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                  <text>Meigs Co. Council
on Aging ntake a
difference, A6

Feeney-Bennett
Unit 128 reaches
out to troops, A6

•
Middl~port

Exit poll:
Economy dominates
voters' worries
WASHINGTON (AP)
-Voters across the nation
Tuesday said they were
intensely worried about
the future of the economy
and unhappy with the way
President Barack Obama
and Congress are running
things.
Voters in overwhelming
numbers were dissatisfied
with the way the federal
ovemment is working
nd majorities disap•
proved of both the
Republican
and
Democratic
parties,
according to an Associated
Press analysis of preliminary exit poll result&lt;; and
pre-election polls.
Voters say the economy
eclipses any other issue.
About a third say their
household suffered a tob
loss in the past two years,
but that didn't give a clear
direction to their voting.
They divided over which
party to support in
Tuesday's House races.
About four in 10. say
they are worse off financially than they were two
years ago. More than 80
percent said they were
worried about the direction of the economy over
the next year.
Only about a quarter of
ters in Tuesday's Hous. e
ces blamed Obama for
e nation's economic
•
troubles. But about half
think Obama's policies
will hurt the country.
About four out of 10
voters said they support
the tea party movement,
and they overwhelmingly
voted Republican.
The results are from
interviews that Edison
Research conducted for
The Associated Press and
television networks with
more than 11 ,000 voters
nationwide. This included
9,525 interviews Tuesday
in a random sample of 268
precincts l)ationally. In
addition, landline and cellular telephone interviews
were conducted Oct. 2231 with 1,600 people who
voted early or absentee.
There is a margin of
sampling error of plus or
minus 1 percentage point
. J .or the entire sample, highW r for subgroups.

Bv

JULIE CARR
SMYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS - On an
evening dominated by
GOP
victories.
Republican John Kasich
was leading an Ohio govemor's race that will determine control of a critical
swing state in 2012's presidential race.
The 58-year-old former
congressman's edge over

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

Calendars
.

lassifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports
©

B Section

2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

l JIJ ,I !!I.!I! I
,,

Democratic Gov. Ted
Strickland was being
fueled by support among
voters in dozens of rural
and suburban counties
where the two men campaigned hard in the final
weeks of the closely
watched race.
Strickland, 69, a former
congressman
from
Appalachia, had clinched
victories in a swath of
counties in the southeastem Ohio foothills, including his home county of

Scioto.
A host of Strickland's
fellow Democrats fell to
defeat, including U.S.
Reps. Zack Space and
John Boccieri, flnd Lt.
Gov. Lee Fisher, who lost
a race for U.S. Senate.
Democrats also lost control of the Ohio House that
they'd held for two years.
The winner will also sit
on the powerful apportionment board, which draws
state legislative districts
that will hold for the next

10 years. The governor
also gets a sign-off on congressional districts that
will be drawn by the state
Legislature that Tuesday's
elections
handed
to
Republicans.
Ohio is viewed as a state
the GOP must-win if they
have a shot at ousting
President Barack Obama
from the White House in
two years, and a state
Obama needs to clinch as ·
his support erodes more
deeply in other parts of the

country.
But it remained .undetermined late into the evening
whether the once-popular
governor could pull out a
win. Neither he nor Kasich
had secured more than 50
percent of the vote
throughout most of the
evening, raising the possibility that the contest could
end within a margin worthy of a legal challenge.
The pair broke a

See Governor, A5

Commission race in air until official count
/hie ahead by 38 with 118 uncounted provisionals ·
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A Nov. 15 official count of
ballots will determine the outcome of Meigs
County's only contested election.
Unofficial results of the race for Meigs
County Commissioner show Republican Tim
Ihle the winner over Democratic incumbent
Mick Davenport, 3,492 to 3,454 votes, after ballots cast Tuesday and early ballots cast 60 days
before the election were counted.
The race for county commissioner was the
only contested one in the Meigs County general election. Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County Board of Elections, said 118 provisional ballots have not been counted and will not be
counted until the official count later this month .
County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill was unopposed, and received 5,257 votes.
Unofficial results of statewide races in Meigs
County were:
Governor
Strickland/Brown (D): 3,385, Kasich!faylor
(R): 3,258. Matesz/Leech (L): 117. Spisak/Rics
(G): 74.
·
Attorney General
Cordray (D): 2,624. DeWine (R): 3.844,
Feldman (L): 149, Owens (C): 254.
Auditor of State
Pepper (D): 2.'381, Yost (R): 4,067, Howard
(L): 278.
•
Secretary of State
O'Shaughnessy (D): 2,557, Husted (R):
3,831, Earl (L): 261.
Treasurer of State
Boyce (D): 2,520, Mandel (R): 3,834.
Cantrell (L): 285.
U.S. Senate
Fisher (D): 2.504, Portman (R): 4,043,

See Candidates, A5

- Brian J. Reed/photo
Board of Elections staff, including Director Rita Smith, right, carry elections material
back into storage after its return from local polling places Tuesday.

Voters defeat two of three Pomeroy tax issues
"'!Jiddleport levy fails, TB levy approved
J. REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTI~EL.COM

POMEROY - Voters
in the Village of Pomeroy
soundly defeated two of
three tax issues on
Tuesday's general election ballot, including a
proposed quarter-percent
income tax hike.
Only a cemetery levy
renewal was approved,
234 to I 52 votes. A proposed
quarter-percent
High: 62
Low: 38

w\vw, mydailysentinel.com

Republican holds edge in Ohio governOr race

Bv BRIAN

WEATHER

Printed on 100'1
Rt.'C)clcd Newsprint D~

• Pomeroy, Ohio

.
'
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2010

50 CENTS • Vol. 6o, No. 18

ea

income tax increase went
down by nearly 70 percent, and a current
expenses replacement of
one mill was also rejected.
A current expenses
renewal of one mill was
also voted down m
Middlepo1t.
The Meigs County
Tuberculosis levy, of a
half-mill, was approved
4,242 to 2,447.
Unofficial results on tax

issues·
• Syracuse
Village:
Renewal of 1.5 mills, five
years, fire protection: 205
for, 63 against.
• Columbia Township:
Renewal of 0.5 mill, five
years, maintaining and
operating cemeteries: 271
for, 127 against.
• Middleport Village:
Renewal of one mill, five
years. current expenses:
247 for, 341 against.
• Rutland Township:

Renewal of one mill, five
years, fire protection: 483
for, 155 against.
• Salem
Township:
Renewal of one mill, five
years, fire protection: 207
for, 73 against.
• Lebanon Township:
Renewal of one mill, five
years, maintaining and
operating cemeteries: 185
for, 79 against.
• Pomeroy
Village:
Proposed
municipal
income tax increase. 1/4

percent for police and
street departments. effective Jan. L 2011:121 for,
270 against.
• Pomeroy
Villagt;:.
Replacement of one mill.
five years. current expeO:Y.
es: 247 for, 341 against.::
• Pomeroy Village:
Renewal of one mill, five
years. maintaining and
operating cemeteries: 234
for. 152 against.

Middleport school project could begin this winter
Elementary building to become $BOOK village hall
BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTit-.ELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Village officials have
toured the Middleport
Elementary building on
Pearl Street with the village's architect to make
final design plans for the
town's new village hall.
Interior
demolition
work required to convert
the 50 year-old school
building into a new seat of
village government could
begin this winter, Fiscal
Officer Susan Baker said
Tuesday. Since plans for
financing the project were
completed, the village h~s

set a goal of one year or
less to occupy its new
offices.
Financing
for
the
$800,000 project has been
finalized. An appraisal of
the property required for
that financing arrangement through Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. has
been completed, according to Baker, and final
steps in completing the
financing package are
now being taken.
Baker said the Pearl
Street building is now
vacant, since an auction
company renting a portion of the building has

left at the end of the lease
period. Baker said she and
Mayor Michael Gerlach
recently toured the building with Architect Randy
Breech to consider final
design plans.
In addition to housing
the private auction house,
the building has also been
used by the village for
storage for the street and
public works departments.
The building has not
been used as a school for
nearly a decade. since the
Meigs Local Elementary
School was built at
Rutland. Shortly after the
village took possession of

the building, plans were
developed for a new jail
and village hall, but those
plans never really got off
the ground.
Jail space has been. a
priority in preliminary
plans for the new village
hall.
As
much
as
$300.000 in outside revenue might be expected
from housing men and
women from other jurisdictions. and Gerlach has
said revenue from that jail
will likely offset the cost
of renovating the building
- allowing a new village headquarters at no
direct cost to the village

resident.
Preliminary plans for
the new village hall are
contained to the existing
building, and involve only
minor demolition. Baker
said since financing is in
place, some inside work
could be completed during the cold winter
months. but no date to
award a construction bid
has been set.
The current \'illage hall
on North Third Avenue
and Race Street dates
back to the 19th century
and is considered inadequate for the village's current space needs.

�Wednesday, November 3,

2010

www.. mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Officials suspect September dry run for bomb plot
BY ADAM GOLDMAN AND
KIMBERLY OOZIER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
The three packages contained papers, books and
other materials headed for
Chicago. But officials
now
believe
the
September
shipments
were a dry run for the
Yemen-to-Chicago mail
bomb plot uncovered last
week.
Before the packages
reached their destinations,
U.S. authorities seized
and searched the boxes.
They now appear to have
been sent by the Yemeni
militant group al-Qaida in
the Arabian Peninsula to
test the logistics of the air
cargo system, a U.S. official said.
"We received information several weeks ago
that potentially connected
these packages to AQAP.
The boxes were stopped
in transit and searched.
They contained papers,
books and other materials, but no explosives,"
said the official, who was
familiar with details of the
shipments and spoke on
condition of anonymity to
discuss classified intelligence.
The official also disclosed that both mail
bombs, one recovered in

Dubai and the other in
Britain on Friday. were
wired to detonators that
used cell phone technology. It still was not ciear
whether those detonators
would have been set off
by telephone calls or by
an internal alarm.
The apparent dry run
was
first
disclosed
Monday night by ABC
News.
.The official said authorities, already aware of the
militants' interest in striking at aviation, "obviously took notice" this past
weekend and considered
the likelihood that the
militants might have
extended their threat to
the cargo system.
"When we learned of
last week's serious threat,
we
recalled
the
(September) incident and
factored it in to our government's very prompt
response," the official
said.
The threat last week
came in the form of
explosive devices hidden
in the toner cartridges of
computer
printers.
Investigators have centered on the Yemeni alQaida faction's top bomb
maker, who had previously designed a bomb that
failed to go off on a
crowded U.S.-bound passenger
jetliner
last

gency personnel to be .on
Christmas.
This time, authorities the watch for mail with
believe that master bomb characteristics that could
maker Ibrahim al-Asiri mean dangerous subpacked four times as stances are hidden inside.
much explosives into the
Germany's
aviation
bombs hidden last week authority extended its ban
on flights from Yemen. on air cargo from Yemen
The two bombs contained to include passenger
300 and 400 grams of the flights. Britain banned the
industrial
explosive import of larger printer
PETN, according to a cartridges by air on
German security official, Monday as it also
who briefed reporters announced broader meaMonday in Berlin on con- sures to halt air cargo
dition of anonymity in from Yemen and Somalia.
A Yemeni government
line with department
guidelines.
statement
Tuesday
By comparison, the expressed "sorrow and
bomb stuffed into a terror- astonishment"
at
ist suspect's underwear on Germany's decision and
the Detroit-boup.d plane said such a "rushed and
last Christmas contained exaggerated reaction to
about 80 grams.
suspicious packages will
"It shows that they are harm Yemen's efforts in
trying to again make dif- combating terrorism and
ferent types of adapta- serves no one but altions based on what we Qaida terrorists who
have put in place," said · always sought to ... hwt
John Brennan, President Yemen's interests, reputaBarack Obama's coun- tion and relations with
terterrorism adviser. "So regional and international
the underwear bomber, as friends and partners."
well as these packages,
U.S. and British offiare showing sort of new cials said they believed
techniques on their part. the targets were planes,
They ate very innovative not the two Chicago-area
and creative."
synagogues named on the
The U.S. and its allies addresses. Exactly how
Monday further tightened the bombs would have
scrutiny of shipments worked, however, remains
from Yemen. U.S. coun- a focus of investigators.
terterrorism
officials
Activating a bomb by
warned police and emer- cell phone while a plane

is in midair is unreliable
because cell service is
SJ?Otty or nonexistent at
htgh altitudes. Further
complicating the plot, it
be would unlikely for terrorists in Yemen to know
which planes the bombs
had been loaded onto and
when they were airborne.
With U.S.-bound cargo
out of Yemen temporarily
frozen,
Transportation
Security Administration
chief John Pistole said
Monday the U.S. would
provide Yemen with new
screening equipm~nt for
cargo.
Yemen
has
promised to step up its
security at airports.
Nobody, including the
Internet-savvy al-Qaida
group in Yemen, has
taken credit for the
failed attack. Jihadist
Web sites contained
numerous
messages
praising the attempted
bombing but nothing
official from the group's
leadership.
Though
al-Qaida's
core is based in the lawless tribal regions of
Pakistan, offshoots have
sprung up in other countries, including Yemen
and Algeria. The Yemen
group is the most active
affiliate and has become
a leader in recruiting and
propaganda, especially
in the West thanks to its

English-speaking, U.S.born spokesmah, Anwar
al-Awlaki.
On Tuesday, Yemeni
prosecutors charged alAwlaki in absentia with
plotting to kill foreign•
ers.
The U.S. is providing
some $300 million in
military, humanitarian
and development aid to
Yemen this year, according to State Department
counterterrorism coordinator Daniel Benjamin.
About half of that is for
military equipment and
training, including some
50 special-operations
trainers for Yemeni
counterterror teams.
State
Department
spokesman P.J. Crowley
said Monday that the
U.S. would not reduce
that aid in response to
the failed attack.
The FBI, Pentagon and
CIA all have people on
the ground in Yemen,
working with counterter-.
rorism
officials
in
Yemen. A military and
intelligence campaign,
financed and directed by
the U.S., to target al- .
Qaida has had mixed
results. Brennan said
Yemeni cooperation is
better than it has ever
been but still could be
better.

Yemen charges U.S.-born radical cleric ai-Awlaki
BY AHMED AL-HAJ AND
. HAMZA HENDAWI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN' A, Yemen
Faced with mounting U.S.
pressure to do more in the
fight against al-Qaida
after the thwarted mail
bombs plot, Yemen on
Tuesday took the surprise
move of putting on trial a
fugitive U.S.-born radical
Islamic cleric wanted for
his part in terror attacks on
American soil.
The move is largely
symbolic, since Anwar alAwlaki was being tried in
absentia. But it appeared
to be an attempt by
Yemen's government to
show its American allies
that it takes the cleric as a
serious threat - something it has wavered on in
the past.
Al-Awlaki, born in New
Mexico to Yemeni parents, is one of the most
prominent English-language radical clerics, and
his sermons advocating
jihad, or holy war, against
the United States have
influenced
militants
involved in several attacks
or attempted attacks on
U.S. soil. Yemeni officials
say he may have blessed
the recent mail bomb plot,
though not ·necessarily
took an active part in it.
The Obama administration is considering its own
terror charges against the
39-year-old al-Awlaki.
But even without charges,
it put him on a list of militants the CIA is authorized to capture or kill,

u

after
the
Christmas
attempt to bomb a U.S.
passenger jet by a young
Nigerian whom al-Awlaki
may have helped recruit
for al-Qaida in Yemen.
Al-Awlaki is thought to
be hiding in the mountains
of ·Yemen, enjoying the
protection of family and
his large tribe, while facing what some analysts
describe as only a halfhearted effort by the
Yemeni authorities to capture or kill him.
Yemeni officials had
until now privately insisted that they had no legal
justification to detain him
and that. if captured. the
country's constitution prevents his extradition to the
United States because he
is a Yemeni citizen.
The trial could signal at
least a superficial shift in
Yemen's position brought
about by U.S. pressure
following the interception
Friday of two bombs hidden in packages mailed
from
Yemen
and
addressed to synagogues
in the Chicago area.
The two packages were
found on planes transiting
through
Dubai
and
Britain. U.S. officials
believe the plot is the
work of al-Qaida's branch
in Yemen, of which alAwlaki is a top figure.
Washington, which has
dispatched a team to help
with the investigation into
the latest plot, has been
frustrated with the limited
scope of Yemen's efforts
to deal with al-Qaida in
the Arabian Peninsula, as

the group here is called,
despite U.S. military aid
that has been hiked up to
$150 million this year.
Yemeni forces have had
multiple clashes with alQaida fighters this year,
but with only ambiguous
results, and most senior
figures in the group
remain at large.
Analysts here believe
that a combination of
regime weakness and
President Ali Abdullah
Saleh's own political
maneuvering have pre-.
vented him from launching a full-blown campaign
to eliminate al-Qaida.
which is believed to have
some 300 core members
in Yemen. Saleh has to
balance among powerful
tribes that control most
areas outside the capital,
as well as among Islamic
hard-liners with whom he
has allied himself to pre•
serve power.
"The government can. if
it wants to, capture alAwlaki with the cooperation of his tribe, said
Yemeni analyst Mansour
Hayel. "But it is taking its
time, using the al-Qaida

threat to milk the United
States for more aid."
Saleh's government has
tried recently to fonn tribal militias to aid its forces
in fighting al-Qaida.
Among those it has
approached is the Awalik,
a large and powerful tribe
based in the mountainous
province of Shabwa to
which al-Awlaki belongs.
But in a sign of the dangerous nature of tribal politics. Awalik tribesmen
belonging to al-Qaida
issued a letter on militant
websites Tuesday warning
their tribe· s leaders of
"God's punishment" if
they help the regime. and
urged them to join alQaida's fight to overthrow
Saleh's regime.
The regime ''has pillaged the resources of our
country and diwied them
up with the Crusaders
(Americans), leaving its.
people to coij1plain of
poverty and disease," the
letter said. "No one allies
with this regime except in
hopes of gifts or out of
fear of its oppression. You
are too good to aspire for
gifts and too noble to fear

anyone but God."
The letter suggests a
split - and such divisions
can often lead to violence
between tribal factions.
But the threat and appeal
to strong tribal loyalties
could also make Awalik
members more reluctant
to work with the government.
The trial of al-Awlaki in
a San' a court on Tuesday
came as a surprise. AlAwlaki's name and that of
a cousin, Ossam alAwlaki. were added as
defendants in absentia at
the last minute in the trial
of another man, Hisham
Assem. Assem has been
accused of killing a
Frenchman in an Oct. 6
attack at an oil firm compound where he worked
as a security guard.
According
to
the
prosecution. Osman alAwlaki had put Assem
indirectly in e-mail contact with Anwar alAwlaki.
Assem, 19, appeared in
court wearing blue prison
overalls. He denied all
charges and claimed that
he had been tortured in

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detention to make false
confessions.
Prosecutor Ali alSaneaa sought to ridicule
Anwar al-Awlaki in his
opening statement, portraying him as a selfstyled cleric who had. in
the past worked in
"America's bars and
restaurants" - suggesting he had broken Islam's
ban on alcohol.
"He is the man responsible for criminal schemes
in Yemen," al-Saneaa
said. "He has an evil per.
sonality and is comfort
able with bloodletting
without conscience or
respect for the law."
Al-Saneea said Assem,
a guard at the French
engineering firm SPIE,
told interrogators he
received Internet messages from al-Awlaki
inciting him to kill foreigners with whom he
was working. Assem
allegedly confessed that
al-Awlaki convinced him
that foreigners are "occupiers," then sent him
audiotape sermons justifying the killings when he
hesitated.

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•

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�Page A:

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 3 ,

2 010•.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Sen·or afraid of takilig cruise
•

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
enjoy socialii'ing with a
group of gal:- who live in
the same adult communiWe're all in our 60s,
d we enjoy shopping,
going to the movies and
taking art and yoga classes. Now several of my
best friends have cooked
up a tour of Spain,
Greece and Italy. I've
never been on a cruise,
and the whole' thing
sounds so frightening. I
dQn't know if I am up to
it. But I know if I drop
out of this, I might regret
it and feel too old for fun.
How do I decide? - F.B.
Dear F.B.: In a way, it
is a shame that someone
had to come up with this
big plan that threatens to
upset the apple cart. With
the activities you already
enjoy, you easily can add
more new things or skip
something when you
aren't feeling quite up to
it. The idea of a huge
undertaking like a cruise
certainly can be daunt. g. First, you haven't
en one before. while
e other women may be

Dr. Joyce Brothers
more experienced with
them. This is actually not
a bad thing - they can
negotiate all the pitfalls
that you may be worrying
about. There's a Jot of
bad press out there about
cruises - from illnesses
to missed connections
and endless lines and
obnoxious fellow travelers -- so the best way to
put your fears to rest may
be to talk to the women
who have already tried
this.
It is also OK to say no.
If you find that after
hearing all the details of
the itinerary you honestly

still have a queasy feeling, there is nothing
wrong with following
your instincts and passing on this one. You may
find one or two of the
other women doing the
same. Perhaps you can
try traveling somewhere
closer to home. on a
small scale, with a couple
of friends. Just because
you don't feel good about
this cruise doesn't mean
you can't do things your
own way. r m sure you
have many fun years of
travel and adventures
ahead of you - and if
your friends decide to
dump you because you
have some limitations,
it's time to prune your
social circle anyway!
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
am feeling a lot of pressure from my husband
and both sets of parents
to have a baby. I have
never really dreamed of
being a mother, but I am
beginning to get a little
nervous. We got married
at 35, and I am nearly 40
now. I have an awful
queasy feeling that I

. .'

would feel trapped by
motherhood - marriage
is confining enough!
How do I decide whether
to go ahead or just wait it
out? This is so huge that I
don't want to make a terrible mistake. - M.E.
Dear M.E.: You seem
very nervous, and with
good reason: This is a
huge decision. as you
well know. You probably
admire the women who
are sure they want to be
mothers - or those who
are sure they don't. But
it's in your best interests
to be a bit torn and to
have to talk this one out
with your husband, and
not with his or your parents - it's really not a
decision they need to
have a vote about. Sure, it
would be great for them
to have grandchildren,
but they don't have the
right to try to push you

into motherhood so that
they can get what they
want.
But you and your husband do have the responsibility of coming up
with a solution to this
dilemma. You seem to be
quite worried about
being tied down, and
that's a difficult concept
for many mothers to
come to terms with the idea that they can't
quit that job, or give
back the child like an
unwanted pet if things
don't work out. Looking
at a lifetime commitment is and should be
absolutely
terrifying.
But the secret lies in taking it one day at a time
and having loving family
around you who are
eager to pitch in. And_it
sounds like you have
that setup already in
place. But in the end, it's

something only you cnn
decide. Take your time•
If you find !71arnago
restricting. you migl
want to , work throt
that concept first.
~
(c) 2010 by King. ;
Features Syndicate ,

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Community Calendar
'

.i

Public
meetings
VVednesda~No~3

HARRISONVILLE Scipio 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.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, 7 p.m. ;
TPRSD office.

er

ednesda~Nov.10

ELLSTON
cial meeting of board
Galliaof directors,
Jackson-Meigs- Vinton
Solid Waste District, 2
p.m.,
1056
New
Hampshire
Ave.,
Wellston, to discuss personnel issues, Meigs
County Recycling and
Litter Prevention and
other business as it
comes before the board.

Clubs and
organizations
VVednesday, Nov. 3
POMEROY
Middleport Literary Club,
3 p.m., Pomeroy Library.
Thursday, Nov. 4
CHESTER
Chester-Shade Historical
Association, 7 p.m. ,
Chester Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS Posdt 9053 Ladies '
iary, 7 p.m. at the

.
Friday, Nov. 5
RACINE
Meigs
County Pomona Grange
with officers conference

at 6:30 p.m. followed by
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
the Racine Grange Hall
located on Oak Grove
Road near Racine.
Saturday, Nov. 6
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed tiy meeting
at 7:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 8
POMEROY
- Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, 7:30 p.m ., Mulberry
Community
Center.
Election of officers.
Tuesday, Nov. 9
POMEROY - Meigs
County Business-Minded
Luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, Randi
Gheen speaking on building your own website,
KFC/Long John Silvers
catering, call RSVP with
Bill at 992-6677.
Thursday, Nov. 11
CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453 will
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the
hall for election of officers. Dues must be paid.
Oyster soup will be
•
served.
Saturday, Nov. 13
POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will
meet at 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. The
program will be on the life
of George Washington.

Church
events
Tuesday, Nov. 7
COOLVILLE
Revival starting at 7 p.m.
nightly through Nov. 7,
Allegheny
Wesleyan
Methodist Church, featur-

ing Rev. Chad and
Valerie Searls, evangelist
and singers, for more
information, 667-6778.
Saturday, Nov. 6
POMEROY
Pomeroy Church of
Christ, Zion Church of
Christ host a free soup
and sandwich dinner,
beginning at 5 .p.m. ,
Pomeroy church, East
Main Street. Desserts
and other refreshments.

Ulion Victims ..

ver 11

of Identity Theft ast Year.
rrt

•

Hdp Protect Yo~rs~~tf Today.

I
I

Birthdays

Free

Document Shredd et'"

11:------------:.1

Thursday, Nov. 11
RUTLAND - Roberta
Wilson will observe her
98th birthday on Nov. 11 .
Mrs. Wilson who was a
longtime principal at the
Salem Center School,
resides at 40 Mayor St.,
Emmalena, Ky. and cards
m be sent to her there.

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ifeL ck.

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Please call to schedule or walk-in for yo
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�Page A£

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 3, 2010-

The Daily Sentinel

THANK ~OODNESS THAT'S

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

.

OVER. WE HAVE THEMUD ALL
TO OURSELVES A~AIN!

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cotrgress shall make no 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 tlu
Government for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Election hangover
WelL another election cycle has come
and gone and we've
thrown out some of
the bums we voted for'
the last time we went
to the polls and kept
some of the other
bums we voted for
during the last election.
We backed our pet ,
issues and worked
Andrew Carter
hard to defeat those
issues we hold in the
same esteem as the
stray cats that sit on our back fence and yowl all
night.
The winners are saying today that because they
won, everybody won. By the same token, the
losers are saying that because they lost, everybody
lost.
Basically, it's just the same old song and dance
- just another manic day after a midterm election, to badly paraphrase ''Manic Monday" by The
Bangles (That's a girl band from 1980s and '90s,
not the Cincinnati entry in the National Football
League).
Anyway. we'll spend the next two years listening to Republicans, Democrats. various minor
parties and the nebulous tea party nation bark and
howl about who is responsible for any upswing or
· downturn in the economy, why our troops are still
deployed in various hot spots around the globe
and why the Super Bowl should never be played
in a cold-weather locale. Okay, so maybe they
won't be gliping that much about the economy.
The blame game - which we as a nation have
become extremely adept at - will continue to be
played by all sides who enter into this bizarre
arena we call the American poiitical process. A
handful of well-meaning souls will seek the forbidden middle ground on key issues that will be of
benefit all of us, but the vast majmity of the political aristocrats that we '11 send to the courthouses.
town halls, statehouses, governors' mansions and
the Beltway bungalows will just carry on with
politics as usual. "Financial backers and party
first, people and America a distant second," is the
unspoken mantra that will be followed.
I really hope that isn't the case. I really hope that
this is the year that all of those we elect will truly
carry out their duty to represent the people and do
what is right for their town, county. state and
America. Some will. but, unfortunately, many others. far too many, will continue to follow the
allure of power and money. Jf that continues to be
tbe case, we'll have more than just a "Manic
Monday'' to worry about: we'll have manic
Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday ...

Voters carry anxiety, •
disappointment to the polls.;
Bv ERIN M c C LAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The millions of Americans voting in midterm elections Tuesday
were not always sure what they
wanted, or even whom. But they
knew they were unhappy uneasy about the economy, frustrated with the direction of 'the
country and dissatisfied with politics.
On an Election Day that seemed
a long way from 2008. disappointment was the theme.
"I'd like to ·find somebody to
blame," said Kimberly Abrudan, a
customer service manager who
had voted at a Delaware charter
school for Democrat Chris Coons
for Senate. "It would make things
a lot easier. But I'm not convinced
that it's any one man."
Abrudan said she voted for
Barack Obama and felt let down
that he had not been able to bridge
the partisan divide and bring
Americans together. If she could
speak to the president in private.
she conceded, "I might shake him
around a bit."
The sentiment was not hard to
• find across the country in an election that took place against a
backdrop of persistently high
unemployment, no sign of real
improvement in the economy and
politics roiled by division.
Vicki Goode of Boyle County,
Ky., had voted for Obama as well,
and said she felt disappointed by
his first two years in office and by
what she characterized as a legislative logjam in Washington.
"I expected more sweeping
change," she said after voting for
Jack Conway, the Democratic
candidate for Senate, over tea
party-backed Republican Rand
Paul.
Goode owns a gift store called

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 lettE-rs will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

Magnolia Cottage. Fewer people
are buying gifts than they did two
years ago, and those who come in
aren't browsing as much - just
finding what they want and buying that one thing. Her husband
was out of work for 16 months.
Just about everywhere, this
election felt far removed from the
last. Two years ago, after all, there
was no tea party. Now it's a force
in American politics. Two years
ago, the nation was in financial
shock. Now hard times are all too
familiar.
"You still have a lot of people
out of work." said James Price, a
lawyer in Indianapolis who voted
a straight Republican ticket.
''We're losing a lot Of jobs. We
have massive amounts of debt."
Just after sunrise, voters trickled into the elections office in
~owntown St. Petersburg, Fla., a
city dotted with boarded-up storefronts and "For Sale" signs on
empty homes.
Alan Satterwhite, a technology
executive, said he was not worried about his own job but was
concerned about the broader
economy and blamed Congress
for it. He voted for conservative
candidates but said he was frustrated with both parties.
·
"No one is stepping forward
with collaboration, and that needs
to change," he said.
Change from the change: It was
another demand voiced by voters
around the nation Tuesday, even
some who had embraced Obama 's
call for "Change We Can Believe
In."
In the intervening two years,
American politics was buffeted by
turmoil - town hall meetings
that devolved into shouting
matches, persistent questions
about the motives of leaders on

The Daily Sentin~
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~

(USPs 213·960)

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Correction Polley
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to be accurate If you know of an
error in a story. call the newsroom
at (740) g92·2156.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published :ruesday through Friday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press
and the
Ohio
~ewspaper
Our main number is
Association.
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are: Postrjlaster: Send address correc·
lions to The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
Box 729, Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Subscription Rates
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
By carrier or motor route
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13
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52 weeks ....•.•..'128.85
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General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
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Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks . • . . .....'35.26
26 Weeks . . . . . . • ..'70 70
52 Weeks • .. . ... .'140 11
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks . .. ......•'56.55
26 Weeks ........ .'113.60
52 Weeks ... •... . .'227.21

t)

both sides. Enough to spawn an"
entire rally in the name of restor-'
ing sanity.
l
Charles Voil·in, \vho lives in St..
Petersburg and is close to retire-;
ment, had seen enough.
He was frustrated thai the presi •
dent had not been more assertive"
during his first two years. But"
then he was disappointed in th~
crop of candidates all around this.,
year. He said he wants more moderates.
''There are more extremes on
both sides." he said "We're get
ting nothing done."
Others were more blunt in
assigning blame. pointing ting•, .'
at the top.
"He's going to bankrupt t
country," said Paul Edwards, a.
retired
naval
engineer
in .
Indianapolis. He was angry that;
his health care costs are rising and .
said he disliked Obama 's overhaul. The president ~ays it will·,
reduce costs in the long tenn. but
Edwards if having none of it.
"I worked hard for 30 years. :
and all I see is my money being,;eaten up by somebody who thinks.
he knows how to spend it bette1\f
,.
than me," Edwards said.
Obama still had plenty of sup-'
porte~.
·
!
"I think it took a long time for'
us to get into the situation that we.'
are," said LaVeeda Garlington, an •
attorney who voted a straight tick~,
et in Silver Spring. Md.. for.
Democrats,
including
Gov.
Martin O'Malley. "It's going to'
take a long time to get out."
';
While :.he said she didn't agree •
with all the decisions the WI.
House had made in two years.
1
was a pretty full plate that the cur- ,
rent administration inherited, and:
I think they need time to try to
work it through."

�Wednesday, November.3,

The Daily Senti11ei• Page Aa

w~·.mydailysentint"J.com

2010

Deaths

Governor

Meigs County Forecast

From Page A1

Doris L. Newman

IUJ)(1r.uo;mg n..'t.'&lt;lnl wLtll 111111\! tJa.u1 SJ(Inulh•'n m~'X•ntn­
huti' til'!!
and that am..,ttm \\ &lt;1' ..:•Jompl)undc&lt;l hy hcg
·'i'l\,llhll~
by
tilL' Hcpuhhcan rntd l.kllttk.T.thc !..'H\'t'mnrs
l);,ns L. NL"\\'Jll:Ul. Kl. &lt;'rlllltp...'hs, dtL'J. TuL'Stbv.
Nm·, 2, 20W. in thl' H(ll:tt.~r M~o.·dk:~l Ct:nlcr. Funrr:tl ,L~~t ll..':iilll( IllS, ~llltlll' ,u ld hU:o.lllt..''S g« 1Uf''· }b.; ( )hfl&gt;
f.harn~r l~J l &lt;lrtUIIL!rl'l' hmk~ a 117-yt.·.u- trat.bUI~l and
SL'f\'ICl'S will he I p.m., S:.uurday. N~oJ\. 6, 2(1Hij in thl'
IJ) Baptis.r Chun;h, Kudlll'}. Pa-sl•K Md Mc.xk ~~,oill "'"~nfi'i:.:d K~t . . kh. a f&lt;•mK'f ma~i11g d.ir.Xl(•r at Lehman
Um~'t:S. m the r.-.:c.
·iat~. Bunal wtlt
m the Cah·:try Baflltst
'llll'ir~unpaig:n t..'Ciltt~t'd on who t..'.otJid do :1lx'tll'fj&lt;•b
Rit) {iratKk. l·rknd' may l'O'III from 5 X 1.1d.:lm7 tl~ Sl:lh:'s tuj!h ua'tllf'IA')'Dk.1IA am.l loouuu!-J SX
p.m..
at lht• Cr\!llleL'It:-. fuucnd l'haJlt.'l and mtt• hi II i11n llOOg~r dL'fll'it
.
hnur rn~)r let Lhc funeral Sl.!C\'ILC at. the daurdJ (l(l
K:JSldL. 11 fn.'&lt;ltK.'fU f~K:c un l'itX NL~"· att.t~.:kl·d
Saturday. Expr~sl(lll~ ,,f ~ymrathy may h,, scllll•) tilt! !'trid;l~1nd t)\('f dll' l1xs.' of 4(0.(Hitl "'lbs. Hl' ro\tl!hl b;u.:k
family ))y visuing WW\\'. t.·rrnll.."i.'n'fun~.:raiiMliC~ ....·~.:•Ill
Stntkland's ll.tttK·ks nn h1s l\.lC(ll\1 :it Ldunan. IIi- taibl
inwsunef.lC b,mk, with pMmi"~~ w twin.t; a mi,.-c hust·
Jl'..~-multk."'(~ urrn'\iJL:h In thl- sUite's LX\'llll:.JH}'
'llll· IA:m.x."fatic ~\t\\"rll~•r, IIICilll\\hik, pointo.'d I•\
naiJO.naJ L'\.~lftorroc t:t~.1nrs as ltll' cul~l u1 the slate's ~\."&lt; ...
Saudra Eltzabcth Codrl\.'f di~d Mutlllla~. Nov. 1. nomk hard time.... Both h1..' and H'hcr ~liJgh• a IW(•·
2010. l\rr,mgn._:~ms wm he announ..:cd hv Cl\'tnl'l'n~ pnmgL'd str.!lL'!.!&gt;'. at LJUX.':-i ~"!Unst Ka.sidt aud hlf'mcr
U.S, R.."f'. Rt,fl Jln!flmiLn, .,..f)o W(tll Tltl·sU.W'!&gt;. S~:nalo.'
Funet&lt;1l HllOte. Racine.
•
r.tt.'\!. m1.•r lkpuhltt-an uutstlwdn!! ctnd tr.tt.lc rX'Iictt.'S that
\.':\il )'kJlh. !-.h •wed lailt.:d It&gt; stkk \1: itll vot~rs.
S tru:kland. an t ~edaincd nrmao;Ler ·and psydL&gt;..'l&lt;l!!ISI.
lotm.:·d 1n Vl1lo.'h his 1.'0\ 1th lt, ('Ill" l"Xtlk~c tuirinn, ex tilnd
h~•1lth can! aL-ccss litrt·hildn!nuncl rL·wnl&lt;: Olun's unwnsliluthm.tJ ~~)fH&gt;l·l'llnding S}~('fll . He ~l! ooucatit)Jl j~
Peoples (tllt.SMOI- 13.n
AEP (rNSEl- 3r&amp;3 .
llx.·kcy tn OhtH's L'Cf:nunJJC future.
PepSlOO (tftSf.)- 6!-l 81) •
Nan t'NA.~Q) - 60.~
f&lt;&lt;t"tl'h ~lUilt(~.'lJ Hll il llk.'S'&lt;l!!~ H( ~llla lfl'r ~~~t:IDilll~ll.
P~minr ~tu~r.!\CJI -li:Sfl
Ashb.nd Inc. r.tl't'Sf)-5D.Io
tllx
~1JL.... und r~..'(lut:x:J. husmcss n."'..!.ulauons. HL! h:L' prnAc&lt;kwell
(t~'t'SF)
64
38
Big Lcrts ~fliYS€) -31.11
pi~l..'d
C\'t.'nlUally eliminating UlL' slat\! itk'\..tllle ta\, ..~hit.•h
Rob Evans (flASOAO) - :.:-9.2'•'
fiocky Roots 1:'4.-'.SO,'\I.l) - ~l l 3
make
ur
ah..!Ut 40 f'!CCCilt Clt the ShilL! hlli8Ct and replacIRIYjal Oulch ShAll- sr.~s
lklrgWarne.r (NY$~) - ~.2'8
ing the Ohio (~pmlln..'flt of 1:1\:'\"elupn-..m with " non ~
!&gt;.nlt.rJ Num INASilt'lJI-1:165 Se.:fs Hok!ing IN/1-I)fllu:&gt;:t- 72 ?I
pmlLt hnanl pJ husmL'.SS katleni .

"L'

Sandra Elizabeth Codne

Local Stocks

Cha1npion (t~ASO/IDJ - I 21

.

t}laml~ Sh~ tfU"c;JlN'~t -8 ..t6

i

Horlfng (tU.SO/t.OI- 31.19
ns i,fNSF) - !19Jt

Wal-i4-art t.N't'SF) -54.79
Wendy's (t~YSF) -4.12
Wes6aoo:J (flYSF) - 16 /0
Worthington l~J'iSF.) -15 8?

· Candiates

"'nt !NYSF'I -4/.4?

Gan flamr~ WYSF.'•-1~.94
tbrl9J~Iid~ (tNSF)-31.40

rhe 4 p f7l
Fl dosing tJIIllrc?S or tlat"JSaCtKmS forNa.,l~mb~r ?. ?OtO, pro-

vided by Fmw1.rd .lon~

JP Morgan 1,t~YSF) - .lG .96
Krogar (t~YSFI - 2? S4
I td Rr.Jnds I,PNSf) - 29.&amp;.l
t~Dfiinlk So (t~VSf)- 6;1 38
OVAC (P~/ISOAOI- 18 !11
OOT (fhSFl- 1.2 91

ll~&lt;t•un

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M.\\'s ~·1 Gilii\'Ji"Jt'is
.Jt (140} 44 t-9-14 t .1!id I e.'il'•}'

Maff8m in Pomt l'l't!.tlSJriJ al
(:J(JS) 614-IJ1N Mtm1..bllr SIPC.

Bv CHARLENe
HOEFUCH
H:EFU::I';;,II,-.J4USEIIntiEltO'A

POMEROY

-

' IlK•

fiV~-~~..tf ft'fCl.'~l'l Ufl the

lc~s. of lh~ .M~IJ!S
I School l&gt;b.l(l~;,.~t
tn!d atmunUy l'&gt;y thc-

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su!nulu\
nwn-.·y is a• Ist' t.'X fll.'l'l('d
to be dL"&lt;;rca~'d

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&lt;tlllOUUlllf !&gt;75~.433 ~IJO­
upt!'rJtinn UJ 201.\.
The f\.1J)NI wo.~' pre· ..;.al~o':d C&lt;t dK' tli ...rrh-1 .,, ~
senk.&gt;tl b)· Trc.asun!r/CH) u~-d ti.&gt;t turmg le&lt;sdk"l:&gt;
'Mark Rhooemu!'l 10 r.lk.• or ()fh\•r 'il'h,tol r··rs·~m. . l
Bnard tH buucaltllill :u us will t~ held C•,·er unlll
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n.·..·cnt Oli..'C'tiog..
'l be ftii'CL':tsl shows an ~Xf'l'l..'talwn thai future·
~xccs~ ~·f re\cnul' for fis- :-.t:Ut~ :~.~~hool funding Will
he t'~"l111c~t.l and 1h c"~J ''car 201l (,f $7 2.6:~3
hut· moving into fis(.~.JI nHm~~y will tx· nc-c,kd II &gt;
year 2m2 a r~\'cnuc tctain .Juhs. ThL' ili~"&gt;Ln~t
tll.'f~it nf S561.443. TIK' has until Sq\1. ~·:t. 21il 2
ll ~urcs presented tty Ill spend . lh!! n~&lt;•r•l.·~
Rfi&lt;,ncmu... indicate lh.al whit:h has Jx·~,·n allul':tl·
m '(.'f the next fh\: yean ..::d. h'o!' I I!J)Uflt:J.
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h 5Dyrs or qualifying dlsabiltty
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GE UNU l11TED
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BY MARllfA A. SIMPSON, D.O.l M.B.A.
CHO Lti-'Ef'Sin' Cll.~ t:F O!i'i£:::.f'An+:: P.'ECO~E

This is ..·mharra~,ing . oot 1\:i,.'L'Iltl&gt;' I ...liUll:&lt;l ha\ in~ bk\.'ding Whl'll I ha~ ...

a huwd t.Jlil\'ellk.'lll. l :~..:ryl_lun~ d~ 1s fi111:. ' lbl~ ha(l(ll!U&lt;.'l.l (llll"C hch'JL' ahuul :J )car
ago. and 11 M\t(lX'd hy u:ooeU. lam a healthy. ~ullll!;. t..'rtlk.&gt;g(' liLUlknt. 001 I d11 ha\\.' prott.
lcms with 'on'ill[Y.tli&lt;lll. SJJJtUid l ~o lo lllC' dtiCLtiC'.' And \\ilUI ,r,a \'C•U thmk dus 1s'.'
1\rtl'~rr: Rt'\'lal bJot."ding L' atw;.y~ ..~~u~ ftw t..'IJfK'l'sn. anll yclu . .lu&gt;uld ~ek ltl\."ll·
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hl.'nig.n &lt;-..,lN's ,,-r 1\'l~t&lt;ll ok•L'tlmg whi~:h ~r'-' mcii·.: &lt;.\tmmofl i11 ...,Jt,..,lipato.'t..l P'-''lllc. •
'lk pnruary prohl.cm tlJaiL'Hn~s to my mmd is 1u1 unul fis~Uf\!. T lus L' a snulltc-M
that &lt;.'an Ot.X.'Uf m the . ~lfl ~)r thl.' a11u.--. wfll."fl ~nu h.J\l' a !11~\ 1!1 mt~wmt·nt. l'Sl~:l'ially
tf 1t1s bani tll' Ia~ c. sud1 that \'HU must.slr.tm to pa...o.; tl~~: · sttJ&lt;'I. An a11al h,.,un: 1~ u.. . ualh' ctcnmp;,u)K.'d hy p.tin &lt;~nt..l hk:x~ding.
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~ prin~y r,t\:SI!IIllllg si~u•J an &lt;~~1.&lt;11 fissUJc i~ pam willt alxw.d n-.w~llll'1ll that
c.~n Ill; quill~ mrcnst.'. 111l! !X'IIl m;1y l;tst liJf ~\·cr;ll hftlll'!\ all•r rlt~· t:Jt,) \\1.'1 fJII.'"•\"11)..!01 ,

lb•.'fC is btlgbt n.'d bh'!Od on d~ l•.»1L'l tis~u~ m~ .sum.:tin._,~ iull~.e lt)llL'l. Rt.:t.taJ nchins.I)T irrituU•lf~ ~rc.' :-~rnpll)lllS rh::tt ain als,_, l\.: asslX't:\l~&lt;l ~ ith an :malfi,sur.-.
w11~tt ''t'IU nsll Y&lt;•ur tl~t:l~t. he ur slto..! w1JI u..~ }'(IU 4Ut....,l1l'IIIS aht~t~l \'l•IJI sVIHfXHl)ls
;~n~.1 ~"ffi;Juct ;Ln C:(:tmll1atinn lit' th~ affcc1~x~ an~a. An :mat lhliurc- i-. l':mly ~:aw -iJr 11
physl&lt;.'131l "' dia~m'M'! \'ISU&lt;lll~. Yu~ &amp;.~:1{1( ntsy ~uggl·~L SC\~'Ji.d Llm~s ll' hdp heal
th~· «.':UIT\~01 fisS.lfl' and f\1 pr~••\o\-'Ul tu•urc fis..•;un;s ln•lll tx·~·umn~ . U'lll~ ~ lit)(~ SUp•
plt:IIICIILillld drinkmg r~lL-nly \If .... ~lk., It' ~..~p rhe slU\lb ,nJt '&gt;\ illl.elp
ll~ pass th~:an
m(•c ~slly. PhY,;o..ic:~l cxcr~i~ is also hdpful f&lt;•r keeping )'l&gt;Ur l&gt;)''lcirl '"regular:· Ynu

'ou

lUll\' alsu be aJVI~d W :soak yuur at~l :.trC-'.1 lUl a I Ub u( W'i ll'nt o,J,.ctl\."1' fuf l5 llbllUlt.~ Sl'VCf3r lim."'S a du&gt;' tn promole he:1lin~.
nl'l ~~~- ~·••r or l'llthf'\k~ hQih tlunn.g tl~·
suak~. as th~ may miwuug. 'llti~ prut.:ltl'\.• b ~ailed a Sit/. haLl I. and ttas ~111cl1} a wann

ntt

w-ater stxtk.

t(ll,tr..

t..:r tlr iU~ incta J);'"'tltle.

Family Medicine: Anal fissures common,
no cause for embarrassment
Qu~dun:

near

( 'llalll'-.! t 't pr'Lx:lpHa-

VISit us oiiline at

(Ct I W, 1 ''B"t' 1S 1: 3H. Pro,· ...·c: Hl7.

(of

r.tm arwl snow sh(l.... I.!Ili

r.nnl'all :unount., &lt;•f hctN~ IH p m.. lh,.·u ;1
than a 1~11llt uf an IUlil d I:JIIi,.'C (If Sill."\\' !'!IJCt\\'L't'S

Jlfr.iSibk.
'fhunidY\': A chalK.\: \ti
~hoW\"r.;, 1t1ainl\ artrr I
p.m. Mct.Ll~ d~ ·Ud~. 'mit a
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lll1Wl\.1t 3 and W UIJ~l.
(..11;mrc t)f pt\.'Cipll.ttJflfl i"
.'0 pc:r'-'l'lll. Nc.,.. rainfall

165. El'a"s &lt;L~: I J2.

Meigs Local
moving toward
deficit operation
tooun•J. ·•m Lh~ worst
\.:.41"'' sn•n.trio up 10 10
t'crl'CIII Jnt the m·xt btt:u-

wind ll\:l'•&gt;lllllll! \' ..::\1
.~\ tUII.d 5 JJifAl, ~
Woontsda~ 1\iJ!,ht: ,,

Hl)usL! tll R~rr~sl·nc.unt.-s to{
.
Wilsl•• 41&gt;). 2.~3:". Juh11:Y.•ll ~R). ~.t)J4. Catll~ 1C1:

fir..;r~:"i.;(

;a~,'is•¥S fsu~

StUifl\'.

a tugh m~ar fi2. f'ulin

From Page A1

O;N,~r .r&gt;rock repolts are

tiS Rank.INYSf&gt;-7J.StJ

\\'edt)\"SdM}!

wllh

Call: 1.866.798.0692

-

�Wednesday, November 3, 2010

The Daily Sentinel• PageA6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Submitted photo ·

Submitted photo

The Meigs County Council on Aging for its Make a Difference Day project hosted
a spaghetti dinner at the Senior Center. The money raised - about $2,000 - was
divided between the Hemlock Grove Church now in the process of rebuilding and
the victims of the tornado in the Reedsville area. Approximately 186 dinners were
served and several other fund raisers were held during the evening. Here Beth
Shaver, executive director of the MCConAging, presents a check to Rosalie and
Fred Johnson representing the Hemlock Grove Church.

Feeney-Bennett Unit 128, American Legion Auxiliary, recently sent pocket flags to
send to Marine troops serving in Afghanistan. Pictured, Myrna VanMeter, Ella
Roush and Goldie Shaffer, auxiliary members; former U.S. Marine John Kulchar,
Brandon Thomas, who served 1n the U.S. Army in Iraq; Girl Scouts Dominique
Rhodes and Brooke Bauer; leaders Joy Rhodes and Bridget Bauer. Unit 128
President Melinda Karschnik said the flags serve as a reminder to the Marines of
the nation's support and prayers.

700 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH

Church Briefs
Fall fundraiser
at McDaniel Crossroads
PATRIOT - McDaniel Crossroads Church will
host its fall fundraiser at 5 p.m., Friday, Nov. 5 at tlie
church, located at 2600 Cadmus Road, Patriot. An
auction will begin at 6 p.m. The meal will include
beans and cornbread, hot dogs and sauce, desserts,
beverages. The event is sponsored by the McDaniel
Crossroads Church Women's Ministries.

Simpson Chapel
Christmas bazaar

•.·"

~~9""

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~~ tsrA at shockingly low prices!

r;t!~~R

Chase &amp;
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Coffee
23 oz. can

Vinton Full Gospel fundraiser
VINTON- Vinton Full Gospel Church will hold a
rummage sale, hot dog and bake sale from 9 a.m.-5
p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 6.

BIDWELL - Mt. Carmel Missionary . Baptist
Church will celebrate its 107th Church Anniversary
on Sunday, Nov. 7. The ,morning worship service
begins at 10:45 a.m. Afternoon worship will begin at
3 p.m. Rev. Ronald Chunn, pastor of First Baptist
Church of Nelsonville, and his congregation will be
the afternoon guests. Dinner will be served following
morning worship. Everyone is welcome. Rev. Gene
A. Armstrong invites the public.

7 40-992-2891

Foodstore

RIO GRANDE Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church will host a Christmas bazaar from
10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 6. Crafts, baked
goods and door prizes will be available. Chicken and
noodles will be available for lunch. Simpson Chapel
UMC is located on Lake Drive in Rio Grande. For
information, call 245-5126 or 379-2114.

Mt. Carmel anniversary

'&gt;. . . . . .

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Crystal20

Assorted Varieties

Cap'n Crunch
Cereal

Drinking Water
16.9 oz bottles

14 to 16 oz. box

$1.49

-

·--

DOLLAR MENU!

Revival at Ewington CCCU
EWINGTON -The Ewington Church of Christ in
Christian Union will host revival services Nov. 8-13.
Rev. Randy Peters is the guest evangelist. Services
begin at 7 p.m. daily. For information, 388-8184.

For the Record

Fairgrounds
Jumbo

Morning Delight

Hot Dogs Buttermilk
Biscuits

llb.pkg

911

10 count pkg

POMEROY - Meigs County 911 dispatched
these calls for emergency medical assistance:
Monday
2:18 a.m., Third Street, Syracuse, motor vehicle
collision; 5:05p.m .. Main Street, Rutland, gas leak;
6:04p.m., Beech Street, chest pain.
Tuesday
1:47 a.m., Page Street, chest pain; 2:03 a.m.,
Sellers Ridge Road, dead on arrival; 3:42 a.m.,
Grant Street, high temperature; 3:56 a.m.,
Edmunson Road, abdominal pain.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the
following transfers:
• Nancy L. Manley to Timothy R. Priddy, Sr.,
deed, Village of Middleprt; Marilyn Knopp Fultz,
deceased, to John F. Fultz, affidavit, Village of
Middleport; Richard A. White to James D. Jones,
Diane M. Milliron, deed, Village of Pomeroy.
• Mary Lew Johnson to Virginia A. Wheeler,
Mary Kathryn Johnson, certificate of transfer,
Letart; Bejamin F. Upton, Jr. to Homer E. Cole,
Mary L. Cole, deed, Orange; Jeremy C. Stone,
Erica D. Stone, to Todd K. Powell, Renee D.
Powell, deed, Bedford.
• Hugh McPhail, Donna J. McPhail, Donna J.
Williamson. to Charles M. Reynolds, Teresa A.
Reynolds, deed, Rutland; Michael Keith Harrison
to Tommy Lee Romine, Christian Lee Romine,
deed, RUtland; Cathy Clifford to Cinda Clifford,
deed, Chester.
• Jerry Kyle Swain, Mary C. Swain, .to Thomas
T. Simmons, deed, Chester; James Lew1s Wolfe to
Martha Wolfe, deceased, affidavit, Village of
Middleport; Mary Jane. Talbott, deceased, to Marc
Travis Pierce, deed, Ohve.

$

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Condensed
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Soups or
Broth
10.5 to 14 con

Wylwood

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Fries
32 oz bag

o;r,

3/S

Beef

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Sirloin
Tip Roas$

Bone}_...,_
Pork Loii~·. .
99
Roast
&amp; ...

lb.

Frozen
Bone-In

Chicken
Breast
lb.

b.

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�--

~-

-------

--·~-- ...,...-:

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
RedStorm men ready for season, Page B2
Buckeyes look forward to bye week, Page B6

POMEROY - A schedule ol upcomtng
htgh school varstty sporting events
•nvolving teams from Mergs, Mason and
Gallia counties.

E!lll.sY. November 5
Football
Buffalo at Wahama. 7:30p.m.
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant,
7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, Novembet.§
Cross Country
State Meet at Scioto Downs. 11 :05
a.m.

20l 0 football
statistics needed
GALLIPOLIS - All
Ohio varsity football
coaches in both Gall ia
and Meigs counties are
asked to submit regular
season statistics - both
offense and defense from their respective
A teams to the Ohio. Valley
wPublishing sports department for district considerations
with
the
Associated Press.
Along with the stats,
please
include
the
heights. weights, positions and 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 @mydai lytribune.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.

PORTS

Pike Eastern ends
Lady Eagles season
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS
BWALTERS@•MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

WELLSTON. Ohio
- All good things must
come to an end.
The . Eastern volleyball team had little luck
with its namesake from
Pike
County
on
Saturday
afternoon,
dropping a 25-1 I. 2516, 25-2 I straight-game ever. express nothing
decision in a Division but praise for his two
IV southeast district seniors
Britney
championship match at Morrison and Beverly
Wellston High School.
Maxson - and what
The
third-seeded they had accomplished
Lady Eagles (22-3) both this season and
failed to win a district over their tenures.
title for the second time
''I would like to thank
in three years - and the seniors for all their
just the third time in the hard work. Britney and
last nine overall - as Beverly have been part
the top-seeded Lady of three district champiEagles (24-1) from Pike onship finals and have
County advanced to competed in 75 matches
their third
straight over their three years
regional semifinal with with the program,''
the triumph.
Caldwell
said.
The Green and White "They've won a league
- playing in their ninth title, a district champistraight district final onship, a regional game
gradually improved as and have 63 match wins
the night progressed, over that span. That's
but the Orange and certainly something to
Brown simply had too be proud of."
much firepower down
Pike Eastern - which
the stretch.
lost to Eastern in the
Eastern coach Howie · 2007 district final Caldwell - who is now advances
to
play
14-2 alltime in district Lancaster
Fisher
tournament games with Catholic on 7:30 p.m.
the program - was dis- Wednesday at Lancaster
appointed to see anoth- High School. Waterford
er solid year come to an
end. Caldwell did, how- Please see Eastern, 86

Charles Trainor JrJMiami Herald/MCT

.

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger fumbled the ball late in the
fourth quarter against the Miami .Dolphins. The Steelers were awarded possession. The Steelers defeated the Dolphins, 23-22, at Sun Life Stadium 1n Miami
ardens, Florida, Sunday, October 24.

Roethlisberger, Steelers
offense still not in sync

•

PITT SB URGH (AP)
- One touchdown in
the last six quarters.
One game with more
than 28 points.
For most of this season, the Pittsburgh
Steelers' defense has
looked ready to take
another deep run into
the
playoffs.
The
offense hasn't, not even
after
Ben
Roethlisberger returned
from a four-game suspension to throw three
touchdown
passes
against Cleveland on
Oct. 17.
The Steelers' 20-10
oss to New Orleans on
Sunday showed there's
considerable work left
if their offense is to
look Super Bowl-worthy, despite Pittsburgh's
5-2 record. The running
O.ame
is inconsistent.
0
•
.
.
there are t1m111g tssues
between Roethlisberger
and the receiving corps
and the o ffensive line is
show ing some leaks
agai n.
Not that all the worJ

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

ries are limited to the
offense. Just 1ike last
season, the Steelers ·
24th-ranked secondary
is starting to give up big
yardage in the second
half - ·a concern with
New
England,
Baltimore and.~ yes,
resurgent
Oakland,
upcoming on the schedule in the next month.
Roethlisberger made
it look easy by throwing
for 257 yards while not
being sack~:LI again~t
Cleveland. There have
been some rough spots
since then, a possible
sign that Roethlisberger
might be behind in his
timing after sitting out a
month. Against New
Orleans, he was 17 of
28 for 195 yards and a
66.8 passer rating.
The offense produced
a single touchdown
drive in New Orleans,
when sonic often predictable .play-calling on
first down repeatedly
left the Steelers in unfavorable down-and-distance situations on sec-

ond down.
Roethlisberger.
sacked three times
while being hit repeatedly. also had a su.ccession of passes that were
underthrown or weren't
in the vicinity of the
intended receiver either
because
the
throw was imprecise or
the route wasn't run
correctly.
"You can't make
excuses. We have to
play
better,''
Roethlisberger
said.
"We never got into any
rhythm. This is definitely a gut check for
us. We got· knocked
down a little bit and
now it will be interesting to see how we will
bounce back."
They'll have an extra
day to do it, as they
don't play division rival
Cincinnati (2-5) until
next
Monday.
The
Bengals, last \~eason 's
AFC North champions,
are stuck in a four-game

Please see Steelers, 86

Curtis Compton/Atlanta Journ al-Const itution/Me T

Cincinnati Bengals tight end Jermaine Gresham is leveled by Atlanta Falcon
defenders Stephen Nicholas, left to right, William Moore, and Christopher Owens

during 2nd-half action at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia, on Sunday,
October 24. The Falcons defeated the Bengals, 39-32.

Bengals' season hits bottom already
CINCINNATI (AP)
- Reality show star
Terrell Owens wishes
he c.ould rewind the
Bengals' season back to
the beginning.
''If I were granted
three wishes. I' d wish
that we could start this
over." he said.
Sorry. No second
takes in the NFL.
The Bengals (2-5)
have hit bottom before
the season's midpoint.
A 22-14 loss to Miami
on Sunday dropped the
defending AFC North
champions into a b&lt;.tplace
tie
with
Clevelanc.l . a team that
beat them head-to-head
last month.
"We're in a slump,
and we need to get ourselves out of it," cornerback Leon Hall said.
This slump goes back
for more than seven
games. In a lot of ways,
the Bengals are revisiting the bad old days.
They haven't won a
playoff game since
1990, the last year that
team
founder
Paul
Brown was around.
Since then. they · ve
managed only two winning records and two
playoff losses.
During that 20-year
run, they've been masters of the fast fo ld.
They've started 2-5 or

worse in four of coach
Marvin Lewis' eight
seasons, continuing a
trend
that's
held
through five different
coaching regimes. It's
the 14th time in those
20 years that they've
opened with a record of
'2-5 or worse.
The Bengals have
dropped four in a row to
drop out of contention.
It's their eighth 0-forOctober in the past 20
years.
Some slump.
'"J don't know if
there's a worse feeling
than losing a bunch of
games 111 a row,"' quarterback Carson Palmer
said. "'This is definitely
a low for this group and
a low for myself, but in
no way are we packing
it in."
How did this happen?
The Bengals thought
they were in good shape
to pull off first-time
feat for the franchise,
which has never won
back-to-back division
championships. They
kept the team virtually
intact, and brought in
Owens and drafted
receiver Jordan Shipley
and tight end Jermaine
Gresham to improve a
passing game that was
the weak link.
Then, everything fell
apart. .

T he running game
that was their foundation last season has
crumbled. Palmer has
been out of sync with
new
receivers.
his
Owens
and
Chad
Ochocinco - the selfdescribed dynamic duo
- haven't even been
close to superheroes.
And the defense that
held it all .together last
season has substantially
regressed.
"'Some of the things
that have been good to
us in the past and been
our staples aren "t there
for us," Palmer said.
"That's ·not an excuse,
that's the NFL. You
can't rely on something
that was good last week
or last year."
The coachino staff
·has come unde~ question as the season slips
away. The Bengals have
been self-destructive
and slow to react and
adapt.
Against
the
Dolphins, the offense
scored a touchdown on
its opening drive. then
got stuck in neutral
when Miami changed
its coverages to compensate for what happened that series.
"They moved the secondary around a lot and
disguised
some

Please see 8engals, Bl

Share your familysfavorite holiday
recipe with your ji'iends and neighbors.

Recipes should be submlttt.-d nu Iuter
than 1\tes., November 16th.
Please email entries to:
pealdwell@ heartlandpubllcatJons.com

Our Holiday Recipe Guide
will be inserted on
Thesday, NoYcmbcr 23rd, 2010
In The Dally Sentinel,
~bt ~alHpoU• Jlnil!' ~ribune &amp;
1lrbe ~oint ~leasant ~rghiter
)

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bengals
fromPageBl

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm men's
basketball team is ready
to make a move up the
Mid-South Conference
standings in 201 0-1 I . A
new ·recruiting class,
teamed with some key
returner::. from last season
and the RedStorm feel
like they will be able to
accomplish that feat this
season.
The RedStorm have
been tabbed to finish 8th
in
the
Mid-South
Conference
Men's
Basketball Coaches' .Poll.
Rio Grande head coach
Ken French begins his
fifth season at the helm of
the RedStorm program.
He feels like he and his
staff have assembled a
team that, although they
may lack star power, will
have the ability to be a
solid unit. "We may not
have anybody that wows
anybody on our roster.
but collectively, as a
group they're going to be
pretty good," said French.
'They're going to fun to
watch, they' re going to
be intense, very passionate about playmg the
game of basketball and
they're going to carry a
lot of pride playing for
the Rio Grande program," Frenc h added.
"We're pleased so far."
French runs down the
keys for Rio Grande to
have a successful season.
"No. 1, from ·a coaching
standpoint, we can't be
coaching effort and attitude every day;• he said.
"At times last year we felt
like as a coaching staff
that's all we were doing.
When you're doing that.
you're not really worried
about the X 's and O's so
to speak."
"I don't think that's
goin~ to be an issue this
year,' French ·added. "I
think the maturity of having seven seniors in our
program right now is
where it needs to be and
we've got a lot of guys
that are hungry, a lot of
guys that want to compete at the highest level
and that's on a daily basis
and I think that's going to
translate into success for
us."
"The biggest thing that
we have to do is defend
and rebound, when we
talk about consistency
and defining roles, everybody's got to play that
part of their role in the
£fogram," French said.
'We've got to be able to
defend and rebound and
that's at all five positions.''
Rio returns senior
guard Doug Campbell.
Campbell ( 11.1 ppg., 66
three's) is the top returning player from la~t se~­
son. Also returnmg IS
fellow senior Wendell
Bates, Jr., who is in his
third season in the program. Bates (4.3 ppg.,
3.9 rpg.) is an athletic
presence who will be
counted on heavily for
leadership. Senior forward Meau Jones is back
for his second season.
Jones (4.0 ppg.• 3.6 rpg.)
will provide leadership
and will be expected to
pick up his game in 201 011.
Junior forward
Shaun Gunnell is back for
his second season in a
Rio uniform. Gunnell
(5.9 ppg., 4.4 rpg.) is an
undersized post-player,
but works extremely hard
underneath and is always
able to get good position.
Junior Brad Cubbie is
back to man the point for
the RedStorm. Cubbie
(7.0 ppg.• 87 asts.) played
adrrurably in that position
a season ago and along
with Campbell makes the
backcourt a strength of
the team in 20 I0-11.
"Last year when we
played (the guards)
weren't issues for us:·
French said. ''It was a lot
of our frontcourt play that
hurt us and gave us problems. We've addressed.
those.
Everybody is
going to contribute, every
single person, but if you
know somebody that you
can hang your hat on, so
to speak, Campbell and
Cubbie give us stability

and strength that we
know, going into the tirst
game, we can count on.''
Rio also has a pair of
returning sophomores in
Dani Marti and guard
Florian Schneider. Marti
(6.5 ppg., 4.3 rpg.) had a
very solid first season and
at 6'8" will provide a
tough match-up for the
opposition's wing spot.
Schneider is a solid athlete who had spot play
last season.
With many new faces
on the squad, French is
concerned about how
quickly the team chemistry develops.
''The
biggest concern right now
is just us developing
some chemistry on the
floor,'' French said. "We
have great chemistry in
the locker room and off
the floor right now."
"Everybody knew you
had to stop P.J. Rase last
year," French added.
''This year it's kind of an
unknown going into the
year, we're much more
balanced, we've just got
to figure out everyone's
role and have everyone
establish a comfort level
within the system."
''If we can do those
(things), { think we will
be successful."
The newcomers are:
Kaleb Kimber, Shedrick
Usand-Burton,
Sean
Whiting, Robbie Jackson, ·
Jermaine Warmack and
Josh Birchfield.
Whiting, a transfer
from
Ohio
VaHey
University and Jackson, a
7'0"
transfer
from
Maryland- B a! tim ore
County are the two veterans of the group.
Jackson also formerly
played
at Marshall.
Whiting will bring experience to the backcourt
and Jackson gives the
RedStorm an inside presence that they were missing last season.
Kimber, a transfer from
Livingstone College and
Usand-Burton. a transfer
from Southern University
are sophomores and
should· provide experience after already going
through the rigors of a
college basketball season.
Kimber, a 6'2" guard
from Salisbury, NC,
could be a shutdown
defender and UsandBurton is a chiseled 6'6"
power forward who
should provide some help
in the post.
Birchfield
and
Warmack are the true
freshmen of the group.
Birchfield played at Fork

Union Militruy Academy
the last two seasons and
at 6'8" will provide some
depth for Jackson in the
middle. Warmack is a
qUick guard who will
push the veterans for
playing time on the court.
Junior guard Mike
Green and junior forward
David Croom round out
the squad. Both have
been a part of the Rio
basketball program at different levels throughout
their college careers and
both have also competed
on the track team in the
past.
Although it may take
some time to gel. French
is hopeful that his team
can win some games
early, but also knows that
as the season progresses
they should get stronger
and stronger as a unit.
''We definitely need to
win early because of what
we went through last
year. but it is going to be
a process.'' French said.
''Our
non-confer~nce
schedule is set up to prepare us for our league
play, which starts in
December."
"We're not anywhere
near the team we' re going
to be in January and. we
hope to improve every
day, and that's all we've
been talking about everyday let's just get a
little bit better,'' French
added.
The biggest difference
in 2010-11 for Rio
Grande should come
from inside the paint.
"The biggest changes for
us are on the inside,
we've added a sevenfooter in Robbie Jackson,
a D I transfer and he's
going to provide us some
stability and some size
that a lot of people in the
league just don't have,"
French said. ·'With him.
and the addition of Josh
Birchfield, we've got
some presence with some
size and strength and
hopefull y, along with
Meau Jones, those guys
are going to be able
anchor the five spot for us
and we won't have the
issues that we had a year
ago.··
Rio Grande finished
8th out of eight teams last
season in the MSC and
compiled a 5-26 overall
mark in 2009-10.
The regular season
begins. November 5-6
with the Giovanni's Tipoff Classic. Rio Grande
will
face
OhioChillicothe in the opener.
Tip-off is set for 6 p.m.

blitzes:· left tackle
Andrew
Whitworth
said. "It looked like
they were able to make
adjustments and we
weren't."
Palmer concurred that
the Dolphins did a better job of adapting.
"They uiJ a good job

Wednesday, November 3, 2010
adjusting after we had a
couple fast drives at the
beginning of the game."
said Palmer, who was
17 of 38 for 156 yards
and threw a clinching
interception in the closing minutes. "They did
a good job of not showing us a lot of the same
thing throughout the
rest of the game.··
At the center of. the
mess is Lewis, who is in
the final year on his

contract. Although his
job is likely safe for
now owner Mike
Brown has fired only
one coach with time left
on a contract - it's
looking unlikely that
he '11 be back after this
season.
Lewis turned down an
offer to extend his con- •
tract last season, wanting to wait and see how
this one turns out.
After seven games,
he's got his llnswer.

Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands

-qp of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
• crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will publish 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.
Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $10.00

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(shown actual size)

9

P~

Olt

Yoor PaynEnt to:

In Honor Of

VETERAN SALUTE

Major
Earl Jones
1969-1971
Army
VietNam

C/0 The Daily Sentinel
P.O. Box799
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo- $15.00
(lx4 actual size)

Photo of
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Branch of Service
Conflict/War
Love, (Name relationship to veteran)

AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 5, 2010
Sentinel ads must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
Your Name:

Address:
Phone:

'"

I

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'q?

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:§

'I~

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In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

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

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
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(740) 992-2155

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Veteran Salute Will Appear
Thursday, November 11, 2010

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lees or insurance. Call
'he Office of Consumer
Aff1ars toll free nt 1·
866·278-0003 to learn
f the mortgage broker
or lender Is properly
111:onsod. (This Is a
public
serviCe
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

'

3 bdr. 1 bath mob1le • •
home $5500.00 740. :
339·3226

Autos

..

~~----~--~ '
117 acre farm for ;
salelocated
OA 1
Eagle Ridge RoaQ • J
just
down
from , •
Basnan Fire house; :
call 740-949-2603
'

3500

Real Estate
R,!!ntals

Apartments/
Townhouses
2BR APT.Ciose to •
Holzer Hospital on SA ,
160 CIA. (740) 44 t· ~
0194
'
CONVENIENTLY
I
&amp;
LOCATED
AFFORDABLE!
&lt; I
Townhouse
apartments,
andfot
small houses for r nt
Call 740-441-1111 '..&gt;t
application
8
information.

I

•
'

1

•
,
..

3801 addison p1ke. 2010 ford fOCtJs 1300
lns1de
and
out. actual miles. Price to
4
month
old Friday and Saturday. sale
$12,000.00
Terrier/Collie mixed a-?
pnce neg. 446·7278
Call~===== or339-3503
puppies
Furniture
740)245-9462
Pets

9wk old Kittens 2·
fema!e.2-ma!e
INDOOR ONLY 1st
shots,wormed, and
liter trained 740)4411100

Free F. black Cocker
Spaniel, good wlkid:s
-;;;Fi;;;;n;;;;on;;;;c;;;;ia;;;;I;;;;S;;;;e;;;;f'Vl;;;;.c;;;;e;;;;s;;; 7 40·949-2950, 444·
3349

~IT CABO

Automotive

Animals
Flea Morkeb

Afll

Houses For Solo

land (Acreage)
Oct. 6th, 42772 Cook
Ad,
Pomeroy, 6-Acres 2 1/2 mile • ~
glassware, baby/kid back of Henderson
clothes, 8am-6pm
W. V
with
septic
system, water top
Recreational
1000
and concrete drive- •
Vehicles
way 740·245·5087 or •
740-208·0028

Life lock

Free Document
Shredder tor new
Llfelock members.
·~~~~=
Call Today
Home Improvements
1-888-758·3029 and
Basement
use promo code
Waterproofing
SHREDDER
Uncondioo:'lall fe:Ime
guarantee \.ocal
VONAGE
references fum shed
Get One Month
Estabhst&gt;ed 1975 Cali
Professional Services
500
Education
FREE! Unlimited
24 !-irs 74G-446-{)870
local
and
long
TURNED DOWN ON
Rogers Basement
SOCIAL SECURITY
WateproofinQ.
distance calling for
Business &amp; Trode
SSI
only $25.99 per
Other Services
No Fee Unless We
School
month.
Win!
Call today I
Pet Cremations. Call
Gallipolis
Career
1-888-582-3345
1·866·798-0692
740-446-37 45
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
SEPTIC
PUMPING CaiiToday! 740-446Gallia Co. OH and
1·800-214Mason Co. WV. Ron 4367
Evans Jackson, OH 0452
Aocred1ted
Member
SOG-537-9528

Free Home
· Security System
with $99 Installation
and purchase of
alarm momtonng
services from ADT
Security Services
Call1·888-367·2171

•

-. 1

FOA ..
LOOKING
DEAL? FIND US,:
Huge yard sal~ Nov NOW!!!
5 &amp; 6, 60 Gav1n st. 4anoakwoodhome c
Village 2 Rodney, 8-2 omn37 &amp; Facebook

The•••

Security

J

Yard Sale

In

Accrediting

6 apts $137.000
·,
rent $2030 mo. 740
446.0390

Toy Poodle Puppies.
CKC, vet checked,
shots, wormed. tails
docked &amp; dewclaws
removed. Colors are
black, chocholate, &amp;
buckeye, boys $300,
girls $350, 740-992·
7007

Free Rent Special
II!
2&amp;3BR apts S395 an&lt;f
up, Central Air, WfO •
hookup, tenant pa~ ;
electric. Call between • •
the hours of 8A-8P. • 1
Cars
&amp;
For Sale Couch &amp; Quality
EHO
1
Chair $75 OBO 'sed Trucks w/warranty all
Ellm VIew Apts.
•
$75 OBO 446·2732 pnced to sell, 16 yrs.
(304)882-3017 • •
n business. Cook
or 446-6281
\1otors, 328 Jackson Twin Rivers Tower 1&amp; •
Pike,
accepting applicattons, :
Gallipolis. OH 740 _ lor waiting list for HUO. ••
Hobby/ Hunt &amp;
subsidized,
1-B~ ,
Sport
446-0103.
apartment
for
the '
==~~~~== elderly/disabled, call • ~o
Trucks
675-6679
,,
2-Cieveland Brown
Tickets for the Jets, 1987 Ford 1ruck V-6
Panthers,
Ravens, 300, $550, 740-992-

=======
Pittsburgh
Games
740)256·1267

~33::6::7~~~~~=
WantTo Buy

==~~~==~ Want to buy Junk

Miscellaneous

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans1·800·
AKC Beagle Pups for
537·9528
Sale
Call
Gary
Northup for more
info 304·(73·5038
"Sangamo"
Illinois
GIVEAWAY: 13 yr. Special pocket watch
old
cockier/spring 23 Jewels, Rare.
also
spinal needs to be $1295.
kept in doors and Hamilton 950-B, 23
loved for Needs a Jewel. 740·533-3870
good home. Great w/
elderly or kids call: ~C-e-nt-ra~l--~8-o~ile-r
253·514·1592
wood
Outdoor
Furnaces
700
Agriculture Instant rebate up to
$1,000 00. 740)245·
5193
Farm Equipment
Zero tum mower Ptano for sale Call:
John Deere 740-367· 304 -6 75•5881
or
0577
304·593·3168

Cars, call 740-3880884

I

1-BR
Apt
$340 •
month, 2-BR Apt 1
4 5o month at tho J
Spnng Valley Area.
740)645·7661
0~ t
740)339·3046 after '
5:00pm

s

Oiler's Towtng. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
lease:
1BR ,
740·388·0011
or For
740-441·7870.
No unfurnished 2nd floor •
apt.
near
Ga ·,;! '
Sunday call
Academy. no pets 1 •
Real Estate ref &amp; dep. requ1red • •
3000
Sales maximum occupancy
=;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~ 2, $350 mon. 740~
446-3936 or 740· •'
Commercial
446-4425
&gt; 1I
LG Office I Rental 2 BR apt. 6 m1 from
Property 512 2nd Holzer. $400 + dep: ••
Ave
Galli!J9Iis,Oh Some utilities pd ~ •
asking $85.000 or 740-645-7630
or
make offer 740)710· 7•10-988-6130
0007
.......~~~......~ Tara Townhouse Apt.'
OFFICEIWAREHOU 2BR 1.5 BA, back
poor: • ·
SEIRETAIL
Great patio,
Location 749 Thrrd playground. No pe•-; • •
Ave Gallipohs.1800 $450 rent. 74()-367·
' I
sq.ft . For more mfo 0547
Call 1-404-456-3802

=

�-

-~ - -~---

--- -~

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

Pretty 1 or 2 BR,
Downtown Gallipolis,
Pref. Female, Utilities
included $550 mth.
$550 Deposit Must
have
excellent
references Kelly 6459096

Let us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU into Valley View
Apartments 800 St.
Rt #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

RIVERBEND PLACE
Apts.
1 BR, Hud
subsidize, elderly &amp;
disabled
complex,
accepting
304Applications
882-3121.Equal
Housing Opportunity

FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

1 &amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport, NO Pets,
740-992-2218

Middleport, 2 br.
furnished apartment.,
No pets, dep. &amp; ref.,
740-0165

Middleport Beech St.
furnished apt., Senior
living, No pets, dep.
&amp; ref., Utilities paid,
7 40-992-0165

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!

FLU
SHOTS
NOW AVAILABLE!
Office of
Carrie Lockhart Dillard, MD

Family Medicine
2416 Jefferson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-4500
Walk-Ins Welcome
Please bring your
insurance card and 10

___

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

,._"""r_~---~--~-----~.----

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

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

~- ~~......-""""""':'

Houses For Rent

Houses For Rent

Nice 1BR house in
Gallipolis. Walk to
every1hing you need.
Very clean unit, with
new paint, $275 per
mo/$100 sec. dep.
Sorry no pets, Call
Wayne
for
Information 404-4563802 ·
2 BR House for Rent,
Excellent Condition,
References
Required. NO PETS
740-645-1766
2BR Corner of 554 &amp;

garage
apartment
425.00 month. Ty
304-675-4030
~V~ery--ni-ce_h_o_m_e-fo-r

6000

Help WantedGeneral

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Drivers-COL-A. Our
Top 25 OwnerOp
Teams
Avg.
$244,417 last year!
Co Teams: .46 up to
.82 cpm split! Sign On Bonus PAID at
Orientation! R &amp; R
Trucking : 866-2048006

rent in Middleport,
good neighborhood.
Newly
remodeled.
New appliances, 2
Bedworns, 1 bath.
Large Kitchen, Sun
Room, Central aAr &amp;
Heat. Nice outdoor
spaces. No pets, non Drivers
smiking. Call 740- Professional Class A
992-5094 for more drivers, OTR tractor
Bulaville Pike $375 details.
trailer,
good pay
mon References &amp;
great home time,
Deposit 740) 3881-3 bed room house health ins.. 401 k,
1100
for rent in Syracuse paid vacation, bonus
Nice, clean 3 BR @ NO
pet's
HUD package,
&amp;
top
Kerr OH $400 mon + approved ~Call 304- equipment all in a
dep 446-7309
675-5332 Weekends small
company
atmosphere
but
3BR, 1 BA STove &amp; 740-591-0265
backed up with large
Refrig Furn., Gas
Central! Trailer
benefits.
heat,
for
rent c:&gt;mpany
AIC,W/0 hook up, $400.00 mo $400.00 Call Blake @ 888carport, No Smoking, deposit
Gallipolis 967-5737 See our
@
No pets. $600 per Ferry, WV 304-962- website
driveforpamtransport.
mo, $600 Dep.,105 0167
Bastiani, Gallipolis.
c:&gt;m
Want to Rent
Call
446-3667,
Taking applications.
look1ng
Education
Relocating
House for sale or for a Nice Home
rent. Pretty, clean, ,Condo or Large Apt.
3BR.
Downtown Prefer
Downtown Keyboarding,
Gallipolis, close to Gallipolis
or
Pt. Computer instructors
Washington
Elem. Pleasant Area.1-716- needed.
Math,
Rent $750, no utlilite. 913-2415
Have Economics
Sale $99,000. Kelly- References
Instructors
Jo 645-9096 or 446Manufactured w/Master's Degree.
4639
4000
resume:
Housing Send
bshirey@gallipoliscar
2 BR Near Clay
eercollege.edu
School $400 mon +
dep. no pets 740- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•R;;;;e;;;n;;;ta;;;ls;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
256"1664
2BR-2 Bath Like new !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Help Wanted4
br.,
bath, Mobile Home water,
General
h
detac ed
garage, sewer, trash pd. No =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
acre &amp; 1/2 land, pets, CA, Covered
newly · remodeled, Patio
Johnson's
located 1 mile out Mobile Home Park Case Manager to
provide
direct
CR 10, Langsville, 740-446-3160
services
to
$650 per mo., $650
clients,develop
a
dep.
No Utilities 3 BR mobil $500mon
Paid.
Lease &amp; &amp; dep. 4BR home standard plan and
coordinate provision
references required.
$725 mon &amp; dep. on
No Pets Allowed. Bulaville Pike 740- of services to meet
the primary, Urgent
740-416-2960.
367-7272
need
of
clients.
Happy Ad
Degree
and
trailer for rent double experience
wide. 3br 2baths 575 preferred.but
not
Happy90
month 575 deposit required.
Send
to:
Birthday!! 1722-b chatham 740- resumes
645-1646
Spectrum Outreach
Joe Delgado
Service,Ltd.,456
Ave.
1 BR Trailer for Rent, Second
River Valley School Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Dist. All new inside.
Off Thompson Rd.
$300 per mth. Trash Little Cesars now
&amp; water pd. Ph. 740- hiring asst. mgrs.
388-9326
Total and
co
mgrs.
Electric.
Competitive wages,
benefits,
and
Supplies
Birtthday Cards
advancement
can be sent to
Green slag 10.00 a opportunities.
c/o Norma Torres ton
great
for Locally owned and
Send
742 General
driveways. Rt. 62 operated.
to
Hartinger Pkwy above New Haven resume
Scottgoodwin45619
behind
American
:\-liddleport, OH
Colloid Co. (304)882· @gmail.com or fax
45760
740-886-7425
3944.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Accepting
applications for part
time cashiers. Apply
in person at ParMar
#42 15054 St Rt 160
Vinton Oh or on
at
online
parmarstores.com
Accepting
applications for part
time
cashiers,
Subway artist &amp; exp.
full time ass. store
manager. Apply in
person at ParMar
#38
15289
Rd
Huntington
Gallipolis Ferry or on
online
at
parmarstores.com
Sales rep. needed to
sell Cable TV and
related services in
Pt. Pleasant and
surrounding areas.
Great Commissions
leads provided. 1800-270-1780
Medical
Gallipolis
Developmental
Center is currently
seeking a part-time
Permanent Licensed
Practical
Nurse.
LPN must have an
Ohio LPN License
and a valid drivers
license.
Interested
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
Center
Attention:
Human
Resource
2500
Department
Ohio
Avenue
Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone:
740-4461642 HR Fax: 740446-2625.
The
Gallipolis
Developmental
Center is an Equal
Oppo.rtunity
Employer
and
Provider of ADA
Services.

Servic~ I

Bus.
Directory

9000

Cleaning

Private
Home
Cleaning.
Reasonable Rates,
Several Ref. more
info Call Tiffany @
304-532-4379

Handyman
Will do handymans
Some
work.
plumbing. roofing,
sidiQg some home
improvement work,
Etc Call Jack at
740)339-0689
100

Legals

COUNTY : MEIGS
PUBLIC
NOTICE
The
following
applications and/or
verified
complaints
were received, and
the following draft,
proposed and final
actions were issued,
Ohio
by
the
Environmental
Protection
Agency
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" include the
adoption,
modification,
or
repeal
of orders
(other
than
emergency orders);
the issuance, denial,
modification
or
revocation
of
licenses,
permits,
leases, variances, or
certificates; and the
approval
or
disapproval of plans
and
specifications.
"Draft actions" are
written statements of
the
Director
of
Environmental
Protection's
(Director's)
intent
with respect to the
issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,
order, etc. Interested
persons may submit
written comments or
request a public
meeting
regarding
draft
actions.
Comments' or pu.blic
meeting
requests
must be submitted
within 30 days of
notice of the draft
action.
"Proposed
actions" are written
statements of the
Director's intent with
respect
to
the
issuance,
denial.
modification,
revocation,
or
renewal of a permit,
license or variance.
Written
comments
and requests for a
public
meeting
regarding a proposed
be
action
may
submitted within 30
days of notice of the
proposed action. An
adjudication hearing
may be held on a
proposed action if a
hearing request or
objection is received
by the OEPA within
30 days of issuance
of
the
proposed
action.
Written
comments, requests

. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - for public meetings
and
adjudication
hearing
requests
must be sent to:
Hearing Clerk, Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency,
P.O. •Box
1049.
Columbus,
Ohio
43216-1049
(Telephone: 614-6442129).
"Final
actions" are abions
of the Director which
are effective upon
available~
issuance or a stated
effective
date.
Pursuant to Ohio
Code
Revised
Section 3745.04, a
final action may be
• Need a website for your business?
appealed
to
the
Environmental
• Need to drive more local customers to your website?
Review·
Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
• Neet to optomize your search tags? (Search EngtneOpt•mzatlon)
by a person who was
a
party
to
a
• Want to sell your products on-line?
proceeding
before
the Director by filing
• Don't have the time or desire to become a web tech?
an appeal within 30
days of notice of the
final
action.
Pursuant to Ohio
Code
Revised
Section 3745.07, a
final action • issuing,
denying, modifying,
revoking or renewing
a permit, license or
variance which is not
preceded
by
a
proposed
action,
may be appealed to
• Sll VER upgrade package. Ask about GOLD &amp; PLATNUM. Prepayment discounts avallabiP.
the ERAC by filing an
appeal within 30
More online advertising opportunities are now available at MyDailySentinel.com
days of the issuance
Contact your sales consultant to to help you set-up you FREE listing and more information about
of the final action.
Upgraded Business Listings.
ERAC
appeals
accompanied by a
$70.00 filing
fee
which
the
Commission in its
discretion
may
reduce if by affidavit
the
appellant
demonstrates
that
payment of the full
amount of the fee
would cause extreme
hardship, must be
with·
filed
Environmental
Review
Appeals
309
Commission,
South Fourth Street.
Room
222.
Columbus,
Ohio

Attention Business Owners

Free on-line business Listings
on

www.mydailysentinel.com

Easy to setup, upgrades

Commercial &amp; Residemial
• Room additions • Roofing •
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hor.;e
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood t'endng
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MIKE W. :\IARCUM. OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long lloflom, 011
740-985-4141
740·416·1834

Fully insured

.·:

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•

....

''f"'P:;

WJNTERS10RAGE
\1eigs Count~ iFair'gmunds
Arrhal: Oct. 30.2010
9:00am • II :011 a.m.
Release: Last .Saturday in Apl'il. 2011
A fee of $20.00 11111 be charj;t'd fo1 e.1rly ·
arrival. late arrival. early removal, h11e
removal. or an)tJIIIC !Kt'CS~ r; wanted to
fairgrounds other than ~tilted dates.
Building space IS first cnme ftr~t serve.
Inside

~tora-&gt;.::

$4.00/11

Open Sp;m: $2.00/lf
Inside I-t-nee: $l.UO!If

Call 985-4372 for more information

louse

Electrical &amp; ALL Plumping work
Concrete 1\alks &amp; dri\cways
VIC 1 Oll~G IH- OWNI\R
740-992-62 15. 7&lt;40-591-0195
In busines~ locally for 30 )CIII'S
RPtlnrPrl \\inter lbtP~

Pomeroy, OH

WV 036725

PSI CONSTRUCTION.
Metal Roofs installed all winter long at
discounted rates.
Specializing in Insurance Jobs including.
storm. wind &amp; water dama~e.
Room Additions. Remodeling. ~Ictal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

100

Legals

43215. A copy of the
appeal
must
be
orr
the
served
Director within 3
days after filing the
appeal
with
ERAC.APPLICATIO
N RECEIVED FOR
AIR
PERMITGATLING
OHIO LLCYELLOW
BUSH RD. RACINE
OH ACTION DATE ·
10/18/2010
FACILITY
DESCRIPTION· AIR
IDENTIFICATION
NO.
A0040569
APPLICATION FOR
THE INSTALLATION
OF

A

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS
I

3,226

FT&amp;sup3;
PNElJMATICALLY
FILLED
LIME
BIN,
WITH
ASSOCIATED
CONVEYORS. (11)
3. 2010

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111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

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i

�-,---~--~--- ........

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY
WOUL.D YOU LII&lt;E

THEM TO COME
NeXT MONDAY
OR TUESDAY~

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

H~E $6E~

.r'M
-rc
TJ./E APVIC.E CF TilE
1'0L&amp;1 MAN OH rt-IE
MOUHT.AI/tl ''

~

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

.......

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

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

•

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

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Fuse
1 Shopping 39 Store
aid
come-ons
5 Ship
40 Pod fill
lockup
41 Lamarr of
9 Starts a
"Samson
pot
and
11 Sports
Delilah"
spot
12 Standard DOWN
1 Praises
13 South
American 2 Fly or flea
3 Dazed
capital
state
14 Sheriff's
4 British
asst.
15 Yet to
brew
5 Rotten
come
kid
17November
6 Lie
sign
7 Lined up
19Lawn
8 Peered
material
,10Goof
20Lake
swimmer 11 To boot
21 Congregants'
seat
22 First
name in
TV talk
24Stick out
26Some
exams
29 Lush
30Vacuum
feature
320utlaw
34 British
brew
35November
stone
36Macaroni
shape

TOdlv'iAnswers
16 Laughing
gas, for
short
18Weed'part
21 Cool, in
slang
23 Bridge
features
24Most
important
thing to do
25 Perfect
place

27 Prone
28 Went it
alone
29Took
notice
30 Label
info
31 Full of
info
33 Back
muscles,
for short
37 - -di-dah

11-3

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

:£ t::&gt;Ot-I'T" KNOW,
StJT" J.'M IHlNKING
we Neec&gt;A New
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MUTTS

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

HAPPY BIRfHDAY for Wednesday,
Nov. 3, 2010:
This year, you often feel as if your
plate is too full. You will develop quite
an interesting juggling act as you
attempt to work-through various
issues, concerns and situations.
Communication with siblings and key
neighbors might be especially difficult.
In general, avoid al1 control games and
power plays. Refuse to play, and you
will win. If you are single, you meet
people with ease, and you bring an
unusual intensity to conversations and
new relationships. Careful- you
could easily bowl someone over with
this trait. Howeve~; if this person cannot handle the authentic you, he or she
is not a candidate for "sweetie." If you
are attached, the two of you often disagree. Others often find you difficult to
be around LIBRA makes a great confidant, healer or physician.
Tire Stars Show the Kind of Day You71

ment ·with the party in question. You
really don't need to push that far.
Tonight Hanging out is fun to do.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
*** Remember your budget and
be willing to say "no," even if you're
sorely tempted to do otherwise.
Tension could build where you least
anticipate it Sharp words, especially
spoken to a close associate or family
member, prove to be a problem.
Tonight Be reasonable.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22)
***** Recognize an opportunity,
and don't allow past history or a difficult and controlling associate to ~top
you. Words could be sharp but help
clear the air. You finally reach a point of
understanding. Tonight Some good
old-fashioped spontaneity.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You know better than to share
your many thoughls with others. r\ot
only are you likely to confuse others,
you also might cause a stressful situation. Use care and intuition with your
finances. Tonight Vanish while you
can!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** Keep your eye pn the big
l&gt;icture. Pressure builds, and you could
discover a newfound volatility. You
could be far too serious when dealing
with a loved one or dear friend. Let go
and become less uptight. Tonight:
Where the action is.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19)
****Take a stand, and you will
come out ahead. Understand what is
happening with a boss you might need
to cater to once in a while. After all. he
or she is the boss and in charge. Learn
to bend in this type of situation.
Tonight: Burning the midnight oil.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
****Force yourself to go past
your comfort level as you attempt to
identify with others. Understanding
adds depth to the communication and
bonding. You could be exaggerating a
concern in your life. Tonignt Try a new
spot.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
***** Meetings become more
complex than they need to be. Others
seem to be determined to change your
mind about a situation. You are pretty
sure you are right, and don't want to
do anything dilferenlly. Be re.peclful
and gracious about another person's
ideas. Tonight Dinner for two.

Patrick McDonnell
As A ''~RI:EDER"
I SEE ALL M':/

lAIER To BE SOLD

THE)'
GET
OUT.

AS ''PEDIGREES'~

PoPPIES ENDURE.
A HARSH L.lFE
AT THE M\LL.

BoT STILL
THE':/ ARE

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Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

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*** You get a severe dose of several controlling and opinionated people.
You might not be sure how to handle
one person who always seems to be
demanding and might feel entitled to
do so. Try to lighten up. Tonight Lend
a friend an ear.
TAURUS (Apri120-May 20)
***** Reflect on the job at hand
and what you need to accomplish.
Your ability to read between ihe lines
defines a work- or health-related matter. You could inadvertently be closing
yourself off from the big picture.
Tonight Do for you.
·
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your creativity remains a
strong suit, no matter what you do or
with whom you come in conta~.
Openly share ideas without demanding agreement. You understand what is
going on with another person. Tonight:
Let your hair down.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
****You cannot get away from
your orientation around your home
and personal life. Creativity flourishes
if you are willing lo express both negative and positive feelings. Cut being
overly serious about a situation.
Tonight At home.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
***** Keep communication
'flowing, even if you suddenly feel
wound tight about a situation. You
might decide to camouflage your vulnerability or decide to have an argu-

*****

***

•
Jacqueline Bigar is 011 the In Ierne/
ctl http:/lunuu.&gt;.jt7CiJUcl inebignr.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
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--- -

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

from Page BJ
and Tuscanm as Central
Catholic \Viii play in the
first regional semifinal
at 6 p.m.
Brenna Holter led the
net attack with seven
kills,
followed
by
Maxson and Jamie
Swat:tel with six kills
each. Kiki Osborne and
Erin
Swatzel
both
added two ki lis in the
setback.
while

~lorrison and Kelsev
Myers rounded things
out with one kill apiece.
Erin Swatzel had a
tenm-high three blocks.
while Maxson and
Jamie Swatzel eac~ had
one
block
apiece.
Breanna Hayman Jed
the passing attack with
I 0 assists, followed by
Alli Hendrix with eight
assists
and
Jamie
Swatzel
with
two
assists.
Holter and Maxson
both led the service
attack with four points.
followed by Hendrix

blamed entirely on
Rocthlisberger's layoff.
or the time he's needed
from Page Bl
to get his game legs
back. While the defense
leads
the league in
losing streak.
After losing 111 New fewest points and rushOrleans, the Steelers ing yards allowed, the
probably are thankful offense is much closer
for what even they to the bottom of the
acknowledged was a league than the top.
The Steelers are No.
lucky victory at Miami.
The Steclcrs were 27 in total offense. No.
limited to two field 29 in passing yardage
goals during the second and No. 20 in points
half of that 23-22 win after scoring 19 points
on Oct. 24. one made or fewer four times. The
possible when an offi- only breakout game was
cial's errant call on a the 38- 13 victory at
Roethlisberger touch- Tumpa Bay on Sept. 26.
do\\n run that wasn't when Charlie Batch
allowed them to kick threw three touchdown
what proved to be the passes.
decisive field goal with
While
Rashard
2:26 remaining.
Mendenhall is r\'o. 8 in
Take away that favor- ru::.hing with an 86.1
able call, and the yards per game average.
Steelers likely would the Steelers were turned
looking up at Baltimore away late in the second
in AFC North standings half during a key goalrather than being tied line stand by New
with the Ravens (5-2).
Orleans that started
Still, the offense's inside the 1-yard line.
struggles
can't
be Isaac Redman lost a

Steelers

Switch today!

_ _ ___,,--ooo:--~--:-------------------~-

'"'ww.mydailyscntincl.com

.

Eastern

~--~-·~-----,.._

\Vedncsday, November 3, 2010

Buckeyes welcome a week away

and Baylee Collins with
three
points
each.
Jamie Swatzel added
two points. while the
COLUMBtJS, Ohio
duo of Brooke Johnson (AP) - Don't look for
and
Janae
Boyles Jim Tressel with a 3 iron
closed things out with in his hands this week.
one point nP.iece.
Even though his team
Eastern finished the doesn't play on Saturday.
season 14-2 in TVC I the Ohio State coach
Hocking play and fin- scoffs at the idea that he
ished
second
to and hi-, staff could just
Waterford ( 16 0). The laze around for a day.
Lady Eagle\ aho fin··we could all go out
ished the 20 I 0 season golfing together:· said
ranked I Oth in the Ohio Tressel, a non-golfer. with
High School Volleyball more than a hint of sarCoaches Association c&lt;~sm.
poll.
111e bye week comes· at
an ideal time for the
eighth-ranked Buckeyes
yard on fir~t down and (8-1, 4-1 Big Ten). It
~tcndenhall gained a
gives them a chance to
single yard on the next heal brubes and get back
two carries, forcing some injured players.
Pittsburgh to settle for a such as linebacker Ross
field goal.
Homan wiTo has missed
"We've got to learn I the last two !!&lt;tmes with a
from this. and I'm sure ~ foot injury. ~
we will;' coach Mike
It also gives them a
Tomlin ~aid.
chance to get refreshed
The offense also hurt and regrouped before the
it~elf when. while dri;final push.
vmg for what would
Their next eame is 1\iov.
have been the go-ahead 13 at home ~gainst Penn
score during the fourth
quarter, tight end !Ieath State. Then comes a huge
Miller fumbled at the showdown at No. 15 Iowa
Saints' 34 follo\.':ing a that is shaping up to be for
25-yard
completio n. at least a piece of the Big
Miller might he the Ten championship . -'most mistake-free play- with the loser possibly
er on offense - his fallmg all the way to
teammates say so - but fourth place. Then there's
the Steelers never got the annual blood-letting
theH momentum back with rival Michigan two
after a fumble that
Roethlisberger termed
"freaky."
··There's no need to
panic." wide receiver
Hines Ward said. "We
have a terrific football
team. This is just one
loss and we have to prepare
now
for
Cincinnati.''

days after Thanksgivmg of non-stop hitting in preat Ohio Stadium.
season camp and games.
The players don't h1t The Buckeyes have made
the practice field again dramatiC (:hanges. particthis
week
until ularly m the secondary,
Wednesday. They make due to costly injuries to
~1oeller,
no apologie~ for seekilig a Tyler
~arnett and Christ'
respite in a long season.
"On the bye week, Bryant. The first two w
we've got to cherish that definitely miss the rest of
moment bccause then!·~ the season and Bryant
times that you need to get was hospitalized last
rest," quarterback 1imelle week with a foot infection
Pryor said. "We all need which may prevent him
rcturnin!! before a
to get some rest. maybe from
bowl game. ~
sleep in a couple of days
"We're looking to get
and be a little lazy." ·
some guys back healthy,''
losing
at defensive end Cameron
Since
Wisconsin on Oct. 16, the Heyward said.
Buckeyes have \\On their
Pryor said the aches and
two games by a combined pains
of a typical season
score of I 0 1-10 - and wear down most players.
dropped a spot in the
"Guys are down a little
Bowl
Championship bit:' he said. "I know I'd
Series rankings.
like to get my legs back a
They are eighth in both little bit (during the bye
the human polls used in week). Als&lt;), I'm goin!! to
the BCS - up two spots llo some working out to
in each since their only get back to some of the
defeat. But they are an technical. sound stuff like
average of 16th m the dropbacks and keeping
country in the computers the ball up high and just
which make up the other make sure we take care of
portion of the BCS for- that. Then Penn State will
mula. a drop of two spots be toming in and we h~
·
even after the two most to be crisp altogether ·
recent wins.
team and individually.
But Ohio State is trying actually can't wait for (the
not to dwell on such mat- week oft).''
ter::. The major objective
The bye abo allows the
this week will be recuper- coaching staff to evaluate
ating after three months where the team stands.

C
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