<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3451" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/3451?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T07:25:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13362">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/0effb227d0ef9487418a82a1bc5d5da5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c4a20b22fa76798f3d90a605c11e7839</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12372">
                  <text>~----------------------~----------~------~--------------- ----~------------- ·-~-------------------.-----------~~~~~

Election 2010:
Kasich begins
choosing aides, A2

Prep football
previews, Bt

Printed on IOOl"C
C\\!iprint

Rccyctl.'d

Middleport • Pomer oy, Ohio
-.

·\. ..... ·-'

•

,

I

50 CENTS it Yol. 6o, No. 19
.

' .

B Y BRIAN

Fund raiser
set for
holiday gift
purchases

•

. a lendars
A3
Classifieds
B3-4
Bs
Comics
Editorials
A4
Sports B Section
© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishmg Co.

lUJI,I !1,1.!1!11

2010

W\\"\\'. mydailysc ntint~l. cmn

New
Haven,
W.Va.,
appeared
Wednesday
before Judge Fred W.
Crow Ill and changed hi~
plea from not guilty to
guilty. He is represented
by Pomeroy Attorney
Charles Knight as public
defender.
Divers will be sentenced in January for his
role In setting the fire and
destroying the church and

its
sacred
contents,
according to Assistant
Prosecuting
Attorney
Matthew Donahue.
Joseph Satterfield, 18,
Erin Hawkins, 23, and
Jeffrey Mullins, 18, are
set for. November. The
four are charged with setting the August fire that
reduced the 160-year old
country church to ashes
al1'd left a congregation

and community devastated, as well.
Satterfield is out on
bond . . He has retained
counsel.
Hawkins,
Mullins
and
Divers
remain in jail, clients of
the
Ohio
Public
Defender.
In addition to arson, the
four were charged 111
identical
indictments
with desecrating rel igious

objects in the church.
breaking and entering,
criminal trespa&lt;&gt;sing, vandalism, tampering with
evidence and possession
of criminal toob.
The congregation of
the Hemlock G rove
ch urch has been attending services in the nearby Hemlock Grange Hall
until a new church can
be built.

GOP stronghold
Meigs supports
Strickland for
governor

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELcot.l

POMEROY - Gov~
Ted Strickland lost hi'S&gt;
bid
for
re-election
Tuesday,
but Meigs
County voters, who have
consistently supported
him in his 20 years in
politics came through for
him again.
It is not often that
Meigs County people
feel comfortable calling a
Congressman
or
Governor by his first
name. but Strickland has
been "Ted" to many here
- including Democrats
and Republicans- since
1 his fir~t run for Congress
in 1992.
Even two years later,
when the Republicans

Brian J. Reed/photos
Third graders from Eastern Elementary School are
the latest group of elementary students to visit
Pomeroy as part of their course in Meigs County history. Rev. Walter Heinz, pastor of Sacred Heart
Church, described elements of the landmark church's
Gothic architecture and the relig1ous symbolism seen
in the stained-glass windows and elsewhere in the
church, built in 1899. Students, teachers and volunteers with the Retired Senior Volunteer Program,
, which sponsors the program, also toured the county
jail and museum, and the Chester Courthouse and
I
Academy.

See Election, AS

~ully

beware: Preventing menacing Marauders

B Y BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENiiNEL.COM

ROCK · SPRINGS Though the ugliness of
bullying hasn't changed.
bullying methods have
taken on infinite possibilities in the instant gmtific;ation age of Internet
access and mobile phone!)
- possibilities local school
districb arc attempting to
address proactively, not
reacti\·ely.
Gone are the ··good old

days'' of a bully simply
taking another student's
lunch money. lbday bullies have a whole smorgasbord of technology to
extmct their tonnent from the Internet to
mobile phones. Though
the bullying devices are
new. there's also an old
trend in bullying rearing
its ugly head again- bullying based on sexual orientation. Though the
media has recently made
this out to be a new phc-

nomena, if you ask gay or
lesbian adults, they'lllikely tell you this scenario is
as old and as unfunny as
jokes about Billie Jean ·
King and Rock Hudson.
The latest in the bullying vernacular is cyberbullying. which is basically when a student is
harassed, bullied or otherwise targeted by another
student using the Internet,
often via e-mails or social
networking sites. and/or
""ith mobile phones. The

technology of today's
mobile phones allow
instant messages. texts.
photos nnd videos to be
sent to hundreds of other
phones in a matter of seconds - once "Johnny is
an (expletive) and here's
why and let's not talk to
him" is boomeranged into
the cyberbullying world,
it's like trying to un-ring a
bell.
Rusty Bookman, superintendent of the ~1 eig:s
Local School District,

says the district ha-; a policy against cyberbullying
and bullying based on
someonc's sexual orientation. In regard to cyberbullying. Meigs Local's
policy actually mentions
the term cyberbullying
alongside terms of prohibited acts like stalking. hazing, name calling. etc.
In regard to cyberbullying, the policy prohibits
haras:-.ment, intimidation,

See Bullying, AS

Rio president gives tips for bu.siness success
BY CHARLENE HOEFuCH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTlNEt..COM

• Sandra Elizabeth Codner
• Bobby Ray Mitchell
• Brian Bradford

SEc n oss- 12 PAl:u;

4,

Phillips only Democrat on
local ballot to daim victory
BY BRIAN J. REED

Page AS

2

I

Learning local ·history

~BITUARIFS

INDEX

REED

POMEROY - One of
four people charged in the
August arson fire that
destroyed the historic
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church has admitted to a
seven-count indictment
and will be sentenced
early next year.
Christopher Divers, 19,

SYRACUSE
Carleton School and
Meigs Industries FundRaismg Group will 'have a
spaghetti dinner in the
school
gymnasium
Sunday with serving from
11 a.m. to 2 p .m.
Funds raised will be
used. to buy Christmas
gifts for the children and
adult
participants.
Dinners can be eaten in or
taken out. There will also
be a sale of baked goods.
Tickets for adults are $6
and for children, $3. The
adult tickets are reduced
to $5 if purchased in
advance. They can be purchased from Amy Smith
at 740-508-9300 or Peggy
Crane. 740-992-6681 .

WEATaER

J.

BREED@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

Donation
drive for dog
shelter
POMEROY
- A
donation drive for the
Meigs
County
Dog
Shelter will be held from
1-3 p .m., Saturday, Nov. 6
at Dettwillcr True Value
Lumber. Most needed
items include: cat and kitten dry food, dog and
puppy dry food , cat and
dog treats, cat and dog
toys, cat and dog leas hes.
cat and dog collar:- (all
sizes). cat and dog shampoo. litter, extra deep litter
pans. 30-40 gallon trash
bags. paper towels and
bleach. liquid laundry.
blankets and towels (new
and used), file folders and
reams of paper. Cash
donations are also needed. For more information
contact Sarah Turner at
444-5190. 100 percent of
all donations \Vill go to
the dog shelter.

NOVJ.: MBI~R

Divers admits to charges in Hemlock Grove arson case

TUPPERS PLAINS A pancake and sausaoe
breakfast will be he~d
from 7 to 11 a .m .
Saturday at the St. · Paul
United Methodist Church,
Route 7. Tuppers Plains.

•

THURSDAY,

-

Breakfast
being held

D.,

~

1

POMEROY- "We've
come a long way. but
we're not there yet.
Women are not fully seen
as equals ... not yet" said
Dr. Barbara Gellman
Danley, speaking at 'the
Professional
WomenStories of Success" luncheon held Wednesday at
the Wildhorse Cafe.
Dr. Gellman-Danley,
president of the University
of Rio Grande and the Rio
Grande
Community
College, was the first

speaker for a series of
quarterly programs being
planned by the Meigs
County
Economic
Development
Office
where women share their
experiences in business ·
and offer advice for personal success.
Talking about what she
has learned as a wormm in
business over the yeru·s.
the speaker, who has a
long history in university
administration, gave tips
for getting ahead. She
talked about maintaining
credibility by avoiding the
gossip scene, and the need

to keep emotions in check
in the business place.
"Don't lose your temper
and don't cry.'' she
advised.
The importance of staying current in your profes- ·
sional field was stressed
by Gellman-Danley who
emphasized the need for
continuing · education.
"Learning is never done
because you have to have a
little more than others to
have an edge in the business world." she said.
As for behavior. ·she

See Women, AS

Dr. Barbara Gellman-Danley ,

Racine approved for paving grant
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

RACINE
- After
more than a decade-long
dry spell. all the streets in
Racine will be repaved
thanks to the village being
approved for its latest
grant.
At this week's meeting
of Racine Village Council.
Clerk-Treasurer
Dave
SP.encer announced the
VIllage had been approved
for a $259,059 grant from
the
Buckeye
Hi1ls
Regional Development

District. The village has
recently received funding
to finance paving of several streets though the
Buckeye Hills Round 25
grant will allow all streets
to eventually be paved.
Street paving will take
place this week, weather
pcnnitting. on Fifth. ,\ lain.
Vine. Tyree. Broadway,
ChciTy,
Dudding,
Sycamore and Broad as
well as John's Road.
.M otorists are asked to
expect delays or avoid
these areas.

Council also approved
signing an option-lease
agreement with AT&amp;T to
possibly place a cell phone
tower on village property
ncar the water tower located
in
Greenwood
Cemetery. Signing the
option-lease agreement
gtves AT &amp;T the option to
build on that site for one
year at a cost of $500
which is paid to the village. If AT&amp;T decides to
build on the site, the
monthly rent to the village

See Paving, AS

Beth Sergent/photo
Work to widen the road, add turning lanes, new curbs,
gutters and sidewalks contmues along Fifth Stre et in
Racine. More paving is taking place on village back
streets this week, weather permitting.

�Thursday, November 4,

2010

4

a

The Daily Sentinel• Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

Kasich starts naming key aides
BY JuuE CARR SMYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBUS - Ohio
Gov.-elect John Kasich
said Wednesday that no
government program will
be. safe under his new
adplinistration as he
seeks ways to address a
looming budget gap that
could approach $8 billion.
Kasich, a 58-year--old
former Republican congressman
elected
Tuesday
to
replace
Democratic Gov. Ted
Strickland, said "nothing
will be left off the table"
as his he crafts the two-

year state budget due out
early next year.
But he stopped short of
threatening jt&gt;b cuts to
unionized public employees before getting even a
flrst glimpse at the latest
budget figures.
'T m not going to get
into·trying to pick on anybody right now," Kasich
said, noting he wants a
smooth transition into
office and productiv~
budget negotiations.
"I'm very confident
that we'll have a very
good
reform-oriented
budget that will restore
the tax cut," he told

reporters invited in after a
meeting with his key
advisers.
In order to balance the
last
state
budget,
Strickland delayed for
two years a planned 4.3percent cut to Ohioans'
personal income taxes.
Three newly-named
Kasich aides and one of
his long-time policy
advisers have scheduled a
meeting Thursday with
the Strickland administration for their first budget briefing, he said.
He has named can1paign manager Beth
Hansen as his chief of

staff. He called her decades.
under the state's last
methodical, calm and
Struble is a softspoken, Republican administrafocused.
cerebral longtime Capitol tion, that of Bob Taft. He
The new position of • Hill staff aide, who will was most recently serving
state policy director was provide a contrast to in the office of Auditor
given to Wayne Struble, Kasich 's more excitable Mary Taylor, the lieu-·
who will coordinate key style. After Kasich left tenant governor-elect.
policy initiatives in all the Congress, Struble served , Hansen, Struble, Keen
cabinet agencies.
as a top aide to former and long-time Kasich
Struble served as policy Ohio GOP Rep. David aide Ben Kanzeg are
director when Kasich Hobson.
and,
more scheduled to meet with
chaired the U.S. House recently, an adviser to Strickland chief of staff
Budget Committee in the freshman Ohio GOP Rep. John ,Haseley and state
1990s. Kasich said in that Steve Austria.
budget director Pari
position, Struble effecKasich also selected Sabety on Thursday.
tively
directed
the Tim Keen as the state's
Strickland
spokesnation'$ budget policy next budget director. woman Amanda Wurst
and helped balance the Keen served as deputy said the governor is comfederal budget for the first budget director and mitted to assuring a
time in nearly three briefly as budget director smooth transition.

Republicans promise limited government
BY CALVIN WOODWARD

ASSOCIATED PREss
WASHINGTON
Emboldened by a commanding House majority
and
Senate
gains,
Republican
leaders
vowed Wednesday to roll
back the size of government and, in time, the
nation's sweeping health
care law.
President
Barack Obama. reflective after his party's
drubbing,
accepted
blame for failing to
deliver the economic
security
Americans
demand while saying of
his health overhaul:
"This was the right thing
to do."
He called the election a
"shellacking."
After two years with
fellow Democrats leading Congress, Obama
now must deal for the
rest of his term with the
jarring
reality
0f
Republican control of
the House, a diminhhed
Democratic majority in
the Senate and a new
flock of lawmakers
sworn to downsize government at every chance.
"I've got to do a better

job," he said, "like everybody
else
in
Washington.'' And he
took responsibility for
not doing enough to alter
the ways of the capital,
whether its hyper-partisansh!p or back-room
dealing. "We were in
such a hurry to get.things
done that we didn't
change how things were
done."
Republicans sounded
less conciliatory in the
flrst blush of their victories from the midterm
elections Tuesd~y.
"Change course we
wilL'' said Ohio Rep.
John Boehner, the speaker-in-waiting, describing
the outcome as a clear
mandate to shrink the
government. That echoed
the unrelenting demand
of tea party activists
whose energy and votes
helped to fuel the largest
turnover in the House in
more than 70 years.
The capital awoke- if
it ever slept- to a new
political order. With their
lopsided
win.
Republicans are ushering
in a new era of divided
government and dethroning Speaker Nancy

Pelosi, a prime target of
their campaign.
Repealmg the health
care law, with its mandates and subsidies to
extend health insurance
to nearly all Americans,
has been a Republican
rallying cry for months
but Obama, with his veto
power,
·and
the
Democrats still in control of the Senate stand
in the way. Several
Republicans indicated
their challenge to the law
won't happen overnight
when they take power.
"I think it is important
for us to lay the groundwork before we begin to
repeal this monstrosity,"
Boehner said. Senate
Majority Leader Harry
Reid, who survived a tea
party
challenge
in
Nevada, said 'Tm ready
for some tweaking" on
the health care law but
would flght its repeal.
Obama, too, indicated he
was open to changes,
saying Republicans who
complain about the burden on small businesses
might have a point. But
he was not about to see
his signature achievement unravel at its core.

In the heady election
aftermath,
some
Republicans cautioned
their own that they have
work to do in building
public trust when many
Americans are fed up
with both parties.
"We've been given a
second chance and a
golden
opportunity,"
said Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia,
No.
2
Republican
in
the
House. But. he added,
"People want to see
results."
Sizing up the power
shift, Reid said he wants
to preserve Obama's
health care law and let
taxes rise on upper
income Americans, but
''I'm not bullheaded."
"If we need to work
something out with the
people who are really
rich. I'll have to look at
that," he said. "If there's
some tweaking we need
to do with the health care
bill, I'm ready for some
tweaking. But I'm not
going to in any way denigrate the great work we
did as a country, and saving America from bankruptcy because of the
insurance industry bank-

rupting us." .
The Republican Senate
leader, Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky, sounded
anything but humble in
declaring "we are indeed
humbled and ready to
listen." At a news conference with Boehner,
McConnell
said
Republicans will cooperate with the other side to
the extent Democrats
"pivot in a different
direction." He predicted
enough Democrats may
support the GOP on
spending and debt matters to achieve action on
that front.
Obama called Boehner
to congratulate him late
Tuesday. He also spoke
with McConnell and top
Democrats in a series of
conversations
that
reflected the shifting balance of power. Boehner
said Pelosi called and
"left me a very nice
voice mail" when she
missed him, and they
will speak later.
Incomplete
returns
showed the GOP picked
up at least 60 House
seats and led for four
more, far in excess of
what was needed for a

maJonty. About two
dozen races remained
too close to call.
Republicans gained at
least six Senate seats,
and tea party favorites
Rand Paul in Kentucky,
Mike Lee in Utah and
Marco Rubio in Florida.
were among their winners. Their comeback
was aided by independents, who backed GOP
candidates for the first
time since 1998.
Not all the tea party
insurgents
won.
Christine
O'Donnell
lost badly in Delaware,
for
a
seat
that
Republican strategists
once calculated would
be theirs with ease until
her stunning upset victory in the primary.
In Nevada, Reid dispatched Sharron Angle
in an especially costly
and contentious campaign in a year filled
with them.
The GOP also wrested
11 governorships from
the Democrats, Ohio,
Pennsylvania and Maine
among them, and gave
two back. Californi.
and Hawaii.

Tea party winners take ambitious promises to DC
·ay NEDRA PICKLER

caucus this summer with a
couple dozen members,
and the freshmen said it's
unclear if they would join
WASHINGTON
Fecvent
tea
party her group or start one of
Republicans are headed to their own.
Congress carrying ambiRep.-elect
Renee
tious promises to overhaul Ellmers in North Carolina
taxes, spending and health said a tea party caucus
care, with activists pres- will serve as sort of a
suring them to buck their watchdog on Capitol Hill
own party if necessary to and
change
the
achieve their goals. ''They Republican Party for the
are not in a mood for com- better. She expects to ·
promise," said Tea Party agree
mostly
with
Patriots co-founder Mark Republican leaders on the
issues but wants to ensure
Meckler.
The activists promised that they follow the core
to keep up the pressure on principles of the movetheir favored lawmakers ment: limited government,
to fight a Washington reduced spending and a
establishment they say is focus on the Constitution.
broken and doesn't work
"What the job will be
for the best interests of the now is to keep those in
American people. That Washington in 'line,"
could make trouble for Ellmers said.
More than 30 tea party
congressional leaders who
need , compromise and candidat'es won election to
dealmaking to get any Congress on Tuesday.
according to an analysis
work done.
Several tea party win- by The Associated Press,
ners said in interviews that enough to make their
they were reaching out to voices heard by Capitol
one another in the wake of Hill leaders if not numbers
the election to form a large enough to pass their
coalition for their conserv- conservative agenda.
ative principles. Rep.
"You can't necessarily
Michele Bachmann, R- set the positive agenda
Minn., formed a tea party. that we want across the
ASSOCIATED PRESS

board, but you can stop a
lot of bad things from happening, and that's a step
forward," said Colin
Hanna, president .of tea
party support group Let
Freedom Ring.
Tim Scott, elected to the
House
from
South
Carolina, said he's not
looking for a fight with
Republicans but to help
push the party toward the
right.
"There's no question
the tea party has helped
the Republican Party
remember its conservative
roots. And if we are going
to govern well, we will
govern from a conservative perspective," Scott
said.
Whether tea party candidates performed better than
more
moderate
Republicans would have in
an anti-Democratic climate
is unclear. But it's evident
the movement injected a
jolt of energy into an election year when Americans
were disillusioned with
government and may otherwise have turned away
from participating.
Tea party victories in
House races help fuel the
Republican takeover of

the lower chamber, while
losses of candidates
backed by the movement
in the Colorado, Delaware
and Nevada Senate races
cost the GOP opportunities to pick up three new
seats. Some didn't take
defeat graciously
Christine
O'Donnell
declared her Delaware
Senate candidacy a success even though she lost
by 16 percentage points,
and New York gubernatorial loser Carl Paladino
showed up to his concession speech wielding a
baseball bat.
Senate leaders will have
three outspoken tea party
favorites to try to rein in:
Marco Rubio of Florida,
Rand Paul of Kentucky
and Mike Lee of Utah.
"The tea party is really an
expression of a widespread sentiment in
America that W&lt;\Shington
is broken and that both
parties are to blame,"
Rubio said.
Rep. John Boehner of
Ohio, planning to take
over as speaker now that
Republicans have won the
House. said that over the
next few months he'll
look at ways to work with

his new tea party caucus
to pass legislation they
will oppose like increasing the debt limit. He did..
n't offer any solutions but
instead tried to focus on
what they have in common.
•
"If we're listening to the
American people, I don't
see any problems incorporating members of the tea
party along with our party
in the quest that's really
the same." Boehner said.
"They want us to cut
spending and focus on
creating jobs in America."
Ellmers said she suspects tea party lawmakers
will usually agree with the
Republican leadership but
that she wants to make
sure they don't simply fall
in line. She even said
she'd be interested to see
candidates other than
Boehner for speaker.
although none is running
and he appears to have a
lock on the job.
Meckler said tea party
activists have a message
for Boehner: "We want
him to remember that the
American people have
spoken loud and clear and
they're not in a flexible
mood."

The Tea Party Patriots,
a coalition of more than
2,800 local groups, plans
to hold a conference for
freshman
lawmakers
later this month to
remind them to stay loyal
to the movement's values.
Meckler
said
activists are looking
beyond
the
next
Congress and have come
up with a 40-year plan to
reform
educational,
political, judicial and
cultural systems to elevate conservative values.
The group is also working on a jobs bank to
offer the newly elected
candidates
potential.
staffers with Washington
outsider credentials.
But Tea Party hero
Rand Paul moved immediately to name an insider as chief of staff for his
Senate office. Doug
Stafford, a longtime
GOP
operative
in
Washington, has been
his top political consultant and is. vice president
of the National Right to
Work Legal Defense
Foundation and as a consultant to the Campaign
for Liberty.

Voter turnout increases from last midterm in 2006
•

' BY MATTHEW DALY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Spurred by anger over the
recession and closely contested races in several
large states, Americans
voted in higher numbers
in midterm elections
fo\rr years ago. .
With more than 95 percent of precincts reporting,
election data indicate that
tw:nout Tuesday was up in
at least nine states, including significant increases in
Florida, Minnesota and
Te~as. Turnout appeared
to be down slightly m severaJ other states, including
Ohio and Pennsylvania.

than

Overall, turnout in the
midterm elections was
projected at 42 percent of
registered voters, about 1.2
percentage point&lt;&gt; higher
than in 2006.
The total popular vote
nationwide was expected
to reach about 90 .million
people, 6.2 million more
than voted in 2006. About
131.1 million peoJ?le voted
in 2008. Turnout ts higher
for a presidential election
than for midtem1 contests.
Curtis Gans, director of
the Center for the Study of
the American Electorate at
American University, said
competitive races featuring tea party-backed candidates drew high voter

turnout in Florida, South Mason University.
Carolina, Delaware and
Even though she lost
other states, with mixed handily, she brought out
results.
voters both for and against
Tea party favorite Marco her, in much the way that
Rubio won a Senate seat in Sarah Palin energized the
Florida and Nikki Haley electorate
in
2008,
was elected ~overnor in McDonald said.
South Carolina. while
"In Delaware, maybe a
Senate hopeful Christine new Fox commentator has
O'Donnell was defeated in been born," he said.
Delaware and Ken Buck
Thrnout was less robust
appeared headed for a nar- in
neighboring
row loss in a Colorado Pennsylvania, where only
Senate race.
41 percent of voters cast
Turnout in Delaware ballots, down 3 points
was up 5 percentage points from 2006. McDonald
to about 48 percent, large- attributed the downturn to
ly because of O'Donnell's a lack of enthusiasm
star power, said Michael · among Democrats and
McDonald, an election noted that Republicans
turnout expert at George won closely contested

races for Senate and governor.
In
Florida,
GOP
enthusiasm
drove
turnout up about 3 percentage points to an estimated 43.3 percent.
Rubio won a three-way
Senate
race
while
Republican Rick Scott
narrowly
defeated
Democrat Alex Sink for
governor.
Turnqut was up signicantly in Alabama,
Colorado. Connecticut,
Delaware,
Florida,
Minnesota,
South
Carolina, Texas and
West Virginia. Gans
said . . Nebraska, Ohio,
Pennsylvania.
Rhode

Island, Tennessee and
Wyoming showed some
of the bigger drops in
voting percentages.
Tea party supporters
accounted for about 4 in
10 voters Tuesday, and .
they voted overwhelmingly
Republican,
according to exit polls.
Overall, just over 1 in 5
voters considered their
House vote an expression of support for the
tea party, while nearly
as many called their vote
a message of opposition
to the group. Just over
half said the tea · party
had no effect on their
ballot.

,

�Page.A3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 4,

Grad hi~ed as . :
· Tech Support ..

Agencies team up for statewide food and fund drive
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - Second
Harvest Foodbank.-; which
makes monthly visits to
Meigs County to distribute
food to families in need, is
with
Ohio's
ing
•
erican Association of
Retired Persons (ARRP)
in a statewide food and
fund drive. •
The three,weck food
and fund drive began Nov.
1 and nms through Nov.
21. with donations going
directly to. each donor's
local food bank and
pantry, soup kitchen or
shelter, making a difference in their local community.
··
Food donations for
Second Harvest Foodbank
of Southeastern Ohio can
be dropped off in Meigs
County at Golden Harvest,
64936 SR 124, Reedsville.
45772 (Phone 740-3786447)
and in Gallia
County at the Mercerville
Food Pantry Food Pantry.
1275 Adamsville Road,
BidwelL Ohio 45614
(Pone · 749-245-54280.
There are also drop-off

places in Vinton, Perry,
Athens and Washington
Counties. Donations can
also be made on line at
www.oashf.org, select the .
"donate now" option.
According to figures
released by a Hunger in
America study in 2009,
over 1.43 million Ohioans
vb,ited a food pantry, soup
kitchen or shelter to meet
their daily nutritional
needs. a number that has
stead.ily increased since
the Hunger in America
study wa&lt;; released.
"Too many people are
forced to make a very
tough decision. They must
choose between paying for
food or utilities or heating
fuel or rent or medicine,"
said
Dick
Stevens,
Hocking Athens Perry
Community
Action
Agency food &amp; nutrition
division director in charge
of the Second Harvest
Food
Bank
of
Southeastern
Ohio.
"Hunger is putting a
severe strain on more lives
in the 10 southeastern
counties we serve."
By donating food items

through the food and fund help older adults and their
drive, Ohioans are able to families put nutritious
help their friends. neigh- food on the table."
bors and family members
"Ohioans understand
who are in need. Due to the impact of hunger
the increasing number of because they see it in their
Ohioans visiting the emer- communities, their neighgency food network, food borhood and their own
donations are incredibly back yards," says Lisa
important. Nutrient rich Hamler-Fugitt. executive
foods. such as peanut but- director of the Ohio
ter, tuna and supplement Association of Second
shakes, which are high in Harvest
Foodbanks.
protein, along with low- "Although Ohio continues
salt and sugar-free foods to struggle through the
are extremely important t,o Great Recression we still
the emergency food net- value helJ?ing ouf strugwork, as individuals with gling friends and neighdietary limitations and . bors.
By
becoming
restrictions visit local involved in the AARP
pantries. spup kitchens Ohio Food and Fund drive,
and shelters.
members of AARP will
Jane Taylor, state direc- impact the lives of fellow
tor of AARP Ohio said. Ohioans in ways they
"Thousands of Ohio's can't even imagine."
older adults are making
More information is
choices between buying available
at
food and purchasing med- www.aatp.org/oh, and
ications. AARP believes individuals can tell the
that no one of any age story of their donation
should struggle to make experience . and why
the choice of buying gro- fighting hunger is so
ceries or the medicine they importan~ by posting a
need. AARP's 1.5 million donation
story
at
members in Ohio can play www.facebook.com/ A
a significe:mt role that will ARPOH.

~ommunitY Calendar
Chester-Shade Historical
Association, 7 p.m.,

Public meetings

Chester Courthouse.

Tuesday, Nov. 9

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, 7 p.m.,
TPRSD office.
POMEROY
The
Bedford .
Township
Trustees, 7 p.m. meeting
at the town hall.

TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Posdt 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary, 7 p.m. at the
hall.
Friday, Nov. 5

RACINE
Meigs
County Pomona Grange
with officers conference
at 6:30 p.m. followed by
VVednesda~No~ 10
·meeting at 7:30 p.m. at
WELLSTON
Special meeting of board the Racine Grange Hall
of
directors,
Gallia- located on Oak Grove
Jackson-Meigs- Vinton Road near Racine.
Saturday, Nov. 6
Solid Waste District, 2
SALEM CENTER • p.m.,
1056
New
Hampshire
Ave., Star Grange #778 and
Wellston, to discuss per- Star Junior Grange #878
sonnel issues, Meigs potluck supper at 6:30
County Recycling and p.m. followed by meeting
Litter Prevention and at 7:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 8
other business as it
POMEROY
- Big
mes before the board.
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, 7:30p.m .. Mulberry
•
ubs
.
Community
Center.
and organizations Election of officers. ·
Thursday, Nov. 4

CHESTER

Tuesday, Nov. 9

POMEROY -

Meigs

County Business-Minded · nightly through Nov. 7,
Wesleyan
Luncheon,
noon, Allegheny
Pomeroy Library, Randi Methodist Church, featurGheen speaking on build- ing Rev. Chad and
ing your own website, Valerie Searls, evangelist
KFC/Long John Silvers and singers, tor more
catering, call RSVP with information, 667-6778.
Saturday, Nov. 6
Bill at 992-6677.
POMEROY
Thursday, Nov. 11
of
CHESTER - Shade Pomeroy Church
River Lodge 453 will Christ, Zion Church of
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Christ host a free soup
hall for election of offi- and ·sandwich dinner,
cers. Dues must be paid. beginning ~t 5 p.m.,
Oyster soup will be Pomeroy church, East
Main Street. Desserts
served.
Saturday, Nov. 13
and other refreshments.
POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter Birthdays
Thursday, Nov.
of the Daughters of the
11
RUTLAND _ Roberta
American Revolution will
meet at 1 p.m. at the Wilson will observe her
Pomeroy Library. The 98th birthday on Nov. 11.
program will be on the life Mrs. Wilson who was a
of George Washington .
longtime principal at the
Salem Center School,
resides at 40 Mayor St.
Church events
Emmalena, Ky. and card~
Tuesday, Nov. 7
may be sent to her there.
COOLVILLE
Revival starting at 7 p.m.

201~

Dustin Dixon was recently
hired as an IT Support·
S pee i a! is t/Peop I eS oft
Support at the HDL Center of
Ohio

University,

Athcn&lt;&gt;~

,

Dustin is a 2010 spring qu, rter graduate of Gallipoli~ •.,
Career College where he
L-----~~=--------~ received an Associate of
Applied Science in Technical Support Specialist. and :
an Associate of Applied Science in Computer.
Applications Technology. He resides in Bidwell with
his wife Brittany.
~
I

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Can a middle-scho I&lt;,
kid switch inside?
I

Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm
writing because I am a
little worried about my
middle-schooler.
who
has always been sort of a
nerd or geek or whatever
the kids say. He 'now
comes home from school
in seventh grade saying
he's not into computer
games and science stuff
anymore he's now
going to be a writer and
an actor! I knew his looks
have changed lately (he· s
gotten tall and slender
and good-looking). but I
don't know if We should
encourage this inner seachange.- K.B.
Dear K.B.: You've
probably spel).t the past
couple of years, or
maybe
even
more,
encouraging your son to
follow his heart and waiting to see how he was'
going to turn out. You got
used to thinking of him
one way. and probably
had a pretty comfortable .
feeling about how he
would be ·changing and
growing in the future..
But you were in for a surprise! Not only does he
look totally different as
he enters adolescence,
?ut he has some ~~~
• Idea~ that are thro\\ mb .
yo~ f~r a loop. And guess
what. There could ~e
even
more
drastic
changes ahead, so fasten
your seat belt and get
used to the idea of being
on a wild ride for a while.

• W

...,.
.
, ..

•••
t"

·' ~

..............

.,

Dr. Joyce Brothers

~-- ·~

, .
Regardless of how,
comfortable you are with ·
your son's new plans, or·
whether you think he is
serious or capable of
sticking with them, it's.~
always a good idea to try,,
to go with the flow and .
be supportive of a son or-: ..
daughter's vision of himor herself. Encourage , ~
him to try out for the
school play or to work on ,
the school newspaper1
and see if he is happy ·
with changing the focus.
of his talents in an artistia .
direction. This is a per~ ·
fectly fine time to be try- .
ing out different things."
- by next year, he may ..
be interested in a sp01t, a·-;
new hobby or a tal c~t. ,
You can enco.urag~ hHn
!O keep. up with his old .
mterests as well - he._
may want to go back to
!hem at sot?e point. Hi.s
Image won t suffer a bitif he is seen as a bit of a·Renaissance boy!

Super Bowl MVP tackles
financi~l illiteracy
Drew Brees'list of accomplishments is long and
Impressive: New Orleans
Sawb quarterback. Super
Bowl XLIV MVP.
Brees cites a personal
experience for opening his
eyes to the impmtance of
money management.
• The average high school
senior can answer onl
about half of basic fina
knowledge questions corJason Alderman
rectly.
• Although 93 percent o~-------Americans believe all high
school students should be required to take a financial
ucation class. only four states require at least a
•
mester-long course in personal finances.
• Only four in 10 adults understand how to properly
calculate how much they'll need to reach their retirement sa"ings goals. Yet for most average earners,
"' Social Security will replace only about 40 percent of
pre-retirement earnings.
• More than one in 10 Americans don't use banks at
alL despite the financial advantages they provide.
As you miglit expect. Brees is taking action. He vis- ·
its high schools around the country, sharing personal
stories, answering student questions and quarterbacking group competitions in Financial Football, an interactive video game jointly developed by the National
Football League and Visa Inc.
,
Brees himself contributed numerous questions for
the latest version just released. See whether you can
answer the followmg correctly:
I. Negative financial infonnation (excluding bankruptcy) can stay on your credit report f~r:
1. 2 years
2. 5 years
3. 7 years
4. 10 years
2. Which of the following will NOT damage your
credit score?
1. Defaulting on a student loan
2. Checking your own credit score
3. Home foreclosure
'
4. &lt;;:arryin~ a credit card balance equal to your
endmg limtt
3. Which arc the two most important factors when
•
determining someone's creditworthiness?
1. Payment history and amounts owed
2. Length of credit history and amounts owed
3. Types of credit they currently use and payment
history
4. Number of credit inquiries made and amounts
owed
By the way, the cotTect answers to the questions
above are: 1 (c), 2 (b) and 3 (a). How many yards did
you gain?
Altlemum on 1~viuer:
WW\\(fll'ifler.com/Practica/Money.)

(1i1 Follow Jason

Please call to schedule or walk-in for yo
Free Glaucoma Screening
eEye Pressure ·&amp; Optic Nerve Exam

740.446.5421
•

a

WJJacllso
For- mo,-e znjomiQJion, p/.BQH qq}J.w

: •.

74 .446.S42l

.•

1-IOI.JZER
(_:LINIC

C · K

v

D

v
c

K
R

D

..

�_ _,_.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _._.IIIIII. .RIIIIFJ1111
~

.

.

_

-

-

-

-

-

~

-

-

-

-

-

-

~

~

~

~

• _

~

_

-

--

-

~--~-~-

-

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

Page~

Th,e Daily Sentinel

The Daily S~ntinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez

D.C.:A two-person)
two-p~rty totpn now

Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cotlgress shall make flO law respecting an
establishmmt of reli~ion,. or prolribitirrg tire free
exercise thereof; or abrid~ittg the freedom of
speech, or of tire press; or tire right of tire people
peaceably to assemble, attd to petition the
Govermumt for a redress of grier,attces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Ready! Set! Fix the economy!
On your mark! Get
set! Fix this rustedout, bondo-covered
Pinto of a mess we
call the U.S. economy!
And; oh. by the
way, Republicans. and
other newly-elected
folk, you have two
years to get it done
before we vote to see
Andrew Carter
who gets the keys to
1600 Pennsylvania - - - - - - - - •
Avenue.
Despite what some partisan GOP pundits some not all, mind you - may think. Tuesday's
Republican rush on the nation's ballot boxes is not
a mandate as politicians perceive it. Political types
usually define mandate as. "They voted for me!
They love me! I ·can do no wrong!"
Quite the opposite. this mandate is of the sort
my dad used to hand down: "Get your chores
done, son. or feel my wrath." Needless to say, Pop
rarely had to tell me twice.
Note to the GOP and others: The voters have
spoken ' and they don't want to have to repeat
themselves.
The reality is that Americans are fed up with a
lot of things. the economy being chief among
those right now. Tuesd~y 's election wasn't so
much a referendum against 'Democrats as it was
an indictment of the political gamesmanship that's
played at all levels of government. The Dems just
happened to be the guys holding all the marbles at
the time.
Note to all politicians: You're the hired help.
You're not the boss. We the People are the boss.
We send you to do a job and you better do it cor
rectly or we'll find someone to else to do it.
Tuesday's results. to me, present more of a challenge to those who won their respective elections
than anything else. That challenge is: "Okay.
we've heard your rhetoric. now let's see what
you've got, Sparky."
Politicians are facing an increasingly disgruntled and impatient populace that is demanding
positive results - a return on their investment, if
you please - moreso now then at any other time
that I can recall in my lifetime.
So, Republicans, Democrats. minor party folks.
I hope you've got your running shoes laced up
tight, because the race is on, the people are watching closely and we expect, check that, we demand
results.
Ready! Set! You know the drill.

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

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Our main concern in all stories is Published Tuesday through Friday.
to be ac~urate. If you know of an 111 Court Street, Pomeroy. Ohio.
error in a story. call the newsroom Second·class postage paid at
Pomeroy~
at (740) 992-2156
Member: The Associated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Our main number Is
Association.
(7 40) 992-2156.
Department extensions are: Postmaster: Send address correc·
tions 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
4 weeks ...........'11.30
Advertising
52 weeks ..•......'128.85
Advertising
Director: Pam Dally ......• _......•..so•
Caldwell. 740-446-2342, Ext 17
Subscnbefs should remit 1n advance
Retail: Matt Rodgers. Ext. 15
d1rect to The OaJiy SenbneL No subRetail: Brenda Davis. Ext 16
scription t7y mail permitted in areas
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext 10 where home carrier service is avail·
able.

Correction Policy

Circulation

Circulation Manager: 740-4462342, Ext. 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
mdsnews@mydailysentineLcom
Web:

t

www.mydailysentinel~com

Mall Subscription
Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks
. . • . . .'35.26
26 Weeks . . . . . . . .' 70.7(}
52 Weeks . . • . _ . . .'140.11
Outside Meigs County

12 Weeks , . . . .. . • .'56.55
26 Weeks . . . . • . ..' 113 60
52 Weeks ..• .. •...' 227.21

Bv L1z

SIDOTI

ASSOCIAIED PRESS

planning to speak with his GOP
counterpart, Mitch McConnell.
about ways to ''build a consensus
and move this country along."
The Democrat said the GOP must
be more open to compromise,
adding that "the time for politics
is now over" and Republicans
must do more than "simply saying

This is a two-person, two-party
town now.
And President Barack Obama, a
Democrat, and incoming House
Speaker John
Boehner,
a
Republican, need each other - as
both partners and foils while they ~no.'"
push their own legislative agenStill, in a sign of fights ahead,
das and lay the groundwork for Reid said the health care measure
the 20 12 elections.
was "ready for some tweaking''
The unlikely duo must find but that he won't support any
areas of compromise to get some- move to repeal it.
thing - anything, really - done
There was talk of forthcoming
to appease an unhappy electorate high profile gathering with
demanding economic stability Obama and new Republican leadfrom a government voters don't ership.
think works. At the same time,
But the day-after rhetoric was
each leader must figure out how typical for the aftermath of a wave
to use the other to draw partisan election - and it was likely to
contrasts that will fire up their disappear as the hard reality takes
respective political bases.
shape of two parties with opposBoth Jisk the wrath of voters in ing viewpoints trying to govern a
two years if they fail on either country in crisis.
In the long-term, the onus is on
task; nothing short of Obama's reelection, the Republicans' new- Republicans and Democrats- alike
found grip on power and the to prove to Americans who are
country's economic well-being is sour on both political parties that
at stake.
Washington isn't broken. Both
For now, Obama is the one on Obama and Boehner need to show
the defensive - and it showed in results to keep their jobs in 20 12
the hours after the election, with and, in a split government. the
Democrats uniformly calling for only way to get results is to comcommon ground while the GOP promise.
put conditions on its willingness
Nothing will get done in
to meet halfway. Come January if Washington without the two
not sooner, Boehner will com- meeting somewhere in the midmand
greater
capital
in dle. And from there. divides also
Washington and sway over the will have to be bridged in the
domestic agenda. But Obama Senate, which will have nearly as
must find a way to reboot his many Republicans as Democrats.
presidency by altering his goals,
Could this two-party govercommunicating them better - or nance force politicians with diaboth.
metrically opposite viewpoints to
The first glimpses of how both find common ground?
men position themselves came
Maybe.
Wednesday, with each leader
There's no doubt Obama 's
addressing the public in the wake predicament will invoke comparof Republicans winning control of isons to presidents who also faced
the House and cutting deeply into a Congress run by the opposition
party. But for all the similarities,
Democrats' Senate majority.
"No one party will be able to there are stark differences, too.
dictate where we go from here," a
In the 1990s, Bil.l Clinton and
weakened president said from the Newt Gingrich partnered to enact
White House. "We must find welfare
reform.
But
the
common ground in order to make Republican House speaker then
progress.''
was a personally polalizing figure
''I'm not suggesting this will be - one who alienated the eleceasy.'' Obama added.
torate - in a way that Boehner is
Boehner signaled as much earli- not, at least not now. Unlike
er in the day by claiming Obama 's Obama and Boehner. Ronald
health care overhaul was a "mon- Reagan and Tip ~O'Neill easily
strosity'' and needed to be developed an amicable relationrepealed. He also suggested that ship that took the edge off their
the GOP's coc3peration was con~i­ partisan differences in the 1980s.
tional,
saying:
"We
hope But even Reagan had to moderate
President Obama will now respect his conservative ideas after
the will of the people, change Republican losses in the House.
course and commit to making the
Both Clinton and Reagan
changes they are demanding. To maneuvered in divided governthe extent he is willing to do this, ment as the country was trying to
we are ready to work with him."
recover from recession. But
One by one, Democrats - their Obama's economy is rebounding
ranks diminished - weighed in at a much slower pace, with just 2
and called for a new approach to percent growth.
· One area of potential comproworking together.
Fresh off his own re-election mise for Obama and Boehner
Senate
Democratic concerns free trade treaties with
victory,
Leader Harry Reid said he was South Korea, Colombia and

•.

••

•
' )

Panama. But many •T&lt;.epublicans ~
want to join Democ•ats and pun- }
ish C~i1~a, raising the risk of a J
U.S.-( hma trade war.
1
Both parties also are awaiting a :.
December report from a bipartisan deficit commission. giving
both sides cover as they try to
both meet voters· demands and )
protect their own politics. ·
,
On both issues, Republicans •.
would be all but forced to agree ,j
with Obama fir face charges of ,·
hypocrisy after campaigning on
the~11.
.
;.)
f&lt;or Obama. th1s may be a sec- ;
ond chance to make a first impres- '
sion.
.I
Throughout his presidential ·1
campaign, the Democrat spoke ·~
about the need to rise above parti- .
:san politics to lind pragmatic 1
solutions to the country's ills.
1
But that proved a fallacy in -1
practice: he forced much of h
. is ,
agenda through the Democrat'
controlled Congress with little
no GOP supp01t. And in doing so, ~
he lost the support of indepen- 't
dents who had grasped onto his
talk of changing the ' ways ol
Washington. only'to be let down.
Compromise C{&gt;uld help him
earn their backing again.
f
He'll need it, given that lie will i
be maneuvering on a presidential :
playing tield far different from the :
one he won on in 200H. Back &gt;
then, he won in con set vative
places likt: Indiana, Virginia and
North Carolina. But Obama's job
approval rating jo; well beltlW 50
percent in many states. And most
critical presidential state" across
the Great Lakes and Midwest
region will have Republican governors come January. making tus b
challenge that much greater.
,
Boehner. for his p&lt;llt. hao; led the ~
House Republican" for the past '
four years with a partisan bent.
But he's shown a willingness to
reach across the aisle in the p&lt;,lst
having worked with the late S
,
Edward l'v1,. Kennedy on educati
refom1. And a certain mnount o ;
bipartisanship could help the
GOP as it works to mend an ,
image tarnished by the divisive 1
George W. Bush years.
·J
''We ' ve been given a second
chance and a golden opportunity.'' .:
Rep. Eric Cantor of Virginia. No. ;
2 House Republican in the l louse. 1
He called. the outcome a rejection · :
of Obama more than an endorse- • ·
ment of the GOP. cautioning fel - ·
low Republicans they must to
work to win public confidence. ":
"People want to see results.'' he "
said.
:...
Still, compromising may be dif~ ·ficult given that the GOP is so -1
intent on defeating Obanw in I\\O
years.
With voters watching. the clock ·1
ticking and problems piling up.··
it's hard to see how either side can '~
afford to retrench to their partisan
}
corners.

..

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailyscnti~el .com

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Obituaries

Meigs County Forecast

Election
From Page A1

Sandra Elizabeth Codner

swept the U.S. House in the middle of Pre~ident Bill
Clinton's first term, Mei~s County supported
Strickland, although he lost hts Sixth District seat for
two year:-.
Strickland lost his biggc~t race yesterday. but Meigs
County carried him again -just barely. Strickland
took 3.385 votes and Governor-elect Joh~ Kasich
3.258. Less than 200 votes were cast for th1rd-party
candidates in the governor's race.
State Rep. Debbie Phillips. D-Athens. is the sole
Democrat on yesterday's Meigs County ballot
returned to office .. She lost here, ~u t Athens County•. a
str&lt;?ng Democratic county. parucularly when Oh10
Umversity ~tudents are included. carried her to victory in her 92nd house race against Michael Hunter.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson, D-St. Clairsville. was
defeated by his GOP challenger, Bill Johnson in
Meigs County and di!!trict-wide, making Johnson the
fir~t Republican Congressman to represent Meigs
County and the district since the late Frank Cremeans
of Gallia County in the mid-1990's. Cremeans served
one term, defeating Suickland in 1994 and losing to
him af!ain in 1996.
While the outcome of the race for Meigs County
Commissioner has not been settled, and will not be
until the official count of ballots on Oct. 15,
Commissioner Mick Davenport, who is trailing GOP
Challenger Tim ihle by 38 votes going into an official
count. would be the first four-term county commissioncr since Dan Hartinger in the mid-20th centuryif he pulls ahead of lhle and is declared the winner
later this month.
Despite the election hype this season, voter turnout
was low. Just over 44 percent of Meigs County's voters cast either early absentee ballots or general election ballots at their polling places Tuesday.

I

Sandra Elizabeth Codner, 58, or Portland. passed
away at I 0:20 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 1. 20 I0, at her 1
·
•
residence.
Born September 14. 1952 in Pomeroy, Ohio, she
the daughter of the late Paul E. and Hazel J.
ens Sellers: She was&lt;~ homemaker ~nd a member
•o the Celebration Center 111 Belpre, Ohto.
She is survived by her husband, Robert James ''Jim"
Codner, whom she married on July 4. 1970 in Racine.
Ohio. the~r ~wo sons .. Robert ''Jay,on" (Janice)
Codner. ot L1ttlc H~cktng ~nd Joshua }ate (Amy)
Cod!ler. of Marysv11le, OhH~. and thetr daughter.
Jesstka JoyKny Codner. of Middleport; three gmndchildren: Alyssa Beth Cod.ner, Alivia Suzanne Codner
and Jaylen Michael Codner.
Also surviving arc her two ~i,ters, Jeannie (Tom
Smith) !\'ease. of Portland and Kitty (Ron) Braden. of
C~ttageville, W.Va.: n sister-in-Jaw, Pam Sellers, of
Middleport, and numerous nieces and nephews; four
caregivers. Jennifer Lagore, Della Shreve, Amber
B~rton and Michelle DuVall, and a special friend,
Tmh Robie.
In addition to her parcnls. she \vas preceded in
death by her brother. William E. Sellers. and a son-inlaw. Jerry Allen.
In keeping with Sandra's wishes there arc no calling
hours o~ funeral servic_e. S~e hequeathe~ her body to
the Wnght State Umverslty. Boonshoft School of
Medicine in Dayton, Ohio for Medical Research.
Arrangements were in care of the Cremeens Funeral
Home. Racine. Memorials may be made in Sandra's
honor and sent to Jim Codner. 28449 Sellers Ridge
Road. Portland, Ohio 45770. Online Condolences
be sent to the family by visiting www.cremcenslhomes.com.

Deaths

Women

Bobby Ray Mitchell

From Page A1

Bobby Ray Mitchell, 58, of Middleport. passed away
Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2010 at his residence. Vic;itation is
from 6-8 p.m.. Thursday, Nov. 4. at Foglesong Roush
Funeral Home in Ma..;on, W.Va.. A funeral service is at
I :30 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 5 at the funeral home. Pastor
Charlie Keams officiating. Burial will follow at
Graham Cemetery, New Haven, W.Va.

Brian Bradford

,.

Brian R. Bradford. 85, Wooster, formerly of Racine.
died Sept. 24, 20 I0. in West View Manor. Wooster.
He was born April 4, 1925. in Racine.
His wife, Donna Forsch Bradford, preceded him in
death.
A funeral was held Sept. 28. 20 I0 at Robe1ts Funeral
Home. Wooster. Burial wa.., Sherwood Memorial
Gardens, Wooster.
Online tributes may be made at www. robertsfuneralhome.com.

advised "don't feel that you have to act like a man, recognize that you have to work a linle harder if you are to
get ahead. but don't use the femininity card to get there:·
She talked about the use of humor to make a point. how
to accept a personal compliment gmciously, and the need
·
for surrounding yourself with good people.
Creating the best pos~ible working atmosphere you
can by turning negatives into positives can be a step
toward remaining excited about what you do, she concluded.

is estimated at $800 with
annual increases.
Mayor Scott Hill reported he'd met with U.S. Rep.
Charlie Wilson, Stntc Sen.
Jimmy Stewart and a rep~;PageA1
re~ntative from U.S. Sen.
· "b
f
·
.
George Voinovich 's office
~r buII ymg y me~:. o c1cctromca11y tran..,nutted ~c~~ 1 to discuss broadband
(1.e.. J~ternet. e-mml, cell~lar telephone, perso~al dtgl- options in rural. Ohio
tal &amp;ststance (PDA), or wtreless hand-held_d~VJce) that I counties. The meeting
a student(s) or a group of student:-. exh1b1ts toward i took place last week at the
anoth~r parucular student(s) more tha.n once and the I Racine
Municipal
behav1or both cau~&lt;; m~nt~l and phys1cal hru:m to the 1 Building. Councilman Ike
other ~tudent ~d lS sutfic!et~tl~ se~·ere, pcrs1st~nt, or Spencer voiced his disappen.:~stve that. 1~ create~-&gt; ~1.1 1ntu~1datmg. thrcatem~g: or proval the public and
abus1ve, educatiOnal em 1ronmcnt for the othe1 stu- council were not made
dent(~).
.
.
aware of the visit until
. ~etgs ~ocal's. poh~.Y a!so states bully!n.g _cam~ot. ~ after it happened.
based on any ot the leg,t!IY prot~c~ed cha~acteJtSttcs.
Hill also said. due to his
S1fCh ~~ s~~· race, color.. nattO~al ongtn, martt~l.statu~ or involvement in the Ohio
~1sabthty.. Tho.ugiJ, .tht~ ~?hey never exp~t?ttly Jt.,ts Mayors Partnership for
sex~al on~~tattOJl a~ .'t rcaso~ not _to b~ll) ~ stu~ent: Progress, the villagt! had
~ookman sa1d the po!1c~ ~ocs abo.contam thts clause. an opportunity to possibly
. If a st~~ent o~ ~!her mdtv1dual ~heves th~re _has been participa~e !n an energy
~ggressl\e ~~,\\ 1or, rcgardles~ ot whe.ther 1t hts a par- coopemt 1ve tf the numbers
ucul~. defi~ttiOn. slhe s~ould report 1t ~nd allow the_ warrant it. The village will
adf!lm~~trat1on to determme the appropnate coun.e ot send in electric .utility bills
action.
.
to others involved in Ute
Book1'!lan feels the fo_~er clause. addr~ss~~ the 1ssue project to see if the village
of _bullyt!lg because o~ sex~al onent~t!On and w~s could save money by partwntte!l m coll_ab?ratlon wtth the North~ast OhiO nering with other viiLearnmg Assoc1at1on (NEOLA): an ~du~at1~na! con- !ages/towns in u coopemg. ~ompany. Bookman c~rtami.Y ~1dn t d1smtss the rive to purchase power
?thly th~ term "sexual onentat1on,' may e\·~ntually together.
find 1ts way IillO th~ legalese concern mg. ~ull~tng. ~ut
Roof replacement on the.
Municipal
•for now, those w~o teclthcx havt: been bulhed m Me1gs Racine
Local due to the1r sexual onentatton, do have n:course. Building also continues_
Bookman reporte~ at a. reccn.t ~EOLA me~tmg. t~ne a project with a total cost
of th~ recomn~.e~dat1ons f~r 1~\'Jsmg t~e bullyt~g po~tc~: of around $44.360. ·n 1e
per:mme~ to . ~10_lenc? . w1thm ~ datmg relat10nsht~:
village received a grant
Thts. policy estabhsh~s st~dents '." gr~des s~ven-.12 w1ll from the Ohio Department
rece1ve. age appr&lt;?pna~e mst_ruc~1on m ~au!lg v10le~ce of Development which
preven~JOn e~ucatton. mcludmg u~structt~n m recogm':- covers half of this cost.
mg.datmg_ ~1olence. Boo~man satd he w1l1 present t.h1s
Leaf pickup in Racine
~hey rev1s1on ~o the Me1gs_ ~ocal ~oard ?f Ed~cat10n may be scheduled for next ·
tht~ month and 1~ approve~. 1t s poss1ble thts pohcy can week though that wasn't
.
confinned due to the dump
be Implemented 1~ the spnng ~emester.
~nother proacll~e. a&amp;gress1ve ~pproac~ to.. bul_lymg truck being repaired. The
tJt:m&amp;,un~~rtaken m ~e1~s ~a! 1s teachm~ antt-bul- leaf pickup will be
Iymg as a weekly class With all. s~ond and fourth announced in The Daily
gmde stu~ents t~s part of the d1stnct's "Char~cter Sentinel
Counts" mstruct10nal progmm. Bookman explamed
these classes are taught by a licensed social worker who
is trained in "Character Counts" instruction. Last
school year all students within the district attended antibullying assemblies which were conducted in all buildings through the use of Title JV-A "Safe and Drug Free
Schools" fundino.
"We have made a conscious effort to concentrate on
all grades but with a higher trc4uency at the elementary
level,'' Bookman said.
.
addition, all student disciplinary referrals within
istrict arc recorded using the Electronic Integrated
•
Student Information System program to help principals
monitor student behavior for their entire school career at
Meigs Local. This allows principal~&gt; to refer back to
past disciplinary referrals to sec if a student has any
prior incidents pertaining to bullying or other aggre~sive
behaviors.
For complete infornmtion on bullying and other forms
• of aggresstve behavior prohibited in Meigs Local. refer
to the student handbook which can be found on the dbSubscribe today
trict website.
(Note: Today's article dealt solely with Meigs Local's
740.992-2156
approach to combating bullying. OfficiaJs with the
Southern and Ea!!tern Local School Districts have also
been asked to participate in this discussion.)

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 37.55
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 60.88
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 49.91
Big Lots (NYSE)- 31.41
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.36
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 56.71
Century Alum (NASDAQ)-14.14
Ch.ampion (NASDAQ) -1.10
Charrnl1g Shops (NASDAQ)- 3.49
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.36
Collins (NYSE) - 59.87
'
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.06
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.05
Gen Electric (NYSE)- 16.06
Harley-Davidson' (NYSE)-31.91
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 37.72
Kroger (NYSE)- 22.75
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 29.84
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 62.13
OVBC (NASDAQ) -18.i0
BBT (NYSE)- 23.05

The Daily
Sentinel

Peoples (NASDAQ) -13.53
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.20
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.50
Rockwell (NYSE)- 64.91
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 9.21
Royal Dutch Shell- 67.19
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)-71.41
Wai·Mart (NYSE)- 54.91
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.75
WesBanco (NYSE)- 17.25
Worthington (NYSE) -15.92
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for November 3,
2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advtsors Isaac
Mills In Gallipolts at (740) 4419441 and lesley Marrero tn
Point Pleasant at (304) 674·
0174. Member SIPC.

mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news

•nying

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

•
mph. Chance of precipitation is 40 percent. New
amounts
precipitation
bet ween a tenth and quarter of an inch possible.
.Friday Night: A slight
chance of rain and snow
showers before 9 p.m ..
tht!n a slight chance of
snow showers. Mostly
cloudy. with a low around
28. we.,t wind between 6
and 8 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 20 percent.
Saturday: Partly sunnv,
•with a high near 44.
·
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudv, with a low around
23. .
Sunday: Sunny. with a
high near 54.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear. with a low around
34.

VISit us online at

~aving
From Page A1

Thursday: A slight
chance
of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high near 54. Calm wind
becoming
northwest
around 6 mph. Chance of
precipitation i!'&gt; 20 percent.
Thursday Night: A
of showers.
chance
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 35. Northwest
wind between 3 and 6
mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent. New
rainfall amount~ between
a tenth and quarter of an
inch possible.
F riday: A chance of
rain and snow shower~
before 9 a.m.. then a
chance of min showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
high .near 45. Northwest
wind between 7 and 14

Our
Heroes
On November 11, our nation wiU pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will 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 ·
Please Fill Out And Return With ·
(sho\\n actual size)

r-----------------,

In Honor Of

Your Payment to:
VETERAN SALUTE

Major
Earl Jones

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

1969-1971

Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family
~d With

Photo- $15.00

(1 x4 actual size)

Photo of
Your
Veteran

In Honor of (name and rank)
Dates of Active Duty
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:- - - - --

In Honor Of

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

----

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

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-2155

•

•

�-

•

Thursday, November 4,

A~.:~tomakers
DETROIT (AP) U.S. auto sales rose m
October as buyers grew
slightly more confident in
the economy and new
models drew them into
dealerships.
October sales could hit
a high point for 2010 and
mark the pest October in
three years, hitting a seasonally adjusted annual
rate of over 12 million
once all the automaker's
U.S. results are tallied.
Still. October is traditionally not a high volume
sales month. Overall
sales may fall short of 1
million new cars and
trucks.
"The trends are positive. and we are going in
the right direction," said
Jesse Toprak, vice president of industry trends at
car
pricing
tracker

a

..

'

·= .,...

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www·ID:Ydailysentinel.com

2010

=•-=

report stronger October US sales

TrueCar.com.
Sales
aren't increasing as fast
as the industry would
like, he said, but "we are
seeing more confidence
by consumers to make
big ticket purchases in an
uncertain economic environment.''
General Motors Co.,
which is preparing for an
initial stock offering
expected later this month,
saw sales rise 3.5 percent
in October.
October sales were also
strong
for
Honda,
Chrysler and Hyundai.
But Toyota. which has
been dealing with repercussions from its sudden
acceleration recalls earlier this year, saw sales
drop 4.4 percent.
Rising sales of its
crossover wagons and
pickups failed to over-

come a double-digit drop
in Toyota's car sales. The
Japanese automaker has
been pulling back on
incentives, which rose
significantly in the spring
after
the
company
recalled millions of car
and trucks over safety
problems. TrueCar.com
said Toyota's incentive
spending dropped l percent between September
and October, while most
other
manufacturers
increased
incentive
spending last month.
GM's sales were driven
by its SUVs and wagons,
which posted increases of
36 percent for October
and 64 percent year to
date. Sales ofGM's most
popular wagons - the
Chevrolet Equinox. GMC
Terrain and Cadillac SRX
- were up 58 percent

compared
with
last
October. Truck sales were
also up, with the newly
launched
Chevy
Silverado and GMC
Sierra posting sales up 12
percent and 13 .2 percent
respectively.
Ford Motor Co.'s sales
rose 19.2 percent, led by
big increases in trucks
and small cars. Sales of
the redesigned Edge
crossover were up 24 percent, while Ford Escape
sales rose 17 percent.
Ford says sales of the FSeries pickup rose 24 percent, thanks in part to a
month-long truck promotion.
Chrysler Group LLC's
sales were up 37 percent
from last October, partly
on the strength of the new
Jeep Grand Cherokee,
which saw sales more

than triple. Ram pickup vehicle. Analysts are
sales rose 41 percent.
expecting last month to
New products also gave be the best October for
a boost to Honda Motor the industry since 2007.
Co., whose sales climbed
Moc;t automak:ers were
16 percent. October was reporting U.S. autos~
the first full month on the VVednesday, but sev
market for the Odyssey reported results Tuesda .
minivan, which saw Among them:
October sales jump 52
• Hyundai said its
percent. VVagons were October sales jumped 38
also hot at Honda, where percent as sales of the
CR-V sales climbed 19 new Sonata midsize
percent.
sedan more than doubled.
Automakers are expect• Subaru sales rose 25
ing to sell around 11.5
percent for the month on
million vehicles this year,
strong sales of the
up from a 30-year low of
Outback and Forester
10.4 million in 2009.
Consumer confidence wagons.
• Volkswagen sales
rose slightly in October,
rose
18 percent with a
according to a report
released last week by the boost from sales of the
Conference Board. That, new Jetta. Jetta sales
and a rebounding stock were up 32 percent over
market, may have spurred last October.
buyers to invest in a new

Dow hits new 201 0 high after Fed details stimulus
NEVV YORK (AP) The Dow Jones industrial
average reached a new
high for the year after the
Federal
Reserve
announced that it plans to
buy $600 billion in
Treasurys to stimulate the
economy. The aim is to
drive interest rates lower
in an effort to spark
spending and lending.
The Dow Jones industrial average gained
26.41, or 0.2 percent, to
11,215.13, its highest
close in two years. Its
previous high for 2010 of
11 ,205 was reached on
April 26. The Dow had
traded above that level
four other times in the
past two weeks.
Broader indexes also
rose. The Standard and
Poor's 500 Index rose

4.39, or 0.4 percent, to
1.197. 96,
while
the
Nasdaq Gomposite gained
6.75, or 0.3 percent. to
2.540.27.
The central bank had
hinted for two months
that it planned to buy
bonds in an effort to
boost the economy. The
Fed made firmer commitments to buy bonds under
the new program than
many investors had been
expecting, which helped
push stock indexes and
most Treasury prices
higher.
Instead of reassessing
its bond purchases every
month given economic
conditions. as many
expected.
the
Fed
pledged to buy $75 billion of Treasurys each
month through the mid-

dle of next year.
Stocks initially swung
lower after the announcement as traders absorbed
the news but then pushed
steadily higher in afternoon trading, giving all
three indexes gains of
about 0.3 percent on the
day.
Mid-term
election
results that delivered a
solid majority to the
Republicans in the House
of Representatives but
kept Democratic control
of the Senate was in line
with what most investors
were expecting.
The Fed's announcement was unusually
direct for the central
bank, which cleared the
way for many investors to
step back into the market.
''The Fed's move takes

gard.
The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury
note, which moves opposite its price, remained at
2.59 percent. The yield
on the 30-year bond,
which won't be targeted
by the Fed's bond-buying
program nearly as much
as investors had hoped,
rose to 4.06 percent from
3.93 percent late Tuesday.
Key economic reports
that would have normally
affected trading were
overshadowed by the
Fed's meeting.
Payroll company ADP
said private employers
added 43,000 jobs last
month after cutting jobs
in September, which usually would have driven
buying in the market. The
report is seen as a gauge

a lot of uncertainty out of
the air," said Anthony
Chan, the chief economist for JP Morgan
Chase's private wealth
management division.
"This puts a floor on the
economy's performance
and gives them the opportunity to do more if the
economy needs it."
The Dow's previous
highest closing level of
the year, which was
11,205.03 on April 26.
The index is now at a
level that it last reached
during the financial crisis
in September 2008.
Hewlett Packard Co. rose
2.1 percent to post the
largest gain among the 30
companies that make up
the index. Microsoft
Corp.'s 1.4 percent fall
made it the Dow's lag-

heading into the government's monthly employment report, which is
out Friday.
The
Institute
Supply
Management
said growth in the service sector accelerated
last month when economists were expecting a
slowdown in the pace of
expansion. That too
would normally have
provided stocks a lift.
The ISM report is
closely
watched
because the service sector accounts for about
80 percent of the
nation's jobs. Earlier
this week, ISM said the
growth in the manufacturing activity also
accelerated last month.

I

AI-Qaida in Iraq threatens attacks on Christians
I

BAGHDAD (AP) Al-Qaida's front group
in Iraq has threatened
more
attacks
on
Christians after a siege
on a Baghdad church
that left 58 people
dead, linking the warning to claims that
Egypt's &lt;;optic Church
is holding women captive for converting to
Islam.
'
The Islamic State of
Iraq.
which
has
claimed responsibility
for Sunday's assault on
a Catholic church during Mass in downtown
Baghdad, said its deadline for Egypt's Copts
to release the women
had expired and its
fighters would attack
Christians
wherever
they can be reached.
"VVe will open upon
them the doors of
destruction and rivers
of blood," the insurgent
group said in a statement
posted
late

Tuesday on militant
websites.
The Islamic State of
Iraq is an umbrella
group that includes alQaida in Iraq and other
allied Sunni insurgent
factions.
It is unclear exactly
what led the group to
seize on the conversion
disputes
between
Egypt's Muslims and
its minority Christians,
although the issue has
become a rallying point
~or hard-line Islamists
m Egypt.
In announcing its
reasons for Sund~y'_s
attack, the group satd tt
had given the Coptic
Church 48 hours t~
release the women It
says had converted to
Islam. The group also
demanded the release
of al-Qaida-linked prisoners held in Iraq.
"All Ch~isti_an centers. orgamzatlons and
institutions,
leaders

and followers are legitimate targets for the
mujahedeen (holy warriors) wherever they
can reach them." it
said.
The group specifically
mentioned
two
Egyptian women married to Coptic priests it
says are being held
against their will. The
church denies the allegation. Some believe
the women converted
to Islam to leave their
h~sband~
because
d1vorce 1s banned by
the church.
Over. the past few
years m Egypt, arguments over these kinds
of alleged conversions
have.
. e~a~erbated
Mushm-Chnstlan tensions already high over
issues like the construction
of
new
churches. The two
c_om"'!-unities generally
hve m peace, though
clashes have taken

Chesterville
United
Methodist Church on
Saturday, Nov. 13.
About 100 crafters and
vendors ar.e participating
in the show which will be
held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m .

holding its fall food drive
at the corner of 3rd and
Pearl Streets in Racine
Satdurday, Nov. 6, from 8
a.m. to 1 p.m.
RACO will be collecting non perishable food
items, laundry detergent
and fabric softner, paper
products, shampoo, and
monetary doantions.
All collections will be
given
to
\1eigs
Cooperative Parish Food
Pantry. For more information call Kathryn Hart
at 949-2656.

place.
The Baghdad church
siege \\&lt;as the deadliest
ever recorded against
Iraq's
Christians.
whose numbers have
plummeted since the
2003 U.S.-led invasion
as members of the
community have fled to
other
countries
to
escape the violence.
The death toll in a
series of attacks mainly
targeting
Shiites
Tuesday in Baghdad,
meanw~ile, rose to 91!
accordmg
to
Iraq1
police and hospital
offic~a!s who spoke ~n
condttlon of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to talk to
the pr~ss. .
.
Iraqt state TV aued
footage VVednesday of
Prime Minister Nouri
al-Maliki visiting victims of the blasts in
Baghdad'~
hospitals.
The televised tnps to
civilians wounded in

attacks were a first for
al-Maliki, who has
been struggling to keep
his job since his Shiitedominated alliance was
narrowly defeated by
the Sunni-backed bloc
of
former
Prime
Minister Ayad Allawi
in the March 7 parliamentary election.
Neither bloc won an
outright majority, setting up a fight for allies
that has left the government stalemated. There
was a g~iJ?mer of hope
for pohtical progress
VVednesday when parliament's acting speaker. Fouad Massoum,
called the lawmakers to
conve~e Monday and
elect hts successor. .
However, the actmg
speaker only has the
right to call parliament
to session and can't
necessarily force all
the ~!~embers to show
so 1t was unclear
whether the date would

hold
or
that
announcement sig
fied any progress in the
political talks.
Last week, Iraq's
highest court ordered
the 325 lawmakers
back to work after a
virtual
eight-month
recess. The parliament
has met only once since
the March 7 vote for
just 20 minutes to
allow more time to
choose a new leadership.
. Under t~e constitutton, parhament was
required to meet within
15 days of final c~urt
approval of elect10n
results and choose a
speaker, then _a president. The appomtments
had to be put off
because they are part of
the negotiations over
the rest of the new
leadership- includ•.
a prim~ mini~t~r
top Cabmet offtctals.

Local Briefs
Office closed
POMEROY - The
Tuberculosis Office will
be closed Nov. 11 for
Veterans Day.

..

Craft show
planned
MINERAL VVELLS,
VV. Va. - A craft show to
raise money for people in
need will be held by the
Ladies Aide of the

RACO holding
food drive for
Parish
RACINE
The
Racine Area Community
Organization will be

For The Record
County CommissionerS
POMEROY - County
Commissioners have changed
their meeting schedule for
November. They will meet at
10 am. on Nov. 10 and 16,
and 10 am on Nov. 22.

911
POMEROY - Unit'i of
Meig.-. County 911 dispatched
these emergency medical
calls:
'fuesday
I0:11 am.., East Memorial

•

Drive, heOO injwy; 1:56 p.m.,
East Memorial Drive, chest
pain; 3:28 p.m., Ohio 124,
motor vehicle collision: 7:2f)
p.m., Ohio 7, Coolville, motor
vehicle collision; 7:59 p.m.,
Ohio 124, Pomeroy, general
pain; 8:09 p.m. Mill Street
Middleport, motor vehicle
collision; 10:22 p.m. Ohio
681, Reedsville, assault ~

Wednesday
1:17am.. VVolfe Pen Road,
abdominal pain; 2:25 am.,
East Main StreeL Pomeroy,
abdominal pain.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder
Kay Hill reported the following transfers in real estate:
• , Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency
to Jessika Codner, deed,
VIllage of Middleport:
P.cilllela Vosefski, deceased,
to David S. Vosefski, affidavit, Salem; Thomas R.
Kennedy, Anita Kennedy, to
Tana L. Kennedy lml:xxlen,
deed. Salisbury.

Share your family's favorite holiday
recipe with your.friends and neighbors.

Recipes should be submit~ed no later
than Thes., November 16th.
Please email entries to:
pcaldwell@ heartlandpublications.com

Our Holiday Recipe Guide
will be inserted on
Thesday, November 23rd, 2010·
in The Daily Sentinel,
'lrbe ®aUipolis 1!lailp 'lrrihune &amp;

'lrbe ~oint ~leasant ~egister

'

�_..

A

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

- -

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

----·- ----.-.------

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
WVU men's basketball prc,ic''· Page B2

•

O"cns rips l\1c~abb, Pngc 86

-~----~__,.

PORTS

Thursday, November 4, 2010

•~=========================================
LocAL SCHEDULE

University of Rio Grande men's soccer runs the table

POMEROY - A ached~lo ol o.:pc;omtng
htgh school varslly sporting ovonts
Involving learns !rom M~ugs. Mason and
Gallla count ..,

Sophomore forward Richard
Junior defender Neil Harries
lsbemer wa" credited with an scored off a corner kick from
Maccauro in the 66th minute.
as~ist on Lopes' second goal and
senior
midtielder
Phil
Stansfield
Sophomore midfielder/forRIO GRANDE. Ohio- The
Umversity of Rio Grande set up Lopes' final goal of the ward Oliver Hewitt-Pisher
closed out the scoring with a
RedStom1 men's soccer team. night.
Senior midfielder Dylan goal in the 76th minute. The
ranked t\o. l in the most recent
NAIA Top 25 rating. finished off Williams began the scoring. as assist on Hewitt-Fisher's goal
the 2010 regular ~cason with an he found the back of the net in went to freshman forwnrd
undefeated record nfter an 8-1 the opening minute of the game. Orlando Zapata.
victory over Walsh Univer:.ity at Sophomore forward Scott Bibby
Junior
goalkeeper
Jack
Evan Davis Field
assisted on the goal. Bibby Marchant recorded four saves on
Rio Grnncle (18-0) had a big would score a goal of his own in the night for Rio Grande.
night from its seniors as the) the 50th minute, assisted by
"When we hook up with
played their final regular season Isberner.
Walsh. and it goes back, years,
Sophomore rnidfielder Rafael years and years, they always
game in front of the home folks.
Senior midfielder Ederson Maccauro scored the first goal of come to play and perhaps.
Lopes recorded a hat trick in his the second half to put Rio tonight there was a little bit sting
final appearance at home. He Grande ahead, 4-0. knocking out of the game just became.
scored two goals in the tirst half home a penalty kick.
maybe for them. they were out of
in the 21st and 43rd minutes . His
Walsh (9-9) kept from being post-season play in the American
final goal came in the 70th shutout \Vith a goal in the 62nd Mideast Conference.'' said Rio
minute.
minute. cutting the deficit to 5-l Grande head coach Scott
Senior
defender
Steven at the time. Ben Truax scored the .Morrissey. ''But nonetheless I
thought we came to play. I
O'Hara assisted on the first goal. goal for the Cavalit!rs.
BY MARK WILLIAMS

•

SPECIAL TO Tl&lt;£ SENTINEL

f.ri.ltly.li~~
Football
Buffalo at Wahal'la, 7.30 p.IT'
Chapmanville at Point Pleasant
7:30p.m
Hannan at Burch. 7·30 p.m.
~. Noyombor §

Cross Country
State Meet at Scioto Downs, 11.05
a.m.

2010 football
statistics needed
GALLIPOLIS - All
Ohio varsity football
coaches in both Gallia
and Meigs countie:s are
asked to submit regular
season statistics - both
offense and defense from their resp~ct 1vc
a m~ to the Ohio Valley
ublishing sports department for district considerations
with
the
Associated Press.
Along with the stats,
please
include
the
heights. weights. position:. and class of each
nominee - as well ns an
order of recommendation
for possible selection.,,
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
sha wley@ mydailytribune.com or sent via fax
to (740) 446-300H.
All statistics and nominations must be received
before 5 p.m. on
Monday, Nov. 8 for consideration.

•

thought we played some really
good stuff at times, created a lot
of opportunities, so really
pleased with how the guys
played. kept their focus and 1
thought it was a good result."
• Morrissey was also pleased
with the fact that his team ran the
table during the regular season.
"I feel proud of the fact that
the guys have worked hard and
we were able to accomplish (an
undefeated regular o;ea&lt;;on). we
set three goals when we came
together when preseason started.
we've obtained one goal.''
Morrissey said. "But the bottom
line is we want to make sure
we're playing that first Saturday
in December and the way we see
it. is that potentially we have
eight matches left to play and we
need to mn the table and we're
going to work extremely hard to
try and do that."

AP Ohio
High School
Football
Poll List
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How a
state panel of sports .wnters and
broadcasters rates Oh•o high school
football teams in the eighth and final
weekly Assocrated Press poll of
2010, by OHSAA dtvistons, wtth
won-lost record and total pomts
(ftrst·place votes rn parentheses):

DIVISION I
1, Cle Glenville (16)
2. CiA Coleram (3)
3, Lake. St. Edward (4)
4, Htlltard DaVIdson (2)
5, Middletown (2)
1 6, Ptckenngton Cent (2)
7. Solon (1)
Sylvanta SouthVIew
9, Aust !110\VIl-F!tch
~o. C1n. La Salle

a.

SSAC football
computer ratings

890
8 00

7 89
7 56
644
6.33

•

BY SARAH HAWLEY
AND BRYAN WALTERS

9-0
10-0
9·1
8-1
8-1
7·2
8·1
8-1
7·2
8·2
7-3
6·3

Three teams. Two playoff contende~. One final
v.·eek to get a victory.
The 20 I 0 football regular season comes to an
end this Fnday in the
\1ountaineer State. and
all three Mason County
programs will be in
action during Week 11
gridiron contests.
Point Pleasant will host
Chapmanville in a pivotal Class AA matchup.
while Wahama will put
its unbeaten season on
the line when it host:&gt; '
Buffalo. Hannao will
also have one f:nal shot
of ending a 21-game los-

6-4
~

7·3
5-4

5-4
5-4
4·5
4-5

~2.67 9·0

12.00
11.50
11 33
10.89
9.44
9 33
9.33
8.67

8.22
7.80
7.80
7.56
7.50
7.50
7.33
7.11
7.10
6.89
6.50

9-0
1o-o
8-1
8-1
7·2
7·2
8·1
7·2
6-3
7·3
7-3
6·3
6·4
5·4
5·4
7·3
6-3
6-4

BY Rusrv. MILLER
ASSOC1-'!TEO flfESS

9-0
9.()
9.()

7·2
7-2
7·2
7·2
7·2
5-4
6-3
7·2
6·3
7·2
6·4
6·3
7·2
6-3
5-4
5·4
4·5

CONTACI'US
1·740·446·2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1·740-446·3ooa
E-mail: mdsaportsOmydallyaentmol com

SPOtll. S!llf~

Bryan Walters
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bwalters 0 mydatlytrtbvne com

Sarah Hawley
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
shawteyO mydallytrlbOne com
)

ing streak when it travels
to Burch.
Here's a brief look at
the Week I I contests.
BUFFALO AT WAHAMA

The Wahama football
team will be looking for
milestones on Friday
evening
at
Bachtel
Stadium in .Mason. W.Va.
The White Falcons (90) are going for their .first
unbeaten season smce
going back to back in
2003 and 2003 and only
their third in school hi"tory in Friday's game
against Buffalo (7-2).
Wahama head coach
Ed Cromley will be
going for his I20th career

victory in the game.
Cromley holds a I I 9-57
overall record in 16 seasons at Wahama.
It will also be Senior
Night at Wahama. with
seniors Elijah Honaker.
Ryan Lee. Jeremiah
Hoffman, Tyler Kitchen.
T)gart Phalen. Kyle
McCormick. and Rvan
Anderson playing their
final regular season game
for the White Falcons.
Wahama and Buffalo
have faced each other in
earh of the last seven
seasons. with Wahama
winning four of the seven
games.~ Waharna won the
2009 !!arne at Buffalo by
a score of 58-22.
Buffalo holds a two

~arne

33

1
1

It's been going on no_w
for over a century 111
Wayne County: Orrville
vs. Wooster. the Generals
against the Red Riders.
The Riders defeated
the Generals ~2-17 in
front of a crowd of 6.000
at Wooster's Folli~ Field
last weekend in the IOOth
matchup of their rivalry.
which dates back to
1903.
Approximately
350
former players who had
played in the game. datmg from the 1930s. took
the field for a pregame
alumni \valk.
The coin toss was performed by 95-year-old
Werden "Squirrel" Miller
from Orr\'llle 's class of
1935. who participated in
the games of '3~. ·33 and
'34. He was the oldest
living former player at
the game.
" I' m just a kid again
being out here."' said
MilJer, who wa~ joined

by wife, Ann, before a coach Tom Grippa said.
cart brou~ht him to mid- "My job now is to ernofield to fl1p the coin. " It's tionall) . not let this kill
amBzing all the interest in u~.
WORLD
WIDE
this game and all the talk
WAYNE: After their 42going on this week."
victory
against
ELUE R
STATES- 14
~IEN: Cincinnati Elder Kettering Fairmont. the
is not going to the play- Huber Heirrhts Wayne
offs, but the Panthers fin- pla)ers jostled for posiished with a 31-28 over- tion around a computer
time upset of Greater screen in the team's
Catholic League South meeting room.
Elder had entered overrival La Salle.
Freshman
Matthew time against La Salle.
.\lurray hit a 24-yard and the . . team was \vatchstreaming.
live
field goal in OT to give ing
Elder (3-6) the win over updates. The Warriors
previously unbeaten La were on the playoff bubble. and that was one of
Salle.
Doug 'Ramsey, the 14- several games possibly
year coach who led Elder affecting their status.
Elder won, and Wayne
to D- 1 state champi·onships in 2002 and emotions sank.
2003. said, "'l'his is one
"Boy:· said Wayne
of those program wins. coach Jay Minton. "It
This ranks way up there didn't look good."
as far as reglllar season
But. as can happen in
wins. I'm overwhelmed.'' Week I0. enough results
La Salle prc,pares for turned in Wayne's rpvor
its first pht)'off appear- that the Warriors secured
the No. 8 seed in
ance since 2004
"All of our goals nrc Division I. Region · 4.
still intact." La Salle That helped the Great:r

..

270
218
213
187
159
156
154
117
57
41

advantage (20-18)
m the series since 1971 .
Wahama won the TVC
Hocking title with last Others receiving 12 or more potnls:
week's win over Miller, 11, Zanesvrlle 20 12, ToI. Cent.
ending Trimble's cham- Cath. 13.
pionship reign. This was
DIVISION Ill
the first year in the
league for the White 1 Alliance Marlington (18)10·0 276
Sheodan (3) 10.0 238
Falcons. who went 8-0 m 32, Thornville
Cots. Watterson (4)
8·1 206
conference play.
4 Eaton (2)
10.0 194
8-2 178
The White Falcons are 5. Steubenvolle ( 1)
Columbran
9·1 128
averaging 45.3 points per 6.7, Tiffin
Spnng. Shawnee
9-1 124
game this season and are 8 Clyde
9-1 95
9-1 34
allowing 5.9 points per 9. Cin Wyom1ng
26
game. In the week 10 10. E Lrverpool (1}
game at Miller. the White I Olhers receiVing 12 or more po101S:
Falcon:s allov.cd their 11, Cin McNicholas 21 11 Tipp
21 . 13, Jacks.;)ll (1)
first points since Sept. Ct!yTippecanoe
15. 14, Newark Licklng Valley 13. 14,
24.
ParMa Patlua 13. 16, Mtnerva 12
The Bison are averngDIVISION IV
Piease see Mason, 86
1, C'ville Clinton- Massie (19) 1o-o 262

2,
3,
4,
5,
6,

Akr, MancheSler (6)
1o-o
Genoa Area (1) •
10·0
P. C. Jonathan Alder (1) 9·1
C1n. N. College Hill
10.0
Kenton
9·1
7, BellvtiiO Clear Fork (1) 9-1
6. Kettonng Alter (1)
6-2
9. Carlisle (1)
10-0
10, Elyria Cath.
9·1

For 1OOth time, Orrville battles Wooster

8·2

CLASS A
1. Wahama
9.33
2. Brshop Donahue 9.22
(tie) Meadow Bridge 9.22
4.W•rtCo
789
5. Buffalo
7 33
(lle) Matowan
7 33
(tJe) Pendleton Co
7 33
(tie) Wtlhamstown
7 33
9. Wheeling Cent
7 22
10. E. Hardy
6.78
11 Parkersburg Cath. 6 67
(lle) Tucker Co
6.67
13. Madonna
6 22
14. Pocahontas Co 6 20
15. Fayetteville
6.00
(tle) Van
6.00
17. Rtchwood
5.44
18 St Marys
5.22
9. S. Harnson
5.00
Man
4 78

1. Cofs. Marioo-Franldrn (17) 1o-o
2 Avon (2)
1D-O
3, New Albany (3)
to-o
4, Maple HIS, (3)
10.()
5. Cin. Wirnon Woods (2) 9-1
6. Mentor Lake Cath. (2) 9-1
7 War•el' Howland (1)
10.0
8. Tallmadge
1o-o
9, Ctn Turptn
9-1
10. Kings Mills Kings
9-1

Final week of football comes for Mason County

CLASS AA
Raven$WOOd
Magnolia
3. Greenbner W
4. Wayne
5. Bluofteld
6. Chapmanvtlle
7 PikeView
(tie) Rtver Vtew
9. Roane Co
10. Pt. Pleoaant
11. Lib. Hamson
(tie) Shady Spring
13. Frankfort
14. Herb. Hoover
(titt) Tug Valley
16. Keyser
17. Poca
18. Braxton Co.
19. Westside
20. Oak Gfen

53

DIVISION II

Lisa Honaker/submitted photo

The Wahama football team, pictured her in a preseason team photo, will be going for the third undefeated season in school history on Friday evening as they host Buffalo.

CLASS AAA
1. G. Washtngton
2. Marttnsburg
3. Morgantown
4. S.'Charleston
5. Hurricane
6. Capttal
7. Bridgeport
8. Nicholas Co.
9. Brooke
10. lJnrverslty
11. Spring Vallay
12. Fairmont Sr.
13. Parkersburg
14. R.C. Byrd
15 LewiS Co
16 Parl&lt;ersburg 5
17 Logan
18. Musselman
19 HuntingtOn
20. Rtverslde

227
226
201
171
\48
130
81

Olhers rece1vmg 12 or more po nts:
11 , Can
McKrnley 30. 12,
Spnngfield 17. 13, To Whitmer 13.

PARKERSBURG W.Va. (AP)- The
Secondary
School
Actlvrttes
Comrrussion's h1gh school football
computer ratrngs reloased Tuesday,
with team records. The top 16 tearT's
at the end or the regular season
quality tor the playoffs bcgrnmng
Nov 12:

16,44
1520
13.90
13.67
13.11
12.89
12.78
12.11
1167
1150
10.00
9.67
910
9.00

ID-0 264
10.0
10.0
to-o
to-o
9-0
1().0
10.0
9-1
9·1

Western
Ohio
Conference land four
big-school teams
Centerville. Springfidd,
Troy. and Wayne - in
the playoffs for just the
second time since 2000.
THE HIG l\tAC: The
Midwest
Athletic
Conference continues its
strong representation in
the state playoffs, a~ fjvc
of the I0 conference
~
1-r
teams earned p I ctyo
spots (Coldwater and
Anna in Divio;ion V;
Delphos St. John's.
:vtaria Stein Marion
Local and Minster in
Division VI). The MAC
has had at least two
teams in the postsea~on
since 19X6 and the last
time the MAC did not
have a team in the postsea&lt;;on wus I9R5.
THE HIG SOC: The
Ohio
Sol•thern
Conference will be sending tive teams to the
playoffs. The league
mcludes II football piny-

Please see Ohio, Bl

256
174
150
146
143
93

89
86
70

Others receiVing 12 or more points:
11 , Ironton 55. 12, Chagrin Falls 41.
13, Heath 19. 14, Martins Ferry 15,
15, Campbell Memortal12

DIVISIONV
1, Youngs. Ursuhne (25) 1o-o
2. Krtland 121
1o-o
3, Fredericktown (1)
1o-o
4. Archbold
1D-O
5. Richwood N unon 121 to-o
6, Westem Reserve
10.0
17. w Latayette Aldgewood1o-o
8, DehanceTtnora
1D-O
9, Hamler Patrrck Henry 9-1
10. Cuyahoga Hts.
9-1

I

293
229
206
202
174
128.
93
83
45

41

01hersrecelvmg12ormorepoints:
tt, w.Jetterson 33. 12, Oak H•ll27.
~ 13, Lima Cent Cath. 21 t4, Anna
13
·
1

I

DIVISION VI
1. Delphos St.John's (27)10-0 289
2. Mogadore (1)
10-o 233·

~: ~~~bwynford

~g:g ~~~

5, Covmgton
a. Spring. Cath cent
7. Marion Local
8, Bndgeport
9. Ada
10. Shadysde

10-o 130
9·1
109
8·2 103
10-0 101
9·1 74
9-1 72

Olhers rcceiV1:'lQ 12 or more pomts
11 Thol'lpsor L~:nont 44. 12.
Sidney lehman 27. IS, Berlin
Center Western Reserve (1) 22 14.
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 21

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

WVU's Huggins won't settle for rebuilding year

RedStorm volleyball
wins at UVA-Wise
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEL

WISE, Va. The
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm
volleyball
team went on the road
and came away with a
four-set victory over
UVA-Wise on Tuesday
evening. Rio won by
scores of 25-23. 22-25,
25-19 and 25-15.
Rio Grande (20-13, 9-4
MSC E) was able to get
big nights out of sophomore
outside hitter
Whitney Smith, sophomore middle hitter Erin
Sherman and senior outside hitter Rachel Walker.
Smith topped the kill
chart with 16 and also
tallied 18 digs. Sherman
delivered 11 kills and had
three solo blocks and two
block assists. Walker also
notched 11 kills and
came away with tw.o
block assists.
Sophomore
1ibero
Lauren Raines paced the
defensive effort with 20
digs. Freshman defensive
specialist Nicole Ogg

Ohio
fromPageBl
ing schools and is split
into two divisions. The
larger SOC II is sending
Portsmouth
West,
Wheelersbug
and
Minford while the smaller division SOC I seflds
Oak Hill and Symmes
Valley.

PASSING

FANCY:

Garrett Morton threw for
304 yards and four TDs
in helping Archbold beat
Liberty Center 35-0;
Brock Mosier had 435
yards passing for three
TDs
in
Sherwood
Fairview's 28-6 win over
and
Hicksville;
Cincinnati Wyoming's
Kyle Seyfried was 16 of
23 for 324 yards and five
TDs in a 41-6 win over
Indian Hill, giving him
71 l yards and 10 TDs
throught the air ip his last
two games.

RUNNING

WILD:

Delta ran for 458 yards
with three backs surpasing tOO yards apiece; and
Bradford's
Jonathan
Barbee rushed for 351
yards and five. touchdowns on 33 carries in a
wild 48-44 loss to Bethel.
THREE FOR FIVE:
Ironton's Tyler Hager
scored five TDs in a 4525 win over Portsmouth.
thus joining fellow running backs Tres Wilks
and Brian Warner with
five TD games. It also
enabled Ironton to tie the
series at 54-54-3, the
most games played by
two teams in Ohio high
school history.
FIRSTS: Middletown
defeated Princeton on
Friday 32-21 to complete
the first 10-0 season
since 1934; Carlisle's 413 win over New Lebanon
Dixie on Friday gave the
Indians their first-ever
10-0
season;
and
Jeromesville Hillsdale
enjoyed a victory celebration 41 years in the
making after beating
Creston Norwayne 21-14
on Friday night. The
Falcons prevailed in a
winner-take-all
game
that decided the Wayne
County Athletic League
championship. Hillsdale
(9- 1, 7-0) joined the
WCAL in 1970 but had
never won a title.

AND

A

had 14 digs. Junior middle hitter Kati Moore
produced three solo
blocks and three block
assists.
Senior setter Ashley
Bloom had big night as
well with 29 assists and
sev~n
serve
aces.
Freshman setter Kayla
Landaker distributed 18
assists.
Rio Grande snapped a
brief two-match losing
streak with the victory.
The RedStorm are now a
very impressive 10-3 on
the road this season.
UVA-Wise fell to 1121 on the season and 5-8
in the
MSC East
Division.
Rio took the season
series
against
the
Cavaliers, winning both
matches.
Rio will close out the
regular season on Friday
with a match against former American Mideast
Conference foe, Malone.
The match will begin at
approximately 8 p.m. following the men's basketball games.
Buckeye League since
1941 with a 54-14 Joss to
Kenton; Minster won
five of its last six games
after starting 0-4 to earn
its first playoff berth
since 2001: Coldwater,
which lost longtime
coach John Reed to cancer in May. defeated
Minster 40-20 to finish
7-3 a1id earned the
Cavaliers'· 14th straight
playoff
appearance;
Defiance Tinora's streak
of seven straight shutouts
ended when Edgerton
returned a kickoff 86
yards to score with 55
seconds left in the first
half of a 63-7 Tinora ~in;
Bucyrus Wynfonl ran
Ohio's longest active
regular-season winning
streak to 48 games - the
last loss was in Week 2 of
the 2006 season - with
a 47-14 win over
Ontario; Dayton Dunbar
started with two losses
before closing with a 7-1
finish to get to the D-lll
postseason for the second
time in three years; and
Kettering Alter is the
two-time defending D-IV
state champion, but the
Knights are coming into
the playoffs off a Week
10
loss
against
Chami nade-J ulienne.

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. (AP) - It took a
half century for West
Virginia to return to the
Final Four. Coach Bob
Huggins doesn't want it
to take that long again.
With top scorer and
assists leader Da 'Sean
Butler, defensive specialist and leading
rebounder
Devin
Ebanks and starting forward Wellington Smith
gone, Huggins will
have to come up with a
way to make another
run into late March.
The newest version of
the Mountaineers will
have a tough time
matching the excitement and production of
last year's squad that
produced a schoolrecord 31 wins before
losing in the national
semifinals to eventual
champion DuJ&lt;e.
There's still a solid
crop of veterans. led by
second-leading scorer
Kevin Jones, that could
help West Virginia
make a run at a secondstraight Big East championship.
Last year's team was
·dominated by
tall,
lanky players with huge
wingspans - but few
who could push around
big opponents in the
paint.
One
reason
was
because
260-pound
Danny Jennings and.
270-potind
Deniz
Kilicli
(pronounced
Kah-LITCH-luh) got
little playing time. The
sophomores and will be
called on to bolster an
inside game that's been
lacking consistency.
"I think it' II be a little
bit more conventionaL''
Huggins said. "We
struggled sometimes a
year ago with big' strong
guys inside because our
strength was just our
overall size where we
could switch everything
and virtually everybody
could guard everybody."
One thing that won't
change:
The
Mountaineers will play
the same aggressive,
lung-busting defense.
West Virginia led the
Big East in rebounding
margin a year ago and
was second in scoring
defense at 63.5 points
per game.
"We can't abandon
those things," Huggins
said. ''I'd like to play

faster. I'd like to be able
to score a lot more. A
lot of transition basketball comes off certainly
the ability to rebound
and the ability to create
from your defense. We
have to continue to
work at those things.
We are bigger and
stronger. So hopefully
we'll be able to throw it
close (to the basket) a
little bit more than what
we were able to.''
Butler, Ebanks and
Smith comprised half of
the team's 72-point
scoring average a year
ago and Jones will be
counted on to improve
his 13.5 scoring average.
Jones
added
10
pounds during the offseason and now weighs
260. The junior believes
he's more mature and
adept at handling the
pressures of Big East
basketball.
"There was a lot of
times last year and my
freshman year when I
would get down on
myself," Jones said. "If
like I had a bad game or
if 1' m not shooting
well, I just had to learn
to shake the little stuff
off.
'Tm just looking to
come in there and
impose my will."
Huggins wants his big
men to establish themselves. too. Kilicli averaged 3.5 points in seven
minutes
per game,
while Jennings averaged less than two
points and rebounds in
five minutes per contest.
If West Virginia is
going to be anywhere
near as good as last
year, "guys like Deniz
and Danny are going to
have to play really well,
where Deniz is going to
have to be a guy we can
throw the ball to score,"
Huggins sa1d. "I don't
know if they're ready to
do that. I hope they
are."
Huggins will use
third-year starter Truck
Bryant and veteran
backup Joe Mazzul1a on
the court at the same
time to help in transition.
"It's the first time
we've got guys who
could actually dribble,"
Huggins joked.
Bryant, the team's
fourth-best scorer at 9
points, missed West

•

•
Mark Cornelison/Lexington Herald-Leader/MCT

West Virginia head coach Bob Huggins yells at his
team during the second half in an NCAA Final Four
semifinal game against Duke at Lucas Oil Stadium in
Indianapolis, Indiana, Saturday, April 3.

Virginia's final three
. games in the NCAA
tournament with a broken foot suffered in
practice.
In Bryant's place,
Mazzulla became the
MVP of the East
Regional after scoring a
career-high 17 points in
a win over Kentucky.
Mazzulla played most
of last season with pain
from
a
surgically
repaired left shoulder.
"We don't have a
Da'Sean. we don't have
a Wellington to go to.
so we in fact might be
those go-to guys."
Mazzulla said. "So we
need to have that more
aggressive perspective
on offense."
West Virginia will
start the season without
backup guard Casey
Mitchell, who was suspended
indefinitely
before ·practice began
for an undisclosed violation of team rules. He
averaged 3.7 points a
year ago. Freshman
Noah Cottrill also is on

indefinitely suspension.
Huggins refuses to
call this a rebuilding
year, although it will be
a challenge for the
unranked Mountaineers
to earn their fourth
straight NCAA tournament appearance.
West Virginia's tough
nonconference schedule
includes a tournament
in Puerto Rico this
month that includes
possible games with
No. 8 North Carolina,
Nebraska
and.
Minnesota. There's also
a January rematch with
No. 14 Purdue, which
handed
the
Mountaineers their first
loss a year ago.
''I like to be good,''
Huggins said. "I like to
walk out there at halfcourt and look at their
guys. look at mine and
say we ought to win,
we've got better guys.
It doesn't always work
that way, particularly in
this league. But I don't
think there's anything
wrong with that."

Www.mydailysentinel.com

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

LAST:

Ashtabula
Edgewood
defeated Conneaut, 35-6.
Friday night in the final
footba!l game to be
played by the old
Northeastern
Conference, ending a 59year run.
NOTEWORTHY: St.
Marys Memorial suffered its. first winless season in the Western
I

"

�Thursday, November 4, 2010
.,r-"
.,•
.,!
~·

'. .

.:

i/'~~ ;.,..

www.mydailysentinel.eem

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

--------------------------------------------•• .
~ribune - Sentinel - l\egigter
CLASSIFIED

E1tlaU

Website.s:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

l\egistef
To Pla~e
~ribune
Sentinel .
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 ,
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3oos
or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

/Jeatlliru

Word. Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ·
,.,~r--l HOW TO WRITE AN AD

' '

\

~

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

200 Announcements
Notices
NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
you do business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
you have investigating
the offering.
Giveaway
wooden
pallets at 825 3rd
ave @ the Gallipolis
Tribune.
Plctur~s

that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune

must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

Financial
Pockets
Looking
Empty? Need some
extra cash for the
holidays?
Bad
credit? No credit? No
problem! Apply Now
Call
888-593-7775
No Fees

• FAST/RS
BELIEF

Other Services
300

Services

Pet Cremations. Call
740·446-3745

Other Services

1000

Financial

DIRECTV

It's Finally FREE!
Free HD for Lite•
and over 120
channels only
$24.99/month. ~
•conditions apply.
promo code MB45
Call Dish Network
. 'Now
1-877-464-3619

VONAGE
Get One Month
FREE! Unlimited
local and long
distance calling for
only $25.99 per
month.
Call today!
1·866·798-0692

\ I

Security

'lrbe ~alltpolis 719ailp \lrrtbune
'lrbe ~oint ~Ieasant 1\.egtster

Furniture

Animals

For Sale Couch &amp;
Chair $75 OBO Bed
Free Home
Pets
$75 OBO 446·2732
Security System
w th $99 installation 9wk old · Kittens 2- or 446-6281
and purchase of
female,2-male
Hobby / Hunt &amp;
alarm monitoring
INDOOR ONLY 1st
Sport
services from ADT shots,wormed, and
Security Services
liter trained 740)441- 2·Cieveland Brown
Call1-888-367-2171 1100
1ickets for the Jets,
Panthers,
Ravens,
Free F black Cocker Pittsburgh
Games
400
Fmancial Spaniel, good w/kids 740)256·1267
740-949-2950, 444·
Miscellaneous
3349
Financial Services

CREDIT CARD
BELIEF
Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your
free consultation.
1-877-264-8031

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Di~ision of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
A~iars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
seNice
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

in the
The Daily Sentinel

600

ADI

Money To lend

READ All ABOUT IT

Recreational
Vehicles

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;uto;;;;;;;;;s;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
2010 ford focus 1300
actual miles. Price to
sale
$ 12•000 ·0
price neg. 446-7278
or 339-3503

°

Professional Services

Do You have a Limited Time Offer!
Dream of being Debt
Free HD for Life.
free? Are you trying
Ask
how by calling ·'SEPTIC
PUMPING
to get your credit
DirecTV today!
Gallia Co. OH and
cleaned? Call 1-866Packages start at Mason co. wv. Ron
995-6887
No
$29.99.
Evans Jackson, OH
Advance Fees!
1-866-541-0834
800·537-9528

.r
,.
f

Land (Acreage) ,

6·Acres 2 1/2 mile
back of Henderson •
Campers/ RVs &amp;
W. V
with
septic !
Trailers
system, water tap .
and concrete drive' 2005 Jayco Eagle
way 740·245-5087 or· '
Gooseneck
Hitch, 74().208-0028
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See 117 acre farm for
photos
at salelocated on
www carmjchaeltraile Eagle Ridge Road
J:S...CQil1
740-446- just
down
from
2412
Bashan Fire house~
call 740-949-2603 · '
07 Brecken Ridge
40' camper, country
Real Eslat~.
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide 3500
Rentals.
...... '•
outs, full size bath &amp;
kitchen, 2 bedrooms,
sliding glass doors,
Apartments/
Townhouses
exc.
condition,
beautiful!,
$20,000
2BR APT.Ciose to
740-247-2475
Holzer Hospital on SA
160 CIA. (740) 441:
2000
Automotive 0194

.l2lSH..
NETWORK

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

lt.

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publlllhlng rewvee the rlg111 to edit reject,« cancel any l&lt;latanytlme. Err«t must~ rtpOited on the llrwtday of plilllcallon and
Tntl.lle-Sertinei·Aeglater will be res'porwlble for no more than the cost of the epace occupied by the error and only the fll'lllnsertldn. We ahaII not be liable 101
any 1oM or eJ&lt;pense that results from the publicatiOn or omlaslon of an adVertisement Correction ..in be made In the 111111 a~allable t&lt;llliol\ • Box numbef lids
are always tonltdentlal. • C!frent rate Cllr11 appllea. • All 1181 eetate ad~ertisernenta are subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968, • Thla ,_.•,.,n.., •
eccepta only l&gt;etp warted ads meeting EOE standards Wa .,.111 not tmowtngly aocapt any achtrtlalng In violation of the lew WIR not ~ retpOnllblt for
errorn ln an ad !liken over the phone.

Do you owe over
$10000 to the IRS?
Life lock
Stop wage
Free Document
garnishments and
Shredder for new
bank levies.
Lifelock members.
Settle Out Ofer Due
Call Today
Taxes for Less
1-888-758-3029 and
1·888:692-5739
use promo code
SHREDDER
Home lmprovemenb
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446·0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

1

Now you can have borders and graphics
)'._\
added to your classified ads
f, ~
m
Borders$3.00/perad
E!
, .1
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1 .00 for large

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

• All ads must be prepaicr

Include Complete
Description • Include A Prlte • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addren When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 O.ys

.GE

JUST SAY

GET YOUR CLASSJFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

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

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword •

..

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
REACH ·OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

mdtclassified@mydailyttibwte.com

.

500

Toy Poodle Puppies,
CKC, vet checked,
shots, wormed, tails
docked &amp; dewclaws
removed. Colors are
black. chocho!ate, &amp;
buckeye, boys $300.
girls $350, 740-9927007

Trucks
1987 Ford truck V-6
300, $550, 740-992;;.33!!!!6!!!!7=====~
Want To Buy
Want to buy Junk
Cars, call 740-388·
0884
Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870.
No
Sunday call

Illinois
"Sangamo"
Special pocket watch
23 Jewels, Rare.
also
AKC Beagle Pups for $1295.:
Real Estate
Sale
Call
Gary Hamilton 950-B, 23
3000
Sales
Northup for more Jewel. 740-533-3870
info. 304·773-5038
Boiler
Central
.Commercial
GIVEAWAY: 13 yr.
Outdoor
wood
old
cockier/spring
Furnaces
spinal needs to be
LG Office I Rental
kept in doors and Instant rebate up to Property 512 2nd
$1 ,000.00. 740}245Ave
loved for. Needs a
Gallipolis,Oh
5193 '
asking $85,000 or
good home. Great w/
make offer 740)710elderly or kids call:
253·514·1592
Piano for sale Call: 0007
304-675-5881
or
700
Agriculture 304-593-3168
OFFICEJWAREHOU
SEIRETAIL
Great
WantTo Buy
Location 749 Third
Farm Equipment
Absolute Top dollar- Ave Gallipolis.1800
Zero turn mower silver/gold coins any sq.ft . For more info
gold Call 1-404-456-3802
John Deere 740-367- 1OK/14K/18K
jewerly, dental gold,
0577
pre
1935
US
STIHL Sales &amp; Service currency. proof/mint For Sale By Owner
Now
Available
at sets, diamonds, MTS
Carmichael Equipment Coin Shop. 151 2nd
6 apts $137.000
740·446-2412
Avenue,
Gallipolis. rent $2030 mo, 740446-2842
446-0390
Hay, Feed, Seed,

Education

Business &amp; Trode
School

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1·800537·9528

Quality
Cars
&amp;
Trucks wlwarranty all
priced to sell, 16 yrs.
in business. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 740446-0103.

Grain

Yard Sale

Good mixed hay, sq.,
$2.50 4x5, round
bales $20.00. Stored
inside 740-446-2075

5 &amp; 6, 60 Gavin St.

I

90 0
Merchandise
Gallipolis
Career
College
(Career's
Close To Home)
Equipment/ .
CallToday! 740~6Supplies
4367
1-800-2140452
50,000 B.T.U LP gas
Accredited
Mem~r visual flame heater.
Accrediting CounCil for
Independent Colleges and Excellent condition.
Sc~ools t 2748
304·593-6618.

Huge yard sale Nov

Houaes For Sale

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;'
AFFORDABLE!
lt&gt;wnhouse
apartments,
and/or '
small houses for rent. _
Call 740441-1111 for ·
application
g :
infqrmation.

.

Free Rent Special _:
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and '
up, Central Air, W/0. ' :
hookup, tenant pays ,
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1·BR
apartment for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675-6679

•
'
.

'

'

.

1·BR
Apt
$340
month, 2·BR Apt ,
$450 month at the
Spring Valley Area.
740)645·7661
or
740)339-3046 after
5:00pm
For
lease:
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor •
apt.
near
Gallia. '
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required: J.
maximum occupancy · '
2, $350 mon. 740· • •
446-3936 or 740446~25
' •
RIVERBEND PLACE ' ;
Apts.
1 BR, Hud ' •
subsidize, elderly &amp; , ~
disabled
complex: '
·
accepting
Applications
304·
882-3121.Equal
Housing Opportunity

{it

..
...
r

l' J

fl .'-.
:

,

Village 2 Rodney, 8·2

2 BR apt. 6 mi from
3 bdr. 1 bath mobile Holzer. $400 + dep. ·'
home $5500.00 740- Some utilities pd. · ·
3801 addison pike.
740-645·7630
Of • ~
339-3226
Inside
and
out.
740-988-6130
&gt;
Friday and Saturday.
"
'
8-?

'

.

Oct. 6th, 42772 Cook
Rd,
Pomeroy,
glassware, baby/kid
clothes, 8am-6pm

LOOKING
FOR
DEAL? FIND US
NOW!!I
4anoakwoodhome.c
om/737 &amp; Facebook

1 br. apt.. 3rd St. ,
Racine, $350 a mo.
pluse
dep.
&amp;
utuilitles,
740-247:
4292

.I

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
•

www.mydailysentinel.com

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
pool,
patio,
playground. No pets.
$450 rent. 740-3670547

Let us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU into Valley View
Apartments 800 St.
At #325 Thurman,Oh
45685,
740)2459170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments
with
Appliances
Furnished &amp; Onsite
Laundry
Facility.
Water/Sewer &amp; Trash
Included
Rental
Assistance may be
available.
Metro
Accepted TDD#419526-0466
This
Institution is an equal
opportunity provider
and employer

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

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

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

Rentals

4
br.,
bath,
detachea
garage,
acre &amp; 1/2 land,
remodeled,
newly
located 1 mile out
CR 10, Langsville,
$650 per mo , $650
dep.
No Utilities
Lease &amp;
Paid.
references required.
No Pets Allowed.
740-416-2960.

Two bedroom trailer,
unfurnished, except
a~d
refrigerator
stove,
nicecountry
in
setting
Harrisonville,
$350/month
plus
deposit.
$350
Call?40-985-4372.

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month 446-1599.
~-~---Very nice home for
rent in Middleport,
Houses For Rent
good neighborhood.
Nice 1BR house in Newly
remodeled.
Gallipolis. Walk to New appliances, 2
everything you need. Bedrooms, 1 bath.
Very clean unit, with
Large Kitchen, Sun
new paint, $275 per Room, Central aAr &amp;
mo/$100 sec. dep. Heat. Nice outdoor
Sorry no pets, Call spaces. No pets, non
Wayne
for smiking. Call 740information 404-456- 992-5094 for more
3802.
details.
3BR, 1 BA STove &amp;
Refrig Furn., Gas
Cantrall
heat,
A/C,W/D hook up,
carport, No Smoking,
No pets. $600 per
mo, $600 Dep.,105
Bastiani, Gallipolis.
Call
446-3667,
Taking applications.

Middleport Beech St.
furnished apt., Senior
filling, No pets, dep.
&amp; ref., Utilities paid,
740-992-0165

Houses For Rent

bdr. all
paid.
downtown.
accepted.

utilities
Near
HUD

Lease

Little Cesars now
hiring asst. mgrs.
and
co
mgrs.
Competitive wages.
benefits,
and
advancement
opportunities.
Locally owned and
Send
operated.
resume
to
Supplies
Scottgoodwin45619
Green slag 10.00 a @gmail.com or fax
ton
great
for 740-886-7425
driveways. At. 62
above New Haven WANTED: Part-time
behind
American position available to
individuats
Colloid Co. (304)882- assist
with developmental
3944.
in
disabilities
~"""""'"""""'"""""'"""""'.......,"""""' Galllipolis. Must have
high school diploma
Employment or GED, valid driver's
6000
license, three years
good
driving
~====== experience
and
Education
adequate automobile
insurance. $8.97/hr,
after training. Send
resume to: Buckeye
Keyboarding,
Computer instructors Community Services,
Box
604,
needed.
Math, P.O.
Jackson, OH 45640.
Economics
Deadline
for
Instructors
w/Master's Degree. applicants: 11/11/10.
Send
resume: Pre-emproyment
bshirey@gallipoliscar drug testing.. Equal
Opportunity .
eercollege.edu
Employer

House for Lease in
City. 2-BR, Gas &amp;
AC, Range, Ref, WID
Nice, clean 3 BR @ Hook-up, Carport. 1Kerr OH $400 mon + 2 people $575 mth &amp; ~~~~=~~
dep 446-7309
Deposit Call 446Help Wanted3BR
2Bath
LG 4555 after 5:30pm
General

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

House
with
full
Basement and 2 car
garage
with
LG
Covered Back Deck,
Stainless Appliances
included, Nice Home
Secluded on State At
160 Across from
Foodland
(Bidwell,
Oh) $700 mth. Must
have
References
740-339-9733

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

FLU
SHOTS

2BR, all electric. S
on At 7. 441-1917 or
7 40-339-6820

Want to Rent

=======

Relocating
looking
for a Nice Horne
,Condo or Large Apt.
Prefer
Downtown
Gallipolis
or
Pt.
Pleasant Area.1-716913-2415
Have
;.;R~ef;.;;e~re;,;.n~c.;,es;..._ __
4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!

Rentals

2BR-2 Bath Like new
Mobile Home water,
sewer, trash pd. No
pets, CA, Covered
Patio
Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
House for sale or
740-446-3160
rent. Pretty, clean,
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to 3 BR mobil $500mon
Washington
Elem. &amp; dep. 4BR home
Rent $750, no utlilite. $725 mon &amp; dep. on
Sale $99,000. Kelly- Bulaville Pike 740Jo 645-9096 or 446- 367-7272
4639
2 BR House for Rent,
Excellent Condition,
References
Required. NO PETS
740-645-1766

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 ID

2 BR Near Clay
School $400 mon +
dep. no pets 740256-1664

trailer for rent double
wide. 3br 2baths 575
month 575 deposit
1722-b chathem 7401-3 bed room house 645-1646
for rent in Syracuse
NO
pet's
HUD _1_B_R_T_r_a-ile_r_fo_r_R_e_n-t,
approved call 304- River Valley School
675-5332 Weekends Dist. All new inside.
740 591 0265
Off Thompson Rd.
garage
apartment $300 per mth. Trash
425.00 month. Ty &amp; water pd. Ph. 740388-9326
Total
304-675-4030
Electric.

RUMMAGE SALE
St. Paul UM Church
(Next'to Fruth's)
Fri &amp; Sat. 9:00 arn
Lots of toys &amp; books
Come Christmas Shop

Help Wanted·
General

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

Accepting
applicatioRs for part
time cashiers. Apply
1n person at ParMar
142 15054 St At 160
Vinton Oh or on
online
at
oarme~rstort!:;.corn

Accepting
applications for part
time
cashiers.
Subway artist &amp; exp.
full time ass. store
manager. Apply in
person at ParMar
1138
15289
Ad
Huntington
Gallipolis Ferry or on
online
at
parmarstores.com

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.
lnlerested
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
Avenue
Ohio
Gallipolis OH 45631
Phone:
740-4461642 HR Fax: 740446-2625.
The
Gallipolis
Developmental
Center is an Equal
Opportunity
Employer
and
Provider of ADA
,;;S.;.erv;.;,;;;ic~e.;;,:s.______
9000

Thursday, November 4, 2010
Handyman
Will do handymans
Some
work.
plumbing,roofing,
siding some home
improvement work,
Etc Call Jack at
740)339-0689
100

Legals

PUBLIC
NOTICEGatling
LLC
has
Ohio,
submitted
an
application to revise
a coal mining PP.rmit
R-2317-7 to the Ohio
Department
of
Natural , Resources,
D1vision of Mineral
Resources
Management.
The
permit
area
is
located in Meigs
Sutton
County,
Township, Lots 276,
277, 834, and 836,
on the property of
Gatling Ohio, LLC.
The Permit area
encompasses 96.6
acres, and is located
on the New Haven 7
1/2 minute U.S.G.S.
Quadrangle
map,
0.6
approximately
miles southeast of
the corporation limits
of Racine. Ohio. The
applicant proposes to
add lime kiln dust to
the existing coal
refuse disposal area
to aid in the drying,
handling,
stabilization
and
neutralization of the
refuse materiai.The
application is on file
for public viewing at
the
Recorder's
Office, Meigs County
Court House. 100
East Second Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769, and shall
remain so for at least
thirty days following
the last date of
publication of this
notice.
Written
comments
or
an
requests
for
informal conference
may be filed with the
Division of Mineral
Resources
Mana~ment, 2045
Morse Road, Bldg.
H-3, Columbus, Ohio
43229-6693, within
thirty days after the
last
date
of
publication of this
notice. (10) 14, 21.
28,(11)4

Servic.e I Bus.
Directory

=;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!

Cleaning
~-=-=-=~-=

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

Commercial &amp; Residential

. • Room addition~ • Roofing • G
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Harns • Vinyl &amp; Wood .Fcnring
Foundations
l\UKE W. ~IARC'Ii\1, OWNJ'R
47239 Rit'11el Rd .• Long Bullom. OII
740-985-4141
740-416-18.34
Fully insured

'

Free estimates- 30 year~ experience

.i

1\ot affilialod "ith \like \larrum lloolin~ &amp; RtmoddinRI

WINTER STORAGE
Meigs ('ount) Fairgr·ounds
Arri\al: Oct. ,\0, 2010
9:011 am.- 11 :110 :1.m.
Relea~e: La~l Sutnrduy in ,\pril, 2011
A fee of $20.00 will be dwrged f\&gt;r early
anival, rate nrnval, early removal. late
removal. or anytime a•ce,;s is 1\V:lnted to
fairgrounds other lhan staled dates.
Building space is first COIIJC liN sen·c.
Inside Storage $4.00.·11
Open Span: $2.00 If
Inside Fence: $ ~.OO:If

Call 9HS;-4372 for more information

Uectrical &amp; 1\l.L Plumping wmk
Concrete walks &amp; driveways

\'IC YOU~(; III- 0\VN.ER
II

740-992-6215.740-591-0195
In business lncaiiJ for 30 years
Reduced Winter Rates
Pomeroy, OH
\\ Y 036725

PSI CONSTRUCTION J

Metal Roofs installed all winter long at
discounted rates.
Specializing in Insurance .Jobs including,
storm. wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions. Remodeling• .'Ileta! &amp;
Shingle Roofs, Nen Homes. Siding, Decks,
Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured ·

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Attention Business Owners

•

Free on-li·n e business Li

I

on

s

ww~~mydai .lysentinel.com
Easy to setup, upgrades available!
The DailY Sentinel

--

• Need a website for your business?
• Need to drive more local customers to your website?
• Neet to optomize your search tags?

(Senrch Fngonc Ophm;atlon)

• Want to sell your products on-line?
• Don't have the time or desire to become a web tech?

---

~o---'-"'

... - ___... .....
o;,::::"'-·_..

We can help!

- -·-

Simple. Affordable. Effective.
Upgrade Your Business Listing for as low as $420/annually*
• SILVER upgrade package. Ask about GOLD &amp; PLATNUM. Prepayment discounts available_

More online advertising opportunities are now available at MyDailySentinel.com
Contact your sales consultant to to help you set-up you FREE listing and more information about
1
Upgraded Business Listings.

Call now!

to set-up vour

FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

740-992-2155

The .Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

I.

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

Thursday, November 4, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Decrn Young!Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

·~~~~~~~~~~

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker
A6 GOON AS 4 FIN lSI-I

M"Y ''DOGGIE BAG"
L.E-FT FR.OM LUNCH

·FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

TodaJ's llswers
19 Database 30 Derision

option
20 Surgery
souvenir
21 Matador's
foe
22 Capital of
ltalia
25 Salts
26 Load, as
software
28 Bus units

THELOCKHORNS

1 GCANNec::&gt; '1'1-\e PAee6
&lt;SO 1 CAN 170 I I
PIGI\AI..I.Y.

1 TfolOI)e.t\1" YOI)
TO
COl-OR IN '{OI)R
COL-ORING ~OOK.

MUTTS
ILL

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Concert
1 Wild
highlight
guess
5 Pale
2 "Dear
brown
me!"
10 Later
3 Musical
11 Sent mesHome
sages, of
4 Easy
dance
a sort
12 Writer
5 Den
group
Rice
6 Be real
13 Poker
7 " - your
ploys
14 Braggarts
loss!"
8 lngenu16 Kitchen
appli9us cry
9 Mag.
ances
workers
20 Block
border
11 Pay for
23 Couple
everyone
24 Pens for 15 Low digits
17 Keenness
hens
18 Regrets
25 Fierce
fighter
27Tattoo
setting
28 Most
rational
29 Poultry
buys
32 Table
protectors
36 Frolic
39 Opera
highlight
40 Burglar
deterrents
41 Easter
symbol
42 Tubular
pasta
43 Sediment

31 Crooner
Mel
33 Pennsylvania port
34Annoy
35 Utters
36 Limit
37 Frothy
brew
38 Moving
need

Brian and Greg Walker.

VIleR~ GOING

PP~

The.Daily Sentinel • Page 85

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
:t HEAR. TH~T
L\KE SOM£ OF US
PUPP)' MILL DOGS,

ToRIES

fACTOR.'j FARM

~

CHICKENS ARE

CRAM

Too SMALL To
MOVE, AND THEY
Too NEVeR GET
To ToucH THE

... PooR
CHlCKENS ...

E~RTH.

.

.

ED INTO

A
WITH ALL
THE PRACTICE L.ORETT~S GIVEN ME."

CAGES

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

The Stars Show the Kitul ofDay Yo1111
Have: 5-Dynmnic; 4-Positit.oe; 3-Atrnzge;

by Dave Green

1

8
2

7

8
1

5

6
9 6 5 7

3 .

6

.........-I 1-'+

4 3 1 7
4
3

2

o--·~-·,.....

;;.y;u:;et,een on the phone so long
1 forgot what I was cryln' about."

8
5

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketch'um

Difficulty Level

6

9

~

***

1110•

t'O/l l

v

G £ ~
L
9 ;L 6 9 G
9
B 6 9
6 9 L ~ £
£ ~ 9 B 6
B G
L 9
L 9 £ 9 B
~ 6 G £
B 9 G ~

v

v

-'OH ~I,MR.W lLSON.!GU€55'/0UPIP\'.I•'f H~l&lt;:
Mf/I&lt;NOCKIN• ON '{OU~ FRONT"" l'OOR."

v

v

..
0

7
B 9
~ B
£ ~
v 9
G v
9 6
6 G
9 L
L £

9 6
v £
G L
B G
L 9

£
~

~

p

9 B
6 9

HAPPY BlRTIIDAY for Thur.;ctay,
Nov. 4, 2010:
Be careful with a need for solitude.
Recognize the functioo of being alone
for you as an individual Just don't
allow this nt&gt;ed to evolve into a defense
mechanism, preventing you from relating. Your personal and domestic life
develops an inspiring tone. Some of
you will choose to live by water. Your
creativity seems like an endless fountain, always available. If you are single,
you meet people with ease, and you
tumble into a very romantic and exciting bond. This person might not be
around all the time. If you are attached,
the two of you knit a closer tie. A fellow Scorpio can be quite challenging.
2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**** Please note the~ of
awkwardness evolving from a wellintended conver..ation. If you tap into
your instincts, you will come out way
ahead Curb a tend~ to overthi.nk
thing&lt;;. Allow an inspiring friend to
take the lead. To.night Go with a suddenchange.
TAURUS (Aptil20-May 20)
Juggling your different n&lt;X.'CI.s
could take you in an interesting direction. Ask yourself how feasible your
choices are. Someone in charge naturally tumbles into the role of devil's advocate. Tonight Go with another person's
suggestion.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
****You are surrounded by such
abundance that you could easily feel a
step out of beat. Your ability to think
and understand what others cannot
separates you from many. u~ your
ingenuity to bridge this po~&gt;ntial barriex: Too.ight Put on your dancing shoes.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
***Give serious thought to making a much-needed adjustment to your
life. This new aspect easily could
revolve around your domestic life, a
new perspective or potential travel.
Don't look at a situation as eitherI o~
and it will transform. Tonight Head
home first.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
****Though you might feel yQU
cannot juggle a new opportunity in
your life, you can. Stop. Toss negative
thinking out of your life, and L'YC newfound potentiaL Someone you care
about could be not only imaginative

***

but aL'iO capable of weaving quite a
naze around an important issue.
Tonight: Visit with friends early on.
vmGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
*** Understand that a knee-jerk
reaction could be more than reasonable. Whether it is acceptable or the
correct choice might be another issue.
Explore options presented by someone
in your daily life. Schedule a checkup
for the ncar future. Tonight All smiles.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*****Your enthusiasm could
either spin out in many different directions, invigorating many different
areas, or, if focused, it could help you
hit a home run. Ask yourself \•;h.ich
path you would prefer. Someone sets
your imagin&lt;ttion oo fire. Tonight
Don't overthink.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
*** Sometimes it is best to find
!he bleacher.; and sit dov.n and watch
:he pia)~ Detached, you will be able to
make better demions and greet opportunity in an unexpected manner.
"IOnight: Let the fun and games begin
... after a nap.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** Only you can trip yourself
up right now. Surrounded by a strong
group of supporters, plenty of ideas
and the ability to cut through the frivolous, you prepa rc to knock on a new
door in life. 1bnight: Where the gang

:s.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.l9)
****
Others continue to respect
and request your leadership. Many
reach out for you or respond to your
gestures. Let communication open up
a financial discussion. Be careful to stay
:n the realm of ~..,ibilities! Tonight
Where your friends are.
AQUARIUS Oan. 2(}.Feb. 18)
**** Detach and hooor an internal commitment. You often seek out
experts, hop on the Internet and look
for the path ao; yet unfound. Use this
trait to help secure the path to success.
1exught: No money risks!
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
**** Whether dealing \•lith ooe
individual or a sequence o[individuals, your pcr.;ooal focused attentioo
can move a p~ forward, open up a
bond and/or creatb a greater sense of
trust, Follow your instincts, recognizing the po~'!ltial problems. Tonight
Give a lowd one SJX'Cial attention
]acquelmc Bigar is Clll the lnft&gt;nll't
at llttp://u"lt"lt&gt;.jtlCqllelinebigar.cotlJ.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

•

:

�,. ,. . - --~-

~---- --~ ~~

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Former friends

--

~~~-----· ~~~-~--~-"""!""'------..,.---.---""'!":"'-----""""!""""'!"'-""""""""--'!""-~--------

www.mydailysentinel.com

Belichic~,

Mangini to face off
BEREA, Ohio (AP) Once the game's over.
Browns
coach
Eric
Mangini and Patriots
boss Bill Belichick will
meet somewhere near the
50-yard line and face yet
another of those painfully.
awkward moments with
the whole football world
watching.
That's when they'll
have to shake hands.
Mangini already knows
what's coming.
·-r m sure it will be one
that's firm. brisk. You
know. textbook." · joked
Wednesday. ''I'm sure
we '11 be talking about it
for years to come."
The rocky relationship
between Mangini and
Belichick
former
friends. student and mentor - has been one of the
NFL's spiciest story lines
for some time. Their rift,
precipitated by Mangini's
departure in 2006 from
Belichick's staff in New
England to coach in New
York and deepened by
Mangini's accusations of
cheating .in the· infamous
"Spygate" affair, has
become legendary - or
laughable. depending on
your take.
On Sunday. their public
and personal feud will be
renewed when Mangini
leads the Browns (:2-5)
against Belichick and the
Patriots (6-1). It will be
their first meeting since
Mangini took over as
coach in Cleveland,
where he got his start in
1995 when Belichick
plucked him from the
Browns· public relations
department and made
him a low-level assistant.
Mangini still speaks
fondly of Belichick.
On the other hand.
Belichick avoids anything warm and fuzzy.
During a conference
call
with
Cleveland
reporters, Belichick was
asked at least five questions about his past. present and future with
Mangini. Each time the
three-time Super Bowl
champion coach turned
the discussion in another
direction.
··we·rt?. both coaching
teams that are going to
play on Sunday:· Mr.
Sunshine said. "We're
both going to put a Jot
into this week and try and
win on Sunday."
Not once did Belichick
say Mangini's first name.
Mangini spent a decade
working under and alongside Belichick. They
were together one season
in Cleveland. three in

Mason
from PageBl
ing 25 points per game
and have allowed 15.3
points
per
game.
Butlalo's two losses both on the road - were
against Poca (24-41) and
Man (14-28).
Wahama - currently
No. I in the SSAC rankings
has already
secured a home playoff
game in next week.
CHAPMANVILLE AT
POINT PL~ASANT

A battle for second
place in the Cardinal
Conference. and a whole
Jot more. will take place
Friday night at Ohio
Valley Bank Track and
Field
when
Point
Pleasant
hosts
Chapmanville in the
Week ll regular season
finales for both gridiron
teams in Mason County.
Both the Big Blacks
(6-3. 4-2 Cardinal) and
visiting Tigers (7-2. 4-2)
will be vying for sole
possession of second
place in the final league
standings. Wayne. with a
win over CHS last weekend. has secured the 2010
title outright headed into
its non-league matchup
with Bluefield.
Both teams. however.
also have something bigger in mind on Friday
night - earning a possi-

New York and six in New
England before Mangini
was hired by the Jets in
'06. Those years shaped
Mangini into a toughminded.
no-nonsense
coach cut straight from
the Belichick hoodie.
In summarizing his
"tremendous influence,"
Mangini complimented
Belichick's well-rounded
knowledge. work ethic
and unmatched attention
to detail. He also learned
how to handle success
and adversity working for
Belichick.
"He's arguably one of
the best. if not the best
coach in the league," said
Mangini, who added his
relationship
with
Belichick
has • not
changed in four years.
So where did it all go
wrong?
Mangini's decision to
join the Jets. New
England's bitter AFC
East
rival.
rankled
Belichick,
who
felt
betrayed by one of his
coaching disciples.
Then. in '07. Mangini
allegedly
turned
in
Belichick for having a
Patriots aide videotape
Jets defensive signals in
the
season
opener.
Belichick was eventually
fined $500,000 by the
league and the Patriots
were penalized $250,000
and had to forfeit a firstround draft pick because
of the incident.
Things haven't been
the same between the two
since, and their postgame
meetings have included
some halfhearted pats on
the back and limp handshakes with little eye-toeye contact. Mangini
hopes that one day he and
Belichick will be able to
and patch things up.
Can they be friends
again?
'T d say never say
never:· said Mangini.
who sidestepped a question about the videotaping scandal. "Obviously.
he was very important to
me and I respect him. He
was very important to my
family and all those
things, but we' II see.
Time will tell. I think
everything takes care of
itself over time:·
ble home game in the
playoffs with a victory.
The Big Blacks currently sit I Oth in the
Class AA ratings. while
Chapmanville is sixth
overall in the same
bracket. The top l.Q
teams in each division
qualify for the playotis,
with the top eight finishers earning home games
in Week 12.
The
Tigers
have
already secured a place
in the Class AA postseason. regardless of the
outcome on Friday night.
but a win would all but
secure a postseason game
at home . . . and maybe
more.
The only definite for
Point, on the other hand,
comes with a win Friday
- which would allow
the Big Blacks to secure
their third straight postseason appearance.
A victory could move
PPHS as high as eight.
but a loss would have
Point hovering right
around the 16th and final
spot. The Bi~ Blacks also
need wins from Wayne,
Poca and Scott this week
to increase their outside
point totals - regardless
of the CHS outcome.
Point Pleasant is averaging 30.8 points per
game offensively while
allowing 12.3 points as a
defensive unit. PPHS
also owns an unblemished 4-0 record at home
this fall.
Chapmanville is scorihg 46.2 points per game

Manoini, 2-5 in headto-head matchups against
Belie hick, hasn't l&gt;hown
any outward signs that
this week's game has
more meaning. A few of
Cleveland's players have
looked for cues their
coach might be more
eager than usual. but
there ·s been no noticeable
change in Mangini.
"Not at all," said
Browns Linebacker David
Bowens. who spent two
years with Mangini in
New York. "He doesn't
show any emotion. He
hasn't said anything in
the meetings. He's pretty
much the same as he has
been every week, identifying some things and
keys we need to win the
game.
"But there's no more
emphasis than there was
last week."
Browns wide receiver
Chansi Stuckey said
Mangini doesn't have to
say anything to convey
that he wants to win
against the man who
broke him into coaching.
If the Steelers are the
Browns' biggest rival.
well. the Patriots are
Mangini's
personal
nemesis.
Stuckey. who played
two seasons for Mangini
in New York, remembers
the Jets-Patriots games as
being filled with hard hits
and hatred.
"They are both very
competitive guys. They
both want to be the best,"
he said. "It's common for
on~ to want to outdo the
other. I know both want
to come in and pound the
other guy.''
Afterward,
they'll
shake hands - · or pretend
to do something like that.
Following
New
England's win over
Minnesota last week.
Belichick offered Vikings
coach Brad Childress a
warm,
two-handed
dchange. Mangini was
asked if he's hoping for a
similar greeting.
"Well, I haven't gone
through the range of
shakes that are · available." he said. laughing.
"I might have to seek an
outside consultant.''
Belichick was asked
about his expectations for
a handshake certain to get
more attention than any
other around the league.
''Hopefully,'' he said,
'Til have a smile on my
face. That's what I'm
hoping for. I hope we
come out on top, that's
what we're going up
there for,''

Thursday, November 4, 2010

RedStorm women to face
Cumberlands in MSC Tournament
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- 'The University of
Rio Grande RedStorm
women's soccer team
will get another crack at
the University of the
Cumberlands in the first
round of the Mid-South
Conference Tournament
on Saturday. Kickoff
for the match is set for
noon in Williamsburg.

Ky.
Rio Grande (6-9, 3-5
MSC) is the No. 6 seed
in the tournament. The
RedStorm
lost
to
Cumberlands, 4-2 back
on October 9. Rio fell
behind 3-0 in the first
half and just could not
come all the way back
from that deficit.
Rio Grande head
coach Amber Oliver is
looking forward to
another opportunity to
square off with the
Patriots, the No. 3 seed
in the tournament.
·'We look forward to
having another shot at

Cumberlands th is season," Oliver said. "We
feel that we did not .pla'y
to our capabilities for
the entire 90 minutes
during our regular sea-·
son match~ therefore.
we feel that if the
w~men contin~e to tra.I~ hard we have the
abiitt~ to come out on
top .,m post season
P1aAy. .
.
·
wm .for Rto Grande
would gtve them a spot
in the semifinals and a
chance to play at home.
Rio Grande is hosting
both the men's and
women's semifinals and
finals, November I OIl.

Rio Grande has not
fared well on the road
this season, winning
only one time and losing seven as the road
team. Rio was 0-1 on
neutral fields.

Cumberlands (7-8-2,
5-3 MSC) is' led by the
duo. of Jamie Roberts
(nine goals, two assists)
and Katie Hefelfinger
(eight goals, one assist).
Hefelfinger
scored
twice in the win over
Rio Grande last month.
The RedStorm counters with impressive
f orward AI ex D avts.
.
Davis has five goals
and three assists on the
season.
Rio will be aiming for
its first win against
Cumberlands
on
Saturday. as it enters
the match having lost·
the four previous meetings between the two
schools.
The winner advances
to face the winner o f .
St Catharine and
Georgetown at Rio on
the 1Oth.

Owens rips Donovan McNabb again

CINCINNATI (AP)
- Terrell Owens is taking a few more longdistance
shots
at
Donovan McNabb.
The Bengals receiver
said on his reality show
late Tuesday night that
he
understands
Washington's decision
to pull McNabb in the
closing minutes of a 3725 loss to the Detroit
Lions on Sunday.
Owens feuded with
McNabb when they
were in Philadelphia
together from 2004-05,
·a factor in his eventual
release.
On
"The
T.Ocho
Show"
on
Tuesday night. Owens
took another swipe at
McNabb. saying there
were
"rumors"
he
couldn't get things done
in
the
two-minute
offense when they were
together.
When in Philadelphia,
Owens suggested that
McNabb was tired in
the fourth quarter of the
Eagles· Super Bowl loss
to New England that
completed the 2004
season.
McNabb
responded harshly and
the two didn't speak for
a long time during
training camp. Owens
was kicked off the team
offensively while surrenmidway through the
dering an average of 25.7
points defensively. The
Tigers are a perfect 4-0 in
road contests this season.
Point Pleasant has won
the last two meetings in
this series and the last
home win against CHS
came in the final game
ever played at Sanders
Field back in 2008.
Chapmanville has never
played at the new football stadium in Point.

2005 season - in part
because of his harsh
comments . about his
quarterback - and was
eventually released.
The
subject
of
McNabb's
benching
was one of the topics on
Owens' reality show
with Bengals receiver
Chad Ochocinco. who
couldn't
understand
why
the
Redskins
would bench McNabb
in favor of backup Rex
Grossman in the closing
minutes.
"That's just wrong.''
Ochocinco said. "It
really makes no sense.
What message are you
really trying to send?"
Owens then took a jab
at McNabb.
"Well, I don't really
want to start anything.
but I did play in the
Super Bowl and there
were rumors where he
couldn't get our twominute offense going at
the end of the game,"
Owens said. 'T m just
saying.''
When pressed on the
matter by Ochocinco.
Owens said. "I'm just
saying."
Owens
defended
Redskins coach Mike
Shanahan's decisions to
change quarterbacks,
saying the coadi knows

best.
"He's the head coach,
so it has to make
sense," said Owens,
who has complained
that the Bengals aren't
paying attention to his
suggestions fo r the
offense. "Well, this is a
situation where Mike
Shanahan, he sees these
two quarterbacks on an
everyday basis. ... So
he's had a chance to
observe.''
Ochocinco ended the
segment by saying. ''If
anyone else out t .
feels
that
Grossman gives t
Washington Redskins a
better chance
than
Donovan McNabb to
win a game with two
minutes left on the
clock. they need to slap
they selves."
The Bengals brought
Owens aboard to ·try to
help them win a second
straight AFC North
title.
Instead.
with
Owens and Ochocinco
grabbing most of the
attention. the team has
sunk to 2-5, essentially
scuttling its season
before the midway
point. The Bengals play
Pittsburgh next Monday
night.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
99-2155

•

HANNAN AT BURCH
I

The Hannan Wildcats
(0-9) look to end a 21
game losing streak on
Friday night at the site of
their last victory.
Hannan will travel to
Delbarton, W.Va.. to face
Burch (3-6). Hannan's
last win came in week 5
of 2008 in a road game at
Burch by a score of 36-6.
Burch won the 2009
meeting at Hannan by a
score of 54-20.
Burch has victories
over Phelps. Ky. (34-26),
Gilbert (50-14). and
Ervinton. Va. (54-20) this
season.
The Wildcats are averaging 6. 7 points per
game this season and
have allowed 42.1 points
per game.
Burch is scoring 22.7
points per game and has
allowed 35.3 points per '
game.
This will be the final
game for Hannan seniors
Colton Campbell and
Dillon Griffith.

find them at..
www.m.y dailysentinel.com • www.mydailyregister.com

Personal Tens Unit Sessions

$225 00
V81ue

Time left to Buy!
Ttt&gt;s dealos not adlve

Be the first to buy!
Relief for lower back. neck
and shoulder peln

The Daily Sentinel• 'Utbt t)oint .t)lt9nnt ~~lllltrr

tn:br ~a

olt~

~ribune

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="575">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10026">
                <text>11. November</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="12374">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12373">
              <text>November 4, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1366">
      <name>bradford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1957">
      <name>codner</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="74">
      <name>mitchell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="517">
      <name>sellers</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
