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                  <text>All-District
football selections,
B1

SNAP gets
help local vets,
A2

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 60, No. 26

Free 500
Free Clinic
GALLIPOLIS — The
French 500 Free Clinic will
be open from 1-4 p.m.,
Thursday, Nov. 18. The
clinic is located at 258
Pinecrest Drive off of
Jackson Pike in Spring
Valley.

Soup-er
Saturday
returns
GALLIPOLIS — The
Soup-er Saturday free
lunch program will be
offered from noon-2 p.m.
on Saturday, Nov. 20 at
Holzer Clinic Sycamore in
Gallipolis. This program is
an outreach of Rio
Christian Church in Rio
Grande and is designed to
meet the needs of those
who are struggling economically. For information,
call 245-9873 or e-mail
fcc@aceinter.net.

Thompson
featured at
book signing
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point
Pleasant River Museum
will host a book signing for
local author Carlene
Thompson from 1-3 p.m.
on Saturday, Nov. 20.
Thompson has released a
new novel, “Nowhere to
Hide.” It is her 14th book.
The Point Pleasant river
Museum is located at 28
Main St. in Point Pleasant.
For information, call (304)
674-0144.

Free
Thanksgiving
dinner
GALLIPOLIS — A free
Thanksgiving dinner will
be offered to the public at 2
p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 21.
The dinner will be held at
Amercain Legion Lafayette
Post 27, McCormick Road,
Gallipolis. The public is
invited. Donations will be
accepted.

OBITUARIES
Page A5
• Mary C. Mathews
• Melvin Henry

WEATHER

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Trial, plea dates changed for accused arson-vandals
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — One of
three men accused in the
August
arson
that
destroyed
Hemlock
Grove Christian Church
will change his plea of
innocence later this
month, and the case
against the only woman
charged in the case is
scheduled to go to trial
Nov. 30.

Joseph Satterfield is
scheduled to appear Nov.
22 in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court to
change his plea. Erin
Hawkins has requested
two continuances of her
trial, which was originally
scheduled on Nov. 9. It
was moved to Nov. 18,
and now has been continued until Nov. 30 at the
request of her attorney,
Public Defender David
Baer.

Satterfield has retained
Gallipolis
Attorney
William Eachus to represent him. He was released
on a property bond in
September
and
has
remained out of jail.
Hawkins and Jeffrey
Mullins, also charged,
remain in sheriff’s custody.
Mullins has requested a
continuance of his trial,
which has now been
moved to Dec. 16.

All four defendants are
charged in identical
indictments with two
counts of breaking and
entering, possessing criminal tools, vandalism,
arson, desecration, and
tampering with evidence.
In addition to setting
the fire that burned the
150 year-old church to the
ground, the four are also
accused of vandalizing
the church and desecrating sacred religious

objects, many of which
dated to the earliest days
of the Hemlock Grove
church.
Since the church fire,
the congregation has been
worshipping
at
the
Hemlock Grange Hall.
Plans to rebuild are now
underway, with help from
community supporters.
Last week, a fourth
defendant, Christopher

See Arson, A5

Annual Christmas flower show set for weekend Official ballot
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY — “A
Christmas Carol” by
Charles Dickens will be
depicted in artistic design
classes at the annual holiday flower show to be
held
Saturday
and
Sunday at the Carleton
School.
All classes of the show
are open to residents of
the Bend Area and to all
members of Meigs
County Garden Clubs,
according to show chairman, Peggy Crane. Also
included in the show are
classes for youth under
the age of 19 years.
Entries will be judged by
an accredited judge of the
Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs and ribbons awarded in three
places in each class of the
show.
In the artistic division
the classes each describe
a scene or character from
“A Christmas Carol”
with a design including
flowers and accessories
to complete a picture.
The
classes
are
“Marley’s Ghost”
a
vibratel; “Scrooge” featuring green, The Ghost
of Christmas Past” showing motion, “The Ghost
of Christmas Present”
including fruit or vegeta-

bles; “The Cratchit
Home,” a still life; “Tiny
Tim,” a small design;
“The
Ghost
of
Christmas,” a transparency; and “Christmas Day,”
a Madonna with child.
In the junior artistic
division, the classes are
“Bah Humbug” interpretive; and “God Bless Us
Everyone” the Holy family.
In the horticulture division, there are classes for
narrow leaf evergreens,
broad leaf evergreens,
berried branches, contrived flowers, house
plants, blooming, foliage,
cacti and succulent ones,
and African violets.
The junior horticulture
classes include dried
roadside
material,
Christmas
ornaments
made with natural materials, and a fairy garden.
In the division for creative designs, there are
classes for wreaths and
wall hangings, both
indoor and outdoor;
packages for child or
adult to include some
plant material. and table
exhibitions carrying out
the theme “Christmas
dinner at the Cratchits.
The Master Gardeners
Charlene Hoeflich/photo
will have an educational A transparency arrangement for the special class of
exhibit titled “the Winter “Ghost of Christmas” in this weekendʼs flower show is

See Flower, A5

count posted
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY
—
Monday’s official count of
7,120 ballots cast in
November’s general election determined the outcome of the county’s only
contested race, but no
other election outcomes
were affected.
The Board of Elections
Monday named Tim Ihle
(R) the winner of the close
race
with
Mick
Davenport. (D). A difference of 38 votes separated
the two candidates prior to
Monday’s official count,
which also included for
the first time provisional
ballots cast on Election
Day.
Voter turnout for the
November election in
Meigs County was reported at just under 45 percent, according to official
results of the election provided by the Board of
Elections Monday.
Official count results
were:
Governor:
Kasich,
3,322, Strickland, 3,430,
Matesz, 120, Spisak, 74.
Attorney
General:
Cordray, 2,664, DeWine,
3,922; Feldman, 151, and
Owens, 255.

being prepared by Peggy Crane.

See Ballot, A5

Hemlock nearing rebuilding goal
Fur Peace fundraiser to assist
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

HEMLOCK GROVE
— The fire which leveled the Hemlock Grove
Christian Church left a
building in ruins, not a
congregation — a congregation which is working
to rebuild its permanent
home.
The church will receive
around $200,000 in insurance money but construction estimates indicate it
will
take
around
$300,000 for just the new
building - this doesn’t
include contents, accord-

ing to Marge Barr, member of the church. The
good news is, the church
has received around
$65,000 in donations
which means it needs
another $35,000 to reach
the goal of simply putting
the church under roof
again. To grasp the cost of
replacing the contents,
one of the church’s
organs was valued at $10$15,000. In short, the
church faces a long,
expensive road on the
road to rebuild — though
that journey is well

See Hemlock, A5

Submitted photo
The Coolville Community Choiralong with nationally known singer/songwriter Rob
McNurlin will host a benefit concert on Dec. 11 at Fur Peace Ranch. All proceeds benefit
the Hemlock Grove Christian Church Building Fund.

High: 59
Low: 37

INDEX
2 SECTIONS — 12 PAGES

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
B2-4
Comics
B5
Editorials
A4
Sports
B Section
© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Tornadoes take another title
Awarded ‘School of Promise’
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE — Southern
Elementary School and
Southern High School are
the only schools in Meigs
County to each be recognized by the Ohio
Department of Education
as a “School of Promise”
for the 2009-10 school
year.

SES and SHS are two of
161 Ohio schools which
received the recognition
based upon 2009-10 local
report cards. These 161
schools have “excelled
through rigorous coursework and a strong system
of learning support to help
students overcome high
levels of poverty,” according to Deborah Delisle,
state superintendent of

public instruction for
ODE.
SHS received this designation once before for the
2006-07 school year in
reading — the same area
it received its 2009-10
designation. This is the
first time SES has
received the designation
and earned its award with
scores in mathematics.
Southern
Local

Superintendent
Tony
Deem explained: “When
looking at the schools that
earn this award, the
research demonstrates five
common themes — rigorous standards and instruction, strong instructional
leadership, instruction
designed for all students
success, parent and community involvement, positive school culture. I feel

Southern Local has really
excelled in all these areas.
As a superintendent it is
reassuring that we are
reaching all students and
that the concentration and
investment
in
math
instruction is paying off.”
Deem said the district
attributes the elementary
school’s success in mathe-

See School, A5

�Wednesday, November 17, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

SNAP, Riverbend Animal
Clinic working together

Submitted photo
Beth Stanley, admitting clerk, second from left, was
recently named the Pleasant Valley Hospital
“Employee of the Month.” She was acknowledged for
providing quality service to customers going out of her
way to ensure customers feel welcomed and ensuring
they find the department they need. Stanley has been
an employee of PVH for 15 years. She and her husband reside in Point Pleasant. Pictured with Stanley
are, from the left, Tammy Midkiff, Director of Business
Services, Hugh Collins, President and Chief
Executive Officer of PVH, and Karen Birchfield, A/R
Registration Coordinator. Stanley will receive a $50
award, a congratulatory certificate and VIP parking. In
addition, she will also be entered in the facilityʼs
Customer Service Employee of the Year recognition.

Riverby Theatre Guild
hosts auditions for
murder-mystery
production
GALLIPOLIS — The French Art Colony’s
Riverby Theatre Guild will hold auditions for the
first production of its 2011 season, “Murder by the
Book,” on Friday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m. and Saturday,
Nov. 20 at 11 p.m. Multiple adult roles are available and prior stage experience is not necessary to
audition. No advance preparations are required for
the audition.
The production is scheduled for February, 2011.
Performances for “Murder By The Book” are
planned to take place in Point Pleasant, W.Va., as a
dinner-theatre event.
The comedy, murder-mystery is directed by Ron
Siders. “Murder By The Book” offers local actors
the opportunity to bring literature’s most recognizable authors to life; William Shakespeare, Emily
Dickinson, Mark Twain, Agatha Christie and more.
The group plans to produce at least five additional productions during the 2011 season. Details will
be announced at their upcoming 2010 Holiday productions, “Snow Child,” Dec. 10-12, at the Point
Pleasant HS Wedge Auditorium and “It’s A
Wonderful Life,” Dec. 17-19 at the University of
Rio Grande’s Berry Fine and Performing Arts
Center.
The Riverby Theatre Guild plans to continue its
mission of bridging the Ohio and West Virginia
communities through the arts by presenting productions on both sides of the Ohio River, and by
seeking involvement from members of numerous
surrounding communities.
More information regarding the French Art
Colony’s Riverby Theatre Guild can be obtained
by contacting the FAC at (740) 446-3834, or by visiting www.frenchartcolony.org. The Ohio Arts
Council helped fund this program or organization
with state tax dollars to encourage economic
growth, educational excellence and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.

Keeping
Meigs County informed

The DailySentinel
Subscribe today
740-992-2156

Submitted photo
Veterinarians Sherri Queen and Brian Hendrickson of
Riverbend Animal Clinic have agreed to provide spayneuter surgeries for the Spay Neuter Assistance
Program (SNAP) of Gallia County. The program benefits
low-income pet owners and feline trap-neuter-release.

GALLIPOLIS — Riverbend Animal Clinic owners
and veterinarians Sherri Queen and Brian
Hendrickson are providing spay-neuter surgeries for
the Spay Neuter Assistance Program (SNAP) of
Gallia County, a not-for-profit organization founded
by local residents Jim and Chris Cozza.
SNAP is the only animal welfare organization in
Gallia County that solely focuses on reducing the
number of unwanted cats and dogs.
Individuals needing assistance or more information
may contact Chris Cozza at 441-1647; they are not to
call Riverbend. SNAP is funded by donations, which
may be mailed in care of Chris Cozza to SNAP of
Gallia County, 1032 First Ave., Gallipolis OH 45631
or deposited directly into the SNAP account at any
Ohio Valley Bank location.

Drama at Promise Land
GALLIPOLIS — Promise Land Church will present
the drama “The Rich Man and the Beggar” at 7 p.m.,
Saturday, Nov. 20. The church is located 3.5 miles out
Ohio 218. Rev. Truman Johnson invites the public to
attend. For information, call 441-1638.

Choir at Crown City Wesleyan
CROWN CITY — The God’s Bible School College
Choir will present a concert 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 2566993.

Love Feast and Auction
ADDISON — River of
Life United Methodist
Church will host its annual
Love Feast and Auction at
6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Nov.
20. A carry-in dinner will
be followed by an auction
with proceeds going to missions. River of Life UMC is
located at 35 Hillview
Drive, 0.3 mile out Addison
Pike from Ohio 7 at
Addison.

Armstrong
marks 17 years
at Mt. Carmel
BIDWELL — Mt.
Carmel Missionary Baptist
Church will celebrate the
17th pastoral anniversary of
Moderator, Rev Gene A.
Armstrong on Sunday, Nov.
28. Morning worship
begins at 10:45 a.m.
Afternoon worship will
begin at 3 p.m. Rev Calvin
Minnis, Pastor of Corinth
Baptist Church along with
the choir and congregation
will be the afternoon guests.
Dinner will be served following morning worship.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

The Four Lads
coming to
Nelsonville
NELSONVILLE — The Four Lads, that legendary vocal group from the 1950s, will present
an evening of music at Stuart’s Opera House,
7:30 p.m. Saturday.
According to a release from Stuart’s, The Four
Lads, with 60 years in the music business are still
touring. Fans will remember that among the
group’s huge hits were “Istanbul,” “Standing on
the Corner” and “Moments to Remember.” The
performance will feature founding member
Bernie Toorish.
As for the history of the group, The Four Lads
began their career in their native Canada. They
were recruited to go to New York, they were
noticed by Mitch Miller, who asked them to do
backup for some of the artists he recorded. One of
these artists, Johnnie Ray, became a major hit in
1951 with “Cry” and “The Little White Cloud
that Cried” with the Four Lads backing him. The
group earned gold records and hit singles
throughout the 1950s and 1960s.
Tickets are on sale. For tickets or more information call (740) 753-1924 or visit www.stuartsoperahouse.org.

GRANT
&amp; O R T H O PA E D I C A S S O C I AT E S

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
Joint Replacement Surgeon

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement, we offer office hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is November 19
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment

Specializing in total joint replacment

�BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Wednesday, Nov. 17
POMEROY — Meigs
County
Firefighters
Association, 7:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy firehouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
Eastern Local Board of
Education, 6:30 p.m., elementary library conference room.
Monday, Nov. 22
RACINE — Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Nov. 18
POMEROY
—
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advisory

Board/Survivorship
Taskforce, regular meeting, noon, banquet room
at Wild Horse Cafe.
REEDSVILLE
—
Riverview Garden Club
,7:30 p.m., Reedsville
United Methodist Church.
Bring gifts for nursing
home, auction items.
Roll call will be a family
Thanksgiving tradition.
POMEROY — The
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors ,
11:30 a.m. at the district
office, 33101 Hiland
Road.
Tuesday, Nov. 23
CHESTER — Past
Councilors Club, DofA, 7
p.m. at the lodge hall.

Church events
Sunday, Nov. 21
LONG BOTTOM —

Northeast
Cluster
Thanksgiving Hymn Sing,
7 p.m., Long Bottom
United Methodist Church,
bring non perishable food
item for the Meigs
Cooperative
Parish
Christmas distribution.

Other events
Wednesday, Nov. 17
MIDDLEPORT
—
Community Thanksgiving
service, 7 p.m., Hope
Baptist Church, 570 Grant
St. Canned food items collected for area families.
Sponsored by Middleport
Ministerial Association.
MIDDLEPORT
—
Annual Thanksgiving and
Veterans Day dinner, 6
p.m.,
Feeney-Bennett
Post
128, American
Legion post. Presentation
of
annual
awards,
Legionnaire of the Year

and Legionnaire of the
Decade.
Sunday, Nov. 21
POMEROY — The
Meigs County Ministerial
Association will host a
Thanksgiving dinner and
services at the Mulberry
Community
Center.
Dinner will be served at 6
p.m. and services with
Pastor Larry Lemley
speaking will be held at 7
p.m. Public invited. A free
gift available to all after the
service.

Birthdays
Sunday, Nov. 21
POMEROY — Clarence
Partlow, formerly of Meigs
County, will celebrate his
100th birthday on Nov. 21.
Cards may be sent to him
at Limestone Street,
Jamestown, Ohio 45335.

Trying to move ahead,
but people hate her

Dr. Joyce Brothers
for some to accept you!
What it boils down to
is human nature. But if
you want something
more
scientific,
Washington
State
University researchers
recently did a study,
published
in
the
Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology,
which showed that
employees like you do
tend to be disliked by
those who don’t want
to do those thankless
tasks at work. The reasons were threefold: It
makes the others look
like slackers, it means
that the standards are
going to be raised for
everyone, and you
seem to somehow be
breaking the rules. On
top of that, there likely
is the suspicion that
you are playing off the
less selfless workers in
a ruthless bid to get
ahead. With all of that,
you might want to look
somewhere outside of
work to enhance your
social circle.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Family Medicine

A S K D R . B R OT H E R S

Dear Dr. Brothers:
No matter what position I start at in any job
I have, I always seem
to get a promotion and
raise in under a year.
My strategy is simple:
Find the job that most
people cringe at the
thought of doing, and
perform that task with
a smile. There’s only
one problem: No matter where I go, I never
get along with my coworkers. It’s like they
resent my volunteering
to do things they would
never dream of doing.
What’s wrong with
them? — B.D.
Dear B.D.: It is
admirable of you to do
the jobs that no one
else wants to tackle.
This helps the company, and it also helps
you get ahead. Is this
something you do for
your own self-interest,
or for the good of the
organization?
This
probably is the same
question being asked
by all those colleagues
of yours who are standing on the sideline
looking at you with a
bit of resentment and a
bit of suspicion. If they
knew exactly where
you were coming from,
perhaps they’d feel
more comfortable with
you. The fact that your
hard work is meeting
with success probably
makes it even harder

Page A3

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers:
I love my husband
very much. There
truly is no one else I
would want to spend
the rest of my life
with. But I have a
problem — and I really can’t tell if it’s him
or me. I get very anxious and nervous if I
have to say no to him.
The very few times I
have said no, he acted
like it was the end of
the world. I really can’t
stand to see him unhappy, and I wind up getting myself into situations where I’m the one
who is miserable. I’m
so confused; I don’t
know what to do. —
T.T.
Dear T.T.: Some
people really dread
saying no, and others
can’t stand to hear it. If
they are married to one
another, it could lead to
a rather unhealthy relationship, in which one
dominates the other
and the other resents
the first. But before we
label you and your husband in this way, you
need to think about
why you are so reluctant to say no to him. Is
it because of his exaggerated response, so
you are second-guessing the validity of your
position? Or are you
frightened of upsetting
him for any reason,

true or bogus? Have
you had trouble saying
no in other relationships? Does he seem to
be manipulative? If
not, how about emotionally fragile?
It may take some
thoughtful reflection
on your part just to figure out where he is
coming from, but I
think it would be
worthwhile to ask him
to talk about this with
you — on a day when
there is no conflict on
the table. Perhaps you
will gain a new perspective on what is
important to him —
and to you. That way,
you will know when
your “no” has the real
power to hurt him and
when it is something
you could compromise
on. Every marriage has
its give and take — you
just need to be confident enough that communication about your
differences is not too
scary for either of you.
If you both want to
please one another yet
still maintain your
individuality
and
choices in daily living,
you’ll need to come to
terms with the fact that
you
won’t
always
agree.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

Many conditions can
cause shoulder pain
B Y M ARTHA A.
S IMPSON , D.O.,
M.B.A.
OHIO UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF
OSTEOPATHIC MEDICINE

Question: I am a 65
year old woman in relatively good health.
My left shoulder has
started bothering me,
out of the blue.
Someone suggested
that I have arthritis. I
have never played any
sport or injured my
shoulder that I recall.
Could they be correct?
Answer: There are
many conditions that
can cause shoulder
pain. They range from
benign conditions to
conditions of concern.
Let me tell you about
some of the causes of
shoulder pain.
Osteoarthritis is a
common cause of
shoulder pain. It can
come and go and is
not always related to
what you have done in
the past or have done
recently. Trauma to a
joint can always predispose a person to
arthritic changes in
that joint, but you can
also develop arthritis
with no memorable
trauma. Osteoarthritis
usually comes on
gradually and is more
common in people
over 50. Other types
of arthritis such as
rheumatoid arthritis
may cause shoulder
pain, too. This condition is highlighted by
morning stiffness and
sometime a redness
and warmth of the
affected joint.
People who have
had injuries and trauma to the shoulder in
the past can have a
variety of musculoskeletal problems
that cause should
pain. We hear people
talk about rotator cuff
problems as well as
tendonitis
in
the
shoulder.
There are some medical conditions that
can present as shoulder pain even though
the cause is really
elsewhere in the body.
This
is
called
“referred” or “reflective” pain. Carpal tunnel syndrome, which
is a nerve compression
condition of the wrist,
is a good example.
Even though the physical cause for the pain
is in the nerves of the
wrist, shoulder pain
can be a symptom of

the condition.
Problems with discs
in the neck can cause
shoulder
problems.
This cause of shoulder
pain is frequently
associated with numbness. Additionally, the
nerves that control the
upper
extremities,
including the shoulders, can become
inflamed and cause
shoulder pain. This is
called brachial neuritis. Shingles should be
considered with a sudden, new onset of
shoulder pain. Usually
a rash will appear
shortly after the pain
of shingles starts.
Even pain from
more distant parts of
the body can be
referred to the shoulder. This means the
problem may be your
abdomen,
for
instance, but the pain
is in the shoulder.
Things like pancreatitis, gallstones, ulcers
or peritonitis can
cause shoulder pain,
as can chest cavity
problems.
Another
serious
cause
of
shoulder pain can be
from a cancer elsewhere in the body that
refers pain to the
shoulder.
What you describe is
probably osteoarthritis, but you should see
your physician and let
her or him make the
diagnosis. That way
you will be sure the
treatment you receive
is the correct treatment.
(Family Medicine®
is a weekly column.
General medical questions can be sent to
Martha A. Simpson,
D.O., M.B.A., Ohio
University College of
Osteopathic Medicine,
Communication Office,
Athens, Ohio 45701, or
familymedicine@ouco
m.ohiou.edu.)

�OPINION

Page A4
Wednesday, November 17, 2010

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TSA: Religion offers no break
on airport screening
BY SHARON THEIMER

Tea party seeks Capitol clout

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Transportation Security Administration
says airline passengers won’t get out of body
imaging screening or pat-downs based on their
religious beliefs.
TSA chief John Pistole told the Senate
Homeland Security Committee on Tuesday that
passengers who refuse to go through a full-body
scanner machine and reject a pat-down won’t be
allowed to board, even if they turned down the indepth screening for religious reasons.
“That person is not going to get on an airplane,”
Pistole said in response to a question from Sen.
John Ensign, R-Nev., on whether the TSA would
provide exemptions for passengers whose religious beliefs do not allow them to go through a
physically revealing body scan or be touched by
screeners.
Civil rights groups contend the more intensive
screening violates civil liberties including freedom of religion, the right to privacy and the constitutional protection against unreasonable searches.
The issue is getting new attention after a man
posted an item online saying he was thrown out of
the San Diego airport for rejecting a full-body
scan and pat-down groin check and instead insisting on passing through a metal detector.
Pistole acknowledged the incident was drawing
wide attention but told the committee an officer
involved was “very cool, calm, professional” in
dealing with the passenger.
The Electronic Privacy Information Center is
among several civil liberties groups suing the
TSA in federal court to stop use of the full-body
scanners. Their lawsuit says the machines are
overly intrusive and violate civil rights, and that it
is questionable whether they can detect powdered
explosives such as those used by a passenger in
last year’s attempted Christmas airliner bombing.
They also question whether the machines pose a
health risk. There is growing opposition from civil
rights groups, religious organizations, libertarians,
airline passengers and pilots.
EPIC is urging air travelers to take part in a
national opt-out day the day before Thanksgiving,
refusing to go through the full-body detectors and
insisting that any pat-down they receive as a result
take place in full view of other passengers.
Several senators asked Pistole to address public
criticism of the body-imaging machines and more
intrusive pat-downs the agency is using. Pistole
said the tougher screening is necessary, and that
the FDA has found the imaging machines to be
safe. Going through the whole-body scanning
machine is similar to getting about three minutes
of the radiation that passengers receive at 30,000
feet on a typical flight, he said.
Pistole said his agency was working to address
pilot and flight attendant concerns about the
screening.

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BY JULIE HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Tea party activists and other
conservatives, eager to transform
electoral gains into clout on
Capitol Hill, are pressuring
Republican leaders to take a hardline approach in the next
Congress, shunning compromise
for confrontation with Democrats.
The strategy is likely to bring
gridlock on major issues — particularly tax cuts and spending —
and make it more difficult for
President Barack Obama and
Congress to find common ground
on virtually any measure. It’s also
leaving key Republicans, in
charge of the House and with
larger numbers in the Senate, less
room to maneuver as they seek to
show they can make the big
changes they’ve promised.
GOP leaders have bowed to the
pressure already this week.
Sen. Mitch McConnell of
Kentucky, the Republican leader,
said he’d go along with a ban on
the practice of earmarking — in
which lawmakers steer federal
spending to pet projects in their
states and districts. The decision
narrowly averted an internal party
fight over earmarks, and gave the
tea party a high-profile victory
reflecting its growing influence.
The change “clearly demonstrates the continuing importance
of the tea party movement,” said
Mark Meckler of the Tea Party
Patriots, a coalition of local
groups. “While many pundits
have questioned our postelection
status, our agenda-setting demand
for the elimination of earmarks is
a clear indication of our intent to
carry out the will of the 2010 election results immediately and for
many years to come.”
Conservative leader Richard
Viguerie said: “Today begins the
process
of
repairing
the
Republican brand.”
Even before taking House control in January, Republicans led
by Speaker-to-be John Boehner of
Ohio have been adamant in insisting that Congress take action
before adjourning for the year to
extend all the Bush-era tax cuts
now scheduled to expire in
January. Obama, who has resisted
preserving the cuts for the wealthiest taxpayers, has signaled he’ll
be willing to do so temporarily, an
approach that some Senate
Republicans are weighing.
Speaking to tea party activists
Monday, GOP Rep. Mike Pence

of Indiana said, “There must be
no compromise” on the matter.
Beneath the rhetoric is a concrete effort by tea party-aligned
leaders to quickly show lawmakers and the public that they will be
a force in high-stakes policy decisions, not just a fleeting grassroots phenomenon.
“A lot of activists right now feel
like they got a win on (election
night) and they want to put another one in the win column as quickly as possible,” said Republican
strategist Kevin Madden. “Tea
party leaders recognize that voters
have sent a very specific message
and they want to make sure that
their success is going to be measured daily, weekly, monthly.”
Some Republicans worry that
kind of pressure could so intimidate GOP lawmakers that they’ll
be unwilling to cut bipartisan
deals on major issues, particularly
on addressing the exploding federal deficit and strengthening the
economy.
“This groundswell, this movement has never happened before,
so everybody recognizes that he
or she might be vulnerable in the
next primary election, much less
the general election, so that makes
them more cautious,” said former
GOP Rep. Sherwood Boehlert of
New York.
Boehlert, known during his
time in Congress for crossing
party lines to vote with
Democrats, said voters clearly
want change in the way
Washington
works,
and
Republicans will pay a price if
they can’t show they’re willing to
compromise.
“There can’t be one side saying
‘no’ and the other side saying
‘yes,’ and never the twain shall
meet, because if this election
taught us anything, it’s that anyone can be vulnerable if they
don’t show they can get something done,” he said.
For now, however, many on the
right still sound like they’re in
campaign mode. When tea party
activists gathered on Capitol Hill
Monday for lawmakers’ first day
back since the elections, they
made it clear they expect
Republicans to flatly refuse to go
along with Democrats’ proposals.
Phil Kerpen of the conservative
group Americans for Prosperity
said the GOP should band together to try to kill a catchall spending
measure to fund government
operations through the end of the
year.

“No Republican better help
them,” Kerpen said menacingly,
to hoots and cheers from a raucous crowd.
Many of those assembled held
signs that said “We’re watching
you,” and as Republican lawmakers took their turns speaking to the
crowd, some yelled the same message.
GOP leaders say they welcome
the grass-roots enthusiasm that’s
coming out of the elections and
argue that — far from complicating their task — the tea party
movement and the freshman lawmakers it helped elect are adding
momentum to their agenda of tax
and spending cuts and rolling
back the health care law.
In a nod to the potency of the
freshmen, Boehner said Tuesday
he would give them even more
say on key decisions. He said he’d
add a second elected slot to his
leadership team for a first-termer
and a third to a powerful panel
that doles out committee assignments.
Still, tea party activists have
already demonstrated they’re
willing to be a highly vocal thorn
in the side of GOP leaders. At
Monday’s rally, Rep. Michele
Bachmann, R-Minn., an outspoken favorite of the movement
whose brief bid for a leadership
post got the cold shoulder from
Boehner and his inner circle, was
introduced as “our leader” in the
House.
She went on to refer to the government as “a gangster government” and said if Republicans
don’t bow to the public’s
demands, “then you had better
turn us out, too.”
The pressure is particularly
acute on the more than 80 incoming GOP lawmakers elected this
month, some with substantial help
from tea partiers. Leaders of the
Tea Party Patriots orchestrated an
electronic onslaught over the
weekend
directed
at
the
Republican freshmen, angry that a
group backed by lobbyists and
campaign consultants was holding a rival orientation retreat for
the newcomers in Washington.
The lawmakers’ personal cell
phone numbers and e-mail
addresses were posted, and supporters were urged to instruct
them to attend the tea party event
instead.
“Don’t let them steal OUR
members of Congress,” the message said.

�Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Deaths

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Meigs County Forecast

Arson
From Page A1

Mary C. “Kate” Mathews
Mary Catherine “Kate” Mathews, 80, Rio Grande,
died Monday, November 15, 2010, in the Holzer
Medical Center. Funeral services will be 11 a.m.,
Thursday, Nov. 18, 2010, in the Simpson United
Methodist Church, Rio Grande. Rev. David Young
will officiate. Burial will be in the Tyn Rhos
Cemetery. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m.,
Wednesday at the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

Melvin ‘Dick’ Henry
Melvin “Dick” Henry, 68, Mason, W.Va., died
Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2010. Funeral arrangements are
incomplete and will be announced later by CrowHussell Funeral Home.

School
From Page A1
matics to hiring teacher Tricia McNickle as a math
coach four years ago. McNickle’s position was originally funded from a grant but is now funded by the local
board of education. The math coach project is in conjunction with The Ohio State University.
“She (McNickle) works a lot with our teachers on
methodology and ways to reach all students,” Deem
said. “Southern local is 68 percent economically disadvantaged and it is important to reach all of the students.”
According to ODE, “Schools of Promise” are closing
achievement gaps for economically disadvantaged and
minority students. The 161 “Schools of Promise” outperformed schools statewide when comparing the number of indicators met in the state accountability system.
ODE recognizes schools across Ohio that are demonstrating high achievement in reading and mathematics
for all groups of students, despite the fact that 40 percent or more of these students come from low-income
backgrounds. Students in these schools met or exceeded the state standard of 75 percent passage in reading
and/or mathematics for the 2009-10 school year.
Deem also attributes the district’s success to community involvement.
“The community support has just been tremendous
and we have more parents involved now than what we
did five years ago,” Deem said. “I am very proud of my
students and staff but still realize we have to never be
satisfied but strive to improve every day.”
SES and SHS will each receive banners denoting their
“School of Promise” award from ODE.

Hemlock
From Page A1
underway.
The most recent fundraiser is the upcoming benefit
concert given by the Coolville Community Choir at the
Fur Peace Ranch’s concert hall. The concert will feature the choir as the opening act for nationally-known
singer/songwriter, Rob McNurlin.
The concert is from 2-5 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 11 at
Fur Peace Ranch. Tickets are $10 and include light
refreshments at intermission. Tickets can be purchased
at Farmers Bank in both Pomeroy and Tuppers Plains;
the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce; or by calling Sue Maison at 667-6455, Sue Matheny at 6673513. All proceeds raised go to the Hemlock Grove
Christian Church Building Fund.
Paula Welker, who is a member of both the Coolville
Choir and Hemlock Grove Christian Church, said each
year the choir picks an individual or cause to contribute
to — contributions are derived from love offerings
taken at three to four concert events the choir gives
each year. At next month’s concert, Welker said the
choir is slated to perform Christmas songs for the first
45 minutes (performing “Christmas USA, A Promise
of Christ”), followed by intermission with light refreshments included in the ticket price, then McNurlin takes
the stage. Welker said she anticipates the choir will join
McNurlin on stage at some point.
“I feel confident about this benefit,” Welker said.
“We have choir members from all over, including
Parkersburg, Athens, Pomeroy and even New Haven so
people are getting the word out that just flat out enjoy
music. Our choir members all sing because we want to,
because we believe in God and the Christmas spirit.”
Barr said the church hopes to have construction
underway in the spring; construction that will in large
part be possible through donations and fundraisers.
Barr said the church is “tickled to death” at the support
its received, including over 260 donations (40 of those
directly from churches or church-sponsored groups)
from over 15 states.
The new church will be built directly over the spot
where the old church sat. Anyone wishing to donate
cakes, cookies for the benefit’s intermission can contact Welker 992-7291.

Divers, admitted to two counts of breaking and entering, possessing criminal tools, vandalism, arson, desecration, and tampering with evidence. He has now
begun to serve a two-year term on the breaking and
entering and possessing criminal tools charges, and
will return to court in January for sentencing on the
more serious counts in his indictment.

Flower
From Page A1
Garden” and information on penny-pincher ideas for
gardeners.
Everything to be exhibited in the show must be in
place by noon for the judging and must remain there
until 4 p.m. on Sunday for public viewing. The public
is invited to attend the show both Saturday and
Sunday afternoons. There, of course, is no charge.

Ballot
From Page A1
Auditor of State: Howard, 281, Pepper, 2,413; Yost,
4,142.
Treasurer of State: Boyce, 2,552, Cantrell, 289,
Mandel, 3,915.
U.S. Senator: Portman, 4,117, Fisher, 2,533, LaBotz,
30, Pryce, 110.
U.S. Congress (6): Cadle, 167, Elsass, 114, Johnson,
3,699, Wilson, 2,978.
State Rep. (92): Collinsworth, 149, Hunter, 3,800,
Phillips, 3,080.
County Commissioner (1/1/11): Davenport, 3,507,
Ihle, 3,551.
County Auditor: Byer-Hill, 5.348.
Three levies in villages were defeated. Final official
results are as follows:
• Pomeroy, current expenses replacement, one mill,
five years: 183 for, 227 against.
• Pomeroy, police/street, levy on income tax, 129 for,
282 against.
• Middleport, current expenses renewal, one mill,
five years: 250 for, 351 against.

For the Record

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cent.
Friday: Sunny, with a
high near 51.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
34.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 58.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
37.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 61.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
43.
Monday: Cloudy, with
a high near 62.
Monday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 46.
Tuesday: A chance of
showers. Cloudy, with a
high near 60. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 35.94
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 58.46
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 51.64
Big Lots (NYSE) — 29.88
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 29.82
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 56.49
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 13.35
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.21
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) — 3.53
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 33.20
Collins (NYSE) — 55.16
DuPont (NYSE) — 45.68
US Bank (NYSE) — 24.72
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.86
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 30.76
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 39.61
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.44
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 31.09
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 60.55
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.66

BBT (NYSE) — 24.45
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 13.59
Pepsico (NYSE) — 64.04
Premier (NASDAQ) — 6.25
Rockwell (NYSE) — 63.72
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) — 9.11
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.04
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 64.89
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 54.26
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.59
WesBanco (NYSE) — 17.27
Worthington (NYSE) — 15.60

Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 16, 2010, provided
by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Local Briefs

911
POMEROY — Meigs County 911 dispatched
emergency medical calls as follows
Monday
4:38 p.m., Ohio 124, Portland, laceration; 4:43
p.m., Rose Hill Road, pain; 5:51 p.m., Sycamore
Street, Middleport, anxiety; 11:29 p.m., Mulberry
Avenue, hemorrhage.
Tuesday
1:11 a.m., Spring Avenue, motor vehicle collision.

Common Pleas

Auction
LETART FALLS — Letart United Methodist
Church will hold a “blind man’s auction” at 5 p.m. on
Saturday.

Soldier given highest medal
for heroism on a ridge

WASHINGTON (AP) — Ambushed in
POMEROY — Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch filed
Afghanistan,
Staff Sgt. Salvatore Giunta stepped into
the following as part of the court’s public record:
a
“wall
of
bullets”
and chased down two Taliban fightCriminal
• Kendall Shane Church, one year, forgery and ers who were carrying his mortally wounded friend
receiving stolen property, to be served consecutively away.
Three years after that act of battlefield bravery,
with sentence previously imposed.
Giunta on Tuesday became the first living service
• Charles Conkle, five years community control, member from the Afghanistan and Iraq wars to
forgery and receiving stolen property, one year, receive the nation’s top military award, the Medal of
forgery.
Honor.
• Timothy Shane, one year, non-support of depenFar from the perilous ridge where his unit was
dents.
attacked on a moonlit night in October 2007, Giunta
• Ryan Keith Marshall, one year, receiving stolen stood in the glittering East Room, in the company of
property.
military brass, past Medal of Honor winners, his sur• Robert W. Riffle, one year, non-support of depen- viving comrades and families as President Barack
dents.
Obama hung the blue ribbon cradling the medal
• Donald J. Haning, five years community control, around Giunta’s neck.
“I’m going to go off script here and just say, ‘I realnon-support of dependents.
ly like this guy,” Obama said, calling him “a soldier as
Civil
• Civil judgment action filed by State Farm Mutual humble as he is heroic.
“When you meet Sal and you meet his family, you
Automobile Insurance Co., and others, against
are just absolutely convinced that this is what
Richard A. Hill, Jr., Albany, and others.
• Civil judgment action filed by Stacey Hudnall America is all about, and it just makes you proud.”
For Giunta, the tribute was bittersweet, because it
against Gaylen Swanson, Rutland.
was a bloody day in Afghanistan’s Korengal Valley
Domestic
• Dissolution granted Roger Don Cotterill, Gail and the soldier he brought back later died.
Anne Cotterill.
• Dissolution granted
Elyse Hatfield, William
Wells.
• Dissolution granted
At Windstream, we’re focused
Eric Wayne, Courtney
MONTHLY RATE OF
on delivering quality services at
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reasonable rates within our service
• Dissolution granted
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Residential Service
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(includes Federal Subscriber Line Charge
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Patrecia Anne Arnold.
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Wednesday: Mostly
sunny, with a high near
59. West wind between
10 and 14 mph.
Wednesday Night: A
slight chance of showers
after 3 a.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
37. West wind around 6
mph becoming calm.
Chance of precipitation is
20 percent.
Thursday: A chance of
showers, mainly between
10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Cloudy, with a high near
49. Calm wind becoming
west around 6 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Thursday Night: A
slight chance of showers
before 9 p.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
34. Calm wind. Chance
of precipitation is 20 per-

POMEROY — Judge
L. Scott Powell issued
marriage licenses to:
• Radley Charlin Faulk,
29, Pomeroy, Kimberly
Sue Blake, 27, Mason,
W.Va.
•
Wesley
Duane
Anderson, 20, Dianna Lee
Evans, 22, Cheshire.

services are assessed according to
government guidelines.

(includes Federal Subscriber Line Charge
and mandatory expanded calling)

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Low-income individuals eligible for Lifeline and Link-Up telephone assistance programs
may be eligible for discounts on these basic local service charges through state-specified
telephone assistance plans.
Of course Windstream provides a complete menu of optional services, including
bundles at discount prices. Windstream also offers basic services at the rates, terms
and conditions specified in the company’s tariffs.
If you have any questions regarding Windstream services, residential
customers should call Windstream at 1-800-347-1991 and
business customers should call 1-800-843-9214.

$42.05

�Wednesday, November 17, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

Rangel guilty: House ethics panel rules misconduct
WASHINGTON (AP)
— New York Rep.
Charles Rangel, a longtime power in the U.S.
House, violated its rules
with financial misconduct, brought it discredit
and will be punished, fellow lawmakers sitting as
jurors ruled on Tuesday.
Protesting the enduring
stain on his four-decade
congressional career, the
80-year-old Democrat
said he was treated unfairly for “good faith mistakes.” His statement
reflected the bitterness of
an eight-month career
slide, starting with an
unrelated ethics ruling
that forced him from his
coveted chairmanship of
the tax-writing Ways and
Means Committee.
The conduct often cited
by critics was his failure
to report income to the
IRS from a unit he owned
in a Dominican Republic
resort — showing the
chairman in charge of tax
legislation shortchanged
the IRS.
Rangel, a founder of the
Congressional
Black
Caucus, remains a political kingpin in New York’s
famed Harlem neighbor-

hood and is unlikely to
resign. He won re-election earlier this month.
Convicted on 11 of 13
charges of rules violations, his ordeal isn’t finished.
The
eight-member
ethics panel that convicted him — four Democrats
and four Republicans —
now will write what is
likely to be a stinging
report to amplify its findings. Then, the full House
ethics committee will
conduct a hearing on the
appropriate punishment
for Rangel, the silverhaired, gravelly voiced
and sartorially flashy veteran of 20 terms in
Congress.
Possible
sanctions
include a House vote
deploring his conduct, a
fine and denial of certain
privileges.
Rangel’s downfall, in
part, came in the way he
solicited money for a New
York college center
designed as a monument
to himself. There also was
his decade of misleading
annual disclosures of his
income and assets and his
use of a subsidized New
York apartment — desig-

nated for residential use
— as a campaign office.
The panel deliberated
over two days before its
chairman, Democratic
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, made a
bare-bones
statement
announcing the findings
— leaving a full explanation for the upcoming
written report.
The conviction was a
fresh
setback
for
Democrats who lost control of the House to the
GOP in the midterm elections,
support
for
Republican candidates’
assertions of bad conduct.
At his one-day trial on
Monday, Rangel was
reduced to pleading for a
postponement — arguing
that his lawyers abandoned him after he paid
them some $2 million but
could afford no more. The
panel rejected his request,
and Rangel walked out of
the proceeding.
“How can anyone have
confidence in the decision
of the ethics subcommittee when I was deprived
of due process rights,
right to counsel and was
not even in the room?”
Rangel complained on
Tuesday. “I can only hope

that the full committee
will treat me more fairly
and take into account my
entire 40 years of service
to the Congress before
making any decisions on
sanctions.”
He called the panel’s
findings “unprecedented”
because there was no
rebuttal evidence. He
complained that the rejection of his appeal for
more time violated “the
basic constitutional right
to counsel.”
Rangel, echoing a statement he made in August
in a speech to the House,
added, “Any failings in
my conduct were the
result of good faith mistakes.” He said they were
caused by “sloppy and
careless record keeping
but were not criminal or
corrupt.”
New York Gov.-elect
Andrew
Cuomo,
a
Democrat who attended
Rangel’s fundraiser in
August while campaigning to clean up New York
politics, said, “It’s obviously a sad situation to
experience.”
“It’s important that people have full faith in the
integrity in public service,

so it’s painful to watch,”
Cuomo said Tuesday at a
press
event
near
Rochester. “But we’ll see
what happens at the end
of the process.”
The eight-member jury
panel was unanimous on
most charges against
Rangel. Members split 44 on a charge that he violated a ban on gifts
because he was to have an
office — and storage of
his papers — at the
Charles B. Rangel Center
for Public Service at City
College of New York.
Two counts charging
him with misuse of
Congress’ free mail privilege were merged into
one. And the panel voted
7-1 on a final charge that
he had brought discredit
on the House. No breakdown was given on who
voted no.
The charges said the
solicitation for the Rangel
Center targeted foundations and businesses that
were seeking official
action from the House or
had interests that might be
substantially affected by
Rangel’s congressional
conduct.
However, Rangel was

not accused of using his
influence to pass or defeat
legislation.
During Monday’s trial
proceeding, the chief
counsel for the House
ethics committee, Blake
Chisam, told the jury that
Rangel
could
have
received permission to
solicit nonprofit foundations. However, he could
not have used congressional stationery and staff
as he was found to have
done.
Rangel had previously
acknowledged some of
the charges, including
submission of 10 years’
worth of incomplete and
inaccurate annual statements disclosing his
assets and income.
He also admitted he initially did not report his
rental income from a unit
he owned at the Punta
Cana resort in the
Dominican Republic.
An
apartment
in
Harlem’s Lennox Terrace
complex housed the
Rangel for Congress and
National Leadership PAC
political
committees,
although the lease terms
said the unit was for living purposes only.

GOP senator deals setback to nuclear treaty
WASHINGTON (AP)
— An agreement between
the United States and
Russia to slash their
nuclear arsenals was in
danger
of
collapse
Tuesday after an influential Republican senator
said it should not be voted
on this year.
With a terse statement,
Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz.,
dealt a major setback to
President
Barack
Obama’s
efforts
to
improve ties with Russia
and to his broader strategy
for reducing nuclear arms
worldwide. The treaty,
known as New START,
had been seen as one of
Obama’s top foreign policy accomplishments.
Without the support of
Kyl,
the
leading
Republican voice on the
treaty, Democrats have little hope of securing at
least eight Republican
votes, the minimum they
would need for ratification
in the Senate. His stance,
unless reversed, would
delay the vote until the

newly elected Senate,
with
an
expanded
Republican minority, is
sworn in next year.
Democrats would then
need the support of at least
14 Republicans.
The White House has
been trying to avoid a vote
next year, knowing that
ratification could slip out
of reach in the face of
opposition to the treaty
from most Republicans
and an increasingly partisan political environment.
At a minimum, a 2011
vote would probably set
the treaty back for
months,
because
Republicans are likely to
demand new hearings in
the
Senate
Foreign
Relations Committee so
that newly elected lawmakers could be briefed.
Following the setback,
Vice President Joe Biden
warned that a failure to
approve the treaty this
year would endanger
national security. He
pointed out that the treaty
would renew U.S. author-

ity that expired last year to
inspect Russia’s nuclear
arsenal.
Senate Democrats were
holding out hope. The
chairman of the Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee, Sen. John
Kerry, D-Mass., said that
he had discussed the issue
with Kyl on Tuesday and
believed the door was still
open to a vote before the
end of the year.
“Ratifying New START
is not a political choice,
it’s a national security
imperative,” Kerry said.
But Kyl’s statement
appeared to leave little
room to resolve the issue
quickly. He said that he
told Senate Majority
Leader Harry Reid, DNev., that he did not
believe the treaty could be
considered this year.
The treaty would reduce
U.S. and Russian limits on
strategic warheads to
1,550 for each country
from the current ceiling of
2,200. It also would set up
new procedures to allow

both countries to inspect
each other’s arsenals to
verify compliance.
Republicans
have
argued that the treaty
would limit U.S. missile
defense options and does
not provide adequate procedures to verify that
Russia is living up to its
terms.
Kyl has argued that it
doesn’t make sense to
reduce the U.S. warheads
until more is done to
maintain and modernize
the remaining arsenal.
Last week the administration sought to satisfy
Kyl’s conditions for supporting the treaty with a
proposal to significantly
boost funding for the
nation’s nuclear weapons
complex. A congressional
aide briefed on White
House plans told The
Associated Press last
week that the White
House was proposing to
add $4.1 billion that
would go to maintaining
and modernizing the arsenal and the laboratories

that oversee that effort.
U.S. government officials
traveled to Kyl’s home
state of Arizona to make
the proposal.
Over the weekend,
Obama had expressed
optimism on the treaty’s
prospects.
But Kyl appeared to
surprise the administration with a statement
against quick passage that
cited “unresolved issues
related to START and
modernization.”

The Kyl statement came
on a day of renewed friction with Russia stemming from Thailand’s
extradition to the United
States of a Russian
accused of illegal arms
sales. The move by Thai
authorities followed a
diplomatic
tug-of-war
between Washington and
Moscow.
Russia has said that it
will seek to ratify the
treaty simultaneously with
a U.S. vote.

Stocks sink on Asian inflation, Euro debt fears
NEW YORK (AP) —
Stocks fell for a fourth
day Tuesday as concerns
over a slowdown in
China and talks about a
bailout for Irish banks
combined to push the
Dow Jones industrial
average to its largest
one-day loss since
August.
Asian markets started
a global sell-off after
South Korea’s central
bank raised interest rates
to curb inflation. Shares
also fell in Shanghai and
Hong Kong as speculation spread that China
will take more steps to
control the pace of its
rapidly-growing economy, which would dampen global demand for
industrial goods.
“The fact that China is
taking actions to tighten
things up over there is
having a big ripple
effect here,” said Bruce
Simon, the chief investment
officer
at
Ballentine Partners.
In Brussels, European
finance ministers ended
a meeting without an
agreement to bail out
Ireland. However officials there said they’re
moving ahead with
preparations to support
the country’s troubled
banks.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 178.47,
or 1.6 percent, to
11,023.50. It dipped
below 11,000 during the
day for the first time
since Oct. 20. Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. and Home
Depot Inc. were the only
two companies to rise
among the 30 stocks that
make up the Dow.

The
Standard
&amp;
Poor’s 500 index fell
19.41, or 1.6 percent, to
1,178.34. The Nasdaq
composite index fell
43.98, or 1.8 percent, to

2,469.84.
All 10 industry groups
in the Standard and
Poor’s 500, the index
followed by most professional money man-

agers, fell. Companies
in the materials and
energy industries lost
the most ground. Both
groups fell more than 2
percent.

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�Inside

SPORTS

Rio to face Bethel in NAIA, Page B6

LOCAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY — A schedule of upcoming
high school varsity sporting events
involving teams from Meigs, Mason and
Gallia counties.

Saturday, November 20
Football
W V S S AC Class A Playoffs
At Point Pleasant JSHS
(9) East Hardy vs (1) Wahama,
1:30 p.m.

Wahama pep
rally Thursday
MASON, W.Va. — A
community pep rally and
tailgate party will be held
for the Wahama football
team at 6 p.m. Thursday
night at the upper parking
lot of the high school, as
the White Falcons prepare for their secondround Class A playoff
game against East Hardy
this weekend. All fans
are encouraged to come
out and support the boys
of fall before Saturday’s
trip to Point Pleasant.

MYL youth
basketball tourney
RUTLAND, Ohio —
The Middleport Youth
League will be holding
its annual biddee league
basketball tournament
for all boys and girls in
grades 4-6 during the
week of Christmas at the
Rutland Civic Center in
Meigs County.
The tournaments —
broken down by gender
and division — will start
on Sunday, Dec. 19, and
run through Wednesday,
Dec. 23, before taking a
two-day break. The tournament will resume play
on Sunday, Dec. 26, and
will
conclude
on
Thursday, Dec. 30.
No all-star or traveling
teams will be permitted
to enter the tournament.
For more information,
contact Dave Boyd at
(740) 590-0438.

RedStorm
women stay
unbeaten
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande
RedStorm
women’s basketball team
blistered the nets at a
60.6 (40-of-66) percent
clip in cruising to a 10971 victory over visiting
Wilberforce on Monday
evening at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
Rio Grande (5-0)
jumped out to a 16-0 lead
and was never headed.
Wilberforce (1-6) did
make a 13-4 run to cut
the deficit to 20-13, but
would not be able to get
any closer than that. Rio
began to pull away again
midway through the first
half and built the lead to
47-28 at halftime.
Rio continued to execute with precision in the
second half, connecting
on 22-of-35 (62.9 percent) attempts after halftime.
The RedStorm had six
players in double figures,
paced by the duo of
senior guard Jenna Smith
and freshman forward
Kate Hammond with 20
points each. Hammond
was a perfect 7-for-7
from the field, including
5-for-5 from beyond the
three-point arc. She also
collected six rebounds.
Junior guard Kaylee
Helton tossed in 19
points (on 8-of-10 shooting from the field) and
pulled down six boards,
senior forward Leah
Kendro added 16 points
and five caroms while
senior guard Bre Davis
scored 12 points and
dished out eight assists.
Senior center Ashley
Please see Rio, B6

B1
Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Gallia, Meigs counties land 22 on all-district teams
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

COLUMBUS, Ohio —
A total of 22 athletes
from Gallia and Meigs
counties were named to
the 2010 Associated
Press Southeast District
football teams.
Of the six area teams
represented,
Eastern,
South
Gallia
and
Southern were part of the
Division VI teams,
Meigs and River Valley
were in the Division IV
teams,
and
Gallia
Academy
was
in
Division III.
Of the 22 players honored, nine were first team
selections. The three
Meigs County school had
10 representatives, while
the three Gallia County
schools earned 12 selections.
Gallia Academy and
Eastern led the way with
three first team selections
each, while Meigs, South
Gallia, and Southern
each had one first team
honoree. River Valley
did not have a first team
representative.
In Division III, Gallia
Academy — which finished 7-3 overall — had
six representatives, three
first team and three special mention. Seniors
Austin Wilson and Ethan
Moore, along with junior
Stephen Atkins earned
first team honors for the
Blue Devils. Wilson and
Atkins were offensive
selections, while Moore
was a defensive honoree.
For the Blue Devils,
Josh Curry (senior),
Aaron Guisinger (junior)
and Brandon Taylor
(junior) were special
mention selections.
The three Division VI
schools — Eastern,
South
Gallia
and
Southern — combined
for 11 selections.
Eastern — which finished the season 7-3 —

Tom Pullins/file photo

Eastern’s Tyler Hendrix drags a Miller defender during the Eagles’ week two game against the visiting Falcons
at East Shade River Stadium in Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Hendrix was a 2010 Associated Press Southeast Ohio
All-District first team selection.

earned a total of five
selections. First team
representatives for the
Eagles were seniors Tyler
Hendrix, Kyle Connery
and Klint Connery.
Hendrix was a first team
honoree at linebacker,
Kyle
Connery
was
selected at defensive
back and Klint Connery
was the lone offensive

selection at running back.
Seniors Brayden Pratt
and Michael Scyoc were
named special mention
for the Eagles.
The Rebels — who finished the year at 4-6 —
earned four all-district
selections. Junior defensive back Josh Cooper
was named to the first
team.
Senior Justin

Northup, along with
juniors Danny Matney
and Dalton Matney,
earned special mention
selections.
Southern — which finished 2-8 overall —
earned one first team
selection and one honorable mention selection.
Sophomore quarterback
Danny Ramthun earned

first team honors, while
senior Jesse Cope was
named special mention.
In Division IV, the
Marauders and River
Valley combined for five
representatives.
Meigs — which finished the season 3-7 —
earned one first team
Please see Teams, B6

2010 Associated Press Southeast All-District Football Teams
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The 2010
Associated Press Southeastern All-District
football teams based on the recommendations of a media panel:

DIVISION II
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends—Grant Venham, Vincent
Warren, 6-3, 210, sr.; Jeremy Fivecoait,
Vincent Warren, 6-3, 195, jr. Backs—DeVon
Sharp, The Plains Athens, 5-8, 165, jr.;
Morgan Wynn, Marietta, 6-0, 170, sr. Kicker—
Derek Montgomery, Logan, 6-0, 200, sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen—Paul Wesselhoeft,
Logan, 6-1, 205, jr. Linebackers—Mitch Rider,
The Plains Athens, 6-1, 210, jr.; Tim King,
Logan, 6-2, 245, sr.; Austin Henthorn, Vincent
Warren, 5-11, 190, jr.; Dustin Baker, Marietta,
6-0, 175, jr.; Chris Russell, The Plains Athens,
5-9, 155, jr.
SPECIAL MENTION
Jordan Jurgensmier, Logan; Nathan
Chandler, Logan; Brian Hendrix, Vincent
Warren; Dylan Leffingwell, Vincent Warren;
Connor Hess, Marietta; Matt McKitrick,
Marietta; Ian Dixon, The Plains Athens; Joe
Germano, The Plains Athens.

DIVISION III
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Linemen—Bubba Landrum,
Jackson, 6-1, 315, sr.; Josh Busby, Thornville
Sheridan, 6-6, 265, sr.; Jacob Parks,
Washington Court House Washington, 6-0,
215, sr.; Stephen Atkins, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy, 6-3, 255, jr.; Dylan Ford, Circleville,
6-2, 250, sr. End—Reily Kiser, Circleville, 6-0,
160, sr. Quarterbacks—C.J. Myers, Thornville
Sheridan, 6-3, 180, sr.; K.C. Hawkins,
Circleville, 6-0, 165, sr.; Camron Cooper,
Greenfield McClain, 5-9, 185, sr. Backs—Klay
Arthur, Jackson, 6-2, 215, sr.; JayTee Ellars,
Thornville Sheridan, 5-8, 170, sr.; Ben Parks,
Washington Court House Washington, 5-10,
165, sr.; Austin Wilson, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy, 5-9, 160, sr. All-Purpose—Anthony
Vagnier, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-2, 164, jr.
Kicker—Luke Eisnaugle, Jackson, 6-1, 160, jr.
DEFENSE: Linemen—O.J. Barr, Jackson, 510, 170, jr.; Tyler Snider, Thornville Sheridan,
6-2, 235, sr.; Jerome Pettiford, Washington
Court House Washington, 6-2, 230, jr.; Paul
Gryniuk,
Washington
Court
House
Washington, 5-9, 185, sr. Linebackers—Drew
Ervin, Jackson, 6-0, 220, jr.; Julian Wyatt,
Washington Court House Washington, 6-3,
230, sr.; Ethan Moore, Gallipolis Gallia
Academy, 6-1, 190, sr.; Nick Alspach,
Thornville Sheridan, 6-2, 215, jr.; Luke
Thompson, Circleville Logan Elm, 6-1, 237,
jr.; Riley Shaw, Washington Court House
Washington, 6-3, 240, jr. Backs—Max
Corcoran, Chillicothe, 6-1, 175, sr.; Zach
Matracia, Greenfield McClain, 6-0, 200, sr.;
Branden Frederick, Wash. C.H. Miami Trace,
6-2, 191, sr.; Kip Winchester, Jackson, 6-0,
180, sr.; Dow Kiefer, Hillsboro, 6-1, 185, sr.;
Troy Sweeney, Thornville Sheridan, 6-2, 195,
sr. Punter—Dylan Osborne, Chillicothe, 6-0,
175, sr.
Offensive player of the year: Klay Arthur,
Jackson.
Defensive player of the year: Troy
Sweeney, Thornville Sheridan.

Coaches of the year: Paul Culver,
Thornville Sheridan; Andy Hall, Jackson.
SPECIAL MENTION
Taylor Archer, Circleville; Blake Riffle,
Circleville Logan Elm; Caleb Huffman,
Washington Court House Washington; Aaron
Buck, Washington Court House Washington;
Travis McIntosh, Wash. C.H. Miami Trace;
Zach Corcoran, Waverly; Skyler Mallow,
Chillicothe; Isaac Beverly, Chillicothe; Casey
Oates, Chillicothe; Josh Curry, Gallipolis
Gallia Academy; Aaron Guisinger, Gallipolis
Gallia Academy; Brandon Taylor, Gallipolis
Gallia Academy; Brandon Sigler, Thornville
Sheridan; Coleman Kearns, Jackson; Ty
McNelly, Jackson; Jared Loftis, Greenfield
McClain; Aric Carroll, Hillsboro; Adam Ward,
McArthur Vinton County; Joey Batey,
McArthur Vinton County.

DIVISION IV
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Linemen—Mack Dunn, Piketon,
6-1, 220, sr.; Cody Bricker, W. Portsmouth
Portsmouth West, 6-2, 285, jr.; Michael
Douglas, Albany Alexander, 6-3, 300, jr.;
Robbie Webb, Ironton, 6-3, 270, sr.
Quarterbacks—Trent
Williamson,
Williamsport Westfall, 5-9, 195, so.; Brick
Davis, Chillicothe Unioto, 6-3, 185, sr.; Mason
Jordan, Portsmouth, 6-2, 165, jr.; Will
McCollister, Ironton Rock Hill, 6-4, 220, jr.
Backs—Jeffrey Roush, Pomeroy Meigs, 5-11,
170, jr.; Luke Brown, McDermott Northwest,
6-0, 205, sr.; Cody Lawson, Albany
Alexander, 5-10, 175, sr.; Tres Wilks, Ironton,
5-8, 180, sr.; Tyler Hager, Ironton, 5-7, 180, jr.
Ends—Tim Staten, Williamsport Westfall, 510, 130, jr.; Jared Vulgamore, Piketon, 5-9,
155,
sr. All-Purpose—Joey
Stewart,
Lancaster Fairfield Union, 6-1, 198, sr.; Chad
Fisher, Proctorville Fairland, 5-11, 160, sr.;
Austin Osborne, Wellston, 5-11, 185, jr.
Kickers—Brandon Kopis, Lancaster Fairfield
Union, 5-10, 160, sr.; Nick Ganus, Chillicothe
Zane Trace, 6-0, 170, sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen—Dustin Barnes,
Williamsport Westfall, 5-10, 170, jr.; Kyle
Auger, W. Portsmouth Portsmouth West, 5-11,
170, jr.; Andy Sparks, W. Portsmouth
Portsmouth West, 6-1, 210, sr.; Brad
Spoljaric, Ironton, 6-4, 270, sr.; Jerrod Collins,
Chillicothe Zane Trace, 5-11, 255, jr.
Linebackers—Brian Warner, Ironton, 6-0,
210, sr.; Tre Underwood, Portsmouth, 6-4,
205, sr.; Trevon Pendleton, W. Portsmouth
Portsmouth West, 6-0, 230, sr.; Trey Bennett,
Albany Alexander, 6-1, 180, jr.; Anthony
Foreman, New Lexington, 5-9, 165, jr.; Jaylen
Prater, Wellston, 6-1, 220, jr. Backs—Jamie
Helton, Piketon, 6-0, 185, sr.; Kyle Locher, W.
Portsmouth Portsmouth West, 6-1, 190, sr.;
Brandon McCarty, Albany Alexander, 5-9,
160, sr.; Tommy Waginger, Ironton, 6-1, 170,
sr.
Punter—Josiah
Yazdani,
Albany
Alexander, 6-0, 175, sr.

Ironton; Trey Wilds, Rock Hill; Chris Donohe,
Ironton Rock Hill; Tevin Mitchell, South Point;
Chris Ferguson, South Point; Jonathon
Holbrook, Proctorville Fairland; Adam Lee,
Proctorville Fairland; Alek Stonerock,
Williamsport Westfall; Josh
Stewart,
Lancaster Fairfield Union; Andrew Gulley,
Portsmouth; Casey Sanders, Portsmouth;
Jerrod Bricker, W. Portsmouth Portsmouth
West; Levi Ratliff, W. Portsmouth Portsmouth
West; Trey Moats, Chillicothe Zane Trace;
Jason McCoy, Chillicothe Zane Trace; Steven
Vanderpool, Chillicothe Unioto; Michael
Chapman, Albany Alexander; Zach Sayre,
Pomeroy Meigs; Cameron Bolin, Pomeroy
Meigs; Steven Brown, Bidwell River Valley;
Cody Holley, Bidwell River Valley; Derek
Boyer, New Lexington; T.J. Abrams, New
Lexington; Jeremiah Kerr, Wellston; Steve
Carper, Wellston; Bryan Robinson, Piketon;
Trevor McDowell, Piketon.

DIVISION V
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends—Daniel Kline, NelsonvilleYork 6-4, 195, jr.; Joey Maynard, Oak Hill, 6-1,
180,
sr.
Linemen—Joey
Reinhardt,
Wheelersburg, 6-3, 295, sr.; Sandy Proehl,
Frankfort Adena, 6-2, 240, sr.; Clay Wescott,
Frankfort Adena, 6-1, 300, sr.; Kyle Dunn,
Chillicothe Southeastern, 6-3, 285, jr.;
Thomas Taggart, Nelsonville-York, 6-4, 290,
sr.; Derek Fulk, Crooksville, 6-2, 270, sr.;
Drew Cannon, Oak Hill, 6-3, 255, sr.
Quarterbacks—Blake Yates, Lucasville Valley,
6-3, 175, jr.; Alex Shears, Wheelersburg, 6-1,
180, jr.; Jesse Slone, Oak Hill, 6-4, 200, sr.
Backs—Mark Slone, Minford, 5-11, 210, sr.;
Jacob Piguet, Minford, 5-8, 195, sr.; Brandon
Schankweiler, Wheelersburg, 5-11, 185, sr.;
Reid Hutchison, Frankfort Adena, 5-9, 180, jr.;
Steven Hall, Chillicothe Southeastern, 5-9,
170, jr.; Boo Woods, Coal Grove DawsonBryant, 5-9, 150, sr.; Westen Hale, Oak Hill, 60, 205, sr. All-Purpose—Alex Holcomb,
Lucasville Valley, 5-9, 170, sr. Kicker—Dylan
Lewis, Oak Hill, 6-0, 175, sr.
DEFENSE: Linemen—Colbie
Griffith,
Minford, 6-2, 235, jr.; Chris Prater,
Wheelersburg, 6-2, 230, sr.; Jake Freeman,
Frankfort Adena, 5-10, 175, sr.; Cody Mann,
Chesapeake, 5-10, 195, sr.; Bubba Wood,
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant, 6-0, 230, sr.;
Chris Fairchild, Oak Hill, 6-2, 280, jr.
Linebackers—Tyler Gaines, Minford, 5-8, 195,
jr.; Brice Crabtree, Lucasville Valley, 5-10,
215, sr.; Justin Cunningham, Nelsonville-York,
6-1, 210, sr.; Isaiah Andrews, NelsonvilleYork, 5-10, 180, sr.; Trey West, Chesapeake,
5-10, 185, sr.; Nathan Brooks, Crooksville, 510, 190, sr.; Devon Davis, Oak Hill, 6-0, 190,
so. Backs—Garrett Tyree, Bainbridge Paint
Valley, 5-9, 165, sr.; Jake Murphy, Coal Grove
Dawson-Bryant, 6-1, 170, sr.; Austin
McMaster, Chesapeake, 6-5, 170, jr.

Offensive player of the year: Cody
Lawson, Albany Alexander.
Defensive player of the year: Trevon
Pendleton, W. Portsmouth Portsmouth West.
Coach of the year: Bob Lutz, Ironton.

Offensive players of the year: Westen
Hale, Oak Hill; Brandon Schankweiler,
Wheelersburg.
Defensive player of the year: Tyler Gaines,
Minford.
Coach of the year: Greg Phillips, Oak Hill.

SPECIAL MENTION
Michael Lawless, Ironton; Tyler Kratzenberg,

SPECIAL MENTION
Eli Pennington, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant;

Patrick Hintz, Chesapeake; Brandon Noble,
Chesapeake; Erik Waderker, Belpre; Justin
Miller, Minford; Robbie Dwyer, Lucasville
Valley; Alex Hartley, Lucasville Valley; Tommy
Graf,
Wheelersburg;
Dakota
Luster,
Wheelersburg; Danny Hudgel, Wheelersburg;
Kirk Yates, Frankfort Adena; Michael Bryant,
Frankfort
Adena;
Christian
Colburn,
Chillicothe Southeastern; Michael Brown,
Chillicothe Southeastern; Hayden Lambert,
Bainbridge Paint Valley; Scottie Perkins,
Chillicothe Huntington; Dustin Young,
Nelsonville-York; Nathan Dean, NelsonvilleYork; Ryan Rex, Stewart Federal Hocking;
Thomas
Slayton,
Crooksville; Adam
Dickerson, Crooksville; Daniel Woods, Oak
Hill.

DIVISION VI
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE: Ends—Levi
McCutcheon,
Waterford, 6-0, 190, sr.; Kevin Lewis,
Portsmouth Notre Dame, 5-10, 146, so.;
Austin North, Glouster Trimble, 5-10, 160, so.
Linemen—Garrett Foster, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 6-0, 215, jr.; Eric Putman,
Glouster Trimble, 6-0, 215, sr. Quarterbacks—
Charles Kish, Glouster Trimble, 6-1, 205, sr.;
Danny Ramthun, Racine Southern, 5-10, 180,
so. Backs—Evan Herrell, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 5-11, 170, sr.; Hunter Boggs,
Willow Wood Symmes Valley, 6-3, 205, sr.;
Ryan Bradford, Portsmouth Notre Dame, 5-8,
160, sr.; Tyler Hughes, Franklin Furnace
Green, 6-0, 170, sr.; Tyler Dyla, Glouster
Trimble, 5-8, 170, sr.; Klint Connery,
Reedsville Eastern, 5-7, 165, sr. AllPurpose—Colten Gill, Corning Miller, 5-9,
175, jr.; Ian Watterson, Manchester, 6-0, 180,
sr.
DEFENSE:
Lineman—Matt
Saab,
Portsmouth Notre Dame, 5-8, 152, sr.
Linebackers—Grant Foster, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley, 6-0, 200, sr.; Jacob
Patterson, Willow Wood Symmes Valley, 5-11,
180, sr.; Levi Porter, Waterford, 6-2, 212, sr.;
Chad Lewis, Franklin Furnace Green, 5-10,
205, sr.; Justin Crager, Sciotoville Community,
5-11, 172, so.; Johnny Stobart, Glouster
Trimble, 5-11, 200, sr.; Tyler Hendrix,
Reedsville Eastern, 5-10, 175, sr. Backs—
Cody Myers, Willow Wood Symmes Valley, 58, 165, sr.; Kyle Connery, Reedsville Eastern,
5-11, 170, sr.; Josh Cooper, South Gallia, 510, 150, jr.
Offensive players of the year: Tyler Dyla,
Glouster Trimble; Evan Herrell, Willow Wood
Symmes Valley.
Defensive player of the year: Grant Foster,
Willow Wood Symmes Valley.
Coach of the year: Rusty Webb, Willow
Wood Symmes Valley.
SPECIAL MENTION
Nick Clay, Willow Wood Symmes Valley;
Chad Offenberger, Waterford; Trevor Lang,
Waterford; Alex Staker, Portsmouth Notre
Dame; Jack Welsh, Portsmouth Notre Dame;
Braiden Bickley, Glouster Trimble; Brayden
Pratt, Reedsville Eastern; Michael Scyoc,
Reedsville Eastern; Danny Matney, South
Gallia; Justin Northup, South Gallia; Dalton
Matney, South Gallia; Jesse Cope, Racine
Southern; Ethan Stricklett, Manchester.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

P O L I C I E S
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Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
¾Errors Must Be
Reported on the first
day of publication
and the TribuneSentinel-Register will
be responsible for no
more than the cost of
the space occupied
by the error and only
the first insertion. We
shall not be liable for
any loss or expense
that results from the
publication
or
omission
of
an
advertisement.
Corrections will be
made in the first
available edition.
¾Box number ads are
always confidential.
¾Current rate card
applies.
¾All Real Estate
advertisements are
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of
1968.
¾This
newspaper
accepts only help
wanted ads meeting
EOE standards.
¾We
will
not
knowingly accept any
advertisement
in
violation of the law.

200 Announcements

www.mydailysentinel.com

300

Services

Lost &amp; Found

Financial

6
wk.
puppies.
Beagle/Dashound
mix.
5 to 6 year old bench
leg beagle 304-6758635.

Do You have a
Dream of being Debt
free? Are you trying
to get your credit
cleaned? Call 1-866995-6887
No
Advance Fees!

Notices

FAST IRS

Taxes for Less
1-888-692-5739

Free Document
Shredder for new
Lifelock members.
Call Today
1-888-758-3029 and
use promo code
SHREDDER

Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

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

Other Services

Professional Services

Pet Cremations. Call
740-446-3745

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

"Creative
Seamstress" will do
sewing,
mending, Home Improvements
alterations, 40 years
Basement
experience,
Waterproofing
reasonable
rates, Unconditional lifetime
harmonyfarm04@ya
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
hoo.com

DIRECTV
Limited Time Offer!
Free HD for Life.
Ask how by calling
DirecTV today!
Packages start at
$29.99.
1-866-541-0834

Looking For
A New Home?

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NETWORK
It's Finally FREE!
Free HD for Life*
and over 120
channels only
$24.99/month.*
*Conditions apply,
promo code MB45
Call Dish Network
Now
1-877-464-3619

NOTICE
OHIO
RELIEF
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
Do you owe over
you do business with $10000 to the IRS?
people you know, and
Stop wage
NOT to send money
garnishments and
through the mail until
bank levies.
you have investigating
Settle Out Over Due
the offering.

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will
be
discarded.

Other Services

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Try the
Classifieds!!

Lifelock

Security

700

Agriculture

ADT
Free Home
Security System
with $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services
Call 1-888-367-2171
Financial

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

600

Animals
Pets

Registered 1 Yr old
male collie pups for
sale. 1 black &amp; white
and 1 tan &amp; white, up
to date shots. $250
each. Call 339-0978
12 wk. old Border
Collie Pups, Shots,
$100 call 245-9880
Free beautiful female
kitten with black and
white markings free
to a good home

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Point Pleasant Register
The Daily Sentinel
Sunday Times-Sentinel

3000

Real Estate
Sales

Commercial
OFFICE/WAREHOU
SE/RETAIL
Great
Location 749 Third
Ave Gallipolis.1800
sq.ft . For more info
Call 1-404-456-3802

Very Nice 2/3 BR 2
Baths, South Gallia
/Fairland School Dist.
Owner
Finiancing
$8,000
down
$531.85 per mth.
740) 256-1686

400

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
• Local Sports
• Community
Calendar
... and much more.

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

Houses For Sale

VONAGE

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537-9528

Want To Buy

Pom-a-poo puppies.
1st shots &amp; wormed.
Will not shed. No
Sunday sales.10321
ST RT 141 Gallipolis
OH

Read your
newspaper and learn
something today!

Farm Equipment
1997 Mortz 3 Horse
slant trailer with Tack
740)339-3046
John Deer Tractor m1950 4w drive good
condition 86 H.P.
1998 New Holand 45
H.P. 3930-4w Drive
Excellent shape new
tires.
(304)5762890.
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment
740-446-2412

Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain
200 Square Bales of
Hay $2.00 per Bale
740)339-3046

Apartments/
Townhouses
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, W/D hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
1 &amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport, NO Pets,
740-992-2218
2
bedroom
apartment available
in Syracuse. $200
deposit, $375 per
month rent. Rent
includes
water,
sewer &amp; trash. No
pets.
Sufficient
income needed to
qualify 740-378-6111

1.5 Story brick, near
Middleport Beech St.
fairgrounds,
hardwood
floors, furnished apt., Senior
living, No pets, dep.
675-3862
&amp; ref., Utilities paid,
Real Estate 740-992-0165
3500
Miscellaneous
Rentals
Clean,Nice,Efficiency
Central
Boiler
1 BDRM , Ref &amp; Dep.
Outdoor
wood
Apartments/
NO PETS 304-675Furnaces
Townhouses
5162
Instant rebate up to
$1,000.00. 740)245- 2BR APT.Close to Gallia
Manor
Holzer Hospital on SR Apartments,
5193
138
160 C/A. (740) 441- Buhl
Morton Rd.
Hay for sale. Square 0194
Gallipolis, is now
and round bales.
accepting
CONVENIENTLY
Square $2-3 a bale
for
&amp; applications
and round 4x4 $20 a LOCATED
waiting list for 1
roll. Barn kept never AFFORDABLE!
Bedroom,
HUDwet. Lime fertilizer. Townhouse
apartments,
and/or Subsidized
304-562-7397
small houses for rent. apartment for elderly
Call 740-441-1111 for and
handicapped.
Yard Sale
application
&amp; 740-446-4652.
Moving
sale
50 information.
Texas Rd Furniture, Free Rent Special
Kids toys, strollers,
!!!
ect. Sat &amp; Sun
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
1000

Recreational
Vehicles

Campers / RVs &amp;
Trailers

Good mixed hay, sq.,
$2.50 4x5, round 2005 Jayco Eagle
Hitch,
bales $20.00. Stored Gooseneck
inside 740-446-2075 sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
900
Merchandise
photos
at
www.carmichaeltraile
rs.com
740-446Collectibles
2412
88 U$ Mint Sets
OGP 1964 thru 2010 2000
Automotive
Make Honest Offer
for All 441-9571
Autos
Miscellaneous
89 Buick Reatta.
Jet Aeration Motors Nice car. Fun to
repaired, new &amp;
drive. $1200 or OBO
rebuilt in stock. Call
256-1545
Ron Evans 1-800537-9528
Quality
Cars
&amp;
Absolute Top dollar- Trucks w/warranty all
silver/gold coins any priced to sell, 16 yrs.
10K/14K/18K
gold in business. Cook
jewerly, dental gold, Motors, 328 Jackson
pre
1935
US Pike,
currency. proof/mint Gallipolis, OH 740sets, diamonds, MTS 446-0103.
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis. 1972
Plymouth
446-2842
Valiant, 6 cyl. std. 4

up, Central Air, W/D
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
(304)882-3017
Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675-6679

Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.
Houses For Rent
Vinton, 2.5 BR 1 BA,
must have stove &amp;
fridg. Water paid.
Large
yard
&amp;
buildings. $480 mon
&amp; dep. plus utilities.
388-8000 after 4pm

3 Bedroom HUD
Approved NO PETS
For
lease:
1BR 740)256-1634
unfurnished 2nd floor
apt.
near
Gallia 2 BR Home with
Academy, no pets, attached garage W/D
ref &amp; dep. required, &amp; Ice Bx New
maximum occupancy Carpet/Paint
2, $350 mon. 740- Refer/Dep. required
NO
Pets,
446-3936 or 740- Prefer
$675 mth water inc.
446-4425
near
the
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Cinema/Hospital
Holzer. $400 + dep. 304-657-6378
Some utilities pd.
3BR gas heat, nice
740-645-7630
or
lot, near hospital.
740-988-6130
$550 mo + dep. Also
large
lawn,
Tara Townhouse Apt. 3BR
all
elec.
2BR 1.5 BA, back carport,
patio,
pool, $550 mon + dep
playground. No pets. 446-2158 ev. 4462-Horses, 55 Gallon door $800. 304-675- $450 rent. 740-367- 0603
complete Fish Tank, 6628
0547
House for sale or
also a HP Computor
rent. Pretty, clean,
Modern
1BR
Apt.
20inch flat screen for
3BR.
Downtown
446-0390
sale
or
trade
Gallipolis, close to
Trucks
everything 740-379Washington
Elem.
9172
Nice 2BR apt. $350 Rent $750, no utlilite.
Kimball
upright 1998
utilities, Sale $99,000. KellyDodge plus
piano, cherry $400 Cummins 3500 Ext. Gallipolis 446-8919 Jo 645-9096 or 446firm 304-882-2287
4639
Cab Call: 339-3046 or 446-2074

�Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD

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

BASKET BINGO
To Benefit the Reedsville
Residents Affected by the Tornado

Houses For Rent

Education

Sales

3 br., w/carport $450
per mo. +dep &amp;
utilities,
3rd
St.,
Racine,
740-2474292

position is a 9-month
contract with Board
approved
benefits.
Salary will be based
on experience and
certification
according to salary
schedule.
Submit
letter of interest to
John D. Costanzo,
Superintendent,
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center, 507 Richland
Avenue, Suite #108,
Athens, OH 45701.
Application Deadline:
December 1, 2010.
The AMESC is an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider.
(11) 12, 14, 16, 17

PT / FT Seasonal
Sales Person Stop in
with
resume
@
Acquisitions
Fine
Jewerly 151 2nd Ave
(Gallipolis)
NO
Phone
Calls
PLEASE.

3BR
dble-wide
furnished, Sr 143Pomeroy. $625 mo.
incl. most utl. &amp; lawn
care. 740-591-5174
Jordan Landing, 2
bedroom apartments
available. No pets.
304-610-0776
or
304-674-0023
deposit required.

November 18th @ 6:00 pm
Doors Open at 5:00
SYRACUSE
COMMUNITY CENTER
Door Prizes, Raffles
&amp; Concessions
$20 FOR 20 GAMES
Advanced tickets can be
purchased by calling
949-2210, 992-6333 or
992-3804
60144866

1 bdr. all utilities
paid.
Near
downtown.
HUD
accepted. (304) 3600163
1-3 bed room house
for rent in Syracuse
NO
pet's
HUD
approved call 304675-5332 Weekends
740-591-0265
4000

Manufactured
Housing
Rentals

2BR-2 Bath Like new
Mobile Home water,
sewer, trash pd. No
pets, CA, Covered
Patio
Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740-446-3160

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Physician Office Manager
- Gastroenterology
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently accepting
applications for a Physician Office Manager
for our Gastroenterology Office. Previous
Physician Office management experience
beneficial.
Licensed Practical Nurse or graduate of an
approved program for Medical Assistant.
Experience is a plus.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
fax to (304) 675-6975
or email
on-line at www.pvalley.org
AA/EOE

60144968

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

JOIN OUR TEAM
O'BLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL: is currently accepting applications for the following:
Medical Lab Technologist: Two-year college including one
year internship Medical Lab Technician Training Program.
Other equivalent education and/or experience if approved
by Chief Medical Technologist and Human Resources Office. One to three years experience preferred. MLT (ASCP);
MLT (AMT). Applicant must be registered.
Medical Technologist: Four year college- Medical Technology Training Program or other equivalent education and/or
experience if approved by Chief Medical Technologist and
Human Resources Office. Three to twelve months' previous
experience preferred. MT (ASCP); MT (AMT); CLT
(HHS). Applicant must be registered.
Job summary; Performs various chemical, microscopic and
bacteriologic tests. Promotes the spirit of O'Bleness Memorial Hospital by displaying caring, courteous behavior in
dealing with patients and their families, coworkers, physicians, and guests of the hospital. We offer a competitive
salary and comprehensive benefit package.
For more information contact:

Human Resources
55 Hospital Dr. | O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
Athens, OH 45701
www.obleness.org
Phone: (740) 592-9227 | Fax: (740) 592-9444
EOE

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Entertainment
Need Santa,
740-992-7853

Call

Food Services
Needed experienced
wait and kitchen
help.
Must be
flexable. Apply on
person
or
at
www.bobevans.com.
(304)
Help Wanted General

100

100

Legals

PUBLIC
NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday November
20 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W.
Second , Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following
collateral:2005 Scion
JTLKT32435019916
8The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or
all
bids
submitted.The above
described collateral
will be sold “as iswhere is”, with no
expressed or implied
warranty
given.For
further information,
or for an appointment
to inspect collateral,
prior to sale date
contact
Cyndie or
Ken at 992-2136.
WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER
17,
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 18, and
FRIDAY
NOVEMBER
19,
2010

Accepting
applications for part
time cashiers. Apply
in person at ParMar
#42 15054 St Rt 160
3 BR 2BA $575 Vinton Oh or on
at
mon+dep
1722b online
Chatham Ave 740- parmarstores.com
645-1646
Accepting
2
mobiles
on applications for part
cashiers,
Bullaville Pk &amp; 1 in time
Rodney $500 mon + Subway artist &amp; exp.
full time ass. store
dep. 740-367-7762
manager. Apply in
3BR, Country setting, person at ParMar
$450 mon + dep. #38
15289
740-256-6863
Huntington
Rd
Gallipolis Ferry or on
2
BR,
2
Bath
online
at
Cheshire Area, NO
parmarstores.com
PETS, Ref. Req. Ph.
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
740-367-7025. $400
CASE NO. 09 CV
mon + dep.
100,
PEOPLES
Underground
NATIONAL
SurveyorYellowbush BANK,
Mining, LLC, located ASSOCIATION,
2 br. w/expando,
VS.
in Racine, OH is now PLAINTIFF,
total electric, No
accepting resumes ROCKY R. HUPP
pets, $400 per mo.
CAROL
J.
for the position of AND
$200
dep.,
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
underground
Middleport, 740-992surveyor. Candidates DEFENDANTS,
2394
OF
must posses at least COURT
a
high
school COMMON PLEAS,
Supplies
COUNTY,
diploma
or MEIGS
OHIO. By virtue of
Green slag 10.00 a equivalent;
ton
great
for experience
in an Alias Order of
driveways. Rt. 62 underground
coal Sale issued out of
above New Haven mining preferred but said Court in the
behind
American not
required. above action, Robert
Colloid Co. (304)882- Interested applicants E. Beegle, the Sheriff
3944.
with
surface of Meigs County,
surveying
and Ohio, will expose to
6000
Employment AutoCAD experience sell at public action
are
strongly on the front steps of
encouraged to apply. the Meigs County
in
Administrative/
Yellowbush Mining, Courthouse
Meigs
Professional
LLC,
offers
a Pomeroy,
competitive benefits County, Ohio, on
Office
Assistant package
including: Friday, December 3,
Positions availabe at company sponsored 2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
Mason
County medical, dental and the following lands
Health
Dept. vision, 401(k) with and
tenements:
Application can be company match, paid Situated
in
the
obtained
at
the vacation
and Village of Pomeroy,
health dept.
County
of
holidays and future Ohio,
Meigs
and
State
of
professional
growth
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Ohio:Parcel 1: Being
opportunities.
Red's Rollen Garage Qualified applicants a part of Lot No. 500
Needed Class A CDL may
forward in Sugar Run in
Hill
Driver with Tanker &amp; resumes
to: Lincoln
to
Haz-mat. TWIC a Yellowbush Mining, Annexation
and
plus 740-339-0034
Attention HR, P.O. Pomeroy,
Box
238,
New described as follows:
R &amp; J Trucking in Haven, WV 25265 or Beginning at a stake
Marietta, Oh is hiring fax Attn: HR (304) in the east side of
CDL A Drivers for 882-1379.
Street,
EOE Peacock
local
&amp; Regional M/F/D/V
which
stake
lies
Routes. Applicants
south 5 degrees and
must be at least 23 Truck driver, tractor 44' west 111.4 feet
yrs have min of 1 yr trailer &amp; tri axle from the northwest
of commercial driving dump, local &amp; some corner of Lot No.
exp. Clean MVR, travel, hrly. wages 501,
which
was
Haz-mat Cert. We based on exp;. also formerly owned by
feature
weekend 1 construction labor, Valentine Ebersbach
home time, Excellent apply at Pullins Exc. Estate; thence along
health
&amp;
dental
peacock Street south
Medical
insurance,
401(K),
5 degrees and 44'
Vacation,
Bonus
17.6
feet;
Ohio Valley Home west
pays
and
safety
Health Inc. accepting thence south 74
awards.
Contact
Applications
for degrees and 10' east
Kenton at 1-800-462Aides. Apply at 1480 263.3 feet to the
9365 F.O.F.
Jackson
Pike northwest corner of
Gallipolis
or
on Lot No. 513; thence
Education
internet
@ north 6 degrees 10'
east 190 feet along
Business
www.ovhh.org.
Instructors Needed &lt;http://www.ovhh.org the west line of Lot
@ Gallipolis Career /&gt; or Phone 740)441- No. 512 to a large
College.
In 1393
Competitive locust post; thence
Economics,
wages and Benefits south 70 degrees
Keyboarding,
and including
health west 289.6 feet to
place
of
Math. In Economics insurance
and the
beginning, containing
and Math instructors mileage.
62/100
must
possess
acre.EXCEPT
the
Master's
Degree.
Send cover letter and MedCorp EMS is following from the
described
a
FT above
resume
to: seeking
bshirey@gallipoliscar Paramedic position premises sold to
for its Gallipolis. Oh Raymond Eiselstein
eercollege.edu.
deed
dated
Station.
Nationally by
The
Athens-Meigs registered a plus, February 24, 1938
Educational Service Clean driving record beginning at the
Center has a position required. Competitive southwest
opening for an ED salary and Benefits (southeast) corner of
Teacher
also
Uniforms a lot formerly owned
(Elementary)
in provided
Please by Rena Eiselstein
Athens County for forward your resume the same being the
the
2010-2011 with a copy of your northwest corner of
School
Year. driver's license and Lot No. 513; thence
Applicants must be certifications to : north 76 degrees
certified/licensed as MedCorp, Inc. Fax and 30' west 50 feet;
north
20
an
Intervention 419-726-7845
or thence
Specialist
or
be Email
: degrees 30' west
eligible to get a jghesquiere@medco 140.5 feet to the
north line of what
Supplemental
rpinc.com
was formerly Rena
License.
This EOE

Legals

Eiselstein’s
lot;
thence
north
70
degrees and 30' east
123 feet to the
northeast corner of
what was formerly
Rena Eiselstein’s lot;
thence
south
6
degrees and 30' west
180 feet to the place
of
beginning,
containing
20/100
acre
more
or
less.Also a former
grantee is to have
free and undisupted
use along the north
side of what was
formerly
Rena
Eiselstein’s lot of a
right-of-way as now
located to Peacock
Street.Reference
Deed: Volume 182,
Page 251, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel
No.
1601286.000Parcel 2:
Being a part of Lot
No. 500 in Sugar
Run in the Lincoln
Hill Annexation to
Pomeroy,
and
beginning at the
Southeast corner of
a lot now owned
Rena Eiselstein the
same
being
the
Northwest corner of
Lot No. 513; thence
South 76 degrees 30'
west 50 feetthence
north 20 degrees 30'
West 140.5 feet, to
the North line of
Rena Eiselstein’s lot;
thence
north
70
degrees 30' East 123
feet to the Northeast
corner
of
Rena
Eiselstein’s
lot;
thence
south
6
degrees 30' West
180 feet to the place
of
beginning
containing
20/100
acre,
more
or
less.Reference
Deed: Volume 182,
Page 251, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel
No.
1601656.000The above
described real estate
is sold “as is” without
warranties
or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 103105
Peacock
Avenue,
Pomeroy,
OH 45769CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
Hupp
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$8,000.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and tenements: The
following real estate
situated in the Village
of
Pomeroy,
Township
of
Salisbury, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio,
and
more

100

Legals

particularly described
as follows:Being in
100 Acre Lot 303,
Town 2, Range 13,
and being Lots No.
Fifty-six (56), Fiftyeight(58), Sixty (60),
and Sixty-four (64) in
C.W.
Dabney’s
Addition as noted in
Volume 2, Page 15
and
16,
Meigs
County Plat Map
Records.Reference
Deed:
Book
94,
Page 829, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel Nos.: 1601714.000,
1601715.000,
1601716.000 and 1601717.000.The
above described real
estate is sold “as is”
without warranties or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 18
West Cave Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769.
CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp REAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$5,000.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and
tenements:
Situated
in
the
Village of Middleport,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:Being
Lot Numbered Seven
(7)
in
Probst’s
Addition to Lower
Pomeroy,
now
incorporated into and
a part of the Village
of Middleport, Meigs
County, Ohio. And
being
the
same
property
conveyed
by Vesta E. Swisher,
as Guardian of Jesse
R.
Swisher
and
William E. Swisher to
R.A. Miller by deed
dated March 1, 1926
and recorded in Book
127 at Page 632 of
the Deed Records of
Meigs
County,
Ohio.Reference
Deed: Volume 158,
Page 821, Meigs
County
Official
RecordsAuditor’s
Parcel
No.:
1500696.00The above
described real estate
is sold “as is” without
warranties
or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 1053
Vine
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760.CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
Hupp.
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$27,500.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an

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100

Legals

interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
FINDINGS
AND
ORDER
OF
REVOCATIONThe
Superintendent
of
Insurance issued a
Notice of Opportunity
for Hearing to each
of the individuals
listed below.
The
Notice was served
on each individual
pursuant to section
119.07
of
the
Revised Code. More
than thirty (30) days
have elapsed from
the date of service or
from the last date of
publication and each
of the individuals
listed below has not
requested
a
hearing.After
reviewing the records
in these cases, the
Superintendent finds
that:1. Each of the
individuals
listed
below is licensed in
this state as an
insurance
agent.2.
Each
of
the
individuals
listed
below
failed
to
comply
with
the
continuing education
requirements
of
section 3905.481 of
the Revised Code for
the
2007/2008
compliance period.IT
IS
THEREFORE
ORDERED
that
pursuant to section
3905.482
of
the
Revised Code, the
Ohio
insurance
license
of
each
individual
listed
below be and hereby
is revoked.
The
revocation shall be
effective December
9,
2010.COLLINS,
JESSICA
DOB:
11/13/1977 P.O. BOX
141 ATHENS, OH
45701A copy of this
Order
may
be
obtained
from
Stephen
C.
Hombach,
Ohio
Department
of
Insurance, 50 West

100

Legals

Town Street, 3rd
Floor, Suite 300,
Columbus,
OH
43215.As set forth in
O.R.C. 119.12, an
appeal of this Order
may be taken by
filing a notice of
appeal
with
the
Department
of
Insurance. A copy of
the notice of appeal
shall also be filed
with the appropriate
court of common
pleas. Such notices
of appeal shall be
filed within fifteen
(15) days of the third
date of publication of
this notice and Order.
Each individual listed
above may appeal to
the court of common
pleas of the county in
which his or her
business is located
or the county in
which he or she is a
resident. If he or she
is not a resident of
and has no place of
business in Ohio, he
or she may appeal to
the
Court
of
Common Pleas of
Franklin County. The
notice of appeal shall
set forth the order
appealed from and
the grounds of the
appeal.This Order is
hereby entered in the
Journal of the Ohio
Department
of
Insurance.MARY JO
HUDSONSuperinten
dent of Insurance
(11) 10, 17, 24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY HUPP AND
CAROL HUPP, ET
AL., DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and tenements: The
following real estate
situate in the State of
Ohio,
County
of
Meigs and Township
of Olive and in
Fraction
Number
Thirty Two (32) Town
Number Four (4) and
Range
Number
Eleven
(11)
and
bounded
and
described as follows,
to-wit:Beginning
at
the
south
west
corner of a 9 acre lot

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel
100

Legals

of land belonging to
J.W. Wines; Thence
in
a
northerly
direction
following
the west line of said
J.W. Wines land and
the line of J.B.
Torrence to the north
line of said fraction
number thirty two
(32); Thence west
along said north line
of
said
fraction
number thirty two to
the north east corner
of a 9-1/4 acres lot of
land belonging to
Catharine Congrove,
et. al.; Thence south
along the east line of
said Congrove land
about 10 rods to the
center of the public
road; Thence in a
westerly
direction
following said public
road to a stake in the
center of said road,
also to a point in the
north east corner of a
30 acre tract of land
belonging to Mary E.
Balser; Thence south
following the east
line of said Mary E.
Balser land to a point
in the north line of
the 114.5 acre tract
of land belonging to
Fredrick
White;
Thence
in
an
easterly direction on
the north line of said
Whites’s land about
38 rods to the place
of
beginning,
containing
about
thirty
and
three
fourths
(30-3/4)
acres
more
or
less.Save
and
excepting
the
following:Situate in
the Township of Olive
in the County of
Meigs and the State
of Ohio and Fraction
32, Town 4, Range
11 and bounded and
described as follows:
Beginning at a point
in the center of the
number nine (9) road
at a point on line with
the J.B. Torrence and
Golda
Smiths
properties: Thence
southwest along said
road 21 rods: Thence
south along said
road 12 rods to a
corner stake: Thence
east 11 rods 6 feet to
a corner stake on
line
with
J.B.
Torrence and Golda
Smiths
properties:
Thence 32 rods north
to the place of
beginning, containing
1 1/2 acres, more or
less, this property
lies on the east side
of said number nine
(9) road and is a part
of the real estate
owned by Golda M.
Smith and described
in a deed dated May
25,
1936
and
recorded June 11,
1936 in book of deed
Volume 142, Page
83 Meigs County,

100

Legals

Ohio.EXCEPTING
3.9516 acres more or
less conveyed to
Richville
Sportsmen’s
Club,
found in Volume 179,
page 571, Meigs
County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G .332 acres, more
or less conveyed to
Betty Hart, unmarried
and Ronald E. Hart,
unmarried, found in
Volume 120, page
453, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 2.8650 acres,
more
or
less
conveyed to Jason
S. and Tonya L.
Lawson, found in
Volume 99, Page
895, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 4.00 acres, more
or less conveyed to
Betty Hart, unmarried
and Ronald Hart,
unmarried, found in
Volume 98, Page
441, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G .3462 acres, more
or less conveyed to
Bryan and Frank
Gilley,
found
in
Volume 84, Page
157, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 1.5 acre more or
less to Steven and
Kathy Shaffer, found
in Volume 83, Page
561, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 1 acre, more or
less conveyed to
Bryan Gilley, found in
Volume 79, Page
529, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 1 acre, more or
less conveyed to
Rebecca
Ahlefeld,
found in Volume 79,
Page 523, Meigs
County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 2 acres, more or
less conveyed to
Allyson and Mark
McBenge, found in
Volume 78, Page
111, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 1 acre, more or
less conveyed to
Helen
Townsend,
found in Volume 78,
page 115, Meigs
County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 1.5 acres, more or
less conveyed to
Cecil Dillon, Jr. and
Flossie Dillon, found
in Volume 187, Page
167, Meigs County
Deed
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 2.4779 acres,
more
or
less
conveyed to Carl
Mark Jones, for and
during his natural
lifetime and upon his

www.mydailysentinel.com
100

Legals

death
to
Robert
Jones, Wilma Jean
Buckley, and Billy
Joe Jones, found in
Volume 226, Page
251, Meigs County
Official
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 3.00 acres, more
or less conveyed to
Carlton M. Jones,
found in Volume 239,
Page 943, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Reference
Deed: Volume 77,
Page 651, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel Number: 0901266.000The above
described real estate
is sold Aas is@
without warranties or
covenants.PROPER
TY
ADDRESS:
53475 Number Nine
Road,
Reedsville,
OH 45772CURRENT
OWNERS: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
HuppREAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$6,250.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.
ALL
SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10,17,
24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County

100

Legals

Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and
tenements:
Situated
in
the
Village of Middleport,
the County of Meigs,
and the State of
Ohio, and being
known
and
designated as Lot
No. 319 in Lower
Pomeroy now a part
of the Village of
Middleport, in the
County of Meigs, and
the Sate (sic) of
Ohio. This being the
same
premises
conveyed from Lewis
O. Cooper to Eunice
A.B. Swift be deed
recorded in Volume
67 on Page No. 128
of the Meigs County
Deed
Records.Reference
Deed: Volume 222,
Page 619, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel
No.:
1500110.000The above
described real estate
is sold “as is” without
warranties
or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 545
Park
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
Hupp.
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$7,500.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does
include
an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24

FIND A JOB
OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

100

Legals

SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and tenements: The
following described
premises, situated in
the
Village
of
Middleport, County of
Meigs and State of
Ohio:Being
Lot
Number
Three
Hundred
SeventyFour (374), as per
recorded
plat
of
Lower Pomeroy, now
the
Village
of
Middleport, said Lot
being on the East
side of Pearl Street,
between Lincoln and
Grant Streets, being
fifty
(50
ft.)
front.Reference
Deed: Volume 210,
Page 609, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel
No.:
1500001.000The above
described real estate
is sold “as is” without
warranties
or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 842
Pearl
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760
CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
Hupp.
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$25,000.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS

100

Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Legals

COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and
tenements:
Situated
in
the
County of Meigs in
the State of Ohio,
and in the township
of Salisbury and
bounded
and
described
as
follows:In Fraction 2,
Town 2, Range 13, of
the Ohio Company’s
Purchase. Being on
the west side of the
Athens Road as
used in the year A.D.
1860 and being on a
branch of Kerrs Run
and more particularly
described
as
follows:Being at the
said Athens road at
the southeast corner
of a tract of land
owned
by
Mary
Ashworth;
thence
along the south line
of said tract owned
by Mary Ashworth
eleven (11) chains
and 15 lines to the
west line of said
fraction 2; thence
south along the west
line of the aforesaid
89 links; thence east
parallel with the east
line of the above
described
eleven
chains and 15 links
to said Athens Road;
thence along said
Athens Road to the
place of beginning,
containing one acre,
more or less.Save
and excepting the oil
and gas and other
minerals,
together
with the right to mine
the same.Reference
is made to Affidavit of
Transfer from Mary
C. Davis, dec. to

100

Legals

Floyd Davis, et al,
Volume 147 page
560 Meigs County
Deed Records; and
Deed from Floyd
Davis, et al to Myrtle
M. Long Volume 148
page 188 Meigs
County
Deed
Records.Reference
Deed: Volume 188,
Page 625, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel Number: 1400946.000The above
described real estate
is sold “as is” without
warranties
or
covenants.PROPER
TY
ADDRESS:
33227 US 33 (aka
833), Pomeroy, OH
45769CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
HuppREAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$15,000.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does
include
an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
SHERIFF’S
SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,

100

Legals

2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and tenements: The
following real estate
situated in the Village
of Pomeroy, County
of Meigs and State of
Ohio,
and
more
particularly described
as follows:Situated in
the
Village
of
Pomeroy, County of
Meigs, and State of
Ohio:Being in the
Village of Pomeroy,
Meigs County, and
State of Ohio, and in
the east half of 100
acres lot number 308
and bounded and
described as follows,
to-wit:Parcel
1:Beginning at the
east
corner
of
Samuel Reynell’s lot
on which he resided
in the year 1894;
thence
north
37
degrees west along
said Reynell’s line
two hundred ninety
feet to a stake;
thence
north
54
degrees east 75 feet
to a stake; thence
south 37 degrees
west 75 feet to the
place of beginning.
Being
the
same
premises conveyed
from W.S. Densmore
and wife to Celinda
Densmore by deed
dated February 6th,
1894, and recorded
in Vol. 77, Page 355,
356 and 357, Record
of Deeds of Meigs
County, Ohio.Except
the coal and other
minerals therein and
the right to mine the
same
without
encumbrance to the
surface, and all ways
and rights of way
along any mineral
seam
is
hereby
reserved
to
the
former grantors, their
heirs
and
assigns.Being
the
same real estate
conveyed to Jessie
Moore from Alma
Reed
by
deed
recorded in Deed
Book 152, Page 388
of the Meigs County
Deed Records, and
conveyed by Jessie
Moore to George J.
Moore
by
deed
recorded in Deed
Book 160, Page 160
of the Meigs County
Deed Records.Parcel
2:The following real
estate situated in the
Village of Pomeroy,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio and in
100
acre
lot
307.Beginning at the
northwest corner of
Charles Hess lot
where he resided in
May 1879, thence
north 36-1/2 degrees
west 283 feet to the
south side of a road;
thence south 51-1/2
degrees west 120
feet along said road;

100

Legals

thence south 36-1/2
degrees west 82 feet
along said road;
thence south 25
degrees and 31 feet
west 189 along said
road; thence south
75 degrees east 541/2 feet to the
northeast corner of
lot formerly owned by
Mrs. Kokes; thence
along said Dornick’s
line;
north
54
degrees east 275
feet to the place of
beginning, containing
1-63/100 acres, more
or
less.Reference
Deed: Volume 132,
Page 191, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor’s
Parcel
Nos.
1601111.000 and 1601110.000
The
above described real
estate is sold “as is”
without warranties or
covenants.PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 435
Rutland
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760
CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp REAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$8,500.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does
include
an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF’S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24

Get A Jump
on
SAVINGS

Shop the
Classifieds!

�Wednesday, November 17, 2010

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�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

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Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Top-seeded Rio to face Bethel in NAIA Opener Rio’s Smith earns MSC
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Rio
from Page B1
Saunders chipped in 10
points and hauled in five
rebounds.
Wilberforce
placed
four players in double
figures with Danielle
Lewis leading the way
with 21 points. Keeahna
Fontes added 16 points
off the bench while
Danisha Brown tossed in
15 points and Jasmin
Wright chipped in with
12.
Rio Grande has now
won four straight against
Wilberforce in the alltime series.
“I thought we played
well in just about all
areas,” said Rio Grande
head
coach
David
Smalley. “I thought our
bench was just very, very
good. Katie Hammond
came in off the bench and
was really like ole
microwave, she just got
hot and got it to the glass,
she hit the three’s and
that was huge. It was
good to see that, a lot of
confidence in that freshman.”

game away with three
goals in the first 10 minutes of the contest.
Sophomore
forward
Richard Isberner (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) scored two
goals and added an assist
in the regular season victory over Bethel.
Rio comes into the
tournament fresh off its
first
Mid-South
Conference regular season and conference tournament championship.
“We’re happy to be in it
(the tournament field), I
know Bethel will come in
here very well prepared
and I certainly look for a
very good match with the
opportunity to advance,”
Morrissey said. “Both
teams are going to be
gunning for a great
result.”
Rio and Bethel have a
history of facing off
against one another. The
two teams previously
played against each other
in 2008 in the national
tournament opener at Rio
Grande with Rio Grande
winning, 2-1. In 2005,
Rio and Bethel played in
the round of 16 at
Embry-Riddle with Rio
Grande scoring a 3-1 victory in that match.
“We have a lot of history and a history of playing them in the regular
season
as
well,”
Morrissey said. “It’s certainly an opponent that
we’re very familiar with
and vice versa, so it
should be a great contest
and hopefully we’ll have
decent weather for it and
it won’t be as cold as if it
were a night game.”
Regular season matchups through the years
have always seemed to
be good games between
the two schools. Rio beat
the Pilots in the regular
season in 2007, 1-0 and
opened the 2005 season
with a 3-2 win. Other Rio
victories in the series
include a 2-0 shutout in
2002 and a season-opening 4-0 blanking in 2001.
Bethel’s last win in the
series came in 2000 with
the Pilots shutting out
Rio Grande, 2-0.
The RedStorm have
traditionally made some

“It was a great team
effort, it was a great team
win,” Smalley added.
“We did jump out and I
think we got complacent
and then here comes
Wilberforce. The lesson
that is continually reinforced with me is you
can’t
relax
on
Wilberforce – they can
come back on you, especially at their place.”
“I’m real proud of our
kids, very pleased with
their energy and their
effort and we’re kind of
on a roll and we hope to
keep that going through
the rest of November,”
Smalley said.
Rio will finish up a
stretch of seven games in
14 days with a road trip
to the Empire State this
weekend. The RedStorm
will play at Roberts
Wesleyan on Friday
night and Daemen on
Saturday. Rio defeated
Daemen last Saturday,
90-71 in the championship game of the Bevo
Francis Tournament.
The tip-off for the
game
at
Roberts
Wesleyan contest is set
for 6 p.m. The rematch
with Daemen will take
place at 2 p.m.

noise at the National
Tournament, only twice
has Rio Grande lost in its
first game in the tournament
(2004
vs.
Evergreen State, 2007 vs.
Fresno Pacific). Overall
in the NAIA National
Tournament, Rio Grande
has a record of 16-6-2
with one national championship (2003), one
national
runner-up
(2008) and four national
semifinal appearances
(2001, 2003, 2008 and
2009).
Bethel (14-7) won the
Mid-Central
College
Conference regular season with an 8-0 mark and
also captured the MCC
Tournament title. The
Pilots have appeared in
eight previous national
tournaments and this
year marks the third consecutive year they have
earned an NAIA bid.
Overall in the NAIA
National Tournament,
Bethel has a record of 29-2.
Rio brings a ton of
offensive firepower into
the NAIA Tournament as
four players have at least
14 goals scored this season (Ederson Lopes 21,
Isberner 17, Scott Bibby
15, Oliver Hewitt-Fisher
14).
Bethel has two scoring
players up front that bear
watching in Romulo
Nobrega (13 goals) and
Zach Ganzberg (12
goals). Nobrega led the
MCC in goals per game.

Teams
from Page B1
honoree and two special
mention
selections.
Junior running back
Jeffrey Roush earned a
first team selection,
while senior Cameron
Bolin and junior Zach
Sayre were named special mention.

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

LOUISVILLE, Ky. —
University
of
Rio
Grande senior guard
Jenna Smith is the MidSouth
Conference
Women’s
Basketball
Player of the Week, conference
officials
announced on Monday.
The weekly conference
award is the first of the
season and of her MSC
career.
Smith averaged 20.3
points, four rebounds
and 2.3 assists during the
week while leading the
RedStorm to three wins.
The Bellefontaine, Ohio
native averaged 27.5
points en route to earning Most Valuable Player
honors at the Bevo
Francis Tournament.
Smith opened the week
with six points, five
rebounds and four assists
in Rio’s 87-84 win over
University
of
Northwestern Ohio. She
hit the game-tying threepointer to send it overtime. She then exploded
for 33 points, including
making seven threepointers, in an 89-84 win
over Point Park in the
opening game of the
Bevo
Francis
Tournament.
In the Point Park win,
Smith became the 23rd
player in Rio Grande
women’s basketball history to join the 1,000point club.
Smith concluded the
week with a 22-point
performance in a 90-71
win
over
Daeman
College.

For the week, Smith
made 46.5 percent (20of-43) of her shots,
including 13-for-30 from
beyond the three-point
arc. She was a perfect 8for-8 at the free throw
line.
She is the first Rio
player to win a player of
the week honor since
Brittany Walker was the
American
Mideast
Conference Player of the
Week, February 11-17,
2008.
“This is our second
year in the Mid-South
and this is our first (MSC
Player of the Week
award),”
said
Rio
Grande head coach
David Smalley. “All the
weeks last year and leading up to this current
time, we haven’t had
anybody and Jenna is
just a phenomenal player
and I think she’s getting
the attention of a lot of
people.”
“The stats she’s putting
up, her shooting percentage, just hit her 1,000th
point, was the Bevo
Francis MVP of a very,
very solid tournament
for us,” Smalley added.
“We’re proud of Jen and
we’re happy for her
because she deserves
that. I think to have that
honor, MSC Player of
the Week, it’s the tops of
the top right now and
hopefully she’ll bring
home several more of
those as the season progresses.”
Rio was 4-0 heading
into Monday’s night
encounter
with
Wilberforce at the Newt
Oliver Arena.

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Asst and
The Raiders — who
finished 1-9 overall —
earned two special mention selections. Juniors
Steven Brown and Cody
Holley were both named
special mention.
The AP district teams
were selected by a panel
of sports writers from the
Gallipolis,
Athens,
Marietta,
Ironton,
Jackson,
Chillicothe,
Circleville
and
Portsmouth newspapers.

Player of the Week honor

60144350

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm men’s
soccer team, ranked No.
1 in the final NAIA Top
25 regular season poll,
will now embark on its
10th straight NAIA
National Tournament run
on Saturday when the
top-seeded RedStorm
will tangle with Bethel
(IN) College at Rio’s
Evan Davis Field in the
2010
NAIA Men’s
Soccer
National
Championship Opening
Round on Saturday afternoon. Kick-off is slated
for 1 p.m.
Rio Grande (21-0)
defeated Bethel, 7-0 on
September 11 at the Dave
Jones
Memorial
Tournament
in
Cedarville. Rio Grande
head
coach
Scott
Morrissey cautions to not
get caught up in the score
of the first match. “We
played Bethel early on in
the season and to be honest, it was probably one
of our better performances. At the same
time, going into this
round of 30, the Bethel
team we played the second
weekend
in
September is not going to
be the same Bethel team
that were going to see
Saturday,”
Morrissey
said. “They’re very well
coached, they’ve got a
very, very good team they’ve done an outstanding job of going
through their conference
schedule and playing
very good opponents.”
“They’ll be very well
prepared, more than anything else I would imagine this will be a statement game for them, to
try and make amends for
the match played at the
Cedarville Tournament,”
Morrissey added. “They
were unfortunate in that
they had a player redcarded, so they played a
man down – the score
line is very skewed in my
opinion and it was never
a 7-0 game in terms of
the quality of Bethel versus Rio. It’s a much,
much closer game than
the score would indicate
the first time and I know
that this time around it’s
not going to be a 7-0
game.”
The RedStorm put the

Daniel Moyo is another
player who will draw
attention as he passed out
six assists this season,
which was tops in the
MCC.
Rio’s defense will be a
key factor once again in
this match-up, as it has
been all season. The
RedStorm defense is
coming off its best performance of the season,
in which Lindsey Wilson,
the No. 6 seed in the
national tournament, was
not able to get off a single shot on goal in the
MSC Final.
Morrissey spoke about
how Rio will approach
the game on Saturday.
“The approach is a lot
different (from the regular season) and it has
been different in that we
finished our conference
championship
on
Thursday, we’ve had
two-a-day
training,
we’ve really picked up
the intensity in terms of
our training,” Morrissey
said. “But in terms of, is
the approach any different? I think the only thing
we’re emphasizing now
is just making sure that
we don’t grow complacent and we want to keep
everybody very sharp. I
think we have up to this
point. It’s just keeping
the guys focused on one
day at a time and here’s
the match that’s in front
of you and that’s all
you’re worried about at
this point in time.”
The winner moves on
to the NAIA National
Tournament final site at
the
Orange
Beach
Sportsplex in Orange
Beach, Ala., November
29-December 4.

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