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                  <text>Police divers find
man's dy in plane
ec ge,A6

Nursing class of '79
plans reunion, A3

Printed on 100%

~

•

Rec~clcd Nc\\~()rint D~

SPORTS
• Reds lose to
Cardinals. See Page BI

Pomeroy to move village offices
remodeling
the
about t\\ o years ago. Staff on
from the Athens-Meigs Millennium building. a bid
Educational Service Center by Karr Contractors for
Improvement Corporation.
'' hich rents the second floor S 168.000 was accepted.
In addition. the Pomero) · of the building are currently Councilmen George Stewart,
Municipal Building would vncatin~ the offices.
Dave Deem. Jim Sisson and
then be deeded to the CIC
At tts last meetin~. Pete Barnhart voted for the
and in exchange the village Pomeroy Village Council motion. Councilwoman Ruth
would receive a $100.000 adjourned into executJve Spaun voted against it.
deduction off the purchase session to discuss property Councilwoman
Mary
price of the Millennium acquisition. After adjourn- McAngus was absent.
building. The Village of ing back into regular sesCouncil also voted to
Pomeroy currently owns the sion, the following action accept
loan rates for the
Pomeroy
Municipal was tuken:
After receiving two bids
Please see Offices, AS
Building. having paid it off

Plans to purchase Millennium building
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENnNELCOM •

POMEROY - All village
offices in Pomeroy will
move from the Pomeroy
Municipal Building (the old
Pomeroy High School) to
the former Millennium
building possibly by late
September. if plans are
finalized for the move.

The move will require the
remodeling
of
the
Millennium buildin~ to
house not only all village
offices but a commerctal
tenant who would be paying
rent in another part of the
building. That rent would be
applied to the monthly loan
payment taken out to purchase the building currently
owned by the Community

Two years later,
outsourcing tax
office profitable
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Outsourcing ~liddleport's
income tax collections has
proven profitable to the village. according to a twoyear comparison reviewed
at Monday evening's regular
meeting of village council.
In 2007. village council
voted to close its income
tax office and hire the
Regional
Income Tax.
Administration to collect
the tax and process the
paperwork. "At the time.
council cited a potential
cost savings through the
elimination of a full-time

.
OBITUARIES
' Page AS
· • William McKinney, 72
•• Lola Frances Oliver, 90
. • Dale Warner, 82

INSIDE

employee "s position.

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Barbara and Don Mora register their entries for the Meigs County Fair with assistance from Kay Gillilan, left, and Monica
Freeman, fair board office workers.

Exhibit entries up for Meigs fair
• 8 cities line up for
swine flu vaccine test.
See Page A2
• • UMW reviews year of
activities. See Page A3
: • Troubled Kings
Island ride to stay idle.
:see Page AS

EATHER

was in 1994 when 1.757 entries came
in . Seven of the 15 entry categories
sho\\·ed an increase this year.
POMEROY - Exhibit entries in
The open class entries represent
open classes for the 2008 Meigs only senior fair participation and do
County Fair totaled 3046, an increase not include the thousands of entries
of 782 over last vear. and the third made by 4-ll Club members. bo) and
highest in numbirs over a 19-year girl scouts, junior grangers , FFA and
period of record keeping.
F.C.C.A. member. along with other
This year's numbers were exceeded youth groups. It also does not include
on Iy by entries in 2004 when 3 .170 several categories which arc not claswere made and 2005 when 3170 were sified in competitive open classes.like
registered. The low over those years the draft horses, according to Debbie
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.. -

Ready to read

Audrionna Pullins
to relinquish crown
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
For
Audrionna Renae Pullins.
the 2008 !vieigs County
Jumor Fair Queen. it\ been
a bus) year of traveling
around the state represent•
ing her home county at var: 2 SE&lt;.710l\"S- 12 PAGES
Ious fairs and festivals .
But it all come~ to an end
{\nnie's Mailbox
A.3 Sunday
evening when she
'
will
relinquish
and
Calendars
A.3 turn the reignsheroftitle
royalt&gt;
1
~lassifieds
B3-4 1 O\ er to another young
woman who has excelled
in
the organization she repBs
. mics
resents.
itorials
The transition will not
A4
come easy for Audrionna
Obituaries
who says she's enjoyed
,
every minute of going out
Sports
B Section and talking about Meigs
County. A highlight of her
Weather
experience came earlier
this month when she spent
~ 2009 Ohiu Vnlle) Puhli~hlng Co.
three days at the Ohio
State Fair where- she participated in the Queen:-.
Pageant.
Please see Pullins, AS
8
Details on Page A5

Last week the
Eastern,
Middleport and
Racine (pictured)
libraries
reopened after
being temporarily
closed due to
budget cuts. The
three branches
are now open
from 10 a.m.-6
p.m., Tuesdays' ~115
and Thursdays.

INDEX

.
.
.

As

.

As

ll.l!lll,l !1!1.!1!11 .

Groundbreaking
held at AMP
hydro facility
STAFF REPORT
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENnNELCOM

HAWESVILLE. Ky. than 150 people
attended the Aug. 5
American Municipal Power
Inc. (AMP) groundbrcaking
ceremon&gt; for the Cannelton
Hydroelectric Plant ncar
Hawesville. Ky.
The 84-megawatt (MW)
run-of-the-river hydroelectric plant is the first of fi vc
such plants under development at existing dams on the
Ohio River. Those in attenAl\IP
dance
included
PresidenttG::EO
!\tare
Gerken. Kentuckv Go,·emor
Steve Be:.hear. C{mgressman
Brett Guthrie
(KY-2).
ColoneJ Keith LandT) U.S .
Army Corps of EngineersLouis' ille Dbtrict. as well as
many lo-.·aL state and federal
ofticials.
Gov. Beshear offered his
thoughts at the groundbreakmg by saying: '"We're here
toda). within sight of one of
the most beautiful and hardest-\\Orking rivers in the
country. tou celebrate three.
things: an innovative company: a powerful. relentless
for~ of nature. that force
being the rushing of water as
gravity pulls it '"from higher
ground to lower ground: and
optimism for the future of
this ~tate and nation.
Specifically, we're here to
acknowledge how American
Please see AMP, AS
~lore

The reign of
royalty ends

. ..._.._

Watson. fair board secretary.
Entries in their respective categories
were diary. 40: beef. 40: poultr). 3:
farm crops, 222: hay show, II: flower
show. 1155: domestic arts, 134: painting. 57: photograph}. 81 3: baking and
canning. 400: grange 4: antique display, 72: Little Miss and Mister. 27;
and prett) bahy. 68.
The cl~ses showing increases this
year were beef. fam1 crops. flower show.
domestic arts. photograph}, baking and
canning. and Ltttle Miss and ~1istcr.

RITA is a non-profit organization. a cooperative
amon!! member cities and
'illages. It charges a flat
rate of three percent of taxes
collected for the ::,en ice.
In 2006. the villa!!e collected S 118.362.69 tTu·ough
its one-percent income tax.
but spent $24.284.41 to do
so. once a tax adrnini~tra~
tor's salary and benefits and
other operating expenses
were calculated. Last year.
the first full year collections
were administered by RITA.
collections
totaled
Please see Outsource, AS

Beth SergenVphoto
1

�PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esd ay, August u , 2009

~ 8 citieS line UP lor SWine ftU vaccine test Stanford prof ~equences
own genome lll weeks

• BY C HERYL WITTENAUER
~SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~

.: ST. LOUIS - Hundreds
of Americans in eight cities
• are lining up for ex peri men• tal swine flu shots in a race
: io get a vaccine out in case
the new ~u virus regains
strength th1s fall and winter.
Sharon Frey, who is lead
ing the government-funded
~ testing at Saint Louis
: University, said scientists
: l;lavc been working late
: nights and weekends to
organize the studies and
recruit volunteers.
• "Typically it takes a year
'"to do this." ~aid Frey. an
~ .mfectious diseases expert.
; ·'I can tell you we're work: i.ng at breakneck speed.''
About 2.800 people will
.:participate in the govern ment-led studies. Saint
;;Louis University will test
~ ZOO adults and 200 children.
: Also under way are separate
~ studies by five flu vaccine
· manufacturers under contract with the government.
.:. Health officials expect to
' have about 160 million
. doses available this fall,
, .with the first batch some: ~ime in September. The
studies will test the safety
and effectiveness of vaccines developed by drug
makers and help determine
·dosage and whether it can
be given with a seasonal
flu shot.
Participants will be given
different combinations of
,two swine flu vaccines
made by drug makers
·sanofi Pasteur and CSL
Limited and a seasonal flu
: vaccine.
Fre; said the data will be
turned around quickly for
review by the Food and
Drug Administration.
It's possible the government will begin a public
vaccination
campaign
before all of the work of the
trials is complete, Dr. Anne
Schuchat has said. She

Carolyn
Atherholtz
, right, is
the first
volunteer
to receive
a shot of
H1N1 flu
vaccine

from
research
nurse
Wendy
Nesheim
during the
first of
several
clinical trials of a
new vaccine conducted by
Emory
University
Monday in
Atlanta.

T

AP photo

oversees the flu vaccination
programs at the Centers for
Disease
Control
and
Prevention.
Health
officials are
haunted by the swine flu
vaccine campaign in I 976,
which was stopped after
unexpectedly high numbers of patients suffered a
paralyzing condition called
Guillain-Barre Syndrome.
While it's not clear the
vaccine was to olame, the

government wants to carefully monitor people who
get the new vaccine for any
problems
Nicholas Sarakas. 25, of
St. Peters, Mo., is among
the vaccine volunteers. As
a young adult, hp's among
the groups targeted for the
swine flu vaccine; swine
flu has been harder on
younger people than their
elders.
"I thought, Tll end up

getting a flu shot anyway,"'
he said. "Somebody has to
be the first person to try it."
The other study sites are
Baylor College of Medicine
in
Texas,
Children's
Hospital Medical Center in
Cincinnati,
Emory
University, Group Health
Cooperative in Seattle,
University
of
Iowa,
University of Maryland
School of Medicine and
Vanderbilt University.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- It might not be long until
there is a gene scanner in
every doctor's office. as
DNA sequencing becomes
faster and cheaper.
A Stanford University
professor reported Monday
that he has sequenced his
entire genome in a few
weeks for under $50,000
using a single machine.
Six years ago, hundreds
of researchers at the Human
Genome Project completed
the same task for $300 million. It took 13 years.
"It's continuing down the
path to making it so every
Tom, Dick and Harry are
going to have their genomes
sequenced.'' said Eddy
Rubin. director of the U.S.
Department of Energy Joint
Genome Institute, who was •
not involved in the study.
The breakneck pace of
technological progress in the
field of DNA sequencing has
raised hopes that affordable
gene scans will be available
to all patients soon .
Researchers hope cheap
gene sequencing will lead to
highly customized disease
prevention, diagnosis and
treatment tailored to an
1 individual's genetic code.
I
Only n handful of human
, genome~·
have
been
sequenced so far. Typically
1 those scans have used several
! machines working side-by1 side to read the four chemi1 cals that make up a "letter" in
1 the D:-.:A sequence.
"We've shown it can be
1 done \Vith one machine and
just three people, with just
one operating the machine,"
said Stanford bioengineering
professor Stephen Quake,
whose results were published in the journal Nature
Biotechnology on Monday.
"It makes genome science
accessible to a much broader
segment of the scientific community," he said. "It's really

democratizing the fruits of the
genome revolution."
Still, the cost of entry
remains high. The machine
Quake used to read his
retails for $1 million.
$48,000 cost of his scan
determined as an average
based on the total number of
scans the machine is expected
to be able to perform, he said.
Quake's machine is sold
by Helicos Biosciences
Corp. of Cambridge. Mass.,
a company he co-founded.
Competitors
say
their
machines can sequence
human genomes for the
same or lower costs at a
similar speed.
Richard Gibbs, director of
the
Human
Genome
Sequencing Center at the
Baylor College of Medicine
in Houston, called Quake's
results impressive.
But he abo said that as
improvements in speed and
cost become more common,
the real test of a gene scan's
quality is its accuracy. Quake
estimates his scan captures
about 95 percent of his DNA
Missing just a few of th.
billion letters that make up
human genome could mean
not finding clues to a serious
disease hidden in a patient's
genes. said Gibbs, who was
not involved in the study.
''The genome is enormous," he said. "What can
be a small percentage of difference can add up to a large
number of events that you
can get or might miss:·
'
The success of so-called
personalized
medici ne
depends not on just reading
the letters that make up
human genes but in under-·
standing what they mean. ·
In recent years, an
avalanche of research has
delved into how variations
in just a few letters between
individuals can mean a
greater risk of developing a
disease.

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..

�--------______,_, ______ .

.....

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- - ________ __,

__

~-·

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August n,

2009

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Controlling husband
needs therapy I
BY KATHY MITCHELL
•

D MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I huve bcl'n
. married to my s~:cond husband f'or si\ years. While
\Ve \\ere dating. hl· was
romantic. thoughtful. C&lt;lring. hardworking - cverythmg I \\as look 1ng f01. I
could count on him to be
there for me and help with
the stre5s of being a single
parent.
0\er the years. I have
disco\ ered he is not that
gu). He is insecure ,md
controlling. He demanded
the pas~words to my e-mml
and bank accounts, look~ at
my cell phone call logs.
had a tracking de\ icc put
111 my car to monitor ''here
I went and e\ en sho\\ed up
at my ~ork picnic t&lt;-)
secretly observe what I
was doing.
My !if~: is an open book.
. but he had it in his mind
that I was cheating on him .
c found nothing because
•
ere is nothing to find. I
have been faithful to him
since Da) One. He has
gone for counselir\g, and it
helped some, but he still
get() angr) if a man looks at
me for more than a second
or talks to me too long. He
gets upset if someone says
I look ) ounger than my age
or that he looks older. He
yells. biO\\S things way out
of proportion and accuses
me of behaving inappropriately. I am really getting
tired of it.
His in,ecuntles come
from hi-, past relationships.
Do you think he will evt.!r
get over this nonst.!nse'? If he
, doesn't, he will certainly
drive me away. - Good
Wife from Iowa
Dear Iowa: Your husband
displays traits of a potential
abuser and could become
• dam!ewu,. H~.: need~ !hera:
on an ongoing basis in
to leam ho'" to let go
damaging behavior and
. embrace healthier resronses
· to his insecurities. 1 he is
. '"illing to work on this and
: you see defimte imprme. ment, there is hope.
: Other\\ ise. he is likely to
: get \\Orse and so is your
: rnaniagc. Be careful.
Dear Annie: When my
: widowed f~llhcr d~.:velopcd
: some health issues, I drove
: ha.lfway across the country
· to bring him to my home to
: take care of him. It was sup: posed to be temporary.
: It has now been six
: months, and Dad shows no

desire to return home .
Worse, he smokes in our
house. is Jisrcspectful to my
husband and me. and drinks
every day to the point of
passing out. He refuses to
get a joh or contribute to the

household. I don't want to
put him out on the street,
but what ebe can I do? Texas Tina
Dear Tina: If your father
is able-bodied. there is no
reason he needs to live with
) ou. especwlly if he
smokes, drinks. refuses to
help out and generally
makes you miserable. Drh e
him back home. or sU!.!!.!est
he put his house on the ~n1ar­
ket and use the proceeds to
rent an inexpensive apartment.
He's
probably
dcpres~cd and would benefit from counseling and
A.A. We hope you will look
into that for him. but make
it clear you \\ill no longer
enable his self-destiUctive
behavior.
Dear Annie:
"Baby
Mama." the 19-year-old
who wants to ha\e a baby. is
all that is wrong '"ith
toda) 's society. She doesn't
seem to realize ha\ ing a
baby will rob her of her
youth. Phhhhhht! Gone.
And forget any further education which means
menial jobs with IO\\ pay
and another child in a poor
home. How will she afford
this baby? Every 19-yearold I know can barely afford
a running vehicle.
She wants one because
her friends have one. as if a
child is the latest cell phone.
Talk about immature. She
wants a child without any
real commitment from her
boyfriend. Do these women
ever think about consequences? Pregnancy 1s a
huge decision. not to men
tion a huge responsibility.
G~.:t ma11 it:u. Gt:t st:ttlt:u.
Mature beyond craving
'·wants" that involve another human life. Sheesh. I can
only ~hake my head. - LK

1
1

I

l

1

I

Submitted photo

Holzer Medical Center PICC Nurse Cindy Harrison, BSN, RN, has organized a 30th anniversary reunion for the HMC
School of Nursing Class of 1979, of which she was a member. The reunion is planned for 5:30p.m. on Saturday, Sept.
19, 2009. at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis. Harrison displays a photo of the HMC School of Nursing Class "f 1979.

Nursing class of '79 plans reunion
GALLIPOLIS - A lot can happen
in 30 years.
People get marrrcd and have chit1 dren. then grandchildren. maybe
change job~ a few times, get a little
gray in their hair, fight to keep the
I gray out of their hair, make new
friends, catch up with old friends.
A lot can htlppen in 30 years.
Members of the Holzer Medical
Center School of Nursing Class of
1979 will mark the 30th anniversary of
their graduation with a reunion scheduled for 5:30p.m. Saturday. Sept. 19.
The event will be held in Conference
Room A-B-C at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
I Class of '79 alumna Cindy Hanison.
I BSN. RN. PICC Nurse at Holzer
Mt:uical Center in Gallipolis, is urganiLing the event. She has fond memories of her days as a student at the
1
1 HMC Schoo of Nur-;ing. \\ hich was
located on First Avenue in Gallipolis .
"My parents wanted me to go to school
in Cincinnati, Dayton or Columbu~. but
I'm a small tO\\ n gal, and I was
1 impressed'" ith the bnmd new facilit) that
was here," Hanison ~aid. "Actually. it
1 was the only place I applied."

I

•

•
:
:
:
•
:
:
:
:
•
:

Tuesday, Aug. 11
DARWIN
Bedford
..,..ow~ship Trustees. regular
eetmg. 7 p.m., to'" n hall.
P0.\1EROY - Salisbu1)'
Township Trustee~. 5:30
p.m. at Manning R~lush
home. 32972 Johnson Road,
Racine, at Hidden Lakes.
Thursday, Aug. 13
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education.
special meeting. disc~1ss
personnel, R a.m .• h1gh
school medm room.

Clubs and
organizations
Tucsda), Aug. II
,
•
:
:
:

1

P0~1EROY

~Jcigs

County
Chamber
of
Commerce. busines~-mmded
luncheon. noon. Pomeroy
Library. featured speaker
Randy
Drew) or
from

UMW reviews year of activities

Horizon Telecom Broadband
Access Crow·s KfCILono
John silver~ catering. RSVP
with ~fichelle. 992-SOOS or
michelle@meigscount)-

ch~~~~~B\r
- Pomeroy
Merchants
Association.
X:30 a.m. Peoples Bank

conference room. Anyone
interested invited to attend.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville OES 255.7:30
p.m. meeting at the hall.
Refreshments. 6:30p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 13
RACINE Sonshine
Circle. 7 p.m. at the
Bethany United Methodisdt
Church. Cards signed at
6:30 p.m. All area \Vornen
welcome.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453. 7:30p.m.
at tht.! hall. Refreshments.
6:30p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 meeting
7:30 p.m. folio'" ing a 6:30
p.m. meal.

Cleland emns promotion ·at plant

CHI•SHIRE - Henry E.
lank" Cleland Ill has be~.:n
• • promoted from associate
• chemist to assistant cht.!mist
! in the Environmental
; Department, effective July
: 29. 2009, at Ohio Valley
o.. Electric
Corp.'s Kyger
~Creek Plant. as announced
: by Acting Plant Manager
,

•
I-------

Carlene Cohut. Cindv Willis Derifield.
Cathy Elliott. T.C. ·Ervin. Stephanie
Gierman. Debra Graves. ~1arv Jones.
Claire Mendenhall. Sharon· Moles,
Sharon Cole .\loore .. Tammv 1'\elson.
Julia Osborne. Cind\ Russ.ell. Dana
Schwambur!!er. Cindv Sch'" a1 z,
Brenda Ship-iey. Ginger Six, .Neesha
Smith. Erika Valente. ~tary Webh,
Aida Westfall and Debra Wilkinson.
Harrison said most of her former
classmates still reside nearby in Ohio.
West Virginia and Kentucky. while others can be found in Tennessee. Virginia
and as far away as Washington St&lt;tte ·in
the Pacific Northwest.
She said the Holzer Medical Center
Nutrition Services Department is pro\ iding refreshments. main meal and
dessert for the reunion. She said Karen
Stocker. RD. LD. Director of l':utriti~;~n
Services at H~1C. has been instrumental in making the reunion possible. •
Efforts are being made to get
informtion about past instructors and
house mothers from the HMC School
of Nursing . Am one with informatidn
or would like more infom1ation about
the reunion. contact Harrison at 740441-3425.
.

Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to amziesmailboxcomcast.net, or write - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 10: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
TUPPERS PLAINS - A eel the response moment sent, and members were
Connie
Rankin
and
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers review of activities and highlighting the article reminded that school suppLies Sharon Loul-..s will presc.nt
from "United Methodist Women arc being accepted at the the
program.
Joanoa
and cartoonists, visit the accomplishment-;
Creators Syndicate Web January to August was Giving/Standing Tall When Mulbcny Community Center Weaver will have the
Response moment and Kas
page at www.creators.com. given at the recent rnct.!ting Times Are Tough." by in Pomeroy.
of the Tuppers Plains St. Martha Knight.
Officers will be elected at Seckman and Nita Wells

Community Calendar
Public meetings

Hanison, who is the only member of
the Class of '79 \\ ho still works at
HMC. said she has planned a tour of
the hospital for her returning classmates to show them all the chanl!cs
and improvements that ha\C OCCUrred
at HMC over the past three decades.
Stops on the tour will include the
Charles E. Holzer Jr., MD. Surgery
Center; the Maternity and Family
Center and Pediatric Unit; Critical
Care
Unit;
newly-renovated
Emergency Department; Education
and Conference Center; and the
Hol~r Center for Cancer Care.
A ceremony to honor the memory of
classmate Sheri Pyles is also planned
during the reunion. Pyles. the wife of
Steve Pyles of Gallipolb. passed away
in 2007. Hanison said l\lr. P) les is
scheduled to attend the Sept. 19 event
and will bring with him a photo collage honoring his late wife. who was a
nurse at H~1C for many years.
In addition to Harrison and Pyle~.
the Class of '79 from the H~1C School
of Nursing included the following
individuals:
Carol
Adeh.berger.
Crystal Arnold, Deborah Boatright.
Pamela Bryan, Kathy Carlisle.

Da\ idA. Walker.
Cleland joined the Kyger
Creek Plant in 2008 as an
associate chemist. He is a
graduate of Ohio University
'"ith a bachelor of science in
biological sciences degree.
Cleland and his \\ ifc.
Angela, and their two
daughters reside in Racine.

On dean's list

: William Nicholson. Middlepor1, was named to the dean's
~ list at Columbus State Community College for the .,pnng
quarter. eammg a grade point average of at least 3.0.

I

Paul United Methodist
Cards w~re signed for Ann the September meeting. the ''ill provide refreshments.
Summerfield and Beulah District U.\&lt;1\V fall meeting Betty Chevalier closed '' ith
Women held at the church.
Joanna W.:avcr opened Dlxiderer. The prayer calen- will be held Oct. 3 at Logan. prayer.
the meeting with prayer and dar birthday card rl!cipient Participation in the Fcsti\ al
Members present ''ere
a u~s 0!1 reading of the was Barbara Brooks of of Sharing Church World Joa,nna Weaver. Barb Roush.
Chevalier.
Kas
U 1 !!tan) and purp.ose. Yqsilant, Michigan. The Self Help Kits were dis- Bettv
Officers reports were g1~en monthly donation for Mission cussed. The next meeting Seckman. ~ita Wells. Judy
Kennedy. and Shamn Louks.
and Judy Kennedy prcsc.:nt- Mulberry wa'&gt; approved to be \\ill be Sept. 7.
--------------------------------------------

Riverside club hosts Roush tournament

The 2009 l'vlary Roush
Women's Golf Tournament
was held recently at
Riverside Golf Course.
Mason. W.Va.
Nin~ clubs were represented. including the host
club at Riverside: Clitfside
at Gallipolis, Golf Club of
West
Virginia
at
Parkersburg. W.Va .. Green
Hills at Ravenswood. W.Va ..
Mingo Bottom at Eli;.abeth.

W.Va., Parkersburg Country
Club: Riviera at Lesage.
W.Va.. South Hills at
Parkersburg. Worthington at
Parkersburg. and. Piont.!er
Golf Course at Marietta.
The tournament was a
blind draw, tWo-lady best ball
event with handicap. Prizes
were given to the best seven
teams. Ties were broken by
going back on the score card
from the most difficult holes.

First
Place.
Diana
Watkins, Green Hills and
Deana He ...son. Pioneer.
Score 57; Second, Sandy
Gatewood. Cliffside and
Carol Tallhamer. South
Hills. 62; Third, Sharon
Persinger, Riviera and Carol
Crow. 'Riversidt.!, 63; Fourth,
Sue Collms. Cliffside and
Charlene
Stilgenhauer.
Worthington, 64: Fifth. Sue
Mancari. Green Hills and

r

•

Angie Lewis. Golf Clob
W.Va.. 64: Si'i.th. Terri
Mount. Riviera and .\-1a(v
Burton, Riverside. 64;
Seventh. Judy Hutchins.
Riviera and Wavic Lud\\ tg.
South Hills. 64.
•:
Closest to Pin: #.6;
Daneen Shears. Parkersburg
Countn Club. #9. Dtu
Wade. South Hills,#l2: Sl}e
Mancari. Green Hills: #14:
Terri Mount. Rh iera.
•

Family Healthcare c~lebrates National Health Center Wee~
Middleport clinic to hold open house
Healthcare. Inc sen cs over
M1DDLEPORT
f·amily Hcalthcarc. l nc 20.000 patients m south(sen ing Russ, Vinton, . eastern Ohio each year- a
Athens. Hocking. Perry, and number that is increasing
Meigs countie~ in Ohio) due to lavoffs and cutbacks
the place ''Where Access during the economic downand Quality Care Begin" for turn. Health center patient.,
people in our community pay on an income-based
joins the rest of America's sliding fee scale; no one is
'more
than
I ,200 turned U\'vay. regardless of
Communi!¥ l lcalth Centers insurance status or ability
in kicking otT National to pay,
J lcalth Center Week 2009
Farnilv Healthcare, Inc.which ends on Saturday.
Middleport Office will be
The theme of the week, holding an open house in
"Where Access and Quality honor of Health Center
Care Begin,'' highlights Week from II :30 a.m.-1 :30
health centers' roles ns · p.m. on Friday. Everyone is
"health care homes'' for im ited to attend.
"E\ervone should have the
some 18 million people in
America. prO\ iding prima- choice • ol a Communit\
ry and prcventh c care and Health Center ru; their health
a range of services. Family care home,'' said Mark

Bridenbaugh,
CEO
of
Family Healthearc.Inc. "We
pro\ ide high-quality :-ervices that emphasize primal) care and wcllncs., so that
families can sta) healthy and
out of hospitals. National
Health Ccntt.!r Week is a time
to spread the message that
we need to invest in an
accessible and affordable
community health system
that c&lt;m reduce disparities,
improve health and achieve
cost savings."
The spotlight comes at a
time when the American
Recovery or Reinvestment
Act (ARRA). or the federal
economic stimulus bill. has
made increased access to
care possible. Communit)
Health Centers were among
the first recipients of stimu':.
Ius funding: $338 million in

so-called Increased Demaricl
for Sen ICes grunts will
enable health cetHers to pro' ide quality care to an additional 2.I million paticflt
over the next t\\O years. ·
For more informlltion.
'is it
www.healthcenterweek .orl!.
·
The ,1ation's nct\\ork M
more than 1.200 Fcdcralh
Qualified Health Cente1:-s
(FQHCs) serves more th6n
18 million people through
7.000 sites located in all Of
the 50 states. the District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico. the
U S Virgin Islands and
Guan . .\Tore informatien
about America's Heauh
Centers is R\ ailable from
the 1'\ational \~sociation of
Communi!\ Health Centcl
(~ACHC). and the '"cb.,itc:
WW\\ .nachc .com.

�-

--~

---------

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

~--~--_...

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street ·Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

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

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Aug. ll, the 223rd day of 2009. There
are 142 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 11 . 1909. the first recorded use of the S .0 .S. distress signal in North America was by the steamship SS
Arapahoe, which had broken down off North Carolina's
Cape Hatteras.
On this date:
In 1919, Germany's Weimar Constitution was signed by
President Friedrich Ebert.
In 1934. the first federal prisoners arrived at the island
prison Alcatraz in San Francisco Bay.
In 1942, during World War II, Pierre Laval, prime minister of Vichy France , publicly declared that "the hour of liberation for France is the hour when Germany wins the
war."
In 1949. President Harry S. Truman nominated General
Omar N. Bradley to become the first chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
In 1954. a formal peace took hold in Indochina, ending
more than seven years of fighting between the French and
Gommunist Vietminh.
:In 1956, abstract painter Jackson Pollock, 44, died in an
a,utomobile accident on Long Island. N.Y.
) In 1962. the Soviet Union launched cosmonaut Andrian
Nikolayev on a 94-hour flight.
tin 1965, rioting and looting that claimed 34 lives broke
out in the predominantly black Watts section of Los
~geles.

• In 1984, President Ronald Reagan joked during a voice
test for a paid political radio address that he had "signed
l~gislation that will outlaw Russia forever. We begin bombing in five minutes."
In 1992, the Mall of America opened in Bloomington,
Minn.
Ten years ago: White supremacist Buford 0. Furrow,
~anted in the wounding of five people at a Los Angeles
JJ!wish community center and the shooting death of a mail
qmier the day before, turned himself in to the FBI in Las
Vegas and waived extradition to Los Angeles. (Furrow is
serving life in prison.) A tornado tore across Salt Lake City.
killing one person.
Five years ago: Britain granted its first license for human
cloning for the purpose of stem cell research. The U.S.
women's soccer team defeated home team Greece 3-to-0 on
the first day of competition in the 2004 Olympic Games
(the opening ceremony took place two days later).
One year ago: President George W. Bush, back from his
Asia tour. warned of a "dramatic and brutal escalation" of
violence by Russia in the former Soviet republic of Georgia;
he pressed Moscow to accept an immediate cease-fire and to
pull back its troops. In Beijing, Michael Phelps got his second gold medal - thanks to a late comeback in the 400meter freestyle relay by Jason Lezak, who lunged to the wall
just ahead of the French anchor. Actor-playwright George
Fu11h died in Santa Monica, Calif., at age 75.
Thought for Today: ''A pessimist is a man who looks both
ways when he's crossing a one-way street." - Laurence J.
Peter, Canadian-born educator and author of "The Peter
Principle" (1919-1990).

Obama must get liberals to support Senate health plan
''Too big to fail" is the
tagline that health lobbyist
Fred Graefe applies to the
health care reform effort,
and he's got it dead right.
The failure of an overMorton
whelmingly
Democratic
Kondracke
Congress to pass President
Barack Obama 's No. I prioti'ty would be a political
disaster for the president
and his party.
It would also be a disaster insisting upon, which is
for the country to continue why heavy lifting will be
with mounting numbers of required to pass it.
The Senate Finance bill
uninsured people - soon to
top 50 million and - assuming Chairman Max
mounting, unconstrained Baucus, D-Mont., can reach
an
agreement
with
costs that employers, premiRepublican Sens. Charles E.
um-payers and government
Grassley. Iowa, Mike Enzi,
can't afford.
Wyo., and Olympia Snowe,
So Graefe, a Democrat Maine - conceivably could
who represents hospitals,
garner 65 votes on the
pharmaceutical and related
Senate floor.
companies, and device
That is, Democrats manufacturers,
bravely some of whom. mainly libpredicts that "President erals, will have to swallow
Obama will sign a health- hard - would vote for it,
care
reform bi II by plus Republicans Grassley,
Christmas.''
Enzi, Snowe, Sen. Susan
Let's hope. But producing Collins, Maine, and, possia bill in the current super- bly, retiring Sen. George
heated ideological and spe- Voinovich, Ohio.
cial-interest environment is
In the Senate, heavy presgoing to require a lot of sure is being applied to
heavy lifting from the presi- Grassley and Enzi by fellow
dent and a willingness to Republicans to stop coopercompromise by a lot of ating with Baucus. And felDemocrats and at least a low Democrats are mad at
handfu I
of
Senate Baucus for consorting with
Republicans.
Republicans.
The likeliest vehicle for
In a different environment
legislative success
- which Obama might
though far from an ideal have established were he
policy outcome - is the truly a post-partisan figure
bill being developed by six - health reform could have
bipartisan negotiators on had broad support if it
the
Senate
Finance included GOP-sponsored
Committee.
elements like medical malThat measure is designed practice reform, consumer
to cost less than $1 trillion choice and competition to
over 10 years, have a lower costs, and options to
phased-in individual man- buy insurance across state
date, foist considerable lines.
costs of covering lowerBut that's not happening.
income workers onto the Nor is Congress likely to
states
by
expanding turn to other worthy biparMedicaid a.nd the State tisan proposals like the
Children's
Health Healthy Americans Act
Insurance Program, and sponsored by Sens. Ron
pay for itself through a Wyden, D-Ore .. and Bob
combination of Medicare Bennett, R-Utah, or the
provider cuts and taxes on B ipa1 ti::.an Pulicy Center
high-end insurance plans. plan of former Sens. Tom
It will contain stiff new Daschle, D-S.D., Bob
regulation of the insurance Dole, R-Kan., and Howard
industry but no govern- ·Baker, R-Tenn. At this late
ment-run "public plan" of date, the Senate Finance
the kind that liberals are bill - if it emerges -

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b

tt

likely will be the only
viable vehicle with bipartisan support.
If Baucus. Grassley and
Co. hang together and produce a bill that becomes the
Health Reform Act of
2009, they could go down
in history like President
Lyndon Johnson and Sens.
Mike Mansfield, D-Mont.,
and Everett Dirksen. R-111..
who passed the Civil
Rights Act of 1964. But.
before the Champagne is
uncorked. the going will
get dicey.
Once a Senate bill passes,
Obama will have to convince House liberals to drop
their insistence on a public
plan, the generous subsidies
included in cun·ent House
legislation and pay-fors
derived from surtaxes on
rich people.
Liberals want the president to pursue a different
strategy: Bulldoze the handful of moderate Senate
Democrats who oppose a
government-run insurance
plan.
The mode'rate group is
led by Sen. Ben Nelson,
Neb .. and includes Sens.
Evan Bayh, lnd .. Mary
Landrieu,
La..
Arlen
Specter, Pa.. Blanche
Lincoln. Ark .. and Mark
Pryor. Ark., plus Joe
Lieberman, ID-Conn.
Liberals haven't given
up on the idea of ramming
a government-heavy bill
through the Senate under
budget reconciliation rules,
requiring 51 votes, not 60,
even if it means firing a
Senate
parliamentarian
who might try to keep the
chamber honest. That
might lead to a total
Republican rbvolt and a
shutdown of further Senate
business, but it's in the
nature of ideologues to go
for broke and damn the
consequences.
The liberal Congressional
Progressive Caucus, 80plus strong. far outnumbers
moderate
Democratic
groupings, and 57 of its
members have threatened to
vote against health reform
if it doesn't include a
"robust" public option.
But Speaker
Nancy

Pelosi, D-Calif.. once chair\s.:oman of the Progressive
Caucus, seems to~ understand what's required to
pass a bill.
She infuriated her fellow
li bcrals by telling r,:&gt;rlnr1~P
last Friday. "Are you aski
me. ·Are the progressives
going to take down universal, quality, affordable·
health
care
for
all"
Americans'!" I don't think
so.''
The smoothest scenario
for passing a health-reform
bill would be for the House
to forgo a lengthy. contentious House-Senate conference and pass the
Senate's bill.
For that to happen,
Obama would have to use
every last ounce of his persuasive skill on his fellow
Democrats plus the
arm twisting acumen of
Chief of Staff Rahm
Emanuel.
Obama will spend much
of August trying to persuade
the American people that
his health plan won't lead to
rationing. more costly coverage, higher taxes for the
middle class and explodi.
deficits.
He's got to beat back
Republican arguments that •
he's promoting "a govern- '
ment takeover of health
care" and maybe even ··government-promoted euthanasia."
But his bigger test comes
when Congress returns in
September. Liberal groups ·
will have spent August
pounding on moderate '
Democrats on behalf of a
government-run insurance
program. no doubt strength- ~.
ening progressives' resolve '
to hang tough.
And that will make
Obama's autumn task even
harder. But his success as
president rides on passing
a health care bill. And, if
he fails, he won't be able to
blame either Republicans
or insurance companies.
His own party will have
done it to him - and then.
selves.
(Morton Kondracke
executive editor of Roll
Call. the newspaper oj
Capitol Hill).

Handcuffing nonviolent· speech

The "media frenzy" - as
President Obama called it
over Sgt. James
Crowley's
arrest
of
Harvard professor Henry
Louis Gates Jr. needs to
become more than a
·'teachable moment," in the
president's phrase. But not
only about interactions
among blacks and white
police. Widely overlooked
in this frenzy is a constitutional lesson. Is there a law
forbidding angry nonviolent speech directed at a
police officer?
John Timoney, Miami's
police chief, is a hard-line,
LETTERS TO THE
law-and-order cop whom
I've criticized for his mass
EDITOR
arrest of. nonviolent protestLetters to the editor are welcome. They should be less ers - when he was police
than 300 H'ords. All letters are subject to editing, must be chief in Philadelphia signed. and include address and telephone number. No without a flicker of probaunsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in ble cause. But I respect
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of what he told Maureen
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- Dowd of The New York
Times (July 26) about
erJ for publication.
Gates' arrest:
"There's a fine line
between disorderly conduct
and freedom of speech. It
can get tough out there, but
Rea&lt;' e. Serv· -:es
(UsPs 213-960)
I tell my officers, 'Don't
correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
make matters worse by
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every morning. Monday
throwing handcuffs on
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street.
someone. Bite your tongue
1in a story, call'the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Seconc·class postage
I

~

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

~

_______

"'

Moreover, as Ronald
Hampton, executive director of the National Black
Police Association. said
after the handcuffing of
Henry Louis Gates: "Black
men's experience with law
enforcement in this country
is very different than that
experience of whites"
(National Public Radio.
July 24). ln July of last
year,
a
New
York
Times/CBS News poll
asked: "Have you ever felt
you were stopped by the
police just because of your
race or ethnic background?" Yes, said 66 percent of black men. Also
responding affirmatively
were 9 percent of white
men (New York Times,
July 24).
But what about this par-

r·n t

'

,.,.,..,,.

Nat
Hentoff

ticular arrest, which has
ignited a continuing national
debate?
The
Massachusetts American
Civil Liberties Union affiliate reminds us (Slate.com.
July 22) claiming racial
bias while protesting an
arrest is political speech,
the core of the First
Amendment - and exercising political speech is
not disorderly conduct.
That was the crime that
Gates was charged with
when
arrested.
The
Cambridge
Police
Department, while standing
behind Crowley. dropped
that charge in the national
gust of publicity, and also, I
believe, the department
knew it would not stand up
in court.
Almost lost in the frenzy
was Athnta police officer
M. Tate (he wouldn't give
his first name) who told the
New York Times (July 24)
how his police department
has trained him not to lose
his cool when subjected to
angry name-calling. An
arrest he said is justified
when:
"The set of circumstances ... will lead a reasonable and prudent person
to believe that a crime has
or is about to be committed
and that the person in question is involved'in a significant manner." Handcuffs
are not warranted. he
added, by anything short of
that.
Yet Gates' arresting officer. Crowley. has - for the
past five years - been
training officers at the
Lowell Police Academy in
how not to engage in racial
profiling. But by the time he

e en trtcnes

&gt;•rtn

s

e a

te•

handcuffed
Gates
in
Cambridge, Crowley knew
Gates was in his own house
and there was no burglary in
progress. If Crowley wasn't
racially profiling Gates as the professor believes he
was (New York Daily
News. July 25. lead editorial) - then he busted him
for political speech. The
sergeant needs more training.
Bob Herbert reports (New
York Times, Aug. l) only
five or six minutes elapsed
between police alert to a
possible break-in and the
handcuffing of nonviolent
Gates.
What was Crowley teaching the Lowell police?
While Obama has been
criticized for increasing the
media frenzy by chargiqg
that Crowley acted ''stupidly" (a word he has recanted). the president did otherwise make sense:
"I think we know. separate and apart from this incident ... that there's a long
history in this country of
African-Americans
and
Latinos being stopped by
law enforcement disproportionately."
This reporter, having
covered the police in Nev.
York City since 1958, I
can further define what
Obama refers to as disproportionate police stops of
blacks.
In May of this year. the
New York Civil Liberties
Union (NYCLU) reported.
based on police data. that
New York City Police
Department
officers
''stopped and interrogated
New Yorkers 171 .094 times
between
January
and
March·· - and more than
151.000 of those individuals were sent on their way
without
charges.
Approximately 89.000 of
those stopped were black.
56.000 were Latino, and
16.000 were white. Donna
Lieberman. the head of the
NYCLU. added: "These
New Yorkers· personal

tt

a

information is nov. stored in
an NYPD database."
"The NYPD is. in effect.
building a massive database
of black and brown N"ew
Yorkers.:· said NYCLU
Associate Legal Director
Christopher Dunn. Based
on \\hat information on
those who are not charged?
Their color!
Not incidentally. Barack
Obama. when he was an
Illinois state senator, sponsored legislation to track
racial breakdown of drivers
stopped by the police. The
term,
"Driving
While
Black,'' is familiar to blacks
around the country prote~,
ing
"disproportionat
police stops on the road an
in their streets.
Newsday
(July • 30)
quotes 44-year-old Julian
Gobourne. black, an information technologist for a
bank. that "whites don't
understand racial profiling
because white people
don't experience it neg&lt;;ltively."
Accordingly. a July 29
Wall Street Journal/NBC
poll disclosed that 4 percent
of blacks blamed Mr. Gates
for the notorious arrest
while 30 percent targeted
Crowley. Among white
respondents. 32 percent
placed responsibility for the ·
arrest on Gates and 7 per- :
cent blamed Crowley.
If
this
"teachable :
moment" is intended to ~
show hov. far we still have ·
to go to enter a post-racial
society. it has succeeded. To :
be continued.
In
another
conte~
Winston Churchill urged:
"Never ever give up!" Nor
should we to ensure the
Constitution's equal protection of the laws.
(Nat Hento.ff is a nationallr renowned authoritY on
tlu; First Amendment· and
the Bill of Rights. He is a ·
member ({/' the Reporters ··
Committee for Freedom oj
the Press, and the Cato
Institute, ll'here he is a
senior fellow).

a

�Tuesday, August u,

2009

Iraq suners bloodiest.dav since u.s. pullback

Obituaries
William McKinney
William Marvin McKinney, 72. of Middleport, passed
away Aug. 9, 2009 at his home.
He was born June 29, 1937 in Charleston, W.Va., son of
the late Burwell Samuel and Lucy Anna McKinney. He
was fonnerly employed as an ironworker.
He is survived by his: wife of 53 years, Carla \1cKinney;
ldren: William Lee McKinney, Jeffrey Ray (Irma)
Kinney, Chris McKinney and his special friend, Tracy
•
Lawson, John (Sheila) McKinney and Angela Smith; special child, Destiney Vining; 11 grandchildren; nine great
grandchildren; brothers, Eugene (Ann) McKinney and
Darrel (Pam) McKinney; sister. Shirley Tyree; several
nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a
daughter, Anna Marie Bareswilt McKinney. and a sister,
Betty Beaty.
There will be no funeral. A registry is available on-line at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

DaleWamer

BAGHDAD (AP) - A
double truck bombing
Monday in Mosul and blasts
in Baghdad brought the
Iraqi death toll to more than
100 in four days. the worst
spasm of violence the country has suffered since U.S.
forces left the cities.
The bloodshed threatened
to chip away at public confidence in the U.S .-backed
government as it seeks to
project a sense of normalcy
ahead of next year's national elections. including an
announcement last week
that all concrete blast walls
be
gone
from
will
Baghdad's main roads by
mid-September.
The Mosul bombing, like
another Friday on the
fringe~ of the ethnically
tense city, targeted ethnic
minorities, indicating that

insurgents are seeking out
relatively undefended targets to maximize casualties
as the strapped Iraqi army
focuses its efforts on more
central areas.
The attacks in Mosul,
which the U.S. military has
called the last stronghold of
al-Qaida, killed 28 people
Monday and A4 on Friday.
It's the first time since the
U.S. turned urban security
over to the Iraqis on June 30
that insurgents have managed to stage two massive
attacks in short order.
Another 22 Iraqis, mostly
day laborers, died in two
bombings in Baghdad on
Monday. Seven Shiite pilgrims also were plied by
bombings in Baghdad on
Friday.
The latest deaths raise to at
least 158 the number killed in

.
Local Weather

Dale Clinton Warner, 82, of Racine, died Friday, Aug. 7,
2009, at his residence.
He was born Oct. 25, 1926. in Pomeroy, son of the late
Herman Earl. and Amber Pearl Watkins Warner. He was a
retired insurance agent. He attended Forest Run United
Methodist Church, was a Mason, and a veteran of the
U.S. Navy.
Thesday...Partly sunny
Surviving are his wife, Mary Bell Warner; four daugh- with a chance of showers
ters: Amber (Dave) Findley, Jill (Alan) Pugh, Connie and thunderstonns. Humjd
(Rusty) Saunders, and Annie Robertson; a son, Michael with highs irt the mid 80s.
(Sheila) Warner; two sisters, Ada (Arthur) Nease and Lois West winds around 5 mph.
Thompson; a brother, Ted (Suzy) Warner; six grandchildren
Chance of rain 40 percent.
and two great grandchildren.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a brothcloudy
with a chance of
Jack Warner; a sister, Dorothy Higgins; a son-in-law,
showers.
A chance of thun•
le Robertson; and a brother-in-law, Gene Thompson.
derstorms
...Mainly in the
Friends may call from 5-7 p.m. on Wednesday, Aug. 12,
evening.
Lows
in the mid 60s.
2009, at Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy. A memorial service will follow .visitation at 7 p.m., with Rev. Bob West winds around 5 mph.
Robinson officiating. Burial will be in Gilmore Cemetery. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Memorial contributions may be made to Forest Run · Wednesday...Partly sunny
United Methodist Church, 31535 Nease Rd., Racine, with a slight chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Ohio 45771.
Highs in the lower 80s.
North winds around 5 mph.

.Deaths

Lola Frances Oliver
Lola Frances Oliver, 90, of Clifton, W.Va. died Aug. 8,
2009 a the Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Chester C.
Oliver.
Funeral services will be held 1 p.m. Wednesday,Aug. 12, at
the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home. The Rev. Glen Rowe
will officiate and burial will be in the New Lpne Oak Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral home, 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.

.Local Briefs

•

. Time change

POMEROY - The Salisbury Township Trustees have
changed their meeting. time from 6:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.
on Tuesday.

Open late
OHSAA meeting
TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern Local School District
will hold a mandatory Ohio High School Athletic
Association meeting for coaches, parents and students in
grades 7-12 participating in fall sports at 6:30 p.m.
Thursday in the Eastern Elementary cafeteria.
The purpose of a pre-season meeting is to introduce students, their parents and coaches in a relaxed, non-threatening atmosphere, communicate specific OHSAA information and promote cooperative community action.
Attendance is mandatory for parents and students ·participating in the sports program. Coaches and school staff wm be
available to answer questions regarding specific programs,
and a short DVD produced by the OHSAA will be presented.

The daughter of Tom and
Stacie Pullins has been
active in 4-H for nine years.
She was a member of the
Meigs
County
Better
Livestock 4-H Dairy Club, a
four-year member of the
Junior Fair Board, and a
seven year member of the
Meigs County Fashion
Board. At Eastern High
School where she will be a
s~niur this year, she plays
varsity basketball and runs
varsity track.
During her reign as
queen, Audrionna visited
fairs in Morgan, Noble,
Jackson, Athens, Mason,
Gallia, Washington and
Vinton Counties in Ohio
and Mason County in West
Virginia, in addition to

•••

SYRACUSE - A schooL supply give-away will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at the First Church of God, Second and
Apple Sts., Syracuse. First come, first served.

Sale and soup planned
RACINE - A white elephant sale and soup supper will
be held Saturday at the Mt. Moriah Church of God. Serving
will begin at 5 p.m.

Troubled Kings
Island ride to stay idle
MASON, Ohio (AP)- Kings Island said Monday it will
keep the troubled Son of Beast roller coaster shut down fo~
the remainder of the year.
Officials will decide the ride's future over the winter,
k spokesman Don Helbig said.
he park closed the ride June 16 after a 39-year-old
man who rode the coaster reported she had been hospi•
talized with a burst blood vessel. Inspectors for the Ohio
.Department of Agriculture found no irregularities with the
ride in a repoxt July 29.
Helbig said park technicians have concluded the ride
is safe to resume operation, but Kings Island remains
concerned.
"We're not completely satisfied with the ride experience," Helbig said of the wooden coaster that runs at 78
mph.
The ride has been idled six times in nine seasons. It was
shut down nearly a year for rebuilding and removal of a
loop after 27 people were hurt in 2006.

result of the Americans withdrawing. "The American
troops are still in their camps
a.nd the intelligence coordination and mobilization assista~ce still exists," he said.
f he U.S. military has
~tressed that violence overall
JS low co11_1pared with past
year. Amencan commanders
also have warned al-Qaida in
Iraq and other Sunni insurgents .waul~ try to re-ignite
sectanan vtolence but said
Shiites are showing restraint
and not retaliating as they
did more than two years ago
when the country came to
the brink of civil war.
Army Col. John R.
Robinson, a U.S. military
spokesman. said attacks
nationwide have averaged
100 a week or fewer for several months, compared with
about 200 per week last year.

Local Stocks

Chance of rain 20 percent.
Wednesday
night ...
Partly cloudy. Lows in the
lower 60s. Northeast winds ·
around 5 mph.
Thursday
through
Sunday...Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 80s. Lows
in the lower 60s.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy in the evening ...Then
becoming partly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 60s.
Monday ...Mostly sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 30 percent.

AEP (NYSE) - 31.03
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 54.59
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 35.28
Big Lots (NYSE) - 24.3~
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 28.27
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 31.41
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.55
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.85
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.05
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 34.34
Collins (NYSE) - 44.55
DuPont (NYSE) - 32.38
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.02
Gannett (NYSE) - 8.13
General Electric (t-IYSE) - 14.57
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 23.46
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 42.69
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.93
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 14.56
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 45.17

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 29.65
BBT (NYSE) - 25.91
Peoples (NASDAQ)- 18
Pepsico (NYSE) - 57.41
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.55
Rockwell (NYSE) - 41.37
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.27
Royal Dutch Shell- 51.54
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 76.91
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 49.72
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.06
WesBanco (NYSE) - 18.16
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.66
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Aug. 10, 2009, prov ided by Edward Jones finan·
cial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant
at (304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.

attending the State Fair. She
also participated in events at
the Albany and Barlow
Independent celebrations.
As for parades and festivities, she took part in
Pomeroy's
Sternwheel
Firemen,
Festival,
Christmas, and Meigs
Alumni parades, Rutland's
July 4th parade, the Ribs
Festival, and the Jackson
Apple Festival.
As a special project she
enlisted other members of
the 2008 fair royalty for a
special project of making
blankets and donating them
to Overbrook Nursing
Center in Middleport and
the
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center in
Pomeroy.

Submitted photo

While at the Ohio State Fair for the Queens Pageant,
Audronna Pullins posed for a picture with the 2009 Ohio's
Junior Fair Queen Kristen Free of Ross County.

Offices from Page At
purchase of the Millennium
building from Farmers
Bank, the only bank that
submitted a bid. The bid
was for a three-month construction rate of 3.25 percent and after that a fxxed
rate of 4.10 percent on a
loan of $575,000 for 30
years. Barnhart, Deem,
Sisson and Stewart voted
yes, Spaun voted no.
McAngus was absent.
At last night's meeting of

School supply give-aways
COOLVILLE - The Bethel Worship Center located on
Route 7 will have a back-to-school supply give-away
beginning at 9 a.m. Saturday. It is open to anyone in need
of school supplies.

the first 10 days of August more than half the 309 killed
in all of July, according to an
Associated Press tally.
"We call on the government to make clear the real
security situation in Ir~q ,"
said lawmaker Alaa Makt of
the minority Sunnis. "We are
not convinced by statements
that everything is OK ...
Iraqi people want security."
However, it's difficult to
detect a trend. The rate of
bombings tends to rise or fall
month by month. This could
mean the insurgents are trying to keep the authorities
off balance, or that they are
too weak to carry out the
sustained campaigns that
typified earlier years of the
U.S. occupation.
Ayad al-Samarraie, the parliamentary speaker, insisted
the upsurge was not a direct

PullinS from Page At

POMEROY - Meigs Tuberculosis Clinic will be open
until6 p.m. tonight.

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pomeroy Village Council,
McAngus said she was not
in support of the move or
purchase. McAngus went
on to say that 4.10 percent
interest .on a $575,000 loan
means $425.220.77 would
be paid in interest, technically
making
the
Millennium building ' $1
million
structure.
Councilwoman Ruth Spaun
called the building a "glorified pole barn."

McAngus also voiced
concerns about a long-term
agreement with the commercial tenant, saying if the
tenant went out of business
the village would have a 30year loan payment to meet
without income from rent to
pay for it.
Though Mayor John
Musser was not at the meeting. Stewart and Clerk
Treasurer Kathy Hysell said
at this point no loan agree-

ment had been signed with
Farmers Bank. Stewart also
said to his knowledge there
has been no official agreements or documents signed
with the CIC or the poten-.
tial commercial tenant.
Hysell said no actual
remodeling work has begun
on the Millennium building
at this point.
All members of council
were present for last night's
meeting.

Outsource from Page At
$137,846.25, but the village
paid RITA only $3,269,
resulting in a $40,000
increase in revenue for village operations.
According to the report
discussed Monday, the village has already collected
$187 ,504 through RITA so
far in 2009. and paid just
over $5,000 to RITA,
resulting in revenue, so far
this year, with revenue of
$182,401 once the bills

are paid. Council Member
Jean Craig, who supported
the change over the objections of some other council members serving at the
time, said the two-year
comparison is proof the
change was a good one·.
She also gave credit to the
late Ferman Moore, who
served as finance committee chairman until his
death and strongly promoted RITA as a cost-sav-

ing measure for the village.
Council also:
•
Excused
Council
Member Sandy Brown from
the meeting.
• Approved monthly
reports from the public
works, finance, refuse and
income tax depaxtments.
• Accepted the mayor's
report of fines and fees collected in July. in the amount
of $14,438.

• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$24.042.04.
• Approved purchase of a
new photocopier.
• Set a special meeting for
7 p.m .. Sept. 1 to award bids
for planned public works
improvement projects.
Present were members of
council, President Rae
Moore. Jean Craig. Julia
Houston, Craig Wehrung
and Shawn Rice.
:•

AMP from Page Al
Municipal Power is tapping
the incredible Ohio River to
produce green, renewable and
sustainable energy, giving us
hope that economic success
and national security will be
ours for some time to come.
With this new run-of-theriver hydroelectric project
at Cannelton Locks and
Dam - and pending projects at the Captain Anthony
Meldahl Dam in Bracken
County
and
at
the
Smithland Locks and Dam
in Livingston County AMP is showing itself as a
leader in the energy production of the future. This is
green and clean energy,
with no emissions, and because the dam is already

here - little additional
impact on the environment.
And it's energy that will
provide some stability to the
power grid in Kentucky. not
to mention help us begin to
reduce our dependency on
foreign sources."
Gerken added: "This
ambitious project is the
largest deployment of new
run-of-the-river hydro in the
country. It will bring more
than 350 megawatts of new.
renewable generation into
the region and will help
make the Ohio River Valley
a showcase for alternative
energy sources. This project
is very important to our
members, but the benefits of
this project do not end with

the participating member
communities. This project
and the four others under
development are bringing
jobs and economic development to the region. It takes
time and patience to develop these projects, but most
importantly it requires a
sophisticated Board and
membership and we are fortunate to have both.''
The $4 I 6 million project
will employ 200-400 construction workers and nine12 permanent operators
once on-line. Seventy-nine
AMP member communities
in five states are participating in the project.
The
Cannelton
Hydroelectric Project is

scheduled to begin commercial operation in 2013. The
other hydro projects the :
organization is developing
are located at the Smithland,
Meldahl. RC Byrd and
Willow Island dams.

A&lt;Jam McDaniel
&amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

~\1:3
Ptnonaliztd Purttral Strvict&gt;

•
.,.

Middleport
992-SI.tJ

Pomero)

992-5444

·~'ll.andersomncdanitl.com

�I

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 11,

2009

Police divers Hod man's bodV in plane wreckage dry
TVA plans
coal

HOBOKEN, N.J. (AP)
- Hudson River d1vers on
Monday found the wreckage of a s~al~ plan&lt;? ~nd
one of tWO VICtimS mlSSlllg
following a midair collisio!! with . a si~htseeing
hehcopter that ktlled nine
people.
The wreckage of the single-engine Piper was found
in about 60 feet of water in
the middle of the river.
indicating it had drifted
from the spot where it
crashed, closer to New
Jersey's riverba.n k, said the
New
York
Police
Department's
top
spokesman, Paul Browne.
It was found on its side
with no wings visible.
NYPD divers couldn't
remove the man ·s body
from the aircraft wreckage.
The Army Corps of
Engineers was being consulted about trying to pull
the plane to the surface of
the river, which is less than
three-quarters of a mile
wide at the crash site
between New York and
New Jersey. The mangled
helicopter was raised from
the river Sunday.
Nine people - two men
and a boy from a
Pennsylvania family on the
plane and five Italian
tourists and a pilot on the
helicopter
died in
Saturday's collision, which
occurred in a congested flyway popular with sightseers. Before Monday afternoon, seven bodies had
been recovered.
At an afternoon briefing,
National
Transportation
Safety Board chief Debbie
Hersman said an eight-day
NTSB survey of the river
corridor before the collision
had counted about 225 airtraft flying within a 3-mile
radius of the collision site
each day.
The airspace where many
of these tour craft fly is
below 1,100 feet, where
pilots are largely free to
choose their own routes,
radioing their positions
periodically but not communicating regularly with
air traffic controllers.
Hersman said air traffic

-

•

,

,.

/

ash storage
..C:
}} •
1 or a Sl

KNOXVILLE.
Te
(AP) - The Tennessee
Valley Authority is preparing to convert all of its coal
waste and gypsum operations to dry storage in the
wake of a massive ash spill
from a retention pond last
year in Tennessee, a TVA
official said Monday.
The nation's largest public
utility has hired three consulting firms to help with the
change in response to more
congressional scrutiny and
expected tougher regulation
of coal ash because of the
TVA disaster.
"We have developed a
pretty comprehensive plan,"
said John Kammeyer, TVA
vice president for coal combustion products. "It is a big
deal. It is a big effort.''
TVA has 26 ash and gypsum impoundments at seven
coal-fired power plants, ·
AP photo
including the Kingston ·
The wreckage of a helicopter that was hit by an airplane and crashed in the Hudson River is repositioned by a crane on
Fossil Plant, where 5.4 m.
a pier in Hoboken, NJ, Monday. Divers hope to pull a plane out of the Hudson River on Monday, but their first priority is lion cubic yards of toxi
to recover the bodies of remaining victims of the air collision that killed nine people, a chief investigator said.
laden ash breached an earthen dike and swept into the :
controllers at Teterboro diving operations Monday still in New York, including ple manslaughter and caus- Emory River and a lakeside ·
(N.J.) Airport told the pilot evening and were to return cousins and uncles, waiting ing a disaster does not name community Dec. 22.
to travel back with the bod- any suspects.
of the small plane to switch to the water Tuesday.
Under a TVA staff proposradio frequencies so conThe NTSB's Hersman al, the agency's six wet-ash
All seven victims recov- ies. A group of 10 tourists
trollers at Newark (N.J.) ered have been positively traveled from Italy, two to said on NBC's ''Today" plants in Tennessee, Alabama
Airport could communi- identified through dental celebrate a 25th wedding show that investigators will and Kentucky would be coneventually examine the air- verted to dry ash operations
cate with him but Newark records and fingerprints, anniversary.
controllers never made the New York medical
"They are destroyed by crafts' structural integrity within eight years. Four of :
and will try to determine these plants, plus a fifth plant ·
contact. She said a examiner's office said. pain," Castellaneta said.
Teterboro controller asked Autopsies
completed
Other members of the how the initial impact in Tennessee, also have wet- ·
the plane pilot if he wanted Monday found they died tourist group had gone on a occurred. She declined to gypsum operations that will
to go down the river or from blunt-impact injuries. helicopter ride a day before speculate about the cause of be converted as well.
southwest.
Italian
Ambassador the crash and had planned to the crash, whose investigaSeveral thousand gallons ,
When the Piper pilot' Giovanni Castellaneta said go again, he said.
tion is expected to take spilled from a gypsum pond ·
answered, "Either," the con- he had met with the medical
"'They told me that the months.
in Alabama two weeks after .
Witnesses said the small the Kingston ash spill.
troller told him to '"Let me examiner in New York and day before, they had · the
with relatives of the five tour on New York City and plane approached the heliknow."
"We are going to go dry '
''OK, tell you what," pilot Italian victims.
were very happy about the copter, which had just taken with all of our fly ash and
Steven Altman answered,
"Today the relatives were tour." Castellaneta said. off from Manhattan's West we are going to de-water our
"I'll take down the river."
asking me, 'How it can be "And they had booked Side for a 12-minute tour, gypsum and make it more
The
divers Monday that a holiday in New York another tour. but of course from behind and clipped it marketable,"
Kammeyer
fought cutTents exceeding 3 can
become
such
a that was canceled.''
with a wing. Hersman said said. "If we can't sell it, we
knots. Silt reduced visibility tragedy?'" Castellaneta said
Prosecutors in Bologna, the helicopter was gaining will dry stack it.''
to less than 6 inches in some in Italian. He promised to Italy, on Monday opened a altitude when the two hit.
The Chattanooga Times
places on the river bottom find out and said, ''We routine investigatiOn into Both aircraft split and fell Free Press was first to rep011
and was never better than a intend
to
keep
that the crash after receiving a into the river, scattering that a recommendation .
foot, said New Jersey State promise."
complaint from Codacons, debris and sending week- convert from wet-ash wo
About a half-dozen rela- an Italian consumers' enders enjoying the beauti- be made to the TVA Boar
Police Lt. Albert Ponenti.
Police suspended their tives of the Italians were group. The probe for multi- ful day running for cover.
of Directors on Aug. 20.

HAVE YOU BEEN LED DOWN
THE YELLOW PAGE ROAD?

,.?
?•

•-

•

'

SEPARATE FACT FROM FICTION!
FICTION: The Yellow Page directories are read regularly by a large audience.

FICTION: Yellow Page directory advertising is creative. active advertising.

FACT: The Yellow Pages is a highly passive advertising medium. In the homes and

FACT: Jt's hard to be creative when you have to limit your message. Harder still when you

businesses throughout your area, the Yellow Pages directory remains closed more than 99%
of the time. Because the Yellow Pages is read and used so seldom, your display advertising
becomes ineffective.

realize you can only change that message once a year. Yellow Page advertising by necessity is
stagnant. passive advertising. Your products change. Your services offered change. Your ptices
change. Your customers change. So should your advertising!

FICTION: All your customers will use the Yellow Pages.

FICTION: Your ad should be as large as your competitors.

FACT: Referral or repeat customers already know you, or have you in mind. What they

FACT: The size of your ad is not as important as the content. Here's where you can \Vork

probably need is your phone number or locations. And that doesn't require an ad in the
Yellow Pages. The white pages are much more convenient as an easy reference. Did you
know the white pages are used 8 times more frequently than the Yellow Pages?

smart and save your valuable advertising dollars. Your ad in a directory should be large
enough to get across a quick, simple message. Buy the space you need. not the space your
competitor buys. You'll have cost efficient Yellov. Page advertising.

FICTION: Yellow Page directories create brand awareness.

FICTION: It's best to have your ad at the beginning of a classification in the Yellow Pages.

FACT: Brand awareness or store image are an important part of your advertising plan. The

FACT: Yellow Pages are designed with bid ads at the head of the classification and small ads
last. Have you been told to get to the head of the list by buying the biggest ad? Biggest isn't
always be!;!! See for yourself. Pick up the phone book and find your ad. Nine times out of ten,
you start at the back of the directory and flip pages toward the front. Most of the time the first
ads you see in a cla\~ification are the small ads.

key to success for you is repetition and exposure, something the Yellow Pages cannot
provide. If the Yellow Pages built bralld awareness, you would see large ads from major
manufacturers, like Coca Cola or Sealy mattress, in the Yellow Pages. But you don't because
the YeiJow Pages are meant to be a directory and are not at all effective in creating brand
awareness or promoting the image of your business.

FICTION: Display advertising is necessary and effective in a Yellow Pages directory.
FICTION: Yellow Page directories sell products.
FACT: Yellow Pages are not designed to sell. You're not allowed to advertise the prices of
your products or services. You're not allowed to tell the reader why you should be chosen
over your competitor. The Yellow Pages are just a reference tool, a directory. How can your
display advertising work the best for you if you're not able to provide the information needed
for a potential customer to make a decision between competing products or &lt;&gt;en ices?

FACT: Dt~play advertising is completely out of context in a directory. People use a directory
to find information about where a product or service is sold. Even after they've found your
store's name and phone number, they'll probably continue to look _through other listing. A
large display ad is unnecessary and does not provide the best return on your advertising
dollars.

TAKE ANOTHER LOOK AT YOUR YELLOW PAGE ADVERTISING
We can help you save money on your Yellow Pages bill and convert those wasted dollars into timely, effective newspaper advertising
Call us today!

THE DAILY SENTINEl. (740)' 992-2155
'

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Titans down Bills in II OF game, Page 82
Big Ten football prc,icw, Page 86

·MAC_ football previc\\. Page 86

Thesday,August 11, 2009

·Maloney ~aintains lead in
Riverside Senior Golf League
STAFF REPORT
MDSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL COM

MASON - Jack Maloney
of Gallipolis. Ohio continues to maintain his lead in
the Riverside Senior Golf
League . .\1aloney, who has
racked up a total of 83 points
for the second half of the
season, leads Bob Stewart of
Cottageville by three points.
In tie for third place are
Mick Winebrenner (Racine)
and
Haske!
Jones
(Charleston) with 79 points
each for Riverside's second
half of play.
Last week's rain didn't
hold back the 79 players
who carne out to golf. forming 19 four-player teams and
one team of three. allowing
for 20 possible points for the
winning squad.
T he day's low score was
57 (-13 under par). and was
accomplished by the team of
Steve Safford (Pt. Pleasant).

APphoto
•

Louis Cardinals' Albert Pujols connects for a single in
the seventh inning against the Cincinnati Reds in a basecall game on Monday in St. Louis .•

Lohse, Cards beat Reds
· ST. LOUIS (AP) - K vle
Lohse won for the tirst tirne
since injuring his forearm
more than 2 1/2 months ago.
workinu
six
effective
innings.. in the St. Louis
Cardinals· 4-1 victor) over
the Cincinnati Reds on
Monday night.
Colby Rasmus drew a
bases-loaded walk in the
fifth off Kip Wells (0-3) for
the go-ahead run and Matt
Holliday, Khalil Greene and
Brendan Ryan hit balls off
the wall in a two-run sixth.
The NL Central leaders have
won four in a row. and at 6351 are a season-high 12
games above .500.
Reds starter Johnny Cueto
·
his left hip running
grounder in the top of
ird and was removed
tro n the game. A team
spokesman said Cueto. '"ho
allowed a run in two

innings. will be evaluated
Tuesday.
Lohse (5-7) won for the
tirst time in six starts since
coming off the 15-day disabled list on July 12, limiting the Reds to a run on four
hits. He walked none in a
start that qualified for a victory for the first time since
being struck on the arm
while squaring to bunt by
Royals reliever Ron Mahay
on May 23.
A 15 game winner last
year. Lohse had been 0-3
with a 5.84 ERA since coming off the DL. He lost two
previous starts this season to
the Reds. for whom he
pitched in 2006 and 2007.
Blake
Hawksworth
allowed a hit in two innings
and Ryan Franklin finished
for his 27th save in 29

Please see Reds, Bl

Buford Brown (Athens.
O H).
Jim
Mitchell
(Gallipolis. OH), and Jones.
The second place score of
60 (-I 0 under par) was made
b) the teams of Howard Lee
Miller (Pt. Pleasant). Phil
Burton (~1ason). and Ralph
Sayre (;-.;ew Haven).
Finishing third for the day
\\ ith a score of 61 (-9 under
par) was the team of Tom
Dotson (Pt. Pleasant). Chet
Thomas (Patriot, OH). Paul
Somerville (Pt. Pleasant).
and Stewart.
The closest to the pin winners were Paul Somerville
on the fourteenth hole with
the
ninth
hole being
clmched by Carl Cline with
a hole in one. It was the first
hole in one of Cline's career.
Cline used a pitching wedge
on the 114 yard shot and was
witnessed by Rick Ash of
Syracuse, Bob Hysell of
Pomeroy. and Jack Maloney
of Gallipolis.

Riverside Senior
Mens standings
Jack Malon'ly

83

Bob Stewart
MICk Wlnebren c·
Haskel Jones
Ralph Say·e
Paul Somervll o
CurtiS Grubb

80
79
79

69
68 5
66
64 5
64
63 5
61
61
60
59 5
58 5

Frank BrOW1

Bob Ol.ver
Ed Debalskl
Carl Stone
Bob Humptrey
John Tl'lol'lpson
M1tch Mace
W1lhs Ducld ng
J1mGress
Bub Suvcrs
Bill Slrickhn
Elmer Chel&lt;
Bob Hill
R•ch Mabe
Tom F1sher
Earl Johnson
Chuck Stanley
Toad Phalir
Jerry Arnold
Gerald Kellv
Russ Holland
Kenny Greene
Charlie Hargraves
Butch Bookman
Cecil Minton
Claude Pro'fltt
Jack Ochehree
Don Corbin

:)7
57
'56 '5

56.5
55.5

55
53 5
53

DAYS

52.5
52.5

51 5
51.5
51.5

48.5
47.5

SPORTS BRIEFS

47
46.5
46

BBAadult
softball tourney

45 5
45.5

Ohio State Preview
1
1

1

BIDWELL- The Bidwell
Ba&lt;;;eball Association will be
holding an adult softball tournament on August 15th,
2009. Fee will beSilO.
Proceeds will benefit youth
ball association of Bidwell~
Contact Terry Mav 388-8293
or Rob Eddy 388-0039. Limit
eight teams.

Rio Grande to
host 4th annual
hoops academy
RIO GRANDE - Come
join the fun while learning
basketball fundamentals and
teamwork at the Rio Fall
Basketball
Academy
(RFBA) with the University
of Rio Grande men's and
women ·s basketball proorams
:;, This league feature-. boys
and girls in two divisions a senior division \\ ith regulation baskets (10 feet) for
AP photo
players in ~rades 6-8 and a
In this Saturday, April 25 file photo, Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor (2) runs away JUnior divisiOn with nine foot
from Doug Worthington, right, during the first half of the Scarlet and Gray college football baskets for players in grades
game, in Columbus. Ohio State and Penn State lead the Big Ten pack.
3-5. The league offers
instruction in team concepts
and a controlled game
atmosphere.
The teams were coached
COLUMBUS (AP)
most of the lines and several clash at Ohio Stadium with by members of the men's and
Ohio State being the presea- other key figures are also Southern Cal'ifornia. a team women's basketball teams.
that trashed the Buckeyes
son pick to win the Big Ten back in the .fold.
The cost is $50 per player
for the tifth year in a row
But this is a different 35-3 last year in L.A.
and can be mailed to the bas"We most certainly have ketball office in advance or
may not have much to do group in scarlet and gray
with anyonl! currently on the than the one that went I0-3 to mature quickly because paid at orientation. The
last year and won seyen of our September is an extraor- academy will sell out and
roster.
"The reason '"hY we're eight Big Ten games. Gone dmar) one," 5aid 'I rcssel. space 1'&gt; e\.tremely limited.
~ No. I is because of A.J. are 28 members of the senior 83-19 through etght seasons
Please mail your entries to:
Hawk. Troy Smith, James class. not to mention three with the Buckeyes.
Rio
Fall
Basketball
The season may rest large- Academy. 218 North College
Laurinaitis - guys who set juniors who jumped to the
that foundation and made pros ahead of time. There h on the shoulders of Prvor. AYenue. Rio Grande. O H
sure Ohio State is as promi- are numerous unproven and rated 'the top quarterback 45674.
nent as it is for the last few maybe
unknown
new recnut in the nation a year
For more infonnation conyears," defensive lineman stal1ers.
ago. He started nine games tact men ·s head basketball
Doug Worthington said,
"This is something that (not counting the Fiesta coach Ken French at (740)
ret~rring to stalwarts during we've got to keep it~going Bowl loss to Texas, where
245-7294 or by e.-mail at basthe four-year run of titles.
and keep our legacy going." he came out for the first play ketball@rio.edu or women's
at wide rcceiH~r). winning head basketball coach David
Sure. the Buckeyes have Worthington said.
talent. Everyone compares
No ~onder coach Jim eight.
Smalley at (740) 245-7491
quarterback Terrellc Pryor to Tressel is more than a little
or
by
e-mail
at
Please see OSU, Bl
a young Vince Young and concerned about the Sept. 12
dsmalley@rio.edu

Plentv of new names, faces for osu

AP photo

Tony Stewart celebrates winning the NASCAR Sprin't Cup
Series' Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen auto
race in Watkins Glen, N.Y., on Monday.

Stewart wins at Watkins Glen
• WATKINS GLE:-.1, ~.Y.
CAP) - Smoke loves it
when it gets slick.
Tony Stewart won the
r.ain-delayed
NASCAR
Sprint Cup race at Watkin~
Olen International on a
my Monday, holding off
tralian Marcos Ambrose
o r the final 25 laps for his
E:up-rccord f'ifth victory at
the famed road course.
: It was Stewart's third win
i'n his first season as an
owner-driver and the :-.eventh road course win of his
career. second to Jeff
Gordon's NASCAR-record
nine. Stewart has seven con-·
secutive top·t\\O finishes at
The Glen. also winning in
2002. 2004. 2005, and 2007

l

•

and finishing second in 2006
and 2008. He also has finished first or second in eight
of the past ll road races; he
was :-.econd to Kasev Kahne
at Sonoma in June. ·
The race originally was
scheduled for Sunday. but a
string of thunderstorms
forced it to be postponed
until Monday. Last week's
race at Pocono also was
postponed
to
Monday
because of rain.
Ambrose was second. a
career best. and Carl
Edwards third. Kyle Busch.
Greg Biffle. Juan Pablo
Montoya. Kurt Busch. Max
Papis, Clint Bowyer and

Please see Stewa rt. 82

You can now pay your bill online at:
l

•

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive • Point Pleasanl, WV . (30-1) 675-43-10

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Page B2 • 'The Daily Sentinel

pra~ecky honored on 20th

·anniversary of comeback
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
- Twenty years after his
-comeback from cancer, Dave
Dravecky once again got a
'Standing ovation as he
walked onto the field in a San
Francisco Giants jersey and
threw a pitch.
Only this time. the pitch
was ceremonial and thrown
:With his right atm, instead of
1he left - which was ampu' tated two years after a memorable day.
Dravecky was honored
Mo~day night on the 20th
anmversary of his comeback,
throwing out the first pitch
.for former teammate Wi.ll
~Clark before the Giants took
·on the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Dravecky pitched eight
innings to beat Cincinnati in
his comeback game on Aug.
l 0. 1989. 10 months after
pave surgery to remove a
.malignant' growth from his
~itching ann. The memory of
the game still gives chills to
those
who
were
at
Candlestick Park that day.
. 'The game was amazing,"
Dravecky said. "You never
expect what happened. You
can't anticipate those types of
-things. As far as the game

"

Reds
from PageBl
chances.
Wells replaced Cueto and
retired the first seven batters
in order in his first appear$tnce in 10 days since being
recalled from Triple-A
Louisville. and first in the
majors since June 23 with
the Nationals. Then he lost
the plate with three walks in
the fifth, the last with the
bases loaded to the freeswinging rookie Rasmus, to
:put the Cardinals ahead 2-1 .
Albert Pujols, who has an
NL record-tying five grand
slams this season. failed to
capitalize on his latest
"(;hance with a routine flyout
against Jared Burton to end
the inning. Pujols is 8 for 11
with the bases loaded with
five homers and 27 RBis.
Reds center fielder Willy
Taveras slammed face-first

osu
from PageBl
True to form, Pryor
showed some jaw-dropping
-speed and moves in the
open field while rushing for
631 yards and six TDs.
Linemen caught air as much
as they caught him. But he
also showed a nagging
inconsistency to complete
passes beyond 10 or 15
. yards. even though he hit on
'61 percent of his passes for
12 TDs with only four interceptions.
He lashed out at reporters
after the intrasquad sctimmage in the spring.
"I just hear the media in
Ohio, or whoever, saying
that I couldn't throw the
ball as good," he said. "But
you saw it today. The world
saw it today. I can throw the
ball. I'm a quarterback that
can run. That's how we're
doing it."
So much depends on
Prvor because so many of
Ohio State's skill players
have departed. Four of the
top six rushers (including
leader Chris Wells with
1, 197 yards), the top two
... receivers (Brian Robiskie
· with 42 catches, Brian
Hartline with 21) and the
top three scorers are gone.
Dan Herron (439 yards)
and Brandon Saine will try
to replace Wells, much like
they did the first part of last
· season when Wells was out
with a foot injury. A prized
recruit, Jaamal Berry from
Miami (Fla.) Palmetto will
likely also vie for time
despite a June arrest in
Florida on a misdemeanor
drug possession charge.
· Out wide the candidates
include DeVier Posey,
Tam·ian Washington, Dane
Sanzenbacher and Ray
Small, with Jake Ballard
taking over for Rory Nicol
· at tight end. Two linemen
moved on, but Justin Boren
(a transfer from Michigan)
and Mike Adams, who saw
time last year as a freshman,
should move right in.
The defense is mostly in
place, but is lackmg the
biggest names from a unit

was concerned, going out
there and the standing ovations. When I went into the
bullpen people stmted standing and cheering."
Five days later at Montreal.
Dravecky's surgery-weakened upper left arm snapped
as he threw a pitch, and he
fell to the mound in pain.
Two months later, it broke
a&amp;ain during a celebration
atter the Giants' playoffclinching game agamst the
Chicago Cubs.
Dravecky never pitched
again. After additional surgeries and radiation treatments, Dravecky's left arm
was amputated in 1991. He
said he has no regrets about
making the comeback.
Dravecky. who had a 64-57
lifetime record in the major
leagues, lives in Colorado.
where
he
runs
Dave
Dravecky's Outreach Of
Hope, an organization devoted to encouraging cancer
patients and amputees. He
delivers more than 20 motivational speeches a year,
telling the story of his comeback and subsequent setback.
He said he still loves retelling
the events from 20 years ago.
into the wall chasing
Holliday's line-drive triple
leading off the sixth, staying in the game after receiving medical attention. RBI
doubles by Greene and
Ryan off the wall in left and
left-center
gave
the
Cardinals a 4-1 lead.
NOTES: Joey Jocketty,
son of Reds GM Walt
Jocketty, was drafted in the
47th round by the Cubs but
is set to enroll at Miami of
Ohio later this month and
walk on with the baseball
team. ... The Reds have
allowed 97 first-inning
runs, most in the majors ....
Wells threw 27 pitches in
the fifth, only nine of them
strikes. ... Pujols booted
Joey Votto 's grounder in the
sixth for his ninth en·or at
I B, his highest total since
he had 14 in 2005. ...
Greene has an RBI in three
straight games. .. . Lohse is
5-3 with a 2.81 ERA at
home and 0-4 with a 6.69
ERA on the road.
that held eight teams to 14
or fewer points. Former
Butkus and Nagurski winner Laurinaitis, the Big
Ten's defensive player of
the year the past two seasons, was a second-round
pick of the St. Louis Rams.
Thorpe Award
winner
Malcolm Jenkins is also in
the NFL, vacating a comerback spot. Starting linebacker Marcus Freeman
and
lineman
Nader
Abdallah also turned pro.
Thaddeus
Gibson,
Cameron Heyward, Dexter
Larimore and Worthington
make for a stolid front four,
with Austin Spitler stepping
into the middle linebacker
pos1t10n after watching
Laurinaitis for the past three
years. Andre Amos is likely
to replace Jenkins.
•
Even though there are
plenty of experienced subs
waiting to take over, count
on quite a few fresh faces
getting minutes.
''I actually have to study
some of these freshmen's
names," Worthington said.
"I remember when I first
came here, I was 'OK,
what's your name? What's
your name?' And I knew
them all. Now, I'm like
'uh.' It's kind of funny
because I'm a fifth-year and
these guys were like freshmen and eighth grade when
I was a going into college."
Some of the rookies have
asked to see Worthington's
tattoos - the 2009 equivalent of team bonding.
Tressel was among six
college coaches who visited
U.S. service personnel in
the Middle East on a
morale-boosting tour this
summer. It ended up meaning just as much to the
coaches.
"Any time you gain experiences that sharpen your
perspective of just how fortunate you are, you'd like to
think that would enhance
your future performance,"
he said. ''I'd like to think
that a more grateful coach
will be a better coach."
And there's nothing he
would be more grateful for
than a big year from Pryor
and a bunch of other
youngsters.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August 11,

2 009 ·

Collins shai-p as Titans beat Bills in HOF game
~erry

cANToN (AP&gt; _
Collins was sharp and Vince
Young tentative for the
Tennessee Titans in overshadowing Terrell Owens'
debut for the Buffalo Bills.
With a little trickery and a
solid performance by the
Collins-led statting offense,
Tennessee opened the preseason with a 21-18 win in the
Hall of Fame game on
Sunday night.
If this was the NFL's
throwback weekend to celebrate the 50th anniversary of
the founding of the American
Football League, then this
also resembled the Titans'
quarterback situation at the
beginning of last year. That's
when Young got off to a terrible start and lost his statting
job to Collins by Week 2.
Collins, already selected
the starter, quickly began
delivering on the faith the
Titans put in him after being
signed to a two-year $15 million contract this offseason.
He went 7-of-10 for 82
yards in producing two
touchdown drives, one
capped by reserve pul1ter A.J.
Trapasso's 40-yard run on a
perfectly executed fake punt
on the opening possession.
Collins was especially efficient in going 3 for 4 for 49
yards on third down.
"I thought we got off to a
good start," Collins said. ''We
executed our offense and
played fast out there."
The same couldn't be said
for Young, who took over at
the start of the second quarter. In his first three series,
Young was 1-of-5 for 13
yards and an interception,
nearly dropped a shotgun
snap and looked hesitant running the ball when he was
easily caught from behind by
rookie linebacker Nic Harris.
Young finally warmed up,
and showed great touch in
hitting Paul Williams for a 5yard touchdown pass to convert third-and-2 to put the
Titans up 21-3late in the second quarter. The No.3 selection in the 2006 draft still has

Stewart
from Page Bl
Denny Hamlin rounded out
the top I 0. Polesitter
Jimmie Johnson, seeking
his first career road win,
finished 12th.
Kyle Busch, 13th in
points, closed the gap on
12th-place Matt Kenseth for
the cutoff spot in the Chase
for the championship.
Busch, who entered the race
102 points behind Kenseth,
narrowed the gap to 58.
The chaos that everybody
was expecting on the double'-file restarts never materialized. There were no
major incidents in the hard,
downhill, 90-degree righthand first tum.
Ambrose started fourth
and ran up front early. But

AP photo

Tennessee Titans punter A.J. Trapasso runs the ball in for a touchdown against the Buffalo
Bills in the first quarter in the Hall of Fame football game at the Pro Football Hall of Fame
on Sunday in Canton.

drive, however, ended when
Edwards floated a pass
intended for Lee Evans at the
Titans' 7 and was easily
intercepted by Cortland
Finnegan.
"It's good to get the cobwebs out," Edwards said.
"(The rhythm) is just what
we are trying to find right
now.... We just can't turn the
ball over."
Owens was greeted by
chants of"T.O.! T.O.!" by the
partisan Buffalo crowd that
stayed an extra day after Bills
defensive end Bruce Smith
and team owner Ralph
Wilson were among six
inducted into the Hall.
Bills cornerback Reggie
Comer scored on a 26-yard
interception return off fourthstringer Alex Mortensen,
while kicker Ryan Lindell hit
all three field-goal attempts,
including a 52-yarder.
LenDale White scored on a
3-yard run on the Titans first-

stringers' only other selies,
capping an 11-play, 73-yard
dnve.
In honor of the AFL, the
Titans, who relocated from
Houston, wore Oilers' thro.
back uniforms. T he B
wore their throwback umforms, which feature the red
standing buffalo logo on their
helmets. And even the officials dressed for the occasion, wearing throwback
AFL red-and-white striped
shirts.
Tennessee players also
wore No. 9 decals on the
backs of their helmets in
honor of former quarterback
Steve McNair, who was shot
to death in a Nashville condominium by his girlfriend,
Sahel Kazemi, who then
killed herself on July 4. The
Titans will wear the decal for
the rest of the season.
The teams will meet again
in the regular season, at
Tennessee on Nov. 15.

pit strategy dropped him slammed head-on into it.
deep in the field midway spinning violently around
through the 90-Jap race. He into the Armco barrier linstayed out when the rest of ing the track.
the leaders pitted for the
Both Gordon and Hornish
first time and was running c limbed from their cars
22nd on lap 50 after making. uninjured. Also involved
his first stop. He ducked were Andy Lally, Jeff
into the pits on lap 55 for Burton and Joey Logano.
fuel and made up 10 secStewart cleared leader
onds on leader Kyle Busch. Kyle Busch on the restart on
A multicar crash involv- lap 67. Busch chose the outing Jeff Gordon and Sam side line as the leader and
Hornish Jr. on lap 63 Stewart took advantage,
brought out a 19-minute red getting past him on the first
flag stoppage and put tum and holding him off up
Ambrose back in the mix.
through the high-speed
Kasey Kahne precipitated esses.
the crash when he dived
Stewart needed every lap
inside of Harnish coming of caution he could get to
out of turn nine on the 11- make it to the end of the
curve track and sent 220.5- mile race, and the
Hornish into the grass on fifth caution helped. A yelthe left side. Horn ish's No. low flag came out on lap 71
77 Dodge caromed off a tire for debris, setting up anothbarrier and. back onto the er double-file restart, this
track, and Gordon's No. 24 time with Ambrose along-

side.
Ambrose dived low inside
to start lap 74, but Stewart
blocked him and maintai.
the lead, with Kyle Bu
and Edwards, who sta
33rd, in close pursuit.
Ambrose, running on
older tires, never mounted a
challenge as Stewart maintained a lead of more than a
second over the final I 0
laps.
"I threw everything I
could
at
him."
said
Ambrose, who won the
Nationwide
race
here
Saturday with a daring
move on Kyle Busch. "We
got stuck in the back of the
pack and had to make a
gamble. T he extra laps we
had on the tires hurt. I
closed in on him, could see
him make a few mistakes
but we couldn't quite close
the deal."

a long way to ~o to regain his
once-domiuatmg form. In
five series. Young went 5-of10 for 39 yards, and a 1-yard
run.
The Bills were sluggish
and looked nothing like the
better-prepared team. considering Buffalo opened training
camp two weeks ago - a
week ahead of the Titans.
The only offensive highlights were J?rovided by
Owens, who Signed a oneyear $6.5 million contract
with Buffalo in early March,
days after being released by
Dallas.
On the field for only one
series, Owens had two catches for 27 yards, including a
16-yarder on the second play
from scrimmage. Trent
Edwards hit Owens in perfect
stride on a slant, and the
receiver had the opportunity
to score if not for a perfect
tackle
by
cornerback
Cortland Finnegan. The

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�. Tuesday, August 11, 2009
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Trlb~entlnei-Regttller will be responsible for no more than tilt eoet or tilt epact occupied by the error and only the tlrat lnsertoon. We shall nol bo llablo for
any IOU or expenee the! results fr0111the p~bllc:aUon ot oml1810n of an adVtl1110mtnt Correction ..,Ill bo made lo the flrat •vallaDfo ed111on. ·Box numb41r aos
are always oontldentlll • Ct.l'reot rille card appllta • All reel tetato advertfeemtnte are eubjeello the Fadtrll Fair Housing Act o11~. • ThiS newepopcr

oceopta only help wanted ads meetlfll EOE stam~•dl. Wt will not knowlngl) t«&lt;!il any advertltlng in viOittlon of the law. Wlb nol be rlllj)OI'IIIbill lor ony
orrort In en ad taken over the phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

Where Can You
Find the Perfect Pet1

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must B
Reported on the firs
ay of publicatio
nd
the
Tribun
entinei·Register will
e responsible for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the error and onl
he first insertion. W
shall not be liable fo

orrections will
ade
in the firs
vailable edition.
Box number ads ar
lways confidential.
Current
pplies.
All
Real
Estat
dvertisements
ar
ubject to the Fodera
Fair Housing Act o
1968.
This
newspape
ccepts only help
anted ads meeting
EOE standards.
We
will
no
nowingly accept any
In
dvertisement
iolation of the law.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Annlversnry.................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
ces ......- ............................................... 300
nee Servlce ....................................... 302
Autonnotlve .................................................. 304
Building Matcrlals ....................................... 306
Busincss ...................................................... 308
Cnterlng........................................................ 310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors .................................................. 316
Domestics/Janltorla1 ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Flnancial .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servico ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Droma .................................... 336
Other Servlces ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcol ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces ................................. 342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Rooflng .........................................................346
Se'curity ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertalnmcnt ..................................352
Flnanclal.......................................................400
Financial Services....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal .....,_............................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock ......................................................615
Pets............................................................... 620
Want to buy .................................................. 625
rlculture ................................................... 700
Equipment .......................................... 705
rden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy .................................................. 725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antlques ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement. ......................................920
Colloctlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
EqulpmenVSupplles....................................935
Floa Markota ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kid's Comer.................................................960
Miscclloncoua..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale .....................................................975

v

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ...... _..................................................... 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
CamperiRVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1 035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
CommerciaVlndustrlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles ..................................2025
Sports. Utility..............................................2030
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condomlniums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercia1 ................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplles ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property .........................................5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... S025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employrrent...............................................6000
Accoun11ng/Financla1 ................................6002
Admlnistrative/Professlonal ..................... 6004
Cash ler/Clerk ............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 601 0
Construction ..................... ,........................ 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 6018
Employment Agencies .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................ 6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
ManagemenVSupervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
Part-Tlrre-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

il

200

Autos

Announcements
72

Dodge

Ct&gt;allenger

coupe, automatic,
8 cyl, 1nteno~ black. axle~0.

lost &amp; Found

nor yellow. nue: Clear
Gasoline atr cond1tlon·
ing,
emal:
eltzabpdar@gmatl.corr
P'lOoe· (5003) 213·3247

FOUND Gray male
Rodney
are
245-9460
Lost
Dog.
wrtte male
Boston Terner wearing • a
stnped cottar. Last seen
Monday n~ght at 7pm at
ShaKe
Jackson
Pike
Shoppe. If found call
John Sipple at 441·5161

99 Chevy Pnz!'n, 67 000
mnes, S3.000 OBO. Ca.1
see on August 14·16, Fn
thru Sun, 9·AM·7PII.1 ..at
551 Bunce Rd Good
runmng condttiOn.
Quality Cars, Trucks &amp;
SUV's
w1th
warranty
20·25 vehicles 1n stock.
Over 14 yrs in bus1ness.
Cook motors 328 Jack·
son Pike. 740·446·0103

Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
ommends that you do
business w1th people you
know. and NOT to send
money through the mail
,_mill yo1. have lnvestigat·
tng tre otfenng.

1ctures t at
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Parts &amp; Accessories
1971 Dodge 360 ong1ne
and transm•ss•on
$300
388·8788

Trucks
1979 Ford 4x4 sho1·bed.
auto. 460 cub.lnch eng
good
cond.
$4000.00
f•rrn 304-882·3570.
400

Want To Buy

Pels

Fmancial

bloocc&lt;l
,\ustra11an Absolute Top Dollar - sil·
pu~ 4 Black &amp; 4 ~le les. ver/gold
coins,
any
Jst shots b "'" old SI2S.OO 10K114KI18K gold 1ew·
each 3()4 675.7608
elry. dental gold. pre
1935
US
currency,
proof/mint
sets.
d1a·
monds, MTS Coin Shop.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
polis. 446. 2842
Form Equipment
Full

Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Divl·
sion of Financtal lnstitu·
tions Off1ce of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
Ol
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1·866·278·0003 to leam
if the mortgage broker or
lender IS property li·
censed. (Th•s 1s a public
service
announ&lt;:efT'ent
from the Oh10 Valley
Publishtng Company)

Would like reasonable
offers on 163 acres(less
m1neral rights) in Spring·
field
Township,
Gallia
County Ohio by September 15 as follows: 1)
Land Wlth limber.
2) Lal'd Wlth Timber rerroved.
3) Timber only.
4) Land Wlth timber and
500
Education
mtneral nghts
Fax acreage owner @
912-236·8782.
Business &amp; Trade
School

~;;;;;;;;==--~~~ ~~~~~~~~
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD . WAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS.
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999- VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW CARMICHAEL·
TRAILERS.COM
74()-446-3825

Yard Sole
2 Famtly Yard Sale at
34465 Bailey Run Rd.
Pomeroy·
nice
items
Tues 11th thru Thurs
'13th 9:00 ·3:00PM

1000

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We W1n!
1·888·582·3345

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallla
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans
Jackson.
OH
800·537·9528
Busy Bee Cleaning Will
Clean Homes &amp; Offtees.
Exportenoe.
references.
304·812 0809
or
304·675·2208

--=W=o;;;n;;;tT;;;o;;;B;;;u;iy=;;;;;;;
•
Want to buy Junk Cacs,
call740·388·0884
Real Estate
Sales,

3000

Commercial

Comm. Space 4 tease,
Prme
locabon,
busy,
higt)ly
vis ble,
dwntwn
Boots I Accessories
comer
1400-2000 sq It
24 ft. Pontoon coat. 5900 mo. 2 'llOnths free
50hp, N1ssan motor.troll· Rent. 740-709·1960
ing motor 2 yrs. old
Houses For Sole
$4900.00 304-638·1619.

Campers I RVs &amp;
16 1f2 horse Kabota, die·
Trailers
Gallipolis Career
sol belly mower, back
College
brade
$7 000,
2005
Sportsman bykz
(Careers Close To Home) 740·742·2498 anyt11T'O
N100 FaiT'tly of 4 looking
321/2' 1 pullout, queen
Call Today! 740·446·4367
for a rental home or mo·
bed never used 19,600.
1·800·214·0452
Have you pnced a John 388·0189, 208·8333
bile home Please Call
gallipol•seareercoUoge.edu
Deere lately? You'll be
740·709·0181
Aecredlled Member Aecre&lt;:fll·
surprised! Check out our RV
or&gt;g Couneol for lndeper&gt;Oent
used
inventory
at Servtce at Carmichael
Colleges and Schools 12749
www.CAREQ.com.
Car· Trailers
I
mtchael
Equipment 740·446·3825
300
Services
600
Animals
740·446·2412
RV ServiCe at Carm1·
Trailers
STIHL Sates &amp; Serv1ce chael
Uvestock
Home Improvements
Now Available at Carm•· 740.446·3825
Equipment
Reg. Black Angus bulls. chael
Motorcycles
Basement
18 mon. old good blood· 740-446·2412
Waterproofing
lines
$1000.00
&amp;up
1960 Tnumph PR6, 650
UnconditiOnal hfellr."e
304·675· 7608.
900
Merchandise chopper m good cond.
guarantee. Local refer·
org.
parts
$5000.00
Pels
ences tumished. Estab304·894-4248.
lished 1975 Can 24 Hrs.
Miscellaneous
AKC Boston Terner pups
740.446·0870. Rogers
2()().1 Honda sh-do" 150
ftrst
shots
&amp;
6
wk,
Ba~~enl Waterproofing.
Jet Aeration Motors
tnan) e.&gt;.uas
gamge kept
WOMled
$175
repaired, ~ew &amp; rebuilt sooo. mtks SJSOO. OBO
740.388-8743
In stock. Call Ron
J04-6?S. 7126
Other Services
AKC Yorkte puppies tails
docked. lirst shots &amp;
wormed.
Parents
on
premises. 2 males $600
each. 2 females $800
each 740·388·9121
or
740·388·1608

2005 fifth wheel two car
tra1ler,mstde
box
45'
long,
whtte,
excellent
cond1t1on, Wtth lhroe Side
doors.
electnc wench,
Price $9.500 call for
mformatton
more
(740)949·2217

Recreati_onal
Veh1cles

Wonted

Pot
Cremations.
Call
740-446·3 '45
~~=~~~~~
""
Professional Services

Utility Trailers

+· 46 acres w new 4 bed
21/2
bath
POSSI~te
owner finance 446-3570.

2 bed 1 bath S249
month. 740 -446_
3384
3 bed 2 batt&gt; new con·
struchon on •'· 5 acres
$525 month Owner '•·
ava1lable.
nance
740-446·3570
Ill'J)
Bed~
llaih
home,!Onl) 1&lt;19 .•unon ·~·t
d"n.l5 )~"'&gt;. at 8" for hs!
~00·62()..19.\fi (\ r46J.

3 Br.1B.t!IUD home,'Onl)
.!~S~amcn'5'td\'\D

Yi".i!t8&lt;i&lt;

I c;
,X0(\.62(1..49-16

C\

ROI9

80 Locust St Galhpo s 2

story Vtetonn hoMe 9
rooms. SBR
OBA, 5
f~replaoes, fenced 1:1 bak
Evans 1·800-537-9528 - - - - - - - - - - - - - yard. Reduced 5150.000
304-675-6363
2000
Automotive Call
16 112 hor~e Kabota, diO·
(June) or 740·441-1202
(Ktm\
sel, 175 hours, belly
IT'ower,
back
blade,
Autos
Mad1son Ave. Pt Pleas$7,000,
740·742·2498
ant, lrame rouse on 2
anyttme
95 Cl'lev.' Blazer L.... 4X4 lots, excellent locatton •or

$3000, 4 15 inch 6 Lug
CKC Min Pinscher pups Hot Tub Outlet, Top camper wheel &amp; 11res
tails
docked,
shots, Quality, Free Delivery, new •
cond.
S4oo.·
wormed
$300. Save 50%. Tiki Tubs.
5
645·683
740·388·8788
606;929-5655

2 future rentals. $14.000.
740·645·0938

.;.4...;BR;..;.2;..;.5~b.;;.a;.th-s-b-ig-fa·m~ity

room in the basement, 1
car garage &amp; I car port,
00 Chevy Monte Carlo big deck In the back. 22!1
Friendly female kttten, In·
Oak china cabinet, glass SS 76,000 mi. Red w/
side home. litter trained lop cablnel bottom .exc
Circle
Dr
Gatlipolls
blacK
lnler.
Loaded.
446·3897
SSOO oo
ftrm $5500, 304·675-8140 AI· 740.682·0802
cond.
LeGrande
Blvd
3BR
304·882·3570.
tor 6:00
Give away 2 femal 8 wk
bnck. rardwood floors,
old
pupp1es.
Wart To Buy
1999 Dodge ttuck 2 FA 2 full baths. central
Shelt101Biack Lab mtx.
wheel dnve. V6, stan- atr 10X14 metal butd740.446·8567
NEED CASH
d::'d, $2600 QBO. 2001 IOQ 5 nuns t•om town,
Neon
automatic $89.000 740.709·1858
Adorable Gor.nan Shep. Bargtn ToJls SR 554 4Dr
pups for sale, 4M·4F Buytng all kinds of lools $2100 QBO 2003 4Dr House lor sale Crew
$400.00
AKC
Pomeroy $89,000,
papers bus.· 388·8915, home· Neon automatiC S3000 Rd.
388·1515 cell-794-1188
OBO. 25&amp;1233
740.992-3549
304-882-3781.

�~age

~

--

-

-

~

-

-

-

-

~

.

.

.

_

,

___,...._______

,_

--

if"*"'!

84 • The Daily Sentinel

3br ,2ba ..Lr,den,
Dr.kitchen w/ breakfast
nook,&amp;
laundry
room
new carpet through-out
on 1/2 acre lot, Sandhill
Ad
304-675-1280
I
304-675-1762.

Apartments/
Townhouses

Manufactu~ed

4000

DON'T MISS

RANDY HOUSER

Rt. 62 North Point Pleasant, WV

304-675-5463

Public Notice

For Sale, 2BA, DR, Oak
Custom kitchen cab1nets,
2 car garage. full basement, extra lot. Priced to
sell. Camp Conley, Pt.
Pl.,
WV.
Call
304·675-6495
or
740-388·8751 to view.
-------Real Estate
3500
Rentals

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
~The Village of Middleport will accept
~ealed bids for a contract for the

~onstruction of a "Salt Storage

Facility". The project consists of a
poured concrete floor with HDPE
liner under concrete base. floor 6"
~eep, walls I0" thick. 3 Walls 8 ft.
lligh, inside walls smooth, plastic
water stop between tloor &amp; walls +
bonding agent between. Submit
sketch of rebar placement (floor &amp;
walls) for approval before bid. No
drains, 2" slope. More information
f\nd specs can be obtained by calling
:740-992-3037. Sealed bids should be
sent to 237 Race Street, Middleport,
OH 45760 and the deadline for bids is
August 31, 2009 at l pm. Contract
will be awarded on Sept. 14, 2009.
The Village has the right to accept or
reject any or all bids.

Tuesda~August11,2009

MOVE IN READY Completely furnished 2BR, all
appliances,
TV,stereo
sys, linens &amp; complete
kitchen ware $700/mo +
elec $500/dep. 446-9585

Help Wanted- General

Housmg

$$Need to fill 50
open po~itlons $$

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Rentals
;;;;;;======~

2 br in Gall. ferry wv
104-675-4100
or
740-973-8999

Two 2 bedroom apartments
in
Pomeroy,
740-949-2311
ask
for
DonAld

MASON
COUNTY FAIR

....

www.mydailysentinel.com
Houses For Sale

Wednesday, Aug. 12th
9:00pm

44f==tt"""":

Apartments/
Townhouses
J br.ground-level &amp;2 br Apt.
near d\\ ntwn Pt. Pleasant
util. pd. HUD accpt.No pets

cal!304-360-0163.

-------1 and 2 bedroom apts.,
fumished
and
unfurnished, and houses in
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required,
no pets. 740-992-2218
2br aptoRodney area. No
pets.
ep/Aef required.
740-446-1271
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoizer Hospital on SA 160
CIA. (740) 441-0194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
.&amp;
AFFORDABLE! Townhouse apartments,
and/or
small
houses Ior rent. ' CaII
740.441-1111 for application &amp; information.
Free Rent Special !I!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup,
tenant
pays
electric. EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Twin Rivers Tower is accepting applications for
waiting list for HUD subsidized, 1-BA apartment
for the elderly/disabled,
call 675·6679

®
-

Addison Area 2Br on private lot $550/mo +
$550/dep. Porter Area
3BR
on
private
lot
$600/mo + $600/dep.
Beautiful Apts. at Jack· 367-0654 or 645-3592
son Estates. 52 Westwood Dr.. from $365 to •3B_A_2_b_a-th-1-4x_8_0_$4_7_5
740-446-2568 · rent $475 deposit. Bulav$560·
Equal Housing Opport\J- ille Pike. 740-367-7762
nity. This institution is an
Equal Opportunity Pro3BA mobile home. DeVIder and Employer.
posit,
references,
no
Gracious Living 1 and 2 pets. 339-0034 4PM to
Bedroom Apts. at Village 8PM
Manor
and
Riverside - - - - - - - Apts. 1n Middleport. from 3 B/room trailer, HUD,
electric,
$327
to
$592. total
740-992-5064.
Equal (740)742-2714
Housing Opportunity.
Sales
Island View Motel has ;;;;;;======~
vacancies
$35.00/Night. Mobile home, 14X70 3
740-446..()406
bedroom, 1 bath, living
room, eat in kitchen. Can
Jordan Landing Apart- see at 551 Bunce Ad on
August
14-16,
Friday
ments
Sunay
2,3,4, br. available, all thru
Asking
electric, no pets call for 9:00AM-7:00PM.
$5000080
details 304-674-0023 or
304·610·0776
_ BR,
- - - - - CountryBA living- 3 5 rty
Nice- Ibr. Appliances. fur- 2-3
on 1 prope
·
nished. $375 + deposit. near. M
11
1 E
PPHS
304-675-3100
or
any oor Pans. asy
304-675 •55 09
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
today!
·s-pa-c-io-us___
se_c_on_d/
_t-hi-rd 866-215-5774
II
oor
apt.
overlooking
Gallipolis City Park and 14X70 2 bedroom very
River. L.A. den. lrg. good condition. $7500.
Kitchen-dining area with 645-2353
all new appliances &amp;
cupboards, 3 BA, 2 78
Elcona 14x70 635
baths,
laundry
area. Paxton, Gallipolis good
$900 per month. Call shape you move.$7200
446-2325 or 446-4425
080
740·645·1646
...----~--- 740_446 _2515
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 28R, 1_5 - - - - - - - bath, back patio, pool,
The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
playground, (trash, sewFinancing- New 2010
age, water pd.)No pets
Doublewide $37,989
450
allowed.
$ /rent,
Ask about $8,000 Re450
$ /sec.
dep.
Call
bates
740 645 8599
~
~~·~~-!!i;~~~~~= mymidwesthome.com
Commercial
740-828-2750
Office/
Warehouse/Storage
Great Location 749 Third
Ave., Gallipolis!
$399/month for 1800
sqft. Build-out negotiable
Call Wayne
404-456-3802

'The Proctorville
Difference"
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167
6000

Houses For Rent

In this troubled economy.
it is reassuring to know
that lnfoCision can offer
YOU a stable areer AND
stedy paycheck allowing
you to provide for your
family!

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

After Nine years in the

area, we have proven
that we are committed
to Gallipolis, and are
currently seeking dependable employees to
help fulfull client
· needs.

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Pallo and Porch Decks

WV036725
992-6215
740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohto

Local Contractor

30 Years Local Experience

740-367-0536

FULLY INSURED

Stop By and Complete
Your Application:
lnfoCision Management
Corporation
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

MICHAEL'S
SERVICE CENTER
1555 l'iYE AH·.
J&gt;omerO\·, OB
• Oi I &amp; fi Iter change

Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:
1-888-IMC-PAYU ext.
2455
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
om
Courtside Grill now accepting applications for
experienced
line/grill
cook. Good pay in fast
paced environment. Ap.ply in person or call to
set up interview between
8·10AM 308 2nd Ave.
across from the park
740-441-9371
-Li:_e_n-se_d_ d_oc_k_ l_or_e_
m-an"'!,
also experienced person
tor loading coal barges.
Send resume to Sands
Hill Mining LLC, P.O.
B:&gt;x .050, Hamden. OH
45634
II (740)
ca
t
384 -4211 orto reques
ap1 ·

•Tune Ups
• Brake Service
• AC Recharge
• VIi nor exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Fluid Change
• General Mechanic
work
(740) 992-0910

7 40-36}-0544
Free Estimates

eaft Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Gatages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinyl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Fully insured &amp; hunding lnailahle
Free estimates - 25+ years experience
l:"'ot alliliatcd

\1

ith \like \larrum Run fin~:,'\:

Rcmnddin~:l

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
·Room Additions
Owner.·

James Keesee II
Get that perfect part time
742-2332
paying job working for an ...._ _ _ _ _ __. .___ _...:;::..::.:~~~.::.::..=.:.::.:.~~:.....--..u
oil firm as a local agent
and eam more. Job re·
quirements: Good comrrumcation skills in Eng·
lish, Internet access Any
Dump Truck
previous working experience could be an advanService
tage. Applicants should
We Haul Gravel,
send their resume to JaLimestone. Coal.
son Wheller email (jasonwheller27 @gmail.co
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Compost, Top Soil
rr ) for more info.

S&amp;L
Trucking

Call Walt or Sandy

Employment

Part Time Dayshift

740-992-3220

Fixed Schedule
8:00-1 :30 + weekend
day
Qualified applicants
would be able to exhibit
courteous phone manner
and basic keyboarding
skills. High School
graduate or GED preferred.
1-8n-463-6247 X2301

or 7400-591-3726

(Cell)

·Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp; Compare

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
All Types Of

Concrete :Work
29 Years Experience

BA~KS

David Lewis

Guttering

CONSTRLCTION

740-992-6971

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653-g657

WV

H

42 1

Insured
Free Estimates

Public Notices in NPurnDrN&gt;rd

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates

(740) 992-5009

Your Right to Know, Delh·ered Right to

Days Of Notice Of The
Proposed Action. An
Adjudication Hearing
May Be Held On A Proposed Action If A Hearing
Request
Or
Objection Is-Received
By The Oepa Within 30
Days Of Issuance Of
The Proposed Action.
Written Comments, Requests For Public
Meetings, And Adjudlcation Hearing Requests Must Be Sent
To: Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency, P.O. Box
1049, Columbus, Ohio
432161049 (telephone:
614-644-2129). "final
Actions: Are Actions Of
The Director Which Are
Effective Upon Is·
suance Or A Stated Ef·
fective Date. Pursuant
To Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.04, A
Final Action May Be
Appealed To The Environmental Review Appeals
Commission
(ERAC) By A Person
Who Was A Party To A
Proceeding Before The
Director By Filing An
Appeal Within 30 Days
Of Notice Of The Final
Actlon. Pursuant To
Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.071 A
Final Action Issuing,
Denying, Modifying,
Revoking, Or Renewing A Permit, License,
Or Variance Which Is
Not Preceded By A·
Proposed Action, May
Be Appealed To The
ERAC By Filing An Appeal Within 30 Days Of
Issuance Of The Final
Action. ERAC Appeals,
Accompanied By A $70
Filing Fee Which The

Hours
7:00am-8:00pm

~p-•c-at-•o_n·------

Classifieds!

Permit, License, Order,
Etc. Interested Persons
May Submit Written
Comments Or Request
A Public Meeting Regarding Draft Actions.
Comments Or Public
Meeting Requests Must
Be Submitted Within 30
Days Of Notice Of The
Oraft Action. " Proposed Actions" Are
Written Statements Of
The Director's Intent
With Respect To The Issuance, Denial, Modifi·
cation, Revocation, Or
Renewal Of A Permit,
License, Or Variance.
Written Comments And
Requests For A Public
Meeting Regarding A
Proposed Action May
Be Submitted Within 30

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

and make Outgoing
calls or well known organizations.

Shop the

A

I ~:-11' HU I

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Get A Jump
On
SAVINGS

Public Notice
The Following Applications And/or Verified
Complaints Were Received, And The Following Draft, Proposed,
Or Final Actions Were
Issued, By The Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency (OEPA)
Last Week. "actions"
Include The Adoption,
Modification, Or Repeal
Of Orders (other Than
Emergency Orders);
The Issuance, Denial,
Modification Or Revo. cation Of Licenses,
Permits, Leases, Variances, Or Certificates;
And The Approval Or
Disapproval Of Plans
And
Specifications.
" draft Actions" Are
Written Statements Of
The Director Of Environmental Protection's
(director's) Intent With
Respect To The Issuance, Denial, Etc. Of

·'I 'h'1ll

You will take Incoming

1BR, stove &amp; relrig turn,
2nd . FL,
until
pd. Sl99/mo! 4 bed. 2 bath.
$400/mo $400/dep 258 Bank Repo! (5% down. IS
Cashier/ Clerk
--..~~!!1111::~ State St., No Smoking, years. 8% APR) for listings ;;;;;;===;;;.;.==~
No Pets. 740·446-3667
800-620-4946 ex R027
Accepting
applications
3BR HARDWOOD Fl.
for part-time
cashiers
Gallipolis City WID &amp; Ap- 38A 1.5 bath Brentwood must be available to
pliances some utilities in- Dr.
Ref
required. work all shifts. Apply at
eluded.
591-5174
or $675/mo
$675/dep. Par Mar 43, 56 Vine St.
~\2~!iii~~~ 441-0110
740-446-4051
or Par Mar 44, 2943 St
::::
- - - - - - - - A t 141, Gallipolis. N o . - - - - - - - - - - .
3 room and bath down· 3BA, 1 bath, stove &amp; re- Phone Calls Please.
stairs first months rent &amp; trig. fum. Gas heat. CIA, ~~~~~~~=
deposit. references re- No Smoking, WID hook
Education
quired, No Pets and up, No Pets. $600/mo +
c_le_a_n_.7_4_0_-4_4_1--02_4_5__ deposit. Nice location. Part-time
instructors
2BA &amp; Studio. Clean Gallipolis. Call 446-3667
needed during the day
renovated dwntwn, new
in: mathematics. ecoappl.. lam. flooring, water 142 4th Ave. 1BA, no nomics, and accounting.
sewer &amp; trash incl. Stu- pets. $375/mo deposit Mathematics and ecodio
$325/mo.
2BR required.
Gallipolis nomic instructors •must
$525/mo. 740-709-1690
446-9523
have a master's degree
...- - - - - - - ....------~ in the discipline. If inter2BR apts. 6 mi. from Hoi- Taking applications 3BR ested please email a rezer. some utilities pd. or house No Pets $350/mo sume and cover letter to
appliances
avail. $300/dep. 446_3617
·
jdanicki@gallipolisca$400/mo
+
dep.
reercollege.edu
740-418-5288
or House for rent all brick
988-6130
3_4 br. on Rt. 2 N. Ripley Help Wanted- General
Ad 304-895·3129.
Dairy Queen of Gallipolis
is hiring dependable indiNewly remodeled 3br., 1 viduals who can work
1/2 ba. prime location, flexible shifts. No phone
ref.&amp;
dep. no pets calls please.
304-675-5162 .

.PUBLIC.
NOTICES

) I'

Cu\tOm Home Building
Steel Frame Building'
Building, Remodeling
Commission In Its Discretion May Reduce If
By Affidavit The Appel·
lant Demonstrates That
Payment Of The Full
Amount Of The Fee
Would Cause Extreme
Hardship, Must Be
Filed With: Environmental Review Appeals
309
Commission,
South Fourth Street,
Room 222, Columbus,
Ohio 43215. A Copy Of
The Appeal Must Be
Served On The Director
Within 3 Days After Fillng The Appeal With
The ERAC.
Final Issuance of Ex·
tension of Permit to Install
American
Municipal
Power Gen. Station
State Route 124
Racine, OH
Action Dte: 07/10/200g
Facility Description: Air
Identification
No.:
EXT00215
Time Extension of a
Permlt-To·lnstall (PTI)
has been issued for the
facility indicated. Ac·
tlon was not preceded
by a proposed action
and may be appealed.
All comments, questions, requests for pertinent Information and
documentation
con·
cerning this action
must be directed to
CARA CHERRY at Ohio
EPA DAPC, Southeast
District Office, 2195
Front Street or (740)
385-8501. A copy of the
Time Extension can be
downloaded from the
Web
page:
www.EPA.STATE.OH.U
SIDAPC
(8) 11

..

h

NO\\ Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
Parts • Engines,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet
Metal &amp; Components

General repair
"W\l.bankscclb.com

For All \lakes of Vehicles

Classlfieds

l

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740-949-1956
Pi a

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• Siding • \in) I
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www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Yeung/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Crime
outings
7 Despise
11 Eggy dish
12 Milky
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13 Keyboard
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15 Deadly
snake
16 Highschool
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18 Auction
bids
21 Hels inki
native
22 Set, as
the sun
24 Tack o n
25 Mover's
truck
26 "T he
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hero
27Wild
cards,
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29Stallion·
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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

A IY'O~fH.

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Barracks
bed
2 Writer
Tan
3 Vitality
4 Natu ral in
craps
5 Amber
source
6 Dance
move
7 Drag- race
car
8 Gorilla or
gibbon
9 Road
sealer
10 Golfer
Ernie
14 M ortise's
mate
16 Ocean
motions
17 Finish

19 Generous
pe rson
20 Massive
wave
21 C raze
22 Balloon fi ll
23 Negating
word
25 Adonis'
love
28 Academy
attendees
29 Cuban
leader

31 Consumed
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34 Parrot o r
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prop
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org .
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38 Chest
bone
39 Pronounce

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'"''D LIKE TO LEVEL WITH VOO BOTH, BOT THERE'6
NO L..EGAL. PRECEDENCE FOR THAT."

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ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green
**** t:nderstanding de,·elops to a new bel. The •
problems that o&lt;i."Ur could change if you allow yourself i
ing. Try walking in another per.;on's shoe:; more often.
to open up tp a partner. Evaluate your role in a rela•
Empathy often soh·es di.;agreemenb;, a.; it .1dds ;.m ele- lilmShip. Don't prevent someone from coming in clo&gt;oer
ment of caring, if not resped. Education and tra,el
.my longer. Tonight Complete a project, if possible.
l ffiRA (Sept 23-0ct. 22)
could play roles in your year. If you are 'ingle, meeting people is a snap. Choose the right person for the
* **** Many think they can do what you are
doing, and they let you know fuat they can do it better,
type of relationship you seek. If you are attached the
two of you will open up to a deeper and fuller connt&gt;~.'­ too. let e\-eryone demonstrate their capacitie... rather
llon. Be willing to take a seminar together or share a
than get into a hot discussion. A loved one, child or
,
creali\'e interest steals'the stage. Tonight: Let your
mutual hobby. ARIES helps you realize) our longterm desires.
lighter side emerge.
·
7111! Stars Show the Kind of Day You11 Have: 5·
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\o,·. 21)
Dlpmmic, 4-P~"itive; 3-Avcmgc; 2-Strso; 1-D!fficult
*** A light and easy pace worKs ju-.t ftne, as long
ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
as you are well organized. A partner might push hard
to get results. Csually, the role is re\ ersai. II you relax. •
***** You move fom:ard ,,;thout interference
your creati\·ity mounts when dealing with tne routine. ,
-finally! Lose the word "no." )ou h,l\e the uniqut&gt;
Tonight: Do c1S much from home as po~ible.
_
opportunity to mo\·e projects forw.ml. Some interestSAGIITARIUS (1\0\: 22-Dec. 21)
,
ing acquaintances add more excitement into the mix.
Tonight: \t\There the action is.
Your creathity and wrbal skills meet,
m,lking anything possible. Your intuiti,·e choice will be .
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20)
*** Your instincts come forward. Analyze ''halls nght-on. How you deal vvith a key assod.1te ch,mges. ·
happening, and visualize more of what you w,ml You This person's response could be different.\\ 'hat would
see a great opportunity. Still, remain behind the
you like to be better a! or have an in1pact on? rlx"Us on ·
thost&gt; ,\rea~. Tonight Let your wild &lt;;ide out.
•
scenes. You will recognize when the lime is right.
Tonight: Think before you leap!
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*** The basics in vour life must be honored.
Sometimes you forget about who counts. You might
Remain positive and direct. Open up to
different types of thinking. You ,,;n see how f,,,t o1 situ- opt for c1 home imP.rovemenL Though genercl)ly
:
' impubiveness might not benefit you, in thi.s ca.;e it
ation resolves itself when you let go of self-imposed
mental boundarie;. The power of the mind is dis·
doe~. Resonance grows \vithin vour close lircle.
played once more. Someone from a distance might
lonight. Let go of your musl-das and make it ea'i):
appreciate hearing from you. Tonight Where th~
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-Feb. lS)
action is.
~lake calls. Verbalize different concem-..
CA.."CER Gune 21-July 22)
Touch ba-,e \\ith others and be direct in how you deal ,
**'* Others seek rou out for ad,;~. 'tou question
"ith a 'ilualion. See someone in his or her true light
which way to approach an important matter. Aru.wers
without making this person into something you want
will come if you continue on your pre;ent p.1th. c.we
him or her to be. Tonight: Find your p.u....
up hearsay and opinions. C'.o for facts first Tonight A
PISCES (Feb. 19-~larch 20)
**** Curb a need to be pos~h e and demand· •
must apeearance.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
ing, and in."tead re' eal yourself and your' ulnerabih- "'
Reach pas! the obviou~, whether resof, ing lies. Others c,m respond to thioi type of beha,ior. Your
a problem or dooding on a pl,1ce to dine Break from
instincts put you in the right place at the right time.
•
your routine; try somethmg different. ror once, ) ou
Tonicllt. )our treat. If you could haw .my!hing, wh.lt
might not need to lead. Rel,n: with other-. more ope11ly. wouTd that be? Treat a loved one, too.
Listen more. Tonight: Where your friends ,1re.
JacqueliPll' Big.v· i; t&gt;n tire l11temtl
:
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
•
at http://tt"'ttl'-)il&lt;-qttelmelllgara&gt;tll
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tue!'(.ia:&gt; Aug. 11, 2009:

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DENNIS THE MENACE

5
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8
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" Daddy's lettin' his whis kers grow.
Why can't I let my· d irt grow?"

3
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-------------- ........

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, August.11, 2009

Ohio State, Penn State lead Bjg Ten pack
BY GENARO

C. ARMAS

AP SPORTS WRITER

Some of the best examples
of consistency 111 college
football can be found in the
Big Ten.
There's Ohio State, the
school that's won at least a
share of the last four conference titles. There's Penn
State, led by Joe Paterno. the
82-year-old Hall of Fame
coach entering his 44th year
on the job.
Here's one trend. though.
the Big Ten would like to
reverse in 2009: its embarrassing showing in bowl
games. A 1-6 record in
bowls last postseason. and a
winless streak in Bowl
Championship Series games
since 2005 has fueled critics' talk that the conference
doesn't compare to the SEC
and Big 12.
, ''I think it's unfair to beat
down the Big Ten, because
every game we play in a
bowl game is an away
game," Paterno said. "I
don't think it's any indication" of weakness.
"I think the Big Ten is a
very strong conference.
Whether we don't win a
couple bowl games a couple
years in a row ... I wouldn't
judge it on three-four
games," Paterno said.
Only Iowa won its bowl
game (Outback) last season.
Penn State tied for its second
Big Ten crown in four years
and went to the Rose Bowl
after defeating Ohio State in
the regular season.
But Pasadena didn't work
out for the Nittany Lions
after Southern California
ended Penn State's threegame bowl winning streak.
Once-powerful Michigan
didn't even get to the postseason, ending a 33-year
streak.
Coach
Rich
Rodriguez hopes tha second
year of his rebuilding job in
Ann Arbor brings more success than last year's dismal
3-9 record.
The Buckeyes lost to
Texas in the Fiesta Bowl,
which followed lopsided
defeats the previous two
years in the BCS title game
for Ohio State.
Coach Jim Tressel and his
Big Ten colleagues are
aware of the whispers.
But,. Tressel said at Big
Ten media days in Chicago,
"I don't know if anyone in
this conference has an inferiority complex .. . If you
watch ball games, our guys
will play toe-to-toe with
anyone."
Not to worry, coach: the
Buckeyes could get another
chance to prove their BCS
mettle.
Ohio State and Penn State
are the favorites again,
though both teams have
enough question marks that
dark horse contenders like
Iowa and Michigan State
could break through.
It could all come down to
the Nov. 7 showdown
between Ohio State and
Penn State in Happy Valley.
A capsule look at teams i'n
predicted order of finish:
OHIO STATE - Key
players: QB Terrelle Pryor,
So.; RB Dan "Boom"
Herron, So.; DT Doug
Worthington, Sr.; S Kurt
Coleman, Sr. Returning
starters: 4 offense, 7
defense.
Notes: Sept. 12 home date
with Southern California is
key to whether Buckeyes
can make another national
title run .... Pryor led the Big
Ten as a freshman with a
pass-efficiency rating of
151.3 in conference games.
:.. "Boom" must replace a
''Beanie" in 1,200-yard
rusher Chris "Beanie" Wells,

Gill at center stage for
Buffalo turnaround
starters:
defense.

MILLER

AP SPORTS WR~TER

AP photo

who left for the NFL after
his junior year.
PENN STATE - Key
players: QB Daryll Clark,
Sr.; RB Evan Royster, Jr.;
LB Sean Lee, Sr.; LB
Navarro
Bowman,
Jr.
Returning starters: 5 offense,
4 defense.
Notes~ Six of first seven
games at home. ... Penn
State's "Spread HD" offense
must operate with new starting receivers and rebuilt
offensive line .... Lee looks
healthy after missing 2008
with right knee injury .... DT
Jared Odrick among best
linemen in league, though
defense must replace speedmsher Aaron Maybin.
IOWA- Key players: QB
Ricky Stanzi. Jr.: RB Jewel
Hampton, So.; LB Pat
Angerer, Sr. Returning
starters: 6 offense, 8
defense.
Notes: RB Shonn Green
took his 1,800 yards to the
NFL. Hampton, his presumed replacement, suffered
an offseason knee injury but
is expected to be ready for
the season .... D-line loses
steady tackles Mitch King
and
Matt
Kroul.
Hawkeyes face a brutal road
schedule: at Penn State,
Wisconsin, Michigan State
and Ohio State.
MICHIGAN STATE Key players: LB Greg Jones,
Jr.; LB Eric Gordon, Jr.; K
Brett
Swenson.
Sr.
Returning starters·: 7 offense,
8 defense.
Notes: Sophomores Kirk
Cousins and Keith Nichol
are top candidates to replace
departed QB Brian Hoyer. ...
1,700-yard rusher Javon
Ringer will be sorely
missed .... Spartans coming
off first nine-win regular
season since 1999.

ILLINOIS - Key players: QB Juice Williams. Sr.:
WR Arrelious Benn. Jr.:
MLB Martez Wilson, Jr.
Returning staters: 8 offense,
5 defense.
Notes: There's no question
who the cover boys are for
this year's Illini: Williams
and Benn are featured on a
school Web site, 7-to-9.com,
to tout their postseason eredentials .... Williams needs
425 total yards to become
the Illini' all-time offensive
yardage leader at 8.880.
WISCONSIN
Key
players: RB John Clay, So.;
DE O'Brien Schofield, Sr.;
LB Jaevery McFadden, Sr.
Returning starters: 6 offense,
5 defense.
Notes: Another year.
another new starting QB?
Redshirt freshman Curt
Phillips could take job at
from fifth-year senior Dustin
Sherer, who took over at
midyear last season .... Top
three receivers
return.
including
TE
Garrett
Graham.
MICHIGAN - Key players: RB Brandon Minor, Sr.;
DE Brandon Graham, Sr.; P
Zoltan
Mesko,
Sr..
Returning
starters:
10
offense. 5 defense.
Notes: Year 2 of coach
Rich Rodriguez' rebuilding
project finds freshman Tate
Forcier taking over at quarterback .... Wolverines last
year gave up 347 points, the
most in school history. Greg
Robinson, fired last year as
coach at Syracuse, takes
over as defensive coordinator.
NORTHWESTERN
Key players: QB Mike
Kafka, Sr.; DE Corey
Wootton, Sr.~ S Brad
Phillips. Sr. Returning
starters: 5 offense, 8

defense.
Notes:
The
6-foot-7
Wootton had 10 sacks last
season. but is recovering
from right knee surgery after
getting injured in the Alamo
Bowl. ... Wildcats must
replace top RB Tyrell Sutton
and top three receivers ....
Northwestern doesn't have
to play Ohio State or
Michigan.
MINNESOTA
Key
players: QB Adam Weber,
Jr.; WR Eric Decker, Sr.: LB
Lee Campbell, Sr. Returning
starters: 9 offense. 8
defense.
Notes: Gophers move
home digs from dingy
Metrodome to new, open-air
TCF Bank Stadium on campus. ... Weber-to-Decker
combo among best in Big
Ten, though Gophers must
boost rushing attack (3.1
yards per game in 2009).
PURDUE - Key players:
RB Jaycen Taylor. Sr.: CB
Brandon King. Sr.; CB
David Pender. Sr. Returning
starters: 5 offense, 7
defense.
Notes: Danny Hope takes
over as coach for Joe Tiller
after spending 2008 as
coach-in-waiting .... Senior
Joey Elliot. voted captain,
likely replaces Curtis Painter
at QB.
INDIANA - Key players: DE Jammie Kirlew, Sr.;
DE Greg Middleton, Sr.; QB
Ben Cha~pell. Jr. Returning
starters: 6 offense, 9
defense.
Notes: Former starting
QB-turned-recei ver Kellen
Lewis booted off team in
April for violating team
rules .... Kirlew's 10.5 sacks
tied for second in Big Ten,
but Middleton trying to
reclaim '07 form ( 16 sacks)
after just four last year.

Tiger rallies at Firestone; posts 70th career win
AKRON (AP) - First
came another signature
moment from Tiger Woods,
an 8-iron over the water that
stopped a foot from the hole.
Even more stunnmg was the
meltdown that followed by
Padraig Harrington.
In a swift turn of events on
Firestone's famous 16th
hole, Woods went from one
shot behind to a four-shot
victory Sunday by closing
with a 5-under 65 to win the
Bridgestone Invitational.
Woods became the first
player in PGA Tour history
to win seven times on the
sam~ golf course.

MAC Preview

Bv RusTY

In this Sept. 23, 2006 file photo, Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel, left, and Penn State
head coach Joe Paterno meet on the field before an NCAA college football game at Ohio
Stadium in Columbus. Ohio State and Penn State lead the Big Ten pack.

It was his 16th victory in
the
World
Golf
Championship series, and
the world's No. I player now
PGA
goes
to
the
Championship next week at
Hazeltine with two straight
victories after missing the
cut last month in the British
Open.
After nearly four hours in
the tough battle that
Harrington expected, he let
it slip away in shocking
•
fashion.
Woods left himself some
170 yards over the water,
and his 8-iron landed near
the pin and rolled back a

foot away. Harrington hit
from the collar of a bunker
over the 16th green. but his
flop shot came behind the
green came out hot and into
the water.
He wound up with a triple
bogey and closed with a 3over 73 to share second
place with Robert Allcnby,
who had a 66.
Woods, who has won the
Bridgestone
Invitational
seven times in 10 starts and
has never finished out of the
top five, finished ot~t his
remarkable afternoon in
style with a 6-foot birdie
putt.

It was the 70th victory of
his PGA Tour career. three
behind Jack Nicklaus in second place. Sam Snead (82)
holds the record.
"We locked horns pretty
good," Woods said. "I made
a couple of mistakes. Paddy
was being consistent, grinding it out. doing all the right
things. Unfortunately, 16
happened. But it was a great
battle all day."
It was every bit of that.
Woods won for only the
sixth time in his career when
trailing by three shots or
more, a deficit that didn't
· last long.

.

When Turner Gill was
going 28-2 as the starting
quarterback at Nebraska in
the early 1980s, he was
known for his sleight of
hand in the option attack.
But it wasn't until he
became the head coach at
lowly Buffalo that he was
twly &lt;tcknowledged as a
magician.
Three seasons after taking over a team coming off
a one-win season, Gill is
one of the hottest names in
the coaching fraternity. A
year ago he led the Bulls to
an 8-6 record and their first
Mid-American Conference
championship.
Over the past two years,
Buffalo has won 13 games
- one more than in its first
eight seasons combined in
the
Football
Bowl
Subdivision.
''I'm excited,'' Gill said
after his squad was picked
to win the East in 2009.
"We ju~t need to build on
what we've learned. We
still can get better."
A
former
Canadian
Football League quarterback and a promising player in the Detroit Tigers and
Cleveland Indians organizations. Gill also took the
Bulls to the International
Bowl. Then he spurned several feeh:rs from bigger,
brand-name schools to sign
a
contract
extension
through the 2013 season.
Now Buffalo is the choice
to win the East again.
Asked if he needed to alter
what got the Bulls to the
title game. Gill answered
with ty~ical clarity: "Why
change. ···Our guys expect
to wm now. Once you've
done it, you can see what it
takes to keep winning."
A capsule look at the
MAC teams in predicted
order of finish:
WEST DIVISION

.

CENTRAL MICHIGAN
- Key players: QB Dan
LeFevour. WR Antonio
Brown,
WR
Bryan
Anderson,
LB
Nick
Bellore, DB Bobby Seay,
DE Frank Zom?o, DB J.osh
Gordy, LB Matt Bermng,
DL
. Sean
Murnane .•
Returnmg
starters:
6
offense, 10 defense.
Notes:
Has
MAC's
longest streak of winnino0
se~sons (4), but opens at
Anzona and then at
Michigan S~te; preseason
media pick to win title
game; Anderson's 226
catches leaves him 80
behind Marshall's Josh
Davis conference record:
LeFevour needs 383 yards
of total offense to break
MAC mark of 12,084 by
Marshall's Byron Leftwich.
WESTERN MICHIGAN
- Key players: QB Tim
Hiller, RB Brandon West,
OG Nick Clemens, OT
Anthony Parker, WR Juan
Nunez,
OG
Phillip
Swanson,
LB
Austin
Pritchard,
DE
Justin
Braska. Returning starters:
7 offense, 4 defense.
Notes: Hiller has 76
career TD passes and needs
25 to pass Marshall's Chad
Pennington (1 00) as the alltime MAC leader.
NORTHERN ILLINOJS
Key players: QB
Chandler Harnish. C Eddie
Adamski, S David Bryant.
LB Cory Hanson, S Mike
Sabol. OT Trevor Olson,
OT Jason Onyebaugu.
Returnino
starters:
7
offense, 4 defense.
Notes: Harnish's 1 ,528
passing yards in 2008 is
No. 8 among MAC freshmen.
TOLEDO - Key players: LB Archie Donald S
Barry Church, WR Stephen
Williams. QB Aaron Opelt,
RB DaJuane Collins, RB
Morgan Williams, OL
Kevin Kowalski. OL John
Morookian,
S
Lester
Richmond.
Returnino
starters: 9 offense, §
defense.
Notes: Williams' I ,010
rushing yards \Vas ninthbest ever by a MAC frosh:
new coach Tim Beckman.
defensive coordinator at
Oklahoma State, takes over
for Tom Amstutz.
BALL STATE - Key
players:
RB
MiQuale
Lewis, WR Br4ggs Orsbon.
TE Madaris Grant. DE
Robert Eddins. FS Alex
Knipp, SS Sean Baker. LB
Davyd Jones, DE Brandon
Crawford.
Returning

4

offense,

7

N~tes : J&lt;.eached highest
rankmg ever - No. 12 in
AP poll
on Nov. 30; has
won a conference-best
consecutive
games; Lewis
22 rushing TDs last year. the second-highest total ever by a
MAC player: Stan Parrish
promoted from offensive
coordinator to replace
Brady Hoke. who· moved to
San Diego State.
EASTERN MICHIGAN
- Key players: QB Andy
Schmitt, WR Jacory Stone,
LB Jermaine Jenkins, LB
Andre Hatchett, DE Brad
Ohrman. C Eric Davis, LG
Andy Fretz, RB Terrence
Blevins. Returning starters:
7 offense. 8 defense.
Notes: New coach Ron
English, a former defensive .
coordinator at Michigan
and Louisville, takes over
for Jeff Genyk, who wa·s
16-42 in six seasons.

EAST DIVISION

0.

BUFFALO - Key players:
WR
Naaman
Roosevelt,
OL
Peter
Bittner, WR Brett Hamlin,
RB James .Starks,
Andrew West, LB Rapha
'
Akobundu, DB Domonic
Cook, DB Mike Newton.
LB Scott Pettigrew. DB
Davonte Shannon. LB
Justin Winters. Returnin~
starters: 6 offense. 'i :
defense.
Notes: Starks has been
named to the Doak Walker
(nation's top running back)
watch Jist.
TEMPLE - Key players:
QB Vaughn Charlton, OL
Wayne Tribue, WR Jason
Harper, DL Brian Sanford,
NT Andre Neblett. LB
Amara Kamara, LB Alex
Joseph, LB Elijah Joseph, S
Dominique
Harris,
s
Jaiquawn Jarrett. Returning
starters: 8 offense, 8
defense.
Notes: Redshirt junior ·
Vaughn Charlton, with
seven career starts, takes
over for the departed Ada,m
DiMichele at QB.
AKRON
K
1
ey P aye.
RG Zach - Anderson,
Elliot Bates. WR Der
Bowser,
QB
Chris
Jacquemain WR Andre
Jones, RT Corey Woods,
LG M'ke
1
1 Ward · FS Jan
C
arter,
R0 V
'W_ayne
Cob.ham,
CB
Miguel
GraJam. DE Almondo
Sewell LB M'ke
Thomas
1
'.
·
Returnrng
starters:
9
offense, 6 defense.
Not~~:
Op.ens
new
InfoC~sJon Stad~um (30,000
capacity), which makes
d~but Sept. 12 \&gt;Alen the
Z1ps host Morgan State. .
OHIO - Key players.
WR LaVon Brazill. QB ~oo
Jackson •. WR 'I_'aylor Pnce.
OL Dav1d White, S Steve
Jackson .. LB Noah Keller,
DE &lt;;urtts Meyers, LB Lee
Renfro: CB Thad Turner.
Returmng
starters:
7
offense. 7 defen~e.
Notes:
Semors
B&lt;?o
J~ckson and Theo S7ott wlil
fight for the startmg QB
•
spot.
BOWLING GREEN
Key players: QB Tyler
Sheehan, Oi: Shane Steffy,
OL._B~ady Mmture, OL B~n
BojlCIC,
WR
FreddJe
Barnes.
LB
Jerrett
Sanderson. S P.J. Maho!Je.
S Jahmal Brown. Returmng
starters: 7 offense, 3
defense.
Notes: New coach Dave
qawson, who replaces the
ftred Gregg Brandon. was
offensive coordinator at
Tennessee last year.
KENT STATE - Key
players:
OL
Chns
Anzevino, OL Michael Fay,
RB Eugene J.arvis. OL Pat
Reedy. OL Mtke Roder, DL
Sam
Prist.
SS
Dan
Hartman. DL Kevin Hog~n.
DL Aaron Hull. Returmng
starters: 8 offense, 7
defense.
Notes: Senior Anthony.
Magazu and sophomore ,
Giorgio Morgan will battle
for the starting QB job.
MIAMI (OHIO) - K.
players:
QB
Dan
Raudabaugh, WR Dustin
Woods. WR Chris Givens.
OL Brandon Brooks, WR
Jamal Rogers. DL Jordan :
Stevens. LB Caleb Bostic.
Returnino
starters:
7·
offense, 6 defense.
Notes: Mike Haywood,
offensive coordinator at .
Notre Dame last season.
takes over as head coach for
Shane Montgomery ( 17-31 ·
in four seasons)

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