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                  <text>HMC cancer progr
reco~ed,A2

URG nam.es student
life director, A6

Genealogy
Fair
CHESTER - A gcnc.tlogy fair for beginning &lt;Uld

experienced researchers will

•

be held from 9 am. to 4 p.m..
Oct. 16, at the Chester
Academy. A special session
will oc held from 4-7 p.m. on
Oct. 15 for researchers with
Bedford-Lodi roots. The
event b C(}-Sponsored by the
Chester-Shade Historical
and
the
Association
Bedford-Lodi Genealogy
Group. Infonnation is availle from Kaye Fick. 985822 or Kayetick@windstream.com.

Applications
available

AMPGS: The Sequel
AMP officials return to Meigs County
B v B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENrNELCOM

POMEROY - What
do
Bobby
Ewing.
Freddie Kruger. Brett
Favre nud the American
Municipal
Power
Generating Station all
have in commt&gt;n they all came hack from
the dead.
Ye~terday,
otficials
with
American

POMEROY -Angela
Faith Keesee. a member
of the Meigs High School
homecoming coufl. was
escorted at cermonies
Friday night on Bob
Roberts
Field
bv
Johnathan Michael.
·

OBITUARIES

•

Page A5
• Robin Glass
• Evelyn May Warner
• Eric Charles Ferrell
• William Bill Rawson
• Okey J. Hurlow

WEATHER

Municipal Power made
their
first
public
appearance in Meigs
County since last year,
when
November
brought the cancellation of the coal-fired
AMPGS.
However,
nearly a year later,
Jolene
Thompson,
senior vice pre:-.ident of
AMP. spoke to a capacity crowd at the Meigs
County Chamhcr of

Please see Arnott, AS

Judge: Alarming trend in IV drug, heroin use in teens
B Y B RIAN

J.

R EED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY
Juvenile Court Judge L.
Scott Powell said he sees
a growing problem \\lith
intravenous drug use
among local teenagers.
and b warning parents of
the signs of this "alarming" trend.
Powell is also offering
free drug screenings of
children under 18 as a
service to parents v. ho
arc concerned their child

might be abusing drugs.
Powell said heroin. a
dangerou~ and addictive
street narcotic. is making
a comeback as a replacement for prescription
pain medication::.
In a ''community warning," Powell addressed a
problem of'increasing IV
drug
usc
among
teenagers and youth.
largely because changes
in the fom1 of a widelyabused pain medication
have made it difticult to
misuse.

Powell said Oxycontin
has been the most common drug of choice
among teenagers abusing
pain medications.
"As a new capsule of
the drug is designed to be
difficult to dissolve.
crush or misuse. heroin is
replacing it as the new
drug of choice," Powell
said Tuesday.
Heroin use presents a
number of alarming
physical complications.
in addition to its highly
addictive nature. Powell

said overdoses. deaths
and the spread of diseases like Hepatitis C and
HIV. have been reported
by juvenile court judges
in other southeastern
Ohio counties.
Heroin provides a fast
and very dramatic high,
Powell said, and takes
only seconds after injecting to take effect. It is
~lso smoked or snorted,
Powell •mid.
"Treatment for an)
drug use always needs to
be administered by a

trained physician, who
works in concert with
counseling," Powell said.
Detoxification is performed at Nationwide
Children's Hospital in
Columbus.
Health
Recovery
Services.
Middleport, offers counseling services.
"Even if a parent does
not knov. the specific
signs of abuse. there are
common signs that show
something may not be

Please see Teens, AS

BCI investigating Middleport burglary
B v B RIAN

J.

R EED

BREED@MYDAIL'(SENT'NEL.COM

tied
the Middleport
Police Department early
Monday that several
thousand dollars' worth
of tools and tires were
stolen from the station.
According to Police
Chief Bruce Swift. the
BCI &amp; I processed the
scene late Monday morning and the inYestigation
continue~.

Most of the tools are
Snap-On brand. Swift

said. He asked anyone
w tth information about
the case to contact the
police department.
Brandon Marshall. 18.
and Robert .Shain. 19,
were
arrested
and
charged with receiving
stolen property and grand
theft after a complaint
from Mitch Meadows,
that two motorcycles
were taken from his
Lincoln Street residence.

The Honda cycle and
another stolen from
Rutland were later recovered. the Yamaha RT I00
has not been located.
Swift said a third :~uspect
is expected to be charged
in the incident.
Swift also reported the
following:
• Lonnie
Starcher,
Sycamore Street. charged
with criminal damaging
after allegedly destroying

a security camera while
he was being placed in
the village jail.
• Brandon Cremeans,
18, charged with contributing to the delinquency of a minor after a
complaint from a juvenile female's parents.
• Amber Lee charged
with domestic violence,
later released on a personal
recogruzance bond through
Meigs County Court.

Where to put them, where not to
12 P,\GES

A3
B3-4
Bs

Sports

Task Force. At the objective area. his crew was
tasked to escort the lead
command and control
helicopter. His formation
was engaged with two
rocket-propelled
grenades and heavily
concentrated small arms
fire from six different
points of origin in a
densely-populated area.
Arnott
immediately
called for flares and evasive maneuvers, and continued to direct his aircraft into a position to
protect the lead aircraft,
returned accurate and
destructive fire into multiple points of origin,
neutralized enemy firing
position~. killed three
enemy
troops
and
marked targets for sup-

'Signs, signs, everywhere a (political) sign'

INDEX

Editorials

SYRACUSE
Air
Force Master Sgt Jason
A. Amott, a helicopter
flight engineer, has been
decorated with the Air
Medal for heroism during
a
mtsston
in
Afghanistan.
Amott was serving as a
flight engineer near
Musa Qaleh, but is
assigned to the 23rd
Wing at Moody Air Force
Base. Georgia. He is the
son of Bill and Stefanie
Arnott of Syracuse. the
grandson of William
\\'inebrenner, Syracuse
and the brother of Shawn
(Billi) Amott, Pomeroy.
Arnott
performed
embedded medical evacuation for deliberate
operattons as pan of a
multi-ship U.S . A~my

Arnott

High : 70
Low: 48

Calendars

Please see AMP, AS

Beth Sergent/photo
Jolene Thompson, senior vice president of American
Municipal Power, speaks to a packed Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce Business-Minded Luncheon
about the company's proposed natural gas fired
power plant for Letart Falls.

S TAFF REPORT

MIDDLEPORT - The
Ohio Bureau of Ciiminal
ldentitication
and
Investigation is assisting
in the investigation of the
breaking and .cnteling and
burglary of a Middlcp011
service station.
Dan Sidwell, owner of
Dan's BP on General
Hartinger Parkway, noti-

X SECTIONS -

Commerce Bu::.inessMinded
Luncheon,
about the company's
plans
to
resurrect
AMPGS into a natural
gas fired power plant.
Some highlights hit
upon by Thomp::.on
about the project's proposed
reincarnation:
The plant will produce
600
megawatts
of

Arnott receives honor for heroic flight work

RENO - District
Resource~
Natural
Assistance Council applications and guidelin~ for
Round 7 funding are available for eligible projects.
Those projects include the
purchase of open space
and the cost associated I
with making them accessible to the general public,
protection of stream corridors. providing wildlife
habitat and reducing erosion. Local govemmcnl..,,
park and joint recreational
districts. conservancy dis1
tricts. soi I and water conservation districts and nonofit organizations ma)
ply. fnfonnation is a\ail_
le from Michelle Hyer
at Buckeye Hills/Hocking
Valley
Regional
Development
District,
374-9436.

Omitted

D.,.

100~ ~

l'rintt.:d on
Recycled Nc" sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

A4
B Section

© 2ow Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

ll.l!IJI,I !I!1.!I!II

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTtlEL COM

POMEROY With
the Nov. 2 election le:-.s
than a month away. political signs are springing
up across the county like
dandelions though they
can often spring up in
illegal places.
According to the Ohio
Revised Code, highway
right-of-way is to be used
exclusively for public
highway purposes - i.e ..
no political signs. The
Ohio Department of

Transportation
states
only uniform marking
guides and warning signs
are allowed on the state's
highway right-of-way.
Often this right-of-way
can be judged as the area
from the highway to
nearby telephone and
dectrical lines. ODOT
bas jurisdiction over all
interstates. Ohio state
routes and US routes on
the state's 49,000 mile
highway system.
ODOT docs not have
jurisdiction inside ~it.Y
and village limits. Back

in July 2008. the Village
of Pomero) passed a zoning ordinance dealing
specifically with political
signs and their legal
placement. The highlights of the ordinance
are as follows·
• Political signs pertaining to the election
shall not be erected sooner than 30 days prior to
the date of the election.
• Political signs shall
not be greater than 12
square feel in sign area
and may not be located
doser to 10 feet to any

v

public right "of-v, ay.
• Political signs shall
not be erected on village
property including parks,
parking lot. amphitheater. village hall nor
along East Main Street
adjacent to the \\alking
path.
• Political signs shall
be removed within se\en
days after the day of the
election.
If a political sign is in
violation of Pomeroy's
ordinance, a warning to
the owner and/or tine
could be levied. lf a pol it-

ical sign is in violation of
Ohio law preventing
them from being placed
within a highway rightof-wa). ODOT highway
crews will remove them
without nohce. Signs will
be taken to the nearest
county garage facility to
be picked up by the
owner. with the agreement they will not be
placed on the right-ofway. Signs will be held
for 30 days at each county t~tcility before properly
being disposed.

�\\Tedncsday, October 6,

2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www. m ydailyscn ti nel.corn

HMC cancer program recognized by ACS
GALLIPOLIS - 1llc
Commic;!.ion on Cancer
(CoC) of the American
College of Surgeons
fACoS) has granted
Three-Year Accreditation
\\ ith Commendation to
the cancer prngrnm at
Holzl'r Health S) stems.
A facility receives n
Three- Year Accreditation
\\ith Commendation folhm ing the on-~itc cvaluatum hy a physician surveyor during whtch the
facility demonstmte~ a
Commendation lc\ el of
compliance \\ ith one or
more tandmds that repreo;cnt the full scope of
the cancer progrc~m (cancer commtttee Jc.tdership, cancer data mana~ement, clinical ser\ Ices. re carch. community outreach, and quality
tmprO\ement). In addition, c1 facihty recei\e ,,
comphancc rating for all
other standards.
Established in 1922 by
the ACoS. the CoC is a
consm1mm of professional organizations dedicated to impro\ ing survival ••• tes and quality or
life for cance1 patient~;
through standnrd-setting,
prevention.
research,
education. and the monitoring of comprehensive.
quality care. Its membership includes Fello\\s of
American College of
Surgeons and 42 national
organi1..a11ons that reflect
the full spectnun of cancer care. The core function&lt;; of the CoC include
setting standard
for

quality,
mullidisciplinary
cancer
patient
care; surveying
facilities
..__........_;:;.o..._, to eva! uDachowskl ate compliance
with the 36 CoC standan!!.; collecting standmdized and quality data
from accredited facilities; and using the data to
de\clop etTecttve educational interventions to
impro\e cancer care outcomes at the national.
state, and local level.
"We are so honored to
have received this recognition from the CoC,''
stated
Ken
Moore,
Executive Director for
the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care. "Our staff
ts committed to providing top quality cancer
care services for our family, friends and neighbors
right here in southeastern
Ohio. We have the support of the entire Holzer
family, including Holzer
Clinic,
and
Holzer
Medical Center, and dedicated individuals like
Bonnie McFarland, RN,
BSN, HMC Community
Health and Wellness
Director, who is the
backbone of our monthly
Cancer Support Group,
as well as our liaison to
the American Cancer
Society."
The cancer support
group meets monthly at

HMC and is sponsored since 1993, spending
by the Amencan Cancer countless hours at the
Society,
HMC national, state and local
Community Health and level to prevent and
Wellness, and the Holzer detect cancer in an effort
Center for Cancer Cnre.
to improve the quality of
The American Cancer patient care. She is very
Society estimates that active in Gallia County's
more than 1.4 million American
Cancer
cases of cancer were Society (ACS) Relay for
diagnosed in 2009. There Life and serves as
are currently more than Chairman of the Gallia
1,400 CoC-accredited Relay for Life Survivor
cancer programs in the Committee. She has been
US and Puerto Rico. rep- extremely instrumental
resenting close to 25 per- in collaborating with the
cent of all new hospitals. ACS
to
implement
This 25 percent of hospi- Holzer Medical Center's
tals diagnose and/or treat monthly Cancer Support
80 percent of newly diag- Group, which has providnosed cancer patients ed many cancer patients
each year. In addition, a and/or survivors a connational network of more nection with others in an
than 1,600 volunteer effort to form a much
Cancer
Liatson needed support system.
Physicians provides leadIn addition to her
ership and support for the duties as a surgeon, Dr.
CoC
Accreditation Dachowski is also an
Program and other CoC advocate for The Ohio
activities at these local Breast and Cervical
facilitie:.. Cancer Liaison Cancer Project and is a
Phy:.icinns (CI.Ps) are member
of
The
volunteer
physicians American Society of
responsible for providing Breast Surgeons. She is
the leadership and direc- instrumental in the
tion to establish. main- facility's approval status
tain, and support their of the cancer program
. facility's cancer program. by continually preparThey are charged with ing for quarterly Cancer
the task of spearheading Committee meetings,
CoC activities at the presenting cases at the
facility and community Hospital's Cancer Care
Conference, reviewing
level.
Holzer Health Systems charts, possessing leadCLP is
Dr.
Alice ership qualities, and her
Dachowski.
General stron~ support to the
Surgeon at Holzer Clinic. Hospttal's
Cancer
Dachowski
has Reg1strar,
HMC
Dr.
served as the Systems' Community Health and
Cancer Liaison Physician Wellness Department,

and
the
American
Cancer Society.
"It is a testimony to all
the hard work of the
Cancer Care Committee
of Holzer Medical Center
that we not only received
the accreditation status
for three years( maximum granted by the
CoC), but also received
commendations in seven
areas,"
stated
Dr.
Dachow,ski. "These nrcns
of
Commendation
include: outcome:. analytumor
registry
sis,
abstracting timeframe,
quality of data submission to the National
Cancer Data Base, compliance with national
pathology
guidelines
(CAP guidelines), cancer
prevention and early
detection programs, cancer education for cancer
registry staff. and cancerrelated quality improvements that directly affect
cancer patient care in our
region. With this number
of commendations, we
are anxiously waiting to
see if our Cancer
Program at Holzer is eligible to receive the
Commission on Cancer
Outstanding
Achievement Award.''
The
Accreditation
Program, a component of
CoC, sets quality-of-care
standards for cancer programs and reviews the
programs to ensure they
confonn to tho e standards. Accreditation by
the CoC is ~iven only to
those facilittes that have

voluntarily committed to
providing the highest
level of quality cancer
care and that undergo a
rigorous
evaluation
process and review of
their {&gt;erformance. To
maintam accreditation,
facilities with
accredited cancer
grams must undergo
on-site review every
three years.
Receiving care at a
CoC-accredited cancer
program ensures that a
patient will have access
to the following:
• Comprehensive care,
including a range of
state-of-the-art services
and equipment.
• A multispecialty,
team approach to coordinate the best treatment
optionslnfonnation about
ongoing clinical trials
treatment
and
new
options.
• Access to cancerrelated infonnation, education, and support.
• A cancer registry that
collects data on type and
stage cancers and treatment results and offers
lifelong patient followup.
• Ongoing monitorin.A
and improvement ~
careAnd most important.ly.Quality care close to
home.
For infonnation about
the Commission on
Cancer, or the cancer
program at Holzer Health
Systems, visit www.holzercancer.org.

..

Times Square bomber sentenced, warns of more attacks
NEW YORK (AP)The Pakistani immigrnnt
\\ ho tried to detonate a
car bomh on :1 busy
S:~turday night in Timl's
Square accepted n life
sentence with a smirk
Tuesday and warned that
Americans can expect
more bloodshed nt the
hands of Muslims.
''Brace
)Oursehes.
because the v. ar with
Muslims has just begun.''
31-year-old
Faisal
Shahzad told a federal
JUdge. "Con ider me the
fir t droplet of the blood
that \\ill folio\\ ..
His punishment for
building the propaneand-gasoline bomb and
drh ing it into the heart
of the city in an SUV
last May wac:; a foregone
conclusion. since the
charge:. to which he
pleaded guilty carried a
mandatory life sentence,
which under federal
rules will keep him
behind bars until he
dies.
But the former budget
analyst from Connecticut

used
the courtroom
appearance
to
rail
against the U.S .• saying
the country will conti~ue
to pay for occupymg
~1uslim countries.
"We are only Muslims
trying to defend our religwn. people. homes and
land, but if you call us
terrorists, then we are
proud terrorists and we
will keep on terrorizing
you until you leave our
lands and people at
pence." he told U.S.
Dis-trict Judge .Miriam
Goldman Cedarbaum.
Shahzad brought
into the courtroom in
handcuff:., and wearing a
long beard and white
skullcap - had instructed his attomey not to
speak, and Cedarbaum
told prosecutors she didn't need to hear from
them.
That left the two free
to spar over his reasoning for giving up his
comfortable
life
in
America to train in
Pakistan and carry out an
attnck authorities say

could have killed an
untold number of pedestrians.
"You appear to be
someone who was capable of education and I do
hope you will spend
some of the time in
prison thinking carefully
about whether the Quran
wants you to kill lots of
pe_ople,"
Cedarbaum
sat d.
Shahzad
responded
that the "Quran gives us
the right to defend. And
that's all I'm doing."
The judge cut him off
at one point to ask if he
had sworn allegiance to
the U.S. when he became
a citizen last year.
"I did swear, but 1 did
not mean it," Shahzad
said.
In his address to the
court. he said Osama bin
Laden "will be known as
no less than Saladin of
the 21st-century crusade" - a reference to
the Muslim hero of the
Crusades. He also said:
"If I'm given 1,000 lives,
I will sacrifice them all."

Shahzad smirked when
the judge imposed the
:;entence. Asked if he had
any final words. he said,
''I'm happy with the deal
that God has given me."
Afterward. the head of
the FBI's New York
office,
Janice
K.
Fedarcyk, cited evidence
that Shahzad hoped to
strike more than once.
"Shahzad
built
a
mobile weapon of mass
destruction and hoped
and intende.d that it
would killlar2e numbers
of innocent people and
planned to do it again
two
weeks
later,"
Fe,.tarcyk said in a statement. ''The sentence
imposed today means
Shahzad will never pose
that threat again."
U.S. Attorney Preet
Bharara called Shahzad a
"remorseless terrorist
who betrayed his adopted country.''
"We have to be concerned about homegrown
terrorists given recent
events. We're working as
hard as we can to make

sure we don't have
another event like that,"
Bharara said.
Calling
himself a
Muslim soldier. Shahzad
pleaded guilty in June to
10
terrorism
and
weapons counts. He said
the Pakistan Taliban provided him wiih more
than $15,000 and fi\e
days of explosives training late last year and
early this year. months
after he became a U.S.
citizen.
For greatest impact. he
chose a crowded a ection of Times Square by
studying · an
online
streaming video of the
so-called Crossroads of
the World, prosecutor!&gt;
satd.
On May 1. he lit the
fuse of his crude bomb
packed in a 1993 Nissan
Pathfinder, then walked
away. pausing to listen
for the explosion that
never came, court papers
said. A street vendor
spotted smoke coming
from the SUV and alerted police, who quickly

cleared the area.
The bomb attempt set
off an intense investigation that culminated two
days later with investigators plucking Shahzad
off a Dubai-bound plane
at a New York airport.
Prosecutors introduced
of
a dramatic
an FBI-staged
in a Pennsyh
that they said
strated
how
Shahzad's bomb
have been.
The FBI's car bomba 1993 Pathfinder fitted
with 250 pounds of
ammonium nitrate fertilizer and diesel fuel, three
25-pound propane tanks
and two five-gallon gasoline canisters - blew up
with a force that ripJX:d
the sport utility vehicle
in half.
The explosion caused a
giant fireball that overturned and shredded four
other cars parked nearby.
obliterated about a dozen
dummies and shot fiery
debris hundreds of feet
in all directions.

Obama seeks to boost community colleges
to the front lines:·
Obama signed legislation this year pumping $2
billion into community
colleges - $500 million
a year for four years although that was far less
than advocates had hoped
for
Community colleges
saw a 17 percent enrollment surge between 2007
and 2009 as the economic
downturn sent laid-off
workers searching for
new skills ,and tight budgets forced families to
dm\ nsize
educational
goals for their children.
At the san1e time. the colleges are themselves
badly unqerfunded and

forced to spend heavily
on remedial education for
poorly prepared studenh.
The White House summit came a day ~1fter the
president announced a
new public-private partnershtp linking major
corporations like the Gap
and McDonald's with
community colleges to
improve job training.
Obama said the privately
funded
Skills
for
America's Future program would make it easier to connect joh-sccking
students with businesses
looking to hire.
The event also featured
commitments from private institutions including

the Bill &amp; Melinda Gat.
Foundation,
which
announced the launch of
a $35 million, five-year
competitive grant program to boost communit)
college graduation rates.
Given the strains on
community colleges, it
will bl' a challenge to
transform them into a
greater engine of change
than they already are
Martha Kanter. undersecrctaf)' of education, said
just 25 percent of community college students
get a certificate or an
associate's deoree or
transfer to a fuur-year
institution \\ ithin three
years of enrollment.

Rheumatoid arthritis likely causes by virus

a type of RA that starts in
childhood calkd juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis. but
today I'll focus on adultonset RA.
The symptoms of RAespecially. the painfulJ' oint
swelling - come an go.
ru1d may vary fi·om episode
to episode. Consequently.
people wi~ RA may wait to
seek med1cal care as the
symptonh seems to go
away without treatment.
Blood tests can detem1inc

\\ nether or not you
RA. and X-rays can
bone destruction that
tx· a sign of the disease. The
Rheumatoid Factor (RF)
blood test, if positive. shows
that vou have RA. but it
may be negative early ~ the
disease. Other conditions
c.m also lead to a "false posithe" RE Additional test-;
for intlammation can help
guide a physician to include
or exclude RA a.s a diagnosis.

WASHINGTON (AP)
President Barack
Obama called Tuesday
for community colleges
to produce dn additional
5 milhon graduates by
2020 as he convened a
White House summit to
spotlight the two-year
institutions he said are
more importnnt than ever
to the country's competitiveness.
Calling
them
the
"unsung
heroes
of
America's education systern,'' Obama said community colleges ·•may not get
the credit they deserve,
they may not get the same
resources as other chool ,
but they pro\ ide a gateway

to million!. of Americans
to good jobs and a better
life."
Obama made his comments in the East Room
at the start of a daylong
meeting with officials
from some of the nation's
I ,200 community colleges along with businesses
and
philanthropics. It was the first
such gathering at the
White House.
Jill Biden, herself a
community
college
teacher and wife of Vice
President Joe Biden,
presided. The purpose
was to boost the schools
that pro' ide millions of
students with skills train-

ing and a less expensive
path to a college degree
even as they're
increasingly challenged
by climbing enrollments
and high dropout rates.
A month from crucial
midtenn elections. Obama
also used the occasion to
accuse
congressional
Republicans of wrulting to
slash education spcndmg.
as he continued to try to
paint an alarming contrast
with the GOP.
"We are in a fight for
the future, a fight that
depends on education,"
the president said. Cutting
spending would be ''like
unilaterally disarming our
troops right as they head

Family Medicine
A.
0.0., M.B.A.

BY MARTHA
SIMPSON,

OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF
OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

Question: My sister was
diagnosed wjth
R,hewnatoid Arthritis. She
'iays this i" a genetic disease. Our mother. v. ho died
~,;ever.tl years ago. had
arthritis, but no one ever
r~cently

..

said it wa~ rheumatoid
arthtitis. Om you tell me
more about what we are
dc.1Iing with?
Answer: Rheumatoid
Arthtitis (RA), is one of the
diseases refened to as
"autoimmune'' diseases. In
this type of disease, the
body's immune system
attacks its own tis~ue by
mistake. In the case of

rheumatoid arthritis. the
immune system attacks the
lining. or synovium. of
joints, usually on both s1dcs
of the body. Another symptom of RA is intlmnmution
that can aftl.-ct the whole
body. causing pain, fatigue
and fever. Most often, RA
attacks the joints in the
hands and feet, mthcr than
large joint-; like the hips and

knees. The destruction of
the joint limn~. in turn.
damages cart1lage and
lxmes by creating friction.
'This usually causes pain
and swelling in the affected
joints and can lead to deformity in them.
RA is more common in
women than in men. and it
u~ually strikes between the
ages of 40 and 60. There is

"

�- ..... -

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 6,

ommunity Calendar
Public meetings
Wednesday, Oct. 6
PO
ROY
Meigs
Co nty Board of Health,
regul r meeting, 5 p.m.,
1gs County Health
ent.
EVILLE - Scipio
hip Trustees~ reguting, 6:30 p.m.,
a v lie fown Hall.
Monday, Oct. 11
POMEROY - Bedford
ownship Trustees reguar meeting 7 p.m. at the
town ha'l.
Tue day, Oct. 12
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Reg1onal
Sewer District. 7 p.m.,
d stnct otfrce.
WELLSTON The

GJMV
Solid
Waste
Management
Distnct
l:ioard of D1rectors, 2:00
p.m. at the district office,
1056 S. New Hampshire
Avenue, Wellston.
Clubs and organizations
Wednesday, Oct. 6
MIDDLEPORT - The
Middleport Literary Club
will meet in the Pomeroy
branch of the Meigs
County Library at 2 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Ladies Auxiliary
9053, 6 p.m. potluck, 7
p.m. meeting.
CHESTER
Chester-Shade Historical

Jillian Cochran and Brandon Fitch

COC HRAN-FITCH
EN GAG EM E NT·
Jdhan :'-J. Cochran and Brandon L. Fitch, together
•h the1r families. announce their engagement and
c.hmg nl.lmage.
ide-elect 1s a 2003 graduate of ~ teigs High
1. She ts the daughter of Kim and Wesley
n of Btdwell and Jennifer Clark of Manetta,
he granddaughter of ·1 helma Hartsook of
1. Alva and Karen Clark of Rutland. and Phyllis
Pomeroy, and the great-granddaughter of
\
and the late Denzel Geoglein of Pomeroy.
Her hance is a 2003 graduate of Eastern High
School JJe is the son of Janie and Bobby Fitch of Long
and the grandson of Ruby and the late Harold
Bott
and Bob and Donna Fitch of Long Bottom.
l\ttation-only wedding will be ru1 e\cnt of Oct. 10
m. .~t the Cnited Methodist Church. Long Bottom.

2010

ASK DR. BROTHERS
Association, 7 p.m.,
Chester Courthouse.
Church events

Sunday, Oct. 10
MIDDLEPORT
Homecoming at Ash
Street Church, 9:30 a.m.
Sunday School, 10:30
a.m., morning worship. 1
Potluck follows. The
Weekleys to sing after
lunch.

Nasty side of co-worker
makes job miserable

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
work in a coffee shop in
my city. After the morning rush, it's pretty laid
back, and there's not
much to do. This is
Other events
when my co-worker
starts in with his daily
Saturday, Oct. 9
diatribe - ripping into
SHADE
- Sixth every regular customer
Annual
Jerseyville who comes into the
Festival,
Shade store in the morning. 1
Community
Center, try to be agreeable and
Dr. Joyce Brothers
Athens CR 33A, Shade. usually try to laugh at
contest, his horrible insulb Pie-baking
Federal Valley Cloggers, but it's getting tiring.
arts and crafts. apple but- How can I get him to would document a typiter and cider making, stop? He's usually not cal suburban family. We
think he's gone way off
children's activities.
that bad a guy - it's the deep end. What can
just when he starts with we do'!- K.L
the insults that he
Dear K.l.: Wow, your
becomes nasty. - D.B.
son is very ambitiousDear D.B.: It is pretty that is quite a project fot
hard to wake up and go someone his age. I am
to work with a smile and surprised, though, that
keep one on your ~ce he thought he would be
when the guy down the entitled to put up whar
counter from you is pro- essentially are spy camjecting hate and frustra- eras in his home without
tion in every direction. the permission of the
Any customers who are rest of the family- and
around while he's doing then put it all out there
this may lind that they on the Internet and call
would rather go else- it art! Regardless of the
where for their coffee. artistic merit of such a
unless they are the type project- and I'm pretwho get off on a rough ty sure that if it were set
and nasty atmosphere up as part of a gallery
- and I don't imagine exhibit, people would
there are too many of accept it as such - it
those. When it is time may not be something
for your break, you you or the rest of the
m1ght just ask the fel- family want to star in.
low if there is some- And again, he really.
thing bothering him. It reallv, reallv should
could be that he has a have· asked you first! At
disabled child or a sick least you found out
grandfather to take care before the cameras
of, or that his home is in started rolling.
Mia Grace Johnston
foreclosure or his wife
But since you found
is cheating on him. Ju~t out in plenty of time.
talking to someone your challenge now is to
about his troubles might decide what you want to
help take the wind out do with this power. You
of his sails when it can cooperate nnd help
comes to dumping on your !o.On jump-start his
Jamie Williamson Johnston and Scott Johnston others.
artistic career, or vou
of Middleport announce the birth of a daughter.
This is just to say that can put your foot down
~1ia Grace Johnston, on Sept. 12, at Pleasant
he may be projecting and ask him to come up
Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant. The infant some serious difficulty v. ith a less invasive type
weighed 6 pounds. I 0 ounces.
at home onto the cus- of project. In any case.
~laternal grandparent:-. are Bob Williamson of tomer: the work equivait is your job to encourParkersburg. W.Va .. and Donna and Danny Fink of lent of "kicking the
age him in his art. as
Charleston. W.Va. Paternal grandparents are Tim dog.'' If he doesn · t conJohnston of\Vinfield. W.Va., and Sherrie and Scott fide in you and just well as maintain whatever dignity you can
Bryant of Winfield. W.Va.
snarls a snarky reply, while he is bent on mak~tater'nal great-grandparents are Donna and
your best bet is to go
Hugh McPhail of Syracuse. and Bill and Minnie about insulating your- ing as dramatic an
Thornton of Danville, and the paternal great- self from his remarks by impact as possible. I
grandparents are Merlyn Johnston Ball of being out of earshot. If know you don't want to
Hurricane. W.Va., and Bill and Sandy Phelix of this is practicaL focus squelch hh career plans,
so you must walk a fine
Hometown, W.Va.
on treating your ov. n line between his goals
customers with extra and yours. This can~be a
courtesy. The manager win-win situation if you
or owner of the shop is try hard to make it such.
sure to find out that one Mavbe other familv
of his employees in members actually will
undermining the opera- want to star in Jnternet
tion with his surly atti- videos
... tranger
tude, and he probably things ha\C happened.
without regard to race, gender, age. or disability. won't last long. If you
(c) 2010 by Ki11g
color, national origin,
Complaints of can be like the place and can
Feahtres S)'11dicate
sex, age or di~ability and reported by writing stick it out, try to do so.
will be served at no sep- USDA. Director. Office Usually the competent
of Civil Rights, 1400 and friendly server wins
arate charge.
In accordance with Independence Avenue. out in the end.
•••
Federal law and U.S. SW. Washington, DC
Department
of 20250-9410 or call 1 Dear Dr. Brothers:
·:stRVING OMEROY.
Agriculture policy, the (800) 795-3272 or (202) My 18-year-old son has
always
been
interested
Service Center is pro- 720-6382
(TTY) .
hibited from discriminat- USDA is an equal in computers. My wife
provider and I have been 'ery
ing on the basis of race. opportunity
supporti\e, thinking this
color. national origin. and employer.
• FREt 2411 Toetncal ~
hobby would parlay
• lnslM! ~ ;e.p 'J(J1I bvdd'Jlsll
itself into a nice career.
• 10 ..... ~..,:!1~
But now it seems we
• C.ala'J 8:lrl Page ~ ~ &amp;(l'(llt
have created a monster.
2sx laster! \
We caught him wiring
;;nt '3,...,.. '_,/
our house v. ith surveilClasses will meet three
with youth in the visual
S g" Up Online! v.ww l.oca~t com
lance cameras that he
and performing arts. He Saturdays per month planned to hook up to
10-ll :30 a.m.
has destgned and pre- from
the Internet! He said
sented creative drama Contact the French Art
this was goin&amp; to be a
Rthable lnttrnet Access Since 199•
and art programming to Colony for registration great art proJeCt that
more than 35.000 stu- details, or for questions
dents throughout the U.S. regarding any of the r"AC
In addition to profession- Kids programming, 740al performance experi- 4 4 6 - 3 8 3 4 .
The Ohio Arts Council
ence with the Walt
Disney Company. and helps fund this program
others, he is a certified or organization with state
elementary teacher and tax dollars to encourage
has taught both visual art economic growth, educaand general education in tional excellence and culpublic school class- tural enrichment for aJI
Ohioans.
rooms.

Friday, Oct. 8
LONG BOTIOM
Hymn sing with "Portal,"
7 p.m., Faith Full Gospel
Church.
Saturday, Oct. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS Revival at St. Paul
United
Methodist
Church, 7 p.m. through
Monday. Rev. Brent
Watson
to
speak.
Special
music.
Homecoming Sunday,
with morning service at •
10:15 a.m., and carry-in
dinner, 12:30 p.m. Music
by "Heaven's Rush."

JOHNSTON
BIRTH

thens-Meigs Service Center
sponsors food program
PO f.RO\
The
\th ns
Mei~s
ducat' onal
Sc1 \tee
C nt r announce&lt;; spans 1ship of the USDA
unJ d ( hild .md ·Adult
( a1 J ood Program.
Sit s p.trticipating in
the program are the
1It of the Valle) Head
rt located at the fol•
0\\ wg addresses: the
Bradbtuy
Learning

Center 39105 Bradbury
Road Middleport and
the
Tuppers
Plains
Center 50008 State
Route 681. Reedsville in
Meigs County, and the
Gallia County Early
Childhood &amp; I•arnily
Center 77 Mill Creek
Road
Gallipolis
m
Gallia Countv.
Meals are available to
all enrolled participants

Internet
0

Youth acting classes at FAC
(JAlliPOLIS - The
Fr n J-. Art Colony will
t~dd )' mth acting classes
to 11" repertoire of multi,uts programming for
chJidrt:n.
Be inning Saturday.
Oct. 16, students age 813 can attend \\ cek I y ses~ ton s of The Young
Act01 o,;' Studio, taught by
f AC Execult\ c Director
J ph Wnght.
Student
will learn
i.lbout actmg and stage
pe1 formance
through
1110\ m ·nt and \ oc.1li;a-

tion acth ities. improvised
and rehearsed performance, storytelling, theatl e games, and more. The
program b designed to
help give students confidl·nce and skill with auditiomng, speaking in front
ot ,1 group, self-expressions, and performance.
Students will work on
audition skills and will he
consistent!) working on a
pe1formance in a workshop scttmg.
Wright has nearly 20
years experience working

(fu:r;::

Visit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news
•

li

..
I

•

�age A

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 6,

The Daily Sentinel

2010

It's tune U&gt; take

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

...and PUt

it ba.ckin
thehaltds
of the
littler

11Xl·

CottJ?ress slw/1 make 110 ft~w respecting att
estdblislunetrt '?( reli,!fion, or prolriMtinJ! tltefree
exercise tlurco.f; or .tbridgitt,{! tlrefreedom of
speedt, or'?( tire press; or tire right of the peoplt
pcace,tbly to ,,ssemble, llwi to petitiott tire
Got•erttmwt jiJr a red reS$ oj,(!riel'duces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Calif. lawmakers want
foreclosure investigation
Bv

ALAN ZIBEL

ASSOC ATED PRESS

More than 30 House members from California
are calling on federal regulator~ to inve~tigate
whether mortgage companies broke the law by
using paperwork that may have contained errors.
·n1e Democratic lawmakers, led by Rep. Zoe
Lofgren and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, urged
bank regulators and the Justice Department to
probe whether mortgage companies violated any
laws in handling foreclosures and borrowers'
requests for Joan assistance.
The lawmakers sent the Jetter to Attorney General
Eric Holder, Federal Reserve Chainnan Ben
Bemanke and John Walsh, acting comptroller of the
currency A Federal Reserve spokesmnn said the central bank "ill respond to the letter. Representatives
for Holder and Walsh declined to comment.
111e action represents the strongest push to date for
federal regulators to intervene in a growing problem
in the nation's foreclosure process. To date. state
attomeys general ha\ e taken the lead on the issue.
Three banks have halted foreclosures in 23
states after evidence surfaced that their employees
or outside Ia\\ yers signed documents without
reading them. !\:umerous state and federal officials
have been ramping up pressure on the mortgage
industry over concems about potential legal violations. including signing documents without reading them and filing inaccurate paperwork.
Along with Sen. AI Franken, D-Minn .. Sen.
Robert Menendez. D N.J., requested that
Congress ' investigatJve ann. the Government
Accountability Office. examine whether federal
regulators O\'erlooked problems at mo11gage companies. They asked the GAO to recommend
whether federal regulatory agencies should have
more authQrity.
Sen. Jeff Merkley. D-Ore.. has urged the
Treasury Department and the Department of
Housing and Urban Development to launch their
own investigations.
On Tuesday. Massachusetts Attorney General
Martha Coakley called on the same three lenders
- plus Wells Fargo &amp; Co. - to halt foreclosures.
That state is not affected by the three banks' foreclosure freeze because it does not require judges
to approve foreclosures.
But Coakley noted that lenders still must comply
with state law, which rC(JUires that boiTowers receive
official not1ces before a foreclosure is complete.
A florida investigation into foreclosure practices was dealt a setback this week when a state
judge denied a s ubpoena for information from a
law firm. Florida Attorney General Bill
McCollum had sought the information.

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;

Bank bailout supporters
struggling for re-election
BY TOM RAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The government's giant bank
bailout may well have averted a
second Great Depression. economists say, but a lot of voters aren't
buying it. Support for the program
is turning into a ki!&gt;~ of death for
many in Congress.
Longtime Republican lawmakers - tarred by their votes for the
emergency aid to banks. insurance and auto companies - have
been sent packing in primaries.
Fresh political attack ads are lambasting candidates from both parties for supporting the $700 billion package that Republican
President George W. Bush pushed
through Congress at the height of
the financial crisis in October

2008.
The actual cost to taxpayers will
be far less than the original price
tag. perhaps totaling $50 billion
or less. But it's been difficult for
lawmakers to make the case that
they saved the nation t:rom possible financial ruin - as some
economists suggest. It's tar easier
for opponents. especially in political soundbites, to portray the
issue as Wall Street fat cats
against ordinary Main Street folks
in the final-\veeks cacophony of
the campaign.
President Barack Obama and
congressional Democrats: now in
cha;ge. have taken heat for a program that many voters see as
proof that the rich guys were
bailed out while the public \Vas
n 't. Indeed, both parties are on the
attack.
Some recent examples:
• In Missouri. Democratic
Senate candidate Robin Carnahan
has been savaging Republican
Rep Roy Blunt for helping push
the Toxtc Asset Relief Program.
or TARP. through Congress. One
ad calls him "Mister Bailout.'"
Another one. paid for by the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign
Committee. asserts: "When our
economy collapsed, Washington
is where Roy Blunt took the lead
and voted for the $700 billion
Wall Street bailout ..
• In Connecticut. Senate candidate
D1ck
Blumenthal hit
Republican Linda McMahon durrng their debate Monday night for
signaling support for TARP. She
has called it "a necessary thing to
do at the time." He says he opposes it.
• Ohio Democratic Rep Mary
Jo Ktlroy is trumpeting her opposttlon to the legi~lation as a freshman member. "I voted against the
bank bailout and took on Wall
Street to protect your money.'' she
says in one of her TV spots.
• The U.S. Chamber of

Commerce. the nation's most
powerful business lobby. is
spending millions on ads trying to
elect candidates who oppose the
TARP bailout and last year's $814
billion stimulus package - even
though the chamber supported
both programs at the time.
• Rep. Chet Edwards. D-Texas,
admits he's vulnerable because of
his TARP vote . "It may cost me
votes. It may cost me an election.''
Edwards told the Dallas Morning
News editorial board. "But it was
the rig~t thing to do.''
Some Republicans who supported the package have already
been cast aside: Sen Lisa
Murkowski of Alaska and Rep
Mike Castle of Delaware were
defeated in GOP primaries.
Republican Sen. Robert Bennett
of Utah was rejected at a GOP
convention,
where
fe1Jow
Republicans taunted him with
chants of"TARP. TARP"
And Democrat c. Sen Blanche
Lincoln of Arkansas came close
to losing the Democratic nomination for re-election in part because
of her support for the. bailout.
l)he \\as among the 67 senators
who voted for TARP in 2008.
Candidates. particularly those
with ties to the tea party movement. have railed against what
they see &lt;lS a "bailout nation."
TARP officially ended on
Sunda) \\hen the government lost
its a\tthority to tap remaining
funds. However. it is still possible
for the Treasury to add to any program that was in place as of last
June 25.
Despite the political venom. the
program has turned out to be far
less expensive than the original
$700 billion price tag.
As of Sept. .30. the government
has spent $388 billion of the $700
billion. and $204 billion of that
has been repmd. the Treasury
Department satd l'uesday in a
''Two lear Retrospective" of the
program
furthermore. the government
has received about $30 billion in
mterest, dividends and stock
sales.
Thus. taxpayers nght now are
on the hook for about $154 bi Ilion. But that doesn't include
future income and gams from
stocks and other assets still held
by the government from aid recipients.
The Whtte House proJects the
program \\ill end up costing about
$50 billion, possibly less. That's
down from the $66 billion the
nonpartisan
Congressional
Budget Office estimated in
August.
Some administration officials
suggest it could eveti wind up

earning taxpayers a small profit.
Treasury Secretary Timothy
Geithner. in a cover letter to
Thesday's report, noted the legislation had strong bipartisan support when passed. Since then. he
said, "many h!lve lost sight of the
pressing need" for the program
and have criticized it - wrongly.
he suggested.
So why is TARP so maligne
For many voters, the bail
program is a symbol of government meddling and waste at a
time when unemployment is at
9.6 percent and budget deficits are
soaring. It was approved shortly
after the failure of Lehman
Brothers. one of the nation's
largest investment banks. as credit markets were freezing up in
fear.
"It was clear that when Lehman
went down. we were within hours
of no ATM machines working any
more." said GOP strategist Rich
Galen. The bailout "was unfortunately necessary.'' Galen said. and
then it was followed by disclosures of big bonuse.;. executives'
golden parachutes, golf outings
and parties \\ hile Wall Street
banks took government money.
Said Galen: "It quickly be~ame
seen as a bailout for people who
were in danger of losing their
summer house in the Hamptons •
opposed to the guy ,.,..ith the har
ware store on Main Street who
\\as left dangling.''
But listen to nearly any economist and the program has been a
big success.
:-:Even though it could have
been done better, it saved the
banking system by stabilizing it,"
said Joel Narotf. preside nt and
chief ecolwmbt for Naroff
Economic Advisers. "If we had let
the system crash and burn. we
probably would ha' c lost a couple
of other large banks and ma) be
another 500 or 1.000 small and
mid-sized banks. It would hm e
been a total disaster without it.''
f\oot all reviews have been positive
The
Government
Accountability Office. a congressional watchdog. said Monday
that the Treasur) bailed out
dozens of banks with known
financial problems. It calkd
better monitoring of banks se
ing to tap a new $30 billion
ing fund proposed by the administration and passed b) Congress
last month to spur lending to credit-staf\ ed small businesses.
The administration's plms to
use $41 billion in 1/\RP mone) to
help people refinance mortgages
to a\oid foreclosure has been a
bust so far. Less than $1 b1lhon
has been spent on the progmm.

�..
Wednesday, Oct ober 6,

Deaths

Trea~ury
Robin Glass

Robin L. Petry ~.l.ass, 5~, Ma~on, W.Va .. died Sept.
27.2010. A memo11,1l servtce wtll be held at 7 p.m. on
Thursday, Oct. 7. 2010, at Pogchong-Roush Funeral
Home. Mason.

Evelyn May Warner
Evelyn May Warner, Middleport, died Tuesday,
Oct. 5. 20 I0, at the Ple.asant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant. W.Va. Servtcc will be at II a.m. on
Saturday, Oct: 9, 20 I 0, at Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home m Pomeroy. Visitation will be held 6-9
p.m. Friday at the funeral home.

Eric Charles Ferrell
Eric Charles Fe1Tell, 28, Gallipolis died Saturday
.
'
0 ct. ..,-· -'&gt;Q I 0 . at h'ts restdence.
Arrangements
will be'
announced later by Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

William Bill Rawson
. William Bill Rawson, 82, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
dted Oct. 4. 2010. at his home. Funeral service will be
at 11 a.m. on Friday at Deal Funeral Home. Burial
will be in the Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on Thursday at the funeral
home.

Okey J. Hurlow

cuts bailout price tag to $50 billion

_w~~~ IN$~JRNb. 1 ~P)

th: financial syste~. and
prevent a deeper cnsts. It
1
says
econoT . . .
D 1 • n,
e m!sts ere tt _the program
.r~~~11 Y d·
epartment ~lth preventmg economs.tTt hcues ~Y·
tc collapse.
T re·asury ' s·
.
d dpnce
. . 1ag was·
~owers
1
~~~ u t!o-~ea'~ rep~~rtgra~~ S~~daythe la;hexptred on
d ·
·
e
report
.
an . ts .1ower than earlier reviews its actions over
- _includin_g !WO years to rescue faila
~' ton e~limate thts
mg banks, automakers
summer
Y
the and others. The law
Budget
in October 2008
,. ·,
.
wtth su~port from Ia:n-Treasury notes m the makers m both parttes
repo t th t th b ·1
d h
. . ·
r
a
e at out, ~n t e Bush admmtstraknown
A
R asr fthe Troubled tton .
sset e 1e Pro~ra~ •. or
"I hope this r~port will
TARP, helped stabiltze allow the Amencan peo-

1 ton

~~~~~~ai~;ulgm-~ 11 ct~o;t
-

.

.

. I

from Page AI
power; the plant's estimated capital costs are
currently in the $600700 million range (subject to change); the new
AMPGS would sit on
some of the 900 acres
the company already
owns in Letart Falls;
high-pressure
gas
pipeline
will
be
required for the site:
the plant will produce
an estimated 500 construction jobs and 25permanent operating
s: the company is
ing at an 18-24
month permitting timeframe followed by a
three-year construction
cycle.
Thompson said hurdles remain for the project.
including
the
member communities
who purchase power
from AMP signing on
for the project; working
with local and state
officials on appropriate
incentives
and
tax
abatements: determining the gas pipeline
route; and finalizing the
contract with the preferred EPC contractor
for the plant, Burns &amp;
McDonnei/Ramco. Last
but not least. Thompson
mentioned
getting
through the permitting
process which will
once again entail public
•
etings and a show of
WJlic support.
In
some
cases,
Thompson said it will
simply be easier to
start from scratch in
the permitting process
such as with the company's Ohio EPA air
permit-to-install and
National
Pollutant
Discharge Elimination
System
permits
obtained for the coalfired version of the
plant. Both these permits were appealed by
various environmental
groups and as part of a
joint
agreement
between AMP and
those groups. the permits are being voluntarily revoked. New
PT£ and NPDES permits will be filed along
with
permits
for
Federal
Energy
R egulatory
mmission
and/or
o Power Siting
gas pipeline certi tcates and associated
environmental permits:
PJM (electric transmission) Interconnection
Agreemen\.
Thompson added the
company's Ohio EPA
solid waste landfill per·
mit will not be needed
because the plant will
have no need for a landfill. AMP is also work·

a

i~dedp_endent

~r$i~c~1.y1~s

1

67t~;;essional

p~sse~

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: A slight
chance of showers before
8 a.m., then a slight
chance of showers after 9
a.m. Mostly cloudy. with
a high ncar 70. West
wind between 6 and 9
m~h. ~hance of precipitatton 1s 20 percent.
Wednesd ay
Night:

Okey J. Hurlow, 7~. Mason, W.Va., died Saturday, ~ostly clear. with a l_ow
t. 2. 2010. at Manetta Memorial Hospital. Funeral around 48. West wmd
vices will be held at 3 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 7 , 201 O, 1 bet ween 3 and 5 mph.
•
1
at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Mason. Burial will . Thurs~ay: . Mostly
follow at St. Joseph Cemetery. Visitation will be held sunny. Wit~ a htgh near
from 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at Wilcoxen Funeral Home. 73. ~est wmd between 5
Condolences may be sent to the family www.wilcox- at~dfh~ mph.
.
enfuneralhome.com.
u rsd ay
N1gh t :
Mostly clear. with a low
---- -- - -- - around 42.

AMP

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

F riday: Sunny, with a
high near 74.
~rid ay Night: {:lear.
wtth a low around 44.
Saturday: Sunny. with
a high near 75.
S at urday
Night:
Clear, with a low around

48.
Sunday: Sunny, with a
high near 78.
_Sunday Night: Clear.
w1th a low around 50.
Columbus Day: Sunny.
with a high near 77.
M onday
Nigh t :
Mostly clear, with a low
around 51.
Thesday: Sunny, with
a high near 77.

Local Stocks

ing to modify the folOVBC (NASDAQ)Akzo (NASDAQ) lowing existing permits
19.00
62.20
for the new project BBT (NYSE) - 24.29
Ashland lm:. (NYSE)
Ohio Power Siting
Peoples (NASDAQ) Board
Generation, -50.66
12.01
Big
Lots
(NYSE)
Ohio Power Siting
Pepsico (.NYSE) Board Transmission, 32.94
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 67.76
Ohio
EPA
401
Premier (NASDAQ) Certification and l.JS -28.87
6.19
BorgWarner
(NYSEl
Army
Corps
of
Rockwell (NYSE) -53.28
Engineers 404 Permit.
62.55
Century
Alum
(NAS. As for the appropriaRocky Boots (NAStiOn US Congressman DAQ)- 13.26
DAQ)-7.68
Champion
(NASDAQ)
Charlie Wilson asked
Royal Dutch Shell for in a federal spend- - 1.15
Charming
Shops 62.31
ing bill to help fund the
Sears Holding (NASgas pipeline. Thompson (NASDAQ)- 3.61
City Holding (NAS- DAQ) -72.08
said it was unclear
Wai-Mart (NYSE)
when that bill might DAQ)- 31.63
54.00
Collins
(NYSE)
come to a vote. Despite
Wendy's ("J'.;YSE)
this
uncertainty. 59.20
DuPont
(NYSE)
4.39
Thompson said the fed WesBanco (NYSE) eral funding for the 45.77
17.19
US
Bank
(NYSE)
pipeline will not make
Worthington (NYSE)
or break this project. 22.33
Gen Electric (NYSE) -14.80
saying there were talks
Daily stock reports are
going on concerning -16.51
the
4 p.m. ET closing
Harley-Davidson
other incentives v. hich
quotes of transactions for
may help that project (NYSE) - 32.09
October 5, 2010, providJP Morgan (NYSE) hurdle "come together."
ed by Edward Jones
Thompson specifical- 39,64
financial advisors Isaac
Kroger (NYSEl ly mentioned the supMills in Gallipolis at
21.37
port for the project
(740) 441-9441 and
Ltd Brands (NYSE) from
Gov.
Ted
Lesley Marrero in Point
Strickland.
Wilson, 27.81
Norfolk So (NYSE) - · Pleasant at (304) 674State
Sen.
Jimmy
0174. Member SIPC.
Stewart. Representative 59.51
Debbie · Phillips and
U.S. Senators Sherrod
Brown and George
Voinovich. as well as
many local officials and 1
residents. Thompson
fromPage Al
was joined at the lunhis
actions
directly
cheon by the compa- · porting aircraft.
His aircraft remained enabling the success of a
ny·s Sentor Director of
Communications Kent on station. reaching criti- mission capturing 11
cally low fue l level enemy prisoners of war.
Carson.
Meigs
Cou.nty before departing to refu- killing low-level insurgents
E c o n o m t c el. Intelligence reports and securing large stores of
Development Director indicated enemy action weapons and munitions.
targeting preventing the enemy from
Perry Varnadoe also specifically
added once AMP final· helicopters but he and his mounting an offensive.
Amott has served 18
izes its contract with crew returned to provide
Burns
&amp; armed cover for ground years in the military. He
is a Southern High
McDonnei/Ramco, he forces extraction.
will organize a "How to
Anrott again marked tar- School graduate.
do Business with the gets for attack aircraft with
Contractor" workshop
for local contractors
who want to participate
in the project.
Other
Chamber
announcements:
from Page At
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce
usually sold in a ball9on.
normal," Powell said.
B~tsiness Recognition
and 1s dissolved in water
Among
those
stgns:
Dlllner. 6 p.m., Oct. 26.
• Decreased interest in before the solution is
Middleport Family Life
injected.
social
activities.
Center.
" If you tind balloons.
•
Avoiding
friends
and
Family
Healthcare
empty wrappers, or used
Jnc. Basket Games. 6 l~1mily.
• Increased and unnat- needles around the house
p.m .. Thursday, Oct. 21
or your child's car. I urge
ural
moodiness.
at Carleton School.
you to seek help,'' Powell
and
•
Depression
Syracuse.
said
agresswn
Sands &amp; Decker CPS
"Sometimes it is difti• Poor grades and
of Logan (engineers
cult
to distinguish teen
attendance
at
school.
and surveyors}, picked
• Ignoring
conse- drug warning signs and
up some of the costs for
the
luncheon
with 9uences of chosen behav- normal teen emotional
behavior," Powell said.
space provided by the tor.
" lf a teen exhibits more
• Constricted pupils.
Pomeroy Library. food
• Changes in sleep pat- than two or three of these
by "Close to Home
warning signs. there is a
Catering'' of the Meigs terns.
potential problem."
•
Track
marks
on
the
County Council on
Powell said screenings
Aging
and
flower arm.
can
be arranged by con•
Weight
changes
and
arrangements by 1he
changes in eating habits. tacting his oftice at 992Pomeroy Flower Shop.
Powell .said heroin is 6205.

Amott

Teens

~le and their representatlves in Congress to
the
and
1ts 1mpact," Treasury
Secretary
Timothy
Geithner wrote in a cover
1etter to lawmakers.
TJ·hedreportf is being circu ate
our
weeks
before the midterm elec.
tions. The economy
emerged as the top issue
for voters and many I·
!flakers
be
1shed for supporting the
financial bailout
·
Critics say it insulated
ban ks f rom nsky
·
moves
that nearly wrecked th~
economy and solidified

~eass~ss

initiati~~

permanently the domina
f
f
1

ba~~~- ~nd ~he~wwa:~f~

tie help for Americans
outside the world of high
finance they say
'
· ·governIndependent
m~~t. watchdogs have
cnt1c1zed Tre· ry f
tru
·
~s~ ?r

ha~ "pr~t~st.~n~r ~~~~~~;nsue~?.

-~ould

without mentioning
th· 10 ,
·

p~~~ th~~e g~f::..wT~~~~ue~~f1~

makes frc ucnt refert
q
fi
ences o taxpayer pro tts
The watchdogs aJ
·t· ·
.
so treat
en 1·
ctzed
Treasury for
ing the b~nks with to~
much deference.

Portman, Fisher
spar over jobs,
taxes
TOLEDO (AP)- The
two leading candidates in
the race for Ohio's open
U.S. Senate seat agreed
Monday night in their
first debate that the
state's economy is a
mess, but they blamed
each other for getting it
there.
Democrat Lee Fisher.
currently Ohio's lieutenant governor, repeatedly pointed out that
Republican Rob Portman
was budget director and
trade ambassador in the
Bush administration. say!ng his policies supportmg free trade caused the
state to lose jobs to
China.
Portman, a former congressman. countered that
Fisher oversaw the state's
job development office
up until a year ago. during a time when Ohio lost
400.000 jobs.
"Our state has fallen
behind the rest of the
country,'' Portman said.
"We're falling bt:hinu
and these guys have not
done the job."
Fisher defended his
record, casting the blame
for Ohio's job losses on
Republicans.
"It's a national recession brought to you by
the policies of George W.
Bush and Congressman
Portman," Fisher said.
Ohio has been hit harder by job losses than most
other states and unemployment has been above
10 percent all year.
Democrats who swept all
but one statewide office
four years ago are now
facing a backlash over
the economy.
Portman and Fisher are
competing to succeed
retiring
Republican
George Voinovich. The
GOP needs a gain of 10
seats to win control of the
U.S. Senate this fall.
Fisher has repeatedly
tagged himself as the
underdog in the race.
Most polls taken within
the last month have
shown Portman leading
Fisher by double digits.
The Republican also has
a
huge
fundraising
advantage over Fisher.
allowing him to dominate
television advertising in
the race.
Fisher came out firing
at Portman from the frrst
moment of the debate,
saying his opponent v. as
a Washington insider
who was more concerned
with helping bankers on
Wall Street.
Portman satd Fisher
supports higher taxes on
small businesses and
health care regulations
that are stopping compa
nies from expanding.
Fisher ~aid he wants to
end tax breaks for compames that ship jobs
overseas. but he also said

h~ supported trade polictes
that
increase
American exports.
Portman
accused
Fisher of wanting it both
ways by opposing trade
agreements as a whole.
"We need to support
trade:' Portman said. ''If
we don't do that, we're
going to be hurting Ohio
workers."
Fisher defended his
record as•head of Ohio's
economic development
department. saying he
was proud of his work
but not satisfied.
He ticked off a list of
companies that the state
has helped keep in Ohio
with tax breaks and
incenthes,
includino
Cooper Tire and Rubbe~
Co:s plant in Findlay and
the headquarters for
Goodyear Ttre &amp; Rubber
Co. in Akron.
Portman said Fisher's
job creation record has
been a failure and would
get worse because he
supports higher taxes and
regulations.
"We should be passing
pro-growth measures."
said Portman. a fiscal
conservative. who advocates cutting federal
spending.
He also accused Fisher
of distorting his record
several times during the
debate.
"He wants to distract
us from his record," said
Portman. who has had a
lot of experience in
debates- at least behind
the scenes.
Two years ago during
the presidential campaign. he played the role
of Barack Obama while
helping his friend John
McCain get ready for a
debate. Portman did the
same for George W. Bush
and Dick Cheney during
debate-prep sessions.
Much of the debate
Monday centered on
Ohio's
economy.
although the candidates
did disagree on how they
would handle Social
Securit}
Both said they want to
protect it for seniors and
for future recipients. but
Fisher said his opponent
had backed privatizing it.
Portman denied that
charge. sa) ing Fisher
v.as simply using scare
tactics.
~
The candidates also
took opposing views on
the countr) 's strategy in
Afghanistan.
~
Portman said having a
date when troops leave
will only encourage alQaida and the Taliban to
wait out U.S. troops.
Fb.her said the time has
come to bring troops
home and that the war on
terrorism should be
fought
with
spectal
forces and stealth equipment.
•

Visit us online at
mydai lysenti nel. com

Your online sourcefor news
1

�\Vcdnesday, October 6,

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailyscntinel.com

2010

Dunn named URG director resident life
RIO GRANDI! - 11le
f r o m
v.orking
Unh ersity of Rio Grande
and
Rio
Grande
with students.
Community College has
named Dougl.ts Dunn as
"1 wanted to be
the Direl'tor of the Office
here
at
of Restdcnt L1fe.
Dunn, who has a long
R i o
Grande,''
history \\ ith Rio Gmnde,
Dunn
i-.. proud to t.1kc ove1 this
D u n n
nev. rule and ha:-, exciting sa1d.
In his nev. position, he
plans for student activi ties and the residence is in charge of student
halls. lie earned his activities and student
bachelor's . degree and housing. In h1s role with
two masters degrees at the housing department,
Rio Grande, and also he oversees the Student
scned for seven years as Life Coordinators and
a
Student
Life Resident Assistants in the
Coordinator on campus. residence halls, and he is
major
In
addition,
Dunn planning for
v. orked for six years as a unprovements to the livhigh school teacher.
ing spaces.
Th1s summer in the resHe decided to take on
th1s nev. role this summer idence halls. for example,
because of his Jove for Rjo Grande has improved
the uni\ersity and the the flooring in the lobbies
enjo) ment he receives of the residence halts,

placed new furniture in
the lobbies, replaced J00
mattresses in the residence halls and made
other improvements to
the living spaces. Dunn is
planning on more activities m the halls for the
students throughout the
school year.
"We look at e.tch residence hall as a living and
learning community,"
Dunn said. College is a
very imp01 tant time for
students to learn about
social interactiOn'&gt; and
social awarcnGss. nnd
the student" learn a great
deal lh ing in the reSIdence halls. he said. Rio
Grande doco; everything
it can to ns ist students
in thio; way. v. bile also
pro\i~ing a comfortable
learnmg envuonment
Rio Grande provides
acth ities for all students.

whether they live on
campus or off, and Dunn
hopes to see many of the
off-campus
students
involved in the different
campus events this year.
''We really want to sec
the commuter students be
involved in all of our
activities," he said. A few
ol the activities held on
campus this year will be
the llomecoming Week
events, the Hallow'een
Dance, the Spring fling
Greek Games and Dorm
Wars, free bowling nights
and free movie nights.
Dunn is planning other
events. but he also wants
Rio Grande students to
suggest and help to plan
the activities that they
'' ould like to see on campus.
"We want to be student-driven." Dunn said.
"J want the student to be

rec;ponsible for telhng me We are here to assist and
the events that they want help the students."
to see happen." He also
Along with the campus
encourages student&lt;; to activities, Dunn also
get involved wtth the stu· wants to reach out to the
dent government and village in order to hold
planning boards on cam- more events with the
pus. Student'&gt; may also community. He appreciget involved in the many ates all that the viii
different athlct1c, acade- and the community
mic, community service to the campus envi
and c;ocial clubs and ment. and Dunn is very
proud to now be able to
orguni~:ations on campus,
and Dunn invites all ~tu­ serve tn this important
dent" to look into joining role for Rio Grande and
the many different orgn· its students.
"1 really can think of
ni~:ation s.
He also wants students no other place that I
to come to him if they would rather be;' Dunn
need help. if they want said. "I love being a part
ideas on how to get of Rio Grande.''
involved in campus
J·or information about
groups or if they have campus life, student
activities or the residence
any questions.
"I love being an •d\o- halls£. contact Dunn at
cate for the student ," he 245-1396.
said. 'They are always
welcome in my office.

OFIC awards scholarships
COLU~IBUS The
Ohio Foundation of
independent College"
(OFIC) has distributed
$91 ,800 in need-based
UPS Scholarships to 60
students enrolled in its 34
member colleges and
um' er 1t1es across the
state.
One of th1s year's
scholarships v.cnt to Seth
Lyle of Ga11ipo~i s who is
a junior at Dcni on
Um,er it)
tud)ing
physics.
The scholarships ''ere
made possible by a grant

that OJoiC received from count1y.
Ohio institutions that
the UP.S EducatiOnal
Endowment Fund at the rcceh cd
UPS
Foundation
for Scholarships from OI•IC
Independent
Higher include it~ 34 member
Education (FIHE) in colleges and umversitics:
Ashland
University,
Washington. D.C.
HHE and the UPS Baldwin-Wallace
Bluffton
Foundation partnered to College,
Capital
prO\ ide more than $1.5 Uni\ crsny,
million nationally in :,tu- Univer tty, Ccdan ille
dent cholarships for the Unhcrsity, University of
Defiance
2010-2011
academic Dayton,
Deni on
year. All of the o.;cholar- College,
The
ship \\ere facilitated University.
through grants to state- University of Findlay,
based pri\ ate college Franciscan Uni'liersity of
a'\sociations around the Steubenville, Franklin

University. Heidelberg
Universitv,
Hiram
College, ·John Carroll
University,
Kenyon
College, Lake
Erie
College,
Lourdes
College,
Malone
University.
Marietta
College, Unh ersity of
Mount Union. Mount
Vernon
Nazarene
Unhersity, Muskingum
Unh ersitv, Notre Dame
College, Oberlin College,
Ohio
Dominican
University,
Ohio
Northern
Unhersity.
Ohio
Wesleyan

University.
University,

Otterbein $46 million in scholarUrbana ship ~upport to more than
Univer~ity,
Ursuline 15,000 students nationCollege,
Wulsh wide.
University. Wilmington
"A college
College.
Wittenberg opens the door to cou
University and The less opportunities,'' said
College of Wooster.
Ken Sternad. president of
The UPS Educational The UPS Foundation.
Endowment Fund, which "UPS takes great pride in
is held and administered our long-standing partby FIHE, v.as initiated nership with FIHE and in
through endov. ment g1fts our support of thou ands
from the UPS Foundation of students over the vears
totaling $4 million and is \\ ho ha\ e been able to
now \alued at $35 mil- pursue an education from
lion. Since its inception, our nation's private colthis fund has a\\urded leges."

Panel discussions hosted by Rio
RIO GRANDI::. - 'I he
Unhersity
of
Rw
Gmnde and Rio Glcllldc
Community College will
host a panel discussion
on the topic of cultc; on
Thursday. Oct. 7.
The panel discussion.
v. hich is o;ponsored by
Grunde
the
Rio
Chapfaincy, "ill begin at
7 p.m. in Room J 18 in
Bob Evans FanllS Hall.
All Rto Grande students
and community member&lt;;, arc invited to attend
and participate in the
discussion .

' Jhe panel discussion
promises to be intcrestmg and educational, and
it also sen·es as an LA
101 credit for Rio
Grande students.
The "What's A Cult?"
discussion v. ill feature a
panel of e.'tperts v. ho
''ill provide information
and different views on
cults and topics related
to cults. The panel members will look at question uch a "What really makes up a cult?" and
"What's it to me?"
Many people consider

cult~ as religious groups
they do not know much
about and they don't
think they will ever
encounter a cult or be
affected by one. They
also don't realL~e how
cults can drav. people in
emotionally.
The speakers at the
panel di cu sion .... ill
mclude Larry Pile, v. ho
v. orks as a counselor at
the We11springs facility
in
Meigs
County.
Wellspring is a nationally-knov. n cult rehabilitatiOn center and works

River Cities Symphony
presents 13th season
PARKERSBURG,
W.Va.- Music Director
and Conductor Robert
Turizziani ha prepared a
joyful program for the
Ri\er Cities Symphony
Orchestra's 2010-2011
concert sea on.
1be concert season wi11
begin v.tth a Messiah
Sing-A-Long. The event
be held at the First
Presbyterian
Church,
I 341 Juliana Street,
Parkersburg on Dec. 19
at 3:00 p.m. There is no
admission .
Jlowevcr.
monetary donations and
non-perishable foods me
welcome for the local
food pantries. Attendees
arc requested to bring
yolll own mu:-.k s~o:orc ,,s
only a limited numbers of
copies ''ill be available
for purchase.
The Annual Wmter
Choral Concert will be
held Feb. 27. 2011, at 7
p.m. at the Saint Mary's
Church in Mariett.l. The
Marietta College Concert
Choir and the Marietta
Oratorio Chorus. directed
by Dr. Daniel Monck,
As ociate Professor of
Music and chair of the
Edward E. MacTaggart
Music Department at
Marietta College, will
join the RCSO.in the performance of Bach selections, including the cantata \Vachel Auf. featul ing solo vwlinist, John
Harrison.
The Spring Concert
will be prc,ented &lt;II
Parkersburg South Iligh
School on April I at X
p.m. This concert will be
d collaboration of the
RCSO and the Schrader
Youth Ballet. The students of the SYB will

''ill

perform with the RCSO
to a composition written
by Sergei Prokofie\ during 1936 in the USSR.
Prokofiev wa::. commissioned by the Central
Children's Theatre in
Moscow to write a nev.
mu ical symphony for
children. The intent wa:s
to cultivate "musical
tastes in children from
the first years of school."
Intrigued by the im·itation, Prokofiev complc\ed Peter and the Wolf in
just four days. The program will also include
Serenade for Strings by
TchaikO\ ~ky
and
Cmnival of the Animals,
featuring pianists Debbie
(iro-,s
and
Victoria
Berne king.
Also, on April l, the
RCSO will present two
Adventures in Music
Education Program' earlier in the day for elementary and middle
school tudents. These
performanc~ will be for
student'&gt; from the feeder
schools of Parker.sburg
South High School and
WJII be held at the high
school.
New and old reinforce
each other at the best of
concerts. That's the
promise f01 the conclu~ion ol
the RCSO's
2010-2011 season with
the Pop' Around the
World concert that will
indude light classical
and l'Ontemporary selections. The concert will be
May 20, 2011 at 80 p.m.
at the Lafayette Hotel, in
~larietta. Due to limited
seating. reservations arc
suggested for this concert
and tickets \\ill be sold at
the door only if seating is

with former cult member'&gt; from acros" the
country. The
other
speakers for the evening
will
include
Greg
Schrader of the Gallia
County Probate Court
and Ron Bynum from
the Radney PikeJ:hYJ.ch
of God.
The panel member
..., ill each be im ited to
make short presentations, and then thev ''ill
answer que~tion" ·from
the audience members.
Audience members are
also im ited to share their

comments during the "ide range of issues.
The next panel discusdiscussion.
Audience
member' sion will focus on the
who have questions but topic of addictions, and
do not wnnt feel com- It will be held on
fortable asking the ques- Thursday, Nov. 4 begintions in person during ning at 7 p.m. in Bob
the discu sian are al o E' ans Farm~ Hall.
For more information
imit~ to .ubmJt ~~r
·
que lion
m Y.ntJng on the panel
before the event begins. call Marshall Ki
The
Rio
Grande 1-800-282-7201.
Chaplamcy span ors tHe additiOnal informatiOn
panel discussion: as a on the wide range of
programs
v. ay to allo'' tudents academic
and community mem- offered on Rio Grande's
bers to hear from experts scenic .campus, log onto
on different ides of a \\ \\ w.no.edu.

For the Record
Middleport .

Cited for failure to
with the order of
the court: :t.•ach Custer,
Arlie
Frye.
Curtis
Lambert. Earl McKinley,
Amy Patterson. \1ichael
Pierce.
~.:omply

pain:
9:20
p.m ..
Gallia/Meigs county line.
motor vehicle collision.
Tuesdav
I: 15 a:m.. Wolfe Pen
Road. diabetk emergency.

MIDDLEPORT
available.
Information. rc erva- The following were fined
tions and season tickets in Middleport Mayor\
are c~vailablc by email at Court: :\1ichael Gomez.
info@ rcso.us or by call- $545, ob~tructing official
ing 304-424-3457. ext . busine~s: Kevin Harris.
'
911
222 or 304-485-7068. $245. cultivating marijuana;
Carolyn
Lambert.
Individual ticket for
POMEROY - Meigs
each concert may be pur- $195, failure to apply
County
911 dispatched
child
restraint.
chased one hour before
Keeping Meigs &amp;
the
e
calls
for emergency
Lowe.
$395.
Dennis
each concert. Ticket are
Gallia informed
S15 for adults and 8 for dri\ ing under court -..us- medical assistance:
pension.
$75.
unsafe
Monda'
students from kinder9:06 a.m.. Chester
vehicle. $75, driving on
garten to college.
~unba!'
Road.
chest pain; 10:38
sidev.
alk
or
curb:
Zach
If pecial accommoda~imrs -~entinel
tions nrc required by Meadows, $200, no eye a.m.. Sellers Ridge Ro.1d,
Mary fall: 11 : 12 a.m.. South
indivtduals \\ ith disabili- protection;
MeigS • 992·2155
ties, please call at lea'\t Shoemaker. $595. recch- Fifth Avenue. P'Ychiatric
Galla • 44&amp;2342
t\\o weeks in achancc for ing stolen property; emergcnc) .
12:
19
p.m.,
Railroad
Deangelo
Thompson.
arrangements.
Funding for these con- $395. drh ing under coutt Street, difticulty brl'athing;
I :27
p.m ..
certs is available in part suspension.
Rocko.;prings
Road,
chest
'l)der
Wamsley.
S
195.
by th~o.· West Vi1g111ia
pos~cssion
of drugs.
Commis~ion on the ArtsDi' is ion of Culture :md $200. posses..ion· of drug
History, the Artsbritlge paraphernal in; Vincent
Arts
hmd.
the Demarco. $195. disorderconduct:
Mark
Parkersburg Community h
Rathbum,
$595.
receiving
NOW IS THE TIME FOR
Foundation, and the
stolen property.
Colony Theatre.

FISH DAY!
STOCKING!

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* Bluegill (HI'\'am) • Minno"' • Rlark Crappie (if&amp;\ ail)
• Gross Carp

\Vednesday, October 13" 2010
Bid" ttl Jlard\1&amp;1'\'
In Bid"eU, Oil
12 :'\oon • 1 pm

~hade

Rher AG ~en ire
In l'omero), 011
l· 3 pm

The J'eed Stop
In (;allipoli"- 011
4·5pm

TO PLACE AN ORDER CALL 1-80()-247·2615
www.farteysfishfarm.com
FARLEYS ARKANSAS PONDSTOCKERS, INC.

Keeping Meigs County informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today

740-992-2156
..

;
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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Sports Briefs, l,age B2

l,rcp I"otchook, 1•age H6

~.SclfEDUI£
POM[ROY - A sthedulo ol upco ong
hogh school varsity aport ng ovon•a
onvolv n; teams from M0191 Ma:10 and
Gall counu •

~.~!I
Volleybtlll
Meogs at Southern 6 p m
Tr mblo at,Wahama &amp; p m
South Galla at Federal Hocking 6
pm
•
Cross Country
Eastern SouthOtn Mo g at
Alexander 4 30 p m
Po nt Pleasant at Charleston
CathOliC lnvltati nal TBA

Soccer
Point Pleasant (BJ at Charleston
CathOliC 7 p m

'IhluGIY. Octobor..Z
Volleyball
Ch ocothe at Gat a Aca 5 15 p m
Federal Hocking at fastem 6 p m
Waterford 111 Sot.thern () p M
Wellston at Me gs 6 p m
Rock H I at RIVOr Vn loy 5 30 p m
Po1nt Pleasant at Herbel! Hoover, 6
pm
Hannon at OVCS 6 p m
Cross Country
Me gs Soutrorn at Logon TBA

Soccer
logon at Oollla Acadorry 5 p m
Potnt Pleasant (B) at Ironton St
Joe 6 pm
f iuth Pont at OVCS 5 30 p m

SSAC football
computer ratings

PORTS
Amsbary ends
season at districts
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS
BWA

T

RS MYOAILVTRIBUNI"" COM

Wt:ST LAFAYETTE,
Ohio - ~astern junior
Chnstian Amsbar) had
his 20 I 0 golf &lt;;euson
come to a close Monday
afternoon after failing
to qualify out ol the
Dl\ is ion Ill d1stnct
tournament held at
Rher Greens Golf
Course in Coshocton
County.
Amsbary - making
the first district appearance of his prep career
f1red a 30-over par
round of I 02 at the
e\ent, wh1ch left him
well out of qual if) mg
range for the &lt;;tate tournament.

Amsbar), however,
wJII ha\e another year
to pursue that goal and
w1ll gam some most
valuable
expenence
from th1s week. It will
,llso mark the second
year in n row that Meigs
County w11l not have a
competitor at the D-3
state meet. Bryan Hams
of Southern la&lt;&gt;t accom
phshed th.tt feat in
2008
Fmrfield
Christian
Academy \\on the D-3
district title as n team
with a score of 328, followed hy Wellington
"'ith
330
and
Sugnn.:reek Garaway
with 339. Centerburg
Please see Amsbary, 81

PARKERSBURG W Va (AP)
The
Secondary
School
Act v ties
CommiSSIOrt s high school lootba I
computer ratings released Tu soay
With team records and po~nts The
top 16 teams at the end ot the rogular season q
fy lor the playolts
beginn g Nov 12

ClASS AM
1 GeorgoWa h
2 Mart nsburg
3 UnJVers ty
4 HurriCane
5~tal
5 S hartcstof'
7 Brooke
e) Morgantown
Noeholas Co
10 B!idgepoft
11 A C Byrd
12 Spring Valley
13 Fairmont Sr
14 Low1sCo
15 Loga"
16 Parkersburg
17 N Maroon
(lie) Parkersburg S
19 Cabo I Mid and
(t e~ R vers de
(teSt A~ns

g

6-0
6-0
6-0
5-t
4 1
4·1
4·1
5·1
5·1
41
42
4·2
32
42
32
3-3
3·3
3·3
2·3
2·3
23

1417
14 00
13 67
1150
,, 40
1140
1100
, 100
1063
1000
950
863
860
7 67
760
633
600
600
')40
540
540

ClASSAA
Ravcn5wood
G cenbr rW
Cttapmanv o
4 Bluefi ld
5 Magnola
6 James Monroe

5-0
6-0
5-1
5-1

5-0

5-1
5-1
ge~~~iSOil 4 1
4 1
9 Frankfort
4·1
(tle~PI. Pleasant
11
ayne
4·1
4·2
12 PkeVIOW
(!Je) Tug Va oy
5·1
14 Poca
3·2
4·2
15 OakGI n
4 1
16 A1ver Vlow
4·2
17 Broxton Co
(llo) Shady Spn:l 42
19 Liberty Rae g
4·2
20 Herbert Hoover 3·3

1060
1050
983
933
920
833
833
820
800
800
760
7 67
767
720
717
700
667
6 67
633
583

CLASS A

•

1. Wahama
5-0
5-0
2 Meadow Bridge
4·1
3 Tucker Co
4 B1shop Donahue 6-0
4·1
5 Matewan
5·1
6 East Hardy
4·1
(t1e)W1rtCo
4 1
8 Will amstown
32
9. Whee ng Cent
5·1
10 Buttalo
5·1
(tlc) Fnycnevt le
4·1
12 Van
41
13 Madonna
42
14 Pend ton Co
15 St Ma~
3·2
16 Parker
rg Call' 4 2
17 Mount Hopo
32
18 Pocahontas Co 3-3
2-3
19 Man
3-3
3-2
e)Richwood
S Harrlso:'l

8.20
7 80
7 40
733
720
700
700
660
640
633
633
600
560
550
540
511
440
433
420
400
400

Charleston
Daily Mail poll
CHARLESTON W Va CAP)
The
Charleston Dmly Mall high ochool
football poll, as voted on by Wost
V1rgmla sportswnters, with llrst
place votes In parontho es. 'record
and total po nts

OLASSAAA
1 G Washington (16) 6-0
195
2 Unrverslty (I)
6-0
161
3 S Charleston (1)
41
152
6-0
147
4 Martinsburg (2)
5. BrOOke
4·1
112
6 Captta
4 1
108
7 Morgantown
5 t
91
8 Hurncane
51
65
5·1
39
9 NiCholas Co
42
14
10 Spring Val ey
Others Brldg port 8 Parkersburg 3
Robert C Byrd 3 Fa rmont Sen or 2

CV.SSAA
1 Magno (11)
5-0
186
2 B uef old (7)
5-1
t67 3
3 Ravenswood (2)
5..0
149
4 Groonbr e• W
6-0
t 32
5 ChapMBrMliO
5-1
113
6 Wayne
4·1
69
7. Pt. Pleasant
4·1
75
James Monroe
5·1
43
Roane Co
4·1
34
R1ver View
4·1
32
L berty
Frankfort 27
10. PtkeV•ow 8, Poca 6
Oak Glen 5

CLASS A
1 Blsh Donahue (10) 6 0
175
2. Williamstown (3)
4·1
141
3 Madonna (1)
4·1
137
4. Wheeling Cent (3) 3·2
127
116
5 Mcadow Brldgo (2) 5..0
8. Wohama (1)
5&lt;0 113
7 Buffalo
5·1
74
8 Foyottev to
5-1
50
9 Matawan
4 1
48
10 East Hardy
s- I 24
(toe) W rt Co
4·1
24
Others Tuell r County 7 Man 3
Moorefield 1 St Marys 1

\:VL'&lt;lnesday, October 6, 2010

Point battles
Lady Huskies to
scoreless draw
B Y B RYAN WALTERS

.

BWALTERS@MYOAILYRIBUNE' COM

POINT PLEASAKT.
W.Va. - The Point
Pleasant girls soccer
team tried its best to
send ~ix seniors out m
st) le Tuesda) night
against 'isiting Herbert
Boo\ er. but the halfdozen upperclassmen
didn't leave Senior
Night on a bad note
either
following
a
scorele!)s dra\\ in a
Cardinal Conference
m.ttchup 111 Ma:.on
Cllllllty.
1 he
host
Lad)
Knight&gt;. (4·9-1) outshot
the Lady llusk1es (5-8-

3) b) a 10-6 margin, but
neither squad had any
luck in getting the ball
in the back of the net.
PPHS also outshot
Herbert Hoo' er b) a 61 margin in the first
halt.
A hle) Burns m.tde
six save Ill net for
Point Pleasant, "hde
Ta) lor Coleman made
10 a\ es in goal for
HHHS. Point ,dc;o had a
2-1 edge in corner
kicks. "'hile the Lad)
Huskie'&gt; claimed a 5-3
ad\antagt: in direct
kicks.
Seniors Ashley Burns.
Please see Point.. 86

Lucas 6th after opening
round of state tourney
B Y SARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY MYOAILYTR BlJNE COI.I

of Lucas
Ritchie Count) leads
the Class AA team competition \\ ath an opening
da) score of 251. Poca is
in second "ith n score of

WHEELING. W.Va. Point Pleasant'c; Opie
I ucas is in sixth place in
Class AA following 155.
In Class AAA. Ru sell
Tuesda) 's opening round
nt
Ogleba)
Park's James of Brooke lead
v. ith n round of 76, while
Speidel Golf Course.
Lucas tired a tina \\heeling Park, l•airmont
round 83 to place in sixth Senior and Bridgeport
at the half Wa) point nf arc tied forth~ top in the
team competition \\ ith
the toumament.
Poe a's
George scores of 246.
In Class J\, Andrew
Hnmrick holds the individual lead in Class AA. Gobleck ol 1\ladonna
shooting a round of 77. hol&lt;l&lt;&gt; .t 10 stroke kad
Chapmnnville's
Za(.'h after &lt;;ht)ol i ng a 74.
&lt;lrec;ham (78) is second. Madonna leads the temn
J~itchic County's Jordan compctitiun '' ith a o;core
Shaffer (80). Shady of 251.
'J'hc final round "iII
Spring's Evan Thompson
(80), and Tug Valle) 's begin at 9 a.m. on
Davey Jude (80) are nll \\edncsda) in \\'heeling.
tJed for third just ahead \V.Va.

Meigs holds
off NYHS
in five
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWl.EYOMYDAILYTfl BUNE COM

NELSONVILLE.
Ohio - The Meigs l ady
~1arnuders led 2-0 after
two sets on Tuesday
Sarah H awley/file photo
evening, but NelsonvilleEastern golfer Christ1an Amsbary putts on the first York forced Meigs to
green dunng the Riverside H1gh School Invitational win it in five on Tuesday
held on Sept. 25. Amsbary's season came to an end evening.
on Monday at the district tournament.
Meigs (9-8. 4-3 TVC
Ohio) won the first two
sets by scores of 25-22
and
25-23.
before
Nelsom ille-York (J 3-4,
4-4 TVC Ohio) won the
third and fourth by
cores of 25-23 and 25·
19. The Lady Marauders
held off NYHS in the
fifth. winning by a score
of 15-12.
Emalee Glass led
Meigs with 12 points,
followed by Jordan
Anderson with nine.
Chel ,ea Patterson with
se•.:t:n. Chandra Stanley
with five. Shellie Bailey
with four. Valerie Conde
wlth three, Miranda
Grueser with two, and
Morgan Howard with
one.
Grueser and
Stanley each had one
ace.
Bailey led the team
v. ith 16 kills. Howard
had 15 kills. ' Ali on
Brov.n had 13 kills.
Stanley had 10 kills,
Alaine Arnold had two
kills, and Glass added
one kill.
Glass had 48 assists in
the match, with Grueser
adding two and Conde
one. Bailey and Stanley
each had two blocks and
Howard had one.
In the first match of the
sea on. Nelsonville-York
defeated Meigs by scores
of 27-25, 25-11. 23-25.
·~~~~!:~= and_ 26-24 on Sept. 2 at
;;;:
. Meigs.

I

L ADY R AIDERS AVENGE
LOSS TO S OUTH POINT

SOUTH POI.l\~. Ohio
- The River Valley
Lad) Raiders (13-6. 8-1)
defeated South Point on
Tuesday evening in an
Ohio Valley Conference
match in South Point.
Ohio.
The win ties the Lad)
Raiders with South Point
for first place in the
Point Pleasant's Emily Kitchen, left, battles a Herbert OVC "'ith one match
Hoover player for the ball dunng Tuesday evening's remaining.
The Lady Raiders
game in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
dropped the tirst match
to South Point this season in four sets. with the
Jo-.s snapping River
Valley's 39-match OVC
''in streak.
On Tuesday. the Lady
Raider defeated South
Point in five sets b)
score~ of 24-26, 25-21.
16-25.25-18, and 15·8.
Kate I) n Birchfield led
the Lad) Raiders with 13
point
(five
aces).
Kel-..e) Sands and Kelcie
Carter had 10 points
each. Kaitl) n Roberts
added eight points (two
aces). Ashley Randolph
h~1d se\ en points (five
aces). and Beth .Misner
had n, c points.
!rae} Roberts led the
team at the net with IQ
1\ills.
followed
by
Kaitlyn Roberts with
nine kills, B"n:hfield
ad&lt;kd seH'll kil ls. (.,t1el"
had fi\'e kills. and S.1nds
Sarah Howteylltlo photo
had three kills.
Point Pleasant's Opie Lucas putts during the
The Lad) Raiders al-.o
Riverside High School Invitational. Lucas Is currently
participating in the W.Va. State Tournament.

Please see Roundup, 86

�Pugc U2 • The Daily SentinPl

www.mydailysentinel.com

W.Va. high school golf
tournament begins
WHEELING. W.Va.
Andrew Gobleck
~hot n J over-par 74
Tucsdn) to help give
Madonna the first-day
lead nt the Cia s A high
school go I r tournament at
Wheeling's
Oglebay
Park
Madonna has u 17stroke
lencl
over
P.\rkersburg Catholic.
ChMieston Cnthohc and
Man are tied for third.
Goblerk is I 0 strokes
ahead of Charleston
Catholic'~ D,tvid Miller
(AP) -

in the individual standings.
In
Clas~
AAA,
Wheeling Park, Fairmont
Semor and Bridgeport
are tied for the team lead,
while Brooke's Russell
James shot 5-over 76 to
lead three others by one
stroke.
In Class AA. Ritchie
County has a four-shot
lead over Poca, while
Chapmanville is third.
Poea's George Hamrick
posted the day's low
score, a 6-over 77.

W.Va. high school golf tournament first
round team and individual scores

Volley for the Cure Match at SHS
RACINE. Ohio - The Southern volleyball team
will be hosting Eastern in the Volley for the Cure
match at Southern High School on TIHirsday, Oct. 14
at 6 p.m. Anyone wearing pink to the contest will be
cligable for door prizes.
The Volley for the Cure event is a tradition that
dates back to 2006 when Sycamore and Loveland
played in the inaugu~ctl event. The event was created
to honor and celebrate the heroic fight against breast
cancer. For the match, both teams wear pink uni fonns. and the match was played with a pink and
white ball. The event ts held in high schools across
Ohto to raise awareness among students, teachers,
nnd fans.

Point Baseball Boosters meeting
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Point Pleasant
High School Baseball Boosters will meet on at 6:30
p.m. on Thesday. Oct 12, in the Commons Area.
Election of oflicers will be held and everyone interested in joining the boosters are invited.

BIDWELL. Ohio - The River Valley Rinky Dink
Association, formerly known as the Vinton-Addaville
Rinky Dink Association, will be holding an awareness meeting concerning the forming of a combined
youth basketball league for boys and girls grades 4-6.
The meeting will take place at River Valley High
School on Monday, Oct. II at 7: 15 p.m.

Syracuse co-ed softball benefit

TEAMSCOR
1 Madonna
r!&lt;ersb\Jrg Ca

es on Ca

2010

Sports Briels

River Valley Rinky Dink Meeting

CLASS A

Wednesday, October 6,

SYRACUSE. Ohio - A co-ed softball tournament
1 "'iII be held on October 16-17 to benefit the tornado
I victims of Meigs County at the Syracuse Park. There
are to be five girls and 1ive gu.Ys on a team. A donation station will be set up with mformation on what is
still needed.
Contact Lee Gillian at (740) 707-2270 for more
information.

Ingels makes ace at Riverside
MASON. W.Va. - York Ingels of New Haven,
W.Va.. made his second career hole in one on the 220
yard II th hole at Riverside Golf Course on Saturday.

Oct. 2.

1ngels used a five wood for the shot, which was witnessed by Chuck Stanley, Bill Zuspan, and Ray
Redman. It was the 17th ace of the season at
Riverside.

Bulger set f'or WVU
Sports Hall induction
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - Baltimore
Ravens quarterback Marc Bulger is among seven people being inducted into the West Virginia University
Sports Hall of Fame this weekend.
The public can attend the indu&lt;;tion ceremonies free
of charges at I p.m. Saturday at the Caperton Indoor
Practice Facility next to Mountaineer Field in
Morgantown.
Bulger was a three-year starter at WVU from I &lt;l9799. He played nine seasons for the St. Louis Rams
before being released in April.
Joining Bulger in this year's class are basketball
standout Bobby Carroll, rifle national champion AnnMarie Pfiffner Johnson, pitcher John Radosevich,
two-sport standout Remme Retton, former sports
information director Eddie Barrett and the late Bill
Karr.
Retton·~ daughter is Olympic gold medalist Mary
Lou Retton.

Ohio Stadium food
workers threaten strike
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- A food service company says a ~trike threat from some of its employees
won't affect concession stands at Ohio State football
•
games.
Service EmplO) ees International Union spokes
woman Laurie Couch says Sodexo workers who want
to unionize have voted to allow a strike for what they
say is retaliation for organizing. She say~ eight workers staged a strike Saturday at a Columbus Crew
game, but such a strike has not been scheduled at
Ohio State.
, Sodexo spokesman Alfred King says contingency
plans are in place if workers strike Saturday. when the
Buckeyes host Indiana. He ays the Gaithersburg,
.Md. based company respects workers' rights to join a
union and that the SEIU has made false claims.
Sodexo employs about 100 people at Ohio State
who prepare and distribute food to conce!)sions stands
staffed by volunteers.

Pryor will be back, but Moeller lost for season

Amsbary
from l,agc Bl
was the final state qualifying StJUad by finishing fourth with a 340.
The four Individual
qualifiers for state were
Tanner
Stoffer
of
Ridgewood (77). Za~k
Wax of River !77).
Jo~eph
Whiston of
Mount Gilead (77) and
Duane
Irvin
of
Huntington Ross (81 ).
Ryan
Troyer
of
Garaway \vas the indi' idual medalist with a
1-under par round of
71, followed by runnerup Garnc.;on Mvles of
Centerburg wit11 a 75.
Only eight individuals
turned 111 rounds under
80.
Rtdgewood was fifth
just missing out on
qualifying as a team with 347, followed by
Newark Cntholic and
Zanesville Rosecrans
with
357.
Newark
C:atholic claimed sixth
plnce on n tiebreaker.
Wheelersburg (359).
Waterford
(367).
Portsmouth Clay (373)

and Belpre t383) roundout the 11-team
field.

ed

COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - All of Ohio was
on edge on Saturday
afternoon and it had nothing to do with the hotly
contested
upcoming
statewide elections.
This was serious stuff:
Ohio State was on the
ropes.
The
second-ranked
Buckeyes led 14-10 midway through the second
half at Illinois with standout quarterback Terrelle
Pryor in the locker room
getting treatment for an
tnjured leg.
It was then that coach
Jim Tressel decided to
control the ball with his
running attack and rely on
his defense. It'!) an
approach that has resulted
in lots of wins while confounding critics who
believe Tressel pia) s such
games way too close to
the sweater vest
''We kind of got that
momentum going with
the two-back looks."

Tressel said of his conservative approach after
Pryor went out \Vith a
strained left thigh muscle.
''If there was a moment
where we felt like, 'Hey,
we needed to do something
movement-wise
with Terrelle to make the
difference in the game,·
we would have (done it).
But we just didn't see the
need."
Pryor returned but the
Buckeves were going to
play ii safe. They were
content to feed the ball on
almost every snap to
physical tailback Dan
Herron, who helped Ohio
State control the ball for
almost 9? minutes in the
fourth quarter and hang
on for a 24-13 victory.
Herron had four carries
for 6 yards at halftime,
but was called on 19
times in the second half,
gaining 89 yards.
It was vintage Tressel:
milk the clock, stay on the
ground. frustrate the

defense, trade field position and make the lead
stand up.
At times, he even used
seven offensive linemen
to gain control of the line
of scrimmage. It was as tf
the Buckeyes turned the
clock back to the mid1970:..
with Archie
Griffin scissoring through
tiny holes for big yards
behind a massive front
wall.
"We couldn't have \von
that ballgame had we not
started running the ball
better. especially with the
nature of that game."
Tressel said after running
his Ohio State record to
99-21. ..That was an oldfashioned
Big
Ten
slugfest.''
With the Buckeyes (50. 1-0) ho~ting lndtana (31. 0-1) on Saturday. circurr stances might force
Ohto State to follow that
familiar template once
again.
After the game Pryor

said that the injury limited
his effectiveness in the
fourth quarter. opening
the door to putting the
outcome in the hands of
the running game.
Tressel satd Pryor hasn't really been tested
week. The Buckeyes
through drill!&gt; and weig
liftin!! on Sunday. then
had Monday off.
"[ would expect every
day he'll get closer to 100
percent;' Tre sel said of
his junior quarterback. "1
think he 'II be fine.''
Else\\ here,
the
Buckeyes are not so fine.
One of the emotional
leader!) of the defense,
fifth-year !)enior defensive back Tyler Moeller.
was lost for the season
with a tom pectoral muscle.
Tressel said Oh10 Swte
would appeal to t11e
NCAA to a&lt;:k for .Moeller
to receive a sixth year of
eligibility due to medical
hardship.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

MORE LOCAL
NE\VS.
MORE LOCAL
FOLKS.
Sub~cnbe

today.
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DHcrlption • Include A Prkt • Avoid Abbre\'latlons
• Include Phone HumMr And Address When N~edtd
• AdJ Should llun 7 O.ys

How you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
./~
Borders$3.00/ perad
~
, .l
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1 .00 for large

~
lr1'

P01.1C1ES ONo ~lty PubQihlllJ rtetn'lll!!e :1gl1110 edll. rejtcl, 01 C8ncelany ICIIII any time. Err011 mUll be rtpOI!ICI on tilt trll 4aj of pUllb!IOII and u.
T~~nai-Rtglller w1ll be respo!Wiblt lor 110 more tMII tilt COli of tr. ep.ce OCCI&lt;Pitll by tilt error ll1d only lht nrs~lnleftlo&lt;\ Wt ahll1101 be liable 10r
any 1oM or IXJ)tl1le thlrt rnuttsi!Otll tilt publ catiOn or 01111alon of tniGvtrtlsemam. Cor:ec:tlon wtn bo lll*ltln lht lll1l Halllbl~ eclitlon • Box numbtt 1c19 ·
are lllwt)'l conlidtllllal • C"renl rslt C8rd tppDea. • Aline I trrl. . edve!ll_,enta are IUbJociiO ll'e Federll Fllr Houclng Act of 19613 • Thll newtpll*
ICCfptJ only help Wlrtod till mNIJ~ EOE llandarda. We will not k:no;lfngly ICOiplll'f ldttltlslng In wloiiiiOn ot thlllw Wll 1101 be mpgclSlble lOt any
1

errors In an ad !Jken onr the phono.

300

Services

Home Improvements

Basement
Waterproofing
Appliance Services
Uncondttioralllfetlme
guarantee Local
Joe's TV Repair on references furn1shed
most
makes
&amp; Established 1975 Call
Models. House Calls 24 Hrs 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
304·675·1724
Waterproofing

$100 REWARD lor a
Black
&amp;White
Maltepoo Pup, Lost
from Green Valley
Dr 81dwell740) 441· ~Smoo
-th
~--~10 p
1440
Kenmore
Electnc
York Range $250.00 Call
Lost
Blond
shtre F No tall, 740) 388·8372

about 101bs, Soph1e,
small reward 740· Child / Elderly Care
794·0321
Rooms avatlable lor
FOUND-New Haven
clients needmg 24 hr
area mall black dog
w. e-hatred w/ camo care at Darst Adult
Group Home, 740·
collar 304·882·3570
992·5023

Other Services
Pet Cremat1ons. Call
74 44 3745
(). 6-

-

--

'r-LGoking For~

A New Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Line
Dandng
Lessons at Merry's
Family Wmery Every
Thursday 7·9 740·
388-0578.

Financial
DIBK.1Y.
NOTICE
OHIO
Limited Time Offer!
VAL fY PUBLISHING
Free HD for Life.
CO recommends that
EASIJB$_
Ask
how by calling
~u do bus1ness With
RELIEF
DlrecTV today!
people you know and
Packages start at
NOT to send money Do you owe over
through the mall unltl $10000 to the IRS?
$29.99.
Stop wage
yo~; have Investigating
1-866-541-0834
theoffenng.
garntshments and
bank levtes
Pictures that
Set11e Out Over Due
DlSli
have been
Taxes for Less
NETWORK
1-888·692·5739
placed in ads at
It's Finally FREEl
the Gallipolis
Free HD for life"
Dally Tribune
and over 120
Home
Improvements
m ust be picked
channels on ly
within 30 days.
$24.99/month."
ah
your ·cond1t1ons apply,
Any pictures For
construction needs
that are not
promo code MB45
Also Winterizing! 24 Call Dish Network
picked up will
hr service 304·593·
Now
be
0859
1-8n-464-361 9 •
discarded.

Other Services

Money To Lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart
Life lock
Contact
the
Ohio
Free Document
Divrsten of Financial
Shredder for new Institutions Office of
Affa11s
Llfelock members. Consumer
BEFORE you refinance
Call Today
1·888-758·3029 and your home or obta1n a
loan
BEWARE of
use promo code
requests for any large
SHREDDER
advance payments of
tees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
V.QtiAGE
Aff1ars toll free at 1·
Get One Month
866-278·0003 to leam
FREEl Unlimited
if the mortgage broker
local and long
or lender is properly
distance calling for licensed (This is a
only $25.99 per
public
serviCe
announcement from the
month.
Ohio Valley Publishing
Call today!
Company)
1·866-798-0692
Education

Busine» &amp; Trade
School

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY "Gallipolis
Career
SSI
College
(Career's
No Fee Unless We
Close To Home)
Win!
CaiiTodayl 740·446·
1-888-582-3345
4367
1-800·214·
0452
SEPTIC
PUMPING Accredited
Member
Gallia Co. OH and Accrediting Counc.t for
lnclepeodent Coneges and
Mason Co. WV. Ron Schools 12748
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528
6 0°
Animals

mrtbune

if)olnt ~leasant ~egtster
. The Daily Sentinel
~unbap \&amp;lutes -~entinel

CONVFNIFNTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses tor rert.
Call 740-441-1111 for
applicatiOn
&amp;
mtormat10n
Free Rent Special
Ill
2&amp;3BR apes $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
lhe hours of 8A-8P
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882·3017

3 family basement.
garage &amp; barn clean
out, Salem Center
School Lot Ad, Oct. -2n-d- flo_o_r _ 2- B-R
8,9,10, 2010. 9am-? apartment.

500

~allipoHs ~atb'

5 Fam1ly Garage
Sale Oct 7 &amp; 8 al
2534
Georges
Crk,Rd Child 2T-3T,
Adult sm-Pius, Car
Seat,Swing,Stroller
w1th Infant Car Seat,
Wood H1gh Chatr,
Exotrc Knifes. Home
Decor X-mas, Lots of
Misc.

Apartments/
TownhouHs

3 Family Yard sale Tw1n RIVers Tower s
145 Lanat Dr. Oct 7· accept1ng applications
for waiting list for HUD
9, 10-?
subSICiized,
1·BR
Large Garage Sale apartment lor the
can
245 Oak Dr. Spnng elderly/diSabled,
Valley, New Items. 675-6679
Oct 8 &amp; 9 9am-3pm

Professional Services

• Hometown News
e Area Shopping
e Local Sports
e Community
Calendar
... and much·more.

Yard Sale

Yard Sale 610 3rd
Ave
Oct
6,7,8
Toys,Women,Men,C
hildren Cloth1ng
------Rodney V1llage II 3rd
St last house on the
right Oct 8 &amp; 9, 8·5

Notices

..

.

Meigs County, OH

l\egister

I
200 Announcements

~

(740) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Word Ads

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

'

Websites:
www.mydailytribune.com
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Sentinel

Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

t

'

Pets
Thursday &amp; Fnday,
AKC
Boxers, Wamsley, Teaford &amp;
Lee. Tyree Blvd,
fawn.black/white
ones. 8wks old. 304· Rac1ne
882-2760
Recreational
1000
Vehicles
5 Bantam Roosters
to GIVE-AWAY 304·
576·2704
Cam pol'$ / RVs &amp;
Trailers
700

Agriculture

overlooking Gallipolis
City
Park,
L.R •
kitchen/dining area. 1
112
BA,
washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep. 740-4464425 or 740-4462325
Nice 2BR apt. $350
plus
utilities,
Gallipolis 446·8919
or 446 _207 4
- - - -- -2 BR apt 6 mi from
Holzer. $400 + dep.
Some utilities pd.
740·645-7630
or
740-988·6130

2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps SIX. Excellent
Farm Equipment
condition.
Asktng
See
STIHL Sales &amp; ServiCe $19,900.
Now
Available
at photos
at
Carmichael Equipment www carm1chaeltraile
740·446-2412
~
740-446·
2412
Tara Townhouse Apt
Hay, Feed, Seed,
;;.;..;..;;...._ _..:.,.__ 2BR 1 5 BA, back
Grain
pool,
2000
Automotive patio,
playground. No pets
Good mixed hay, sq., I
$450 rent. 740-367·
$2.50 4x5
round
bales $20.00. Stored Parts &amp; Accessories 0547
ins1de 740-446-2075
900

Merchandise

86 Honda Accord parts
car. new trres. $600.
740·208·7733
Want To Buy

======= ~=~==;;;;.;;;;;;;;;
Furniture

GIVE·AWAY! 11 Love
seat, 2 chairs. lair
condition, call 304·
675·2620
Miscellaneous

Oiler's Tow1ng Now
buymg junk cars
w/motors or wtout
740-388..0011
or
740-441-7870.
No
Sunday call

Beautiful
1BR
apartment In the
country
freshly
painted very clean
WID hook up nice
country setting only
10 m1ns. from town.
Must
see
to
appreciate.
Water
pd $375/mo 614·
595·7773 or 740·
645-5953

Want to buy Junk
Jet Aeration Motors Cars. call 740 •388 •
repaired, new &amp;
0 884
Livestock
rebuilt In stock. Call ~..,..,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,...,
Security
Ron Evans 1-BOoReal Estate
Black Angus Bulls 1
3000
537·9528
Sales
&amp; 2 yr olds, call after
5 pm. 740·288·1460 FIREWOOD &amp; HAY
Pleasant
Valley
Free Home
Security System
Pets
FOR SALE 304·882· For Sale By Owner Apartments Is now
taking
applications
2537
with $99 installat1on
Home for Sale 74
Hall grown Tom cat
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
and purchase of
_a_y_ _ __ Midway Dr. Bidwell Subsidized
to giveaway, btw, ·G-iv-e--A-w
alarm monitoring
$50,000.00
20°o
likes
people.
446·
Chnstmas
Items ?
Apat1ments.
servrces from ADT
down
on
Land
Applications
are
1542
boxes completely lull Contract
Security Services
740·794·
taken Monday thru
Call1 -888-367·2171
304-458·1657
1013
4mth
old
Male
Thrusday
9:00am·
Chihuahua
Pup
Real Estate 1:OOpm. Office is
Want To Buy
3500
Rentals located
at
1151
$250.00/ 14mth old
Absolute
Top
dollarEvergreen
Drive,
female
Chihuahua
400
Financial
Pomt Pleasant, WV.
$200.00.
740)388· silver/gold coins any
1OK/14KI18K
gold
Apartmenb/
(304) 675·5806
8372
J&amp;werly, dental gold.
Townhouses
1935
US
Miniature pre
Financial Services CKC
2BR APTCiose to
Pinscher
Pups. currency proof/mint Holzer Hospital on SR
sets,
diamonds,
MTS
Shots, wormed, Tail
160 CiA (740) 441·
~JLCABD Dock P.O P $250.00 Coin Shop. 151 2nd 0194
Avenue.
Gallipolis.
ea. 740-388-8788
RELIEF
446-2842
1 BR and bath. first
Buried In Credit
months
rent
&amp; New 2Br,
1.5BA
Registered
Card Debt?
deposit. references Townhouse 1 mile
Oct
4·9,
Burnett
Ad
York1es.Champion
Call Credit Card
knacks, reqwed, No Pets from Silver Bridge
Blood Line, Lowest knick
Relief for your
pictures. and clean. 740·441· $550 mon 740-645·
Price Ever 740-441· clothes,
free consultation.
0245
5785
nascars, etc.
9510
1·877·264-8031

API

�Page 84 • TI1e Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentinel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

Houaes For Rent

Valley
V1ew
Apartments
800
State Route 325
Thurman OH 45685
740·245 9170
12
Bedroom apartments
appliances
w th
furmshed on
te
laundry fac1hty Call
for dcta or pick up
application at rental
off•co Poss1b1 1y ol
rental
asststt:nco
Equal
Hous1ng
Opportun 1ty
TOO
419·526·0466 Th1s
lnst•tut•on is an Equal
Opportunity porviCter
and Employer

2 br lor rent or sale
Pomeroy
Full
bnscment w/garage
k1tchcn appliances
w/d hookup
rent
$500/mo
plus
ut•IIIIO • No pets ref
a dep asking
740 992·
$39,900,
f&gt;502

m

------Very f'lce tlome for
rent •n M•ddlepoort
good neighborhood
newly
remodeled
New appliances. 2
bedrooms. 1 bath
largo k•t&lt;.;IIOII, lilJII
room central 8lr &amp;
heat N1ce outdoor
spaces No pe"ts, non
smok1ng Call 740992·9784 or 740
992·5094 for more
deta

4000

FIRST MONTH
FREE
2&amp; 3BRAPTS
$385&amp;
UP Sec Dep $300
&amp; up,
AIC WID hook-up,
ten·
ant pays eloctnc
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882·3017

Help Wanted·
General

Help Wanted·
General

poSlllon ava1lable to
asstst
lnd1v1duals
w1th developmental
d•sabllllies
in
Gallipolis. 13hrlwk
Must have
h1gh
school diploma or
GED, valid dnver's
license, three years
good
dnving
expenence
and
adequate automobile
Insurance. $8.97/hr
after tralnmg. Send
resume to Buckeye
Community Services.
PO
Box
604,
Jackson
Ohio
45640 Deadline for
applicants. 10/4/10.
Pre-employment
drug testmg. Equal
opportumty
Employer

Speaahst To work
with Individuals With
developmental
disabilities assessing
behavior problems
developing effcct1ve
lntervenuons tramlng
staff and monitoring
implementation
of

Help Wanted.
General

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Help Wanted.
General

Medical

Part t1me direct care
poSition
for
Ravenswood,
WV
provld1ng oommun ty
skills training with an
Individual
w1th
MR/00
Seeking
Monday-Friday:
evenmg and mtdmght

STNA's, CNA's &amp;
HHA's If Interested
call740·441·1377

======~===;;;;;;;;== ======;,;; -=~~=~~~ Local Home Health
Wanted
Pan-ume Behav1or
Support Career 0RP-Ottunl1y Direct Care- Full and Agency now h1rlng

Manufactured

Housing

Cleamng
poSlUons
available
m
Pt
Rentals
Pleasant,WV
area
1ndustnal s1nrng 304·
2BR Mob1!e Home 529·7379
water sewer trash
pd
No pets
Johnson s
Mob1!e
Home Park
740·
446-3160

Due to expansion
Into this area we •
have IUII·t1me
positions ava1lablo
Ap:&gt;llcants must be
sharp and have a
sincere desire to
work Those selected
will have excellent
advancement

mtervenlions.
PoSitiOn IS open In
the Ripley area. Must opportunities w1th our
growing company
•
have BAIBS and 2
years
professional We offer $40k·60k
experience working 1st year potent111 t,
with
MHIUU Cash Bonuses,
individuals.
lnaedible lncent1ves,
Experience
and Groat retirement
working knowledge plans 5 days work
of
behavioral week
pnnc1ples
and
techmques preferred Serious Inquires
Salary
negotiable only, please call1·
based
on 866-534-6174
expenence Reply to Tuesday-Wednesday
BSS-R1pley
4834 9am-5pm to request
Ave , an lntervtew Sorry,
MacCorkle
South
Charleston, no phone 1nterv1ews
wv 25309
Ask for Brent
Shepherd

..------~

shifts Saturday and
Sunday·
day
. ·
d h;
evemng and ml n•g
shifts.
For
all
positiOns:
High
school diploma or
GED
required.
Cnminal background
check. Must have
reliable
transportation
and
valid auto insurance
Hourty rate starting
at sa 00-$9.50 hour
based
on
experience
Apply
online
at
http://www.patswv.oo
m or call 304·373·
1011

Get AJump
On

SAVINGS

l'ull) insured
~ n·r l"&gt;timatcs • 25+ years experience

'''~

Shop the
Classifieds!

\

3BR
2BA, $575
mo+dop+uli 1122 5
Chatham Ave 740·
645·1646

1 &amp; 2 br apt &amp;
houses tn Pomeroy &amp; 4 BA 2 BA Mobile
all
appl ,
Middleport NO Pets homo
washer dryer $450
740-992-2218
mo + dep 740-388·
8066 or 740·245·
0001
Middleport
sen or
hv1ng, 2 br turn shed
Soles
apt dep &amp; ref no ======~
pets uti ties pa1d BRAND
NEW
740-992-0165
foreclosure 3br 2ba
ready to move 1nto
Clean,
Nco $39 900 00 Call 740·
EffiCiency 1BDRM 446·3093
Ref Dep NO pets
304-675-5162
6000
Employment

• Prompt and Quality \V.ork
• Reasonable Rates
• Insured • .Experienced
References A' a liable!
Call Gar) Stnnle}

=======

Ccn740-591-8044
Please lea\c

PSI CONSTRUCTION
pedalillng in Insurance Jobs including,
stonn, \\ind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions. Remodtling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, :"ell Homes. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling.
Lirl'nstd &amp; Insured

1·2 BDRM Apts m
PI
Pleasant
all
Child/Elderly Care
t.~ • s pa1d call 304·
360·0163
Do you need a
christian nanny In
Spnng Valley Green your home Reply to
Apartments 1 BR at PO Box 100 Pt.
$395+2 BR at $470 Pleasant, WV
Month. 446·1599
~~~~~=~
Help Wantod •
General
Very Nice 2 &amp; 3
BEDROOM APTS. ~~~~~~
Gallipolis
Local S1te Manager.
Clty.$550.00 &amp; up General
Cleaners,
includes w/alg &amp; and
Floor
Washer &amp;Dryer NO Tectm1c1ans needed
PETS...
740)591· m R•o Grande Must
5174
be dependable and
hard worktng
All
applicants w•ll need
Houses For Rent
to be ab e to pass
1Br cottage off street background drug
pkg very clean $300 screen
To mqUire
mon+utl
446-8919 call 888·806-5720
or446-2074
3BR, 1 BA STove &amp;
Refrtg Furn , Gas
heat,
Cantrall
A!C,WIO hook up,
carport, No Smokmg,
No pets $600 pc~
mo, $600 Dep ,105
Bastlani, Gallipolis
Call
446·3667,
Tak1ng apphcat1ons
House for rent close
to Locks RT62 no
pets. dnnkmg or
smok•ng. must have
refs 304·576-2642

·'"'"•'rd Mllh \lokr \larrum Roolln2 ~ -~~tli~l

Rick Price -17 yrs. Experience
WV#040954 Cell740·416·2960
74()..992-0730 ..

Residential • Commercial
• 'e\\ Homes • Additions
Roofing • Insurance Oaims
I.iccnse • Insured

READ All ABOUT IT
in the
The Daily Sentinel

HEALTH
ABODE
CARE
SERVICES
INC Home Makers,
CNA wanted for
SouthSide
&amp;
Glenwood positions
1·800·327·7262

\!tbe ~alltpolts 1!lailp \!tribune
\!tbe f}otnt f}Ieasant 3Regtster

Exp. Person to assist
w/ m•lkulg on modern
da•ry farm, housing &amp;
utrht1es can be a part
of
package
fax
resume w/ 3 ref to
304·675·5074

304-882-3637 304-882-2728
WV041938

SUNSET CONSTRUCTION
Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Decks, Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free Estimates

740-742-3411

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s

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•
Wednesday, October 6, 201 0

www.mydailysentlnel.com

BLONDIE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun
("i"!li'"""'l:""r\j~~~Jitllr'lllrl

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

,. '

HI &amp; LOIS

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Blood
donation
5Thunder
sound
90ccupied
11 Hooch
12Caravan
creature
13Film
trophy
14Had
dinner
15 Doorways
17Veneer
19 Golf's
Trev1no
20Leg up
21 Porpoise's
place
22 Diner
seating
choice
24 Urgent
call
26 Rude
fellows
29 Tra1n part
30Tyrants
321ncarnations
34 West of
Hollywood
35Gunpowder
ingredient
36Grammar
topic
38 Noted
trailblazer

JOSEPH
39 Longed
40 Goofs
41 Inquisitive
DOWN
1 Print units
2 Place for
three men
3 -uno
4 Part of
Mao's
name
5 Run to
6 Place
7 Flowenng
shrub
8 In Itself
1 0 R1o
Grande
city
11 Dull
fellow

16 Harvest
month
18 Watch
chains
21 Mall unit
23 Even
chance
24 Rescuer
25 Clay, for
one
27 Cheese
choice

28 Play
places
29 "Now it
told"
30Be bold
31 Rundown
33 Some
bills
37Moral
no-no

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
'j'KNOW ... Ll K.E ...
THE USUAl.. .••
... SHTOFF. .. WHATEVER ..

f..o .J
_

·.....

~

..EVERYTHING LEROY
ANTHROPOLOGY
WA5 FROM WATCHING THE FLINT5TONE5 ...

I

..

~~ f

.-JM vJ!I!.

.................... .......,,., ......... _

10,

HAPPY BIR1HDAY for \'\Wncsda)~

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
Dav~ G r~~n

hy

1

2

5

7.

6

5

.... ..
-·10

1

8

4&gt;

9
3
7
9 5

" Mommy. you wanna guess what
I'm thlnkln' about?"

1 3
4

DENNIS THE MENACE

Hank ~etchum

~tion.... rome y~

4 9 3 6 2 7

._

D.o ....... , . _..

Dtfncull\• l.e,el
I

8

** *

S G

v

L 9 6
L G 9 8 6 'V ~ B
~

9 S 6 L 8 ~ B v
B L ~~~-+-G 9 ~ • -~---r6 8 S
6 8 'V S B 9 G L

--+---+--1

~

This )'eaJ; you opcnt to the pos._&lt;&gt;ibilities. Though you mi t spend a lot
of time thinking and re ccting. you
abo come up with unusual an5\\Cl'S.
The quality of your daily life, health
nnd work become an issue. You might
decide on a major change that suit-. the
"new" you. Ifyou an' single, you
could mL&gt;et someone m 2011. Take your
time getting to kn;)w thb JX!Nll1. Alsl:1,
don't commit unless you are ""lire, &lt;h
more than lll'\e !';uitor could hc01d )'(IUr
wa}~ lf you are att.1chcd, you \\.ill want
to keep in mind your partner. H will be
unu-,ually easy to lx."'romc me-oriented.
A fellow LIB~ might sa~ different
but has .;i.milar core i&lt;;:.ues.
TI~e Star$ Show tJre Kuul of Day You11
Ha;-'C' S:Dynmruc; 4-POSltft't'; J-Avemg&lt;',
2-.;(l-$0, 1-bzlftcult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
Dive into work ,,,th a strong
scnsc of what you mlbt do. Sudden

***

3 2 4

7

Od.6, 2010:

6 8 •8 9 S v G
---

G v ~ 6 S B L 9
S B L v G 8 6 ~

·way through

others and/ or some ~t about a
::.i!uation. Po-,tpone any meetings until
L1tcr toda_:.~ Tonight: Defer to othcrs.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
*****Your creativity surges
when in a mc..&gt;cting. Oth&lt;..~ p1 ~"ttl
optims that might not be quilt' work
able, but oould be \\ith sonw touches
and adjustments. New::. from a distance force; a change in your ~h.·dull'.
10n.ight Working lah:&gt;,
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*** You might lx.· ::.low to get
started, despite others who pnld and
push to get a n.&gt;spOn! • You could toss
rour hands m the~ !-&gt;.1\ing
'mough." \\ork through ,, situation,
nnd you'll rome out "miling. Tonight
l\1idwcck break.
CA."''CER Qune 21-july 22)
S..1rting through all the
paperwork. rnlh and mquuics could
e.'lsily have you a bit anZL~. If you fed
the need to find an c.xpcrt. do. 't ou
come out ahead only ~you fmd the
appropriate path. Tonight: I lome IS
"'+here the heart b.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
***He aware of the firi.'lnci.'ll
l!Tlfllications of a partncr.;hip You
oould .;uddt.&gt;nly deodc to \"Cer in
another dil\.'Ction. M01ke it 01&lt; to h.•
~mewhat erratic, though normally
vou behave in a steadfast mc1nncr. A
di_.;cu:;silll'\ a1uld be quill:' animatt.'ti
•1nd t.'lllightcning. lbnight liang with

****

,,,u

fricnd..s.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. Z2)
Others put an inordinate
amount of pl'CSSUil! on you. Examine
\\hat needs to be dorc and wh)~ )ou
don't ha\ e to do anything a particular
way, though others certainly think they
h:l\'e bettt•r ideas. 1onight t~at a
friend to munchies
a drink.
LIBRA (Sept. 2J·Oct. 22)
lake your time. Do nl'eded
n.scarch, and don't b.:1ck l)ff a decbion,
~·\'l'n if it isn't popular. A.,_"'-Xian:-..
rould be quite cnallenging and full of
them.scl\'C'S. 'tour diplomatic ~kill"
oould be a nea.'SSitv. Tonight: As you
h.keit.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No\', .2l)
Emphasize other opinions
as \\ell as vour own. If you don't ha\-e
the n..·a~sal) support, you could have
a problem. Know what you "'ant and
wh\: Your ~ativity find_.., a mcrging
pomt where others QlJ1 hop on the band\\ agon! fooight: Much-needed
pnvatc time.
SAGnTARIUS (1':0\~ 22 I:A&gt;c.. 21)
* Take ,, firm hand m ck'aring
out err.mds or a p!OJL'Ct. Whether you
nre organizing an event or "orking.
others tnL'&gt;t) ou to do the right thing. A
fu J.mu&lt;ll nutth:r t.uuld :slo\1. vou do\\ n.
1 orught: Where the fun i.... •
CAPRICOR."' (!Ax: 22-Jan. lq)
C'.c..'tting a complc!c vi..,kll'l
will tilkt• dctndunent \lr p('rhap:- a con
vcr.-;.:1t1tm \1. ith someone you n.'Spcct
"hol1ob experti~. You could be O\'Cr·
whclml'd by all the input you n.u-h·c..
Know when tll pull b.Kk ,md rethink a
dt't.ision. Tltnight Check in on .molder
friend.
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20-Fcb. lS)
Others mak it clear \\nert'
they are mmmg from. You could be
OWI'\\nclmt.&gt;d b\• \\ h.1t IS happening.
Investigate altcm.'lti\'l'S \\,th grc.1tcr
care, yet ,,;th diplom.1C\~ You could~ •
struggling With ho" to tcll someone
you might hm-e changt.'&lt;i \'Our mind
Toru~t: Relax to good tnll'IC or a

** • *

ana

***

****

***

****

***'*

nlO\'IC-

PISCES (~--b. ]q March 20)
**"'** Juggling the pro; and con...
of a Sltuation could bt~ diffirult, t."'P..'
ci.1lly as someone rrukes it dear that
you i\1\' not the IC'.1d pla)w. Say little,
and '' .ltch what others pmpo-.e.
l'tmight: !)inner with a \:h:~.! frimd.

Jacque/me Brgar IS 011 tire lntmtet
at lrttp://wur..r•Jacqudmebisar.com .

.mvdailvsentinel.com

~

�•
Pugc B6 •

'1 he Daily Sentinel

www.m }dailyscnti n cl.com

W ednesd ay, Octob er 6,

2010

On night she's crowned, Ohio player kicks 3 PATs Halladay finally gets to
Bv
make postseason debut
RusTY MILLER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Jackie Kasbur~ had a
husy mght on Frtday.
She wns crowned
homecominr queen at
Doyleslo\\ n Chippewa
and kkkcd three
point-after touchdm\ ns
for the "inlcs~ Chipps.
"I grl'W up with rootball. pia) ing in the bad') ard with m) brothers,"
said Kasburg. \\ ho left
the girls soccer team in
August before tr) ing out
for football. "I just
thought (the team) isn't
doing so good and I
might as well try out to
see if I can help:'
She made her Htrsity
debut in a 55-27 defeat to
Rittman that happened to
coincide with her coronation last "eck at the
northeast Ohio school.
"She approached me
about kicking two weeks
into the season," coach
Kevin Wolf said before
the game. "She outkicked
(the previous starter) in'
practice. She's a solid
kicker, who made a 43) ard field goal in practice. but we can't get a
touchdown to let her do
her thing.''
The Chipp had been
hut out the previous
three games. pushing
back her first appearance.
"I had never kicked a
football until three '' eeks
ago." Kasburg said. "My
dad took me out the
Sunday before my first
practice and had me
doing tuff. I v.a terrible

at first. but then my dad
told me the steps to take.
I love it now. I think the
fnct I've played soccer
for 13 years helped me
pick it up really quickly."
The girl with the crmvn
and the helmet ha~
alrcadv been a welcome
additi()n.
"For what we're trying
to create here, she's U(~
all the qualities," %)If
said. "She's as good for
the program as we· ve got
right now."
LAND GRAB: Jon.ly
Scanlon had 29 carries
tor 307 yards and four
TDs as Clinton-Massie
beat London 49-0: 'fYiar
Trautwcip rushed for 168
yards and a TD.
Michigan-bound Greg
Brown had 165 yards and
four scores and Trent
Stout 118 yard" in
Fremont Ross' 43-35 win
in its 88th meeting with
Findlay: Jonathan Brick
carried 42 times for 247
yards and three TDs in
\Vestlake's 21 -7 win over
North Olmsted: and
Bellville Clear Fork's
Jordan McCune rushed
for 239 yards and two
TDs and threw a 57-yard
11) pass in a 42-7 win
over Wooster.
PASS/NO
FAIL:
Pandora-Gilboa's Josh
Breece completed 22 of
31 pa ses for 481 yards
and six TDs in a 42-0 win
over Hardin Northern:
Elyria Catholic's Danny
Rea er hit on 27 of 43
pa ses for 379 )atds and
five scores in a 54-31 win
mer Garfield Heights
Trinity. giving him 23

TD passes with just five
interceptions; l!dgerton 'c;
Brod) Hegal threw for
336 yards (2() of 371 and
four TDs and ran •or a
score in n 48-6 w1n over
Defiance Ayersville, and
Western Brown's Nick
Woodyard set school
mark!'&gt; with 302 pa;;sing
yards and 401) total yards
111 a 36-32 win over
Goshen. while Jake
Banlil caught 15 pasc;es
to set another school
record.
GAUI&gt;Y NU:\liJJo:RS:
Celina
sophomore
Bmden Billser \\as 44 of
62 passing tor 5H9 yards
nnd four TDs in 43-36
win over L1mn Shawnee.
It was the fifth-highest
passing total in the Ohio
High School Athletic
Association record book.
Billger's favorite receiver was Shawn Feier;tein.
who had 19 receptions
(third most 111 a game in
OHSAA history) for 266
yards (ties school record
and tied for 15th in ~tate) .
Billger has thrown f01
1.066 in his last two
games and hrokc his own
school record set the
week before against Van
Wert 1477 yards).
DOT-DOT-I&gt;OT:
Mentor's 18-7 victory
over Cleveland Ignatius
left the Wildcats at 2-4
and in jeopardy of missing the playoffs for the
first umc smce 1987. ...
Coal Grove beat South
Point 49-26 to give coach
Dave Lucas his 200th
career win at Coal Grove.
... Maria Stein Manon
Greg
Local's

Schwieterman has 17
catches for eight touch·
downs this season. ...
Defiance Tinora (6-0)
has five shutouts and has
outc;cored foes 239-18 ....
East Liverpool (5-1) hus
its most wins since 2004.
... Hamilton Ross had six
interception'\. with Logan
I lannon and Gus Madden
returning theirs for TDs.
iu a 59-13 win over
Oxford Talawanda. ...
Joke liengen hit Heath
Dodson on a 31-yard TO
as time expired to help
Ne\\ Concord John
Glenn upset previously
unbeaten Crooksville 1613.
SEEK ING A CURE:
It was an emotional night
at Portc;mouth on Friday
night far beyond
Jackson's 38-13 "in.
Members of both coachmg staffs and hundreds
of fans donned teal-colored T-shtrts to raise
awareness and funds for
the fight against ovarian
cancer. Portsmouth coach
Curt Clifford's daughter.
Courtney Clifford.~ who
suffer-. from the disease,
sent a message of support
that \\as read to the
crowd. t\.1ore than $5.000
was raised for ovarian
cancer re~earch.
STILL NOT SATISFIED: Cincinnati La
Salle is riding the first 60 start in the school's 50year history. after a 33-13
home ' ictory over Walsh
Jesuit.
"If feels great, but it's
not good enough." said
QB Andrew Kummer. a
Miami U. commit.

Playoffs set to start ~ith 3 Cy Young winners

"Should be a prett) fun
matchup to \\atch," aid
Rays third baseman Evan
Longoria. all set to play
after missing the final I 0
games of the regular season v. ith a strained left
quadriceps.
Texas' dangerous lineup features playoff newcomers Josh Hamilton
and Michael Young. but
the Rangers are the only
current major league
franchise that hasn't won
a playoff series.
Lee was acquired from
Seattle in July to help
change that. The lefthander went 4-0 with a
1.56 ERA in five posheason starts for the Phillies
last year.
"I expect as much out
of myself a~ anyone
expects out of me. You
can call it pressure. ~all it
\\hat you want. But I'm
not nervous or worried or
any of those kind of
W(lrd:-. that would go
along"' ith pressure." Lee
said 'Jucsday. "I'm looking forward to it. and it's
going to be a challenge
and n lot of fun.''
Next up, Halladay and
the
Phillies
host
Cincinnati at 5:07 p.m.
ElY I:
With three aces in the
rotation and a playofftested team. Philadelphia
is heavily favored to

reach its third consecutive World Series. 'I he
last National League club
to do thut \\as the St.
Louis Cardinals from
1942-44.
Hut the Red!-&gt;, led by
\'otto. a top contender for
NL MVP, can slug with
just about anybod) and
they ha\e an overpo,,ering arm to bring out of
the bullpen in rookie
Aroldis Chapman.
Halladay.
obtained
from
Toronto
last
December, will be making his playoff debut
after 13 stellar sea:-.ons.
He'll
face
hdmson
Volquez. who rctumcd
this ) ear from right
elbov..· surger) and went
4-3 \Vith a 4.31 ERA in
12 starts.
Cincinnati, winn~r of
the NL Central. is in the
postseason for the first
time since 1995.
··1 could sit here lorever and talk about
Halladay,'' Phillics manager Charlie Manuel
said. "He's vef) dedicated. he's \er) inteme. he
wants to"' in. he definitely wants a ring. He wants
to be the best pitcher in
ba eball. but he al o
wants to be on the best
team. lie definitely puts
his team before himself,
and he's definitely tnspirational to nil of our pln~­
crs and he plays a btg
role in the makeup of our
temn."
The X:37 p.m garnt:' is
a familiar matt:hup.
Sabathia and the Yankees
face A L Central champion Minnesota 111 a firstround series for the
fourth time since 2tK&gt;3 . •
New York \\On nil
three pre\ ious meeting .
including last year en

route to Jts 27th World
Sc1ics title. but this time
the Twin~ have homefield advantage at their
spacious new ballpark.
Target Field.
Wednesday night w11l
mark the first outdoor
postseason game in
Minnesota since 1970.
and the temperature is
supposed to be in the 60s.
"It's hard not to look at
the past. that ~:-o prett)
ob\ ious," Twin:.- fir;;t
baseman
Michael
Cudd) er said. ··But it's a
totall) different team
than those first two times
we played the Yankees."
It might be a different
New York team than la.-.t
senson. too. Derek Jeter
and the Yankees staggerc.~d to a 9-17 tin ish that
cdst them the AL East
crown.
Francbco
Liriano
pitche the opener for the
T\\ ins. who hung a picture in their clubhouse of
the back page of a recent
(i'ev. York) Dail~ ~e\\s
that read "Bad news:
Yanks must go on road
for pia) offs. Good ne\\ s:
The) ,play the Twins. E-Z
Pas.
"We tried to wrap this
thing up and didn't get it
done," said And) Pettitte.
who"' ill start Game 2 for
Ne" York. ·The bottom
line is "e 're the world
champs until someone
knocks us off."
All division series arc
best·of-tive. The fourth
matchup gets under wa)
Thursday night. when
retiring manager Bobby
Cox and his wild-card
Atlanta Bmves play at
NL West champion San

Ohio
The South
Galli a Lady Rebeb ( 128. 8-5 TVC Hocking)
defeated Southern (5-10.
5-6 TVC Hocking) in
three sets on Monday
e\ening.
South Gallia won by
swres of 25-13. 25&lt;!0.
and 25-23.
The Lady Rebels were
kd by Chandra Canaday
with I 2 points (three
aces). Ellie Bostic had
I0 points (three aces),
Tori Duncun added nine
points (three aces),
1 aylcr Duncan had six

points (three aces).
Ch.rissy Howell had six
pomts
(two
aces).
Shelbcy ~err) added
five points Ohe ace ).
nnd Meghan Cald\\ ell
had four points.
Southern was led in
points h) Kntd) n II ill
"ith 12 points Courtnt'Y
Thomas
had
:-even
points, Kelsl~)' Strang
and Bohbi I larris ea~h
added three points. and
Maggie Cummins hnd
two points.
i\terr) and Cald\\CII
each had fhe kill",

Bostic had three kills.
and Tayler Duncan.
Canaday. and Ja:-my ne
John!&gt;Oil each added one
Caldwell and
kill.
Bostic each had two
blocks.
and
Ta\ ler
Duncan added one. ·
Tavler Duncan had
nine· assists and Tori
Duncan added four.
The Lady Rebels won
the JV match by scores
of25-16 :tnd 25-19.
Sm1th Gallia "'ill pia)
at Federal Hocking on·
Wl•dnesda) evening at 6
p.m.

BV MIKE FITZPATRICK
ASSOCIATED P~ESS

First playoff appearance in 15 years. Packed
house in Philadelphia.
Goose bumps galore.
By the time Joey \'otto
and the Cincinnati Reds
ha\ e a chance to soak it
all in. Phillies ace Ro)
Halladay "ill be in the
middle of his windup.
"You've ~ot to start
somev. here.' said Reds
manager Dust) Baker.
taking his third NL team
to the P.ostscason. "It's
sort of hke a kid coming
of
college.
out
Everybody wants to
know what is his job
experience'? J\ nd sooner
or later )ou've got to
work to get that experience, and that's where we
are right now."
The anticipation 1:&gt;
over. the alsn-rans arc out
and the pressure is on.
Everyone knows what's
at stake in October.
R) an Howard and the
Phillies are S\\ inging for
their third strnight pennant Texas is trying to
win a playoff serie for
the first time. The wildcard Yankees hope to
repeat as World Series
champs.
Postseason baseball
begins Wednesday, with
au io of Cy Young Aw.trd
w1nners on the mound:
Hallacht). Cliff Lee and
CC Sabathia.
In the lirst of three
marquee
pitching
matchups, Lel· gets the
ball for the Rangers
against the Tnmpa Bay
Rayc;. who will throw an
ace of their own under
the root at Tropicana
Field. Da\ id Price has
blossomed into the elite

Roundup
from Page Bl
won the JV match by
'cores of 25- I9, J9-lS.
and 25-13.
River Valley will host
Rock IIi II at 5:30p.m. on
Thur:-;day in the OVC
finulc.
LADY R EBELS BEAT
S OUTHERN IN 3

MERCFRV II I.E.

starter almo~t everyone
expected. going 19-6
with a 2.72 ERA for the
AL East champions.
First pttch, I:37 p.m.
ED1~

Franci~co.

www.mydailysentinel.com

PHILADELPHIA (AP)
- Roy Halladay spent
plenty of October~ at
home. wiGhing for this
opportunity.
The ace right-hander
has been to seven All-Star
games. won a Cy Young
Award, pitched a perfect
~ame a.nd compiled an
unpress1ve resume over
his 13-ycar career. But the
one thing he hasn't
crossed off his to-do list is
p1tch in a postseason
game.
Until now.
Halladay w1ll take the
ball when the Philadelphia
Phtllies
host
the
Cincinnati Reds in Game
I of their NL di\ ision
series Wednesday.
"It's definitely something I'm looking forwnrd
to," Halladay said on a
rainy Tuesday. ••Jt' a
great challenge. It's something I've wanted to do
my \\hole career, and I'm
very grateful for the
opportunity.''
Edinson Volyuez will
sta11 tor the NL Central
champion Reds. who are
in the playolls for the first
time smce 1995. Volquez
came back from nght
elbow surgery and went 43 with a 4.31 bRA in 12
tarts.
"For me. it's something
really big," he said ... 1 was
out for one year and came
back from lbmmy John
surgel). This is lhe first
game of the playoffs. It's
something big. Really
big.''
After 12 seasons pln)ing for Toronto in a division dominated by the
New York Yankees and
Boston Red Sox, Halladay
desperate!) wanted to join
a legitimate contender. He
I nearly got the chance last
year, but a trude to
Philadelphia fell through
• before the July 31 non'' aiver deadline.
The Phillies acyuired
Cliff Lee in tead and he
near!) led them to a second straight World Series
title. Lee was 4..{) with a
1.56 ERA in five postseason starts. gettmg the
team's only two wms in
the World Seric again t
the Yankee .
Halladay \\atched the
Serie~ with more interest
than u ual because he was
ncarl) a part of it. and to
ec his former teammate.
A.J. Bumett. pitch for
Ne'' York.
"You're alv.ay catchiJ?g up on it. You rna~ not
s1t and watch everv smgle
inning like 1 probably did
last vear," llalladay said.
"I think everybody who is
not there is envious of the
gu\s who are.''
Halladay "a" so intent
on playing for a championship-caliber club that he
passed up a chance to test
free agenc) after this season and potentiall) get the
ric he t contrnct e\ er for a
pitcher. Instead. the big
ng!1t-hander igned a 60
million. three-) ear exten;;ion from the Phillies after
they completed a trade
\\ ith the Blue Jav last
December.
·
On the same d.~. the
PJ1ilhes ~cnt Lee to ~cattle
for three
prospects
General manager Ruben
Amnrn Jr. didn't \\ant to
risk llhing Lee in free
agenC\, and nl!cded to
replenish the farm ")stem.
Once
Philadl'lphia
bc~ame a reality. llullada\
never considered going
anV\\hCrC eiSl'.
,-;The coni ra('t \\as ne-. er
a factor for me,.. he aid.
···n1e bigge:-t thing for me
was going somewhere that
bad a chance to compete

Point
from Page 81
Rub)
Schwartz.
.M iranda
Thomp~on.
Shay I) nn
Likens,
Amanda Roush and
Aron Hart were honored ut halltime for
thl!il' t;Ontributions to
the pmgram over the
years.
Point
Pleasant
dropped a 4-0 decision
to Huntington St. Joe
la~t
Thursday
and
picked up a 1·0 'ictory
over Lincoln Count)
last ·1\1esday.

for a couple years, and
being able to do that as
soon as possible. You
never really know how
long you are going to play.
You Ttate to suck up a year
just to be able to control
exactly where you go,
when you can already go
there before that. The
biggest factor was there
was thic; team, the one
team that I really wanted
to go to that was able to
make things '-'Ork. I have
a chance to win right
away. and not only right
away, but hopefully ~ave
a couple chances at 11. It
was a simple decision."
Halladay lived up to
enormous expectations in
Philadelphia. He threw a
perfect game at Florida on
May 29 and finished 2110 with a 2.44 ERA.
Halladay led the major~
si
wms. complete ga
(nine). shutouts (four) •
innings (250 2-3).
''I could sit here forever
and talk about Halladay.''
Phillies mana2er Charlie
Manuel said. 'f·He's very
dedicated. he's very
intense. he want' to win.
he definitely wants a ring.
He wants to be the best
pttcher in baseball, but he
also ''ants to be on the
best team. He definitely
puts his team before himself, and he's definite!)
inspirational to all of our
play~rs and he plays a big
role m the makeup of our
team."
On almost every other
staff, Halladay would've
been an obvious choice to
start the series opener. But
the Phillies also have Roy
Os\\alt (13-13, 2.76) and
Cole Hamels ( 12-11,
3.06). Both pitchers
\\Ould've had better
records if the~
more run support.
important!\. both
been sucee sful in
postseason.
Hamels wa-. the NLCS
and World Serle~ MVP
\\hen the Phillies won
their second championship in 2008. Oswalt is
4-0 "ith a 3.66 ERA in
eight postseason games.
includmg ·seven starts.
Oswalt h. starting Game 2
on Frid.'l) and Harne Is will
pitch in Cincinnati in
Game 3 on Sunday.
The Phillies. who led
the major.&gt; with 97 wins.
chose to ha' e an ~xtra day
off in the series so they
could use a three-man
rotation and have each
pitcher get hi-... nom1al four
da) s of rest. The three
aces make Philadelphia a
prohibiti-.e fa,orite to
reach the World Serie~
and become the first 1\'L
team in 66 \cars to capture three ~1raight
nants.
"I don't rea II) enjoy t
underdog role. but that' ...
the role~ that vou •re ca~t
upon. and that is the role
that you =-en e." Reds
manager Dustv Baker
said. :;The"e guys are the
incumb&lt;:nts, so. naturally.
we should be the under
dog. Pith. we haven't
heen here in a long time. It
docsn 't matter what people think. At this point
"'c · re one of the elite that
are :-.Uil ~tanding r\s long
as )OU go to the oance.
the) sa~. )tm've got a
chance.'

pe,.

as

The Lad) Knights
''ere outshot 20-4 in the
loss to the Lady Irish.
with 1'hompson recording II ,3, es in net for
PPHS.
Point oubhot LCHS
by a 23 1 margin. wi
fhompson scoring
lone goal of the g
the eighth .minute ot
rl'gulation.
Roush
a~sisted on fhompson 's
~amC-\\ inning
goal
Hurns made nne save in
the triumph.
Point Pleasant return!&gt;
to action Saturday when
it tnn els to Cross Lanes
Christian for a non-conference mntchup at
10:30 a.m.

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