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Roadshow
continues, A2

Life: God's
gift to you, A7

Printed on 100%
Rl'C.)l'lrd Nc\lsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
~flf-" ()ji,Y~-OCTOBER 15, 2010
-11.

New Chester
Commnity
Center opens
Saturday
TUPPERS PLAINS
Bethel Worship Center's
new Chester Community
Center opens this Saturday.
Oct. 16, with a Fall Fest
event for kids from 1-3 p.m.
The safe Halloween
emative event wiJI feae games like balloon
p~. ring toss. slimy green
things (a tub full), guessing
games and more fall
' favorites, as well a'i some
fun inflatables.
Pood, snacks &lt;md c&lt;mdy
will be provided for the
children at no charge and
the public is welcome to the
free event to be held at the
new Center. which b in the
old . former
Chester
Elementary School building just off State Route 7 in
Chester.
Por more infonnation.
call the church at 740-6676793, or visit its web -.ite at
W\\w.bethelwc.org.

Immunization
clinic
P0~·1EROY
The
Meigs County Health
Department will host a
ldhood immunization
1k from 9-1I a.m. and 1.m. on Tuesday. Oct. 19.
A $10 donation appreciated
- but not required for service.
Bring child's Medicaid or
insurance cards. if applicable, and shot records.

Flu shot clinic
POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Health
Department will be hosting
its annual flu shot clinic
from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3
p.m.. Saturday, Oct. 16 at
the health department. The
vaccines are tree and for
Meigs County residents
only.
Res.idents with
Medicare B, Railroad
Medicare and Medicaid
cards are asked to present
them at the clinic.

~BITUARIES
Page A3

• Charlotte 'Darlene'
Myers Faulkner

WEATHER

.~

~

U ... :

www.m yda ilyscntincl.com ...

~'~~AE:.,t•

I

...........

Early voters encouraged to begin process
B Y BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The
Meigs County Board of
Elections is asking those
who plan to participate in
early voting to begin the
pr~)Cess. as there remains
only t\'o'O weeks to do so.
Becky Johnston. deputy
director of the board, said
the board has received
O\'Cr 800 application-. fur
early ballots so far. Early

voting began Sept. 2~ for
this year's general election, to be heldJm Nov. 2.
Any registered voter
may request an early ballot. either by calling the
board office or by visiting
in person. The deadline
for voter registration has ·
passed.
The Nov. 2 election
includes races for Ohio's
governor and other state
offices. as well as
Congressional a.nd :-tate

representative races. This
year's election includes a
contested race for County
Commissioner, between
the incurncnt Democrat
Mick Davenport and
Republican Tim lhle.
County Auditor Mary
Ryer-Hill j., unnppn'&gt;ed in
her race for re-election.
This year's fall ballot
also includes 12 county,
township and village ballot issues. including three
tax initatives in the

Village of Pomeroy, levy
renewab in Middleport
and Syracuse. and a county-wide proposal to renew
the tuberculosis levy.
Under Ohio's early
voting provision, voters
can cast ballots 60 days
before the election by
requesting ballots by
mail or voting at the
Board of Elections
The
board
office.
requires identification
for early voting. as well

as voting at the polling
locations on election day.
"We welcome early
voting and we encourage
it," Johnston said, "but it
is important that those
who wish to cast their
ballot prior to Election
Day begin the process in
a timely manner, in order
to allow us to process
their application, mail
the ballot and have it
returned by the deadline."

HonOr Society

Pomeroy ~
water fees ~

increase ·
B v B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Residents in Pomeroy
will have to dig a little
deeper into their wallets
to pay for water after an
ordinance to increase
fees for water usage
unanimously passed at
this week's meeting of
village council.
Beginning ""ith the
1
' billin~;ycle starting on
...;.;;.;;;..;;;;;..~-----' or about Nov. 10. overBrian J . Reed/photos ages for minimum usage
Eastern High School's National Honor Society "tapped" new members Thursday in the school's annual NHS , limits as well as deposit
induction ceremony. NHS President Devon Baum is pictured with one of the inductees, Baylee Collins, lighting 1 for connects and recona candle as part of the ceremony. NHS members pledge to "seek the light of truth, hold scholarly habits, engage nects increase. In 2011,
in worthy service, and to lead forward in all things that shall advance the welfare of the school, well-being of the the ordinance allows for
community and the honor of my country." Pictured is the 2010-11 NHS: Megan Carnahan, vice president. a three percent increase
Ashleigh Duffy, historian, Kristin Fick, Cheyenne Doczi, Secretary Jesse Cleland, Morgan Hall, Tim Markworth, on water rates every year
Treasurer Scott Gilbride, Baylee Collins. Brenna Holter. Kelsey Myers, Devon Baum, Jay Warner, Tyler Cline,
Janae Boyles and Kyle Connery.
See Water, A3

. ________

l

Walk for Awareness set for Sunday
BY B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@"f{DA1LYSENiiNELCOM

POMEROY
Awareness about anything
in life is the key to affecting positive change which
is what the Third Annual
Walk for Awareness hopes
to accomplish.
This year's walk begins
at 1 p.m ...sunday, Oct. I7
on the Pomeroy parking
lot. The walk is sponsored
by the Down Syndrome
of
Association
Southeastem Ohio which
connects local families
affected
by
Down
Syndrome with resources.
The walk is free though
donations arc accepted to
the DSASO to continue
providing families with

free assistance.
A complete schedule of
the e\'ents on the parking
lot is as follows: 1 p.m..
welcome: I:30 p.m., balloon launch and walk; 2
p.m.. cornhole tournament: 2:30-3:30 p.m.,
music by Paul Docffinger:
3:30 p.m.. closing. There
will be concessions.
games. characters and
pumpkin painting.
The
DSASO \\as
founded by Da,·id and
Lisa Averion of Meigs
County after one of their
children.
daughter
Gianna. was born with
Down Syndrome. After
Gianna's
birth.
the
Averions were surprised
to t1nd little. local
resources for those fami-

lies affected by Down
Syndrome. The Averions,
who figured they were not
alone in their frustration at
the lack of resources.
decided to create a network of information a-;
well as assistance.
Lisa said over the past
two years. the organization has raised over
$10.000 to assist local
families with essentials
such as gas cards to physician appointments. money
for hotel stays. funds for
medical
equipment.
books. etc.
"More outreach is our
goal." Lisa said. "Others
aren't tapping into our
resources and I w&lt;mt peo-

See Walk,A3

.

File photo

Paul Doeffinger will perform at this Sunday's Third Annual
Walk for Awareness on the Pomeroy pa~ing lot. The
walk raises not only awareness of those living with Down
Syndrome but funds to assist local families affected.

.

Trees removed at Kyger Creek Plant to comply wi.th EPA mandate
STAFF R EPORT

High: 61
Low: 40

INDEX
2 St:CTIONS -

. .las~ifieds

16 P AGES

Bs-6

~OffilCS

B7
A4

Editorials
Faith
Sports

As-7
B Section

rg :ww Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

!

li.IJJ ,I !!. !II .

CHESHIRE - Area residents who travel Ohio 7
through the Cheshire area
may have noticed that the
land\cape has taken on a
different appearance lately
with the removal of all the
trees along the roadway at
the Kyger Creek Power
Station.
Annette Hope. plant
manager at the Kyger
Creek Pov,;er Station in
Cheshire. said the plant
was required by the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency to remove the trees
as a safety precaution.
"In order to comply with
a U.S. EPA mandate for all
power plants that have ash
impoundments.
Kyger
Power
Plant
Creek
removed the trees and vegetation along State Route 7
North.'' Hopt~ said. "While
this docs make the ponds
more visible from the road-

"

way. this action was necessary to ensure that the roots
from these trees did not
impact the integrity of the
dike and create an unstable
or hazardous situation.
This was done to ensure
both personal and environmental safety."
Hope said Kyger Creek
will plant grass along the
hillside where the trees
were located and p,lt other
measures into play to prevent erosion on the hill side.
"Not only arc we seeding
the area but stra\\ will be
laid down. and storm water
will be controlled with a
silt fence and hay bales.''
she said. "We arc committed to operation of Kyger
Creek Power Plant in compliance with all ntlcs and
regulations to ensure the
safety of the public. our
employees and the environment."

Andrew Carter/photo

The landscape outside the Kyger Creek Power Station looks considerably different since the removal of trees that lined Ohio 7 across from the plant. The
1
removal was mandated by the U.S . EPA as a safety precaution.

�-

~

- --

Fr iday, October

~

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

15, 2010

Roadshow continues

Andrew Carter/photos
The Ohio Valley Refinery and Roadshow continues today and Saturday at the Holiday Inn on Ohio 7 in Gallipolis. The show is open from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. today and 9
a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday. Local residents can take their antiques, collectibles, and gold and silver items to the show. Organizers say nearly all coins and paper currency,
vintage jewelry, war memorabilia, musical instruments and toys made prior to 1965 ar~ highly sought after by collectors. For information, call (21 7) 726·7590.

GCC graduation held

ASK DR . BROTHERS

Can a background of
G~Ci,~t!p2;;~ College ~~~~~~or ?~t~:;~~!fn ~~ ~~io~:~ a~=
hOOkUpS lead tO real lOVe? I ~:r~u~!1~nSa~~~ea~.os~~~ f~f;~0~~~~aker, Senator by~~~f~0~~~

Joella Roberts, Ange..!i.l..
Runyan, Shelly Sincl~
Languell, Lacie Skeen,
Laura Sowders, Christy ·
Chauntelle
Dear Dr. Brothers: 1
1 25 for all students who
In his address, Senator ate degrees included Ward,
have come back to college
completed their course of Carey congratulated the Christi11a Beaver, Pamela Williams, and Ryan •
Receiving
this year \\'ith a new attistudy during the 2009- graduates
on
their Bowles, Laura Curtis, Williams.
diplomas
were
Miranda
d M be·11 · bee
2010
school
year.
accomplishment,
noting
Misty
Davis,
Jennifer
1
tu
e.
ay
Is
ause
The
ceremony
took
the
hard
work
and
dediDewitt,
Brittany
(Lee)
Long
and
Amy
am getting older. or maybe
things are changing on
place at the Faith Baptist cation it takes to pursue a Dixon, Dustin Dixon, McKinney.
·
Church
located on college degree. Carey Wendy
Gatewood,R'Sergio
Plants closed the cereG
campus. Let me expIam.
Jackson Pike in Rodney. said his own family expeholston,
tchard mony with the benedicThis year. everyone seems
to be getting invited to dinGCC history instructor rienced the advantages of Harless, Deborah Hysell, tion. Bo Shirey congratuWilliam Plants opened a career college educa- Myra Infante, Monica lated the graduates,
ner and a movie. like in
some old· fa-;hioned play.
the ceremony with the tion as his mother earned Markin, Terri McClellan. thanked families and
With my sordid past. do
invocation and GCC her
degree
from Robert (Mac) McGinnis, guests, then invited them '
you think I can sw1tch now
President Robert L. Southeastern Business Katherine
McGuire, for a reception at the .
and find a real boyfriend?
Dr. Joyce Brothers
Shirey welcomed the stu- College.
Connie Monroe, Rose Church Family Ministry
dents
and
guests,
Following
Carey's Portis, Timothy Price. Center.
- E.D.
~MKn: ltisirum~ ~~~~e~~~ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - ing that you see the din- ··real thing.. with blinders
ner- and - a- movie-type on these days.
date as something out of
That said, I suppose the
Mary Jo Barringer, Julie
an old-fashioned play. sticking point would be in
CHESTER
Most ~ople a few years trying to bring a former Public meetings
Structure employed dur- Members of Chester Curtis, Charlotte Grant,
older than you and up ..player" and a "nonplayCouncil 323 Daughters of Everett Grant, Thelma
ing the NIMS concept.
know of that method as er" together and have it
Monday, Oct. 18
America practiced for White, Sharon Riffle,
the tried-and-true way to work. This is what you LETART FALLS - Letart MIDDLEPORT - The inspection on Oct. 19 Sandy White. Opal
Middleport
Literary
Club.
2
get to know· someone arc ooing to have to take a Township Trustees, reguduring their recent met:t· Hollon. Maxine White,
gradually - which can cha~ce on if you want to lar meeting, 5 p.m., office p.m. in the Pomeroy ing.
library. Frankie Hunnel to
actually lead to true love. put your hooking-up days building.
Thelma White called JoAnn Ritchie, G.
review "Ford County" by the meeting to order. Holter, Nancy Kin
On the other hand. it was behmd you and find a dlfJohn Grisham. Oleta Members gave the Pledge Doris Grueser and Helen
known to foster a rather ferent kind of guy to date.
Clubs and
Heighton, hostess.
su~rficial way of getting You may be interested in
to the American Flag and Wolf
together, and there always a recent study by the organizations
Pledge · to the Christian
have been rude surprises University of Iowa. It
Church events
Saturday, Oct. 16
Flag, read from Psalm 70,
after the wedding for found that those who ROCKSPRINGS
prayed the Lord's Praye~
Friday,
Oct.
15
some who followed all the started off in relationships Season's final tractor pull
and
sang the first stanza
POMEROY
Revival
rules and dated pro~rly. that basiCally were friends for Big Bend Farm
of
the
Star Spangled
services will be held at the
Today most people live with benefits were just as
Banner.
Antiques
Club,
1
p.m.,
SERVING POMEROY
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel,
together before marriage, likely to end up happy as
Members are to wear
Unlimited Hours, No Contracts!
so you could pose a theo- traditional daters if both Rocksprings Fairgrounds. Ohio 143, through Oct. 17.
white
for
inspection.
a
Spectators
admitted
free.
ry that it really doesn't were looking for a serious
7 p.m. nightly. Rev. Paul
Concessions. 742·3020 Bates, evangelist, and silent auction and bake
matter how you get there. relationship.
sale will be held.
for information.
singers. Pastor is the Rev.
A report of members
• FREE 24/1 Toc:f11liul SUppoo1
SALEM CENTER - Star Charles McKenzie.
hospitalized was given.
• t'tsln ~· - yt# buddy lisll
Grange 778 and Star
• IO...,.._wCil\ltbmlil
Monday, Oct. 18
Mary Jo Barringer read
• CUA:Im Si;wl P1lgt . - i t « &amp; ...,.
Junior Grange 878, fun GALLIPOLIS - Promised
State
a
letter
from
the
night and halloween party, Land
Church,
Clay Councilor,
Alberta
with costume judging, Chapel Road off Ohio
Helton,
stating
Doris
REEDSVILLE - Sarah Lee. a talented and gifted teacher 6:30 p.m., followed by 218, camp meetings, 7 Grueser was accepted for
Sign Up Onlintl www.lociiNet.com
at Eastern Elementary, and Devon Baum. a senior at Eastern, 1 potluck supper. everyone p.m. starting today though Commission for State
~
c-J Today &amp; Sa-te!
have been recognized for excellence by the Ohio Lottery rep- 1 invited.
Oct. 23, local preachers Council.
Monday, Oct. 18
LocoiNef 740·992~260
resenting the Athens area
and singers nightly.
Attending were: Marge
Rehable loh:mel 4ccess Su&gt;&lt;:e 1 99~
Lee. who has been named the Ohio Lottery Teacher of the 1 CHESTER - Pomeroy Saturday, Oct. 23
Fetty. Judy Marshall.
Month for September. teaches talented and gifted students in Chapter 186 Order of ALFRED - Alfred United
the third, fowth. fifth and :;ix:th grades. Kim Allen, director of Eastern Star, 6:30 p.m., Methodist Church will host
gifted services. said "Lee consistently makes high marks on refreshments, practice for a wiener roast at 6:30p.m.
evaluations. I Ier les..'iOns are based on student interests and are installation, 7:30p.m., regdesigned to stretch thinking and rea&lt;;Oning. She continues to ular meeting, Masonic Birthdays
challenge herself professionally. She donates her personal 1 Hall.
Saturday, Qct. 23
Wednesday, Oct. 20
time for events and ~pend&lt;; her own fund-; for classroom
POM
EROY - Mildred
CHESTER - Pomeroy
materials," ·
Ziegler
who will turn 90 on
Chapter
186
Order
of
Lee created a Web site for each school that she wori&lt;s with
and in addition to that. she communicates by newsletters, Eastern Star, installation Oct. 25, will celebrate her
email and phone calls with parent'i. Studenlc; do not even real- of officers, 7:30 p.m., birthday on Saturday, with
u.e that they are being challenged because they strive to pl~c;e Masonic Hall
an open house at the
her. She is ~urrently working on a Masters Degree m HARRISONVILLE
Hemlock Grove Grange
Education. She is described by Allen as an "excellent educa- Meigs County Firefighters Hall. Cards may be
tor."
Association, 7:30 p.m., brought to her there or
For being recognized as a Teacher of the Month. Lee ~ Scipio Township Fire sent to her at 42654 S.R.
MEIGS COUNTY CDBG 2010
receive four tickets to a Cincinnati Bengals' game. recogru- Department Discussion
COMMUNITY
HOUSING IMPROVEMENT PROGRAM
tion at the event, merchandise from the team and an assort- includes narrow banding, 681, Pomeroy. Ohio
NOTICE
OF EXPLANATION
ment of Partners in Education merchandise from the Ohio Reedsville tornado and 45769. It is requested that
FLOOD
PLAIN
DEVELOPMENT
Joint-Incident Command gifts be omitted.
Lottery.
Baum ha&lt;; been named an
Meigs County intends to undertake a CDBG 2010
Academic All Star by the
Community
Improvement Program ( CHIP) project, for
Ohio Lottery for the month of
the purpose of home repair/home
September. ''Being an all
rehabilitationlhomeownership of various housing units
around excellent student is
within Meigs County. Portions of the project may be
not always an easy ta'&gt;k. but
one that Devon Baum
located in the 100 year flood plain. The proposed
achieves," says Kim Allen.
projects cannot be undertaken in any other location as '
Director of Gifted Services.
there is no practical alternative for the location of the
Baum is a National Honor
When:
October
17,
2010
projects. The CHIP project can only take place where
Society member, honor roll
there is a need and it is known that the need may be
Where: Pomeroy Parking Lot &amp; Walking Path
student and a leader. He was
targeted in these base flood plain areas.
chosen as one of two repreTherefore,
it is the judgement ofthe Meigs County
sentatives at the Regional
Commissioners
that the benefits to the LMI
Scholars
Leadership
residents
that
live
in
these areas in various locations
Conference in Southeastern
in Meigs County, outweighs consideration of
Ohio.
For being recogni?.ed as an
Executive Orders 11988 and 11990.
Academic All Star. Baum
A more detailed description of the project and the
will also receive four tickets
FIRM Flood Maps are available for citizen review
to a Cincinnati Bengals•
at the Meigs County Grants Office,
game, recognition al the
117 East Memorial Drive, Suite 7,
event, merchandise from the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
team and an a&lt;&gt;sortment of
Music,
Food,
Games,
Characters,
Pumpkin
painting
&amp; much more!!!
Partners in Education merMeigs County Commissioners'
chandise from the Ohio
**No registration fee to walk--donations accepted**
Tom Anderson, President
Lo{\Cry.
For more information call
16-7853

Commum·ty Calendar

0 of A plans inspection

Internet

Ohio Lottery recognizes
Meigs Countians

Third Annual "Walk for Awareness"

Schedule of Events:
1:00 Welcome
, ..
1:30 Balloon Launch &amp; walk 0
2:00 Cornhole Tournament
..t?L?e2:30-3:30 Music by Paul Doeffinger
y;r·
3:30 Closing
--~·--

cr:r::25x~t!!!J

�Friday, October 15, 20 I O

www.myduilysentinel.com

Obituaries

for all customers.
Council memberc;
who
voted
for the third and
From Page A1
fin.tl reading of the ordinance were Pete Barnhart, Ruth Spaun, J1m Sio;son,
George Stewart, VJc Young Councilman Jack1e
Welker was ahsent.
Mayor John Muo;ser has prc-.iously said the
increases arc needed to finance unprovements to the
"ater system, gcnl'ral maintenance and to pay for an
increase in operating expenses which contmue to
grow.
Reported bl'low are current hase charges for various waterline sizes along with the new overage, disconnect and reconnect charges. Agmn, current base
charges for minimum usage do not increase by three
percent until 2011.
For 5/'13 and 3/4-inch sen ice, a monthly base
chm·ge of $21.50 for the first 2,000 gallons of water
plus 65 cents for each 100 gallons or fraction&lt;; thereof of usage in excess of 2.000 gallons per month. The
fee for overage goes from 55 cent&lt;&gt; for each 100 gallons mer 2.000 gallons per month to 65 cents.
For l-inch sen ice, a monthly bao;e charge of
$53.50 for the first 2,000 gallon of water plus 65
cents for each 100 gallons or fractions thereof of
usage in excess of 2,000 gallons per month. The fee
for memge goes from 55 cento; for each JOO gallons
over 2,000 gallons per month to 65 cents.
For I -1/2-inch service a monthly base charge of
$84.50 for the first 2.000 gallons of water plus 65
cents for each I 00 gallons or fr&lt;~ctions ,thereof of
usage in cxcclis of 2,000 gallons per month. The fcc
for overage goes from 55 centc; for each I00 gallons
over 2.000 gallons pc1 month to 65 cents .
For 2-inch service, a monthly base charge of
$143.50 for the first 2,000 gallons of "ater plus· 65
cents for each 100 gnllons or fractions thereof of
usage in execs~ of 2,000 gallons per month. The fee
for O\Crage goes !rom 55 cents for each 100 gallons
over 2.000 gallons per month to 65 cents.
for 4-mch en ICC, a monthly base charge of
$274.50 for the fir t 2,000 gallons of "ater plus 65
cents for each I 00 gallon.; or fractions tJiereof of
usage in excess of 2,000 gallons per month. The fee
for O\erage goes from 55 cento; for each 100 gallons
mer 2,000 gaiJons per month to 65 cents.
For 6-inch crvice. a monthly base charge of
$463.50 for the first 2,000 gc~llons of water plus 65
cents for each 100 gallons or fractions thereof of
usage in exce&lt;;s of 2,000 gallons per month. The fee
for overage goes from 55 cents for each 100 gallons
over 2,000 gallons per month to 65 cents.
For master-meter accounts such as certam apartment complexes. a bnse charge ol $21.50 per unit per
month, plus 65 centc; for each I 00 gallons of usage in
excess or the. product of 2.000 gallons times the number of units in the complex.
Hydrant feeds are $4 per month.
Tap fees: 3/4-mch line, $330 plus $8 25 per foot of
highway eros ing: 1 inch line, $495 pluo; $8.25 per
foot of high\\ay cros)mg: 2-mch line, 660 plus $11
per foot of high\\ay aossmg; 4-inch line, $770 plu~
cost of pipe and material&lt;; used. 6-inch hoe. $1.320
plus cost of p1pe and matenals u ed; 8-inch line,
$2,200 plus cost of pipe and matenal used. Bulk \\ ater
fee is $4.75 per each 100 gallons.
Water deposit fees \\Ill go from $75 to $100:
reconnect fees "ill go from $50 to $100. Anyone
found using water that is unauthorized to recei\e service will be charged $500.
As pre\ iously reported, Pomero) .raised the minimum charge for" ater rates by a flat $5 increase at the
beginning of this ye,1r The1e are 880 cu~tomero; who
purchase water from the Vi II age of Pomero).

Water

Charlotte 'Darlene'
Myers Faulkner
I

Charlotte "Da~lene'' Myers Faulkner, passed away at
lloll.cr ~1cd1cal Cente1 in Gallipolio; on Thursday.
14, 2010 after an extended illness.
was born 111 Wilmington, Ohio on July 23, 1938
to the late IIerman and Goldie (Kaufmun) Myers. She
was a homemaker.
She is survived l~y her husband of 45 year:; Charles
W,· ~aull&lt;J~e.r; .children, 'J:11nmy Byington, Tony
F~wlkncr, lcrn Young, ~larty Faulkner, Crystal
R1chmoml. Charlene and Neil Anderson, Melodic and
Bruce Bis:.cll, .Jeri and Dm id Gunn, Beverly and Paul
Voss, and Lon and Ray Patterson; 28 grandchildren.
25 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild.
Also surviving are brothers and sisters, Hennan and
":eresa Myers, Virginia Elliott, Judy and Van
Newberry, Linda Storer and Bonnie Back· brother and
si.ster-in-law, Roger and Ann Faulkner; a~d numerous
meces and nephews.
She is p~ceded in death by her parents, her mother
and father-m-lc~\\; Wayne and Cleo Faulkner; sisters,
E\elyn Nova) and Katie Telvin. grandsons, Michael
Young and Joshua Broadhurst; step-daughter,
Shawnetta Faulkner and many brothers and sisters-inlaws.
Services will be held on Saturday, Oct. I6. 20 I0 at 4
p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomeroy wiU1 Da' id Brainard and Paul Voss officiating. Burial will follow in the Mound Cemetery in
Chester. Visitation will be held one hour prior to the
rat service.
•
n on line registry is available by logging onto
www.andersonmcdan ie !.com.

Local Briefs
Basket games

,

TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers Plains Volunteer
Fire Department "dl hold Longaberger games at 4
J&gt;.m. on Nov. 13, at a cost of $20 for 20 2ames.
~
Concession,s·will be mailable.

Trick or treat
CHESTER- Trick or treat will be held from 6-7
p.rp., Oct. 28, in Chester.

Anniversary celebration
CHESTER - Chester Volunteer Fire Department
will celebrate its 50th anniversarv with an open hou~e
reception at 2 p.m. on Oct. 24. "
A history will be presented and past members will be

~=~:~~~:cream will be

sen·cd.

ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist Church "ill
host a \\ iener roast at 6:30 p.m. on Oct. 23. The public
is imited.

Chili

'"01e Daily Sentinel • Page A3

s~pper

REEDSVILLE - Reedsville United 'Methodist
Church will hold a chili and soup dinner 5-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
pic to know about us and
please contact us for assistance and help.''
From Page A 1
Many people often ha\'e
.
misconceptions about Down
Syndrome and the capabilitie~ of those who are bom
with it. According to the Averions, those capabilities are
endless and they've made :;ure Gi[mna has bt:en visible
in the church and school community.
"I think her presence in the community has changed
any misconceptions;· Lisa said, explaining she feels it
was never a matter of the community not accepting people with Down Syndrome but understanding. Down
Syndrome.
Perpetuating this understanding b what the walk
s to accomplish along with understanding how to
t the needs of those living with Down Syndrome.
• or more information about the walk or DSASO,
email the Averions at averion@ohio.edu.

Wa Ik

'
Feds propose
stricter dust
limits in US coal mines
CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP) -Federal regulators proposed tougher limits Thursday on coal dust
exposure to better protect the nation's 73.000 coal
miners from chronic lung disease.
T he change is part of regulations the Mine Safety
and Health Administration is proposing in hopes of
eliminating black lung disease. director Joe Main
told reporters during a teleconference. The agency
plans to hold public hearings and take comment
before adopting final rules, a process that typically
takes a year or more.
Black lung is caused by inhaling dust and has
plagued coal mining for generations. Government
researchers blame the chronic disease for the death-:.
of more than 10.000 coal
miners in the past
decade.
While the number of
new cases had decreased,
tlators have found
ence in recent ycar:s
suggests it's making
•
a comeback among
younger rnin~rs under
current rcgulatwns.
"We are fin ding an
increase," Mai n said.
"The only logical conclusion that you can
make is we need to
change.''
The chan~es wou ld cut
existing lim1ts for breathable coal mine dust in
half.

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

Meigs County Forecast
Frida) : A ch,mce of
sho\\ ere;, mamly before
noon. Mostly cloudy, with
a high near 61. Southwe ..t
wmd 6 to 10 mph bccommg northwest. C hru1ce of
precipitation rs 30 percent.
Frida) Night: Mostly
cloudy, then gradually
becoming clear, with a low
around 40 Nonhwest wind
between 5 and 7 mph.
Saturda): Sunny, with
a h1gh ne.'U' 65. West wind
between 5 and 9 mph.
. Saturda)
Night:
.Mostly clear, with a low
around 38. West "ind
around 5 mph.
Sunda): Sunny, with a
h1gh near 69.
Sunda) Night: Mostly
clear. with a low around 42

Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a h1gh near 7 3.
Monda) ight: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
45.
Thesday: A chance of
:;howerl!. Partly sunny,
wnh a high near 71 . •
Chance of precipitation is •
30 percent.
1\Jcsda} Night: A
chance of sho\\ers . .Mostly
cloudy. with a low around
46. Chance of precipita- !
tion is 30 percent.
:
Wednesday:
Partly •
sunny. with a high near 67. •
Wednesda)
Night: •
Part!) cloudy, "ith a low :
around 45.
Thursda):
.Mostly :
sunny. \\ ith a high near 67.
&lt;I

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35 79
Akzo (~ASDAQ) 61 64
Ashland l'lc. (NYSE)- 52 44
Big Lots (NYSE) - 32 94
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 29.43
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 53.75
Century Alum (NASDAQ)- 14 40
Champ1on (NASDAQ) 1 20
Charmirg Shops (NASDAQ)- 3 41
Ctty Hold1ng (NASDAQ) - 32 94
Co!Uns (NYSE) 60 22
DuPont (NYSE) - 46 49
US Bank (NYSE)- 22.57
Gen Eleru c (NYSE) - 17 16
Hartey-Dav1dson (NYSf)- 31 98
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.72
Kroger (NYSE) -2215
Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 2918
Norto K So (fNSE) - 61 78
OVBC (NASDAQ) -18 80
BBT (NYSE)- 22 88

Peoples (NASDAQ)-12.49
PepSICO (NYSE)- 66.64
Prem1er (NASDAQ)- 6.45
Rockwell (NYSE)- 62.03
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.95 •
Royal Dutch Shell- 63.65
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 73.79
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.25
Wendy'f. (NYSE) -4.78
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.66
Worthmgton (NYSE) -15.00
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.

ET closmg quotes of transactions
for October 14 2010, provfded by
Edward Jones financial advisors
Isaac M 'Is m Gal. poliS at (740)
441-9441 and Lesley Marrero m
Pomi Pleasant at (304) 67HJ174.
MemberSIPC

Quality Matters for Online
Learning offered by Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE - The Univer-;ity of Rio Grande
and Rio Grande Commumty College ru·e creating more
and more online cl&lt;~sses, and is 110\\ pm1 of a national
program that ensures the h1gh quality oflntcmet-based
courses
Rio Grande recently bec,unc imohed with Quality
Matter&lt;i for Onhne Learning. an organization that
help colleges und uni\CfSlUes across the country
reach high ~t,mdard for lntemet-based cla ses.
Dr. Greg Miller, director of adult learmng and continuing education at Rio Gr,mde, explained that the
Quality Maners program pro' ides a rubric of be~t
'practice analysi.; for colleges and um,ers1tie~. To
put it simply, the orgamza~nitrson 'Mc1Janitf
tion make sure that the
onhne classe are struc'Funtra( iame
tured in the best "a) possible to help students
leam
Quality Matters 1 part
of u national effort to
de\ elop c;tandards for
excellence in onhne learn
ing. and a man) other colleges and unhersJtics in
Ohio arc abo im olved

--

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local food palllr) a~ u e tm c to gil r "ad 111 our comm1111il1.

Octo~er 18, 1010
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PageA4

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157

Fr iday, October

15, 201 0

D~MOC.RAllC PARTY

www.mydallysentlnel.com

•

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make uo law respectiuJ~ a11
establislmmrt of relig ion, or prohibiting tlu free
exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
• speech, or of the press; or the riglrt of tire people
peaceably to assemble, aud to petition tlu
Gor,emmmt for a redress of griel'attces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

·..

YOUR OP I NION

Quick response commended
Dear Editor:
I would like to commend all who responded to
the Olive Township tornado VICtims. The fire
departments and squads from nearby communities. the churches and people who pitched in with
food and helped cook for workers and families.
Merchants who donated food and supplies,
school children helping with cleanup. churches
and friends donating what was needed in food,
cleaning supplies and places to stay.
Although a few were hurt. nobod) was killed in
Reedsville.

Paul Boring
Reed.n•ille

Vote
Dear Editor :
Voters! On .No\. 2. we have the opportunity to
halt the do\\ nward spiral toward socialism by
removing the elected officials who have stood b).
wringing their hands, while the executive branch
and un-elected bureaucrats attempt to drag the
nation into socialism! Most post-VietNam-era citizens don't know that socialism steals freedom
from the middle-class of any nation in which
socialism triumphs. and leads to dictatorship.
Learn from history; consider, "the effect of
Socialist doctrine on Capitalist society is to produce a third thing different from either of JtS two
begett~rs to \vit. the Servile State" (Hilaire
Belloc): DeTocqueville warned. "'socialism
means slavery" and "democracy extends the
sphere of individual freedom. socialism restricts
it:'' F.A Hayek: "socialism has come to mean
chiefly the extensive redistribution of incomes
through taxation and the institutions of the welfare
state" (pick up his book. "The Road to Serfdom.''
at Bossard Library).
How refreshing it was to see the Chilean people
waving their flag. expressing pride in their country, rejoicing in the bravery and detennination of
their president and of the workers to rescue the
miners! May the day soon come \Vhen we
Americans proudly display our tlag. voice our
pride in our country, face the world bravely with
no apologies. and return to the ''can-do.. confidence of fonner years! Vote!

Alice May Lasseter
Gallipolis

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are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number No unsigned letters wrll be published
Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues. not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

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(USPS 213-960)

Correct io n Policy
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
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Mail S ubsc r ipti o n
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks
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26 Weeks . • . . . . . .'70 70
52 Weeks . . • . '140 11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks
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26 Weeks
'113.60
52 Weeks
227 21

Analysis: Tax change kef
to Ohio governorS race
B Y JULIE C A RR S MYTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Endless campaigning and two
televised debates have left Ohio
voters scratching their heads: Did
Gov. Ted Strickland raise taxes or
didn't he?
The answer is yes. And no.
In
the
governor's
race.
Strickland and fellow Democrats
and challenger John Kasich and
Republicans are using accurate
facts to make opposing arguments. mindful that tax questions.
such as an extension of Bush era
cuts for the highest earners. can
divide voters.
Whether you see the Ohio
income tax change that Strickland
backed in 2009 as a tax hike may
come down to political philosophy.
Democrats reach for tax rate
charts and Ohioans' 2009 tax bills
to make their argument that suspending a planned cut didn't raise
taxes Republicans pull their argument from the Ohio law books.
where mcome tax rates were
adjusted upward as a result of the
bill Strickland signed.
First. the mechanics of the deal.
In 2005. Ohioans began seeing
a series of income-tax reductions
championed by then-Gov. Bob
Taft. a Republican. The Taft tax
plan called for five annual reductions of 4.2 percent. for a total 21
percent cut when the plan was
fully phased in.
Last year, as a difficult budget
negotiation raged. Strickland's
preferred alter"i1atives dried up
and he announced he \\ ould balance the state budget by suspendmg the final year·s cut.
That meant tax rates remained
t1at from 2008 to 2009 rather than
going down by another 4.2 percent as planned. Sttickland had
pledged that as governor he
would not raise taxes, and those
Republicans who opposed the
move quickly leaped on what he
did as a broken promise.
For Grover 1\orquist. whose

'

Americans for Tax Reform in
Washington. D.C.. has led the
tight against government tax
hikes. there's no question about it.
He said Strickland openly intended the tax change to raise government
revenue
which.
in
Norquist's book. is the very detinition of a tax increase.
"This was an $840 million tax
increase on the people of the state
of Ohio ... Norquist said in a recent
telephone interview. ''If you pass
a taw and as a result have to pay a
higher tax. that's a tax increase:··
After a bill containing last
year"s tax change was passed. tax
rates in all of Ohio ·s nine tax
brackets \Vere adjusted upward in
state law books. That's because
the final year of the Taft tax cuts.
though they had not yet taken
effect, had already been written
into law.
So a glimpse at the Ohio
Revised Code before and after
Strickland took action would bear
out Norquist's anwment: A law
was passed and rates were raised
from what \Vas previously on the
books. And the decision came at
the end of 2009. so quarterly filers
had already started paying at the
lower rate.
But if )Ott look at Ohioans'
actual tax bills. as Democrats
choose to do. you will find that
Ohioans didn't actually pay more
in 2009 taxes than they paid in
2008 taxes. So. their argument
goes, how can Strickland have
~upported a tax increase when
people are paying lo" er taxes·)
Most taxpayers witQ similar
income in 2008 and 2009 actually
paid a little less the second year
because the value of their personal exemption rose with inflation.
said Ohio Department of Taxation
spokesman John Kohlstrand.
According to data from the tax
depattment. two-income families
of four earning $30.000. $60,000.
$100.000 and $200.000 all experienced tax reductions between
2008 and 2009 - even without
the Taft tax cut that had been

planned. The savings ranged from
$5 to $12. though, versus the savmgs of between $26 and $454
they would have sav~d with the
4.2 percent cut.
"Bottom line'? This was not a
tax increase:· Kohlstrand said in
an e-mail. '·It was a decision to
postpone a rate cut. That's a
meaningful ditTerence.·•
The no-new-taxes pledge that
~orquist's group asks politicians
at both the state and federal levels
to sign doesn •t preclude tax
reform packages that are revenue
neutral or lower a state's overall
tax burden, Norquist said. The
1dea is that there not be a net g· ·
.n tax revenue for the state.
"The pledge is a commitme
not to enact a net tax increase:· he
said.
In !'orquist's view. Strickland
policies led Ohioans to lose jobs
and leave the state. and even making tax adjustments that bring in
less re\enue than the previous
year aren ·t justified.
"That's not a tax cut. That"s b~d
policy:· he said.
But Jon Shure. deputy director
of the State Fiscal Project at the
Center on Budget and Policy
Priorities. said dozens of states
raised tax rates during the last
budget cycle- in orde; to keep
money flowing to state programs.
But few. if any. saw actual gams
in net re"enue.
"'This is the longest. deepest
Great
recession since
the
Depression. and the result for
states has been an unprecedented
collapse of state revenues:· he
said. "If) ou make less money or
lose ) our job. you pay less
income tax. If you bu) less. )A
pay Jess sales tax. It's really basic as that."'
He said job growth and economic perfonnance;is often better
after a tax increase than after a tax
cut.
Seem~ it's now up to Ohioans to
figure out whtch they just experienced.

�r
Friday, October 15, 201 o

10 4~ m Sunday l.vcntng '' Of.l p m,
l'aitor !)Qo \\all~r

Apostolfc

C'hurrh nl fr,us ( "hrhl \poslolk
\an/.anJI and \\ani Rd Pastor J.uncs
\1rllcr. Sunda) School
Ill JO ._ ·n
, 1-verung 7 'O p '"
Rhcr \,til&lt;·}
R1ve~ \all&lt;) 1\postoiJ, \\oflhiJ&gt; ( nh r,
lnl s 3rd
\&gt;e ~1tddlcpon Rev
M~tbael Br:ldlord I'J.&lt;tor Sun!h) 10 30
d m Tucs 6 10 pmer \led ' pm Hoble
StUd)
I mmnnud \postulit labtrna&lt;lt• Inc.
Loop Rd off \ew L1m" Rd. Rutland
Sen Ms ~un 10.00 d m &amp; 7 10 111n.,
Thul"$. 7 00 p 1n • Pastor M r1 R llutlon

Assembly of God
I ihtrt) hlrmhf) lol ( ,.)(!

1'0 llo• 41)7 Dudding Lane M; son
\\ \a. Pa'tor \ tl l&lt;nnan~ \und y
Sm~tes IOO!Jam.and7pm

l'ag•·• ill&lt; !·n-..willllapti.;t Chur&lt;h
l'llstor Ro\d Ross. ~un!h) 'idl0019 10 to
10:10 am, IIOI")hip cn"e t I IOto 1 · 00
m \led preaching b pm
('~rptnlt•r lndtJ"'Udenlll.optJ,Il'bunh

rr,

sunday s,oo.
9 lOam
•hong
SeMce 10 30;un 1.-vemng Servrce
7 JOpm 1\edo&lt;'i&lt;l.ly Bohle Studv 7 00 pm
Pastor
( ht"ihin: 1\apli;t ( hu11h
Pastor '&gt;te1e l1ttle 740-loi78C 11
740 992 7~2 C 74C'-MS 2527, Suoda)
s, hoo.t 9:1U am. Mornmg \\ rshtp , 1
am. Youtlo &amp; ll1ble Buddoe () I pm
boor pr:l&lt;llcc 7 10 ~rectal .l:o1 of Ill&lt; nth
l.adoes I Gr.cc 7 pm 2nd Monda\ Z
M n s fell "ship 7 pm 1rd Tuc&lt;
llol&gt;&lt;' llaptl,t I hun:h t '"ulhtrn 1
570 Ur:lllt ~~ Middleport Sunlhy S&lt;hnol
9:l0 n m 1\orslllp .. m and 6 p m
\\ednesd.W ~rv~&lt; 7 p 1U Pastor Q,o
FJlo
Rutland first llapti't ( hur&lt;h
Sund;.) s, ocl 9: lO am \\or.~bop
10:45 am
Pnmrro) hrstllapli&lt;t
Pastar Jon Broden E.:! "'ain Sr
Sund:lv Sch. 9 3U am \\or;hrp 10 10 run
flrst 'oulhtm llapli't
41872 Prmt. ' P1ke Sunday school
•no L'n \1 onlup 9 45 am &amp; 7 00 p m
\\ednesday Semce 7 00 p m Past r
VaVJd Bnu!Wil
First llapli,t l'hurch
Pn tor B I) Zu&lt;pan 6th and Palm r St
Moddlepon Sundav school 9 , S d m
\\'r&lt;htp
•o I~ om ?()() pm
\lednesdav Sent&lt;C 'i)()pm
Radne h"t Jlapti&lt;t
Patt"r Ryan bton. pa lor SJ!nday
So;bool '1: 10 a m 1\ r.~htp I 4( o m.,
6 00 p m. \\ednesday Se vte&lt;&gt; '00
pm
\ihtr Run llaplht
Pn!t r John \~&gt;JJlson ~und;) S.:hool
LOam \lor htp
lla m 7 00 p '11
\\ed~lh1 ~n1c
7 OC i&gt; m
\lt.l nlon 1\aplist
Pnst r. DennO&gt; \\ea1cr sunda) \dJool
9 1~ am E.vc oog
6·3 p m.
II ednesdal Se'&gt;lccs 6·10p m
Btthlrhcnllttptht I hurch
Great llend R ute 124, RJc e OH
Pastor Sunday Sch I 9 10 n
Sunday\\ r.~htp 10 10 m \\ edne.'ida)
Boble Stud• 7 00 p m
Old lltthd fn't \\ill Bapfi,t Church
~8601 St R 7 Moddleport Sunda1
Serv"e 10 am 6 00 p rn, fUcsW)
Str\ICC .t- 00

•

llill&gt;id&lt; llapri,l ( hun·h
St Rt 143 JUS! off Rt 7 Pa&gt;tN Rev
James R Ao:ree, Sr. \unday l n fled
~~nice \\orsbop
IO·lO 3.m o p m
\\&lt;dncsW) Semces 7 p m
\ ~&lt;IOI') llapti~t lnuqx·nclcnt
N 2nd ~~ Moddlepon, Pastor Jam~
~ Keesee, \\onho;l
Oa m 7 p.m •
\\ rdoesda) Semces 7 p m
~25

hilh llaptl•l Church
Rao rood St Ma~ n. Sunday \,ho:ol 10
m, \\crsbop
II am 6 pm
\\ &lt;doe$i13) Servtc ' 7 p rp
furest Runllaptbl· Pmll(·ro~
Rev J seph \\oods Sunda' ~chool
a.m \\orshop II lO un.

IU

\It, Muriah ll.•pll't
f"Ou:Th &amp; MoJo ~t Mtddl~p&lt; rt \und:.v
School 9 30 n m \\ r !up 10 ~~ m
Pn110r R&lt;' Moc~l A Thomp n Sr
~n1l4uil)

SuoJa) ScbOt&gt;l

Rutland l "'' \1 illllapti,t
Satcm St., Po&gt;lor Ed Jl.nncy , Sunda)
S,ho~l
10 am h'fntng 7 p m,
\\ednc Jav sm ,,e 7 p.m
Srwnd llapti'l Church
Ram«wOO&lt;I. II V Sunda&gt; ~chool [() 111n
\INnong wo~h1p 1 em henmg 1 pm,
1\cdne&gt;da) 7 p m
h"tll.•pli'' I hunh of\la"•n, \1 I
(Independent Baf~tstl
SR 652 and -\nderson St Pasto~ Robert
llntd). ~unday school 10 am \lnrnong
church II am Sund:.) e;emng o pm. \led
Robl StUd) 7 pm

Catholic
sa, n'lllh arl Cat holt, ( hurd•
161 Mulhern '\•e. Pomeroy, W2
1'\o t '' Rev 1\allcr ~ Heonz Sat
4 15 5 I ~I' m Ma&lt;s ~ 10 p m
C'on 8 15 Q I~ a n1 .. sun \lass
a m !Jail) Mass 8·1() 111u.

llaJ&gt;Ihl
1 Ill d m \\ •r hop

\lt. \!uriah ("hunh "' (,IJ&lt;I
Mote H1ll Rd , Ronne Pastor James
~allerfocld, sunday S&lt;hool 9:4S am
~venong o p m. lledne5day $en occs 7
p.m

Po I r IJ&lt;:n11l '\;nil llor&lt;blp 9 10 am
Sunday St· ool JO:lO am

Rulland (·hun·h Hf ( .otl

Kt·rd"'llh•

l'~"or

l.arr) Shrctn
Jl
r
!0 a m , 6 p m . 1\ednesda) Servocc•
pm

~X'I~.

Con
\un
!110

S)rdlHW f ir&gt;t l"h11 r&lt;h of God
Apple and Se,ond ~~~ Pa&lt;tor Rev Davod
Russell, Sunday School anc 1\•mhop HI
n m l:venrng Stm&lt;e• 6.10 I' m
1\edncsdJ) Ser.~res ~ 30 p rn
( hur&lt;h of (;,.J of Proo11hfl)

\\t't"rle ( hurch of l"hri•t
llUoChtldrep's llomr Rd Pomcro), Oil
( ootact 74() ~2 l847 sunda) momong
10 00 Sun mornmg Jloble stud)
followoog wo~hlp ~un ••e 600 pm.
1\ td bt le &gt;ludy 7 pm
'
llcmiOt ~ (,ro\l lhrhlian f"hunh
Miru&lt;tc '~rl} Jlr, I'D \\~rshop 4 10
am Sunda1 S&lt;houl 10·10 aJn. Boble
~rudy 7 pm
llollltm\ ( hurth ul· ( hrhl

2.2 1\ \la1n Sl sunday School 9'10
a n 1\orshop ,o lO am 1&gt; pm
1\ednesday Sem.es 7 p,m.
\\c't'idt Church ol l hrhl
Children'• llome R&lt;l, liunday
Scho10l II am \\orshop IOa.'ll, 6 p on
\\&lt;dntsda) 5trvt&lt;es 7 p m

ChapmHn Sunda) S&lt;hool
10 ant
\\orshop 11 a m \\ednesda) Servtces 7
pm.

Congregational
lrinit) ( hurch
P;tstor Rev lorn luhnsot Second &amp;
Lynn P&lt;&gt;m&lt;rc&gt;), Pastor , \lorshop 10 ::5

am

Episcopal
Grace Epi,cupal ("burch

'U'

F \1.un St. Pom&lt;IJ).
Holy
~u&lt;hari&lt;t I 10 m. Sundat &amp; S.:IO pm
\ltd Rev. l.t.slte l·lemnuog

Holiness
{ ummunit) (

hur~h

Stele lom~l, •.t.on Strat.
Rutland, Sun!h) 1\oO&gt;hop-JO.OO am
\uncto) serv.ce.-7 p.m

\!iddltpurt t hurth of l"hri't
and MJtn, P&gt;"or AI Han on.
Cbddrens Dorectur Sharon ~ayre Tceo
[~rector Dodger VautJtan. Sun.tly School
910arn 1\orshop 81' t030a.m,7
nt 1\ednelday :&gt;emo;es 7 ~ m

l&gt;an•ilk llolint"'' t"hurch
11057 SIJite Route 1:!-S. Lont"lle. Pastor.
Jlti.•n Batie), Sunda) schoo 9.30 am.
Sun&lt;by "OI'h•p Hl:lO .Lm. &amp; 1 p m
lltdocsday prJ) cr sm oce &lt;p m.
CuhBr) l'ilgriml hapel
Harnson-.Ue Rood. Pa&gt;tor Charles
M&lt;Kenlje, Sunda)' School ~JO am
\\or.&lt;htp 11 a.m. 7 00 p m \lednesda&gt;
Scmcc 7-llO p m.

~lh

Rose uf Sharon lloline" Church
Lcsding Creel; Rd . Rutland Pastur Rev
De"ev Kmg Sunda) schoo 9.311 am.,
Sundal worshop 7 p m 1\edncsW)
pr ycr nleeung 7 p m '
l'im· (,ro&gt;r llihlt•llnlint" Church
I 2 mile off Rt 325, Past&gt;r • Sunday
School rlO n.nt, \\o.r&gt;hop 10:30 a.m,
o.OO p m \\cdneslh) Servoce 7 00 p m

I
lll"•n"'ll''" Rid~&lt; ('hun:h or&lt; "hrist
1'3 Mllruce ferry. ~unda) \chool &lt;J 10
I. !II

\\or&lt;hlp
10 l() 1 '" "10 p m
1\ednesday :-.emces (.lOp m
/ion l hurch oil hri'l
Fo-meroy llarrosonv lie Rd (Rt , 4 ,,
Pa tor· Roge· \htson ~unda} School
910 am 1\or.hop 10:30 1m 7 0(
p m \\edncsday Smtces 7 'm.
fuppers l'l.un Churt·h of Chrht
trumental 1\orshop semce 9 am
Commum n 10 a m • Sunday Schoo
10: I~ am \outb- ~ 30 pm Sunda) 81ble
Stud) \\ ednesday 7 pm
Bradhur) Church ol ( hri'l
Monoster Jusun Rousb W558 BraJburv
Road Moddlepon. Stlnday S,h, ol 9:10
a(tl.

\\orship 10:30 am

1\eslrJan llihfr llnlint-.., Church
Pearl St Mtdtllepon i'-o1Stor [)Qug
Co• \unday School '0 an llorslup
10:45 p m, ~unday Eve 6 00 p m
llednes&lt;la) Serv1ce 7:00pm

7~

'I JO

I

l"h~ttr Church or tbt 'a.tartnt

om \\orshop

Pallor Rev. Warren Lukens, Sunday
School ~ 10 am 1\vr&gt;hop 1().3() am
SunJay eventng 6 pm
Rutland I hur&lt;h orthl" ,a,artnt
Pastor t:.enrge Stadler. Spn!hy School
9lO a.m 1\orshop - 111:30 a.m 6:10
p m. lledoe&lt;day ~ervo&lt;" 7 p m

hop 11 0 am Sunda&lt; School
10 30 '11, lor I Suolh) I \lo nth 7.00
p m emce l'a tor (iene Grodwon
lnJlr&gt;ns Plain, ~1. l'aul
!'J;t&lt;&gt;r Jom ( Nbnt. Sundav School 9
a on, \\or hop JQ d 111 I uesday Sm·O&lt;es
7 'Opm
l"tntral ( luslrr
A&lt;bury (~)rautse). l'a&gt;tor; Hob Robonsoo
Suoda) School ~..IS am., ll~&gt;r bop II
o.m 1\ ednesda) Sem'es 7 30 p m

II radford ( hurrh of Chri•l
Corner f St Rl. I.M &amp; llradbul} RJ ,
Y ulb Moorster Boll Amberger, Sunda)
School 'I lO a m 1\orsrup 8 00 a m,
10 10 ~.on 7 00 ~ m \\ednesday Sentces
700pm
flit·~&lt;&gt;r) Bills Church uf ( hri,f
luppen !'lam&lt;, l'ol.Sior Moke \!oore 1\ible
'lass. 9 am Sunda). wohhop :o am
Sunday, wo"htp 6l0 pm ~unda) Boble
dass 7 pm \led

Rl'fd"i!l• ( hu11·h ul Chri"
Pa.&lt;tor Jack Colgro\e Sunda) S,bOt&gt;l
9 110 am \\t~rslup Nr&gt;~ce· 10:10 a.m
BoNe Stud). 1\edoesda). 6 '10 p nt
llt\f&lt;r ( "hurch nf Chri't
~unJa) schoo19 10 a.nt, Sunda) wof\hop
I0:30a.m
I he ( hurch of ( 'hri't or Ponu·ro~
lntersectoon 7 und 114 II E' angehst
Dennt&lt; Sargent Sunday 1\oble \tud)
9 10 am, \\orsh1p. 10.10 • m .wd 610
p m. 1\&lt;dn~sda\ l!lblc \ludy 7 r m

Christian Union
llartford ( "hun·h nr l"hrhl in
Chri&gt;lian t nlon
Hantord. 11.\a Pnstor \1oke l'uc~eu.
sunda) ~chool 9·!0 am llt~rsho;&gt;
10 10 on 7.00 p.m. \\edn~Slla)
SCIItc&lt;! 7 fMI p.m

Sc:rvat,;t 10 30 a zu,

lltath 1\liddlrpon
Pa.!t&lt;)l Bnan Dunham. Sunda) s,ho&lt;•l
'O:OOam., 1\or.,hop II oo •.m.
\'hUJ1 S)f8t:U~

Pa&lt;tor Bob Robonson Sunday S&lt;hool
9l0a.m,\\ot;lup 1030om
l'•·•rl ( h.lpel
Sund3~ ~&lt;hnol 'lam. ll&lt;'rshtp IOa.m
\r" 1\eginning,' Church
PurncroJ
Pastor Bnan Dunll3m, \lor&lt;htp
am., ~unda) School 10:45 am

While's Chaptl We-leyan
Coolville Road, Pastor, Rev. Charles
Manmdale, Suo School - 9:30 a.m,
Worshlp-10:30 a rn., Wed Servtcc 7 p.m.
hiniew Jliblt Cburcb
letan, W.Va. Rt. 1 Pastor Bna.n May,
Sunda~ School 9:30am, Worshop- 7.00
p m. Wednesday Boble Study • 7 00 p.m.
fallh Fellow•hip Cru&gt;ade tor Christ
Pastor Rev. frankho Dicken$, Servocc:
fnday, 7 p.m
Cahal'} Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd., Pastor: Rev.
Blackwood, Sund3y School 9 30 am,
Won hop 10;30 a.m, 7.30 p m,
Wednesday Strvrcc 7-30 p.m.
Sti•tl';&gt;ille Community Church
Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Worship
11:00 um Wednesda)' 7:00 pm Pastor.
Bryan &amp; Mossy Dailey

O·a,;, Chri,tian Fello,.•hip
(.\oo-denomon•• toonal fellowslupl
:l.leeung on the ,\1eo,s Middle Stbool
Clll&lt;tena Pa_&lt;tor: Chns Stewan
10:00 am 'ioon Sunlhy; lnfonnal
1\or&gt;hip. Children's mtntslr)
Communi!) of Christ
PorUand-Racone Rd. Pastor Jom Proffon
Sunda)' School 9·10 a.m., \\orshrp
10 30 a.m. \\ednesda) Services 7:00
p.nt
Btthtl 1\or&lt;hip Center
3&lt;r82 St Rt. 7, 2 mole&lt; south of Tupper&gt;
Plarn~. OH. ~on-dcnomonattonal "''b
C'Pntemporary Praise &amp; Worship. Pastor
Reb Barbtr, Assoc Pastor Karyn Davts.
Youth Dorector Belly Fulk,. Sunday
services. 10 am \\o1&gt;hip &amp; 6 pm Famil}
L,fe Classes, 1\ed &amp; Thur nt~hl L1fe
Groups at 7 pm. fburs morning ladoes'
Ufe Group at !0. Outer I..Jnul' Youth I..Jfe
Group on 1\'eJ evemng Irom 6:}0 lo 8:30.
\'"'us onhne at w.. w.belbelwc.org

9:25

R&lt;J&lt;~Sprin~,

Pastor l&gt;.:wa)ne Stutler Sunday School
9 lO am \\orsh•p
10 1m.. Youth
l'tllo" sh1p Sunday 6 p m Early Sund3y
wor;lup 8 lUll. J.enora Leotlleot
kutland
Pastor· John ChapiiLlll Sunda) School
9"30 am \\of&gt;hlp 10:10 am Tbursd.ly
Servt&lt;es 7 p m
Salem ('tnlrr
Pastor. 1\olh:un K Marshall. Sunday
School 10 I' am, llonhtp 9J5n m.
Bohle Stud) M.mday 7 00 pm
Suo"\illt'

1\ethan)
Pa tor khn Roz.ewtcl sunday S&lt;hool
10 om , llo~shop q m \\ednesda)
Semce 10 a.m

\lornln2 'ilar
Pastor John ROZtWICZ. Sunday \chO&lt;•l
II am. 1\ mup lOam.

Laurrll lilt fl'\'(" \ltthodi5t Church
I'll tor: Glen McClung Sullda) ~cbool
9 lO d m. \\orshtp tO·IO a 'II. and 6
p m ,1\eJnesdav Sem,e 7 00 p m

h~ lrtart
Pastor Boll Marshall Sunday Scbocl
9a.m. \\orshtp 10 am 1&gt;1 Sunda)
even month everuo~ servtce 7:{)(1 p.m.
\\edncsd3) 7 p.m

Latter-Day Saints
Tht Church of Jt&gt;U&gt;
Chrht of l.afl&lt;r·H•J \.110b
St Rt. 160 4-lo t&gt;2~7 e&gt;r 446-7486
Sunday $,boo! 10 20-11 am. Rehef
Socoel) Pncstbood II 05 12 00 noon.
~acrame;lf Sen·~&lt;e 9·IO·IS e.m
Home~king mecung. 1st rturs. 7 p 111

Lutheran
St. .John l.ulhtran Church
Pme Grove. \lorshop 9:00am Sunda)
S&lt;hool 10.00 am. I'll wr

.

Our"'" lour l.uthuan ( hurd\
\\olnut and Henry St&lt; Ra-enswood
\1 \a, )'astor Da,ld Ru~1ell Sunday
School 10:00 am, \\oO&gt;htp II om

St. l'aull.uthcran l hurch
c..mer ~)&lt;3m0re &amp; Second St. 1\UDCIO),
Sun. s,hool '1.4~ am. \1 oolup h am.

United Methodist .
Graham l nitro \Mhudi't
\\or&lt;hop II a.m. Pastor Rl•hard 'l;e,rse
lie&lt; hid l nittd \lrthodi't
'•" Haven. Rrchard '\ea,e Pastor
Sunda) worshop q .10 d m fues ~: It)
j113) er and Bohle Stud).
\lt. Olht l nitl'd \lcthodht
Olf 124 h&lt;Joood "oll&lt;,volle l'a,tor Re•
Ralph Sport'. Sun~a&gt; S&lt;h•xr; 9:30a.m.,
\\•&gt;~&gt;hop
10 30 a m • 7 p m., ·1 hul'oda)
Sen ocr. 7 p m
\ld~' (

ooperathe Parhh
:olortheast Cluster. Alfrro. PallOr Genr
Goodwon, Sunda) S&lt;hool Q lO 4 m,
\lvr,.hop ll•.m.6.10pm
Chr,t&lt;r
J'a,tor· Jun Corblll \\or&lt;hop 9 am.,
\unda) Scb,&gt;ol
10 a.m. , lbur.da)
~\"r\li.:f'\ 7

pm

.Joppa

Church of God

\liddleport Communi!) Church
5"5 Pearl St. Moddltpon Pasto~ Sam
Aoder,on. Sunday School 10 a.m .•
E&gt;eorng '·30 p.m., 1\&lt;dne\llay Sen-t&lt;e7 30pm.
faith \alit) Tabemade Church
R"'l•y Run Road. Postor· R.- Emmett
Rawson. Sunday Evening • p.m.,
fhursda) S&lt;rvoce 7 p.m.

lOam

Rtt&lt;kin~port Church
1-..athr)n \\ole). Sunda) s,bool 9 30
aJU 1\orsrup JO·JO 3.m Pastor Ptulhp
BeU
Torch (burch
Co Rd. 63, Sunda) School 930 a.m ..
\\orsh1p •O·&gt;Oarn
•

.S}racu'e \Ji,,ion

1411 Bndgcman St., Syra&lt;use, Pa&lt;tor Rev. RO) Thompo;oo, Sunlhy School 10
a.m. Evenmg 6 p.m., Wedoesda) S~rvtc-e
'pon.

Nazarene
!'oint Rll(k Church of th&lt; 'l;ar.artne
Route Ni9. o\lbany Re' U&lt;&gt;)d Cinmm.'
pu&lt;tor. Sunda) "•boo! 10 .1m "orh"p
sm~te II am. t&gt;emng sema' pm lied
prayer mecun~ 7 pm

Uazd Communi!) Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: F.d&gt;el Han. Sunday
Scbool 9-10 am .. Worshop- 10:30 am.,
710p.m
D)t\\ille Communit) Church
9:30 a m.. II"OI'htp I0303.m.• 7 p.m
\!oN Chapel Church
Sunday school - 10 a.m. \\or.hop II
a.m. \\ednesda) Stn-oct- 7 p.m
Sunda~ Scbool

Faith Go-.ptl Church
Long Bottom, Sunda} S&lt;hool 9:30am .•
1\orsbop
10:45 a.m .. 7·3n p.m,
\lednesda) 7 lO p.m.

~~racuw ('hur&lt;h

full G&lt;npell.i~hthou.se
l304S Htlaod Rood. Pomeroy, l'a;tor Ro)
Hunter. Sund3y S&lt;hool 10 a.m., &amp; •:30
lh'&lt;lncsdav E\enong 7.30 p.m ..

l'un~t·rur

South IMhel Communi!) Church
SH&gt;" Rodgr Pastor Londa D•mt\\l)&lt;&gt;d .

l"hur&lt;h of the "'a1arenc
Pa,IN hn lo;enJ&lt;r Sunda) Sch&lt;"&gt;&lt;&gt;l

Hoh:oon Cbrhlian Fello»shlp Church
Pastor Herschel White, Sunday School·
lOam, Sun!hy Cb111th oervocc -6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Harri"'"' ille fommunit) Chur&lt;h
Pastor lberon Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m. and" p m.. 1\'edoe\llay 7 p.m

1\ethel Church
fo\\nshlp Rd. olhSC' \unday Scbool 9
am, ~orsb1p
10 1m 1\'edne'da)

oftht :\aJ.a.,nt•
Sunda\ School 4 10 am, 1\orsbip •
10 30 3 m 6 p 111, \led SCI"\Ke' 7 p.m

Salem Community Cburch
B""k c.t \\est Columbia. \\.Va om uevmg
Road, Pastor Charles Roush (304) 6752288, Sunday School 930 am, Sunday
e1enin' servrce 7:00 pm. Bibly Srudy
Wednesday servoce 7;00 pm

t'aith hll Goopel Church
Long Bonom. Pastor Sre;-e Reed. Sunday
s.hool 9·~0 a.m. \\orsbip - 930 a.m
and 7 p m, lledoe&lt;lh) • 7 p.m, Fnday fellowship senocc' p.m.

Cooh ille l nitro \lrthodi'l Pari'h
Pastor Helen Khnt, Cool\ lie Chur,h,
Mam &amp; Fifth St, Sun School 10 am.,
\\orsh1p 9 am. Tues Smtces 7 p.m.

Rl'fd" ille Frllo.,,hip
Churrh of the \azarene, PN&lt;&gt;r Ru&lt;&gt;ell
Omon Sunda) S,hool 9: It) a.m,
1\orship 10:~5 a.m. 7 p.m. 1\edn&lt;,da)
Ser&gt; ll"t' 7 p.m

Full GQSpt! Cburch
of the LhingSa,ior
Rt.338. Antrqwty, Pa&lt;tor· Jesse Morris,
Serv1cn Saturday 2:00p.m.

\bundant Grace
923 S Third St, \11ddlepcrt. Paster Teresa
Davis, Sunday servtce 10 a.m.
1\edne&gt;da) SCM&lt;C, 7 p m.

RadntRe' 1\ tl.t:un \l.usball 'lunda)
Sdtoo!
:0 a.m. 1\orslup
a.m. 1\&lt;dnesda) S&lt;rvoce' 6 pm Tbur Soble
Siudy 7 pm

\lidtllt•(l&lt;ort l"hun·h of the :\a,.arrn•·
f&gt;a,lor l~••nard 1\&gt;well Sunday S&lt;hOt&gt;l
9:30a.'ll,\\orshop 10.30a.nt.~:30p.m ..
1\edn«da\ $en ices 7 p m.

Clifton Tabtmacle Church
Chiton. W.Va . Sunday School - 10 a m.,
Worship - 7 p.m. Wednesday Servocc - 7
pm.

·n.

Pa~

~t.'l"'ll't"'

Rejolciog Ute Church
SOO N. 2nd Ave .. Moddlepo11, Pastnr;
Moke Forema.n, Pastor bnentus Lawrence
Foreman,.Worsbtp- 10:00 am
Wednesday Servoces 7 p.m.

\sh Slrttl Church
3Y8 Ash ~1.. \1oddlepon·Pa&lt;lors Mark
\1ono" &amp; Rodne) 1\alker Sunday
s,bool \1:10 a m., \lorn on~ \\orship 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6:30pm, 1\ednesday Service
6-l() p m., Youth Ser.occ- 1:00 p.m.
\~apt Ure Center
"full-Gospel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Poll) \lade, foO' Second Ave. \Woo.
5017 Serv~&lt;e ttme Sunda) 10:30 a.m
\\&lt;dnesday 'pm

Carmel·Sutl&lt;on
Cerme&lt; &amp; B:!Shan Rds Ra"ne Oboo
Pastor J hn Rc•zewtez. Suoda) School
9 45 a m 1\ rslup II 00 3.m , Boble
Stud) lied 7 10 p m

Service 6

trtroom Go.pd \filsion
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd 31, Pastor Rev.
Roger Willford, Sunday School • 9:30
a m. Worsbop- 7 p.m

Common &lt;;round ~fi\~ion"i
l'a;t f! Dennos \1nort &amp; R1ck IJitle
Sunday 10:00 am
"! eamJI!'&gt;u)
l':llW· Eddie Baer, Sun. Wonhop II am
l33 Mechanoc St P11mero)
.\e10 II ope Our&lt;h
Old Amencan Lcgic'n H.tl.
fourth Ale , \loddlepon. Sunda)' 5 p.m
S1racu"' Communlt} Church
2480 Se..ood St S) r;!Cuse, OH
Sun. School 10om, Sund) noght 6 :10 pm
Pastor Joe (iwmo
\ \e" B('j:innlng
I full GO'optl Church) HarrMnvolle,
Pastors: Bob and Kay MaO&gt;hall,
fhurs. 7 pm.
\mating Grare Communi!) Church
Pastor \layne Dunlap SUite Rt. 6lll,
fuppeN P1runs, Sun \\ooh1p: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed Bohle Stud) I 00 p.m.

forest Run
l'asiN 1\ob Robonson, ~uu!hy School 10
d.m \1 rshop 9 a.m

f,YCOllll

p.m.

Other Churches

l·lal""'""
!'astor l.lewayoe Stunler ~uoday S&lt;hoo!
lO on, 1\prship II a m

IIJs&lt;ll Run Communi!) Chun:h
Pa.&gt;tor Rev. l.m) Lemley, Suodav School
9 :10 a.m , \\oO&gt;bop • 45 a.m 7 p m
Thursday lltble Stud\ 311d Youth 7 p.m.

Rutl~1rd

( hunh of Chrl&lt;t
~unda) chool 9 30 am \\orsbtp !llld
Commun on
10 l a m, Oavod
1\ .&gt;eman. Moooster

Carleton !nttrdtnomlnatlooal (burch
Kmgsbury Road, Pastor. Roben Vance,
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m, Woohip

( A'Jlll UtJtiUnl

Sunday Se!
1030 m

SundayS,bool IOam\\orshop 9a.m
1-..eoo l hurrh nf I "hrl•t
\\or hop 9 ~0 am \unJd) 5chool
10 lOam Pll.&lt;tor Jeffrey 1\allac~. 1st and
~nl Suoda1

10 a. m 2nd and 4th Sunday

l'a tor

I'Oul&lt;nt)

3322~

9 10 a 1n Wouhop 10:30 am znd 6
p m, \\edne1llay Sen,.es 7 p.m

\1,

0 J 1\ hole Rd off St Rt- Iffi. Postor PJ

Church of Christ

Baptist

•

The Dally Sentinel • Page AS

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

F~llowship

•

www.mydallysentinel.com

Re.toration Christian FtJio,.ship
9365 Hooper Road. Athens, Pastor·
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10.00 am,
1\edoesday· 7 pm
House or Healing \finislrie.
St. Rt. 124 t.angs,iUt, OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Roben cl Robena
!1-iusser, Suoda) School 9:30 am, ,
Worsbop 10.30 am - 7:00 pm. Wed
Servoce 7 00 pm
Team Jesu.o. "\1inhlries
Pastor: Eddie Baer. Meeun~ 333
Mechanic Stree~ Pomeroy OH .
Servoce e&gt;el)· Suoda) II :00 a.m

Pentecostal
PenlerosiJII \s.embl)
Pastor St. Rt 124. Ra.:me, Tornado Rd
Sunda)· School • 10 am, Evening . 7
p.m, Weduesda) Sen1&lt;es 7 p.m

Presbyterian
Harrison,iUe Pmb}terian Church
Pastor· Re&gt;. Dav1d Faulkner. \\orshop
9;00 a.m Sunda)
\liddleporl Prtsb)lerian
Pa_,ror lames So)dcr, Suoda) School 10
a.m, "'or.hip service II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
St&gt;enlh·Dal Ad'enlist
Mulberry Hts Rd, Pomero), Satunla)
Semces Sabbath School - 2 p.m ,
Wor.hip- 1 p.m

United Brethren
\IL Hermon l nilfd Brethren

in Chrhl Church
re,as Communoty 36411 \liclt.bam Rd.
f&gt;a,tor. Peter Marundale, Sunday Scbool
q-.10 a.m. Worship - 10.30 a.m. 7:00
p m.. Wednesda) Se~oces ':00 p.m.
Youth group metung 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 p.m.
Eden l nitro Brtlhrtn in l'brist
Stare R~ulr 124, between ReedsVIlle &amp;
HoXkm~port. Sunda) SchOt&gt;l 10 a.m.,
Sund.o) \\or;lup • II 00 a.m. Wednesday
Service&lt; - 7:00 p.m., Pastor- M '\dam
\\Ill

.

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
j19hrr. ~nbrrson. :fl:lcDtllllrl
jfnnrral l!)omr

"Let your light so shtne heforl'
men. that the) ma) sec ) uur

'liddleJlnr1, OH

good works and glufif) )Ollf

.Jam~'

Father in hea\Cn"
~l.tllhcw

5 Ih

491J Ridlland AHmue, Athens
74U.594-6lU
1-800-451-91106
'' \\ \l,kurnmdioloe.y.rom

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�..
PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 15,

2010

A Hunger for More
In the little Italian burb
of Florence, a sculptor
taps patiently away at
seventeen foot tall block
of marble.
Tap,'tap, tap!
"Hmmm. Maybe a bit
more right here," he says
to himself as he resets his
chisel.
Tap, tap. crack!
"Oops!" says the sculptor as he gazes at the
huge section of stone
totally crumbled at ·the
block's base. The monolith now looks as if it is
leaning, about to fall over
on its side.
could
somebody get this thing
outta here and bring me a
new block of marble!"
"Hey,'' says his friend.
Mike. who happens to be
walking through. " If
you· re not gonna use
that, could I have it?"
The nameless sculptor
shrugs. "Why not? lt's
ruined now so I don't
want it. You can have it!"
With a little help from
his proteges, Mike manages to get the nine ton
stone block moved to his
own studio. Once it is

a

··urn,

Mike.
man, Jesus looked at the Hades will not overcome
Our friend Mj.ke, born m:'m nnd saw the stone it" (Matthew 16:15-IR).
What do you c;;ee when
Michelanoe 1
ans "stont )
you look at those around
Buonarroti, looks on t
1U111p of OOZ111!
masterpiece before him mud, not a pile of dusty you? Do you see imperand murmurs softly. and worthless rubble, not fections? Do you only
"See? I told you that I'd even gravel with which perceive failures and
lind you.''
to line one's driveway, "throwaways?" That's
About fifteen hundred Jesus saw something of not the way the f·ather
years
before infinite worth hidden sees them. He sees peoMichelangelo carved the deep inside the rough and ple who are broken. yes.
magnificent form of wild man. He saw him He sees the blemishe~
David, Jesus looked on a and discerned the poten- and the faults. yes. He
Thorn Mollohan
rough cut figure .of a fel- tial for faith and love and even sees the hidden
low. a tishennan named beauty. He looked inside imperfections that you
settled into place, he dis- Simon (John I :42), and the heart of Peter and saw and I cannot perceive
misses his students and saw something more than a life that would come with our human eyes.
But instead of looking
alive and change the
then surveys the mono- a "throwaway."
"The
first
thing world in unimaginable at them as unwanted
lithic block of stone with
Andrew did [after having ways as the Holy Spirit "lumps," He sees instead
a critical eye.
what beautiful works of
''You can't hide from first met Jesus l was to of God worked within
art that might be made of
me. I see you in there," find his brother Simon him.
and tell him, 'We have
"What about you?' them. Instead of comhe says as a smile spreads found the Messiah· (that
[Jesus] asked. 'Who do plaining about all the
across his face. Anned is, the Christ). And he you say I am?' Simon "block"-heads that are in
with a hammer and chis- brought him to Jesus. Peter answered, 'You are His way. He dreams big
el. Mike begins hunting Jesus looked at him and the Christ, the Son of the dreams and welcomes
the elusive quarry hidden said, ·You are Simon son living
God.·
Jesus the imperfect and marred
within. For three years he of John . You will be replied, 'Blessed are you, into the divine studio of
breaks dead stone loose called Cephas' (which. Simon ... for this was not His grace. There He
from the marble muscles when
translated,
is revealed to you by man, begins to patiently chisel
and stony sinew of Peter)" (John I :41-42).
but by My Father in out masterpieces as men
David. Eventually. the
This is something of heaven. And I tell you and women place their
enemy of Goliath and the the
reverse
of that you are Peter, and on faith wholeheartedly in
great king of Israel stands Michelangelo who, when this rock I will build My Him and align themfree and clear in front of looking at stone, saw the Church. and the gates of selves with His will.

I'm glad. I'm glad
because I'm one of those
"block"-heads. I'm gla.
because God saw in m
something more than
failure and brokenness.
I'm glad because He
loved me and saw something more than a
"throwaway.''
"We also thank God
continually
because,
when you received the
Word of God, which you
heard from us, you
accepted it not as the
word• of men, but as it
actua1ly is, the Word of
God, which is at work in
you who believe" (I
Thessalonians 1: 13).
(Thorn Mollohan and
his family have ministered in southern Ohio
the past 15 years and is
the author of The Fairy
Tale Parables. He is the
pastor
of Pathway
Communit) Church and
may be reached for comments or questions by
email
at.
pa .5/orthom@ path waygallipolis.com.)
Copyright© 2010,

Thorn Mollohan.

Search the Scripture
" these were more
noble ... they searched
the scriptures daily ... "
This week. to complete the study of the 7
"ones" of Ephesians 4:4-6, we look at what
God says about the "one body." First. the
body is Christ's church: "and hath put all
things under his feet, and gave him to be the
head over all things to the church. which is
his body, the fulness of him that filleth all i11
all" [Eph. l :22.23]; "and he is the head of the
body, the church: whQ is the beginning, the
firstborn from the dead~ that in all things he
might have the preeminence'' [Col. 1:18].
Let's review part of the prayer Jesus prayed
shortly before His arrest: "Neither pray I for
these alone [the 12 apostles]. but for them
also which shall believe on me through their
word; that they all may be one~ as thou.
Father, art in me. and I in thee, that they also
may be one in us: that the world may believe
that thou hast sent me" [John 17:20.21 ].
From these verses we learn: (I) Jesus
prayed for all down through time who would

believe on Him; (2) believers would learn
how to obey God through the words of the 12
apostles~ (3) all believers would be ''one;" (4)
the oneness of all believers would convince
the world that Jesus was the One sent by God.
Beginning in Acts 2. the 12 began teaching
what God requires of all in the last age of the
world [Acts 2: 14]. Since the 12 learned from
Jesus Himself and from the Holy Spirit after
Jesus returned to His heavenly home. the
doctrine which they taught. we can be sure
there wa::; unity of teaching. There would be
no competing groups teaching different doctrines. Religious teachers who want to bring
together many groups into the "one body" go
to John 15: l-6 in an attempt to justify the
divisions.
A close look at the passage shows that
throughout. it is individuals under discussion. not groups: v.5: "he that abideth in me.
and I i!l him ... ··: v.6: "if a man abide not in
me ....
Farther down in John 15. ''if ye keep my
commandments. ye shall abide in my Jove"
(v.IO]; "ye are my friends, if ye do whatsoever I command you" [v.l4 ]. Careful reading
gives no indication tha_t groups are under discussion.
First Corinthians 12: 12_-27. using the analo-

gy of the physical body. leaves no doubt that
the "one body" is made up of individuals. As
the foot. the hand. the ear, the eye. are all
essential members of the physical body and
work in tfarmony for the benefit of the body,
so. too. each individual Christian is a member of the body of Christ. "Now ye are the
body of Christ. and members in particular"
[v.27]. God. through Paul; says division
among His followers is a sign of immaturity:
''And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as
unto spiritual, but as unto carnal. even as
unto babes in Christ. I have fed you wit .
milk. and not with meat. for hitherto ye were
not able to bear it. neither yet now are ye
able. Por ye are yet carnal: for whereas there
is among you envying. and strife. and divisions. are ye not carnal, and· walk as men?'' [ l
Corinthians 3: 1-3].
No. readers. the "one body" is not made up
of many religious groups: God demands unity
among His people: unity in teaching. in
name. in worship.
Bring your Bible. search the scriptures with
the church of Christ. We meet at 234 Chapel
Drive, off Bulaville Road.
Visit our Web site: www.chapelhillchurchofchrist.org.

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our neighbors, that IS people with whom we can mteract ma W&lt;l} whb can
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we can JUSt as easily harm them sometimes unknuw 0 1} Amencans who b~}
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others. These days v.-e may have more direct contact with someone living
halfway around tie world than we do w1th the person lmng ne:d door Cons1der
how our achons might be helping or harming our neighbors around the world
and next door. We should love our ·mghbors as ourselves. Whe l asked \~ho {lur
e1ghbors are, Jesus responded with the parable of the Gooo s..~an:an the
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�PageA7.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October

15, 20t Q ,

Poor tackling posture Harm your hurt_
· will get you hurt
Football is a game
played in which the
potential for getting hurt
IS a persi tent concern. I
always feel compassion
for parents who have to
traipse onto the field
when their child goes
down with injury. lne
big reason for that is
because I have been there
and done that on occa~ion.

Incidentally, during a
varsity football game in
JQQR, Keithen got hurt
badly, and I helped him
off the field in the second
quarter. Then, Emn got
hurt badly, and I helped
him off the field in the
third quarter. It was a bad
night for the Branch
brothers for sure.
But, of all our boys. it
•
as Micaiah 's situation
during one of his junior
high games that brought
to me the most concern.
On
Parkersburg
Catholic's opening offensive series, their big fullback broke out on a nmning play. Micaiah came
up from his defensive
position to attempt the
tackle. It was a vicious
collision
in
which
Micaiah got the worst of
the impact. Standing
along the sidelines with
the team. I cringed when
I saw how the impact
went against him.
When he hit the
ground.
my
initml
thought \\as that he was
not going to get up J

.

•

Ron Branch
began thanking God,
however,
when
he
jumped to his feet and
started running for the
sideline.
Once there, he started
gasping
desperately,
because the air had been
knocked out of him.
Then, suddenly he collapsed to the ~round,
complaining voc1ferou ly about hurting badly in
the m1ddle of hi~ back.
Fortunately, a medical
professional was quickly
on hand. which. after a
good examination, indicated that Micaiah basically had not suffered
injury to keep him out of
the game. The Lord was
very gracious, I believe.
But, there was a significant
reason
why
Micaiah got hurt the way
he did It was because of
poor tackling posture.
When the contact was
made, Mrcaiah was on
h1s heels with his head
bent over way tou far.
Poor tackling posture

will indeed get a player
hurt.
After the game, the
thought about Micaiah's
poor tackling posture
shifted from the football
field to a significant spiritual comparison.
Ruminate on this for a
moment. Why is it that
many in the church so
often get hurt when they
experience the impact of
life's head-on confrontations? The answer can be
traced to one critical
truth. Spiritual inj ury
occurs when one is not in
proper spiritual posture.
For example, overi.Y
sensitive people are easily hurt because they ar~
not in proper spiritual
posture to maturely
countem1and critical tidbits. People struggle with
lust JS ucs because they
are not in proper spiritual
posture to deal forthrightly with temptation.
Others are quick to condemn because they are
not in prope~; spintual
posture to practice the
Lord's expectations. All
too many nssociated with
the church fall away
because the} have not
positioned themselves
properly in the truths and
principles of God.
What further complicates matters is that it is
so ens) to get out of
proper spiritual pbsture.
Micaiah stated several
times over the years since
that game that he usuall)

did not tackle in the
"rong way, to which J
have replied that it only
takes one time oftackJing
with poor technique to
get hut1.
It is Jonah who comes
to mind at this point. In
the belly of the fish, he
showed clearly that he
had not been in proper
spiritual
posture.
Nonethele~s.
having
shaped up spiritually,
God used Jonah mightily
in Nineveh. But, Jonah's
posture slumped quickly
again when he afterwards
vented anger toward God
for sparing the city from
divine
judgment.
Because of his poor spiritual
posture,
God
rebuked him.
Listen. proper tackling
posture has become a
perspective for emphasizing Scripture's constant emphasis on the
importance of Biblical
prin~iples such as "walkmg in the Spirit," ••growing in grace and knowledge,'' and " letting the
Word of Christ dwell in
you richly.'' Failure to do
so assumes an otherwise
poor spiritual posture,
which opens us up for
ea~ily getting hurt.
Micaiah · eventually
returned to the game, and
earned credit for nine
tackles. His technique
was much better.
(Rev. Ron Branch is

pastor of Faith Baptist
Church m Mason, W Va.}

Life: God's gift to you

To television's belo,ed
Fred Rogers belongs the
credit for h1s saying ...
''it's a beautiful da} in the
neighborhood.'' To God
belongs the credit. the
praise. nnd the glory for
this being an absolute!}
beautiful day'
The sun is shining, and
the temperature is ideal
for this time of year.
There are some clouds in
the sky above, yet I am at
a loss for words as to
how to describe them.
Suffice it to sa).
they're up there - which
is. of course, where
clouds are supposed to
be.
How about you? Are YO-U where you are- supposed to be? Now I'm
not talking about your
esent position on th('
uch, or in your favorite
•
sy chair at home.
For all J know, you
may be reading this at
your work site. Jf so, I
hope you are either the
boss, or hnve his or her
approval to read this on
company time. It's your
life; I suggest you hve it
wisely and productively.
In fact, your life is
God's gift to you. Never
mind that you are the
direct consequence of the
uniting of your father's
sperm with one of your
mother's eggs. I'm here
to remind you that your
life far exceeds some
mere biological happenstance; rather, your conception was itself what
we might think of as a

One of the things that
the devil hates is when
you love. When you do
for others what they
don't even deserve. Jt is
when your love for God
and for others supersede.:;
your own selfish desires.
Satan hates that. Why?
Simply because it exemplifies the love of God
and not the selfishness of
man.
This is why the enemy
of our soul sends situations our way to get us to
act selfishly as opposed
to lovingly.
We all experience.
times of disappointments, discouragements
and hurt. Most of us
know what it means to be
"stabbed in the back" by
a so called friend or coworker. in order to get
ahead of us. Others
become badly hurt by
unfaithfulness, a divorce,
or by a child that disobeyed his/her parents.
Hurt is almost inevitable
in the human race.
For most, hurt is hard
to let go of. For most.
hurts causes people to
retaliate or get even. Jt
creates a number of anxieties, stress and sleepless
nights, eventually causing even physical illness.
When someone hurts
you it creates an emotional tie that can bind
you to that person and
this gives the other person power over your life,
mentally, emotionally
and even physically.
Forgiveness on the other
hand, is the act that. 1f
done from the heart. can
break those ties and set
the person free.
Forgiveness is one of
those tools that God has
giVen us to use that
d monstrates freedom
d releases us from the
ttnchments of life's
pam, and hurt from others.
True forgiveness is the
love of God manifested
through an imperfect person. In this God is glorified and \\e live happy

I

Alex Colon
,1

and free.
1
Sometimes th1s is real-·,
ly hard to do when badly,
hurt. But the more you.'
forgive immediately the
easier it gets. This IS one '
of the best way:; tu harm
your hurts.
•
God forgives us imme1 ·'
dmtely when \\e ask. Ht; ,
holds no grudges again h
us and keeps no account
of our sins against Him 1
when we ask to be for?.
given. To forgive lik&lt;;
God forgives, is to love
like God loves. This i'&gt; •
when love is free and no1
an obligation.
1,
When loving Hnn .,
becomes an obligation,
one of many things we
have to do. we end up
focusing even more on
ourselves. To love Him
however, is to focus on
Him and it is to want to
Jove Him even more.
This is freedom at its
best and being in love
with the one who loved
us first.
I pmy that if you have
been hurt. that you \\ilt
be able to ham1 your hurt
today by forgiving others
and expressing the Love
of God inside of you
bringing you into a place
of freedom. peace and
joy. Remember that hurt
comes from evil: therefore, harm your hurts ·!
with the goodness of,,
God.
Make it a great \\eek! f
( Rel'. Alex Colon 1s

you \\ ith at the outset. o Count&gt; .
Ministenal
pastor of Lighthouse i
that you no\\ need t
soc1at1on, workmg
Assembl\ of God in '
recO\er it.
~.:onjunct1on
with the
Gallipolis, 0/zio. Online '
This IS \\ h} l asked you L.S.S. Mobile Food
ar www.lagoluo.or~.)
earlier if you are \\here Pantr), were distributing
Y-0-l' are supposed to \'arious foodstuffs to
be. In aying that God those
eligible
and
has gifted ) ou with life. J enrolled to receive them.
ha,·e not hed to you.
These are some won- '
However, there j~ some- derful people - gracious
thing else 1 am now and grateful, friendly and
going to tell you which kind, sharing and spontagoes hand-in-hand with neous. Many have seen
that, and which adds better times: some have I
some serious '"flesh" to seen worse. Whate\ er it '
b that tomorrow might
the whole concept.
Ready or not. here 1t is: bring only God knows ... Just as your life is but God already is there,
God's g1ft to you. '"what and that works for us.
But I know this: all of
you do '' ith your life is
your gift to God.'' There us who were there at
11 is - the truth. the Sacred Heart yesterday.
whole truth. and nothing like all of you reading
but the truth.
this now. are precious in
God was never under God's sight. God was
any obligation to give present when you were
you life but, for reasons born. and fnr every one
known only to Him. God of your birthdays since
chose you to live. t,hen: He was beside you
Exact!) what kind of life at the altar when you
you've been living is. for took your marriage vows,
the most part. something and He ·s stood alongside
only you and God know you when .you said your
conclusively.
last good-byes to your
Perhaps your life has loved ones. God has been
been headed South for so -with you, is with you.
lo~ you no longer know and He "ill be with you
wh1ch way is up. Not to when vou die.
God" has a vested interworry: God is a God of
second chances. Third e~t in you, so be sure to
James and Laura Rainey
chances. too. And fourth, take care of your-;eJves.
and fifth - get the pic- May you always choose
ture?!? God has a plan to li\ e the sort of life of
for you, so never quit which qod app~oves, and
GALLIPOLIS -James and Lauro Raine} will pre '
hoping: there is always be to Hm1 a tatthful sersent a concert at 6 p.m.. Sunday, Oct. 17 at F1rst
vant. Shalom.
hope.
(Rev. Thomas Johnson Church of the Nazarene in Gallipoh~. Admis.,ion is
Yesterday was the econd Tuesday of the i~ pastor of Trinitv free. A lo' e offering will be accepted. First Church of
month. As was t) pical of Church• in Pomeroy, the Nazar('ne is located at 1110 First Avenc in
Gall ipolis. For infom1ation. call (740) 446-1772.
thts day, we of the Mdgs Ohio.)

IN CONC E R T

Thomas Johnson
"divine appointment.''
Indeed. as Psalm 139
eloquently sets forth.
God envisioned each and
every one of us as the I iving, breathmg individuals
we are today long before
we ever were actually
conceived. Life is itself a
magnificent miracle nnd so are you! God
wants you to kno\\ this.
so He's laid it on my
heart to use this space to
say so.
Again. )our life is
God's girt to you. Your
birth was no accident. so
don't let anyone try and
tell you otherwise! God
doesn't make mistakes.
You're d palt of His
master pl1'1n for this world
in which we are now hving. Already m you, too,
is the "right stuff' to
enable you to endure,
persevere, and overcomt:
anything the world might
throw
up
at
you.
Unfortunately, the life
you have been living may
have "smothered" the
good stuff Gnd equipped

I

I

Raineys at First Nazarene

�- ~

Page A~ • The Daily Sentinel

- - --

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

Friday, October, 15, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

~-

-

-SAY WHAT? -

-

------

NAME: Joe
Staysntak
HOMETOWN:
EIJ'Ila
OHIO STATE
YEARS: 1986-1989
HIGHUGHTS:
Staysn1ak started
three years at offenswe tackle and was named first·
team AII-B1g Ten as a senior.
AFTER OSU: Staysn1ak was select·
ed 1n the seventh round of the 1990
NFL draft by the San Diego Chargers.
He had a sLx-year NFL career, four of
them WltP the Indianapolis Colts. He
hosts a sports talk show ~ rad1o in
Indianapolis and IS part of the Colts
rad1o pregame show.

1: Who IS Wisconsin's other Heisman
Trophy winner besides Ron Dayne?

2: Whose Interception 1n the final
m1nute clinched OhiO State's 20-17 'Nin
over Wisconsin in 2008?

3: Which of Ohio State's assistant coach·
es has been there the longest?
4: Who does Wisconsin coach Bret
Bielema say IS the best player he ever
coached aga1nst?

5: How many po1nts d1d Terrelle Pryor
score in his high school basketball
career?
Answers: 1. Alan Ameche en 1954; 2.
Malcolm Jenkins: 3. J1m Heacock, 15 years;
4. Vince Young; 5. 2,285

Devin Smith, a sen1or WJde receiver
from Massillon Washington, who has
commrt:ed to OSU, scored on a 76·
"Wherever he
yard pass on his team's first offensive
play in a 28-7 win over Steubenville
is, he
last week. A week ear1ier, he scored
on the game's first play when he
represents Ohio
returned the opening kickoff 79 yards
for a touchdown.
State.
Nick O'Leary, a grandson of Jack
He's probably
Nicklaus, and a senior tight end from
Beach Gardens, Aa., does not
even more noticeable than Palm
have Ohio State on h1s list of h1s top
five schools, which includes Alabama,
Gordon Gee."
Aorida State, Georgia, Miami and
North carolina.
Sam Grant, a 6·3, 230-pound
- Oh1o St&lt;.te defensive lineman Dexter junior tight end from Lakewood St.
Edward High School, made an unoffiI41rimore about coach jim 1re:;scl.
cial visit to Ohio State last weekend.

&lt; WIDE RECEIVERS

&lt; QUARTERBACKS
Oheo State fans spent two years wonying Terrelle Pryor did·
n't throw the ball well enough and now the concern is he
won't be able to run enough. bsu coach Jim Tressel says
Pryor (1,349 yards pass1ng, 354 yards rushing) IS ready to be
a two-way threat aga1n this week after not running the ball in a
38-10 Win over Indiana ,ast week because of a strained leg muscle. Pryor leads
B1g Ten quarterbacks With 15 touchdown passes.
Wlsconsen quarterback Scott Tolzien (1.201 yards, seven IDs) 1s a play-rt-safe
QB who IS t1ed for t11e fewest Interceptions in the Big Ten with two. Tolzten hasn't
had a turnover en h1s last four games, but OSU entercepted h1m twice for touchdowns 1n a 31·13 win last season.
Advantage: Ohio State

How big are Wisconsin's offensive linemen? "That offen·
sive line is a bunch of guys 7-foot-2 and 400 pounds.
They're humongous," Ohio State defensive tackle Dexter
Larimore said. Left tackle Gabe Canm1 (6-7, 327 pounds)
and guard John Moffitt (6-5, 323 pounds) were first-team
All-Big Ten in 2009.
For Ohio State, left tackle Mike Adams was named the
team's offensive lineman of the week for the second time. Right tackle J.B.
Shugarts had to leave the Indiana game because of soreness in his foot, but is
expected back this week.
Advantage: Wisconsin

&lt; DEFENSIVE UNE
Ask a hundred people who Ohio State's best defensive l!ne·
man IS this season and 99 of them will say C'..ameron
Heyward. But Heyward says it's Nathan Williams (five tackles
for losses, 1.5 sacks). OSU's defenswe line has gotten good
~ pressure on opposing quarterbacks but would like to increase
rt:s sack total (eight).
Defenseve end J.J. Watt (6-6, 285 pounds) leads Wisconsin with 8.5 tackles
for losses and also has two sacks.
Advantage: Ohio State

&lt; UNEBACKERS
Ross Homan (37 tackles) and Brian Rolle (30 tackles) will
be key players when Ohio State's defense, ranked No. 2 in
the Big Ten with 78.7 yards per game allowed, takes on
Wisconsin's running game, also ranked second in the Big Ten
at 240.8 yards per game.
Wisconsin suffered a big loss when Chns Bor1and, last year's
B1g Ten Freshman of the Year, had to shut 11: down for the season when his surgically repaired shoulder did not heal proper1y. Culmer St. Jean leads the team 1n
tackles (33).
Advantage: Ohio State

&lt; DEFENSIVE BAC •

JOHN SIMON
The 6-foot-2, 270-pound sophomore defensive lineman
faces a m1ghty challenge thiS weekend aga1nst Wiscons1n's
beefy offensive line. S1mon has 15 tackles this season, three
for a loss, With one sack and a fumble recovery.

Devon Torrence, who came to Oh10 State as an offensive
player, has made a big 1mpression at cornerback this season. Torrence has an interception and is tied for the team
lead with four pass break-ups. Safety Jermale Hines was
one of two OSU defenders who returned interceptions for
touchdowns against Wisconsin last season.
For Wisconsin, cornerback Antonio Fenelus has two interceptions. Safety Jay
Vala1 IS st~l remembered not too fondly by some Ohio State fans for his two
hits that caused concussions for Dane Sanzenbacher and Dan Herron the last
time the Buckeyes played at Wisconsin in 2008.
Advantage: Ohio State

Wlscons•n's John Clay (6·1, 248 pounds) is a runn1ng back

vmo looks like a linebacker. He runs that way too. Clay (692

yards, n1ne IDs) and the smaller, speed1er James White (485
yards, eight IDs) give the Badgers options in the runneng game.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Clay has run for 100 yards or more in 11 of his last 12 games.
Ohio State kicker Devin Barclay IS 11 of 12 on field goals, with a long kick
White, a freshman, has gained more than 100 yards in two of hiS last three games.
For Oh1o State, Dan Herron (355 yards) apparently has claimed the No. 1 tail- of 42 yards. Freshman Drew Basil, the long-range kicker, has had both his
back spot. Brandon Saine was used mainly as a receiver and didn't get a cany attempts blocked this season. Ben Buchanan is averaging 40.9 yards per kick.
Wisconsin kicker Philip Welch is 7 of 9 on field goals With a long kick of 49
r aga1nst Indiana. Herron had 68 yards on 12 cames, including a 39-yard touchyards. Punter Brad Nortman is averaging 42.2 yards per kick.
down run last week after rushing for 95 yards the week before aga1nst Illinois.
Advantage: Even
Advantage: Wisconsin

&gt;

&lt;

School
Ohio State
~•ch1gar State
IOwa

Purdue
WISCOOSin
M1ch1gan
Northwestem

lllenoiS
Indiana
Penn State
M.nnesota

Big Ten
W L

2
2
1
1
1

0
0
0
0
1

1

1

1
1

1
1

0
0

2
2

0

2

Overall
L

W

6
6
4
3
5
5
5
3
3
3
1

0
0
1
2
1
1
1
2
2
3
5

BIG TEN TREND: Ohio State has
won four of the last five times it
has played at Wisconsen's Camp
Randall Stad1um.

BIG TEN SCHEDULE
OSU at Wiscons•n. 7:15p.m.
lllinoes at Mich1gan State, noon
ArKansas State at Indiana, noon
Minnesota at Purdue, noon
Iowa at Michigan, 3:30 p.m.
TOP 25 GAMES TO WATCH
Boston College at Fla. State, noon
Texas at Nebraska, 3:30 p.m.
Arkansas at Auburn, 3:30 p.m.
BYU at TCU, 4 p.m.
McNeese State at LSU, 7 p.m.
Iowa State at Oklahoma, 7 p.m.
Boise State at S. Jose State, 8 p.m.
Mississippi at Alabama, 9 p.m.
Oreg:Jn Slate at 'Nashl('€torl, 10:15 p.m.

Passing Yards
Terrelle Plyor .........................1349
Rushing Yards
Dan Herron ..............................355
Terre lie Plyor ..........................354
Jaamal Beny ...........................219
Receiving Yards
Dane Sanzenbacher ............... .411
DeVier Posey............................364
Field Goals
Devin Barclay ...................... 11/12
Punting
Ben Buchanan.......................40.9
Tackles
Ross Homan ............................37
Interceptions
Chimcj1Chekwa .......................... 2
Brian ~olle...................................2

Jnaveau@limanews.com
419·993-2087

Schedule
strength
matters
When the subject is Boise
State, neutrality doesn't seem
to be an option.
There are some college football fans rooting for Boise
State to grab one of th&lt;3 spo.
in the BCS national champi
onship game because for them
the Broncos are a loveable
underdog.
Others want Boise State to
go to the title game for a very
different reason. They don't
like the BCS system. And
they want to see its foundation shaken by a school from
outside the old boys club of
college football playing for the
title while an Alabama, an
Oklahoma or an Ohio State
sits at home.
On the other side of the
aisle, there are those see Boise
State, TCU and their nonpower conference brothers as
pretender s, not contenders.
They might agree the Broncos are very, very good. But let
them play a Big Ten or Southeastern Conference or PAC-10
schedule and see if they roll
12-0 seasons off the assembly
line year after year, this group
say:;.

M aybe we've already seen
what happens when a region.
football power who plays on
or two tough opponents a year
starts playing in a strong
league. We've seen it when
Penn State went from being
an independent to playing in
the Big Ten.
In Joe Paterno's first 27
years as Penn State's coach
before joining the Big Ten, the
Nittany Lions had four
unbeaten seasons, five oneloss seasons and won 79 percent of their games. Since
becoming the Big Ten's
eleventh team in 1993, they ,
have won 70 percent of the
time. have one unbeaten season and no one-loss seasons.
In 18 seasons in the Big Ten,
Penn State has lost 64 percent
of the time against Ohio State,
Michigan, Wisconsin and
Iowa.
It is 6·11 against Ohio State,
4-10 agaiiist Michigan and 4-9
against I owa, including eight
losses in its last nine games
against the Huwkeyes. Its best
effort against one of the Bie A
Ten's other top teams is a 6-6W
record against WISConsin.
Be careful what you wish for,
Boise State.

Sept. 2 ....................Marshall, W 45-7
Sept 11 ..................M,am• w 36-24

Sept. 18 ...................Ohio w43-7
Sept. 25 ................. E. MICh. W 73-20
Oct. 2 .....................at Illinois W 24-1&lt;3
Oct 9 ....................... Indiana W 38-10
Oct. 16 .....................at Wisconsm
Oct. 23 ..................... Purdue
Oct. 30 .....................at M1nnesota
Nov. 13 .....................Penn State
Nov. 20 .....................at Iowa
Nov. 27 .....................MIChiganSept. 2

Content compiled by Jim Naveau and
destg~ by Ross Bishoff • The Uma News
Copynght © 2010 The Uma News.
ReproductJon of any portiOn of thiS mater.
ial is prohibited Without express consent.

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

43

Days until kickoff

Comeandjoin usjor

PUMPKINPORT FAMILY FALL FESTIV.
Saturday, Oetober 16 • 1:00 - 4:00 pm
Family Life Center (Main Street) in Middleport ~.,.
Dis event is free to the pu~ &amp; imaU In

Ftl£1

Pt::!"f

;l:n« houset -"-.J"

��• Page 2

Senior Quarterly

Making the_move to independent retirement living
(MS) - When 72-year-old Army .
veterap. Ted Bickhoff was at his local
VA hospital for an appointment
recently, he struck up a conversation
with another patient about selling his
home and downsizing. As luck
would have it, Eickhoff's fellow
patient lived in a local independent
retirement community owned by
Holiday Retirement, and raved
about the benefits. Eickhoff was
sold.
"I couldn't believe how much you
get for the money," said Eickhoff.
"It is so nice to have everything
taken care of with just one monthly
payment. It covers everything I
need, including amazing meals. And
if you need another snack, the chefs
just make it for you!"
Eickhoff, a retired Command
Sergeant Major, is part of a growing
number of seniors who are planning
for an independent living future.
In fact, a recent AARP poll found
that nearly 60 percent of Boomers
say they are concerned· about living
independently, and more than 50
percent say they have begun to think
about how they would pay for independent living assistance as they get
older.

Crunching the Numbers
Mereen Klein, 86, started looking
at the costs of keeping her own
apartment versus independent living
when her eyesight declined. Klein
needed assistance with transportation and didn't want to keep bugging
her son to drive her around, so she
decided to move to an independent
retirement living community that
met her needs.
"It was right for me with my fixed
income, and the money covers
everything," said Klein. "I don't pay
for TV, or to have my room cleaned.
I couldn't believe what I got for the
money-- it was really something."
To determine what makes financial sense, seniors need to add up the
true
. costs
.. . of
. managing
. . . a home. ver...

sus being part of a retirement community.
.
"Even if you no longer have a
mortgage payment, you still have
fluctuating
monthly
expenses
including utilities, taxes, phone,
cable and food that can add up significantly," said Stan Brown, COO
of Holiday Retirement. "For many
seniors, switching to a community
that includes one manageable,
monthly flat fee gives them the ability to plan out the next 15 to 20 years
and know exactly what they can
expect to spend and what they can
afford."
For Klein, it not only made fmancial sense, it also gave her back
some of her freedom.
"I can take the community bus
down to the bank or out to dinner. I
can even go to the doctor and my
appointments without bugging anyone for a ride," said Klein. "I have
more independence now than when I
lived alone."

Ask the Right Questions
To calculate the true costs of making the move to an independent
retirement community, Brown cautions seniors to ask as many questions as possible prior to moving in,
·to uncover any buy-in fees, to determine if a long-term lease is required
and to see if the "feel" of the community is right.
"It doesn't make financial sense to •
make the move if you aren't comfortable in the new community and
will want to move out within a few
months," said Brown. "It needs to
not only be affordable, but a great
place to live as well."
Seventy three-year-old Julianne
(Judy) Kayatt knows this all too
well. She sold her home and moved
into a community that didn't offer
much for her money and wasn•t as
caring as she'd hoped. After only a
few months, she started her search
agai!l anq was fot:t'!!late to finq that .

a Holiday Retirement community of a promotion from Holiday
Retirement, which covered up to
was a perfect fit for her.
"My family likes that I am happy $1,000 of her moving expenses, and
here, and I like that I can still be Kayatt received her birthday month
independent and live here," said free when she moved in.
Kayatt. "I am free to go where I
And as for Eickhoff, the payoff for
want; I am enjoying activities and him is being surrounded by people
events and I'm surrounded by his own age with shared experiences
friends. I know I can be happy here and a passion for living the good life.
for a long time."
"This is everything I ever thought
about doing when I retired," said
Eickhoff. "Sometimes people remiThe Golden Years
nisce about the past being great, but
Making the move to an indepen- I was fighting in the military for 22
dent living community can be an years and working hard, and now
affordable way to make the most of these are my golden years. I can
one's retirement years. Kayatt, Klein actually relax and people take care
and Eickhoff have all seen the bene- of me for a change."
For more information on making
fits to cutting ties to a house or an
apartment in favor of community the move to indep~ndent retirement
living, visit holidaytouch.com r 'all
living.
Klein was able to take advantage 1-800-322-0999.

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We are pleased to offer the foUowin&amp; services:
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www.rockspringsskillednursing.com

·

�nior Quarterly

• Page 3

VP makes pretty scarves
P MEROY- Making pretty scarves for little children
in HeadStart is a Christmas project carried out year after
year by the Retired Senior Volunteers at the Meigs Senior
Center.
The w01:k on the annual project gets underway when
cooler weather et in and goe · until early December
when the colorful carves are gathered up to give to the
children. .
La t year about 20 women from Meigs, Mason and
Gallia Counties knitted 364 scarves, many not only donatin!! their time and talent to the project but providing their
own yarn to do it.
a part of the project, one class of HeadS tart children.
all wearing theif pretty hand-kmtted scarves. are brought
to People Bank for a story hour around a Christrna tree.
For the pa t several years Maxine Little has read them a
tory and the bank has passed out treats.
"'ince there are usually more scarves than children.
tho left over are distributed through the Coats for Kids
pr gam, an annual project of Peoples Bank where
mployees are dedicated to seeing that all children have a
wann winter coat, and the Meigs Cooperative Parish proram which serves dozen of families with low incomes.

Thi~

0
RSVP volunteers
Mary McAngus,
Peg Houdashelt,
and Lorna Seth,
left to right, crochet scarves for
HeadStart children. With them is
Diana Coates,
RSVP director for
the Meigs County
Council on Aging.

Holiday Season, Hear what you've Been Missing

Hearing Aid
.
Demo Days
10% off all hearin9 aid purchases
·
Hearing aid battenes are only 50¢ a piece with purchase of a carton
• Free Hearing Screen for hearing aid, held on Tuesdays and Thur days. by appointment o11ly.
•Hearing screenings performed by a lit·en ed Doctor ofAudiology, in conjunction with a Board Certified Ear iVo ·e &amp; Throat MD
• FREE Hearing Aid Consultation
• Demo the Newest in Digital Hearing Aid Technology

Dighal hearing aid technology i movin 0 ·o fast and with
many opti )n · a •ailable. it i be t to li ·ten and . ee for
your elf and th n with our profe ional as i tanc de id what b st uit you.) ur budg t nd
ur life t I .

�• Page 4

Senior Quarterly

Stay healthy during flu seaso
.

COURTESY OHIO DEPT. OF AGING

Flu is a contagious respiratory
disease caused by influenza
viruses. It can cause mild to
severe illness and. in some cases,
can lead to death. Flu viruses are
spread from person to person by
coughing and sneezing or by
touching an object that has flu
viruses on it and then touching
your eyes. nose or mouth.
Flu season runs from late fall
through the winter months and
generally peaks in February and
March.
Symptoms of flu may come on
quickly and include fever.
headache, extreme tiredness, dry
cough, sore throat, runny or
stuffy nose, muscle aches and
stomach symptoms such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhea.
Complications of flu may
include bacterial pneumonia, ear
infections; sinus infections, dehydration. and worsening of chronic
conditions such as congestive
heart failure, asthma or diabetes.
How to Avoid the Flu
Flu shots are your best defense
against the flu. It is best to get a
flu shot as they become available
for the coming flu season (usually in the fall). but you can still

.

benefit from a flu shot later in the munity.
How to Care For Yourself When
season. Check with your doctor
before you get a flu shot to make You Have the Flu
sure it is right for you. Your doc• Stay home and rest to fight the
tor may recommend another flu and avoid spreading it to othapproach, such as the use of cer- ers.
tain antiviral medications.
• Drink plenty of liquids to
Other prevention steps:
replace fluids lost through fever
• Maintain good health habits: and sweating.
Get plenty of sleep, be as physi• Take medication for your
cally active as is appropriate for symptoms. If you have a chronic
· you. manage your stress. drink health problem or are taking medplenty of fluids and eat nutrition- ication, get advice from your docal foods.
tor or pharmacist about the best
• Wash your hands often with over-the-counter medications for
soap and water, scrubbing for you. Your doctor may want to
about 20 seconds. Use an alcohol- prescribe antiviral drugs to lessen
based hand sanitizer if soap and the length of the flu.
water are not available.
• Wash your hands often to
• Cover your mouth and nose avoid spreading the virus to othwith a tissue when you cough or ers.
sneeze. Throw the tissue away
• Let your case manager know
immediately and wash your that you have the flu and if you
hands. If you don't have a tissue. need any additional services,
cough or sneeze into your shoul- such as a ride to the doctor or
der or arm, then wash any affect- help getting food, liquids and
ed skin immediately.
medications. If you are moving to
• Limit your contact with per- another loc;ation to receive care
sons who are iH. Avoid shaking while you recover, let your case
hands if you are iJl and with oth- manager and service provider
know where you are going and
ers who are ill.
• Limit going out and into again when you are coming
crowds as much as possible dur- home.
2009 HlNl Flu Pandemic
ing the flu season, or when flu
A.flu pandemic occurs when a
cases are common in your com-

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE

.

new virus develops that is not
affected by available vaccines,
causes strong symptoms and
spreads far and quickly. The 2009
HlNl flu strain (also called
swine flu) reached pandemic status in 2009.
The same healthy habits that
help you limit the spread of seasonal flu and other types of respiratory viruses will help control
the spread of 2009 H 1N l flu.
Generally, people age 65 and
older are least likely to get ick
with the 2009 H lN l virus.
Because there will be limited
amounts of vaccine available. the
first doses are recommended for
those who are most likely to get
infected, including young peopl ,
child caregivers. pregnant worn n
and emergency personnel.
Older adults are considered low
priority for 2009 H 1N l flu vaccine.
While HlNl vaccine is not' a
priority for older adults, antiviral
treatment is, because people age
65 and older are at higher risk for
flu-related complications.
If you experience flu-like ymp
toms, see yom doctor as soon as
possible.
Stay healthy during flu season!

Free Home Delivery of
Prescriptions Available

�nior Quarterly

• Page 5

Helping you age better: What is the AAA7?
vices include, but are not limited to: information, referral and assistance; personal care
and homemaking; respite care; adult day
AAA 7. You may have seen this acronym or care; assisted living; caregiver support; case
perhap have heard about it, but what exact- management; home repair; transportation;
ly doe it stand for? What does it mean? home-delivered meals; community-center
Although one version of the acronym meal programs; legal assistance; and linkage
"AAA'' covers automobiles and traveling,
to community services. In short, the AAA 7
the AAA 7 stands for the Area Agency on
Aging District 7, a non-profit corporation provides services that enable older adults
de ·ignated by the State of Ohio to be the and individuals with disabilities to remain in
planning, coordinating and administrative the one place they call their own ... home.
Choice - Independence - Quality. The
agency for federal and state programs in
AAA
7 strives each day to make this availAdam , Brown. Gallia, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence. Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton able to those individuals in our district who
need our assistance. In order to support this.
countie_ in Ohio.
The programs coordinated by the AAA 7 our Agency's slogan. "Helping You Age
, rc available to help older adults and those Better." was developed to promote positivity
with disabilities live safely and independent- and assistance as a part of the aging process.
ly in their own homes through services paid Aging is experienced by everyone, but no
for by Medicare, Medicaid, Veterans one should go through it alone or without
Administration, other federal and state assistance. Each and every one of us
re ources. as well as private pay. These ser- deserves to experience choice, independence
BY PAMELA

K.

MATURA

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

HEALTH MANAGEMENT NURSING SERVICES
QUALI1Y CARE NURSING SERVICES
ULTll\1ATE HEALTH CARE

and quality, and the AAA 7 is here to provide
this to seniors and those with disabilities in
our district.
Individuals who feel they could benefit, or
know of someone who could benefit from the
services the AAA 7 provides are encouraged
to call our toll-free number at 1-800-5827277 (TTY 1-888-270-1550). You will have
the opportunity to speak directly with a
nurse or social worker who will assist you
with information surrounding the programs
and services that are aYailable to best serve
your needs. Our caring and competent staff
works side-by-side with older adults and
their families to arrange long-term care consul!ations, in-home services and a number of
other programs that promote safe and independent living at home. Let us help you
"age better."

WnndC r is

tO

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We follow industry best practices and protocols to ensure
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and healing of wounds, all in the comfort of your home.
Call today to see if you qualify for
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740-377-9095

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1-800-759-5383

'

I

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Amy Caldwell LPN
www.OVHH.org

�Senior Quarterly

• Page 6

Sallaz crowned 201 0 Heritage Queen
POINT PLEASANT- Five ladies vied for the 2010 Heritage Queen title during Wednesday's pageant, which was held at the Gene Salem Senior Center in
Point Pleasant
Point Pleasant Mayor Brian Billings emceed the pageant, while the 2010 Battle
Days royalty, which included Miss Battle Days Meghann Hesson, Little Miss
Battle Days Kylie Billings, Young Miss Battle Days first runner-up Delaney
Bronosky, and Young Miss Battle Days second runner-up Aubrey Lewis, assisted
by distributing voting ballots to those in attendance. City Clerk Amber Tatterson
also presented all contestants and former Heritage Queens with "I Love Point
Pleasant'' pins.
During the pageant, contestants talked about their hobbies, interests, children
and grandchildren. Prior to announcing the winner, 2009 Heritage Queen Sheila
Ann Elkins addressed the crowd. Elkins encouraged those in attendance to help
the community.
"Get out and volunteer. You're never to old to volunteer," she said. "Everybody
do your part, get out there and be involved."
Billings agreed with Elkins' statement, and praised her reign as Heritage Queen.
"She's done an excellent job. We are very proud of her," he said.
Of the five queen contestants, Patricia Sallaz of Gallipolis Ferry, came out on
top. Sallaz was crowned by Elkins.
''I will do the best I can to represent all the seniors of Mason County," Sallaz
said. ''I also hope to be a living testament as a born-again Christian."
Sallaz, 73, and has three children, 10 grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Her interests include church activities, reading, helping other seniors and
singing in the choir. Sallaz said that she plans to get other seniors involved in the
community during her reign as Heritage Queen.
''I would like to encourage all seniors to be active in the community by volunteering and participating in the many opportunities available to them," she added.
Other contestants included Mary Holley, 86, of Point Pleasant; Charlotte Rose
Knaul, 90, of Point Pleasant; Linda Morris, 66, of Point Pleasant; and Margaret
Kiser, 62, of Point Pleasant
Holley's interests include cooking, canning, house keeping, shopping, playing
cards, spending time with her friends and family, and going for rides in the country. She has two sons, Jim and Bill, and 10 grandchildren. She says she was talked
into running for Heritage Queen.
Knaul said she is interested in reading novel books, including murder and true
story books. She has four children and five grandchildren. Knaul ran for Heritage
Queen because she likes to dress up for the fun of it.
Morris says her interests include helping seniors at the center and other. people.
She has three children and six grandchildren. Morris decided to run for Heritage
Queen because she would like to be a spokesperson for the center and help
improve the center by talking to those who don't know about the services they
offer.
Kiser's interests include singing gospel songs and reading. She ha-; five children,
five grandchildren, and one great grandchild. She is part Cherokee Indian and
decided to run for Heritage Queen since her ancestors were the first pioneers.
Each of th~ contestants dressed up in nice outfits and costumes and were
cheered on by the audience. Sallaz will reign alongside Hesson and the rest of the
Battle Days royalty this weekend. She also will have a year to promote the senior
center.
Sponsors for the pageant included Siders &amp; Sons Jewelers, queen's crown;
Women's Club, cake, queen's sa&lt;;h and queen's bouquet of flowers; Four Sea&lt;;on's
Florist, corsage for each contestant; and Mary Kay Consultant - Amy Music, gift
bags for contestants and queen.

2010 Heritage Queen Patricia Sallaz stands alongside her husband, John.

Want to improve your
Life, Bod} and Health?

•

�• Page 7

ior Resource Center: Hub of activity for Gallia Co.
GALLIPOLIS - For many
years, senior citizens in Gallia
County have found fun and fellowship at the Gallia County
Senior Resource Center.
From bingo to knitting, art
classes to billiards, crocheting
to trips to the mall, the center
provides a wide variety of activities and opportunities for the
senior population of Gallia
County.
Gallia County Council on
Aging
Executive
Director
Shirley Doss said the center is a
constant hub of activity on a
daily basis.
Bingo and art classes are
offered each Tuesday at the center. Bingo games are played in
the morning. Art clas.ses begin at
12:30 p.m.
nitting and crocheting are
red from 1-3 p.m. each
ednesday.

Developmental Center (GDC) to
provide socialization opportunities for residents of the facility.
Funding from a Community
Development
Block
Grant
secured by the Gallia County
Board of Commissioners paid
for the addition of 10 new parking spots at the senior center.
The new spaces are located on
the east side of center near the
Gallia
County
Engineer's
Office.
Doss said local civic groups
The center's popular evening played at 9 a.m. on the fourth have played a major role in makmeal is held on the second Wednesday of each month.
ing senior center events and proTuesday of each month at 6 p.m.
Another popular activity is the grams successfuL She said the
The Travel Club meets at 3 p.m. birthday dinner for citizens age Knights of Columbus, Gallipolis
on the third Monday of each 55 and older. Doss said Penny Rotary Club, Gallipolis Lions
month.
Sager and Billy Meadows super- Club, Kiwanis and Galha
Cards and games are played vise the party. Ohio Valley Bank County Genealogical Society
from 1-4 p.m. on the third provides prizes for the event.
OGS Chapter have donated
Monday and fourth Thursday of
In addition to the regular funds and volunteer hours to
each month.
activities, Doss said the center assist center staff on various
An 8-ball pool tournament is partners with the Gallipolis projects.

From bingo to knitting, art classes to
· billiards, crocheting to trips· to the mall,
the center provides a wide variety of
activities and opportunities for the
senior population of Gallia County.

(JV.e1j6r,ook, ~ -~­
~fia6i£it:at:ion Cent:en
,. r/ele!Jmtti!l) 2t{ream tf.'2ua!t[y

t

\,;,~~·titt; G~fl'f! '

Call today to schedule
atour of our beautiful facility.

740-992-6472

EVERYWESDAY,SR\JDR Cir IZENS
55 YEARS AND OIDER

SAVEAN ADDirDNAL5·%

333 Page Street
Middleport, OH

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t{)ffcring Skilled and Intermediate Lewis of Nursing Care •Rehabilitation: Ph~sical Therapy.
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�'(::

Senior Quarterly

New coordinator named at Well ness Cente
POMEROY - Tracey Smith is the new
coordinator at the Wellness Center at the
Meigs County Senior Center.
She has been working at the Center for
the past year and was selected to replace
Bryan Hoffman, an exercise physiologist,
who left the program after six years to take
a position with the Mason County Schools.
Assisting Smith with the program is
Colleen McCambridge who is a Zumba
instructor. Two others at the Senior Center,
Debbie Jones and Debbie Wayland, are
new Zumba instructors and help with classes which are held at 5:30 p.m. in
Middleport on Mondays at the Riverbend
Arts Council headquarters, and in Syracuse
at the Community Center on Thursdays. •
According to the American Council on
Exercise (ACE), older adults need to get
plenty of safe and appropriate exercise, and
to help provide that is the goal of the Meigs
Wellness Center.
Exercise helps maintain mobility and stamina, reduces the incidence of disease, and
leads to an overall better quality of life,
according to the ACE.
Ten specific results from exercising are:
to increase bone density and prevent osteoporosis, to improve self-efficiency and
maintain independence, to increase metabolism, to maintain balance and improve
eflexes, to decrease falls, to create a sense
of community or a feeling of belonging, to
improve pulmonary function, to boost
mood, to belp present and regulate diabetes, to improve flexibility, joint range of
motion, and functional movement; and to
improve cardiovascuar strength.

Tracey Smith, new We.flness Center coordinator, watches as June Lee, left, and Jean Stout work out on the elliptical
equipment.

Questions on Local Aging Resources?
Calll-800-331-2644 for answers

STEPP MONUMENT CO.

Caregiver support and free assessments for older adults needing
in-home or long-term care services:
• Personal care • Homemaker services • Home-delivered meals • Transportation to
medical appointments • Long-Term Care Planning

Visit www.areaagency8.org
Advocacy. Action. Answers on Aging.

/""""\.A rea Agency·on Agmg
.
aaax

·~

A Program of: Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley ROD
Serving Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan, Noble, Perry &amp; Washington Counties

Route 62 North of Point Pleasant (Camp Conley)
Mon. -Fri. 3:00p.m. to 6:00p.m.; Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Other Times AvaJiable By Appointment

CALL:

73 or 674-1379

�Senior Quarterly

0

• Page 9

opportunities a oun for seniors

At one point in the 2008
0 car-nominated
film
"Frost/Nixon,"
former
President Richard Nixon,
played by Frank Langella.
says, "Retired people are the
most bored people in the
world." While some retirees
might scoff at that rem'!rk,
others no doubt agree there's
an element of truth to it.
Perhaps boredom is one
reason many seniors continue to work past retirement
age.
According
to
the
Congressional
Research
Service (CRS), 47 percent of
male seni·ors and 34 percent
of female
seniors were
Joyed in 2007. That
e figures were from
7 is significant, as it
indicates this was before the
economic downturn of 200809. a consequence of which
was more seniors returning
to the workforce.
Por many seniors, though,
\ orking isn't
simply
a
m ans to earn money. In
tact, seniors who continued
working past the age of 70
·arned an average of just
$20.000 in 2007. Seniors
also tend to work to have
something to do . For_seniors

looking to do just that, there
are a host of employment or
even volunteer opportunities
that can help seniors stay
busy and possibly put a little
extra money in their pockets.
• Local park service. Many
local park services hire
seniors to help keep the
parks clean. These are often
seasonal opportunities, making them ideal for seniors
who live in different cities
depending on the seasons.
• Golf course. Golf courses
are other seasonal businesses, at least in much of the
country, that also boast lots
of part-time opportunities
for seniors. For example,
golf courses need rangers.
who ensure all golfers play
by the rules and respect the
course, and even maintenance staff. who do everything from cut the grass to
maintaining gardens. -These
can also pull double duty,
providing seniors with daily
exercise to help them stay
healthy.
• Volunteer. Many programs that help indigent citizens get by every day welcome seniors as volunteers.

Meal deli very services and
other programs that cater to
the sick are often in need of
·a helping hand.
• School systems. Local
school districts also have
volunteer opportunities that
can be ideal for seniors.
Positions such as crossing
guard or even hel pi'ng out
with the local athletic teams
don't require much of a
commitment and can be
rewarding
and
fun
for
seniors.
• Consultant work. Seniors
who miss the thrill of business don't have_to give it up
completely simply because
they're
retired.
Many
seniors earn a handsome

amount of money by working
as consultants, using their
vast experience to help the
next
generation .
What's
more.
consultants
often
work on their own schedule.
an ideal situation for seniors
with a passion for business
but an equal passion for the
positives of retirement.
• Library. Libraries might
not be as popular as they
once were. but many are still
going strong, and some even
use volunteers and part-time
employees to keep their
operations running smoothly. Many libraries prefer hiring seniors thanks to their
reliability and good attitude.

Abbyshire Place
311 Buckridge Road- Bidwell. Ohio 45614

740-446-7150
www .abbysb ireplace.com

Featuring.._ Gallia Manor a 24 bed ecured
Alzheimer' /Dementia living area that cater. to both the
resident and their loved one .
v

San1e Day.Results

"Creating a safe and home-like environment
for your loved one affected by Alzheimer'·"

1504 Jackson Pike Gallipolis, OH ·
~~ . 740·.44~-:M~J ... ·... ~-· -

--~

-"

M

�• Page 10

Senior Quarterly

Support for caregivers and grandparent
raising grandchildren available ·loc~lly
Are you a caregiver .who is looking for additional support in understanding how caregiving is impacting your life?
Are you a grandparent raising a
grandchild who is looking for com...:.c munity services or support to assist
you in your needs?
If so, your local -Area Agency on
Aging District 7, Inc. (AAA7) is
here to help.
Through funding from tlie Older
Americans Act, AAA7 provides a
Caregiver Support Program that is
designed to provide caregivers with
services that can help reduce stress,
in addition to resources that can aid
with providing better care for not
only the loved one, but the individual caregiver as well.
A caregiver is anyone who is caring for someone who cannot complete everyday functions such as
dressing, feeding or using the
restroom. Although caregiving is a
loving and giving act, it often brings
with it hard work, stress, and questions for the loved one providing the
care.

''What our Caregiver Support
Program offers is "all avenue for education and Jresources that can help
caregivers with the care they provide
to their loved one," says Vicky
Abdella.
RN,
Director
of
Cornmu"nity Services at AAA 7 .
"'Anyone who provides care and is
looking for a needed support system
is encouraged to give our office a
call. Through a conversation with
the caregiver over the phone, we can
determine what services might best
help their situation and facilitate this
process in order to assist the caregiver in their needs."
Services provided through the
AAA7 Caregiver Support Program
include assessments, training, information, assistance, counseling, and
answers to everyday problems. Any
caregiver in AAA 7's 10-county service area who wishes to receive
these services is able to with no eligibility requirements. Additional
services include respite and supplemental services that could include a
resource or product that is needed to
complement the care provided, such

Arbor

much more. To be eligible, kinship
caregivers must be 55 years of age
or older and caring for someone 18
years of age or younger, or an adult
child from age 19-59 who has a disability.
The Area Agency on Aging
District 7 Inc. serves ten counties in
Ohio including Adams, Brown,
Gallia,
Highland,
Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
Vinton. Services are provided on a
non-discriminatory basis. For more
information about th~ Caregiver
Support Program for caregiver or
grandparents and relatives who are
raising a child, call the AAA7
free at (800) 582-7277.

t G llipolis: A Nursing and Rehabilitatio

r

... helping people live better

My husband, Roger Chnstian. was cnt1cally 1n1ured m an ATV accident wh1ch resulted 10 a

Choking

traumatic bratn injury over a year ago. Several months after h1s accident, he developed

Choking occurs when food or another object partially or completely blocks a person's airway. Choking and suffocation are the fourth leading cause of home injury
death in the U.S. Older adults are at increased risk of choking due to many factors,
including dental problems and appliances and difficulty swallowing due to age-related illness or medicine use. Also, older people who live alone may not be able to get
the help they need when they choke.
Treat every choking instance as an emergency. If you witness someone choking,
call 9-1-1 immediately. If you are familiar with life saving techniques, such as
abdominal thrusts, use them to try to clear the airway. Do not attempt to drive a
choking person to the hospital emergency room yourself unless the 9-1-1 operator
instructs you to do so.
If you are alone and choking, and you can't speak, dial 9-1-1 and leave the phone
off the hook. In most communities, emergency personnel automatically respond to
- 9-1-1 calls in which the caller does not speak. While waiting for the emergency
crew to arrive, you can attempt to clear your airway by thrusting your midabdomen .(the area at the bottom of your ribs) against a chair back or railing.

.. ..

as medical supplies, home safety
equipment, legal services, and more.
All services are offered by the
AAA 7 at no charge to the caregiver.
Grandparents or relatives who are
raising a child can also take advantage of the services provided
through the Caregiver Support
Program. These "kinship caregivers" include individuals who provide full-time care for a relative or
non-relative's child and/or children
in their home.
Through the Support Program,
kinship caregivers can utilize
resources and services surrounding
daycare, financial assistance, parenting the second time around, and

'

..

significant wounds. It was my dec1sion after tounng several rehab centers m the tri-state area
to move Roger to Arbors at Gallipolis because of their excellent reputttion

tn

canng for those

with traumatiC bra1n 1njuries and thetr wound care. Roger's wound have healed s•gnificantly
thanks to wound care spec1alist. Se01ta Griffith. When I leave Arbors at Galhpohs I know he is
in good hands with Senita and Arbors' staff - Jackie Christian, Willowwood, Ohio

Please call ua at 740.446.7112 to find out how we can help you achiev
your rehabilitation goals. S~hedule a personal consultation and !our
of our center today!

Arbors at Gallipolis
A NURSING AND REHABILITATION CENTER
170 Pinecrest Drive •

Gallipolis. OH 45631

•

www.galhpohsskillednursing.com

�_.,

Senior Quarterly

• Page 11

e fire safe and fire.smart
COURTESY OHIO DEPT. OF AGING

"An ounce of
prevention is worth
a pound of cure."
- Benjamin Franklin,
volunteer ftre fighter
Everyone should have fire
prevention and response plans
in place, but this becomes
e pecially important for older
adults because of changes that
come with aging or impaired
health. According to the
tional
Fire
Protection
ociation, adults over 65
years old are twice as likely to
d ie in a fire and those over 85
are four times more likely.
Prevent Fires
• Safe Cooking: Always
\ •atch stove top items and turn
off burners if you must walk
away - even for a minute .
T urn handles of pots and pans
toward the back to avoid accidentally knocking them over.
• Avoid loose-fitting and
dangling clothing on your
arms and chest while you
cook. Keep flammable materi-

als like towels, potholders ,
papers, etc., away from heating appliances. Use a timer to
remind you if you are using
the oven. If you don't feel
safe cooking, contact your
case manager or an area
agency on aging, (866) 2435678 about receiving home
delivered meals or other assistance with meal preparation.
• Safe Electrical Equipment:
Unplug small appliances like
toasters and can openers after
each use. If an appliance
appears to be malfunctioning,
have it checked and repaired
before using again. Be sure
that electrical cords and any
extension cords are in proper
working condition. Be sure
outlets are not overloaded.
• Safe Heating: Do not use
your oven to heat your home.
If you use electric space
heaters, be sure the electrical
cords are in good condition
and the outlet can handle the
load. Do not share an outlet
used by a heater with any
other device. Avoid using
extension cords with heaters.
Use only the correct fuel in
kerosene heaters to a" oid fire
or explosion, and be sure to
let the heater cool before refueling. Store and handle the

In Honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month

fuel safely. Be sure fireplace
flues are clear and always use
a screen to deflect sparks.
Keep combustible materials
like blankets and clothing at
least three feet away from any
heat sources. If your utility
services have been -cut off,
contact your utility company
to make arrangements or contact your case manager or an
area agenc)' on aging for
resources to assist you in
resolving the matter.
• Safe Decorating: The use
of candles and other open
flames requires direct and
constant supervision. Keep
flammable materials at least
three feet away and extinguish
flames before leaving a room.
For electrical decorations,
avoid extension cords and
overloading outlets. Turn off
and unplug electrical decorations overnight and when you
will not be home.
Be Prepared
• Install smoke detectors on
each level of your home and in
all sleeping areas and test
them monthly. Change the batteries every six months. For
help obtaining and installing
smoke detectors and batteries,
contact your local fire department. your case manager or an

area agency on aging.
• Use only deep-seated ashtrays. If you or others in your
home must smoke, keep smoking materials away from combustible materials and wet
them before disposing of
them. Never smoke while
lying down, when tired or
when taking medications that
cause drowsiness. Always~ turn
off medical oxygen while
someone in the house is smoking, then turn it back on when
they've finished.
• Develop and practice a fire
evacuation plan. Identify at
least two ways to get out and
review safety steps like
checking closed doors for heat
before opening, using your
emergency alert device if yuu
have one and crawling on the
floor below the smoke. Get
out fast and stay out!
• If ) ou require assistance
getting out of the house. close
the door to your room. sta)
near a window and sta) on the
phone with rescuers. Alert"
your local fire department
prior to a fire that you may be
unable to evacuate ' ·ithout
assistance in the e\ ent of a
fire - this will help keep yon
and your rescuers safer.

We are Proud to Offer
Authonzed to offer

I

Auto Insurance
Program from

HE

Would like to remind everyone
to perform self-breast exams monthly.
1616 Eastern Ave. Gallipolis, OH • 740-441-1645

H RTFORD

n

r

S UNDERS INSURANCE AGENCY
OHIO

�Senior Quarterly

• Page 12

Mason County Action
Group plans October events
POINT PLEASANT The
Mason County Action Group has
several activities planned this
month.
Seniors also will have the opportunity to participate in a Health Fair,
slated for 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Friday, Oct.
15 at New Hope Bible Baptist
'*' Church in Point Pleasant.
Already this month, the center has
held several activities, including the
annual Heritage Queen Contest.
During the contest, Patricia Sallaz of
Gallipolis Ferry was named the 20 10
queen. She was crowned by the
2009 ·Heritage Queen Sheila Ann
Elkins. Also during the Annual
Battle Days Festival, the center hosted a bean dinner.
As usuaL the senior nutrition program is still active. Meals are served
at 11:30 a.m. The suggested price is
a $2.50 donation per meal for those
ages 60 an up. Anyone under age 60
must pay the required $4 meal price.

The deadline to sign up for lunch is
by 2 p.m. the day before.
Reservations may be made at the
sign-in desk in the center's dining
hall or by calling 304-675-2369.
Other activities taking place this
month are crafts from 10-11 a.m. on
Mondays; free bingo from 10:15-11
a.m. on Tuesdays; music entertainment from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. on
Wednesdays; church service from
10-11 a.m. on Th!Jrsdays; and free
bingo from 10:15-11 a.m. on
Fridays. . At the Mason Senior
Center, scrabble will be held at 10
a.m. every Tuesday, while bingo. will
be held at 10 a.m. every Thursday.
Also in Mason, blood pressure
checks provided by the Mason
EMT' s will be provided the last
Tuesday of each month. At' the
Hartford Senior Center, bingo will
be held at 10 a.m. every Thursday,
while music will be held every
Friday'at 10 a.m.

B KJ G. I SU ANCE tNVESTMENTS.
Don't )OU wish you hod o b~ ll thot cooJHdo, it d1? Where; Y,OWJ coo tolkt
contro.l of yow ~nond.6"! ne~ in on&amp; ploce e~md still geft tlle ~p9rfi o&amp;-i~

you needZ t-.!bw ~ou con &amp; PCiaple.s, Bon~. !Do xom c!Oy-bdctJ~ booJHngy
hle c:are of you.r insurance n~ ond$&gt;ten ir:wesrrigj1t there at the bonlk. It

jusl' makes sense. When you keep; if oJI Jo~ther,, yo.u rnoke betfulr dfa&lt;cisions
obou ywr future, So what db yo.u w.&lt;:~nt ito

do?

new busimess, or pbn fo.r your retireml!'tnt,. you

Insure yo.uu new fuome,, slbm o

{&lt;':tlfl

!'

.

d P.oojples Bank.

I

f

:.

National Centarian Day was observed at Arbors of Gallipolis with a special celebration honoring four of the facility's "senior seniors;' to borrow the phrase used by
Life-Enrichment Director Mary Stutler in regard to the occasion. Edith Erdman, at
age 107 the oldest resident at Arbors, was one of those honored on Thursday. Also
among the honorees on Thursday were Clovis Casto, 90; Raymond Delong, 97;
and Edna Barry, 98. Short said 10 people age 90 or older are residents at Arbors.

1

,

'D:

The rl(jht tim . The rfght place.

J

'

\
'

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\

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

Inside

Bl

The Dai .y Sentinel

MLB postseao;on bohhlcs, Page B2

HrO\\ ns hrulscd up, Pngc B3

RTS

Friday, October 15, 2010

-=========================================
LOCAL 8( HI DUIJ

Pre p Vol leyba ll Roun dup

POMEROY
A ached a of upcoming
high octoool ~•rs•IV aport ng evenla
lrwolv111g toama fro, Gal a Mason ond
Meog5 coul'loea

fdsUlY,..QkloJmlli

Football
Portsmouth at Gall n Acodomy
WeUston nt Molgs
Eastern at Portsmouth Ens1
South Go 111 81 Wahama
Southern at Water1ord
AlVOr Va Icy 111 Coal Grove
Po111t P ..ant at RavenSWOOd
Hannan 81 Van
Soturday. ~~ 1§
Volleyball

South Gal a at M or Noon
Cross Country

SEOAL Meet at Ga a Academy
il~om

TVC Me l at Atllen5. 10 11 m
Mon.dlly. October 18
Volleyball

Poco ot Point P asont 6 p rr.
OVCS ot Chesapeake, 5 30 p rr

:Iu.H.du. Oc1obcr 19
Volleyball

Po1nt Pleasant at Woyno, 6 p m
HnnN!n at Sherman 6 30 p m

Eastern's
Brenna
Holter, nght,
slams a spike
attempt over
the outstretched
arms of
Southern's
Bobbi Hams
dunngthe
second game
of Thursday
n1ght's TVC
Hocking volleyball match
at Charles W.
Hayman
Gymnas1um
in Racine,

Sarah Hawley
/photo

Volleyball

• nnan at St Joseph Central 6
pm

S CHEDULE
M.oMDy,.Qctober 18

Lady Eagles beat Southern in finale

Dlvlalon II Volleyball

(10) V1mon County at (71 M OS 6
pm
Division IV Volleyball
(10) Ironton SJ at {7) Southern 6

pn
~Octoberll!

D-2 SOccer
{7) Ga lla Academy at (2) Warren 6

prn
Wednotdav. Octobet.20
D-2 Volleyball
(5) Waverty at (4) Galha AcMomy 6

pm
VC·Melgs winner at (2) Warrol' 6 ,
pm.
IbJHI®Y.~lO.Iw-2.1

D-4 Volleyball Sectional Finals
Fed Hock-Belpre w•nnor at (3)
~nstorn 6 pm
(5) South Gotha a• (4) South
Webster 6 pm
ISJ.Southern w nner at (2)
Water1old, 6 p 11'

•

St1urday. OctobeL23
1-3 Volleyball Sectional Final
RlVOr Va y t t4) li ;"1blo 4 p m

B Y BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS MYDAll.YTRlBU'I: COM

Ohio.

Wednesday. ;Qru)bm.lD

0H10 TOURNJ&lt;~'

River Valley
CC finishes 2nd
at OVC meets

S EtmNEL S TAFF
L4DSSPORTS UVDA L't'SENre.ELCOM

RACINE, Ohio - In a
full of pink on
1 hursda) evening. the
l·astern Lady Eagles (202. 14-2 TVC Hocking)
defeated Southern (6-15.
6-10 TVC Hockin&amp;) in
the regular season tmalc
for both teams.
!'he matl'h was dedicated to the Vollev for the
Cure as sevenil other
matches around the state
ha\e been during the
month of October.
Eastern claimed victory in three sets. wmnmg
b) scores of 25-8.25-17,
nnd 25-11. The win ga' e
~n m

Huddleston and Strang
the Lad) b1gles n second nee). Maggie Cummins
place fini h in the 'J VC had three points. and each had two kills. "ith
Amber
Hocking.
Jordan Huddleston nnd Cummins.
The Lad) l:.agles were Kelsey Strang each had Hayman, and Thomas
each
adding
one.
led in points by Brenna one point.
S\\ atzel led the net Ha) man had four blocks.
Holter '' ith 14 (four
aces). Britney Morric;on attack of the Lady Ea!lles Cummms had two. and
hnd 10 point&lt;&gt; (tour aces), wtth 12 kills and tn e Bobbi Harris had one.
Thomas had se\ en
Ally Hendrix had 10 blocks. Holter had II
pomts. Beverly Maxson kills and one block. assists and Strnng had
added eight point&lt;; (three Maxson added eight two. Teaford had four
aces). Brooke Johnson kills. Hendrix had four di~s.
!hie; was the final rcguhad three points. .lam il.' kills and one block.
S" atzel
and
Janne ~ lorrison had three kills, lar season game for
Bo) les each had l\vo Kelse) ~1 yers had two Southern semors Bobbi
and
Shawna I larris. Michelle Ours.
points. and Autumn k1lls,
and Stephanie Berryman.
Trussell had one point.
Murph) had one kill.
Hendrix had 16 assists as well as Eastern seniors
Courtne) Thoma~ led
Eastern.
while Beverly Maxson and
Southern "1th se.... en lor
pomts ( t\\ o aces). tol- Swntzel added IS and Britney Morrison.
lo\\cd by Hope l'eaford Breanna Hn) man had Please see Roundup, Bl
li\e,
\\o ith three pomts (one

BIDWELL. Ohio R1ver Valley had quite a
showing Tuesday night at
the 20 I 0 Ohio Valley
Conference
Cross •
Country Championships
at RVHS, but even those
efforts were not enougn
to prevent Fairland from
repeating as both the
OOy5 and girls champions for another fall.
FHS was simply dominant m both varsity con~
tests. winning the boys ·
crown by 33 points while
the Lad) Dragons won
by nine points. Fairland
- \\ hich had nine of the
14 AII-OVC honorees at
the meet - posted scores
of 18 in the boys event
nnd 25 in the !!iris com~
petition.
.
The Silver and Black,
I however, were right
behind the Green and
\V~ite in both events to
firw&gt;h as the runners-up,
scoring 51 points in the
tx~s race and 34 points
in the girls race. And the
Lady Raiders also came
away with this year s
OVC individual champi,
on - Katie Blodgett.
Please see RVHS, Bl

RedStorm women
edge Ohio Valley
B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS

Blue Devils
fall to
Chillicothe, 6-1
S ENTINEL S TAFF
t.WSSPORTS MY'OA LYSOOINELCOM

CHILLICOTHE. Ohio
- The Galhn Academy
Blue De..,il~ (6-10-2)
opped nn SEOAI
me to Chillicothe on
• mrsday evening by a
score of 6-1.
Cody Robinson scored
the lone Gnllin Academy
goal atter hits own shot
'' ns deflected by the
Chillicothe goal keeper.
Chillicothe ll.'d 2-0 ut
the half with two goals
by
Justin
B,tll.
Chillicothe added four
more goals in the second
half by Jo!!h Watkins,
Cameron Lowe. and
Dalton Bettendors.
Gnllia Academy had
11
shots.
while
C'hillicothe
had 30
shots. Zach torthup
stopped 17 for the Blue
Devils. while 1\ick Zup1
had
JO Sa\CS for
Chillicothe
The Blue Devtls will
begin tournament pin)
o n Thesday at Warren at
7 p.m.

CONTACI' US
1-740·446·2342 ext. 33
Fax - 1·740 446-3008
E-m~~ll: l'ldssporlsOmyds•ly•o~hnel com

Sru~rll S\111~

Bryan Walters
{740) 446-2342 ext 33

bwaltorsCmyda lytr buno com

Sarah Hawley
(740) 446-2342, OX1 33
Ghaw1oyCmydalytr buno com

SPECIAL TO THE SENW.El

VIENNA. W.Va. TI1e Uni\ersit) of Rio
Grnnde
RedStorm
"omen s occer team
'' ent on the road and
recorded a 1-0 win O\er
Ohio Valle) Unhersit)
on Wednesday afternoon in non-conference
action.
Rio Grande (4-7)
matched its all-time
record for'' ins in a single season after knocking off the Fighting
Scots.
The game was scorele:-s until the 67th
minute ''hen JUnior
midfieldcr
Maggk
llarris scored the onh
goal of tht: game.
Freshman forward Alex
Davis was credited with
an assist on the pia).
Davis later rnis,ed on a
one-on-one opportunity
as she delivered the bal1
right to the OVU goal
keepe~
Rebecca
Richardson.
"1 he
goal
reall)
seemed to ~pnrk us."
said Rto Grande head
coach Amber Oli\cr.
"We
had
several
chances (to score) right
after that.
The victory was the
first on the road this
season
for
I he
Rt•dStorm. "We told the
girls before the game
that it would come
down to \\ hich team
would show up. our
home team nr our road
team." Oliver said.
F'reshman goalkeeper
Stickelman
Hannah
stopped all three OVL'
shots and enrned her

I

first collegiate shutout.
Richardson notched
t\Hir saves for Ohio
(I 11 ).
Rio
Valle)
Grande out-shot the
Fighting Scots, 11-5
and held a 5-3 edge in
shots on goal.
The RedStorm return
to
Mid-South
Conference action on
Saturda) with a road
game at Georgeto\'\ n
College. Kick-off IS set
for 4 p.m.
R EOS TORM VOLLEYBALL
LOSES IN THREE

C
A
~I
P
BELLSVILLE. Ky.
The Univer!!it) of Rio
Grandt: Red Storm \ nlk) ball team went on
the
road
to
Cnmpbells\ille
Umversity
on
Wednesdrt) afternoon
nnd suffered a &lt;&gt;traight
set loss· to the Tiger&lt;;,
25-27, 17-25. and 1925.
Rio Grande ( 12-11. 53 MSC Enst) lost for the
second
con ccuti\ e
time after ha\1ng won
six straight matches.
Sophomore middle
hitter l:.rin Sherman \\as
the top hitter in the
game ror RIO Grande
eight
kills.
with
Sophomore outside hitter Whitney Smith
addt:d St'\'Ctl kills to tlw
l:tli'&gt;C.
RcdStorm
Shaman also rt:cordcd
three hlol'ks \\ hile
Smith
posted t\\ o.
Junior middle Iutter
Kati Moore nlso regis·
tered t\\ o blocks ,,s

Coming Soon..·.
tell your friends

save, save

•
T ht; Dail) Sentinel

"''''.Ill)
dail) senti nel.com
•

'' eII.
Please see Rio. Bl
\.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Wobbly fielding making for postseason bobbleheads
and try not to make any
ASSOCIATED PRESS
mistakes and sometimes
\\hen you try too hard
So much for Chase dtt s when you make all
Utley. Josh Hamilton and your mistakes."
their plnyoft pals hanWhatever, there sure
dling every grounder, arc a lot of them. The 31
popup and throw with errors were the most in
~ase. So far. this October nny round of a baseball
is all about those E~.
postseason. In fact, that
Placido Polanco. Scott matches the total from the
Rolen and Evan I ongoria entire 2009 postseason.
were among a hall'-dozcn
Last year. a missed fly
Gold Glovers who turned ball b) St. Louis left
into postseason bobble- fielder Matt Holliday ·Was
heads during a first round the s ignature miscue of
that set a record for the playoffs. This year,
erron;.
the liner that Cincinnati
In all, 3 1 enurs in only right fielder Jay Bruce
15 games - a mistake lost in the lights was the
rate up an alanning 66 biggest misplay. So far.
percent over the regular
The Reds made just 72
~eason .
errors during the regular
" l think defense is hu_ge season, tied with San
right no\\,'' said CC Diego for the fewest in
Sabathia. who \\ill start the N L. Then Cincinnati
for the Ne\\
York made seven errors while
Yankees against Texas in getting s wept in three
Game 1 of the AI. cham- games by the Phillies.
pionship series Friday
"I think that s somenight. " I mean, you can l thing that juc;t happens,"
give away outs. You have Philadelphia
manager
to play solid defense. You Charlie Manuel said. ''All
• see \'jhat happened in a of a sudden we hit streaks
couple of those games in where our defense kind of
collapses or we start playthe NL series.''
No bad \\Cather or twi- ing had. I think that s all
light zones to blame. part of baseball and all
either. lnstend, postsea- part of. I would ay, being
son newcomer Cod) excited about being there,
Ross offered a s impler at the same time, a little
tight."
explanation.
Atlanta second base" Maybe just pla) off
nerves. I think that s all I man Brooks Conrad had
can kind of chalk it up the roug hest time. comto." the San Francisco mitting four errors in the
right fielder smd. ''Ma) be Braves four-game loss to
coincidental. First round, the Giants. His three
you want to be perfect errors in Game 3 cost
BY BEN WALKER

Atlanta a chance to
advance.
Then again, it happened to another Brooks.
too. In the 1970 World
Series, Baltimore third
baseman
Brooks
Robinson tossed nwny his
first throw in Game I for
an error. lie recovered
quickly. and put on one of
the greatest defensive
performances in Series
history.
"You know. it s part of
the ¥.arne. 1 his is pressure,· Giants third baseman Pablo Sandoval said.
"i s way different from
the regular season to the
postseason. This is the
time you try to do everything perfect and you
start to make errors.''
The Yankees were the
only team to play flawles::.ly in the first round.
They
swept
the
Minnesota Twms, whose
only error came from
Gold Glove catcher Joe
Mauer.
There were I0 errms in
each of the other three
series - Texas-Tampa
Bay,
Phillie::.-Reds,
Giants-Braves. Last year,
there were a total of 13
errors in 13 openinground games.
"We ve got to be headc;
up. I think one thing
we re very proud of with
the Yankees is that we
play good baseball," New
York first baseman Mark
Teixeira said.
"I m not sure if you
notice. but every time I

catch a ball, every time
I m coming off first base,
I run towards third
becaur;e if a guy is rounding third. you never know
what he s going to do,
especially if the guy has
speed," he said.
Texas basically stole its
first three runs against the
Rays in the deciding
Game 5. Elvis Andrus
and Vladimir Guerrero
scampered home from
second base on grounders
and Nelson Cruz scored
on a throwing error by
catcher Kelly Shoppach.
"In this situation, it
seems like a mistake really gives those guys a couple runs there," Yankees
catcher Jorge Posada
said.
The defendin[.! World
Series champion Yankees
made only 69 errors this
year, fewest in the
majors.
"We preach it all year
long,"
manager Joe
Girardi said. ''It plays an
important role in games
because you start making
error::. and giving extra
baserunners, a Jot of
times it leads to runs. It
leads to a longer pitch
count for your pitcher and
you go to your bullpen
maybe sooner than you
want.
"There s a lot of ways
that it can affect the
game," he said. "And,
usually. when you ~ee
teams that have pitchmg
and defense, usually they
play a long time.''

Friday, October 15, 2010

UC, Louisville ready
for Keg of Nails
•

LOUISVILU~.
Ky.
(AP) - Cincinnati run·
ning back Isaiah Pend can
understand why the twotime defending Big East
champions weren t picked
for a three-peat.
Quarterback Tony Pike
and wide receiver Manly
Gilyard, the backbone of
an offense that lit up scoreboards across the league
the last two seasons, are
gone. Coach Brian Kelly
bolted for Notre Dame.
New coach Butch Jones is
still ~etting settled in his
new JOb.
All good reasons to
doubt the Bearcats can be
the fll'St conference team
to win three straight titles
since ~1iami (J-1a.) won
four in a row from 200003.
Thai OOe.sn t mean Pead
agrees with it.
ll1e Bearcats (2-3) have
reeled off a dozen strai~ht
conference wins headmg
into Friday night s Big
East
opener
against
improved Louisville (3·2).
That should count tor
something.
''I &lt;b1 t feel we re getting the respect that maybe
we should have, that
we ve earned," Pead said.
· ~iJ. s kind of edgy."
The Bearcats aren t the
only .one looking for a little respect The Cardinals,
picked to finish last in the
Big East. come in having
won two straight for the
first time in nearly two

years.
Louisville
pounded
56-0 last \\eek
for its first shutout since
2006, leading offen::.ive
lineman Greg Tomczyk to
proclaim first-year head
coach Charlie Strong s
rebuilding job is already
complete and it s time for
the Cardinals to be taken

Roundup

~1emphis

from Page 81
The Lady Eagles won
the JV match by score.; of
25-7 and ::!5-12.
Southern will begin
l.ectional
tournament
play on Monday as it
hosts Ironton St. Joe nt 6
p.m. Eastern will play in
the sectional final on
Thursday at 6 p.m.

RVHS

BLUE ANGELS SWEPT BY
MARIETTA

MARIEITA. Ohio
The Gallia Academy volleyball team came real
close
to
spoiling
Marietta s perfect season
on Thursday night, but
ultimately dropped a
straight-game 25-19, 2521. 26-24 decision in the
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League finale
for both clubs.
The
VI Sitlllg
Blue
Angels
(1 3-6 ,
7-5
SEOAL) battled through
three tightly-contested
games against the host
Lady Tigers (21 -0. 12-{)).
but \1HS found a way to
cap off their 2010
SEOAL championship in
unbeaten fashiOn .
Marietta jumped out to
a 24-J 6 lead in Game 1
before winning by s ix
points, then found itself
with a slim 21 -20 advantage in Game 2 before
reeling off four strai~ht
points to take a :L-0
match lead.
GAHS responded nicely in Game 3. taking a
24-21 advantage. but the
hosts rallied with five
straight points to wrap up
the 3-0 match decision.
Marietta also \\Oil the
previous
contest
in
Gallipolis by a 25-20, 2520. 25-13 margin.
Morgan Leslie led the
Angels with eight service
points. follo .... ed by
Taylor Foster with seven
and Hannah Cunningham
with four points. Both
Morgan Daniels and
Riley Nibe':l added t';"'o
points aptece, '' hlle
Knssie Shriver rounded
things out with one point.
Leslie and Foster both
had a team-best two aces
in the setback.
Leslie. Daniels and
Shainna Fillinger all led
the net attack with six
kills apiece. followed by
Haley Rosier with three
kills
and
Hannah
Cunningham with two
kills. Danieh added n
team-best five blocks,
followed by Filling~r
with three and Leshe
with two blocks.
Heather Ward led the
defense with 37 digs, fol -

seriously in the jumbled
Big East.
"Nolxxly s
really
jumped up and taken the :
lead like 4this is the t,eA
team, '' said quarterbac. ,
Adam Froman. 'There s a •
couple of teams that are
playing pretty good. but at
the same time if we feel
like we go out there and
put our best effort, go out
there and execute like we
did last week, we feel like '
we can go out there and
play and beat anybody."
The Cardinals certainly
looked like world beaters
against the Tigers, piling •
up 573 yards of total
offense and dominating
the way they did during
the Bobby Petrino era.
Yet they re also well
aware that Cincinnati is a '
marked step up over the •
Tigers. arguably one of the
worst teams in the country.
111ough the Bearcats
stumbled a bit out of the
gate, losing to Fresno State
and North Carolina State,
they seem to have found
something during a tou.
two-point loss to No.
,
Oklahoma three weeks
ago. They followed it up
with a 45-3 whipping of
Miami of Ohio last weekend that gives them some
serious momentum going
into the 50th Keg of Nails. '
Cincinnati has captured
the trophy in each of the
last two seasons. including ·
a 41-10 blowout a year
ago. It s a loss that has
stuck \\~th the Cardinals. '
"We quit last year."
Fro!Th'ln said.
That hasn t been the
case
this
season.
Louisville quickly fell 1
behind Kentucky and
Oregon State but managed
to keep it interesting until 1
the final minutes.

Sarah Hawley/photo

Southern's Jordan Huddleston (11) dinks a ball over the outstretched arms of
Eastern's Ally Hendrix and Brenna Holter during Thursday mght's TVC Hocking
matchup at Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium in Racine. Ohio.

lowed by Leslie with 30
and Foster with 20.
Cunnin~ham had a teambcst )"' assist:.. while
Shriver added 16 assists.
GAHS
defeated
Port~mouth 25-10, 25-5.
25-20
on
Tuesday.
Cunningham led the
Angels with 16 point!&gt;.
followed by Shriver and
Leslie with 10 points
apiece.
The Blue An~reb who finished tied with
Chillicothe for third
place in the SEOAL
standings - nov..· turn
their attention to the
Divi~ion II postseason on
Wednesday night when
they host Waverly at 6
p.m.
MEIGS FALLS TO ATHENS
IN SEASON FINALE

THE PLAINS, Ohio The
Meigs
Lady
~larauders (12-10. 5-5
TVC Ohio) wrapped up
the 20 I 0 regular season
on Thur:;day evening
with a TVC Ohio match
against the Athens Lady
Bulldogs.
Athens won the match
in three sets b) scores of
2S-26. 25-8, and :!5- I 6.
Emalee Glass Jed the
Lady .'v1arauders with six
points. followed
by
Jordan Anderson \Vith
five points, Chandra
Stanley. Valerie Conde,
Morgan Howard, and
Shellic Bailey each had
two points. and Kelsey
Shulc:r had one point.
Bailey had 1.3 kills.
Alison Brown added
seven, Howard had four.
Stanley
and
Alaine
Arnold each had two. and
Emily Kinnan had one.
Howard and Kinnan each
had one block.
Glass had ~2 assists.

while Miranda Grueser.
Conde. and Arnold each
had one.
This was the final reguJar season match for
Meigs seniors Chelsea
Patterson:
Jordan
Anderson,
Miranda
Grueser. Kelsey Shuler,
Chandra Stanle) , Shellie
Bailey. Alaine Arnold,
Valene
Conde.
and
Morgan Howard.
The Lndy Marauders
will host Vinton County
on Monday in the sectional tournament at 6
p.m.
LADY RAIDERS FALL TO
JACKSON IN 4

JACKSON. Ohio River Valley ended its
regular season on a down
note Wednesday night
during a 25-23. 23-~5.
25-15, 25-22 setback to
host Jackson in a nonconference
volle)ball
matchup in the Apple
City.
The visiting Lady
Raider:-. who won
their ninth consecutive
Ohio Valley Conference
championship this year
finished the 20 I 0
campaign with a 14-8
O\'erall
mark.
The
lronladies, \\ ith the victory. improved to ~-I 3
this season.
Cassie Randolph led
the Lady Raiders with 15
service points and six
aces.
followed
by
Katelyn Birchfield with
10 and Kelcie Carter
with seven points.
Kaitlyn Roberts led the
net attack '' ith 13 kills,
followed by Birchfield
and Curter with seven
apiece. Kelsey Sands
added five kills and Beth
Misner contributed t"' o,
while Randolph rounded

things out with one kill.
The Lady Raiders did
salvage a spht \\ith a 2510. 25 - 12 victory in the
junior varsity contest
Mary Waugh led the JV
Raiders with 12 points.
RVHS returns to action
Saturday. Oct. 23. when
it opens Division Ill sectional tournament play at
Trimble.
lADY CATS FALL TO ELK
VALLEY

ASHTON, W.Va. The Hannan Lady Cats
(3-21) fell to Elk Valley
on Thursda} evening at
Hannan High School.
Elk Valle) won by
scores of 25-16, 25-18,
and 25-16.
Jasmine Campbell and
Jasmine Weise each had
five points to lead
Hannan. followed b)
Stephanie Dillon and
Samantha Blain with
four points each: Heather
Ellis with three points,
and Katie Ellis with one
point.
Dillon had nine spikes
(one kill), Blain and
Heather El 1s each had
four spikes. Kat1e Ellis
had three spikes. and
riffanv Adkins had two
:spikes: Katie Ellis had
15 sets. Heather Ellis had
four sets. and Jazi Casto
had two sets.
Weise and Casto each
had I:! digs, Heather
Ellis had 10. Katie Ellis
and Blain had seven
each,
Dillon
and
Campbell each had six.
Adkins had four, Emily
Holley had three. and
Brittany Samarroco had
{\\ l&gt;.

Hannan will play at
Shennan on Tuesday at 6
p.m.

20th and 22nd.
On the boys side of
things, Tanner Mattie of
Fairland won the in
from Page 81
ual title "'ith a mark
19:10.
Blodeett. with her\\ inThe Raiders were led
n in!! time of 24:34. by Trent Wolfe with a
became
the
Lady
Raiders
fifth
OVC time of 21 :22. finishing
champion in the last five se-.enth overall for AIIyears. joining three-time OVC honors. The top
winner Ashley Fitch eight males earned all(2005. 2006. 2007). league accolades.
Jared Hollingsworth
Blodgett was also the
was
next in lOth with a
OVC girls champion last
time of 22:34, followed
fall .
Chris
Goodrich
Jessica Hager earned by
(23:0
I)
in
13th.
Richie
All-OVC honors b; placing thirth with a tune of Jackson (24:34) and
26:17. while Keyana Jamil Stepney (25:28) .
Ward just missed out on rounded out the team •
all-league honors by fin- score with respective finishing seventh With a ishes of I 7th and 21st.
Nate · Shuler (27:51)
time of 27:50. The top
six ladies earned AII- and Chev EbLin (29: 10)
OVC accolades.
also placed 28th and
Carissa Wolfe (32:43) 29th. respectively. for the
and
Sonja
Rankin Raiders.
(33 45 had respective
Coal Grove had the
effor:s o 15th and 18th only other team score,
to round out the team finishing third in the
scoring. Jessica Halle) ooys race with 67 points
(34:28)
and
Olivia There were 35 runners •
Walker (36:22) abo the boys race and 24 run ,
respective finishes of ner~ in the girls event.

Rio
from Page 81
Sophomore
Iibera
Lauren Ramcs led the
team 111 d1gs with 17.
Smith added five .
Senior setter Ashlev
Bloom handed out I 6
assists and had a pair of
serve aces while freshman
setter
Kayla
Landaker
delivered
seven as::.isb .
Campbell"' ille. who

leads the M1d South
Conference
West
Division. improves to
20-5 on the season and •
8-1 in MSC play. The •
Tigers have won four
straight.
Rio Grande will travel to Huntington (IN)
University to participate in a tourname~t
this weekend. RIO IS ,
scheduled to tace the
host school at 11 a.m.
on
Saturday
and
Purdue-~orth Central at
l p.m.

Deer Feeders 30 Gal.
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DeertWild Game Cameras
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SJadg RMll Ag sen1ee alSo cames rrany other
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)

I

�_______ _______
_....

~~-..._._.,

'Fr id ay, October 15, 2 01 0

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

-

---

w ww .mydailyscn tin cl.com

Might allegations sack Browns
Favre s marketability?
PRAIRIE,
· n. (AP) - Over 20
as an NFL 4UnrBrett Favre has
taken plent) of hits on the
lield.
Now his reputation is
taking a hit, too.
The NFL is investigating the Deadspin website
report that he allegedly
sent
below-the-waist
nuked photos of himself
to a woman who worked
for the New ''l'nrk Jet:.
when he played for the
team two years ago.
Favre has become one
of America s mo t popular athletes by winnmg a
Super Bowl. setting all
kinds of passing and
durability records and
building an image as an
everyday down-to-earth
guy.
Just watch one of those
Wrangler commercials.
where he plays backyard
pickup ball \\ith a bunch
of smiling and laughing
. while wearing a T. blue jeans and stub. e.
.
Wrangler. arguably his
highest-profile promotion. issued a statement
Thuro,;da\ saving "we are
follm' ing the story like
everyone else.
"We are not making
any major decisions on
our marketing program
until more inti.&gt;m1ation is
available."
Wrangler
spokesman Rick French
said.
Even if Favre ultimately avoids punishment
from the league, 1t s clear
that this damage - fair
or not - will be difficult
to repair.
"It has certainly shifted
to 'good family guy and
one of us to 'lust hke
every other professtonal
athlete we c:m t tru t,"
smd sports marketing
specialist Matt Delzell.
will we still see
;e starring jn televi•:,
ads after he retires?
·• I see it highly unlikely
for the simple fact that
the companies he endorses have hung their hat on
h1s being a good-old-boy
family ~uy in middle
Amenca, · Delzell said in
an interview from his
Dallas-area oftice, where
tr s a director for the
entertainment marketing
agency Davte Brown
Talent. ·
Fa-. n: has dodged all
questions about the story.
even when given opportunities to directly deny
t s true. According to
marketing and public
relations analvsts, the
Minnesota Vikfngs 4uarterback has made the
matter worse by not
addressing it.
Asked
after
Minnesota s loss to the
York Jets on
1day night 1f the alleon has been an
embarrassment, Favre
said. " I am embarrassed
about this football game."
When Tiger Woods
tumbled from grace following revelations of his
infidelity. he took months
to acknowledge his
behavior and apologize
for it. Michael Gordon,
the chief executive officer of Group Gordon. a
corporate and crisis public relations outfit in New
York. compared Favre s
evasiveness on this issue
to what happened with
Woods.
" It looks like he s trying to dance around. 1t.
which is only creatmg
more questions around
him rather than fewer,''
said Gordon. whose firm
EDEN

I

.

-------~---

BERRA. Ohio (AP) The Cleveland Brnwns
have new tc.tm coloro;:
bmio;ed and orange.
As many a~:&gt; se\cn
"itarters, mcludmg quarterbacks Jnke Delhomme.
Seneca Wallace and runlllng back Peyton HiUis,
misc;ed their ...econd
lilralt•ht
practice
on
nwn.day a., the Browns.
ban•Ted up on both sides of
the ~inc, prepared to face
the well-rec;ted Pittc;hurgh
Steelerc;
·
The injury bug has bitten deep into the Browns
this ~1s&lt;1n. and won t let
go.
''II ~ football," Wallace
said. "Injuries happen"
TI1ey seem to be conung
at an inordinate rate in
Cleveland.
Wallace, a carc~r backup who made four &lt;;tarts
while Delhomme recovered from a high ankle
1
sprain in the -;eason open
' er, confim1ed he suffered
the same il~ury when he
was sacked m the firc;t half
of Sunday s lo~s to
Atlanta. Wallace entered
the lockGr room on
Thursday w~aring a pl.asttc protectiVe waJkmg
hoot. which has become
something of u fashion
trend \Hth the Browns.
"A lot of people are
1 weanng boot~ around
David Pokress/Newsday/MCT
here Mike Holmgren
New York Jets Drew Coleman sacks Minnesota "itarted that." Wallace said,
Vikings quarterback Brt:lll Favre in the first quarter at referring to the Brown •
The New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, pre!&gt;ident who recently
shed his boot after underNew Jersey, Monday.
gomg foot o;urgery thic;
v. orks with public fig- business analysts at summer. ''He ,.,as Y..alk.lng
ures. sports organizations Forbes.com, Favre made around with the boot earliand a variet) of others. about ~7 million last year er in tmimng camp and
had a boot on.
''If he were more forth- alone from endorsements. nobody
Now it &lt;;eems hke it s the
coming it would seerh 1-e s done all kind~ of thing."
less ominous. but it looks ad' ertic;ements over his
With both of hi., expcnlike he ii trying to hide career, from credit cards cnced quarterbacks hmpo,;omethfng. The Jeople to those famed blue Jeans ing and potentiall) out tor
htHe also w,ts recent!) -.eveml v.eeks. Bnmn!&gt;
who hnve handle these
Situations well are the featured by Sears in a coach Eric Mnngim is
one:, who come out hon~ spot poking fun at hi"&gt; expected to start rook1e
estly \vith the facts and indecisive tendencie~ as Colt McCo) against the
tell a complete story &lt;;O he pretend.., to hem ,md St~elers, coa1 n oft the1r
there are no more 'luec;• haw over '' h1ch T\' he b) \\Ct'l\
wants to buy. Spokeo;rnan
tlon&lt;:&gt; down the road.·
On
ravredoesn l have near Tom Aiello smd the sene&lt;. 1\1
the global stature that v. as intended sole ) tor
Woods doe-;. and they the 2009 eason and that
also differ in their back the company IS not working "ith him current)
ground.
Fnvn· ~ agent. Bu"&gt;
Part of FaHc s attraction to fans was the way Cook, did not return mes
he faced up to his past sages thi"i week.
A5 much as he s clearl)
problems and overcan1e
persistent
personal enJoyed the attention · nd
traged1es to succeed on the praise over the ) ear~.
the field. His otherworld- Favre has also brought a
ly performance the day chip-on- h is-shou~ der
after his dad died of a kind of defiance to h1s
heart attack was one of football career. Asked last
the NFL s most memo- vear after arriving in
rable games of the past Minnesota v. hat ~ his
response was to nil the
decade.
''liger had a very care- people critical &lt;lf his
fully crafted pristine -.vavcring. FaHe shot
image that at least to the back, ''Don t \\ atch "
But news about the
outside made him look
over
like perfect." Gordt)n back-and-forth
said. "With Favre. people retirement u~ually just
are fans of his play but cau::..co;; C) es to roll at the
tr s never had a perfect wor:-;t. Stones like this,
even if proved to be falc;e,
reputation.··
bring
far
Favre spent the summer t) pically
before the 1996 season in stronger reaction" and
a rehab clinic to treat his true backlash.
ll is Vikings teammate&lt;;
pamkiller addiction. and
he has revealed his fre- haven t Y..a\ered, at least
quent
drinking
and publicly, in their support
carousing early in his of him. Asked whether he
career. Both he and his believes fa, re concerns
wife, Deanna. have pub- himself with external per
lished tell-all books about ceptions at this point in
their ups and downs. his career. pnrtJcularly in
They ve been married 14 light· of the current ~~an­
dal,
kicker
R) an
years.
f'avre has had his Longwell shrugged off
detractors. whether peo- the potential negath e
ple fed up with hi~ waf- effect on his perfortling about playing and a mam:e.
"Well. I think we all do
perceived egotism behind
1t or simply Packers back- lo a et't1ain Je,el •. but at
er~ angry about his signthe same time the puhlit s
in g~wi th-t he- Vi k i n~s going to think the way
betrayal. His populantv the\ think rmd repm1ers
was widespread, howe,~­ arc' &lt;•omo to \\rite what
. I
sail
er. transcending his days they"" owant...
as a three-time NFL MVP Longwell. who also
in Green Bay. According played alon~-side Favre
to the lea&amp;ue. his jersey with lhe Pacl\er.;. "So as
was the thml-bcst online much as we do tlunk
seller on NPLShop.com about it and care about It,
over the period from ultimately I have to make
April I through Sept. 30. kid-.s and he ha-. to play
And according to the 4uarterback."

;;;...------- - ----- ---l

OVP Sports Briefs
"""'-'"' BASKETBALL OFFICIATING
CLASS

Mike Rouse at (740) 286-2482.
S YRACUSE CO- ED SOFTBALL BENEFIT

JACKSON. Ohio - An Ohio High
School Athletic Association baskeiball
ofticiating dass will be offered to anyone that desires to become a basketball
official. Participants will be able to ofticiate games th i~ season. ~lasses will
begin on Saturday. Nov. 6. 111 the Apple
City.
For more information. contact either
John Derrow at (740) 710-5069 or

SYRACUSE. Ohio - A co-ed snftball tournament will be held on October
16-17 to benefit the tnnwdo \'ictims of
Meigs Count) at the S) racu-..c Park.
There are to bL' live girls and fi\'c guys
on a team. A donation station \\ill be set
up with information on what i~ still
needed.
Contact Lee Gillian at (740) 7072270 for more infomwtion.

F

The Qaily Sentinel • Page B:J

re bruised all over
NCAA hi"tory
Mangini was a!.ked if he
had t1pped further.
· I d c;ay that the lean i5
more
pronounced."'
Man~1m said before practice. 'I wao; really happy
wtt~. what he did ye-;terday.
Me( oy got the majority
ot the snaps w1th the first
team
offense
on
Wednesdav,
and
he
worked with the starters
again Thun.day dudng the
30 minutes of practice
open to the media.
Man~mi was. impreso,;ed
with IVlcCoy s c·nmposure
on the field during the
workout. which ended
with McCoy le&lt;tding the
Browns in their post-practice ''breakdown., huddle
for the first time as a pro.
'1htt &lt;; probably what
he was used to doing tor
)Cars and years being in
that role. and he just fell
back into• that role.''
Mangini s.1id.
Jn all. nme playen. down from Wednesday s
II - sat out practice
Timrsday and four others
were limited. In addition
to Delhomme, Wallace
and Hillis (thigh). the
BroWil'S walking wounded includec; aefen-;he
linemen Shaun Ro!!ef'&gt;
(elbow). and Rob'"iure
Smith (back). center Alex
Mack (shoulder). guard
Flo)d Womack (knee).
tackle John St Clair"
(anklel and tirht end
Robert Royal (shoulder).
Wide recen er returner
Joshua Cribbs (ankle),
safety Abmm Elam (knee)
and '&gt;nfety Nick Soren::.en
(calf) missed part ot practice
•
\1angini is hopeful he II
get more playerc; back on
r;riday. He needs Hillis
badh
llie pUJmhing back
pulled his quadnceps muscle in pmctice last week.
Aftet gaining more than
100 )ards m consecuthe
~ames. he y,.as hmdcred by
t
lnJUr) anain"l the
n o1 d managed Jll"t
n I0 t' &lt;~me&lt;.. T h~
~ns '"'II need Htlli'l at
&lt;;trenoth against

Pittsburw s No. !-ranked
m-.hing defense. giving up
tust 62 yard~ per game.
If ;vtc( oy doe~ start. and
th re i-; little evidence su~- '
ge&lt;oting h..: won t make h1s
re~ular-season debut, the
24 year-old will have to
deal "Wtth a defense with a
nasty reputation.
· 'It i-; Blittburgh."'
Manp.m• c;aid.
Md:..'oy s challenge will
be to recognize when the
Steelers an:: coming, and if
he can. audible into plays
to oft~et Pittsbuqp s pac;s
msh.
Mangini doesn t expect
Troy Polamalu, James ,
Hamson and Co. to show
McCoy any mercy.
''I m sure that they re
going to do things that
they thmk is gomg to beat
the protection, beat the "
c;cheme and there is
always somethmg creative
that the) come up with
each game," he said.
'"That s something that
they ve done for a lono
time. the) ve done "Wetl for a long time. It hasn t
reaiJ) been exclusivdy
w1th ) oung quarterbacks.
so1netimes when it ~ets
rolhng it happen:. a little
bit more.'The Brov. ns
need to c;afeguard McCoy.
who 1s on track to become
the 16th different 4uarterback to start a game for the
Browne; c;ince 1999: 'Jbe
team rc-::.igned Brett
Ratlitf this week off 1\:ew
England s pract1ce squad
a5 a backup. but with the
wa) thin~s .are going for
CJe,elano.. 1t :-; not farfetched to think he could
get some playing time if
McCoy gets hurt or struggles.
Wallace c;
injury
knocked him out of a
game for the first time in
his
c~reer.
forcing
M,mgmt to go back to
Delhomme. who wa-;n t mobile and appeared to re- inju':C h1s ankle. ~1angini
declined to comment on
Delhonune c; :.latus and
the 'cteran QB has not _
been :;een at the team s
training tac11it) thi:. week.

Our identity.
Our way of life.

�Page B4 •

·nw Daily &amp;ntind

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Fdday, OctobeJ· 15, 2010

~ QBs lead offensive renaissance in Big Ten Win up front and you win Ohio State-Wisconsin
. IOWA

C ITY. Iowa
Name the
league "ith the nation s
best crop ol quanerba~.:ks
this season.
. Bet the Big 'l~n didn t
come to mind. did it?
' Well, believe it.
. With the se&lt;tson at the
, halfway point for many
• schools around the ~oun­
: try, no conference can
'match the Bio Ten for
, sheer depth at the game s
,• most important position. a
:development
that s
·helped fuel an oJTensive
, renaissance in a league
once knmvn as the
· gn?UIH.I-and- pound ci rcutt.
. Six of the top 16 QBs
:nationally in pass efti. ;ciency rating. led by the
, •Once
turnover-prone
·:Ricky Stanzi of Iowa. ru·e
;in the Big Ten. The SEC
'tranks second with four
:and no other league ha"
more than two.
; The Big Ten has a talented group.
•: There are dual-threat
:stars such as Michigan s
' Denard Robinson and
· :Terrelle Pryor at top•:ranked Ohio State. Mo~e
traditional
drop-back
' passers, includinu Stanzi.
1 Michigan
State -s Kirk
1 Cousins and Wisconsin
s
: Scott Tolzien, have led
I their
teams to strong
• _starts. and spread QB Dan
Persa has completed 78
percent of his passes in
• ·leading Northwestern to a
, 5-1 record.
' Heck:, Indiana s Ben
Chappell leads the lea~ue
:. with nearly 300 passmg
:·yards a game. but he .,
! "been overshadowed by
"the others so far.
'11 s· a little bit more
: wide-open
conference
,offensively. Everybod}
, still . wants to pound the
ball and control the line of
. scrimmage, but tnere s
·-great athletes across the
- board in this wnference
:and it s getting that much
·.more challenging on
. · defense." Nortlnvestern
·'Coach Pat Fitzgerald said.
'' The Big Ten has been
evolving as a more
·diverse offen~ive league
.-since the mid-1990s,
when Joe Tiller brought
.the spread to Purdue and
:·watched as it helped the
::Boilermakers reach the
: Rose Bowl after the 2000
season.
: Over the past few year!'&gt;.
even traditional ground
'powers Penn State. Ohio
State and Michigan have
, :fo~nd success opening
· _thmgs up.
, • The Nittany Lions had a
• , mini-revival with their
version of the spread
under former quarterback
... Daryll Clark. reaching the
, ' Rose Bowl two years ago .
•The
Buckeyes have
adapted their offense to
,. ~cap1talize on Pryor s athleticism and, this week,
• became the tirst team in
• •the league since 2007 to
hit No.~l.
Michigan coach Rich
· Rodriguez brm1ght with
_ him the spread·option
attack he used to light up
• Big East scoreboards at
• West Virginia. Thout;h the
'Wolverines have hao their
''much-publicized strugL gles in his first two seasons, they ve hit pay dirt
'~with Robinson in 20 I 0.
, "The Big Ten is probably similar to the Big
•• East. where there were a
few teams that would
•spread you out. a few
teams that were more of a
' power-based offense a~d
some that were 111
between,"
Rodriguez
said. ··1 trunk you re going
to see more and more
variety throu~hout the
game going forward as
well."
Perhaps the simplest
·explanation for why the
Biet Ten looks more
, 'explosive than ever this
season is because the
• quarterbacks are just bet• 'ter at what they do.
: ~ Pryor has always been a
·!major threat when he
"tucks the ball and nms.
and he s got 354 yards
rushing this season. Last
~ week. ~he set career highs
with 24 completions and
334 yards in less than
three quarter~ in a 38-1.0
·win over lndtana. and h1s
' 15 touchdown passes lead
the league.
Robinson has been
for
the
spectacular
Wolverines. ranking sec(AP) -

Qui~k:

ontl in the nation in total
offense with 36Y yard-.
per gnm~ and l7 tow:hdowJls - nine on the
ground. eight through the
air.
Iowa
coach
Kirk
Fercntz sees ... imilarities
hetwecn Robinson and
one of the forefathers of
the ne\\ 13ig 'lt.·n. fonner
lnuiana
quarterback
Antwaan Randle-EI.
''When Indiana had
Rantllc -El. thcv ran a
unique attack.· And if
you vc.: got a player like
that, you re smart to do
that," ltma coach Kirk
Ferentz said. "Mv uucs~ is
that Michigan wfl(do that
for a long time."
Teams that run more
traditional Big Ten attacks
are also sceii1g their production jump in 20 I 0.
Stanzi. who threw 15
interceptions in 2009 anti
completed ju~t 56.2 percent of his pl\sses. has
throw just two picks and
trails only Boise State s
Kellen
Mnnre
and
Aubum s
Cameron
Ne\\ton in passing efficiency.
Cousins has upped hi~
completion percentage
from 60.4 percent to 6!U
percent this year. and
Tol1ien has cut his interceptions from II to just
two this season.

Of course. Wisconsin
would be rather silly to
throw it 50 times a game
with nmning back&lt;; John
Clay. .lames White and
one of the nation 1:1 best
offen~ivc lines. Bu t the
Badgers have learned to
be more creative cut of
base sets.
" I think (Wbcon~in
offensive coordinator)
Paul Chrzst an&lt;J his oftensive staff have as much
ingenuity and test yuu in
us many different ways as
any offense that we face,"
said Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel. who s been poring over tilrn in preparation t(lr Saturday s trip to
Madison. "It s not like
they line up aml say. 'OK,
here we come. you know
exactly
\Vhat
we re
doing. 'llial s not the
cast·.··
l s not as though the
Big Ten has forgotten its
roots. It also boasts five of
the nation s top 20 teams
in rushing yards per game
and seven teams allmving
less than 20 points per
game.
··certainly it is dtverse
bl!cause vou still have
those teatlh that ha\e the
ahilit) to play power football, but you have those
that have great speed on
the outside and usc the
spread attack.'' Indiana
coach Bill Lynch said .

1

COLUMBUS.
Ohio on the Buckeye" by run- the Badgers.
(AP)
When top-ntnkcd ning when and where they
''fhcre sa couple teams
Ohio State meets No. I !:l want,
punishing the that have a couple good
Wis~onsin on Saturday.
defensive front with a player'&gt; on the offensive
the game almost certainly five-man. I ,600-pound line. but I thmk this b the
will be decided by a cou- line trying to create day- most complete line,"
ple of precious yards li~ht for guard-sized runOhio State defensive end
the ones between their nlllg back John Clay (list- Cameron Heyward said.
re.,pe~tive offensive and
ed at 248 pounds).
"They run so hard •
defensive lines.
''They just Jove to tinic;h blocks very w
"Yes, it s definitely a pound the ball," Ohio They re c;ome tn:es and
game that II be decided in State defensive lineman they get so much push."
the trenches," Buckeyes Dexter l .arimore said.
The challenge for
sali:!ty Jermall' Hine:- said ·'They are going to load Wisconsin i-; to not invest
this week during the run- the box up with as mt~t.:h everything in the run
up to the showdown. meat ns possible and just game. To win. the
"l.ikl! I .,J;L&lt;; tt.'lling our tl)' to keep pounding and Bad!!er-; will certainly
defen~ive linemen. 'If pounding. If you can t
have to have quarterback
)OU guys get blown off control the line of scrimScott Tolzicn have a good
th~: ball, \Ve re going to . mage. it s going to be all
day through the air.
have a long day. Period. ·· day, just nmning and run"You want to run the
Indeed, not all the l~a­ ning and nmning. And not football. but it ::. nnt going
tured characters will be pretty."
to be a game where
household names. Joining
Just when a team adapts maybe we can run the ball
Ohio State quarterback to the bruising Clay. 60. 50 times," guard John
Terrelk Pryor. the key Wisconsin coach Bret Moftitt ::.aid. ··we ve got
Buckeyes will be guys Bielema subs in freshman to have a good pass game
like J.B . Shugarts and speedster James White. and it has to keep th~:
Nathan Williams. whik who can turn a sliver of ~hains moving. That all
the dilfcrcnce-makers for space into a long ntn.
stans with protection."
Wisconsin will include
When Ohio State has
Bielema doc.'&gt;n t foresee
Loui~ !'\zcgwu and Peter the Buckeyes changing a
the ball. it will try to balKonz.
whole lot, thm~h.
ance thmgs out.
"The tren~hes is where
"! believe uhio State
Pryor passed for a
it o,.vill be,'' Oh10 State really Jines ·up and savs. career-best 334 yard'&gt; la'&gt;t
coach Jim Tressel said. 'We arc '='uoino
week in a rout of lndiana.
e to do wfmt
''The 11111 game. cenainl). we do defen:-.ively. and all while resting a sore left
Pass protection. for sure. kind of react to every- thiuh muscle. ~Still.
Both sides. "llxil s when! thing else. •· he said. more prone to turnin&lt;
the game is o,.von and lost.'' ·'"1 hey · vc got great per- collap-;ing pocket into
The .lines, so to speak. sonnel."
scrambling gain than tor
are clearly drawn.
The Buckeyes intimi- standing
in &lt;H!ainst
~
"' . the
The muscular Badgers date a lot of team~. but ntsh and
deltvenng a
want to enforce their will they don t expect to bully strike Jowntield.

h.

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�Friday, October 15, 201 0

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1re alwaya conl•dentbl • C11rtt'll tale caro appDea. • All real eetllo edvtni1Mmtnts are subjeCt to tht Federll Fllr HoUJ~nQ Act of 18e8. • Tllil ,_.per
~pt1 only help w:u1t&lt;1 adt mHIIfll EOE ~~anaards We wtll nc1 knowingly aecepl any achertlttlng In v!Ol•ton ol tne lew Wll ncl be mponeiblt tar lilY
errore In an lid taken o.er rne pi!One

Miscellaneous

Giveaway a childs 2000
Automotive
huffy bike &amp; 30
Forsythia
Bushes
{you dig) 740-446Autos
8896
~~~~~~
98 KIA Sephia LS, 4
Free
wooden cyl, auto trans, very
fencing . good shape, good t:res, 30 mp,
very
good.
must take all, 740· runs
$800, 740-992.0255
591.0082

Basement
Waterproofing
Uncond11tonal hfet1me
guarantee Local
references lurmshed
Established 1975 Call
24 Hrs 740·446·0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Wont To Buy
FIREWOOD &amp; HAY
FOR SALE 304-882·
Oiler's Towing. Now
2537
buying junk cars
GIVE-AWAY· Several w/motors or w/out.
or
pair of women shoes /40-388-0011
No
size 8 narrow, call: 740-441-7870.
Sunday call
304-458-1657

Other Services
Pet Cremations. Call
740-446·3745
line
Dancing
Lessons at Merry's
Fam1ly Winery. Every
Thursday 7-9 740388·0578.

Wont To Buy

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limited Time Offer!
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Other Services

M oney To lend

D.lSJ::L

NOTICE Borrow Smart
the
Ohio
Contact
Divrs1on of Financral
Institutions Off1ce of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obra:n a
loan.
BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or msurance. Call
the Office ol Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1·
866·278·0003 to team
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
serv:ce
announcement from the
Oh10 Valley Publishing
Company)

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500

Education

Professional Services

Business &amp; Trode
School

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

Gallipolis
Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home}
Ca11Today' 740·446·
1-800-21 4 .
4367
0452
Member

Security

ADT

'

READ All ABOUT IT
in the
The Daily Sentinel
mbe ~allipoli5 1!\atlp mrtbune

f}otnt f}Ieasant ~egtster

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
2004 Jayco Camper
rebuilt In stock. Call 31ft. Long $6,400.00
Ron Evans1-80DPh. 740-446·6754
537-9528

PUMPING Accred•bng Covncil IGr
SEPTIC
CGIIeges and
Gallia Co. OH and Independent
Schools 12748
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
Animals
600
800-537-9528

~be

Now you can have borders and graphics
.,_..
added to your classified ads
_{ ~
rn
Borders$3.00/ perad
I!1
,~
Graphics 50. for small
~
$1.00 for large

POUCIES Olvo Ylllley PubUIII!Ing restrvMihll ugh! to tel II, rtjecl. ot cancel any t&lt;leteny tlmt

Lifelock
\.

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Ojsplay Ads

Dai ly In-Col umn: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
S u nday In-Column: 9:00a .m .
Fnday For Sund ays Pa per

• Stltrt Your Ath With A Keyword • Include Complete
Oncllptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbre\'1ationJ
• Include Phont Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 DaYJ

Foundgray/white .....,....,....,....,....,..~
Sheepdog like male
Services
dog, Middleport, 740- 300
992-3253

N otices

Pearlliru

Free Home
Security System
with $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
servcces from ADT
Security Services
Call1 -888-367-2171

400

Financial

financial Services

CREDJLCABD.
RELIEF
Buried In Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your
free consultation.
1·877-264-8031

l ivestock
Black Angus Bulls 1
&amp; 2 yr olds, call after
5 pm. 740-288-1460
Who Made Who Club
Calf. lead broke
hairy,
750#
$1500.00 304·8572166

Want to buy Junk
Cars, call 740-3880884
~...............~~~
Real Estate
3000
Sales

Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
HJK/14K/18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mint For Sale By Owner
sets, diamonds, MTS
Pets
Coin Shop. 151 2nd 6 apts $137.000
Avenue.
Gallipolis. rent $2030 mo. 740GIVE-AWAY; Poodle 446·2842
44 6-0390
&amp; Maltese Mix 304- ~~~~=== ----""'!"'~~
812-7334
Yord Sole
Home for Sale 74
---..,....,....,....,....., •;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;;;;;;;
5·Family Yard Sale Midway Dr. Bidwell
923 4th Ave, Oct 15 $50.000.00
20%
&amp; 16 9am-3pm, down
on
land
Health Ryder, 140 Contract.
740-794Form Equipment
VHS exercise/dance 1013
STIHL Sales &amp; Service tapes
Now
Available
at
CITY
RIVER
Carmcchael Equipment
You
FELLOWSHIP
740-446-2412
price most items!
Sat. Oct 16, 2010
Hoy, Feed, Seed,
Groin
Silver Bridge Plaza
Gallipolis sam to
Good mixed hay. sq. 3pm for info Call:
$2.50 4x5, round Michelle 645-4943
bales $20.00. Stored
inside 740-446-2075 Friday Oct. 15 9am-?
Garage Sale -Debbie
Merchandise Drive. Shower Doors,
900
Vanity Tops, PreTeen Girls Clothes.
Ladies Petite Clothes
Equipment I
and shoes
==•S;;;u:i;;p:i;;p;;;lie•s==
OF Yard Sale 4867 St.
~OJNG OUT -- At #850 Oct 12thBUISNESS ..sA.L.E 17th 9am-?
Saturday 10/16/10,
8-6, Warehous~ &amp; Oct 14.15.16,21 ,22
land, office supplies, 4409 Bulaville Pk 8·
equipment
&amp; ?. tools. chains,
furnishings,
tools. battery charger. old
vehicles
&amp;
mise lard press, Christmas
&amp; items, books, Avon,
construction
materials.
A.O.K Lots of misc.
Builders. Inc 3999
Addison Pike 740- 377 Georges Creek,
367-7319
Boys &amp; Girls. Baby
Clothes,
Longenberger
Furniture
Baskets,Kids Toys &amp;
Misc. Items Oct 15 &amp;
Dining room suite, 16

table w/8 chairs w/2
extra leaves, china
cabinet,
serving
buffett. All wood ex.
cond. Also victorian
Pets
style
secretary
glass
Registered 1yr old wlbeveled
Collie Black &amp; White doors. 446·1423 call
Great
with
Kids after 6pm
$150.00
ph
740)446·6754
Hamilton
Upright
Piano-Great
Free to a good home
Condition for a great
- female bassett and
price of $500.00
a full blooded male
740)388·9979
beagle, Good with
kids I Good hunters
740·245·9250
4 Piece Sectional
Sofa
Excellent
8 Beagle/Schnauzer Cond. Cost $1500.00
mixed puppies Call will see for $300.00
304·675-1616
740}379-2722

"'
E-ve
- 1-yn-'s_ Y
_a_r_
d ...,.
S-al-e:
Friday Rt. 62 above
Mason
supporting
gospel music electnc
range ,
clothes,
numerous items.
~..,....,....,....,..~~

1000

Recreat1_onal
Vehicles

Compera I RVs &amp;
Trailers
2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19.900.
See
photos
at

2005
28X80
Champion
Home
3BDRM. 2BA., on
6ares
close
to
cornstalk. 304-6756640
4BDRM, Brick, 1 112
BA., Sun Room, 2
car garage loc. in pt.
pleasant
304-675·
7747
Houses For Sale
Home in Gallipolis, 2
story, 3BR, 1BA.
carport, deck,2 out
buildings, 4.5 car
garage/shop
w/carport.
Asking
$112,000 Call 740·
578-6687 or 352817-8652
35 Hinkle Ave. 2
story, 4BR, 2BA,
forced air &amp; heat. lot
of renter damage.
$24,900. 446-0822
LOOKING
FOR
DEAL? FIND US
NOWI!!
4anoakwoodhome.c
omf737 &amp; Facebook

Lots
Mobile home lots to
rent at Gallipolis
Ferry WV $100.00
monthly.
304·675·
6908
3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Apartments/
Townhouses
2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hospital.on SA
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194

Tara .Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
patio,
pool,
www.caamchaettraile playground. No pets.
rs..com
740·446- $450 rent. 740-367·
2412
0547

�Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

...

•;

t

•

1 •

I

I

~~~=~

Aportm.nts/
Townhouaea

Apartments/
Townhouaea

~~=-==-=;;;;;: :;;;~;=:=;;;;;;;;;;;;=

Apartments/
Townhouses

==;;;;;;;;;===;;;;;:
Pleasant
Valley

4000

Manufactured
Housing

Help Wanted •
General

100

=;;;;;;;;;;
~=~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: MEIGS
~
01rect Care· A part OHIO!N

Legals

COUNTY,
THE
MATIER
OF
SETTLEMENTOF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE
COURTMEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOAccounts and
vouchers
of
the
followtng
named
frduc1ary
has
beenfiled
1n
the
Probate Court, Me1gs
County. Oh1o lor
approval
and
settlement F-1 E NO
32502 • The Fourth
Account f1led by
John D. Lightfoot,
Guadaln
of
the
person and estate of
FraOCls
Delbert
Lightfoot,
an
Incompetent person.
Unless
excepuons
ore filed thereto, sard
account Will be set
for
heanngbefore
said Court on the
15th
day
of
November 2010, at
whrch
umc
sard
account
w111
be
considered
and
conttnued from day

100

Legals

: Services Offered

H Souvenier and
Theresa Souven er
&amp;
Apartments 1s now
Rentals
t1me
d1rect
care
are
the
owners
takmg
applications 28R Mobile Homo posluon lor Ripley,
of Real
estate
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD water, sewer, trash WV
proVIding
located at 121 Byall
apartments,
nndlor
S
bsld
d
communtty
sk
II
Small houses for rent
u
IZe
pd
No pets
Avenue,
Bowling
ca 1 74 0-44 H 111 tor
Apartments.
·
M b
tramlng
With
an
Green, OH 43402as
0
1
1
app lcatlon
&amp;
Applications
are Johnson's
e jndivdual •
w1th
further descnbed in
740 " MR/00
Information
taken Monday thru Home Park
Mon ,
Plaintff s mortgage
446 3160
Thrusday
9:00am"
Thurs,
9 m-noon;
recorded on March
Free Rent S~lal
1:OOpm. Office Is 3BR, 2BA.
$575 Tuos, W
7am·
28, 2007 10 Book
Ill
located
at
1151 mo+dep+utl 1722 5 1pm Must bo able to
2742 page 89 of the
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Evergreen
Dnve, Chatham Ave 740· work
occasional
Mortgage Records of Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
up, Central Air, W/0
Point Pleasant, WV. 645·1646
even1ng
and
Wood County, Ohio
hookup, tenant pays
(304) 675·5806
wec~end hours
Pole Buildings, Siding,
and that Defendants,
electric. Call between
14X70 mobile home
Kenneth
H
the hours of BA·8P
3BR $425 + utillt1es.
Decks, Drywall, Additions
For oil poslt1ons.
EHO
Souvenier, and If
Ref/secunty
H1gh school d1ploma
Ellm VIew Apte.
and New Homes.
deceased, art heirS,
deposlt,No
Pets.
(304)882·3017
or GED required
•
_
dev1sees. legatees,
614 364 2042
Insured- Free Estimates
Crlm nal background
executors,
Twtn Rlvors Tower Is
check requ1red Must
executrixes
acceptlng applicatiOns
Sales
have
reliable
admlnrstrotors,
lor waiting list lor HUD
1.2 BDRM Apt's In
transportatron
and
admlnrstratrlxes,
SUbsidized,
1·BR
Pt
Pleasant
all BRAND
NEW vahd auto Insurance
apanment
lor
tho
ass1gnees, Unknown r----\\
......
IN_T_f.R
S~tO_R_
A_
G_E----.
ut111tres paid call 304· foreclosure 3br 2ba Houry rate start ng
elder1y/dJSabled,
call
Spouse(s)
of
all
360-0
63
ready
to
move
tnto
at
$8
9
50
hour
675-6679
1
heirs,
devtsees,
Mrigs Count) fairgrounds
$39,900 00 Call 740· based
on
legatees executors,
Arrhal: Oct. 30• 2010
S
_p
_n_n_g_V_a_ll-ey....,G-ree-n 446-3093
expe!lence
Apply
execu1nxes,
9.00 am· 11:00 a.m.
admrn
stra1ors
Relea.\t&gt;:
Last Saturda) In April, 2011
Apartments 1 BR at ~
~~P-at-rt-ot~
~
-=x
::":"
online
at
1
2000
1 4 70
admrn1stratrlxes.
· A fcc f S20 00 will be charged for early
$395+2 BR at $470 Mobile Home With hnp /lwww palswv co
I te nrm'al early removal. late
Month 446· 1599
Vinyl Sldlng/shtngled m or call (394)373·
ass1gnees and Jane amv
Doe,
Unknown
remO\al
or nnytJme acccss IS wanted to
Roof
$17,000
00
_1_01_1
_
_
_
_
_
For
lease:
1BR
Housea For Rent
Spouse of Kenneth fatrground other 1han italed dates
unfurnished 2nd floor
740-645·7306 Must •Mature
worker
H Souvenier and Bu ldmg pact • first come first serve
Gallia
apt.
near
N1ce 1BR house 1n Move
needad for part t1me
Theresa
Souventer
lns•de Srorage $4 OO!If
Academy, no pets,
FIRST MONTH
Gallipolis. Walk to
jan1tor work
Call
and 1f deceased all
Open Span SlOO!If
ret &amp; dep required,
Norma
at
304·531·
FREE
everythrng you need.
In 11le Fence ~I 00/lf
for
to
day
until
finally
6000
Employment
max1mum occupancy
6868
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS.
Very clean umt, w1th
hers,
devisees,
C111l \185-4372 for more information
appointment
Must disposed of. Any legatees, executors, ...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.
2, $350 mon. 740·
$385 &amp;
new pa1nt. $275 per
be 55 or older and person
interested executnxes,
446·3936 or 740· UP, Sec. Oep $300 mo/$100 sec. dep
may
file
written administrators,
446·4425
&amp; up,
Sorry no pets, Call Drivers &amp; Delivery WV rostdent
exception to sa1d administratrixes,
AIC, WID hook-up
Wayne
for
Exp. Person to assist account or tomatters assignees, Unknown
BeaU11ful
1BR
ton1nformat1on 404-456· A &amp; J Truck1ng 1n wf m•lklng on modern
pertaining to ltte Spouse(s)
apartment In the
of all
_ing &amp;
oval
ant pays electric,
3802.
Manetta, Oh is htnng dairy farm , housing &amp;
execution
of the he1rs,
country
freshly
devrsees,
COL A Dnvers for utrllt1es can be a part
EHO
trust, not tess than legatees, executors,
prunted very clean
Prompt and Quality Work
Ellm Vlow Apts.
1Br cottage off street local &amp; Reg1onal of
package
fax frve days pnor to the executrrxes,
WID hook up mce
304-882·3017
RoUles
Applicants
Reasonable Rates
pkg very clean $300
resume wf 3 ref to dataset for heanng administrators
country settmg only
mon+ull. 446-8919 must be at least 23 304·675·5074
Insured
Experienced
L SCOTI POWELL admmlstratrixes.
10 mrns from town
or 446·2074
yrs have mm of 1 yr
References
Available!
Judge
Common assrgnees and John
Must
see
to 1 &amp; 2 br apt &amp;
of commercial dnVIng
Medical
Pleas
Court
Probate
appreciate
Water houses rn Pomeroy &amp;
Doe,
Unknown
Call
c;ar)
Stanley
Clean MVR,
6 Rms &amp; Bath, exp
pd S375Jmo 614· Middleport, NO Pets
the Drvlsion
Spouse of Theresa
Come
Jon
We
Haz-mat
Cert
Appliances
Me gs County, OhiO Souvenrer
be
595-7773 or 740· 740-992·2218
weekend FunIExtend care
Fum1shed,
122 feature
645·5953
October15, 2010
reqwred to set up
SeMces
Inc
Health
home
ume,
Exce
lent
Please lea\e message
Cedar St Galhpol s,
ex~ung IN THE COMMON any rnterest they may
&amp;
dental has
2
_ _B_R- ap_t_ 6 _m_l _f_
ro-m Uke----~- NO SMOKING &amp; NO health
1n
sa1d
at PLEAS COURT OF have
401(K), opporturnties
Holzer $400 + dep Completely
New, PETS S550mth plus Insurance,
premises
or
be
Bonus Rockspnngs
Vacation,
WOOD
COUNTY,
Some utihUes pd Renovated lnstde &amp; Deposit
740)446·
Rehabrhtatlon Center OHIO Wood County forever barred. that
pays
and
safety
94
or
3
5
7An645•7630
....,..
Out, 1 Bed, 1 Bath
Pomeroy, Clerk of Courts One upon fa1lure of sard
awards
Contact 1n
Specializing in Insuranre Jobs including.
Defendants to pay or
740·988·6130
Apt's at 677 Ohver - - - - - - - : - Kenton at 1·800-462· OH LPNISTNA
Courthouse
3
bedroom,
1n
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
to
cause
to
be
pa1d
1
Needed We offer a SquareBowling
1 BR and bath. f1rst St., Mrddleport, Price Pomeroy
1n 9365 FO F
sa1d judgment within
415 Middleport, 740-591·
Room
Additions, Remodeling. Metal &amp;
competitive
salary,
Starts
at
S
Green, OH 43402
mon1hs
renl
&amp;
three days from rts
Includes
Water,
tUitiOr
Shingle Roofs. Ne"' Homes, Siding. Decks,
Household
Realty
deposit. references
6827
rend1tron that an
&amp;
Trash,
Best Spec1ahzed IS reimbursement
vs.
a Corporation
required, No Pets Sower
Bathroom Remodeling.
Order of Sale be
h
k
Reference &amp; Deposit -~---~~
comprehensive
Kenneth
H
and clean. 740·441·
4
br •
bat • currently
see •ng
1ssued
to
the.
Sheriff
Ucensed &amp; Insured
16
4
benet ts
package, Souvenier
Reqwed, 7 0-4 " detached
garage, expencnced,
0245
and
of Wood County,
4 16
and
opportunity
for
Theresa Souvenler.
6629 or 7 0-4 • acre &amp; 112 land. professional flatbed
)TS.
Ohio to appra1se,
2nd floor 2 BR 6622
newly
remodeled, dnvers We
offer professional growth! et aiCase No. 2010
advertise
in
the
Oa1ly
apartment,
WV#040954 Cell 740·416-2960
located 1 mile out competti11ve pay with Apply at the fac1hty or CV 0782 Kenneth H Sent1nel and sell said
at Souvemer, and rf
overlooking Gallipolis -----~­ CR 10, LangsVIlle, a weekly guarantee onhne
740·992-0730
City
Park,
L.R , Middleport,
sentor $650 per mo.. $650 of $750 We offer per www.extendrcare co deceased, all heirs, real estate, that the
prem1ses be sold
m
We
are
located
kitchen/dining area, 1 living, 2 br, fum1shed dep
devisees,
legatees,
No Uuhtres d1em of $50 per day
free and clear of all
1/2
BA, apl, dep &amp; ref . no Paid' also 3 br 1 We have a full benf1t at 36759
execu1ors.
claims, hens and
Rockspnngs
Ad,
washerfdryer. $600 pets, uttlrties pard, bath
execu1rlxes
turn1shed package
1ncludrng
1nterest of any of the
mon + dep. 740-446· 740·992.0165
mobile home, water med cal dental life Pomeroy Oh 45769 adnumstrators
parties here n that
EOE
adm mstratrlxes,
4425 or 740-446· ·~----~- &amp; trash paid, 5450 drsabthty $ more
Clean,
Nrce,
the proceeds from
2325
aSSignees,
Unknown
Musical
Eff1c1ency 1BDRM, per mo., $450 dep. Must have Class A
the sale of said
Spouse(s) of all
premrses be applied
Re1 , Dep , NO pets located 1 m le off COL w1th 2 years ep
deVIsees,
Krngsbury
Rd. &amp;
good
driving Frrst
Presbytenan herrs,
In Memory
304-675·5162
to
the
Pia nliff s
Residential • Commerdal
Pomeroy Lease &amp; record Please call Church rn Mrddleport legatees executors, JUdgment and for
executrixes,
• Ne\\ Homes • Additions
or plan stlorganlst,
2br
stove/refr references reqwred 8D0-849·1818
such other rei ef to
In loving
Roofing
• Insurance Claims
online Pease call 740-992· admrmstrators,
fumrshed,
CIA No Pets Allowed apply
whrch
Household
License •Insured
www bestspeaallzed 3350 or 740·992· admmlstratnxes,
memory of
$385 00 a mon + 740-416-2960
Realty Corporatron rs
ass~nees and Jane
7172
com
dep 304-675-7783
ent1tled.Said
304-882-3637 304-882-2728
Doe.
Unknown
are
Available
October
PartSpouse of Kenneth Defendants
(Williams)
to
the
22, house for rent In
Time/Temporaries H Souvenler and d1rected
2 br. apartment w/ Pomeroy,
$750
Help Wanted·
Theresa Souvemer Complaint where1n
kit. app..alc &amp; gas deposit required, call
General
Part-Tlme 2days per
d f d
sed all notice under the fatr
Birthday
or
week, must have an 1 ecea
•
furnace, WID hookup 740-992·7511
debt
co!Ject1on
located
In
Pt 740·591·0800
vahd &lt;1nvers license heirs,
&lt;1evlsees. practrce
October 17,
act
IS
Pleasant
304-675·
HOME
HEALTH Apply
in
person legatees, executors. g1ven.Said
2010
6375 Or 804-677·
executnxes,
C
Very nice home for AIDES
NEEDED Special
are admtnistrators,
Defendants
are
We miss your 8621
rent m Middlepoort. PAID TRAVEL TIME Cleaning
1743 admlnistratnxes.
required to answer
beautiful smile:;
twenty-e1ght
good neighborhood. AND
MILEAGE Centenary
Ad assignees, Unknown w1thin
and lo\ing
remodeled. EXPERIENCE
Galllpohs
Spouse(s)
of all days
a«er
the
Very Nice 2 &amp; 3 newly
herrs.
devisees, publtcat1on
Said
ways. We think BEDROOM APTS. New appliances. 2 NECESSARY
bedrooms. 1 bath, APPLY
@
Defendants Will take
Gallipolis
legatees execu1ors.
of you often!
notrce that you are
executnxes,
Clty.$550.00 &amp; up large kltchen, sun RESCARE COM IF
Lo,·e, Tom and Includes w/8/g &amp; room, central atr &amp; YOU HAVE ANY
required to answer
administrators
sa d Complarnt on or
Dottie Curtis
Miscellaneous
adm"nrstratnxes
Washer &amp;Dryer NO heat N1ce oUldoor QUESTIONS
the
26th
PETS...
740)591· spaces No pets, non PLEASE CALL 1· =====~;;;;;: assgnees and John before
and family
FREE· Eleclnc Organ Doe,
Unknown day of November
smokmg Call 740· 888-794-4490
5174
(13Ped:lls)
304-882·
992 9764
740
•
or
•
Spouse of Theresa 2010 or Judgment wrll
2385
rendered
992·5094 for more
Souven er, and rf be
Card of Thanks
deta Is
COST TECHNICIAN
deceased, all hetrs, accord1ngly.
Realty
lmmedrate opening
deVIsees. legatees, Household
1·3 bed room house
Corporation
for
team
ongmated
execu1ors,
Kathleen Scott wishes to
lor rent 10 Syracuse
Pla1ntitf,
indiVIdual
Must PUBLI:
NOTICE executrixes,
NO
pet's
HUD
Stephen D M Jes
thank everyone for making
have excellent basic NOTICE is hereby admrnistrators,
approved call 304Vincent A
Lewrs
math
skrlls,
profrclent
giVen
that
on
admln
stratrlxes,
her 105th birthday so
675·5332 Weekends 1n Excel &amp; Word. Saturday October 16
Attorneys
for
assignees.
Unknown
Plaintiff18
w
enjoyable. Special thanks to 740 501 0265
H1ghly
motivated at 10·00 am.. a Spouse(s)
of
all
w1lling
to
learn pubhc sale w111 be heirs,
deVIsees,
Forest Run Quilters, Forest 2BR ,1B, LA DR Tra1n1ng proVIded held at 211 W
legatees, executors.
K
Run Church, Gov. Strickland. New gas furnace AC Must be wullng to Second , Pomeroy. executrixes,
travel and work OT Ohio. The Farmers administrators,
Ohio Senate and Sen. J immy 7miles Rt2N
at different plant sites Bank and Savings administratnxes,
No Smoking No Pets due to the revolvmg Company IS solhng
Stewart. and Rep. Debbi e
assignees and
•
$425.m $400.Dep.
nature
of
the for cash In hand or Unknown Spouse of
Phillips.
304-675·2381
constr/plant upgrade cert1fied check the , whose last known
Ref Req.
proJects
Tralnmg followmg
The cards. flowers, visits,
address was 121
wrll require 10 to 12 collaterat·1998
Byall Ave, Bowhng
cakes &amp; gifts were
~=W=o=n=tto=R~e=nt== weeks start1ng pay Chevy
Malibu Green OH 43402
Fam1ty
relocatmg $16/hr. If quahf1ed 1G1NE52M4WY169 wrll
hereby
take
all greatly
looking for a Nice fax
an
updated 5911998
FORD notice that on August
appreciated.
Home ,Condo or resume to. 614·716· E250 CLUB WAGON 16, 2010, Household
•
•
Large Apt. Prefer 2272 denotrng "Cost 1FBSS31L6WHB932 Realty Corporation,
Downtown Gallipolis Tech" on the cover 96The Farmers Bank flied its Complaint 1n
Area 1·716·913·2415 page
Excellent and
SaVIngs Foreclosure
and
Help Wanted
company! EOE
Company, Pomeroy Marshallrng of Lrens
Help Wanted
Have References
OhiO, reserves the In
IQe
Common
nght to b1d at this Pleas Court of Wood
WANTED: Part -tune positton
sale, and to Withdraw County, Ohio One
available to assist indh idunls \\ ith
the above collateral Courthouse Square,
prior to sale. Further, Bowhng Green OH
developmental disabilities in Meigs
The Farmers Bank 43402 being Case
County. 30 hrs/wk. Must have high
and
Savings No 2010' CV 0782
school diploma or Ghl&gt;, valtd
Compa'ly re!&lt;E!rves against Kenneth H
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155 the right to retect any Souvenier. et at
driver's license, three yenrs good
or
all
bids
driving experience and ndcquatc
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
~ subm1tted.The above pray1ng for judgment
In the amount of
automobile JOsurance. $H.97/hr after
~:00 AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION' ~ descnbed collateral $136.550 88
with
training.
w1!1 be sold "as IS· interest
thereon
Send resume to:
where Is", With no nccording to the
Broad Run Rod &amp;
expressed or implied terms of the note
Buckeye Community Services
warranty given For from Apnl 1, 2010
Gun Club
P.O. Box 604
further 1nformat1on, unttl paid and for
Sunday
.Jackson, OH 45Mil.
or for an appointment foreclosure of sa1d
October 17, 2010
Deadline for-~tpplrcants: 10/21 / 10.
to Inspect collateral, Mortgage Deed on
prior to sale date the
Pre-employment drug testing.
following
Factory Match
contact Cynd1e or descnbed
real
Ken at 992·2136 estate, of wh ch sa1d
Equal Opportunity Employer
(10) 13 14 15
Defendants Kenneth t:::..::~--=:::;:=..:....::.:....:......;:.;;:;..:::=:::;..:..._____...~
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED

~~~~BLEI

1BR nicely furnished
apt No sfnok1ng, No
pets $400 mo +
dep 740-446·4782
~-----Lot us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU 1nto Valley V1ew
Apartments 800 St.
At #325 Thurman,Oh
45685
740)245:
9170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments
with
Appliances
Furnished &amp; Onslte
Laundry
Fac11ity
Water/Sewer &amp; Trash
Included
Rental
Assistance may bo
available.
Metro
Accepted TDD#419·
526.0466
Th1s
lnstrtutlon Is an equal
opportumty proVIder
and employer

To place an ad
Caii 740-992-21SS

SUNSET CONSTRUffiON

•

740-742-3411

StanJeyTree
Trin m
Rem
*

*

=======

*

*

•

Cen740-591-8044

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Rick Price -20

Experience

======;;;

------Polly

Curtis

------""!"'"

======;;;

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Job Done?

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�Friday, October 15, 201 0

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

,

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CROSSWORD

Mort W alker
I. CA N'T a eLtEVE"YOU
ACTUAL.L.Y R UN A W HOL-E

AR MY CAMP

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

Pot..titC.tAN~

/{4JAJ.ET; Y vov Mt&lt;Hir coN-SJ{:&gt;ER •••
FI6HT
WHeN
BECOMING A
t!IJIJ6itGe, WORK FOR
YOJ.I
F&gt;oL.I"T/C.fAN...
THe GOOf? OF niE
GllOW JJP...
PEOPLE ANP 6EINS
50CIETY' ~t.Fl~LY!!

t~
~

HI &amp; LOIS

""'!'""_ _ _ _ _.,......,_...._ _ _..,._.._ _ _ _..,

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 .

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BLONDIE

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=-~

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Pe tty
argument
5 Frost
9 Eye hole
11 Plant. in a
way
13 Dancer
Castle
14 Su rg ical
tool
15 Go astray
16 Sanction
18 Takes the
tension
out of
20 G uita r
pioneer
Pa ul
21 Put ott
22 S mooch
23 Atlantic
catch
24 O btain
25 Makes a
choice
27 Putting
site ,
29 S qua bble
30 Crock's
cousin
32 Warned,
watchdog-style
34 Have
debts
35 "... lovely
as-"
36 Camera
c reator
Land
38 Frasier's
brother
39 Singer
Della

JOSEPH
40 A ppends
41 Write r
Harte
DOWN
1 Behe ld
2 Sounded
content
3 Cltnt
Eastwood
m ovie
4 Badge
metal
5 Lends a
hand
6 Poet
Khayyam
7 C lint
Eastwood
mov ie
8 "The
Matrix"
star
"10 Re nted

..

·-•
..,
·~

12 A ttire
17 Fo r every
19 X-file
top1cs
22 "It's real"
24 Test
checker
25 Heart, for
o ne
26 Shylock's
o utwitter

27 "Golly!"
28 Absolutely
not,
Informally
30 Consecrate
31 Conviction
33 Hoe
target
37 Cotillion
gtrl

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (checklm o) to
"'homas Joseph Book 1, PO Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853· 6415

-.
•.{

..•

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

1
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MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

-.

1G-15

W illiam Hoest '

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" DO YOU MEAN GOOD CONDITION FOR THE AGE
SHE IS OR THE AGE SHE ADM ITS TO?''

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by

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Dav~

7- 6 I-5
7
9

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" ...It's their anniversary."

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DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

3-Az\•mge; 2-Sa-:;o; !-Difficult

J

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11rc Stars Shaw the Kmd of Day
'tou'l/ I fare: 5-Dttnmmc; 4-Pvsrtm~;

Gn:cn

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I IAPP'r BIRTHDAY for Frida\I
Oct. 15, 2010:
•
!'his year, many bpportunitics
evolve, pointing to a nt•w direction.
This transformation could im·olve
your dailv life. You have rnanv intcr\.&gt;:&gt;ts; you ~ght decide to make one of
them a business. You have a tendency
to overeat and go to extremes. I~lke
good care of yourself. If you a!\! single, several people could light up
you r life. C.ct to know ead1 per.'&gt;On
better before deciding that anyone is
right! If you arc attac.l1cd, the two of
you could sha.re a new pastime or
mten.-.;t, drawmg you clo~r.
AQtJARIUS always whips up the
fun.

ARIES (March 21-Aprill9)
* *** Whether it is the kr}owlcdgc that the WL'CkL•nd is heading m
or a change in the planets, you dtm't
care. You fed empowL"TCd. Uot your
i's and cross your t'" before vou leave
\\ ork. Gather ~Aith other., and chrbtcn this wl.'\.'kend.. ll1night: Let the fun
begin.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
****You certainh will n~d to
focus on the hen• and now. Other.;
want your remedies .1nd solution'&lt;.
Plea~ sha!\! them, as they do make a
diffen.'Ilce. Tonight Not feeling as
carcfn.'C as you might like.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20)
***** Pull back in order to gain
a complete perspective. Not everyone
think., in terms like vou. The broader
your outlook and the more empathv
you express the more likely you will
find an agreemcnt.o fonight Opt for
the unusual.
CANCER Qunc 21· Juh· 22)
***** You might ,\·,mt to rclak
to a kev as-.odate din'Ctlv but c,1n't.
Wqrk on the b,lsic is-.u~ BL' a better
listcnc~ and absorb ne\' infom1ation
\\;th care. Listen to what is being
.,h,H\'&lt;i limight: On~on-..me time.
LEO Qulv 21-Aug. 22)
**** Be an efficiency expert and
get as much done as pos.-;iblc early
on. You w;n want to be more innovative and dyn.1mic in your choices.
Positively gn•d a partner's somefum_os
odd ideas. Clear out as much work •1S
pt~sible. l onight: Lt•t }'Our hair
down. It ha.o; l&gt;L&gt;cn a wry wild Wl'Ck.
V IRGO (Aug. 23-St•pt. 22)

-~

*****Others challl"nge you but
rrught not intend to upset you. Use
their input more po-.itively than in
tbe pa.,t. You' U"L'e a matter very dif
fercntly if you do, and allow for an
unusual resolution. lonight: Relax in
\'Our favorite manner.
' LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** * You could fccl.,\\am]X'd
z
by an oven\'hclming amount of
:
1\.'CfUCSts. You might not'' ant to han1
die a pcr.;ona) matter a-.; )'Oll ha\'c in
the pa-.;t. let g&lt;' .md flo\, , Lose your
•
Judgments for .1 da\: lonight Final!)~
:
• '
time to be you ro;clf:
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
~
***** Accomplishment
!
demand.., unu~ual cn•ativitv and
~
an~wer.;. You comt• up "; tft many
r
ide,h, which head in from out of left
:
field . Be ~Ailling to tc...t tht&gt;m out on
:
other.;. J\ new love intcre ... t 1&gt;r child
could be overwhdming. Tlmight·
!lead on home.
SAGITTARIUS (:'\\l\', 22-Dcc. 21) • •
* * *** You know \\hat othcl"
nl'l.'CI. rhe choice is just ho\\ much
~
you w.mt or nL'Cd to help th&lt;'ll1 Be
r
aware of what is going on here. A
:
:
f.1milv member can be quilL&gt; nlluring,
but do vou want tll get invol\'L&gt;cl?
,
Tonight: Other.; .1n.' happy t0 find
~
\'OU.
~
• CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
1
***** You smile nnd com(' out
:
ahL·ad of the game. You ki10\\ what is • :
nL'l'&lt;k&gt;cl. Though )'&lt;'U can be quite
,
as~rtive and direct, you nl-.lJ are
:
'
c.1pable of a mini·re\·olutil)n if nl'Cd
be. In rour lwad, you JUstifv thi-;
beh.w10r with ''vou gott,, do what
•
you gotta do." lonight On top ot
your game.
1
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-h·b. IH)
:
**** Re... t &lt;1s"un.'li th.1t there 01rc
t
many diffen'Tlt appn1.1d1cs to a
:
money matn.•r. 1111~ -.mart move ts to
W('i~tl the pi'()&lt;; c1nd mn.... Could you
•
be tO&lt;l optimbtic ,,b..,ut lme ~~of
option-.? fon1ght You \\l.ll know
e:~o;Ktlv what to d11. Haw fun!
PISCES (h•b. IQ Mnrd' 20)
• :
*** You Cl)uld bt• -.Jightlv ovl'r:
whelmed by an l'pportunitv. 'wu
,
could try to pu"h s..mwonc tll do
:
something your'' ny. Knll\\ "hat you
want before cn•.1ling a l1't ot upr\Mr.
~
You .ue allsmilt•s during tlw d&lt;~y.
' •
lonight: Do only what )'I)U w,mt.
n •;

i

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Jacquelitrc B1gar ~~ 011 tl~t• lutcmt't
at IIHp://u&gt;u'l.l.l.jacquclmdngar.cmu.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�Page ns • l"he Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntincJ.com

Frklay, October 15,

2010

- -ATHLON. SPORTS· - -

KEEPING THE BANDTOGETHER
Whcr Ka y Kahnc leaves hiS H1Chard
Petty Rlfd for a Red Bull Toyota at soa
son s end (and then a Hendrk k Chevy
n 20121 he II bring With 11m ono 1m·
portll t b t Of cont1nulty tile crew Chief
Kahnc and Kenny Francis eaCh con·
f ed
FranciS would follow Katme
to Red Bull Racing next se3SOil and
then on to Hend!lck Motof'SPOrtS In two
years Ten~ Kahne's 11 career CUp
viCtor cs IJa\C oome with ffllnas atop
the I box, Including SiX In 2000
tlOT BAD FOR AN OPEN WHEB.£R
ocy Stewarts wr1 n the Pepsi Max
400 bSI weekend was hiS 39th career
NASCAR Cup V1CIOry Stew3t IS now
tied w r. Flock for lllll on
NASCAR all t me 1NIIl$list and Is tilth
'lOng IICtJYe drNers He
Jeft
Gordon :21 Junm Johnson (53}, BiD
II « h1 M.l!ll Martin (40) The
1
also Ills first at Auto CIIJ&gt;
~)' lea&gt;'lng JUS( two trncks
0ar1 ngton lJis Vegas Where he I13S

2. Kevin Harvletc

3. Denny Hamlin

mat

2

4 . Tony Stewart

6. Jeff Gordon

6. Ryan Newman
7. Greg Biffle

8.

9. Kyle Busch

10.
11.
1 2.
13.
14.
15.

not wtY.I

3

BOWTIE BRIGADE Stewarts Win alSO
secured Ill Manufacturer's Cup for
Chevrolet for the eighth consecutive
year Tcan Chevy has won lllo Manu
facturer 's Cl.p 8 record 34 times su!Ce
1950 Ford as second on the liSt With 15
TOP 5 'EM TO DEATH J mm e John·
sons tlllrd place finish al Auto Club
Speedway was illS 13th of the year
tytng h m tor tops on tour wtt11 Kevin
Harvtt HarVlCk had a stranglehold on
llle spot unti .Johnson caught fire w.
we ks ago that time the No 48
has recorded IMllop 5s to Har
V!ck I'M&gt;. HaMck still has the edge
20 to 17 over JoM.;on 111 top. I 0

Sprint Cup Standings
DRIVER

POINTS

BEHIND

1 Jimrruc .kliVlson

!m3

2
3 Kevin HJMcl&lt;
4
Gordon
5 Tony Stewart

5637
56t9

·36

5588

-85

5566

107

5533

140
162

6 ~Busch
7 Carl Edwards
8 Jeft Burton

55t1
5496
5486

9. K)'le BUSth

10 Greg BlMe
t ' Matt Kcnscth
12 C1mt Bowyer
1"1
t4
15
16
t7

5458
5432
5426

54

177

leT
2t5
24t
-247

•
FllR Til£ SI'RIHT CUP •
2017
Ryan Newman
3656
J ie McMurray
3596
-2077

Marl&lt; Martin

3506

Juan Pablo Mootoya 3455
DavidR mann 3382
18 0 Eamharllt.ll:
3379
1 KaseyKahne
3249
20 Joey L.ogano
3348

2167
22t8
2291

2294
2324
2325

Nationwide Standings
POINTS

DRIVER
t Brad KeseloWski
2 Carl Edvmds
3 KyleBusdl
4 JustinA.
5 Paul M nard

4764
4380
4279

3938
3866

BEHIND

384
485
·826
-898

6 !Cevln tla!\'lck

3763

1001

1 Joey Logarc
8 Trevor Bayne

3392

-13n

339t

9 Steve Wallace
1o Jason Leffler

3351
3315

-1373
1413
t449

'

Truck Standings
POINTS

DRIVER
I Todd Bodtne
2 Arlc A1m rota

Jt96
2934

J Johnny Sauter

2896

4 AustinD on
5. Timolh)' Peters
6 Matt Cra1lon

2808

2773
2773
2687
2549

lRonHomaday
8 MikeS!&lt;.
9 Dcrlld s
10

2504
237~

I.Diton

BEHIND
·262

300
388
423
-423
509
·647
692
817

Highs &amp; Lows
miSSed the Chase
due to an consiStent 26-race regular sea
tfOweVe h M 39 Stewart --Haas Rae
tfil ce Illy haven t thrown In the
wei on
$C3$0ll In tho laSt se1ren
races. t
an I13S su finlStles of
n nth or better with his worst run In
that span 111 th) com1ng at the
Chase transfer race m Richmond

cart Edwards

Clint Bowyer
Jeff Burton

Kurt Busch
Matt Kenseth
AJ Allmendlngor
Jamie McMurray

Jut t off the lead pack:

of first.
weeks
Johnson exactly where we all expected
h1m leading the points during the Chase. Let's hope this ooesn't get ugly.
There Is a b1g drop·Ofl between Johnson and tllo rest ol tile field but Harvlck leads the rest of the
best. averag1ng a 7.5·place run during the Chase.
Hamlin Is Dnver No. 3 of the trio that should contel'd down the stretCh tfe and Johnson are both
averag ng a 7.75-place run curing the Chase but Denny hasn t been quite as flashy
H1ndsrght1S 20120 Had Stewart won In Loudon Instead of runn1ng out of fuel on the last tap, he most
likely would be 1opoints bch nd Johnson In the stand nos
Gordon may have had the clutch perforr.Jai!Ce Of the F'ontana Weekend vmen he drove from 24th
to nin1h In the fmal15 laps alter a pit road specdmg penalty
Continues to run better than most of the Chase f~eld a!ier o I tn n Fontana
Things looked prormsmg after he won at Kansas Then Fonta 1a s blown engme kind of negated all
the good win
Uke has teammate Btfr.e, EdwardS was teel~~~g the good VI~ untrl he lOOk a 14·1ap triP behind the
wall at Auto Club Speedway
Kyle may be one o11he most talented dnvcrs o! hiS oeocratlon but
have to wonder If NASCAR s
cnase format wil htmler his !lUll pe~fonnanct-3 101 years 10 tome
If you're keeJ)jng score at nome, Bowyer's now gotten the drivesllaft In three o1 the tour ChaSe races
It's not dear hoW he could ve been so tar off at Fontana when hiS teammates were so good.
A tate. race wreck ru ned wtlat cou d have been a top 10 n Southern Cal fom1a
The recurring Roush eng ne Issue looked as If It was going to bite Kenseth tate at Fontana.
The mckname "Walt-mendloger• hasn t been whlspcreo about nearty as muCh over the last month
Two wins. three runner-up shoWings and four poles this year lor Jam e Mac It's still confUSing how
numbers like those don't translate Into a Chase bid
Joey Logano. Mark Martin, Paul Menard, Ju,an Pablo Montoya, Martin Truex Jr

vou

Smokin' Performance

be ved the p;~lrlng of Dale Earn·
harllt Jt and teaM owner Rcl&lt; Hen
drlr.k wou d be 8 championshiP
wtrn ng relaUonshlp Needless to say
11 has not. WIUl the two w1nmng only one
polnts·paytng mce together 1M1chlgan,
:?008) The ocond rolf of the 201 o season
has seen htue Improvement. as EaQ'lhardt
has recorded only one top t 0 f1nlsh SIIICC o
fourth tn to m1d-scason Daytona rnce

NC

TV:ASC
Olstance: 501 miles (334 laps)
Banking/Turns: 24 ~

By MATT TALIAFERRO

Banking/Straightaways: 5 degrees
May 2010 Winner: lfJJ! Buscll
Crew Chief's Take: 'Char1o:te rs probably
t!'.e most we&lt;~:hef-lieiiSltive track we rate on.
Sfi!jll dmges- dood CO'Ie( SUlShine, temP€!Qtlle- malo'.e almos! B!llri:leliewble clif·
terence The challenge becomeS adapting
and particWr1y mthe case Of theCoca·Cola
600 the races are really long there. The key
Is lilnl'~e the Q1v stages when the sun Is
out lrld be ~ poslllOn to battle tor the Vt'ln at
nil;trt llle moiStll'e In the 8ft' makes the track
change too. It makes It very drftiwlt for a
dr1ver and crew ctuef to stay on top of It·

Atlllon Sports Rat:l!lfl EditDr

Three Chase roccs down three
top-three runs for the dcfendmg fourtime scncs champ1on On a cia:,. that
may ha\e \\ttnessed the oflicaal end
ofse'cn dm-crs'lltle hopes, pomt
lender J1mmieJohnson held a steady
wheel m Cahfonua. tim hung tlurd m
1he Peps1 Max 400 lrom Auto C'lub
Spccdv.ay and c.xtcndmg h1s lead m
the ChMc standmgs.
Wlulc John~on held fonn, one
dfl\er con!irdercd nn nftcrthoughl m
the Chase, Ton)' Stewart, charged to
the pomt on a rc&lt;;tart wrth 11 laps 10
go and held otT Johnson and a hardchargJng Chnt Bov.)cr to score h1~
second Yom ofthc season.
"I'll be honest, v.hcn I \\okcup th1s
mommg I thought ify,c had a top-10
da) that was gomg to be good. ond if
''c rnn m the top S today that was
gomg to be an out mndmg da)',"
Stewart s:ud ~lie (CI'C\\ cluefDanan
Grubb) told me th1s mommg he found
somcthmg that he ''as confident Yo as
gomg to be qune a bit dllf1.."1'C11l and
bctt.r than )C'tcrday (dunng prncucc). and he for urc drdn't dlsappomt
on that It was a b1g ~cy."
StCYo art Yo1tS 23rd-fastest m Smur·
&lt;by's final prn&lt;.1tce session. and admitted the v. cckcnd pnor to bcmg m
nn all-or-nothing rmnd,ct. I he
changes made by Grohb allo\\cd the
No 14 team to ~"J'atch their way ha,k
mto utle contention. gauung 20 JX&gt;IIll'
on John~on to s1t fillh, 107 pomt.' out.
"We ha'e the tlcxib1hty to just
look fomard and not \\OIT) nbout 11'
\\C toke a gamble and tt doesn't
\\ork," Stewart smd. "We still ha\C
to be nundful oftt. ob\lousl), but the
penalty for u' isn't that great \\hen
you're lOth m points"
Aside from Stewart, only Hoi\') cr

• Presea59f1 Thunder Will
ma11es Its return In JallU3ly 201 1
The January test sessiOilS at Day·
lona lrltemational Speedway wtllth
were discontinued following the
2008 season m a cost-cutting
measure, Will be held on the
repaved surface earty next year.
Preseason Thunoer will be
staged tn a three-day format lor
Sprlnt Cup teams starting on Thurs·
day, Jan 20. The re-Introduced
practice dates wall help Cup teams
and Goodyear acclimate them·
selves With the new surface ln
preparation for the 53rd runnang of
the Daytona 500. Which will klck oft
NASCAR's 20 11 season on Feb. 20
NASCAR NationWide and camp

Rutland Bottle (;as
-n1111 ,'{)11/Qr o.,e, 6f) J'llllli
740-742-2511
1 -800-83 7-8217
~"'~~~

G~,Jl\1.· ~,,~

'J:~'

LocaUon:~d

When: Satmlay Oct 16

Tony Stewart wins in
Fontana, tightens Chase gap

ASP InC.
Tony Stewart (14) charges lo the lead In the Pepsi Max 400 from Auto Club Speedway in
Fontana, Calif.

gamed ground on Johnson in the
playoiT standmg:;. Bu1, by his O\\ n
udm1 s1on, he IS too far back to mnkc
u rcahsuc charge 1 hat lea\es race
troph1cs as h1s moll\ nuon as the s..--ason Yomd-. d0\1 n, nnd 11 appeared he
rn1ght cnm hiS second of the Chase
BoYtycr's 1\o 31 Chevy had pulled
away from the field and \\as sctung
sml unul o dcbns ectullon "ilh 16
laps remammg bunched up the field.
Bo'IY)er \\as li\id 0\er h1 m-car
rad1o. clatmmg the debris had bi..'Cn
suung on the back:;tretch for the enure green flag run Asked about 11 oftCI'\\IIrd, Bo\\yer smd, ..That's a
good qucsuon. I 11\\ (debns) for a
long time You know, I mean, hell,
1t's part'{)f t. What do you say?"
Denny li:tmhn entered the Auto
Club C\Cnt only c1ght JXltnl' bchmd
JnhnsOI\, but lost 28 mnrkcrs o ller
fimshing etghth I h.• now slls 3o
llVInls bud.
Kevan I fun 1ck m&lt;tde 11 udiant run
through the field after 4U:thfyang11st
nnd then getting pcnal1zed for speeding on pll road be lore SO of200 laps
trunsp1red lfc dro' c b:lck to a sohd
SC\ cnth-pl cc shO\\ ing. but also lost
ground to Johnson, droppmg 24
p&lt;Jmt:. but holdmg onto thud m the
standmg.o; lie 1 still a managcnble 54

pomts out of the Chase lead

JetT Gordon sal\aged h1s title
chances w1th a miraculous late-race
rolly that 581\ him charge I rom 24th
to ninth m the final IS laps. L1kc
llarvick, Gordon "as nabbed for
peeding on pit road, but the damage
appeared far more 5C'oere. Gordon
\\liS ruruung comfortably ins1dc the
top 10 when the mfrachon occurred,
!lfld dropped him to 29th Yollh JUst
under 40 laps remammg Takmg ad·
'antagc of l\\ o late-race cautions,
Gordon's crev. put on fresh rubber.
catapultmg him past man) cars on
old tire,, lJj, spnnt through the field
kept him "1thin 85 pomts of h1s
teammate, John&lt;;On.
Four dri\1..-n; suffered cat."1roph1c
damage to their Chase hopes. Kurt
Busch ''reeked "ith se\cn l.tps remaining and fimshcd 21~1. Carl I dwards lost 14 laps due to a faulty
d1stributoc and concluded the d,ty
34th. Kyle Busch und Greg Bitlle
,uffercd engine fmlures on thc- t\\omllc, high-speed, high·RP\t Auto
Club Spc&lt;.:dWO) layout and fimshed
35th and 41 Sl, re ..pccthcly. These
Jri, crs. along" ith Jeff Burton, Matt
Kcnscth and Bowyer. fmd thcm.sci\CS
at lca't 140 out of the champtonsh1p
lead and likely done for the ~cason.

RYAN NEWMAN Newm

DALE fARNHARDT JR. Many

Race: B¥il cl Amenca 500
Track: Cllar1otte Motor Speedway

In ts I na season as a pnmary
sponsor for Pcnske Racing s No 77
Dodge Cll1ven by Sam Homish Jr
1ng Wor1d Truck teams w.D be glven

extra

trBek

time during Speed·
weeks 2011 In February to adapt to

the new pavement
• Stewart·Haas Racing wei·
corned a new sponsor tor Its 201 t
campaign on Tuesday When E•xon·
Mobil's Mobt11 motor oil was lntro·
duccd as a co primary for Tony
Stewart's No. 14 CheVTDiet
Mobil t replaces Old Spice,
which elected not to renew Its lund·
lng of Stewart's car tolloW11g the
20t 0 season. It Will be on the car
tor 11 races In 201 1
The longtime NASCAR sponsor IS

• The Wood Brothers have
hired 27-year NASCAR veteran
Donn•e Wingo as crew chief lor
their part·lime No 21 fo«1 effort
currently driven by BtU Shott.
Wingo comes to the wooa Brotn·
ers from Roush Fenway Racang.
where he most rece11Uy served as
crew chief for the No. 6 car aod
DaVId Ragan.
'Anyone in NASCAR knows the
histone sign1f1cance and what the
Wood Brothers have meant to
NASCAR," Wingo said. "The No. 21
IS Iconic 1n this sport and 1t's a great
pnvllege to be assoaated with thiS

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
f
Rt.1"'
~~ Ui, Old J:own Roed
Point ,._aunt~ WV

team. I'm eager to get to Charlotte
next weekllnd and see \'ltlat we C8tl
do as a team·
\VIIlQO replaces David ~ whO
parted ways w1th the team last
week.
The Wood Brothers have been In
the sport smce t953, rocking up 97
VICtones on NASCAR &amp; premier Clr·
curt wtule campa1gnrng macll nes
tor such notable dfwers as team co
founder Glen WOOd, Jurnor Johnson,
Curts Turner. C81e 'l'arb0r01J11h, AJ
Foyt. Dav1d Pearson. Ne11 Bonnett,
Date Jarrett and RICky Rudd.
The 90 wins earned by tile
Woods' No. 2t car rs fourth a!Hme
amoog car numbers. trnilmg only the
Nos. 43 (198) 11 (194) and 3 (97)

NATIONWIDE SERIES

Race: Dollar General300
Track: Charlotte Motor Speedway
Location: Concord. NC
When: Friday Oct 15

TV· ESPN2
Distance: 300 miles (200 laps)
May 2010 Winner: Kyle Buscll

Race: Kroger 200
Track: Mattinsv!lle Speedway
locatiOn: tkJtlnsvllle, Va
When: Sallr.lay Oct. 23
TV: Speed Channel
Distance: 105 2 miles (200 ~
6anlllng/Tums: 12 ~
2009 Winner: TllllOI!Jy Peters

C lassic Moments
May 25, 1!185
Char1otte Motor Speedway
The Splint CUp A!I·Star Race has gone by
many monikers, run lllder many formals and
has seen more than Itsfair share of Classic fmiSheS. In 1985 s The Winston, the all-star
event's ftrst runmng a legendary field dubbed
"The Dashing Dozen"l&lt;ick.s things ol1 in styte.
Terry t.llbonte sits on the pole by vutue of
be1ng the series' defending champaon, but
Harry Gant InheritS llle lead after pit stops. Oat·
reD W31trtp elects to wall to take ~res late 11111e
race and when he does runs down Gant,
p3SSI;lg him Oil the final lap
Upon CIOSSIIlO 100 frish ine, \\'3!1J1l's etlQIIlll
l*lws leading to speculation that the No. 11
BOOwei.'ief Chevy is IU1W1I alig l!lliJil8 and t11a1
Waltrip was i'6truCted by car owner .knor.kilr
son to "&lt;1*:h•ltle car to 8'IOid beilg penalized

Athlon Fantasy Stall
Looking a1Checkers: vt !tl finishes of fust,
secont1 and thlrtl ttRJS tar mllle Olase ancJ SOt
points paying WillS at etmottc In his caree~:

are )'OU willing ID bet againSt .lmmie ~?
Pretty Solid Pick: Regartless of equipment,
KBsey 11'6/lne (below) can rght this place up.
Good
Pick: Joey LDgano has career
1 nisheS Of nmtta filt!l and
13th In pomts-paylng runs
In CharlOtte
Runs on Seven Cylinders:
Juan Pablo Mlnloya has
only one f1111Sh better
than 28th In Concord.
~, ........ .
Insider Tip: The 600
has a histoly of first~--~::. :r:·~
time Wlllners - the
.
October event, not so
.
.
l'lucll. Stick lo the usual
~
:
Chase suspects.
~..... _..._.

.-. . ,
t
'

. .,,.

_,.,_..

. . ....
. . _. .

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