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

W:ddfire makes
menacing advance
near Los Angeles, A2

.... - -----------------.....,
........

Harness racing frotn the
Meigs County Fair, A6

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Long Bottom man killed in crash

SPORTS
• Angels christen
. new gym with win.
See Page Bl

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTO MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

LETART A Long
Bottom man was killed on
Saturday evening along
Ohio 124 in Letart when
the motorcycle he was riding collided with a pickup
truck.
Accordmg to the GalliaMeigs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol,
~~~ , Hobart R. Childress. 50. of

Eagle Ridge Road in Long
Bottom , died in the accident.
Troopers
say
Childress was riding a 2003
Harley Davidson Sportster
eastbound on Ohio 124 with
passenger Tracy N. Clark,
40, Long Bottom.
Troopers sny a 17-year
old juvenile, who was driving a 1992 G:vtC Sierra
pickup, was attempting to
turn len onto Ohio 124 from
private property when the

truck and motorcycle made
contact.
Yesterday
a
spokesperson for the GalliaMeigs Post said it appears
the juvenile is at fault for
the accident though no
charges have been filed and
the accident remains under
investigation. The juvenile
was not injured.
Childress died at the
scene and was released into
the care of Cremeens
Funeral Home, Racine.

Clark was taken by air-medical helicopter to CabellHuntington
Hospital.
Yesterday
evening
a
spokesperson for the hospital classified Clark's condition as fair.
According to the accident
report. the motorcycle
received contact damage to
the front tire. forks. handle
bars, left side; damage was
also done to the seat. fuel
tank and exhaust pipe. The

motorcycle was towed by
Racine Service Center. The
pickup truck received contact damage to the left front
fender. hood, front bumper
and induced damaged to the
right front fender.
According to the patrol,
this is the third traffic fatality in Meigs County this
year. The patrol reports
there were four traffic fatalities in both 2008 and 2007
in Meigs County.

Last of three
Meigs Jail
escapees
apprehended
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Marlie Lanae Browning
• Hobart R. Childress

INSIDE

Charlene Hoefllch/photos

The hundreds of peoples who came to the FootHills Festival enjoyed the blues bands while relaxing on the grassy area
of the Sheets fam1ly farm.

'

• Tough track
popular with fairgoers.
See Page A3
• Fundraiser planned.
See Page A3
• O'Bieness adds
new scanner to
imaging capabilities.
See Page AS
• Ariel offers performing
arts and wellness
: classes. See l)age A6
• Romine presents
Grange lecture
on Lincoln cent.
See Page A6

Fourth Annual Foothills
Festival 'biggest and best~
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSEN'!'INEL COM

PO~EROY The last
of three men who escaped
from the Meigs County Jail
last week was recaptured in
Jackson County, W.Va., and
returned to custody here.
Timothy Wickersham and
two other men escaped
early on Aug. 23, by using a
, mop handle to remove keys
from an open key box and
unlocking the cell door. and
1 walking
out
undected
through a fire exit. James
Lee Garnes and Buford W.
Smallwood. Jr., were apprehended later the same day.
Wickersham, accordrng to
• Sheriff Robert Beegle, was
captured Friday by authorities in Jackson Couny, W.Va.
Beegle said Wickersham's
former girlfriend, Amanda
Brotherton, was housing
Wicker:-&gt;ham at her Home in
Ripley, W.Va., and has been
charged there with aiding
and abetting a fugitive.
Wickersham and Garnes
are now back in the county
jail in Pomeroy.
Srnall\vood has since
been transported to prison.
He was awaiung conveyance to the Orient

HARRISONVILLE
The
"biggest and best" \vas how Jared
Sheets. president of the Foothills
Music Foundation, described this
year's Foothills Blues &amp; Arts
Festival held over the weekend.
It was estimated that more than
Please see Escapee, AS
4,000 visitors from a dozen states
turned out - nearly twice more
than at last year's festival - which
speaks to the growth of the free
event staged in a hayfield on the
Sheets family fann.
This is the fourth year for the festival but the first year for participa.c,
tion of the Athens
Local l
1
Professional Ar1ist and Craftsman
Association (ALPACA) which
added not onty versatility. quantity
and quality of display, but the added
dimension
of
demonstration. STAFF REPORT
Besides the ALPACA artists. sever- 1 MDSNEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
al local artisans participated \Vith
festival displays.

Nelsonvi·lle
bypaSS
ready or
constfuCt"lOll

Mojo Theory of Columbus was one of several bands entertaining Saturday
afternoon.

Please see Festival, AS

Details on Page A3

INDEX
Ask Dr. Brothers
Calendars
Glassifieds
Comics
•

.ito rials

Obituaries
Sports

Weather

I

~ JJIJI,I !I!1.!I!II .

Please see Bypass, AS

�~

--- ~

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

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PageA2

THE

.IThe Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1 ,

2009

iWildfire makesmenacing adVance near los Angeles
;:py JOHN ANTCZAK
:t.SSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

· •. LOS ANGELES - A
deadly wildfire that has
blackened a wide swath of
tinder-dry forest around Los
~ngeles took another men'acing turn i\Ionday. as towering flames threatened to
devour thousands of suburban homes and a vital
mountaintop broadcasting
complex.
Fire crews battling the
!blaze in the Angeles
National Forest tried desperately to beat back the
tlames and prayed for
scorching weather condi1ions to ease. The fire was
~he largest of at least eight
'l&gt;urning across California
".!l.fter days of triple-digit
'temperatures
and
low
liurnidity.
The fire scorched 164
square miles of brush and
threatened
more
than
12,000 homes. but the lack
of wind kept them from driving stormily into the hearts
of the dense suburbs nOJtheast of Los Angeles.
Columns of smoke bil)owed high into the air
jJefore dispersing into a
gauzy white haze that
burned eyes and prompted
warnings of unhealthy air
throughout the Los Angeles
area. Smoke could be seen
.billowing around the fabled
Hollywood sign.
• "It's
burning
every·where ," U.S. rorest Service
spokeswoman Dianne Cahir
said. "When it ~ets into
canyons that havei1't burned
jn numerous years, it takes
off. If you have any insight
into the good Lord upstairs.
put in a request."
Authorities backpedaled
on an earlier report that five
people were trapped at a
smoky ranch near Gold
Creek. The five men and
o ne \.\'Oman had been asked
multiple times to evacuate
'but refused to leave.
- "When we tried to ~et
them out. they said they"'re
fine. no problem. they didn't want to leave.'' fire
spokesman Larry Marinas
said.
• The. exact number of people InJUred or threatened by
the fire was still not clear.
Among those evacuated
were Los Angeles Dodgers
shortstop Rafael Furcal and
his wife. Their home is in an
'area
of
La
Canada
Flintridge threatened by the
massive Station Fire. Furcal
-*\'as given the day off and
did not play in Monday's
{iome game against Arizona.

-

AP photo

A United States Forest Service air tanker drops fire retardant next to a line of fire as the Station fire burns in the hills above
a home in Acton, Calif. on Sunday.

Over the \Veekend. three
people who refused to evacuate were burned when thev
were overrun by !lames,
including a couple who had
sought refuge in a hot tub .
authorities said.
Fire crews set backfires
and sprayed fire retardant at
Mount Wilson, home to at
least 20 television transmission towers. radio and cell
phone antennas, and the
century-old Mount Wilson
Observatory. The observatory also houses two giant
telescopes and several mul~
timillion-dollar university
programs. It is both a landmark for its historic discoveries and a thriving modem
center for astronomy.
The fire about a half-mile
away was expected to reach
the mountaintop sometime
Monday night. said Los
Angeles County fire Capr.
Mark Whaling. If the tlarnes
hit the mountain. cell phone
serv1ce and TV and radio
transmissions would be disrupted, but the extent was
unclear.
The blaze killed two tirefighters. destroyed at least
21 homes and forced thou~
sands of evacuations. The
firefighters died when their
truck drove off the side of a
road with flames all around
them.
The victims were fire
Capt. Tedmund Hall. 4 7, of

San Bernardino County. and
firefighter
Specialist
Arnalda ''Arnie·· Quinones.
35. of Palmdale. Hall was a
26-year
veteran.
and
Quinones had been a county
firefighter for eight years.
Quinones' wife is expecting and due to give birth to
their first child in the next
few weeks.
Hall and his wife have
two boys, ages 20 and 21.
and was described as a family-oriented man who loved
riding motorcycles.
They died fighting a fire
that showed no sie:ns of subsiding Monday. P~eople who
1led returned to find their
homes gone.
"It's the worst roller
coaster of my life. and I hate
roller coasters.'' said Adi
Ellad. who lost his home in
Big Tujunga Canyon over
the weekend. ··one second
I'm crying, one second I'm
guilty. the next moment I'm
angry. and then I just want
to drink tequila and forget.''
Ellad left behind a family
heirloom Persian rug and a
photo album he put together
after his father died. ''['m
going to have to figure out a
new philosophy: how to live
without loving stuff," he
said.
The blaze in the Los
Angeles foothills is the
biggest but not most
destructive of California's

wildfires . Northeast of
Sacramento. a wind-driven
fire destroyed 60 structures
over the weekend. many of
them homes in the town of
Auburn.
The 275-acre blaze was
50
percent
contained
Monday afternoon and full
containment was expected
Tuesday. It wiped out an
entire cul-de-sac. leaving
only smoldering ruins. a
handful of chimneys and
burned cars.
Gov.
Arnold
Schwarzenegger toured the
Auburn area. where only
charred remnants of homes
remained on Monday. At
some houses. the only
things left on the foundation
are metal cabinets and
washers and dryers.
"It was embers traveling
in the wind, landing on the
roofs.landing on attics. getting into that horne and
burning the home on fire ...
Daniel
Berlant.
said
spokesman
for
the
California Department of
Forestry
and
Fire
Protection.
Some mandatory evacuation orders were lifted. but
most residents are still
being told to stay away
while crews work to restore
electricity and hose down
embers.
...,East of Los Angeles. a
t.OOO-acre fire threatened

2.000 homes and forced the
evacuation of a scenic community of apple orchards in
an oak-studded area of San
Bernardino County. Brush
in the area had not burned
for a century. fire officials
said. Flames burning like
huge
candles
erupted
between rocky slopes of the
San Bernardino Mountains
and the neat farmhouses
below.
With highs topptng I 00
degrees in some areas and
humidity remaining low, the
National Weather Service
extended a weekend warning of extreme fire conditions in the central and
Southern California mountains.
Winds were light. which
prevented the flames from
roaring at furious speed
into towns. In 2003. a
wind-whipped blaze tore
through neighborhoods in
San Diego County. killing
15 people and destroying
more than 2.400 homes.
That fire burned 273,000
acres - or 427 square
miles - the largest in state
history.
Overall, more than 2500
firefighters were on the line.
More than 20 helicopters
and air tankers were preparing to dump water and retardant over the flames. Two
Canadian Super Scoopers.
giant craft that can pull

thousands of gallons of
water from lakes and reservoirs. were expected to join
the fight later in the day.
In La Crescenta. where
the San Gabriel Mountains
descend steeply into •
bedroom suburb a do
miles from downtown L
Angeles. 57-year-old Mary
Wilson was experiencing
her first wildfire after nine
years of living in a canyon.
Her family was evacuated
twice in the past five days,
she said.
"We saw the flames. My
daughter got really scared,"
she said. But she was philosophical: "You have to surrender to the natural forces
when you choose to Jive up .
here. It's about nature doing
its thing.''
Also in La Crescenta, dispatchers O\emight activated
a "reverse 911" system that
sent a recorded evacuation
warning to people. but it
turned out to be a mistake.
Whaling. the L.A. County
tire captain. says the message applied to only a small
number of residents closest
to the fire but instead a large
number got the sleep-sh~
­
tering calls. He said he d
not know how many peop
were involved in the call.
''They pushed the wrong
button," he said.
Terry Crews. an actor promoting the new movie
"Gamer" on KTLA-TV.
talked about being forced to
flee two days ago from his
home in Altadena, in the
foothills above Pasadena.
He saw 40-foot flames.
grabbed his dog and fled.
'T ve never seen anything
like it," he said. 'Tm from
Michigan. I'm used to tornadoes ... but to see this
thing. you feel helpless."
''This is like 'The Ten
Commandments."' he said.'
referring to the movie. "You
go. 'holy God, the end of
the world."'
An animal sanctuary
called the Roar Foundation
Shambala Preserve. six
miles east of Acton. was in
the mandatory evacuati~
zone. but fire offici
decided removing the a .
mals would be "a logistical
nightmare.'' said Chris
Gallucci. vice president of
operations.
··we have 64 big cats,
leopards. lions, tigers.
cougars .... The animals are
just \.valking around. not
being affected by this at
all.'' Gallucci said. "But if
we panic. they panic. But
we are not in panic mode
yet."

Multiple wildfires scorch West in dry, hot weather
Bv THe AssociATED PRESS
A look at wildfires across the
U.S. West on Monday:
ARIZONA
• Fire crews were working
Monday to corral a bla:t.e that has
forced the evacuation of about
500 homes in two subdivisions
nestled in the forest north of
Payson. which is about 90 miles
northeast of Phoenix. The fire
that started Sunday afternoon has
charred more than 500 acres in
the Tonto National rorest. Fire
· officials don't yet know what
caused the blaze. but said they
: don't believe it was sparked by
· lightning. Between 400 and 500
· firefighters were mopping up hot
spots on the fire. No injuries had
been repo1ted. The residents from
Beaver Valley subdivision were
allowed back horne in the
evening.
but
those
from
Whispering Pines were told they
would have to wait a while
longer.
CALIFORNIA
. • A deadly wildfire that has
· blackened a wide swath of tinderdry forest around Los Angeles
surged toward thousands of suburban homes and a vital mountaintop broadcasting complex
while trapping tive people inside
: a smoky canyon. The flames
: scorched 164 square miles of
brush and threatened more than
12.000 homes. but the Jack of
wind kept them from driving
explosively into the hearts of the
dense suburbs nottheast of Los
Angeles. Fire crews set backfires
and sprayed fire retardant at
Mount Wilson, home to at least
20 television transmission towers, radio and cell phone antennas, and the century-old Mount
Wilson Observatory.
• Ofticials hope a backfire will
slow a blaze that has consumed

nearly 5,000 acres in Yosemite ened 275 acres amid high winds
National Park. State fire officials and reportedly was 50 percent
say a wildfire ncar the communi~ contained. The governor declared
ties of Foresta and El Portal is 55 a state of emergency in the Sierra
percent contained. Despite aerial foothills area.
• In ariposa County. a nearly
bombardment and 968 firefighters on the ground, officials esti- 7 -square-mile fire in Yosemite
mate the blaze won't be fully National Park forced the evacuacontained before Sept. 10. About tion of about 50 homes. The blaze
50 homes in El Portal and Foresta was reported to be 50 percent
are still under evacuation orders. contained Sunday. Two people
The fire began Wednesday when suffered minor injuries.
a 90-acre prescribed bum near
COLORADO
foresta jumped the lines and
• Crews fighting a nearly 2square-rnile wildfire in western
whipped out of control.
• Another 2.000 homes were Colorado arc also putting out 17
threatened in San Bernardino smaller fires sparked by lightCounty. and a mandatory evacua- ning. A Sunday night storm
tion was under wav in Oak Glen. sparked the new blazes while
an unincorporated scenic com- crC\\'S were keeping the large fire
munity of apple orchards near away from three cabins and an
Yucaipa and about 90 miles east outbuilding about 10 miles north
of downtown Los Angeles. A I .6- of Nucla in southwest Colorado.
square-mile wildfire- that began according to fire information offiSunday afternoon tripled in size cer Lee Ann Loupe. The larger
overnight and was burning out of fire was re{Jorted Saturday and
control in oak and conifer wood- was also beheved to be caused by
lands. Flames burning like huge lightning. Firefighters had no
candles erupted between rocky estimate Monday on how much
slopes of the San Bernardino of the fire was contained.
Mountains and the farmhouses
HAWAII
belo'Yv.
• About 25 residents of Molokai
• Another fire eJUpted Monday had to evacuate when flames
on the edge of Yucaipa, threaten- from a 9 .4-square-milc wildfire
ing six homes and burning about headed toward their homes. But
five miles from the larger fire. they were cleared to return severAbout 15 acres were burned. al hours later when the wind
Residents of I 0 homes have been shifted to the west. away from the
evacuated as a precaution.
residential area. A firefighter who
• A 3.8-square-mile blaze that suffered smoke inhalation on
began Thursday ncar the San Saturday wa~ hospitalized in staBernardino County town of ble condition. The cause of the
lkmet was 95 percent contained fire was being investigated. Four
and was expected to he fully sur- public schools were closed in
Molokai because of the brush
rounded Monday evening.
• Northeast of Sacramento. t1 fire.
fire that began Sunday afternoon
OREGON
• Firefighters on Monday were
destroyed 60 l&gt;tructures, many of
them homes in the town of mopping up the nearly 2-squareAuburn. \\ith an entire cul·de-sac mile Micro\\ave fire that threat~
wiped out. The tire had black- cncd Mosier over the weekend.

Fire
crews

monitor
the
Station
fire as it
burns in
the
Angeles
National
Forest
above
Acton,
Calif. on
Monday.
AP photo

Three homes and a bam were lost
to the blaze. which has cost an
estimated $1.7 million to fight
and was repo1tedly 75 percent
contained.
UTAH
• Residents of New Hmmony in
southern Utah began returning to
their homes Mondav after authorities lifted an evacuiuion advisory
driven by a wildfire tlare-up. But
fire officials warned that the
blaze could become active again
with expected hot and windy conditions. The lightning-caused
Mill Flat fire had been buming in
the remote Pine Valley wilderness
area for more than a month before
it flared up ewer the weekend.
forcing hundred:-; from their
homes and prompting new criticism that fire officials didn't
attempt to extinguish it earlier.

The blaze has blackened about 12
square miles. At one point. fire
officials said the blaze threatened
550 homes and 58 commercial
buildings. Three homes and eight
outbuildings were destroved.
WASHINGTON
• Firefighters expect the blaze
that destroyed a large hay warehouse in Moses Lake to
for days. There were 70.000
of hav in the Court
Manufacturing building. where
the roof collapsed during
Sunday's fire. according to The
Grant County Department of
Emergency Management. The
250.000-square-foot
building
processed ha) into cubed livestock feed for export to Korea,
Japan and Taiwan. There were no
injuries. and no word yet on what
started the blaze.

.,
I

�·~~--~--~~ -·- -------- -- -- -

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

PageA3

Tl1e Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1 , 2009

ASK J)R.. Bl{.OTHERS

Mom wonders if gay
son should have kids
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

•

~ty

)ear Dr. Brothers:
son has alway~ been very
close to me, and as hi~
mom, I've tried to he as
supporth,e as possihk ns he
came out and later fell in
Jove and entered into a lifelong partnership\\ ith &lt;mother fine young man. But now
the) are turning to me for
ad\ ice on whether they
should adopt a child. I am
torn because I don't want
\\ hatever I ma) sa) to have
so
much
importance.
Unfortunately, the other
potential grandparents don't
speak to the1r son. What do
· you think of this huge idea?

-L.T.
Dear L.T.: It is a huge
· idea to adopt a child. and I
can sec how you arc feeling
a heavy rc~ponsibility to
give your ~on your best
advice on a topic that is
' unknown tcrritorv for vou.
Since there" ill nclt be a supJrtive pmr or grandparcnh
1 the other side - unless
:.omeone can seriously
appeal to these people to be
•
, famil) to their son, his partner and their child
there j...
a lot riding on ) our loving
participation in ) our future
grandchild' life. You will be
the major female relat1ve
and role ~el. a responsibilit) ~~l.&lt;!erns you \\ill handle 'efy well. Since your son
anq h1s partner have chosen
• t..'"&gt;' adopt, the) will be able to
, focus their love on a needy
child. and .~&gt;orne of the issues
you are worried about will
fade away as he or ~he
retums that love.
· Oh\Iously, you can't
make thb momentou~ Jccic;;ion for your son and his
partner. I believe that by
a~king for your opinion and
ad\ ice, your :;.on Js showing
his re:;,pect for ) ou as a
mother. and asking for your
ble~sing, as 1t \\'ere. on the
omentous undertaking he
mts ) ou to be a part of.
•
o. b) supportmg \\ hatever
he dectdcs. as vou ha\e in
the past \\ ith his sexuality
and life-partner decisions,
you\\ ill help make sure that
this decision ts the right
one. and that the child has a
strong foundation at home.
A child of gay parents will
need high self-esteem· to
face the inevitable teasing
that comes with the tctTito-

ry. You can help give him or
her that gift.

•••

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
grandma is a character. l can
see how my mom takes
after her - Mom is a bit
scatterbrained, so that is
why I am writing to you (I
am in college). I know there
are all sorts of scams that
target old people. and I am
afraid of my grandma
falling for· some. as she is
alwa)S after a bargain. and
even use~ the Internet. What
can I do to make sure she
and her money are safe, and
not make her feel like some
senile old lady taking
advice from a kid? - N.!\1.
Dear N .M.: I can see you
are fond of your grandma
and admire her spunk and
bargain-hunting instinct. At
the same time, you are feeling very protective, and
want to make sure she is not
thr:eatened by unscrupulous
people who target older citizens who don't have anyone
looking out for them. It is
too bad your mom isn't up
to the challenge of helping
her mother. but it sounds as
though you have gained a
lot of know-how from having to fend for yourself a bit
when it comes to common
sense and street smarts. So
let me congratulate vou for
your warni" heart and sharp
mind. Now. what to do?
I think the best thing
would be to help your
grandmother b~come educated about scams. Sit down
with your grandma and
show her some articles
about the latest scams introduce her to some of the
Web sites that are elderfriendly. Her Internet use is
a double-edged sword she needs some safeguards
a~ainst spending money and
g1ving out her personal
information online. Check
out what's a\·aiiable to do
that. Once she can feel like
a savvy shopper who's
aware of the scams. she may
be a much more shrewd person online and in other
aspects of her life. The key
is to get her mvolved and
out of the potential victim
mode. You can help her feel
empowered and part of a
team. as you outwit the bad
guys together.
• (c) 2009 by King Features
.S~\'Ildicate

-------...,---------

Fundraiser planned
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Senior Care Center 1~ hosting
a
basket
games
:fundraising event at 5:30
p.m. on Thursda). Sept. 10.
Hol1-er
Semor
Care
Center is located at 380
Colonial Drh e. just off
Jackson Pike. All proceeds
will benefit the construction
of a new picnic shelter at the
nter. :"-lew and retired
ngaberger® baskets will
. . featured.

The fee for 20 games is
Three special games
Will be offered for $5 each.
Pre-register to win a
Longaberger® basket valued at $100. A dessert auction will be held and door
prizes will be given away. A
concession stand will be
available. To purchase
ad vance tickets contact
Amber Johnson at 740-4413406. or Clint Potier at 740446-5001.
$~0.

Local Weather
Tuesda) ...Sunny. llighs
, m. the ·upper 70s. Northeast
wmds around 5 mph
Tue-;day night. .. Mostly
clear. Lowe;; around 50.
North winds around 5 mph.
Wednesday .•• Sunny.
, Highs m the upper 70s. East
windc;; around 5 mph.
Wednesday
night. ..
Mostlv clear. Lo\\ s in the
lower.50s.
Thursday...Sunny. Highs

in the upper 70s.
Thursda} nigh t ...Partly
cloudy
in
the
evcning ...Then
clearing.
Lows in the lower 50s.
Friday and
F riday
night ... Mostly clear. Highs
in the lower 80s. Lows in
the mid 50s.
Saturday
thro ug h
Labor DaY... Partlv cloudy.
Highs in wthe lower 80s.
Lo\vs in the mid 50s.

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Driver faces challenge of running the tough track.

Tough track popular with fairgoers.
POMEROY Tough
Vehicles of all kinds
track compcti~i&lt;~n attracts • speeding ~long went up and
plenty of parttc1pants and over the htlly terrain around
lots or spectators ana this the track and through a pool
year's contest at the Meigs of water seeking a win.
County Fair was no excepThe winners in the nontion.
productive class were Jim

Kandel
of
New
Philadelphia;
Travis
Stevens of Old Washington,
J im
Kandel of New
Philadelphia, Adam Harris
of Frazeysburg, and Gary
Vermillion II of Athens.

In the production class the
winners were Joel Nichols
of Athens, Calvin Holley of
Pomeroy. Aaron McVey of
Coolville, Robbie Reeves of
Chester. and Eric Thomas of
Long Bottom.

Take picnic lunch, lawn
chairs and photographs to
share. For more information
call 99-5502.
Sunday, Sept. 6
CHESHIRE - Ross-Fife
renunion, with dinner at
noon.
Kyger
Creek
Clubhouse.

session, 5 p.m. Rutland Fire
State to conduct regular
September business.
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees, regular
meeting. 6:30 p.m., town
hall.

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Sept. 1
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, regular meeting. 7:30
p.m., at the lodge, refreshments at 6:30p.m.
CHESTER Chester
Council 323. Daughters of
America, 7:30p.m. Members
bring items for silent auction
to follow meeting.
POMEROY Meigs
Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m. at
Meigs High School.
POMEROY Ladies
Auxiliary of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion.
I p.m. at the Legion Hall.
All members and others
interested in joining asked
to attend.
VVednesda~,Sept.2

CHESTER Chester
Garden Club. open meeting,
7:30 p.m. at Chester United
Methodist Church. Janet
Bolin speaker. Everyone
welcome.

F riday. Sept. 4
CENTER
Meigs County Pomona
Grange. 7:30 p.m. at the
Star Grange Hall located on
County Road 1, 3 miles
North of Salem Center. All
contest items to be judged.
Saturday, Sept. 5
SALEM CENTER
Star Grange, #778 and Star
Junior
Grange
#878,
potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. Final plans' for the
chicken BBQ on October 4.
Thesd ay, Sept. 8
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville O.E.S # 255
7:30p.m.; potluck 6:30p.m.
Work to be don. wer chapter
dress. bring school supplies.
SALE~1

Reunions
Saturday, Sep t. 5
LOGAN- Staneart family reunion. descendants of
Joel and Lydia Stancart,
noon at the Kachelmachcr
Park on Route 93 in Logan.

Public meetings
Tuesday, Sept. 1
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport Village Council,
5 p.m., to award contracts
for upcoming projects.
VVednesd ay,Sept.2
POMEROY Meigs
County Board of Health. 5
p.m., conference room.
Me1gs
County
}iealth
Department.
PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees. regular
meeting,
6:30
p.m ..
Pageville Town Hall.
Thesd ay, Sept. 8
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees. special

Church events ·
VVednesday,Sept.3
S YRACUSE - Denver
McCarty to conduct revival
services at the Syracuse
Community Church, 7 P·"'·
through Sept. 5. Special
singing every eYening _:.
Monday, Claudette Harbin;
Tuesday. Delores Long;
Wednesday. Voices of Faith;
Thursday, Joe McCloud;
Friday. Joe and Naomi
Gwinn: and Saturday. Two
foi Jesus. Need a ride. caU
992-3893. van with wheel
chair lift. Pastor Joe Gwinn.
Saturday, Sep t. 5
RACINE Southern
Charge United Methodis.1
Men's Prayer Breakfast. ~
a.m .. Bethany UMC.

Meigs County Fair "Thank You"
Show Appreciation To Your Fair Buyer
with A ''Thank You'' Ad In The ...

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

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

lllrtlllll
1 Col. x 2" $16.30

Sunday

2 Col. x 5"
$67.50

STS
$111.00

$22.20

Local StockS
AEP (NYSE) - 31.43
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.61
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 36.68
Big Lots (NYSE)- 25.79
b Evans (NASDAQ) - 25.42
rgWarner (NYSE) - 29.67
•
ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.23
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.79
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.24
City Holding (NASDAQ)- 31.84
:coiJjns (NYSE) - 46.04
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.93
US Bank (NYSE) - 22.62
Gannett (NYSE) - 8.64
General Electric (NYSE)- 13.90
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 23.98
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.46
Kroger (NYSE)- 21.59
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 14.92
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 45.87
(

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 28.92
BBT (NYSE) - 27.94
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 15.81
Pepsico (NYSE) - 56.67
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.75
Rockwell (NYSE)- 41.85
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 5
Royal Dutch Shell - 55.47
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 63.45
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.87
Wendy's (NYSE) - 5.04
WesBanco (NYSE)- 14.68
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.17
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Aug. 31, 2009, provided by Edward Jones flnan·
clal advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

2 Col. x 2"

$27.00
STS

$44.40

�~--~---------

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

-

-------------------- ------- --~----~----------~----~~------~--------------.-~~

PageA4·

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make rzo law respectit~g an
establishment of religion, or proltibiti11g the
free exercise thereof; or abridgin,~ tire freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of tlze
people peaceably to assemMe, and to petition
tlu Gor,ertmrent for a redress of grier,ances.

Tuesday, September t, 200~

Analysis: Oba_1na keeps Buslt nominees in top posts
a thing with Republican~
• Francis Collins, an evan- congres:sional allies want to
but was a sign of good judg- gelical Christian. as director saddle t.txpa) ers w Hh even •
ment in both cases'' because of the National Institutes of more debt through their·
WASHINGTON - For Bemanke and Gates were Health.
government-run health care
all the GOP howling about doing good jobs.
Unlike the others on the experiment that will cost
Barack Obama radically
'Obama 's larger problem list, Collins is not a trillions of dollars," c;aid
~leering the government to
i:-; that he ~till doe!- not have Republican and worked in Republican party ch.
the left and lcauir\g the his own people in a majori- the Ohama presidential Michael Steele. Ho~
nation toward sociali:sm. ty of the governrm!nt's lop cumpaign. But he doesn't fit Minority
Leader John•
some of his major appoint- , policvmaking
the usual mold of liberal Boehner. R-Ohio, accused•
po~itions
ments arc Republican men rcquil·ing Senate confirma- Democrat as portrayed by Obama of a management·
and \\omen ol the middle.
tion. But tho~c he has put in many Republicans.
style that'~ "not lcader~h1p,
In what may be the top top positions include anumCollins discussed his reli- it's negligence." Sen. Mike •
I\\ o national posts in light
ber of Republicans or non- gious views in a 2006 book. Enzi. R-Wyo., said in
of today's cri!:.cs at home traditional Democrats.
Although some questions Saturday's GOP video and'
and abroad, Obama stuck
Along with Gates and have been raised about Internet
addrcc;s
thar.
with the picks of fanner Bernankc. they include:
whether he could keep his Obama 's Dernocmts fa\ or
President George W. Bush
• Sheila Bair as holdover religious views separate ·•cutting hundreds of b1I~
in reappointing Fed chief chairman of the Federal from his work.· the physi- lion~ of dollars from the
Ben Bcmanke and Defen e Depo~it lnl&gt;urance Corp. cian-geneticist
is well elderly to cr~.:ate new go\Secretar) Robert Gates.
She has played a major role respected m his field for emment programs."
Bernanke last week was in the management of the landmark discoveries of disIn asking Bernanke to·
gi \en another four-year financial crisis. A one-time ease genes and as head of stay on. Bush praised the·
tenn to preside over nothing unsuccec;sful candidate for a the Human Genome Project. fanner Princeton economis~
less than saving the U.S. Kan~as House scat, Bair
Meanwhile, Obama has for
and wi!idom"
. "his calm
.
economy and then keeping was first appointed by Buc;h been contending with an m steenng the economy 1
it strong. He was appointed in June 2006. Forbes angry left upset at him for through the worst financial'
by Bush in 2006 after a Magazine ranks her as the not insisting more forceful- crisis since the Great,
I short stint as chairman of second most powerful ly on a government-run Depression.
Bush's
Council
At the time he announced'
woman in the world behind health insurance option and
' Economic Adv1sers. Gates German chancellor Angela for his decisions to retain he was sticking with Gates:
was kept in his Pentagon Merkel.
some Bush-era counterter- at the Pentagon, Obama said
post to wind down the war
• Ray LaHood. a former rorism policies.
he didn't ask the member ol
in Iraq and huild up the one congressman from Jllinois.
"The effort to portray the Bush wur cabinet to'
in Afghanistan.
as transpm1ation secretary. Obarna as dangerou~Iy left- remain because of his party~
The los of Sen. Ted He was elected as part of the ist just docsn 't have any
affiliation but because '
1 Kennedy 10 brain cancer led "Gingrich Revolution'' of trnction," said Stephen felt he could best ''serve t
to a chorus of laments about 1994~and was so trusted by Cimbala, a political science interests of the America• .
the dearth of politicians both
Republican!:.
and professor m Penn State. "I people.'' Obama &lt;;aid he was·
these days able to reach .Democrats that he was think if they want to pick up ··going to be \\clcoming aj
acros8 party lines. While selected to preside over the seats in 20 I 0 and get back vigorous debate inside the
Obama hasn't had much House cluring the impeach- up off the floor where Bush White House."
'
luck with the tilghly polar- ment vote against President left them. they"re going to
Meanwhile.
Obama.
ized Congress in building Bill Clinton.
have to find a way to go returned from h1s "acation
bipartisan support on legis• Former Rep. John bcvond the very narrow in
Massachusetts
on
lation,. he's reached out McHugh from upstate Nev. core Republican base and Martha '!i Vi"e) ard and.
often to Republicans in fill- York. as Army secretary. reach out to moderates. The after a few days at Camp·
ing key jo_bs.
McHugh was kno\vn b) his case they have to make David, v.ill redoubJe his
The not1on that he's mov- House colleagues for an against Obama is a case efforts "toward getting a
ing the government to the even temperan1ent and V.Ill- about competency and per- bipartban result" on health:
left ''is laughable, it's utter- ingness to Wl&gt;rJ..: with formance. Not about ideolo- care O\ erhaul. said deputy'•
ly laughable," said Thomas Democrats.
g)•.''
\\'hite How.e press secre-1
E. .Mann. a government
• Former Utah Gov. Jon
Republicans are going all tary Bill Burton. "After he
scholar at the Brookings Huntsman, who \Vas a out on the war path, espe- gets a lillie time to recharge,.
Institution. Mann said rhe Mormon missionary 111 cially on health care over- his batteries ...he's guing tlJ"
decision to keep Bemanke China in hts youth, as haul and budget issues.
come back as rip-roaring n:-;""
and Gate:-. "doesn't huy 11im ambassador to China.
"Obama and his liberal he was hefore," Burton said.
------------------------------------------

BvToM RAUM

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~

- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T 0 DAY I N HI ST 0 Ry
Today is Tuesday, Sept. I. the 244th day of 2009. There
are 121 day:-. left in the year.
Today's H ighliglll. in Hi:-.tory: On Sept. I. 1939. World
War II began as NaZJ Germany Jnvaded Poland.
On this date: In 1807. former Vice President Aaron BurT
w~s found not guilty of treason. (_Burr w~s then tried on a
misdemeanor charge, but was agam acquitted.)
~n 1894, the Great Hinckley_ Fire destr~yed Hinckley.
Mmn .. and five other commumues, and ktlled more than
400 people.
.
.
In 1897. the first sect ron of Boston s new subway system
was opened.
In
190?. Albert.a and ~askatch.ewan entered
Confederatron as the e1ghth and mnth provmces of Canada.
In 1923, the Japanese ciues of Tokyo and Yokohama
were devastated by an earthquake that claimed some
140.000 li~es.
.·
.
•
•
In 1951, the Umted States, Australia and ~ew Zealand
signed a mutual defense pact. the ANZUS treaty.
In 1969. a coup in Libya brought Moammar Gadhafi to
power.
ln 1972, American Bohby Fischer won the international
chess crown in Reykjavik, Iceland. as Boris Spassky of the
Soviet Union resigned before the resumption of game 21.
In 1983,269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines
Boeing 747 \Vas shot down by a Soviet jet fighter afler the
airliner had entered Soviet airspace.
In 19g9, Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti
died of a heart attack at his :mmmer home in Martha's
Vineyard. Mass .. at age 51.
Ten years ago: Twenty-two of baseball's 68 permanent
umpires found themselves jobless, the fallout from their
uruon 's failed attempt to force an early start to negotiations
for a nev. labor contract. Ten American tourists and two
Tanzanians were killed when their small plane cmshed as
the)' v.ere leaving Serengcti National Park.
Five )ean; ago. More than I ,000 people were taken
hostage by hea\ ily armed Chechen militants at a school in
Bec.;Jan in !iOUthern Russm; more than 330, mostly children.
~ere eventuall) killed in the three-day ordeal. Militants in
Iraq freed seven employees of a Kuwaiti trucking finn after
their employer paid half a million dollars in ransom. The
crimmal case against Kobe Bryant collapsed as prosecutors
in Colorado dropped n sexual assault charge against the
NBA star.
One year ago: Hurricane Gustav slammed into the heart
of Louisianu 's fishing and oil industry with 110 mph winds.
delivering only a glancing blow to New Orleans.
Republicans opcned their national convention in St. Paul,
Minn., on a subdued note because of Hurricane Gusta\;
John McCain's running mate. Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin,
Tevealed that her 17-year-old daughter, Bristol. was pregnant. Jen·y Lewb raised a record $65 million for the
Muscular Dy~Lrophy Association in hb. annual Labor Da)
telethon. Country singer-actor Jerry Reed died in Nashville
at age 71. Voiceover m1ist Don LaFontaine, whose distinctive baritone graced innumerable movie trailers, died in
Los Angeles at age 68.
Thought for Today: "When nothing is sure, everything is
possible." - Margaret Drabble, British author.

or

•
Spin Met~r: College aid bill may fall short
Bv

LIBBY QuAID

AP EDUCATION wRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bar·ack Obama
says a bill in Congress
would help send millions
more Americans to college.
But the measure may fall
short of Obama 's goal.
The bill would boo:st Pell
Grants for needy students.
But it does nothmg to curb
college costs. \\ hich rise
much faster than Pell Grants
do.
And it spends precious
Leuers to the editor are welcome. They should be fejs federal dollars on things
than 300 ll'ords. All lettt•r:, are ,\llbject to editing, must be that don't help pay for colsigned. and includt' addres.r and telephone number. No ! lege, such as construction at
unsigned letter.\ will be published. Letters should be in K-12 schools nnd new
good taste, addressing i\·.wes. not personalities. Letters of prc~chonl
programs.
rhanks to orr:aniwtions and indh·iduals will not be accept- Lawmakers have an estied for publication.
rnat~d s~n billion to spend
on the legislation, but less
than half of the money
would go to Pell Grants.
The bill would do other
things to help college stuReader Services
(UsPs 213-960)
dents. It would ensure lower
Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
interest rate&lt;&gt; for need-based
Our main concern 10 all stones Is to Published every morning. Monday
college
loans. It would
be accurate 11 you know of an error through Frrday, 111 Court Street
shorten the labyrinthine colIn a srory, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy. Oto:o. Second·dass postage
lege aid form. It \\ould pro992·2156
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The ASSOCI8ted Press and
vide money for c.;tates and
the OhiO Newspaper Assoc~auon
Our main number is
schools to improve college
Postmaster: Send address correc·
(740) 992-2156.
access and graduation rate&lt;&gt;.
tions to The Dally Sentinel, P.O. Box
Department extensions are:
And it would prO\ ide more
729. Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
college
aid to veterans.
News
Subscription Rates
As a result, it has wideEditor: Charlene Hoef!1ch, Ext 12
By carrier or motor route
spread support and jc;
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext. 14
4 weeks ••• ••••• • • •• ••'11.30
expected to win approval in
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
52 weeks ..•..••••••.'128.85
the House v. hen lawmaker~
Oally .•........•...••.••50'
Advertising
return from their August
Senior Citizen rates
Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell,
26 weeks •••.•••• • ••.•'59.61
break. Ther) it begins tht·
740·446-2342, Ext. 17
52 weeks •.• ...••.••.'116.90
trek through the Senate.
Retail: Mall Rodgers. Ext. 15
Subscribers should rem1t in advance
But even ~upportcrs agree
Retail: Brenda Dav1s. ExJ16
direct to Tho Daily Seotilel No subClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext 10
that to reach Obamn 's goal,
scrlphon by mail permitted 1n areas
where homEi carrier seMCe is available.
Congress would have to go
Circulation
much further.
Circulation Manager: David Lucas,
Mall Subscription
"I think it's a big step. but l
74()..446·2342 Ext 11
Inside Meigs County
don't think it's enough," smd
12 Weeks
•••.'35.26
General Manager
Sandy Baum of the College
26 Weeks • • • • • • ."70.70
Ctmrlene Hoellich. Ext 12
Board, the nonprofit devoted
52 Weeks . • . . . . . ..•.1 140.11
E-mail:
to college acce l&gt; th.rt owns
Outside Meigs County
mdsnewsC mydallysentmel com
the SAT and AP tests.
12 Weeks •
.'56.55
A look at v. hat Obama
26 Weeks • . • . . • • . • .'113.60
Web:
and other Democrats are
52
Weeks
..•...•...•.
'227.21
www.mydaiiysentinel.com
promising, and at what their

LETTERS TO THE.
EDITOR

. The Daily Sep_tinel

1

-

•

.....

Regardless, tutt1on at make a difference. la\\lllak-•
•••
every type of college has ers would need to make Pell)
THE SPI~:
risen faster than Pcll Grants Grants an entitlement, like!
• "This legislation wi II have, nnd the disparity Social
SecurJtv
.md•
also help us reach the goal I would worsen under the Medicaid. to end· the proset out in Michigan th1s bill.
gmm's dependence on the
week to 2raduate 5 million
That might actually work annual spending proce), . In:
more Amencanos from com- against Obama's goal.
fact. that's ''hat Obama'
munity colleges by 2020."'
If college tuition is asked Congress lO do in hi
- Obama.
increasing
faster
than budget proposal.
• ··It will help us reach grants, students mav be
Doing so -would make
President Obama 's goal of forced to take on more loan Pell Grant::, a lot more preonce again leadmg the debt. which may mean dictable. And if grant were~
world in college graduates fewer college graduates. predictable - if a student'
by making college more indu:stry analyst Mark knew in middle chool t'
affordable and accessible." Kantrowitz
said. a certain amount would
- Rep. George Miller. 0- Kantrowitz argues for dou- waiting for her - tt cou c
Calif.. House Education and bling the Pell Grant and have a significant impact on
Labor Committee chairman. then indexing it so it grows college -enrollment, said
• The bill "will make col- along with inflation.
Baum. a senior policy analege dramatically more
Under the bill. Pell Grants lyst for the College Board. •
affordable for mi II ions of \\ ould rise slightly more
But it also would be costly'
Americans."
Huuse than inflation o\'er the next and difficult to pass amid •
Education
and
Labor decade. increasing on aver- exploding federal deficib.
Committee news release.
age by about 2.6 percent The White House budget
•••
yearly, according to the office estimated the cost of an
THE FACTS~
bill's spon~ors. It'!- the first entitlement to be $117 billion
College in the United time lav.makers have C\ cr over the next decade. On
States is onl) getting more agreed to a Jong-tem1 annu- Tuesday. the office aid the.
expensive. with the cost al increase in the program. CO!!-t would actuall) rise much
growing faster than the cost Pell Grants have alwayl&gt; higher, b) an additional $27 ~
of health care.
depended on annual spend- billion. because more people•
The foundation for feder- ing bills and on occasion than anticipated are going·
al college aid is the Pel! have stayed flat or been cut back to school and demand
Grant. v. hich is for lov.- when lawmaker
came for Pell Gmnts is soaring
income ~tudents and. unlike under pre sure to reduce amid the crippled job market.
a loan, does not ha\ e to be spending.
La\\ makers on!) ha\ e
repaid.
But the increase Congres~ $87 billion to spend, an:
When Pell Grants began is prescribing is less than amount the) came up \\ ith 1•
in 1973. they provided more half the 5.6 percent average by proposing to have the
than enough to cover tuition yearly increase of Pell government take over all:
and fees at a public four- Grants over the life of the federal :student loans and
year college. where mo~t program. During that time. end subsidiel&gt; for private
students arc enrolled. The college tuition has risen lenders.
•
That amount isn't eni'll
maximum grant then was more than 7 pen~ent annualto pa) for an entitlemcn .
$452; tuition and fees were ly.
about $438.
And the bill's increases But it would be more than•
That's no longer the case. may be illusory. They the $40 billion needed to tie
The maximum- Pell Grant \\Ould still depend on Pell Grants to inflation.
•
last year was $4.731; public whethcr Congress provides
~1iller has spread the.
college tuition and fees the mone) to fund them in extra money across an arrcl)•
were $6,585. Not every its annual spending bill!:..
of programs that are attra\-.
grant recipient receh es the
"It still opens up the pos- tive
to
members
or
maximum.
sibility of a false promi e,'' Congress and v.ill attmct'
Community colleges still said Kantrowit~. publisher
upport for the bill. includ '
charge less. about $2.400 on of the FinAid.org Web site ing many not for higher•
average. Pri\ ate schools nnd the FastWeb.com :schol- education. New preschool.
charge a lot more, about arship search engine.
programs. for example.;
$25.000.
Experts say that to truly would get $8 billion.

btll would actually do:

�·--·---..
Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

For the Record
Foreclosures

Marlie Lanae Browning, infant daughter of Brooke
Hayes and Christopher Browning went to heaven to be with
the angels on Aug. 27, 2009.
She was born Aug. 15. 2009 in Parkersburg, W.Va. and
weighed seven pounds seven ounces.
In addition to her parents Brooke and Christopher, Marlie
urvived by grandparents Debra Wigal, Brian Hayes,
es and Cindy Plants, Randall and Tara Browning, great
ndparents Lee and Joyce Smith, Jerry Hayes. Ruby
Bonnett and Richard and Mary Browning, and a lot of
aunts, uncles and cousins who will miss her.
She was preceded in death by great grandparents Dotti
Hayes, and George Bonnett.
The funeral service was at 3 p.m. yesterday at Leavitt
Funeral Home, Parkersburg. Visitation was also from 2-3
p .m. yesterday. Burial will be at Evergreen North Cemetery.

POMEROY - Actions for
foreclosure were filed in
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Chase Home
Finance, San Diego, Calif"
against Robert E. Milliron,
Long Bottom. and others;
of
Bank
America/Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing, Plano, Tex.,
against Michael A. Welsh,
Rutland, and others; and
Peoples Bank. Marietta,
against TariM. Bass,Amelia,
and others.

Hobart Roscoe Childress

...

....--~ -···-·---~-----------

www.mydailysentinel.com

Marlie Lanae Browning

.
I

--

Civil actions
POMEROY
Civil
judgment actions were filed
in Meigs County Common

Pleas Court by Arrowood
Indemnity Co., Marshall,
Minn., against David M.
Smith, Syracuse; and Craig
B. Moffitt, Apple Grove,
W.Va .. and others, against
Casey R. Smith, Long
Bottom. and others.

Divorces
POMEROY - Divorce
actions were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Emili Patterson,
Middleport, against Eric
Patterson, Hartsville, S.C.;
Pamela Hess, Reedsville,
against Gary Hess, Camp
Lejeune. N.C.: and Sarah
Herrera. Portland, against
Fernando
Herrera,
Morristown, Tenn.

Divorces were granted to
Teresa A. Estes from Jose L.
Estes, and Wanda Sue Wood
from Robert L. Wood.

Dissolutions
POMEROY - Actions
for dissolution of marriage
were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by
Amanda
Luellen
Tyo,
Racine, and Terry Lee Tyo,
Nelsonville and Stacey J.
Browning. Racine, and
Brandon R . Browning,
Reedsville.

Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued in
Meigs County Probate

Court to: Michael Joe Hill.
Jr., 35, and Regina Jo
Manuel. 29, Racine; Derik
Thomas Winebrenner, 26,
and
Samantha
Denise
Bailey, 21, Reedsville;
Christopher Shane Jude, 29,
and Tiffany Marie Savage,
29, Vinton; Craig Anthony
Holland. 23, Coolville, and
Abbi Gail Thompson, 24.
Long Bottom.
Joshua James Rammel.
30. and Elizabeth Catherine
Hughes, 32, Albany; Jeffrey
Eugene Nelson, 48, and
Christina Jane Lee, 42,
Shade: Jacob Adam White,
23, and Tabitha Nicole
MitchelL 23, Shade; and
Robert Curtis Vanan, 22,
Rutland. and Ashley Nichole
Knapp. 20, Pomeroy.

Local Briefs
Tests required

)

POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will be closed on Monday for Labor Day.

Winners announced
POMEROY - Meigs County Democratic Party
announced the winners of savings bonds from daily drawings at the county fair: $50 savings bonds: Monday. sponsored by Dorothy Sayre in memory of Dave Sayre. Judith
Rockhold: Tuesday. sponsored by Mindy Hill, Becky
Sparks; Wednesday, sponsored by Henry and Mary
Hunter, Joe Foreman; Thursday, sponsored by Joyce
Quillen , Kenneth Swartz; Friday, sponsored by Mick
Davneport, Daniel Card; Saturday. sponsored by Joe
Proffitt. Shawn Hawley.
Saturday: S I 00 bond. sponsored by John Ihle and Rita
Slavin , Lawrence McDermitt . Ohio flag was won by
Emmalea Warden and sponsored by Meigs County
Democratic Party.

Committee meets
MARIETTA- Buckeye Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development District Executive Committee will meet at 11
a.m. on Sept. 11 at the Buckeye Hills Training Room. 1400
•
St.. Marietta .

Holiday schedule
MIDDLEPORT - Rumpke will not run its waste
removal and recycling service on Labor Day. Service will
be delayed one day during the holiday week, beginning
when service resumes on Sept. 8.
Additional information is available at (888) 786-7531.

Concert of Prayer
TUPPERS PLAINS - A Concert of Prayer for Schools
will be held at 7 p.m . on Sept. 14 in the Eastern High
School cafeteria. The event is sponsored by the Middleport
Ministerial Association. Information is available from AI
Hartson, 992-2914 or Eddie Baer at 416-1568.

Festival from Page Al
The two Mages. one for
acoustic perfonnances. the
other for electric, were :-;et up
on the festival site providing
the place for performances of
13 different bands. the likes
of Sitdown
Baby
of
Providence
R.I .. Mojo
Theory of Columbus. Albert
Castiglia of Miami Aa. Larry
Garner of Baton Rouge, La.,
Liz Pennock and Dr. Blues of
St. Petersburg , Fla .. and the

e

EscapeerromPageAl

Reception Center when he escaped. Smallwood had
already escaped the jail once. earlier this summer, but was
apprehended shortly after. Wickersham also faced escape
charges when he fled the jail on Aug. 23. Beegle said he
expects the men to be charged with felony escape by the
grand jury.
Beegle said the jailer on duty at the time of the escape
was bu~y performing dispatcher duties and had left the
key box unlocked and unattended while performing
other tasks. Beegle said he would be subject to disciplinary action, and that new security procedures would be
put in place.

face painting. games for
cornhole enthusiasts. and
foods ranging from traditional festival to fried catfish.
Sheets said that evaluation cards were completed
by many ~f those coming
to the fest1val. ''One of the
overwhelming sentiments
noted by visitors was their
appreciation for having the
festival free to the public
so they had the ability to

bring their families.
"We could not have pro"'
\ ided this high quality
music and art experience for.
the communitv without the
generous help- of our many:
corporate and individual
sponsors."
commented·
Sheets. ··we are grateful to
the Ohio Arts Council and
the Ohio River Border
Initiative for the grants that
helped fund the festival."'

Bypass from Page AI
phases of construction for
the eight-mile Nelsonville
Bypass project. Kokosing
Construction
Co.
was
awarded the $45.2 million
contract for Phase Two.
Earlier this month, Beaver
Excavating Company was
awarded the $92.88 million
contract for Phase Three.
Construction on phase one

Free hearing screenings
POMEROY - Karr Audiology and Hearing Aids will
provide free hearing screenings for Meigs County residents
55 years or older from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on Sept. 10 at the
Meigs County Health Department. Appointments are
required. Call Debbie Jones to schedule an appointment at
992-2161.

hometown favorite. the
Sheets family Mudfork
Blues Bands. Entertainment
went from 5 on Friday night
to near midnight and
resumed at noon on Saturday
and continued past midnight.
All of the camping sites.
nearly a hundred. were filled
by those attending the festival. There was something for
everyone with the children
enjoying a bounce house and

of the project was completed earlier thls summer.
With funding from the
Recovery Act. ODOT was
able to advance construction on the historical bypass
five years earlier than
scheduled.
With up to $150 million
of stimulus funds to be
invested in this project, the

Nelsonville Bypass represents ODOT's largest single
investment of stimulus
funds . The largest stimulusfunded project in the state is
the Interstate 90 Innerbelt
Bridge
in
Downtown
Cleveland, estimated at
$400 million (including $85
million in stimulus funds).
ODOT estimates show

that U.S. 33 carries more
than I ,700 trucks daily from
Columbus to Charleston,
W.Va., making it the eighth
busiest truck route in Ohio.
33 through Nelsonville,
where it currentlv narrows
from a four lane highway to
a two-lane local roadway,
carries roughly 1,500 heavy
load trucks per day.

Fire from Page At
was so we had ladder trucks
Pomeroy
and
from
Middleport come in to set
up for stand by, but we didn't have to use them." Blake
said.
In addition. the fire
department's water supply
was temporarily cut off after
a vehicle ran over the
hydrant line that was providing the water. Water had
to be shut off until we could
~onncct to another hydrant
line, Blake said. Due to having to use another hydrant
line, the intersection of 2nd
St. and Mallard Lane was
blocked off for approximately two hours as well.
v

Although the majority of
damage was contained in the
area of the building where the
laundry mat would be. Blake
said that Westmoreland's
actual office, which is where
he sees patients, would probably be closed for a few days.
However, Westmoreland is
currently seeing patients at
his home, which is located
across the street from his
office, until the building is
repaired.
"I should be able to use
the office in the next three
or four days if I can get the
electric
back
on."
Westmoreland said.
He added that he was

grateful for the help of the
fire departments in dealing
with the fire.
"The firemen did an
incredible job in saving (the
office)."
Westmoreland
said. "I fully intend to keep
my office open. If (the fire)
was intentional. they arc not
going to shut me down.''
According to Blake. two
people suffered
minor
injuries due to the fire. One
per:son wa~ transported to a
hospital by emergency medical services while the other
was transported by a family
member.
The
injuries
imolved a sprained ankle
and a cut on the hand, which

required stitches.
The ~ew Haven, Point
Pleasant, Pomero). Ohio
and Middleport. Ohio fire
departments assisted in
putting out the fire.

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 1,

2009

Hartless racing from the Meigs County Fair
Bv SCOTT WOLFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

ROCKSPRINGS
Hames:- racing was once
again a big hit of the Meigs
County Fair. It's a tradition
that ha~ been such a big part
of the roots ot' what made up
the original county fair circuit. And all is that much
better when some of the
local root~ bring home ~orne
of the winning purse like
Don Spencer, Pomeroy,
with good showings in his
races. Spencer had two wins
and two ~econds. Drivers
ranged from the teens to 90ycar-old Walter Young who
placed fourth in his heat-the
ninth event of the day.
As much of the tradition of
the fair as the racing was the
sponsorship and printing of
the racing program by the
Weber family and the
Quality Print Shop; and the
sanctioning of the Southern
Valley Colt Circuit. Blankets
were sponsored by Quality
Print. The Daily Sentinel.
Powell's Foodfair, General
Tire Sales, Pomeroy Eagles
Club #2171, Holzer Clinic,
McDonalds, Panners Bank,
River City Sports Har,
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral
Home, ~1iddleport/Pomeroy
Lions Club. Bun's Party
Bam, and Middleport
Trophies and Tees.
In the first heat Crown
Time Quesky with driver
Ryan Holton in the sulkcy
for
owner
Esther
Cro\\ nover and trainer Earl
Owings. Town's Princess
was
second
(Stephen
Hettinger), followed by
Pat's Flash (Bill Long, Jr.)
and Lilly More Power
(Dale Gardner). The time
was 210:3.

Driver AI Jones claimed the second heat for the w1n and
The Daily Sentinel Blanket.

Scott Wolfe/photos

Don spencer of Pomeroy gets a close win at the fair.

Driver AI Jones claimed
the second heat behind his
mount Idle Acres Last for
the win and The Daily
Sentinel Blanket. Second
was Bit 0 Looks (John
Ryan Melsheimer). Hat
(Chris Page), Crown Time
Yooray (Bill Long, Jr.). and
(Ty
Night
Mistress
VanRhoden). The time was
209:0.
A new track record was
set in the fourth heat when
Victory Tax and kid sensation Chris Page brought
home the huge run-away
win with a 204:0 on the half
mile track. Skymaster Ross
(Charlie Schoonover) was
second ahead of Lima
Judgement (Al Jones).
Chads
Message

(Mclsheimer)and .la1.zys Spencer.
Baywood
Mistress (Jones) was third
Boy (Ed Rider).
Sugarstar
and
Dale Gardner rode Jennys while
Spirit to the third race win. VanRhoden was fourth.
Standin On a Beach The race time was ~07:0.
(Mcbheimer) was second
The seventh heat saw
and Looknforthcbigtime Holton and JL Rockin Jake
(Hettinger) third. The time claime the win over
was 205:4. The fifth race Hezahumer (long). Money
was won by Heres Hooter Moocher (Page). Rose Run
(Holton), Big Tov., n Event Leo (VanRhoden), l.L'S
(Charles
Little), Victory (Barney Dillon),
YankyPanky (Long), Lima and Lima Express (Jones).
Ritch (WanRhoden). and The time was 212·0.
The biggest thrill of the
Town's Prince (Long). The
day cameTn the 8th race.
time was 203:3.
The sixth race was won one-mil trot for Three Year
by Keeponrolnbaby w1th Old Fillies. a race in which
Chris Page in the sent for Don Spencer blasted the
his second win just ahead field with a blistering win
of Pomeroy's Don Spencer. from Lima Secret. Spencer,
The second place horse Patricia Vaughan. and
was also trained by Debra Lee Spencer arc the

owners and Spencer the
tramer. L ima Secret placed
ahead ol M.tcc. Audre)
(Nicole Hames'), Siuhng
lloora). l Look Like Cind)
(Nolan) and Gingcrbcar
(VanRhoden) with a time of

and Air Friendly (Robert
Grover) follov.ed The time
was 209:0.
Grand Victory and driver
Don Spencer brought home
the II th race win on a bike
pulled by the Steven
2()&lt;): I .
Swatzei!Kathy
Swatzef
In
the
mnth
go. trainer/owned
Grand
Quikmac;tcr &lt;K. Hawk) Can)on. Little
Moola
brought home the win O\ er (Long) wa&lt;. second ahead.
Criss) Snow another entr) Mr. Fred (Bryan Wea\i
O\\ ned
and trained by and Nordic Sam (Page). 1
Spencer. Pldcing second time ,.,as 210 I. The finat
''as another huge feat and race ''as \\on b) Crown
second number two of the T1me Happ) the fourth win
da) in addition to the pre\ i- b) Holton on the day.
ous win.
Cro\\ nover wa&lt;; the owner
RO)UI
Sugar and Earl Ov. ings the trainer.
(Mclsheimer) was thtrd Maf:!ic Ice wac, second with
ahead of mnet)·)ear old Page in the sulkey of the
Walter Young and With A Eric Nesselroad trained
Little Luck. B Key Largo horse. Can Do it Forever
wac; fifth (Harncs ... ). The \\as third (Nolun). Shes A
time wa ... 207:0. The tenth Yankee Bab) (Long) was
race was \\On b\ Dakota'~ fourth.
and
Screamin
Dmmond (Hetunger). wh1le Belie\ er (James Coan) fifth.
The Heat (Holton), Big The race was sponsored by
Ben's Canyon (Harne~s). Quality Print Shop.

Romine presents Grange
'You Earned It. Now Keep It!'
lecture on Lincoln cent A comnzo11 sense guide to senior plaruzbzg senzinar offere~
HEMLOCK GROVE Lecturer Kim Romine presented
the
program,
"History of the Lincoln
Cent," during the recent
meeting
of
Hemlock
Grange, held at the Grange
Hall, with Rosalie Story
conducting the meeting.
When the Lincoln cent
coin made its first appearance in 1909, it marked a
radical departure from the
accepted styling of U.S.
coins. introducing as 1t did
for the first time a portrait in
the regular series. The composition of the one-cent coin
has changed three times:
1943. 1962.and 1982.
In 2009, the U.S. Mint
will mint and issue 40 different one-cent coins in
recogmtion
of
the
Bicentennial of President
Abraham Lincoln's birth
and the I OOth anniversary
of the first issucance of the
Lincoln cent.
The themes for the
reverse designs represent
the four major aspects of
Lincoln's life. Romine dis-

tributed papers with the
designs of the back of the
new~one-cent coins.
Romine also discussed
replacing the Grange Hall
roof. If the members are to
install the roof. volunteers
are needed, she said.
Anyone interested is asked
to call 992-7079. More discussion will be held in
September.
Contests were judged,
with first place winners as
follows: Afgh ..n, Helen
Swartz; embroidery, Rosalie
Johns~n; plastic canvas,
Rosahe ~ohnson; ~tuffed
toy, Ro~ahe Johnson, b~a?ed
J~Welry,
Rosahe
Johnson, p~oto scenery,
Opal Grueser. gumbalL Roy
Grueser;
puzzle.
Roy
Grueser; sun catcher, Opal
Grueser: stepping stone,

gfha~. ~~~esG~e~~d~u~~

group, Sara Cullums: quilt,
individual. Sara Cullums.
Member~ discussed setting up the fair booth.
A pizza supper will precede the September meeting.

POMEROY
Meigs County
''If something happens to you toda),
seniors looking toward retirement as will your a~;sets be protected and prewell as members of their families :-.erved for tomorrO\\ ?'' That is the
interested in estate planning are question to be discussed at the 9:30
encouraged by the Area Agency on a.OJ. semmar to he held to the Comfort
Aging 8 to attend a program on Estate Inn on Pike ~rreet m Mc~rietta The
Planning and Elder Law to be held in Area AgenC} on Aging 8 \\ill host
Marietta Sept. 24.
Certifii!d Eld r La\'&lt; Attome) (certiThe fact that more than 20 percent fied bv Nat1onal Elder Law
of Meigs Count)\ population falls Foundati"onl Don Chapin, E q. to pre
into the senior citizens category sent a progr.ml on Estate Planning and
emphasizes a general need for know!- Elder Law issues.
edge about common sense planning
Chapin has taken the knowledge and
for the future Since every aspect of expenence gamed from ) ears as ,m
American life is being affected by the attorne). focusing only 011 Elder Law,
aging population, and more people are and boiled it down into an easy-toliving lon~er while the tirth rate is understand presentation on estate
declining. 1t is predil:tcd that the great- planning for ~eniors and their fannlies.
est effect on the senior population is
"Many have heen confused b) gov, still to come now that the nation's 78 ernment regulations. and mi..,leading
1 million baby boomers have begun information
from
~o culled
I turning 60. said a release from the 'exper1s,"' said AAAS Director Rick
Area Agency.
Hindm.m. "It is our goal to provide
I
--------------------

the region's -.eniors and families with
common c;en&lt;;e plannmg information
the) can use:·
By foliO\\ ing the seven step proc.es"
Jearn the smart way to plan for
future. Startmg \\ 1th the informa
gathenng proce';S, he will provide
1dea~ on what aspects to consider
when planning ahead and \\here to get
cruc1al information needed. Learn
ho\\ to eliminate needless taxes. avoid
probate, and stop nursing home and
home care :.pend-d0\\11. The goal is to
help o;cniors de\ elop a plan to preserve
wl1dl the) ha\e so diligently worked
for durin£! their li\cs.
To RSVP j(Jr rhe free el'ent ur to
Team mare abow other programs, call
AAA8 a1 1-800-331-26-14 or visll
wwwareaagency8.nrg. AAA8 st'ITl'\
Athem. Hocking, Meig~. Monroe.
Morgan. Noble, Perry and Washington
Cvuntin.

Ariel offers performing arts and wellness classes

GALLIPOLIS
The Ariel will yoga seo;sions are scheduled throughout Sept. 9. Registration fee is $6 per class
host an array of Performing Arts and the year. Beginning and experienced or $25 per session. "Totally Teen
Wellness classes w1th fall classes in yoga practitioners are encouraged to lmprO\ •· is open to students grades 7yoga. ballroom dancing. limng dane- attend the classes. Yoga will meet on 12 ••md focuses young acting students
ing, acting and theatre to begin in Monda)c; from 5:~0-7 p.m. Se&lt;;~ion one on the tast-paced creativit) of impro ..
meets Sept. 14 through Oct. 12. and i&lt;; 'Jsat10nal theatre and acting. Classes:
early September.
Contemporary Line Dancing '' iJI be $50 per pef\on. Many health benefits meet Thur:.da\ s from 4:30-5:30 DA
meet for five weeW
the newest addition to the Ariel's class are achieved through the practi~.-c of Session one
offerings. Taught by inlitructor, Elaine yoga Ballard may be contacted v. ith begmning Sept.IO. Registrati&lt;1n fee is
Wheeler, line dancin~ w1ll be taught specific yoga questions by em.tiling $25 per student:-. or $6 per class.
Jo~eph Li. MD. will bring back his
on Wednesdays hegmning Sept. 9 ., charlcne.ballard 0 earthlink .net.
from 6 to 7 for youth and 7 to 8 for
Joseph Wright. Ariel Executive and popular Ballroom Dancing classes f01
adults. Youth willleam basic footwork Artistic Director, will teach three youth adults. beginning ~arl) N&lt;)\:emb~r.
The capstone event of of line dance with an added flair of classes. "The imagination Factory" Se-;~ion one of Ballroom Dancmg will
RACfNE
Navy
Seaman Recruit Robert E. boot camp is "Battle hip-hop dance moves or tatlay's popu- will offer creative activities through meet for six weeks. No\. 3-Dee. 10!
Arthurs, a 2007 graduate of Stations." This exercise lar music. Adults will begin with basic multi-disciplinary nrts. o;uch as story Classes w11l meet on Tuesdavs; 7 to 8
Southern High School, gives recruits the skills and line steps and dances and then build to telling, cartooning. acting and more. to p m for v. alt.l and 9 to 9 ·p.m. for
Racine. recently completed confidence they need to intermediate dances and steps. Session students grades 2-4 p.m. SessiOn one Salsa Beginning and intermediate
U.S. Navy basic training at succeed in the fleet. ''Battle one of Line Dancing v. ill last for four will last 5 weeks, begmning September dan~.ers ma) register as couples or
Recruit Training Command, Stations" is designed to gal- weeks. September 9 through October 8, and will meet Tue..,davs from 4:30- mdl\ tduab. Class fee is $60 per pervanize the basic warrior 7, and has a registration fee of $20 per 5:30 p.m Reg1strahon fee 1s $6 per i&gt;on for one hour of class each week. or
Great Lakes, Ill.
During the eight-week attributes of sacrifice. dedi- student. For specilic Line Dancing class or $25 for the session.
S1 I I0 for both hour~ of class.
program. Arthurs completed cation, teamwork and questions. Elaine Wheeler may be
Adhmce regi&lt;;tnltiOn for all classes
''Theatre Ad\ientures" '' tll meet on
a variety of training which endurance in each recruit contacted at wheelerwoodswed- Wednesda) s from 4:30 5.30 p.m .• ,., required. Space i limited. Detailed
included classroom study through the practical appli- dings@wildbluc.nct
open to gradeo;; 4-10. will introduce ciao;~ information and chedule for thC
and practical instruction on cation of basic Navy skills
Yoga, with Charlene Ballard, will students to the magic of theatre full 2009-2010 class series can be
naval custom:s, first aid, and the core values of return to the Ariel beginning Sept. 14, through performance and behind the found on the Ariel website.
Courage
and for a five-week session. Additional scenes creativtt). Sesston one hegmo; W\\ w.arieltheatre.Of"!!.
firefighting. water safety Honor,
and survival. and shipboard Commitment. Its distinctly
and aircraft safety. An "Navy" flavor was designed
emphasis was also placed to take into account what it
O'BLENESS BUSINESS B I~ IE FS
means to be a Sailor.
on physical fitness.
nator in the emergency department at accepted the posiuon of interim unit
O'Blencss Memorial Hospital. He has man,lg.er in the medicalf.,ur~ical depm1been with O'Biencss ..,mce 1997. Ju!iti ... ment at O'Blencss Memonal Hospital.
Rachel Adeyanju, RN, BSN, has graduated from Hnckmg College in She hn..., been with O'Bieness since 21
l
ATHENS - Hypnotist for a one-hour session is accepted the position of education Nelsoll\ illc, Ohio. with a degree 111 and \\ m. pt-e\ iousl) an education ntl
Each
participant nurse/nursing suppm1lcader in the nurs- applied science in nursing.
Westfall graduated from Hockt
Donald Mannarino, M.A., $60.
College in Nelsonville, Ohio. with an
wiH hold stop ~making receives a CD reinforce- ing dep:utmcnt at O'Bicness ~lcmorial
•••
Dehra Rile). RN. recently accepted a~&gt;sociate'c; degree in nursing.
and/or lose weight sessions ment copy of the hypnosis Hospital. She wa~ previously the unit
•••
Tuesday, Nov. 3, at program as well as instruc- ~anager of nutpat1e1.1t surg~ry and nurs- the position of unit manager 111 outpaKim Re5an0\ich. RN. ha., accepted
O'Bieness
.Memorial tion on self-hypnosis for ,· mg.support. Ad~yanJU rece1ved a bache- tient sen 1ccs at O'Blencss Memorial
lor s degree m nursmg from the Hospital. She \\as pr-e\ iou-.Jy the unit the position of dinrcal coordinator in the
Hospital. A previous session stress relief.
The weight-loss session is · University of Kansas and a master's manager of the medical/o;;urg1cal depart- emergency department at O'Bieness
on Sept. 24 has been canat 5 p.m. and the "stop- I degree in nursing fro~1 Ohio U~iversi~)· ment. Rile) ha-; been v. ith O'Bicnesc, Memorial Hospital. She ha-; been with
celed.
Sponsored by O'Bleness, smoking" session is at 6 as well as a bach~lor ~.degree 111 soc1al sinc.e 2002 and graduated from O'Blenec,s c;ince June. Re ano\iich gradHocking College in elsomillc. Ohw. uated trom the Um-..cr&lt;.it) of Rio Grande
Mannarino will hold two p.m. Pre-registration is nee- work from the Um\ erslt) of Kansas.
with an associate· degree in nursing .
'' 1th an &lt;1ssociate\ degree in nur-;mg and
•••
.one-hour sessions using essary. Register online at
rccCI\Cd a bachelor of :-.ciencc degree in
Charles (Rex) Justis. RN. recently
•••
clinical and medical meth- www.DonMannarino.com
Christina Westf.. ll. RN. recently nursing from Ohio Uni' ers1l).
accepted the position of clinical coordiods of hypnotism. The fcc or call 216-831-6251 .

will

Navy recruit completes
Navy basic training

People in business

Hypnotist coming to O'Bleness

I

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
J{annan blanked in opener, Page U2
Rodrigue!. denies violations, Page 86

Thesday, September 1, 2009

Lady Eagles beat
South Gallia in 4

LEFT-A
view from
the visitor's
bleacher
section at
the new
Gallia
Academy
High School
Gymnasium
during
Monday
night's firstever varsity
sporting
event at the
new athletic
complex
The Blue
Angels
defeated
Minford in
straight
games during their
non-conference volleyball match.

i

STAFF REPORT
MOSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern volleyball
team needed four games.
but the Lady Eagles made
coach Howie Caldwell's
return to the siddincs a
inemorable one during a
24-26. 25-15, 25-11. 25-18
non-confercm:~:.
victory
over South Gallia on
Monday night.
The Lady Eagks (1-0)
·re taken to more than the
•
ge in Game I. as the
Lady Rebels (0-1) led most
of the opener before hanging on for the two-point 2624 victory.
But, m a clas~ic example
of Caldwell led team. the
Green and White never
looked back from that pomt
on - cruising to consecuBv BRYAN WALTERS
tive Wins Of JO, 14 and BWALTERSCMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM
se\·cn points to claim the
four-game triumph.
CEi':TENARY- The last
· Kasey Turley led the I day of August in 2009. The
hosts with 14 kills. fol- first day of a whole new era
lowed by Jamie Swatzel in Gallia Academy athletics.
and Brenna Holter with
The Gallia Academy volrespective kills of 10 and leyball team christened its
eight. Beverly Maxson led new gymnasium in style
the offense with II points, ' Monday jllight against visitfollowed
by
Sami ing ~·1inford, claiming a
Cummins with I 0 and straight-game 26-24, 25-18.
Karissa Connolly with nine 25-19 non-conference vicpoints.
~ tory in the first-ever varsity
Chandra Canaday Jed the event played at the new
Lady Rebels with a game- htgh school.
htgh 17 points in the setThe host Blue Angels ( 1~k.
0) never trailed by more
~!'he Lady Eagles also than two points in any of the
....Jaimed an evenmg sweep three games played in the
with a 25-13. 26-24 \ ictory maugural season opener. but
m the JUntor varstty con- the Lady Falcons (0-1) did
test.
their very best to make sure
Eastern returns to action and give GAHS a tough
Wednesday when it travels time in opening its new
ro Meigs for another non- facility - twice rallying
conference contest ut 6 deficits of six points in the
p.m. The Lady Rebels opening two games.
return to action today when
it travels to Racine for a
)1on-confercnce matchup
~ith Southern at 6 p.m.

Bryan Walters
/photos

Blue Angels christen new
uvm with victorv over Minford
However, the Blue and
White managed to withstand
both of those strong pushes
early on to take a 2-0 lead in
the match, then led start to
finish in Game 3 to wrap up
the first of man) home victories to come at GAHS.
Afterward GAHS coach
Amy Shriver was proud of
her team and what they had
accomplished on Monday
night. She noted there were
some nerves. but that it was
more of an honor for her
squad to be the first ones to
defend the home court.
"The kids were very excited to be able to kick off the
first game ever in the new
Gallia
Academy
Htgh
School." Shriver commented. "We had a lot of nerves
adJUSting to the new surroundings. but ovemll I'm
pleased with the wa) the
girls played tonight. It just
seemed like it took us a
while to get in sync, but we

did get out of here tonight
with a win in three straight.
So overall. I'm happy with
the end result."
The Angels stormed out to
a 9-3 advantage in Game I ,
but MHS countered with a
9-3 run of its own to knot
things up at 12-all. Both
teams traded leads back and
forth up to 22-all before the
guests took a 24-22 edge late
in the opener.
Gallia Academy scored
the final four points of
Game 1 to secure the opening-game win. There were
11 ties in that opening
game, with Minford holding
the lead seven times compared to just five for
GAHS. The hosts' btggest
lead was six points in Game
I , while Minford led by two
pomts just once.
The Angels again stom1ed
out to a 9-3 cushion in the

Please see Christen, Bl

Prep Golf Roundup

Eastern golfers post win over Fed Hock

~PPHS boys pick

STAFF REPORT

j

up first victory
STAFF REPORT
MOSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

SOUTH POINT - The
Point Pleasant boys soccer
team picked up its first victory of the
2009 campaign
on
Saturday,
rallying
back from
an
early
deficit
to
claim
a
thrilling 2-1 decision over
host South Point during a
non-conference matchup in
Lawrence County.
' The Black Knights ( 1-22) fell behind 1-0 to the
,:&gt;ointcrs just 15 m inutcs
into the contest, but rallied
{o tie things up just I 0 minutes later when Preston
~airden found the back of
the left-side net on a 16)•ard shot from the right.
:fhe goal allowed both
learns to enter the intcrmis~ion tied at one ap1ece.
• The score remained that
way until the 65th minute.
:When Jordan Messick sue~essfully
converted
a
penalty kick for the eventual-winning goal.
PHS managed 20 shots
goal. compared to only
ght by the hosts. South
Point keepers came up
with a dozen saves in the
loss, while Matt Lewis
made six saves in prescrving the win.
Point Plea&lt;;ant returns to
action today when it travels to Centenary for a nonconference
matchup
against Gallia Academy.
Game time is scheduled for
5:30 p.m.

,

,

.
1~i!I~L__.:....'--

I t.=

____.f:___ _.:.......;:..:..;;;._±.~
AP photo

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Johnny Cueto throws against the
Pittsburgh Pirates in the first inning during Game 2 of a
doubleheader baseball game Monday in Cincinnati.

Reds beat Pirates 6-3
for doubleheader sweep
ClNCIN~ATI (AP) Brandon Phillips hit one
homer and had another overturned after a review
Monday night. and the
Cincinnati Reds beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates 6-3 to
complete a doubleheader
sweep that drew the two
smallest crowds in Great
American Ball Park's history.
1
Phillips had three hits off
~ left-bander Paul Maholm (7; 8), including a solo homer.
He had another solo shot
overturned in the fifth.
Replays showed that his
drive down the left-field line

Gallia Academy senior Amy Noe , right, puts away one of
her game-high six kills over a Minford defender during
Monday night's first-ever varsity volleyball match at the new
GAHS in Centenary. The Angels' Maddie Swisher (2) is pictured in the background.

had actually veered foul,
leading to the first reversal
at the ballpark.
Johnny Cueto (9-10)
returned from a stuy on the
disabled list because of a
sore shoulder and won for
the first time since July I.
Francisco Cordero pitched
the ninth for his 29th save in
31 chances.
The Reds sold only 9.087
tickets for the second game,
the smallest gate m the ballpark's seven-year histof).
The opener drew a much
smaller actual crowd.

Please see Reds. Bl

MDSSPORTSCMYDAJLYSENTINELCOM

POr-.1EROY
The
Eastern golf team had little
trouble with visiting Federal
Hocking on Thursday. posting a convincing 53-stroke
victory during a Tri-Valley
Conference
Hockin!!
Division matchup at Pme
Hills Golf Club in Meigs
County.
The Eagles - who had all
six players shoot rounds of
50 or lo\',:er on the day posted a team tally of 166,
finishing well ahead of the
Lancers· total of 2 I 9.
Christian Amsbary led the
hosts with a medalist round
of 39. followed by Chri~
Bissell and Jay Warner with
respective efforts of 40 and
41. Craig Jones and Jordan
Wood both posted matching
46s. but only one went
toward the final team score.
Kyle Young also posted a 50
for the victors.
Aaron ~1cPherson and
Austin Russell led the
Lancers with matchmg 49s,
followed by Tyler Clemons
with 58 and Shayne Gillian
with 63. Steve Coen and
Brandon Russell ended the
guests' day with scores of73
and 76.
MEIGS GOLF FALLS TO
ROCKETS

WELLSTON
The
Meigs golf team fell to 1-2
overall
in
Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division
competition last Thursday
after a 3-stroke setback to
host Wellston at Fairgreens
Country Club.
The Marauders - who
lost to Athens (150-194) in
the league opener and followed that up with a wm

against Vinton County ( 183200) - posted a team score
of 195, finsihing just behind
the Rockets' tally of 192.
Scott Kennedy led MHS
with a 47, followed by
Bobby King with 48 and
Tvler Andrews with 49.
R)'an Jeffers rounded out the
team scoring with a 51.
Ben Hood and Anthonv
Frederick had re:-pecti\'e
efforts ot 57 and 61 for the
guests,
and
James
Cunningham also tired a 42
over six holes of play.
Wellston's
Blake
Downard fired a medalist
round of 41 . followed by
Thomas Skaggs with 46.
Nick Derrow and Tony
Spanos completed the winning ~!core with respective
rounds of 50 and 55. Robert
Roberts and Lane Bunnell
also shot 60 and 63 for
WHS.
WATERFORD OUTLASTS
TORNADOES

WATERFORD The
defending
Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division champions had little trouble in defending their
crown Thursday against visiting Southern, a::. Waterford
had all six golfers fire
rounds of 44 or under en
route to a 36-stroke victory
at home.
The Tornadoes had a trio
of 48s from Taylor Deem,
Nathan Roush and Cylc
Rees in the setback, but
those were the lowest totals
that any SHS player had on
the day. Andrew Roseberry
fired a 50 to complete the
team scoring at 194.
Colby Roseberry and
Dyllan Roush also had
respective rounds of 59 and
70 for the Purple and Gold.

The Wildcats ended the
da) with a total of 158, led
by medalist Joey Rogers
with
a
37.
Brandon
Offenber!!er was next with a
38. while Kvle Allen and
Austin Hilner\ ing rounded
out the scoring \\ ith respective efforts of 40 and 43.
Aaron Miller and Casey
Bmham had their matching
44s thrown out of the scoring totals.
RIPLEY AVENGES POINT
AND WAHAMA

MASON - It \Vas just a
few days ago that the Ripley,
Point Pleasant and Wahnrna
golf teams met in a tn-match
at the Green Hilb County
Club. The Big Blacks came
out on top in that one.
Mondav afternoon found
the same·3 teams going at it
again onl) this match was
held at the Ri\erside Golf
Course in Mason. WV. The
results were as different as
the golf courses. Ripley
played consistent golf and
won thi-. match with a final
score of 169 in the play 6,
count 4 format.
Point finished second
shootin!! a I 75 while
Wahama was th1rd wllh a
final score of 186.
Co-medalist for the match
was Ripley s Bla~ Barnette
who shot a 41 pUiyin~ from
the back tees. Jordan
Franklin was a close second
in the Ripley scoring \\ ith a
42. Both Devin Mahan and
Heath S\\ isher were another
shot behind with 43 for the
contest. Ben Dewees and
Tyler Casto also played for
the victors. but their scores
were not included in the
final count.

Please see Golf. Bl

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

:Wildcats fall to Valley
!Wetzel in opener, 46-0
I

STAFF REPORT

• MDSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

· ASHTON - The Hannan
football team started its 2009
~ea~on on a down note
f?awrday night. ~ufferin~ a
~6-0 setba~k to visitmg
:Valley-Wetzel during a
~eek
I non-conference
inatchup.
: The Wildcats (0-1) fell
behind 21-0 after one quarter
of play and trailed 34-0 at
:he half, but managed to play
petter in the second half after
;imitin!! the Lumberjacks ( 1tl) to ]i.JSt 12 points in the
final two periods of regulanon.
~
;: Just three plays into the
contest, Cody Bates picked
off a Hannan pass and
tetm·ned it for a score at the
R:24 mark for a 7-0 advan{a!!e. Ganett Uellschy added
;t ~rushing TO at the 5:58
mark of the tir~t for a 14-

•.

...
.
~

~

:

Christen
fromPageBl

,..
;second game. only to have
Minford rally back and tie
lhe score at I 0-all. Both
teams again traded leads up
to 16-all. but the hosts ran
off nine of the next 11
points to take a 2-0 lead in
games with a 25-18 win.
-· Sitting on a two-game
'lead headed into the finale.
PAHS stonned out to a 5-0
lead before extending that
edge out to its biggest of the
nigl1t (9 pointsr·at 21-12.
The Lady Falcons fought
their way back to within

Golf
from Page Bl
.. Point Pleasant's Alex
Potter was co-medalist for
the day matching Barnette's
41. Opie Lucas was only a
shot back turning in 42
while Justm Cavender shot
a 45.
Trav1s Gnmm provided
Point\ fourth score with a
47. Also playing for Point

point edge, then Matt Poling
scored on a run at 3:02 for a
21-0 cushion after 12 mintiles.
Poling added a Y6-) ard
punt n:ttml for a ..;core at the
7: 16 mark of the set:ond to
increase the lead to 28-0,
then William Streets added a
scoring run with 2:59 left in
the half to give the guests a
34-0 lead fieading mto the
half.
Codv Bates added a scoring run at the 3:42 mark of
the third for a 40-0 lead, then
Valley-Wetzel capped its
offensive totals \Vhcn Collin
Bates scored on a run with
7:42 left in regulatiOn.
Rohcrt Warth led Hannan
with 15 rushing yards on
nine carries. while Jason
Paden led the defense with
seven tacl\:les and two
assists. No other ~tatistical
information was available
at presstime .

Reds
from Page B1
Fewer than 2,000 fans saw
Darnell McDonald score on a
\vild pitch ti·om Jesse Chavez
(0-4) in the bottom or the
ninth for a 4-3 win. After
playing the first game in ten·
nis-match silence, the Reds
v..·ent on to complete their tirst
c.loublehcader sweep in I 0
vears.
· A lot of bad things have
happened to both teams since
April 10. when rain wiped out
their game and prompted the
makeup doubleheader.
The Pirates went on yet
another trading spree. gettmg
rid of most ol their stmters.
Only Ryan Doumit and Adam
LaRoche are left from the
lineup that manager John
Russell wrote out on that

Tuesday, September t,

rainy April I0 night.
For the Red~. it's been all
ahout injuries. Every Reds
starter from that game ha-;
been sidelined at some point
in the sea'ion - 19 players
overall have gone on the disahlccl list. Joe&gt;· Yotto was the
only Reds mamstay left in the
lineup from April.
Hardly anyone cared to
watch.
When U1e afternoon game
began, 11 fans ~vere scattered
in the upper-deck bleachers in
left field. attended by two
ushers. After the fourth
inning. the video board
l&gt;howed one fan surrounded
by empty scats as Eric
Carmen s "All By Myself'
played over the speaker system, drawing a smattering of
applause and laughs from the
other fans who knew the feeling.
In the second game. the

Reds scored thfl'e ttmes in the
first off Maholm, who threw
41 pitches in the inning.
Phillips led off the third with
his 18th homer. Drew Stubb~
later added a two-nm homer
- the rookie also had a solo
shot in the opener.
Pittsburgh hadn't been
swept in a doubleheader in
Cincinnati since July 9. 1976.
when the Big Red Machine
was on its way to a second
strai~ht World Series championship.
The losses left Pittsburgh
onI y five shy of becoming the
first major American protessional team to string together
17 straight losin~ seasons.
The Reds are mne losses
away from clinching their
ninth straight losing season.
their longest stretch of futility
since the 1950s.
Notes: Reds second baseman Brandon Phillips lost a

2009

solo homer after an umpire's
review.
Phillips hit what wao; initially ruled hb second home run
of the game off Pitt&lt;;burgh 's
Paul Maholm during the fifth
inning on Monday night. The
drive down the left-field line
flitted with the foul pole, and
third base umpire Dan
Iassogna signaled a home run.
Several Pirates players
immediately questioned the
call. a&lt;.; did manager
Russell. After the umpi
conferred. crew chief Ric
Reed - workinl! behind the
plate - viewed...replays that
showed the ball had curved
foul. The review took 1
minute. 55 seconds and
resulted in the first overturned
call at Great American Ball
Park.
Phillips went back to the
plate and singled. but wa&lt;; left
stranded.

J.

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

four point... at 22-18. but
were outscored 3-1 the rest
of the way to allow GAHS
to secure the sweep.
The Angels were led by
senior Amy Noe with 18
points and three aces. followed
by
Hannah
Cunningham with six
points ~ and
Courtney
Shriver with five points.
Noe al~o led the offens1 ve
attack \vith six kills, followed by Morgan Daniels
with five kills. Morgan
Leslie and Mollie Blake
also had three kills apiece
for the \'ictors.
Cunningham had a teamhigh II assists. followed
by Shriver with nine
assists.
with their scores not counting were Erik Allbright and
Ja~on Stouffer.
Matt Arnold shot his best
score of the year. a 43, to
lead the White Falcons.
Dave Greene turned in a 44
and Brandon Johnson added
a 48 for Wahama.
Freshman
Caroline
Thompson contributed a 51
for the dav to account for
Wahama's fourth score. The
~cores of Zack Whitlatch
and Dakota Sisk were not
added in the final tally.

·=
W"&gt;lUlbl.lic
...,...• • ...., ... ~J.gh~ '1.&lt;•

TUPPERS PLAINS REGIONAL SEWER DIS·
TRICT
LEGAL NOTICE· INVI·
TATION TO BID
w Sealed Bids will be re·
'• celved for furnishing all
labor, materials and
• equipment necessary
to complete a project
known as Wastewater
· Facility Improvement
Project at the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer
District (the "Owner"),
49460 State Route 681
',West, Reedsville, Ohio
45772 on the following
schedule by Contract:
Wastewater Facility Improvement Projectuntil 4:00 P.M. local
time on September 9,
• 2009 at the District Of•. fice.
At said time and place,
·publicly opened and
read aloud. Bids may
be mailed or delivered
In advance to the Tuppers Plains Regional
W
Sewer District at the
above address.
Bid Documents Include
.,the Bid Requirements
and Contract Documents (that Include all
bid sheets, plans, specIfications, and any ad'denda) can be obtained
from ME Companies,
·535 Brooksedge Boulevard, Westerville, Ohio
'~ 43081 with a non·re·
fundable payment of
· · $65 per set. Checks
should
be
made
payable to ME Companies, Inc. Bid Documents will also be on
file in the plan room of
the F.W. Dodge Corpo·
· ration.
Each Bidder is required
-to furnish with Its sub·
mission of the fully
completed Bid Documents, a Bid Security in
accordance I with Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Revised Code. Bid se·
.curity furnished in
:Bond form (Bid Guar.. antee and Contract and
-Performance Bond as
provided In Section
153.57.1 of the Ohio Revised Code), must be
Issued by a Surety
Company or Corporation licensed in the
State of Ohio to provide
:said surety. Those Bid·
ders that elect to sub·
mit bid guaranty In the
form of a certified

check, cashieris check
or let1er of credit pur·
suant to Chapter 1305
of the Ohio Revised
Code and In accordance with Section
153.54 (C) of the Ohio
Revised Code.
Any
such let1er of credit
shall be revocable only
at the option of the ben·
eficiary Owner. The
amount of the certified
check. cashier's check
or let1er of credit shall
be equal to ten (10) per·
cent of the Bid and the
Successful Bidder will
be required to submit a
bond In the form provided in 153.57 of the
Ohio Revised Code in
conjunction with the
execution of the Contract.
Each proposal must
contain the full name of
the party or parties
submlt11ng the Bidding
Documents and all persons Interested therein.
Each bidder must submit evidence of Its experiences on projects
of similar size and com·
plexlty. The Owner in·
tends that this Project
be completed no later
than the time period as
set forth in Article 4 of
the Standard Form of
Agreement Between
Owner and Contractor
on the Basis of a Stipulated Price.
Each Bidder must in·
sure that all employees
and applicants for em·
ployment are not discriminated
against
because of race, color,
religion, sex, national
origin, handicap, ancestry, or age.
All contractors and
subcontractors
involved with the project
shall follow the requirements of the American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
as outlined In the Supplemental Conditions.
Additionally, contractor
compliance with the
equal employment op·
portunity requirements
of Ohio Administrative
Code Chapter 123, the
Governoris Executive
Order of 1972, and Gov·
ernoris
Executive
Order 84-9 shall be required.
Bidders will be re·
qui red to conform to all

provisions of the Federal Davis-Bacon and
Related Acts (The Act)
which requires that all
laborers and mechan·
lcs employed by con·
tractors
and
per·
subcontractors
forming on Federal
contracts (and contrac·
tors and subcontrac·
tors performing on
Federally assisted con·
tracts under the related
ACTS) In excess of
$2000, pay their labor·
ers and mechanics not
less than the prevailing
wage rates and fringe
benefits, as determined
by the Secretary of
Labor, for correspon·
ding classes of labor·
ers and mechanics
employed on similar
projects
In
the
area.This procurement
Is subject to the EPA
policy of encouraging
the participation of
small business in rural
areas (SBRAs).
The Engineers estimate
for this project is
S150,000.
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer District
reserve the right to
waive any informalities
or irregularities. The
Tuppers Plains Re·
glonal Sewer District
reserve the right to re·
ject any or all bids or to
increase or decrease or
omit any item or times
and/or award the bid to
the lowest, responsive
and responsible bidder.
TUPPERS PLAINS REGIONAL SEWER DISTRICT
Invitation to Bid UTILITY TRACTOR WITH
FRONT LOADER, 5'
REAR BLADE, BRUSH
HOG, PTO AND THREE
POINT HITCH
Sealed bid for furnish·
lng a Utility Tractor with
Front Loader, Si Rear
Blade to the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer
District as specified
below, In the attached
specifications and pro·
posal, will be received
by the Sewer District,
49460 State Route 681
West, Reedsville, Ohio
45772. until 4:00 p.m.,
September 9, 2009, at
which time, they will be
publicly opened and
read aloud. Proposals

received after that date
and time will not be
considered. Bid shall
be submlt1ed on the at·
tached bid form in
sealed
envelopes,
plainly marked "Utility
Tractor" and shall be
addressed to the Sewer
District at the above ad·
dress. Delivery to be
made upon receipt of
purchase order and
shall be at the Sewer
District address. Bidder
will state in his bid the
name and model number of the equipment he
Is offering and will in·
elude with his bid a catalog
or
brochure
marked to indicate the
standard factory equip·
ment of the model on
which he Is bidding.
Bidder must at1ach a
separate sheet to his
bid listing ANY deviation from the minimum
specifications
as
shown below. If no attachment is provided, It
will be assumed that
the Item being bid
meets the minimum
specifications.
II the equipment of·
fered by a bidder under
the at1ached specifications meets the specifications except for
minor factors or reasonably small amounts
in dimensions, and if it
shall be determined by
the Sewer District that
these minor variations
from the specifications
do not prevent the
equipment being bid
from performing as satisfactorily or from
being as good as
equipment fully meeting these speclfica·
tlons, then these minor
variations from the
specifications may be
waived by the Sewer
District, If it deems It to
be to its advantage and
the equipment with the
waived variations In
specifications will be
accepted as fully meeting these speciflca·
lions.
In submitting bids
under at1ached specifications. bidders should
take Into consideration
all discounts, both
trade and time, allowed
In accordance with the
above payment policy.
All bidders should

quote net prices, therefore, exclusive of all
Federal Excise Taxes
and Sales Taxes. The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer District
reserves the right to
waive all Informalities
in bids, to accept any
bid or any portion
thereof, or to reject any
or all bids should It be
deemed in Its best in·
terest to do so. The bid
shall fully comply with
the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act
of 2009, Including the
Buy American provl·
sions. Bidder must at·
tach a separate sheet
to his bid listing ANY
deviation from the minlmum specifications as
shown below NEW OR
USED (2004 or Newer
with no more than 500
hrs) TRACTOR WI
FRONT LOADER, 5i
REAR BLADE, BRUSH
HOG, PTO, AND THREE
POINT HITCH.
HP
40 hp min
COLOR: Red, Yellow,
Blue, or Green Bidder
to Specify Color in Bid
EQUIPPED WITH:
Front loader, Brush
Hog Three point hitch,
5ft long rear blade,
compatible with 3·pt
hitch. PTO to operate
Brush Hog
QUOTATIONS MUST
INCLUDE THE FOL·
LOWING
INFORMA·
TION:
1. Complete description of tractor with ap·
pllcable
printed
materlal.
2. Guaranteed delivery
time after receipt of
written order.
3. Tractor will be accompanied by com·
plete shop manual.
4. The District will only
accept bid for entire
package.
Tractor,
loader, blade, brush
hog, three point hitch
and PTO complete.
PROPOSAL
UNDERSIGNED
The
hereby proposes to fur·
nish a new Utility Trac·
tor with Front Loader,
5' Blade, Brush Hog,
Three Point Hitch, and
PTO to the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer
District, Ohio, in secordance with the attached Invitation to Bid,
the at1ached speclflca·

.-&lt;:: ... ~....,"~

tions, and at the followlng price, warranty, and
delivery time:
Price S
Less TradeS N/A
Net S
Year Make &amp; Model#
Color
E n g I n e
Hours: Warranty:
Delivery Time:
Signed:
(Corporation, Firm or
Company)
By:
(Officer, Au·
thorlzed Individual or
Owner)
Title:
Mailing Address:
Zip: Telephone: Fax:
E-Mail:
Date:
Note: Bids must bear
the handwrit1en slgnature of a duly authorized
member
or
employee of the organizatlon making the bid.
TUPPERS PLAINS REGIONAL SEWER DIS·
TRICT
Invitation to Bid HALF
TON UTILITY TRUCK
WITH TOOL BOX AND
MECHANICS TOOLS
Sealed bid for furnishlng a Half Ton Cab &amp;
Chassis with Tool Box
and Complete Mechanics Tools to the Tup·
pers Plains Regional
Sewer District as specifled below, in the attached specifications
and proposal, will be
received by the Sewer
District, 49460 State
Route
681
West,
Reedsville, Ohio 45n2,
until 4:00 p.m., September 9, 2009, at which
time, they will be publicly opened and read
aloud. Proposals received after that date
and time will not be
considered.
Bid shall be submlt1ed
on the attached bid
form In sealed envel opes, plainly marked
"Utility Truck" and shall
be addressed to the
Sewer District at the
above address. Deliv·
ery to be made upon recelpt of purchase order
and shall be at the
Sewer District address.
Bidder will state In his
bid the name and
model number of the
equipment he Is offer·
lng and will include
with his bid a catalog or
brochure marked to In-

l'lc&gt;~lces

,.,.

l'l~"'to'Vsp-pe~rs

I &gt; e i i i " ' V c . - e d ~igh'l. t.e&gt;

dicate the standard fac·
tory equipment of the
model on which he Is
bidding. Bidder must
at1ach a separate sheet
to his bid listing ANY
deviation from the min·
lmum specifications as
shown below. If no at·
tachment Is provided, It
will be assumed that
the Item being bid
meets the minimum
specifications.
If the equipment of·
fered by a bidder under
the attached speclflca·
tions meets the specifications except for
minor factors or reasonably small amounts
In dimensions, and If it
shall be determined by
the Sewer District that
these minor variations
from the specifications
do not prevent the
equipment being bid
from performing as satisfactorily or from
being as good as
equipment fully meet·
lng these speclflca·
tions, then these minor
variations from the
specifications may be
waived by the Sewer
District. if It deems It to
be to Its advantage and
the equipment with the
waived variations in
specifications will be
accepted as fully meet·
ing these specifications.
Price shall Include a 14·
day plate and State of
Ohio Certificate of Title,
which shall be made
out to the Tuppers
Plains Regional Sewer
District and mailed to
P.O. Box 175, Tuppers
Plains. Ohio 45783. A
copy of the title appll·
cation is to be dellv·
ered with each vehicle.
In submit1ing bids
under at1ached specifications, bidders should
take Into consideration
all discounts, both
trade and time, allowed
In accordance with the
above payment policy.
All bidders should
quote net prices, there·
fore, exclusive of all
Federal Excise Taxes
and Sales Taxes.
The Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer District
reserves the right to
waive all informalities
in bids, to accept any
bid or any portion

..,...-c:....:a.-

thereof, or to reject any
or all bids should it be
deemed In Its best in·
terest to do so.
The bid shall fully comply with the American
Recovery and Rein·
vestment Act of 2009,
including the Buy
American provisions.
Bidder must at1ach a
separate sheet to his
bid listing ANY devla·
tlon from the minimum
specifications
as
shown below:
NEW OR USED 4x2 112TON, CAB AND CHAS·
SIS (Ford F·150 XL
Regular Cab or Equal)
THREE (3) YEARS OR
NEWER WITH
NO
MORE THAN 36,000
MILES ON ODOMETER,
WITH
DIAMOND
PLATED TOOL BOX IN·
STALLED, AND TOOLS
(Sears Mechanics Tool
Set for Plant Piping
Maintenance or equal)
G.V.W. 6,450
lbs.
(Min)
CAB TO AXLE:
Bid·
der to Submit with Bid
ENGINE: V6 (Min.)
TRANSMISSION: Automatic 4-speed, with
Electronic Overdrive
FRONT AXLE:
Bidder to Submit with Bid
REAR AXLE:
Bidder to Submit with Bid
COLOR: White
EQUIPPED WITH:
Power Brakes 4 -wheel
Anti·Lock Power steer·
ing, with tilting wheel
Power windows &amp;
Locks, Vinyl Bench
Seat Rubber Flooring
(Black) with rubber removable mat's Cab Air
Conditioning. Heavy
Duty 600 CCA Bat1ery,
Full Size Spare Tire and
Wheel (Front and Rear)
Am/Fm Radio with
clock
Swing-out Type Mirrors
Fuel Tank ( Min. 20
Gals), Dual Air Bags.
QUOTATIONS MUST
INCLUDE THE FOL·
LOWING
INFORMA·
TION:
1. Complete description of vehicle with applicable
printed
material.
2. Guaranteed delivery
time after receipt of
wrlt1en order.
3. Vehicle will be accompanied by com·
plate shop manual.

•
I&gt;e&gt;&lt;&gt;w--

4. The District will only
accept bid for entire
package. Truck with
tool box Installed and
tools.
INSTALLATION:
1. The Installation shall
be performed following
the state of the art. All
required Components
shall be supplied by the
installer.
PROPOSAL
The
UNDERSIGNED
hereby proposes to furnish a new Half Ton
Utility Truck Cab &amp;
Chassis with Tool Box
and Complete Meehan·
lcs Tools with to the
Tuppers Plains Ae·
gional Sewer Dlstr.lct
Ohio, In accords
with the attached I
tation to Bid, the a tached specifications,
and at the following
price, warranty, and delivery time:
PriceS
Less Trade$
N/A
NetS
Year Make &amp; Model #
Color
0 d o m et e r
Reading:
Warranty:
Delivery Time:
Signed: (Corporation,
Firm or Company)
By: (Officer, Authorized
Individual or Owner)
Title: Mailing Address:
Zip: Telephone: Fax:
E·Mall: Date:
Note: Bids must bear
the handwrit1en signature of a duly authorized member
or employee of the organization making the
bid.
(8) 18,25. (9) 1.

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SAVINGS

�-----------. -~- -

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

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JUSLSA.Y

Your Ad,
(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-21 57
Or Fax To (304) 675-6234
Word Ads

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

.......

-~-- --,.,.....-

Announcements

300

Services

400

Houses For Sale

Financial
rlyle@comcast.net

Lost &amp; Found

Home Improvements

Beautiful Apts. et Jack·
son Estates. 52 Wesl·
wood Dr from $365 to
$560.
74().446-2568.
Equal Housfng OpportuLeGrande
Blvd.
3BR
nity. ThiS institution is an
brick, hardwood floors,
Equal Opportl.lnlty Pro·
FR, 2 full baths, central
vKler and Employer.
'
air, 1OX14 metal build·
ing, 5 mins from town, Clean 1 br. fum. apart·
$89,000. 740·709·1858
ment. dep. Ref req. no

Money To Lend

Basement
Waterproofing
i.Jnc:ond•llOnalllfetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences furnished. Estab·
ished 1975. Cal124 Hrs.
740.446.Q870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Oh10 Div1·
sian of Finanetal lnstrtu·
110ns Office ol Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refl·
SSOO reward for tnforma·
narce your homo or oblion leading to the safe
tain a loan. BEWARE of
return ol 'Spot' who •s
requests for any large
n1ssing from Debbie Dr.
advance
payments • of
Other Services
call
740·709·9719
or
fees or insurance. Call
740·446·4682.
Please. ;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;::;:;;;;;;;; the Office ol Consumer
we love ond miss him
Pet
Cremations.
Call AHiars
loll
free
at
740·446·3745
1·866·278·0003 to learn
Notices
If the mortgage broker or
Professional Services
lender is properly h·
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
censed. (This ts a public
TURNED DOWN ON
PUBLISHING CO. rec· SOCIAL SECURITY SSI service
announcement
o:nmends that you do
!rom the Oh1o Valley
No Fee Unless We Win!
b'Jslness Wllh people you
Pubhshing Company)
1-888·582·334,5
K~OW and NOT to send
PUMPING
money through tt&gt;e ma11 SEPTIC
Education
Co.
OH • and 500
,mtd you have tnvestigat· Gallia
Mason Co. WV. Ron
tng the oHenng.
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537·9528
Business &amp; Trade
Pictures that

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

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

\
I,

4 bedrooms. 3 baths, 2
car
garage
attached,
covered
front
porch,
basement, attic, adjacent
lot 1ncluded, good neigh·
borhood, dead end street
in Pomeroy, $120,000,
740·992·2475,
740.992·6949

smok1ng.call
304·675·2970. after 4pm
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts. in Middleport, from
$327
to
$592.
740·992·5064.
Equal
Hous1ng Opportunity.

4 bed 2.5 bath S6001mo Island V1ew Mole! has
possible owner finance vacanc1es
$35.00/N•ght.
446·3384
74().446-0406
Jordan's Landing Apart·
men~ IInder new !T'an1.15acre beautiful bld. agement, 2, 3, &amp; 4 BR
site, close to Roosevelt units available 2 Wks off
school, no mobile homes 1st months rent. Please
$25.000 304·675-7934
call (304) 674-0023 ar
(304 610.0776.
Real Estate
3500
Rentals Modem 1BR apt. Call
740.446-0390
Land (Acreage)

School

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 74().44{;-4367
Hl00·214.Q452
gal poliscareercollege.edu

Madison Ave. Pt. Pleas·
ant, frame house on 2
lots, excellent locatJOn tor
2 future rentals, 510,000.
740.645-0938

Apartments/
Townhouses

www.comlcs.com

Pets

Miscellaneous

I

Campers RVs &amp;
Trailers

Tara
Townhouse
Apartments/
1990 Kimball Ptano, the
Apartments
2BR, 1 5
Des1gner Collection, very RV ServiCe at carmi· •=-=T=o=wn=-h=o=usu:::;;:::;;;;::;: bath, back pauo, pool,
Colleges and SchOols 12748
good condition, $1000 chael
playground, (trash. sew·
Trailers •
and 2 bedroom apts., age, water pd.)No pets
740·446·6565
74().446·3825
furniShed
and
unfur· allowed.
$450ilent,
600
Animals
I
mshed, and houses In $450/sec.
dep.
Call
Jet Aeration Motors
RV
.
Pomeroy and Middleport,
.
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
740
645
8599
Service
at Carmichael security deposit required, !!!!!~~~~~~~!!!!
Wanted
Boston Terrier mom. dad
In stock. Call Ron
Pets
Tra11ers
7 4 puppies all are AKC
no pets. 740·992·2218
Commercial
Evans 1-800-537-9528 740·446·3825
N•ce Fam11y of 4 looking
Kittens. POSSibly 9·10 Reg. Puppies 1st shots &amp;
1br. ,1 ba.
over
garage 2·3
Bedroom
Mob1le
for a rental home or mo·
sell
due
to
weeks old. Already eat· wormed
W ant To Buy
Motorcycles
apt. $500.00 a mon. + Homes for Rent. (740)
b•le home Please Call
S100
each.
1ng
dry
food
(740) health
$500.00 dep. 870 sq. 446·1279.
740·709.0181
388·8743
NEED CASH
1997
1100
Honda
446-6350
ft.located at Lakin WV
Bargin Tools SA 554 Shadow,
Windshield, couples or s•ngle person
Houses For Rent
CKC Min Pinscher pups Buying all kinds of tools Luggage
Rack,
S1ssy
only, no chndren or pets.
tails
docked,
shots, bus.· 388-8917, hol!le- Bar.
Asking
$3,200.
Legals.................~..................................: ......1 00 Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
no smoking mside, must Sl99 'mo! 4 bed. 2 ba\h.
wormed
$225
each. 388·1515 cell- 794·1188.
(740)388-8283.
Announcements .......................................... 200 ATV ............................................................. 1005
have ref. 304·687·8213
Bank Repo' 15~ do\\n, ~~
740·388-8788
Blrthday/Annlversary.................................. 205 Blcycles......................................................1010
2BR APT.Ciose to Hol- )C.WO 8% APR) for h&gt;tmg\
Absolute Top Dollar • stl·
Happy Ads .............:......................................210 Boats/Accessories ............................, ....... 1015
2000
Automottve zer Hospital on SA 160 &amp;J0..620.4946 ex R027
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ..............- ............ 1020
co•ns,
any
Free 3 beautiful klttens, vertgold
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
CIA. (740) 441.0194
3
Bedroom,
Laundry
litter tra1ned, 3-4 mon. 10K/14KI18K gold Jew·
Notices ......................................................... 225 Other ..........................................................1030
Autoa
CONVENIENTLY
LO· ROOM Garage,167 Gra·
old 304-675-2634 leave elry, dental gold, pre
Personals ..................................................... 230 Want to buy ...............................................1035
1935
US
currency,
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD· ham St, Rodeny S600
message
Wanted ........................................................ 235 Automotive ................................................ 2000
proof/mint
sets,
dla· ·•3=v=e=hiclc
=-=
s =a=t =1=p=rice
=-.=s=ee
= ABLE! Townhouse apart· mo.
740-446·4543
or
Services ....................................................... 300 Auto RentaVLease ..................................... 2005
ments.
and/or
small 740-645-4834
Pomeram1an· puppies, for monds, MTS Coin Shop.
Appliance Service ....................................... 302 Autos .......................................................... 2010
nd Avenue. Gall!· at 571 Left Fork Rd. Bid·
sale AKC Reg. Ch am· 151 2
Automotive .................................................. 304 Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
houses for rent. Call 3BR 1 bath home n lc·
well.
740441-1111 for appli· Grande Blvd S650 !ent
Building Materials ...................................... 306 Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
pton Bloodline. Sfle IS polis. 446-2842
&gt;&lt;ll!&lt;lno""" ................................................. , •••• 308
cation &amp; Information.
Parts &amp; Accessories .................................. 2025
AKC Champ1on, 3M. 2
$650 dep. renter pays
200~
Neon air, auto·
Ya rd Sale
................................................310 Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
black, 1 chocolate. $500
Free Rent Speci al Ill
utilities. NO PETS Call
malic,
4
door
$2000
y Care ....................................... 312 Trucks ......................................................... 2035
hrm
Ask
for
Paula
mile below dam, Rt 7 OBO. 1999 Dodge truck, 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and 446·3644 for applicaton
Computers .................................................. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
740·379·2164
S. Home 1ntenor, tools, V6, standard, 112 ton up, Central Air, WID br,
Contractors ..................................................316 Vans ............................................................ 2045
$500Jmonth
tn
3
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318 Want to buy ............................................... 2050
furniture, winter &amp; fall $25000
OBO
2003 hookup,
tenant
pays Syracuse. Deposit, HUD
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
700
Agnculture clothing. Sept1st·Sth
Call between approved.
No
Pets
Neon 77,000 mi. air, electric.
Financlal .......................................................322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
automatic $3000 OBO. the hours of 8A·8P.
304-675·5332 weekends
Health ........................................................... 326 Commercial ................................................3010
Garage sale, September 2005 Neon 66,000 m1 air,
EHO
740·591·0265
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328 Condominiums .......................................... 3015
4 &amp; 5, 102 Mary St., New automatic, 4 door $3500
Ellm VIew Apt s. •
Farm Equipment
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Own~r ....................., ...............3020
Haven, WV
For
rent 2 br. house &amp; 2
(304)882-3017
OBO
256·1652
or
lnsurancc ..................................................... 332 Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
256·1233
Twin
Rivers
Tower
is
ac·
br
apt.
$375 ·00 a mol'
Lawn Service ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Huge 1st garage sale,
KIEFER BUILT,
each on 5th St. Pt Pleas·
Music/Dance/Drama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
cept•ng
applications
for
-------VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· Sept 2.3.4.5, , toms for ·No Clunkor·2002 Toyota w8lling list for HUD sub- ant 304·812-4350.
Other Servlces ............................................. 338 Want to buy................................................3040
JD
112
STOCK
TRAILERS, everyone,
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Camry XLE 95.000-new sldized. 1·BR apartment For Rent: house 2 Bed·
MAX
EQUIP- mower, 45657 St. Rt.
LOAD
Professional Servlces ................................. 342 Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
tires/$6,100.(740)446·
for the elderty/d1sabled, room,
1 Battl, W&amp;D
MENT
TRAILERS, 124
Repalrs ......................................................... 344 Commercial ................................................351 0
9555 or (740)339.0315.
hookup,
call675·6679
oHICe
space,
Rooflng .........................................................346 Condominiums .......................................... 3515
E~RESS
&amp;
CARGO
Community
yard
sale
Trucb
~
large yard. Total electric,
Sccurity ........................................................ 348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
HOMESTEADER
Sept. 1.2 Kingtown Ad PI
~
S400 a Month plus De·
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
CARGO/CONCESSION
Plea.
collectables,
Dod
eo 1
·
posit. also for Sale 14x70
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352 Storage .......................................................3535
TRAILERS.
B+W
2008
go
mm
ns
Beautiful
1
BR
apartment
1980
Windsor
house
clothes, tools , knick
Financial .......................................................400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
6 In the country freshly Trairer
GOOSENECK FLATBED
diesel
1
ton
H.D.,
older
Mode'
Financial Servlces.......................................405 Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
knacks.
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
speed, 4 dr., long bed, painted very clean WID Needs some TLC S3500
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots.............................................................4005
TIRE TRAILER I"JVEN· Garage Sale, Sept 1·.2 red, less than 2000 ml, hook up nice country set· OBO.
Call
Money to Lend .............................................415 Movers........................................................4010
5 000
TORY AT
Education .....................................................500 Rentals ....................................................... 4015
.~~~8
$2 • • ling only 10 mins !rom (740\446-2667 If no an
8:30-5:30. Some lumi- ~~~
WWW CARMICHAEL·
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Sales...........................................................4020
ture 6 m11es below Galli- ·=======~~ town. Mus1 see to appre- swer leave message.
TRAILERS.COM
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510 Supplies ..................................................... 4025
polis on St. At. 7 S.
c•ate.
$3501mo ;;.;.;.;;.;;~.;.;..;.;..;;;~.;,;.....;~
Lessons ........................................................515 Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Util ity Trailers
or House for rent 4 BR
7 4().446-3825
614 •59s-m3
house In Vinton 12 mo
Huge Yard Sale I Bake
Personal ....................................................... 520 Resort Property.........................................5ooo
74
953
SALE 504 2f1d St. Pt. 2005 fifth wheel two car .;..;,;Q
;.;.;.;
.645-.S
;;.;;.;..____ Lease or will sell on land
Animals ........................................................ 600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Animal Suppllcs .....................-................... 605 Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Havo you priced a John Plea. Sept 1 &amp; 2 starting trarler,tnside
box
45' 3 room and bath down· contract.
(740)441·5150
Horses .......................................................... 610 Employment...............................................6000
Deere lately'? You'll be at 8ar"''.
long,
white,
oxcellent stairs frrst months rent &amp; or (740)379-2923.
Llvestock...................................................... 615 Accountlng/Financlal ................................6002
surprised! Check out our - - - - - - - - - condrtion, with three side deposit. references rePets .............................................................. 620 Admlnistratlve/Professtonal .....................6004
used
~nventory
at Yard Sale, Sept. 4th &amp; doors,
electric wench, quired, No Pets and Moble Home for Re(lt.
Want to buy .................................................. 625 Cashier/Cierk .............................................6006
www.CAREQ.com.
car· 5th. 9·5, Anllquejl, Col· Pnc~;~ $9,500 call for clean. 740.441-&lt;&gt;245
Nice Mobile home SR
Agrlculture ...................................................700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
m1chael
Equipment lectibles,
Furniture, more
informat1on
C
160, 5 ml north ol Hol~r.
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705 Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Glassware, misc. 7169
MOVE IN READY om· $450
+
soc.
arden &amp; Produce.......................................710 Constructlon .............................................. 6012
740·446·2412
St Rt 7S, Junction 7S &amp; (740)949·2217
pletely furnished 2BR, all depos1t.(740)441·5150 or
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Lovers Lane.
TV,stereo (740)379·2923.
Real Eslale appliances,
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
&amp; Lond ........................................... 720 Education...................................................6016
3000
sys, linens &amp; complete
Sales
Want to buy ..................................................725 Electr ical Plumb lng ................................... 6018
Now Available at Carmi· Yard Sale, Townhouse,
kitchen ware $700/mo +
Manufactured
Merchandise ................................................ 900 Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
4000
chao!
Equipment Lover's Lane Sept. 1, 2.
alec $500/dep. 446·9585
Housmg
Antiques ......................................................905 Entertainment ............................................ 6022
740·446·2412
-4.
hrs.
3
8
Two, second noor, 1BR,
Appllance .................................................... 910 Food Servlces............................................ 6024
Houses For Sale
Auctions .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal J obs .................... 6026
unturmshed
apartments
Recreational 2 bed 1 bath $300/mo.
900
Merchandise
Bargain Basement.......................................920 Help anted- General ..................................6028
for lease, comer of Soc·
Rentals
1000
Vehicles 446·3570
Collcctlblcs .................................................. 925 Law Enforcement ......................................6030
ond &amp; pine 1n Gallipo~s.
Computers ................................................... 930 Maintenance/Domestic .............................6032
Central alr. No Pets. Ref· 2 BR, Uke New, No
EqulpmenVSupplles...........- .......................935 ManagemenVSupervisory ........................ 6034
A uctions
3
Bcd.2
Bath
HUD erenccs required.. Water Pets, Johnson's Mob le
Flea Markets .. ~ ............................................ 940 Mechanlcs .................................................. 6036
Boats / Accessories
Park.
included. $325 and $290 Home
hO!llCi 'Only199.':unoo.'5':01
Fuel Oil Coai!Wood!Gas ............................. 945 Medical.......................................................6038
Woodyard's M1ni Mall.
d"11lS )n. at 8._, for l.st. per month. Security de- (740)645.()5()6
Furniture ...................................................... 950 Muslcal ....................................................... 6040
We sell Merchandise for Camper, 2005, Sports· 800~9-'6 ex T461
posll call 446-4425 or _
D_o u
_b_le__w_id_e__
lo- -r-en-1
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955 Part-Tlme-Temporaries ............................. 6042
AUctiOnS and Flea Ma•· IT'en by K2 23 112 It 1
Kid's Corner.................................................960 Restaurants ............................................... 6044
3BR, 2 bath, Poner area
kets by the pallets Also pullout·Oueen bed-never 3 llr.2Ba HUD homes'Onl) 446-3936.
Miscelloneous ..............................................965 Sales ...........................................................6048
$18,900. ~'8 1 amon 1 S~d\\n IS
One BR Apt close to S600 rent + deposit
we v~1tod semng name t..Sed.
Want to buy.................................................. 970 Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
or )'1'.&amp;18%
or
brand clothtng tn the (740)388..0189
800-620-41146 e.\ hospital. Free cable. WID 740-367·0654
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975 Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052
(740)208-8333.
hookt.tps. (740)339-9492.
740-645-3592
R019
store. (740)446-7327.
Accrod.ted Member Accrod t·
1ng Cou'lCIIIor lndepondont

2 Free PersianiH•mala·
yan one male one Fe·
malo, 1 year old, Free
mtxed cat 3 yrs old male.
(740) 245·5678.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

992

1

nJo

------

•
1

,

,
'

�www.mydailysentinel.com .

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Rentals

Clerical

3Br mobile home in the ONLINE
BOOKEPPER
country.
NEEDED TO WORK ON
740-256-6574
BEHALF OF OUR COMPANY.
ACCOUNTING
2 bedroom mobile home EXPERIENCE
NOT
In Racme, $325 a month, NEEDED • ANY JOB EX$325 dep. yrs. lease, No PERIENCE NEEDED .
Pets, No calls after 9pm, YOU WILL EARN UP
740-992-5097
T0$3000 MONTHLY
Mobile home for rent, CONTACT US AT ( cris)
Hud accept. call before ben204@gmail.com
FOR
MOREINFORMA9pm 304-675-3423.
TION.'

Advertise yOur
business on this page

foraslowas

Sales
Country living- 3-5BR,
2-3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
today!
866-215-5774

OHIO'S
BEST BUYs
2010 3BR Doublewide
$39,977
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
FHA$349 mo
2010 3brl2ba Single
from $199 mo

MIDWESTHOMES
mymidwesthomes.com

740.828.2750
Sm. mobile home lor
sale 14x60 w/ central air,
all app. Included, good
cond.
best
offer
304-458-1727.
The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Financ1ng - New 201 0
Doublew1de $37,989
Ask about $8.000 Rebates
mymidwesthome.com
74D-828-2750
"The Proctorville
Difference•
$1 and a deed 'is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167
6000

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
CHILDCARE
Fundraising Director Nationwide co. Call Directors and owners to help
them raise money. Avg
$15-$20/hr.
We
train.
813-355-3889

Education
Part-time
instructors
needed during the day
ecoin: mathematics,
nomics, and accounting.
Mathematics and economiC Instructors must
have a master's degree
in the discipline. If interested please email a resume and cover letter to
jdanickl@gallipoliscareercollege.edu

I

SERVICE CENTER
1555 :\YEAH!.
l'omcro , OH
• Oil &amp; filter change

• Tune Ups
• Minor exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Fluid Change
• General Mechanic
work

• AC Recharge

(740) 992-0910

The Daily Sentinel

After Ninew years in the
aarea, we have proven
that we are committed to
Gallipolis, and are currently seeking dependable employees to help
fulfill client needs.
You will take Incoming
and make Outgoing calls
for well known organizations.
Stop By and Complete
Your Application:
lrfoCision Management
Co'tporalion
242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
Or Call and Schedule
Your Interview:

1-888-IMC-PAYU
ext. 2457

AUTOMOTIVE
PRODUCTION WORKERS
needed in the Buffalo,
WV area short-term temporary
assignments.
Must be able to pass
background.
drug
&amp;
physical exams. call
304-373-7289
on
M/W/TH
or
304-757-3338 M-F for
luther help.

992-2155
Help Wanted· General

Help Wanted· General

Assistant House Manager /Relief
Assistant
House Manager. Mini·
mum of a high school diploma/GED
required.
Work evenings, nights,
weekends, and holidays.
Experience working with
individuals in crisis preferred. must be able to
pass background check.
maintain
confidentiality
and work well with others. The relief assistant
house manager would
work as needed only.
Send resume to Assistant House Manger PO.
Box 454 Gallipolis Ohio
45631. Please respond
by September 3, 2009

Care Giver is needed.
This is a FULL TIME position, meaning you will
be living here as if it
were your home. This Is
NOT
a
day1ime
or
nightime only position.
Sleep here at night and
do normal household duties thru the day. Person
needing assistance Is
mobile and can function
on her own. FREE RENT
&amp; FREE UTILITIES plus
small
salary.
740-367-7129

-------Automotive
Production
Workers needed in the
Buffalo, wv area for
short-term temporary assignments. Must be able
to
pass
background,
drug and physical exam.
Call (304) 373-7289 on
MfW/Th
or
(304)757-3338 M-F for
further info.

LETART FALLS
SEPT.
3rd ~4th-5th
---Help.Wanted

Part Time Dayshifl
Fixed Schedule
8:00-1 :30 + weekend
day Qualified applicants
would be able to exhibit
courteous phone manner
and basic keyboarding
skill! High School
graduate or GED preferred.
1-877-463-6247 x2301

CONCESSION
STAND CANDY
FRESH FALL BULK
CANDY COMING
SOON

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE
Jackson Pike- Gallipolis
Across from Gallia County
Fairgrounds
Open Mon-Thurs 9 am · 2 pm
74

Help Wanted

Sportswriter
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seeking a
motivated. people-oriented individual to
fill a vacarcy in the news department as a
sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for
the daily edition of the newspaper, as well
as assist with the production of sports
pages. Excellent \Vriting and English
skills. photography skills and knowledge
of desk-top publishing arc sought. The
posttton is full-time , with benefits.
Interested parties cun send resumes to:
Kevin Kelly, Managing Editor,
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.,
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or mdtnews@ mydailytribune.com

LEAD

PH

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00am-8:00pm

(3ait Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinyl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
Long Bottom, OH

47239 Riebel Rd.,
740-985-4141

740-416·1834

Fully insured &amp; hondin~ mailahlc
Fn•c cslimatcs- 25+ )Cars experience
' C'Out affilialtd 1\ilh \lik•· \lan·um l&lt;oolin~: &amp; Hcmncll'ling l

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

Hai'dwo'd Cabinetry And Funlti~re
www.tbabtl'Cl"ae'kcablnet2'y.cz.m

740.446.9200
2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

CONCRETE
CONSTIWCTION

242 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, OH
Qualified applicants
would possess the ability to read aloud clearly,
basic typing skills, and
the ability to follow company's policies and procedures including good
attendance and work
ethic.

29 Years Experience

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured

wv042182 Free Estimates

Owners:

Cell: 740-416-5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

740-992-1671
Stop &amp;Compare

Overbrook Center is currently accepting applications for State Tested
Nursing Assistants. Full
Time and Part Tlme positions · available.
Inter·
ested applicants can p1ck
up an application or contact Lucy Goff, BSN, AN
Staff Development Coor- • • • •
dinator @ 740-992-6472'
M-F 9a-5p at 333 Page
St., Middleport. Oh. EOE
&amp; a participant of the
Drug-Free
Workplace
Program.
.llillillil~~llll.'j

BOTOMIST

ital is currently
Pleasant Valley
accepting resumes for a full-time Lead
Phlebotomist.
be a licensed
or equivalent Two
phlebotomist by
as
an
Office
in a clinical laboratory
n,.,,.,,.ron Must have a valid

Large, ne,tr frozen, head\ on

$i0 per ih Cash only
Pmt i; required in advance
Shipments arrive every
other Frida ·

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs

BA:\KS

• Decks • Additions

Guttering

COl\STRt:CTIOl\

Seamless Gutters
Roofing. Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential

•Electrical
•Plumbing

• Pole Barns

(740) 992-5009

Seiling;

~ow

• Ford &amp; Motorcraft

*Experienced
References Available'
Call Gary Stanley @
740-591-8044

Please leave message
or letter of credit upon
a solvent bank in the
amount of not less
than 10% of the bid
amount In favor of the
aforesaid
Meigs
County Commission·
ers. Bid Bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof
of Authority of the offl·
clal or agent signing
the bond.
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as bid for
N~PDemolitlon Project
and mailed or delivered
to:
Meigs County Commis·
sioners
Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Attention of bidders is
called to all of the requirements contained
In this bid packet, particularly to the requirement for a payment
bond and performance
bond for 100% of the
contract price. No bidder may withdraw his
bid within thirty (30)
days after the actual
date of the opening
thereof. The Meigs
County Commission·
ers reserve the right to
reject any or all bids.
Mlck Davenport, President
Meigs County Commls·
stoners
(8) 27 (9) 1, 4

co.

Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Building'
Building. Rcmodehng

Part~

NOTICE TO CONTRAC·
TORS
Sealed proposals for
the
NSPDemolition
Project Meigs County,
Ohio will be received
by the I'Aeigs County
Commissioners at the
Meigs
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
until 1 :00 pm, Thursday, September 17,
2009 and then at 1 :15
p.m., at said office
opened and read aloud
for the following:
NSPDemolltion
Pro·
ject.
Specifications,
and bid forms may be
secured at the office of
Meigs County Commls·
stoners, Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 740·992-2895.
Adeposit of 0 dollars
will be required for
each set of plans and
specifications, check
made payable to. The
full amount will be re·
turned within thirty (30)
days after receipt of
bids.
Each bid must be ac·
companied by either a
bid bond In an amount
of 100% of the bid
amount with a surety
satisfactory to the
aforesaid
Meigs
County Commissioners or by certified
check, cashiers check,

•

• Free Estimates

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

*Insured

Full Variety at Wholesale Prices.
Candy Bars, Gum, Sugar/Novelty
Candies

Help Wanted

7 40-367·0544

R~modeling

'22"' columr 1nch Sunday
CAll OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

DWIGHT HILL
RESIDENCE

Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

LE'WIS

Weds, September 2
9ary~-3 pm

Are You Tired of the Corporate
Headaches
Homecare? Come
Join
a Family Owned Home
Health Agency Providing
Flexible Hours and a
Great Working Environment.
Now Accepting
Applicahons
for
Part
Time AN's and LPN's
Call
us
1-866-368-11 00.

s13· colUmn inch weekdays

BIG YARD
SALE

lnfoCislon will be conducting on-the-spot Interviews!

- -.....- - - - Local Office 1n search of
15 evening shift employees. 5:30-11 :00 pm +
weekend day. 4 day
work week. Qualified apif unable to attend,
plicants would be able to
' please call
exhibit courteous phone
1·888-IMC·PAYU
manner and bas1c keyExt. 9104
boarding
skills.
High http://jobs.infocision.com
School graduate or GED
preferred. Call Toll Free
for Interviewing informa- ""!!!~~~~~~~
lion
1-877-463-6247 ;;::
Medical
x1921

BULLETIN BOARD

L

740-367-0536

In this troubled economy,
it is reassuring to know
that lnfoCision can offer
YOU a stable career
AND steady paycheck at·
lowing you to provide lor
your family!

Get Your Message Across Wit!) A Daily ~net

anted

30 Years local Experience
FUllY INSURED

• Brake Service

Quality Control $15/hr
evaluate
retail
stores,
training provided pleas
cal877-712-0008
Cosmetolog1stindependent contractor
or
booth rent, 60% commission. choose your own
hours, free tanning training &amp; certification guaranteed sales. e~cellent
location
tree parking
call740:992-2200
'
-------Quality Control, earn up
to $15 an hour. evaluate
retail stores, training provided,
call
1-800-901-2694

HeI

Local Contractor

l\IICIIAEL'S

per month!

, Rooting. Siding,
f Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

992-6215
740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio

S8.8Mlr

Gallia-Meigs
CAA
is
seek1ng an Intake Clerk
to work With Emergency
Programs.
Organizational skills, computer ex-.
pedence a MUST and
abtlity to deal with persons
of _
various
SOCIO-Iifunomtc
backgrounds. Temporary fullltme (6 months). possibly
becom1ng
permanent.
Valid
Drivers
license.
h1gh school graduate or
equivalent. Resume with
three (3) references to
Ms.
Edwards,
Gallia
Meigs C.A.A., 8010 N.
State Route 7 Cheshire,
0/'tiO, 45620 by og/08/09.
GMCAA ISEOE.

,I

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
·VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

WV036725

$$ Need to fill 50
open positions $$

http://jobs.infocision.com

I

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Help Wanted- General

Clerical

FIND
AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Coppick &amp; Son's

Landscaping
(Home &amp; Business)
Jerry &amp; Lisa Coppick
Chris, Kevin. Brad &amp; s~an
740-992-3646
Cell: 7-10-508-0075
Ceil:740-508-0069

S&amp;L
Trucking
Dump Truck
Ser\ice
We Haul Gravel.
Limestone. Coal,
Compost. Top Soil
Call Walt or Sandy

• Engines.

Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions

• Aftennarket
Replacement Sheet

Metal &amp;

Components
For All Make&gt; of Vehtdes

Racine. Ohio
740-949-1956

Fresh, Home Grown Vegetables
Cabbage,peppers, tomatoes,
sweet com, green beans

SAYRE PRODUCE
47985 Adams Road
Racine, Ohio

(740) 667-6729
We Accept WIC and Senior Coupons!

Sunset Home
Construction

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726
(Ce]J)

Advertisein this
space
for

$70
per
month

"Buying Locally- Building Locally"
New Homes, Additions. Garages,
Pole Buildings, Remodeling, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Drywall.

740-742-3411
PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodeling. ~1etal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Homes. Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; IQ~urcd
Rick Price· 17
Experience

yrs.

WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740-992·0730

.

~

w

�~r-4------~~~-~-~-------~--~-------·----~~----------~~~~----------~

I
Tuesday, September 1, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Stepped
down
5 Pesky
swarm
10 Less
loony
12 Of the
kidneys
13 "Don't
worry
about it"
15 Noshed
16 "This is
tasty!"
17 Lamb's
mom
18Sweet
drink
200penhanded
hit
21 Flea market unit
22Works
leather
23Message
from the
boss
25 Dark beer
variety
28 Ditties
31 Burden
32Game
akin to
horseshoes
34 "You bet!"
35 Chestnut
husk
36Geese
formation

Tom Batiuk

Bl.JI...k. WAS Go1N&amp;"0 BfMUP ; - - - - - - 1.£~ ... AND 1$5 ~K€f&gt;r
17\IJ(JNG fO HIM UtJ1ik.

FlNAU.'r, 8VU.. :rusfGAv£
A~D WAl-KED AWAlf.

JOSEPH
37 Parting
words
40 Worry
41 River of
northern
France
42 Party
throwers
43 Porgy's
love
DOWN
1 Korean or
Thai
2 Coffee
bar orders
3 Fly or flea
4 Wallet bill
5 Bleak
6 Not pos.
7 Lansbury
of
Broadway

8 Asian
26 Boxing
nation
combo
9 Naps
27 Swears
11 "Casino
29 " - liberty
"
or ... "
14 Variety
30 Prepares
show
broccoli
19 Chores
33Tennis
20 Dictation
star
expert
Monica
24 Laments 35Wagers
25 Like
38 Ball club?
lads _ _ 3~ Hold up

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (Check/m.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2. PO Box 536475, Orlando. FL 32853·6475

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

'1-1

!Ires\~
12~~

IF we BAIT IT WITH VOOR MEATLOAF'? ..

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
b) Dave Green

4

2 5
9
6
9
3 4

6 5
3

5
DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

9
1

6

1
"Is it okay If Barfy takes me
for a walk now?"

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

4
9

7 5
Difficulty Level

**

*****

9 7

2
5
7 8

8

HAPPY BlRTI-IDAY for Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2009:
This year, opportunities come forward. Evaluate
each offer. If you dive into anything too quickly, you
might not be comfortable. Maintain good health and an
exercise plan. Veer away from fads and way-out ideas.
If you are single, you'll meet a lot of people through
your daily life. You could find someone very enticing.
Just be sure this person is emotionally available. If you
are attached, the two of you will gain by taking time
away together. You might even feel like newlyweds.
AQUARIUS helps you get healthy.
71te Stars Shaw the Kind ofDl!J.Y.vu'll Htroe: 5-Dynamic;
4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Uijjrcult
ARIFS (March 21-April19)
Finally, you are connecting with others.
You might wooder what is happening with a child or
sibling. Moods change as the day ages. In fact, you will
note a need for frivolity from those around you.
Tonight Where the action is.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***A must appearance is inevitable, as is the
responsibility that comes with it. Communication will
surge if you are willing to be vulnerable. Listen to what
is being shared; there could be a good idea or two coming f01ward. You could be pushed in two opposite
directions. Tonight A must appearance.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Keep digging to find the answer. The more
you detach, the greater the potential for understanding.
A brainstonning session will be positive if you Jet go
and relax. Keep track of how others are thinking.
People might appear to be indulgent. Tonight Where
the good times are.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
*** Deal with your tinances head-on. You might
want to do something very differently. Communication
soars, and a :ot happens quickly. Extremes occur with
spending. Don't feel as if you have to keep up with the
Joneses. Let go of visions, and be realistic. Tonight A
deep talk.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
Sc:hedule spedal time to move a pl'OJed:
forward. Someone's inquiry could make you quite
happy. You feel as if you gel a second chance.
Investigate news, but keep certain observations private.
Make it OK to indulge someone. Tonight Ask, and you
shall receive.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

6
9,(11

*****

*****

****Accomplish as much as you can. Others
work with you so that you "'ill gain an unusual sense
of accomplishment. Bosses have a lot of ideas, and they
start sharing more of them. Consider what might be
happening behind the scenes. Tonight Frolic more.
LIBRA (Sept. 2.3-0ct. 22)
****You are all smiles and ready for nearly
everything. l'\ews from a distance surprises you. You
could feel a Jot different, and quite quickly at that.
Listen more openly to news that involves a loved one.
A project together could be worthwhile. Tonight Be
spontaneous.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-l'\ov. 21)
Keep conversations moving, and don't
allow others to obsess or get locked into one thought.
An associate and I or partner starts expressing everything that he or she is feeling. Be open to opportunities.
Indulge a higher-up or someone you care about.
Tonight: Swap news.
SAGITIARIUS (l'\ov. 22-Dec 22)
You will want to share. Communication
flows as you rarely have seen before. You might not
have the right words, as you are taken aback by what is
going on. Listen to your instincts ~~ith a friend, sibling
or neighbor. Tonight favorite spot. favorite hangout.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
**** Be aware of your financial status. You could
offer much more beyond finances than you thought
possible. An idea ....ill
off in an unprecedented
manner. Stay on top o your game. Don't be teiL&lt;;ed into
spending excessively. Tonight Your treat.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
You hit your power days and wonder
exactly what you are doing and why you are doing it.
Sometimes you compromise a little too muCh. Could
this be one of those occasions? Listen to wHat is going
on with a child as well as a loved one. To ght
Whatever floats your boat.
PISCES (Feb. 19-J'vtarch 20)
l'\ot everything is as transparent as you would
like. Fatigue plays a key role in making i:iecisions.
Listen to what someone IS shanng and hiS or her choices. Detach, and vou willlediT\ a Jot more. Someone
clear~· admires what you do and how you do iL
Tonight Put your feet up.

*****

*****

ray

*****

***

Jaap~/in,• Bigar i:: .m the ltltl'rntt \
at http://u~t.tnjarquelim:btgar.rom.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday., September t,

2009

Michigan coach denies NCA-A violations
ANN ARBOR. Mich . (AP)
- Rich Rodriguez gripped
the podium. bowed his head,
paused and appeared to fight
back tears. The click-clickclick of cameras was the
only sound.
Instead of being peppered
with quarterback questions
five days days before the
season opener. the Michigan
coach on Monday found
himself addressing allegations that the Wolverines
have been violating NCAA
rules relating to how much
time they spend training and
practicing.
He insisted, repeatedly.
that college football's winningest program has followed the rules since he was
put in charge 20 months ago.
Rodriguez became very
emotional when he talked
about the perception that he
and his staff uu nut care
about their players.
'That is disheartening," he
!;aid, then paused before
looking up to finish his
thought for dozens of
reporters and a long line of
TV cameras. "To say that is
misleading, inaccurate and
goes against everything that
I have ever believed in
coaching."
The school launched an
investigation on Sunday
after the Detroit Free Press
published a rep011 in which
players from the 2008 and
2009 teams said the amount
of time they spend on football during the season and in
the offseason greatly exceeded NCAA limits. The players
spoke to the newspaper on
condition of anonymity
because they feared repercussions from coaches.
Big Ten compliance officials arrived on campus
Sunday to assist with the
investigation, according to
two people at the school.
One person, who spends a lot
of time with the team. said
the school's compliance
office often makes unannounced visits to make sure
the program is following the
rules. Both people spoke on

the condition of anonymity
because the school will not
publicly discuss the case
until the probe is completed.
··our office does not conduct investigations in situations such as this," the Big
Ten said in a statement. "As
that task is undertaken by the
institution and - depending
the circumstances the
NCAA. To the extent we get
involved, it is purely in an
advisory capacity."
Rodriguez suggested the
complaints were an attempt
to ·'tear up" the effort to
rebuild a program that lost a
school-record nine games
last year. It was Michigan's
first losing season since
1967 and its first without a
bowl in 34 years.
Michigan athletic director
Bill Martin announced the
school investigation. saying
the allt::gatiuns were taken
seriously. He said the school
believed it has complied
with NCAA rules.
Martin,
who
hired
Rodriguez away from West
Virginia in a contentious
move, said he was surprised
by the newspaper's report,
but said he fully supports
Rodriguez.
''I'm all in for Rich
Rodriguez," Martin said
after the news conference.
Like Rodriguez, the university's compliance director, Judy Van Hom, has
denied that the football program violated NCAA rules.
Those regulations allow
players to spend eight hours
a week on mandatory workouts during the offseason.
Players told the Free Press
that they have spent two to
three times that amount on
required workouts.
The players said the
amount of time they spent on
football activities during the
season exceeded the weekly
limit of 20 hours and often
exceeded the daily limit of
four hours. 1 hey also said
quality-control staff often
watched seven-on-seven offseason scrimmages that are
supposed to be voluntary and

AP photo
AP photo

Michigan head coach Rich Rodriguez waits for his players
to be seated for a team photo, during the school's annual
football media day on Sunday, Aug. 23, at Michigan
Stadium in Ann Arbor.

Driver Benny Gordon, thrrd from left foreground, poses for
a photo with the NASCAR racecar custom-designed to
commemorate 9/11 durrng a marketing event Monday in
New York. Gordon and North South Motorsports will ra.
the car to commemorate 9/11 on September 11, 2009
the NASCAR Nationwide Series race at Richmond
. International Raceway.
1

!

went. If there was a run, you
went. It's just what you do to
be a better football player.'' !
Rodriguez opens the season Saturday at home
against Western Michigan. !I
planning to play three quarNEW YORK (AP)
A collapse of the trade centerbacks, and said he is no
custom-designed racecar ter's north tower.
worried about the allegaThe un\ eiling took place
tions becoming a distrac- 1 bearing the phrase "Always
Remember''
was
unveih.:d
at
the museum previe""'
tion.
Monday
by
:-.lASCAR's
c;i
te.
''here "is !tors can use
''Nothing is going to
change
their
focus," Bennv Gordon acro~s from interactive coa1puters and
the World Trade Center vie"" photos ahu a model of.
Rodriguez said.
site.
""'hat the ground zero site
Linebacker Obi Ezeh said
Gordon
will
race
the
car
e\ entuall y ... iiJ Jopk like.
the report will only make the
on
Sept.
II
at the
''No mat er \\
profesteam's bond stronger.
sion
you'
e
in.
ere
are
Richmond
jQ.~ernationa1
"We were really tight
Speedway
in
~ ir!!inia. It important way• to concoming out of training
camp," Ezeh said. "I think also bear&lt;. the p~rase "9/ I 1 tnbute to bmldm~ a 9/11
and n1~-Jseum,"
things like this kind of help Memorial." a reference to mcmori
Scl tl J~ eph Daniels. presi~
the
National
Sept.
II
us to grow stronger."
Memorial and Mu~eum.
dent ot the 9 11 rttemorial
Gordqn co-O\\ n'&gt; the Foundation, addir that he
North 3outh ~1otors{'.orts hope-. the car wi inspire
team, ha-;ed in Dupoi-i. l)a. :-.lASCAR fans •o le.
It's near the memorial 1)ite mor~ 1 ab.out the ~moria
1Connc ,
for Unit~d ~3. one ot four
Jitb
any day besides Saturday."
hijacked j~tliner-;
that NASCAR spoke 1an, said
Devenny should know.
crashed on Sept. II • 200 I . up to 75 000 pch le will be
Colorado will play five
"It's a real honor and 111 the stands at the
games on days other than
privilege for u-; to do th1s." !\'ASCAR
Nationwide
Saturday, one of27 BCS conference schools that have at
said Gordon. adding that Series. a li he predicted
least one game off the tradihearing the stories of fire- about 2 millionhN viewers
tional day of the week.
fighters and police officers would watch it 6h ESPN 2.
Thirty-nine other non-BCS
has been ''mcrcdible."
An identical ca is ready as
schools will skip Saturday
The car is a bla~k. blue a ba\.'kup. in ca~e the other
for another day, led by Boise
and white Ford Fusion with one is damaged in the race.
State, which will play six of
patriotic stars and &lt;;tripes.
It\ assigned o. 72. the
its 13 games on weeknights.
After being delivered in a number of retir dracer Bill
How did everybody get to
53-foot-long truck. the McKenzie. wh(~· now part
know the Broncos and their
hood was removed so trade of Gordon's tea .
blue ar1ificial turf? By watchcenter responder-; could
The vehicle. ith a 358
ing them on weeknights.
engine by Rous Yates. ca11
sign its underside.
The result is the Broncos
AP photo
"I don't knO\v much reach arouqd 200 mph.
·
and others have created a This is a Jan. 8 file photo showing audience members watch- about NASCAR. but now
··] hope evezybody is
new road map to football rel- ing a live 3D broadcast of the BCS Championship NCAA col- I've become a huge fan:· &lt;:heering for us ipld I hope;
evancy with the recruiting lege football game between Florida and Oklahoma at the said retired fire Lt. Micke) \.\e have a good run,'\
boost that comes from play- International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las . Krofs, who survived the Gordon s'"Jid.
ing on television.
Vegas. Now, every day really can be Saturday in a 24/7 cable
"When you look at some of
TV
world where college football programs have become willthe schools who have taken a
ing
to suit up whenever they'll get exposure.
very active approach to footj
ball on nontraditional dates, BCS conferences. According
All the options allow fans
Boise State and Louisville to the Big 12 conference, mit to watch more than 80 major
are two that really spring to of the nine games featuring a college teams on Labor Day
mind right away," said conference team not playing weekend alone, beginning
Middle Tennessee athletic on Saturday. Colorado (led Thursday
with
South
t-.'EW YORK (AP)
Patriots, Bills. cJts. Saints:
director Chris Massaro, by former Boise State coach Carolina at North Carolina Tweet away, boys. Just save it and Lions.
whose Blue Raiders face Dan Hawkins) participates in State and ending when for before and aft~r the games.
But NFL players have
Troy on Tuesday, Oct. 6, on five of them.
Miami and Florida State
The NFL said Monday it embraced the network to the,
ESPN2. "Look at the success
"It gives an opportunity for renew their rivalry Monday will allow players to use soda! point that some announce·
and the growth those pro- a lot of teams just to get out night for the 54th time.
media network., this st!ru.on ne\vs by tweeting, includinp:
grams have experienced. and e:et their face shown as a
And yes. it's theoretically but not during sames. Pia) ers. Saints rookie &lt;fomerbacK;
Those are two programs we team and a program," possible to watch e\ t!ry coaches and routball opera- Malcolm Jenkins. file sent out
model ourselves on trying to Devenny said. ''It's interest- major college team play this tions personnel can use wurd of his signins with the
become."
ing and it makes it a lot of fun season. Working that o.;ched- Twitter, Faccbook and other team on Twitter.
Massaro said the bump in to play in games besides ule out felt like ~it took about social media up to 90 minutes
The Cincinnati ~ngals sent
coverage doesn't end when Saturday."
as long as the roughly 60 before kickotl. and after tht&gt; out first official ward of first~
Then there's the prolifera- hours in real time you'd garne following traditional round draft pick Andre
the broadcast does. After
Smith's signing Sunday on a
Middle Tennessee
beat tion of games streamed li\'e spend watching one quam.'r j media interviews.
·
During !!ames. no updates t\.\ect on their Web site. That
Florida Atlantic on a Hail on the Web.
f
1
Mary pass on a Tuesday
ESPN360.com has the o · a game mvo vmg e\et') : will be peii11itWd bv the indi· came one day after Bene:ats·
night last season. he watched most, including some Mid- te~7~inbrecher
ackno\.\ 1- i vidual himself or anyone rep- receiver Chad Ochocinco sent'
' resenting him on his personal out a tweet sayin!! Smith had
the highlight rerun for sever- American Conference doual days. (I. of course, saw that bleheaders in November. edges the nontraditional ' Twitter. Facebook or any signed. which was \'.'TO~~· So
game. Weeknights really CBS College Sports XXL schedule can hmt attendance. other social media account. Smith's a!!ent. Alvin Keels:
sent out hi';. own tweet saving
make my quest easier).
offers monthly or yearly sub- and Devennv ~avs the class the leauue said.
time
missed
"can
be
tough
un
The
ttse
of
social
media
by
the report w~ incorrect. •
"The exposure in the coun- scriptions to gain access to
student
athletes.
But
both
Nf-&lt;1...
game
officials
am.l
officiThe NPL's security departtry's newspapers and media several other conferences.
outlets, let alone ESPN tele- Some colleges even offer consider the problems neces- ating department personnel ment assist:s players in removing fake sites on Facebook
vising it because you're the JumboTron feeds - what sary inconveniences to fea- will be prohibited at all time-..
ann Twitter.
ture
their
conferences
and
·
The
league.
which
has
always
only football game being they're showing on the big
"The growth of social
programs.
i ban-ed ~flay-by-play
descripplayed that night, is much screen in the stadium - live.
1
"Sometimes
you're
bringtions
o
game&lt;&gt;
in
progress.
media
pTat~~}fi'J?S such .
more meaningful," he said. for a nominal fee.
ing
homework
on
the
rond
or
also
extended
that
ban
to 1\vitt..-r and F1,ceb&lt;l?k has
"You have name and logo
''Having been in meetings
atcd important ner., ways
·
recognition across the coun- with our football coaches whatever it might be in orJer social media platfonns.
the
NFCand
clubslO
commuEarlier
tl'tJs
summer,
try.''
recently, the thin~ they talk to get it tumed in.'' Devenny
''For young guys. it can Chargers comerback Antonio nicate and connect 'f.'ith fans."
Other, bigger schools look- about is the televrsion expo- said.
be an awakening."
Cromartie \.\u.s fined $:' 500 thlj) lc~~e said in a~Statement,
ing to re-establish themselves sure and how important it is
And for fans like me. it by the team for criticizing the "The J"'t'L ... Will QDntinue to
in the national conversation to them and what a difference
food service at training camp emphasize innovtlive and
on Twitter.
are using nontraditional dates it makes in their recmiting couldn't get much better.
appropriate use of lflese new
I watched 113 teams two . The
Miami
Dolphrn., fonns of communication."
efforts," MAC commissioner
to stay in the forefront.
Colorado's
schedule Jon
Steinbrecher
said. years ago and 106 last se.tson imposed restrictions on playCommissioner (· Roger
eYcn while covering 1 cr-.,. reporters and ' n -.occt, G(lodell tweeted from the
begins with Colorado State ''Whether it's the Big Ten.
v. hich to &gt;k up tors at their tr'ainmg camp, ar·d dr.1tt in April.
on Sunday, and ends with a ACC or Mid-American Wisconsin
several other teams also set up
Other leagues have not
traditional Friday matinee Conference, parents want to most of my Saturda)S.
As it tums out. I d1dn l some restrictions on practice issued formal policies on
against Nebraska on Nov. 27. be able to see their kids
need that day much anywuy.
fields. including the Brom:o~. social media.
But it's still not the noon in play."
that only training staff are
allowed to attend.
Detroit
Lions
rookie
Carson Butler, wh played at
Michigan. said he didn't
think players had to do a lot
more work for Rodriguez
last year when compared
with previous seasons under
Lloyd Carr.
''It was just a different
structure." Butler said.
Butler said it didn't seem
as if the players were forced
to spend excessive time
training and practicing.
"I don't know all of the
exact rules, but I don't
remember anything that
seemed like it was too
much," Butler said. ''If the
weight room was open. you

Pa.-based memorial car
to race in Va. on Sept. 11

,
I

The old college try: Seeing all 120 teams possible
MILWACKEE (AP) Some people climb mountains or compete in triathlons.
My goal: Watch one quarter
of a ~arne involving every
team 111 major college football - all I 20 teams.
Whoa, Nellie!
First. some ground rules
for my "U. Tube" experiment: 1 can watch the games
live, on TV or even recorded,
but I have to watch them inseason - meaning that I
have to view them by the
start
of
the
Bowl
Championship Series national title game.
Yeah, it's a lofty goal. But
with a digital video recorder,
careful planning and an
understanding wife, it can be
done.
I began talking about how
to watch all the major college
teams in 2001 and actually
started trying to do it four
years ago. So far. I haven't
accomplished the feat - but
at least I can give it the old
college try.
Just the fact that I even
attempt this, in addition to
having a full-time job as a
sports writer - says something about the state of college football.
There was a time not too
long ago when just a handful
of schools consistently got
national TV coverage.
Those who grew up in the
1970s can probably run down
the
list:
Nebraska,
Oklahoma.
Southern
California
Notre Dame.
Michigan.
Oliro
State,
Alabama,
Penn
State,
Florida, Texas and maybe a
few others.
Now, every day really can
be Saturday in a 2417 cable
TV world where college
football
programs have
become willin9 to suit up
whenever they II get exposure.
1 /
Whetlie it's Miami on
Monday (Sept. 7). Troy on
Tuesday (Oct. 6), Hawaii on
.,W ednesday (Sept. 30), North
~exas on Thursday (Sept. 3)
or Fresno State on Friday
(Sept. 18), there's a game on
nearly every night.
"It's your team's time to
shine because everyone is
going to be watching it,"
Colorado ti~ht end Patrick
Devenny sa1d. ''There's not
much else on TV when we're
on - when any team is on -

I
'

1

1

-NF-L: Socialmedia OK:
before, after games e

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