recession. the economy has been downturn in the economy anytime
growing. But the growth has been soon would now mark the start of
painfully slow.
a new recession. The last time that
How slow? The Organization happened was .in 1981 and 1982.
for Economic Cooperation and most economists believe.
The last recession that lasted
Development figures the U.S.
economy will grow 2.6 percent longer than this one was. well..
this year. It would take growth somethmg far worse than a reces
twice that fast to drive down sion: The Great DepressiOn. It
unemployment by a smgle per- included a do~ ntum of three and
centage po~nt.
a half years. ending in 1933. and
Unemployment usually keeps another lasting more than a year.
rising well after a recession ends. ending in 1938.

The Daily Sentinel!
.

(USPS 213-960)

Correc tion Polley
Our main concern in all stories is
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story. call the newsroom
at (740) g92-2156.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the
Ohio
Newspaper
Our main number is
Association
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are: Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, PO.
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
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Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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4 weeks ..•.•..•.. .'11.30
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Mall Subs cription
Inside Meigs Cou nty
12 Weeks . .
.'35.26
26 Weeks ..... , .. .'70.70
52 Weeks ..•..• . .'140.11
Outside
12 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Meigs County
. . . . . . . 56.55
........ 113.60
.•..••..' 227.21

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�Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Obituaries
Guido Joseph
Girolami

l

ui do
seph
1rolami,

8

4

•

Pomeroy,
passed
away on
Sept. 19,
2010, at
t
h
e
Holzer Medical Center.
He was born on Nov.
20, 1925, in St. Louis,
Missouri, son of the late
Guilietta
(Fabbri)
Girolami and Basilio
Girolami. He was in the
retail business. He was
an Army Veteran of
World War II and the
Korean Conflict, and
belonged to Post 39,
American Legion.
Mr. Girolami was drafted in January, 1944 and
served until May, 1946.
He was with "D"
Company-26
First
Infantry-65th Division,
.th Patton's 3rd Army.
s Divison made the
epest penetration into
Eastern Europe, meeting
the Russians on May 9,
1945, at Erlaut, Austria
and again on May 9,
1945. He re-enlisted in
the Army in June 1950,
volunteering for the
Korean Conflict, but
instead he was shipped to
Trust Command, Trieste,
and was assigned to
284th M.P.Company. He
served honorable as
Assistant
Criminal
Investigator and was discharged in 1953.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by
his wife, Vidia Cecchi
Girolami; sisters, Gemma
Casci
and
Lily
Strickland.
He is survived by a son,
Frank (Karen) Girolami,
Loveland,· Ohio;
a
daughter, Peggy (Steve)
vis, Gallipolis; grands, Mike Davis and Joe
•
vis, Gallipolis; · 10
· nieces and nephews,
Dave (Yvonne) Casci,
Rev. Art (Joyce) Casci,
Teresa Carr, Rita (Rich)
Bailey, Ida (Jim) Counts,
Ron (Lowry) Casci, Steve
(Rosanna)
Strickland,
John (Vicki) Strickland,
Michael
Strickland,
C~stophet: and (Heidi)
Stnckland.
Funeral Mass will be
conducted at 11 a.m. on
Thursday, Sept. 23, 2010,
at Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, by the Rev.
Father Walter Heinz.
Burial will be in Sacred
Heart Cemetery.
Friends may call on
Wednesday, Sept. 22,
from 4 to 8 p.m. at
Anderson
McDaniel
Funeral
Home
in
Pomeroy. A Vigil Service
will be conducted at 7:45

t

)

•

on-line registry is
able at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Noma l. Schul

Noma L. Anderson
Schul, 89, of Coolville,
Ohio died Saturday afternoon, Sept. 18, 2010 at
St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, WV after a
short illness.
She was born Aug. 31,
1921 in Beech Hill, W.Va.
to the late Romulus R.
and Bertha P. Nicely
Anderson. She was an
active homemaker and
partner on the family
farm and was a member
of the Little Hocking
Church of Christ.
She is survived by her
husband of 68 years, Roy
0. Schul; three sons,
Herbert (Donna) of Little
Hocking, Ohio, Herman
ancy) of Guysville,
o and Jerry (Carol) of
talian Springs, Tenn.;
seven
grandchildren,
Herbert Jr. (Jennifer) of
Hebron, Ky, Stephanie

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tornado

Deaths
(Todd) Rahr of Nampa,
Idaho, Tracie Francis
(Robert) of Cambridge,
Ohio, Kimberly Sickler
(Harry) of Jackson, Ohio,
Matthew ,Schul (Pam) of
Akron, Ohio, Walker
Schul (Michelle) of
Spring Hill, Tenn. and
Jennifer Miller (Jason) of
Lebanon, Tenn.; 21 greatgrandchildren and one
great-great-grandson; a
sister,
Alma
Knotts
(Clifford)
of
Little
Hocking, Ohio; along
with numerous nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in
death by her parents, four
brothers,
Preston
Anderson,
Merrill
Anderson,
Clovis
Anderson and Romulus
Anderson Jr.; three sisters, Zama Fay Anderson,
Erma
Pickens
and
Christine Mattox;
a
grandson, Scott Allen
Schul and a great-grandson,
Joshua
David
Colyer.
Services will be held 11
a.m., Tuesday, Sept. 21,
2010 at White-Schwarzel
Funeral Home, Coolville,
Ohio
with
David
Newberry and· Steve
Fuchs officiating. Burial
will be in the Meigs
County
Memory
Gardens, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Friends may call at the
funeral home Monday
from 6-8 p.m.
You can sign the online
guestbook at www. whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.co
m.

Thor 1ake'
Carsey
Thor 0. "Jake" Carsey,
93, of Rocksprings Road,
Pomeroy, died on Sept.
16, 2010, at his daughter's
residence
in
Chillicothe.
He was born reb. 2,
1917, in Pratt's Fork, son
of the late Charles and
Mahala King Carsey. He
was a retired employee of
the
McBee-Litton
Plant
m
Industries
Athens.
He was a member of
the Rocksprings United
Methodist Church, a veteran of the U.S. Army,
and a member of the
Drew-Webster Post 39,
American Legion of
Pomeroy.
Surviving are a son,
Kenneth (Sheila) Carsey,
Middleport; daughters,
Louise (Bob) Luke,
Middleport, and Judy K.
(Phillip
Searfoss)
Clifford, Chillicothe; a
stepson, Randy (Mary)
Sheets, Sandusky; three
step grandsons: Larry and
Terry Sheets and Chris
Searfoss; a step granddaughter, Shawna; two
nieces, Kathern Ash,
Dayton and Conne Kay
Chapman, Harrisonville;
a nephew, Danny Joe
Carsey of Chillicothe;
five
grandchildren:
Melissa Sisson, Sherri
Chriscoe,
Wendy
Hubbard,
Kenny
R.
Carsey
and
Kenda
Carsey; five great grandchildren: · Davey Allan
Hubbard,
Devon
Hubbard, Ashleigh Wood,
Andrew Willford, and
Seth White.
Besides his parents, he
was preceded in death by
his wife, Pearl Carsey;
sister, Katie Knicely; sister, Beryl Wyatt; and two
brothers, Elda and Joe
Carsey.
Funeral wi 11 be at 1
p.m. on Tuesday, Sept.
21, 20 I 0, at Ewing
Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with Joy Oark officiating. Burial will be at
Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call from 9
a.m. until the time of service on Tuesday.
Memorial contributions
Adena
Hospice
to
Service, 111 W. Water
St., Chillicothe, Ohio
45601.

Opal leona
Mulford
Opal Leona Mulford,
age 87, of Letart, W.Va.,
died of natural causes on
Sept. 19, 2010 in her
home surrounded by her
loving family.
In lieu of flowers Opal
asked to please donate the
amount to the Feed the
Children Organization at
http://www. feed the
children.org,
because
"God expects us to help
feed the childrei\." A
funeral service will be
held at 11:30 a.m.,
Wednesday, Sept. 22,
2010 at Anderson Funeral
Home in New Haven,
W.Va.
A
brief

viewing/visitation will be
held one hour prior to the
service at 10:30 a.m.
Pastor Mike Finnicum is
officiating. The burial
will follow at the Gravel
Hill
Cemetery
in
Cheshire.

Sylvia long
Sylvia Long, 77 of
Ashton W.Va.,
died
Sunday, Sept. 19, 2010 at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A graveside service
will
be
held
on
Wednesday, Sept. 22,
2010 at the Balls Chapel
Cemetery, Ashton, W.Va.
There will be no public
visitation. Th~ Deal
Funeral Home is serving
the family.

fromPageAl
from local church volunteers, and students from
Eastern High School were
permitted to spend most of
the school day on Monday
assisting in the cleanup of
debris and other storm
recovery work.
What relief volunteers
and storm victims need
most are supplies to aid
in the cleanup, Byer said.
They need canopies and
tents, hand sanitizer,
totes and heavy trash
bags, rakes, shovels,
large rolls of plastic,
tarps, safety glass, chain

Riverfest
fromPageAl

seven and under class, and Gibson of Dunbar W.Va.,
Breanna Zirkle, first place fourth place. The duck
derby is an annual fund
in the 12 and under class.
Winners
raiser for the Pomeroy
in
the
always
fromPageAl
popular sexy leg contest Merchants Association
buyers at the Meigs donations were a welcome were Warren Wingo of with proceeds going into
County Fair participated addition to the food bank St. Albans, W.Va, first; downtown beautificain the program. Last year which normally sees Allen McGee of Juliette, tion.
there were eight animals around 100,000 pounds of Wyoming, second, and
Twelve cruises on
donated which equated food donated each year. Brad Searles of Rutland, Ruble's sternwheeler,
into 716 pounds of However, with the eco- third.
The Blennerhassett, were
processed meat - num- nomic downturn, she
In the duck derby the featured over the three
bers which quadrupled guessed the food bank grand prize of $500 in days festival concluding
would see around 70,000 Chamber Bucks to be with a fireworks cruise
during this year's sale.
The
meat,
once pounds donated this year spent with a Chamber of on Saturday night. Then
processed, goes back to despite a growing need. Commerce member mer- on Sunday three church
the food bank in Logan Last year, the food bank chant was won by Nora cruises were held A serfor storage, waiting on fed 1,281 Meigs County Casto of Portland. Other vice including commufood pantries in Meigs families per month which top money winners were nion was held on the
County to request the . equated into 492,765 $300 savings bond from New
Beginnings
meat. Those food pantries pounds of food distributed Farmers Bank for second Methodist Church cruise,
in Meigs Coupty which in one year in Meigs place to
Rhonda Christian music was feaare eligible to distribute County alone. Last year, Roberts, Pomeroy; a tured on the Trinity,
the meat are Hillside the food bank served a $
savings bond from Episcopal and Baptist
Baptist· Church, Bethel total of 186,492 individu- Peoples Bank, third cruise, and a worship
Worship Center, Rutland als in its 10-county area. place to Kim Snyder of service was held on the
Care
Closet,
Meigs Second Harvest Foodbank Racine; and a $75 sav- Carmel and Catholic
County
Cooperative of Southeastern Ohio falls ings bond from Ohio churches cruise.
Parish,
Wellsprings under the jurisdiction of Valley Bank to Bruce
Hocking-AthensPantry, Silver Run Food the
Pantry, Meigs County Perry Community Action
Council on Aging, Faith Agency. The fair livestock
Chapel Food Pantry, program started in 2006 at
Calvary Pilgrim Pantry, the Athens County Fair.
"The food pantry is
Gathering Food Pantry,
fromPageAl
Golden Harvest Food very appreciative for the
donated
food,
it
means
a
Pantry.
The village believes
week, Mayor Michael
Bill Nease, president of lot when times are so Gerlach told village the costs associated with
Home National Bank, hard," Rountree said. "I council the letters are the issuance of subpoesaid this was the first year wish every county fair now going out in the nas will be easily recovthe bank participated in was as receptive to the mail, offering a final ered through the collecas
~eigs
the program and he plans program
opportunity for those who tion program. Gerlach
on keeping the tradition County. It was the best have not filed returns or said the additional revgoing. He explained HNB fair I've been to this year. paid their taxes to do so enue will be particularly
decided to donate the ani- It was awesome."
before additional action is useful for the village,
For those interested in taken against them.
mals to the food bank
because 2010 collections,
because the meat would the program or a similar
RITA is the agency the to date, are considerably
go directly to families in program where hunters village contracts with for behind what they were a
need living in Meigs can donate harvested administration of its year ago.
County.
deer, call Rountree at income tax program. The
Even considering a;
Red meat bas become a 385-6813 or go do letters will go to those $30,000 .overpayment
rareity at most pantries www.hap~ap.org
or who have either worked made by a Middleport
and Rountree said the www.fhfh.org.
or lived in Middleport business, which is now
and not filed tax returns being returned over a
as required by village period of time, the village is still $20,000
ordinance.
The letters call for a below collections at this
reason for not filing a point last year. That is
fromPageAl
return or paying taxes, as due to the genera! ecoalumni flag football game tion on the event, call
well as an opportunity to nomic turndown rather
takes place at 4 p.m. at Debbie Werry Evans at
pay up if they are owed. than a collection probMarauder Stadium.
416-2810 or email her at
Those who fail to lem, Baker said last
For general informa- evansd@ohio.edu.
respond to the courtesy week.
The village's contract
letter will then be issued
a subpoena to appear with RITA to operate its
before RITA tax attor- income tax program has
proven to be a money
neys, Gerlach said.
The letters will be saver for the village.
Saturday, 9:45 a.m. for issued to taxpayers who Turning over collections
Sunday school, l 0:45 for have been delinquent for to the non-profit agency
Sunday worship and 6
allowed the village to
POMEROY- Clerk p.m. for Sunday evening the past five to six years.
eliminate a position and a
The
letter-writing
camof Courts Diane Lynch service. Special singing
department, saving tens
repo11ed her office will be is planned for each ser- paign will cost the village
of thousands of dollars.
nothing
beyond
its
usual
closed on Oct. 5 w she vice.
percentage fee for RITA's As an added benefit, the·
and employees can attend
village has seen an
service.
passport training.
RITA has access to increase in collections
both the state's and the through RITA as well.
Last year, the village
Internal
Revenue
Service's taxpayer data- collected $277,105.53 i'n
P~MEROY The
POMEROY Meigs base, and can therefore income tax last year, at a
Me1gs County . Health County Historical Society determine who is work- cost to the village of
or
living
in $8,240.40.
Department w11l
be' and
Meigs
County ing
closed on Friday, Sept. 24 Museum will hold a Middleport but not filing
for staff training.
fundraising spaghetti lun- their tax returns as the
cheon from 11 a.m. to 2 law requires.
While some of the 522
p.m. on Thursday. The
menu will be spaghettti, people on the list are
salad, garlic bread and strictly negligent in filing
MIDDLEPORT
their returns, others,
dessert
for $6.
Revival will be held Sept.
Fiscal Officer Susan
The
meal
is
available
28-0ct. 3 at the Wesleyan
Baker said in July, are resBible Holiness Church. for carryout, dine-in and idents of Middleport work
delivery
in
Pomeroy.
75 Pearl St., Middleport.
in Pomeroy or other
with Evangelist David L. Orders for carryout and towns with an income tax,
dine-in
should
be
placed
Fulton.
by Wednesday by calling and have just not filed a
Services will be held at
return to indicate that.
7 p.m. Tuesday through 992-3810.

Food

mo

Taxes

Reunion

Local Briefs
Offices closed

Spaghetti
MCHD closed lunch

Church revival

Taking Applications

The Maples

Church fundraiser
POMEROY POMEROY St. Paul Lutheran Church,
East Second and Sycamore Streets, will hold a benefit luncheon from 11 a.m. to noon on Friday, with proceeds benefitting the Hemlock Grove Church of
Christ.

saws and saw operators.
Anyone who wishes to
donate items to the effort
is asked to call 378-6244.
A representative of
Auditor Mary Byer-Hill
will be in the area on
Thursday, Byer said, to
assist with applications
for tax reduction due to
property
damages
caused by the storm.
The Meigs County
Dog Warden will be distributing dog food to tornado victims who need
it.

HUD Subsidized
Efflclency/1 Bedroom
;; SOyrs or qualifying disability
~
Low income priority

~,,ALL
lffiLlllf$

w

t

740-992-7022
Silverheels
A Realty Company-EHO

~/. ARf PA~

• ~/,M'"

•

•

�Tuesday, September 21,

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010 .

Every time a band performed festival-goers packed the amphitheater to listen to the music.
t

Bruce Gibson won the
senior talent contest with
his impersonation of
Prince with the high voice
and the stage prance .

•
Photos by·
Charlene Hoeflich

The Blues Brothers, Dan Stewart and Nick Ingels, took first place in the junior talent contest.

David Banks demonstrates his skill at line throwing in the AEP sponsored contest.

FREE
HEALTH SCREENINGS
CHOLESTEROL, BLOOD PRESSURE AND DIABETES
Free screening and education for Cholesterol. Blood Pressure and
Diabetes will be available to the community on Friday, September
24, 2010 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm at the Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center at 36759 Rocksprings Rd. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
Total Cholesterol and Glucose can be non-fasting. Lipid Panel
(cholesteroL triglyceride, HDL &amp; LDL) require fasting for 9-12
hours.
There is no charge for the screenings.
Screenings and health information will be provided by the Ohio
University College 'of Osteopathic Medicine's. Community Health
Progmms. Registration is not required. For more information, please
call740-597-1212 or 1-800-844-2654.

Rocksprings
In the chili cookoff, Robert Johnson (stirring) and Austin Juelts were first place
·
winners.

REHABILITATION CENTER
••

�r

Bl

The Daily entinel

Inside
Defenders blank TVC, Page B2
Browns beating themselves, Page B6

•

Thesday, September 21,2010

LocAL SCHEDULE

POMEROY - A schedule of upcom1ng
h1gh school vars1ty sporting events
•nvolv•ng teams from Me1gs. Mason, and
Gallia counties.
~

Seotember 21
Volleyball
Portsmouth at Gallia Aca. , 5:15p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern. 6 p.m.
Meigs at Alexander. 6 p.m.
River vaney at Rock Hill, 5:30p.m.
Wahama at Fed. Hocking, 6 p.m.
Wayne at Point Pleasant, 5:30 p.m.
Hannan at Cross Lanes Chr.. 6 p.m.
Golf
Gallia Aca. at SEOAL Match, TBA
Wah\ma at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Southern at Belpre, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Nelsonville-York. 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant, Poca at Scarlet
Oaks. 4 p.m.
Soccer
Chillicothe at Gallia Aca , 5 p.m.
Point Pleasant (B) at OVCS, 5 p.m.
Wednessjav. Seotember~
Volleyball
Gallia Academy at River Valley.
5:30p.m
Meigs at Trimble, 6 p.m.
aterfotd at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Golf
ahama at Eastern, 4:30 p.m.

Point runs at.Ripley Covered Bridge Invitational
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

RIPLEY, W.Va.- The
Point Pleasant cross
country programs traveled to Cedar Lakes Park
on Saturday to take part
in the 2010 Ripley
Covered
Bridge
Invitational.
There were a total of
174 competitors and 17
teams involved in the
event. The Big Blacks
were last in the nine-team
boys field with 266
points, while the Lady
Knights had no team
score with only one runner in the girls field.
The ladies had eight
teams and 73 runners in
their event. with Andrea
Porter posting an eighth-

place time of 22.50.55
for PPHS.
Scott won the girls
team title with a score of
44, followed by runnerup St. Mary s with 75.
Sami
Harris
of
Charleston Catholic won
the individual crown
with a time of 19:33.26.
There were I 0 I nmners and nine teams in
the boys event. which
Wintield won by individually and collectively.
The Generals posted a
winning team score of
52. finishing six spots
ahead of Huntington
(58). Joe Kirtner led
WHS and all runners
with a winning mark of

overall with a time of
21:08.90, while Caleb
Riffle was 59th with a
mark of 21 :20.34.
Riken
Nowlin
(21:41.44) was 63rd,
Elijah
McClanahan
(21 :45.1 I) was 67th and
Logan Burch (24:32.58) ·
was 86th to round out the
team scoring. Guy Fisher
(25:27.64) also placed
93rd overall.
Complete results of the
20 J0 Ripley CQvered
Bridge Invitational are
available on the web at
www.runwv.com

17: I 1.07.

PIKETON, Ohio
The Gallia Academy
girls cross country team

Ryan Bonecutter led
PPHS by finishing 56th

BLUE ANGELS WIN
PIKETON INVITE

won the team championship, while the Blue
Devils placed fourth
Tuesday at the 2010
Piketon Invitational held
on the campus t'f Piketon
High School in Pike
County.
The Blue Angels beat
out five other teams by a
margin of 17 points on
the girls side, posting a
winning team tally of 39.
Chillicothe was the nmner-up with 56 points.
The Devils finished
right in the middle of the
seven-team event initially ending the day tied
with PHS for fourth with
121 points.
GAHS,
however,
earned fourth place outright by finishing the
evening with a better

time from its sixth-place
runner - which ultimately decided the knotted score.
Peyton
Adkins
(GAHS) won. the girls
race with a time of 18:36,
over a minute faster than
the 58-participant event.
Taylor Hacker of Ironton
was the runner-up with a
mark of 20:04.
Mckenna
Warner
(20: 18) was next for
GAHS by finishing
fourth, while Samantha
and
Barnes
(21 :01)
Madison Holley (22:49)
were seventh and 11th
respectively.
Hannah
Watts (23:00) rounded
out the team score by
placing 12th overall.

Please see CC, Bl

Thursday. Seotember 23
Volleyball
Marietta atGallia Aca. , 5:15p.m.
Eastern at Miller, 6 p.m.
Fed. Hock1ng at Southern, 6 p.m.
Fairland at River Valley, 5:30 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Hannan. 6:30p.m.
Burch at Hannan. 6 p.m.
Cross Country
Meigs, River Valley at Jackson
Invitational, 4:30 p.m.
Golf
Eastern at Belpre, 5 p m.
Waterford at Southern, 5 p.m.
South Gallia Federal Hocking,
Point at Wahama. 4:30p.m.
Soccer
Marietta at Gallia Aca., 6:30p.m.
Pt. Pleasant (G) at Sissonville, 5 p.m.
Pt. Pleasant (B) at Sissonville, 8 p.m

AP Ohio
High School
Football Poll
DIVISION I
1, Cle. Glenville (20)
2, Cin. Colerain (5)
3, Hilliard Davidson (1)
4. Lake. St. Edward (3)
5, Cin. Moeller (1)
6, Pickerington Cent. (1)
7, Middletown
8, Centerville (1)
9, Solon
10. Massillon Perry

Others rece1ving 12 or more po1nts:
11 , Willoughby S. 57. 12. Groveport·
Madison 27. 13.'Tol. St. John's 22.
14, Medina 20 15. Youngs.
Austintown-Fitch 19 16, Twinsburg
12 16. Cin. La Salle 12.

Friday, Seotember 24
Football
Gallia Academy at Ironton, 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Southern. 7:30 p.m.
South Gallia at Eastern, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at Waterford. 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Alexander. 7:30 p.m.
Vinton Co. at PI Pleasant. 7:30p.m.
alo at Hannan, 7:30p.m.
Golf
r Valley at OVC Championships.
9a.m.

•

Charleston
Daily Mail
poll
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)- The
Charleston Daily Mail high school
football poll, with first-place votes
In parentheses. record and total
points:

CLASS AAA
1. G. Washington (14) 4·0
2. University (5)
4·0
3. Capital (1)
4·0
4. S. Charleston
2·1
5. Morgantown
4·0
6. Brooke
3·1
7. Martinsburg
4·0
8. Fairmont Sr
3-1
9. Hurricane
3-1
10 R C. Byrd
3·1

•

192
175
153
126
119
110
100
39
32
24

Others: Parkersburg 11, Nicholas
unty 5, Bridgeport 4, Logan 3,
kersburg South 3. Lewis
unty 1, Hampshire 1, St. Albans
1.

CLASS AA
1. Magnolia (13)
2. Wayne (1)
3. Bluefield (6)
4. Ravenswood
5. J. Monroe
6. Frankfort
7. Greenbrier W
8. Braxton Co.
9. PikeView
10. Chap'ville

4·0
3-0
3·1
3·0
4-0
3·0
4-0
4·0
3·1

l1

190
170
163
148
116
96
80
31
30
29

Others: Oak Glen 15, Herbert
Hoover 9, Roane County 8, Point
Pleasant 7 , River View 4, Shady
Spring 3, Liberty Harrison 2.

CLASS A
1 Madonna (10)
2. Wheeling Cent. (8)
3. B. Donahue (2)
4. Williamstown
5. Pendleton Co.
6. Matewan
7. Wahama
8. Buffalo
9. Meadow Bridge
10. Wirt County

3·0
2·1
4·0
2·1
4·0
4·0
3·0
3·1
3·0
4·0

186
174
158
126
83
78
61
59
54
45

Others: Fayetteville 30, Man 29.
Hardy 7, Mount Hope 6. St.
2 Tucker County 2

CONTACfUS
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1-740·446·3008
E-mail: mdssportsOmydailysentlnel.com

Spow

~tm!

Bryan Walters
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bwalter~@ mydailytribune.com

Sarah Hawley
(740) 446·2342, ext. 33
shawley@ mydailytnbune.com
)

4·0 298
4·0 220
4·0 195
4·0 176
4·0 163
4·0 150
4·0 126
4·0 93
4·0 68
4·0 61

DIVISION II
1, C1n. Turpin (11)
2, Marion-Franklin (2)
3, Maple Hts. (3)
4. Mentor Lake Cath. (1)
5 Avon (1)
6, Tol. Cent. Cath (2)
7, Warren Howland (2)
8, Now Albany (1)
9, Copley (4)
10. Cw. Winton Woods

4·0 234
4·0 191
4·0 157
3·1 153
4-0 143
4·0 135
4·0 116
4-0 105
4·0 102
3·1 70

Others receiving 12 or more po1nts:
11, Cols. St. Charles (1) 65. 12.
Uniontown Lake (3) 61. 13.
Chesterland W Geauga 56. 14, Day.
Carroll 29. 15, Sunbury Big Walnut
24. 16. Lexington 16. 17, Cuyahoga
Falls Walsh Jesuit 15. 18, Westlake
13

Meigs' Morgan Howard.(34) spikes the ball dunng Monday's game against South Gallia. South Gallia players
Meghan Caldwell (21 ), Tayler Duncan (16), and Chandra Canaday (2) defend the hit as Meigs players Alaine
Arnold (12), Emalee Glass (7), and Shellie Bailey prepare for a return. The Lady Marauders won the match in
five sets.

1

Lady Marauders outlast SGHS in 5
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSPRINGS,
Ohio - Like a pendulum on a grandfather
clock, momentum was
clearly swinging back
and forth on Monday
night at · Larry R.
Morrison Gymnasium
as the Meigs volleyball
team outlasted visiting
South Gallia in five
games for a hard-fought
25-20, 21-25, 25-16,
17-25, 15-10 victory in
a TVC non-conference
matchup
in
Meigs
County.
The Lady Marauders
( 4-4) got a slow start
out of the gates i.n
Game I as the Lady
Rebels (8-4) stormed
out to an early 8-3
advantage, but the hosts
responded with a furious 22-12 charge to
take a 1-0 match lead.
Meig'&gt; carried that
momentum into Game 2
after establishing an
early 7-3 edge, , but
SGHS retaliated with a
solid 22-14 run to knot
the match up at one
apiece.
•
Meigs
recaptured
momentum in Game 3
after storming out to a
16-6 edge en route to a
nine-point
decision,
then South Gallia did
the same in Game 4
after taking a 14-8 lead
that ultimately turned
into an eight-point win
Bryan Walters/photos
artd a two-all tie.
South Gallia's Meghan Caldwell (21) spikes the bal_l during Monday evening's non- .

Please see Volleyball, Bl
J

league contest at Meigs High School. South Gallla players (back to front) Tayler
Duncan, Ellie Bost·c, and Jasmyne Johnson prepare for a return

...

DIVISION Ill
1, Steubenville (27)
2. Cols. DeSales (1)
3. Roger Bacon (2)
4, Clyde
5. Cots. Watterson
6. Napoleon
7 Thornville Sheridan
8. Alliance Marlington
9, Youngs. Mooney
10. Minerva

4·0
4-0
4·0'
4·0
3·1
4·0
4-0

313
248
223

168
126
j13
112
4-() 80
2·2 79
4·0 52

Others receiving 12 .or more points:
11, Gallipolis Gallla 32. 12. Akr.
SVSM (1) 30. 13, Washington C.H.
• 24. 13. Tiffin Columbian 24. 15,
Eaton 23. 16. Salem 22. 17 Spnng.
Kenton Ridge 18. 18, Hubbard 17.
19, Parma Padua (1) 16.

DIVISION IV
1. Elyria Cath. (6)
4·0
2, Ottawa-Glandorf (15) 4-0
3. Perry (3)
4·0
4, Clarks. Clinton-Massie4·0
5, Akr Manchester
4·0
6, Kettering Alter (2)
3·1
6, Kenton (1)
3·1
8. Ironton (4)
4·0
9, Genoa Area
4-0
10, Middletown Fenw1ck 4·0

230
226
195
139
132
115
115
105
91
76

Others rece1ving 12 or more points:
11, Cin. N College Hill 70. 12, Cols.
Hartley 69. 13, Caflisle 47. 14,
Martins Ferry 32. 15. Portsmouth W.
23. 16, St. Clairsville 20. 17. Plain
City Jonathan Alder 16. 18,
Campbell Memorial (1) 14. 19,
Orrville 13.

DIVISIONV
1, Youngs. Ursuline (22) 4·0 292
4·0 243
2. Versailles (3)
3. Ham. Patrick Henry (1)4·0 191
4, K~rtland
4-0 160
5. Cuyahoga Hts. (1)
4·0 144
6, Richwood N. Union (2)4·0 143
7, M•nford (2)
4·0 109
8. Oak H1ll (1)
4-0 87
9. Anna
3·1 56
10. Archbold
52
Others rooo1v•ng 12 or moro points:

11, W. Jefferson 48 12. Collins
Western Reserve 38. 13. W
Lafayette Ridgewood 32. 14,
Fredencktown 27 15. Defiance
nnora 26. 16, Cardington-Lincoln
23 17. C1n. Summit Country Day 18.
18, Lucasville Valley 13.

DIVISION VI
1 Delp.St. John's (28)
2, Newark Cath.
3. Marion Local
4, Dalton
5. Bucyrus Wynford ( 1)
6, Ada
7, Shadys1de (1)
8. McComb
9. Hopewell-Loudon
10 Mogadore

4·0
4·0
4·0
4-()
4·0
4·0
4-0
4·0
4·0
4·0

312
220

208
152
148
136
121
87
74
55

Others rece1ving 12 or more po1nts.
11 • Edgerton 53. 12, Covington 32.
t 3, Berlin Center Western Reserve
25 14, Thompson Ledgemont 22
15, Willow Wood Symmes Valley (1)
20. 16, Bndgeport 17. 17 Fremont
St Joseph 16 18, Spring. Celh
Cent t3.

�~-,-~-~·,--~~-

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~ --~

,----:-,----

•

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1
Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Defenders blank Teays Bobcats' goal: Take down Brutus Buckeye
Valley Christian, 6·0
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTAIBUNE COM

TEAYS
VALLEY,
W.Va. The Ohio
Valley Christtan soccer
team jmproved to 5-3-0
this season after claiming a convincing 6-0
victory ove1 host Teays
Valley Christian on
Friday during a nonconference matchup in
the Mountaineer State.
The Defenders
who have now won four
straight decisions stormed out to a 2-0
halftime advantage and
never looked back. And
in fact, they even got a
little help along the
way.
Richard
Bowman
started the scoring in the
fifth minute after netting an Alex Haddad
pass for a 1-0 advan
tage.
then
Chance
Burleson netted another
Haddad pass in the 26th
minute to give the
guests a 2-0 intermis
sion advantage.
Burleson scored his
second goal of the contest in the 43rd minute,
netting another Haddad

cc
from Page Bl
Elizabeth
Holley
(23:20) was 15th, Taylor
Queen (27:29) was 38th.
Katie Dunlap (28: 19)
was 44th, Lexi Henry
(28:37) was 46th. Olivia
Rucker (34:32) was 57th
and Kirstan Stanley
(34:43) was 58th.
On the boys side.
Ironton v.on the team and
individual crowns co11
vincingly as the Tigers
- with 25 points- beat
the field by 43 points.
Gary Monroe ( 16:21)
won the individual title
by more th'an 20 seconds
over the 65-competitor
event.
Matt Watts led the
Devils with a time of
16:42, finishing as the
boys runner-up. Tim
Warner (20:14) was next
in 25th. followed by
Quentin
McKinmss
(20:33) in 29th and Ben
Bush (21:15) in 40th.
Logan
Greenlee
(21 :57) rounded out the
initial team score by finishing 43rd, while Casey
Lawrance (22:09) won
the tiebreaker for GAHS
in 44th.
1

MORE LOCAL
NEWS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Suhscribe todm·.
992-2155 -

,

apology from
Ohio
University on Monday
and the 19-year-old
Hanning is banned from
further affiliation with
the school s athletics
department.
Actually,
re s not even a student
there anymore; he now
attends nearby Hocking
College.
Hanning. of Meigs
County in southeast
Ohio, not far from Ohio
University s campus in
Athens. suited up about
15 minutes before the
Bobcats faced Ohio
State, went on the field
near the OU cheerleaders
and waited for his
chance.
It came as Brutus and
an Ohio State cheerleader hoisted an OSU
flag, and prepared to lead
the Buckeyes players
onto the field. With his

Bobcat head in place,
Hanning ran along the
sideline and got in position.
''As soon as they started running onto the field,
tim s when I went," he
said.
The Bobcat sideswiped
the ,Buckeye, who got
back to his feet and continued his sprint toward
the end zone.
But
Rufus.
urn,
Hanning, wasn t done.
He then chased Brutus
into the end zone,
climbed on his back and
rode him to the ground.
The two then tussled,
with Rufus punching the
Buckeye in his oversized
head while fans booed.
The Post of Athens
was the first to report
Hanning s intentions.
Bobcats
athletics
spokesman
Jason

Corriher released a statement calling the actions
''extremely poor judgment and sportsmanship" and saying that the
university regrets th.
negative effect they rna
have on the relationship
between the two schools.
Bobcats coach Frank
Solich summed up it
nicely: "Obviously we
needed to tackle the guy
with the ball, not the
mascot."
Hanning said he thinks
the reaction to the tackle
has been "a little blown
out of proportion.''
''Either
everybody
loved it or everybody
hated it. It s never been
anything in the middle,''
he said.
•
"I think I planned it
pretty well ... and I definitely would have done it
again."

Volleyball

league
action
on
Tuesday. South Gallia
will travel to Eastem
for a TVC Hocking
contest. while Meigs
heads to Alexander for
a TVC Ohio ma'tchup.
Both
matches
will
begin at 6 p.m.

five digs, Hamilton had
four. Schoonover and
Martin each had two,
and Crank added one.
The Lady Defenders
travel to Hannan on
Thursday at 6:30 p.m.

passing and 50 for 61
(.820)
on
spikes.
Belpre was 69 for 104
(.663) passing and 34
for 46 (.739) on spikes.a
The junior varsitYW
Lady Eagles won by
scores of 25-12 and 2519.
Eastern will return to
the court on Tuesday
against South Gallia at
6 p.m.

pass for a 3 -0 advantage.
Then in the 49th
minute. Teays Valley
Christian s Travis Lutz
scored an own goal which is when you score
against your own learn
- to give OVCS a 4-0
cushion.
Haddad - who finished the night with
three assists .::... finally
got in on the scoring in
the 59th&lt; minute after
netting a Burleson pass
for a 5-0 edge.
Burleson recorded a
hat trick in the 69th
minute after netting his
third goal on a pass
from Scotty Wood to
wrap up the 6-0 triumph.
Peter Carman made
14 saves in goal for the
Defenders. while T.G.
Miller also made two
saves for the victors.
Rex Rhodes had seven
saves in goal for TVCS.
from PageBl
Ohio Valley Christian
returns
to
action
Tuesday when it host.s ·
In the fifth and deciPoint Pleasant in a non - sive game, the Lady
conference matchup at 5 Marauders established
p.m.
an early I 0-3 cushion
and never looked back
en route to the 3-2
mateh triumph.
Emalee Glass led the
player or anything like \ tctors with 16 service
that, so I don t know what points. followed by
that was all about."
Valerie Conde with 11
The
next
time points. Both Morgan
Cleveland had the balL Howard and Jordan
Mack committed an Anderson added eight
unnecessary rou~hness points apiece, while
penalty when he htt line- Shellie
Bailey
had
backer Derrick Johnson
seven
and
Chelsea
after the whistle. The
penalty proved costly Patterson had three.
because the Browns were Chandra Stanley also
backed up 15 yards and had two service pomts
kicker ' Phil
Dawson for MHS.
Bailey led the net
missed a 42-yard field
goal just before halftime attack with 16 kills. folof Clevel&lt;:md s 16-14 loss. lowed by Howard.
·Mack was running Stanley and Alison
downfield to block for Brown with nine kills
teammate
Jerome apiece. Alaine Arnold
Harrison when he plowed added four kills while
into Johnson.
the duo of Glass and
··J m trying to rush Emily Kinnan both had
there and get a block and
do things. be fired up. one kill each. Howard
play the game with pas- and Stanley both led
sion and a little too much MHS with two blocks
passion." Mack said. '"ll apiece.
Glass had a team-high
hurt my team and l feel
assists,
while
bad for it. But 1 m trying 44
to play the game fast. It s Stanley added two and
my job to be protecting Miranda Grueser had
my running back. and one
tmt s what we re tryin~ to
Chandra Canaday led
do."
the Lady Rebels v. ith
15 service points, followed
by
Meghan
Patrick Brown (23:08)
Cald\vell \Vith II and
and Ben Roach (32:57)
· also
had
respective Tori Duncan with 10.
efforts of 47th and 64th Ellie Bostic added fi\e
points, Tayler Duncan
for the Devils.
chipped
in four and
Complete results of the
Jasmyne
Johnson
added
2010 Piketon Invitational
are available on the web three service points.
Both teams return to
at wwv..9aumspage.com

Browns center cries foul
BEREA. Ohio (AP) Browns center Alex Mack
accused Kansas City
defensive lineman Shaun
Smith of grabbing his private
parts
during
Sunday s game.
Mack said Smith. who
played two seasons for
the Browns before he wa&amp;
released last year. committed the dirty play in the
second quarter.
"I don t think he should
be able to do that." Mack
said Monday. "I m still
fired up about it."
Mack was so enraged
by what Smith did dunng
a running play that he
started to chase him
toward Kansas City s
sideline before turning
around
because
Cleveland s punt team
was coming onto the
field. Mack gestured to
the officials and pointed
at Smith. who demed any
wrongdoing.
"I don t have no comment," Smith said. ·•J
d::n t recall doing anything like that. I m not
known for being a dirty

COLUMBUS. Ohio
(AP) - Turns out, the
Bobcat had it in for the
Buckeye all along.
"It was actually my
whole plan to tackle
Brutus when I tried out
to be mascot." said
Brandon Hanning. formerly known as Ol'tio
University s
Rufus
Bobcat. "I tried out about
a year ago, and the whole
reason I tried out was so
I could come up here to
Ohio State and tackle
B111tus."·
And that s what he did
Saturday,
wrestling
unsuspecting Brutus to
the
ground
before
I 05,075 screaming college football fans at Ohio
Stadium. Ohio State got
even in the end. trampling the visiting team,
43-7.
The tussle led to an

LADY DEFENDERS BEAT
CHESAPEAKE IN 4

GALLlPOLIS, Ohio
The Ohio Valley
Christian
volleyball
team improved to 4-0
on Monday with a four
set
victory
over
Chesapeake.
The Lady Defenders
won by scores of 25-15,
25-17. 18-25. and 2522.
Allie Hamilton led
the Lady Defenders
with 24 points, including I 0 aces. Maggie
Westfall had 18 points
(seven aces). Samantha
Westfall · added
17
points (nine aces).
Sarah Schoonover had
15 points (four aces),
Madison Crank had
nine points (two aces).
Amy Ours added seven
points, and Beth Martin
had three points.
Hamilton also led the
team in kills with
seven, followed by
Samantha Westfall with
six. Maggie Westfall
with
three,
and
Schoonover with one.
Maggie Westfall had
three
blocks
while
Samantha Westfall had
two.
Samantha
Westfall
had
nine
assists,
Maggie Westfall had
three, and Crank and
Martin added one each.
Maggie Westfall had

LADY EAGLES SOAR
PAST BELPRE

BELPRE. Ohio
The
Eastern
Lady
Eagles (9-1, 5-l TV C
Hocking)
defeated
Belpre (1-9, 1-8 TVC
Hocking) in three sets
on Monday evening at
Belpre High School.
The Lady Eagles won
by scores of 25-7. 2510. and 25-8.
Eastern
senior
Britney
Morrison
served nine'consecutive
points in the first set to
help the Lady Eagles in
the 18 point win.
Morrison led the
Lady Eagles on the
evening with 15 points
including two aces.
Jamie Swatzel had 12
points (four aces), Ally
Hendrix
added
11
points, Beverly Maxson
had six points (three
aces), Brenna Holter
added four points (three
aces). and Breanna
Hayman
had
four
points.
Swatzel led the net
attack for Eastern with
11 kills and one block.
Maxson had seven kills.
Hendrix added five,
Holter
had
three,
Morrison had two, and
Kiki Osborne had one.
Hendrix
had
15
assists, followed by
Swatzel with eight and
Hayman with two.
As a team Ea~tern
was 63 for 68 (.926)

BLUE ANGELS FALL
TO CHILLICOTHE

CHILLICOTHE,
Ohio The Gallia
Academy
volleyball
team (6-2) dropped an
SEOAL contest
to
Chillicothe in a four
sets
on
Thursday
evening.
Chillicothe won by
scores of 25-16, 23-25,
25-21. and 25-17.
Morgan Leslie led the
Blue Angels with 12
points (five aces), eight
kills, and 17 d1gs.
Kassie Shriver had
eight points (three ace.
and 14 assists, Hanna
Cunningham added six
points, two kills, and 19
assists, Heather Ward
had six points (two
aces) and 42 digs,
Haley Rosier had three
points. nine kills, and
one block.
Morgan Daniels had
nine kills and six
blocks,
Shainna
Fillinger had three kills
and
two
blocks,
Amanda McGhee added
12 digs, two kills, and
one
block.
Taylor
Foster had 16 digs,
Caroline Baxter had 16
digs, and Breanna West
had four digs.
The Blue Angels
defeated Vinton County
earlier in the week.

�•

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FoundThe
University of Rio
Gande
Campus
Police Dept. recently
located
an
air
compressor on ST
AT 325 in Rio
Grande that may
have fallen off the
back of a truck or
trailer.
Please
contact
campus
police at 7 40-245300
Services
7286 w/a description
if you may have lost
this item
Child / Elderly Care
Lost 3 black feeder
calves
around
Rooms available for
6/1/2010 If found call
clients needing 24 hr.
Owen Garnes 740care at Darst Adult
339-2483 or Ban
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740-388992-5023
8555. They crossed
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in
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Vinton &amp; wnet East.
Domestics/
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Notices

POUCIES · Ohio 'Mile)' Publlaillng r_.,.. the rtgllto tdll. re)tCI or cane.~ any td at any t&amp;me. Errore must be repoc'lcd on me lirll oay of publlcll&amp;oomld the
Trtbu1e-Serclnel-flegtller will be responsible for no ~~tore ll'lln tne 0011 of the~ OCC\IP~ by the t~ror and only ttoe ht111noortion We ahlft not be llMIIe lor
my 1081 or txperu:e thll rtttlla lfom tilt pWik:lllon or om1111on of lllliOwlltiMmtl'll. Corrtct•on Wlli be made In tho) lint. tvellalllt ldlt&gt;on • BoJ r'4ll!lb9r 1'!!1
are alway. conftdenlla\ • C16renl rete card appUea. • All rMI Mille tdwertt-.ente art aubjec:l to the Ftcltrll Fllf Housing ACI o~ 1968 • Tltia nenpllKII'
~It only help watllld tdt mHIIng EO£ ttaooardl We will not knowingly tcee~ any acl•ertiSing In ~oollll•on of the ftLW Wlft nee be ~ble 1or any
euors In an ad laken ove~ the phone.

Home Improvements

WantTo Buy

Land (Acreage)

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
1OK/14K/18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proff/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446-2842

Wv 13 acres pnme
water fornt property
call 740-441-0523 or
740-441-9580

Other Services

Yard Sale
Pet Cremations. Call
740-446-3745

167 Woodland Dr 9-6
Sept
21-23
tables/chairs, misc.

Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unless We
Win!
1-888-582-3345

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallta Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson. OH
800-537-9528

Financial

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
service
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)
500

Education

Business &amp; Trode
School ·
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Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
CaiiToday! 740-4464367
1-800-2140452
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CounCil
lor
Independent Colleges and
Schools 12748

'600

Animals

Animal Supplies
Free Male Dwarf
Bunny 6 months oldneeds to go to. a
good home Call:
304:675-7585
Horses

11Bailp mrtbune

5 YR. Old Mare Rec.
10 wks. of training
from a cert. trainer.
$600.00
304-8823438

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Pets

The Daily Sentinel

1 male baby donkey,
1 male pygmy baby
goat, 740-992-5258

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2 Lots for sale w/s/e
aval.1 02 &amp;104 Depot
rd Bidwell 618-4029921
3500

Real Estate
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400

• ·Hometown News
• Area Shopping
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Lon

3 Family Yard Sale 9
mi.
out
At.
62 1 BDRM apt. all ult's
Leon,WV Sept. 21- pd &amp; sat tv included ..
23 8am-7pm
ref.
check
plus
deposit-quite!!! call:
Recreati_onal 304-675-4532
1000
Veh1cles
2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hospital on SR
Campers / RVs &amp; 160 C/A. (740) 441·
0194
Trailers

Repairs

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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

·,...,....-: - - · - - -

Giveaway 3 long hair
tiger striped kittens
8wks old 740-446·
8567

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment

900

Merchandise
Appliances

Wanted 2 gravity Kenmore fridg, u pick
beds w/running gear up. $50.00 Call 740in good condition. 441-1785 after 11 am
740-388-8g5o
Equipment/
End of Sumer sale
Supplies
on 4',5',&amp; 6' rotor
Beauty
tillers Special Round Black
Bale Feeders were sandblast sand $6
$195 now $125 Jims per 100-lb bag, ten
Farm
Equipment or more $5 each.
304-773-5332
446-9777
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Miscellaneous
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment Jet Aeration Motors
740-446-2412
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Garden &amp; Produce
Ron Evans 1-800·
537-9528
Richards
Brothers
Fruit Farm~ Items are available
have apple' Mon thru for sale at the Village
Cheshire,
Sat 8-12 &amp; 1-5. Sun of
OH.
9-5. Many v.arieties Cheshire
aailable jellies, jams, Please
contact
cider, apple butter. Village
Hall,
Co Ad 46 2054 (740 &gt;367-0301 '
to
up
an
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Thurman
Oh. appointment
date
and time to see items
740286-4584
of interest: List of
items are: Light bars
Hay, Feed, Seed,
for old
Cruisers,
Grain
Good
Year
tires
(several),
Three
Lg. Round Bales of cages from a Crown
Hay for Mulch. Call Victoria cruiser, tar
7 40-992-7603
buggy, etc.
Make
known
item
and
HAY SQ. BALES interest and price for
$2.50 (4CUTIING) sale to April Stinson,
CALL: 304-675-5086 Fiscal Officer. 119
State Route 554,
OR 304-895-3470
Cheshire, OH 45620

.t h
H1
G ooseneck
c '
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www carmjchaeltraile
J:S..CQID.
740-4462412
Motorcycles
2007 HD Heritage
Softail. 4,695 milesShowroom
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$16,000 negotiable
740-446-0141
2000

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2&amp;3BR apts $3g5 and
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electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
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(304)882-3017

Automotive

Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
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subsidized,
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call
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675-6679
740-645-7965
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$3200 OBO 2561539
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6002
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740-446- Beautiful
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country
freshly
3617.
painted very clean '
W'D hook up nice
Want To Buy
country setting only .
Want to buy Junk 10 mins. from town.
Cars, call 740-388· Must
see
to
0884
appreciate.
Water
pd. $3!5/mo 614Oiler's Towing. Now
595-7773 or 740645buying junk cars
5953
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or Nice
2BR
apt.
740-441-7870.
No appliances.
w/d
hookup, water pd.,
Sunday call
good localton on
Real Estate Centenary close to
3000
Sales hospital. No pets. call
after 5. 740-4469442
Commercial

5 piece bedroom
suite,
large
refrigerator, tables &amp;
other pieces, 740Elderberries,
spice 949-3601
bush berries,
2 Grave Lots Seal
pawpaws,
black Chapel
(AT
2)
walnuts,
740-698- Mason Co. Call for
6060
more info at 863- For sale Commercial
357-1602
office building Corner
lot on 1st Ave. call
740-645-2192
Ginseng- want to buy
other
botanicals,
For Sale By Owner
Twin Oaks Service
Station
junction
6 apts $131.000
RT7/33,
rent $2030 mo, 740Wednesdays
12-1
446-0390
starting
22
MH, 2004 Clayton
September, call 330304-675·6908 (never
67 4-4195 for price
used)
list.
Want To Buy

LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or :
small houses for rent. •
Call 740-441-1111 for •
application
&amp;
information.

1BR. Clean, quiet
country living. Deck
has
panoramic
views.
Water+Garbage inc.
WID
Hookup
$400/mo. 446-2242
1 BR and bath. first
months
rent
&amp;
deposit. references
required, No Pets
and clean. 740-4410245

�.Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

Pleasant
Valley
Apartments is now
taking
applications
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
Subsidized
Apartments.
are
Applications
taken Monday thru
9:00amt
Thrusday
1:OOpm. Offtce is
1151
located
at
Evergreen
Dnve,
Potnt Pleasant, WV.
(304) 675-5806

For rent Commerctal

· Sales
Bank
owned
manufactured home
w/land
account
number 328368, call
Ron 614-834-3833 or
go
to
mobilehomesexpress
.com for more info
6000

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Truck
drivers
needed. Glat beds &amp;
dump trailers. Apply
in person at 935
Dnve.
pinecrest
3BA 1BA. 2 mile
from town on 141 Tractor trailer Driver
country setting $500 needed. Mus: have
mon+dep 446-4824
Send
Hazmat.
resume to :..juman
House Ior saIe or Resources P:&gt; Box
rent. Pretty, clean, 705 ' Pomeroy Oh
3BR
Downtown 45769.
Gallipolis, close to ~~~~~~~
Entertainment
Washtngton
Elem.
Rent $750, no utltlite. Need someone for
Sale $99,000. Kelly- K&amp;D OJ Service,
Jo 645-9096 or 446- Karoake!OJ
4639
Business must have
. . . . . , - - - - - - - valid drivers Rctnses
Beautiful
newly &amp; be sober, w II work
remodeled/restored
by
yourself
'&amp;
send
home in Pomeroy for wfowner,
rent. 3 bedroom, 2 resume to Box 88,
bath, large kichen, Rutland, Oh 45775
laundry
room, or call 740-742-7709
ftreplace. Nice quiet
Food Services
neighborhood. Call
740-992-9784
full time grill cook
dayttme or 740-992- apply in person only
5094 evenings.
Park front diner 314

1BDRM, quite st. in
Mason, WV $450 a
month plus $250
deposit, $350 w/
renter paying utilities
$450 w/ landlord
paying utilities Roush
St. behind 2661 2nd - - - - - - St.
Garage
Apt. Very nice home for
rent in Middleport,
Call :304-593·8187
good neighborhood .
Spring Valley Green Newly
remodeled.
Apartments 1 BR at New appliances, 2
$395+2 BR at $470 bedroom, 1 bath.
Month 446-1599.
Large kttchen, sun
room, central air &amp;
Commercial
heat. Ntce outdoor
Commercial building spaces, Call 740for rent 740-446- 992-9784 or 740992-5094
6565
space . ide~l
for
automottve shop 3
bays and 1 lift call
740 645 2192

www.mydallysentinel.com

Houses For Rent

3BR, t BA, stove
1BR nicely lurntshed &amp;refrig furn ., gas
apt. No smoktng, no heat. central AC/,
pets. $400 mon &amp; WID
hook
up,
dep. 740-446·4782
Carport, no srnoktng,
no pots S600mon +
FIRST MONTH
dep. 105 Basttani,
FREE
Gallipolis. 446-3667
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS.
taking applications.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
For rent 3 BR 1 5
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up, BA, carport, cntrl
A/C
gas
heat
ten·
Kanaugha Sec Dep
ant pays electric.
$500 rent call 740EHO
446·3481
Ellm View Apts.
304·882-3017

2nd ave Gallipolis
Help WantedGeneral

Cost
Technician
Immediate opening
for team originated
mdivtdulal. Must hae
excellent basic math
skills. proficient in
Exel &amp; Word. Hightly
motivated. wiling to
__.....,______ learn.
lira• •ng
10 1
1BR $350/month m
provt
'
ded.Must
be
Syracuse. Deposit,
HUD approved, no willing to travel and
pets. 304·675-5332 work OT at dtfferent

~~+~~-~~~~ weekends/740-591·

plant sites due to the
revolving nature of
;;;;;;;;;====~-~~~~~~~the
constr/plant
House for rent. 3Br 1
upgrade
projects.
Ba Evans Heights.
Training will require
$475 mo plus dep &amp; ~~~~~;; 10 to 12 weeks
util. Apartment for
Rentals
starting pay $16/hr. If
rent
1Br
1BA
qualified
lax
an
Springvalley
area. 2BA Mobile Home updated resume to :
$375 mon plus dep. water, sewet, trash 614·716-2272
&amp; util. 740-256·1883 pd
No pets, denoting "cost tech"
or 740-339-3046
Johnson's
Mobtle on the cover page.
.._
740 Excellent company!
·
2 BR house m H ome Pa'"
446·31~
EOE
Vmton, nice area
$400 mon. 2 BR
mobile home 4 mi Takmg applications -----~~from Hospital near for 2BR mobtle. Very Wanted:
Direct
160 $400 mon 441· good conditton. No supervision
pets. $395 mon &amp; employees
to
5150 or 379·2923
------overesee male youth
740446
3617
2 story farm house dep
"
in a staff secure
Houses For Rent

0265

on Holcomb Hollow
Ad near the college.
Call lor appt. 740·
634·3023

------Mobile Home on
farm 3Br 2Ba all
appl , includmg w/d,
4B
~R.....,ra
_n_c':""
h~
hous-e~f~
or &amp; all utlit. tncl. $750.
rent, 2 miles west of 5 40·729-1331
Holzer on Jackson
Pike, new ktichen Nice 16x80, for rent.
w/granite, walk out 3 Bedroom, 2 bath,
setting.
basement, 2 car Country
garage. $1100 mon + 740-339·3366 740·
dep. 740-446-1299
367-0266.

F.'

residential
environment.
Must
pass
physical
training requirment.
Pay
based
on
experience. Call 740379-9083 M-F from
8·4
General

farm
la~or, Gallipolis M-F
days, Ron 853-2355

Help Wanted·
General

Medical

~=~==~- Accepttng

Burglar-Fire Alarm·
Satellite
TV.
Installation
service
Tech
needed.
Computer,
low
wmng
voltage
experience
and/or
education
helpful.
Satellite installation a
plus. Must be honest.
willing to learn . able
to
work
Full
unsupervised.
tim-Part time-retired
will be considered.
For interview replay
to:
with
resume
Consolidated
Security ..Systems,
INC 240 Upper Rtver
Rd. Gallipolis Ohio
45631

Resumes
for a Recepttonist
potstion at a local
Dentist offtce tn Pt
Pleasant.
Some
computer and phone
skills needed. Please
mat! to Dental Olftce
3984 lndtan Creek
Rd., Elkview, WV
25071

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

~~~-~--

Ins. Home Surveyor
performed fteld work
&amp; computer reporttng
for
a
national
mdustry leader no
exp. Paid traintng
performance based
$12 a hr. Pff apply at
www.muellerreports.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL0UR OFFICE AT 992-2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! ~

.

Attention Grafters:
Overbrook Rehabilitatton
Center
Annual Oktoberfest
will be held on
Saturday, October 2, 2010
from 11-2
Outdoor booth space is avatlable at no
charge, but space is limited Crafters
are to provide own table &amp; chatrs.
Interested crafters should RSVP by
Monday September 27 by calling
Mtchelle Kennedy at (740) 992-6472

For: • Room additions • Rooting • Garal(cs
• c:cnmll Rt•modcling • Pole &amp; Horse
Han1' • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
J&lt;oundations
M 1KE W. MARCUM, 00 N ER

472 39 Riebel Rd • 1 l.ooq Bottan, (lj
/40-985-4141
~0-416-!834
Full) itisured ,
Free estimates - 25+) e.ars e.'\perienl'e '.. ·
(;\Ill affili31td 10ith \li~~.\lan:um RllO•fin~&amp; Rtmodflin~:
c

.:

ROBfi!T BISSfU
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

740-992-1671

c;orn

"'En,oy-car~in_g_fo
_
r -,h-e

Elderly? Caregtvers
needed Pt. Pleasant,
Leon &amp; Pliny areas.
Good pay benefits.
Drivers
Licenses
required.
Flexible
hours.
1-866· 766
9832 or 1-304-766·
9830

Stop &amp; Compare

•

Management/
Supervisory

THE
•cLASSIFIED$
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this 1Nidely read
section to 1Nish
someone a
Happy Birthday..
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad ''In MemorY''
of a loved one.

The Tuppers Plains
Chester
Water
District is accepting
applications/resumes
for
a
Water
Treatment
Plant
Operator. A valid
Class 1 Operators
Certification
is
destred but other
qualifications may be
acceptable such as
college for related
engineering ftelds of
experience. This is a
working supervtsor's
position. Starting pqy
and benefit package
will
range
from
$15.00 to $19.50 per
hour commensurate
fo
qualifications.
100% paid Health
Care/
Vacation.
OPERS Rettrement.
and
many other
benefits. Interested
parties should send
TPC
Water
to
District, 39561 Bar
30 Road, Reedsville,
Ohio 45772 and
Attention to Donald
C Poole, General
Manager. Must be
received
by
September 30, 2010.

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

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

®allipolis 119ailp m:ribune(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~Ieasant ~egister

(304) 675-1333

~SI

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

EMPLOYM
J51 Http Wanted

Good
to the

Last
Word
That's the word from
subscribers who read
our newspaper daily
for captivating news
stories, dining and
entertainment reviews,
travel deals, local
weather reports and so
much more!

Stay Informed...

..~
•

~l)r ~allipolis

Jlnilp ~ribunr
m:tJe ~ofnt t)leasant ii\egigter
The Daily Sent~nel

�..

Tuesday, September 21 , 201 0

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean You ng/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker

... LOUNGING IN F RONT O F
THE TV, P~INI&lt;ING BEE R,
NG SNACKS, NAPPING...

J
J

AN D S TO P CLICI&lt;ING
T"H I! MUTE B UTTON

J

ATME !

V"--:::=:=:::------;;;;:::1 1
1

1
J

i

•

~~~----------~ ! ~~~~------------~
FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Ch r is Browne

r

rve

&amp;t.JE'/&amp;

PI5GOV~/l£P 7116~0U/Z.GE OF YOJIR

PROIJt.EM .. •

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Car
quartet
6 H ead o ut
11 Stood up
12 TV 's
DeGeneres
13 Serenity
15 Print measures
16 C rude
home
17 0cean
between
Eur. and
A mer.
18 Hunting
dogs
20Take to
court
21 B&amp;O and
Read mg:
Abbr.
22 Towel
embroidery
23 Dutch city,
With "The"
26 Tricks
27 To be, to
Balzac
28 Nearest
star
29 Pub o rder
30 Venice
boat
34 TV's
Rathe r
35 Comedy
first
baseman
·36 Stano
need
37Mood
40 Poet Nash
41 Use a foil

JOSEPH
42 Film units
43 Take the
w heel
DOWN
1 VCR
inserts
2 S tnger
Cara
3 S unday
entree
4 PC key

5 'Now,
you
listen!"
6 Some
turns
7 Shade
t ree
8 A ssu med
nam es
9 Risky
undertaking
10 Infinite

TodiV'S Aaswers
14 For a ll of
us
19 Factual
22 Dog, in
D resden
~3 M ove
toward
24 Not in
custody
25 Hurled
w eapon
26 Tiebreaking
· elections

28 M anhattan area
30 Verdon
and
Stefani
31 Conside r
32 Jousting
need
33 European
viper
38 S inger
Torma
39 Got
together

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 75 (chcck/m.o.) to
Thomas Josepll Book 2. PO BoK 5364/5, Orlando. FL 32853·64/5
10

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
:r. SETTER
START GUARDING AG.&amp;. l N S T

A SORE.
THROAT.

ZITS

" DON'T OSE OUR ANNI
VOU CAN NEVER REMEMBER IT.''

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

You'll Have: 5-Dvnnmic; 4-Po~ith't'; 3Az·•.,-ngc; 2-Su-so; 1-Difficult

by Dave Green

I

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" But I'm n o t t e lling him what t o do.
I' m just givln' h Jm my advice."

DENNIS THE MENACE

~

Hank Ketchum

..

lr/6
~

I

IJE SOM Et'A't' ~1..1..
51-!AR~

nte

SAM• LA&amp;1"

NAMfi.,"PEi.NNIS. ''

'''(ou KIPPI N•t I 'PON'T
I:V~N \...IKE ~ARI N'

~~~ %A-r WrfH '(OU! ¥

~

G 17 s £
17 6 G ~
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6 8 19
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L

t-

l!Al)PY BIRIIIDAY for lucsday,
Sept. 21, 2010
Thi-; vcar, vou benefit from substantial Changes. Tune in to your
instincb. whL'n you feel off. You often
juggle different concerns, not knO\'Il·
ing v.·hich choice to make. Not making a judgment is often the same as
making one. Don't play ga.me.'i with
yourself. Conversations, esJX'ci.lll)'
with siblings and neighbors, could be
pointed and difficult. If you nrc single, you head in a new direction and
meet some very intriguing pL'Ople. Be
n bit less judgmental than in the past.
It vou arc attached, you open the
door to a new type of interaction by
being a little k"s covert and more
forthright. PISCES can be ch,1lk•nging.
·n,e Stars Show tile Kind of Day
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
* * * Trust your intuition, .md you
won t go wrong. Understand that
someone feels ill at ease with you.
Opportunities come in from out of
left field. Complications tttm into
advmtures with the correct outlook.
You could be .1mazed by wh.1t life can
and ''ill produce. Tonight: \.o &lt;~long
for the ride
TAURUS (April20-M&lt;~y 20)
**** Lero in on pOs!-.ibilitit'S that
you have resisted up till now.
lnwstigate what someone kl&gt;t'ps
thr\ming into your face.,\ mrcting
might be " great avenue for selfl'Xpression. Expn&gt;ss yourself in a war
that others can understand your position. Tonight: Where the fun k
G EMINI (May 21-june 20)
* *** r.1kc a stand while you are
dear of a situation or a problem.
runnel your crwrgy into your" ork
&lt;1s only you c.m. Knowing your limit-;
could be significant. Enthusi.1sm
between you and a boss could m.1ke
,, big difference. Ji.1night: Burning the
midnight oil.
CANCER Oune 21-july 22)
***** Keep reaching out for
others. If you m'Cd &lt;~n expert M ,1n
oftbeat oprnion, go for it. The mor&lt;'
d i wrse tht• ft 'l.'dback. the strongt•r a
project can become. Do remain open.
lonight: Follow the music.
LEO Ouly 23 AuK 22)
**** Keep rcnching out for
those at a dist,mcc. You might fL't'l
that you cannot win for losirtg. Really,
th,1t might not bt• true You cnnnot

succet&gt;d withou t an agreement with a
partner or partners. Keep that in
mind when making necessary decisiom. lonight Dinner for two ... and
at, k.
VIRG O (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
**** Others defer with ease and
come to a clear understanding. Your
:;en-;c of direction is poignant and
din&gt;&lt;:t. You laugh. and another person
responds. Question the possibilities
more openly. Tonight: The only
ans\.,·t·r i'&gt; yes.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-CX.-t. 22)
*** Keep an e.1sy, mellow pace,
and you will discover that the end
rcsuJt, me more than worth it. You
cann,lt alwavs have situations go the
way \'ou de~ire. Realizl' what the p~
sibilities might be if vou just relax.
!(might: Clear out an errand or two.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23 Nov 21)
* * ** Build on existing knowled~e, adding that 0.1ir your sign is
uruqucly known for. I low you handle
a changeable situation has a lot to do
....,&gt;itl1 your mood. Distance yourself
from automatic reactions. Tonigh t:
Fun and games
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
* ** \&amp;tting going pre&gt;ents its
-;hare of challengc-.. Io be honest, you
might wnnt to curl up and just be.
Soml'thing mw;t be h,md led and will
l'ncrgin· rou - of th.lt you can be
sun'. llm•ght: Pl.w i ~ low-ker
CAPRICORJ'I; (Dec. 22·Jan. 19?
* ** * * k~p L• &gt;mmunication
rolling. You have dnvc and direction.
1he u•wxpt•cted occurs. Your daily
life :1nd direction put pressure on the
possibilities. lonight: Visit with a
frknd1
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. 18)
** * * Be awarc of your limits.
lhL'n decide if the result of a situation
is self-imposed. Your tolerance level is
ch.mging. Also, you .m' willing to do
whah!\'cr you must to open doors.
u~ care \\ith spending 1onight Do
som&lt;' shopping on the way home.
PISCES (Feb. 19 March 20)
***** Use &gt;·our high energy to
achil'W your desu~&gt;d results ratner
than c.1usc a result th.1t might not be
·~" 'upporth'e. Drum up your self-disophne, focus and verbal skills, then
yo~:~'ll accomplish a lot. lonight All
~null'....

jrn:qurline Bignr is on tilt' Internet
at http://um•w.jacquelinc/rigar.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
'

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, September 21,

2010

Browns beating themselves
BEREA. Ohio (AP) Monday night.
Browns
coach
Eric
After review.ing tape.
Mangini must have felt
Mangini said he wished he
like he was at home in his
had used more of the
living room scolding his
"Wildcat" package with
three young sons.
wide receiver Joshua
For the second straight
Cribbs at 4uarterback and
Monday.
Cleveland~ s
Wallace lined up On the
coach stood in front of his
edge. The Browns used it
players and lectured them
only once. with Cribbs
about their Sunday sins.
picking up I yard on a 3rdToo many penalties. Too
and-3.
many tumovers. Too many
· Looking back. it s
mistakes.
something I would have
Too this. Too that.
done more m retrospect."
"They re tired of me
said Mangini, adding
saying it, and I m tired of
offensive
coordinator
saying it," an exasperated
Brian Dabolt concutTed
with his assessment. "We
Mangini said. "We can t
have penalties. We can t.
talked about it this mornWeaUl t tum the ball over.
ing. Both of us agreed. we
We can t do it. We II drill
should ve run it more it. we ll talk about it. we II
to get Josh more touches.
review it, we ll analyze it.
1:-C s got a chance on any
... You can t expect to win
play."
AP Photo/David Richard
close games.
l11e Browns don t have
Cleveland Browns coach Eric Mangini reacts to a call
"Two games decided by in the fourth quarter of an NFL football game against many playmakers. Cribbs.
~ve points with big swings
the Oakland Raiders, Sunday, Dec. 27 2009, in who returned two kickoffs
m momentum. you can t Cleveland. The Browns won their third straight, beat- for touchdowns against
do it.''
the Chiefs last season, is
ing the Ra1ders 23-9.
The Browns (0-2)
the club s best home-run
Gene Sweeney Jr/Baltimore Sun/MCT
"Wt:. know we re a bet- hitter - and maybe even
dropped their second penaltie:-. in the ~econu
Cincinnati
Bengals'
Mike
Nugent makes the fourth of
•
half.
We
just
dkln
t
finish
ter
team
and
we
just
hruldstraight winnable game. a
~heir best nmner. Mangini
the
way
we
re
supJX)sed
ed
out
victories."
comerhis
five
field
goals
against
the Baltimore Ravens dur16-14 loss to the Kansas
m t the only one who
back Eric Wright said. would like to see Cribbs ing an NFL game at Paul Brown Stadium Cincinnati,
City Chiefs in a game that to."
See. the Browns are lis- ·'We were in situations get the ball more.
Ohio, Sunday. The Bengals won, 15-10
•
was almost identical to
tening
to . Mangini. where we should have
their 17-14 loss at Tampa
"Everybody knows that I
They rl:! just not doing won two games and we Josh can do once he has
Bay a week earlier.
lost them ...~
. the ball in his hands."
For the second straight what they re told.
Like
kids.
M~mgini s post-m01tem
game, Cleveland s struting
Massaquoi said. ··special
This is not the start the on Cleveland s latest loss. things happen when he has •
quarterback - this time, rt
dropped
the the ball.''
was
backup
Seneca Browns wanted - nor the wh1ch
J
Wallace filling in for one Mangin1 may need to Bro\\'ns to J -I I in home
Mangini did not have
The Ravens haven t
CINCINNATI (AP) openers since
1999. any update on Delhomme,
injured
starter
Jake keep his job.
Cedric
Benson
had
little
allowed
a touchdown in
While there s no evi- focused on the team s self- who injured his right ankle
Delhomme - thre\v a
mom
to
run.
Carson
their
past
I 0 quarters,
costly interception. For the dcnce team president mtlicted wounds (nine while throwing an inter- Palmer had little time to including the playoffs,
Mike
Holmgren
is
ready
penalties
for
78
yards
I
and
second straight game. the
ception in last week s get rid of the ball. The but
haven t
scored
Browns failed to score in to make an) drastic the oft~~ s inability to game at Tampa Bay. Cincinnati
Bengals
enough
points
to
back
it
the second half as their moves. the Bro"' ns have · move the ball in the sec- Delhomme was in a walk- became the latest team up.
no
breaks
in
their
schedule
onJ
half.
offense disappeared. For
ing boot on the sideUne that played an entire
"Everything about it is
With Wallace under cen- Sunday.
the second straight grunc. over the next seven weeks.
Mangini game and failed to get tough." said Joe Fiacco,
Cleveland s
defense and without a \vin or two ter in his 15th career start. promised he would have into the end zone.
•
who threw four intercepany
significant Cleveland gained only 55 further information on
played good enough to or
By
most
measures,
the
.tions
and had a minusimprovement the cries for yards and three first downs Wednesday. when the Baltimore
win.
Ravens
cule
passer
rating of23.8.
dismi-.;sal - one came on a penalty Browns begin preparing defense had another great
And. for the second Mangini s
straight game, the Browns already tilling the air on - after halftime. The for this week s game in day. Only one thing \vent "We dido t do enough on
the offensive side of the
sports talk o.;hows will get Browns were predictable Baltimore.
came up short.
wrong:
Mike
Nugent
ball to win the game, and
and unable to tind any
"We were leading both louder.
Mangini did not promise
still get his kicks.
we know that. We have to
The Browns. though. holes in Kansas City s any wholesale lineup could
games," wide receiver
Five of them was get better."
Mohamed
Massaquoi still ha\e optimism despite defense, which ended last chan!!es. but made it clear enough.
It wasn t supposed to
said, slightly shaking his losing to two teams they • season as the NFL s 30th- that he won t tolerate misNugent s career-best
head. ·•we turned the ball felt the) should have heat
ranked unit and had a short takes from those cun·ently five field goals led the happen. The Ravens
invested heavily in their
over. We had too many en.
week after playing on on the field.
Bengals to a 15-10 victo- passing game in the offry Sunday that was famil- season,
bringing
.•
iar in a lot of ways to the Anquan Boldin at
AFC
North
rivals. Dante Stallworth. When
Cincinnati ( 1-1) won yet Stallworth got hurt. they
another division game. signed former Bengal
COLUMBUS.
Ohio
its
eighth
straight. T.J. Houshmandzadeh.
( AP) - Ohio State. where
Baltimore (l-1) saw The goal \Vas to make the
Woody Hayes favored
another
impressive passing game get more
"three yards and a cloud of
defensive showing wast- vertical.
dust" isn t exactly famous
ed.
~
Against Cincinnati, it
for filling the air with footThis has been going on was nominal.
balls.
for some time.
The Bengals were
No wonder coach Jim
"h s always been this
inspired after their openTressel
joked
about
way for the past I 0 years ing 38-24 loss to New
Terrelle Pryor completing
1
ve played against England. Defensive coora school-record 16 consecthem," receiver ~Chad dinator
utive passes in Saturday s
Mike Zimmer
Ochocinco said. "lt s took the blame for that
43-7 victory over Ohio
never been a blowout. one. saying he overUniversity.
l s always close. I don t
"It must be hard to do,"
loaded the play book.
know why the games are This
Tressel said of the mark.
time. he simplified
ah,:ays like that. It s
"We ve been throwing the
things
and l~t the defense
extremely
frustrating
ball all over the place at
shine.
from a skill position set.
Ohio State for a lot of
"I wasn t surprised,"
but J think the linemen
years.··
Palmer
said. "f was just
and the defense enjoy
After pausino for a sechappy
to
see them playgrunes like this.
ond of stunnedsilence. he
that
way.
1here
s a lot of
. "And the defense really
added, '"That s a joke."
talk
about
Baltimore
s
saved us today."
Pryor s big passing day
Everybody
- he compfeted 22 of 29
D.l1 t forget the kicker. defense.
passes for 235 yards and
Nugent was released hypes them up, and
two scores with two interby Tampa Bay early last they re great. but I thi.
ceptions - paved the way
season after he missed our defense took that as
in a game that was over
four of his first six kicks. personal chal1enge. and
early. It was the kind of
He spent the next two they outplayed them
breather the Buckeyes (3months watching the today.''
Baltimore s defense
0) needed after last week s
NFL on television and
bruising 36-24 win over
came
awa) huffing about
apprecwt111g what it
then-No. 12 Miami.
would mean to get ~moth- two disputed calls on
"Whatever they gave me
Cincinnati scoring drives
~
·
Neal C.·lauron/Columbus Dispatch/MCT er chance.
f took advantage of.·· Pryor
in the second half.
"It
was
something
to
smd. ''The line gave me Ohio State wide receiver DeVier Posey (8) fends off his brother Ohio cornerback experience t1rsthancC sit·Ray Le\vis got a penaltime. the receivers ran Julian Posey (9) after making a reception during the first quarter of their NCAA
t)
for tripping after he
ting on Sundays watchgood routes. It s a good football game at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio, Saturday.
rolled into Palmer for a
ing
people
do
a
job
you
.step. but 1 d like to go 25 e!1d Cameron. Heyward 13-yard untouched scram- the clock," said Ohio State
sack. Terrell Suggs was
f()r 25."
p1cked up a fumble and blc and another Barclay wide receiver DeVier want to be in," Nugent called for roughing the
Posey. who dueled with his said. "You realize there s passer when he wrapped
On a day \vhen the adv'anccd it 5 1:ards. He field goal.
Next came back-to-back older brother. Ohio defen- a lot of people watching his arms around Palmer
defense was stout but the also had a tackle 111 the end
tumovers. a Bates fumble sive back Julian Posey. all ' on Sundays who want on another attempt at a
• running game was just mne for a safety.
Two years ago. the recovered by Ross Homan clay. "1 wao,n t aware of the your job."
averaoe. It was Pt)'or s
The Bengals ga\e him s~\ck and drove him backplay that tumed the game Bobcats led_ 14~ I 2 heading and then Heyward s recov- record and I don t pay
into the 1ourth qtw11er ery. In rapid succession attention to· records. but he a chance to compete for " ard for the tackle as
mto a rout.
the job in training camp. Palmer got rid of the ball.
•
"!* s
evetybody s bef(Jre the Buck~yes pulled came a 5 xard pass from was sharp."
"There were six points
Not evetythino was per- He won il. beating out
dremn of a quarterback... out a 26-14 vtctory. But Pryor to t1ght end Jake
Rayner.
In given off (bad) calls."
Bobcats coach Frank this. game - with Ohio · Stoncbumef and Hemm s feet for the §uckeyes. Dave
gettmg SR50.000 to pro- 3-yard run to push the lead however. They continued Cincinnati s home open- Lewis said. "lt s six
Solich satd.
to have difficulty on spe- er. he was perfect from points. They dido t earn
Tressel said he s come to vide the opposition -- was to 34-0.
"It seemed they could cial teams - ~iving up a 36. 30. 46. 38 and 25 it. You don t come into a
expect a lot of his junior nevcr in doubt after the
Buckeyes racked up 17 pass it on us at will,'' 99-yard kickon return to yards. The last two kicks lkn s den and play nice.
quarterback.
'·Nothing would surprise points in each of the first Bobcats linebacker Noah Juliru1 Post,!y (called back were set up by big plays man. This is football. and
Kelter said.
for an illeg~l block). along . - Bernard Scott s 60- football is getting hi
me. thougn. from him," he two qumt~rs.
On thctr second play
In front of a cro\'.d of wtth havmg a punt yard kkkoff return and 'lkre s so lnany ~ ru
said. "He s capable of
I linebacker
Brandon that take away from
everything because he s from scrimmage. the I 05,075. Pryor hit on 16 blocked.
Ptyor, who ran for 35 John&lt;&gt;On s interception.
blessed with tremendous Bobcats coughed up the passes in a row - most of
game.''
yards on 8 carries. also was
talent and his work ethic is ball when Phil Bates pass the receivers were lone
picked off twice on loop- ••11111•~•••••••••••••••
to the left sideline was some they were so open fantastic."
.
The victory over the tipped by Devon Torrence until he undetthrew a mg. medium-length passes
Dane over the middle, both interU
turnover-prone Bobcats ( 1- to Tyler Moeller. Devin wide-open
by
Donovan
2) improved Ohio State to Barclay s 3:!-yard field Sanzenbacher over the cepted
with
Hilton Fletcher.
41-0-1 since it last lost to goal made it 3-0 tive plays middle.
Dmvson llltippino the ball
He was the only person
another Ohio college. a 7-6 Ti1ter.
Ohio didn t pil·k up a away late in the half. The not in a good mood in the
setback to Oberlin m 1921.
Dru1 Hen·on mn for two tir:-t down on its next three previous mark of 12 con- Ohio Stale locker room.
"We ~ot better as a
touchdowns and Ohio possessions, either. and secutivc completions was
Sttte s defense had five after the punts. the set by ~im K_arsat~ i!1 team," Yryor said. ··But
those two ptcks were unactakeaways. A week after an Buckeyes scored on 1985 agamst W1sconsm.
"I£ s controlling the ceptable. I m mad about
RO -yard
interception Pryor s 9-vard pas~ to
www.mvdallvsentlnel.com
retum, mas~ive defensive Brandon Saine, Pryor s tempo and he s controlling both of them."

Nugent kicks 5 FGs as
Bengals beat Ravens

Pryor, No. 2 Buckeyes bop Bobcats, 43·7

G..J.t vour

s p 0 r·IS

online

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