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                  <text>Obama's back-to-school
speech inspires
some kids, A2

--

r·

Printed on 100%
Recycled Newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

, Gallia Academy CC
lnvitational. See Page Bl

Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH

the Iraqi army
regiments
that
' captured her, she
was taken to a
hospital for medical
treatment.
While there U.S.
were
forces
tipped off as to
her whereabouts
JessicaL-"L•ywnc..h.. by an Iraqi and
moved in and
eventually "extracted" her from
there, according to a news release
which detailed events of the battle
in Nasiriyah in which Lynch's unit
was involved.

POMEROY - Jt!ssica Lynch,
taken prisoner in the Iraqi war in
2003, will be the Grand Marshall of
the 10 a.m. parade at Saturday' s
observance of the Veterans
Appreciation
and
POW/MIA
Remembrance Day.
Lynch
who
resides
in
Parkersburg. W.Va. was wounded
and captured by Iraqi forces in an
ambush where 11 other soldiers in
the company were killed and five
were captured, but later rescued.
After some time in the custody of

Please see Honors, AS

Diffie promises to deliver 'the hits~
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - Though he
comes across as an average
Joe in polite conversation.
there's nothing average
about having a string of Top
40 singles on the country
charts, many of which
singer-songwriter Joe Diffie
promises to deliver live and
in person this Saturday in
Racine.
The free concert begins at
6:30 p.m. at Star Mill Park
and is billed as the main
attraction for Racine's Party
in the Park event.
Diffie spoke to The Daily
Sentinel yesterday about the
upcoming show. promising
to deliver ''the hits'' tcr the
crowd, saying ''they' re tne
reason people come out to
see you." Diffie said in
addition to his popular
songs. he and his five-piece
band throw in a little extra
with a neow song here or
there but overall his mission
is to have fun so e veryone
else can do the same.
In 1990. Diftie had his
first number one single on
the country charts with
"Home" and followed that
song with memorable hits
like "John Deere Green, If
The Devil Danced (In
Empty Pockets), Ships The
Don't Come In, Prop Me
Up Beside The Jukebox (lfl
Die). Third Rock From The
Sun. Pickup Man, So Help
Me Girl. Bigger Than The
Beatles. A Night To
Remember ·• More recently
he wrote the number one hit
''My Give A Damn's
Busted" recorded by Jo Dee
Messina.
As for his own hits, Diffie
said the fans certainly .have
their favorites but he gets
the most requests for "John
Deere Green." Diffie said
he often receives a lot of
John Deere paraphernalia to

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Charlotte Clark, 54
• John 'Jack' Johnson, 90

~~-~~~amiflu

for the sick,
not a preventive.
See Page A2
• Obama space
panel says moon
return plan is a no go.
See Page A2
• Trolley ride
highlight of D of A
session. See Page A3
• Quiz topic: The long
and short of height.
See Page A3
• Land transfers.
See Page A5
• For the Record.
See Page A5
• Local Briefs.
See Page A5

BY BRIAN

Joe Diffie
sign for those fans but joked ful stories over the years,
"I never did get a lawn- from people from all walks
of life" that talk to him
mower.''
When it comes to his hit about how that song affectsingles, one of his personal . ed them. particular military
favorites to perform is personnel.
··1 think that song elicits a
"Ships That Don't Come
In," calling it a "wonderful lot of emotion in people,"
song'' and crediting song- Diffie said. adding it will be
writers Dave Gibson and part of the set list on
Paul Nelson. · Diffie said Saturday evening.
Diffie guessed he perhe's had ''so many wonder-

forms an average of 65 to
70 shows a year and said he
has a ··really good band'' to
bring
to
Racine
on
Saturday.
As for what's after
Racine Diffie has his first
live CD coming out in
November . called "Live At
Billy Bob's" which was
recorded at Billy Bob's in
Foxt Worth, Texas.

J.

REED

POMEROY - A local
business is searching for
land to build a new facility
in .Meigs County, according
to the county's economic
development director Perry
Varnadoe.
Varnadoe said the prospective builder is seeking 10 to
20 acres. but is willing to buy
a larger parcel if the price is
reasonable. The site must
have three-phase power and
public water service. but the
developer \Vould be willing
to install the septic system
needed. The site must also be
accessible to trucks to and
from Ohio 7 or 33 or U.S. 50.
"While the developer
would prefer not to have
homes near the location,
there is no risk of toxic
materials." Varnadoe said.
"The developer \vould just
prefer a private area."
Because the business is in
the development stage.
Varnadoe declined to comment on the nature of the
business or reveal who the
business owner is. However.
he said. he will promptly
relay information from
prospective sellers to the
interested party. He emphasized that anyone with such
information should contact
his office at ~mce. before
another parcel1s purchased.
, . Vama~oe s_aid the business
m questton ts _no~ focused
on a 50-acre stte _m .Athens
County, of whtch only
around 15 acres are usable.
"They are on a tight time
frame. so the l~nd must be
available
!mmediately."
Varnadoe sat&lt;;!. He . ~sked
that any~ne wu,h appltcable
land &lt;lVatlable tor sale contact him at the economic
development office, 9923034. and he will contact
the interested developer.

Child seat
inspection in
time for
changes in law

INDEX
• 2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

B3-4

janics

Bs

l !torials

A4
As
B Section

Weather
·:9 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

lli.I!IJI,I !1!1.!1!11

Development
office seeking
land for
developer
BREED@MYDAJLYSENTINELCOM

Details on Page A3

Sports

aD"

Speaker at the opening ceremony
will be Meigs High School graduate
of 1968. Jennifer Menchini Kirby.
who is a Lieutenant Colonel and
commander
of
the
142nd
Aeromedical Evacuation's Squadron,
Delaware Air National Guard.
Lt. Menchini-Kirby's p1imary function when deployed is to aeromedically evacuate and care for the casualties
coming out of Iraq and Afghanistan.
She is also vice president of Patient
Care Services and Chief .Nurse
Executive at Wyshoff Heights
Medical Center in New York City.

Lineup for the parade will be near
the Bob Roberts Football Field on
Main Street in Pomeroy. The route
of the parade will be down Main
Street to Buttemut Avenue then turn
onto Second Street to Sycamore and
move to the parking lot on the river
where the celebration will continue.
Veterans, veterans groups, organizations, businesses. and individuals
wishing to show their appreciation
for those who defend our country
are invited to participate. The
parade will be followed by a prayer,
the ceremonial flag raising. and a
21-gun salute to all veterans, POWs
and MlAs.

..:~IIILi'W·,

HOEFLICH@MYDAJLYSENTJNEL.coM

1

Obituaries

-

Celebration honors veterans/POWs/MIAs

SPORTS .

Ask Dr. Brothers

-----

Meigs volleyball
stays unbeaten, Bt

I

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~

~

-

-

-

.

_

~

-

~

.........

-

-

_

_

_

.

-·----- _________

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----

.

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

.

_,_.,

_

__ __

~-------_.

.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Submitted photos

The FBI recently released new photo stills taken from the video of last week's robbery of Farmers Bank in Tuppers Plains.
The male suspect remains at large.

~~1~elr~n F;oaJ~.~~~y T~~

FBI releases additional photos of robbery.
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS The Federal Bure~u of
Investigation
recently
released new photo stills
taken from the video of last
week's robbery of Farmers
Bank in Tuppers Plains.
The photos show the male
suspect demanding money of
the bank teller before making

off with an undisclosed
amount of cash . The suspect
told everyone in the bank he
had an explosive device in a
blue. fabric grocery bag
though no device was actually seen. The man WU) only in
the bank for about a minute
according to the video.
Yesterday. Special Agent
Rick Smith of the FBI'.s
Cincinnati office said there
is no new information on the

case. The suspect remains at
large and is described as a
male in his early 20's. t1vefeet. 10-inches tall. 150
pounds. An FBI press
release states n witness saw
the mak removmg some of
his clotlung after fleeing the
bank on foot. describing him
as having short, cropped,
brown hair. While in the
bank, the !&gt;Uspect was disguised in a black mesh face

P0~1EROY - A child
safety seat inspection will
be held from II a .m. to I

covering, black hooded
sweatshirt and black pants.

inspection will be part of
the county's National Child
Passenger Safety Week,
TI1e FBI also rcpotted
. hthe sept. 12- 18 .
There are changes in store
suspect was seen Wtt a
female .who may ~e an for parents with children in
accomplice though no turther ' car seats. Effccti\·c Oct. 7,
d~tails h_ave emerged about every child under the age of
thts possthle second suspect.
ei!!ht must ride in a booster
It's now been 0\ cr a \\ eek se:u or other· appropriate
since the robbery happened safety sc.&gt;at. unlc.&gt;ss he is four
last Tuesday. The bnnk, feet. nine inches tall or taller.

Please see Robbery, AS

Please see lnspedlon, AS

T

II •

7

M

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l'&lt;t ,, C':t

s s mt=:?'?R&amp;nsm

1

a r

a c r

'tr"t'1'*••s:w :

e•

�U.S. says
.Tamiflu for
the sick, not
a preventive
BY MIKE STOBBE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

. ATLANTA - Most people
who get swine flu don't need
prescription nu drugs. nor do
the "worried well:· govern. ment doctors said Tuesday as
thev issued new guidelines
· for-medicines in big demand.
The dru!!s Tamiflu and
Relenza should only be
used to treat people who are
sick and at high risk for
complications.~
federal
. health officials said.
The new advice tries to
close a door that govern• ment doctors had left open
with earlier guidance in
May. Back then. they didn't
rule out sometimes using
the drugs to stop swine flu's
spread and prevent illness
even in children who had no
· symptom~.

But now the new flu is
more widespread. including
a new surge of cases in the
Southeast and a large campus
outbreak in the Northwest.
' And health officials say the
antiviral medicines should be
reServed for people at greater
risk - including pregnant
women. children .younger
than 5. and people with certain chronic conditions like
. asthma and heart disease.
"The majotity of adolescents and adults and most
children won't need anti virals." said Dr. Anne Schuchat
· of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, at a
· Tuesday news conference.
Swine flu was first identified in April and is now
responsible for almost all
.flu cases in the United
States. It has caused more
than 1 million illnesses so
far. though most were mild
.and not reported. the CDC
•estimates. Nearly 600 labconfirmed deaths and more
than 9,000 hospitalizations
have been reported.
Six states have reported
widespread flu cases, according to the government's most
recent data. Most are in the
Southeast, possibly because
schools reopen for classes
earlier in this re!!:ion so there
is more opportunity for the
virus to spread among children. Flu-like illnesses last
week led 25 schools in
.Alabama. Georgia, Missouri
·and Tennessee to dismiss stu&lt;ients. affecting more than
:12,000 pupils.
; And in the Pacific
NOtthwest, college officials
·said 2,000 Washington State
University students were
.:sickened by swine flu during the first two weeks of
classes on the Pullman campus. None were hospitalized
and the illnesses seem to be
tapering off. officials said
this week.
• Overall, it's unclear
;whether swine flu is more
dangerous than seasonal flu.
:Which plays a role in an estimated 36.000 deaths each
-year. The virus has not
mutated into a deadlier form
since it first appeared. but
health officials are concerned about the possibility.
• Many parents are won·ied,
1oo.leading to reported shortages of antiviral medicines in
some pmts of the country.
These prescription drugs,
when started within two days
after someone ftrst becomes
-sick, can reduce flu symptoms and shorten the time of
illness by one or two days.
The CDC recommends
prompt treatment with
Tamiflu or Relenza for anyone who is hospitalized with
a flu-like illness, as well as
'treatment at the first sign of
flu for high-risk people.
People older than 65 also
should be given the drugs if
they develop flu-like symptoms. Though the elderly
have been Jess likely to
catch swine flu, those who
do get infected are more
likely to become seriously
ill, CDC officials said.
Health offkials want to
avoid overuse ofTamiflu and
Relenza, because a virus can
develop a resistance, making
the drugs ineffective . .The
CDC said it's aware of only
nine cases of Tamiflu-resistancc in swine flu, and several were people who were taking the drug as a preventive
· rather than as a treatment.

PageA2

TJHIIE

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesd ay, September 9., 2009

Obama's back-to-school speech inspires some kids
B Y K ATHY MATHESON
AND MONICA RHOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS

PHILADELPHIA - On
the very first day of the
school year, 12-year-old
Mileena Rodriguez was
reminded by President
Barack Obama himself that
hard work can take you
places.
Mileena
listened
to
Obama 's plea to study hard
and stay' in school Tuesday.
watching along with several.
of her classmates at
Thurgood
Marshall
Elementary School and students across the country.
For all the hubbub among
adults over the back-toschool
speech,
many
youngsters took the president's message to heart.
"He said that we're the
future. and he's right.'' said
Mileena, who wants to be a
forensic scientist. "That's a
president telling you, 'l care
about you getting your education.' Just imagine what
kids like us can do if we
actually listen."
Schoolchi ldren
from
coast to coast watched on
classroom TVs and computer screens. Others did not
hear the message at all,
either because their parents
pulled from them from class
or their schools refused to
carry the speech over complaints from conservative
groups and others that it
smacked of political indoctrination.
In his speech. which
aired on C-SPAN and the
White House Web site,
Obama used examples
from his own life to urge
students to study hard. He
told them to stop chasing
dreams of being athletes or
reality TV stars.
·'The truth is. being successful is hard. You won't
love every subject you
study. You won't click with
every teacher. Not every
homework assignment will
seem completely relevant
to your I ife right this
minute. And you won't
necessarily succeed at
everything the first time
you try,'' Obama said.
Other presidents. including Republicans Ronald
Reagan and George H.W.
Bush. delivered similar
speeches to students. but

AP photo

Fourth grade students at Amqui Elementary School in Nashville, Tenn., watch the broadcast of President Barack Oba.
delivering a speech on the importance of education Tuesday.
•

some conservatives accused the parents' responsibility to
Obama of trying to promote teach them that. not the govsaid
Ryan
his policies. and they urged ernment,''
schools and parents to boy- Christensen. a carpet cleancott the address. Florida er who asked that his 10Republican Party chairman year-old daughter be pulled
Jim Greer initially called from a fifth-grade class
the speech an attempt to watching the speech in
"spread Presidel)t Obama 's Caldwell. Idaho . .
In Mm·ietta, Ga .. the elesocialist ideology."
The
Department
of mentary school that Mollie
Education was also criti- Cushing's two daughters
cized for proposed lesson attend chose not to air the
plans disttibuted to accom- president's address. And
pany the speech. including a that was just fine with
Cushing.
section - later changed "We're not really happy
that asked students to write
about how they could help . with 'the way the country is
right now, so 1 don't have
the president.
Schools were not required real wam1 fuzz:ies ~bout the
to show the speech. and the whole thing." said Cushing,
White House posted an a stay-at-home mom and
ad\'ance transcript on its Republican. "I don 'f think
Web site on Monday. After there's going to be anything
they got a look at the text. he will touch on that will be
many critics. including important.''
The uproar followed
Greer. backed off. and some
schools agreed to show the Obama to Wakefield High
School in Arlington, Va ..
speech after all.
Still. others were glad where he delivered the
the) kept their kids out of speech . A -.mall band of pro·
testers greeted his motorcla~s.
"Thev don't need to be cade \vhen it arrived at the
told b): the president what school outside the nation·,
their responsibilities are. It\ capital. One caiTied a sign

reading: "Mr. President,
stay away from our kids.''
Karen Mil ler, a former
PTA official and a longtime
education activist in the
Houston area. said she initially had concerns about the
speech and accompanying
lesson plans. "Whenever a
political figure goes to a
public school..one has to be
very cautious.'' she said.
After hearing the speech.
however, Miller said she
found it inspiring.
''The message he gave to
children was so appropriate,
that you shape your destiny
no matter the hand you're
dealt," she said. "The message was absolutely on tar~et. I had chills ."
- All schools in the I63,000student Philadelphia district
were encouraged to show the
.,peech. which coincided
with the first day of school.
Missouri Lt. Governor
Peter Kinder, a Republican.
had originally criticized the
~peech and its suggested
lesson plans as "steps never
before seen by any presidencv in the realm of rrovernment intervention."But

he said his concems eased
after some of the lesson
plan!-&gt; \vere changed.
"It was perfectly innocuous and a praiseworthy
message:· he said Tuesday.
At Thomas Jefferson
High School in Auburn,
Wash .. a racially and economically diverse district
outside Seattle, sophomores
listened attentively to the
address. Fifteen-year-old
Ariana Steele said the message connected with her.
·'When you see someone
of such power saying what
your parents say or your
teachers have said. like all
your life, it really makes it
more powerful to you and it
reall) makes you want to try
more.'' she said.
And William Geist, a San
Francisco fifth-grader who
likes to sleep late. liste~
d
closely to Obama 's stor
~
studying with h~s moth
4:30a.m.
"Now since I heard this
speech. I'm like, 'Man. I've
got to get up early in the
morning. r \'e got to get
ready for school. I've got to
do this,"' William said.

Oban1a space panel says ntoon return plan is a no go
WASHINGTON (AP) A White House panel of
independent space expe11s
says NASA's return-to-themoon plan just won't fly.
The problem is money.
The expert panel estimates
it would cost about $3 billion a year beyond NASA's
current $18 billion annual
budget. ·
"Under the budget that
was proposed, exploration
beyond Earth is not viable,''
panel member Edward
Crawley, a professor of
aeronautics at MIT. told The
Associated Press Tuesday.
The report gives options
to
President
Barack
Obama, but said NASA's
current plans have to
change. Five years ago,
then-President George W.
Bush proposed returning
astronauts to the moon by
2020. To pay for it, he
planned on retiring the
shuttle next year and shutting down the international
space station in 2015.
All those deadlines have
to change, the panel said·.
Space exploration would
work better by including
other countries and private
for-profit firms , the panel
concluded.
The panel had previously
estimated that the current
plan would cost $100 billion in spending to 2020.
Former NASA associate
administrator Alan Stern
said the report showed the
harsh facts that NASA's
space plans had "a mismatch between resources
and rhetoric.'' Now. he said,
Obama faces a choice of
''essentially
abandoning
human spaceflight" or paying the extra money.
The paneL chaired by
retired Lockheed Martin
CEO Norman Augustine.
includes executives. scientists and ex-astronauts. It
posted a summary report
Tuesday on both White

House and NASA web sites .
NASA can't get beyond
low-Earth orbit without
spenqing more, but space
travel with astronauts is
im'portant, the panel found.
That will cost an extra $3
billion a year and is
··unquestionably worth it."
Crawley said.
The question is where to
go.

.

The Bush plan was to go
to the moon, which would
serve as a training ground
for flights to Mars. The
Augustine panel agreed
Mars is the ultimate goal.
but said going to the moon
first is only one option and
not the preferred one.
Instead, the panel emphastzed what it called a
''flexible path'' of exploring near-Earth objects
such as asteroids. the
moons of mars. and then
landing on the moon after
other exploration.
"There's a lot of places in
neighborhood,"
the
Crawley said. "In fact.
going to the moon is more
difficult than going to a
near-Earth object."
The panel also said the
space shuttle should continue flying until early
2011 to finish all its space
station work and that it
can't realistically retire by
Oct. I, 20 l 0 as the Bush
administration planned.
The
panel
called
''unwise" the Bush plan to
shut down the space station
in 2015 and steer it into the
ocean. after 25 years of construction and only five years
of fully operational life. The
space station's life should.
be extended. the panel said.
Once the shuttles are
grounded. it could be another six to seven years before
the United States has its
own transportation into
space. the panel estimates.
That's bechuse it will take a
few years to build and test

the new Ares rocket. In the
meantime, NASA will have
to rely on the Russian
Soyuz.
The panel also urged
NASA to pay private companies to develop spaceships to ferry astronauts to
the space station and lowEarth orbit. That may be
riskier. but it would free up
NASA to explore elsewhere. the panel said. Elon
Musk, chief executive officer of SpaceX, said within a
few years he could send
astronauts to space for
about $20 million a person.
less than the $50 million
Russia is charging. He
hopes to launch his private
rocket. Falcon 9, later this
year or early next.
NASA should encourage
other countries to join the

U.S. in exploring space
beyond Earth orbit. the
panel said.
"If after designing cleverly, building alliances with
partners and engaging commercial providers. the
nation cannot afford to
fund the effort to pursue the
goals it would like to
embrace. it should accept
the disappointment of setting lesser goals,'' the
report said.
The
panel
outlined
Obama's options. In two
cases. the federal government could choose not to
spend extra money on
exploration and thus wouldn't go to the moon or anywhere new in the next couple decades. The other plans
involve spending more
money.

The panel suggested that
tf NASA continues its current moon plans. to save
mone) it should kill plans
to make a smaller Ai·es I
rocket to carry astronauts
and go right to the bigger
Ares V.
Other \ ariations of going
to moon plan could rely on
a vers10n of the space shuttle system that would use
the boosters and external
tank with a capsule
attached
NASA already has spent
$7.7 billion on its cur.
moon plan. including
design and construction of
new rockets. The Ares I has
a test of its key ftrst stage
scheduled for later this
week and an overall test
launch
scheduled
for
Halloween.

is pleased to w~lcome
]ody Gerome, D.O
to our area.

Dr. Jody Ger ome will be replacing J ane
Broecker, M.D, who has been practicing in
Meigs over the last few years. Dr. Broecker
has enjoyed working with the women of
Meigs County and will still be available for
appointments in the Athens office.

(f~J
{~
fHAlTii &lt;;nT£AI

O'BLENESS

Jod)' Gerome, D.O.

Starting September 15thJ appointments can
be maae with Dr. Gerome by calling
7110·992-9158 (Meigs) or
7110-5911-8819 (Athens).

~

,,

�Hard

Top-$9500

L--_ __;_.:.....;.~...J (740)446-3442

304·675·5972
mossago

Community Calendar

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Sept. 10
CHESTER
Che ter
Shade
Historical
Association. 7 p.m. at the
• Chester
Courthouse.
Preparation for September
and October events.
P0~1EROY -Alpha lota
: Masters. II :30 a.m. at New
• Beginnings Church. Nonna
·Custer and Julie Huston,
• hostesses.
•
Monday, Sept. 14
POMEROY Meigs
County
Agri~uTiural
ciety, 7:30 p.m. at the
ck Spnngs Fairgrounds.
•
POMEROY Meigs
· County Cancer Initiative.
· regular meeting, noon, conference
room.
Meigs
County Health Department.
Thesday, Sept. 15
CHESTER Chester
' Council 323, Daughters of
America,
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.

Other events
Sundn}', Sept. 13
REEDSVILLE
Reedsville
and
Long
Bottom United Methodist
: churches and the Eden
, · United Brethren in Christ
, Church of Reedsville will
co-host the sixth annual
Neighborhood Day I p.m.,

Wednesday, Sept. 9
SYRACUSE - Revival
with Rev. Chuck Millhuff, 7
p.m., through Saturday.
10:30 a.m. on Sundav at
Slracuse Church of. the
Nazarene.
Friday, Sept. 11
LONG BOTTOM _
. •
.
B 1_11 1ter~ to smg 7 p.m.,
Fa1!h r~ull Gospel Church.
Oh1o 124.
. Sunday. Sept. 13
L91.'TRIDGE - Or~ngc
Chnsttan Church, l_.ottnd~c.
annual h~lmecommg With
Sunday sch~ml. 9:30 a.m.:
church ~erv1ce. 10:30 a .m.
and
d1nner at
noon.
Afternoon message by
Pastor ..Malsoln~ J. Gru~ser.
More 1!lfonnat1on..., obtamed
by calhng 6696-1-'19. 6673431. or 662-2633.

Birthdays
Sunda~, Sept. 13
ALBANY- Freda Smith
celebrates her 85th birthday
today. cards can be sent to
42919 School Lot Road,
Albany. 45710.

Reunions
Sunday, Sept. 13
RACINE - Kerwood-Hill
Reunion, 1 p.m .. Star Mill
Park, bnng covered dish.

of rain 30 percent.
Thursda~ night ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
50s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.
Frida)
through
Sunday ...Partly
cloudy.
Htghs in the lower 80s.
Lows in the upper 50s.
Sunday night. ..Mostl)
cloudy. Lows in the upper
50s.
Monday
through
Tuesday...t-.lostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstOJms. Highs in the
lower 80s. Lows around 60 .
Chance of rain 30 percent.

.Local Stocks
47.51
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 26.54
BBT (NYSE) - 26.52
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 15.03
Pepsico (NYSE) - 58.28
Premier (NASDAQ)- 7.15
Rockwell (NYSE)- 41.50
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 4.99
Royal Dutch Shell - 56.94
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 62.61
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 51.40
Wendy's (NYSE)- 5.13
WesBanco (NYSE)- 14.92
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.87
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions tor Sept. 8, 2009,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

True ( ) False ( )

earning power tumrd out to with dementia risk.
6. False. While "'hort
be thut ol the resJJOnders at
Would you rather date
16 )ears of age.· 'his might women used to be the picsomeone taller than you, or
indicate that adolescent ture of femininit), throughTrue ( ) False ( )
shorter? Do you thin~ taller
experiences with height out the years the balance of
people have more fun or
and growth i"Sues retlect in power has changed. With
make more money? What·
Allswers:
" person's ~elf-esteem, the popularit) of wqmen '-;
does it mean when someone
J. False. Taller people \\ hich can go on to influ sports. girls {with th~
has a Napoleon complex? and earning power were cnce self-confidence and exception of gymnast-;)
studied
in perform.mce on the job often find that the) ure able
Everyone has opinions rccentlv
to be more succes..,ful ath
about height or the lack of Australia. and it was found later in life
it. but "hat are some of the that pay was related to
4. True. According to a letically if the) emphasize
truths behind the myths? he1ght in the study. Taller ~tudy reported m the journal strength and fitness. Taller
Take this quiz. and find out people, especiall) men, Climcal Endocrinology. it 1:- girb no longer hunch o~er
the truth about height, earned nearly $1 ,000 per possible to link the h~ght of - they join the basketball
health and happiness.
year more with every 2 an adult to hie; or her opin- team or tr) the1r hand nt
1. There is no evidence inches of height abo\e the ion of his or her health, modeling if athletics don't
that taller men generally average. This was due to the regardless of what his or her attract them. Petite girls arc
k
h
rna ·c more money t an perception that taller people health may actually be. The getting the short end of the
are more intelligent and stud) took place in England stick these days. but trends
horter ones.
True ( ) Fa/.,e ( )
, powerful. the study said.
and showed that the 'lhorter have been known to re\ er~e
2. A Napoleon complex
2. True. Not a profession- a person was. the ''orse the themselves.
7. True. Although enterrelates to how people over- ally recognized mental dis- rl'spondent felt his or her
compensate due to their order. a so-called Napoleon physical and mental health tainment magat.ine photos
short stature.
complex takes its name to be. It also showed that show many instances of
Tr.ue ( ) False ( )
from
French
emperor any small increase 111 adult taller women with shorter
3. It's not when a growth Napoleon Bonapa1te. who he1ght had a great impact men. these examples tend to
sput1 happens that matters, is perceived as being short upon the state of health as be m~\Jia stars and models .
In the average population,
as far as earning power is in stature. Two recent reported hy the participant.
concerned: it's just how tall British studies suggest that
5. False. Phy&lt;;icians have however, men generally still
you end up that counts.
the complex ma) be a long recognized a link like to appear taller than the
True ( ) False ( )
myth: One study found that between height and socio- women the) go out with.
4. Shortness in men and men under 5 feet 5 inches economic status. Short This rna) be due to the
women can negatively tall were less likely to lose limbs rna} be an indication male"s traditional role of
affect how they feel about their temper than men of of poor nutrition in early being bigger and stronger,
average height. and the life - linked to po\erty and and he will feel more com
their 4uality of life.
other found that height large family size. in some fortable with a ~mnllcr
True ( ) False ( )
couldn't
account · for an) cases. Now. researchers are woman who doesn't threat5. There is no link
between socio-economic significant differences in findmg a possible link en his masculinit).
If' ou were able to ans,.,er
background and height. or personality functioning or between short limbs and the
five·
of the se\ en question&lt;
aspects
of
daily
living.
develoi?ment
of
dementia
in
between height and brain
correctly,
you ha\e a good
3. False. A Universny of later life. Women in the
function in later life.
per
...
pecth
e
on he1ght.
Pennsylvania study sam- study with short• anns and
True ( ) False ( )
(c) 2009 by Km~: Fearwu
6. Women almost always pled participants' heights at legs v. ere at nsk for demenfeel more comfortable with four ages. ending at 23. The tia. and men wJth shorter Syndicate
their height if they are short. height that correlated with arms also were associated

BY OR. JOYCE BROTHERS

7. Men rarely feel comfortable dating someone
taller than themselves.

l

Trolley ride highlight of D of A session
CHESTER
Ga~
Holter reported on the
Daughters of America state
session
when
Chester
Council 323, D of A, met
1 recently at the hall ..
Marge. Fetty pres1ded at
the meetmg.
H?lter read ~report on the
sess1on, held 111 Cleveland.
Delegates enjoyed trolley
rides aroun:.l the city to
enjo) landmarks. including
the Rock and Roll Hall of
Fame, v.ell-known cemeteries. ball fields. and ships.

Members opened the
meeting
by
offering
pledges. prayer and scrip·
ture reading~. and appro'ing
regular
business.
Members voted to sene
refreshments at the first
meeting of the month.
A commission for Esther
Smith from State Counc1Ior
Jackie BO\\ man was read
The Good of Order committee held a silent auction.
Attendin2 were Felt\,
Holter, Doric;. Gruese"r.
Sharon Riffie. Ruth Smith,

Foodstore

Ground

Mt. Dew, Diet Pepsi

Pepsi
Cola

Beef
Sold i n 5 lb. Chub Pack

c~4 ~~~. ::1::~:.:::~s
Ol'llilah/e at .~tore while quantities
la.l't. Sale price without coupon $5.99

Shank Portion

Sweet
Onions

HAMS
0

SJ!!bag
Totino's
arty Pizza

Lb.

Banquet
Pot Pies

s•
&amp;12

7 40-992-2318

ursday. September 10. 200
· Pomeroy
Fun. Food &amp; Soft Drinks

Sub'&gt;urJbe toda)' • Q92-2155

740-992-2891

33105 HILAND RD. SUITE I
POMEROY. OH

On Your Side"'

Proud to be a
part of your life.

POMEROY

BROWN INSURANCE
AGENCY

Nationwidee

Deloris
Wolfe,
Opal
E1chin,ger. Thelma White.
Julie CurtiS, Sandy White,
Charlotte Grant. Jo Ann
R1tch1e, Laura Mae Nice,
Helen Wolf, Everett Grant.
Esther Smith and Opal
Hollon.

700 W. Main Street, Pomeroy, ·o H

cU.TJMfl
\\ftRECIATIIII
DAY

D

can

Quiz topic: The long and short of height

Church events

:--------------------

AEP (NYSE) - 30.86
• Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.76
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 37.76
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.04
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.71
· BorgWarner (NYSE) - 32.82
ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
10.03
•
ampion (NASDAQ) - 2.09
• Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.36
• City Holding (NASDAQ) ' 30.66
Collins (NYSE) - 46.98
'DuPont (NYSE)- 31.83
• US Bank (NYSE) - 21
Gannett (NYSE) - 7.96
General Electric (NYSE) • 14.50
• Harley-Davidson (NYSE) ; 25.02
• JP Morgan (NYSE) - 42.54
: Kroger (NYSE)- 21.95
• Limited Brands (NYSE) - 15.47
: Norfolk Southern (NYSE) -

pi

ASK l)R.. BR.C)TH ER.S

Belleville Locks and Dam.
Music by George Hall.
RACINE
Annual
Hanest Festival, 11 a.m ..
St. John Lutheran Church,
33441 Pine Grove Road,
guest
speakeJ'
Linea
Wannke, potluck and social
at noon.

·Local Weather
ednesdu) ... Partly
with a chance of
showers. A slight chance of
thunderMorms in the after
noon. Highs around 80. East
. winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Wednesdu~
night...
Mostl) cloudy. A chance of
showers m the C\ening .
Lows in the upper 50s. East
winds around 5 mph.
, Chance of rain 30 percent.
._ Thursday...Partly sunn)
with a chance or showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
. the upper 70s. Northeast
. winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance

ieR

MOderfl
740-446-0390

\Vednesday, September 9, 2009

l

Wl'&lt;lnesday, Sept. 9
RUTLAND Special
: board meeting of Leading
: Creek
Conservancy
District, 5 p.m., to discuss
: personnel.

~e:ao-4 ao

or leave a ~ssage

PageA3

: The Daily Sentinel

~blic meetings

loavo 740:992-6368

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

'Vcdnesday, September 9, 2009

The Daily Sentinel A year cifter meltdown: Tough questions, choices
reces.
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

Bv ADAM GELLER
AP NATIONAl WRITER

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

NEW YORK - Where
do we go from here'?
t\ year after edging danOhio Valley Publishing Co.
gcrou&lt;;!) dose to free fall,
there are signs the ccOJHllllV
Dan Goodrich
is regaining a foothold. But
Publisher
Americans· sense of finanCharlene Hoeflich
cial security is badly shaken
and the nation confronts
General Manager-News Editor
questions that defy quick or
Pam Caldwell
comfortable answers.
Advertising Director
Without easy credit, what
does life hold for a nntion of
consumers?
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
With nest eggs broken.
establislrment of religiotr, or pmhibiting the
will older workers need to
rethink reti1ement?
free exercise tlrereof; or abridging the freedom
, With old inl&gt;titutiOns gone
of speech, or of tire press; or the right of tire I - and the government
propping up mhcrl&gt; - what
people peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition
will
replace them'?
the Gor,erttment for a redress of grier,ances.
The anxieties reach deeper
than those stirred by all
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution other recessions since World
War II, when husinesses,
workers and consumers took
reassurance from signs economic life was returning to
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 9, the 252nd day of 2009. nomml. Instead, the C.S. is
·n1ere are 113 days left in the year.
at an unsettling economic
Today's H1ghlight in History: On Sept. 9. 1776. the sec- moment, facing the possibilond Continental Congress made the term "United States'' ity that some old expectations nut) no longer apply.
official. replacing "'United Colonies:·
On this date: In 1830, Charles Durant flew a balloon from
After more than a decade
New York City across the Hudson River to Perth Amboy, N J. of building dreams atop a
bubble - first in technoloIn 1850. California became the 31st ::.tate of the union.
In 1893. Frances Cleveland, wife of President Grover gy stocks. then in housing
Cleveland. ga\e birth to a daughter, Esther. in the White - there is no clear route
House: it was the first time a president's child v.as born in forward. Moving on, economi~ts say. the courltr)' will
. the executive mansiOn.
In 1919, some 1,100 members of Boston's I ,500-man ha\e to redefine expectapolicc force went on stnke, plunging tl)e city into chaos. tions, accepting that the
(The strike was broken by Massachusetts GO\. Calvin bubble-fueled growth the
country hecam~: at:customed
Coolidge, who brought in replacement officers.)
In 1926, the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC) was incor- to is neither something to
• aif!J for nor count on. but
porated by the Radio Corp. of America.
In 1948. the People ·s Democratic Republic of Korea I cvtdcnce of an economy
(North Korea) was declared.
that was out of balance.
In 1956, Elvis Presley made the first of three appearances
''The problem b we're
on ''The Ed Sullivan Show.''
longing for something \\e
In 1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed into law shouldn't h;tve even wantthe first civil rightl&gt; bill to pass Congress since Reconstruction. ed," said Joel. Naroff of
. In 1971. prisoner~ seized control of the maximum-secu- Naroff Economtc Ad\JSors
rity Attica Correctional Facility near Buffalo. 1': .Y.• begin- m Holland, ~a.
mng a siege that ended up claiming 43 lives.
. If~ s!ow chmb out of rece~In 1976, Communist Chinese leader Mao Zedong died in ~10ry ISm st.orc, as many econBeijing at age 82.
ormsts bche,e, tt could !ake
Ten years ago: Former Republican Sen. John Danforth years to answer qu~suons
opened an independent inquiry into the 1993 siege of the about the future. Until then.
Branch Davidian compound near Waco, Texas. A massive ~e grcat~c;t comfort may be
explosion tore apart a Moscow apartment building, killing m knowm&amp; that \\e are far
about a hundred people. Israel released 199 Palel&gt;tlnian from alone m our doubts.
secunty pnsoners as part of a new peace deal.
That much IS clear to
Fhe )'ears ago: Secretary of State Colin Powell told the Stephen
Sullivan.
a
Senate Foreign Relations Committee that abuses b) govern- Metuchen •. ~ J .. nccountant
.ment-~upported Arab militias in Sudan qualified as geno- who lo~t h1~ JOb last ~all and
cide against the black African population in the Darfur at 62 ts st1ll ~e&lt;_trchtng for
region. A powerful car bomb exploded outside the work. lie ~ees t.t tn the faces
Australian Embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, killing 10 people. of others ltke hun w~o m~et
One year ago: President George W. Bush announced he c~tt:h Wcdt,lesday ntght lor
would keep U.S. force strength in Iraq largely intact until ht~ ~lu_u·ch s unemployment
the next administration, drawing rebukes from Democrats 111 ~~tsll¥·
who wanted the war ended and a bigger boost &gt;f troops in
. ,If m1s.erx lov~~ compa~y.
troubled Afghanistan. Asif Ali Zardari. the widower of ~hts 'S. It: Sul.l1van satd.
assassinated former Pakistani leader Benazir Bhutto. took There s hke a b1g unknown
office as Pakistan's president.
here and . nob.ody ~nows
Today':-; Birthdays:ActorCiiffRobertson is 86.ActorTopol ~rom .readmg 1t. trymg to
is 74. R&amp;B singer Luther Simmons is 67. Singer Inez. Fox:x is 1 st~dy ,U ... w~.~t wtll happen.
67 . Singer Dec Dee Sharp is 64. Country singer Freddy \\hat s next ·
,
Weller is 62. College Football Hall ofFamer and former NFL · The 9reat Rece~~ton wa!:&gt;
player Joe Theismann is 60. Actor Tom Wopat b 58. ' y~rs. 111 the makmg. But
:Musician-producer Dave Stewart is 57. Actor Hugh Grant is "'htlc the downturn began at
49. Actor Adam Sandler is 43. Rock sin!!er Paul Durham the e!ld of 2007 • the econo(Black Lab) is 41. Model Rachel Hunter is 40. Pop-jazz Ill) .sr~est~ppcd a meltdown
singer Michael Bublc is 34. Actre...,s Michelle Williams is 29. unttlla~t fal!.
DCSJ_'llc e1g~t ~lonths. 0 ~
'fhought for Today: "'Obstacles are those frightful things
you see when you take your eyes off the goat:• - Hannah effo_ns by fedet,l~ polt~)
More English author and social reformer (1745-1833).
mak~rs. t~c coll.tp~e .m
'
housmg prrccs had contmued rippling through the
financial system. Credit
LETTERS TO THE
markets - th~: economic
EDITOR
lifeblood for businesses and
•
wcr~: frcet.ing
LNters to rhe cdiwr are welcome. They should be less consumers
up.
In
early
September.
the
than 300 1\'()rds. Allltmers are subject to editing. must l&gt;e
stgned. am/ include address and telephone number. No government settcd control
).msi811ed lertas ll'il/ be published. Le/fers should be in of Fanni~: Mac and Fr~:ddie
good taste, acldn•ssing issues, not personalities. Letters of 1\ltac. the federally chartered
thanko; to organizations and individuals will not be accept- companies at the heart of
the mortga~e markets.
ed for publication.
Then, wHh the distractions of ummcr a memory.
the bottom dropped out.
In a weekend of desperate
dealmaking, Merrill Lynch &amp;
Reader Services
(usPs 213-9so&gt;
Co. - the nation's biggest
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
brokerage brought low by bilOur main concern In all stones is to Pub' shed fNery morning Monday
lions in losses on bad mortbe accurate II you know of an error through Fnday, t 11 Court Street,
gage
investments - signed
1n a story. call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, OhiO. Second-class postage
itself over to Bank of
992-2156.
paJd at Pomeroy.
Member: Tho Assoc1ated Press and I America. By sunrise Monda),
WYfw.mydallysentlnel.com

TODAY' IN HISTORY

!The Daily Sentinel

Our main number Is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brfan Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Circulation Manager: David Lucas,
740-446-2342 Ext 11

General Manager
Charlene ~oefl ch. Ext 12
E·malt:
mdsnews@rryda lysent nel.oom

and keeping unemployment
In every previous
high. But the economy is since World War ll. po _
made up of many different makers found a route to
&lt;~ctors, and the uncertainty
recovery by cutting. intcn:-~t
ahead raises unique ques- rates and unleashing pent-up
tions for each one.
demand tor cars. homes and
Some of the most daunting other purchases. But with
are those set out for )Oung interest rntes at hi~toric lows
adults. now exiting school and over-consumption part of
and joining the job market. what got us here, this do'' nEmployers have cut millionl&gt; tum defies such an approach.
of JObs they were destined said Dean Baker. co-director
for. Economic uncertainty of the Center for Economic
has made m1ddle-aged and and Policv Research m
older workers reluctant to Washington, D.C.
change jobs or rctire.limiting
Economists ::.ay the C' .S.
movement in the workplace. will have to re-examine
''I'm trying to warn people policies that have kept the
it's going to be aifferent value of the dollar high. A
coming out (of school). that strong dollar keeps the cost
they're going to have to pre- of imported goods low for
pare themselves differently." home consumers even as It
said Phil Gardner, director of drives domel&gt;tic manufacthc Collegiate Employment turing overseas. The nation
Research
Institute
at may ha\e to rethink its
reliance on cheap imports
.Michigan Stnte University.
In a survey by the and abandonment of many
Nat10nal Association bf m:qwfacturinl! jobs.
Colleges and Employers in
BUt the difficult choice-;
MHy, fewer than 20 percent ahead are fraught with h ~
of the new graduates who ards in an economy t
applied for a job said they derives much of its strenpt
actually had one. down from the freewheeling
from 51 percent a year earli- nature of the market{'lace.ln
cr. Young adults have the heat of this cnsis, the
remained among the most federal government has
optimistic, with some ~ee- ...cized a much larger ecomO\ ing
ing a chance to explore dif- nomic role
ferent economic path:--. toward stronger reswlation
ApplicatiOns to the Peace of financial markets. propping up companies that were
Corps are up 16 percent.
But Gardner believes the poised to fail and, arguabl).
job mark!!t for new graduates picking winners and losers.
v. ill not tum around until
Those actions raise serious
20 II , and wonders whether questions about government's
long-tenn role. said Rajshree
the optimism is mil&gt;placed.
The calculus is complicat- Agarwal. a University ol
ed by the mindsct of workers · illinois economist focused on
ahead of them. Adults in late entrepreneurship. The Obama
middle-age sufl'ereu the administrntion ~-b promised
biggest losses when the stock that many of these mo,es arc
market collapsed. a recent temporary. But it is setting
survey b) the Pew Research precedents and regulations
Center found. and 75 percent that risk interfering with an
said this recession will make economy whose chief strength
it harder to retire.
is innovation. she said.
"If we stop that from hapWorkers were retiring
later even before this reces- pening then we have real
sion. partly because of the done major damage to
withering of traditional pen- way our economy functit
sions and the raising of the and these temporary soluage for full benefits under tions tend to have a cascadSoctal Security. said Steve ing effect," Agnn,al said.
Sass. ussociate director at
Others ee it vetV differthe Center for Retirement ently. arguing the· go\ emResearch at Boston College. ment must move more
At the same time, many aggressively. A more electpeople also discovered ne\\ sive Washington could set
satisfaction in continuing to and fund priorities in educawork. As a rl.!sult. the aver- tion and technolog) for an
age age for retirement economy Jacking direction
among men has edged up by and up against increased
ahout a year, to 64.
global competition. It could
But the setback of the force banks to reduce thl!
recession intensifies the balance homem\ ners owe
pressure on many more peo- on their mortgage::;.
pic to work longer. potenWithout
the
latter,
tinily pushing the average !\tanning said. millions ot
retirement age to 67 _
Americans will be so sad" It certainly makes things died with debt the) will
worse," Sass ::.aid. "It's not have no chance of accumugoing to be easy. but that's lating the savings to send
\\hat \\ e as a nation have to their children to colle2e.
do. because we ha,en't start ~mall busines-.es ~or
saved enough."
finance their retirement.
"What Amencans don't
To keep working, though,
people will have to find a understand i... that the intemapath across a shifting eco- tional context ts changit.
nomic landscape.
he said. "It's almost as if
For most of the past l\\ o ~ectors of American soc1ety
decades. U.S. workers ha\c are 2oing to ha\e to make
heard repeatedly that the some pretty big changes. but
future lay 111 claiming a role in most of them arc in denial.''
a new econom\' based on serThe confusion of this ecovkes. Much of the countrv's nomic crossroads docs little
manufal'tllling was ceded' to t9 clarify which choices t.:.S.
countries with low-cost labor. consumers. businesses and
But a huge part of the ser-' policymakers should make.
\icc cconomv was the But it doe.., hi~hlight the
financial s~:ctol·, which has opp011unity and nsks at hand.
been devastated by the
In China. India and other
meltdown. At the same nations. economic players
time, other countries ha\ e are alread) constdering
grown mto economic rivals those choices and trying to
not just by offering low figure out which direction is
costs. but b) improving the the '"ay fon\ ard. That
education of their worker~ leaves the U.S little choice.
and their technological said Baker. the economist.
"It rna\ not be an easy
infrastructure. The ~U.S.
economy's reliance on bor path. but I think we are
rowing has resulted in a going to change just becauo.;e
gmdual ~hift of \\ ealth to the current path i&lt;-n 't susother parts of the world. tainable.'' he snid. "It rcall)
isn't an option open to us.''
most notably to China.

the Oh1o Nowspaper Associat1on.
Postmaster: Send add~ess correc·
lions to The Dally Sentinel, P.O Box
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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Circulation

Sept. 15. another one of Wall
Street's mo~t ~toried tinns.
Lehman Brother!&gt;. had collapsed into bankmptcy.
Investor~ sent the Dow
Jones industrial average
plummeting 504 points In
the blggest single-day loss
since the aftermath of Sept.
11.2001.
In recent months. stocks
have re2ained more than a
third o'f the ground lost
since their peak. But unemployment has soared. costing 6.9 million jobs since
the start of the recesston.
Some 14.9 million people
are out of work.
The hit to income~ has
coincided with a painful
blow to American~· wealth.
. not just in stocks but to the
e4uity in their homes. While
the dot-com bubble was
somewhat larger in dollar
terms, the collapse of the
housing bubble has been
much more far-reaching, and
it has depleted public confidence as well as resources.
The crisis has had a pronounced impact on the
nation·s economic psychology. Consumers have cut back
~harply on spending, stepped
up saving and begun reexanlinm!! lifestyle" financed
with borrowed cash.
It's
unclear.
though.
whether that mindset will last.
and if so what it might mean .
··v.,re 're at a cusp," said
Keith Campbell. who l&gt;tUdies U.S. consumer psychology and is co-author of
''The Narcissism Epidemic:
Living in the Age of
Entitlement.'' ''This is an
unstable environment and
it's really hard to predict
which way it's going to go."
The answer is critical. As
U.S. ·manufacturing has
continued to mme overseas
in recent decades. consumer
spending ha~ sustained the
economy, accounting for
more than 70 percent of the
gros.., domestic product.
That spending grew even
as pay stagnated. becau-;e of
increased reliance on credtt
and debt At the same lime.
homes were touted not JUst
as places to hve, but as
investments whose prices
could onh rise.
That "economic myth
r:etains much of its power.
··we are finding that most
homeowners just think of
this (the collapse of the bubble in home prices) as a tl'mJlOrary glitch:· said Robet1
Shiller. a Yale lJntvcrsity
economist and a leading
expert on the housing market and the dvnamic&lt;; of
decision-making.
"They
seem to think it's going to
go up again. This idea that
''e're running out of land
and this is a good investment is still a popular' iew.''
But those 'iews are cvohing. Some consumers v.ill
be so ch:btened bv what has
happened that e,:en if they
have the capacity to return
to old \Va) s. they'll continue
new patterns of spending
and savings. Others may not
have a choice.
"The et:onomy will never
really recover to the way it
was before and that\ not
necessarily a bad thing,"
said Robert Manning, an
expert on consumer credit
and debt. "It was based on
consumers getting deeper
and deeper into con~uming
... and that's a disaster."
But with lin~ of crec;iit to
consumer:-- cui this year to
half of their 2006. peak.
even consumers who want
to return to spcndmg will be
conl&gt;trained.
Timt sets the scene for an
economy that will grow
much more slowly thnn in
the past. creating fewer jobs

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�Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

FAIR LIVESTOCK SALES

John H. ~Jack' Johnson
~1ASON, W.Va. - John H. "Jack" Johnson. 90. died
Monday. Sept. 7, 2009 at the Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center.
Born on April 22, 1919 at Hat1ford, W.Va. he was the son
of the late Richard and Millie (Roush) Johnson. He was a
farmer at Peirl Burris Farm.
e was preceded in death hy his wife, Catherine C.
•
nson; sisters. Betty Long and Elizabeth Johnson; and
brothers, Charles and Thomas Johnson
He is survived by a special friend. Helen Howard of New
Haven, W.Va.; a sister-in-law. Lois Cunningham of
Syracuse, Ohio; several niece and nephews, and several
great nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at the Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home
from 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday. Services will be held at I
p.m. on friday. Sept. II at the funeral home and burial will
be in Graham Cemeterv.
E-mail condolences io foglesongtucker@verizon.net

Warren
Calaway,
owner of
Tuppers
Plains
Dairyette,
purchased
the reserve
champion
market steer
for $2,000
from•Jacob
Dunn.
Photos provided by Meigs
County Fair
Board

Charlotte Clark
POMEROY - Charlotte Ramona Clark, 54. of Lake
•
Jackson. Tex .. passed away on Sept. 5, 2009.
She was born on July 9, 1955. in Pomeroy, daughter of
the late Charles Raymond Snider and the late Oretha
Pickens Snider.
She is survived by her: husband, Kevin Clark of Lake
Jackson, Tex.; children: Kirk Edward (Bridgett) Williams
and Charles Robert (Orctha) Williams all of Cedar Rapids.
Iowa: grandchild1~en: Kaycey, Talon and Lexi Williams;
brothers. Charles (Ann) Snider of Pennsylvania. Marion
Snider of Pomeroy and Patrick Snider of Racine; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to hl'r parents, she was preceded in death by
rother, Ricky Snider.
uneral services will be held at II a.m., Friday,
ptember II , 2009 at I I at Anderson-McDaniel Funeral
Home in Middleport. Burial will follow at Greenwood ~
Cemetery in Racine.
i
Visiting hours wi~l be from ?-8 p.m. on Thursday at the 1
funeral home. A regtstry 1s avmlable on-line at www.ander- 1
sonmcdaniel.com.

Warren
Calaway,
owner of
Annie's Place
of Tuppers
Plains Ohio
purchased
the grand
champion
market dairy
steer from
Benjamin
Ayres for
$1,300.

«

Local Briefs
Correction
PO.~ lEROY- The charge for birth and death certificates
at the Meigs County Health Department raised by $5. going
from $20 to $25. It was incorrectly reported the price went
from $5 to $25. The Daily Sentinel apologizes for the error.

LAND TlzANSFERS

Cook-off planned

POMEROY Meig~
John Rou:sh. Regina
POMEROY - Plans are under way for the annual chili
Brian
cookoffto be held Sept. 19 at the annual Stemwheel Riverfest. County Recorder Kay Hill Roush, to G.
Ptizes will be awarded in corporate and individual categories. reported the following Connolly. Angie Connolly.
deed. Letart.
Teams are limited to four members who must have proof transfers of real estate:
E.
Armes.
deceased.
John Roush, Regina
Roy
of a current tuberculin skin test with an advance entry form.
No ingredients may be pre-cooked or treated in any way affidavit to extinguish life Roush to Michael L. Roush.
deed. Letart.
to the preparation period, with the exception of estate. Sutton.
Roy
Keith
Armes.
Mary
Max L. Knopp, Jill L.
or bottled ingredients. ~1eat may be pre-cut or
but not treated in any way. The use of home~canned Jane Armes. to Roy Keith Knopp. to John K. West,
Am1es. Mary Jane Armes. Roberta J. West. deed,
or other l)ome-prepared ingredients is prohibited.
Sutton.
deed.
Sutton.
Coleman-type stoves. grilb and electrical hookups are
Thoma~ W. Tucker, Linda
Dean Weber.
Linda
available with ad\ nnce notice Additional information IS
avialable from Belva Workman, 742-3111, Tom Reed, 992- M. Tucker, to Tuppers Weber. Dennis Weber. Sail)
Plains-Chester
Water Weber. Steve Jenkins,
5673. or Meigs County Tourism at 992-2239.
District, right of way. · Donna Jenkins. to Duane
Weber. deed. Village of
Letart.
Clara Sayre to TP-CWD. Rutland.
Duane Weber, · Edna
right of way. Salisbury.
POMEROY - The KYOWVA quarterly men and boys
Crisp. Weber. to Duane Weber.
Leona
Gail
supper mectmg will he held at 6 p.m. on Sept. 21 at the Juamta Core. Otto Mace, Donna Jenkins. Dennis
Bradford Church of Christ, with women of the congrega- Yvonne Mace, Rhonda Weber, Edna Weber. Dean
tion serving supper from 6 to 6:50 p.m. ·
Core, Otis ' Core, to TP- Weber. easement, Village of
Doug Shamblin, senior minister with the Bradford church, CWO. right of way. Rutland.
is the directors' president of the KYOWVA Evangelistic Bedford.
Billie A. Davis, Ruby A.
Association and the church is a regular supporter. AI Hartson
Michael
J.
Evans, Davis, to Joseph W. Davis.
of the Middleport Church of Christ will preach and Maf\rin deceased. to Sharlce Evans. deed. Chester.
Whiteman of Wellsburg, W.Va., will serve as music minister. deed. Lebanon.
Billie A. Davis. Rubv A.
Congregational singing and special music will begin at 7.
Tony Hutton. Michelle L. Davis. to John ,\·1. Davis.
with a brief business meeting to follow preaching and Hutton, Richard L. Baker. Leanna
Davis.
deed.
reports from churches supporting KYOWVA. A freewill Michelle L. Baker. to Chester.
offering will be accepted.
Norma J. Pickens. Homer
1\hchellc L. Baker. deed.
L. Pickens. to Homer L.
Rutland.
Javme L. HilL Dean Pickens
and
:'-J'onna
Vance Hill. Jr.. to Donna Pickens deed. Letart.
Ma'"lan
Durham.
POMEROY - TOPS Ohio 570 meets at 5 p.m. every Hill, deed. Letart.
Ja\ me I.... Hill, Dean deceased. to-Geor~e Hunter.
•
esday. Meetings arc now held at the Mulberry
Vance Hill. Jr., to Darrell E. Jennifer Hunter. deed .
•
mmunity Center. 260 Mulberry Avenue. ·
~on·is. Janette D. ~onis,
Scipio.
1
deed. Letart.
George Hunter. Jennifer
John Roush, Regina Hunter.
to
Tony A.
Roush.
to
Todd
M.
VanCooney.
Karen
SYRACUSE - An Evening with Dan and the Harrison. Jody G. Hanison. VanCooney. deed, Scipio.M.
Hymntimers can now be seen from 10 to 11 p.m. on deed. Letart.
Donald
R.
Thomas,
Wednesday nights on Channel 2 Network, W.Va.

Supper meeting

Meetings moved

.

Channel change

P0~·1EROY - Marriage licenses were 1ssued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Ryan Keith Williams, 22. and
Stacey Ann Weisend, 31, Pomeroy; Levi Zebulon &lt;;opley,
22. and Crystal Dawn Kasler, 21. Pomeroy: and i'\1cholas
Joseph Fichter, 29. and Jen11ifer Nicole Travis. 28. Albany.

Menchini-Kirby's military highlights include 25
years or service with the
Delawure Air National
Guard
.,., ith
multiple
deployments in support of
militar) operations in
Southwest Asia, Europe.
Central
America
and

Divorce
POMEROY- An action for divorce was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Cou11 by John C. Harmon, Racine.
against Kellic R. Harmon, Syracuse.

Complaint
.

OMEROY - A complaint to quiet title was filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court by James W. Warner.
Middleport, against CSX Transportation. Inc ..
Jacksonville. Fla., and others

Robbery fromPageAl
which has 10 employees, reopened the following day. ~one
of the employees were injured. The bank was robbed once
before in 1987 when it was a branch of Bank One.
Anyone with information on the hank robbery should call
the Meigs County Sheriff's Office which is also in\'estigating the incident.

.'

J&amp;D Eden Development,
of
deed.
Village
Syracuse/Sutton.~

Countrvtvme ALC. Ltd ..
Anthony "Land Co .. Ltd., to
Countrytyme
Norwich,
LLC. deed, Letart.
Hockin!! Vallev Bank to
Justin S\vat1. Erica Swart,
deed. Columbia.
Ah·a Bernard Walker,
deceased, to Mary G.
Hamilton,
affida,vit-.
Salisburv.
Johnn)· E. Hartness.
Dolores Hartness. to TPCWD. right of way. Chestet.
N'ancy Davis to TP-CWD,
right of wa). Scipio.
Scott R. Wolfe, Tamara L.
Wolfe. to TP-CWD. right of
way, Scipio.
Jeffrey Baker. Pamela S.
Baker. to Adam Woirol,
deed. Salem.
David
L.
Donohue.
deceased. to Richard P.
Freeland. certificate of
transfer.
Village
of
Syracuse.
Robert
S.
Steele.
deceased. to Margaret N.
Steele. affidavit. Salem.
Edith A. Clark to Cli11t
Stewart. deed. Rutland.
Millard
~f.
s,, artz,
deceased. to Wanda S\\ artz.
affidavit, Salisbury.
Wanda Swartz to Amanda
K. White. Kenneth L.
Swartz.
Charlene
K.
Chaney. Darryl L. Swartz,
deed. Salisbury.

Honors rrom Page At

For the Record
Marriage licenses

Carot'yn G. Thomas, to
Melissa
Kay
Morris.
Rebecca Dawn Depoy.
Daniel
Lee
Thomas,
Gregory 'Podd Thomas.
deed. Village of Pomeroy.
Teresa A. Rose to Joseph
David Ro. e. deed, Lebanon.
Kevin L. Crabtree to
Ralph E. N1anin, Jr.,
\larilyn' S. Martin, deed,
Columbia.
Wayne F. Ward. decea..ed.
to Zachery Paul Ward, certificate of transfer, Lebanon.
Brenda K. Hickel. Gloria
I. Michael. to Gan· E.
Michael. Roger A. Michael,
Denni' E. Michael. Debra
L. tvtichael, Brenda K.
Hickel, deed. Village of
S yral?use/Sutton.
Brenda L. Carrington.
Steve D. Carrington. to
PLM Futures. LLC, deed.
Salishurv.
Williain Hall, Dina Hall,
to TP-CWD. right of way,
Bedford.
Teresa A. Gallowav to
TP-CWD, right of \vay,
Bedford.
Steven R. Uill. Joanne
Dill, to TP-CWD, right of
way, Chester.
:VIargaret E. Ha'' thorne.
Timothy D. Ha\\ thorne.
Margaret E. Kearns. Betsy
Keams, to Dyana Kearns.
deed, Chester.
Ryan B. Williams, Judith
A. Williams, Jill Williams,
Ryan Baxter Williams. to

Africa. She holds a master
of science in nursing from
Universit)· of
Loyola
Chicago and in 2005 was
awarded the OrganizatiOnal
Innovation
Nurse
Executive Award.
Following her talk flag~
will be presented to those

who lost loved ones in Iraq.
At 11:40 a.m. e F-16 fighter
ain:raft of the !78th Fighter
Wing of the Ohio National
Guard will flv over
Pomeroy.
·
There will be numerous
exhibits on the parkmg lot
to include radio-controlled

model aircraft and a display
of Armv National Guard
equipment. Food vendors
will also be present.
Questions regarding the
Remembrance Day are to be
directed to Bill Spaun 740·
992-3992 of Del Pullins.
740-985-3669.

Inspection from Page At
1

£~~,·ery c h"ld
.. I e1g
. I
1 ageu
1t

to 15 not s~cured in a car
seat must be secured m the
seat belt.
Full ~nforcement of the
new laws will begin in
April. 2010, according to
Margi~
Riffle
of
Gallia/Mcigs Community
Action Agency and the Help
Me Grow program, who
will
help
conduct
Saturday's inspections.
Riffle said three of everv
four child restraintli arc not
properly used. With the
upcoming changes in the
Jaw, all parents will children

in booster seats should have
them in~pected by the certified inspectors. She said
parents should refer to the
four guidelines set forth by
the National Transporation
Safety Administration:
• Infants should be kept in
the back seat in a rear-facing seat as long as possible
under the state ltm. At a
minimum. they should ride
in that manner until at least
one year old and 20 pounds
in weight.
• Once thev ouH~rO\\ the
renr-facing ·seat~. they
should ride in the back scat.

facing forward, until they
reach the weight or height
limits for their scat. ysually
age four and 40 pounds.
• Oncl' children outgrow
forwan.J-fac111g scats. they
should ride in rear 'eat
honsters. in the back seat.
until a safety belt fits safely.
when the lap belt lays
across the upper thighs and
the should helt fits across
the chest.
• When children oiJtgrow
their booster seats. usually
at eight )Cars of age, they
can use adults .;;cats in the
back seat if the safety belt

work:-; properly.
All children under 13
should ride in the hack seat.
Riftle said.

Fami/s Valw Pa~J.~~geJ Al'tliiDbll'

•
.,.

~1iddteport
992-5141

Pomero}
992-5444

-~.and=:uutl.rom

�Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Daily Sentinel• Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

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The Daily Sentinel

Jnside
Rockies d0\\11 Reds, Page 1\2
BYU mo,·es up in AP poll, Page 86

6Jckeyes aware
~ reputation as
big-game failures

RTS

\Vednesday, September 9. 2009

Prep Volleyball Roundup

Lady Marauders stay unbeaten; Southern picks up first win

COLU~lBUS {AP) - It
STAFF REPORT
seeri1s every blog. Twitter
MDSSPORTSOMYDAILvsemiNELCOM
ac;count and Web page that 1 --,-.
•
deals with college football
~ ELLSTON
fhe
has some disparaging com- ~ergs volleyball team had
ments about the Ohio State httle trouble on the road
football team's woeful p~r- Tuesday night. against ~ost
formance on the national Wellston, postmg a strar~ht
stage the past three year...
game 25-?. 25-12, 2_5-~ VJCNow comes a date \\ ith tory dunng a. Tn-.\ ~l~ey
No. 4 USC at Ohio Conferen~c Oh10 Drvrsron
Stadium on Saturday mght, matchup m Jackson County.
The Lady M:rrauders (3-0.
a game vie\\ ed b , the
.
)
2-0 TVC Oh10) rcmamed
.
erghth-ranke~ Buckef.es as unbeaten on the season a~ opport~mty to .11•1ally and did so in quite a conSl~~nce t~err many cntrcs.
vincing fashion. As a team.
1 d?n. t really care ,"~~ut t\leigs finished the night
t~e or.rnrons o~ othe_rs 11 ght with totals of 35 kills. 30
now. de,fens~ve lrnem~n assists and three blocks to go
Doug 'v\orth.lllgto~ su1d along with a near-perfect 70Tuesday. ''I feel w1th the
team that we have we can
compete with anybody in
. country."
1c game \\ ith the
RIGHT• ~ans is a rematch after Gallia Academy
USC's dominating 35-3
sophomore
win in Los Angeles last
Peyton Adkms,
year.
far right, leads
That's just one loss in a the pack up the
trend that has seen the
first hill during
Buckeyes
embarrassed Tuesday night's
several ti~es on natiOnal Gallia Academy
television in recent seaCC Invitational
1
held at the
sons.
ln 2006. the Buckeyes
University of
were swamped 41-14 by
Rio Grande.
Florida in the national I Adkins defeated
championship game. A
the other 57
year later. another SEC girls in the comteam, LSU, put a 38-24
petition by
whipping on them in the almost two minnational finale in New utes en route to
Orleans. Last )'ear. the
leading the
Angels to the
Buckeyes lost three highprofile night games on
.
national television - the
team championship.
early showdown with
USC. against Penn State in
Bryan Walters
a crucial Big Ten game.
/photos
and in the Fiesta Bowl

of-71 effort from the ~ervice
line.
Tricia Smith led the '&gt;Crvice attack with a game-high
23 points, followed by
Emalee Glass with 10 and
Valerie Conde with seven.
Glass also had n team-high
two ace-. in the triumph.
Shellie Bailey led the net
attack with 11 kills, foilowed by Morgan Howard
with nine kills and Chandra
Stanley with eight kills.
Bailey had a team-high two
blocks and Smith led the
offense with 19 assists.
Glass al~o had 10 assist:;,.
Sami Ousley led the Lady
Rockets with three servi~:e
poinb .

Meigs made it an evening
sweep with a 25-10. 25-12
victory in the junior varsity
contest. The JV .\-1arauders
are also 3-0. overall and 2-0
in the TVC Ohio after
Tuesday's win.
~1eigs returns to action
today when it travels to
Centenary for a non-conference matchup against Gallia
Academy. The JV game will
begin at 5:30 p.m.
SOUTHERN SLAMS OVCS

RACINE - The Southern
Lady Tornadoes have been·
dose, but Tuesday night the
Jadv netters bounced over
the· hump and into victory

lane. picking up the first varsity win for Coach Katie
Dickson. Southern won 2515, 16-25.25-17, and 25-22.
It was a night of many
star!&gt; both for the winners
and the non-winning team.
The opening game of the set
started closelv. but Southern
stretched it out at the end for
the ten-point win. Katie
Woods and Gabby Johnson
combined for 14 P?ints all
from the same po~ttion with
Woods . giving Southern a
15-5
advantage
after
Southern led by a &lt;&gt;lim 6-4
margin. Breannn Taylor
had two aces in the charge.
while Kelsey Strang had a
kill and a key dink that

helped turn the game
around.
Samantha Westfall of the
Defenders had a couple big.
booming kills that kept the
visitors in the hunt. Going
down the stretch Johnson
served up an ace and five
straight points for the win.
Stran!! had a kill and a dink
amid the five point finale as
Southem won 25-15.
In the second game. Allie
Hamilton had a pair of Kills
for the visitors as OVS
broke open a 6·6 game and
went on to a 13-6 advantage.
.Maggie Westfall served up
the points. including an ace.

Please see Volleyball, B6

Golf Roundup

Point golfers
fend off
Wahama,RV
STAFF REPORT
MDSSPORTSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

1
tstTexas.
only have the lo ses ....----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• g the Buckeyes. their
shortcomings have fueled a
national perception that the
Big Ten has slipped.
Coach Jim Tressel said
it's important for his playBY BRYAN WALTERS
ers to deal with what's in
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
front of them. and not try
to right three ) ears of disRIO
GRANDE
There
appointment.
were a total of 152 \ arsit)
"We've got to think
competitors and 15 teams at
about the moment - and
Tuesday night's Gall ia
good teams ha\'C that abiliAcademy Cross Country
ty to stay in the moment
lm itational held on the camand ignore anything posi- ,
pus of the University of Rio
tivc or negative or any
Grande. There were 94 indithing along the way and
ddual runners and 10 teams
just stay in the moment of
in the bovs division, while
what's going on." Tressel
58 runners and five teams
said. "Sometime~ for the
competed in the girls race.
younger guys. maybe you
Locallv there were four
could get caught thinking
schools :._ Gallia Academv.
(about the big picture).
River \'alley. .\1eig-. mid
And to me, that's dangerEastern - from the Ohio
ous thinking."
Valley Publbhing area preStill. Ohio State's playsent at the event. and all four
believc that winning
schools were well representone game can go a
ed at the end of the evening.
I g way toward redeem- 1
The best area pcrt'orn1ance
came from the host Blue
ing the school's &lt;&gt;ulhed
•national reputation.
Angeb. '' ho won both the
"It would definitely"help • Meigs Cody Hanning, right, leads a pack of runners up a team and individual titles in
m;," tailback Dan "Boom" hill during Tuesday night's Gallia Academy CC Invitational the girls competition. The
Herron said. "It \\ould held at the University of Rio Grande. Hanning was the top Angels scored a team total
of J8 points and were led by
show the people outside in local finisher for boys at the event
the world that Ohio State is
capable of being one of the
Prep Soccer Roundup
top teams and going to the
notional championship.''
.The Buc};eyes didn't
exactly open the season on
a high note. They led 21"Jt was a good game all the role of helper to make it 2-1 .
pbint underdog Navy 29STAFF REPORT
wa) through," ::.aid an elated
The GAHS defense held its
1~ with 6 J/2 minutes left
Mo::.sPoRTSO MYOAILYSENTlNa COM
GAHS
head
coach
Mike
ground
in the fina~minutes to
op Satur~ay. Then t~ey CENTENARY - Score Dyer. still chtlled from a record the
historic victory.
\~re., stopped on. a f~lll th- two second-half coals and postgame water cooler show
Goalkeeper
Allie Troe-.ter
1
~nd-- at the Mrdshrpmen you'll be a winner on
of
his
players.
made
two
saves
to pick up
er
courtesy
p. gave up an 85-yard Tuesday.
her
fourth
"Everybody
played
hard.
We
win
of
the 5easor\.
tquchdown pass. tur~ed the 1 Sounded like a good pre- bounced back from the Jackson's Andre\V
Brown
bJtll ov~r on a. lcrrclle scription, e!&gt;pe.cially for a Marietta game and e\ery- recorded eight sa\ es in the
P[yor mterccptron, and Gallia Academy soccer team
?-latched as Na\ Y marched still aching from a 6-0 set- body focu!&gt;ed on what we had losing effort.
GAHS outo;;hot Jackson I 8~
d~wnfield to pull to ~9-27 back last Thursday a~ to do today. It \\as a great
game.''
7.
Wlth about 2 1/2 mmutes ?vtarietta.
Jackson (1-4-1, SEOAL 1Gallia Academy made it an
left.
.
Cody Robinson and Corey
1-0)
didn't
completely
~:oop­ evening sweep with a 3-2
lehal!ker Bnan Rolle Eberhard provided the seeeratc with the snipt. taking a victory in the junior varsity
• ped in to save the ond-half goals and the Blue l-0 lead midway through the t·ontest.
Buckeyes,
intercepting Devils were indeed winners
Gai!Ja Acadenw (4-1-0.
defeating iirst half with Cody . Rader
Ricky Dobbs' pass attempt on
Tuesday.
1-1-0) coillinues rts
SEOAL
linding
the
net
off
an
assist
for a two-point conversion. SEOAL rival Jackson 2-1 at
7-match home stand when
b) Barrett Jayjohn. ·
Rolle lumbered untouched the GAHS soccer complex.
That lead lasted until the Warren \'i..,its for a 5 "&gt;.m.
along the Navy sidelin: to
The win w_as si.gnificant ~n
·15th
minute of the o;;econd match on Thursday.
gjve Ohio State two pornts I two fronts. FJrSt, rt was Gal Ira
fQr a 3 t-27 lead. The Academy's first-ever victory half when Robinson scored
OVCS BLANKS FLYERS
Buckeyes recovered the over Jackson. Secor}d~y. 11 to tie the match at 1-apiece.
Maher
was
credited
Zeke
onside kick and ran out the m~rked th~ Blue qevtls first
GALLIPOLIS
The
clock. relieved to escape SEOAL vrctory smce 200~. with the assist.
Ohio
Valle)
Christian
soccer
matchEberhard
netted
the
\\:ith a victory.
GAHS shl~t o~t Logan 1-0m
2006, but lt drd not count as winner with 10 minutes to team scored its second conplay. Robinson played the secuttve ~·tctory of the season
Please see Buckeyes, B6 an SEOAl. contest.

MASON - The golf
course wa!&gt; the same. Two
of the three teams playing
were the same and the overall result was the same. That
means, for the second consecutive day. the Point
I Pleasant High School
Varsity Golf Team won a 9
hole tri-match played at the
Riverside Golf Course
Tuesdav aftemoon. The Big
Blacks· team score in the
play 6. count 4 format was
169 which was good
enough to beat the teams
from-Wah am a High School
and River Vall~ey High
School. The White Falcons
finished second "'ith a score
of 177 '' hile River Valley
shot 224 to finish third.
The course \\ as in good
conditiOn and the "eat her
was just about perfect.
Pomt's Ppie Lucas and
sophomore Peyton Adkins Waharna's Oa\ c Greene
With a winmng time of took ad\antage of the con19:45.2.
ditions w1th~ both golfers
GAHS had five competi- breaking 40 for the aftertor::. finish in the top-10 noon. In a close match.
spots to finish just three Opie ended up as medalist
points away from a perfect for the match shooting an
score. Fairland was the girls excellent 36 while Dave
runner-up with 59 points, was close behind with a
followed hy ~lcigs with 82, very good 38.
Piketon with 87 and Logan
In ~addition to Opie's
with 113.
score. the Big Blacks had
Adkms - who defeated rounds of 41 by Enk
the enure field by almost Allbright and 43 from Justin
two minutes (I :56) - \vas Cavender. Both Travis
followed by teammate Grimm and Jason Stouffer
Samantha Barne,, who post- tunred in 49 for the day with
ed a runner-up time of only one of those scores
21 :41.4. Mckenna Warner being included in the final
(22:04.9) was fifth overall totaC Kylenn Criste also
for the Angels. while Genna played for Point and shot a
Baker (22: 12.6) and Kat lin 51 \\ hich was not part of the
Ruby (22:55.3) re~pecuvely team score.
finished the team scoring by 11 Matt Arnold and freshplacing seventh and lOth.
man Dakota Sisk had the

Angels, Dragons win I
Gallipolis cc Invite

Katie Dunlap (25:32.2),
Kara Jackson ~26:05.6),
Brea Close (26:43 .9. Linsey

second best score for
Wahama with both shooting
a 46 followed by Brandon
Johnson with a 47 to
Please see Invite, 81
a~:count for the tinal team
total. Caroline Thompson
and Zack Whitlatch also
played for Wahama with
their scores not counting.
RiYer Valley scoring was
led by Kyle Bryant with a
54 followed by a 56 from
Gib:-on.
Chris
on Tue,da) night \\ ith a 4-0 Derek
decision o\'er visiting Ironton Goodnch and Zack Polcyn
Saint Joseph during a non- added 57 apiece to account
conference matchup m Gallia for the team total. Matt Ball
and Cody Smith al o
Count) .
The Defenders (2-1-2) had played, but their scores did
count in the final tally.
perhaps their best ovemll' notWahama
plays their 3rd
game of the season against match of the \\ eek at the
the Flyers. limiting the guests Riverside
course
on
to just just six shots on goal Thursday against a fine
while holding them score- Eastern High School team.
less. OVCS. ho\\e\cr, had 14 Point Pleasant is idle until
shots on goal in its second Monday "'hen the) host the
consecutive lriumph
River \'alley team at Hidden
l11ings started well for the Valley.
hosts, as Chance Burleson
scored on an assist from Ale.\.
POINT KNOCKS OFF
Haddad in the e•ghth minute
VVAHAMA,SOUTHERN
10 gi\ c aves an early 1-0
advantage. Things cooled off
~lASON -The calendar
from that point on. us neither said it was Labor Day so the
tcnm was able to score in the varsity golf teams from
rest of the first half - mak- Wahama, Point Pleasant and
ing u a 1 0 conte t at the Southern labored "'ith a 9
intermission.
hole golf match at the
The Defenders hroke that River!-tde Golf Course. The

Blue Devils net historic win over Jackson, 2-1

----·

•

Please see Soccer, 86

Please see Golf, 86

�Page B2 • The Dail~ Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.co m

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Rockies win fifth straight with 3-1 win over Reds Lawver: We'll drop suit it
DENVER (AP) - The
Colorado Rockies had their
two best power hitters out
:or the lineup with stiff
: backs.
So Eric Young Jr. took it
upon himself to provide a
little pop. hitting his first
career homer in a 3-1 victo·ry over the Cincinnati Reds
.on Tuesday night.
• With Troy Tulowitzki and
' Jan Stewart both out with
"back ailments. the Rockies
went with a makeshift
~nfield. Part of that included Young stepping in at
second base.
He certainly stepped up
~at the plate. not only hitting
"a solo homer. but also scoring after a leadoff double in
the first.
"That's why they put me
:at the top of the lineup. to
-get something going and
::hopefully ignite the rest of
lhe lineup." said Young.
·whose father. Eric, hit the
franchise·~ first home run
:at old Mile High Stadium.
"After the double the team
was excited. and after the
home run everyone was
excited for me. It made it
:even more special for me."
· The win was the fifth
straight by the Rockies. and
.m oved them 19 games
'above .500 (79-60) for the
.first time in franchise histo

·rv.

: · It also ensured the NL
wild-card
leaders
of
remaining at least two
~ames in front of San

Francisco, which hosted
San Diego later Tuesday.
Mixing up his sinker and
slider. Jason Marquis (1510) kept the Reds off-balance all night. He allowed
one run and four hits over 7
1-3 innings. Marquis struck
out a season-high seven mostly with his slider and got 12 groundball outs
with his trademark sinker.
·'This was quite a step-up
performance by Jason
tonight,'' Rockies manager
Jim Tracy said. "He had a
terrific slider."
And kept using it. waiting
for the Reds to adjust.
'Tm a guy that's going to
let the game dictate how I
pitch." said Marquis. who
matched his career-high in
wins. "Until they made the
adjustment. J wasn't going
to make the adjustment."
When they didn't, he
stayed with the slider.
''He usually throws a lot
more sinkers. but he had his
slider working and he'd
throw it at any time:· Reds
manager Dusty Baker said.
"Marquis threw an excellent game and that's wh)
he's a 15-game winner,
especially in this ballpark:'

Marquis ran into trouble
in the eighth. giving up
leadoff singles to Drew
Sutton and ~Drew Stubbs.
After Paul Janish moved
the runners up \vith a dribbler, Marquis was replaced
by Randy Flores, who got
Joey Yotto to hit into a runscoring groundout for the
second out.
Rafael
Betancourt
entered the game and
enticed Brandon Phillips to
hit an inning-ending flyout.
Franklin Morales then
made it five straight saves
filling in for the injured
Huston Street by closing
out the ninth . ·
Todd Helton and Carlos
Gonzalez each drove in a
run with ·a sacrifice fly.
while Yorvit Torrealba's
single in the second extended his hitting streak to a
career-best 16 games.
Clint Barmes moved
from second over to short
to fill in for Tulowitzki,
while Garrett Atkins played
third in Stewart's absence.
· Atkins made a diving
stop in the fourth, snaring a
grounder in the hole and
throwing out Craig Tatum
by a half-step at first.
saved
the
Barmes
Rockies a run with his
glove in the sixth. With a
runner on third. Barmes
stopped a grounder up the
middle. pirouetted and
threw to first to just get
Phillips.
Matt Maloney (0-4) was

recalled from Double-A
Carolina before the game,
JOining the team for a third
stint this season. The leftbander lasted five innings,
giving up one run and four
hits before leaving with a
blister on his middle finger.
..Just decided to come out
before it would rip off,''
Maloney explained. "'The
most frustrating part is it's
probably the best 1've
thrown since I've been up
here.''
Pedro Viola made his
major league debut in relief
of Maloney in the sixth,
giving up Young's homer
- a solo shot to left.
.. As soon as it hit the bat I
knew it had the distance,"
Young said. "When I came
into the dugout and saw my
teammates excited for me.
Yorvit was at the top step
and gave me a hug.
moments like that. when
teammates embrace you.
it's a special moment.''
NOTES: The Rockies are
24-10 against the NL
Central. ... Rockies RHP
Ubaldo Jimenez tweaked
his hamstring running the
bases Monday, but he said
it was feeling better and
doesn't expect to miss a
The
Reds
start.
announced after the game
that RHP Kip Wells will
start Thursday against
Colorado. ... Reds RF
Wladimir Balenticn was
ejected in the ninth after
striking out.

21:11.9 for 35th. follo\.'.·ed
by Jon Porter (22:15.9) in
46th and Jamil Stepney
(23:41 .7) in 64th. Stanley
Patrick also placed 72nd
for the Raiders w1th a time

of 24:37.6.
Complete results of the
2009 Gallia Academy
Invitational are available
on
the
web
at
www .baumspage .com

Steelers QB admits rape
RENO, Nev. (AP) - A
former Nevada casino worker
who
has accused
Pittsburgh Steelers qum1erback Ben Roethlisberger'tOf
sexually assaulting would
drop her civil lawsuit if he
acknowledged the rape and
apologized, her attorney said.
Reno-based attorney Cal
Dunlap wrote in a letter to
Roethlisberger's lawyers that
his client would also like the
quarterback
to
donate
$100,000 to the Committee
to Aid Abused Women. a
Reno nonprofit organization
that offers support to domestic violence victims.
Roethlisberger's lawyer.
David
Cornwell.
said
Tuesday they wouldn't
accept her offer.
Dunlap said the proposal is
designed to counter claims
made by Roethlisberger's
lawyers that his client only
filed the lawsuit to get
money from the Super Bowlwinning quarterback.
Her only interest "has been
and is to regain the dignit)
that was taken from her."
Dunlap said in a motion that
asking the letter .be added to
the court record. ·
The Reno Gazette-Joumal
reported on Dunlap's letter
on its Web site Tuesday.
Dunlap dido 't return telephone and e-mail messages
left by The Associated Press
on Tuesday night.
.
The woman, a VIP casmo
hostess, filed the 'civil suit

a!!ainst Roethlisber!.!er in
July. claiming he raped her in
2008 in a hotel penthouse
across the &lt;areet from u golf
course where he was playing
in a celebrit) toumament.
The woman has said she
rcpor1ed the incident to se.
rity at Harrah's Lake Tal
but never filed a criminal
complaint because she feared
Hanah ·s would side with
Roethlisbcrger and she
would be fired. She also
accused HmTah ·s uftidals of
orchestrating a cover-up.
The suit seeks a minimum
of $440.000 in damages from
Roethlisberger, at least
$50.000 in dama!!es from the
eight Harrah's officials
named as defendants and an
unspecified amount of punitive damages .
The AP, as a matter of polk:y, does not identif) people
who say they have been sexually assaulted.
Roethl is berger and his
lawyers deny the woman's
allegations. 111ey demanded
in an Aug. 19 settlement let·
ter that she drop the lawsuit
and write a letter of apology
to the NFL star.
In retum. Roethlisberger
would release both ~
woman and Dunlap from ·
le!.!al liability stemming fro
the ··conspiracy to extort and
defame" him.
Those demands have been
rejected by the woman.
Dunlap said in his letter.

The Meigs
duo of
Shawnella
- Patterson,
left, and
Dani
Cullums
come out of
the woods
after crossing a bridge
at
Tuesday's
Gallia
Academy

cc

• Invitational
held at the
University
of Rio
Grande.
Bryan Walters
/photos

Invite
from Page Bl
Brown
(29:26.9)
and
Mattalynn
Dennison
(30: 13 .I) also had respective effmts of 21st. 24th.
27th. 42nd and 46th for the
Angels.
The Lady Marauders
were led by Shawnella
Patterson in 16th overall
'' ith a time of 24:25.0. fol: lowcd bv bani Cullums
(24;41.8) in 18th and
Brianna
Buffington
(26:44.4) in 28th. Emma
Perrin
(26:59 .6)
and
Shannon Walzer (27:08.9)
rounded out the team score
with respective finishes of
30th and 31st.
Tess Phelps (27:57 .6),
Olivia Creek (28:59.1),
Maggie Smith (29:22.0).
Dawn Bissell (29:49.8),
Olivia Bevan (29:57 .0).
Rachel Bauer (30:58.5)
and
Vanessa
Crane
(40:31.8) also had respectiye placements of 36th,
38th. 41st, 44th. 45th. 49th
and 58th for MHS.
The Lady Raiders had
only four competitors in
the girls race. one runner
short of a team score.
RYHS, however, had a
pair of top-1 0 efforts from
. Katie Blogett (21:55.7) in
third and Jessica Hager
(22:52.0) in ninth.
Sara Mayes placed 39th
for RYHS with a mark of
29:04. I. while Chloe
Houck (31: 15.6) rounded
things out for the Lady
Raiders by finishing 51st.
Eastern's lone competitor - Nikki Gilbride placed 20th overall with a
time of 25:22.2.

On the boys side of
things. FHS won the team
title with a score of 38.
Logan was next with 95.
followed by Wheelersburg
(104), Piketon (116) and
Alexander (145) to round
out the top-five. The last
five were Wellston ( 146).
Pike Eastern ( 179), Meigs
(208). Coal Gr.ove (208)
and Gallia Academy (212).
Forrest Reed of Wayne
won the boys individual
competition with a time of
17:32.2, followed by runner-up Kevin Thompson of
Alexander with a time of
17:46.4.
The top local effort came
from Cody Hanning of
Meigs, who placed 13th
overall with a time of
19:08.5. Steven Mahr
(21: I 1.5) and Jacob Riffle
(23:24.8) were next for the
Marauders by placing 34th
and 6lst. while Jared
Williamson (24:26.3) and
Jeremiah Myers (30: 11.6)
rounded out the team score
by finishjng 71 stand 93rd.
McKinniss
Morgan
(21 :00.9) led the Devils
by finishing 33rd overall.
Seth
Amos
while
(22: 15 .I) followed in 44th
and Brady Curry (22:22.4)
in 48th. Kyle Bays
(24: 10.5) and Ben Bush
(24:37 .6) rounded out the
team score with efforts of
67th and 73rd.
Casey
Lawrance
(27:35.5).
D .J .
Faro
(29:00 .3)
and
Logan
Greenlee (29:57.1) also
placed 88th. 9 1st and 92nd
for GAHS.
The Raiders were also
one runner short of a complete team in the boys
race. Jared Hollingsworth
led RVHS .with a time of

---- ~ ---

-

__ .,.

Eastern's Nikki Gilbride leads a pack of runners out of
the woods after crossing a bridge during Tuesday's
Gallia Academy CC Invitational held at the University of
Rio Grande.

�Wednesday, September 9, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

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at $29.99
1·866·541·0834

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV .............................................................1005
Blcycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1 015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVLease .....................................2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercialllndustrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessorles .................................. 2025
Sports Utillty..............................................2030
Trucks .............................: ........................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................ 3010
Condominiums ........................,................. 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentats ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial................................................3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ....................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots .............................................................4005
Movers........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment............................................... eooo
Accounting!Financla1 ..................... ,.......... 6002
Adminlstratlve/Professlonal ..................... 6004
Cashier/Clerk ..............................., ............. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction ......................................., ...... 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agoncles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Services ............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .......................:.... _ ... 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domeatlc ........................- ... 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ..................................................6036
Medical .........,.............................................6038
Musical .........~.............................................6040
Part·Tlme-Temporol'les ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048

o

.

Automotive ·

.

Trucks
1995
Ford
Splash 4-cyl
12t.OOO
m1.
((740)682·6051

Ranger
5-spoed,
$3000

6-1 0.

30 nch side,
gOOd
cond tJOr'
S800. 74().508·8024

raMP-

NEED CASH
Barg1n Toots SR 554
Buy1ng all Kinds of loots 3000
bus.- 388-8917, home·
388·1515 cell· 794-~188.

Home Improvements

Other Services

2~0

Utility Trailers
Trumpet Silver Conn. w/
case.
good
cond. 2005 hfth wheel two c;:J
$300.00 OBO cash only 1railer.ins1de
box
45
call Rob11' 304·675·1870
while,
excellent
long,
Whirlpool dorm·sizod re· cord1t1on. wtth three side
frtdgerator and GE 1 doors. olectnc
wench
room wtl'doW NC. Both Pnce S9 500 call for
SSO
ea. more
tnfoiT'IaUOn
ike
new.
(140)248·9439.
(i40)949·2217

I2E.B.I
SEITLEMEtiL
.USA

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ........................................................... tOO
Announcements .......................................... 200
.................................. 205
AOS ..... .... ............................................210
Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ....................................................... 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ......................................., ........... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestlcs/Janltorlal ................................... 318
Electrlcal ...................................................... 320
Financla1 .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsuranco ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlco ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dancei'Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlcos ............................................. 338
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Sorvlcos ................................. 342
Repalrs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................ 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntortainmont ....-.:...........................352
Flnanclal.......................................................400
Financial Servloes ....................................... 405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend ............................................. 415
Educatlon .....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................ 510
.. A"'""""·--.....................................................515
....................................................... 520
............... ~ ....................................... 600
Animal Supplies ...................................... ,.. 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
Llvestock......................................................615
Pets ............................................................... 620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ............................................_.....700
Farm Equipment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................900
Antlqucs ....................................................... 905
Appllance .....................................................910
Auctlons .......................................................915
Bargain Basoment................- .....................920
Collcctlbles ..................................................925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplles ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
FIJOI 011 CoaiJWood/Gos ............................. 945
~rnlturo ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport..................................955
Kid's Corner.................................................960
Mlscellonoous..............f ...............................965

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

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Debit?
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lor your
free consultalion.
1-8n-264-8031

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CREDIT CABil.

Pet
Cremations.
740·446·3745

--

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DispJay Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
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Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fcc Unless We W1n1
1-888·582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallla
CoOH
and
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
80().537-9528
Security

AQI
Free Home Security
System
$850 Value
with purchase of alarm
monrtoringservices
from ADT Security
Servrces.
Call1·888-274-3888

Abso ute Top Dollar • stl·
ver/gold
COinS,
any
10K/14KI18K gold J9W·
elry, dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency.
prooff.lllrl
sets,
dia·
mords, MTS Co1n Shop.
151 2rd Avenue, Galli·
polis. 446·2842
Yard Sale

Money To Lend

Farm Equipment

· Real Estate··

Sales.

Houses For Sale
2 bed 1 bath S300, 0
44 s- 3570
l
Be&lt;J.2
Bal'
Hl D
lwmc,•On•) 199 'aruor. '5'
d"~ I~ )rs oll ~·.- for h&gt;t
800·620-4946 ex '1461
) Br 1Ra.Hl D hom~s·o~l)
~~s~""'"" :s&lt;;;.twn.l5
)TS.IliS"'f

~(1(1.620-4'/JI• t&gt;\

R019

1st liMe yard sale. 105
custom
built
EBY,
INTEGRITY, Garlield
Ave.
Sept. Beautiful
home 2800 so It plus lull
KIEFER BUILT,
11·12, 9-???
basemert on 2 5 acres
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS. Raco yard sale for schol· W1tfo ex':ll lot $285,000
Watson
Ad
i..OAD
MAX
EQUIP· arshtps at Star Mill Park 1t 63
MENT
TRAILE~S. Racme, on September 74().441-9772
CARGO EXPRESS &amp; 15. 16, 17 September Mad1son Ave Pt. Plea~
HOMESTEADER
15 from 9·&amp;, September ant. lrame t'ouso or 2
CARGO/CONCESS'ON
HI frorr 9-4, and Sap- lots, excellent location to
TRAILERS.
B+W tel"lbet 17 ''om 9-2. on 2 future rentals, 510,000
GOOSENECK FLATBfD Sep!ort'ber 17, a Items 74().645·0938
S399'3. VIEW OUR EN· one-half priCe &amp; ctothtng
TIRE TRAILER INVEN· $1 00 8 .bag. lots of 3tlr,2ba.Lr den Dr krt
TORY AT
kitct'en Items cloth'ng b:-kfast nook laundry •m
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
shoes. pt.rses, fumrture. on 112 ac lot Sandi' I
304·675·1280
TRAILERS COM
exerc1se equtpiT'el"' jew· Ad
740·446·3825
e'ry, toys. etc Someth'ng 304·675·1762

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Oh10 Div'sion of Financi&lt;ll lnstitulions Olf1ce of Consumer
Alfa1rs BEFORE you ref·
nance your home or ob·
ta1n a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any 1arge
advance
payments
of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consurrer
Affiars
toll
free
at
1-866-278.()()()3 to leam
II the mortgage broker or
lender fs proper'y l1·
censed. (Thts Is a publiC
seMCe
arnourcement
from tt&gt;e Ohio VallEy --.....--............--Publishing Company)
John Deer 2840 tractor
~":'!""":'!""~":'!""":'!""~":'!""~ lnternatiOn&amp;: 584 tractor.
3000
FordiiT'anure
500
Education spreadcr,(740)286·6522
Have you pnced a John
Doere lately? You'll be
Business &amp;Trade
surpnscdl Check out our
School
used
1nvcntory
at
www.CAREQ.~:.om
Car·
Gallipolis Career
michael
Equipment
College
(Careers Close To Home) 740-446·2412
Call Today! 740·446·4567 STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1co
H300·214·0452
Now Available at Cnrmt·

'or everyone. T'lanks for 4 bed 2.5 bath 5600 mo
yollr Sllpport.
possible owner finance
446·3384
Commumty
Yardsales,
Be'lmd Alligator Jacks.
•
Rcai .Estate•
3500
Sept 11th. Friday. Ratn
-- .. ·
Rentall!
or Shine.
Frt 9/11 9·2, 9112 9·2,
Apartments/
Many baby girl clothes,
Townhouses
furniture &amp; toys, 55 Boot
Hill Rd. 1 mt out Kerr Rd.
and 2 bedroom apts •
fromStRi160.
ft.rnlshed
and
un'ur·
·- - - - 11
- -610
- -3- r si'Cd. and howes "
9
10
Sept
· · •
rd
Ave Men's XL Srirts. 2 Pomeroy and Mladleport
Equ,pment End Tables.
Wol"'len's sect..r'ty deposit reQ~.olred
no pets. 740·992·2218
M&amp;L, G1r's 4T al'd Toys.

..

galhpoliseareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrodtt·
ltlg Ccuncollor lndoperl(leot
Colleges nnd SchOOls t274B

chaet
740 446 2412
'
'

.

Yard Sale, Sept 12·13
lots of gtr1 baby clothes
0·24 months. 2 bouncer
seats, hrgh chatr swmg.
Fuel Oil Coal
stroller. 423 Evergreen
Wood/Gas
Rd.
Bldwell.
For Sule Leon..rd s Rre· (740)645-2351
wood,
also
acceplir.~
Recreational
1000
vouche~ Call lor rates
·
•
Vehicles
74().682·7172
or
74().908 8465
900 ·

600

Animals

•

l

I

livestock
For sale 6 Angus cows
&amp; 18 mon. old Black
LiRlOUSin bull,
call
304·675·1311
or
304-675-4611.

.MerchandiSe ·
••

I

I

MIKellaneous
Pets

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1·800·537·9528

Boats / Accessories
Camper, 2005. Sports·
men by K2 23 1/2 ft. 1
pullout-Queen bed-never
518.900.
used
(740)388·0189
or
(740)208·8333.

2 Long-hair grey &amp; white
male kittens 10 wks old.
Free to good home.
(740)446·9937 Call9·9.
A huge collection of mar·
TCJ?&lt; /Accounting
bles, all kinds. hand·
Campers/ RVs &amp;
2 male mixed •ottwe1ler made, sulhdcs, and lots
,gMERICAN
Trailers
6
wks
old
(740) of go w1ths A ,1reot col·
RELIEE
367·0672
or
(740) loct1on Saro for $4000.
RV ServicE' at Carm·
367-0624.
Settle IRS Taxes
Cali (740)441·1236
Trailers
chaoi
For a fraction of what
Found,
femaro
dog. Brand new ~ P•oda· 740-446-3825
you owe. If you owe • Black, Tan, White Has tors.
Roof
or
std
over $15,000 in back
scar
on
hip. PlOY ted ducts package RV
taxes call now for a
uMs. 1·5 ton, 1·7 5 ton SeMCe c• ~ michael
(740)245-9583
Tra et'll
f~ee consultation.
AIC &amp; E"l«:tnc (3 pt."se)
740-446·3825
Free
puppies
6
wks
old
2
new
'leatstr
ps
1n
k1t
roof
1-8n-258·5142
(1}, mother IS lull blooded Cl.trbs. Sb I 1n plaSb&lt;:, ~~=~~~=~~
Motorcycles
Boston Terr , lather 1s ready to be tnt• ·lied
Terr m.x 304-593.()393
R·22 Freon P•k:G lor 2005 H;.~ey Dav dson
both 56000 or trade lo a Sofia
Deuce
6.000
Fnendty female killen
Gator AV, or a Kawa• kl rn e
pac flc b t.e drag
been, spade ard Iotter
'Tiule
cal
(740) bars extra
aI
trninM.(740)446-3897
441-1236
ta~ory 'Tia rterarce

T.4X..

;;;Me

formed,

new baCK

28R APT.Ciose to Hoi·
zer Hospttal or SR 160
CIA. (740) 441-0194
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLEI TOW1~~se apart
and/or
srrall

c"

appltFree Rent Special !I!
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
.Jp, Central Air
W'D
~ookup,
tenant
pays
e.ecmc.
Call betweGl1
tr.e hours of 8A·8P
EHO
Ellm V1ew Apts .
(304)882-3017
T\vln R1vers Tower ts 110.
captlng applicattons lor
W811ing lis! for HUO St.bo
SidiZOd, 1·BR apart:nenf
for the etdelfy•~~sabled.
call 675-6679

tel
3 roo • and bath
sta1rs r rst no:-~ths n ,.. &amp;
depos t
referenc ... r
QJ red
No Pets anJ
clean. 740-44Hl245
MOVE IN READY Cor"
ptetely ft.:"''~hod 2BR II
app ances
TV •' -eo
sys, I ners &amp; completo
k 'ch::'l ware $700/Mo •
446 .)~5

�52 Weeks

www.mydailysenllnel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartmenb/
Townhouses
New Ha11en. 1 bedroom
apartment has washer &amp;
dryer. deposit &amp; reter~nces.
no
pets,
740.992·0165

Houses For Rent

Sales

For Rent N•c:e 3 SA
Brick·1 Ba. BaseMent.
Carport No Pets, No
Smok1ng Security Dep.
&amp;
Rent
$625.00.
(740)4,6-41 1.6.

OHIO'S
BEST BUYs

Middleport: 1 &amp; 2 bed·
room unturnished &amp; tur· 4000
nished apartment, de·
· posit &amp; retetences. no !:!
~ets. 740·992·0165

Manutactu~ed

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Nice 2 bed/1 bath apt.
Mason. WV. All wood
floors &amp; new windows
Inc. water, sewer, &amp;
trash. $425-t deposit &amp;
references.
'14Q-416-6622.n40-416\3284
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Estates. 52 WestWood Dr., from $365 to
$560
74()-446-2568
Equal Houslllg Opportu·
nity. This mstilUIIOO IS an
Equal Opponumty Pro·
v•der and Employer.
Gracious Living 1 Vii
and 2
~droorr Apts. at tlago
Manor
and
Atversode
~pts. In Mtddleport, from
327
592
$
to
$
·
740·992·5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

Housmg

Lob

2 BR. 1 Bath. Big yard In
the country. No •nside
pets. Rent $300/mo. plus
utilities.
Call
40 256 6202
(7 &gt; '
·
Rentals

6ne

74Q-992-5094 and leave
a message.
3BR 1 bath homo , LeGrande Blvd S650 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
utilities. NO PETS. CaU
446-3644 tor appllcatol"
3br,
SSOO /month
m
Syracuse Depoolt HUD
approved.
No
Pets
304-675-5332 weekends
740.591.()265

Help Wonted - General

Care G1ver Is reeded.
Th1s is a FULL TIME poSition, meaning you wilt
2010 3BA Doublcwide
bo living here as 11 •I
$39,977
were your home. Thts 1s
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
NOT a
dayllme
or
FHA$349 mo
nighhme only postllOn.
2010 3brl2ba Single
Sleep here at n1ght and
from S199 mo
do normal household du·
MIDWESTHOMES ties thru tho day. Person
mymidwesthomes.com
needing ass1stance is
740.828.2750
mobile and can !unction
on her own. FREE RENT
- - - - - - - - &amp; FREE UTILITIES plus
The BIG Sale
small
salary
Used Homes &amp; Owner
740-367-7129
Financing· New 2010
Doublel'oide $37,989
Career Opportunity!
No expenexo requued'
Ask about $8,000 ReNo Credit Card Sales!
bates
• No Collections•
mym•dwesthome.corn

2 BR. Like New, No
740.828-2750
Pets, Johnson's Mob1le - - - - - - - Homo
Park.
"The Proctorville
(740)645.()506.
Difference·
S1 and a deed is all you
2 BAJaII electric, at Rod· need to own your dream
noy. $400 plus utilities.
home. Call Now•
(740)446-2692.
Freedom Homes
888·565..()167
·-rent
--- -------Why
when
you-can
own. New Gov't finance
Employment
loans. 0% down as low 6000
as 1% interest. Low to
moderate income. D&amp;W
Homes. 877-288·9995 or
Child/Elderly Core
.
_
800 788 5474
CHILDCAAE
- - - - - - - - Fundraising Dtrector Na2 bedroom mobile home
tionwide co. Call Direcin Racine, $325 a month,
tors and owners to help
$325 dep. yrs. lease. No
Pets, No calls after 9pm. them raise money. Avg
.
•
$15·$20/hr.
We
tra1n.
740 992 5097
813-355·3889

Island V1ew Motel has
vacancies
$35.00/Night.
740·446·0406
-----.--Jordan's Landing ApartOlent. under new man·
agement, 2, 3, &amp; 4 BA
units available. 2 wks off Big 2 bed/1 bath mobile
1st months rent. Please
home New Haven, WV.
call (304) 674.0023 or
Newer carpet, all appli(304) 610.0776.
ances, washer &amp; dryer.
BA Apt close to A20 $428 per mo. lor 3
hospital. Free cable. WID years or rent $375 per
mo. Deposit &amp; refer6ookups. (740)339·9492
ences
Tara
Townhouse 740-416-6622/740·416Apartments - 2BR, 1 5 3284
bath, back patio, pool, - - - - - - - playground, ,(trash, sew·
R20 nice older 2 bedl1
age, water pci.)No pets
bath mobile home. New
allowed.
$450/rent,
carpet,
countertops,
$450/sec.
dep.
Call
!ridge. electric, plumbing
740·645·8599
&amp; eloctnc heat. $428 per
mo. for 1 year or sale tor
Houses For Rent
$3500. On rented lot in
5199/mo! .I tx-d, 2 bath New Haven, wv. De&amp; • references.
Ban~ Repo! 15~ dn\\n, IS poSit
year, , 8'!&lt; APR. fut lisungs 740-416·6622n40·416·
3284
800-62()..494() ex R027
Very nice 1 BR home 1n
Pomeroy, great neigh·
borhood,
large
yard,
ideal for 1 or 2 people,
new appliances, No In·
door pets, Pilon srrloktng,
Call 740.992·9784
or

www.mydailysentinel.com

Clerical
ONLINE
BOOKEPPER
NEEDED TO WORK ON
BEHALF OF OUR COMPANY.
ACCOUNTING
EXPERIENCE
NOT
NEEDED . ANY JOB EXPERIENCE NEEDED .
YOU WILL EARN UP
T0$3000 MONTHLY
CONTACT US AT ( crisben204@gmall.corn
)
FOR
MOAEINFORMA·
TION.'

~~======
Education

========

Mobile home for sale
2000 Clayton 1 6x80
3br 2 ba garden-tub,
walktn closet, dishwasher s2o.ooo
304-675-2279.

Ouafrty Control. eam up

to $15 an !Jour, evaluate
retail stores. tratmng proVlded,
call
1-800-901·2694

Medical
Overbrook Center 1s cur·
renUy accepling appl1ca·
t1ons for State Tested
Nursrng Ass1stants. Full
Time and Part lime post·
lions
available.
Inter·
ested applicants can ptck
up an application or con·
loci Lucy Goff, BSN, AN
Staff Development Coordinator @ 740·992·6472
M·F 9a·Sp at 333 Page
St., Middleport, Oh. EOE
&amp; a p&lt;:rticipant of the
Drug-Free
Workplace
PrograM

Frea EsUmates for
• BackhoB • Trenching
• Brush Hogglna
• Plll'tabla Bantlmin
Tree Tl'lmnllng • Setting
Poles l Trunes

Call740-892·9572

Full and Pan-time Pos1t1onsl
Day and Even•ng Shifts! •
Profess•ono::: Work Env•·
ronmentl
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401K1
Weekly Pay + Bonus In·
cenlivesl
CaiiTODAYJ
Interview TOMOR·
ROW It
Work NEXT WEEKIIt
1·888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
2455
Apply online:
http://)obs.lnfoclslon.c
om

FIND A JOB
OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

• Room Addition&amp; &amp;
Remodollng
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Pointing
• Polio ond Porch Decks

WV036725

Sportswriter
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune is seeking a
moti\·ated. people-oriented individual to

fill

a vacancy in the news department

as a

sport,writer, The successful candidate will
cover high school athletics in the area for
the daily edition of the newspaper. as \\ell
pages. Excellent

writmg

and

English

skills. photography skills and kno\\ ledge
of desk-top publtshing
postlion

is

full-time.

are

sought.

'' ith

The

benefits.

lntere!-oted parties can send re!-&gt;umcs to:

Ohio \'alley Publishing Co.,
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or mdtnews@m)dailytribune.com

7 40-949·2217

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

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Pomeroy. Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

Free Estimates

7:00am· 8:00 pm

&amp; filter change
• Tunc Ups
• Bmkc Service
• AC Recharge
1 Min or exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; Fluid Change
1

Help Wanted

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

Local Contractor

l'viiCHAEL'S

Help Wanted

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

Hill's Self
Storage

992-621 5
740-591 -0195

SEIH'ICE CE~TEI{
1555 :\\'E AH~ .
l'omcrm. 011

as assist with the production of sports
-------House keeper wanted for
elde11y wo:nan Nl Mason
Area. 12-15 hrs a woek,
must
have
ref.
304·674·1685.
Ohio Air Med•cal based
and MICU program IS
seeking q11alifled AN and
Paramedic staff lor upcoming w1nter openings.
The a1r bases will be
open1ng throughout the
Ohio area.
We offer
competitive
wages,
heallhcare benetits, va·
cation and 401 K pack·
ages.Our ideal candidate
1S state cort1tied and has
expenence with treat1ng
critical care patients. All
Interested
candidates
please email resumes to
resumeforconsidera·
uon12@yahoo com
or

¥0UNG'S
Carpenter Service

V.C. YOUNG Ill

You choose the type of
calls you want to take:
Aecrurt volunteers lor
non-prol1t organizations
OrRatse tunds and renew memberships lor the
NRAI

Part·time
instructors
needed during the day
in: mathematics, eco·
nomlcs, and accounting.
Mathematics and eco·
Mobile Homes for rent. nomic instructors .must
All
electric have a master's degree
(7 40)4 46·4234
in the discipline. 11 mter(740)208· 7861.
ested please email a re·
Soles
sume and cover letter to
jdantcki@galltpoliscaCountry liv1ng- 3·5BR, reercollege.edu
2_3 BA on property. Help Wonted_ General ma11 to PO. Box 301,
Many floor plans! Easy
PortsMouth, OH 45662
Flnanangl We own the Ouaftty Control S15Jhr ..-~.,...,.,=--=-~=-=:--~
bank.
Call
today! evaluate retail
stores,
866-215-5774
tra•n1ng provided pleas
-~~-~~- cal8n- 7t2·0008

========

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

011

• Gencrul Mechanic
work
(740) 992-0910

7 40-367-0536

(3aa Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Resideutial
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinyl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740-416·1834
• Fully insured &amp; hunding ;1\ailahle

Free estimates- 25+ ) Cars cxpcricnt'c
' " " ' allih;~kd

\1

ilh \lit..- \Iarcom Kuufin~: &amp; KL·mucldin

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

(USTOM~iNETRY

Hard 1a~S «abfn2try liM ~urnftu?e
www.timbe'l"cree~~.e:;m

74 .446.920
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpolls
CAU FOR FREE ESTIMA

LEWIS
CO~CRETE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

('O~STIWCTIO~

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All 'I) pes Of
Concn.-te Work
29 Years Experience

The GaJiipolis Daily Tribune is
accepting resumes for an outside sales
representath·e to join our sales team
and manage an established account list
while calling on new accounts.
This is a full time position offering
salary plus commission, full benefits.
mileage, and potential career gro'' th.
The successful candidate nill be a
disciplined, ~elf-motivated team player
that understands the importance of
developing strong, mutually beneficial
business
relationships
with
our
accounts, and ha,·e sales experience.
For confidential interview, please send
resume and cover letter to
@,llltpolt.s'lamlv t!:niJunr,

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Oavid Lewis
740.-992-6971
Insured
Free bumatc'

Cell:

Owners:

740·416·5047

Jon Van Meter &amp;

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
·New Homes
• Garages
·Complete
Remodeling

740·992·1671
Stop &amp; Compare

.

Replacement
Windows and
\'in~ I Siding
Specialists, 1:ro

Attn: Pam Caldwell
P.O. Box 469
GaUipolis, OH 45631

(740) 7-'2-2563

,!~~~~
PUBLIC
NOTICES

Classifieds
papc ad

l

}Jtf\J
~A

Do-it-yourself classified ads

Save time and money. Go to www~mydailysentinel.com
and click on Classifieds and follow the user-friendly steps
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.•

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t/7 great packages to choose from

Da'l
Sentinel
Th
..e I y

Mlitloliull~

~-~·""'·~~ ..r..o...

FINDINGS AND ORDER
OF REVOCATION
The Superintendent of
Insurance issued a Notice of, opportunity for
Hearing to each of the
individuals
listed
below. The Notice was
served on each indlvidual pursuant to section
119.07 of the Revl&amp;ed
Code. More than thirty
(30) days have elapsed
from the date of servIce or from the last date
of publication and each
of the Individuals listed
below has not requested a hearing.
After reviewing the
records in these cases,
the
Superintendent
finds that:
1. Each of the individuals listed below is licensed in this state as
an Insurance agent.
2. Each of the indivlduals listed below failed
to comply with the contlnulng education requirements of section
3905.481 of the Revised Code for the
200612007 compliance
period.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that pursuant
to section 3905.482 of
the Revised Code, the
Ohio Insurance license
of each Individual
listed below be and
herebv Is revoked. The
revocation shall be effectlve
September
24.2009BROCK,
MELVIN
THEODORE
DOB:
02/17/1964 2101 W
COLLEGE AD PO BOX
292 SYRACUSE, OH
4Sn9
CALL,
ELIZABETH
ANN DOB: 08/2511980

~· · ~·-

LAUREL CLIFF AD
POMEROY, OH 45769
HUPP, EMILY ELIZABETH
DOB:
12/251198049295
MCKENZIE
RIDGE
ROAD RACINE, OH
4Sn1
METHENEY, HEATHER
MICHELLE
DOB:
08/05/1982
33580
BEECH GROVE RUTLAND, OH 4Sns
•
A copy of this Order
may be obtained from
Stephen C. Hombach,
Ohio Department of Insurance, 50 West Town
Street, 3rd Floor, Suite
300, Columbus. OR
43215.
As set forth In O.R.C.
119.12, an appeal of
this Order may be
taken by filing a notice
of appeal with the Department of Insurance.
A copy of the nc»tlce of
appeal shall also be
filed with the approprlate court of common
pleas. Such notices of
appeal shall be filed
within fifteen (15) days
of the third date of publication of this notice
and Order. Each fndlvidual listed above
may appeal to the court
of common pleas of the
county In which his or
her business Is located
or the county In which
he or she Is a resident.
If he or she Is not a res·
ident of and has no
place of business In
Ohio, he or she may
appeal to the Court of
Common Pleas of
Franklin County. The
notice of appeal shall
set forth the order appealed from and the
grounds of the appeal.

• Siding • \'in) I
Windo,,s •

Metnl

and Shhiglc Roofs
• l&gt;ccks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
*Prompt allll Qual1ty

Work
"'Rca~onahfe Rate~

*Insured
*Experienced
Rclcrc•Kes t\vailahlc!
Call Gary Swnlcy @

740-591-lW44
Pl1•asc lem e mcssaj.!c

HA~KS

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

SW
ClMSIC (,\I RI:STilRtnl)N &amp; I'U1'S

-~tkw, fO&lt;t•1fa4"

Now Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
Parts • Engines.
Tnmsfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet
~Mal &amp; Components
l'ort\11 ~lake,of\chkle,
Racine. Ohio

CO:\Sl'RL'C:TION

co.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Commercial •

Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Cuo,tom Home Buildtng
Steel Frome Bu,Jdinl)s
Building. Remodehng
Gcner.tl rep;nr
n ww.hank.,cclh.cnm
IU\

I.I~SIIlE

(;t l'l'l"J:I{S
Vinyl ,jdin~. llo•n'-·

SE ,\\Ill·~'iS

\1;tinh:nal1i.'\.', Puw..·r
\\.il,hing &amp; &lt;itllh:r CIL~o.~nin~

Hnmkd &amp; hl\urt'l.l

l'n:c

blinwl~~

J(~-!! 1 2-47'15

740-949-1956
Coppkk &amp; Son's
l..and,caping
(Home &amp; Bu,mess)
Jell) &amp; L1sll Copp1ck
Chm, 1\e\ to llrdd &amp; Scan
740.992-,\6411
Cell 740-508.0075
Cell 740-508-0069

Fresh, Home Grown l'egeltlbles
Cabbage, peppers. tomatoes~
sweet com, green beans

S&amp;L
Trucking

47985 Adams Road

Dump Truck

(740) 667-6729

Serv11:e
We

Haul Gravel.

SAYRE PRODUCE
Racine, Ohio
We Accept

WIG and Senior Coupons!

Limestone. Coal,
Comp1lsl, l'op Soil

Call

Walt

Sunset Home
Construction

or Sandy

740-992-3220
or 7400-591-3726

(Cell)
SE,\L IT
CO~STRl

C'I'ION

Roofmg Stdml: P.unnns·
Guum Dccl' et.:
for Ftut ( ourrrous
Srnut, I ru I· Jrimatrs &amp;
A/Jordablr PMrs, Call...

"Buying Locally· Building /,ocally"
~cw Homes. Additions, Garagl·s.
Pole Buildings, Remodeling, Roofs.
Siding, Decks. DQ wall.

740-742-3411

l&gt;&lt;nnl• Bo)d 7.&amp;0.992-lOZ9

PSI CONSTRUCTION
~~~~~.~~~~y~sz~~N ~~!~~eg~~ :p~~~~~: RI~!~~~9~~~~~GE
&amp; ..
scrap
1
f: "' H
D
'I t' 1
mg.
www mydaI ysen_m_e_.c. .o_m
. _______........
O~Hi .l:i.l:45u;7;,x;69. .u. .~pilller"inte_n_d~en_t_o_f~'n~s~ur~--L..-.l.l.:.::twinL..·t.Q;lleilltll-'al:!l.sllllL--l......L--8-at~hJ'O(~rn. .,_,. Re~"""ode~i~~ ~=i~n~=~~::.~~sured
I

126 PLEASANT RIDGE This Order is hereby

Room Additions. Remodeling. Metal

DOB: 06127/1982 142 of Insurance.
MULBERRY
AVE. MARY JO HUDSON Su·
P,QOMMI.i.ERLIO'-Y...J,

...

ltu\ing
•

iron-

Sh

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R

.......

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...

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S'd'
1

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�Wednesday, September 9, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

.

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

EETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Wagers
1 Bar mixer
5 Like some DOWN
statues
1 Hardware
9 Brother of
item
Groucho
2Tara
11 Sub
family
system
3 Entertain
12 Black bird 4 Blackjack
13 Magazrne
card
unit
5 "Jeepers!''
14 Before, to 6 Sneaker 21 Block28 Hot dish
bards
part
head
holder
15 Shrp
7 Designer 23 Gentle
29Swimmer
sound
Ralph
reproach
Mark
17 Deva8 Market
24 TV's Dr.
30Lunch
stated by
direction
Howser
hour
fighting
10 One way 25 Bobbing 31 Must
19Went ·
to travel
goals
have
ahead
11 Autograph 271981
33 Eccentric
20Got up
16 Catalog
Ryan
one
21 Kingsley
patron·
O'Neal
37 Chemist's
or Stiller 18 Fling
movie
place
22Note
...
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (chccklm.o.) to
taker
Thomas Jose~ Book 1. PO Box 5364/5, Orlando, FL 32853·6475
24"Kapital"
26 Perch
29Soak up
30Baby
32Cinema
snack
34"For
shame!"
35Domeshaped
home
36Martini
garnish
38 Attach, in
a way
39Dwindled
40Gusto

Mort Walker
TOP-OF-THEHEAP ... ON.
THE EDGE OF
EXCELLENT... IN
THE WINNER'S
CIRCLE ...

HE'S BEEN
~EADING THAT

BOOK ON POSITIVE
THINKING

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

·Tom Batiuk

N'6. B~~KA ... 1'1£

!A.k?RKS

GOf ('/'{.( SfUD£~
I~RANC.E R?RIVI.

FORME'.

~AGAR THE HORRIBLE

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Chris Browne

HA&amp;AR WEi HAV~ To CUT

OUR VACATiON GHO!&lt;TAN!J
GO HOMe f&lt;IGHI AWAY/

•

9-9

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker
WJ.!Ai'G WRotJG
wrfH yotJ,

iRIXI~ '? .. ,
E&lt;A'f" y'OlJR

FOOD

1
.
~

2

~

1e

9·q

'l·9

I

i

1\o~\ ~

!;

~~~~~!~~~~~~

~~~

Hvoo

INTRODUCE so MANY NEW 811..1..5, voo
-6H001..D BE A MEMBER OF CONGRE-6-6."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

~
~

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

I

~l.'

.,..,
THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

3 5 6
7
4 5 9
8 3 7
8 6
2
9 3

•
"Are the WEEDS greener on the other
side of the fence, too?"

7

5

1

2

3

8
9

DENNIS THE MENACE

5
6 4 8 9 2

Hank Ketchum
Difficulty Level

***

60&gt;6

L £ G6 8 v 9 ~ 9
9 9 ~- G £ L 8 6 v
8 117 6 ~ 19 9 GIL £
.. G 8 9 L v £ 6 9 ~
r 9 ~ v 9 6 8 £ G L
~
5 £ 6 L 9 G ~ v 9 8
~ ~ I L £ 8 }9 6 9 v G
6 G 8 VIL 9 ~ £ 9
v9 9 £ ~ GL8 6
1

0

1

~

=

••

I:IAPPY BIRTHDAY for Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2009:
This year, dive in and get the job done. Your efficien. cy is tested. Sometimes there is a backfire. perhap; with
more frequency than in the past. You \\ill have a lot on
your plate, but you'll al'iO h&lt;~Ye the energy lo deal with
all your projects, work, etc. rf you are single, you easily
rould meet someone through work. Get to know this
person completely before deciding you are in a relationship. He or she might be unavailable emolionallr If
you are attached, the two of you benefit from mo:-e priva~ lime together. TAURCS helps you underslar.d others.
TIIC Stm·s Show the Kiwi of D1111 You'll Hmv:: 'i-Dtpwmic;
4-Positfce; 3-At•eragc; 2-So-sO; 1-Difficu/1
·
ARIES (Mardi 21-April19)
****You know how to indulge a loved one.
\\lhen you express your feelings, approach a co-worker
or potential partner with openness. Keep the di~-play of
emotions in check. Thi.., person prefers coolnes.s.
Tonight: lime to treat..
TAURUS (Aprii20-May 20)
*'****You are on top of your g&lt;une. Stop worry
ing. You c,mnot orchestrate everything that h.1ppens.
Trust in Lady Luck, w~o v.ill pJ,,y a significant role in
your public image c1nd work. Tonight As you wi'h,
especially as you are carrying a lucky r,1bbit's foot
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
*** You might want to go within or cluse your
door rather than deal with distraction. Others clearly
&lt;~ct out in an attempt to get your attention. The question
lies in what happens if you don't give these people
what they want. '!(might fin&lt;llly a littJt&gt; downtime.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
****You know what is viable. Listen to someone
who demonstrates unusual caring. though this person
c.m be difficult if he or she doesn't get what he or she
wants. Emph.lsize iriendship. Others respt.md by being
. more adaplc1ble. Tonight: Where the ,1ctkm is. I
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
***Continue to take the Je,1d. \bu ha\ -e ,, natural!} gracious milnner that draws in others. You m,lke
headway where others cannot. Someone who could
have been difficult simely i,11ls right in line, delighting
Y.ou and mcmy others. Oppo~nities he,1d your way.
1'onight: A force to be reckoned with.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
*'**'** Keep re,1ching past the &lt;&gt;bvious. The end
re;;u)l'i could be delightful if you simply relax with

associates and others in general. Good news romes in
through someone at a di-;tance or through a foreigner.
You know what to do. \Nhat is stopping you? Tonight.
Go to a baseball game or find some other ea&gt;.-y adventure.
LIBRA (Sept. 21-0ct. 22)
Deal with others on a one-on-one level.
even tf the intensity could be a little time-con~uming.
Your efforts will be paid back in multiples. By being so
receptive, you could learn an important piece of information. Be subtle when this morsel drops. 'lbnight Add
more romance to your lite
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-l'\0\. 21)
****' Qthers are challenging, whether they intend
to be or not. Don't challenge people right now. Be
recepth·e to their ideas, but be clear ac:; to where the
respon&lt;&gt;ibility for a flul:&gt;-up lies, should one occurcertainly not with you! Tonight: Happily heading
home.
. SAGriTARIUS (i'O\'. 22-Dec. 21)
****Decide to get a&lt;&gt; much done a-; possible. You
could be on O\erload. Simply focus on one task ,,t ,,
time. A meeting finds many supporters for a key cause.
If you need someone to pitch in, just ask. lbnight: The
theme i'&gt; togetherness.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***'**Your imagination kick." in and delights
many. 'rou ~a personal matter far differently than the
other person im·olved. Accept the f&lt;~ct that you don't
ha\ e the same opinions. ,md respect your difference;.
lbnight: Indulge a little. Let go of selt-di!'cipline for several hours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
**** \ Vork from home if po&lt;;!&gt;ible. You will get a
lot done without distr,1ctions- ,1nd far more quickly ,,t
th,1t. A p&lt;~rtner could become tmusually fa.,tidious and
irril,,ting 1vith thic:; inclination. Simply accept it, as you
cannot chang_e it. Tonight: Order in.
PISCES(Feb.l9-l\!arch20)
*****Keep communimtion !lOI\ing_at the same
high level. Return calls ,md schedule meetings. A talk
reveals another's tn1e feelings. Con&lt;;ider the implimtions of what he or she is saying. Your sixth sense step&lt;;
forw.mi. roinling the way. li:&gt;night: Join a friend for
dinner.

*****

facqut'iru~

Bi8arr&gt; tlll_ the lutem~t

11 httpJ/tr":ri&lt;'Jacqurllllt'VISIII';C'OIIl.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel
game losses. •
''Of course. you don't
want to hear that,'' he said.
from Page Bl
"For us to get the big win
would show everyone out
there that we can do it, we
Tressel ~aid it's difficult can win the big games."
The key, kicker Aaron
for college kids to wrap
their minds around a term Pettrey said. ts to play
so obtuse as a school's error-free and worry-free
and just let the game play
national reputation.
"I don't know that you out.
knows
can talk in those abstract · "Everybody
ways."
he
said. we've made mistakes, that
"Reputation? I mean, to we've shot ourselves in the
foot in big games," he said.
me that's an abstract."
Herron is aware of how "So I guess it'll be in the
many people are putting back of our minds that we
down Ohio State's pro- just have to go out and play
gram because of thoo;e big- a solid game."

Buckeyes

Soccer
from Page Bl
scoreless drought in the 48th
minute. as K) le Scott came
up with an effort goal after
intercepting an ISJHS goalie
pass and netting it for a 2-0
edge.
Jared Bartley netted a goal
on an assist from Jonathan

Golf
from PageBl
play 6. count 4 format was
won by Point Pleasant with
a score of 175. Wahama
placed second with a score
of 184 and Southern was
third shooting a 215 for the
match .
~
Point's Opie Lucas and
Erik Allbright led the Big
Blacks and"'shared n:cdalist
honors for the day with a
fine score of 39 each. Justin
Cavender added the third
score with a 47 while •Alex
Potter. Travis Grimm and
Jason Stouffer all shot 50
for the day. Of course, only
one of those scores was
included in the tina! total.

Volleyball
fromPageBI
Samantha WestfaJI put her
club up 14-8, and then
Southern's Ashley Walker
brought it back to 14-12
befure a Lindsay Teaford
ace tied 1t at 15-15. Hali
Burleson sened up six
.strai~ht
points,
then
Ham1Jton added three more
for the 15-16 OVC v.in.
Tied at 1-1 in the first two
games of the :;et. Southern
knew it had to take charge.
Southern went up 12-6 in
the third game behind a
Taylor ace and three
Lindsay Teaford aces amid
a seven point servin~ stint.
Two Samantha Westfall
kills put OVC ahead 14-13.
The defenders Jed 17-15,
then Courtney Thomas
placed a great set in the
sights of Kelsey Strang who
hammered a ki II and set
Southern on a 7-0 string of
unanswered points.
Strang had another kill
and Taylor two more as
Emily Ash got credit for the
serving points. Foi:owing
an OVC time Strang hammered another kill and Ash
ended the game with two
more key serves. Southern
won 25-17.
OVC went up 9-5 in what
proved to be the finale.
Lindsay Teaford brought it
back to 9-8 for Southern,
then Hamilton added an ace
for an 11-8 OVC lead.
Southern's Thomas provided a necessary spark for
Coach Dickson's crew. reeling off a string of five
straight and a Southern 13ll lead, while Steph
Shamblin had a key dtg.
OVC tied it at 13-.13 and the
game was tied on two other
occasions before Southern
took control for good.
Taylor had a key dig and
kill in the winning stretch
and also added an ace that
tied the score at 19-19.
Burleson put OVC up 2119, then bch ind a great sa vc
by Katelyn Hill, Southern
gained mornentu m and
went on for the win.
Thomas had a great diving
save and added an ace in the
24-22 advantage, then the
sophomore added another
serve for game point and the
match. 25-22.
Ash ( 12-12) had twelve
points. Woods thirteen. and
Taylor twelve. B~,;rleson
led all scorers with 20 and
Lindsey Miller added 15 for

VanMeter in the 53rd
minute, making it a 3-0 contest. Burleson concluded the
scoring in the 65th minute
on a successful penalty kick
for his second goal of the
night.
Peter Carman made three
saves in net for the
Defenders.
Ohio Valley Christian
returns to action Friday
when it hosts Teays Valley
Christian at 5 p.m.
Wahama's second place
total was paced by Dave
Greene with a 43 followed
by Brandon Johnson with a
46. Matt Arnold's 47 and
Zack
Whitlatch's
48
accounted for the final
White
Falcon
total.
Caroline Thompson turned
in a 54 and Dakota Sisk shot
56, but these scores did not
factor into the final tally.
Southern's best score for
the match was turned in by
Nathan Roush who shot a
48. Andrew Roseberry was
next with a 52 followed by
Taylor Deem with a 57.
Both Cyle Rees added 58's
for the day, but only one of
those scores were included
in the total for the match.
Colby
Roseberry
also
played. but his was a noncounting score.
OVC.
OVC's Hamilton was 1012 spiking with three digs
and 6-6 serving; Burleson ·
was 16-16 serving and 7-8
spiking with three digs: S.
WestfaJI. was 5-5 serving
with 7-9 spikes for kills and
two blocks and five digs.
Lindsey Miller was 10-10
serving and Madison Crank
was 7-8 serving.
For Southern, Taylor was
14-16 spiking and 7-12
serving with two blocks.
Strang was 18-19 spiking
with 7 kills and a dig,
Bobby Harris was 4-4 spiking and 3-3 serving, and
Katelyn Hill was 6-10 spiking with a block and 4-4
serving
night,
while
Stephanie Shamblin had a
6-8 spiking night. Woods
\Vas 9-1 0 serving, Walker 910, Thomas 8-9, and
Teaford 11-12. Other good
floor games were played by
Kayla Stevens . Ash, and
Gabby Johnson.
There was no reserve
game. Southern .
hosts
Waterford on Thursday in
Hayman gymnasium.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

BYU jumps 11 spots in AP Top 25 after upset
NEW YORK (AP) B YU barged into the top I 0
of The Associated Press college football poll. making
the biggest jump of any team
from the prese.tson rankings
after scoring the biggest
upset of the opening weekend of the regular season.
The Cougars jumped II
spots to No. 9 in the Top 25
released Tuesday, three days
after they stunned Oklahoma
14-13 as three-touchdown
underdogs.
Cougars quarterback Max
Hall said the victory has
energized Provo, Utah. and
the BYU campus.
"For the fir't time there
were people at the airport to
greet the team. About 2,000
people were out there when
we got back," he said. "The
overall atmosphere has been
really cool and we're enjoying it.''
Florida was still an overwhelming No. 1, receiving
56 of 60 first-place votes.
two less than last week.
Texas held steady at No. 2.
with two first-place votes.
USC will be No. 3 when it
visits No. 8 Ohio State on
Saturday in one of the
·biggest
nonconference
games of the season .. The
Trojans moved up a spot thi~

week and the Buckeyes fell
after narrowlv escaping with
a 31-27 v1ctory· against
Navy.
No. 4 Alabama moved up
one spot after its 34-24 victory against Virginia Tech and
persuaded two voters to pick
them as the top-ra'nked team
in the country.
No. 5 Oklahoma State
moved up four spots after an
impressive 24-10 victory
against
Georgia.
The
Cowboys have their best
ranking s\nce October 1985.
The loss dropped the
Bulldogs eight spots to No.
21.
No. 6 Mississippi, No. 7
Penn State and No. 10
California round out the top

10.

Oklahoma dropped I 0
spots to l'o. 13 after losing.
but all things con!iidered the
Sooners are probably feeling
much better about their longterm outlook now than they
were Saturday night at
Dallas Cowboys Stadtum.
BYU is no stranger to the
top 10. The Cougars were
ranked as high as eighth last
season. But BYU stumbled
in its biggest games, suffering lopsioed losses to
Mountain West Conference
rivals TCU and Utah, then

losing to Arii'ona in the Las
Vegas Bowl.
BYU travels to New
Orleans to face Tulane on
Saturday before playing their
first home game on Sept. 19
against Florida State. one of
three teams to fall out of the
rankings this week.
Oregon and Iowa also fell
out. Moving into the Top 25
were Miamt, Cincinnati and
Missouri.
LSU was No. II and· No.
12 Boise State moved up two
spots after beating Oregon
19-8 on Thursda)'.
Virginia Tech's opening
loss dropped the Hokics
seven spots to No. 14.
No. 15 Georgia Tech. was
followed by TCU and Utah.
Notre Dame's 35-0 victorv
against Nevada helped the
Fighting Iri sh climb five
spots to No. 18.
North Carolina was No. 19
and Miami moved into the
poll at No. 20 after a thrillim!
38-34 victorv Monday nigh~t
against rlorida State in
Tallahassee.
The final five were
Georgia,
Nebraska,
Cincinnati, Kansas and
Missouri.
The Big 12 has six ranked
teams, most of any conference.

Cincinnati, the defending
Big East champions, is the
first team from the conference to be ranked this season. The Bearcats started
their ~cason Monday with a
47-15 road victory against
Big East rival Rutgers .

TheAPTop25
1. Florida (56)

1·0

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1,355
1.331
1.201
1.095
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294

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266
248
196
126

2. Texas (2)

1·0

3 Southern Cal

1·0
1·0
1·0
1-0.

4. Alabama (2)

5. Ok'ahoma St
6. Mossissippl
7. Penn St
8 Oho St.
9. BYU
10. California
11 LSU
12. Bcise St

13.mlahoma
14 Virg n a Tech
15. Georgia Tech
16 TCU
17 Ut..h

18 Nctre Dame
19 North Caronna
20.Mami
21.Georgta
22. Nebraska
23. Cincinnati
24 Kansas
25. Mi;soun

o-o

l.O

523

Others recervlng votes. Oregon St.
113, Mchrgan St 83, Pittsburgh 82,
Texas Tech 53 Oregon 47 Clemson
40. Florida St. 39. West Vrrg1noa 32.
Tennessee 30, Iowa 24, Mich1gan 18,
UCLA 18, Baylor 17, Boston College
14, Arizona 12, East Carolina 6, Air
Force 4, Auburn 4, Colorado St. 4,
Arkansas 3. South Carolina 3,
Houston 1, South Flonda 1. Southern
Miss. 1, Tulsa 1.

Hea1111and Publiea.titlns
Nel.vspapers in • ObiQ~
• West \rrginia, and
• Keotucks h" ~e · oined
~[Je ~allipohs

laailp 1Eribune,.

·n pre entin the
l:arge t online auction
in the Tri-State area.

r tlian

LADY RAIDERS BEAT
CHESAPEAKE

BIDWELL - The River
Valley volleyball team
stayed unbeateR in league
play on Tuesday during a
straight game 25-21, 25-10,
25-13 victory over visiting
Chesapeake in an Ohio
Valley Conference matchup
in Gallia County.
The Lady Raiders (2-1. 20 OVC) won their second
straight decision against an
OVC school. helping RVHS
extend its alltime league
mark to 70-2 overall since
2002.
Aubrie Rice led the service attack with 15 points,
followed by Kelsey Sal\ds
with 12 points and teamhighs of I 0 assists and four
aces. Ciara Bostic also had
nine assists in the triumph.
Jacqueline Jacobs led the
net attack with seven kills,
followed by Rice with four
kills and Bostic with three
kills.
The
Lady
Raiders
claimed an evening sweep
with a 25-12, 25-21 victory
in the junior varsity contest.
Mary Waugh led the JV
Raiders with eight service
points.
RVHS returns to action
today when it travels to
Thppcrs Plains for a nonconference matchup against
Eastern. The JV game will
begin at 6 p.m.

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up to tht' Auctiuo.. This achmising \\ill run in the 'I' he (~uUi~)lis !All~ TribuDt\
Puint PIN.~nt RftCisk't' •nd l'ht." OWl) Scntind.
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