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0
4

a a

Piniella wav:es
goodbye
to
•
baseball, Bt

Revival services
announced, A3

Printed on 100%
Rrc.H·kd ~l'\~sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Page AS
BY BETH SERGENT
meeting of the American
• Barry Steve Bryant
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Municipal Power Generating
• Michael A. McNutt
Station (AMPGS) Participants
COLUMBGS- ~ine months on Aug. ~9.
• James 'Bub' Ohlinger
after Amencan
Municipal
"We are excited ... sometimes
• Nancy Maxine Wells Power announced its coal-tired God just teaches us patience."
power plant was being dropped.
the
company
officially
announced the rebirth of the
project on Monday.
AMP plans to move forward
\vith development of an approximately 600 MW natural gas
combined cycle (NGCC) generating facility in Letar.t Falls.
AMP made the announcement
following action taken at a

JVIissing
woman
reported
SENTINEL STAFF

PO:vtEROY The
Pomeroy '
Police
Department reports a
Racme woman has been
nu:&gt;~ing :&gt;im:~: Saturday,
Aug. 21, according to a
family member.
Sandra E. (Proffitt)

WEATHER

High: 82
Low: 62

INDEX
2 SECJJONS- J2 PAGP.S

• Calendars

A3

Classifieds

B3-4

Comics
Editorials
~ports

Bs
A4
B Section

© 201 0 Ohio Valle) Puhh hmg Co

liJ!IJ ,I !I!I]!1!11

turn-key fixed-price contract
that will be subscribed to interested AMP Members.''
A major infrastructure need is
the installation of a natural gas
line to the proposed plant in the
Letart Falls area. U.S. Rep.
Charlie
Wilson,
D-St.
Clairsville, said he has asked for
a $17 million appropriation of
federal funds to run a gas line to
the potential plant. This appropriation is the number one
appropriation being asked for by
the U.S. Department of Energy

Please see AMP, A5

trials set ..
for alleged
Hemlock
arsonists

MOSNEWS@MYDA LYSENTINELCOM

ROCKSi&gt;RINGS
Market livestock sold to
highest
bidders
the
Saturday, as the week's
Junior Fair livestock projects went to sale.
Sale results were, by
department:

34,

·'===:-=-::

Meigs County Commissioner
Mike Bartrum said about the
company's
long-awaited
announcement. 'This is a very
positive thing. They could've
gone with other options but
AMP is still coming here.''
Bartrum and other local officials sec this announcement as
an extremely positive step
though the project's future is not

l:t:rlain. According to AMP's
official
statement:
''Development of the Meigs
County site is dependent upon
the successful final negotiation
of appropriate tax abatements,
economic and infrastructure
incentives, construction contracts and pricing. as well as a
successful effort by AMP to subscribe the project to its member
municipal electric systems.
Project Participants voted to
pursue conversion of the
AMPGS project in Meigs
County to a NGCC resource to
be developed under a lump-sum

Bv BRIAN J. REED
AND BETH SERGENT

Morri~.

• Additional scenes
from the Livestock
Sale. See Page A2

D ... '

Livestock Sale closes Junior Fair activity November

MOSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

INSIDE

.a

AMP moving forward with Meigs Co. plant

OBTIUARIES

of
P i n e
Grove
Road in
Racine.
was last
s e e n
~...~.--.......,;..;.....__, a r o u n d
Morris
I 0 : 3 0
p.m., Au~.
leav.ing Gloeckner s
ar
m
downtown
Pomeroy with two male
subjects. according to the
police report. llte report
goes on to say the male
subjects claimed to be
from Michigan. working
local construction jobs.
Morris has brown,
shoulder-length
hair,
brown eyes, weighs 165
pounds and is 5' 6'' tall.
Anyone with information
on her whereabouts ·is
asked to contact the
Pomeroy
Police
Department at 992-6411.

,,

A

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Market rabbits
Elizabeth
Teaford ,
Portland. g.c .. Ridenour
Gas
Sen ic e.
SSOO;
Dakota O ' Brien. Racine,
Ridenour das Service.
400: Charles Harrison.
Pomeroy.
J&amp;L
Construction,
300:
Kayte Lawrence. Long
Bottom. Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.. 200:
Justin Eblin, Syracuse.
State
Rep. ' Debbie

Phillips, 210.
Tyler
Davis.
Reedsville.
WeCan
Fabricators,
250;
Kourtney
Lawrence.
Long Bottom, Mark
Porter GM SuperCeyter,
200: Hannah Kennedy,
Pomeroy. Tattm's Feed
and Seed. 250; Kaleb
Gheen. Long Bottom.
Gheen's Painting, 370;
Zachary Browning. Long
Bottom. Turley's Matress
Sales, 200.
Nicholas
Wamsley,
Pomeroy. Home National
Bank. 200; Sabra Bailey.
Long
Bottom,
Rocksprings
Rehabilitation.
275;
Alyson Bailey, Long
Bottom. Home National
Bank. 210; Brittney Leach,
I Long Bottom, Farmers
Bank.
210:
Hailey
Cremeans, Portland, Home
National Bank, 200; Sierra
Cleland, Racine. Peoples
Bank, 300.
Jacob
Wilson,
Portland,
Rutland
Service Center. 200; Julie
Weddle. Long Bottom.
Gheen's Painting. 220:
Daniel Card, Reedsville.
Farmers Bank, 200;
Whitley Leach, Long
Bottom. Tattm's Feed
and Seed. 300; Katlyn
Ba~ber. Coolville: 290,
H o me National Bank:
Devin
Humphreys.
Pomeroy, 350. Wild
Horse Cafe: Jamie Card,
Reedsville,
NorrisNorthup Dodge, 300;
Joshua Parker, Pomeroy.
300; Kelsey Kimes,
Reedsville,
Farmers
Bank, 200.
Haley Musser, Racine,
J&amp;L eonstruction, 225;
Brayden
•
Kopec,
Middleport. Birchfield
Funeral Home/Rutland
Department Store, 200;
Mickayla
Eblin.
Syracuse, Kisale Corp ..
200:
Randal
Davis.
Reed:.ville.
WeCan
Fabricators. 250; Hailey
Sigmtln. ~ortlaAd, The
Vaug han Agency. 200;

l

'

Beth SergenVphotos

Jacob, Parker, Tuppers Plains, sold the Grand Champion Market. Steer to RC
Construction for $3,500. Also pictured, Kurt Welch of RC Construction, Sam and
" Mia Baucrbach, Olivia Davis, fair queen, Catherine Wolfe, fair queen runner-up.

Jackie Jordan Shade sold the Grand Champion Market Hog to McDonald's for
$1 ,200. Also pictured: Roscoe Mills of Pomeroy McDonalds, Ol~via D.avis, fair
queen, Catherine Wolfe, fair queen runner-up, Morgan Russell, swme pnncess. •

Jacob Weddle, Long
Bottom, Gheen's Rental,
275; Austin ~tiller,
Pomeroy. McDonald's,
200: Baylee Collins,
Long
Bottom,
Karr
Contracting, 300: Kari
Lawrence. Long Bottom,
Ridenour Gas Service,

260.

Market poultry
Jesse Morris, Long
Bottom,
g.c.,
McDonald's, $600: M.
Austin Pierce, Rutland,
r.c., AB Contracting.
Inc., (&gt;00: Tyler Morris,
Pomeroy,
Hendrix
Heating and Cooling,
400 ; Benjamin Tillis.
Rutland, Parker Grain
Farms,
375;
Cole
Bet;rjng, Pomeroy, Bob's
Market. 375.
Cheyenne
Doczi,
Middleport.
Fanners
Bank and Savings Co ..
350; Julie Tillis, Rutland,
RC Construction, 375;

Brady Bissell, Long
Bottom, Farmers Bank,
350; Kassid)' Betzing.
Pomeroy.
Scott
A.
Williams. 375: Sydney
Grueser,
Reeds\ ille.
Peoples
Bank. 225;
Morgan
Tucker.
Pomeroy,
Birchfield
Funeral Home/Rutland
Dept. Store. 275; Haley
Bissell, Long Bottom.
Home National Bank,
200: Abigail Houser.
Rutland, Norris-Northup
Dodge, 200.
Tiffany Will. Pomeroy.
Mark
Porter
GM
SuperCenter.
200;
Mattison
Finlaw
Pomeroy, Home National
Bank, 250; Ty Bissell,
Long Bottom. Cross &amp;
Son::. Farm Equipment.
275: Shawna Murphy,
Reedsville. Rocksprings
Rehabilitation.
200:
Michael
Satterfield,
Pomeroy.
Birchfield
Funeral Home/ Rutland
Dept. Store. 200: Justn

Morris, Rutland. Monroe
Muffler, 200.
Amber Moodispaugh,
Reed ville. Moooispaugh
Auctioneering. 300; John
Witham,
Coolville,
Me Donald 's/R utland
Service Center. 200:
Gabe Trask. Langsville.
Downing-Childs-MullcnMusser
Insurance
Agency / Me Donald's.
200: Christian Speelman,
Reedsville, Cross &amp; Sons
Fann Equipment. 210.

Market dairy
feeder
Tiffany
Tripp,
Pomeroy, g.c., Peoples
Bank/Pleasant
Valley
Hospital and Michael
Bartrum. $1 ,800: Brenna
Holter, Pomeroy, r.c .,
~lark
Porter
GM
SuperCenter/Swisher &amp;
Lohse und The Drug
Store,
I ,400: Taylor

Please see Sale, A&amp;

t

POMEROY The
Meigs County Grand
Jury indicted three men
and a woman for burning
the Hemlock Grove
Church of Christ to the
ground, for desecrating
religious objects in the
church. tampering with
evidence
and
other
felonies relating to the
fire earlier this month
that destroyed the 150
year-old church.
The four are scheduled
to go to trial on Nov. 9.
Also indicted was a .
Langsville woman who
shot at a driver and two
passengers two weeks
ago.
Christopher Divers, 19,
New Haven. W.Va.,
Jeffrey M. Mullins, 18.
Rutland,
Joseph
Satterfield. 19. Racine,
and Erin Hawkins. 23.
Pomeroy. have been in
jail for two weeks on
bonds set by Judge
Steven L. Story. They
appeared Monday before
Judge Fred W. Crow III
on the indictments.
The
grand
jury
returned identical sevencount indictments against
the four late last week,
charging two counts of
breaking and entering,
possession of criminal
tools. vandalism, arson,
desecration and tamper,
ing with evidence. Judge
Fred W. Crow III set
$10,000 personal recognizance bonds. $50.000
surety
bonds
and
$200.000
appearance
bonds in all four cases.
The Meigs County
Clerk of Courts office
said Monday a cash payment of $70.208 would
be required for any of
the four alleged arsonists
to be released from the
jails in which they are
being housed.
Rick Hedges was
appointed to represent •
Satterfield, David Baer
to represent Hawkins
and
Mull ins.
and
Cha~les Knight to represent Divers.
Tania Crawford, 48,
Dexter Road, was indictcd on six counts of felonious assault and two
counts of discharge of, a
firearm on or near a prohibited iJremi&lt;&gt;es.
Joshba Price. 19, was
shot twice and a female
juvenile ~vas wounde~ in
the leg m the shootmg

Please see Trials, A5

�\

Tuesday,August24,2010

www.mydailysentinel.cop1

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Beth Sergentlphoto

Jordan Parker, Tuppers Plains. sold the Reserve
Champion Market Steer to Arnold Insurance for
$3,300. Also pictured, Mark Arnold, Amy Arnold,
Maggie Brannam, Katie and Tommy Gonzalez of
Arnold Insurance, Olivia Davis, fair queen, Catherine
Wolfe, fair queen runner-up, Sam Bauerbach.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Kelsey Johnson sold her grand champion market goat
to Peoples Bank, represented by Tina Rees, Pleasant
Valley Hospital and Mike Bartrum, and The Cutting
Crew, represented by Jarrod Hill.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Home National Bank President Bill Nease is pictured
with Makayla Findley and the reserve champion market goat, which the bank purchased at Saturday's
Junior Fair livestock sale.

Beth Sergentlphoto
Beth Sergent/photo

Kalya Tripp, Pomeroy, sold the Grand Champion Dairy
Market Steer to Farmers Bank for $1,600. Also pictured, Paul Reed from Farmers Bank, Olivia Davis,
fair queen, Catherine Wolfe, fair queen runner-up,
Jessica Cook, dairy princess.

Audrionna Pullins of Long Bottom sold the Reserve
Champion Dairy Market Steer to Meigs County
Auditor Mary Byer-Hill for $1 ,350. Also pictured, ByerHill and daughter Molly Hill, Olivia Davis, fair queen,
Catherine Wolfe, fair queen runner-up, Jessica Cook,
dairy princess.

Beth Sergentlphoto

Breanna Colburn, Racine, sold the Reserve
Champion Market Hog to Home National Bank for
$1,250. Also pictured, Bill Nease of Home National
Bank, Olivia Davis, fair queen, Catherine Wolfe, fair
queen runner-up, Morgan Russell, swine princess.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Brian J. Reed/photo

Brian J. Reed/photo

Elizabeth Teaford sold' the grand champion market
r~bbit pen to Ridenour Gas Service, represented by
Janet Ridenour.

Dakota O'Brien sold his reserve champion pen of
market rabbits to Janet Ridenour, Ridenour Gas
Service.

Jesse Morris sold his grand champion pen of market
poultry to McDonald's of Pomeroy, represented by
Roscoe Mills.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Brian J. Reed/photo

Brian J. Reed/photo

Janet Ridenour of Ridenour Gas Service purchased
the grand champion commercial feeder from Rebecca
Pullins.

S&amp;J Lumber Co., represented by Grace Edwards,
purchased the reserve champion commercial feeder
from. Maddison Wooydard.

AB Contracting Inc., Allen Bell, purchased Austin
Pierce's reserve champion market poultry pen.

Beth Sergentlphoto

Ryan Amos of Coolville sold the Grand Champion
Market Lamb to Farmers Bank for $1 ,200 at the
Junior Fair Livestock Show. Also pictured, Woody
Stines from Farmers Bank, Carolann Stewart, lamb
princess, Catherine Wolfe, fair queen runner-up,
Olivia Davis, fair queen.

Beth Sergentlphoto

Cody Bartrum, Pomeroy, sold the Reserve Champion
Market Lamb to Whaley's Used Cars for $900. Also
pictured, Gene Whaley of Whaley's Used Cars,
Carolann Stewart, lamb princess, Catherine Wolfe,
fair queen runner-up, Olivia Davis, fair queen.

Brian J. Reed/photo
Tiffany Tripp is pictured with her grand champion dairy

feeder, and buyers Tina Rees • and County
Commissioner Michael Bartrum, representing
Peoples Bank, N.A., and Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Exavation work Includes: Driveways, Land
Cleaning, Ponds, Trenches, Reclamation
&amp; Much More

US do the shopping for you.
Call 740.992.3381 or
Brian J. Reed/photo

Mark Porter GM Super Center and Swisher &amp;
Lohse!The Drug Store, represented by Porter and Ed
Zatta, purchased Brenna Holter's reserve champion
dairy feeder.

vis1tdcmusser.com

ri!musser
'-~~

I

Call today for a free estimate!
Manuel (740)590-3700
Danny (740)590-9255
Mike (740)590·3701

Grang,
-

HOME

NATIONAL BANK
RACINE I! SYRACUSE

(j~ 100 J/efW!
g www .homenatlbank.com~
www.mydailysentinel.com

PRESCHOOL REGISTRATION
The Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center Preschool registration
for the 2010-2011 school year
will be ~eld Thursday, Au9ust 30, 2010
at Eastern Local Administrative
Office and
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an appointment
oontact Betsy at 740·992·2165

�-~ ·-· ·-

---

Th~

-· -- -

- - .

- --

.

-- ~-~---·-.. -~--- -------..-----------:-------...---------...,

PageA3

Daily Sentinel

Tuesday,August24~2010

ASK DR.. BR.OTHER.S

Revival
•
services
announced

She is always
left alone at bars

•

Dr. Brothers: It
that no matter what
J do. when I go out with
my friends, l am the one
left sitting at the table
while everyone el!'e is out
dancing ot ha'\ing guys
buy them a drink at the
'at. I don' t think I am any
less attractive than the
other girls, butT can't tigure out why I am always
the one to go home alone.
lt's as though I am wearing a sign that says, "Go
awayf' Do you think I
give off some kind of
unfriendly aura? I am
Iatht:r :shy. b~tl nice. M.L.
Dear M.L.: l am !'ony
to hear that you :u-e having
such a hard time meeting
people. A bar is a really
difficult place for a mther
shy yow1g woman to show
her stuff. You may have the
swe-etest personality and
the kindest and most intelgent persona out there,
ut what the guys at the bar
are looking for often is
• much more superficial.
They like to see attractive
people who look like they
are enjoying themselves
and that doesn't have to
be the girl with the biggest
chest or the ti!2"htest skit1. It
can be the girl with the
twinkle in her eye and a
smile on her face.
It could be that you are
Miving off strong nonveroal communication signals that indeed are
shouting, "Stav away!''
Since you have a history
of going home alone. you
may feel defeated - and
look it. Check your posture and your head carriage in the bar minor. Do
you look like someone
anybody would attempt a
l:onversation with? Don't
be afraid · to smile and
make small talk if you see
you like on the next
tool ~ he may be a
bit shy, too. My last bit of
advice is to not hang out
in bars so much - try
c.: nluvating :some friends
who like to take trips to
the library. where you
may find a group of
young men wlio can really appreciate a somewhat
shy, nice girl like you.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: I am
worried about the little boy
I baby-sit for. I go to the
home three days a week
while the mom works at a
part-time job. She is very
nice, and the child is a very
timid 4-year-t&gt;ld. The
father told me that his son
is very shy ·and said he

MIDDLEPORT - Revival services
will be held at the First Baptist Church
of Middleport, 211 S. Sixth Ave.,
Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights
Services will begin at 7 p.m.
Pastor Bill Zuspan will be speaker
for the services which will include
special music each evening. On
Thursday the Forgiven Again Trio will
sing, on Friday, the Forever Blessed,
and on Saturday. Th.e Concords.

The Concords

Dr. Joyce Brothers
wants to "toughen him up"
before he starts kinder
garten. This man is a good
person but is very loud and
boisterous. and the kid just
gets more timid when his
dad's around. Is there a
way I can help with all of
this?- A.R.
))car A.R.: J.t could be
that the father once was a
shy child, and made up
for it later in life by
becoming loud and rather
obnoxious. That is one
way shy children try to
compensate when they
get older. Or it could be
that the father is naturally
expressive and uninhibited, and he just wishes his
child had inherited some
of
his
tendencies.
Chances are, the boy is
more like his mother. who
seems to be nice, calm
and less to one extreme or
the other. If you too can
extend a calm and kind
hand to the child, it probably will help counteract
whatever misguided type
of bullying his father may
be doing. Shy kids don't
open up because someone
shows them how to be
loud and boisterous; they
do so when they feel confjdent enough to face the
world on their own.
That said. you may wish
to sit down with the parents for a discussion about
what activities and discussions you might have with
theit son during the next
few months to help him
grow into a confident little
boy 'vvho is ready for
school. There is no reason
that you can't point out to
the father that the child is
making progress when he
is treated gently and with
attention to his feelings ·
and desires. Check out
some storybooks about
shy preschoolers at the
library and share them
with the parents and the
boy. Everyone has his bes.t
interests at heart, and
these things may help.
(c) 2010 by King

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
VVednesda~Aug.25

CHESTER - Chester
Township special meeting 7 p.m. the town hall
regarding
emergency
repair to Township Road
293, Silver Ridge and
415 Weber Road.
Thursday, Aug. 26
POMEROY - Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors
11 :30 a.m. at the district
office at 33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy.
Monday, Aug. 30
RACINE - Southern
Local
Board
of
Education, regular session, 8 p.m., high school
media center.

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Aug. 24
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport Lodge 363, 7
p:m., to confer Master
Mason degree on one
candidate. Bring non-perishable food items for
food bank.
RACINE - Mandatory
OHSAA meeting for all
Southern fall sports athletes and parents, 6 p.m.,
high school gym.
VVednesda~Aug.25

CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453 special
meeting, 7 p.m for the

purpose of conferring the
Master Mason Degree on
one candidate. All Master
Masons
invited.
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Meigs
Athletic Boosters, 7:30
p.m. at Meigs High
School. ·
Thursday, Aug. 26
POMEROY - Alpha
Iota Masters Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will hold their beginning
day activities with a luncheon 11:30 a.m. at the
Wild Horse Cafe.
TUPPERS PLAINS -·
VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.
Tht.Jrsday at the Tuppers
Plains Post home.

School events
Tuesday,Aug.24
MIDDLEPORT - MidValley Christian School
open house 7 to 8:30p.m.
at the Rejoicing Life
Church. Open enrollment
night. Meet the teachers
and administrative staff.,
Tour the newly renovated
elementary. Refreshments.
MIDDLEPORT
Open house at the Meigs
Elementary
School,
26871 SR 124. 6 to 7
p.m. Visit the classrooms
and meet your child's
teacher.

Beginnings UM Church,
Second St., Pomeroy,
4:30 to 6 p.m.
Thursday, Aug. 26
RACINE
Revival at
the Bald Knob Freedom
Gospel Mission, Aug. 26,
27 and 28, 7 p.m. Singing
and preaching.
MIDDLEPORT
Revival
services,
Middleport First Baptist
Church, 7 p.m. Thursday,
Friday an Saturday.
Pastor
Bill
Zuspan
speaking. Special music,
Forgiven Again Trio on
Thursday,
Forever
Bless~s on Friday, and
The
Concords
on
Saturday. Public invited.
• Friday, Aug. 27
POMEROY - ,Noah's
Ark Outdoor Drama, 7:30
p.m., Aug. 27-29, Hillside
Baptist Church, free
admission.

Birthdays
Thursday, Aug. 26
SYRACUSE - Esther
Harden of Syracuse will
celebrate her 89th birthday on Aug. ·26. Cards
may be sent to her at Box
11 , Syracuse.
Saturday, Aug. 28
RACINE - Charles
Bush will be 90 on Aug.
28. Birthday cards may
be sent to him at 49740

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Church events
Marcum Construction

VVednesda~Aug.25

Commercial &amp; Residential

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dinner
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McKenzie Ridge Road,
Racine, 45771. A recep
tion in his honor will be
held from 1-4 p.m., at
Racine
American
Legion Hall.
Sunday, Sept. 5
RACINE Mildred
Shuler will be celebrating
her 97th birthday on
Sept. 5 Cards may be
sent to her at 44826
Resort Road, Racine,
Ohio 45771.

J/w;.1/aiJJ£ L~M8~R COMJ!ANY

PRESCHOOL REGISTRATION
The Athens-Meigs Educational
Service Center Preschool registration
for the 2010-2011 school year .
will be held Thursday, August 26, 2010
at Carleton School for children
ages 21/2·5
Appointments are necessary.
To schedule an appointment
contact Betsy at 740-992-2165

634 E. Main St., Pomeroy, OH

Richard Smith

740-992-5500

LARGE SELECTION
of Refrigerators &amp; Freezers
Ranges - Washer - Dryer
Whirlpool - Crosley - Estate

BUY THE PAIR $728.00

Bunk Beds

$399 Standard Bunk bed $319
$479 Bookcase Bunk bed $379
$679 Twin/Full Bunk bed $539
$889 Stairway Bunk bed $709
$769 Loft bed $619

8 cycle·2 speed
Heavy Duty
Reg. $429.00

Sale $399.00

Mattress ale

Restonic Towne Queen Set ..... $399
Restonic Argent Queen Set.. ...$599
Restonic Imperial Supreme Queen Set.. ... $699
Classique ET Plush Queen Set.. ... $999

*See store
for details

Free Delivery &amp;Removal
of Old Carpet· Furniture
Beddin &amp;A liances
All Living Room Suites
Recliners &amp; Glider/rockers
Pri

STORE HOURS: MON.-FRI.9:30-5:00
SATURDAY 9:30-1:00

l

�. . .4.--~----------.-.-·~ ----- ----- - - ----~~-------------------...------------~······

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 2 4 ,

The Daily Sentinel

2010

----

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cougress slhlll "'''ke 110 law respecting a11
establisluuetlt of religiotl, or prolaibiti11g the fru
e.wrcise tllt'reof; or abrid.f!itr.~ tire freedom of
speech, or of tltt: Jlress; or tile right of the people
· peaceaMy to a.(semble, aud to petitiou tire
Gol'enrmeut for a retlress ofgriePatlces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

..
~

BY ANNE FLAHERTY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

A senior U.S. conummder on Mo1xlay wouldn't predict
when Afghanisuu1 might take control of its own secwity
and wruned that NATO necxb at least ~mother year to
recruit and train enough soldiers ruld police officers.
The a sessment by Lt. Gen. Bill CaldwelL the
head of NATO's traming mission in Afghanistan.
further dims U.S. hopes that the planned U.S.
withdra\\UI next year WJII be significant in size.
President Barack Obama has said that troops~
will begm pulling out in July 20J I, the size and
pace of withdrawal depending on security conditions. Defen&lt;;e officials. includin!! Defense
Secretary Robert Gates. have said they believe
next summer's pullout would be modest.
In a Pentagon briefing, Caldwell told reporters
that Afghan lmny and pplice fixces won't reach sufficient numbers until Oct. 31, 20 II - three months
after Obama 's deadline to start lJ.S. withdrawals.
NATO has set the goal of crcating.an Afghan
military and police force of 305.600 personnel 171,600 army and 134,000 police. There are currently 249.500 personnel - 134,000 army and
115,500 police.
But Caldwell predicted that desertion and injury
rates are so high among Afghan forces that NATO
will have to recruit and train 141.000 people. to
ensure it has the 56.000 additional personnel
needed next fall.
Because Afghanistan is still scrambling to recruit
and train its security forces, Caldv. ell said tnere
\\as no accurate estimate on when Kabul might
take control of even the more peaceful parts of the
country. Caldwell also said it is likely the U.S. and
intemational community will have to pay for that
force for some time. even after NATO troops leave.
As was the case in Iraq, the training and equipping of Afghan 'iccurity forces is considered the
linchpin in the U.S. exit strategy. However. the
effort hal) been particularly difficult in
Afghani~tan, where illiteracy rates are high, corrupti~m is rampant and t~re is little banking infrastructure to ensure troops get paid.
Last June. Gates predicted that Afghan forces
could take control of security in some areas by the
end of this year. But diplomats in the U.S. and
Europe have since said the tirst hand over may not
occur until early next year. A N/XI'O conference in
Lisbon in November would decide which areas
would be hru1ded mer tirst.
Caldwell said that fewer than 18 percent of the
Afghan force IS literate, preventing most soldiers
from recognizing the serial number on their
weapons or perfonning other basic tasks.
111iteracy also has kept some Afghans from being
able to access their wages through an electronic
banking system, established by NATO to reduce
the risk that conupt officers would dtvert some of
the money.
Another major issue is attritio·n. Caldwell said
the attrition rate last month for Afghanistan's civil
order police force was 47 percent. The figure is
down from 70 percent last year but remains
·•unacceptable," he said.

The Daily Sentinel
Setv.i.oE

(USPS 213-960)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
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0

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Afghan security force
at least a year away

~

~.

.0

~

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..

Histrionics over the mosqUC: •
Symbolism crowds out reality
The American media, and to a
lesser extent the world media,
focus· on symbolism at the
expense of underlying reality.
And sometimes they can't even
make sense of the symbolism.
The artifici~lly generated controversy over a proposed mosque
within about two blocks of the
site of the 9/ II attacks is illustrative 'of this ignorance.
The "liberal" media, which
can't pass up a chance at controversy, has allowed conservatives,
who often claim to be defenders
of Philadelphia freedom, to shriek
that this is not an issue of religious freedom but one of callousness and in~c:nsitivity in putting a
mosque near the fonner site of the
World Trade Center. The conservatives, however. were certainly
leaning on government to use its
power to prohibit the building of
the mosque using zoning rules. a
clear violation of the founders·
intent to ban any law "prohibiting
the free exercise" of religion.
Meanwhile, liberal President
Barack Obama, in speaking about
the mosque, first defended religious liberty, implied that opposition to the mosque violated such
freedom, and then later seemed to
back off by saying that he wasn't
commenting on the wisdom of
building the mosque - just
defending the right of a construction permit. Another liberal,
Harry Reid, the Senate majority
leader, also defended religious
freedom theoretically, but insisted
that the mosque should be built
somewhere else. These comments
flung the door wide open to con-·
servatives to use public pressure.
to preempt the building of the
mosque.
Yet conservative opposition to
building the mosque is based on
ignorance. Even if erecting the
mosque Is insensitive to the pain
of 9 ·11, which I would argue that
it is not, the Constitution doesn't
require people or groups to be
sensitive to others· concerns in
order to enjoy religious freedom.

Ivan
Eland
For example, some Christians
hold Jews responsible for killing
Christ, but that does not preclude
Jews from worshiping freely in
the United States. Furthermore,
the mosque is being proposed by
the Cordoba Initiative, which is
dedicated ~ to
improving
Western/Islamic relations and
promoting interfaith dialogue,
and the leading person behind the
project is from the most liberal
and tolerant group in Islam, the
Sutis. Lastly. two long-standing
mosques are already in the neighborhood of ''!!round zero."
Some proponents of building
the mosque argue that mainstream
Muslims should not be punished
for the actions of militant
Islamists. Since zoning laws or
public pressure have not been
used to prohibit the construct ion
of evangelical Christian churches
near the sites of abmtion clinic
bombings. these advocates have a
good point. More9ver. not allowing this mosque to be built.
whether because of government
zoning restrictions or mere public
pressure. could help radicalize
moderate Muslims around the
world. Muslims around the v.orld
pay close attention to how
American Muslims are treated,
because they fear a "war of civilizations·· between the Christian
and Islamic worlds. When they
hear 1\ewt Gingrich say that the
mosque would be an example of
Muslim ·'triumphalism:· they are
fearful of such a cross-civilizational cont1kt or may be more
likely to become radicalized and
say "bring it on."
Most important, stiiling the

construction of this mosque
\\ ould further add to the delusions
of the American public about the
causes of the 9/ I 1 attacks. Radical
Islam had less to do with those
attacks than retaliation for longstanding American meddling in
and occupation of Arab and
Muslim countries, At tl1c time of
the attacks, those delusions were
fostered by then-President George
W. Bush, who. while professing
that he wanted no war against
Islam, blamed the attacks on a)
Qaeda 's jealousy of American
freedoms (you know, the ones
opponents of the mosque are trying to subvert). Osama bin
Laden's adamant denial of Bush's
assertion, and the ai-Qaeda
lender's repeated statements
American interven(ion in anli
occupation of Arab and Islamic
countries motivate his attacks on
the lJ nited States. have not ) et
penetrated the p:syche of the
American public. Neither has
empirical rl!search done by
Robert Pape from the University
of Chicago, which sho..vs that suicide bombing has lt lot less to do
with religion~~md more to do with
throwing out foreign occupiers
(especially democratic occupiers).
So the media's and public's
attention to trivia. such as the creation of a third mosque in the ·
neighborhood of "ground zero,"
crowds out a national discu-&gt;sion
that is sorely needed about why
tetTorists are heinous Iy attacking
the United States in the first place.
Perhaps then the contributor)
negligence of the U.S. government would be exposed to its own
people, and an unnecessal'). outdated. expensive, and dangerous '
interventionist foreign polic.
would be reined in.
(lwm Eland IS a Semor Fel101t
a/Ill Director of the Center 011
Peace &amp; l.ihertv at The
Independent Institute. Eland is a
national security and foreign policy expert based 111 H'ctshingtrm.
D.C.)

�________

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The Daily Sentinel • Pag~ As

www.mydailysentinel.com •

Tuesday,August24,2010

Customs agents in Ohio find marijuana in tombstone

Obituaries
James ·Bub' Willard Ohlinger
James "Bub" Willard Ohlinger, 69, of Pomeroy
passed away Sunday, Au~. 22, 20 10 at the Arbors
Nursing Home in Gallipohs.
Alorn July 21, 1941, he was the son of the late
Warles and Opal Ohlinger. James attended the Ash
Street Baptist Church.
James is survived by seven children: Kim, Jimmy,
Reggie, Janie, Kelly Jo, James, and Little James;
along with numerous ~randchildren. Also surviving
are eight brothers and s1sters: Donna "Toots" Bentz of
Jackson, Goldie Wolford of Lynchburg, Va., Charles
"Chod" Ohlinger of Long Bottom, Eunie Tong of
Rural Retreat, Va.. Dottie Hawkins of Syracuse,
Dorsey Ohlinger of Reedsville. Jackie Bowles of
Pomeroy. and Shelly Hutton of Pomeroy.
Services will be held Wednesday, Aug. 25, 2010 at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Viewing will be from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the funeral directly following.
Burial will rollow at the Bradford Cemetery.

Deaths
Michael A. McNutt
Michael A. McNutt, 60, of Point Pleasant W.Va.
died Friday Aug. 20, 2010. A memorial service was
held on Monday Aug. 23, at 7 p.m. at the Deal Funeral
..lil_ome, Point Pleasant. Burial will be at the conve•
nce of the family.

Nancy Maxine Wells
Nancy Maxine Wells, 81, died Sunday, Aug. 22,
2010. Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 25,
2010 at Willis Funeral Home with Rev. Hilda Sanders
officiating. Burial will follow in Suncrest Cemetery
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. Friends may call on Tuesday from
6-8 p.m. at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Maxine's memory to the
Macedonia Church Building Fund in care of Rev.
Hilda Sanders, 1074 Plymale Road, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. Visit www. willisfuneralhome.com to send email condolences.

Barry Steve Bryant
Barry Steve Bryant, 60, of Gallipolis, Ohio died
Friday Aug. 20, 2010. Services will be 11 a.m.
Thursday, Aug. 26, 20 10 at Willis Funeral Home with
Pastor Michael Lynn officiating. Burial will follow in
the Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call
on Wednesday, Aug. 25, 2010 from 5-8 p.m. at Willis
FunenU Home. Visit www. willisfuneralhome.com to
send e-mail condolences.'

CINCINNATI (AP)
Customs officials
say they seized more
than 50 pounds of marijuana from inside a
tombstone
being
shipped from Jamaica
to England through
Cincinnati.
U.S. Customs and

Border Protection officers made the discovery
with help from a narcotics detection dog at
the Cincinnati DHL
Express hub at the
Cincinnati/Northern
Kentucky International
Airport.
Officers
questioned

last week why someone
would ship a tombstone
from Kingston, Jamaica,
to London. An x-ray
machine revealed packages of the drug in a
metal box, wrapped in
metal mesh and hidden
inside the hollowed-out
concrete marker.

The stone bears the
name of 35-year-old
Delroy Senior. Part of
its inscription reads,
"your place no one can
fill."
Authorities estimate
the marijuana's street
value at about $52,000.
They have no suspects.

from a site on Hemlock
Grove Road.
• Edeh United Brethren
Church,
Reedsville,
reported theft of two air
conditioners.

to Syracuse Racine
Regional Sewer District,
easement; Gary S. Kapp,
Jr.. Rita Kapp, to
Syracuse
Racine
Regional Sewer District,
easement; Board of
Education to Syracuse
Racine Regional Sewer
District, easement; James
E. Diddle, Linda C.
Diddle, to Syracuse
Racine Regional Sewer
District, easement.
Kathy A. Miller to
Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District, easement;
Dale Willis to Syracuse
Racine Regional Sewer
District, easement; Kermit
Stalnaker,
Brenda
Stalnaker, to Syracuse
Racine Regional Sewer
District, easement; Steve
Riffle, Julie Riffle, to
Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District, easement;
Michael Hill, Mindy Hill,
to
Syracuse Racine
Regional Sewer District,
easement; Salser Family
Revocable Trust, Charles
I. Salser, Betty E. Salser,
to
Syracuse Racine
Regional Sewer District,
easement; Brian Bowling,
Terri
Bowling,
to
Syracuse Racine Regional
Sewer District, easement

For the Record
911

Sheriff

POMEROY - Meigs
County 911 dispatched
these emergency calls for
assistance:
Friday
8:32 a.m., Sycamore
Street, Middleport, lifting
assistance; 9:18 a.m.,
Ohio 124, Racine, difficulty breathing; 11:53
Ohio
124,
a.m.,
Middleport, chest pain.
12:03 p.m., Park Street,
fracture; 1:09 p.m.. Lee
Circle, laceratiOn; 4:44
p.m., Painter Ridge Road,
psychiatric emergency;
10: 11 p.m., Carson Road,
weakness; .10:49 p.m.,
Ohio 7, Cheshire, pam.
Saturday
6:02p.m., Main Street,
Middleport, head injury;
10:46
a.m.,
Powell
Street,
unconscious;
11 :26 a.m., Syracuse,
shoulder pain; 3:16p.m.,
Roc.ksprings
Road,
altered mental status;
4:13 p.m., Fairgrounds
Lane, seizure; 5:34p.m.,
Mulberry Avenue, pain;
9:08p.m., East Memorial
Drive, swelling; 9:35
p.m., Cherry Street,
Syracuse,
laceration;
9:48 p.m., Ohio 248,
medical alarm.
Sunday
3:01 a.m., Bradbury
Road, swelling; 10:01
a.m., Ohio 248, laceration; 2:13 p.m., Grant
Street, medical alarm;
6:18
p.m., Peacock
Avenue, fall.

POMEROY - Sheriff
Robert Beegle reported:

Arrests

•
Steve
Chappell,
Pomeroy, by Pomeroy
Police, on a bench warrant Common Pleas
.from the Court of Common
POMEROY - Clerk
Pleas for failure to appear
after recognizance release. of Courts Diane Lynch
He was to appear in court filed the following in the
public record of the court:
on Monday.
Domestic
•
Lester
Bush,
•
Divorce
action filed by
Pomeroy, by Pomeroy
Police, on warrants Alyssa Kennedy against
charging
aggravated James E. Kennedy.
• Dissolution action
menacing and domestic
violence. He appeared in filed by Lisa Dawn Eakins
and Mickey Eakins.
court on Aug. 20 .
Foreclosures
• Tiffany Barker, 20, Lee
• Action filed by
County, Fla., in Lee
County, on indictment Farmers Bank and Savings
from Meigs County charg- Co., against Cara Hall Day
ing five counts of forgery, Care, Inc., and others.
• Action ftled by
five counts of receiving
stolen property, and a count Citimortgage, Inc., against
of deception to obtain dan- Eric J. Johnson, and others.
• Action filed by Chase
gerous drugs in July, 2009.
A transport company Home Finance, LLC,
has been contracted to against Dennis C. Jones
II, and others.
return Barker here.
Judgment
•
Kevin
Roush,
• Civil judgment action
Minersville, on a charge
of burglary for the ftled by Beneficial Ohio,
alleged theft of a comput- Inc., against Terri Hoschar.
er from the Chuck
Ritchie residence.
Recorder
Complaints
• Scott Ransom, Hill
POMEROY
Kay
Hill
Road, Racine, reported Recorder
tools stolen from the tool reported these transfers
box on his truck and from of real estate:
Beth A. Deaver, James
his garage.
• Dick Cole, Cole's T. Deaver, to Syracuse
Mobile Home Sales, Racine Regional Sewer
reported a choker chain District, easement; John
and diesel fuel stolen Alkire, Pamela D. Alkire,

.:ocal Briefs

Commissioners
POMEROY - Meigs
County Commissioners
will meet at 10 a.m. on
Thursday instead of at
their regular meeting
time, 1 p.m.

AMP from Page A1

Deadline approaching

in an upcoming spending
this
bill.
However,
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The 3rd annual Miss spending bill may not
Mothman Festival Pageants will be held Sept. 17 and come before Congress
18 at the Point Pleasant Riverfront Park.
until fall, even possibly
On Friday, contestants in the Teen, Miss, Ms. and next year
Mrs. will compete, and on Saturday, the children's
AMP selected the
pageant will be held for contestants ages 2-12.
Meigs County site near
This pageant is open to anyone, ages 2-married Letart Falls, previously
women. Contestants do not have to be from West the site of the organizaVirginia to be eligible.
tion's planned coal-frred
For an entry form, _please send a request to missmoth- facility, as the primary site
manfestivalpageant@gmail.com or call 30-593-8998.
for a self-build NGCC
Entry fee is only $40. Visit missmothmanfestival- facility in April 2010. The
pageant.com for more info.
company has said as an
alternative to the selfbuild option, AMP then
examined options of partnering with a third-party
or individually purchasing
one of several NGCC
Tuesday: Areas of dense fog before 9 a.m. existing facilities or proOtherwise, mostly cloudy, with a high near 82. North jects under development.
wind between 3 and 8 mph.
AMP stated the due dili[fuesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around gence examination includ•
. Calm wind.
ed third-party review of
Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 85. gas markets, wholesale
Calm wind becoming west between 5 and 8 mph.
energy market projections
Wednesday Night: A slight chance of showers (including
carbon
before 3 a.m. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 62. impacts),
construction
Northwest wind between 5 and 7 mph. Chance ofpre- pricing and permitting
cipitation is 20 percent.
inrplications for both the
self-build and purchase
options. The due diligence
also included negotiations
with
the owner of an existfrom' Page Al
ing NGCC facility.
"It was important to
earlier this month after Crawford allegedly shot them
our Participants that we
from her yard.
According to Sheriff Robert Beegle, Crawford was conduct a thorough Q.ue
in her yard when Price, driving a car, stopped in front diligence examination of
of her house, and she opened fire, striking two of the our options to ensure we
recommended the course
car's four passengers.
She remains in jail on a $250,000 cash bond. Her of action that would
trial was also set for Nov. 9. William Eachus and bring the least overall
David Baer were appointed to represent Crawford on risk, provide the most
overall value and allow
the felony charges.

Meigs County Forecast

lrials

Gi~5hop
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New! DaVinci Beads
106 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-1702
Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 9-5
Sunday-closed

Visit us @www. weavingstitchesgiftsho

them to maximize the
investments they have
already made," AMP
President/CEO
Marc
Gerken said. "Policymakers at the local, state
and federal levels have
indicated their support
for a natural gas project
in Meigs County and we
will work with them to
finalize the abatements
and incentives, including
anticipated site infrastructure incentives from
the State of Ohio.
"AMP
and
our
Members made some
tough decisions in the
past year and I applaud
their efforts, patience and
confidence in each other
and the organization they
own," said Gerken. "Our
Members understand the
importance of taking a
long-term view of power
supply resources and
markets. AMP is poised
to be in a strong position
with our investments in
new, more efficient,
mine-mouth coal generation in the Prairie State
Generating Campus, our
various rentwable energy
investments - including
hydroelectric, solar, wind
and landfill gas - our
energy efficiency pro-

gram and new natural gas
resources. Our portfolio
of owned generation will
be approximately 18 percent renewable in 2015."
At their Aug. 19 meeting, Participants also
voted to secure a block of
replacement power from
the lower-cost wholesale
power supply now available - AMP stated the
economic downturn and
low natural gas pricing
have led to historically
low wholesale power
prices. While this is
expected to be a temporary condition, AMP said
its members can benefit
by locking in longer term
power supply at this time.
According to the company, the combination of
these efforts will allow
Participants the opportu-

nity to recoup more than
$100 million with savings from reduced power
supply costs (for a portion of Participant power
supply needs as compared to AMPGS coal
project projected costs
through 2020) and utilization of the Meigs
County site investment.

BEST AUTO RATES

740-992-6677

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Let" a.f" ,k(PJHajk!-t" "8aeL~~t"o «~o~~ fact:/

BEND AREA
CHIROPRACTIC
CENTER

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we·fe just around the bend ...
www.drkelseychiro.com or visit us on facebook

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304-773-5773

�r-1------------------ ·-------·---------..

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August

24, 2010

Sale from Page At
Parker.
Pomeroy,
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings Co .. 1,000: Kirk
Pullins, Long Bottom.
Home National Bank.
1.000.
Garrett
Ritchie,
Reedsville. Reed &amp;
Bauer Insurance. 900;
Allison
Barber,
Coolville.
Home
National Bank. 900:
Clayton Moore. Racine.
Home National Bank,
700: Clayton Ritchie.
Reedsville. Reed &amp;
Bauer Insurance, 775;
Rachel
Kesterson,
Pomeroy. Fanners Bank,
1.000: Laura Pullins,
Long Bottom, Reed &amp;.
Bauer Insurance. 800.

Market goats
Kelsey
Johnson,
Coolville, g.c.. Peoples
Bank, Pleasant Valley
Hospital and Michael
Bartrum and The Cutting
Crew. $1 ,800; Makayla
Findley, Ractne, r.c.,
Home National Bank.
1,000: Jett Facemyer.
Pomeroy. 1,350: Hannah
Hill, Long Bottom. 525:
Tyler Barber. Coolville,
Farmers
Bank
and
Savings Co., 500; Jessica
Parker. Tuppers Plains,
Parker Corp.. 625.
Trenton
DuVall,
Middleport. Eastman's
Big Bend Save-A-Lot,
450; Daschle Facemyer.
Pomeroy. Twin Rivers
1.800;
Hardwoods,
Blaise
Facemyer.
Pomeroy. David Burt.
1,000: Jordan Lyons.
Reedsville, AEP/Gavin,
550;
Cara
Amos,
Coolville, Douglas Horse
Logging, 500: Alison
Deem, Racine, Fanners
Bank.
500:
Jerrika
Keesee.
Middleport,
Shelly Materials. 500.
Sharp
Facemyer.
Pomeroy.
Hupp
Landscaping.
I, I 00;
Madison
Dyer.
Middleport,
NorrisNorthup Dodge, 800:
Owen
Arix.
Long
Bottom. Brown Agency
Nationwide Insurance,
350: Heidi Willis. Long
Bottom.
AEP/Mountaineer, 525:
Nikita Wood. Pomeroy,
Scott A. Williams, 500:
Taylor Chevalier, Twin
River Harwoods, 500.
Brent
Johnson,
Coolville,
Karr
Contracting, 750; Megan
Middleport,
Dyer,
Yaugers Farm Supply.
350; Clayton Wood,
Pomeroy. David Burt,
800: Michele Satterfield.
Pomeroy. Ridenour Gas
Service, 425: Marrisa
Keesee,
Middleport,
Farmers Bank, 475; Alex
Amos. Coolville. 450,
Farmers Bank; Taiton
Sarver, Pomeroy. Home
~ational Bank. 400.
Facemyer,
Scout
Pomeroy, Twin River
Hardwoods,
1.1 00;
Breanna
Smith.
Facemyer
Pomeroy,
Forest Products, 950;
Colton Hamm, Racine.
Green Valley Co-op. 675:
Courtney
Lyons,
Reeds_ville, AEP/Gavin,
400;
Alexandra
Houdashelt. Pomeroy.
550, Butcher Logging:
Katelynn
Chevalier,
Home National Bank,
500.

Charle" Bret Cleland. National Bank. $500;
Reedsville,
Hendrix Cody Rayburn, Po1peroy,
Heating and Cooling. Ohio Valley Bunk, $550:
Trenton Cook, Pomeroy,
1.000.
Samuel
Collins. Mel Weese, optomitrist.
Reedsville. Baum True $500: Cotten Rayburn,
Lumber Co .. Pomeroy. Bob's Market.
Value
1.000: Clinton Lambert. $500; Paige Buckley.
Langs ... ilie. Elgin Service Rutland, Farmers Bank.
Farms. $400.
Ccntcr/S&amp;S
1.000. Amanda Gilkey.
Langsville. Elgin Service
Mark~t hogs
Farms.
Ccnter/S&amp;S
1.690: Hannah Hawley,
Jackie Jordan. Shade,
~1 D
ld'
Reedsville.
Norris~.c..
' c ona "·
Northup Dodge. ·1.200: ::;1,200:
Brcanna
·
Jesse
Woodyard. C o lb urn, Racme.
r.c..
Pomeroy. S&amp;J Lumber Home N'ational Bank.
-I 'J5() A
c lburn.
Co., 1,200.
·- ; uston
Kelsey
Burton. ::;Racine.
Twin River
Pomeroy, Parker Corp., Hardwoods. $800; Brent
1,000; Morgan Windon, Welch,
Cool\'ille.,
Pomeroy. Home National Keller's
Excavating.
Bank.
I ,000: Jenna $500:
Shawnella
Burdette.
Facemyer Patterson.
Rutland.
Lumber Co.
1,600: Fanners Bank, $700:
Lacey Hupp. Racine. Victoria Curtis. Pomeroy.
Porter
GM
Holzer Clinic, 1.300; Mark
Jacob Dunn. Pomeroy, Supettcnter. $550: Kayla
Farmers Bank. 1,100
Hawthorne, Reedsville,
Steve Nelson. $750;
Shanda Welch. Coolville.
Market
Depoy's Ag Parts. $500;
lambs
Daniel Jenkins, Racine.
Swisher &amp; Lohse. $550:
Ryan Amos. Coolville. Trinity Sanders, Holzer
g.c., Farmers Bank. Medical Center, $550.:
S 1.200; Cody Bart rum. Allen Peoples, Meigs
Republican
Pomeroy. r.c., Whaley's County
Used
Cars,
S900: Party. $500; Doug (Greg)
Matthew Werry. Chester. Jenkins, Racine, Home
G&amp;W
Plastics
and National Bank. $425;
Keesee.
Murphy Oil Co.. S 1.050: ~1atthew
Dawn Bissell. Rutland. Middleport,
Tobacco
Ohio Valley Bank. $700: King #5. $525: Katie
Jordan
Roush. Durst, Long Bottom.
True
Value
Pleasant Baum
Middleport,
Valley Hospital and Mike Lumber Company. $550:
Seller:;,
Bartrum. $700; Zachary Bradley
Porperoy. Pomeroy. Mark Porter
Bartrum,
Brown
Agency GM Supercenter~ $475:
Nationwide Insurance, Jake Roush. Middleport,
Drilling.
$600;
$700: Lucas Hunter, JD
Beaver.
Racine, Gatling. Ohio. Cheyenne
$1.100:
LeDeana Porneroy. Twin River
$700;
Sinclair. Racine. Depoy's Hardwoods.
Chelsea
Kelley.
Ag Parts. $500: Courtnee
Williams.
Langsville, Pomeroy Holzer Clinic
'
Porter
GM $650. '
MarR
Kyle Russell. Rutland.
Supercenter. $500: Tyler
Pomeroy, Feed Stop and R~C
Williams
Porter
GM Packing. $600: Dameson
:vlark
Supercenter,
S700: Jenkins, Racine. Fanners
Russen Beegle. Portland. Bank.
$5.50:
Emily
Bob's Mark~et. $550; AJ ManueL Racine, Brad
Roush, Racine, Home Maynard Contracting.
National Bank, $500; $550: Meghan Lambert.
Rutland
Paula
Barthelmas. Langsville.
Pomerov, Farmers Bank. Service Center, $650;
$400: Carolann Stewart. Timothy Elam. Racine.
Rutland, Swisher &amp; David
Burt,
$600:
Lohse. $600: Eli Hunter. Courtney
Fitzgerald.
Racine, Gatling. Ohio. Long Bottom, AEP
$1,250; Jenni Taylor, Mountaineer Plant. $500;
Russell,
Rutland,
Michael's Morgan
8 utcher
Detail Center I Deer Rutland.
View Farms. $500: Rhett Logging, $500; Dierra
Beegle. Portland. Home Jenkins. Racine, Baum

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True Value Lumber.
$475: Shana Roush.
Rutland, AEP Gavin
Plant, $550; Michaela
Holter, Racine, Citizens
Banf&lt; of Athens, $650;
Miranda Holter, Racine,
Citizens Bank of Athens,
$800; Caitlyn Cowdery,
Home
Reedsville,
National Bank, $600;
Adam Pape, . Portland,
Home ~ational Bank,
$5i5; Dru Jenkins.
Racine, Farmers Bank,
$500: Matt Durst. Long
·
Bottom, Forked Run
S
Cl b $ 6
00:
portsman
u ,
Jenna Jordan, Shade,
Arnold' Insurance, ct575·,
'
A~gela
Keesee,
Mtddl~port,
Shelly
Matenals,
$550;
Courtney
Mather,
Chester, Wal-Mart of
M.ason, W.Va., $750;
Kunber.ly Hawthorne,
Reedsvtlle,
Steve
Nelson, $650.
C~elsea
Holter,
Racme, Home National
Bank, $600; Kaitlyn
Hawk, I:-ong Bottom,
AEP Gavm Plant, $650;
Zachary !--egg,. Pomeroy,
Eastman s Btg Bend
Sa~e-A-Lot,
$5.25;
Cattlyn Holter, Racrne,
Dr. Douglas Hunter,
$500: S.avannah Hawley,
Reedsvtl~e.
Parker
CorporatiOn,
~500;
Bra':ldon
Marcmko.
Racme, .
J&amp;L
C~nstructton,
$500;
Mttchell
Howard,
Pomeroy, .. G&amp;M Fuel,
$6.50; Bnttney Mather,
Chester, The Wounded
Goose Restaurant, $650;
Rebecca Chadw~ll, Long
Bottom..
0 Ble~ess
Memonal
~osp1tal,
$600;
c;hnstopher
H~l~er. Racme, AEP
Phthp Sporn Plant, $6qo;
Terrence
. Conlin,
Pomeroy, Swtsher &amp;
Lohse, $500; Kayla
Wyant. Albany, Tuppers

Plains Dairyette, $500;
Chase Graham. Racine,
Nelson Meat Processing,
$550; Dennis Teaford,
Portland,
ramily
Oxygen, $500; Lindsay
Teaford, Portland, Home
National Bank, $600;
Alyssa Smith, Pomeroy.
AEP Mountaineer Plant,
$500;
Chandler
Drummer, Portland. Hot
Spot &amp; Randy Moore BP,
$600: Ashlyn Wolfe.
Racine, Home National
Bank. $600; Morgan
Howard,
Pomeroy,
Whaley's Used Car:;,
$700: Josiah La~son,
Albany. Pleasant \ialley
\!like
Hosptial
and
Bartrum. $600.
Kelsey
Myers,
Pomeroy, Earnest L.
Trent, DDS, $650; Miya
Gilmore, Albany, Oiler's
Livestock I Oiler 's Trash
Service, $500; Cole
Graham, Racine, Randy
Moore
BP,
$600;
Madison
Hendricks,
Whaley's Used Cars,
$550; Brittany Wells.
Racine, Meigs County
Fish &amp; Game, $450:
Zachary Manuel, Racine,
Kinsale
Corporation.
$675; Brook Andrus,
Albany. Summerfield's
Restaurant,
$500:
Abigail Legg. Pomeroy,
Jividen's
Farm
Equipment, $500: Jake
Andrus. Albany, JD
Drilling, S500: Destinee
Blackwell,
Pomeroy,
Holzer Clinic, $500:
Faith Teaford, Portland.
Dr. Douglas Hunter.
$550; Derick Powell,
Reedsville,
Hendrix
Heating &amp; Cooling.
$700; Mark Gibbs,
Reedsville,
T homas
Rental Center, $500;
Haley Tripp, Pomeroy,
Parker
Corporation.
$700;
Andrew
Syracuse.
Roseberry.
The Cutting Crew, $700;

Ronald Wilson, Racine,
Hot Spot. $650; Garrett
Wolfe, Racine,
Dr.
Douglas Hunter ai l
River Front Meat &amp; D
$700; Travis Kime
Portland, Baum True
Value Lumber, $600;
Ciera Older, Pomeroy,
Fanners Bank, $700;
Weston Kelley, Pomeroy.
Michael's Detail Center I
Deer View Farms, $550:
Hannah
Mulford,
Pomeroy, AEP Philip
Sporn
Plant,
$550;
Larissa
Riddle.
Coolville
Parker
' Corporati~n.
$675; .
Michael Manuel Racine
Dettwiller
'Lumbe;
Company and Wolfe
Farms, $2,200.

Market dairy
steers
Kalya Tripp, Pomeroy,
g.c., Farmers B ank,
$1.600;
Aud rionna
P·ullins, Long Bottom,
r.c.,
Meigs Count&amp;
Auditor Maty Byer-Hil.
$1 ,350; Benjamin Ayres,
Reedsville, Wal-Mart of
Mason. W.Va., $1.750.

Market steers
Jacob Parker, Tuppers
Plains.
g.c.,
RC
Construction. $3,500;
Jordan Parker, Tuppers
Plains, · r.c..
Arnold
Insurance, $3,300; Dylan
Milam, Pomeroy, JD
Drilling, $2,200; Jordan
Wood, Long Bottom,
Pullins
Excavating,
$3, 100;
Courtney
Bauerbach,
Tuppers
Plains, Cool Spot and
Parker
Corporation,
$3,000: Ashley Putnam,
Coolville, G&amp;M Fuel.
$2.800: Samuel Evans.
Racine, Farmers Bank.
$2.500.

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Market
Commercial
Beef
Rebecca
Pullins.
Coolville, g.c., Ridenour
Gas Service, $2.500:
Maddison
Woodyard,
Pomeroy, S&amp;J Lumber
Co., 1,200; Jonathan
Barrett,
Coolville,
Collins Show Cattle,
1,125; Cassidy Cleland,
Gheen's
Reedsville,
Painting, I ,000; Ashley
Life, Racine. Holzer
Clinic, 700.
Nicole Moodispaugh,
Farmers
Reedsville,
Bank.
900:
Shandi
Beaver. Pomeroy, Twin
River Hardwoods. 1.300;
Elizabeth
Collins,
Reedsville,
Diamond
Stone, 1.100; Justin
Cotterill.
Pomeroy,
1,000;
AEP/Sporn,

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Inside

The Daily Sentinel

Bl

A numerical view of OSU, Page 82
Clarett to tryout for pros, Page B6

•

Thesday, August 24, 2010

~==================================~====
Countdown After a year away, Moeller back to physical ways

Kickoff

DAYS
LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedulf' of upcoming
high school varsoty sporting events
onvolvong teams from Meogs and Gallia
coun11es.
~Augus124

Golf
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Southern at Miller, 5 p.m.
Po1nt Pleasant. Poca at Sleepy
Hollow, 4 p.m
Soccer
'
Gallia ~cademy at South Point. 7
p.m.
Point Pleasant (G) at Ravenswood,
6p.m
Wednesday, August 25
Cross Country
Southern. Me1gs at Vinton County,
Sp.m.
Golf
l
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Wellston, 4 p.m.

•

Thursday, Aygu:&gt;W
Golf
Gallia Academy, River Valley at
Cliffside, 4:30 p.m.
Waterford at Eastern, 5 p.m
Federal Hocking ~t Southern. 5
p.m.
Meigs at Vmton County. 5 p.m.
uth Gallia. Poont PIP.:!SAnt at
ffs1de. 4:30 p.m.
ller at Wahama, 4:30p.m.
Cardinal Conference at Scarlet
Oaks.1 p.m.
Soccer
OVCS at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Sissonville at Potnt Pleasant (G), 6
p.m.
Sissonville at Point Pleasant (B), 8
p.m.

Meigs County
volleyball
p_review at EHS

COLUMBUS.
Ohio
(AP) -Tyler Moeller has
always been a vicious hitter..
Then he took a vicious
hit in a Florida bar and his
world was flipped upside
down.
Now after a troubling
year of doubt and questions. he's back practtcing
at Ohio State, httting others with the same passion
he did before a sucker
punch nearly took him out
of the game.
"I feel leaps and bounds
better." the senior defender said earlier this week
after a practice heavy on
the pad-cracking. ''Those
big hits aren't so big anymore. I feel great. I feel
back to myself hittingwise.''
Just over a year ago,

Moeller was with his family on vacation in Florida.
At some point he got into a
conflict with another customer in the par/restaurant.
The other guy. who later
pleaded gUtlty to felony
battery, punched Moeller,
who fell back and hit his
head on the floor, suffering
a fractured skull and a
brain injury.
The Cincinnati native
was in the hospital for
weeks undergoing surgery
to relieve pressure on his

swollen brain. He had
dozens of ugly stitches all
over his head. suffered
short-term memory loss
and, at least for a while, it
was as if his personality
slipped away.
At least one doctor told
him he'd never play football again. Subsequent
analysis determined that
he was making a good
recovery. Perhaps - perhaps - with some tJme
away he might once more
return to the field.
So he spent all of the
2009 season watching
from the sidelines instead
of starting at the star position. sort of a hybrid
between linebacker and
defensive back.
The low point might
have been the team's apex.
Devin Barclay's 39-yard

field goal in overtime gave
the Buckeyes a stirring 2724 win over Iowa, sending
Ohio State to the Rose
Bowl and initiating a wild
celebration on the fieldtumed-mosh pit.
Moeller was on the sidelines and couldn't even
join in.
"1 had to sit down. I got
dizzy. It was bad,'' he said.
"I wanted to play and I
wanted to cheer on the
tean1 and I couldn't do any
of that. l was just a new
person. I had to just sit and
watch us. It was tough situation to be in."
He returned to classes
and went through sprine
drills but was not ~rmit::
ted to hit or be hit while
doctors kept an eye on

Please see Back. Bl

Piniella waves goodbye to half-century in baseball
CHICAGO (AP)
After all the wins. all the
los~es and all those arguments. Lou Piniella clearly
felt it was time to leave.
Saying the final goodbye after a half-century in
baseball. that was the hard
part.
''J cried a little bit after
the game. You get emotionaL I'm sorry: I'm not
trying to be." the Chicago
Cubs
manager
said
Sunday. his eyes tearing
up again and his voice
crackmg.
"This will be the last
time I put on my uniform,"
he said.
The 66-year-old Piniella
announced before the
Cubs-Atlanta game that he
was retiiing unmediately
after it was over and planning to s~nd more time
with his atling mother.
"My mom needs me
home and that's where I'm
going," Piniella said.
The£ubs clidn 't do him
many favors on the field in
his wrapup, losing 16-5 to
the Braves. He was in the
dugout when it ended. and
he waved his hat across
the field to his friend,
longtime Atlanta manag~r
Bobby Cox, who has satd
this is his last season.
The Cubs gave up II
runs over the finaJ three
innings to fall 23 games
under .500. Many m the
crowd of 37,518 had
already left Wrigley Field
when Sam Fuld grounded
into a game-ending double
play.
·•Jt's a o-ood dav to
e
' ·s a
remember and
also 1t
good day to forget."
Piniella satd.
Third base coach Mike
Quade was promoted to

Nuccio DiNuzzo/Chicago Tribune/MCT
~hicago Cubs manager Lou Piniella thanks the cheering crowd for their acknowledgement during an emotional moment at Wrigley Field in C hic~go, Illinois, on

Sunday. The Cubs lost to the Atlanta Braves, 16-5.

interim manager, gettin~
the nod over bench coach
Alan Trammell, who was
thought to have been a
candidate to succeed
Piniella next season. But
general manager Jim
Hendry· said Trammell
was not ~oing to be considered ror the job, so
Quade was selected to finish out the season.
Speculation is rampant
that former Cubs star Ryne
Sandberg, now their
Triple-A manager, will be
hired.
From the start. it was !n
emotional day for a man
kno.wn for his fiery ways
as a player, manager and
executive for 48 years.

TUPPERS PLAINS.
Ohio - Eastern High
School wiJI be hosting a
volleyball preview at
4:45 p.m. on Saturday,
August 28 at the EHS
gymnasium against both
Southern and Meip for
all junior high. JUnior
varstty and varsity programs.
The three schools will
play one another in a
und robin format, with
e 7th grade teams start•
ing the event at 4:45 p.m.
The 8th grade teams will
play at 5:30 p.m.. followed by the junior varsjty squads at 6:30 p.m.
The varsity teams will
cap the evening with a .
start time of 7:30 p.m.
There will be an admisBEREA, Ohio (AP) dealt for quarterback
sion charge a~ the door
Peyton
Hillis
would
not
Brady Quinn in March.
and no season passes are
Jet a summer rainstorm,
"It was good to see the
permitted for entry.
slick 'tutf. or six St. Louis things he can do as a runRams stop him.
ner:· Mangini said. "It
Rain-soaked Cleveland was good to see things
Browns fans roared as you
remember him
Hillis broke six tackles doing, which were reaGALLIPOLIS, Ohio on a gutty 9-yard run to sons for the trade. He
- The Gallia Academy start the ·second quarter gives you a spark as a
night.
It tough. physical guy.''
High School cheerlead- Saturday
sparked
Cleveland
to
its'
Offensive coordinator
ers will be holding its
·second annual Alumni first touchdown in a 19- Brian Daboll and quarterback Jake Delhomme
Cheerleading Night at 17 preseason loss.
"We got fired up seeing liked Hillis' bowling-ball
6:30 p.m. on Friday,
September
I 0.
at that," center Alex Mack routine so much they
Memorial Field during said Sunday. "Anytime called his number four
the home football contest you see one of your guys times on the next six
running downhill, run- plays: a 1-yard plunge;
ainst Wellston.
All former GAHS ning over people, you pass plays of 3 and 9
•
yards; and another bullcheerleaders are invited just Jove it.··
Hillis,
thwarted
at
the
dozing
4-yard run to the
to come and cheer with
line.
broke
to
his
right,
right.
the current squad during
·'He's the epitome of
the first quarter of that and carried defenders
with
him.
He
flexed
his
tough,
rugged football:'
contest.
muscles
and
stomped
his
Delhomme
said.
New alumni cheerleadHillis gained a teaming shirts will be avail- feet after his battering
leading 51 yards on I 2
able fer purchase to those Ram run.
1ihe
fans
loved
it.
carries
and credited
who RSVP no later than
Coach Eric MaRgini did, teammates for creating
August 31.
too. It was the type of his pile-pushing perforContact
effort
he had seen Hillis mance.
Randles at (740) 245"I just try to do the best
58 I 0 or by email at contribute to Denver
Broncos
drives
the
past
cheer4blue@gmail.com
two years before being
Please see Hillis, Bl
for more inform31ion.

Piniella teared up at
home plate when the
umpires wished him well
with his mom. He shook
hands with Cox after they
reached the plate. hugged
each other and exchanged
back slaps as Piniella 's
No. 41 was posted on the
center-field scoreboard.
Cox was announced to
the crowd and took his cap
off and waved it to the
fans.
Then the. public address
announcer ran down
Piniella 's achievements as
he stood at the plate, and
scattered , cheers
of
·'Louuu" could be heard
throughout the crowd.
After Piniella and Cox

posed for a picture with
the umpires. the managers
hugged each other again.
Piniella then headed to the
dugout and, as the cheers
got louder. took off his
cap, waved it to the crowd
and begari to clap for the
fans.
When Piniella made the
first of three trips to the
mound in the seventh
inning to change pitche.rs,
fans behind the dugout
gave him a standing ovation as he came off the
field and he acknowledged
them with a little wave of
his hand.
Piniella said last month

Please see Lou, Bl

Peyton Hillis pushes for
starting spot with Browns

SENTINEL STAFF
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BEVERLY, Ohio Defending
champion
Waterford had little trouble
with
visiting
Southern on Thursday at
Lakeside Golf Course, as
the Wildcat goff team
posted a 55-stroke victory during a Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division matchup in
Washington County.
The Wildcats - who
had the top-four individual rounds on the day posted a winning total of
164. finishing well ahead.
of the Tornadoes and
their tally of 219.
Brandon Offenbarger
the reigni ng TVC
Hocking Player of the
Year - earned medalist
honors for Waterford
with a round of 38.
Teammate Aaron Miller
was the runner-up with a
40.
Austin Hilvering and
Branham Casey rounded
out the winning score
with respective rounds of
41 and 45.
Adam Pape paced
Southern with a round of
49, followed by Andrew
Roseberry and Dyllan
Roush with rounds of 5 1
and 57, respectively.
Cole Graham completed
Southern's team tally
with a 62.
Both Trenton Cook and
Brandon Marcinko also
fired matching 69s for
SHS.

Charleston " .
Daily Mail
preseason poll
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -The
Charleston Dally Mail preseason
high school football poll, with firstplace votes in parentheses, 2009
record, and pomts, :

CLASS

AAA

1
2
3.
4.

South Charleston (19)
University
Brooke
Martinsburg
s. Capital {1)
6 George Washington
7. Morgantown
8. Parkersburg
9. Bridgeport
10. Musselman

13·1198
9-4 156
13·1 148
9·3 106
6·5 96
9·3 94
7-4 89
6-5 50
12·1 34
5·5 33

Others receiving votes: Fairmont
Senior 23, Spring Valley 18.
Wheeling Park 9, Hurricane 8, St.
Albans 8, Riverside 7, Lewis County
6, Cabell Midland 4, Princeton 4,
Parkersburg South 3. Nicholas
County 2. Robert C. Byrd 2,
Woodrow Wilson 1.

CLASS

GAHSAlumni
Cheerleading

\

Wildcats
roar past
Southern

AA

1. Bluefield (17)
2. Magnolia
3. Ravenswood (2)
4. Wayne (1)
S.Keyser
6. Chapmanville
7. Point Pleasant
8. PikeV1ew
9 . 0ak Glen
10 Frankfort

12-2 197
12-1151
9·3 148
13-1 143
8-4 78
6·5 69
7-4 57
8-4 56
6·5 51
11-2 41

Others receiVing votes: James
Monroe 32, Grafton 17, Wetr 8, Poca
6 Scott 6, Sherman 6, Westside 6.
Herbert Hoover 5, R1ver V1ew 4,
Braxton County 3, Liberty Raleigh 3.
Greenbner West 2, Roane County 2.
Philip Barbour 1, Shady Spring 1.

CLASS

A

1. Madonna (8)
14·0 171
2.Man(1)
12·2 170
9·3 167
3. Williamstown (3)
4. Wheeling Central (7) 9·4 166
5. Richwood (1)
12-186
• 7-3 65
6. B1shop Donahue
7. Fayetteville
9·3 41
8. St Marys
2-8 39
9. Clay-Battelle
9·2 36
7-4 34
10 Moorefield

Ed Suba JrJAkron Beacon Journai/MCT

Cleveland running back Peyton Hillis acknowledges
the cheers of the fans after dragging several St. Louis
"Rams defenders for a sizable gain during the first half
of a preseason game at Cleveland Browns Stadium in
Cleveland, Ohio, Saturday.

Others receiv1ng votes: Wahama 32,
Mount Hope 27, Buffalo 22, Tucker
County 16, East Hardy 10. Meadow
Bndge 10, Notre Dame 10. Valley
Fayette 6, Wtrt County 4, Calhoun
County 3. Parkersburg Catholic 3,
Pendleton Counly 3, Matewan 2,
Paden City 2, South Harrison 1, Van
1

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Page B2 • 'Jhe Daily Sentinel

Back
from Page 81
him. But they Inter deareu
him to rejoin the team :Ulu
fully participate in all
drills.
Now Moeller is back to
being himsclt.
"'JYicr Moeller loves to
play the game," couch Jim
Tressel said. "We missed
him sore!]. If you think
back to the spring game of
'09, he would have been
one of the first gu]s you
thought of ''hen you
walkeu out of the stadtum
saying. ·Boy, this gu)- ha"
arrived.· Then we didn't
have him, so it's going to
be huge to have him
back."
Safet)- Jemutlc Hines
had doubts that Moeller
might be able to return, but
those doubts ha-.. e evaJX&gt;rated in the late '\ummer
heat.
'Tyler was born ready."
he said. "Tyler is the hardest hitter on the tetun by
far. He's ready. Tyler's
going to go 1,000 mph and
hit people. Everybody
knows that."
Even Moeller, dubbed
"Rat" by an assistant
coach \Vho thought he
scampered around creating havoc like a large
rodent. has been surprised
by how well things ha\e
gone so far.
He said the only lingerin~ 'effect of the head
inJury is a loose flap of
scalp that mmes _free!)
when he tugs on tt. the
result of the surgerie'\.
Moeller lau!!hs when an
observer cnnges as he

Hillis
from Page 81
1 can:· said Hillis ... A lot
of guys helped out with
great blocking by the
offensive line and (fullback Lawrence) Vickers.
We got some things
going. but \\estill have a
Jong way to go."
The long \\ ay includes
hanging on to the fontball. The Browns' five
turnovers - equal to the
total they had in their
final five games of last
season upset Mangini.
''It's critical to protect
the football in any kind
of weather." Mangini
said. "We looked back
and one team out of 40
has won (in recent years)
with five turnovers. You
might as well play the
powerball (lottery) at that
point."
Power
football
is
Hillis· game . It is the
style Mangini wants and
what pleased him most as
Cleveland overcame a
13-0 deficit '" ith 17
straight points.
''We did some positive
things when we pla]ed
Browns
football,"
Mangini said, adding that
the squad had better get
used to practicing in
Cleveland's har ... h climate during the season.
''It is one reason J
believe so firmly in practicing in the elements."
Mangini said. "We're
going to rent out the
indoo;. facility for a car
show.
Mangini's
glibness
didn't mask his disappointment in the mistakeprone loss that included
seven penalties.
Hillis. who fumbled
only once in two years
with Denver, said he
understands keeping the
football is as important
as advancing it.
"We had a lot of
turnovers." he said "If
we hold on to the ball. a
lot of things can be different. You know weather definitely plays a factor, but you· ve got to
overcome
that.
Everybody's going to
play in tough-weather
games snow, rain.
sleet - but you· ve got to
hold onto the football."
Hillis had no fumbles
as a rookie when he
gained 343 yards on 68
runs for the Broncos in
2008. With a longest run
of only 19 yards, his 5yard average was particularly poignaqt as to hi~
consistency.
Denver
changed coaches. how-

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moves the untethered skin
around.
no
But
he
has
headaches. no pain, no
memo!) loss.
"I feel great:· he said. "I
feel like me again, official! ..
~
&gt;·Hts. teammates couldn. t
be happier.
''llc 's probably one of
the most physical guys for
his size." linebacker Brian
Rolle said of the 6-foot.
21 0-pounder.
Tressel believes that
Mnclkr serves as a beacon
1or others.
"He loves the game."
Tn:ssel said. "He loves to
pra\!tice. he's fast. He adds
so much. A vear ago when
he was walkln!! around not
phl} ing. that's ~almost a little bit of a downer. if you
know what I mean. Guys
were looking and saying
'Oh man.' The) knew how
much he wanted to play.
There wasn't anything
uplifting about that.
"Just his presence this
year. in my mind. will be
uplifting...
On a t~pical August day
of practice, Moeller certainly wasn't standin~ ·
around watching others htt
m; he had a year earlier. He
was dealing some punishment to op~posing ballcarriers who entered his zone.
It was just like old times,
the times before he took
the hit that almost ended
his career.
"I feel really good. And
I feel really good about
this team.·· he said with a
grin. pinching the sweat
trom the bridge of his no~e
with two tingers. ··r feel
good about camp so far although it'd be nice if it
were a little colder:·
ever. and a new offensive
philosophy limited him
to 13 carries for 54 yards
in 2009.
Mangini likely will
give the 6-foot-1. 240pound Hillis more opportunities to tote the football.
''He is tou~h with the
ball in hiS hands."
~angini said. "He is
more elusive than you
think for a guy his size.
He did add some. a little
bit of fuel to the group.
What' fntstrating is we
shouldn't be in the position where we need to
add fuel."
Hillis'
hard-hitting
style can be especially
valuable as a blocker for
Jerome Harnson, who
Jed Cleveland with 862
yards rushing and five
touchdowns in 2009.
"I kind of like to think
I can do everything
decently weu:· Hillis
'&gt;aid. "It's just putting me
in position to be a playmaker. blocking, special
teams. no matter what it
may be. Whenever I go
out there. I· m going to do
my best."

---~-~---

Tuesday,August24 , 2010

A numerical view of Ohio State
COLUMBUS.
Ohio
(AP)- A look at the 2010
Ohio State football team.
by the numbers:
4.100,000
Coach Jim
Tressel's estimated salary,
in dollars, for the upcoming year, including bene
fit~. cars, tickets and other
perks
1.225,379
Attendance at Ohio State's
13 game'&gt; last season, an
average of 94.260.
65.0oo - Spectators at
Ohio State's spring gmne,
won 17 14 by the Gray on
third-team QB Kenny
Guiton 's 45-yarq touchdo\\ n pass to Taurian
Washington with 55 s~­
onds lett.
20 II - Nebraska's tirst
year of Big Ten football,
when it offici~lly leaves
the 10-team Big 12 to join
the 12-team Big Ten
2010 - Ohio State's
98th year of Big l'en football.
1921 - Lac;t yea:- that
another Ohio colle~e
defeated the Buckeyes 10
football (Oberlin. 7-6).
508 - Number of victories by college head coaches named Tressel: 229 by
Jim at Youngstown State
and Ohio State; 124 by
Jim's brother Dick, Ohio

State assistant and former
head coach at Hamline;
and 155 by the late Lee.
father of Jim and Dick,
while at Baldwin-Wallace.
394 - Number of victories, all at Penn State, Joe
Paterno has by himself.
335
Weight, in
pounds, of the heaviest
Buckeye. frestunan offensive lineman Johnathan
Hankins, who stands 6foot-3.
100- Ohio State's success rate. in percentage
points. on on-side kicks
last seac;on (I for 1).
91 - Number of points
Buckeyes trailed No. 1rartked Alabama in the preseason Associated Press
Top25.
80 - Height, in inches,
of tallest Buckeyes: TE
Reid Fragel and OL Mike
Adams.
19 - Ohio State's victories in bowl games, out of
41.
14 - Returning starters
for the Buckeyes in 2010,
including nine on offense
and five on defense. Also,
number of catches TE Jake
Ballard had last season. the
most important of which
was the last one. On thirdand-13 midway through
the fourth quarter of the

Rose Bowl, Ballard leaped
to catch Terrelie Pryor's
high pass for a 2~yard
gain while the Buckeyes
were c1inging to a 19-17
lead. The ftrst down led to
a touchdown and a 26-17
win.
13- Number of games
Big Ten members play
against
Mid-Amencan
teams this season, including Ohio State's tilts with
Ohio
and
Eastern
Michigan.
8 - Ex-Buckeyes in Pro
Football Hall of Fame
(coaches Paul Brown and
Sid Gillman, players Lou
Groza, Dante Lavelli, Jim
Parker, Paul Wartield. Bill
Willis
and
newly
enshrined Dick LeBeau).
6 - Consecutive wins
over rival Michigan,
longest streak ever by-the
Buckeyes and the longest
in the series for either team
since Michigan 1922-27;
aJso, Buckeyes' winning
streak going mto 20 I 0 season.
5 - Consecutive Big
Ten titles shared or won
outright by the Buckeyes
(school and conference
record is six from 1972-

Lou

pointing season - two
years after they had the
best record in the NL.
"I wish we would've
played better for him,"
reliever Sean Marshall
said.
"You hate to see stuff
like that. You hate to see a
grown man kind of tear up
like that, it just shows his
heart for wmning and his
drive for baseball and his
family."
Piniella finished with an
overall record was 1,8351.713. He trailed only
Tony La Russa. Cox and
Joe Torre in victories
amon~ active manaaers.
Pimella's record with
the Cubs was 316-293.
Under the mellowed skipper, Chicago won consecutive NL Central titles m
2007-08. but missed the
playoffs last year and
slipped back even further
thts season with a new
owner. Tom Ricketts, in
chllll!e.
''IPve enjoyed it here,''
Piniella said. "In four
wonderful years I've made
a lot of friends and had
some success here. this
year has been a little bit of
a stmg~le. But, look.
Family tS important, it
CO!Tlt:S f m;l."
In 18 years in the majors
as a player - he had a
.291 career batting average - and another 23 as a
manager, Piniella made
ftve trips to the World
Series and has three championship rings. He be~an
his professional playmg

career in 1962.
"It's a very tough dar,
for him. ve'Y emotional. ·
Hendry said of the man he
hired four years ago 'to
replace Dusty Baker.
"There has been some
times the last couple of
months where he knew his
family was possibly going
to need him. He certainly
didn't want to go out
before the end of tfie year,
but it's just at the point
now where he need to be
home with his mother and
his family."
Piniella began managing in 1986 with the
Yankees and lasted three
years, including a stint as
general manager. He managed the Reds from 199092, leading them to a
World Series championship in his first season.
He also ~ot national attention dunng his time there
for a clubhouse wrestlin~
match with reliever Roo
Dibble, who downplayed
the incident and said
"we've been family ever
since."
After
Cincinnati,
Piniella had a long run in
Seattle, where his teams
won at least 90 games four
times and 116 in 2001.
The three-time manager of
the year also spent three
seasons in Tampa Bay's
dugout, but he questioned
his hometown team's
commitment to winning at
the time before the team
bousht out the final year
of hts four-year contract.
The Cubs won 97 games

from Page 81
he planned to retire at the
end of the season and reiterated his plans just
Saturday. But he missed
four games in August to be
with his mom in rlorida
and decided this weekend
his divided attention wasn't helping anyone.
"She hasn't gotten any
better since I've been
here," said Piniella, who
turns 6 7 on Saturday.
"She's had a couple other
complications, and rather
than continue to go home,
come back. it's not fair to
the team. it's not fair to the
players. So the best thing
is just to .step down and go
home and take care of my
mother."
The
surprising
announcement wac; made
in a tean1 handout Sunday
morning after Piniella had
repeatedly insisted he
would finish the season.
Cox empathized with his
counterpart.
"lt's tn your blood that
long, but Lou's mom is in
ill health ... Cox said before
the game. "It's a sad day
for me because I kept on
thinking that Lou would
be back, not here but
somewhere else.''
Piniella met with his
team to let them know he
was leavin~ and it was
very emotiOnal, despite
the Cubs· terribly disap-

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

77);
4 - Number of children
- they are quadruplets -

for QBs coach Nick
Siciliano and his wife, one
more than Ohio State golf
coach Donnie Darr and his
wife. who "only" have
triplets.
3 - Where Tressel.
starting his 1Oth season,
ranks in tenure among
Ohio State football coaches, behind only Woody
Hayes (28 years) and John
Cooper (13).
2- Ohio State's preseason ranking by AP, Sports
Illustrated and the USA
Today coaches poll; also,
number of Big Ten teams
Buckeyes do not pia} this
fall (Michigan State.
Northwestern); also number of true freshmen Corey
Browns
from
Pennsylvania
the
Buckeyes have this season:
one is a wide receiver
called "Philly" Brown
because of his hometown
and the other is a defensive
back
known.
as
"Pittsburgh" Brown.
I - Number of times
opening-game opponent
Marshall and Ohio State
have previously met in
football. The Buckeyes.
squeaked by 24-21 at
home on 9/11/2004 on
Mike Nugent's 55-yard
field goal as time expired.
under Piniella in 2008, but

were swept out of the
playoffs for the second
straight year and it's been
mostly downhill since that
successful mn.
What Chicago fans saw
for the most part was a
more reserved Piniella,
although he did have one
dirt-kicking
meltdown
with umpire Mark Wegner
early in his ftrst season
and ~oon thereafter the
Cubs took off and eventually
· overtook
the
Milwaukee Brewers to
win the NL Central in

2007.
Piniella joined the Cubs
after doing some TV
work. looking for a final
challenge and hoping
like so many before
- that he would be the
manager to bring the Cubs
a long-awaited championship. The Cubs· last
World Series appearance
came in 1945. their last
World Series winner in
1908. It didn't happen.
despite the promising ftrst
two seasons.
"It's a tough job. But,
look. 1 mean. They're
going to win hert.
They've got a familyowned business now,"
Piniella said.
Piniella said he would
look back later. He added
that he no future plans,
other than to tend to his
family and relax.
''I'll have plenty of time
to reflect. 1 will,'' he said.

�------------::.:-----------------~-------·

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Oh1o
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
•ees or insdrance. Call
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600

Animals

Pets

900

Merchandise
Equipment I
Supplies

7 free mixed breed
Beauty
puppies.
740-256- Black
sandblast sand $6
1352
per 100-lb bAg, ten
Rat Terrier Puppies or more $5 each.
Blue &amp; White $75. 304-773-5332
Call 645-6857 or ~~~~~~~
Miscellaneous
379-9515
Jet Aeration Motors
Chihuahua puppies,
repaired, new &amp;
1st shots, wormed, rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800vet check. $20()- Mom
537-9528
is CKC reg. Dad is
AKC reg. 740-3888-$els of white tail
8372
deer antlers on skull
plates, some score in
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reg.
Boxer
the 150's &amp; 160's.
puppies,
tails
These are unique &amp;
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$800. Fellows dont
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fawns,
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brindles,
740-949740-533-3870
9114
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Free gray tiger kitten, ceramic stove, great
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thoughout store 304675-4084
Recreati_onal
Kabota tractor 51 HP 1000
Veh1cles
diesel 2 wheel drive
wlbucket Used 16
hrs. 304-675-6531
Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at 2005 Jayco Eagle
Carmichael Equipment Gooseneck
Hitch,
740·446-2412
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
Hay, Feed, See d,
$19.900.
See
Grain
photos
at
Hay for sale $2.50 YiWW.caanictlaeltrniltl
sq bale 740-367· (~Q!D
740·4467762
2412

2001 Chevy Impala Holzer Hospital on SR
68,300 miles call 160 CIA. (740) 4410194
740-446-1714
CONVENIENTLY
Quality
Cars
&amp; LOCATED
&amp;
Trucks wlwarranty all AFFORDABLE!
priced to sell, 15 yrs. Townhouse
in business. Cook apartments,
and/or
Motors, 328 Jackson small houses for rent.
Pike,
Call 740·441·1111 .for
application
&amp;
Gallipolis, OH 740- information.
446-0103.
~~~~-~
Free Rent Special
I!!
,2003 Neon Ssp, air,
$3,200 OBO 256- 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
1539 and 2009 PT up, Central Air, WID
Cruiser automatic, air hookup, tenant pays
$6,200 OBO 256- electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
1233
EHO
Ellm Vie~ Apts.
2001 Buick Lesabre,
(304)882-3017
55,000
miles,
1
owner, bmpr to bmpr Twin R1vers Tower is
100% warranty. 304- accepting applications
675-6555 or 740- for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
208"0028
apartment
for the
call
Oiler's Towing. Now elderly/disabled,
buying junk cars 675·6679
wlmotors or wlout.
740-388-0011
or
740·441-7870
No
Sunday calls.
Tn1cks
2002 Ford F150 XLT
VB, AT, 2WD, 45000
miles, 1 owner, bmpr
to
bmpr
100%
warranty
304·6756555 or 740-2080028.
.......,.....,.,....,....,....,....,...
Real Estate
3000
Sales

Attractive,
unfurnished,
one
bedroom apt.
2nd
floor, corner Second
and Pine. No pets,
References required
Security
deposit.
$325 per month.
water included. call
740-446-4425
or
740-446-3936.

2br
apt.
$450
mo.+dep. Kanauga
For Sale By Owner total elec. 740-3393224
6 apts $147.000
rent $2030 mo, 740- 1br apt. total ele.
$350mo.+dep. Porter
446-0390
OH 740-339-3224
Farm for sale in Jordan Landing Apts·
putnam Co., WV 105 Now leasing 1,2, 3
acres
w/public and 4 bedroom units.
utilities. Minerals sold Nq pets. Ask for rent
withe
land
Exc. specials.
304-610woodlands
for 0776 or 304-674hunting.
Several 0023
house sites t-iouse
on
property.
but 2nd floor 2 BR
needs work. Rolling apartment,
hills &amp; many flat overlooking Gallipolis
Park,
L.A..
areas. 15 min from City
Milton,
WV. k1tchenldining area, 1
BA.
$350,000. •Contact 1/2
Keith Chapman 304- washerldryer. $600
mon + dep. 740-446654-6312
4425 or 740-4462325
Houses For Sale
Home for sale 3Br.
2ba, formal dining,
new
Siding,
wlappliances close to
RV school. Details at
www.orvb.comf740·
388-0589
Colonial home for
sale For more info
vtsit www.orvb.com
f7 40-256·6011

FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
NC, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

�- --- --·--~

www.mydailysentinel.~om

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses
Valley
Apartments

V1ew
800

State Route 325
Thurman OH 45685
740·24::&gt; 9170
1·2
Bedroom apartments
w1th
apphnnces
furnished , on s1te
laundry faCility Call
for details or p1ck up
application at rental
efface Possability of
rental
assastance
Equal
Housing
Opportunaty
TOO
419-526·0466 ThiS
111Stltution IS an Equal
Opportunity porvider
and Employer

4000

Manufactured
Housing

:~~~~~~~

6000

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Addason Area 2Br
mo•ble
home
$550/mo + $550/dep
367 -&lt;&gt;654 or 645•
3592

Tractor trailer Dnver
needed Must have
Send
Hazmat
resume to Human
Resources Po Box
705 Pomero)' Oh
45769.

3Br 2 BA mobile for
rent. $500 mon &amp;
dep
Newly
remedied 740-3677762 or 740-645·
0460

Wanted
Delivery
Driver Must have
valid drivers license,
good driving record &amp;
pass a background
check. Job requires
heavy
lifting
&amp;
assembling medical
equipment. Must be
dependable &amp; trust
worthy Knowledge of
the HMe bus1ness a
plus. Stop mat 1616
Eastern
Ave
for
apphcataon.

Takmg applications
for 2BR mobile Very
good condat1on No :-:-~-~~~­
pets $395 mon &amp;
UqUid asphalt driv':!rs
dep 740-446-3617
needed in Point
2BR 1 BA furniShed
Pleasant area. Must
Apt m Ne.w Haven
$400 deposit $450 14x70 trailer, 3 br , 2 be 21 yrs old or
bath, 111 Syracuse, older. Must have
rent 304·882·2523
$475 a mo. plus Class A COL with
Hazmat
dep /ut1l • No pets
and
Clean
newly 740-992-7680, 740- endorsement
TWIC card. Good
redecorated
1BR 416-7703
MVR. Local trips.
reference,
deposat,
nn J'lflls 304-675- .------~ 800-598-6122
5162
2 br. mobile home an -=-~-~:---Racine. $325 a mo.. Dominos Pizza now
$325 dep., 1 yr hiring sate dnvers
Spring Valley Green lease No pets, No Apply in person all
Apartments 1 BR at calls after 9pm 740- locataons
$395+2 BR at $470 992-5097
Month 446-1599
Dnvers needed: COL
Drivers willing to
Trarler
1n
town
dnve for local readyRacme. 2 bedroom. max
company.
Commercial
1 bath, all electnc,
Experience
Is
carport large front
Downtown
off1ce. porch
Close
to preferred but not
Driver
pnvate parlong lot shcool, library &amp; necessary.
$400 mon. We pay park $425 depostt, must be willing to do
water &amp; trash Ava $425 per month pre-maintenarce on
and
Sept
1st
740· water &amp; garbage trucks
equipment,
4461761
included NO Pets
yard/plant and other
Avallbale
for miscellaneous
lmmed1ate
move
an
Houses For Rent
chores. Experience
Marvan 740-949-2217 operat ng equ pment
1
1
2 BR apt . Rodney
and extra skil s such
area, also 2 Br house - - - - - - - as welding a plus.
on Kenion NO pets, Mobile home for rent.
dep &amp; ref req. call 304-675·3423 before Starting pay based
on experience and
740-446-1271
or S:30 pm
driving
record.Call
740-709·1657
~~~S~al~e~s~~
304-773-5519
House for rent 2BR 2
BA energy efficaent
home w/ utality room
&amp; 20'x20' garage
Green twp
$600
mon + dep /40-446·
0666

Handy Man Special.
Used 3 bedroom, 2
bath $2995 ancludes
1 1
deIavery. CaII N'kk
740 385 4367
·
·
-N":"ac_e_u_sed~
3~be
-d
~roo
_m
_

home
$4 995
3 br 1 bath house &amp;
1ncfudang
delivery.
mob1le home tor rent
Call Inez 740·385·
10 Racme, 740-9492434
2237
1BR $375/month 10
Syracuse
Depos1t
HUD approved no
pets. 304·675·5332
weekends/740-591 ·
0265

14x70 3BR
2Ba
1994
Skyline
Sprucendge
Supreme
$10,000.
Any offer cons1dered
765-977-7165

Education

Employment

Rentals

14X70 mobile home
3BR $450 + utilities.
Ref/secunty
cteposat.No
Pets
614 364·2042

....- ..........

--~~--..,.--------~--·~------""!
.---

--=E•d·u~ca;;;;;ti;;;;'o;;;;n~~

•
Are you interested in
a rewarding position?
PAIS IS cJrrently
accept1ng
applications 'or the
following
posations:Direct
Care A part-time
position for Ripley
WV
providang
communaty
skill
trainang
witn
an
indavidual
with
MRIOD Mon. Thur::.
Fn 9 am-noo~ . Tues
&amp; Wed 7a11_1pm;
Direct Care Part-

time posataon for
Point Pleasant WV
providing
resadentiallcommunit
y skill training w1th an
andividual
w1th
MR/00.
Mon·Fn,
vanous day and
evening shafts; Direct
Care
Part-tame
positions for Mason
WV
provading
residential/communi!
y skill training with
individuals
with
MR/DD
Mon-Fri,
various day and
evening shifts.
For all posations:
High school diploma
or GED required.
Cnminal background
check required Must
have
reliable
and
transportation
valid auto insurance.
Hourly rate starting
at $8-$9.50 based
on
experience.
Apply
online
at
http://www.paaswv.co
m or call 304-3731011 _

Help Wanted·
General

======~

communicate, both
wntten and verbally
w1th many vanables,
def10e and solve
!Jrul.llttms, c.:ullect and
analyze
data,
establish
budgets.
policy development
and
personnel
managementllabor
relations. A salary
range starting at
$55,000 and a full
range of benefits are
offered.
Applicants
should
have
a
Bachelor's Degree or
equivalent
work
expenence '" the
field.
Job
descriptions
are
avaalable
and
apphcataons should
be submitted to Tom
Anderson, Chatrman,
121 Faarfane Dnve,
Maddleport,
OH
45760. Deadline to
submit an application
and
resume
•s
September 15, 2010.

~~~~~~~

Maintenance I
Food Services
Domestic
=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Harris Steak House
now hiring. 304·675· Part lame maantance
personal
wanted.
9726
304-610-0776
or
Help Wanted •
304·674-0023
General
Medical
Part
time
help
needed for local dry
cleaner. Must have
valid drivers license
and be dependable.
740-446·9585
Browns Market dell
near Holzer Hosp.on
ST Rt 160 man wge
Must be able to work
all shifts. Any day of
week. Call 740-446·
7504
------Energetic person or
couple to assist walh
operation of modern
dairy
to" include
milking,
calves,
heifers, and crops.
Housing and utilities
part of package. Fax
resume to 304-372·
5385.

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

Se

ices Offered

To place an ad
Call 740-992-2155
PSI CONSTRUCTION
~ia.lizin;j

SMITH

in In&amp;n:an:e J&lt;b; i.Ix:l~,
storm, wir¥:1 &amp; water darrage.
Roan Mditions, Rerrodeling, ~tal &amp;

Concrete Services·
.

Shingle Roofs 1 New Hares, Siding,
Decks, Bathroan Remxleling.
Llcensed &amp; Insured

FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED

~.

Formerfv RohiNi Cmntruction

33 Yl'ars Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458

Rick Price - ,17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740.416-2960
740-992-0730

Onner: Sam Smith, :\1ason. WV

HRS Repair. 1-740-992-3061
20+
exp

YOUNG'S

JTS

Sen ices Most Heating &amp;
Cooling S) stem (including

Heatpumps) and Control~!
TankJess Hot Water Heater
Change-outs/ Replacements.

CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• Ne" Gurnges • Electrir;ll &amp;
Plumbing • Rooling &amp; (;utters
• \inyl Siding &amp; Painting • Patio and
Pordl Deck.&lt;;

Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Hut45.00 hrl) Rate t 10.00 l'np Chrg.

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp;Removal

ROB[RT BISS[LL
CONSTRUCTION

* Prompt and Qualit~ Work
* Reasonable Rates
* Insured * Experienced

• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

References A'ailable!
Call Gary Stanle)

740-992-1671

Cen740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

1-.---------------'

RAVENSWOOD

~ttttbap

urttnes -~entittel

,

LEWIS

CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
If we can't help you He will
find you the help you nud

CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION

Auto Accidents • \\'ork
Injuries • !'leek &amp; Back Pain•
Shoulder, Ann. Hip &amp; Le~
Pain • Headaches • Ma~age
Therap) • Acupuncture

Concrete Removal and Replacement

All T) pes Of Connete Work

30 Years Experience

David Lewis

New Extended hours: M f;
Or. KellY, K.
Sc1t. &amp; nenings emer!lencic.l
Junes, D.l'.
M tl
A
td

.

740-992-6971

304-273-5321

Insured

free Estimates

316 Washington St.· Ravenswood

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Commercial &amp; Rt\idetltial
~·

r: • Room nddition~ • Roofing •
• (;~neral Remodeline • Pole &amp; Horse

Barn' • \In~ I &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundation~

M 'iKE W. MARCUM, CM N ER
47239 Riet:cl Rd., I.oog ~,

740-985-4141

(JI

~0-416-1834

Fully insured
~ n:e l"limates - 25+ ~ear~ experience
i\ ul•ffili" l'·rl \l ilh \lik•· \l.~rcum lloJOiin~ ,\ lln11Gddw~1

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
•local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

The Daily Sentinel

WV 036725

992-6215 7411-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local E~peri~~ce

240

@alhpolis llailp urrtbune
ftoint ftleasant l\egtster

i

Please leave message

The Gallia, Jackson.
Meigs &amp; Vinton Joan!
Solid
Waste
Management District
is
accepting
applications for the
full time, unclassaf1ed
position of Dastrie1
Darector.
"This
position
is
responsible for all
phases of the day to
day operations of the
solid waste district,
including
the
recycling
center
Interested applicants
must possess the
ability
to

Tuesday,August24,2010

Stay Informed ...

'O::be ~allipolis :l!lath' tJrilJune
m:IJe lloint ~leasant l~rgister
The Daily Sentinel

�I

[

Tuesda~August24,2010

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

ALt. YOUR UNIFORMS
WERe FILTHY. :t
SENiiHeMiO
THE CLEANERS

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACRoss· DOWN
1 Packs
1 Turner
down
and Fey
6 Swollen
2 Take as
11 Blockhead
one's own
12 Concur
3 Bishop's
13Julia
topper
Roberts
4 Poker
film
prize
15 Big galoot 5 Less
16 Enemy
relaxed
17 Building
6 Book
22Pub
28Soda
wing
makeup
missile
choice
18 Rakes
7 "Grossi"
23Most
30 Urban
with
8 ''The
plentiful
oases
gunfire
Feminine 240versee 31 Make
20 Slight, in
negotiaMY.stique"
amends
slang
author
tions
32Bile
~1 Tillis or
9 Director
25We
producer
Torma
Federico
count
33 Hagar's
22Comic
10 Berates
in it
dog
Carvey
14Seasonal 26 Robert
38Touch
23 Traffic
of
song
lightly
light color 19 Prayer
"Train39Bagel
26 "Be quieti"
ender
spotting"
topper
27 Nasty
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checklm.o.) to
28 Train unit Thomas
Joseph Book 2, P.O. Bo~ 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475
29 Plac.es for
some
Sgts.
30 Doorways
34Golf
position
35The works
36 Light
metal
37 Julia
Roberts
film
40T-bone,
for one
41 Solitary
sort
42 Scouting
'shelters
43Wield, as
power

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

i

f
MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

OOCH, Dl D ':/OU KNOW THAT
~A.B)'

SHARKS ARE CALLED

I

PUPS?
"YOU'RE RfwHT, L.ORETTA ... I HAVE ABSOL.OTEL.Y
NO IDEA HOW UNINFORMED I AM."'

f~ ~~j
ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
lw Da\ c Green

3
7 8 4

6 2
8
1
9 7 5 4 6
2
5
4
5 8
9 1 2
2 6 4
5 9 1

4

"You've had Daddy long enough,
Jeffy. Let somebody else
have him for a whUel"

4

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Difficulty Level

"lT~S MORG FUN CHANGIN7 1l-tt CI-4ANNEL'S
~AN WATCt-ltN• T\-IE"M..''

**

9 ~ G g
6 B g L
v £ L G
L v 6 £
8 G 9 v
B g ~ 6
G 9 B ~
g 6 v B
~ L 8 9

8/l4

£ B

v

v

HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Tuesday,
Aug. 24, 2010
This year, you manage to dear out
problems with ease. Partners, associates,
family and friends could dlallenge your
ideas often. You are being asked to question your fundamentals and perhaps
certain key goals. 'fransform your life
wilh the help of others' feedback. Your
popularity soars if you are single. You
could tumble into a very intense relatiooship. The intensity could be real and
long term, but give yourself a year
before making a judgment call. If you
are attached, your relationship will have
the quality of new lovers. Enjoy. PISCFS
often presents a different point of view.
Tire Stars Shaw the Kind of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2S&lt;rso; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
***You might have your hands
full as you strive to dear out work.
Others suddenly become vocal and
emotional, pemaps drawing the same
reaction back. Take p walk before you
react. Tonight Understanding evolves to
anew level
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
You juggle many different
vices and controversial opinions.
Detachment allows you to pull out what
appe~ to be important An easy, steady
pace always proves to be an asset
Meetings add zest to a situation.
Tonight Where your friends are.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Listen to feedback. Demands,
requests and extremes mark your day.
Knowing where to put your energy
might be critical A partner gives you
powerlul insight Tonight: You cannot
get. out of the limelight!'
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Creativity could be the outcome of different interests and hectic
communication. A partner helps you
gain insight into what seems difficult to
grasp. News easily could be mixed with
opinions, not facts. Tonight Let your
mind detach, then take another look at
events.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Gain insight and handle a personal matter directly. Your sense of
direction could be tossed into limbo by a
financial sli . Use this situation to tighten up your budget Reorganize plans if
need be. Tonight Touch base with a
friend who always gives you a new perspective.
vm.Go (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****Suddenly, you could have
your hands full dealing with friends,

*****

***
***

6 L

9 G £
~ 6 9 B
B ~ g 9
g L 6 ~
9 G L v
6 g £ L
L 8 ~ G
G v B g

~

g

G
B
£

v
9
6

***

HOROSCOPE

associates and loved ones. Juggling the
pros and cons of a situation could force
you to work overtime. Forget staying on
schedule. You will be absorbing numer-ous extra issues during your day.
Tonight A creative idea provides relaxation.
LmRA (Sept 23-0ct:. 22)
Get into a project. Distractions
surround whatever you do. Your mind
could be working overtime as you
attempt to digest what is going on. Stay
focusecl. takirig on one item at a time. Be
sensitive to a family member who needs
feedback. Tonight Go off and enjoy a
favorite sport.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
****You might be juggling people and events, as are many people
today. You have the ability to integrate
what you are hearing. You tum a situation into a plus, while others really don't
know what to do. Tonight Let your
innate people skills emerge.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Pressure builds as you juggle
different conceml. As mentally quick
and flexible as you can be, your plate is
still ful], Realize others also are dealing
with the same energy. Use your assets to
make it easier. Tonight Happily head
home to cocoon.
CAPRICORN (Dec.. 22-Jan.l9)
**** Keep information to yourself,
especially if confusion surrounds you.
Once you process and get a firm handle
on a rertain prevalent situation, you will
be able to move forward. Others follow
your lead Tonight Swap war stories
with pals who also might be overwhelmed.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
**** An innate conflict lies
between your perspective and that of
others. You might want to rethink a situation and decide if another way could
be better. If you can extract yourself
from a prrolem_ all the better. You don't
need to be in the middle of a hot issue!
Tonight Treat yourself on the way
home.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
The Full Mooo points to
you being pivotal. You might not 9e
able to do as much as you would like.
Understanding grows as you.listen to
others, who certainly don't see eye to
eye with you. Be a hero, and find an
acceptable solution for everyone
involved. Tonight Whatever makes you
smile.

***

***

*****

Jacqueline Bigar is on tlze Internet
at http://unvw.jacquelinebigm:ccm.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�.....--....-llllll!---111!11...

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

Page B6 • lhe Daily Sentinel

'W\\'W.mydailysentinel.com

----~

Tuesday, August 24,

2010

Tiger Woods, wife officially divorced
are so proud of the grace worked as a nanny for
and strength she has Swedish golfer Jesper
shoWn during this difficult Parnevik, asked to have
Divorced. Single dad. ttme," her father. Thomas her maiden name restored
Golf game still to be deter- Nordegren. a talk show as Elin Maria Pernilla
mined.
host at national broadcast- Nordcgren.
And so. after nine er Swedish Radio. told
The sordid sex
months of turmoil over his The Associated Press. ··we cost Woods three
extramarital affairs, now know that she will come corporate sponsors
begins the next chapter in out of this even stronger Accenture, AT&amp;T and
the life and times of Tiger and has a bright future in Gatorade - worth milWoods.
front of her."
lions of dollars, and he lost
In· a hearing that lasted
The divorce was final- his stature the gold stanno more than 10 minutes ized by Bay County dard in sports endorsein a Florida judge's cham- Circuit
Judge
Judy ments. A month after the
bers, Woods and his Pittman Biebel during a scandal became public.
Swedish-born wife offi- 10-minute hearing in a Woods spent two months
cially divorced Monday.
conference room in her' in thera{&gt;y at a Mississippi
"We are sad that our chambers. according to clinic w1th hopes of savmg
marriage is over and we Biebel's judicia.l assistant. his marriage.
wish e~ach other the very Kim Gibson. Woods and
"While we are no longer
best for the future," Woods Nordegren were present. married. we are the parand Elin Nordegren said in along with their lawyers. ents of two wonderful
a joint statement released Gibson said.
children and their happiby their lawyers.
''1 don't couuncnt on ness has been: and will
The divorce was granted active cases:· Thomas J. ah\ays be. of paramount
shortly after 2 p.m. in Bay Sasser. Woods· divorce importance to both of us."
County Circmt Court in attomey, said. Asked why they said in the statement.
Panama City, Fla., about they chose to file in "The weeks and months
375 miles from their Panama City. Sasser said it ahead will not be easy for
lsleworth home outside was a joint decision by the them as we adjust to a new
Orlando, where Woods lawyers.
family situation, which is
drove his SUV over a tire
Nordegren 's attorneys why our privacy must be a
hydrant and into a tree on - including her twin SIS- principal concem."
Thanksgiving night. That ter, London based Jose fin
Some of the court docuset off shocking revela- Lonnborg - referred all ments indicated that
tions that sports' biggest questions to the statement. Woods had to focus on •
star had been cheating on
Woods' agent. Mark marital woes as well as 9
his wife through multiple Steinberg, declined to golf this summer.
affairs.
comment when asked if
He completed a fourWoods' life and golf the couple had a prenuptial hour course on "Parent
game have been in disar- agreement or terms ot the Education and Family
ray ever smce.
settlement. ··we're not • Stabilization·· on July I 0.
He and Nordegren were commenting beyond what the day before he left to
married Oct 5. 2004. in was in the release,'' he play the British qpen. He
Barbados and have a 3- satd.
had won the previOus two
year-old daughter. Sam,
~ordegren 's
mother, times at St. Andrews by a
and an 18-month-old son, Barbro ~Holmberg. also combined 13 shots. but
Charlie.
declined to comment.
this time finished 13 shots
Terms of the divorce Nordegren, who once behind in a tie for 23rd.
such as how much it will
cost Woods - were not
disclosed. They said only
that they will "share parenting" of their two children.
Local Source For
Nordegren, who for
• Furniture
years tried to stay, in the
background, was captured
• Appliance
on video by celebrity websites eating lunch or picking up her daughter from
school.
··we love Elin. and we
D ouG FERGUSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal

Ohio State's Maurice Clarett is taken down and out on this play by Penn State's
Darek Wake and Richard Gardner as No. 4 Ohio State beat No. 18 Penn State 137 Saturday October 26, 2002, in Columbus, Ohio.
'

Clarett asks to be allowed to
travel to pro tryout
COLUMBUS.
Ohio
(APl - Fom1er Ohio
State tailback Maurice
Clarett has gotten back
into the da-.snxnn. i'\ow
he wants to get back onto
the football field.
Clarett asked a judge to
travel to a ttyout with the
Omaha Nighthawks of the
United Football League.
· A review of the motion
will
take
place
Wednesday. Clarett cannot leave the state until he
receives clearance from
the court.
On Mondav, Clarctt.
who led the Buckeyes to
the 2002 national championship. finished up 4?
months in a locked-down.
dormitory-st) lc facilit)
that serves as a transition
for those getting out of
prison. He asked Franklin
Countv Common Plea~
Court Judge David Fais to
leave the state to try out
for the pro team.
His attorney. Michael
Hoague. said Claret! was
ready to make the most of
the opportunity.
"Since he re-enrolled in
summer-quarter .cJasses at
Ohio State, he's bet:n
going to school and also
working out each moming
at the Woodr, Hayes
Athletic Center. · Hnaguc
said. "Ht- looks really
good ..
Clarett pleaded guilty in
2006 to aggrayated robbery and caiT) mg a concealed weapon and served .
3? years in a Toledo
prison. He has been
attending classes at Ohio
State while li' ing in a
detention facility in
Columbus. Now he will
either move to Nebraska
to try to make the team or
will find an apartment and
continue his schooling.
people
in
"The
Nebraska had a couple of
questions about Maurice.
First. was his head on
straight? And it's on really
straight," Hoa~ue said.
"Second. is he 111 shape?
And the answer to that is
he's in great shape."
Tim Jackson. f'ais'
bailiff. said Monday that
the review of Claretfs
request had to be pushed
back because of scheduling problems. Clarett's
cac;e will be discussed in
open court then.
The expansion Omaha
franchise will be making
its deblU in the UFL's second season this fall, joining the Florida Tu~;kcrs.
Hartford Colonials. Las
Vegas Locomotives at!d
Sacramento
Mountmn
Lions. Among the player!i
on the team, currently
gomg through preseason
camp. are two former
NFL stars. quarterback
Jeff Garcia and running
back Ahman Green.
The Nighthawks open
their season Sept. 24
against the Hartford
Colonials.
A spokeswoman for the
};ighthawks declined to
comment on Clarett po:.sibly practicing with the

team.
Omaha's player personnel director i'S Ted
Sund4uist. fom1er general
manager of the Dem er
Brom:os. who took Clarett
in the thin.! round of the
2005 NFL draft.
Clarett, a fanner ~Jr.
Football in Ohio. started
for the Buckeyes as a
frt:shman and quickly
asserted himself as one of
the premier running backs
in the country. He mshed
for 1.237 yards in 2002.
helping Ohio State to its
first national championship in 34 )Cars. He
scored the winning touchdown in the second overtime of a drnmatic Fiesta
Bo" I victol) over topranked Miami.

But he was ruled ineligible the following year
for taking pccial benefits
worth thousands of dollars. He sued to enter the
NFL draft carl). before he
was out of high school for
three years. but lost in
court.
After he was eventually
drafted by the Broncns, he
was cut before the season
started. He missed most of
the preseason with a groin
injury.
Then in September
:won he pleaded guilty to
having a hiddt:n gun in his
sport utilit) vehick and
holding up twn people
outside a bar
Hoague said Clarett ts
nen ous but hopeful.

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•

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