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

Holiness or
.crazine~s, Part 3,
A7

A Hunger
forMore,A6

•

e

entine

at

Printed on 100%
RrcJc:lcd l\"cwsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

D.,.

~

Official count USW takes action to secure health care coverag~ for Century retirees:
POMEROY - The
Board of Elections will
conduct its official
count of Nov. 2 ballots
at 10 a.m. on Nov. 15.

Office closed

•

POMEROY - Meigs
County Clerk of Courts
legal division will be
closed Nov. 9 to allow
staff. to attend passport
ammg.

Community
dinner
REEDSVILLE
Alfred and Reedsville
United
Methodist
Churches will hold a
"come and dine'' dinner,
3 to 5 p.m., Nov. 30, at
Reedsville
church.
"Delivered" will sing at
6. The public is invited,
Pastor Gene Goodwin
said, particularly those
affected
by
the
September tornado.

Office closed
POMEROY The
Meigs County Health
Department will be
closed on Thursday,
Nov. 11 for Veteran's
Day.

·•

mmunization
clinic
POMEROY - The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct a childhood immunization clinic from 911 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on
Tuesday. Nov. 9. Free
influenza vaccines will
also be given to children
and adults during the
clinic.
Donations
· accepted
but
not
required for service.

OBITUARIES

•

Page A3
• Joyce Grimm
• Bobby Mitchell
• Ronda L. Fish
Anthony H. Svoboda

WEATHER
I

High: 44
Low: 32

2 SEcnONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars

A3

lassifieds

Bs-6

Comics
Editorials
Sports

. B7

A4
B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

l JJ ,I

RAVENSWOOD,
W.Va. - For the second
time this year, the United
(USW)
Steelworkers
union will go to court to
seek restitution of health
care insurance for retirees
at the Century Aluminum
plant here.
A suit filed in February

seeks to restore the benefits to retires 65 and older
whose health care benefits
were terminated by the
company on Jan. 1, 2010.
On Monday, Century
Aluminum
announced
that health care benefits
for all of its retirees will
be totally eliminated on
Jan. 1, 2011, and that its
subsidy of coverage for

retirees not yet eligible for
Medicare would be elirninated on June 30, 2011,
resulting in termination of
all retiree health care for
those who retired from the
Ravenswood plant.
"These benefits were
guaranteed under the
terms of the labor agreement.'' said USW District
8
Director
Billy

Thompson. "People who
spent their working lives
in this plant had every reason to expect the company
to live up to its commitment to provide this coverage.
"Now they feel as
though they've been
stabbed in the back." he
said. "The union will use
every means at its disposI

al to seek justice and see
to it that the company contributes to the retirement
security as it promised.''
Upon review of Century
Aluminum's announcement, the USW legal team
will take the necessary
and appropriate legal
action to restore the benefits to the level agreed to
in the contract.

Tourism investing in signs
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The Meigs County
Visitors Bureau/Tourism Office is investing in new signs to welcome and attract
visitors to the area.
Michelle Donovan. outgoing director
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce, said the county visitors
bureau has decided to replace .two old
tourism signs and install three news ones,
erecting a total of five signs at various
exit/entrance points in the county - all
by January 2011. Each of these signs cost
around $4,000. Donovan said.
New signs are already located on the
Gallia I Meigs County lines; along US 33
near Portland: in Tuppers Plains near
Coolville. There are plans to replace the
old tourism sign along US 33 near the
Athens County line and install a new one
in the Five Points area.
Donovan said the new signs are needed
to promote the county's website and toll
free phone number to the tourism/CVB
office - both of which are prominent on
the signs, as is the "welcome to'' and
"come back again" (depending on if
you're coming or going) slogans.
Donovan said the signs and website
assist in promoting one of the county's
biggest assets - festivals.
"I don't think people are as familiar
with all the wondetful festivals we have
and the signs and website are a good way
to market these events and others,"
Donovan said about the need for the new,
redesigned signs in some old and new
locales.

1

Submitted photo
Michelle Donovan, outgoing director of the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, is pictured
alongside one of five new signs promoting tourism in Meigs County. The signs list the website
for Meigs County Tourism as well as a toll free phone number promoting county events.
Though not all signs are up, they are expected to be by January, 2011.

Meigs Dog Shelter now online
Donation drive Saturday in Pomeroy
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

ROCK SPRINGS Finding the right dog has
gone high tech in Meigs
County with the help of
Petfinder.com which is
making an unconditional
love connection between
adopters and adoptees.
The s~elter has been
utilizing Petfinder.com
for a few years now but
does it work? Judy
Halley of Gallipolis will
tell you it does.
Back in June, one of
Halley's two, beloved
beagles died at 16 years
of age. The beagle who
was left behind. Babe,
was heartbroken, along
with Halley. Halley said

Babe was so grief strick- several dogs at the shelter
en she WOuld go tO the tO taking tWO tripS tO
grave of the deceased Ohio's Amish country
• dog and sit. Halley said with her new family. She
by this past August, she also regularly enjoys
was ready for another roast beef, vegetables
beagle to bring into her ~ and rice for dinner and
home.
sleeps on an orthopedic
After a disappointing dog bed with her new
search for the petfect dog best friend, Babe the bearesulted in a dead end, gle.
Halley logged onto
"She is so sweet, intelPetfinder.com and found ligent and appreciative,"
Ginger, a beagle who was Halley said of the dog. "I
at the Meigs County Dog wish more people would
Shelter.
consider adopting from a
"l knew I'd know when shelter- they make the
I found the right one." best dogs.''
Halley said about when
Halley and her husband
she landed on Ginger pic- have adopted dogs from
tured on the website.
the Gallia1 Mason and
Ginger has gone from Meigs
County Dog
sharing a kennel with

See Shelter, A3

.
Submitted photo·
Judy Halley of Gallipolis found her perfect pet, Ginger,
at the Meigs County Dog Shelter via Petfinder.com.
The shelter has several dogs listed on the website
which are up for adoption and a donation drive is being
held on Nov. 6 at Dettwiller Lumber in Pomeroy for
shel~er supplies.

Pleasant Valley Hospital offering pacemakers

INDEX
.

STAFF REPORT

!1!1.!1!11

POINT PLEASANT
- Stephen K. Rerych,
MD, a general surgeon at
P.leasant Valley Hospital,
currently offers patients
the opportunity to have
pacemakers implanted
locally with~ut ~aving to
travel to larger. urban
facilities.
In addition, patients
· can receive advanced
diagnostics and .innovative treatments at PVH
devoted to the detection
and treatment of heart
rhythm disorders which
can cause a wide range of
problems from dizziness
and fatigue to stroke and

even -;udden death.
maker contains a power"Today's pacemakers ful battery, electronic cirare truly remarkable 'cuits and computer memdevices. Their main pur- ory that together generate
pose is to keep the elec- electronic signals. The
trical system from going signals. or pacing pulses,
too slow and thereby pre- are carried along thin.
vent the problems associ- insulated wires, or leads,
ated with slow heart to the heart muscle. The
rhythms." explained Dr. signals cause the heart
Rerych.
muscle to begin the con"Pacemakers
have tractions that cause a
become a reliable means heartbeat.
of helping people live
A
pacemaker
is
longer and improve their implanted just below the
lifestyles despite having collarbone in a procedure
a slow heart rhythm," he that takes about two
continued.
hours. It is programmed
Although it weighs just to stimulate the heart at a
about an ounce, a pace-

See PVH,A3

Stephen K. Rerych, MD, a general surgeon at PVH. ·

...

�Friday, November 5,

2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

GOP asserts new strength, targets Obama programs
BY DAVID ESPO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Victorious at the polls,
congres s ional
Republicans
asserted
their newfound political
strength on Thursday,
vowing to seek a quick
$100 billion in federal
spending cuts and force
repeated votes on the
repeal of President
Barack Obama 's prized
health care overhaul.
At the White Houses,
Obama said his administration was ready to
work across party lines
in a fresh attempt to
"focus on the economy
and jobs" as well as
attack waste in government. In a show of bipartisanship, he invited top
lawmakers to the White
House at mid-month,
and the nation's newly
elected governors two
weeks later.
Rep. John Boehner, ROhio, in line to become
the new speaker of the
House, brushed aside
talk that the No. 1 GOP
goal was to make sure
Obama is defeated at the
polls in 2012. "That's
Senator McConnell's
statement and his opinion," he told ABC, referring to the party's leader
in the Senate and adding
that his own goals
included cutting spending and creating jobs.

But tentative talk of
compromise competed
with rhetoric reminiscent of the just-completed campaign.
In a speech at the conservative
Heritage
Foundation. Kentucky
Sen. Mitch McConnell
said the only way to
achieve key party legislative goals such as
ending
government
bailouts, cutting spending and repealing the
health cate law "is to put
someone in the White
House who won :t veto"
them.
"There's just no getting around it," he
added.
Obama has ruled out
accepting repeal of the
health care measure, and
Senate
Democrats
responded quickly to
McConnell.
"What
Sen.
McConnell is really saying is, 'Republicans
want to let insurance
companies go · back to
denying coverage to
people with pre-existing
conditions, let them go
back to charging women
twice as much fo.r the
same coverage as men,
and let them push millions of seniors back into
the Medicare doughnut
hole,'' said Jim Manley,
spokesman for Majority
Leader Harry Reid, DNev.
The · maneuvering

unfolded two days after
elections that swept
Democrats out of power
in the House and cut
deeply into their Senate
majority, scripting an
uncertain new era of
divided government for
the final two years of
Obama's term.
In the House, Boehner
asked members of the
Republican rank and file
to support him for
speaker when the new
Congress convenes in
early January. His victory is a formality, given
the huge 60-member
gain he engineered as
party leader.
Nor did there appear to
be any .competition to
Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia as majority
leader, the second-most
powerful position in the
House.
Among Democrats,
Speaker Nancy Pelosi
has yet to disclose her
plans. The most recent
speaker whose party lost
its majority, Rep. Dennis
Hastert of Illinois,
resigned from Congress
a few months later.
Even before the new
Congress comes into
office, the old one is
scheduled to meet the
week after next for a
post-election session.
In remarks to reporters
after meeting With his
Cabinet at the White
House, Obama urged

lawmakers to avert an justifiably angry at
income tax increase that Washington. They want
could take effect Jan 1, Congress to cut spendratify a new arms-reduc- ing," wrote Lewis, who
tion treaty with Russia, faces an internal chalprovide unemployment I'enge in his attempt to
aid to victims . of the become chairman of the
recession and extend panel next year.
At a news conference
expiring tax breaks for
on Wednesday, the presibusiness.
Congress also must dent signaled he . was
enact a spending bill that ready to jettison his
permits government to campaign-long insisremain in operation, and tence that tax cuts be
the issue already has extended for earners at
emerged as a likely flash incomes up to $250,000
point in the post-election but be allowed to expire
for higher-income peomeeting of Congress.
House ple.
Many
White House press
Republicans
campaigned on a platform of secretary Robert Gibbs
cutting
government made the hint explicit on
He
said
spending to levels in Thursday.
effect in 2008, before extending tax cuts perenactment of an eco- manently for uppernomic stimulus bill and income earners "is
other increases that something the president
Democrats passed. Rep. does not believe is a
of good idea," but that
Jerry
Lewis
California. the senior Obama would be open to
Republican
on
the the possibility of extendHouse Appropriations ing the cuts for one or
Committee,
notified two years.
Republicans respondDemocrats during the
day that GOP lawmakers ed coolly to the overture.
will try and implement "I take any signal that
the cuts when Congress the president may be
considers the spending backing off his pledge to
bill needed to keep most raise taxes on small busiagencies running for the nesses as a good sign,
next eight months. The but we have to see where
estimated savings total this discussion goes,"
$100 billion.
said Rep. Dave Camp of
"The
unmistakable Michigan, in line to
message sent by the become the chairman of
American people on the tax-writing House
Tuesday is that they are Ways
and
Means

Committee. He and
other Republicans say
that the expiration Of
some income tax cuts
would be felt on numerous small business own-.
ers.
McConnell's speech
reflected his status as
leader of a minority
unable to originate legislation, a position different from the one
Boehner will soon hold.
"We have to be realistic about what we can
and cannot achieve,
while at the same time
recognizing that realism
shtmld never be confused with capitulation,"
the Kentucky .senator
said.
"On health care, that
means we can - and
should - propose and
vote on straight repeal,
repeatedly. But we can't
expect the president to
sign it."
Boehner, in his ABC
interview, said he's not
sure the president and
other Democrats fully
understand the message
delivered by the voter.
on Tuesday. "When you
have the most historic
election in over 60, 70
years, you would think
the other party would
understand that the
American people have
clearly repudiated the
policies they've put forward in the last few
years."

Obama challenges Cabinet, sets bipartisan talks
. Bv Juuce PAcE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
President Barack Obama
sought Thursday to
retake the political initiative after a bruising
election,
inviting
Republican
and
Democratic
congressional leaders to meet
with him on the economy and jobs. The White
House said Obama
would consider extending Bush-era tax cuts
even for upper income
Americans for a year or
two.
The Nov. l 8 meeting
will be closely watched,
in particular, for any
signs of cooperation
between Obama and his
two frequent Republican
antagonists, incoming
House .speaker-in-waiting John Boehner and
Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell. They
will be joined by" the top
Democrats in Congress,
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi
and
Senate
Majority Leader Harry
Reid.
•
Four other lawmakers

will attend: Repub)icans
Rep. Eric Cantor of
Virginia and · Arizona
Sen. Jon Kyl, and
Democrats Rep. Steny
Hoyer of Maryland and
Sen.
Dick
Illinois
Durbin.
White
House
spokesman Robert Gibbs
said no staff would take
part in the meeting,
which will include dinner. Gibbs said he
expects the meeting to
be the first of many.
While
the
White
House said the date of
the meeting was set,
McConnell spokesman
Don Stewart said, the
date and time were still
being
worked
out.
Stewart said McConnell
is "encouraged" by the
chance to meet with
Obama to discuss issues
including trade, reducing
spending
and
increasing
domestic
energy production.
But McConnel! himself threw down the
gauntlet, taking a COJ1frontational tone in a
speech to the conservative-oriented Heritage
Foundation. He called

with some certainty
for Senate votes to years.
"It's clear that the vot- about what their tax
repeal or erode Obama's
signature health care ers sent a message, landscape is going to
law, to cut spending and which is that they want look like." He added that
to shrink government.
us to focus on the econo- it's critical for middle
"The only way to do my and jobs," Obama class families to have
all these things it b to told reporters, with that same sense of reasput someone in the .Cabinet members at his surance.
White House who won't side. The president said
Obama also said the
veto any of these he instructed his Cabinet work that needs to be
things," McConnell said. to make a "sincere and done during this month's
He also said that Obama consistent" effort to legislative
session
would have to move change how Washington extends to foreign policy.
toward GOP positions works, something he Specifically, he said, the
on critical issues if he acknowledges has been a Senate should ratify a
wants to save his agenda. failing of his administra- new arms control treaty
with Russia. Obama said
Tuesday 's elections tion so far.
The president said he the START treaty, which
amounted to a national
political reset, shifting wants the bipartisan would cut U.S. and
control of the House to meeting with congres- Russian nuclear arsenals
Republicans when the sional leaders to be a by one-fourth, is somenew Congress convenes substantive discussion thing that is essential to
early next year.
on the economy, tax cuts the country's national
During the campaign, and
unemployment security and should have
Obama
called
for insurance. He wants to bipartisan support.
extending tax cuts for focus on the busy legMcConnell responded
middle-income families. islative agenda that that he didn't think there
Gibbs said Thursday that awaits Congress when would be enough time in
Obama continues to lawmakers return for a the lame-duck session of
believe that extending lame-duck
session. Congress to address the
tax cuts permanently for Among the top front- START issue.
upper income earners "is burner issues: renewing
Obama said: "What's
something the president Bush-era tax cuts due to going to be critically
does not believe is a expire at year's end.
important over the comgood idea" but that he
Aware that he's been ing months is going to be
would be open to the pegged as antibusiness, creating a better working
possibility of extending Obama said, "We've got ,relationship between this
the cuts for one or two to provide businesses White House and the

congressional leadership
that's corning in."
The gap between the
announcement of an
Obama-Hill leadership
meeting and the session
itself - two weeks from
now -is due to Obama's
foreign travels. He will
be on a four-country trip
to Asia from Frida.
through Nov. 14.
The president said on
of his top priorities. on
the trip is to open Asian
markets to U.S. companies so they can sell in
the region, a development Obama said would
help create jobs at home.
"My hope is that we've
got
some
specific
announcements to show
the connection between
what we're doing overseas and what happens
over here at home in
terms of job growth and
growth,"
economic
Obama said.
The president will also
hold a meeting at the
White House with newly
elected Democratic and
Republican governors on
Dec. 2.

Obama drops plan to limit global warming gases•
Republicans dubbed
the bill "cap-and-tax"
because it would raise
WASHINGTON
energy prices. They
Environmental groups then used it as a club in
and
industry seem the midterm elections
headed for another bat- against Democrats who
tle over regulation of voted for it. Thirty of
greenhouse gases, as the bill's supporters
President
Barack were among some 50
Obama said he will House
Democrats
look for ways to control whom voter~ turned out
global warming poilu- of office Tuesday.
other
than
"It's doubtful that
tion
Congress placing a you could get the votes
to pass that through the
ceiling on it. ·
"Cap-and-trade was House this year or next
just one way of skin- year or the year after,"
ning the cat; it was not Obama
said
the only way," Obama Wednesday.
said at a news conferThe new battle over
ence Wednesday, a day global warming in
after Democrats lost Congress will target the
control of the House. E n v i r o n m e n t a 1
''I'm going to be look- Protection
Agency,
ing for other means to which is poised to regulate greenhouse gases
address this problem."
Legislation puttin~ a for the first time, after
limit on heat-trappmg the Supreme Court
greenhouse gases and ruled in 2007 that it
then allowing compa- could treat heat-trapnies to buy and sell pol- ping gases as pollulution permits under tants.
that ceiling narrowly
John Engler. a former
passed the House. in Michigan governor who
2009 as a centerptece leads the National
of Obama's domestic Association
of
agenda, but it stalled in Manufacturers, said he
the Senate.
expects a RepublicanBY DINA CAPPIELLO
ASSOCIATED PRESS

controlled House to
take a "fresh look that
will get at a lot of questions" dealing with the
EPA's role in regulating
greenhouse gas emissions.
En vi ron mentalists,
meanwhile,
urged
Obama to hold his
ground.
"While there will be
attacks on ,(EPA's)
authority, it is important that there not be
any surrender on EPA's
ability to do the job,"
said Trip Van Noppen,
president
of
Earthjustice.
The Senate in June
rejected by a 53-47
vote
a
challenge
brought by Alaska
Republican
Lisa
Murkowski that would
have denied the EPA
the authority to move
ahead with the rules.
Six Democrats voted
with Republicans to
advance the "resolution
of disapprovaL" which
the White House had
threatened to veto. A
similar resolution has
broad support in the
House, with 140 cosponsors.

Engler said efforts to
block the EPA will only
be strengthened by
Tuesday's
election
results.
Obama, when asked
about the EPA's authority Wednesday, said
that while a court order
gave the EPA jurisdiction, the agency still
wants
help
from
Congress.
"I don't think ... the
desire is to somehow
be protective of their
powers here," Obama
said.
"One of the things
that's very important
for me is not to have us
ignore the science, but
rather to find ways that
we can solve these
problems that don't

hurt the economy, that
encourage the development of clean energy in
this country, that, in

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
The Daily
Sentinel

fact, may give us .
opportunities to create
entire new industries
and create jobs."

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�Friday, November 5,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2010

Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

Meigs County Forecast

Shelter
From Page A1

Sh'clter:-, all three of which were found on
Petfinder.com. Since the infusion of "smart phones''
Joyce (Phillips) Grimm. born March I3. 1932, people can download the application for
passed away on Nov. 3. 2010 at Doctors Hospital Petfinder.com on to their phones for even quicker
West. after a two month battle with Cancer.
access to the perfect pet. Petfinder.com is also helpful
She was 78 years old and a longtime resident of for those who wish to adopt a shelter dog but don't
6inc~ln Village. Joyce liv~d life to the fullest with· relish going to the shelter for fear of wanting to take
.
nazmg energy. compassiOn and zest. She was a all the dogs home.
wonderful wife. mother, grandmother and aunt. She
Despite Ginger\ success story, several dogs remain
was a graduate of Pomeroy High School in 1950, at the shelter for adoption. This Saturday. Sarah
where she was class president and a delegate to Turner, a local girl from Racine. who is also a 4-H
Buckeye Girls State.
member, has organized a Donation Drive for the
She was preceded in death by: parents. Dayton and ~leigs County Dog Shelter. The donation drive will be
Irene (Baker) Phillips, Pomeroy; daughter, Amy held from 1-3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 6 at Dettwiller
Hagen; brother. Barrie R. Phillips.
True Value Lumber in Pomeroy.
She is survived by her husband of 58 years. Robert;
Most needed items include: cat and kitten dry food.
son. Steven (Karen) Grimm of Spartanburg, SC; dog and puppy dry food, cat and dog treats, cat and
daughter, ~~risty Pearl. &lt;;olumbus: son-in-law, Erik I d.og toys, cat and dog leashes. c~t and dog collars. (all
Hagen, Hilliard; grandchildren, Mtchael and David SIZes), cat and dog shampoo, htter, extra deep litter
Grimm, Charleston. SC. Brian Grimm, Columbus pans, 30-40 gallon trash bags, paper towels and
Troy and Haylee Pearl. Columbus. and Elizabeth and 1 bleach, liquid laundry, blankets and towels (new and
Ben Hagen, Hilliard.
·
used), file folders and reams of paper. Cash donations
In lieu of flow~~s. donatio~s may. be made in her are also needed. For more in.formation.contac.t Turner
name to the Prame Townshtp Sentors Association, at 444-5190. 100 percent of all donations Will go to
4616 W. Broad St.. Columbus, 43228. A memorial the dog shelter.
reception will be held at the Prairie Township Senior - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Center, Saturday. Nov. 6, 2010 from 5-6:30 p.m.
Arrangements completed at Jerry Spears Funeral
Home with Crematory, 2693 W. Broad St., Columbus.

I

PVH

From Page A1

Bobby Mitchell
Bobby Ray MitchelL 58, Middleport, died Nov. 3,
at his residence.
W He was born Jan. 29. 1952, in Gilbert, W.Va., son of
the late Robert and Ivy Toler Mitchell ln addition to
his parents. two brothers preceded him in death in
infancy.
Survh ing arc his loving wife. Kathryn Marr
Mitchell, sons: Nathaniel Mitchell, Middleport,
Bobby Ray. Jr. (Trudy) Mitchell. Pomeroy, Neal
(Melissa) Mitchell of Indiana. and Jerry .(Tracy)
White, Cross Lanes. W.Va.: daughters. Crystal
Mitchell of Florida, Katherine (Claude) Osborne,
Harrisonville. and Bobbie Rae Mitchell. Florida: II
grandchildren: four great grandchildren; a brother,
James (Debbie) Mitchell, DeCator, Tenn.; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral will be at 1:30 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 5,
2010. at Fogelsong-Roush Funeral Home. Mason.
W.Va.. with Pastor Charlie Kearns officiating. Burial
will be at Graham Cemetery.
There will be no calling hours.
~ 10,

Deaths
Ronda Leah Fish
A

Rhonda Leah Fish, 55. Pomeroy. died Oct. 31.
at. her residence. A memorial service·will be
held for friends and family to attend Saturday. Nov. 6,
2010 from II a.m. until I p.m. at the American
Legion Post 128. located at 5 Mill St .. Middleport,
Ohio.

~10,

Anthc:&gt;ny Herman Svoboda
Anthony Herman Svoboda. 79. of Pomeroy died
Thur'\day, Nov. 4. at St.. Marys Medical Center in
Huntington, W.Va. Graveside services will be held at
1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 6 at the Wells Cemetery at
Harrisonville. Pastor Jon Brocket will officiate. In lieu
of flowers donations may be made to the Birchfield
Funeral Home at Rutland to help with expenses.

Local StOCks

I
I

Area schools set to perform at·
MU Marching Band Festival

Community Calendar
Tuesday, Nov. 9
~ POMEROY

Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m. at the
home of Manning Roush.
Wednesday, Nov. 10
WELLSTON
Special meeting of board
Galliaof
directors,
Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
Solid Waste District, 2
1056
New
p.m.,
Hampshire
Ave.,
Wellston, to discuss personnel issues, Meigs
County Recycling and
Litter Prevention and
other business as it
comes before the board.

~lisbury

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, Nov. 5

RACINE
Meigs
County. Pomona Grange
.with officers conference at
6:30 p.m. followed by
&amp;neeting at 7:30 p.m. at
the Racine Grange Hall
.
ated on Oak Grove

Road near Racine.
Saturday, Nov. 6

SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange #878
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting
at 7:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 8

POMEROY
- Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club, 7:30 p.m., Mulberry
Community
Center.
Election of officers.
Tuesday, Nov. 9

POMEROY - Meigs
County Business-Minded
Luncheon,
noon,
Pomeroy Library, Randi
Gheen speaking on building your own website,
KFC/Long John Silvers
catering, call RSVP with
Bill at 992-6677.
SYRACUSE - The
Syracuse
Community
Center
Board
of
Directors, 7 p.m. at the
Center.

tion amount&lt;; between
tePth and qu~uter of an inch
possible.
Saturday Night: A
slight chance of rain and
snow showers before 9
P·!ll·· then a slight chance .
ot snow showers between 9
p.m. and 10 p.m. Partly
cloudy. with a lov.. around
25. Light and vari&lt;tble
wind. Chance of prcctpitation is 20 percent.
Sunday: Sunny. with a
high near 52. .
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear. with a low around 31.
Monday: Sunny, with a
high near 63.
Monday Night: Mnstly
clear, with a low around 34.
Thesday: Sunny, with a
high near 68.
·
Tuesday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 38.
Wednesday:
Mostly'
sunny. with a high near 66. •
Wednesday
Night:
Partly cloudy, with a low
around42.
Veterans Day: Mostly.
sunny, with a high near 70.•

pre-determined rate, and settings can be adjusted at
any time. Routine evaluation. sometimes even via
telephone, ensur~s the pacemaker is working proper- AEP (NYSE)- 37.59
Peopl~s (NASDAQ) -14.69
ly and monitors battery life, which generally runs Akzo (NASDAQ)- 61.80
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.35
from live to ten years.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 50.79
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.46
The most common reason for a pacemaker is a Big Lots (NYSE) - 29.26
Rockwell (NYSE)- 66.37
heartbeat that slows to an unhealthy rate, or bradycar- Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 29.95 Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)-9.32
dia. A pacemaker resets the heart rate to an appropri- BorgWamer (NYSE)- 58.52
Royal Dutch S.hell- 68.29
ate pace. ensuring adequate blood and oxygen are Century Alum (N.ASDAO) -14.00 Sears Hokflng (N.ASDAQ)- 74.32
delivered to the brain ;md other parts of the body.
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.36
Champion (NA~DAQ) -1.14
"Dr. Rerych's stellar leadership and commitment to Oml'i'g St'ql)(t-.LASI:W))-3.51 Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.90
quality health services and personalized patient care City Holding (NASDAQ)- 33.95 WesBanco (NYSE) -17.98 ,
has helped build the surgical services program at Collins (NYSE) - 60.60
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.37.
Pleasant Valley Hospital;' praised Hugh H. Collins, DuPont (NYSE) - 48.36
president and chief executive officer at PVH.
US Bank (NYSE)- 25.16
Daily stock reports are the 4
"I believe that by offering the pacemaker service to Gen Electric (NYSE) -16.51
p.m. ET clos:ng quotes of
the community we are making a difference in people's HaretQavidson (NYSE) -33.40 transactions for November 4
lives.'' he added.
·
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 39.80
2010, provided by Edward;
Dr. Rerych received his medical degree in 1974 Kroger (NYSE) - 23.21 .
Jones financial advisors Isaac·
from Columbia University College of Physicians Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 31.43
Mills in Gallipolis a\(740) 441Surgeons (New York, NY). In 1975, he completed his Norfolk So (NYSE) - 62.72
9441 and Lesley Marrero in
internship at Duke University Medical Center in gen- OVBC (NASDAQ) -19.26
Point Pleasant at (304) 674eral and thoracic surgery. In 1986 'Dr. Rerych was BBT (NYSE) - 24.20
0174. MemberSIPC.
named the Chief Resident in General. Vascular and
Thoracic Surgery, also at Duke University and the
Chester DofA holds inspection ·
Virginia Medical Center (Asheville, North CaroHna).
In 1991, he served as an a~sistant clinical professor of
general, vascular and thoracic surgery at the same
CHESTER- Inspection was held at a recent meet·
ing of the Chester County 323. Daughters of America
institutions.
Prior to coming to Pleasant Valley Hospital, Dr. held at the hall.
Rerych lived in Asheville, North Carolina where he
G~ Holter, inspecting officer, gave a good report on
was a private practitioner.
the mspection. He was escorted by the tlagbearcrs to
Some of his honors include being runner-up for the the altar where he was presented a gift or appreciation ..
Investigator of the Year Award through the American
In the meeting it was announced that meetmg will be
College of Cardiology ( 1978), winner of two Olympic at 6 p.m. once the ume changes. Julie Curtis was elect-ed a trustee for a two year term, and plans were made.
gold medals for s\vimming ( 1968), Outstanding to clean the lodge hall.
College Athlete of the. Year for the states of New
Holter read a letter reque~ting a donation for tho
Jersey and North C~olina (1969) and elected to the Ohio National officers. Reported iU at recent meetinos •
were George \Volfe. Harold Smith, Laura Mae Ni~. Sports Hall of Fame m New Jersey (1969).
.. Prof~ssio~ally, he wa~ been invited to speak on Shar?n Riffi~. Opal Eichingt:r. Ar~en Depoy and
Non-mvastve EvaluatiOn of Coronary Artery Goldie Frednck. The death ot Dwtght Bissell was
Disease'' at the annual meeting of the Society of noted.
.Nuclear Medicine and as a closing discussant on 1 Attending the most recent meeting were Julie Curtis,
"R&lt;rdionuclide Angiocard10lography in Patients with Ch~lotte GJ:ant, ~v~rett Grant, Thelma W~ite, Sandy.
Surgical Disorders .. at the annual meeting of the White. Maxt':le \\htte, Judy Marsha111 Dor.Is Gmese!, ·
Southern Surgical Assoc 1ation.
Mar:t Jo Barnnger, Opal Hollon, .Est~1er Snuth. Dc.l~m~
Dr. Rerych is located in Suite 113 of the Pleasant Wolle, qary Holter. Jo Ann Ritchie, Sharon Rttfle;,
Valley Hospital Medical Office Building. For more I Nancy Kmg and Judy Buckley.
------ -- ~-.
information about the pace1naker service or general surgery options. please call. (304) 675-1666.

---...,.......-------------Public meetings

q:

Friday: Scattered rain
and snow showers before
10 a.m., then scattered rain
showers. Cloudv. with a
high near 44. Northwest
wind between 5 and 8 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent. New precipitation amounts between a
tenth and quarter of an inch
possible.
Friday Night: Scattered
rain and snow showers
before 1 am., then scattered snow showers.
Mostly cloudy. with a low
around 32. West wind
between 7 and I0 mph
becoming calm. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
New prccipitatiou amounts
between a tenth and quarter
of an inch possible.
Saturdav: Scattered rain
and snow ·showers before
noon. then scattered rain
showers. Partly sunny, with
a high near 45. Calm wind
becoming
northwest
between 8 and II mph.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent. New prccipita-

Joyce (Phillips) Grimm

BY HOPE ROUSH
HAOUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

5 p.m., Megis County
Library.
Thursday, Nov. 11

CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30 p.m. at the hall for
election of officers. Dues
must be paid. Oyster
soup will be served
Saturday, Nov. 13

POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will
meet at 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. }he program will be on the life of
George Washington.

Church events

United Methodist Church.
Saturday, Nov. 6

POMEROY
Pomeroy Church of
Christ, Zton Church of
Christ host a free soup
and sandwich dinner,
beginning , at 5 p.m.,
Pomeroy church, East
Main Street. Desserts
and other refreshments.

Other events
Saturday, Sept. 6

SYRACUSE - Free
bluegrass
concert,
6:30 p.m., Syracuse
Community Center.

Birthdays

Tuesday, Nov. 7

COOLVILLE
Revival starting at 7 p.m.
nightly through Nov. 7,
Allegheny
Wesleyan
Methodist Church, featuring Rev. Chad and Valerie
Searls, evangelist and
Tuesday, Nov. 9
singers, for more informaPOMEROY - Meigs tion, 667-6778.
County
Genealogical'
ALFRED
- Wiener
Society, regular meeting, roast, 6 p.m:, Alfred

Thursday, Nov. 11

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

------

Fair Board elects new members
POMEROY- Six members have been elected for three year terms on the Board of Directors of the Meigs
·
County Agricultural Society.
Re-elected to the Board were Wes Karr. Tom Pullins. Brent Rose. Dave Burt. and Karen Werry, and new
to the Board Samuel Evans. The three-year terms begins Dec. I. 2010.
•
Other membe of the Board ar.e Kenny Buckley, Bob Calaway, Buddy Ervin, Jane Fitch, Ron Hensley.
Ed Holter Mike Parker Steve Swatzel. Dave Watson Brian Windon Larry Life ·m 1 Dan 11y D· ·
.•
•
.
•
.
.
•
' t
,tvis.
New otficers of the Board wtll be elected at the Nov. 22 meet mg.

liUNTINGTON - Both the Wahama High School '
and Point Pleasant High School .Marching Bands will
compete at the Marshall University Marching Band
Festival this weekend.
The festival, which is hosted by Marshall Univer..,ity's
Marching Thunder and Kappa Kappa Psi, will take
place at the Joan C. Edwards Stadium. The competitiort
will t;ct underway at 11:15 a.m.
•
Thtrty-one bands are expected to participate in the
festival. Wahama High School will compete in the Class
A2 and is set to perfom1 at 3:30 p.m. Point Pleasant
High School will perform at 4:30p.m. and is competing
in the Class AA. Other Tri-County bands set to perform
include South Gallia. Ohio. Class A I, 11:45 a.m.; River
Valley. Ohio. Class AA, 4:45 p.m.; and .Meigs, Ohio;
Class AA, 6 p.m.
Steve Barnett. MU director of bands. described thcfesti\h.tl as one of the biggest band events in the area. .
"The Tri-State Band restival is one of the J:.u-gest
events hosted by Marshall University and is a veryimportant recruiting tool for the Marching Thunder and .
for Marshall Universitv,'' Barnett said in a news release~
"There will be more than 12.000 band students. parents
and supporters in attendance on Saturday. I am very proud to be associated with such a large rmd important •
event for our university and for Huntington."
.
Additional schoob participating in the competition
are Greenbrier West; Ravenswood; Gilbert; Shady.
Spring. Lincoln County; Calhoun; Buffalo; Poca; South
Charleston: ~1inford. Ohio; ~itro; Wirt County; Wayne~
Fort Chis well,. Va.; Wayne County, Ky.: Huntington
High; Fairmont Senior: Woodrow Wilson; Nicholas
County; James Monroe; Richwood; Liberty; Marietta.•
Ohio; Princeton; Spring Valley; and Cabell Midland. •·
Awards will be given in each cla~s for first, second
and third place band. Additional award'\\ ill be presented to color gum·d, drum major and percussion. Overali.
awards will be given for majorettes. twirlers t.md dance
teams. The bands with U1e highest overall score'\ ,, ill be
awarded Grand Champion and runner-up Gran&lt;~
Champion. The bards who receive the highest scores in •
1
Marching Performance. Music Performance and_
General J?ffect al~o w~ll receive a~ards. The Pro Mark
Corpo~auon. whtch .'s an officml t:ndors~r of the_
M:rrc.~m(f~tun~e~, \~tll a~ard ~lq&lt;&gt; g.tft ~e~~~ates to.
th~;Followmg
htghc.st sconng pcrcu.s~10n sectmn Ill t.:a~o:h cl~tss ..
the compctti.Jon the M·u'Sinll Uruvcrslly'
Man:hing B&lt;md will perfonn cxhibitit;n ~~1ber at 9 p m!

I

ru;

�--

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

1.

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 5,

Mismanagement rampant
in public hOusing

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Bv

'

-------------------------

Congress slrall make 110 law respecting an
establislrme11t of religion, or J;rolribitin,~ tire free
exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speeclr, or of tlte press; or tire right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Go11emment for a redress of griwances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

New Congress to affect overseas ties
R.

HURST

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Republicans· huge victory in congressional
elections could crimp President. Barack Obama 's
hopes of resetting relations with Russia and open the
way for a new get-tough approach with China.
The congressional shake-up after Tuesday's vote
also could bring better backing for Obama ·s policies
in Afghanistan. But it could force the president to ease
demands that Israel make concessions to the
Palestinians on settlement building in the West Bank.
a crucial issue in stalled peace talks.
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton has said
the election results will not change the U.S. course
abroad because "politics stops" at the nation's borders. Republicans and Democrats. she said. can "build
coalitions" and "find allies on issues that are in
· America's interests."
Despite her words. the dramatic shift in the
American political scene is bound to have an effect.
A stronger Republican voice in Congress may push
the president to slow plans to begin withdrawing from
Afghanistan in July and badger him to be even
tougher on Iran over its suspected nuclear weapons
program.
Simmering conflicts with China probably could be
most open to quick U.S. action with Republicans
holding a majority in the House of Representatives
and more seats in the Senate. Their tougher approach
on human rights and minority issues in China may
extend to Beijing's currency. which many Democrats
also want raised against the dollar so that American
goods can better compete in international markets.
Failure by China to act could lead to stronger bipartisan calls for sanctions.
More Republicans in office could help Obama on
trade deals. Many of Obama's Democrats are suspicious of an accord with South Korea to slash trade
batTiers on industrial goods and services, which has
languished since it was signed in 2007 by George W.
Bush's Republican administration.
Obama now backs the deal as a way to improve
American exports and strengthen ties with an important U.S. ally. He has directed his trade officials to settle differences before the Group of 20 economic summit Nov. 11-12 in Seoul.
But Obama's ~oreign policy could take a battering over
efforts to improve relations with Russia. Many conservatives have not shed their Cold War distmst of Moscow and
are skeptical of a nuclear arms pact Obama and Russian
President Dmitry Medvedev signed in April.
Republicans fell sh01t of a majority in rhe Senate.
but 67 affinnative votes are needed to ratify the treaty.
Obama may have a better chance in the interim lame
duck session that begins Nov. 15.
While Democrats are losing patience with the
almost decade-long Afghanistan contlict, Obama
probably will find backing for his war policies from
Republicans. That could come with pressure to limit
or shelve plans to begin withdrawing in July.
In the Middle East, strong Republican gains probably
will cost Obama some maneuvering room in his sponsorship of peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.
The president has pressured the Israelis to stop their West
Bank and Je111salem settlement building projects.
But the American economy is still the prime concern of U.S. voters and the presidential election now
just two years away. Obama is unlikely to be able to
retreat to a focus on foreign affairs.

·The Daily Sentinel
I

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Charlene Hoeflich
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BY STEVEN

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~

2010

,

There were accusations of an
executive slush fund. financial
shenanigans and dictatorial
management. But it was the
$900,000 in secret sexual
harassment payments that got
the head of the nation's fourthlargest housing authority fired
and had the mayor asking how
the housing board missed it all.
Yet Philadelphia's isu't t::ven
close to the worst of dysfunctional housing agencies across
the country that operate with no
budgets, untrained staff and
shoddy record-keeping, according to a' review by 'The
Associated Press of inspection
and audit records of 146 housing authorities that the government considered the most troubled.
The documents show the U.S.
spends hundreds of millions of
dollars each year on housing
authorities that don't follow
financial rules or, worse. lack
.even the most basic policies for
spending petty cash or using
government credit cards.
"How is it possible that you
didn't know?" Philadelphia
Mayor Michael Nutter asked as
his city became a high-profile
symbol of scandal and mismanagement in the nation's public
housing system. "It defies logic
and credibility that all of these
things could be kept away from
the board for so long a period of
time."
Actually. it doesn't.
The AP's review found that
federal money intended for one
program occasionally gets used
for others. Contracts are signed
without bidding or approval. In .
New London, Conn., housing
officials had no written contracts at all.
Yet Washington's hands are
largely tied since the threat of
withholding or reducing funding to punish irresponsible
housing authorities ultimately
would in effect penalize poor
tenants for the mismanagement
of their landlords.
All of this is supposed to be
audited, but sometimes that
either doesn't get done or
there's no paperwork on file to
prove it. Early this year, federal
officials were still trying to
resolve problems with 2006 and
2007 audits from Highland
Park. Ill.
.
Meanwhile. waiting lists for
getting into public housing are
often ignored. And once tenants
are in. landlords frequently
don't know whether they're
charging· the right rent. In
Dallas, housing employees
made income calculation errors
in the files of two out of every
three tenants.
Philadelphia is not the worstmanaged housing authority in
the country. Not even close. The
Department of Housing and
Urban Development has identified 146 housing authorities as
having major problems. and
flagged them as "troubled."
The AP requested under the
Freedom of Information Act all
inspection and review documents related to the most troubled agencies. The Obama
administration turned over
thousands of pages of sometimes haphazard and incomplete
reports and said they were the
only documents available at
headquarters. To get a clearer
picture of a troubled housing
authority,
officials
in
Washington would have to gather information from regional
offices.
The documents the AP
reviewed showed a housing system in which agencies must
become nearly insolvent before
the federal government steps in.
And even when Washington
does intervene, the mismanagement can continue for years
while the U.S. continues subsidi:ling the housing agency.
The U.S. public housing system is a bureaucratic labyrinth

of local, state and federal governments and nonprofit, quasigovernment housing agencies.
Housing budgets are typically
controlled by housing boards,
separate from city budgets.
Depending on the city. mayors
and city councils may or may
not have a say in how the boards
are run.
Some boards don't meet regularly. Or if they do, they don't
keep minutes of their meetings.
Benton Harbor, Mich., is home
to what federal regulators
described as an "unmotivated
board."
That leads to situations like
the one in Philadelphia, where
the mayor wants the authority to
appoint more members of the
housing board. In Garrison,
Texas, where the housing
authority has been cited for
overspending and poor money
management, the federal government's improvement plan
included asking tqe mayor to
appoint someone with financial
experience to the board.
Sen. Charles Grassley. RIowa, who is investigating HUD
for subsidizing housing for
thousands of sex offenders. said
it's up to the Obama administration to fix these problems.
''It's an understatement that
too many public housing
authorities operate poor! y,"
Grassley said.
But such problems have existed for decades, making HUD a
target of criticism through
Democratic and Republican
administrations.
"A lot of people assume that
HUD can snap its fingers and
make it all better." said Sandra
Henriquez. assistant secretary
for Indian and public housing.
"We are asset managers. We are
not responsible for tbe direct
day-to-day operation of any
housing authority...
Housing authorities draw
most of their money from the
$26 b11lion budget of HUD's
Office of Public and Indian
Housing. But that money doesn't buy Washington control of
the nation's 3.300 housing_
auttiorities.
It's not hard for local housing
officials to keep problems under
wraps, or at least make them
appear manageable, particularly
in smaller communities that
aren't scrutinized as big cities.
Often. by the time Washington
gets wind of problems, the
housing authority's balance
sheet is full of negative numbers.
"Since we're the regulator.
the compliance monitor. people
will do anything to keep HUD
out of their business. and therefore aren't forthright and get too
far down the road before they
ask for help,'' Henriquez said.
Once a housing authority is in
trouble. finding someone to fix
the problem can be difficult.
New housing executives often
don't know what they're up
against until they walk in the
door and discover years of mismanagement.
"When you open a file and
you see nothing on the financial
side has been done. it gets
awfully scary. You don't know
where to start," said Joe Torres,
the acting housing director in
Willacy County. Texas. Torres
is the fourth person to occupy
the job since mid-2008. The
county is still looking for a permanent replacement.
Haphazard record keeping can
extend to policies. too. Housing
authorities in Royal Oak
To\\nship. Mich., New Britain.
Conn., and Lackawanna, N.Y..
have been cited for having inadequate or nonexistent policies
for writing checks. dipping into
petty cash. swipil1g government
credit cards or using government \ehides.
With so much federal money
coming in and. such lax policies
about how to spend it. the
potential for misuse is great.
For years. Doris Marie Abeyta
wrote checks to her family from

•

the Alamosa, Colo.. housing
authority accounts. It wasn't
difficult: Board members regularly signed blank checks and
relied on employees to fill them
out.
The
executive
director,
Patricia Martinez, didn't mind.
She was embezzling, too. By
the time they got caught: Abeyta
had taken more than $400,000,
Martinez nearly $1.3 million.
Prosecutors said the two
began dipping into the accounts
in 1998. stopped when HUD
audited the housing authority in
2006. then started up again in
2007. Both pleaded guilty to
embezzlement and are serving
prison terms.
If things go really wrong at a
housing authority. Washington
can put its organization •.
receivership, essentially seizil
control. There are six local
housing authorities under HUD
receivership. Taking control of
all 146 troubled housing authorities would be a huge new federal expense.
"The biggest stick we have is
to shut off funding. We'll turn
off the money until you say.
·oK .. OK, OK.... Henriquez
said. "But what that really does,
that punishes the people who
need the subsidy. That punishes
the residents who need the service."
So. while some housing
authorities make progress, others have problems year after
year. In mid-2008, federal officials cited Corsicana, Texas, for
its long delays in filling vacant
apartments. 1t shouldn't take
much more than a month to fill
a vacancy, HUD said. '
CorsicaiJa, it took an average
five months. The report note
that Corsicana had unnecessarily long delays in 2005, 2006
and 2007.
"It takes housing authorities a
while to get into noticeable,
demonstrable
trouble,"
Henriquez said. "However long
it took them to get into trouble,
it will take them. at least that
long if not longer to get out of
it."
.
Henriquez said the Obama
administration wants to have
another option, a threat that
housing authorities would take
seriously but wouldn't amount
to widespread eviction. She also
said she'd like HUD to replace
the single housing authority
audit with
more focused
reviews that would help HUD
spot problems sooner.
Both of those changes cou~
require congressional approva
When stories like the Alamos·
embezzlement case or the
Philadelphia scandal emerge.
there's a temptation to put nev•..'
regulations in place, said
Michael Liu, who served as
President George W. Bush ·s
first head of Public and Indian
Housing. But often that just
means more paperwork and
more headaches for local officials, raising the likelihood that
they'll cut more corners.
For now, the system clunks
along. Names come off the troubled list and are replaced by
new ones. The size of the list
changes some, but it hovers at
around 4 percent of the nation's
housing authorities. For some,
the black mark prods them to
make changes quickly.
For others. like the housing
authority in Winter Haven. Fla.,
years pass with little impro.
ment. The organization has be
labeled troubled since 2003.
Five years later. an inspector
found the housing authority was
not preparing monthly budget
anal) ses. its staff and managers
were inadequately trained. and
the board's monitoring and
accountability 'fere inadequate.
Today. seven years after it
first appeared on the list. Winter
Haven remains troubled.
-~

I

�Friday, November 5, 2010

F~llowship

Apostolic

•

{ hurrh ur Jtml ( hrht \pu&gt;tollr
\BnLandt 'Uld \\ani Rd. Pa&lt;tor James
~IIIIer. Sunday S,hool
:cl30 am .
[\tums 7 'Ovm.

KiHI' \nil•·&gt;
\aile) \J••stoli&lt; \\&lt;•rsh1p (~ut~r.
M7.1 S lrtl A1·c M1ddlep&lt;'!l, Rc1'
M"had llr.~tllnnl. Pa~tor. Suuda~, l!l:.\11
a.m. fur&lt;. ~&gt;:30 J&gt;ra)cr, \\cd 7 pm ll1hle
Stud)
RIV~I

Fnmtanm•l \()(1\tnlk lul»nnacll·lru.·
Loop Rd otT '&gt;ew J~ma Ril Rutland,
ServJcC' ~un 10:00 a-n &amp; 7 10 p m
I burs 7 (Xl p m • J&gt;a,tor \!Jrt) R llultnn

Assembly of God
Ubtrt) \ "embl) ofl :od
P.O. llo' 4&lt;&gt;7, l&gt;uddmg LaM. MJSOD
" \a Pastor \ell Teno3llt Sunda)
Semccs 10:00 am and 1 p m

Baptist
l'.,~tlillr

trttwUI Bapti1t Church
Pa&lt;tor Ao)d Ross sundJv ~cbool9 '0 to
I!!: lOam.\\ rsh1p&lt;en1Ct 10 lOti&gt; ''()()
am. \\tel. prcacbm~ 6 pm
Cllrjl&lt;'nh·r lndtl&gt;&lt;·ndt•nt llapti&lt;t { hurrh
11 &gt;O:un. l'rcach1ng
sund.l) School
Se!VI&lt;e lfl· Ulam. I 1e1m~ Se•~1&lt;e
7:00pm. \\'tdn.:sda) ll1Nc 'itudy 711() m.
!'astor.

•

Cht,hirt' llupti't C'hurdl
Pa.stur Steve l.ntlc, 7·10 lt.7 78tll, II
74(1 'l'n 7542. I' 74(1 645 l)Z7 Sunda)
Schod: 9·10 am. Murmng \\orsh1p· 1010
am. Youth &amp; B1ble lludd1es 6 lO pm.
chmr pra,uce 7;30; SpecL1l davs f !!ll."nth
Ladles of ura&lt;c 7 •'" 2nd Monda~ Z
MensfeiiOI'Ihlp?pm 1rd rues
llopl• llapti&lt;t ( hureh l ~out hem l •
~70 Granr St • \lllldleport. Sunda1 scbnol
9: l( am.. \\onbip II a 'D and 6 p m..
\\i:dncsdav '\tmci ' p.rn Pastor Gm
l:l!IS
Rutland ••"" Bapthl Clmrrh
Sunday &lt;;ebool 9 W a.m. \\orslup
l 4~ am.
l'omtn&gt;) til"il llapti&lt;t
P..!Stor Joo Brockert. La&gt;t \bin SL.
Sunday Scb. 9:10dm. \\ rslllp HllOam
H101t Suulht'rll Uaplbt
4 872 l~&gt;lllero\ l~ke. Sunday ~cbool
9:lo a.m. llonh1p 'I 4~ am &amp; 7 00 p !11,
\\ednesday Scrv1ces
Jla1'1d llramard

7 00 p 111 l'astnr

I ir~tllapti't Chun·h
Pastor· Billv Zu.&lt;pnn ~th llld l'nhner \!.,
\IIddie pun. SundJ) Sc lO&lt;•I IJ I~ d 111 •
\\ors~1p
10.1 ~ a tn. 7 00 p m.
\\i:dne &lt;lay Semce 7'(1() p m

•

Kacin&lt;' ••NI H•pti&gt;t
Pastor. R).J Eaton pa\lor Sunda)
School 9 30 m. \\ , Jup 10:40 J m..
6 00 p 'll \\cJn:sd.ty Sm c
7 00
pm.
'•htr Run IIApti't
Pa tor J hn s.. anscn ~unda~ ~cbool
lOam \\ rsh1p
II m '00 pm
,\\td.nesdav Sc"y!m 7 00 p m
\ft.l nlon Bapti&lt;t
Pastor Lknrus \\ea&gt;er Sunda) Sc.1
9 '5 a !11 • [ ventng
6 30 p m •
\\edncsda) Serv1ccs 6 10p.m.
llNhlthcm llaptist ('hurrh
Great Bend, Route 124. Rl~tlne Oil
~unday Schnnl
'1:.1!1 un.
l';•!lor
Sunda) \\orsh1p IO:.IU •. nt,; \\ednesda)'
lli~le Slu&lt;l)' ·7:00 p.m.
Old lltt htl hn \\ill lla111i,f C'hurrh
St Rt. 7 Mld&lt;llepor• Sunda1
Se VICe :o d.m.. 6·11(' p m , Tuesda\
Semce$ .(,·UO
~M60 I

Jlill.Jdt Bupti't Churrh
St Rr '4l JUSt off Rt 7. Pastor. RC\
JJm ' R Acree ~~ ~unda) t n r .d
Semce \\orsh1p 10 ! am 6 p m
I\ ednesd.n Scmccs 7 p m

•

\ i&lt;'tol') Bapti&lt;llndtjl&lt;'ndmt
525 S 2nd St MHidl&lt;pcn. Pastor J:uncs
E. ~ce. \\, rsh1p lOam 7 p m.
"edoesda) Sm 1c~ ? p m
I alii• l!aptht &lt;'hurrh
Rai.!Oad St. Mason. Sund.t) Sc'lool 10
J.m , \\orsh1p
I n.m • 6 p m.
\\ednestb) Serncts 7 p.m
l·o""l Kunllapfi,t·l'nmt·rn)
Rev. Joseph \\oods, Suuda1· Srho•~ • 10
a.m \l~nh1p I HU d.m.

www.mydailysentinel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
10 4~ am. 'iunda) l.:•enmE 6.00 p'll.
lkn \\~lker

P.,

llutland • ,.. \\ill Baptl't
Salem ~I • Pastor Ed Bame) Sunday
Sc~oo!
10 1m. E'•n1n~ 7 p m..
\\edncsday Se"VJces 7 p.m
S.·&lt;ond llapli't ('hurl'h
Ravcn~wO&lt;~I. 1\ v sunda) \cbo; 1 Jr. un
• \Jo~nm~ worsh1p II am Evemng 7 rm.
\\edncsJav 7 p.m
Hr-t Uapfi,t ('hu!'l'h ol """"'· \\\
tludependcntllapt"t)
SR b52 and Anderson St. Pa&lt;tor· Robert
(,raJ). Sunday S&lt;hool Hl am, ~INmng
cbur&lt;h II am. Sun Jay e\eomg I' pm, \led.
B1hlc Stud) 7 pro

Anli&lt;lnit) l!apli,r
Sunda) Sch!l('l 'llO am \\orsh1p

\lt. ~lorbh Churn of (,od
M1le H1ll Rd Kanne Put r J mes
Satterfield, 'Sunda) S•h I • H 1m
benang 6 p m.. 1\edne ila1 Ser• ces 7
pm.
Kutl3nd C1111rch &gt;f (,O&lt;J
J&gt;a\(1 I f.lrl) ShtcfO I ~.lldJ\ \\OJ'Sillp
Io m 6 p m II edne d.&lt;) ~crv1ce•
pm.
S)nU.'IIIol' J·tr~(,( '11111\h

58'18

t 'lmr&lt; h cor GOIJ ,,r 1"'J!hrn

Rd off St R1 60. Pa&lt;tor I' 1
( hapman. Sunda) School
10 d m
\\orsb1p II am. \\tdncsda) Serv c« 7
p.m.
I \\bite

(on

Sun
9: 10

Church of Christ
\\r.t&gt;tdr Church of Christ
H2l6Ciuldren's !{orne Rd. PomttO), OH
C ntact "40·992-!84' Sunda) mom10g
10·00 Su 1 mrro10~ B1ble stud&gt;;
f'flOI'In~ worsb1~, Suo e\e 6:00 pm,
\\.d b1ble studv ? pm
lltrnlntk c;rnlr ( llfi'""" C'hurl'h
M1n"1er Lmy Brown \\orsh•r '1:.10
am. Sund.y S&lt;hno! 10:10 d m. ll1~le .
Stud\ • 7 p.m.
l'omrn&gt;) Church of Chri&lt;t
212 II. \lam St • Sundav Srh&lt;lOI • 9:\0
a.m. ll&lt;•rsh•p· 10:10 , m n Jl.ln ..
1\ednesda) Sm~ees 7 p.IJl.
l'umerm \\&lt;"f&gt;lde Church of C'hri&lt;t
~ 1226 ChddreQ'S Home Rd. Su3da)
~hool II • m.. 1\orsb•p. lOa.m t\ p m.
\lednesdJI ~CMCtS -p.m.
"lddlrport Cbureh of Chrl\1
~·~ •nd ~!- ~. P tor. AI Hartson,

ur &lt;ftHJ

\pplc .mtl Scwnd St. , l""·tor Rev. ll.IVJI1
Rui&lt;dl. Sumla) St hnul mtl \lnr,hlp Ill
am f.vcnwg Ser\1&lt;~' 6: Ill p 111.
1\cJnesdav $cf\'lcts tdll p m

0

Catholic
:&gt;acrt'd lle:an Catholic t'hunh
It\ I \fulberry Ave P&lt;mcro), oJII2
Pasto Rn \\alter E: Hemz. Sat
4 45 ~ l~p m • Mass ~ 10 p m
C&lt;&gt;n ~·4~ 9: 15 a m ~ua. Mass
a.m. Oai v Ma»-~ l( 8.!!1.

Congregational
Trinh~ lhur\'11
Pastor Rev 1om Jolul"'Jl Stcood &amp;
Lynn. Pomeroy Pa fr&gt;r • \\ rslup It 2S
am.

Episcopal

Gracr • pt...vpal Chureh
\21i E M.na St . Porntro1
II ly
Eu&lt;hanst II 10 a '11 Sunda) &amp; ~ '0 pm
\led Re,, Lcshe 1-lemmmE

Holiness
&lt; ommunil~ ( h.m,:h
Pastor· Stele rumek. Ma111 S~.:tt,
Rutl.md. Sunday Wc&gt;r&lt;luj&gt;- 10.00 a m .
Sunda) Sc"·"e 7 J&gt; m
lluu&gt;llh•lfulint·" thurdl
31057 S!.lte Route 125 l.ng.vlle J&gt;a.\to&gt;r:
Br&lt; '" Baile), sunda) ~d1ml 9 10 am •
Sunday W'rshtp ,\)·10 a.m &amp; 7 p.m..
\\ednesda) pra1er serv1ce 7 p ~~
C'ahur) l'il~trim Cl1apel
HJm OilVIlle koad. Paltor Ch:Jk&lt;
McKenZie SundJy Stbooi '1: lO ~ m
1\crslup II m 7 00 p'll. \\,-dliesd3)
S.:mcc 700pm

Ch d.ens ::&gt;nect r Sharon Sa,re. Teen
Dt!ttt r: Oodger \ orltan. Sundav ~.bool
910 am 1\orsfup-8.1 S. 10:30 am. 7
p.m. \\ednesda' Sel"\~ees 1 p m.

K•"" or ~hJron llolinru Cburrh
Crtek Rd. Rutlan:l, Pa&lt;1 r. RC\
Dc\&gt;t) K..1g ~u~ 1o.':ioo' 9 JO b m.
Sunda) "orsrur 7 p m \\.dnc-.day
pta)el metliD~ 1 ~ m

1-.mo Chureh or Christ
9· j[ a en. ~undav Sc~ool
10 lO a.m. PastorJr rev \\•lla&lt;.:e. 1st 1111d
lrd Sund."

J'in&lt;· c.rme Bible llf&gt;liiiC''&gt;.&lt; ( hun:h
I 2 m\Je off Rt 12.~. ~ llor • Sunday
s,hooJ 9:30 1m. \\orsbll 10.3!1 J m..
o:OOpm .. \\cdnesda) Sel"'~~:e 7 00 p.'ll.

\\o:~b1p

Lmn~

Pastor Lknzd Null \\orslup }: lO a.m.
Sunda) School • 10 30 am.
l.ollj:Hottom
~unda) School
9 &gt;O am. \\o"hiP
10 '&lt;' m.
K&lt;l'd.llillt·
\\ rsh1p 'I' 10 a 11 • '&gt;unda} 5ch01'1
10'30 am. I 11'&gt;1 Sun&lt;t:l) of Month 7·00
p.&lt;n &lt;eiYICe Pastor· Gene Good" 10
'l\1pp&lt;-r' Plain' Sr. Paul
Phtor· Jnn C1rb.n. Sunda) S&lt;ho&gt;OI • q
am., \\nrslun .. 10 a.m., Tue 1d&lt;l)' Servn:e~
?·.lllp.m.
Central ('lu,trr
A~ury tS)llii:USC), J&gt;a.\tor Rob Rchmson,
Sunda) S&lt;hool 9:45 a.m. 1\ orsh1p • II
am.. \\cJnesda) Sem.:es- 730p.m.
nat1.101Xb
Pi .or: O.:"avne 5turtler, Sunday SchOOl
10 are \\ orship II a.m.
t'orest Run
Bob Robmsoo. SUDda} School 10
&lt;~.m. \\orslup 9 a.m.

Past

llrath 1\liddlrponl
Pastor Bnan Dunham, Sunda) School
I~'XlJm. \\orship II·OOam.
hbur) SJ r•ta"'
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sanda) Scbool
9'l0am. Worship 1030a.m.
l'carl Chapel
Sunda} 'lool 9 a.m., \\'orsh1p 10 a.m.

s,

'•" ilel(innin~' Chun:h
Pornrm)
Pastor: Bnan Dunham, \\orship
a.m. Sunda) School· 10:45 a.m.

9:25

RockSpring.s
!'astor· Lkwa)ne Stuller. S~mday School
9:00 a.m .. Worsh&gt;p . ,o .:m~ Youth
~Ito,. ship. Sanda) 6 p.m. l:arl) Sunlb}
" rsh1p 8 am. Lenora lcifbeit
Rutland
l'l.&lt;tor John Chapman. Sunda) Scbocl
9:10am. \\ •rsbtp IO:lOam. Thursday
Strvtccs 1 p.m.
S•lem Ctntrr
1'a&gt;1cr. \\JIIiam f\. Marshall. SUDda)
School 10:15 a.m.. \\o:ship 91' a.m..
B1ble Stud) \looda) 7 00 pm
SnmHillt
Sund3) School 10 1.111., \\orslup 9 am.
llethan)
l'•sror. John Roze" 1cz, Sunday School •
10 l.m .• \\'orsh1p 9 a.m. 1\ednesda)·
Strl «es • 10 a.m.

llrar11 allo11 Rid~e Church of Chri't
!'astor Bruce rer!), Sunda) School '1:30
om
Wt&gt;toh•p
10·30 a.m. 6:.10 p.m
\\cdnesda) SmJCes 6:30p.m

\\r,l&lt;·)an llihh·llulln&lt;l&gt;' t'hur.h
St...\l1ddlcpon. P:t,IN: l.loug
(u,. Sund:1) S&lt;hnol 10 u m \lor&lt;hlp
10:-15 r.m.. Suncl.11 he h 11(1 p no.,
\\cllncsJJy Scr\lcC 7·00 pm

/jon Church of Chrl1l
Pomeroy. fl •nsoovllle RJ (Rt. 431.
Pastor R&lt;&gt;ger \\atson, Sunday S'hoot
9 lO m.. \\orslup 10:10 a.m 7 00
I' II' \\edntsd3) '&gt;CI"'lces - p m

lh.M•II Run ( nmmunil~ ( 'hunh
P.oiStor Rev. lArry l.cmle\. )unda) s, ~ocl
\.-Ill a 'D • Worslup 10 45 a.m.. 1 p m..
Tnursda) 81ble Stud• nd 'outll ? p m.

\lornin~ Star
Pastm ioho Rozew~ez. Sunda~ 'cboo!
II a.m • \\ orsb1p • I0 a.m

l.aurel ClifT l"rtt \ldbi)Ji,t Cburrh
P:L&lt;tor Olen \!cOung. S1 da) School
9 lO o.m \\onlup 10 0 am and 6
i' II' .".:dni"W) Sel"\lcc 1 00 p m.

Ea'll.rtan
Paster B:.l Mar~ball Sunda) School
9a.m "ors!lip 10 am. lst Suoda}
CVel) month C&gt;CDIDg &lt;CI"' !CC #·00 p.m.,
\\edncsda) 7 p m

!upper- Plain Church of l'hn\1
lnstrumtDUI \\crsb1p ~el"' ce 9 a m..
C~mmumon
, a.m Sunday 5chool
IO:l~em Youth-51&lt;. pmSunda).Biblt
5tud) \\tde:sd.l) ., pm
llndbun Chureh or Cbri&lt;l
\11n1 er Jusun R sb 311S5S ll13d
R ad, \1 ddkpc7t. \und3v S&lt;:b
9

l'\

a.rn
\\ C.:np •

3(

.m.

Rutl:md Chureh or Chrbt
Sund ) '&gt;&lt;hool • 'l:lO a. n .. \\01sb1p a.d
Cummu,1wn
,0:30 .m.. D&lt;VId
1\ 1sr!llllll, ~hnister

75

Pe.~rl

Latter-Day Saints

Tht ('burch or Jt'lus
Christ or l.attrr·l••1 S.ainls
St R 160 -'4£&gt; 1&gt;2~' r 4-16 7486
Sunda• S 'ool I 20 I a m Rehef
Socie'' Pr. !hood
~ 12• nron
S .r ment Sen •• e '.1 10 I~ J ll'
ll• rDCI113LJg mectmg , st Tbun ' p re

Lutheran
~t •.lohn

l,uthtr:m C'hurd)
Pluc (,ro,·e. \\~rsh1p 9·110 1.111. Sunda)
Sdwol IO:!MJ u.m. Pastur

Bradfur~

C'hu...,h of Chri1t
Corner of :SI Rl. 124 &amp; BradbUI) Rd ...
Youth \hniSt(r: Bill Amh&lt;rgn. SunJa)'
Sc'lO&lt;•I 9.10 a.'ll. \\orship 8:00 u m..
10:10 am .• 7·00 p.m.,\\ednesda) Sen ICe&lt;
7:0C y.m

Our Sa,iunr l.uthm111 t 'hurdl
1\alnut und llenr) \11 .. Ra&gt;enlwuud,
I\ Va , Pa&lt;tor Dav1d f&lt;u•sell Sunday
School 10·1)0 am. \lor&lt;hlp II am
~1.

llirkon II ill' Chureh or Christ
r•ppers Pbn&lt;. Pastor \like \loor.. llJble
dass. 9 • m sund3). wor&lt;lllp 10 a m
Sullda) " rs.Jup n· 10 pm Sunda1 B1 1e
c' ? l'ffi \le
Kffi1;11llt Church or Chri&gt;t
Pastor )3,t Col~ v\t, Sunday School
9: lO a en. \1 rship sermc 10:10 1.~
B1ble Stud) 1\:dllC'Ida) 6ll' r m
llntrr ( hurd1 or Chri't
Sunda' school 11·lO a.m Sunlb) "o:sb1p
It:. lOam.
The ( hun·h of ( 'hri,f or l'olllCI'O)
lntersecuon 7 dOd 124 II, !'1angehs•.
DenniS Sargent. Sunda) llible Studv
Y 10 am., ""rsh•p: HUO a.m. and ~:30
p.m .. \\'ednrsda)' llihle Stud\ 7 p.m.

Christian Union

\It, \luriah llaptilt

h&gt;urth &amp; Mam St. \hdJkport, ~uuda)
School ~ IOa.m. llorsh1p 111:4~ a u1
l'n tor Rev ~l1chaeiA lb&lt;•mpson. s~.

The Daily Sentinel • Page AS

l'au! I utbtrun ( hul'\h
Coner S~cam• re &amp; ~ewnt! St l'Qmerov.
Sllll S&lt;~cd 1}4h n. \\c ship II a n

United :\1ethodist
c:rahJm l nittd \ltthodlst
\\&lt;&gt;:'1b1p II am Pastt~r Rll'b.ud 1\e:ase
ll«htrll nU&lt;11 \lct~odi&gt;t
Ne" Haven Rl&lt;hard N &lt;e. Past&lt; r
Sand&gt;~ "o:shlr 9 30 n m Tues 6·\0
prayer and B1ble Stud\.

Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Ba,han Rds. Ra"ne, Ohio.
Pallor: John Rozewic~. Sunday School
'1'45 ,.. m.• Worship 11:00 n.m. B1ble
Study lied. '1· 30 p m.

Pastor bn Lnendtr. Sunday School
9:30 am \\QrShlp 1010 a.m nnd (..
p m.. \\ ednesdav Semc~ • p m
Chtster Chun:h or the ~8T&lt;II't'Ot
Pastor Rev Warren Luken~. Sunday
Sd""'' '1. '0 D m. \\ nhlp 10 10 .. m
~und3) evenmg 6 pm
Rutla111f ( ·hurd• of the \a1artnr
Pastor (jeorge Sladler, Sunday School
9: Ill 3m, Wor•lup 10:.10 am .• f&gt;:\0
p m., \ledtocsda)' Servll-cs 7 p.m

Other Churches
("oJilfiUJII (,tuUIICJ \l l\..\ifln~

Pasto~

Denm1 Moore &amp; R1cl; Lmle
Sunday 10.00 a.m
I t ,uu J tsu.t
Pastor· hlJ1e llaer Sun \\'JX&gt;Iup II am
311 Mechamc St Pomeroy
,.,, llopf Churcb
Old AmenCliD lcpon lllll,
fourth Ave. M11ldleport. Sunlby ~ p m.
S) rucwe C'ommunit) Church
24gQ '&gt;ecood 'il S) t.1cust, OH
Sun. School lOam. SUJJd) n1gbt6 W prn
1'1$1or Joe Gw10o
\ '\rw ll&lt;'l:lnnlng
t• ull Gospel Church I Harmoo\1lle
Pastors Bob nod Kay Mmball.
Thurs. 7 p.m
\matin~ c;rnc~ ('mumunit) ('hurrh
Pa&lt;tnr \\ape Dunlap, State Rt 6S I.
tuppers Plams. Sun Wonh•p· lOam &amp;
6:10pm .. \\e.J Bible litudy 7;1)() p m.
011'i' C'hri&gt;tiun litllo~&lt;,hiJI
t:'\on·d&lt;nolmnatU&gt;nal tcllow&gt;hlp)
\1ceung m the \lr1gs M1ddlc SchO(II
Cafct&lt;na ~""''"" C'hNI Ste~&lt;an
JO·OO.un Soon Sunda); lnlonnal
\lor&lt;h1p. Ch1ldren 's mm1stry
l'ommunit) or ( hrht
Porrland Racane Rd • P.oiStor J1m Proffin.
Sunda) '\cho&lt;'l 9 10 a m.. Worsh1p
10:30 am., \\ednesd1y Semc~ • 7 00

pm.
llttbtl \\orshlp Ctntor
19782 St Rt ' 2 miles south or fuppers
Pla1ns. OH Non-denolll!uUonal "'th
Contempo:-m l'r.l1&lt;e &amp; \\ orsbtp Pastor
Rob B:uber. A5SOC Pastor Karyn Oms
Youth Duector Ben) fulks. Sunday
set\'I«:S 10 am \\&lt;mb1p &amp; 6 pm f IIlii&gt;
Life Classes, \ltd &amp; Thur 01ght Life
Groups at ' pm. Thurs mom1n~ 13d•es'
Ufe Group at 10. Otlter l1m1ts YOU1h L1fe
Group on \\ed e-. •ng from 6 'lO to 8.30.
\1st! usonlme at """·bcthd11c org.
\'h Strttt ('hun·h
WS Ash St. Middleport Pastor Mart
Morrow sunda) Sehoul 9:30 .tm..
Mommg \\1J1Sh1p 10 311 1 rn. &amp; 6:30pm,
1\'cdne&gt;dJ) ServiCe • n:.IO p.m., Youth
Service· n: 10 p.m.
·\K'!P&lt;' life C'tllll'r
Full Gospel Church", l'a&lt;tou John &amp;
P:ltty \\adc 603 Second Ave. Mason. 773
501'. Semce t1me: Sunday 10:10 d.m..
\\edncsday ~ pm
Abundant c;racr
923 S Thin! 'it. Middleport. Pastor reresa
Davn Sunday serv•ce. 10 a m
\\ednesd:Jy semcc. 7 p.!p.
Faith toll G~Kptl Chureh
Bott m 1'3.!1£&gt;r Stt&gt;t Reed. SundJ)
Scbool 9l0 a.m. "unlllp 9 30 a':l.
::d 1 p m. \\c.foesda) ? p m. Fnday
feU!l" slup !oe!VIct i p.rn
Lon~

Racine
Rev \\ 1 1am Mmlu:. Su:Jda
~
m. \\orship
II
a.rn \\ ~) Servi~s'ipm, !'bur B1blc
\tudy'pm
Past

~

&lt;whill&lt; (;nitoo Metbodi-t Parish

llurtson,111c Communi!) Chureh
Pastor l'beroa Durham, ~unday 9 lO
am and~ p.m \\C&lt;!Msda) 7 p.m.

Pasto~

Helen Khne , C'oohllle Cbun:b,
Mam &amp; Fifth SL. Sun. ScbOI)[ • Ill a.m.•
\\ rsh1p 9 am. Tues. Semces 7 p.m.
Bethd Church
lo,.nsh•p Rd., 468C, Sunda)· School 9
a.m, \\'o1,bip

\liddlepurt &lt;'omrnuuit) ('hureh
Pe.1rl St., M1ddlepor1 • Pastor. S•rn
Ander1on Suuda) Sthllol 10 am
!:I'Cmng • 7 ~0 p.m. Wednesday Srmce •
7·10p.m.
~-)

10 d.m ... Wttlm:,day

hilh \alit) J;,hcrnudt C'hun:h
Baile) Run Road, Pa&gt;tor· Rev Emmett

Services · '0 a.m
li~J~:kin~port Church
K•thryn 1\'iley. Sunda) Scbocl 9 lO
a.m., llorsh1p. 10:30 J.m .• P1stor Phllhp
Bell
Toreh Church
Co. Rd. 6), Suada) S.:hool • 9:10 a.m.
\lorsb1p lt':'lOa.m.

Nazarene
!'oint Rod &lt;'hun:'b of lhe '\aurtne
Rootc 689. Alb3n). Rev Uo1'd Gnmm,
pastor, Suod3) School 10 am; worhs•p
sel"'.te II am. t\erung &lt;el"'iCC 7 pm. \\ed.
pra) er m«Uog 7 pm

Ra""'n. Sunda) hen1ng ? p m,
Tbursda) Semce 7 p.m.
SJruru.e \ll"fon
1411 B:tdgeman St, Syracllle Pastor
Rev Roy Thompson Sunday School 10
am. henmg 6 p m.. 1\ edncsd:ly Semce
7pm.
llattl ( ommunit) Cburrh
Off Rt 124. Pastor l:dsel lim. Sundiy
&amp;~ool 9"30 m.. \\orsb1p 10:30 a.m.
7 lOpm.

\II, Olhe l nitre! \ll'lhodi&lt;t
Off IU be und \\Illes&gt; lc l'll•tor Re•
Ralph Spii&lt;'S, Sunda) S,hool 9c'll am.,
\\'ur,hlp 10:10 an. 7 pm J'hursda)
Serv1cr&lt; 7 p.m.

\liddlrporf Church of the :'laTJ~rtne
Pastor: Leonard Powell. Sanlby School •
~30 a.m.,Worsh1p 10:.10 a.m.. 6:30p.m
\\edncsda) SmiLe' 7 p.m .•

ll)n•ille ('ommunlt) Churrh
School 9 lO am., \\orsbip
10:10om. 7pm.
\lorw t'haP&lt;I ('hun:h
Sunda) scbool 10 a.m. \\orsh1p
II
a.m.. Wednesda) Sen ICC· 7 p.m.

\fl'i!;' fcHIIK'lUiht' l'.trhh
-""rthe"'' c Justa, Alfred. 1'.11to1' c.cue
c:l~&gt;d\\10 Sund") S&lt;hl"'l
9:111 ,, n1.,
\lt&gt;rshlp II o1 m, ~ .11 p.m.

Rt"&lt;d~•ille FeiiO\lship
ol the 1\azarene. Pastor· Russell
( ar&lt;on • Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
\\ohhip 10:-15 a.m., 7 p.m. \\cdo(,d3)
Services 7 p.m.

t:lilh Gt"J&gt;d C'hu«h
l.ong Bt&gt;ltom. Sunday Sehoul • &lt;l )II am ..
WnrshiJl
10:4~ IIIII, 7.10 p.m.
\1 ednc,d.1) 7· .10 p m

S)rdl'""' Church of the '\v.al\'nr
Pastor Shannon HutchiSon Sunday
\\orsh1p
10 lO a.m. ~ p.m. \\ed
Se!"'tees 7 p m

l·ull G"'lll:l li~hthuu\1'
Pomero), P.Shlf' Ro)
Hunter. Sunday ~.:hool W am .• &amp; 7·30
1\'e.JnesJJ) Elerun~ 7·!0 p m.

l'on1ero) ('hureh oflhe '\aul\'D&lt;

'&gt;outh Rcthtl ( onuuunll) t 'hurch
Sll,er R1d~e Pa&lt;tor Linda Damewood,

llarlfurd Chun·h of C'hrht in
thrhtiiln l ninn

('ht.,.ttr

Jlartford \\ \ • P•stor \hkc Pul'k.'
Sund.11 SohMI 9·)0 a.m. llorshlp
I0. 10 a m • 7 00 p. m . 1\ednesdav
'Setvltt• 7 ')() p.m.

Pa&lt;tor. J1m C'Nbllt, l\or&lt;h1p V m.,
Sunda) School
10 a m. • I hundJI
Semces 7 p 'll.

Church of God

Joppa

Churc~

~und•y

Suoda) School 9 am. Wocslup Servi...:
10 a.m 2nd nod 4tb SUDday
\arleton lntrrdrnominational Cbureh
Km bury Road, Pastor Robc-:t \Wict.
Sunday Sc~ool 9.30 l.'D. \\orslup
Sen ICe u; JU "'m .• Eve,mg Serv1ce 6
p.m.
frnilom G"'P&lt;'I \li"ion
Hald Knoh, on Co. Rd 31, Pastor· Rev.
Rog(r Willi ord, !unday School 9: 10
a.m Wl&gt;nh•p 7 p.m.
\I hite\ ( hajl&lt;'l \leJ&gt;It)an
CoolVIlle Road, Pastor: Rev. Clar'cs
Mart10dale Sun School
9·30 am
\\. nbJp- 10:30 3.m., Wed. Sel"\lCe 7 p m.

f aln lew llihle Church
lct:m. \\ Va. Rt I, Pastor. Bnao May
Sunday School 9:30Lm.. \\ rslup. 7.00
p.m. \\i:dotSlby B1ble Study -'()()p.m.
• aitb hllow,bip Cru&gt;ide for ( bmt
Pastor Re• FmUm D1de~. Sen .cc
Fnday, 7 pm.

C:ih&amp;J1 B•ble Churrh
Pcmeroy Pike, Co Rd. Pastor· Rev
B!Jcbood Sunlby School 9·10 am.
\\onb1p 10·30 a.m., 7 30 p.m ..
Wedncslby Semce. , ..lO p.m.
Sti~&lt;r,•Hir Communi!) Church
Sunda)' School 10:00 am, Sunday Worship
II :00 am, Wednesday 7:00 pm Pastor
Rryan &amp; \11ssy Dailey
Rcjoidn~
~no

l.ife Chun:h

;-.;. 2nd Ave.. Middleport, Pa;ror:

.\!Jke foreu1an. Pallor fmeritus Lawrence
Fortnun, Worsh1p- 10:00 am
Wednesday Sel"\lces 7 p.m.
llinon Tabtmade Churrh
Clifton, \\'.\a., Sunda) SchoOl I'I a.m.
1\orsbip } p 'll, \l'ednesda) Semc-e • "
p.m.
Full G"'!* Chun:b

or tht' Lh lo~ S..'ior
Rtl38. AnllqUII). Pastor: Jesse Moms.

'&gt;emc:t$ Satunla) ~ 00 p m.
.~altm Communi!) Cbun:b
Bact or West C'olumbt3, \\ \aom Lieving
Road. Pastor Charles Roush t3MJ 6i~·
2288. Sunda) ~chool 9:30 am, Suada)
e\Cmog semce 7·00 pm. B1~l)' Stndy
\ledoesday semce ;·oo pm

Hohson Chrhtian Fello.,,hip Church
!'astor· ller&gt;Chel \\'bite Sunda) School·
10 am. Sunday Chul'&lt;h servie&lt; 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Re,coration Chrbtian Fello &gt;~ ,hip
'IJM Hooper Road, Athens, Pastor
l.onnae Coat&lt;, Sunda) Worsh1p 10:00 am.
\\ ednesda) . 7 pm
llou"' of Ilea ling \linhtrir-.
St. RL 11~ l.an~"ille, OH
f .U Gospel. Cl Pastors Robcn &amp; Robert3
Mussu, Sanda) School 9:30 iim ••
\\orsb1p 10. JO am • ; 00 pm. \\cJ.
Stmce 7·00pm
Ttam Jrsu, Mini-ui..,
Pastor. F.ddie Batr M~ting 333
Mechanic Strffi. l'ome!D). OH
Se1"11ce e' ei) SWlday II 00 a.m.

Pentecostal
Penltro,1al -''-tmbl)
Pa&lt;tor St. Rt. 124. Rac10e, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m., E-ening • 7
p.m.. Wednesday Serv1ccs 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
H:~rri,om ille l're.h) terian

Church
Paswr: Rev. Oa' id Faulkner. \\orsh1p •
9:00 n m. Sunday
\liddleport Pre.b) terlan
Pa&lt;t(&gt;r: James Sn)dcr. Sunda) S•hool 10
a.m, 11orship &gt;ci"''JCe II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist
S~'enth·ll3) \d&gt;·mti't
Mul'lcuy !Its. Rd. Pomc~y. Saturd.t)
Semces Sabbath School
~ p.m .•
1\orship 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hrnnoo l nitre! 81\'thrtll
In l'hrl't Om reb
Tetu Commurut) ~II \\lck!wn Rd.
Pastor Pttcr Maruodalt. Sunday S~bool •
9. lO a.m.. \\orship • 10:30 a.m.. 7.00
p m.• \\cdnesda) Scmce&gt; 7·00 p m.
Youth ptlllp mtetm£ 2od &amp;: .ttb Sund:l) s
7pm.
Fdrn l nited Brethren in C'hri-1
Stale Route 124, bet11een ReedsVILe &amp;
Hock1n~pM. Sunday Srhool • 10 J.m..
:O.onday \\orsh1p 11:00 a.m. Wednesday
Senicts • 7:00 p m. Pa&gt;tor· ~~ Adam
Will

.H~SIIII:md. Rood,

Church a .n nouncements sponsored by these area merc hants
"Let )OUr hght so shme
men. that the) ma) see )OU
good '' orks and glonf} you
father in heaven."
,\1auhew 5: I

Bill Quickel

.~

499 Rit'.hland A\'enue, Athens
740-594-6333
1-SU0-451-9806

ISI)rr, ~nbrrson.

JHd9amrl

jfunrral ~omr
\tiddlqx•rt, Oil

7411-991-5141

Jamt'l&gt; Andtrson. Adam 'h l)unlrl·
Dirtdors
Pomtro), OH 7~0-992·5-U4

II

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Let your light so slline before
men, that they may see your
good worh and glorify your
Father in JreO\'C/1."
Matthell' 5:16

992·6677

White Funeral Home "For God so lo\'ed the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Since 1858
world that he gave his one
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
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God and man."
and only Son ..."
shall
see
God.
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John3:16
Acts 24:16
Matthew 5.~8
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•f.tt our famlly Mp
pi'OI«I ~ur family •

Suppression • E.\tingu1sher.; • Spnn!Jers
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800) 353.0837 fa,

l1te Lord does notlouk at tilt thing\
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outK·ard apptaranu, tht Lord looks
tht lu.•af1.
2 Samut/16-7b

at

�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 5,

Church Notebook

A Hunger for More
If there is anything that
is especially challenging
to a material-minded civilization such as the one
in which we live. it is the
inescapable fact that we
have been created as spiritual beings. As evidenced by not only our
ability to comprehend
abstract and complex
themes such as love,
freedom. beauty, and
grace, but also our NEED
to articulate and develop
them. there is in the
human soul a spark that
reflects the image of the
Giver of that .spark God Himself.
Throughout history, we
see the ebb and flow of
the manifestations of that
spark as our spiritual
yearnings lift our eyes
from the "mundane"
affairs of everyday life
and cause us to reflect on
eternal things. But therein lies a great danger
waiting to ensnare us
should w~ haphazardly
plunge into the spiritual
world heedless of its various perils. For if it is
spiritually lethal to deny
spiritual reality. it is also
a grave and disastrous
matter to tum to spiritual
ideas and te'hchings that
mas9uerade as truth bltt
are, m fact, deceptions.
During our brief visit
on planet earth, our pilgrimage through life
places us upon a path that
has "hiding in the rocks"
of our circumstances, a
band of robbers ready to
attack and place mto
bondage the unwary
(similar to the traveler
mentioned
in
Luke
10:30) only these
"robbers" are spiritual
beings which war with
God upon the battlctield
of human history.
I realize such discussion is often unpleasant
and uncomfortable (as
well it '\hould he), hut let
us entertain for a moment
that there are indeed spiritual forces at work in the
world and many of these
are not benevolent or
benign, but are mstead
malevolent and cunning.
" ... Our struggle is not
against flesh and blood,
but against the rulers,
against the authorities,
against the powers of this
dark world and against
the spiritual forces of evil
in the heavenly realms"
(Ephesians 6:12 NlV).

defeated people. If he can
deceive us into not heeding nod'c; warnings and
lo\ HlJ .tppeals to turn to
Him and repent of our
own waywardness, we
are a people who are perishing. If he can throw
enough of the "dust" of
confusion and doubt into
the air when the Truth is
presented to us, we may
hesitate ju!'&gt;t long enough
Thorn Mollohan
to miss our windows of
grace
and
remain
The forces of evil are enslaved to our passions
not primarily s.octetal ills and pride, or worse,
(although such problems shackled to spiritual
,eep
are manifestations of the powers that work
us
from
a
saving
knowlreality of that evil). The
dark powers are not polit- edge of Jesu:-. Christ.
Consider this deceivical parties (although it
must be said that parties er's "modus operandi"
and politicians can det1- throughout the account
nitely be influenced and of the Scriptures and it
mampulated by such becomes clear that it is as
forces). The "bad guys" Jesus declares in John
in this world are not even 8:44b, that'' ... (the devil)
other religions (although was a murderer from the
anything that steers us beginning. not holding to
from the truth of the the truth, for there is no
Gospel is a tool or means truth in him. When he
to thwart God's will for lies, he speaks his native
our lives). No. the real language, for he is a liar
"bad guys"
moving and the father of lies.''
Humanity's
initial
behind the scenes and
opposing God's activity plummet from his special
and lordship over His position in walking with
creation are spiritual God at the beginning of
time was triggered by the
bemgs.
crafty
guile of this great
The prince of these
spiritual beings at war adversary. "Now the serwith the God and the pent was more crafty
eternal hope that we have than any of the wild aniin Christ is generally mals the LORD God had
referred
to
in the made. He said to the
Scriptures as "the devil." woman, 'Did God really
Satan, as he is also fre- say. ''You must not eat
quently called (which from any tree in the garmeans "accuser" or den"?' The woman said
sometimes "adversarv''), to the serpent. 'We may
delights in our mist'or- eat fruit from the trt~es in
tune. gloats in our rebel- the garden, but God did
lion against God. and say, "You must not cat
finds his greatest plea- fruit from the tree that is
sure in our rejection of in the middle of the garGod's offer of hope den, and you must not
through Jesus. Hence the touch it, or you will
Biblical admonition to. die."' 'You will not sure"Be careful! Watch out ly die,' the serpent said to
for attacks from the the woman. 'For God
Devil. your great enemy knows that when you eat
He prowls around like a of it your eyes will be
roanng lion, looking for opened, .and you will be
some victim to devour" like God. knowing good
and evil'" (Genesis 3:1-3
( 1 Peter 5:8 .i'i'Ln.
Setting aside what .t-.1V).
And so, as our first
Hollywood may sensaancestors hearkened to
tionally tell us in O!Jr cin
emas or even on our tele- his voice. they rejected
vision or ·nvo screens. the love and Law of God,
chief among the deadly ushering in the bitter fruit
tools. that comprise this of that rebellion. And
enemy's repertoire is the .still, though the Lord
tool of deceit. If he can gracefully did not cast us
simply deceive us into away. but immediately
not
trusting
God's began the great work of
promises, we are a rebuilding connections

2010

Fall fundraiser at McDaniel Crossroads

with His broken creation.
the devil continues to
attempt to thwart and disturb God's people. seeking again and again to
deceive them into turning
aside from God's will
and Word. Though the
evil one is largely successful in his purpose to
"lead the whole world
astray"
(Revelation
12:9). and the bitter consequences of such successful deception wracks
our planet with pain. take
care to simply look to the
Truth (which is Jesus
Christ, see John 14:6),
trust Him. obey Him, and
know that you are secure
in your victory.
Do not treat as trivial
the spiritual messages
constantly beamed your
way but consider carefully how the things in
which you trust stack up
against the truth of
Christ. Cultivate a real
and abiding relationship
with God through the
reading of His Bible and
through prayer. And as
you become a student of
God's Word, "do not
believe every spirit, but
test the spirits to see
whether they are from
God, because many false
prophets have gone into
the world" (1 John 4: 1
NIV).
We live in a serious age
among conflicting and
contradictory philosophies wielded by ancient
spiritual powers seeking
to lead us astray. Choose
wisely then the voices to
which you listen. But
remember this too, "You
are from God. little children, and you have con-.
quered them, because the
One Who is in you is
~r~ater than th~.one who
as m the world (1 John
4:4 HCS).
_(71wm. Mollohan .a~td
Ius fa~mly have muu~tered m southern Oht?
the pmt 15 ? vears and ts
the author of 71te Fmry
Tale Parables He is the
pastor
of Pathway
Commumty Church and
may be reached for comments or questions by
email
at
pastorthom @pathwaygallipolis.com.)
Copyright© 2010,
Tlwm Mollohan.

PATRIOT - McDaniel Crossroads Church will
host its fall fundraiser at 5 p.m .• Friday, Nov. 5 at the
church, located at 2600 Cadmus Road, Patriot. An
auction will begin at 6 p.m. TI1e meal will includ'
beans and combread, hot dogs and sauce, dessert
. beverages. The event is sponsored by the McDanie ;
Crossroads Church Women's Ministries.
.

Simpson Chapel Christmas bazaar
RIO GRANDI:.
Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Church w1Jl host a Christmas bazaar from
10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 6. Crafts. baked
goods and door prizes will be available. Chicken and
noodles will be available for lunch. Simpson Chapel
UMC IS located on Lake Drive in Rio Grande. For
information. call 245-5126 or 379-2114.

'
•
:
·

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

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

Captive Free at New Life Lutheran
GALLIPOLIS - Captive Free East Lakes youth
ministry team will be at New Life Lutheran Church at
7 p.m., Sunday, :Nov. 7. The group of six young adults
minister with music, testimonies and puppetry and are
an inspiration to people of all ages. The program is
open to the public and admission is free. New Life
Lutheran Church is located at 900 Jackson Pike.

·
•
.
·

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

Women's conference
at Rodney Pike COG
RODNEY - Rodney Pike Church of God will host .
12-13. The ~
guest speakeris Jaqui Smith, a national evangelist an.
gifted prophetess. The cunfereu~.:e will kick off at
p.m. on Fnday, Nov. 12 with a rally.Minister of Mus
Rob Neal will lead praise and worship. The Adoration
Dance Team will present liturgical dance and drama..
The conference will continue at I 0 a.m. 011 Saturday. ·
Nov. 13. The registration fee is $6. A banquet ""ill fol- .
low the Saturday sess1on. Tickets are $6. To register..
call Rodney Pike Church of God at 245-9518.

I its 2010 Women's Conference on Nov.

Choir at Crown City Wesleyan
CROWN CITY- The God's Bible School College
Choir will present a concca1 at 6 p.m .. Saturday, Nov.
20 at Crown City Wesleyan Church. The church is
located at 26144 Ohio 7, Crown City. For information. call 256-6993.

:
·
•
·
:

The sponsors of. this church page do so "'ith pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

s

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If ye abide in Me. and¥&gt;'
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John 15:7

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•

�c a

l
PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 5,

2010

Grandparents should be
Holiness or
concerned about the messes craziness?' Part 3
. u r son, Keithen, and
his family live approximately four hours from
here in Ada, Ohio.
Recently. I took some
time on a Monday to go
, and spend the evening
with them. I love Keithen
and Jessica, but they
have two children with
whom I actually wanted
to spend the evening.
You grandparents certainly know how that
goes.
Granddaughter
Kinsley, nearly three
years-old, was evidently
cheered to hear that her
Pawpaw Branch was
coming to visit with her.
Upon my arrival, I was
particularly gratified to
see her come out of the
house to greet me and
gesture for me to scoop
her up in my arms.
Soon after, I gave
sley and her brother,
en,
Pawpaw-pre•
sents,
which
they
absolutely diq not need,
but you grandparents certainly know how that
goes. Anyway, Kinsley
proceeded to command
my attention by engaging
me in playing and chatting.
But, at one point, it
became the evident concern of her mother that
Kinsley had allowed her
room to become too
messy. Kinsley was
directed to stop playing
with
Pawpaw
long
enough to go straighten

Ron Branch
up her room somewhat.
Kinsley's countenance
fell as she looked upward
at me. I knew instantly
what she was asking
without verbalizing it she wanted her Pawpaw
to help her. So, I volunteered, "I will help Miss
Kinsley with her room."
Thereupon, she reached
up quickly grabbing the
index finger on my left
hand to escort me. As we
neared her room, she
said. "Pawpaw, I show
you how to clean up my
messes."
With that, she ran into
her room and, after jumping up on her bed, nestled
cozily in it. From there.
she began to prescribe
authoritatively.
'That
goes
over
there.
Pawpaw.'' Clothing by
clothing, doll by doll,
and book by book she
directed where each item
should be placed, regardless whether it belonged
there or not. I was told to
put books on top of cloth-

ing, and clothing on top
of her dresser instead of a
drawer. All of the dolls
went on the bed with her.
Once I suggested she
should get down and
help. but she puckered up
and said, "No, Pawpaw,
you do it."
Having ruminated on
this Pawpaw I granddaughter
interaction
since, 1 am moved that it
manifests a compelling
spiritual tmth for nil of us
to consider. After all,
have you ever noticed
how so often we allow
our lives to get messed
up because of the consequences of improper
decisions, poor judgments, lazy management,
and unwillingness to take
personal responsibility?
But, what makes it more
poignant is how, after we
grow weary of lounging
around in the· messes we
make, we expect God to
tidy things up while we
simultaneously try to
direct God how He
should restore things.
That is exactly the attitude of the corporate
postmodem church. The
church sees itself existing in the midst of a
messed up society, and
we self-righteously complain about it. Secular
immoralities surround
the piety of the church,
and we opicye long and
loud from our pulpits and
in our church meetings
how things ought to be.

The Bible and corn
I have a question for
you to ponder: ... What
do The Holy Bible and
almost completely
n cob of field corn
. .e in common?
"In the beginning" all
the corn planted in the
field from whence came
this particular cob was
intended for a certain
farmer's cows. They
never got to taste this
com.
Instead, it was eaten
by one of the many deer
that routinely pilfer this
farmer's
corn.
He
brought me what was
left so I could see, firsthand, the actual damage
deer do.
At
least
in
Pennsylvania, if not
here in Ohio, deer regularly break through
barbed-wire fences to
access farmers' fields.
This causes farmers a
lot of aggravation and
stress for rather obvious
reasons: not only do
y have to mend those
ces; they might also
ve to go looking for
some cow(s) that found
the break in the fence
and wandered off.
Given that deer do
what comes natural to
them, I've met many a
farmer who holds that
"the only good deer is a
dead deer!" Put yourself in their shoes. and
you' 11 better appreciate
their concern for the
bottom line.
The crops farmers
plant are meant to sustain their cattle, their
other farm animals and,
to some extent, them
and their families, too.
However, if something
else gets a hold of it

t

Case in point: there
came a time when
Thomas Jefferson sat at
his desk with two
copies of the same
Bible, a pair of scissors,
and then excised from
each Bible the portions
of Scripture he particularly liked. What he
didn't went into his
"circular file.''
Jefferson . then proThomas Johnson
ceeded to paste his preferred passages into yet
book
with
first
say,
for another
blank
pa~es,
thus
makinstance, a deer - then
the rule of "first come, ing for h1mself his own
version of the Bible.
first served" applies.
This
final
product
Now, let's imagine
lacked the cohesiveness
that ear of corn repreand integrity of the
sents The Holy Bible.
original - much like
Personally, I have no the remnant of the ear
problem
whatsoever of corn which now
with God's Word, and I occupies a spot on my
regularly use the New desk: it's there alright,
King James Version.
but worthless to man
However,
if you and beast alike!
should want someone of
With respect to whatgreater import to render ever versiOn of The
a more substantial vali- Bible we prefer. that
dation of God's Word, be,ing a non-issue for
then I recommend the him,
John
Wesley
Apostle Paul as "the advised
the
early
man." Writing to his Methodists to "live and
protege, Timothy, Paul let live." Better to read
endorsed the Scriptures one than none!
as being "given by
However, let's get
inspiration of God, and real and concede the
profitable for doctrine, obvious: neither readreproof, correction, and ing the Bible nor,
instruction in righteous- worse, believing what it
ness" (2 Tim. 3:16).
says is happening today
There it is, in a nut- on the scale we'd preshell: the most inclusive fer!
Notwithstanding
and positive commen- our opmion on the matdation of the Bible any- ter, surely God is even
one could ever possibly more upset and perhope to obt.ain. Even so, turbed!
God's Word is one of
I've discerned an
those things some peo- overt tendency on the
ple simply cannot leave part of some people
alone - and for what- within the Church, no
ever reason(s) will tam- Jess, to try and strike a
balance between the
per with.

Jl

We express burden about
Last week were dealt
the need for others to get with the issue of holiright with God while we ness vs. craziness. I
wait for God to do some- asked the questions: Are
thing about it. We try to we to be holy? And if so,
direct God to act in judg- then how? To which I
ment :.ithout realizing , am still waiting for more
that
JUdgment must responses to· it. 1 will
begin at the house of 1 comment on some of the
God." All this we pontif- emails I will receive on
icate from the cozy spiri- this subje~.
tual confines of our saneI would also like to
tuaries.
clarify a comment that I
The reason that our made in the previous
societal and moral sur- article which sounded
roundings have become like I was being critical
s6 messed up is. because of women that wear
the church has become skirts and not pants and
too cozy in its position. men that wear suits as
The church has come to being pure craziness.
purposely ignore the This is not so. If your
importance of spiritual convictions as a woman
application where we fall is to wear skirts in order
on our knees in prayers to honor the Lord from a
of confession and repen- biblical worldview, then
tance. The church has it is great! But . certain
forgotten the need for attire does not guaranvirtual. vivacious, and tee, nor does it welcome
verbal presence to active- the presence of God in a
ly set things to right. church or does not even
Things will never get put please God when the
back right until the heart is wicked and thus
church quits trying to tell revealed by actions,
such as rejection of othGod, "You do it."
In so many terms, this ers including racism.
is a grandparent thing, This is not of G'od and
because our grandchil- it's
not
holiness.
dren will certainly suffer Holiness is a matter of
the consequences if we the heart first and foredo not do something most. I just wanted to
about it now.
clarify that paragraph in
(Rev. Ron Branch is order to not be misunpastor of Faith Baptist derstood.
Church in Mason, WVa.)
We ended the article
by saying that when
holiness is applied for
the first time in any area
of our lives, a reformation takes place. To be
world and the Word of biblically reformed is to
God. Consider that the be made biblically holy.
writer of Hebrews In other words, in order
describes this word of to accept, live and pracGod as ''living and tice holiness living, a
powerful, sharper than reformation in the mind
any two-edged sword ··· and heart of the believer
a discerner of the
thoughts and intents of has already taken place.
the heart" (4: 12). Wow!
I trust that with this
That's powerful stuff!
article as well as others
And yet there are that I don't come across
those who actively and like I am "holier than
aggressively endeavor thou" kind of a guy. I do
to "water-down" God's recognize my faults and
Word, and even to say continue to pursue the
things the Bible never path of holiness in every
said. BEWARE those area of my life. But can
preachers who say what I tell ya that the area that
·others like to hear! The lacks holiness in most of
false prophets of the us is in the area of the
Old Testament did like- mind? Our mind, where
wise, and like them the battlefield is, 1s
many
modern-day filled with unholy thinkpreachers have sold out ing. As a result, the
to those with "itchy'' comments.
attitudes.
ears ( 2 Tim. 4 :3 - 4 ).
and reactions to life
This is not God's
plan! God made His itself will reveal our true
Word available to His holiness.
Furthermore, holiness
people, to us, to ·be the
lens through which we is also revealed in the
might see the evil and natural. In other words,
suffering in the world, when living a life of
and the means whereby ' holiness according to
we
can effectively scripture, then it is Jived
address all such prob- out in the natural
lems. If, however, we world. Speaking from a
try to make God's Word biblical standpoint, l'd
conform to ~~e worl.d, like to use two scripcurrent ~ondltlons w1ll tures to bring out a topic
never 1mprove and, that has become quite
worse, we, betray our popular in this day and
Lord. Let s not go
there!
age.
God's Word is heavThe two scripture are:
en-sent
soul
food. Heb
12:14
(KJV)
When tampered with, "Follow peace with all
it's no better than junk men, and holiness, withfood!
out which no man shall
(Rev.
Thomas see the Lord: .. .''; 1
Johnson is pastor · of Thess 4:7 (KJV) For
Trinity
Church
in God 'hath not called us
Pomeroy, Ohio.)
unto uncleanness. but

Alex Colo11
unto holiness.
Now, with these two
scriptures we can conclude that no man will ·
see the Lord without' '
holiness. So, does this
mean that the person
who is made righteous
(saved) in Christ but has
not become holy is not
going to make it through
the gates of heaven? Of
course not! That is not
what this verse is saying. Holiness in this
verse speaks of being
called out, as the ecclesia or the church of
Christ. On the other
hand, we must be
cleansed and holy not
unclean.
These verses sometimes create a lot of controversies m biblical
interpretation but it
should not. But suffice it .
to say that being saved
includes a type of holiness, which is to be
called out, while the ·
other holiness is to. be
set apart from sin,
world. etc.
With that in mind, I'd
like to open up a topic,.
that I would like to
receive some feedback
from you on our email at
lighthouseagpastor@ya
hoo.com and let us
know what you think
about it.
The topic to center our _
discussion is one that
most people do not want
to deal with, yet much
criticism is often found
from different people,
while on the other hand,
to others, is not a major ·
problem at all.
The topic is this: From
a biblical perspective, is
God in favor of, or does ,
God approve of tattooing our physical 'bodies.
or not? I think that this ·
is one subject that must •
be dealt with In our:
Christian communities·
due to the fact that such :
trend is very expressive
in this day and age. ·
Regardless of its expres- ·
siveness, is it ok to tat-:
too our bodies in the
context of holiness?:
Something to think :
about, consider and:
come to a biblical con- :
elusion so that both :
those that have gotten:
their tattoos as well as :
those that don't, be holy:
like our Father in heav- :
en is holy. r m looking :
forward to your com- :
•
ments.
Make it a great Day! :
(Rev. Alex Co/611 is·
pastor of Lighthouse:
Assembly of God in
Gallipolis, Ohio. Online:·
www.lagohio.org.)
:

�}

Page AS • The Dail) Sentinel

www.m)Jail)·scntinel.com

Friday, November 5, 2010

Ear
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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Bengals, Browns, and Steelers, Page 82
NCAA freshman class, ,Page B3

•

PORTS

Roush receives honor from W.Va. Golf
Course Superintendents Association

LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY -

hrgh

A schedule of upcom1ng

cchool varsity $pOtting

Friday, November 5, 2010

ev~mtg

1nvolv1ng teams from Meigs. Mason and
Gallia counties .

.E.ti.Qn November 5
Football
Buffalo at Wahama, 7:30 p.m.
Chapmanville at Poi nt Pleasant,
7:30p.m.
Hannan at Burch, 7:30 p.m.

SENTINEL S TAFF
MDSSPOATS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

MO R GANTOWN.
W.Va. - On Tuesday,
Nov. 2, the West Virginia
Golf
Course
Superintendents
Association held its
awards
dinner
in
Morgantown, W.Va.
The
Lifetime
Achievement Award was
presented to Gary Roush,
owner and superinten·dent of Riverside Golf

Saturday. November 6
Cross Country
ctlio State IX Chanpiooships
Bt 9::.i.oto LbM'JS in Cl:&gt;lwt&gt;~
Division Ill Boys, 11:05 a.m.
Division II Boys. 11:50 a.m
D1vision 1 Boys. 12:35 p.m.
DIVISion Ill Girls, 1:20 p.m.
Division II Girls, 2:05p.m.
D1vis1on I G1rls, 2:50p.m.
·-The OVP area has one competitor each in the D-3 and D-2 boys
races. as well as two runners 1n the
D-2 girls event

Club in Mason. W.Va.
Roush entered the golf
course industry with the
purchase of a nine hole
f!Olf course in M ason,
W.Va. Roush - who
.was a building contractor
by trade - joined the
WVGSA. WVGA, and
the GCSAA in 1974 to
learn as much as he could
about the game and business that he believed was
a good investment. He
took the first of many big
steps in his career in

1976 by expanding the
course to 18 holes, doing
much of the labor himself. He became a well
respected member of the
golfing
communities
with his passionate love
of the rules of the game
and the sportsmanship of
the golf community. In
1996, Roush was asked
to join the WVGA committee and in 1998 he
became a member of the

Please see Roush. 83

2010 football
statistics needed
•

•

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

RedStorm
hoops opens
with Giovanni's
Classic this
weekend
BY

M ARK W ILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- The 20 I 0- II basketball season opens this
weekend at the Newt
Oliver Arena with the 3rd
Annual Giovanni ·s TipOff Classic. Rio Grande,
8 )hio-Chillicothe. Bethel
- IN)
College.
and
Pikeville College will
make up the field for the
two-day event.
Rio Grande will tangle
with Ohio-Chillicothe on
Friday at 6 p.m., in the
second game of the night.
Pikeville College, from
the
Mid-South
Conference. and Bethel
will begin the day at 4
p.m.
"It's a very exciting
time, any time you tip-off
to start a new season. but
going into my fifth year
now, I'm as excited or
maybe more excited
about this opener than I
was about any of the ones
in the past, just because
of what we went through
last year, plus the group
that we've got together.
I' m excitetl to see them
g row and mature and
develop that cohesivess on the tloor," said
o Grande head coach
Ken French. "It's going
• to be very, very exciting
and it's going to be a
good classic."
"We've got good teams
coming in, Pikeville has
already
played
the
University of Kentucky
and they've also got a
win under the belt.
against Temple Baptist.
so they've got two games

Please see Rio, 83
I

Kirthmon Dozier/Detroit Free Press/MCT

Tigers manager Sparky Anderson stands in the
dugout at the last home game against Baltimore
September 21 1995 ip Detroit, Michigan. The former
Hall of Fame manager died Thursday at age 76.
1

Hall of Fame manager
Sparky Anderson dead at 76
J OE K AY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Reds fans were taken
aback when Sparky
Anderson showed up in
Cincinnati for his first
day as a big league manager, an unknown taking
o~·er baseball's tirst professional team.
Sparky who?
Really?
By the time he was
done, this man with the
shock of white hair and
schoolboy
nickname
would produce a mighty
list of achievements that
featured three World
Series titles - including
crowns in each league and a Hall of Fame entry
on his resume.
Anderson. who directed the Big Red Machine
to back-to-back championships and won another
in
Detroit,
died
Thursday from complications of dementia in
Thousand Oaks, Calif.
He was 76. A day earlier.
his family said he'd been
placed in hospice care.
Anderson was the first
manager to win World
Series titles in both
leagues and the only
manager to lead two
franchises in career
W111S.

"Sparky was, by far,
the best manager I ever
played for." said former
Reds star Pete Rose, the
game's
career
hits
leader. "He understood
people better th:~n anyone I ever met. H1s players loved him. he loved
his players, and he loved
the oame of baseball.
Ther~ isn't another person in baseball like
Sparky Anderson. He
gave his whole life to the
game."
Anderson's teams in
Cincinnati
featuring
Johnny
Bench. Joe
Morgan and_ Rose that
won crowns m 1975 and
1976 rank among the
most powerful ot all
time. Led by Kirk
Gibson
and
Alan
Trammell,
Anderson
won with the Tigers in
1984.
" He was a good guy,"
former Tigers pitcher
Jack Morris said, chokino up over the news.
"Baseball will have very
few pel&gt;ple like Sparky.
He was a unique individual~ He was a character
with a 0ureat passion
and
"
love for the game.
Anderson ~never tried
to
overshadow
his
teams, giving his star~
great leeway while try-

ing to stay in the background. At Anderson's
request. there will be no
funeral or memorial service.
Always affable, ever
talkative and known for
a
se If-deprecating
demeanor. Anderson was
equally popular among
players, fans and media.
·'Revered and treasured by his players for
his humility. humanity,
eternal optimism and
knowledge of the game."
his Hall of Fame plaque
reads .
Baseball
Commissioner
Bud
Selig called Anderson a
gentleman and dear
friend.
"I recall with great
fondness the many hours
we would spend together
when his Tigers came to
Milwaukee,'' Selig said.
"Sparky was a loyal
friend. and whenever I
would be dealing with
difficult situations as
commissioner, he would
lift my spirits. telling me
to keep my head up and
that I was doing the right
thing."
Anderson's win total
of 2, 194 was the third
highest when he retired
after the 1995 season,
trailing only Connie
Mack
and
John
McGraw. He's still sixth
on the career list - he
won 863 games in nine
years with the Reds and
I .331 in 17 seasons with
the Tigers.
Morris helped the
Tigers win their most
recent title. Told of
Anderson's death, he got
emotional during a telephone conversation with
The Associated Press
from his home in the
Twin Cities.
"Wow. He died wa)
too young. T got a lot of
phone calls yesterday
about the hospice and
the dementia, neither of
which 1 knew about. I
wasn't prepared for this .
I don't kml\v what to
say.
I'm
kind
of
shocked, .. Morris said.
"He was a big part of
my life, for sure. He had
a lot to do with molding
me professionally and
taught me a lot about
perseverance.,.
Anderson knew all
about perseverance.
George
"Sparky"
Anderson got his nickname in the minor
leagues because of his
spirited play. He made it
to the majors for only

Please see Sparky, 84

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journai/MCT

Cleveland Browns running back Peyton Hillis runs over Cincinnati Bengals defenders Adam Jones (24) , Keith Rivers, a nd Dhani Jones during a third-quarter run.
The Browns defeated the Bengals, 23-20, on Sunday, October 3, at Cleveland
Browns Stadium in Cleveland, Ohio.

Pick 6: Young legs making NFL impact
RICHARD ROSENBLATT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Halfway through the
season. Titans All-Pro
running
back Chris
Johnso'ii is less than onethird of the way to his
stated goal of rushing for
2,500 yards.
While he's got an off
week to figure out how
he's going~ to make up
ground in his attempt to
become the first NFL
player to hit 2.000 yards
twice, there are some
other young legs beginning to get some attention.
Johnson burst into the

NFL with a I ,000-yarcl
season in his rookie year.
and followed it with
2.006 yards last season.
Even though he's way off
that pace. he sttll ranks
third in the league with
721 yards.
Vikings All-Pro Adrian
Peterson is leading the
~FL with 776 yards. followed by the Texans·
Arian Foster, an undrafted free agent in 2009
who ranks second, 39
behind Peterson.
Foster is palt of a Pick
Six of emerging running
backs from the tirst half
of the season:
Arian
Foste1~

Texam: A practice player
last year, a prized possession this season. The 6foot-1. 227-pouncl second-year pro became an
instant star in Week l
with a club-record 231
yards (and three TDs) in
a 34-24 \Vin over the
defending AFC champion Colts. He's run for
I 00-plus ) ards in three
other games and has
seven TDs on the ground.
not to mention 28 catches
for 245' vards and another
TD.
- Darren McFadden,
Raiders: In his third sea-

Please see NFL, 84

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

Recipes should be submitted no later
than Toes~, November 16th.
Please email entries to:
·pcaldwell@ heartlap.dpublications.com

Our Holiday Recipe Guide
will be inserted on
1\tesday, November 23rd, 2010
in The Daily Sentinel,
{ltbe ~allipolis 119ailp tltribune &amp;

'aebe ~oint ~lrasant l\egister

�~-~,------------------

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Novembers,

2010

Ben after 1 month: Good, and gettiilg ~etter Bengals' offense going
PITTSBURGH (AP)
One month after
returning
to
the
Pittsburgh Steelers. Ben
Roethlisberger is an average quarterback.
By his standards, even
if not by anyone else's.
He has five touchdown
passes after three starts.
compared to three a year
ago, but his attempts and
yardage are down. Then .
again. so are his interceptions. He's played one
excellent game, one average game and one admittedly substandard game.
winning two of them.
"I'm leaving plays out
there,"
said
Roethlisberger,
who
grades his play at about a
C. "I think there's a lot of
room for improvement."
While they won't say
so, he's probably right
about where the Steelers
(5-2) expected him to be
- on the field - following the four-game suspension that left him
unable to play or practice
from Sept. 3 through Oct.
3. They knew he would
miss some passes, would
need time after returning
to get his timing and precision back.
"I think he's going to
continue to play better as
he continues to get into
situations and knock the
rust off." coach Mike
Tomlin said. ··The standard is to win a football
game for us. I am less
concerned specifically
with how he plays and
how he plays alone."
Off the field, the twotime Super Bowl winner
is exceeding expectations. Teammates say
he's never looked more
energized while going
through the daily grind of
playing the sport.
He's often the first
player on the field for
routine practices. He also
seems less put out by the
daily rituals than can
quickly become boring to
a player with his cache,
such as the endless meetings. the constant interviews, the tape-watching
and information-processing. No longer does
Roethlisberger treat it
like one big bore.
"'He's like a little kid."
wide receiver Hines
Ward said.
The Steelers always
liked the quarterback
they had before. if not
always the person who
was that quarterback.
They like him even better
now. They expect to like
him even more before the
season ends.
"'I think he's probably
more appreciate of the
mundane, but I don't
think that's earth-shattering," Tomlin said. "When
you lose something for a
period of time that you
enjoy and love to do, you

noWhere on 3rd down

AP Photo/Keith Srakocic

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger just gets rid of the ball as he
is hit by Cleveland Browns linebacker Matt Roth (53) and defensive tackle Shaun
Rogers (92) in the second quarter of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 17, in
Pittsburgh.

gain perspective and
appreciation for it when
it's returned to vou."
For comparison's sake.
Roethlisberger is 52 of
82 for 754 yards. five
touchdowns, two interceptions and six sacks.
Through his first three
games last season, he
was 78 of 109 for 860
yards. three TDs, four
interceptions and seven
sacks.
He's not throwing quite
as much because of the
Steelers'
increased
emphasis on nmning the
ball. although Rashard
Mendenhall doesn't have
a I 00-yan.l game since
Roethlisberger returned.
Mendenhall twice ran for
120 yards or more during
Pittsburgh's first three
game.s.
Roethlisberger felt he
could have played better
. during a 23-22 victory at
Miami on Oct. 24, when
the Steelers didn't score a
touchdown in the second
half and he fumbled near
the goal line. He was
even less pleased after
going 17 of 28 for 195
yards. no touchdowns
and an interception. get-

ting sacked three times day to prepare for
and hit seven other times Monday night's game at
during the 20-10 loss Cincinnati (2-5), which
has lost four in a row.
Sunday at New Orleans.
The Saints also effec- The Bengals twice beat
tively kept him around the Steelers last season.
the line of scrimmage, costing them the AFC
limiting his ability to North title and starting
improvise and create them on a five-game losing streak that ruined
plays while scrambling.
''Good teams are aware . their season.
Roethlisberger hasn't
of how good he is outside
the pocket, so they try to forgotten.
''It's an AFC North
keep him in the pocket,"
game. It's a rivalry.
Ward said.
It was the one game to That's all that you
date
where need." Roethlisberger
Roethlisberger showed said.
With the Steelers
some
rustiness.
He
appeared to have difficul- reaching the midpoint of
ty with the noise inside their season. and games
the Superdome and with against the Patriots ( 6a defense that limited 1). Ravens (5-2), Jets (5him to no completiQn 2) and Raiders ( 4-4)
among those remaining,
longer than 25 yards.
"Teams always try to Roethlisberger is concome after us, we know vinced he's not yet
that,"
Roethlisberger where he will be by the
smd. "We just have to be end of the season .
''I'm always going to
prepared for it and. last
week. I don't think we try to improve, I don't
were as prepared as we care if it's Week I or
Roethlisberger
normally have been. We 20,"
just had an off game, and said. ''There's some
hopefully that doesn't good things and some
happen (again)."
bad things. I'm just tryconstantly
to
Roethlisberger and the ing
Steelers have an extra improve."

Browns' McCoy set to start against Patriots
strong in that direction:' Wednesday - the day
BEREA. Ohio (AP) The plan was to keep Colt Mangini said before Wallace was targeted to
return after Cleveland's
McCoy on the sideline this Thursday's practice.
With 'Wallace and bye week - but wasn't
season so he could learn
for the future. It arrived Delhomme unavailable. satisfied with the way it
responded.
it's the only direction.
quickly.
''I'm just being smart
This will be McCoy's
Now. the Cleveland
Browns can't get the rook- first start at home, where and not trying to rush to
ie quarterback off the Cleveland fans will wel- get back on the field," he
come him with a mon- said. "You know you gotta
tiel d.
McCoy will make his strous ovation. So far, he's be smart with this type of
third consecutive start on 1-1 with a loss to the injury. If it feels good and
Sunday when the Browns Steelers and a win over the you go outside and do
that
you
host the New England Saints, who fell for several something
Patriots, completing a ter- trick plays in a 30-17 loss haven't done in the last
rifying trifecta of games to the Browns two weeks couple weeks. you can
kind of nag it a little bit.
for the third-round pick ago.
·"It was just being smart.
The Browns had hoped
who opened his NFL
career with road games at to have Wallace back this But there was no setbatk:'
Delhomme has not been
Pittsburgh and
New week, but he has not yet
been cleared by doctors. available to the media in
England.
Neither Seneca Wallace Wallace may be able to two weeks. Making his
nor Jake Delhomme have practice on Friday. but by debut for the Browns. the
been able to practice this then the Browns will have 35-year-old hurt his ankle
week as they continue to installed their game plan while throwing a gamerecover from high ankle . for the Patriots. There is a changing interception in
sprains, leaving McCoy as chance, if he's ready. that the Sept. 12 opener against
Buccaneers.
the best option for Browns Wallace could serve as the
Delhomme was inactive
coach .Eric Mangini, who McCoy's backup.
Wallace hasn't played the' next three weeks. but
will be facing mentor and
long-lost friend. Patriots since injuring his ankle on returned as the No. 2 quaragainst
the
Oct. 10 against Atlanta. his terback
coach Bill Belichick.
Mangini. never one to fourth straight start filling Falcons.
Still hobbled by the
reveal his plans in order to in for Delhomrne. who
keep the opposition guess- rolled his ankle in the sea- injury, the only he was
ing. would not go as far as son opener at Tampa Bay. going to play was if
naming McCoy his starter. High anlde sprains typical- Wallace got hurt. Sure
However, he did indicate ly take 4-to-6 weeks to enough. Wallace's ankle
twisted.
forcing
McCoy was his top heal. and Wallace is just got
Delhomme to come in.
one month into recove1y.
choice.
He tested his ankle on Right away. it beeame
"We're moving pretty

apparent he wasn't ready
and he re-injured his
ankle. a setback that eventually led to McCoy's
unexpected rise up the
depth chart.
Mangini denied that
Delhomme came back too
early.
"No, it was a little bit
different deal." he said.
"With any of these things,
1 think when you come
back, regardless of when
you decide to come back.
if you got hit the right way
you've got a chance of reinjuring it."
Not knowing if Wallace
or Delhomme would be
ready, McCoy entered this
week preparing to start.
On Wednesday, he said he
wac; excited about the possibility of playing against
New England's Tom
Brady. a player he has
always admired and one
he has studies religiously
on film.
"Being here. a lot of the
things that we do are from
New England. a lot of the
plays," he said. "So it's
Tom Brady over and over,
especially learning our
offense. He's a tremendous quarterback. There's
a reason they've won three
Super Bowls. The guy is
incredible.

CINCINNATI (AP)
When
Carson
Palmer,
Chad
Ochocinco and Terrell
Owens get together for
the NFL's weekly reality show, they're a collective dud on the most
important down.
The
Cincinnati
Bengals' season· is all
but finished because
their talented passing
game and their oncedependable
running
game go sideways back to the bench when it's time to either
pick up a few more
yards or punt.
The Bengals are 2-5
heading
into
their
Monday night game
against the Pittsburgh
Stee.Jers in large measure because they can't
string
first
downs
together. Palmer is the
AFC's
lowest-rated
passer on third down,
completing fewer than
half his throws.
Overall, the Bengals
convert only 37.3 percent of their third down
chances, which ranks
20th in the league.
The most frustrating
part:
No
common
thread among all the
third-down failures.
''Whatever the case
may be. they're just
tiny things but when
you can't get over that
hump and can't get that
next third down, everything is magnified,"
offensive coordinator
Bob Bratkowski said
Wednesday. "And it
keeps you from running
your offense."
The last loss is the
best example of this
often-lost offense.
The Bengals got the'
opening kickoff and
went 86 yards in 15
plays
against
the
Dolphins, converting
all four of their· thirddown plays in one of
the most impressive drives of the season.
Palmer threw a 7 -yard
touchdown
pass to
Owens on a third-down
play.
Afl~r
that,
the
Bengals converted only
2 of 12 third downs the
rest of the game. They
went three-and-out on
five straight possessions, feeling the boos
that accompanied each
punt on their way to a
22-14 loss.
"Particularly when
you haven't converted
two or three in a row,
then there's a little
more pressure there on
that." Bratkowski said.
"'C'mon. we've got to
get one,· and that's
when people start to
press and get frustrated
and force the issue.
which is not a good
thing.''
A quite unexpected
thing, too.
The Bengals kept the
offense moving last
season by running the
ball. The passing game
finished 26th in the
league, prompting the
decision to sign Owens
and draft tight end
Jermaine Gresham and
slot receiver Jordan

Shipley. The passing
game is much • better,
ranking sixth in the
league. But the running
game is down. third
downs have become a
nightmare. and the
defending AFC North
champs are virtually out
of the race at the season's midpoint.
It's got them puzzled
and frustrated.
"I've come in here the
I ast two weeks and
answered that question,
and I really don't have
an answer for it,"
Owens said Wednesday.
''I have no idea. I have
no answers. For me to
be here. I just want to
do what I'm supposed
to do and try to con.
tribute as best I can.
"So I'm not here to
create any distractions
or what have you. I'm
just here to try to do the
job which they brought
me here to do. I can't
account for anything
else.''
Owens arrived with a
history of secondguessing his quarterbacks and coaches. He's
been careful with his
words so far and kept
his frustrations to himself
·
Ochocinco seems to
be taking it much harder, in part because his
production is down.
Five times. Ochocinco
has been held to four or
fewer catches. He has
only two touchdowns
- Owens has five and hasn't been much
of a factor when th.
game's on the line.
Ochocinco declined
to talk to the media on
Wednesday, a day after
he got emotional on his
cable show with Owens
when the subject of the
Bengals' losing came
up. Owens repeatedly
prodded Ochocinco to
get back to playing the
way he used to play.
"What you want me .
to do?" Ochocinco said,
his voice rising. "I'm
on the field. I'm available. I wear No. 85. I'm
out there. I'm out there
- I'm going to leave it
at that. There's nothing
I can do but make
myself available, period."

Palmer didn't take it
as a dig at the quarterback.
''We're on a fourgame losing skid an.
haven't been productive
on offense,'' Palmer
said. ''We talk every
day. We talk about trying to be more productive and get him the ball
and everybody else on
offense. I am not taking
that as he is calling me
out, but I hear him and I
sense his frustrati'on.
''I'm frustrated with
the same things he is,
and I always try to find
ways to get him the
ball.''

Getvour

sports·

online

.

Wll.mvdailvsentinel.com
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Friday, Novembers,

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The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

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

Barnes head of the freshman class Self-critical Polamalu knows ..
he
can play better
.
1 pick in next year's draft.
First. though, there's that
matter of restoring North
Carolina back as a national championship contender.

It's time to tip off the
college basketball season.
and that means new stars
around the nation are
Brandon·
Knight,
ready to break out. TI1e Kentucky: John Wall left
ual elite teams have Kentucky after one seashmen that are poised son. So did three other
o keep them at the top. freshmen.
Wall was
and eventually show that a among five Kentucky
lasting mark comes not players selected in the first
.with preseason hype, but . round of the NBA draft.
by making an impact in Time to complain? Nah,
March.
not when Ashley Judd is
At least early. one fresh- one of the program's
man stands above the rest biggest backers. And cerof players wearing a col- tainly not when there's
lege uniform for the first Brandon Knight to step in
time.
and till the void of Wall's
North
Carolina's departure. Knight will be
HruTison Barnes became the guard running the
the first freshmru1 to make offense this season - and
The Associated Press pre- it may even run throuoh
season men's basketball him. He's a scorer at heart,
All-America team since ~ut may need to develop
voting be~~n before the mto
. a true.
d distributino
. 0
1986-87 season. Barnes pomt guar . He can get
headlines a list that's sure there under .Cali pari - as
to include some one-and- long as he doesn't resist
done stars as well as four- and try and do too much.
year standouts. You might It's bound to be fun
as well enjoy them now watching. either way.
before their names are
Kyrie Irving, Duke.
called by NBA commis- He's a blossoming star
sioner David Stem.
and may turn out to be
Of course. some may Duke's best player. Kyrie
t live up to the enor- Irving just isn't the best
• lous expectations and freshman in the ACC - at
other more unheralded least not yet. Watchino
freshman may rise and him try and wrest that pre:
become the future stars. season title away from
instead.
Barnes could be another
But for now. as we wait fun chapter in the storied
for the unknowns to sur- history of the Tobacco
Unlike
face. here are six fresh- Road rivals.
men any program would Knight. Irving developed
love to build a March a reputation as a pure
point guard. He can run
Madness 1un around.
Harrison
Barnes, and should be an instant
North Carolina: He's the hit and fit with Nolan
preseason All-American Smith and AP preseason
Kyle
that coach Roy Williams All-American
is counting on to lead the Singler. ff coach Mike
Tar Heels back to the Krzyzewski is going to
NCAA tournament after a lead the Blue Devils to a
stunning fall last season. repeat - yes. we know he
The 6-foot-8 small for- hates that word - the 6-2
ward has already been Irving will be key to cutpraised by Williams for ting down those nets.
Fab Melo, Syracuse.
his tremendous discipline.
focus and desire. But it's How can anyone not love
his polished all-around this name! Consider the
Absolutely
game that really has headlines:
everyone raving. . Barnes. Fab-ulous! Simply Fab. score. rebound and tastic! .Plus. the Ora_nge
already be~n projected have had championship
• y some scouts as the No. luck with a ·'Melo" on

their team (see Anthony.
Carmelo). Melo has more
than a catchy name. He
has the game to go along
(APl
with it. He's the freshman - PITTSBURGH
Getting caught out of
that needs to most work to position. Being a step
hit his potential on this slow on a play. Missing
list, but the 7-foot center tackles. Not making the
has a massive wingspan instinctive plays he
and a sweet game around knows he could make.
the basket. The native of
Steelers tive-time Pro
Brazil was chosen Big Bowl
safety
Troy
East preseason rookie of Polamalu rarely seems to
the year. He's not the only have a bad game, but
freshman to keep an eye Sunday night's 20- W
on this season: The loss to the New Orleans
Orange have a fearsome Saints was one of them.
Polamalu is blaming
freshmen foursome of
Melo, C.J Fair. Dion himself for the defeat,
Waiters and 6-10 center saying he didn't'trust his
Baye Moussa Keita that own instincts to make
should make them a factor plays he knows could
have affected the outin March.
Jared Sullinger, Ohio come. He has done conState. He was a repeat siderable critiquing of
winner of the Ohio himself since then to
Associated Press Mr. avoid having a n::peat
Monday
Basketball award. He was performance
the Naismith Award win- night against Cincinnati.
Polamalu admittedly
ner at the high school
blew
an assignment on
level. Now, he's the latest
wide receiver
in1pressive big man at Saints
Robert Meachem 's 50Ohio State. Sullinger, the yard reception in the
6-foot-9 center/power for- fourth quarter, and he
ward, may tum out as the faults himself for not
best big man in the sport making several plays
this season. He likes to against Saints quarterfinish strong in the post back Drew Brees.
and. fitting for his frame.
"A lot of times you can
is a dominant rebounder. be in the right spot, you
He may not quite play the can be within the scheme
same game as former of the defense. But in my
Buckeyes star Greg Oden. own mind when I know
but. hey. these days that's something's going to
not really a bad thing.
happen and you don't
Enes
Kanter, take advantage of things,
disappointing."
Kentucky; Josh Selby, it's
said
Kansas. Let's call this 6a Polamalu
"Maybe
and 6b. Don't put either Wednesday.
player in your top fresh- only I would know some
man bracket just yet. not . of those things. There
with both still waiting were plays that I knew
clearance from the NCAA were coming that I didn't
to suit up for the opener. react fast enough to.··
Polamalu wouldn't disBut if they get in. watch
cuss
specifics. but said
out. The 6-foot-11 Kanter
there
were
multiple occamust sit out team activities
while the NCAA deter- sions when the Saints·
mines whether he lost his alignment and personnel
him to what was
amateur status while play- alerted
coming. Wary of abaning for a Turkish club doning his assignment,
team. Selby. the overall he chose not to gamble
No. l recruit in the 2010
class. is sitting out while
the NCAA looks at his
relationship -with the business manager for N BA
star Carmelo Anthony.

course.
On the home front.
Roush led the cause to
make Riverside Golf
from Page Bl
Course in the state. In
USGA committee for the 2000, he led the conUS
Public
Links struction crew that built a
Tournament.
He has brand, new plantation
spent his last 15 years style clubhouse with a
sharing his knowledge of fully stocked pro-shop.
the mles throughout the grill and banquet facilities. In 2007, Roush and
state and nation.
In addition to tourna- his crew built two new
ments on the local scene. holes at the n01th end of
Roush has donated the the course complete with
use of his course for the a three acre lake and wetWVGA
Amateur lands are preserved. This
Qualifier. US Public construction allowed the
Links Qualifier, the Top addition of a driving
Flite Junior Tour. as well range to be added to the
as a stop on the WYGA amenities at Riverside.
Roush is quick to
Senior Series each fall.
acknowledge
the profesRiverside Golf Club is
also the home of one of sional growth and pere oldest individual golf sonal development that
•
urnaments in West these organizations have
Virginia. the Riverside allowed him. He cites
Amateur. which has been the networking at meetplayed since 1972 at the ings. personal experi-

ences shared by collea2ues, access to the
review of ne\'l equipment
and participating in
national golf events as
s&lt;;&gt;me of the highlights of
h1s 38 year career.
Roush and his late
wife. Mary. have two
sons. Ty. a professional
golfer with membership
in the Tri-state PGA of
America, and Mitch, who
has followed in his dad's
footsteps as a superintendent Roush is semiretired, but is on call for
his sons who now run the
bus mess.
Roush lives in Mason,
W.Va. with his wife.
Teresa.
and
enjoys
spending time in Florida
during
the
winter
months. Roush's advice
to the next generation is
"stay informed, stay
licensed. and keep learning."

DAN GELSTON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Roush

Rio
fromPageBl
in and Bethel has already
a couple of games."
French added. "Jt will be
very exciting and it
should be some good
basketball for early in the
year."
In the game on Friday
against OU-C. French
knows the Hilltoppers
will play hard and give it
all they have.
"I guarantee you. it's
just like us going to play
Marshall or O.U., it's a
big game for them and
. 's an opportunity for
m to get to go against
•
a level above them,''
French said. "For their
guys. it's an opportunity
to try to prove that they
maybe could have played
at this level..,
''They'll play hard.
they always have,"
French added. "They will
give us a very tough ·
game and they've got a
lot of size this year for a
branch school. they've

got six guys, 6 '4'' or bigger. so that could pose a
problem for us. you
never know."
''We're very excited
about the opener· even
though some people will
say it's a branch school,
it's doesn't matter who
you play in your opener.
everybody's go~ng to
have nerves, everybody's
excited and execution is
not going to be where
you want it to be and
you're going to have segments of the game where
you're going to play well
and you're going to have
segments of the game
where we're going to
take a couple of timeouts
and talk it over," French
said. "We know what to
expect, it's just that we
want to make sure we
bring the energy and passion and enthusiasm to
the game that's needed."
French said that Bethel
will be a very good opponent for his team on
Saturday afternoon.
'
·-rhey·ve got a young
team. they lost some
guys from last year. but
their coach does a great

I

J

J'

by trying to brenk .up a
play. but wishes now he
had.
··In my mind. they
would have been gamechanging
plays,"
Polamalu said. "It's like.
'Man, I knew that play,
and I should have done
something about it.· But
it's also maybe going a
little bit out of the
defense and expectin!! a
little bit more of myself
than I should."
Told of Polamalu's
comments. cornerback
Bryant McFadden said,
''That's the kind of competitor Troy is.''
"Troy is always an Xfactor for us. He's able to
do exceptional things,"
McFadden said. ''We all
want to be as close to
perfection as possible.
close to being where we
need to be as possible at
all times. and sometimes
we fall short ...
Polamalu. 29, docsn 't
believe he's havinQ: a
poor season. suggesting
the Steelers wouldn't be
5-2 if he were. But he
realizes his statiStiCS
infer there's been a dropoff in his play since he
twice injured his left
knee last season. limiting
him to three full games.
His knee feels better
than it has at any time.
since he was initially hurt
in the 2009 opener
against Tennessee. and
he insists it's not a factor.
But with two interceptions, no forced or recovered fumbles and no
sacks as the season nears
its midpoint. Polamalu 's
production i" down from
his last uninterrupted
season.
Polamalu made seven
interceptions while being
chosen first-team All-Pro
during the 2008 season.
when the Steelcrs won
the Super Bowl. He also

had three intercept1ons ~
last season despite missing II full games and·
parts of two others with .
his injured knee.
'
The Steelers· secondary had a not-&lt;;urpris- '
ing falloff once Polamalu
went down last season,' •
~nd it isn't substantially'
1mproved statistically&gt;
now that he's back. The '
Steelers are 25th in pass
defense (243.1 yards pel'
game) and opposing
quarterbacks are completing 6R percent of
their passes. up from 56.5 '
percent in 2008.
''We acknowledge we
have some work to uo." '
coach Mike Tomlin said. :
Even Polamalu. whose "
ability to fill multiple
roles as a pass defender.
pass rusher and run stop- ·
per out of multiple alignments often is cited as the
feature that separates
Pittsburgh's defense from
all others.
·'I can't tell yuu too
many games that l
\Valked away from satisfied with my perfor:
mance." Polamalu said.
"In my mind. there's
more plays out there I
should make. And this is
not the only game I felt
that way."
A d(nvn season for '
Polamalu? Steelers safety Ryan Clark said
almost every other player
in the league would love'
such a year.
··He can cover anybody
in this league. tackle anybody in this league."
Clark said. "Some ~day~
you're not going to bt: at
your best atld y:Ou·rc not
going to make every big
play ... and he feels he let ·
us down. When you put•
the kind of pressure Oil
yourself to be grt:at as he
does. you're going to feel'
that way sometimes." ·

Our ·
Heroes·

~~~~Honor

job with them and they
had a lot of success last
year, went to the national
tournament
and
advanced out there." he
said. "They're wellcoached, very disciplined: they're a little bit
I ike a Mount Vernon type
of team."
"It will be a very good
test for us. come
Saturday." French added.
"Early on. that's going to
be a nice war and after
Saturday. win or lose,
we'll know a lot about
ourselves."
The Saturday tip times ~
are 4 p.m. for Rio Grande
and
Bethel
while
Pikeville and OU-C will
begin the day at 2 p.m.
Also playing this
weekend. but not a part
of the classic - the Rio
Grande volleyball team
will close out the regular
season on Friday night
versus Malone at 8 p.m.
and •the Rio Grande
women's basketball team
will host the University
of Cincinnati-Clermont
on Saturday night at 6
p.m.

Of! November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
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honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have sen-ed or is currently
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In Honor Of

VETERAN SALUTE

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1969-1971

C/0 The Daily Sentinel
P.O.'Box799
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�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Sparky
·from Page B1
' one season. batting .21 ~
.for the Phillie::. in 1959.
, Anuerson learned to
•control a tempcr that
: near!) -;cuttled his flcdg' ling career as a manager
in the minors. and went
l)n to become one of
baseball's best at run: ning a team. AnJ he won
, with a humility that
couldn ' t obscure his
: unique ability to manage
people.
,"1 got good pla)Cr!&gt;.
stayed out of their way.
let thein win a lot and
then just hung around
fl)r 26 years.'' he said
during his Hall of fame
acceptance speech in

:woo.

Of course. there was a
lot more to him.
"To be nrounu me. you
have to be a little bit
cuckoo," Anderson said
on the cJav he resigned
from the ·(igers afte~ the
1995 season . "One day
it's \Vritten in concrete.
the next day it's "vrittcn
in sanJ. I always felt it' I
didn't change my mind
every 24 hours, people
would fino me boring."'
Famil y
spokesn1an
Ewald
knew
•Dan
Anderson for about 35
\ears as a former Tigers
spokesman and baseball
writer for the Detroit

www.mydailysentinel.com

and singled home the
go ·ahead run on opening
dav in Cincinnati. "vvhich
tu1:ned out to be the
highlight of his playing
career. A lioht-hittin&lt;•
sccC\nd basem~tn. he had
12 extra-base hits zero home runs - and
34 RRb in477 at-bats.
He was back 111 the
min or:; the next vear.
and soon realized ii was
time to think about
a not her career.
I k decided to tr) managing.
That almost flamed
out. too. Hi&lt;; first job
wa~ managing a minor
league tealn in Toronto
in I %4. He was overly
aggressive in his strategy and argued evel')
close call with u111pire!&gt;,
showing a short fuse that
-;non got him fired.
Cardinals general manager Bob Howsam gave
him a second chanc~c to
manage in the minors.
moved
to
then
Cincinnati to build the
Reds.
When he needed a big
league manager there, h~
d~cided
to
cal I
Anderson, \Vho was
shockecJ to get the
chance. The )oungest
manager in the majors at
age 35. he signed the
s2s.soo contract ....:.. by

.

far the most money he'd
ever made - and set out
to make himself known
in a city asking: Sparky
who'!
"Bob Howsam either
had to be nuts or have a
lot of savvy," Anderson
said. "As it turns out. he
had a lot of savvy."
llowsam assembled
one of the most talented
teams of all time Bcnl:h. Morgan. Rose,
Tony Perez. Ken Griffey
Sr..

George

Poster.

l?avey
Concepcion.
Anderson was charged
with making it work.
Anderson's plaqL!e in
Cooperstown calls him
"the crank that turned
the Big Red Machine."
and his players agree
that it fit. Bench noted
that Anderson treated his
players respectfully and
was alw·ays on top of
game strategy.
"It's a lot like a chess
game. and Sparky was a
chess master." Bench
said.
In
Cincinnati,
Anderson also got himself another nickname:
Captain Hook. a reference to his habit of
pulling a starting pitcher
when he got into a jam
late in a game. He also
showed creativity in
making lineup changes.

Friday, Novembers,

NFL

One of the most
important
moves:
switchin!! Rose from left
field to~ third base on
from Page Bl
May 3, 1975. allowing
Foster to play full-time
like
Johnson,
in left. It wa!&gt; the final son
Mc.Padden
may
now be
piece of the Machine.
tinding
his
legs
- 165
which · be!tt Boston in a
yards.
three
:ros
mshing
seven-~&lt;une
dramatic
Series that year. ~then and two catches, J I yards
swept to another title receiving and a TO in a
whik
winning
Jog Week 7 rout of the
games the following sea- Broncos. and Ill yards
rushing 111 las.t week's
son.
Two second-place sea- win over the Seahawks.
sons led to a surprising 1 With 668 yards. he's the
firing. The Reds have league's No. 7 rusher.
won ~only one other NL I - LeG(Irefle Blount,
title and World Series I Buccaneen: Undrafted
since he left. 111 1990 rookie has made his presunder Lou Piniella. ence felt rl.!cently with
Anderson moved on to several key second-half
Detroit. where he had runs in a one-point. Week
more longevity and 7 win over the Rams. and
added one more title.
a 120-vard. two-TD
He refused to manage effort in athree-point win
replacement players dur- over the Seahawks last
in~ baseball\ labor disSunday. Blount 1s best
pu"ie in spring training of known as the Oregon
1995. angering owner player suspended alter
Mike Ilitch. He resigned 1 punching Boise State's
after a 60-win season. Byron Hout following a
saying the franchise loss in the Ducks· 2009
needed a ne\'1-' direction.
He hoped to manage season opener. He signed
somewhere else. but with the Titans in April.
-.vhen an offer never and eventually wound up
with the Bucs before
came along. he retired.
1.
Week
Survivors include his
LeSean McCov,
wife. Carol; sons Lee
and Albert; daughter Eagles: With all-purpose
We~tbrook
Shirley Englebrecht; and Michael
gone. :VkCoy did well
nine granc..lchildren .
1

1

2010

last season and has
quickly emerged as
instant offense this year:
477 yards rushing and
five TDs. 38 catches for
~93
yards in seven
games. The 5-11. 208pounder also is tough :._
he played with a broken
rib anc1 had 138 total
yards (92 rushing.
receiving) in a win
the 49ers.
Pewon
ffilli\,
Bmwm: Acquired in the
Brady
Quinn-to-theeBroncos trade. the 6-1.
240-poun&lt;..l third-year pro
has logged 460 tough
yards and five TDs. and
is becoming quite the
depl.!ndable ball carrier.
He also has 27 catches
for 193 yards and a TD.
and complete&lt;..l a pass to
QB Colt McCoy in a win
over the Saints in Week

m
.
iiiJ..

7.
- Jaln"id Best. Liom:
The 5-l 0. •199-pound
game-breaking' threat 1s
fitting in well with a
pass-oriented offense.
and has 613 all-purpose
yards (297 rushing. 316
receiving) with five TDs
through seven games.
He ·s also the first NFL
rookie to score five T~
in his first two carw
games since Billy Sims
in 1980.

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

1\e\\S.

"Sparky Anderson \viii
• 'always be measured by
his number of .victories
and his place in base. ball's Hall of fame. But
all of that is overshadowl!d by the type of person he was. Sparky not
only spiked life into
·baseball. he gave life in
general something to
smile about. Never in
my lifetime have t· met a
man as gentle. kind and
·courageous ·as Sparky.''
,he said.
Anderson's win total
trails onl) those of
-Mack. McGraw. Tonv La
'Russa. Bobbv Cox -and
'·Joe Torre. (!is overall
record was 2.194- 1~34
:and he was a two-time
.AL M:.\nager of the Year.
"Sparky was one. oi
the greatest people 1· ve
met in ba,eball.'' Detroit
Hall of Farner AI Kaline
said. "He \Vas a leader to
' his players both on and
off the field. He \vas an
: incredible person and I
.cherish the time I was
able to spend with him ."
• While Anderson wa!&gt;
often surrounded by top
players, there was more
to his ability than merely
filling out a lineup card.
He had the ri!!ht touch
with superstars. and it
came in handy when he
led the star-studded
Reds to World Series
wins in 1975-76. He
won
four
National
League pennants in
Cincinnati from 197078. then was stung when
the Reds fired him after
second• consecutive
place finishes.
Anderson took his disappointment to the other
league and won there.
too. directing the Tigers
to the 1984· championship and a division
title in I Y87. He was
voted into Cooperstown
by
the
Veterans
Committee.
Even then. he showed
his usual self-deprecation. Anderson had
refused to step foot
inside the Hall until
2000 because he felt
unworthy.
"I didn't ever want to
go into the most precious place in the world
unless I belonged."'
Anderson said.
For a long time. he
was a long shot to make
the Hall.
The only notable thing
about Anderson as a
player was his prematurely graying hair and
his nickname. He wa~
playing for Fort Worth in
· the Texas League in
1955 when a radio
announcer, taken by his
feisty play, started calling him Sparky.
The name stuck. He
uidn't. Anderson made it
to the majors in 195Y

4

6-

o-

e.vn:• ,._lliews
-

7

t-

-

CElli) Fetch I

.i

I

I

I

1

· SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
4
6

7

8

nieRea
'TheRed-- TAiistin Crty Lrmrts •st""''
_ J Green Show Green Show. ~rtm/ Sarah Jarosz"
Football C(Ll J(ii5) NCAA Football Ari'iii'na vs Sti'mlard &lt;Ll - - - - - -

ciiCiiS"Fii'St'Ot May· l

10
11

!

.I

�Friday, November 5, 2010

..
.
..
"'

I

I

I;'

~

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

The·Daily Sentinel• Page 85

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.....? .. .

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Equipment/
Supplies
50.000 B.T.U. LP gas
visual flame heater.
EJ:&lt;cellent condition.
304-593-6618.
Furniture
For Sale Couch &amp;
Chair $75 OBO Bed
$75 OBO 446-2732
or 446-6281

Miscellaneous

Free Upright Deep
Freezer
plus
Firewoc1d But the
wood needs to be
Cut. 740-208-0072
Illinois
"Sangamo"
Special pocket watch
23 Jewels, Rare.
$1295.:
also
Hamilton 950-B. 23
Jewel. 740-533-3870

Lamps.Furniture.Hou
AKC Beagle Pups for sehold Goods,Office
Sale
Call
Gary Supplies, Tools. @
Northup for more 1456 Jackson Pike
info. 304-773-5038
Huge yard sale Nov
5 &amp; 6, 60 Gavin St,
Village 2 Rodney, 8-2
Nov.
6th,
42772
Cook Ad, Pomeroy.
glassware, baby/kid
clothes, 8am-6pm
Sat, Sun, Mon. Co.
Ad 18 Kingsbury
towards
Rocksprings,
we
have everything

Farm Equipment
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Recreational
Gallia Co. OH and Zero turn mower 1000
Vehicles
Mason Co. WV. Ron John Deere 740-367·
Evans Jackson, OH 0577
800·537-9528
Campers/ RVs &amp;
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Trailers
Security
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment 2005 Jayco Eagle
ADI
Hitch,
Gooseneck
740·446·2412
Free Home
sleeps six. Excellent
Security System
Hay, Feed, Seed,
condition.
Asking
with $99 tnstallation
Grail\
$19,900.
See
and purchase of
at
photos
Good mixed hay, sq.,
alarm monitoring
Ym.'li...Ca[rni~:;baell[aile
services from ADT $2.50 4x5, round rs.c.o.rn
740-446bales $20.00. Stored 2412
Security Services
Call1-888-367-2171 rnside 740-446-2075

)

Let us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU into Valley View
Apartments 800 St.
Rt #325 Thurman,Oh
45685.
740)2459170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
Apartments
with
Appliances
Furnished &amp; Onsite
Laundry
Facility.
Water/Sewer &amp; Trash
Included
Rental
Assistance may be
Metro
available. •
Accepted TDD#419·
526-0466
This
Institution is an equal
opportunity provider
and employer

2-Cieveland Brown
Tickets for the Jets.
Panthers.
Ravens.
Pittsburgh
Games
740)256-1267

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers
07 Bracken Ridge
40' camper, country
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide
outs. full size bath &amp;
kitchen. 2 bedrooms,
sliding glass doors,
exc.
condition,
beautiful!.
$20,000
740-247-2475
2000

Commercial
OFFICEIWAREHOU
Great
SEIRETAIL
Location 749 Third
Ave Gallipolis.1800
sq.ft . For more info
Call 1-404-456-3802

Apartments/
Townhouses
Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list tor HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
tor
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675-6679

For Sale By Owner
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740446-0390

Automotive
Houses For Sale

Autos

Animals

GIVEAWAY: 13 yr
old
cockier/spring
spinal needs to be
kept in doors and
loved for. Needs a
Professional Services
good home. Great w/
TURNED DOWN ON elderly or kids call:
SOCIAL SECURITY 253-514-1592
SSI
No Fee Unless We
700
Agriculture
Win!
1-888·582·3345

Apartments/
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Hobby/ Hunt &amp;
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Boiler
Central
wood
Outdoor
Furnaces
Instant rebate up to
Pets
$1,000.00. 740)245Free F black Cocker 5193
Spaniel, good wlkids
740-949-2950, 444Yard Sale
3349
Yard Sale Rain or
Lifelock
Toy Poodle Puppies, Shine, Sat ONLY
Nov.6th 9am - 2pm.
CKC. vet checked,
Free Document
171 Lariat Dr Lots of
Shredder for new shots. wormed, tails
Household
docked
&amp;
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Ufelock members.
items/DishesfToys/C
removed Colors are
Call Today
urtains and women's
1-888-758-3029 and black. chocholate, &amp;
buckeye, boys $300, Clothing
use promo code
girls $350. 740-992- INSIDE Yard Sale
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7007
8am-1pm
Get One Month
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local and long
distance calling for
only $25.99 per
month.
Call today!
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lr1'

r'LGoking For-,

Make Honest Offer
for All 441-9571

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

VISA

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Financial

NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
lnstilutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
Home Improvements loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
Basement
fees or insurance. Call
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1·
guarantee. Local
866·278·0003 to learn
references furnished
Established 1975. Call if the mortgage broker
24 Hrs. ~40-446·0870. or lender is properly
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JUST SAY

CHARGE IT!

2010 ford focus 1300
actual miles. Price to
sale
$12,000.00
price neg. 446-7278
or 339-3503
2007 Impala LTZ,
Fvlly
equipped,
18.000 miles. Exc.
Condition 446-1731

1-BR
Apt
$340
month,
2-BR
Apt
3 bdr. 1 bath mobile
home $5500.00 740· $450 month at the
Spring Valley Area.
339-3226
740)645-7661
or
740)339-3046 after
THE HOUSE AT 5:00pm
'
1284 MCCORMICK
lease:
1BR
RD. IS NO LONGER For
unfurnished 2nd floor
FOR SALE
apt.
near
Gallia
LOOKING
FOR Aca,demy, no pets,
DEAL? FIND US ref &amp; dep. required.
NOW!!!
maximum occupancy
4anoakwoodhome.c 2, $350 mon. 740·
omf737 &amp; Facebook 446-3936 or 740446-4425
Land (Acreage)

Quality
Cars
&amp;
Trucks w/warranty all
priced to sell, 16 yrs.
in bustness. Cook
Motors. 328 Jackson
Pike,
117 acre farm for
Gallipolis, OH 740· salelocated
on
446·0103.
Eagle Ridge Road
just· down
from
Trucks
Bashan Fire house.
1987 Ford truck V-6 call 7 40-949-2603
300, $550, 740-992·
Real Estate
3500
.;;;,33~6~7=====~
Rentals
_.
-;;;;;~;;~;;
Want To Buy
Apartments/
Townhouses
Want to buy Junk
Cars, call 740·3882BR APT.Ciose to
0884
Holzer Hospital on SR

=

Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
740·441-7870
No
Sunday call

3000

Real Estate
Sales

Commercial

LG Office 1 Rental
Property 512 2nd
Ave
Gallipolis,Oh
asking $85.000 or
make offer 740)710·
0007

160 CIA. (740) 4410194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses for rent.
Call 740·441·1t11 for
application
&amp;
information.
Free Rent Special
!!I
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up. Central Air. WID
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017

2 BR apt. 6 mi from
Holzer. $400 + dep.
Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740-988-6130

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

Downtown Gallipolis.
3 br 1.5 bath. central
air, carpel/hardwood
floors,
kitchen
applicances
included,
washer/dryer
hook
up. No Pets. Ample
storage · available.
Dep &amp; Ref Required.
call 740-446-7654
2 BR Home with
attached garage WID
&amp; Ice Bx New
Carpet!Paint
Refer/Dep. required
Prefer NO
Pets,
$675 mth water inc.
near
the
Cinema/Hospital
304-657-6378
3BR
2Bath
LG
full
House
with
Basement and 2 car
LG
garage
with
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

3BR, 1 BA STove &amp;
Refrig Furn. Gas
heat,
Cantrall
AJCW/D hook up,
carport, No Smoking,
No pets. $600 per
mo, $600 Dep.,105
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp; Bastiani. Gallipolis.
houses in Pomeroy &amp; Call
446-3667.
Middleport, NO Pets. Taking applications.
7 40-992-2218
House for sale or
rent. Pretty, clean,
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to
Washington
Elem.
Rent $750. no utlilite.
Sale $99,000. KellyJo 645-9096 or 446·
Middleport. 2 br 4639
furnished apartment..
No pets, dep. &amp; ref., For Sale or Rent
2BR, all electric. S
740-0165
on At 7. 441-1917 or
Middleport Beech St. 740-339-0820
furnished apt., Senior ~-~-~-­
living, No pets, dep. 2 br. house for rent
&amp; ref., Utilities paid, on Ann St., Pomeroy
740-992-0165
dep. required, 740992-6385
Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at 4
br.,
bath,
$395+2 BR at $470 detached
garage.
Month. 446-1599.
acre &amp; 1/2 land.

1 br. apt., 3rd St.
Racine, $350 a mo.
pluse
dep.
&amp;
utuilities,
740-2474292 .

Houses For Rent
Tara Townhouse Apt.
2 BR 1·5 BA, back
patto,
pool.
playground. No pets.·
$450 rent. 740-3670547

Houses For Rent

newly
remodeled,
located 1 mile out
CR 10, Langsville,
$650 per mo., $650
dep.
No Utilities
Paid.
Lease &amp;
references required.
No Pets Allowed.
740-416-2960.

Nice 1BR house in
GallipoliS. Walk to
ryth.
d
evve
'ng youtneeth.
1
ery c ~an unt' WI
new pa1nt, $275 per
mo/$100 sec. dep.
Sorry no pets, Call
RIVERBEND PLACE Wayne
for
Apts.
1 BR. Hud information 404-456- garage
apartment
subsidize,. elderly &amp; 3802.
425.00 month. Ty
disabled
complex,
304-675-4030
accepting
2 BR House for Rent.
Applications
304·' Excellent Condition,
882-3121.Equal
References
Very nice home for
Housing Opportunity Required. NO PETS rent in Middleport,
740-645-1766
good neighborhood.
Newly
remodeled.
6 Rms &amp; Bath,
New appliances, 2
Appliances
Furnished,
122 Bedrooms, 1 bath.
Cedar St. Gallipolis, Large Kitchen, Sun
NO SMOKING &amp; NO Room, Central aAr &amp;
PETS $450mth. plus Heat. Nice outdoor
Deposit
740)645· spaces, No pets. non
smiking. Call 740Modern 1BR Apt. 7651
992-5094
for more
446-0390
1-3 bed room house details.
for rent in Syracuse
FIND A JOB NO pet's HUD
bdr. all utilities
Near
approved call 304· paid.
IN THE
HUD
675-5332 Weekends downtown.
CLASSIFIEDS 740-591-0265
accepted.

�--.. . .-.. - . . . ----~

... ...

------- · -.-----"-:"-----~--.---"!"'""------1'111111'-!

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

~

IIIIIIWII...- .... _ -. . . .--~--~

www.mydailysentinel.com

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR
BARGAINS

Houses For Rent

Supplies

4 bdr 2 ba. 450.00
month.
450.00
deposit
Middleport
OH. (3v4)675-3753
..__------------~ 362 L1ncoln Street.

Green slag 10.00 a
ton
great
for
dnveways. Rt 62
above New Haven
behind
American
======~ Colloid Co. (304)882Lease
3944.
======House for Lease in
City. 2-BR, Gas &amp;
AC, Range, Ref, WID
Hook-up, Carport. 1· Drivers &amp; Delivery
2 people $575 mth &amp;
Deposit Call 446- Red's Aollen Garage
4555 after 5:30pm
Needed Class A COL
Driver with Tanker &amp;
Want to Rent
Haz-mat. TWIC a
plus 740·339 0034
Relocating
looking
for a Nice Home
Education
,Condo or Large Apt. ~=====:;;:;
·
Prefer
Downtown B usmess
Gallipolis
or
Pt. Ins t ruet ora Needed
· 1·IS career
Pleasant Area.1-716- @ GaII.1po
In
913-2415
Have College.
References
Economics,
Keyboarding,
and
Math. In EconomiCS
4000 Manufactu~ and Math instructors
Housrng must
possess

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

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

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

Family Medicine
2416 Jefferson Avenue

Master's

Point Pleasant, WV
304-675-4500
Walk-Ins Welcome
Please bring your
'
insurance card and ID

Rentals

9

2BA·2 Bath Like new
Mob1le Home water.
sewer, trash pd. No
pets. CA. Covered
Patio
Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446·3 160

MIZWAY
Thursday- Pool Tourn 7:30
Fri- Karaoke 9-1 ·
Sat- AMIX 9-1
SR 143 Pomeroy, OH

3 BR mobil $500mon
&amp; dep. 4BR home
$725 mon &amp; dep. on
Bulaville Pike 740367·7272

Pomeroy Eagles #2171
Southern Accent
November 6
8-12
The Wild Ride
November 20th
8-12
Members &amp; Guests
Welcome
740-992-1171

2BR Trailer Vinton
Area, NO PETS, Ref.
Required
$400
mon+dep. 388-0011

1 BR Trailer for Rent,
River Valley School
Dist. All new Inside.
Off Thompson Rd.
$390 per mth. Trash
&amp; water pd. Ph. 740388-9326
Total
Electric.

Turkey &amp; Ham
Dinner

Dt:IQr"tt

Help WantedGeneral
======;;;;;
Accepting
app~cations for part
time
cash1ers,
SubNay artist &amp; exp.
full time ass. store
manager. Apply tn
person at ParMar
#38
15289
Huntington
Rd
Gall polis Ft.ry or on
online
at
parmarstores.com
WANTED: Part-time
position available to
assist
individuals
with developmental
in
disaoilities
Galllipohs. Must have
high school diploma
or GED, valid driver's
license, three years
good
driving
experience
and
adequate automobl e
insurance. $8.97/hr,
after training. Send

vacation
and
holidays and future
professional growth
•
opportunities.
Qualified applicants
may
forward
resumes
to:
Yellowbush Mining.
Attention HR. P.O.
Box
238,
New
Haven, WV 25265 or
fax Attn: HA (304)
882-1379.
EOE
M/F/DN

resume to· Buckeye

Send cover letter and Corrmunity Services,
resume
to: P.O.
Box
604.
bshirey@gallipoliscar Jackson, OH 45640.
1
Deadline
for
eercol ege.edu.
applicants. 11i11110.
Help Wanted.
Pre-employment
General
drug testing .. Equal
======:;;:; Opportunity
Case Manager to Em~loyer
provide
direct -U-nd•e-rg;..r-ou_n_d___
services
to Sur.eyorYellowbush
clients,develop
a Mining, LLC, located
standard plan and in Racine. OH is now
coordinate provision accepting resumes
of services to meet for the position of
the primary, Urgent underground
need
of
clients. surv9yor. Candidates
and must posses at least
Degree
experience
a
high
school
preferred,but
not diploma
or
required.
Send equi~alent;
resumes
to: expenence
rn
Spectrum Outreach underground
coal
Service,Ltd.,456
mining preferred but
Second
Ave not
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

Help Wanted·
General
•====;;;;;;;;:=
Interested applicants
w1th
surface
surveying
and
AutoCAD experience
are ·
strongly
encouraged to apply.
Yellowbush M1ni:1g,
LLC.
offers
a
competitive benefits
package including:
company sponsored
medical, dental and
vision. 401 (k) with
company match, paid

Friday, November 5, 2010
Medical
Abbott Home Care is
currently accepting
Applications
for
Home Health Aides
for Gallia County.
Apply in person @
315
Washington
Street, Oak Hill, Oh10
------9000 Service I Bus.
01rectory
-;;;~;;;;;;;

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Room additions • Roofing • .."'""'•""'
• (;~ucral Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • 'Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
~liKE W. ~1ARCmt, OW~R
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

~

-;;;=;;:;C;;:;Ie;;:;an;;:;i::ing==
Private
Home
Cleaning,
Reasonable Rates,
Several Ref. more
·1nfo Call Tiffany @
•532 ..379
304
~~~--~~=~

=

ely

Han man
--==--===Will do handymans
work.
Some
plumbing roofing,
Siding some home
improvement work,
Etc Call Jack at

740-985-4141

insured

.'fl

Free l..,timalrs • ~·car~ e:o.pcricncc
1\ot afnliatfd wlith \IIL.t \larLum Kuofin~ S. Krnu»tldin!!'

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Metal Roofs installed all winter long at
discounted rates.
SpedaliLing in Insurance Jqbs including.
storm, wind &amp; \\&amp;tcr damage.

740)339..0609

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

~=====~

740-416-1834

Full~

Room Additions, Remodeling, Metlll &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Homes. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

==•M;;:;e;;:;d;;:;ic;;:;a;;:;l= Ohio Valley Home
Health Inc. accepting
Applications
· for
Aides. Apply at 1480
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis . or
on
internet
@
www.ovhh.org.
&lt;httpJtwww.ovhh.org
I&gt; or Phone 740)4411393
Competitive
wages and Benefits
including
health
insurance
and
mileage.

Shop the
Classifieds!

&amp; extenor.
Electrical &amp; ALL Plumping work
_
Concrete walks &amp; drivewavs
\1C YOl::\G III- OW:-o..ER
740-992-6215.740-591-0195
ln busines~ locally for 30 }ears
Redured \\lnter Rates

iiiiii.--iiiiiiiiiiiiii.----------------------------.
Pomero), 011

WY 036725

Accepting
applications for part
time cashiers. Apply
in person at ParMar
#42 15054 St At 160
Vinton Oh or on
online
at
parmarstores. com

trailer for rent double
wide. 3br 2baths 575
month 575 deposit Little Cesars now
1722-b chatham 740; hiring asst. mgrs.
and
co
mgrs.
645-1646
Competitive wages.
benefits,
and
Two bedroom trailer, advancement
unfurnished, ·except opportunities.
refngerator
and Locally owned and
stove,
nicecountry operated.
Send
setting
in resume
to
Harrisonville,
Scottgoodwln45619
$350/month
plus @gmail.com or fax
$350
deposit. 740-886-7425
Call740·985-4372.

Sunday, November 7th
11-1
$6.00
includes drink &amp; dessert
Carry-out orders call
949-2044
Racine American Legion
#602
Racine, Ohio

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Friday, November 5, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE '

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY
D~AR

•

::::u

Mort Walker

GENERAL HALF~ACI&lt;,

:I.'Ve BEEN IN THe ARMY
A LONGTIMENOWANDI.'D
Lf!(E TO GET OUT AHDENJ'OY
LIFE AS A FREE CIVILIAN.

DE:AR BEETLE BAILEY,

ME, TOOl
51NCERE:LY1

~.H~

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Fill the
tank
6 Observes
Ramadan
11 Texas
landmark
12 Cornhusker
city
13 Childhood
ailment
14 Dance
record
15 Outback
runner
16 Sign of
error
18 Early
hour
19 Boxer, e.g.
20 Asner and
O'Neill
21 Musician
Lofgren
23 ""Phe Time
Machine"
writer
25 Printer
problem
27 Happy
companion
28 Sinful city
30 Humdrum
33 Snicker
sound
34 Homer's
neighbor
36LAX
guess
37 Frankie's
co-star
39 Chess
pieces
40 Puccini
opera

JOSEPH
41 Tire
feature
43 Sing like
Bing
44 Washer
cycle
45 Barbera's
cartooning
partner
46 Collectible car
DOWN
1 "Now the
competition is
serious!"
2 Reunion
group
3 British
writer
4Game
caller
5 Offered

-·

6 Sought
food
7 City
on the
Skunk
8 American
writer
9 Trisection
parts
10 Jazz
blowers
17 Squabble
22 Down in
the
dumps

24 High hit
26 Butte
setting
28 Lady of
Spain
29 Ran into
31 Relaxed
32 "Messiah"
composer
33 Ship door
35 Raison38 Bus. sch.
course
42 Disencumber

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! SendS4.75(ch6cklm.o'TiQThomas Joseph Book 1, P.O. Box 536475, Ortando. FL 32853·6475

11-"i

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

TI-\OG~ ARe AL.t..
"T}}C. THINGG ~e

F001"8At..L., 8ANP PRACTICE:,
1-\0MEWv'ORt&lt;,
HANGli·JG 01)"(.

~A"'e80ARI?ING,

William Hoest
~.

COl)L.P 13E: POIN0 IF
1-\E PIPN'"( 1-\AVE: TO

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MUTTS

-.

Patrick McDonnell

wow

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CLOSING DOWN
THIS POPP!f
MIL\. FoR ALL
THEIR VIOLATIONS

WOW... l: M\GHT
BE FRE.E.D ... .:t
M\GHT WALK ON
GRASS ... I MIGHT

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FINDA HOME ...

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HALF HIS AGE."

.

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HAPPY BIR}HDAY for Friday, Nov.

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

•

3

4

8
7 1

5

9
7

6 4
1
2

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

~PE&lt;RHAPG 'IOU WOULP LIKE TO TR"' OUR

LINe; OF STRAir.JACKtiiS.''

8

.Difficulty Level****

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This year, espedally in the next few
weeks, scan your life and decide where
you would like a new beginning. You
have unusual strength and power to
create and manifest in the next 12
months. Know what you want, then
you will take the right course. Many of
you simply might decide to exorci7,.e a
bad habit or start a diet. 1he chances
for success are higher than in the past.
H you are single, you radiate. Your
intensity draws many admirers. Date
until you find the right person. H you
are attached, the bond easily could
become one-sided, with your increas~charisma. Remembe~ a relationship is a two-way street SCORPIO
could be a soul mate.

2-Scrso; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****A new beginning becomes
more than possible ifyou relax with a
child or loved one. Take a stand and
share more of what you feel is significant. Whether you know it or not, you
are a trendsette.t: Tonight Go with a
loved one's or friend's idea.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
1t.
Defer to others with
renewed interest and better understanding. You might not be able to do
what others can. as you come from
such a totally different background. A
trip or special occasion migfit need
revising. Tonight Listen to another's
declaration
.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
****You might think you can
clear your desk and check off several
projects. A partner or associate might
need to revise hi&lt;&gt; or her thinking about
what is possible. Tonight VJSit with
friends, or run some errands. Don't
push.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
1t.
lt. You remain a creative and
dominating force, no matter where you
are or with whom H you can open
your eyes, toS~&gt;ing previous judgments
aside, you could see someone far differently. Tonight Add some romance
into your life.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
,
****You cannot bypass certain
priorities or change directions suddenly. It appears that someone or a situation is like an extra weight to carry. You
might not know which way to go. In

** **

5

"The year 1988 is in this
HISTORY book!"

5,2010:

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positiue; 3-Avemge;

by Dave Green

4 6
3

5
7
11/()5

6 B £ G
L 9 'V 9
l ~ L 6
£ 'V 9 ~
'V l 6 B
9 £ 9 L
~ L B 9
B 9 G £
g 6 ~ 'V

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**

*

this situation, step back and see what
heads down the path. Tonight Order
in.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
*****Reach out for others,
make calls and remain sure of what
you desire. Someone close could be
unusually demanding. Though you
know what you want, let others add
their own variations. Think in terms of
teamwork. Tonight Hanging out could
point to a new friendship.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
***Your possessive side could
cause a problem with a family member
or a personal situation You can change
your course or decide to tame a personality trait with todays New Moon.
Tonight Don't go overboard.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21)
The New Moon promises
many happy events if you can remain
open and optimistic. A new start or resolution can occur if it's made right
now. Use your disciplined mind to create your desires. Tonight The world is
your oyster. Now what?
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
***You could be pushing your
luck if you oontinue to~ as outspoken
as you have been in recent days. Take
time off from your hectic schedule. You
might wonder how much is enough.
Now is the time for a personal resolution. Tonight Vanish home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You might have been
waiting for an event Qr a statement. Jf it
involves a long-term goal or friendship, make a decision to make it so.
How you justify an expense might be
OK, but be sure you can handle any
consequence;. Tonight Where people

.,•,

....
...

...."'·
.,

~
•
~

•

*****

*****

are.

•
::
•

•:
:;
••
:·

•

AQUARIUS Oan 20-Feb. 18)
****You oould be left holding
the bag. Much goes on around you,
making it nearly impassible to stay on
a pre-ordained path. Your ability to fle\.
is tested. However, you also might
need to establish limits. Tonight A
must appearance.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Don't hold back from
exploring an option any lo~~ be it
education or travel. You mi t be craving more knowledge and · e experience. Why would you want to deny
yourself this exposure? Tonight Try
walking a bohemian path.

*****

jacqueline Bignr is on tlze Jntemet
at http://wur;.l\jacquelint'/ligar.cam.

~
•'
·:
•

.

..
~

.

·'

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

.mvdailvsentinel.com
~I

..

�Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Novembers,

2010

Four Turns
GOOD RUN GONE BAD Dale
Earnhardt Jr. looked like the Talladega Terror of old on Sunday.
Reminiscent of the days when he
won five of eight Talladega events
(2001-04), Earnhardt led a racehigh 124 laps until an accident
with 53 laps to go relegated his
No. 88 machine to a disappointing
39th-place finish.
GAMER Three of Clint Bowyer's
four career wms -two victories
at New Hampshire (2007, '1 0) and
Sunday's Talladega triumphhave come in Chase races. The
fourth win came at Richmond in
May 2008.
NEW PLATE ACE Kevin Harvick
has proven to be the best restrictor
plate racer on the Sprint Cup circuit this season. While the title
tends to drift from driver to driver,
Harvick has owned the field at
Daytona and Talladega in 2010. In
the four events he has two wins, a
runner-up and a seventh.ln his career, Harvick has three plate wins,
which ties him with Jamte McMurray for fifth among active dnvers.
TIGHTEN UP Denny Hamlin and
Kevin Harvick are within 38 points
of Jimmie Johnson with only three
events remaining in the season.
The last time the championship
standings were this close this
late? The Inaugural year of the
Chase, 2004, when Kurt Busch
beat Johnson by eight points and
Jeff Gordon by 16.

2

3

Sprint Cup Standings

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11
12.
13
14.
15.
16.
17
18.
19.
20.

DRIVER
Jimm1e Johnson
Denny Hamlin
Kevin Harvick
Jeff Gordon
Kyle Busch
Carl Edwards
Tony Stewart
Matt Kenseth
Kurt Busch
Jeff Burton
Greg Biffle
Clint Bowyer

,.

Jamie McMurray
Mark Martin
Ryan Newman
Juan Pablo Montoya
Joey Logano
David Reutimann
Dale Earnhardt Jr
Martin Truex Jr.

POINTS
6149
6135
6111
5942
5919
5902
5632
5625
5799
5797
5788
5782 •
3976
3937
3883
3866
3809
3772
3662
3614

BEHIND
-14
-38
-207
-230
-247
-317
-324
-350
-352
-361
-367
-2173
-2212
-2266
-2283

-2340
-2377
-2487
-2535

Nationwide Standings
DRIVER
1. Brad Keselowski
2. Carl Eclwards
3. Kyle Busch
4. Jusbn Allgaier
5. Paul Menard
6. Kevin Harvick
7. TreVOf Bayne
8. Jason Leffler
9. Joey Logano
10. Steve Wallace

POINTS
5144
4659
4439
4278
4067
3902

3633
3593
3557
3554

BEHIND
-485
-705
-866
-1077
-1242
-1511
-1551
-1587
-1590

Truck Standings

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER
Todd Bodine
Ark: Almirola
Johnny Sauter
Matt Crafton
Ausbn Dillon
Ron Hornaday
nmothy Peters
Mike Skinner
DaVid Starr
Jason Whrte

POINTS
3480
3264
3166
3072
3065
2987
2980
2822
2780
2678

BEHIND
-218
-314
-408
-415
-493
-500
-656
-700
-802

Highs &amp; Lows
JOEY LOGANO He obviously has the talent or Joe Gibbs wouldn't have placed
him in the coveted No. 20 Home Depot
car left vacant by Tony Stewart, but Joey
Logano has been hit ·n· miss in his
near two-year Cup career. He's
come on of late, though, with five
runs of.seventh or better in the
last eight races on completely
different styles of racetracks.
KURT BUSCH Without a teammate 1n the Chase, Kurt Busch
and the No. 2 Penske team have
floundered. Thought to be an attractive darkhorse entering the playoffs.
Busch has only one finish better than 13th
(fourth, Dover) and has fallen well out of
title contention by virtue of his 18.1-place
average finishing position over the last
seven races.

2. Kevin Harvlck

He's won the
every way Imaginable, so why doubt he cart outduel Hamlin and Harvick in a
dogfight down the stretch?
How do you differentiate between Hamlin and Harvick here? Take whichever driver fmished better In
the last race. Yeah, It'S that ttght.

3. Denny Hamlin

Denny Hamlin and Kevin Harvlck

ASP. Inc.

Say what you will about the Chase, but there's no denying the three best teams have risen to the top
and are deservedly duking it out for this title.
· --~~-..J
=-=-----;;Th
::-e-r~
e ":"is-:a~b:7.:ig gap down to fourth, where Busch slots in just ahead of Gordon based mainly on his
explosiveness- and the fact that he actually wins from time to time.
Eleven top fives and 17 top 1Os are on par with the Big Three, but the goose egg in the win column
5. Jeff Gordon
finds Gordon over 200 points back in the standings.
He may be 12th in the standings. but it's hard to argue with his two wins and a runner-up showing
6. Clint Bowyer
in the Chase.
The No. 99 team just can't get out of the sixth-.to 12th-place range. They're clearly two steps
7. Cart Edwards
behind Hendrick, Gibbs and Childress.
The Chase hurts guys like Logano, because he's not getting any attention due to the fact he di&lt;fn't
8. Joey Logano
qualify. Meanwhile, he's outperlormed 90 percent of those in it.
Man. can this guy's luck get any worse?
9. Jeff Burton
Quietly set to overtake McMurray for 13th in the standings. Which is kind of like Crash Dav1s in
10. Mark Martin
pursu1t of the minor league home run record.
Tony makes the list because. well, he's Tony Sbewart. but the truth is this team is collecting notes
11. Tony Stewart
for next year.
How has Kenseth remained in the top 12 despite zero wins and only five top fives? Answer: He has
12. Matt Kenseth
no DNFs and has not fmished worse than 30th all season. That worked under the old point system.
13. Dale Earnhardt Jr. In the midst of a four-race run at tracks that historically have agreed with Junior.
It's gotten to a point where we actually expect more out of McMurray at certain tracks.
14. Jamie McMurray
15. Greg Biffle
Biffle is in not on what he's done, but on what he could possibly do in the next three races.
Just off the lead pack: AJ Allmendinger, Kurt. Busch, Paul Menard, Juan Pablo Montoya, Martin Truex Jr., David Reutimann

Disaster Averted

Race: AAA Texas 500
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
Location: Ft. Worth. Texas
When: Sunday. Nov. 7
TV: ESPN
Distance: 334 laps (501 miles)
Banking/Turns: 24 degrees
BanklngtstrLightaways: 5 degrees
April 2010 Winner: Denny Hamlin
Crew Chief's Take: "Texas looks like Charlotte and Atlanta, but trust me, it isn't: It's different from any other track in the way that it
flattens out off of Turn 2 onto the back
straight AI other tracks, there's a little banking on the str3Jghtaways. Turns 3 and 4 are
dramatically different from Turns 1 and 2 because of thaL The exrt of two and the entrance
of three are the trouble spots, both from a dtiver's and a mechanic's perspective. It's one
of those places where, in my mind, strange
things happen. I'm always extra wary when
we go there."

Clint Bowyer scores win,
Chase leaders survive
By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor

1t was the race that kept Jimmie
Johnson, Denny Hamlin and Kevin
Harv1ck awake at night. The three
drivers left to senlc the 20 I 0 Chase
for the Sprint Cup knew the Amp
P-ncrgy Juice 500 from Talladega Supcrspecdway would be the ultimate
wild card race in a tight championship battle.
After 188 white-knuckle laps with
giant packs of cars in tight drafting
quarters, the trio of contenders escaped unscathed, and more incredible, all with top I Os. In tact, one Harv1ck - came within A foot of
winning.
Instead. it was Harvick's R1chard
Childress Racing teammate, Clint
Bowyer. who won the lottery after
finding the right draft to get him in
the right position at the right time to
have just enough of an advantage
ovcr I Iarvick when a caut1on was
displayed allcr thc leaders had taken
the white !lag.
AJ Allmendinger's frightening
spin, !lip and head-on contact with
the inside wall triggered a yellow
flag as four leaders entered Tum I in
t'.vo-by-two fom1ation. Bowyer
edged out llarvick and Da.,id Reutimann. with drafting assistance from
Juan Pablo :'vfonotya, to score his
second win of the season, both having come in the Chase.
"Just very, very happy for a lot of
reasons," Bowyer said. "Everybody
at RCR ha~ worked very hard to get
us back. To have Kevin racmg for a
championship is where obviously Jeff
[Burton] and I wanted to be. But to
have him still m a shot at wmning a
championship, that's very important.
To be able to win two mccs m a Chase
for our race team is very important."

• NASCAR lost a titan of the
sport on Oct. 29 when Jim Hunter,
NASCAR Vice President of Corporate
Communicabons. passed away after
a 12-month battle with cancer at
the age of 71 .
Hunter worked in and around the
sport for over 40 years as a journalist. author. public relations repre·
sentative. track administrator and
sanctioniqg body executive.
• According to multiple media
outlets, Earnhardt Ganassi Racing
has been approached by Ford to
switch manufacturers next season.
Currently a Chevrolet·backed
team, EGR was formed by a merger
between ChiP Ganassi Racing and
Dale Earnhardt, Inc. prior to the

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Inc.

Richard Childress (center) congratulates his drivers, Kevin Harvlck (left) and race winner
Clint Bowyer, In Victory Lane at Talladega Superspeedway.
But the focus of the point standfiold, but Gordon's engine came
hack to life and the two recovered to
now center; on the top three.
where Johnson, who finished sevfinish seventh and eighth. respecenth. holds a 14-point lead over
tively.
Hamlin, who ran ninth on Sunday.
Hamlin struggled as well. only to
rebound late. Employing the same
llarvick remains third, just 38 points
• sandbagging strategy as Johnson.
out of the lead.
Hamlin rode in the back but at one
Harvick suffered nose damage to
point lost the drat\ and went one lap
his No. 29 Chevy with 46 laps remaining, when Bowyt-T spun the car
down. llc wasn't able to get back on
the lead lap until the Harvick./Amof Marcos Ambrose whtlc racmg in
brose mcidcnl, but once there, he
the pack. The contact dented Harhooked up with his teammate, Kyle
vick 's nose, but the crew repaired the
Busch, and drafted to the ITont.
car with duct tape and Bondo and,
miraculously, the aero-sensitive car
However. the Joe Gibbs Racing duo
sat atop the pylon too early- with
seemed unaffected.
Johnson laid back at the tail end of 30 laps to go- - opening the door for
the field lor a large portion of the
others to pair up and draft by.
The three points leaders arc now
race. waiting patiently with teammate Jeff Gordon to make one last
prepared to settle the championship
over the last three races- at Texas,
mad dash through the field ncar the
end. When the duo decided to go
Phoenix and Homestead. And with a
with 16 laps remaining, neither ex38-point spread, it's still anyonc:s title.
··we're going to three tracks that
pected to slice through the field as
are good for all three competitors,"
quick as they did. Within two laps
they drove from 26th and 27th to
Johnson said of the final stops. "Ten
first and second, only to get shuflled
extra points from first to second are
back when Gordon dropped back
going to be important. leading laps.
due to what he believed to be an enleading the most laps. you're going
gine issue. Without his drafting partto have to be on you're A-game from
here on out."
ner, Johnson plummeted through the
ing~

News &amp; Notes
2009 season. Due to the EamhardtChevy association, Ganassi ended
his relationship With Dodge to complete the union.
EGR uses engmes provided by
Eamhardt-Childress Racing Engines,
which have arguably been the
strongest in the garage this season.
While Ford may be able to otter
more money and a higher spot in the
manufacturer pecking order, leaVing
the engine shop that has powered
EGR to three wms this season- the
Daytona 500, Brickyard 400 and the
Bank of America 500 from Charlotte
- would be a risky move.

"The offer is on the table, and it's
up to them whether or not to take
it." a spokesperson for Ford Motor
Company told Sirius Radio's Sirius
Speedway. "If this was a strict business dec1sion,l think Chip [Ganassij
would make the move. But racers
are a pretty loyal bunch. I honestly
think it could go either way."
The Earnhardt name has long been
associated with Chevrolet. DEl first
fielded acar in the what was then the
Busch Series with Dale Earnhardt Sr.
drivmg in 1984.11 was not until1987
(22 races into rts existence) that DEl
ran Chevys exdusiVely.
Earnhardt's association w1th
Chevy while driving for Richard Childress Racing also began in 1984.

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
General &amp; Mech n1c I Contractor
Robert W. McMillan
President

Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

• Even with a scintillating
championship battle at hand, the big
question on many fans· mmds is if
Dale Earnhardt Jr. Will receive a new
crew ch1ef at Hendrick Motorsports
next season.
Winless with Lance McGrew atop
the prt box 1n 57 races. team owner
Rick Hendrick was asked whether a
change would be made to aid Earnhardt's efforts.
"We don't try to make any
changes until we get to the end of
the year and we look at everything,"
Hendrick said. ·we all agree, we're
just trying to focus on what we've
got to do, finish these four [races]
and then we'll take a look at where
we are."

NATIONWIDE SERIES
Race: O'Reilly Auto Parts Challenge
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
When: Saturday. Nov. 6
TV:ESPN2
Distance: ?00 laps (~00 mile~)
April 2010 Winner: Kyle Busch
Race: WinStar World Casino 350K
Track: Texas Motor Speedway
When: Fnday, Nov. 5
TV: Speed Channel
Distance: 147 laps (220.5 miles)
June 2010 Winner: Todd Bodine

Classic Moments
Texas Motor Speedway
A third-generation driver grabs hiS first win
in the DireclV 500 at Texas Motor Speedway
on April 2. 2000, while a fourth-gen driver
makes hts first and only start.
Dale Earnhardt Jr. leads a race-high 106
laps in his DEl Budweiser Chevy and wins in
only his 12th Cup start. His father and car
owner. Dale Earnhardt, greets him in Victory
Lane for an emotional post-race celebration.
Adam Petty, great-grandson of Lee, grandson of Richard and son of Kyle, makes his one
and only Cup appearance In the No. 45 Petty
Enterprises entry.
No one realizes how brttersweet the day will
be for the Pettys, though, Later that week the
patnarch of the family. Lee. passes away. And
tragically, just over one monih taler on May 12,
Adam passes as well. when the throttle on his
car sticks and he hits the wall while practicing
for the Busch Series race at New Hampshire.

Looking at Checkers: It's tough to not figure
one of the three Chase contenders- Jimmie
KeVin Johnson. Denny Hamlin and Harvlckwon't factor.
Pretty Solid Pick: Jeff Gordon, as well as Kurt
and Kyle Busch are stout in
Good Sleeper Pick: Car1 Edwards or Man Kenseth could
break long losing skids
here.
Runs on Seven Cylinders: Joey Logano has
been solid lately, but
that may end in Texas.
Insider Tip: The Earnhardt-Childress engines have been the
best on tour all season.
II should pay off here.

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