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                  <text>Election Day 2010:
.B e sure to get out
and vote today!

OVS to present
Dvoral{,A3

•
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-

50 CE~~·~ ..~ ~ol. 6o, No. 17
-

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RACO holding food drive
for Parish
RACINE
The
Racine Area Community
Organization will be
holding its fall food
drive at the corner of 3rd
and Pearl Streets in
Racine Satdurday, Nov.
6, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.
RACO will be collecting
A lon perishable food
~terns, laundry detergent
and fabric softner, paper
products, shampoo, and
monetary doantions.
All collections will be
given
to
Meigs
Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry. For more information call Kathryn H¥t
at 949-2656.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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Election 2010: Today tells the tale
Commissioners race tops local ballot
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Today is
Day in Meigs County
and across Ohio, and 1,450 voters had cast ballots in the local
election as of the end of business
Monday.
Polls are open from 7 a.m.-7
p.m. today.
Meigs County voters will
El~tion

elect a county commissioner and
participate in the statewide elections for governor, attorney general, state auditor. treasurer, and
U.S. Senate. A Congressman
and State Representative will
also be elected today.
The only contested local race
is for the seat on the Board of
County
Commissioners,
between
Democrat
Commissioner Mick Davenport

and Republican Tim lhle.
Today's ballot also includes
12 county, township and village
ballot issues, including three tax
initatives in the Village of
Pomeroy, levy renewals in
Middleport and Syracuse, and a
county-wide proposal to renew
the tuberculosis levy.
The election has been under-

See Election, A5

Mick Davenport

KICKOFF TO CHRISTMAS

Immunization
clinic

BY BRIAN

Holiday
bazaar
planned

J.

REED

Brenda Dequasie of Rutland views one of the
outdoor displays along Main Street.

Crowds filled stores to check out what's new in holiday
decor.

STORY AND PHOTOS BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

gave favors, both browsers and buyers were welcomed, and the shopping was brisk.
Fourteen businesses participated in the traditional open house celebration including two new stores
along Main Street. It was a time where downtown
businesses showed what they had to sell early in the
Christmas shopping season.

POMEROY
- The
first. lawsuit all~ging
; wrongful death due to
mesothelioma from exposure to asbestos products
has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court.
Attorney Christopher
Tenoglia. Pomeroy. represents Charles Valentino,
Dublin, executor of the
of
Margaret
estate
Valentino, in the civil
·action filed last week.
Allied Corporation. a
successor ,pf the Bendix
Corp., Cltveland, and 25
other co-defendant • companies are named in the
lawsuit.
Margaret Valentino was
a nurse at three Columbusarea hospitals when she
was exposed to asbestos,
products
containing
asbestos or machinery
using asbestos products,
causing her August, 2009
death, the civil complaint
alleges.
The lawsuit alleges negligence on the part of the
companies
allegedly
responsible for Valentino's
exposure to asbestos, as

Page AS

POMEROY- Pomeroy's kickoff to the holiday
shopping season Monday night was a success by
anybody's measure.
People filled the stores participating and particularly those featuring holiday themed decorations
and home decor. Some served refreshments, others

• David Edmonds
• Marguerite E. Neal
• Bonnie M. Spillman
• Betty J. Ferguson

Banking.booyah! New HNB opens

OBITUARIES

•

First lawsuit
alleging
mesothelioma
death filed in:
Meigs Co.
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The
Meigs County Health
Department will hold a
childhood immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-3 p.m., Tuesday,
Nov. 2. Influenza vaccines are also available
and available for adults
who are Meigs County
residents.

POMEROY -There
will be holiday bazaar at
The Maples, 100 E.
Memorial Dr., Pomeroy,
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Thursday. Crafts, baked
goods, candy and miscellaneous items will be
for sale. Soup, sandwiches, and desserts
will be served for a
donation from 11 a.m. to
1:30 p.m.

Tim lhle

and fit right in with ''big
city" aesthetic~. Nease
t~aid the bank purposefulRACINE
-The ly didn't want a ''cookie
doors to the new Home cutter" design of a strucNational Bank opened to ture and credited Ray
the public and a big, Karr
of
Kinsale
banking"booyah" yester- Corporation with bringday morning.
ing "quality to the pro"Booyah" is slang used ject" and "keeping us on
to describe an exclama- budget."
tion of success and/or
However, the modern
excitement which reflect- design of the building
ed the community's sen- isn't the only "unique"
timent during yesterday's aspect of the bank.
ribbon cutting.
There's the 14-foot long
Walking
into
the boardroom table made of
hank's entrance is like Spanish cedar which
walking into an interac- originally came from the
tive kiosk which revolves collection of the late
· in a circle of choices, Boone Weaver who used
including tellers, board- the wood to make jon
room. loan department, boats. The wood was
Brogan-Warner then inherited by Gordon
Insurance and on the sec- Winebrenner of Racine
ond level, more adminis- Planing Mill who contrative offices.
structed
the
table.
"You can't help but Winebrenner
also
smile when you come worked on the chimney
into this building," Bill made of sassafras and
Nease, president of HNB cherry wood which came
said, quoting one of the from Facemyer Lumber
bank's customers who'd Company. The modern
taken the grand tour yes- bank will also be adorned
terday.
with historic photos from
As customers filtered the Racine area, hopefulin and out of the bank all ly by the Nov. 10 open
day long, most comment- house. The Oh-kan Coin
ed on the contemporary Club and Bob Graham,
look of the structure who collects local, hiswhich appears as if it toric memorabilia. will
could be dropped in the be on hand for the open
middle of a larger city house.
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

. WEATHER

High: 61

Low: 31

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars
.

lassifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

liJIJ,I !1!1.!I! II
'

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"'

See Death, A5

First graders from
Southern
Elementary
were some of the first
visitors to the new bank,
with one of the students
saying, "I want to live
here."
John
and
Glenna
Riebel of Chester also

toured the new bank yesterday. Though from the
Chester area, John said
he'd been a loyal HNB
customer since they gave
him a loan to attend Ohio
University in 1956. Both
John
and
Glenna
remarked the new bank is

a "beautiful building for
Meigs County."
Brooks Sayre was the
new ba'nk's first customer
of the day and Nease said
he hopes the bank is
around for at least another 100 years of servicing
customers.

The doors are open and ribbon cut &lt;:&gt;n th~ new, $2-million Home National Bank.
Pictured cutting the ribbon are (from left) Tom Wolfe of HNB, Scott Hill, mayor of
Racine, Michael Warner of Brogan Warner Insurance, Bill Nease of HNB, Ray Karr
of Kinsale Corporation.

�.

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(

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Voters likely to hand GOP big governorship wins
BY TOM RAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Republicans are anticipating major gains in governorships
across
the
nation's industrial heartland and in several vital
presidential swing states.
With a record 37 seats
on the line Tuesday. the
same antiestablishment
wave expected to engulf
congressional Democrats
is
roaring
toward
Democratic-held statehouses as well.
The damage may not be
as devastating as the party
of President Barack
Obama had once feared.
Democrats have a good
shot at claiming governor's mansions now occupied by Republicans in
California,
Hawaii,
Vermont and Minnesota
and holding onto ones in
New York, Maryland,
Cglorado,
New
Hampshire and Arkansas.
Still, Democrats braced
for the loss of no fewer
than five governorships and likely far more.
Republicans hoped for a
net pickup of up to 12.
Governorships are especially important this year.
Those elected Tuesday

will help shape national
politics and policy beyond
the next presidential election.
Governors will not only
be behind-the-scenes players in 20 12 presidential
races, but they have a critical say in implementing
the new health care law,
and will actively participate next year in redrawing congressional and legislative districts based on
the 2010 census.
On the eve of midterms,
races remained extremely
tight or at least highly
competitive in Californi~
Florida, Ohio, Illinois,
Connecticut,
Oregon,
Rhode
Island
and
Vermont.
In the California race to
succeed Republican Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger,
polls suggested former
Democratic Gov. Jerry
Brown was pulling ahead
of Republican
Meg
Whitman in his threedecade-later comeback
bid. Whitman, the former
chief executive of eBay,
plowed more than $150
million of her own money
into the race, making it
one of the most expensive
self-financed campaigns
in history and keeping her
in the game.

Both parties saw Ohio
and Florida - states that
decided the 2000 and 2004
presidential races, respectively - as top jewels of
this year's contests. And
both were going right
·
down to the wire.
Ohio
Gov.
Ted
Strickland, a Democrat,
was waging a tough reelection bid against former
Republican congressman
John Kasich. Earlier polls
showed Kasich ahead but
later ones suggested a
dead heat.
A Republican in the
governor's chair in Ohio
could complicate Obama's
re-election bid, a dynamic
not lost on the president,
who visited Ohio 12 times
over the past year.
In Florida, wealthy businessman Rick Scott was·in
a
cliffhanger
with
Democrat Alex Sink. the
state's chief financial officer. She had a slight lead
in some polls, but both
parties saw the contest as a
toss up. Scott, who was
dogged by a Medicare
fraud scandal at the hospital corporation he once
ran, pumped about $60
million of his family's
money into the race and
wa~ getting substantial
help from the national

GOP.
There are now 26
Democratic governors and
24 Republicans. Thirtyseven seats will be filled
on Tuesday, a record.
More than half of these
races have no incumbent
running, assuring a robust
freshman class of governors next year.
Those in the Midwest
will wield the most clout.
Not only will they help
redesign legislative districts, but some will have
to abolish existing ones.
Because of population
losses or sluggish growth,
Ohio is expected to lose
two congressional seats
and Michigan, Iowa and
Illinois one apiece. The
four now have Democratic
governors. Republicans
hope to pick up all four and then some.
"When you look across
the Great Lakes and the
Midwest, that is a region
of the country that has
been dominated by
Democrats at the state
level. We are either tied
or ahead in swath of the
country
between
Pennsylvania and Iowa,"
said Mike Schrimpf,
spokesman
for
the
Republican Governors'
Association.

Across the nation,
Democrats are in danger
of losing governorships
Pennsylvania,
in
Michigan, Ohio, Iowa,
Illinois, New Hampshire,
Wisconsin and New
Mexico - most of them
important presidential
battlegrounds.
"They are nearly all
2012 swing states,"
Schrimpf said. "If we
gain back a majority of
those swing states, it
makes Obama's re-election a lot more difficult."
Nathan Daschle, executive director of the
Democratic Governors
Association; said a president's party histoncally
loses five governorships
in midterms. With some
Republicans predicting
twice that many ga:ins or
more, Daschle said
"frustrating them from
reaching their goals is
something we'll celebrate."
Obama paid heavy
attention to governors
races in the final days,
personally campaigning
for many Democrats. "I
think he's been tremendously helpful," Daschle
said.
Well, but maybe not in
Rhode Island.

The Democratic candidate, Frank Caprio, had
been holding his own
until Obama declined to
endorse him during a
visit a week ago. That's
because
former .
Republican Sen. Lincoln
Chafee was running in
the race as an independent. Chafee crossed
party lines in 2008 to
endorse Obama and the
president was repaying
the favor.
It didn't sit well with
Caprio, who said Obama
could "take his endorsement and really shove
it." Caprio dip~ed in the
polls followmg that
remark. Over the weekend, Caprio said he
wished he had chosen
different
language,
although he didn't flatly
apologize.
Polls show Chafee
leading both Caprio and
Republican
John
Robitaille.
"I don't think our candidate used the best
choice of words in how
he reacted to the situation," said Daschle. "But.
I was also pretty clear in
expressing my frustration and disappointment
that the White House
didn't endorse him."

Dems hope to limit losses in campaign's last hours
BY CHARLES BABINGTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Democratic
and
Republican · party leaders
put on their best game
faces Monday, making
11th hour arguments on
the eve of midterm elections that seem certain to
curb
if
not
end
Democratic control of
Congress.
"We're hoping now for
a fresh start with the
American people," said
GOP chairman Michael
Steele. "If we don't live
up to those expectations,
then we'll have a problem
in.two years."
His Democll!tic counterpart, Tim Krune, said he
believes Democrats will
do better than some
experts have contended,
arguing that Republicans
have been obstructionists

who "can't see beyond the
end of their no."
Kaine, Steele and other
party leaders were asked
once again on a slew of
network morning news
shows to give fresh
assessments of their
prospects on the eve of
balloting that will culminate a volatile - and possibly transcendent campaign season.
For his part, President
Barack Obama had a relatively quiet day planned at
the White House after
returning Sunday from a
two-day, four-state campaign swing. Aides said
he planned no more campaign travel before the
election.
"It's up to you to
remember that this election is a choice between
the policies that got us
into this mess and th,e
policies that are leading us

out of this mess," Obama
told a crowd at Cleveland
State University.
At stake is control of
Congress,
where
Democrats now hold
sway. History has shown
that the party of the president in power often fares
poorly in midterm elections, and this year isn't
expected to be an exception. A struggling economy and near double-digit
unemployment haven't
helped
Democratic
chances.
Republicans are poised
to take over the House;
they need a net gain of 40
seats to do it. They're also
expected to take several
Senate seats away from
Democrats The GOP
. would need to sweep most
of the closely contested
races to gain 10 Senate
seats for a majority.
Democrats are hoping

that a late-innings scramble in Alaska might help
them head off chances of a
GOP Senate takeover.
Steele, along with
Mississippi Gov. Haley
Barbour,
conceded
Monday, however, that
recapturing the Senate
would be a tough order,
notwithstanding excitement about a comeback.
Barbour said he thought it
would be "a bit of a
stretch."
Said
Kaine:
"The
Democrats have been
doing the heavy lifting at
the toughest time in the
American economy since
the 1930s."
Steele said he believes
th~ American peo~le ''are
much more skeptical'' of
the Democrats than the
Republicans, but added
that "they also have some
concerns about the direction that Republicans will

then lead when we take
control of the Congress in
2011."
Kaine, who accompanied Obama back from
the Cleveland outing, said
he believes "he has a very
good perspective about
the need going forward to
make some adjustments
and corrections" after the
election.
On Sunday, former
president Bill Clinton,
still a popular and energetic
campaigner,
stumped for Democrats in
Maine,
Connecticut,
New Hampshire and
Rhode Island.
"I'm pleading with
you." Clinton told an
audience in Nashua,
N.H., ''give John Lynch
a massive victory."
Lynch, the three-term
governor. faces a strong
challenge
from
· John
Republican

Stephen.
Republicans went to
their own rallies and talk
shows, almost giddy
with the expectation of
regaining the House
majority, and not ruling
out claiming the Senate
against long odds.
Sarah Palin, the 2008
GOP vice presidential
nominee, told "Fox
News Sunday" that vot.ers will say: "You blew
it, President Obama. We
gave you the two years to
fulfill your promise of
making sure that ou: a
economy starts roarin~
back to life again."
·
Kaine and Steele
appeared on ABC's
"Good
Morning
America," Durbin and
Cornyn were interviewed
on NBC's "Today" show
and Barbour was on
CBS's
"The
Early
Show."

Tuesday won't end the campaign for some candidates
BY BRETT J.
BLACKLEDGE
ASSOCIATED PRSSS

WASHINGTON
The campaign for some
candidates won't end with
Thesday's election, and
could be taken over by
lawyers who already are
preparing for possible
recount battles.
The large number of
too-close-to-call congressional races in states like
Colorado,
Nevada,
lllinois and West 'Virginia
has some observers predicting more contested
elections and recounts
this year. At the very
least, a slow count of ballots in states like
Washington and Alaska is
expected to keep many
voters in suspense.
"I'm sure Democrats·
will say the same thing,
but Republican campaigns are prepared for
the reality that many of
their races will not be
decided on Election Day,"
said Paul Lindsay, a
National
Republican

Congressional Committee
spokesman.
That fact has prompted
both parties to place their
best legal minds on alert,
and, in some cases, to
mobilize days in advance
in areas where reports
have surfaced of pre-election problems. Hundreds
of lawyers are ready to
pounce on any claims of
voter fraud, machine malfunctions and polling
place disruptions.
"We're focused on
making sure that doesn't
happen on Election Day,"
said Deirdre Murphy, a
Senate
Democratic
Campaign
Committee
spokeswoman said.
This happens every
election cycle, the threat
of dramatic recount struggles. But Florida's 36-day
recount fight in 2000,
which left a nation wondering who would be its
next president, forever
changed how vote challenges are viewed.
Nothing is unheard of.
and everything is possible. It took eight months

to
formally
declare
Democrat AI Franken the
winner after Minnesota's
2008 Senate election.
Lawyers across the
country already have
chased down reports of
irregularities, part of a
pre-election ritual fueled.
by partisans who are concerned that their candidates will suffer from
voter and ballot fraud.
Consider
claims
in
Nevada of electronic voting machines that automatically recorded votes
for a candidate when tested; phony absentee ballots mailed to some
Pennsylvania voters with
the wrong return address;
and armies of volunteers
in Wisconsin vowing to
chase away those trying
to vote who aren't properly regis~ered.
''The
overwhelming
number of them turn out
not to be true," said Ben
Ginsberg, a Washington
lawyer
who
helped
Republican
Norm
Coleman's campaign in
his 2008 bid against

Franken and a key member of Bush's Florida
legal team in 2000.
"1 think you're ever vigilant about these sorts of
issues." Ginsberg says,
but he admits that "a lot
of lawyers tend to get
over caffeinated at this
time of year."
The big problems don't
usually surface unless
there are razor-thin races.
And there are many
prospects for those this
year, if polling is to bet
believed. Eight states
have candidates in House
and Senate races who are
running nearly even going
into Tuesday's election,
including Nevada where
Republican
Sharron
Angle threatens Senate
Democratic
·Majority
Leader Harry Reid.
If candidates in those
and other tight races don't
win convincingly, the
focus will shift after
Tuesday to how votes are
counted, and how provisional and absentee ballots will affect the races.
New
York
voters

already are expecting lenges. There are even
problems thanks to new iPhone applications that
electronic
voting allow voters and polling
machines that proved less observers to upload
than reliable in the photos of irregularities.
September
primary,
More states have
which New York Mayor turned to electronic vatMichael
Bloomberg ing machines to help
called a "royal screw-up." simplify casting a balIf elections come down lot. But the election
to a few hundred votes, process still varies state
problems with voting by state and there is n.
machines, absentee bal- consistent method t
lots and challenges made handle vote challenges
against voters with regis- and recounts, all of
tration questions could which make for big
make a difference, said business for election ·
Wendy Weiser, a lawyer lawyers.
A decade after a preswith the Brennan Cen~er
for Justice in New York.
idential election boiled
The group has joined down to ballots with
others in the Election hanging
chads
in
Protection coalition to Florida and confusion
help
voters handle over what votes to
Election Day problems, count, the country's
including what to do if election process still
there are problems with leaves a lot to be
machines or challenges desired, said Joseph
to a voter's registration. Birkenstock,
the
Partisan groups and Democratic
National
even television net- Committee's
former
works have set up hot chief counsel.
lines to monitor voting · "I really don't think
problems,
including we're in a significantly
voter registration chal- better position," he said.

Keeping Meigs County informed

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PageA3

The Daily Sentii1el

Tuesday, November 2,

Dvorak concerto to
make regional debut
at Ariel Theatre

University of Rio Grande
Symphonic Band concert
planned for Nov. 18
RIO GRANDE - The University of Rio Grande
Symphonic Band will present its Fall Concert at 8
p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 18 in the John W. Berry Fine
and Perfonning Arts Theater on campus.
A concert featuring
contemporary pieces
"American Barndance" by Richard Saucedo and
"Midnight On Main Street'' by Brian Balmages will
be presented along with three selections featuring
soloist Kaiti Dovyak on violin and Valerie Tanner.
voice adjunct professor in the Fine Arts Department.
The violin solo will be "Theme from Schindler's
List" from the film of the same name anq composed
by John Williams.
Valerie Tanner is from Waverly, Ohio where she has
taught voice in her private studio for the past several
years. For the Fall Concert , Valerie is featured on
two George Gershwin tunes, "But Not For Me'' and
"Someone to Watch Over Me," accompanied by the
Symphonic Band.
The Band will also perform music from the film
"Star Trek: A Symphonic Suite" arranged by Jay
Bocook which includes several tunes not performed
in the original movie.
The concert is free to the public and !Jniversity students are encouraged to attend'for LA 101 credit.

New art exhibit opening
at Greer Museum

Joseph Johnson
BY THOMAS CONSOLO

GALLIPOLIS - It was a busy year in 1895: In
New York City. Antonio Dvorak put the finishing
touches on his cello concerto. In Gallipolis. ground
was broken for the Ariel Opera House. Fast fQrward
115 years, and the two finaHy get to meet.
Dvorak's concerto, the biggest blockbuster of the
solo cello repertoire, receives its regional premiere
Nov. 6 as the centerpiece of an all-Dvorak program by
the Ohio Valley Symphony. OVS music director Ray
Fowler conducts the 8 p.m. performance at the ArielAnn Carson Dater Performing Arts Centre in
Gallipolis. Joseph Johnson takes on the challenge of
the concerto as guest soloist.
The concert is the orchestra's "home opener," since
restoration constn1ction at the Ariel made it unavailable in October.
Dvorak is an audience favorite thanks to his seemingly bottomless supply of beautiful melodies. The
United States has a special soft spot for his music
thanks to the masterpieces - like the "New World"
symphony and ·the "Americ:.m" string quartet - he
wrote during his three years here. The cello concerto
wus the last major work completed before Dvorak
moved back to his native Bohemia (now part of the
Czech Republic). and it shows the composer at the
height of hi~ powers. It requires the same mastery of
cellbts who play it.
owler loves Dvorak's music. too. but he said he
n 't set out to build an ali-Dvorak program. He said
the rest of the evening - movement~ from the
Serenade for Strings and from the two sets of
Slavonic Dances - fell together naturally around the
concerto and Johnson.
Finding Johnson, fonner princ1pal cellist of the
Milv.·aukec Symphony Orchestra and now in h1s first
season as principal of the Toronto Symphony
Orchestra, was a lucky accident for Fowler. The conductor said he heard of Jonnson because he had
worked with a violinist whose playing Fowler likes
and respects. Of the cellist, he said, "His playing is so
very. very solid.''
A graduate of the Eastman School of Music,
Johnson earned his master's degree from
Northwestern University. In addition to his Toronto
position. he is principal of the Sante Fe Opera orchestra. Johnson recently completed a special recording
project called the Cello Collection. Published in three
volumes. it presents cello literature appropriate for
recitals featuring companion recordings by Johnson.
November's portrait of Dvorak reflects the OVS
, mission to bring great music played by great artists to
southeast Ohio - all while making orchestral music
easy to love. The public is encouraged to attend OVS
rehearsab for free at 7-10 p.m. Friday, Nov. 5, and 14 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 6. Open rehearsals are an excel1t way for young and old alike to grow comfortable
1th symphonic music. They're also a great glimpse
behind the scenes at what goes into preparing an
• orchestral pe1fom1ance.
Single tickets to the Ohio Valley Symphony's allDvorak mght ·are $22, $20 (senior) and $10 (students)
and are available through the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Perfonning Arts Centre box office, 428 Second Ave ..
Gallipolis. Ohio. Subscriptions to all four remaining
2010-11 OVS concerts abo are still available. For
more infonnation, visit the OVS Web site. www.ohiovalleysymphony.org. or ca1l (740) 446-2787 (ARTS).
Further funding for the Ohio VaJie.y Symphony is
provided by the Ann Carson Dater Endowment.

•

201Q.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

She can't.get
enough of his smell:;~
•

I

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
am crazy about this guy I
am seeing. 1 think there is
something very different
about my attraction to
him. Usually it is a guy's
cute smile, of his personality, or his intellect, or
his athletic ability or a
whole bunch of other
things that could attract
me to someone. My current guy has none of
these, really - he's nice
and sweet, but the main
thing is that he smells
great! I don't mean his
cologne - he doesn't
wear any. Can a personal
smell be that powerful?
-L.R.
Dear L.R.: Indeed it
can, and you seem to have
fallen under the spell of
your boyfriend's natural
odor. I wonder if you have
ever taken a piece of his
clothing to bed to cuddle
with, or just like to hang
around in his room
smelling his clothes.
While some people might
. tind this type of behavior
strange indeed, others
_have no problem admitting that they do the same
thing. When a man has a
nice natural smell, it's
comforting to keep it with
you even when he has to
be away from you. and
that's why many wives
and girlfriends like to
sleep in their gu) ·s oversized T-shirt. You lillow
you are hooked on an
aroma if you beg your
boyfriend NOT to wear
cologne or even deodorant because you don't
want that nice aroma to be
covered up or diluted!
Now that we've confirmed that you have fallen
hard
for
your
boyfriend's aroma, the
challenge for you is to
find some other things
about thjs fellow that tum
you on as much as his natural scent. As you get to
know him better. trv to
find out what you have in
common and what you
enjoy doing together.
Find out if you truly are
compatible, or if you have
just been blinded by youknow-what. Dating him
should be much more
just
common
than
"scents.''

Dr. Joyce Brothers
although I still have some';
stuffed animals on my·.
bed, I find that whenever ·
my husband travels, he :
takes some small stuffed ·
dog or something with ·'
him in his suitcase. I ·
thought it was funny at: '
first, but now I am won- ~
dering what you think. ~&lt;
S.P.
•
Dear S.P.: OK, so it's.•
fine for you. a grown",
woman. to keep teddy·:
bears and other mementos;·
left over from years ago, •
but your husband tucking
a reminder of home into 1;
his bag is absolutely·
weird'? Sounds like the
·old double standard rearing its ugly head. So let'S;
see if we can get to the:.
bottom of this 'Without·
gender prejudice
•
although I admit it's-'
going to be difficult. We
tend to want our businessmen to be all business. a:t .
least when it comes to !
putting together that deal •
your family
income· 1
depends upon. So I can ~
sec how a teddy bear in ~
the suitcase might raise a •
few eyebrows when the '
rest of the sales team·~
1
meets in the room and 1
catches a glimpse of it. · 1
On the other hand,
. maybe it's not such a '
strange thing. I want tQ ·
share a news item I saw
- it turns out that in the '
past year. the populat; '
h9tel chain Travelodge ·:
has reunited more than
75,000 I bt.:JoVS With the
owners who left them'!
behind in the hotel. Here's ·
some of the surprising '
statistics they found when · '
they dug a little deeper:·;
35 percent of the 6,000 ·
Britons they surveyed .
admitted to sleeping with .
a teddy, and 25 percent of
men said they take a bea{
with them when they travel. Ten percent. of guys
who aren't married stash
their bear when their lady
friend spends the night,
and 14 percent of manieq
men also hide their teddy
bear. Go figure!
(c) 2010 by King·.

RIO GRANDE - A new art exhibit at the
University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande
Community College's Greer Museum features several stunning and very large artworks.
The exhibit features the work of artist John
Hancock, and it i:; one that area residents will not
want to miss. Hancock's work includes several
large-scale drawings; the smallest is approximately
5-feet tall. His larger pieces, he explained, can
range up to 20 feet high.
Hancock's artworks are all completed on large
sheets of Mylar, which gives them a different look
and feel than large-scale drawings by other artists.
The Mylar is a clear, shiny material. and many people associate it with helium balloons. Hancock
enjoys working with this material and using it to
help create his images.
The name for this exhibit i~ "Natural Family
History," and it features a wide range of images.
Included in the exhibit are pieces that show plants
and animals, along with maps that show different
topography. Along with these images. Hancock has
also created artworks based on family photographs.
"It's a visual collage," Hancock said describing
his \.vork. Some of the pieces are abstract while others are more traditionaL he explained. All of the
pieces work together around the main theme for the
exhibit.
Here is. how Hancock describes his artwork.
"My paintings. drawings, and collages grow out
of a continuing exploration of the natural world and
Qur place in it" Hancock said. "The work usually
starts from direct observation. Sometimes the finished painting or drawing is completed in one sitting. More often, using my drawings. sKetches. photos, and notes back in the studio, 1 bring the work to
completion through a process of revision and experimentation.
"Most often the work starts with drawing media,
•••
watercolor or gouache. Sometimes I combine these
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
and other materials. improvising and re-working the
image. In this way, I can bring together naturalistic have always had a soft
and abstract elements, use the excitement and ten- spot for stuffed animals,
sion between them, and create a type of visual har- and my husband started
mony in each painting or drawing,'' Hancock said." winning me bears and
"Natural Family History." features 15 works of art tigers and animals when
we were dating as highthat all stand on their own as excellent pieces. but
school kids and would go
also work together in the exhibit. Nine of the pieces to the fair. But now we're
were displayed at an exhibit in Chillicothe earlier .all grown up, and
Features Syndicate
this fall, and three of the pieces arc brand new.
While the artist lives in Virginia, he has shown his
work all around the country, as well as in England.
accreditect~:
and he is proud to be bringing his work to Rio
Grande.
RIO GRANDE -- The University of Rio Grande '
The exhibit is open The Greer Museum is open and Rio Grande Community College's Radiologic
from 1- 5 p.m. Tuesday thrqugh Sunday at Rio Technology program has received a continuing. '
Grande. The museum is free and open to the public national accreditation. signifying the high quality of ;
and brings in a wide range of types of artwork by the program.
.
.
regional artists and artists from across the country
The program recently received an eight-year con- ·
each year.
tinuing accreditation from the Joint Review '
For more information on the "Natural Family Committee on Education in Radiologic Technology '
History'' exhibit, or on other exhibits at the Greer (JRCERT). The JRCERT is the only agency recog- '
Museum. call Jim Allen at 1-800-282-720 I. For nized by the U.S. Department of Education for the ·;
additional information on upcoming events at Rio accreditation of traditional and distance delivery edu
Grande, as well as information on the wide range of cational progran1s in radiography, radiation therapy; ~
academic programs offered on the university's magnetic resonance and medical dosimetry.
'
scenic campus, log onto www.rio.edu.
The national accreditation means a great deal to •
Rio Grande and to the students in the radiologic tech! '
--~-------------------------------------------nology program. Receiving this accreditation from
JRCERT shows the high quality of the Rio Grande
------------------------------------------------ program, as the approval process is very challenging, ~
Shade
Historical
Prut of the process is a peer evaluation, and it is ben~ i
and organizations Association,
Tuesday, Nov. 7
7 p.m.,
eficial process that can help a program find ways to ·~
COOLVILLE
Chester Courthouse.
build upon its strengths.
• •!
·Tuesday, Nov. 2
Revival starting at 7 p.m.
Friday, Nov. 5
For n10re information on the radiologic technology.·
MIDDLEPORT
RACINE
Meigs nightly through Nov. 7, program at Rio Grande. call Tracey Boggs at 1-800-. •
Regular stated meeting County Pomona Grange Allegheny
Wesleyan
of Middleport Masonic with officers conference . Methodist Church, fea- 282-720 I. For additional infonnation on the pro- ,!
Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m., at 6:30 p.m. followed by turing Rev. Chad and gram, as well as information on the wide range of
with refreshments at meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Valerie Searls, evange- academic programs offered on Rio Grande's sceni~
6:30. Bring non-perish- the Racine Grange Hall list and singers, for more campus. log onto www.rio.edu.
able food items.
located on Oak Grove information, 667-6778.
MIDDLEPORT
Saturday, Nov. 6
Road near Racine.
Monthly meeting of
POMEROY
Saturday, Nov. 6
Middleport Community
Pomeroy Church of
SALEM CENTER Association, 9 a.m., Star Grange #778 and Christ, Zion Church of
Peoples Bank.
Star Junior Grange #878 Christ host a free soup
VVednesday, Nov. 3
potluck supper at 6:30 and sandwich dinner,
POMEROY
p.m. followed by meet- beginning at 5 p.m.,
Middleport
Literary ing
at
7:30 p.m. Pomeroy church, East
Club, 3 p.m., Pomeroy
Main Street. Desserts
Not a hlgh-prlcqd
Library.
CREDIT CARD RELIEF
and other refreshments.
consolidation lo~n
tor your FREE coneultatlon CALL

Rio tech program

1

4

'

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Nov. 2
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township Trustees meet
6:30 p.m., township
garage.
VVednesday, Nov.3
a - tARRISONVILLE ~
.
ipio
Township
Trustees meet 6:30
p.m., firehouse.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health.
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.

Clubs

BURIED

CHESTER -

Chester-

Church events

or ona of thoeo
consumor credit
couneellng progr~m•

..
•J

li

877-264-8031

-.•

1

�.,

lp

The Daily Sentinel

Tu esday, November 1, 2010.

The Daily Sentinel

r-----------------------------------------------------------------m.-.£e.-~====~·

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-21 57
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make tlO law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govemment for a redress ofgrievattees.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

How much is too much?
BY BRIAN J. REED
BR EED@MYDAI LYSENTI NEL.COM

.

•
)

I read an interesting story in this month's Men :s
Health magazme: "I Hate Fat People."
Richard Conniff writes about society's prejudice toward the overweight - a population that
continues to grow exponentially in America, most •
alarmingly in children.
Conniff quotes scientific studies: Men say they
would rather date a recovering drug addict than a
fat woman. Schoolchildren say they would rather
have friend in a wheelchair or with a facial disfigurement than a fat friend.
For the record, I am thinner than I once was, but
not as thin as I hope to be, and certainly never as
thin as my doctor's weight chart tells me I should
be. By the dreaded Body Mass Index, I have been
recently demoted from "obese" to "overweight.''
But for me - and I can be a vain man - the
issue is not social acceptance or appearance,
although I know I look better at 215 than 1 did at
320. As many know, I have a serious heart disease.
But having lost 120 pounds in 15 years, I feel
better and move better. I sleep less and sweat less.
I also get propositioned more!
But fat people, if you don't get fit for the sake of
vanity, and you don't do it to improve your social
life, do it for your health and do it to extend your
life.
Consider this. For men, obesity increases the
chances of diabetes by more than l ,000 percent,
and doubl~ the risk of he rut disease. It triples the
risk of impotence and more than doubles the risk
of cancer. Think about that before you super size
again!
And news flash, mom and dad: If you are raising a fat child, you are setting him up for a good
share of social rejection before he ever reaches
adulthood and probably a shorter lifespan in the
long run. That is not anti-fat rhetoric. That is reality.
To me, the issue is not about social acceptance
of fat people. Yeah. I know. We should accept people for what's inside and not outside. It is wrong
to judge someone by their appearance.
We must, however. address the growing obesity
crisis in our country before another generation
dies too s'o on for having too much too eat and too
little to do.

'
.J

a

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel!
F

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and
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Mail Subscriptio n
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---

.·

Early clues: What to
watch in today$ elections·
l

B Y N ANCY BENAC
ASSOCIATeD PRCSS

How early will America know if
it's a Republican romp or if
Democrats somehow minimized
their damage? There should be
plenty of clues this evening and long before bedtime.
Final results in some states
might not be known for days. But
trends could be evident from the
Midwest and South - especially
from Indiana, Kentucky and West
Virginia - even before most of
the nation has finished dinner.
Six states have polls that close
at 7 p.m. EDT, and 16 more close
by 8 p.m., featuring plenty of
telling races in the East and
Midwest. First up: Indiana.
Kentucky,
South
Carolina,
Georgia, Virginia and Vermont,
offering the first hard evidence of
just how big a night it's going to
be for Republicans.
Not even their mothers expect
the Democrats to gain ground. It's
just a question of whether they
fall back or over a cliff.
If the GOP can unseat
Democratic Rep. Baron Hill in
Indiana's always-hard-fought 9th
congressional district, for example, that's a good sign for the
expected Republican takeover of
the House. And if they can capture all three seats they've got an
eye on in Indiana, that could well
signal a GOP hurricane.
On the other hand. if Democrats
hold their ground in Indiana, and
if their Kentucky Senate candidate, Jack Conway, can beat back
Republican Rand Paul, it could be
an early indication that GOP gains
won't challenge the record books
and that the tea party is serving
weak brew.
A few tips on what to watch as
the returns roll in Tuesday night
(all times are EDT):

House of Representatives
Expectations are high that
Republicans will pick up at least
the 40 seats they need to retake
control of the House after four
years of Democratic rule. That
should start in the Midwest.
In Ohio, where polls close at
7:30 p.m., six Democratic-held
seats are in jeopardy. ln
Pennsylvania and Illinois, where
polls close at 8 p.m., lO more are
at risk.
If Midwestern incumbents such
Joe Donnelly in Indiana and John
Boccieri in Ohio fall, Republicans
are probably headed for huge
gains
nationwide.
Measure
Democratic resilience if the party
manages to hold on to a pair of
imperiled Georgia seats, and if
Rep. John Spratt can win a new

term in South Carolina.
Worth watching in Florida (an 8
p.m. poll close): a rematch
between Democratic Rep. Ron
Klein and Republican Allen West.
A loser two years ago, West rides
anti-incumbent sentiment and is
easily outspending his opponent.
Even if Republicans demonstrate early 1 strength Tuesday
night, it will take time for them to
lock in enough districts to ensure
a GOP majority. That's because
the West Coast states of
California, Washington
and
Oregon are home to 67 House districts. In 2006, it was l a.m.
before it became clear that control
of the House had passed from
Republicans to Democrats

U.S. Senate
It would take a true blowout for
Republicans to pick up the 10
Senate seats they need for control.
The first should be an easy one. in
Indiana. But if Paul can't keep
Kentucky in the GOP column, it
would be a sign of strength for
Democrats and a symbolic setback for the tea party activists.
Republicans should have an
easy time holding onto one of
their own vacant seats in Ohio,
where former Republican Rep.
Rob Portman is favored. But keep
an eye on West Virginia. another
7:30 poll close state, where
Democratic Gov. Joe Manchin
and Republican millionaire industiialist John Raese are tussling
over the seat long held by the late
Democrat Robert Byrd. A
Republican victory there could
keep alive GOP hopes of a majority.
Three-term
Sen.
Blanche
Lincoln could be the first Senate
Democratic incumbent to falL
when polls close in Arkansas at
8:30p.m.
Polls close at 10 p.m. in the
most closely watched race of the
night: Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid's battle in Nevada
against tea patty favorite Sharron
Angle.
Even if Republicans show huge
strength, the nation still could go
to sleep Tuesday night with unanswered questions about the makeup of the Senate: Polls don't close
until 1 a.m. in Alaska, where it
could take days or weeks to determine the winner of a three-way
race for Republican Sen. Lisa
Murkowski 's seat.
How long could the suspense
drag on?
In 2006, it took until 8:30 p.m.
the day after the election to determine that Democrats had taken
control of the Senate from
Republicans. And in 2008, it was

-------- - - I•

nearly eight months after Election
Day before it was deteunined that
Democrat AI Franken had won
Minnesota's Senate race, givi.
Democrats control of their 6(
seat in the Senate, exactly the ·
number needed to overcome a •
Republic:an ftlibuster.
'

Governors
For all the focus on Congress,
there will be plenty of suspen~e
over how big a real estate-grab the
Republicans cnn manage in gov- 1
ernors' manstons around the·
country.
South Carolina wi II offer an )
early measure Tuesday night of
tea party strength: Republican
Nikki Haley trailed for monthsbefore Sarah Palin's endorsement
and a tea party ~urge helped her •
nail the GOP nomination. Nnw
she's favored over Democratic
state Sen. Vincent Sheehen.
Over the next few hours. resulto,;
will roll in for the blue-state·
Northeast, where Democrat&lt;; are facing tough GOP challenges in
Massachusetts. New Hampshire ..
Vermont. Maine and Connecticut.
If Democratic Gov. Deval Patri.
goes down in the liberal bastion
Massachusetts, it's a sign that the
tea party fury over taxes and big _
government is spreading far and
wide.
'
There's plenty of suspense in
Florida, with an 8 p.m. poll close.
in the battle between Republican·
businessman Rick Scott andDemocrat Alex Sink, the stale's
chief financJal ofllcer.
Close contests are expected in
late poll dosing states Oregon.
and Hawaii. And polls don't close.
until II p.m. in Culifomia, where ,
billionaire businesswoman Meg
Whitman and former Gov. Jerry
Brown are vying to replace outgoing Republican Go\. ArnoldSchwat?.enegger.
2012

•

This isn't a presidential election ~
year, but there will be plenty of,
20 L2 tea leaf reading Tue'iday
night, espew11ly when Wc&lt;&gt;tern
results start flowlll£ tn
Most prominently among &lt;I
hopefuls. Sarah
Palm
endorsed numerous Republicans, ,
and if they have a good night, &lt;&gt;o
will she.
As for President Barack Obama
at midterm, his gmdc will rei) '
largely on the outcome of the ·
fight for control of Congress. But •
his re-election campaign also will
be affected b) th~ result of guber- '
natorial races in -;tatcs like Ohio..
Iowa, Florida and hi.s home state •
of Illinois.

..

�u

A

l

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Obituaries
David Edmonds
On Saturday, Oct. 30, ~~'!"'L'&lt;::'-..,._==:r.after a brief illness, David
tson Edmonds, 63, of
lipolis Ferry, W.Va.,
ard "well done, good
and faithful servant'' as he
went home to be with
Jesus.
He was preceded in
death by his parents, the
late
Riley
Watson
Edmonds and Rosa Slack
Edmonds; and two brothers. Jerry Keith Edmonds ..___ _ __:_:_ _ __ J
and
Garrett
Gene
Edmonds.
He is survived by his loving wife of 40 years,
Sharon Rose Edmonds; four children, Scott (Kim)
Edmonds of Baxley, Ga., Rusty (Melissa) Edmonds
of Ashville, Ohio, Phillip (Jen) Edmonds of Hilliard,
Ohio, and Rene (Craig) Romine of Middleport.
Ohio; five grandsons. Isaiah, Jacob, Elijah, Landon
and Colton; four brothers, Ernest (Ruth), Frank
(Linda), Steven (Wanda) and Donald (Linda); and
four sisters, Carolyn Sue Cobb, Sharon Kay
Edmonds, Marlene (Ron) McCarty and Robin
(Wayne) Richardson.
David was a coal miner for 30 years and member
of the UMWA. He was a deacon at Rutland Free. Will
tist Church, where he had been a member for 29
rs.
•
Arrangements are handled by Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland, Ohio. Viewing will be at Rutland
FWB Church on Tuesday, Nov. 2 from 5-8 p.m. The
funeral will be held at the church on Wednesday,
Nov. 3 at 1 p.m. Burial will be at Pete Meadows
Cemetery in Glenwood, W.Va. Flowers may be sent
to Birchfield Funeral Home.

f.

)

I

Deaths
'

Marguerite E. Neal
Marguerite E. Neal, 94, Point Pleasant, died
Sunday, Oct. 31, 2010, in the Pleasant Valley Nursing
and Rehab Center. A graveside service will be held at
1 p.m., Thursday, Nov. 4, 2010, at Forest Hills
Cemetery, Flatrock. Burial will follow. Friends may
call from 6- 8 p.m. on Wednesday at Deal Funeral
Home.
\

Bonnie Mae Spillman
Bonnie Mae Spillman, 73. Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., forly of Gallia County, died Saturday, Oct. 30, 2010,
er residence. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m.,
urday Nov. 6, 2010, at Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home. Burial will follow at Big Four
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home on
' Saturday from noon until time of service. An online
guest registry is available at waugh-halley-wood.com.

Betty Jane Ferguson
Betty Jane Ferguson, 64. Crown City, died Sunday.
Oct. 31,2010. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m.,
Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2010, at Hall Funeral Home in
Proctorville. Burial will follow at Ridgelawn
Cemetery in Mercerville. Friends may call from 1-2
p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2010, at the funeral home.

Meigs County Forecast
Thesday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
61. Calm wind becoming
north around 6 mph.
Thesday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
North wind between 3
Smph.
ednesday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
59. West wind between 3
and 8 mph.
Wednesday Night: A
slight chance of showers
after 10 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
42. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 52.
Chance of precipitation is

30 percent.
Thursday Night: A
chance
of showers.
Mostly cloudy. with a low
around 37. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Friday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy.
with a high near 46.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
34.
Saturday:
Partly
sunny, with a high near
48.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
30.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 52.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) -37.28
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 59.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 51.27
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.90
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -28.47
BorgWamer (NYSE)- 56.04
ry Alum (NASDAQ) -13.41
pion (NASDAQ) -1.12
ing Shops (NASDAQ)- 3.40
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.86
Collins (NYSE) - 59.64
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.90
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.93
Gen Electric (NYSE) -15.95
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 30.61
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 37.42
Kroger (NYSE)- 22.01
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 29.06
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 61.77
OVBC (NASDAQ) -18.51

l

BBT (NYSE)- 22.74
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 12.74
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.55
Premier (NASDAQ)- 6.35
Rockwell (NYSE)- 63.28
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.42
Royal Dutch Shell- 65.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 70.89
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 54.31
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.75
WesBanco (NYSE) -16.06
Worthington (NYSE) -15.51

bai/y stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
for November 1, 2010, provided
by Edward Jones financial advi·
sors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. MemberSIPC.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

U.S. issues mail advisory,
tightens cargo scrutiny
BY GEIR MOULSON AND EILEEN SULLIVAN
ASSOCIATED PRE~

WASHINGTON- Two mail bombs intercepted in
Britain and Dubai contained enough packed explosives to cause "significant" damage to the planes carrying them, German officials said Monday, a grim
warning as investigators tried to trace bomb parts and
scanned for more hidden explosives possibly sent
from Yemen.
Authorities believe Yemeni-based terrorists sent
two mail bombs addressed to Jewish synagogues in
Chicago last week, but the devices appear to have
been aimed at blowing up planes in flight. While officials caught two bombs in the United Arab Emirates
and the United Kingdom, U.S. officials warn there
may be more in the system.
Yemeni security officials said Monday that a leading al-Qaida militant in Yemen who surrendered to
Saudi Arabia last month provided information that
helped ·in'thwarting the mail bomb plot.
But he had been captured in Yemen and turned over
to Saudi Arabia before the packages were shipped and
likely would not have known the tracking numbers.
Officials have said the til? that came in just before the
plot unraveled was spectfic enough that it identified
the tracking numbers.
The mail bombs intercepted last week contained
10.58 ounces (300 grams) and 15.11 ounces (400
grams) of the explosive PETN, a German security
official said Monday. The official, who briefed
reporters in Berlin on condition of anonymity in line
with department guidelines, said that if the bombs had
gone off the explosive effect would have been "significant." The detonation mechanism was very sophisticated, said the official, who declined to elaborate.
By contrast, the bomb that failed to explode last
Christmas Day on a Detroit-bound airliner used 80
grams of PETN.
One of the packages transited through a UPS hub at
Germany's Cologne airport before being intercepted
at its next stop in England. The device had already left
Germany when an alett from Saudi authorities was
received in the early hours of Friday. Another package
was intercepted in Dubai.
A second German official said that authorities in
Berlin don't yet know whether the bombs were supposed to be. or could have been, activated in the air or
at their destination in the United States. Both officials
said that Germany received its information on the
bombs from authorities in Dubai and Britain.
"Depending on where it is placed on the plane and
if it breached the exterior wall, it could bring the plane
down," said Leo West, former FBI explosives expert,
who worked many major bomb cases including the
1998 U.S. embassy bombings in Africa. ''It would be
a sizable explosion. In a plane it doesn't really take a
whole lot at a high altitude."
.
Bombs experts say the key is the altitude of the
plane when the bomb goes off. The cpances of the
plane surviving a blast increase at lower altitude. At a
higher altitude, the plane is pressurized and a little
hole can easily become a big hole, bomber experts
say.
An official United Arab Emirates security source
said that authorities are tracing the serial numbers of
a mobile phone circuit board and computer printer
used in a mail bomb sent from Yemen and found in
Dubai last week.
Yemeni officials also said that Jabir al-Fayfi, a
Saudi militant who had joined al-Qaida in Yemen,
informed Saudi officials about the plan. The officials
spoke on condition of anonymity because they were
not authorized to talk to the press. Several tribal lead-

For the Record

ers with knowledge of the situation. who similarly
spoke on condition of anonymity, also confmned alFayfi's role.
U.S. officials have said an alert from Saudi Arabia
led to the interception Friday of two explosive devices
hidden in packages addressed to Chicago-area synagogues, on planes transiting in Britain and Dubai. AI~
Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the terror· group's
affiliate in Yemen. is suspected in the attempted
bombing.
The Saudi newspaper Al-Watan on Monday cited
Saudi security officials saying that the kingdom gave
U.S. investigators the tracking numbers of the packages.
·
The UAE 1security official told The Associated Press
Monday the emirates are sharing the bomb part serial
numbers with the United States, Yemen and other
countries involved in the probe in an effort to track the
bombs' origins. The person spoke on condition of
anonymity because the investigation is ongoing.
In the U.S., counterterrorism officials warned local
law enforcement and emergency personnel to be on
the watch for mail with unusual characteristics that
could mean dangerous substances are hidden inside.

Election
· From Page A 1
way for 60 days, in that early voting has been an option
for all registered voters.
The board of elections posts the following polling
locations for those who will vote in their precincts today:
Bedford, Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
Campgrounds, Rocksprings Road. Pomeroy; E.
Chester, Shade River Lodge, Ohio '248, Chester: W.
Chester, Pomeroy Gun Club. Pomeroy Pike Road,
Pomeroy.
Columbia, Columbia Township Fire Department,
Ohio 143, Albany; Lebanon, Portland Community
Center, Ohio 124, Portland; Letart, East Letart United
Methodist Church, East Letart Road, Racine.
N. Olive, St. Paul United Methodist Church, Ohio 7.
Tuppers Plains; S. Olive, Long Bottom Community
Center, T.R. 275, Long Bottom; Orange, St. Paul United
Methodist Church, Ohio 7, Tuppers Plains.
Rutland Village, Rutland Civic Center. Main Street,
Rutland; E. Rutland, Rutland Civic Center. Main Street,
Rutland; W. Rutland, Rutland Civic Center, Main Street,
Rutland; Salem, Salem Center Fire Department. Ohio
124, Langsville; Middleport 2. Church of Christ Family
Life Center, Main Street, Middleport.
Middleport 3, Church of Christ Family Life Center,
·Main Street, Middleport; Middleport 4, Church of
Christ Family Life Center, Main Street, Middleport;
Pomeroy 1, Mulberry Community Center, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
Pomeroy 2, Mulberry Community Center, Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy; PomerQy 3, Mulberry Community
Center, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy; Bradbury, Bradford
Church of Christ Activity Building, Bra~ury Road,
·
Middleport.
Laurel Cliff, Meigs Local Administrative Building,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy: Rocksprings. Meigs Local
Administrative Building, Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy;
Scipio, Scipio Township Fire Department, Firehouse
Read, Pomeroy; Racine Village, Racine First Baptist
Church Christian Outreach Center, Fifth Street, Racine.
Racine Precinct, Racine First Baptist Church Christian
Outreach Center, Fifth Street, Racine; Syracuse Village,
Syracuse Community Center, Seventh Street, Syracuse;
Minersville, Syracuse Community Center. Seventh
Street, Syracuse.

•

Death

Common Pleas
POMEROY - Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch filed
the following as part of the court's public record:
Civil
• Civil judgment action filed by Citibank, N.A.,
against Janie Woods, Pomeroy, and others.
• Action for foreclosure filed by Nationwide
Advantage Mortgage Co., against William Michael
Cadle, Racine, against others.
• Civil judgment action filed by FIA Card
Services, N.A., against Keith Putnam, Pomeroy.
• Civil judgment action filed by Citibank against
Bracy A. Kom, Pomeroy, and others.
Domestic
• Action for dissolution of marriage filed by Joy
Lynn Rhodes, Brent Allen Rhodes.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the
following transfers of real estate:
• Andrew M. Ledbetter, Jessica Ledbetter, to
James E. Kreitzer, Alice M. Kreitzer, deed,
Columbia; Eva Lucille Snyder Lawson, deceased, to
Robert Lee Lawson. affidavit, Letart; Robert W.
Crow to Dennis Wolfe, sheriff's deed, Village of
Syracuse.
• Lori Ann Phillips to Danny D. Brown, Bonnie
G. Brown, deed, Sutton; Rebecca A. Ours to Scott
A. Ours, deed, Sutton; Iva P. Upton to Benjamin F.
Upton, Jr., deed, Orange; Elizabeth Lathey to
Elizabeth Ann Lathey, Gregory D. Lathey, deed,
Salem.
• Farmers Bank and Savings Co. to McClure and
Sons, Inc., ded, Village of Pomeroy; Janet E.
Connolly. American Electric Power, to Columbus
Southern Power, easement, Orange; Jeremy
Connolly to Columbus Southern Power, American
Electric Power, easement, Orange; Jeff Belcher to
American Electric Power. Columbus Southern
Power, easement, Salem.
• Donald Dean All, deceased, to Sandra J. All,
affidavit; Douglas Hauber. Brenda Hauber. Denise
Dawson. Scott Hauber, Kimberly Hauber, John
Bogard, Jr., Barbara Bogard, to Keith A. Collins,
Marjorie L. Collins. deed, Lebanon; Douglas
Hauber. Denise Dawson. Scott Hauber. John
Bogardf Jr., Brenda Hauber, Douglas . Dawson,
Kimberly Hauber, Barbara Bogard, to Nicholas A.
Schultz, Kayla Schult,z, deed, Lebanon.

From Page A1
well as liability for her illness and death, breach of warranty, product liability, conspiracy, concealment and
willful misconduct.
The lawsuit demands an unspecified cash judgment.
Valentino was allegedly exposed to asbestos at her
work at St. Anthony Hospital and Mount Carmel Health,
Columbus, and St. Ann's Hospital, Westerville. in the
late 1960's and early 1970's. She was diagnosed with
mesothelioma in June, 2009, and died two months later,
according to the complaint.
Mesothelioma is a form of cancer of the protective lining covering the mesothelium, or lining of the body's
organs. It most commonly affects.the pleura, or outer lining of the lungs and chest wall, but also can affect the
heart lining and the lining of the internal chest wall.
The liability resulting from the massive number of
people exposed to the chemical and the subsequent lawsuits .filed has reached into the billions, but Tenaglia said
his was the first complaint to be filed in the local court as
a result of the disease.

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�.,

Tuesday, November

www .mydailysentinel.com

2, 2010

Rio fund raiser for
Meigs tornado victims
RIO GRANDE
Students
from
the
University
of
R10
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College held
a ~pecial event on campus recently to raise
money
for
the
tornado/severe vveather
victims from Meigs
County.
The students were all
member~
of
Rio
Grande's
Diagnostic
Medical
Sonography
Club, and they held a
bake sale on campus. The
bake sale proved to be
very successful and the
students raised $300. The
club then donated the
money to organizations
that will use the funds to
help the disaster victims.
Stephanie Saunders.
director of the Diagnostic
Medical
Sonography
program at Rio Grande,
explained that the members of the club held the
bake sale on Oct. 5 at the
Gazebo near the Da\ is
University Center. The
club members made all
of the items they sold,
and they received excellent support from Rio
Grande students, faculty
and staff.
The President of the
Diagnostic
Medical
Sonography Club this
year is Sarah Marshall,
while the Treasurer is
Ryann Leslie.
The students in the
Diagnostic
Medical

Sonography Club will
hold several different
fundraising
event~
throughout the school
year. but most of these
activities are geared
toward raising money to
help the students pay for
their state registry examinations.
After seeing all of the
damage caused by the
severe weather in Metgs
County, though, the students wanted to do something to help and decided
to hold the bake sale.
"They wanted to do a
communit) service project,'' Saunders said. She
fully supported the idea,
and said that she stresses
the impottance of community service work to
her stttdents.
·~1 require the students
to participate in a communit) service project
every year," Saunders
said. In past years. the
students have taken part
in Relay For Life events.
American Red Cross
blood drives and other
important events in the
region. This year's class
of Diagnostic Medical
Sonography students will
also take part in commu·nity service projects.
"It's good to teach
them about civic responsibility while they are in
school,'' Saunders said.
And with her students
entering the medical
field. she encourages the

students to community
service projects rei&lt;1t~d to
health care. It is important for all students to be
involved in community
service projects and to
give something back to
the region, and it is especially imp01tant for students entering the medical field to take part in
programs like this while
they are in school.
The students in the
Diagnostic
Medical
Sonography Club al&lt;;o
take part in fundraising
activities such as bake
sales throughout the year
in order to raise money
for the registry exams
and other initiatives. The
students will also raise
money this year to pay
for a trip to a conference
they will attend later in
the academic year.
Rio Grande offers programs in general sonography and cardiovascular
sonography, and is one of
the few programs in the
region to offer a bachelor's degree in diagnostic
medical sonography.
For more information
on the program, or for
more information on the
Diagnostic
Medical
Sonography Club, call
Stephanie Saunders at 1800-282-720 I. For additional information on •the
wide range of academic
programs offered on Rio
Grande's scenic campus,
log onto www.rio.edu .

Phillips honored for leadership
COLUMBUS - The
Ohio Association of
County Boards (OACB)
Serving People With
Developmental
Disabilities
recently
announced its 20 I 0 ''legislators of the year," and
a legislator from Athens
County was chosen.
State Rep. Debbie
Phillips. D-Athens, was
chosen by the statewide
organitation for her outstanding
leadership,
advocacy and accessibility to the people in her
district and statewide
who have developmental
disabilities. State Sen.
Shannon
Jones,
RSpringboro. also was so
honored.
"Representative
Phillips is one . of those
rare legislators who made
an immediate impact on
our community," said
Dan
Ohler,
OACB
Executive Director.
"She came into the
House of Representative
with a strong knowledge

investigators, unhappily
married people. gamblers, barbers. nursmg
home workers and parents of a developmentally
disabled child.)
Ultimately. interpersonal relationships, race
relations. respect and
friendship become the
themes of the stories,
Hunnel noted. The first
story is "Blood Drive'"
and it involves the adventures of three good old
boys who leave the county in a pickup truck headed for a hospital across
the state border in
Memphis. They ha\'e
been sent by their neighbor to donate blood for
one of their own who has
been injured while working at a construction site.
On their way, they
become distrac!ted by
their desire for beer and
their interest in finding a
strip club (they never do

make it to the hospital).
Some of the characters
are admirable and some
are rascally but all of
' them are interesting, said
Hunpel. If you like John
Grisham. this book is
recommended as having
his touch in each of the
seven stories.
Oleta Heighton served
as hostess. Twelve members and two guests
responded to the roll call
question of: "Who is
another prolific author
you once liked. but no
longer enjoy?"
Dana Kessinger will be
hostess and reviewer for
Wednesday's meeting.
She will be reviewing
''South of Broad'' by Pat
Conroy. For roll call
members are asked to
show a picture of their
best high school friend.
Vice
President
Charlene Rutherford presiding at the meeting.

CHESTER -A Hearts
and Hands Thrift Shop is
opening Nov. 1 I in the
Chester
Community
Center located in the old
Chester
Elementary
School.
The Shop was formerly
the Hearts and Hands
Clothing Parish located
at Long Bottom. It was.
the project of the Ji l1
Holter and the Bethel

TUPPERS PLAINSPlans are moving forward for the fifth annual
Christmas giveaway to be
held by the Bethel
Worship Center on Dec.
4.
Jill Holter. chairman,
reports that the Center
has already started collecting money and good
used toys for this year's
give-away which will
take pla9e at the Chester
Community Center in the
old Chester Elementary
School.
Pre-registration to get

toys
will
start on
Monday, Nov. 8. with
Holter at 949-2603 or at
the
Bethel
Worship
Center, 667-3305. Those
who want to donate to the
project or volunteer to
asstst in collecting and
distributing toys are
asked to call either number and express their
interest.
"It takes thousands of
dollars and lots of used
toys which can be refur·
bished to make this event
happen,'' said Holter. She
said contributions iri the

past have come from
many businesses and ·
individuals and that without their help there could
be no give-away.
According to Holter
because of the give-away
over the past five years
several thousand parents
have been able to provide
gifts for their children.
"This is such a rewarding project for everyone
involved. It truly brings
the
meaning
of
Christmas to the forefront of one's mind," she
concluded.

Keeping
Meigs County
informed

The Daily Sentinel

Worship Center who will
continue to operate the
business in the new localion. All proceeds will go
to"':'ards the upkeep of the
Center.
Prices, according to
Holter, will be very lo~
in price (35 and 50 cents
and $1 ), in good condition and clean. The shop
will be open Thursqays
and Fridays from 9 a.m.

to 3 p.m. and on
Saturday from 9 a.m. to
noon.
Donations can be taken
to the shop duri ng business hours or left at the
Bethel Worship Center
office building located at
the front of the church.
For more information
regarding donations call
Holter at 949-2603 or the
church c\t 667-3305.

mydailysentinel.com

lr

Your online source for news

(

Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will pu/Jlish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by _including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

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VETERAN SALUTE

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Army
VietNam

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. I

demonstrated clearly that
people can work together
for change," Pht llips said.
Representative Phillips
has
participated
in
OACB's
Call2Action
trainings. where ad\.
cates arc trained on h
to interact with their legislators.
Phi ll ips is fi nishing her
first term as a representative. She introduced a
measure in the House
that removed the words
''mental
retardat1on"
from the name of the
Ohio Department of
Develop m ental
Disabilities, as well as all
County
Boards
of
Develop m ental
Disabilities.
Additionally, she has
assumed a leadership
role in the House of
Representatives as someone who understands diflicult and ever-changing
programs
such
as
Medicaid ami Medicare.

Visit us online at'

(shown actual

Bethel plans Christmas give-away

about the tield of developmental disabilities. and
rolled up her sleeves and
got to work," he said.
Phillips and Jones will
be· honored during opening day activities of the
27th
annual
OACB
Convention Dec. 1-3 at
the H ilton Hotel at
Easton. Last year. about
700
people
from
througho·ut the state
attended
the annual
event.
''O ur work for Ohio\
most vulnerable people is
not done. While we have
accomplished much during my first term in the
House, I am looking forward to working closely
with our County Boards
of
Developmental
Disabilities on issues
they face . What was so
inspiring about working
on the name change bill
is the fact that the selfadvocates got involved
and spoke out - their
personal
testimony
affected legislators, and

Thrift Shop opening
.. at Chester Cent•

Members·hear about 'Ford County'
M IDDLEPORT
Frankie Hunnel reviewed
"Ford County'. by John
Grisham at a recent meeting of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the
Pomeroy Librar).
Hunnel
described
Grisham as a "gifted
story teller, a master of
the legal thrillers and one
of her fdvorite authors:'
He has written more than
20 best selljug novels.
''Ford County," a collection of, folksy, short
stories were set in the fictionalized Ford County.
Miss. Hunnel said inspiration for the stories,
however. is taken from
the author's former home
county of DeSoto. Miss.
The
stories
revolve
around ordinary people,
such as blue collar workers and professionals
(including good old
boys/rednecks, prisoners.
lawyers,
merchants.

The Dai1y Sentinel • Page A6

t

----

L-----------------~

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(7 40) 992-2155

�,~.~-

II

I

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

The OVP Scoreboard, Page 82
Ohio beats Louisiana-Lafayette, Page 86

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

2010 football
statistics needed
GALLIPOLIS - All
Ohio varsity football
coaches in both Gallia
and Meigs counties are
asked to submit regular
season statistics - both
offense and defense from their respective
teams to the Ohio Valley
Publishing sports department for district considerations
with
the
Associated Press.
Along with the stats,
please
include
the
heights, weights, positions aM class of each
nominee- as well as an
order of recommendation
for possible selections.
Submissions should be
mailed to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, c/o Sarah
Hawley, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631.
Statistics may also be
emailed
to
shaw ley @ mydailytribune.com or sent via fax
to (740) 446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must be received
before 5 p.m. on
Monday, Nov. 8 for consideration.

•

Gallia Academy, Southern send
runners to state CC meet
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBJNE COM

Four local runners will
compete in Saturday's
State Cross Co,untry
Championships at Scioto
Downs in Columbus,
Ohio.
Southern's Kody Wolfe
and Gallia Academy's
Peyton Adkins, Mckenna
Warner. and Matt Watts
will be competing at the
state meet after placing in
the top 16 in their respective races at the regional
level.
Adkins lead the Blue
Angels - who nearly
qualified for the state
meet as a team - placing
third with a time of
19:04.2. Also moving on
for the Blue Angels was
Mckenna
Warner
(l9:40. 9) with an I Oth

Adkins

Warner

place finish.
Also competing fdr the
Blue
Angels
were
Madison
Holley
(20:48.5)
in
44th,
Samantha
Barnes
(21 :22.7)
in
64th,
Hannah Watts (22:0 I. 7)
in 89th, Elizabeth Holley
(22:40.9) in l06th, and
Katie Dunlap (26:33.0)
in !34th.
The Blue Angels tallied
a team score of 157 to tie
Tipp City Tippecanoe for

Watts

Wolfe

fourth place. but lost the
four spot on a tie breaker.
River Valley's Katie
Blodgett also competed
in the Region 8 meet at
Troy, placing 56th with a
time of21:ll.7.
The lone local runner
in the boys Region 8
meet
was
Gallia
Academy's Matt Watts.
Watts placed fourth to
advance to the state meet

Please see cc, 86

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Eastern's Emeri Connery, pictured here during ttie
district cross country meet at the University of Rio
Grande, placed 28th in the regional meet on Saturday
at Pickerington High School.

POINT

Porter places
27th at state
CC meet

e Rebels fall

to Symmes '
Valley in
finale, 53·12
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

WILLOW
WOOD.
Ohio - The South
Gallia football team
ended its 20 10 season
on a down note Friday
night following a 53-12
setback to host Symmes
Valley in a Week 10
non-conference gridiron
matchup in Lawrence
County.
The visiting Rebels
(4-6) had little luck with
the rival Vikings (9-l),
falling behind 40-0 by
halftime
and
4 7-0
A hrough three quarters of
~lay.

•

SGHS.
however,
closed its 20 I 0 campaign out on a solid note
in the fourth quarter,
putting together a pair of
scoring drives that
allowed the Red and
Gold to become just the
sixth team this year to
score
double digits
against Symmes Valley.
The victory, however.
allowed SVHS to clinch
a home game next week
in the Division VL
Region 23 playoffs. The
fourth-seeded Vikings
will host fifth-seeded
Malvern (7-3) on Friday
night at 7:30 p.m.
The Rebels, who finished the year on a
three-game losing skid.
did not complete a pass
for a third consecutive
w~ek and managed only
25 . yards of total
offense in the setback.
SVHS,
conversely,
racked u'p 316 rushing
yards and had another
61 through the air for a
total of 377 yards of
total offense
Both
squads
had
one
turnover. a fumble each,
in the contest.
Tl;te Vikings started
the scoring early in the

Please see Rebels, 82

•

BY BR'(AN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRJBUNE.COM

ONA. W.'Y,a. - Talk
about history that is
worth rqljating.
Point \L) Pleasant's
Andrea Porter made
school. history twice
over the span of 3.1
miles on Saturday. as the
Sarah Hawley/photos sophomore became both
Eastern senior Tyler Hendrix (20) carries the ball during the third quarter of Saturday's game a~ East Shade the first Lady Knight
River Stadium near Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Seniors Brad Stone (45) and Tim Markworth (75) provtde blocks as and the school's highestfinisher ever at state
Southern senior Jesse Cope (77) prepares for the tackle.
during the 20 I 0 Class
AA-A cross country
championships held at
Cabell Midland High
in
Cabell
School
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM
County.
Porter. making her
TUPPERS PLAINS.
state CC debut. placed
Ohio Home field
27th overall out of 88
advantage.
competitors and posted
In sports it is usually
an historic time of 21:47
seen as an advantage to
- finishing just an eyeplay on one ·s home .field,
blink ahead of Breanna
but in the recent htstory
Mazzella of Richwood
of the Eastern-Southern
(21 :47).
series that had not been
Porter, a first-year
the case. The road team
participant in the threehad one the previous f'ive
year old cross country
games in the s~ries, \~ith
Point
program
at
the last home wm commg
Pleasant. gave PPHS its
by Eastern in 2004. .
second consecutive seaOn Saturday evemng,
son with a runner at the
the Eastern (7-3, 6-2
state
level.
John
TVC Hocking) football
Kinnaird became the
team celebrated Senior
first Black Knight and
Nicrht and looked to end
first-ever Point competith; five game home
tor to qualify for state in
drought in the series.
2009.
The Eagles succeeded
Porter, however, overin doing just that. With a
took
Kinnaird as the
final drive that lasted
top-finisher in PPHS
more than 10 minutes,
history, as Kinnaird was
the Green and White held
51st
overall last year in
off the Tornadoes (2-8. 2the Class AA-A boys
6 TVC Hocking) for the
race. Kinnaird. on the
win.
other hand, still has the
Southern had first pos- Southf;!rn's Eric Buzzard, front, takes th? handoff f.rom quarterbacK Danny fastest time at state
session in the game, but Ramthun during the first quarter of Saturdays game agatnst Eastern. Buzzard ran (19:49.94) for a Point
stmggled to gain ground. 85 yards for the touchdown on the play..
Pleasant runner.
On a fourth down and 32 each carried the ball, extra pomt k1ck.
The Eagles next drive
Sarah McCauley of
Southern lined up for a with Cook also completThe
two . tean~s began at their own 14 Philip Barbour won the
punt, but the snap went ing 011 pass to Kyle exchanged punts 111 .thetr yard line - the worst individual girls race in
out the back of the end- Connery. Cook ~·an _in n~xt two poss~ss!ons. starting spot of the game Class AA-A with a time
zone for a safety. Eastern from the one yard Jme tor wt.th ~astern ~egmmng a for Eastern. Three runs of 18:33. followed by
took the 2-0 lead on the touchdown of the dnve JUSt before the end by Klint Connery gaye runner·up Sami Harris
Southern's first posses- game. Cook added the of the first quarter.
the Eaoles a tlrst down, of Charleston Catholic
sion.
two point conversion run
Eastern stmte9 the sec- but Cogk was intercepted with a time of 19:0 I. .
~ast~rn began i~s fir.st to make the score 10-0.
ond quarter of ' play at by Trenton Deem at the
Philip Barbour also
offenstve P?ssesston 111
Southern began its next Southern's 20 yard line. 40 yard line of Southern. won
AA·A team title
good positiOn at ~he offensive drive at its own The Eagles kept the run- Southern could not take ,\·ith the
62
points. almost
S?utl~e~n 39 . yan~, !me · J5 yard line. and took ning attack ~oing w~th advantage of the Eastern half the total
posted by
after a short d10p ktck by only one play to sco:e its five conse~uttve carnes turnover. punting the ball
runner-up
Shady
Spring
the Tornadoes.
The first touchdown ot the to set up a one yard back to the Eagles after
(120).
Eagles gr?und g~me to?k game. Southern senior touchdown run by Cook. just three plays.
Complete results of
c~:&gt;ntrol.of the dnve, With Eric Buzzard took the 'Iyler Hendrix added the
Eastern run the ball and
ntne of the 1~ plays on ball 85 yards down the extra point kick. The the clock down to half· the 20 I 0 WVSSAC
the .
grouryd. Eastern sideline for the Tornadoes were again time without another cross country championships are available on
Runnmgback
Klmt score.
with
Danny forced to punt on their
web
at
Connery
and Ramthun adding the next
Please see Eagles, 86 the
Quarterback Chase Cook
· possession.
wwv..baumspage.com

Eagles outlast Southern on Senior Night, 23-13

•

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

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Tuesday, Novemb er 2, 2010

The OVP Scoreboard- Week 10 Football
Symmes Valley 53, South Gallia 12
S. Gallia
Symmes V.

~edStorm

volleyball
loses a pair at tri-match
BY

MARK WILLIAMS
• SPECIAL TO THE SEN.INEL

PORTSMOUTH,
Ohio - The University
of
Rio
Grande
RedStorm
volleyball
team lost a pair of
matches at a tri-match
on Saturda,y at Shawnee
State. Rio lost to Mount
Vernon Nazarene in
four games, 25-16, 2225, 21-25 and 15-25.
Rio
then
lost to
Shawnee State in three
games, 17-25. 21-25
and 17-25.
The losses snapped a
seven-match winning
streak
for
the
RedStorm.
Rio Grande ( 19-13, 84 MSC) started well
against Mount Vernon
Nazarene, taking the
first set, 25-16. The
RedStorm played close,
but could not get over
the hump in the in
games two and three
an&lt;I lost the fourth and
final game in convincing fashion.
Sophomore middle
hitter Erin Sherman
posted big numbers in
the los~. totaling 18
kills and nine blocks.
Sophomore outside hitter Whitney Smith collected 14 kills and had

Rebels
fromPageBl
first quarter after C.J.
Blankenship hauled in a
35-yard pass from Cody
Myers at the 9:02 mark,
giving the hosts a 6-0
lead on their opening
drive of the game.
Evan Herre\! added
scoring runs ~{ 28 and
56 yards over tlie next
two SVHS offensive
drives, which resulted in
a 19-0 advantage after
12 minutes of play.
The Rebels' third
drive of the night stalled
in the opening moments
of the second period,
forcing SGHS to punt
the ball away. Jacob
Patterson took the ensuing kick and returned it
82 yards to paydirt, giving the hosts a 26-0
cushion at the t I :40
mark.
Hunter Boggs followed with a three-yard
run at 8:06 for a 33-0
lead, then Herrell added
his third - and final score of the night on a
] 9-yard scamper at 2:29
for a 40-0 cushion at the
intermission.
D.J. Miller's 20-yard
scoring run at 2:07 of
the third period extended the Vikings· lead to
47-0, their biggest of the
night.
SGHS,
however,
briefly trimmed that
deficit down at the 8:39
mark of the fourth quarter after a 15-yard run
by Dalton Matney made
it a 47-6 contest.
Symmes Valley countered with a I 0-yard
scoring run by Tyler
Rowe at the 3:45 mark,
pushing the lead back to
47 points at 53-6.
The Rebels concluded
the scoring with 2:21
left in regulation, as
Jacob White rumbled 49
yards to paydirt to wrap
up the 53-12 decision.
SVHS claimed a 19-8
advantage in first downs
and punted the ball only
once in the contest,
compared to seven by
the guests. SGHS was
tlagged eight times for
65 yards, while the hosts
were penalized seven
times for 58 yards.
White led the Rebels
with 67 rushing yards on
1 I carries, while Matney
added 47 yards on 12
IJ

two blocks.
Sophomore
libero
Lauren Raines led the
defense with 24 digs.
She also produced six
serve aces.
Senior setter Ashley
Bloom distributed 27
assists while freshman
setter Kayla Landaker
handed out 10.
Mount
Vernon
Nazarene now stands at
38-3 on the season.
Against
Shawnee
State, Rio was competitive. but it was not
enough to prevail in the
match. Smith was the
top performer in the kill
department against the
Lady Bears with 11.
Sherman added nine
kills and five blocks.
Bloom dished out 14
assists and Landaker
12. Rio loses the season
series to Shawnee State.
two matches to none.
Shawnee
State
improves to 29-8 on the
season and 12-1 in the
Mid-South Conference.
Rio Grande will close
out the
Mid-South
Conference portion of
the
schedule
on
Tuesday on the road
versus UVA-Wise. Rio
defeated the Cavaliers
at home on September
24.
totes. Cory Haner was
also 0-for-4 passing.
throwing zero interceptions.
Herrell ·led the hosts
with 105 rushing yards
on five carries, followed
by Miller with 74 yards
on six attempts. Myers
finished the night 2-of-3
passing for 61 yards and
a
touchdown.
Blankenship and Miller
each caught a pass for
35 and 26 yards. respectively.
South Gallia finished
the 2010 season with
one more win than last
year and also went .500
in its opening season in
Tri-Valley
the
Conference
Hocking
Division at 4-4.
Friday night was also
the final football game
in the Red and Gold for
seniors Jeff Combs, Jeff
Call, Justin Northup.
Jesse
Dale
Duke,
Faulkner,
Ronnie
Montgomery,
Harley
Sheets and Nick Lyons.

0 0
19 21

0 12 7 6 -

12
53

Scoring summary
First Quarter
SV -C.J. Blankenship 35 pass from Cody
Myers (kick failed) 9:02
SV-Evan Herrell28 run (pass failed} 7:02
SV-Herrell 56 run (Eli Ash kick) 3:01
Second Quarter
SV -Jacob Patterson 82 punt return (Ash
kick) 11:40
SV-Hunter Boggs 3 run (Ash kick) 2:29
SV-Herrell19 run (Ash kick) 2:07
Third Quarter
SV-D.J. Miller 20 run (Ash kick) 2:07
Fourth Quarter
SG-Dalton Matney 15 run (run failed)
8:39
•
SV-Tyler Rowe 10 run (kick failed) 3:45
SG-Jacob White 49 run (run failed) 2:21
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

SG

sv

8

19
34-316
61
377
2-3-0
, -1
7-58

34-125

0
125

0+0
1-1
8-65

Individual Statistics
Rushing: SG-Dalton Matney 12-47,
•
Jacob White 11-67.
SV-Evan Herrell 5-105, D.J. Miller 6-74.
Passing: SG-Cory Haner 0-4-0 0.
SV-Cody Myers 2-3-0 61.
Receiving: SG-None.
SV-C.J. Blankenship 1·35, D.J. Miller 1-26.

Eastern 23, S outhern 13
Southern
Eastern

7
10

0
7

6 0 6 0 -

13
23

Scoring summary
First Quarter
E-Safety 10:02
E-Chase Cook 1 run (Cook run) 5:13
S-Eric Buzzard 85 run (Danny Ramthun
kick) 5:06
Secon d Quarter
E-Cook 1 run (Tyler Hendrix kick) 9:21
Third Quarter
S-John'Gray 78 pass from Ramthun (kick
failed) 6:01
E-Hendrix 3 run (kick blocked) 1:13

s
First Downs
6
Rushes-yards
18-89
Passing yards ' 99
Total yards
188
Comp-att-int
4-9-0
Fumbles-lost
1-0
Penalties-yards
10-91

E
21
64-267
15
282
2-5-1
2-0
4-40

Individual Statistics
Rushing: s-Eric Buzzard 4-77, Da~ny
Ramthun 10-21 Tyler Barton 3-2, Trenton
Deem 1-(-11).
E-Tyler Hendrix 28-125, Klint Connery 1583, Brad Stone 6-34, Chase Cook 14-19,
Ryan Shook 1-6.
Passing: S-Danny Ramt"lun 4-9-0 99.
E-Chase Cook 2-5-1 15.
Receiving:. s-John Gray 1-78, Trenton
Deem 1-14, Jeremiah Warden 1-5, Eric
Buzzard 1-2.
E-Kyle Connery 1-17, John Tegnolia 1-(2).

2010 OHSAA

fOOTBALL
PLAYOFF PAIRINGS

COLUMBUS, Ohio -The Ohio High School
Athletic Association released the regional
quarterfinal (first-round) pa1rings Sunday for
the football state tournaments. Listed below
are the seeds, schools and won·lost records
of the tournament qualifiers
The regional semifinals, regional finals and
state semifinals will all be played at neut~al
sites. The state finals '1.111 be played at
Massillon Paul Brown Tiger Stadium and
Canton Fawcett Stadium December 3-4.
DIVISION I
tentatively sc:hedJ18:f fer 7 p.m.
Satw:t:l:ly, lbv. 6
~

Reg ion 1
8 Brecksville-Broadview Heights (7-3) at 1
Solon (10-0)
7 Warren G. Harding (8-2) at 2 Cleveland
Glenville (10-0)
6 Mentor (7 -3) at 3 Lakewood St. Edward (1 0-

0}

5 Willoughby South (9-1) at 4 AustintownFitch (9-1)
Region 2
8 Medina (8-2) at 1 Canton McKinley (8-2)
7 Twinsburg (9-1) at 2 Sylvania Southview
(10-0)
6 Massillon Washington (7-3) at 3 Toledo
Whitmer (9-1)
5 Fremont Ross (9-1) at 4 Toledo St. John's
Jesuit (9-1)
Region 3
8 Troy (8-2) at 1 Pickerington Central (9·0)
7 Columbus Northland (8·2) at 2 Hilliard
Davidson (1 0-0}
6 Hilliard Darby (8-2) at 3 Springfield (8-2)
5 Dublin Coffman (8-2) at 4 Westerville South

(8-2)

•

•
Region 4
8 Huber Heights Wayne (7-3) at 1 Mlddletcmn
(10-0)
7 Hamilton (7-3) at 2 Cincinnati Colerain (10-

g&gt; Cincinnati St. Xavier (5-4) at 3 Cincinnati
LaSalle (9-1}
.
,
5 Centerville (8-2) at 4 Cinc1nnati Archbishop
Moeller (7-3)
DIVISION II
Gm3s tert:at:.ively ~ fer 7:33 p.m.
F.z:icBy, lbv. 5

7 Garrettsville Garfield (8-~} at 2 Chagrin Falls
(9-1}
6 Cortland Lakeview (8-2) at 3 Sl Clairsville
(8-2)
5 Campbell Memorial (9-1) at 4 Martins Ferry
(7-2}
Region 14
8 Mansfield Ontario (7-3) at 1 Bellville Clear
Fork (9-1)
7 Huron (7-3) at 2 Elyria Catholic (9-1)
6 Wooster Triway (8-2) at 3 Orrville (7-3)
5 Ottawa-Glandorf (8·2) at 4 Genoa Area (100}
.
Region 15
8 Coshocton (8-2) at 1 Ironton (8-2)
7 Albany Alexander (8-2) at 2 Heath (9-1}
6 Amanda-Ciearcreek (7-3) at 3 Columbus
Bishop Hartley (8-2)
5 Portsmouth West (8-2) at 4 Sparta Highland
(8-2)
Region 16
8 Cincinnati Taft (7-3) at 1 Clarksville ClintonMassie (10-0)
7 Waynesville (8-2) at 2 Plain City Jonathan
Alder (9-1)
6 Kettering Archbishop Alter (8-2) at 3
Cincinnati North College Hill (10-0)
5 Kenton (9-1} at 4 Carlisle (10-0)
DIVISIONV
tentatively 8d:le:iJlej fer 7 p.m.
S:lturmy, lbv. 6
~

Region 5
8 Kent Roosevelt (8-2) at 1 Tallmadge (10-0)
7 Chagrin Falls Kenston (8-2) at 2 Mentor
Lake Catholic (9-1)
6 Warren Howland (10-0} at 3 Copley (9-1)
5 Aurora (8-2) at 4 Ashland (8-2)
Region 6
8 Sandusky (6-4) at 1 Avon (10..())
7 Maumee (7-3) at 2 Avon Lake (8·2)
6 Cleveland John F. Kennedy (7 -3) at 3
Olmsted Falls (7-3)
5 Maple Heights (1 0-0) at 4 Toledo Central
Catholic (8-2)
Region 7
8 Zanesville (9-1) at 1 Columbus Marion·
Franklin (1 0-0)
7 Dresden Tri-Valley (8-2) at 2 New Albany
(10-Q)
6 Columbus St. Charles (5-4) at 3 Uniontown
Lake (7-3)
5 Sunbury B1g Walnut (8-2) at 4 Canal
Winchester (9-1)
"
Region 8
8 Dayton Carroll (7-3) at 1 Cincinnati Winton
Woods (9-1)
7 New Carlisle Tecumseh (7-3) at 2 Kings
Mills Kings (9-1)
6 Cincinnati Mount Healthy (8-2) at 3
Cincinnati Turpin (9-1)
5 Harrison (5-5) at 4 Trotwood-Madison (8-2)
DIVISION Ill
tentatively 8d:le:iJlej fer 7 p.m.
Satw:t:l:ly, lbv. 6
~

Region 9
8 Hunting Valley University School (7-3) at 1
Parma Padua Franciscan (7-3)
7 Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary (6-4) at 2
Hubbard (8-2)
6 Youngstown Cardinal Mooney (5-4) at 3
Mogadore Field (7 -3)
5 Poland Seminary (7-3) at 4 Akron Buchtel
(7-3)
Region'IO
8 Columbus St. Francis DeSales (5·5) at 1
Columbus Bishop Watterson (8-1)
7 Shelby (8-2) at 2 Clyde (9-1)
6 Columbus Eastmoor Academy (6-3} at 3
Tiffin Columb1an (9-1)
5 Elida (8·2) at 4 Tipp City Tippecanoe (9-1)
Region 11
8 Minerva (8-2) at 1 Alliance Marlington (1 0·0)
7 Dover (8-2) at 2 Steubenville (8-2)
6 Salem (8-2) at 3 Thornville Sheridan (10-0)
5 Newark Lickiltg Valley (8-2) at 4 East
Liverpool (8-2)
Region 12
8 Washington Court House Washington (8·2)
at 1 Springfield Shawnee (9-1)
7 Dayton Dunbar (7 -3) at 2 Cin. Archbishop
McNicholas (8-2)
6 Cincinnati Wyoming (9-1) at 3 St. Bernard
Roger Bacon (7-3)
5 Jackson (9·1) at 4 Eaton (1 0-0)
DIVISION IV
Gm3s tentatively ~ fer 7:33p.m.
F.z:icBy, ~v.5
Region 13
.
8 Perry (6-4) at 1 Akron Manchester (10-Q)

Region 17
•
8 North Lima South Range (7-3) at 1
Youngstown Ursuline (10-0)
71ndef,lendence (8-2) at 2 KirUand (10-0)
6 Hanoverton United (7·3) at 3 Cuyahoga
Heights (9-1)
5 Creston Norwayne (8-2) at 4 Columbiana
Crestview (9-1}
Region 18
8 Northwood (7-3) at 1 Archbold (10-0)
7 Jeromesville Hillsdale (9-1) at 2 Collins
Western Reserve (10-0)
6 Columbia Station Columbia (9-1) at 3
Hamler Patrick Henry (9-1)
5 Defiance Tinora (10-0) at 4 Lima Central
Catholic (~-1)

.

•

Regio n 19
8 Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant (8-2) at 1 Oak
Hill (9-1)
7 Woodsfield Monroe Central (8-2} at 2
Fredericktown (1 0-Q)
6 West Lafayette Ridgewood (10-0) at 3
Wheelersburg (8·2)
5 Nelsonville-York (8-2) at 4 Minford (8-2)
Reglon20
8 Hamilton Badin (5-5) at 1 Richwood North
Union (10-0)
7 Cin. Summit Country Day (7-3) at 2 West
Jefferson (1 0-0)
6 Lees Creek East Clinton (8-2) at 3
Cincinnati Hills Christian Acad. (7-3)
5 Coldwater (7-3) at 4 Anna (8-2)
DIVISION VI
tert:at:.ively s::lla:Wed fer 7:33 p.m.
F.r:idiy, l'bv. 5

G:mis

Region 21
8 Dalton (7-3} at 1 Bucyrus Wynford (10-0)
7 New Washington Buckeye Central (9-1) at 2
Mogadore (10-0)
6 Monroeville (8-2} at 3 Thompson .
Ledgemont (10-0)
5 McDonald (8-2) at 4 Berlin Center Western
Reserve (9-1)
Region 22

8 Edgerton (7 -3) at 1 Delphos St. John's (1 00)
7 Fremont St. Joseph Central Catholic (9-1) at
2 McComb (10-0)
6 Toledo Christian (8-2) at 3 Sycamore
Mohawk (9-1)
5 Leipsic (9-1) at 4 Ada (9-1)
·
Region 23
8 Glouster Trimble (7-3) at 1 Shadyside (9-1)
7 Salineville Southern (8-2) at 2 Bridgeport
(10-0)
6 Lancaster Fairfield Christian Academy (90) at 3 Newark Catholic (7-3)
5 Malvern (7 -3) at 4 Willow Wood Symmes
Valley (9-1)
Reg ion 24
8 Minster (5-5) at 1 Springfield Catholic
Central (9-1)
7 Lockland (6-4) at 2 Sidney Lehman
Catholic (9-1}
6 Ansonia (9-1) at 3 Covington (1 0-0)
5 Maria Stein Marion Local (8-2) at 4 Fort
Loramie (8-2)

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

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Security
G~llipolis
Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
ADT
CaiiToday! 740-446Free Home
4367
1·800·214·
Security Syste
with $99 installation 0452
and purchase of
alarm monitoAng
services from ADT
Security Services
Call1-888-367-2171

400

Financial

Financial Services

CREDITCARO
RELIEF

in the
The Daily Sentinel

\!Cbe ~alltpolts !!la.tlp \!Crthune
\!Cbe Jlotnt Jlleasant l\egtster

Apartments/
Townhouses

2BR APT.Ciose td ~
Holzer Hospital on SA •
Absolute Top dollar- 160 C/A. (740) 441; I
silver/gold cojns any 0194
10K114KJ18K
gold
------------~' I
jewerly, dental gold, CONVENIENTLY
&amp; •
pre
1935
US LOCATED
currency. proof/mint AFFORDABLE!
sets, diamonds, MTS Townhouse
apartments.
and/or _
Coin •Shop. 151 2nd
small houses for rent
Avenue,
Gallipolis. Call 740·441·1111 for
446-2842
application
&amp;
information.
Yard Sale
Free Rent Special
Huge yard sale Nov
!!!
5 &amp; 6, 60 Gavin St. 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Village 2 Rodney. 8·2 up. Central Air, WID
Recreational hookup. tenant pays
1OOO
electric. Call between
'~ Vehicles the hours of 8A·8P. ; •
EHO
Ellm View Apts. ' •
Campers/ RVs &amp;
(304)882-3017
•I
Trailers
Twin 'RiVtrs Tower is · J
95 Chevy M.H. Road acc~ting applicationS
Trek 210 Popular, ~
iting list for HUD :
74647 miles, 350 sub ized,
1-BR •
for
the ' ·
eng. , ale, sleeps 4, apartment
call • 1
runs good. 740·446· elderly/disabled,
675·6679
I
)
4325

I

Profelsional Services

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POUCIES: Ohio '&gt;'lley PubU&amp;Illng re&amp;&lt;lrvss the t1ghl to «&lt;ll. reject. or cancel any lid at any tlmll. Errore must be ceponed on the first day of publlcrtlon and the
Tttbun.Sertlnei·Reglalef W111 be re5pons1ble lor oo more !han lhe cost of the apace o-:c:upled by the enor and only the fi1Gtlnser110n. We ahellnol be liable tor
any Iota or expon~;e that cesuHs from the publlcat~n or omission of an actvertiMmerrt. Correction w•ll be mlldeln the fliGI aw8rlable oolhOIL ·sox numb« lids
are aiVraya conlidenttal • Cl.frent rate card app!ies. • All reel etlate advet11sementt are aubject to the Fedet"al Fair Housing Act of 1968. • This MW1flll*
ao:cepts only help wartl!d eels me«lng EOE slanclards. We will not knolilngly ac:cepe any adwei1r81ng In VIOIIIion ottll&amp; law. Will no! be mpontibla for 1ny
errors In an ad taken over the phone.
•
•

Basement
Waterproofing.
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740·446·0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing. •

NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until.
you have investigating
the offering.

Do you owe over
$10000 to the IRS?
Stop wage
garnishments and
bank levies.
Settle Out Over Due
Taxes for Less
1-888-692-5739

•

Miscellaneous

financial.

FAST IRS
RELIEF

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
~~~
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
. $1 .00 for large

Home Improvements

Notices

Pictures that
have been
placefin ads at
the G~tlipolis
Daily Tribune
must be P.icked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

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

• All ads must be prepaid"

I

200 Announcements

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

DispJay Ads

Word Ads

Daily In-Column: 9:0P a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

.

. ·i

Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
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free consul~ation.
1-877·264-8031

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for

Independent Colleges and

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600

Animals

Pets

AKC Beagle Pups for
Sale
Call
Gary
Northup for more
info. 304-773-5038

'.

1-BR
Apt
$340
month, 2·BR Apt
$450 month at the
Spring Valley Area.
740)645-7661
or
07 Brecken Ridge 740)339-3046 afte(
700
Agriculture
40' camper, country 5:00pm
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide For
lease:
1BR
outs, full size bath &amp; unfurnished 2nd floor
Farm Equipment
kitchen, 2 bedrooms, apt.
near
Gallia
Zero turn mower sliding glass doors, Academy, no pets;
John Deere 740·367- exc.
condition, ref &amp; dep. required~
0577
beaiJtifull,
$20,000 maximum occupancy
740-247-2475_
2, $350 mon. 740•
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
446·3936 or 740~
Now
Available
at
2000
Automotive
446·4425
Carmichael Equipment
740·446·2412
Pretty 1 or 2 BR,
Downtown Gallipolis:
Want To Buy
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Pret. Female, Utilities
Grain
Want to buy Junk included $550 mth.
Good mixed hay, sq , Cars, call 7 40·388· $550 Deposit Must
have
excellent
$2.50 4x5, round 0884
bales $20.00. Stored Oiler's Towing. Now references Kelly 645inside 740·446·2075 buying junk cars 9096
w/motors or w/out. 2 BR apt. 6 mi from
Merchandise 740·388·0011
900
or Holzer. ~400 + dep,
740·441·7870.
No Some utilities pd.
Sunday call
7 40·645·7630
or
Flea Markets
7~0-988-6130
Real Estate
3801 addison pike. 3000
Sales Tara Townhouse Apt.
Inside
and
out.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
Friday and Saturday.
patio,
pool.'
8-?
Commercial
playground. No pets.
Hobby / Hunt &amp;
LG Office I Rental $450 rent. 740-367·
'
Property 512 2nd 0547
Sport

4
month
old
Terrier/Collie mixed 2-Cieveland Brown
puppies
Call Tickets for the Jets.
740)245·9462
Panthers,
Ravens,
Pittsburgh
Games
9wk old Kittens 2- .;.7!:!:40~}!!i!25;!6~·~12;6~7~~~
female,2-male
""
Miscellaneous
INDOOR ONLY 1st
shots,wormed, and ;;;;;;;;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:
Jet Aeration Motors
liter trained 740)441·
repaired, new &amp;
1100'
rebuilt in stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800537·9528
Toy Poodle Puppies,

CKC, vet checked.
shots, wormed, ·tails
docked &amp; dewclczyJs
removed. Colors are
black, chocholate, &amp;
buckeye, boys $300,
girls $350, 740·9927007

2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www carmichaeltraile
[S.,QQffi
7 40-446·
2412

Ave
Gallipolis.Oh
asKing $85,000 or
make offer 740)710·
0007
~~~~~~~

For Sale By Owner
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo. 740·
446.0390

~~~~~

Houses For Sale

•'
1

,

,
,
I

'
1

'

•

'
~'

•
"
·'
:
•

--------------- ·'

FIRST MONTH
FREE
'i
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
• I
UP, Sec Dep $300 •
&amp; up,
NC, WID hook-up, . • 1
ten•
ant pays electric, . •
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

LOOKING
FOR
DEAL? FIND US
- - - - - - - - NOW!!!
Small 2 br. mobile ,
Illinois
"Sangamo"
4anoakwoodhome.c home in Racine,, . ,
Special pocket watch
om/737 &amp; Facebook $225 per mo., $225
23 Jewels, Rare.
dep., years lease: '
$1295.:
also
Land (Acreage)
$60 non refundable '.
Hamilton 950-B. 23
water dep., No Pets, '
Jewel. 740-533·3870 6-Acres 2 1/2 mile 740. 992 •5097
back of Henderson
Boiler W.V
Central
with
septic
wood system, water tap Middleport Beech St!
Outdoor
Furnaces
and concrete drive· furnished apt., Senior •:
Instant rebate up to way 740-245-5087 or living, No pets. dep.
$1 ,000.00. 740)245- 740-208-0028
&amp; ref., Utilities paid~ . ,
740·992·0165
5193

=-=-=-=-===--=

..
I

..

�· Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Let us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU mto Valley View
Apartments BOO St.
At #325 Thurman,Oh
45685.
740)2459170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments
with
Appliances
Furnished &amp; Onsite
Laundry
Facility.
Water/Sewer &amp; Trash
Included
Rental
Assistance may be
available.
Metro
Accepted TDD,419526-0466
This
Institution is an equal
opportunity provider
and employer

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395t2 BR at $470
Month. 446·1599.

www.mydailysentinel.com

-------

Houses For Rent

House for sale or
rent. Pretty, clean,
3BR.
Dcwntown
Gallipolis, close to
Washington
Elem
Rent $750, no utlillte.
Sale $99,000. KellyHouses For Rent
Jo 645-9096 or 446N1ce 1BR house in 4639
Gallipolis. Walk to
everything you need. 2 BR Near Clay
Very clean umt, with School $400 mon +
new paint. $275 per dep. no pe:s 740mo/$100 sec. dep. 256-1664
Sorry no pets. Call
Wayne
for 4
br.,
bath,
information 404-456- detached
garage.
3802
acre &amp; 1/2 land,
' •-B-R-.--B-A-S-To_v_e_&amp; newly
remodeled,
3
1
Refng Furn . Gas located 1 mile out
heat,
Cantrall CR 10, La1gsville,
AJC,W/0 hook up. $650 per mo., $650
No Utilities
carport, No Smoking dep.
Lease &amp;
No pets. $600 per Paid.
mo. $600 Dep. 105 references required.
Bastiani, Gallipolis. No Pets Allowed.
446-3667, 740-416-2960.
Call
Taking applications.
1&amp;2br.apt&amp; Nice, clean 3 BR @ Very nice home for
rent in Middleport,
houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Kerr OH $400 mon +
gOOd neighborhood.
Middleport, NO Pets,
dep 446-7309
Newly
remodeled.
740-992-2218
2BR Corner of 554 &amp; New appliances, 2
Middleport. 2 br. Bulavllle Pike $375 Bedrooms, 1 bath.
furnished apartment., mon References &amp; Large Kitchen, Sun
No pets, dep. &amp; ref , Depos1t 740) 388- Room. Central aAr &amp;
1100
Heat. Nice outdoor
740-0165
Trailer
for
rent spaces, No pets. non
FIND A JOB $400.00 mo $400 oo smiking. Call 740deposit
Gallipolis 992-5094 lor more
IN THE
Ferry, WV 304-962- details.
CLASSIFIEDS 0167 •
A nice home for rent
3
bdrm,
lull
basement, lg tot, in
town,
no
pets.
$500.00 mo. plus
deposit
available
Nov. 1st Call: 304675-3431

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel
BULLETIN BOARD

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

1-3 bed room house

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
: for rent in Syracuse
9 00 AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! : NO pet's HUD
approved call 304675-5332 Weekends
740-591-0265

FLU
SHOTS

Want to Rent
Relocating
looking
for a Nice Home
,Condo or Large Apt.
Prefer
Downtown
Gallipolis
or
Pt.
Pleasant Area.1-716913-2415
Have
References

NOW AVAILABLE!
Office of
Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Family Medicine
2416 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-4500 .
Walk-Ins Welcome

4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg

Rentals
2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer trash
pd.
No pets,
Johnson's
Mobile
Home Park
740446-3160

Rentala
3 BR mobil S500mon
&amp; dep. 4BR home
$725 mon &amp; dep. on
Bulavllle P1ke 7 40367-7272

Help Wanted·
General

Accepting
applications lor part
t1me cashiers. Apply
In person at ParMar
#42 15054 St At 160
2
BR,
2
Bath
V1nton Oh or on
Cheshire Area, NO
online
at
References
PETS,
parmarstores.com
Required Ph 740·
367-7025
$400 Accepting
month $400 Dep.
applications for part
cashiers,
trailer for rent double time
Subway
artist
&amp; exp.
wide. 3br 2baths 575
month 575 deposit full time ass. store
1722-b chatham 740- manager. Apply in
person at ParMar
645-1646
#38
15289
'
Huntington
Ad
6 000
Employment Gallipolis Ferry or on
online
at
parmarstores.com
Drivers &amp; Delivery
R &amp; J Trucking in
Marietta, Oh is hinng
COL A Dnvers for
local
&amp; Regional
Routes. Applicants
must be at least 23
yrs have min of 1 yr
of commercial driving
exp. Clean MVR,
Haz-mat Cart. We
feature
weekend
home time, Excellent
health
&amp;
dental
insurance,
401 (K),
Vacation,
Bonus
pays
and
safety
awards.
Contact
Kenton at 1-800-4629365 FO.F.

Medical

Gallipolis
Developmental
Center fs currently
seeking a part-time
Permanent Licensed
Practical
Nurse.
LPN must have an
Ohio LPN License
and a valid drivers
Interested
license.
persons
should
submit an Ohio civil
service application.
You can go on-line at
carrers.ohio.gov,
mail, fax or you can
pick one up in the
Administration Office
•
at GDC. Gallipolis
Developmental
Education
Center
Attention.
Human
Resource
Department
2500
Keyboarding,
Ohio
Avenue
Computer instructors
Gallipolis OH 45631
needed.
Math,
Phone·
740-446Economics
1642 HR Fax 740Instructors
446-2625
The
w!Master's Degree. Galli lis
Send
_resume: . Dev:pmental
bsh~rey@galhpoliscar Center is an Equal
eercollege.edu
Opportunity

Help WantedGeneral
Case Manager to
provide '
direct
services
to
clients,develop
a
standard plan and
coordinate provision
of services to meet
the primary, Urgent
need
of
clients.
Degree
and
experience
preferred.but
not
required.
Send
resumes
to:
Spectrum Outreach
Service,Ltd.,456
Second
Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

Employer
Provider of
Services.

and
ADA

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

100

Legals

In The Court Of
Common
Please,
Meigs County Ohio.
Yost v. Ewing, et. at.
Case No 10DLT004
J. Doe unknown
spouse Jl any of U.A.
Cornett and J. Doe
unknown spouse if
any of C.M. Cornett
will take notice that
on September 14.
2010 plaintiff Peggy
Yost, Meigs County
Treasurer filed a
petition.
for
tax
foreclosure against
them and Ben H
Ewing,
Doris
J.
Ewing, The United
States of America
Ohio
The
Department
of
Taxation and Vinton
County
National
Bank in the Court of
Common
Pleas,
Meigs County Ohio
th~rd floor of. the
County Courthouse
the same being Case
No. 10DLT004 in
said Court, praying
that plaintiff be found
to have a good and
valid first lien on
certain
premises
taxes, assessments
and penalties, that all
defendants,
be
required to set forth
their claims or be
forever barred from
asserting them, that
plaintiff
be
paid
within a reasonable
time, to be named by
the Court. the equity
or redemption of
defendants,
be
foreclosed and Orde~
of Sale issued to the
Sheriff directing h1m
to sell said premises
in
the
manner
provided
by
R.C.5721.19. Parcel
10 # 16-00842.000. A
complete
legal
description can be
found at the Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office at Volume
223, Page 457 of the
Meigs County Deed
Records.This cause
will be heard on
December 20, 2010
at 11:45 am or as
soon thereafter as
meets
the
convenience of the
Court
Interested
parties have 28 days
to respond to the
Complaint for Tax
Foreclosure.
Answers are to be
filed with tthe Meigs
County
Clerk
of

Tuesday, November 2, 2010
100

Legals

Courts, Th1rd Floor of
the
County
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
and are to be sent to
Colleen
S
WilliamsMe1gs
County Prosecuting
Attorney, 117 West
Second St. Pomeroy,
Oh 45769 (11) 2, 9,
16, 2010
Gatling Ohio. LLC.,
430. Harper Park
Drive, Beckley, WV
25801 has submitted
an
Underground
Coal M1n1ng and
Reclamation
(Including
Surface
Operations) Permit
Application
numbered D-2317-5
to
the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural Resources,
Division of M1neral
Resources
Management
The
proposed coal mmtng
and
reclamation
operations will be 1n
Sections:
7,13,19,25.26 &amp; 32
Fractions: 1,7,13.19
&amp;
2S
Sutton
Township, Township
3, Range 12, Lots:
1217,1218 &amp; 1220
Township,
Sutton
Township 2, Range
12, and in Fractions:
1,31 &amp; 33 Chester
Township, Township
3. Range 12 Meigs
County, Ohio. The
area is located on
the
Chester 7
&amp;frac12;
minute
U.S.G.S. Quadrangle
map. The perm1t
be1ng
located
approXImately
2
miles North of the
corporation hmits of
Racine, Ohio The
proposed permit w1JI
encompass
19 9
acres
and
the
proposed area to be
underm1ned
encompasses
4026.9 acres. This
coal
mining
will
application
remove coal us1ng
the
underground
min1ng
methods,
specifically the room
and pillar method. A
Road Permit has
been obtained to
conduct
surface
rmning

operations

within 100 feet of the
outside nght-of-way
line but no closer
than 0 feet of the
traveled portion of

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Commercial &amp; ftesidential
• Room addition~ • Roofing •
• GcneraiRcmodrling • l'nle &amp; Horse
llarn • Vln.' I &amp;: \\ ood fencing
Founclutinns
\liKE W. MAl(( liM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd .. Long Hotlom, 011
740-91!5-4141

74fi ..U6-18J4

Full~·

insured
1-'ITc l ~timates- .m years expnience
\ut .lllih,rt&lt;tl "ilh \llkr \l•rrum l!no~n~ ,, ~!J"~~Iin~l

"JNI'ERSI'ORAGE

!\Irigs Count~ f ;tlrgrounds
Arrl\nl: Ort. 30, 201!1
9:00 om- 11:00 a.m.
Relrasr: l.a~l Sat urdu' in April, 201 I
A fee of $20 00 wr I b:: c'.targ,'tl r r rarlv
arm'lll, lale ol•nval, t&gt;:trl) •emovo!!, late
removal. or an)llmc a&lt;'&lt;= ~ IS w_ntcd to
fmrgrounds &lt;&gt;thcr tt..Jil l~ted dates.
Bmldmg spa~,;c ts fir~t wme hr\1 sene
lnsid~ &lt;iturngt" \100
Open Sp.1n $2 Oil lf
, Inside I encc $1 Otl,(

Call 9145-4372 li1r more information

remodeling • New

(.Jaragc~

• P;ttio &amp;

Pon.:h Decks • Vinyl Sidmg &amp; Soflitt
• Roofi1~ &amp; Gutters

•~21q,IJIUWfldlkMJIJ)
Intcnor &amp; e"tcn&lt;rr. Hou"c Painting.
t:.lcctncal &amp; ALL Plumping work
Concrete walks &amp; dmcway~
\'IC YOll='IG Ill- 0\\ NER
740-992-6215.740-591-0195
]n businc\S h&gt;eDII} for 30 )'t~rs
Keduced ''inter Rates
l'omerO). 011
\\'J 036725

all
discounted rates.
Spcciali1ine in lnsuram-e Job including,
storm, \lind &amp; natcr da~ge. '
R011m Additions, Remodeling; rtltotal &amp;
Shin~le Ruofs. Ncn Homes, Siclug. Decks.
Bathroom
Lirrnsrd &amp; I

100

Legals

County Road #29
(Bowman's
Run
Foad) as described
below· L~ted if Lot
1218, TcJJinsh1p 2
Fange 12, St.Jtton
Townsh1p,
Me1gs
County,
Oh10
8eg1nmng at the
intersection
of
County Road #29
Run
(Bowman's
Foad) &amp; Townsh1p
Foad #19 (Salser
Foad), thence from
said
place
of
beg1nning
and
followmg
County
Road
#29
(Bowman's
Run
Poad) in an ca .terly
direction
for
a
distance
of
approximately 1250
feet to the point of
terminus. The Road
Ferm1t is valid from
7/23/09 nnd c;hall
remain In effect unt1i
coal
mmmg
operat1ons
arE:J
completed under the
coal mining perm '
tssued pursuaro1 to
thiS
permit
Ttus

100

Legals:
is

s
Off1ce,
2nd Street,
OhiO
fnr
public
1.
Wnttm
s.
or
s
for
an
conference
sent to the·
partment of
Resources.
of Mineral

Pomer
45169
mspecti
comme
ob1ectio
request
mforma
may b
Ohio
Natural
Divisio
Resour
Manag
2045
Morse
Road,
Buildin
H-3,
Columt&gt; s.
Ohio
43229· 93, Within
(30) thii1Y days of the
1ast da~ (November
2010)
of
9
publi~ n
of th1s
not1ce (10) 19 28,
(11)2,9 2010

.___....;__ _ _.,.::r

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igs Cou

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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

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f
t

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Tuesday, November 2, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDlE

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Dean Young/Denis Le.brun
~~~~~~~~==-,

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker
TI-l ERE ARe SOME

ANTS UP HERE
SUILDINGA LITTLE
MOUND AND ...

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HI &amp; LOIS

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Romp
7 Legal
paper
11 Texas
town
12 Donut
feature
13 2000
Bruce
yYillis film
15 Birthrelated
· 16 Disrobe
18 Game
callers
21 Get news
of
22 Rudiments
24 Bran bit
25.Young
one
26 Overly
27 Gross, as
income
29 Urban
area
30Snooty
fellow
31 Mailed
32Did some
modeling
34Upcoming
Denzel
Washington film
40 Golf cry
· 41 Better
ventilated
42 Norse
god
43Wine
expert

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Winter
bug
2 Galloped
3 Sphere
4 "Camelot"
lyricist
5 Perfect
6 Varnish
layer
7 Marine
mammals
8 Hold up
9 Under the
weather
10 Ball
holder
14 Gold
purity unit
16 Fruit-basket items
17Consumed
19 Belong

20 "Ivanhoe"
author
21 Bunny
move
22 Carton
23 Kind of
milk
25 Forbidden
28 Critic's
annual list
29 Lebanon
trees

31 Brown tint
33 Petty
argument
34 Alien
craft
35 Silent
OK
36- Lanka
37 Particle
38 Rebel
general
39 Goof

NEW CROSSWORD BOOKl·Send $4-75 (checklm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2. PO. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853 6475

Brian .and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
\..IFE AT M':J

ILL
SToRIES

~
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PUPPY M\LL.-

NO CLEAN
WAI~B. ...

No

No EXERCiSE ...
NO PROTECTION

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FROM THE

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ELEMENTS ... No

veT cARE ...

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COMPASSION...

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Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

r M£mr '!HAT rr~
Ta:?MUCH PJ&lt;E:"%UI&lt;E
CJNME!

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

6
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O..IIWIVIO"- .......
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"Uncle Sam's mommy should've told
him It's not polite to point."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

5

8 4
6
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7
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8

3

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2

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7

5

**

11/02

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Jiv?'/~~e "~~ j HOROSCQ E
HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Nov. 2. 2010:
This year, you renew a key area of
your life. Often you take on too much
responsibility, then you feel as if you
must push others. Ask yourself why
you behave in this manner. What
would happen if you didn't feel the
need to compensate for others? Decide
what works best for you, and honor
that decision. Your first responsibility is
fu.you and your life. J1 you are single,
you meet people with ease. You could
find that you enjoy being in a new
crowd. If you are attached, the two of
you gain through expanding your
social network You also will enjoy
your time together more. VIRGO
comes through for you.

Tire Stars Show tire Kind of Day ,You?/•
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average;
2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****Opt for a one-on-one conversation with a partner or associate.
You suddenly see many more ic;sues
and ~ibilities because of this talk
Don t lull yourself into assuming
everything is fine, or else you could
have a surprising jolt Tonight Put
yourfeet up.
TAURUS (April20-May 20) .
Your ability to draw in
many different perspectives emerges. A
partner or associate could be testing
your abilities without even knowing it.
You have what it takes, though you
might feel like you need to take a class
in juggling! Tonight Do only what you
love.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
****Stay close to home.
Everyone needs a timeoul once in a
while. Why would you be any different? A boss or someone you look up to
blows into your day as if he or she
were the only person in your life.
Md.intain a seru;e of humor. Tonight
Nap, then opt for some fun
CANCER (fune 21-July 22)
Keep your imagination on
the front burner, and share your
thoughts. This openness will have a
very positive impact on your communication if you also demonstrate listening skills. Tonight Surprising news
comes forward!
LEO Q'uly 23-Aug. 22)
Financial extremes punctuate your dealings. Whatever is going
on_ people don't feel like reining in
their impulsiveness. Know your limits
while still enjoying the frivolous tone
of the moment Tonight A late-evening

*****

9
4

"YOU WORRY TOO MUCH ABOUT

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discussion could b6 significant
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
***** Communication flouric;hes, and you might feel very good about •
a key individual in your life. Your ability to greet upset might be tested. Of
course, everyone prefers the good
times. Extremes and strong feelings
punctuate your interactions. Tonight
Pay bills first
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
At present, you might nol be
able to convince others of the rightness
of your ways. Perhaps you might want
to look within and see how very judgmental you are. Learning to respect
and honor others' ideas could be
instrumental. Tonight Nap, then
decide.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-l"ov. 21)
***** Your interests generally
don't coincide with those of others, yet
you find that your friends and/ or associates are all on the same page. Your
creativity surges in this carefree environment Tonight: Let it all hang out.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Honor your commitment&lt;;
and responsibilities. On some level,
you feel as if you don't have enough
time to cover all the bases. Prioritize,
and you will accomplish what is
important. Tonight: The later it gets, the
more fun you have.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Underslanding will evoh·e
if you relax and don't become defensive. On some level, you feel as if you
always need to be in charge. Let go of
self-imposed demands, and relax.
Someone who is a bit offbeat helps you
identify with different ideas. Tonight:
Where your mind can roam.
AQUARIUS Q'an. 20-Feb. 18)
**** A pariner might be a little
too demanding, but you also might
decide to accept his or her terms.
Understanding about this specific bond
becomes mucli clearer as a result of the
present give-and-take. Tonight Dinner
and ad1at.
PISCFS (Feb. 19-l\Jarch 20)
**** Realize lhat olhers might De
more vested in a project than you are.
As a result, you could find yourself in a
power struggle. Ask yourself if it is
really worth it. Let the key people in
your life have it their way. They nee..i
to understand the ramifications of their
decisions. Tonight: A force to be dealt
with.
.

***

****

****

facqueliuc Big11r is 011 tire llllemet.

at http://ururw.jncquelinclrigar.com

.mvdailvsentinel.com
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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

4

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

Tuesday, November 2,

2010

Jackson leads Obio past
Louisiana-Lafayette 38-31
ATHENS. Ohio (AP)
- Boo Jackson threw
for three touchdowns
and had a rushing score
as Ohio's defense put
constant pressure on the
quarterback in a 38-31
win over LouisianaLafayette on Saturday.
Jackson completed 16
of 22 passes for 240
yards but had four interceptions for the Bobcats
(6-3). He also rushed
for 74 yards on 11 carries. scoring on a 7-yard
run in the first quarter.

The Ragin' Cajuns (26) pulled ahead 14-7
after Aaron Spi kcs
caugflt a 20-yard touchdown
from
Brad
McGuire and Spikes' 7yard touchdown run in

the o,;econd quarter.
But Ohio regained the
lead for good in the
fourth quarter wh.
Jackson. connected Wh.
Terrence McCrae on a
13-yard touchdown to
give the Bobcats a 2417 advantage. Jackson
also had pas&lt;;ing scores
of 3 and 24 yards.
McGuire
finished
with 384 yard&lt;: on 25 of
39 passing and one
interception
for t
Louisiana-Lafayette.

Sarah Hawley/photo

players ring the victory bell at East Shade River Stadiu
Saturday's 23-13 victory over Southern.

Eagles
from Page Bl

Gallia Academy's Madison Holley, left, and Samantha Barnes, right, run during the
district meet at the University of Rio Grande. Both participated in the regional
meet on Saturday at Troy High Scool.·
Southern's
Jennifer
McCoy •
runs
during the
distric:
cross
country
meet on
Saturday,
Oct. 23, at
the
University
of Rio
Grande in
Rio
Grande,
Ohio.
McCoy
was the
first female
Southern
cross
country
runner to
advance toregionals.

cc
from PageBl
with a time of 16:27.3.
In · the Division III
Region 11 meet at
Pickerington
High
School. Southern 's Kody
Wolfe advanced to the
state meet with a fifth
place finish. Wolfe ran a
time of 16:40.2. Also
running
for
' the
Tornadoes were Jus tin
Hettinger (20:04.8) in
104th, Tommy Werry

(20:26.2) tn !15th. Zach
Manuel (20:45 9) in
118th. Chris Yeater
(2 J :52.3)
in
!28th.
Andrew
Ginther
(22:46.6) in !30th. and
Trenton Cook (23:31.7)
in 131 st.
The Southern boys
team placed 16th •vith a
score of 38 J•
In the Division TIJ
Region 11 girls race,
Eastern's Emeri Connerv
placed 28th with a time
of
21;13.5
and
Southern's
Jennifer
McCoy was 69th with a
time of 22:33.6.

Returnees to the state
meet
are
Gallia
Academy's Adkins and
Warner. Adkins placed
19th in 2009 with a time
of
19:42.78. ' while
Warner was 75th with a
time of 20:49.88.
Wolfe, a sophomore,
will be the first cross
country runner from
Southern to advance to
the stale meet.
Complete results of the
regional meets from Troy
and Pickerington are
available
at
www. baums page .com

score. Eastern led 17-7
at the half.
The Eagles began the
::.econd half of play with
the ball. but without
~tarting
runningback
Klint Connery who was
injured late in the first
half.
Eastern was
forced to punt the ball on
the opening drive, but
pinned Southern at its
own I 0 yard line.
. The Tornadoes moved
the ball with three
straight runs by Ramthun
to setup a 78 yard touchdown
pass
from
Ramthun to John Gray.
The extra point kick was
no good, but Southern
had cut the Eastern lead
to four.
Eastern
seniors
Hendrix and Brad Stone
took over the running
game for the Eagles in
the second possession of
the half. Hendrix ran the
ball in from the three

following

yard line to extenl.i the John Tegno!i, .
Eastern lead. The i!a!!lcs
Hendrix Je the Eagles
held a 2~ J lead ,~- er in tht: vi&lt;..:lor · with J25
the blocked extra point yards on
8 carries.
attempt.
Klint Conn y had
Southern punted the carries for 83
ball to the Eagles ou tlw ~tone cmTie six times
first play of the fobipl tor 34 yards Cook had
quarter. Eastern took 14 cames for 19 yards.
possession at its own 34 and Shook had one carry
yard line with II :52 for six yards.
remaining in the eame.
Cook cofllpleted two
The 18 Play drive Tasted passes for 15 yards. one
I 0 minufes and 39 sec- to Kyle Com ery and one
onds. and ended ·with the to Tegnolia.
Eagles coming up short
For the Tornadoes,
on a fourth and goal play. Buaard had four carries
Southern got the ball for 77 yards. Ramthun
back with 1:13 remaining
carried I 0 tirlles for 21
in the game. trailing bv
two
scores.
~The yards. Tyler Barton- had
three for two ~·ards. and
Tornadoes could not
score. giving Eastern the Deem had on for nega'tive yardage.
~
23-13 victory.
Ramthun
was
4-9
passFor the tirst time since
yards.
2004. the Eastern senior!&gt; ing for 99
Ramthun
completed
were able to ring the victory bell on senior night. passes to Gray, Deem.
Senior team members are Jeremiah Warden. and
Brayden Pratt. Tyler Buzzard.
This was also the final
Hendrix. Ryan Shook.
for
Sou~hern
Klint Connery. Ryan game
Amos, Kyle Connery. seniors Buzzard. Daniel
Brad Stone. tvlichacl Jenkins. Joey Forest.
Scyoc, Tim 1\farkwotth. Adam Warden. and Je
Lonnie Westfall, and Cope.

Time left to Buy!
Thb deal •• 1101 - -

Be the first to buy I

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