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                  <text>Veterans Day
2010: Honor our
veterans today

Freenteals
for veterans, A6

•

at

entinea
l'rintcd on 100' (

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Correction

•

POMEROY
- In
Wednesday's
article
''Pomeroy police officer
appeals suspension," it was
repo1ted audio recordings
of meetings on Sept. 25
and Nov. 5 regarding the
suspension ·of former
Patrolman John Kulchar
were submitted to council
to hear.
· Though recordings were
made of both meetings by
ulchar, only the meeting
n Sept. 25 \Vas submitted
into the public record at
this week's meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council.

HCC)Cicd Nc,H;print

Arson· ruled out in Middleport fire
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

MIDDLEPORT
The cause of the fatal fire
which claimed the life of
a Middleport man earlier
this week is still under
investigation though the
fire scene did not reveal
any evidence of criminal
intent,
according
to
Shane
Cartmill.
spokesperson for the
Division of State Fire

Marshal.
In a statement released
Wednesday, Cartmill said
his office along with the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Office and the Meigs
· County Coroner's Office
are continuing their
investigation
on
Monday's fatal fire at a
home located at 35843
Leading Creek Road .
Denver Fortner. 65, perished in that fire.
Cartmill's statement

also reported the cause of
the fire has not yet been
determined by investigators.
"However. preliminary
autopsy results and the
initial examination of the
fire scene did not reveal
any evidenr·e of criminal
intent:· Cartmill said. "A
final determination on the
cause of the fire will not
be made until the final
autopsy report is completed, a process that can

take six to eight weeks."
On Monday. investigators reported the fire originated in the kitchen.
Cartmill
previously
reported Fortner's wife
discovered the fire. but
said she was not home
when it started. The home
was equipped with smoke
alarms. but it's not known
if they activated.
The
Rutland
Fire
Department was the primary responder and was

on the scene with the
investigator from the fire
marshars office· Monday
evemng. Rutland was
assisted
by
the
Middleport and Pomeroy
Fire Depa1tments on the
call. Emergency personnel from Meigs EMS
were also on the ~cene.
Cartmill said this is
123rd fire-related fatality
reported to the Division
of State Fire Marshal in
this calendar year.

Ready for Veterans Day

Veter.ans
dinner

Lights stay on
in Pomeroy,
for now

POMEROY The
Pomeroy Gun Club will .
host a free dinner for veterans at the club house at 7
p.m. Thursday in observance of Veterans Day.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

PONIEROY - Despite
the defeat of a current
expense levy to keep the
streets lights on in
Pomeroy. those lights will
stay on, for now.
Though the replacement
levy was defeated. the village will still be collecting
on the existing levy
through 2011. This means
the village has an opportunity to place the replacement levy on the ballot in
the March primary and
November general election of 2011, for passage.
If these levies fail again.
the lights. all street lights
will likely go out in
Pomeroy, according to
Mayor John Musser not just the liglits along the
walking path.
Thts
subject
was
brought
up
by
Councilwoman
Ruth
Spaun at this week's meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council. Pomeroy spends
around $30.000 a .year on
street lighting. The existing levy generates around
$16.000 for street light
expenses though
the

Woodmen
plan dinner
POMEROY - Modem
Woodmen will have a
Thanksgiving dinner at
5:30 p.m. Saturday at the
Burlingham hall. Mem~rs
are to take a covered d1sh.

~anquetset
PORTLAND - The
end of the year banquet
sponsored b)' the Portland
Community Center and
Ohio River Producers
(Racine Southern FFA)
will take place at 6 p.m.
Saturday at the Portland
Community Center. Meat.
potatoes. rolls and plates
provided but those attending are asked to bring a
covered dish. Call Bruce
McKelvey for more information at 590-9936 or
843-5216.

Service
canceled

•

LANGSVILLE
Evening services set for
Sunday at House of
Healing Ministries has
been canceled. Regularly
scheduled Sunday, evening
rvices \.\&lt;ill resume on
ov. 21.

WEATIIER

D ...

Brian J. Reed/photo
Jim Hudson hangs the American flag from the third-floor balcony of the Meigs County Courthouse Wednesday,
in preparation for today's Veterans Day observance on East Second Street. The program begins at 10:55 a.m.,
and is sponsored by Drew Webster Post 39. American Legion, Pomeroy.

I

See Lights, AS

First sentence imposed in Hemlock Grove church arson
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY.- One of
four people charged in the
August arson fire that
destroyed the Hemlock
Grove Church of Christ
was sentenced to four
years Tuesday on three
counts of a seven-count
indictment.

According
to
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen S. Williams.
Christopher L. Divers.
New Haven. W.Va. will
return to Meigs County
early next year to be sentenced on the remaining
counts.
Divers appeared in
Common Pleas Court

with his attorney. Charles
Knight, and admitted to
two counts of breaking
and entering. possessing
criminal tools, vandalism,
arson, desecration. and
tampering with evidence.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
accepted Divers· pleas of
guilty and sentenced him
to one year each on the

two B&amp;E counts and possessing criminal tools
charge. with the sentences
to be served consecuth·ely, for an aggregate sentence of two years.
Williams said the two
B&amp;E counts are, by law.
allied offenses of similar import and therefore
merge for purposes of

sentencing.
The
remaining
charges. Williams said.
are more serious. and
Divers will be sentenced
on those counts in
January. 2011. Divers
was remanded to Sheriff
Robert Beegle's custody
to begin his sentence.

Commissioners. ready to review renovation bids
BY B RIAN

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTit

High: 68
Low: 37

INDEX
2 S:ECCIO:-IS -

•

12 pAGES

Calendars

A3

lassifieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports
©

2010 Ohio

B Section
Valley Publishmg Co.

li..IJI,I !1!1.! !II

~ COM

POMEROY - Meigs
County Commissioners
could award a contract
later this week for the ren:
ovation of a Middlep011
building for use as a new
employment center.
Commissioners sought
sealed bids for the project,
but none were submitted.
Last month, the board
authorized the engineering
firm overseeing the project
to solicit bids from local

contractors. Chtis Shank,
Director
of
the
Department of Job and
Family Services. told
commissioners
Wednesday he has bid proposals from a number of
contractor-; and is ready to
proceed with the renovation project.
Commissioner:-. recessed
their meeting until I 0 a.m.
on Ftiday and will consider bids for the project at
that time .
The Meigs County
Community Improvement

Committee donated the
old Rio Meigs Center
building to the county. The
first tloor of the building.
which also housed the
Hol1er Clinic and a private
medical practice before
that. will become a onestop employment center.
Services through the local
"one-stop" arc now provided through the DJ FS
building at North Second
Avenue &lt;md Race Street.
Rio Grande Community
College's Crossroads program occupies the second

floor of the building, located on Mill Street. Shank
said the move will allow
the agency to prm ide a
more convenient and contidcntial environment for
those seeking employment
services through
the
agency.
During their business
meeting, commissioners:
• Approved a resolution
for the transfer of $50.000
from the Common Pleas
Court foreclosure fund.
considered an excess, to
the general fund for Adult

Probation services.
• Approved a resolution
authorit.ing an in-service
for DJFS employees on
Dec. lO. and authorizing
closing the oilice for the
day.
• Approved a contract
between the DJFS and
Hupp Landscaping for
snnw removal.
Present
were
Commissioners
Tom
Anderson and Michael
Bru1rum and Clerk Gl01ia
Kloes.

.

Meigs School Board approves elevator upgrades
B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Arrangements to move
forward on upgrades to
the elevator for use by
handicapped students at
Meigs High School were

--

.

approved at Tuesday
night's meeting of the
Meigs Local Board of
Education.
It was noted that the
work will be done in two
phases. the first over
Christmas break and the
remainder after school

closes in May. Cost of the
overall project is $40.566.
l\1ark Rhonemus, trcasurer/CFO. reported. Kone
Elevator will do the work.
An 0\'Crvicw
what
work needs to be done
was given to the Board by
Paul McElroy, director of

or

operations. Payment for "
the work will come from
the remainder of a
$656.550
settlement
which the district received
as a result of a law suit on
a
masonry
contract
default on c&lt;)nstnu..-tion of
the Meigs Elementary

School several years ago.
Matt Simpson, technology coordinator, reported
to the Bo;u·d on extended
library hours made possible by a $235,000 federal

See Upgrades, AS

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_,.....,_,__

____,_ _ _

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Page A2 • The Daily Sentinel

'

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--

Thursday, November 11,2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BEND AREA
CHIROPRACTIC
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Dr. Kelsey M. Henry· D.C.
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•

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•
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By Appointment

(740)
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Toll Free 1-877-..Jo..J'·~..J'J•

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784 N. 2nd v.e ue
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Personal Injury • Real Estate
• Domestic &amp; Probate

Debbie Sparkman &amp; Linda Birtcher
owners
. M-F 9am-6pm
,.. Sat 9a m-12noon

Ri Grande
Veteran's
Organization

•

200 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, OH
992-6368

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rcial

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1·800-282-7201

II

We've GotJt!

Brogan Warner
Insurance Services
21 4 E. Main Street - Pomeroy, Ohio
502 Elm Street - Racine, Ohio
(d fYte NatJo

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••

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
Telephone: 740-992-5479
Fax:740-992-6911
warnerj1 @nationwide.com

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On Your

lngel~
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PC &amp;h 200. R G de t)!U'ib'"
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WE SALUTE 'i'HE HRAVE
MEN AND WOMIC:N OF
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WI•. RI-.MAI"'"

filE 110ME Ofo' TilE BRAVE
BECAUSE OF YOUR

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Middleport, Ohio
740-992-2825
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KING~

HARDWARE

Serving Our Community
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740-992-5020
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Sat 8am-5pm
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Sunday 11am-4pm

•

�-----~-----------~-----~~~-~----~------~- -~-·----__.........,__

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday. November II, 20 I 0

In Honor
CPL Thomas R.
19~~. 1947

Annv

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

In ~lemol} 1937·2003

In Honor

~l.Sgt Roy (Frank)Riflle

Sgt. Hero Roush

195~ -1972

6/67 • 12/73

ArmY
Korea I Viet ~am

Anny

In Honor ·

In Honor

__,."'_""~

VietNam
World War II
Love,
. Low,
LoYe,
Bessie •Jeff· Craig Wife Frona &amp;Familv' Your Wife Alicia

In Honor

Bernie B. Gilkey PFC
Bemarcl D. Gilke,· PFC
Father &amp; Son
1942 - 194~

WWII
Low.
Debbie &amp; Family
Mark &amp; Famih:
Richard
&amp; Family
.
Arnl)

.

lu Honor

Cpl. Donald W. Manuel
Annv.

Korean P:o.w.
Lou. Jowe Wife
Daughters
Robin &amp; Donita
Special
Grandaughtcr Brceanna

LCPL Keith Williams
2008· current

Marines
War in Afghanistan
Low,

In Honor

Tec4
Private
William F. Sorden Sr. Robert Burton
1943· 1945

ArmY \VWII

Lon,

Your Famih'

1952- 1953

Army Korea
Love,
YourFam·

·---------------------------~---------------c

�- .

-- -

..

...-·

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 11,

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make no law respectin.~ an
establishment of religiott, or proltibitini tlu free
exercise thereof; or abridgiu,~ tlte freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tile right of the people
peaceabl}' to assemble, and to petition the
Go11emment for a redress ofgriel,ances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUI~ OPI~ION

Veterans Day Thoughts
Dear Editor:

.

This is day to remember when all of America
should give thanks. Give thanks to the Yanks of all
the years past that have paid the price in wars of
distress. There were tears and tears from all the
years, and today we must say they seen to amass.
No one knows the fear of combat but those who
have been there and no one knows the woes and
tears for the love ones who have been lost. On this
Veterans Day. may we look forward to better days
ahead when the sign on all military installations
will say, "Closed due to humans finally learning to
live in peace with and another. Amen."
Richard B. Roberts
MSGT, USAF, Retired

Dear Editor:
America is a most b~autiful country.
We pray It stays that way.
But, to keep Old Glory flying,
There is a price to pay.
For everything worth havmg
Demands hard work and sacrifce,
And freedom is a gift from God
That cornmands the highest price.
It is so hard to understand
the complexities of war,
• For \Ve must all realize
What we are fighting for.
So in this time of crisis. .
Let us offer no resistance
In honoring all of our veterans,
Our love, our prayers, our existence.
This Veterans Day we are again reminded
Of all their tremendous sacrifices
Endured to insure American freedom
Those who bravely and proudly fought the criSIS.

Honor those who carried the burden
Of defending our country, our gratitude is tnte.
Soliders, this country remains the greatest on
earth,
Brave heroes, it's all because of you!
Bonnie Stegall
Gallipolis

..
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are subject to editing. must be signed and include address and
telephone number No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader se.rv.LOes

(USPS 213-960)

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Policy
Our mam concern 1n all stories IS Published Tuesday through Friday,
to be accurate. If you know of an 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio..
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Pomeroy.
at (740) 992-2156.
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Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
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2010

Not on our watch
J

A favorite film of
mine is "A Few Good
Men," a fictional tale
which details the eyents
surrounding the unfortunate ~.:ourt martial of two
U.S. Marines stationed
at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba.
At one point during
the trial, two of the
defense lawyers for the
accused
Marines
become engaged in a
heated confrontation. As
the exchange concludes,
Lt. Sam Wineberg asks
Lt.
Cmdr.
Joanne
Galloway, "Why do you
like them so much?"
Galloway
answers
without
hesitation,
"Cause they stand on a
wall. And they say,
'Nothing's gonna hurt
you tonight. Not on my
watch.'"
Down through the
years,
from
the
Revolutionary War to
the Civil War, through
World Wars I and II,
Korea, Vietnam and the

Andrew Carter
present-day conflicts in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
our fighting men and
women have, through
th!!ir deeds, pledged to
us all. "Nothing's gonna
hUJt you tonight. Not on
our watch."
On this Veterans Day,
let us pause to pay tribute to and vow to always
remember those men
and women who have
made the ultimate sacrifice for our country. Let
us also honor those
bra"e
souls
who
returned home to tell us
the countless stories of

sacrifices made, of battles won and lost; the
tales of courage auu
grace under fire that stir
a feeling deep within
each of us that we can
only call "American
pride."
May we also honor
those men and women
returning home from
Iraq and Afghanistan,
who face, in some cases,
greater obstacles to
overcome on the homefront than those who
fought in previous wars.
To those who served in
Vietnam and returned
home to a turbulent
atmosphere full of negativity, fear and confusion; to you we offer our
heartfelt thanks for your
service and a humble
apology for any mistreatment that you experienced. No one who
dons the uniform of their
nation in military service
should ever have to face
what many of you did
after touching down on

the shores of the lam .
that you rail "home." •
On this M::tcJ ans Day, ,
let us also honor
offer a caring .shou
to the families of our '
military
personnel.
They. like their , loved
ones in the ticld, face the ;
onslaught of the enem) .
on the battlefields of th
heart, mind and soul
They ~ear the'burden o ;
holding together till' '
homefront emotionall) •
spiritually and financwl
ly. The ~acrifices the)
make go largely unno
ticed and •unheralded .
but are no less imp011ant
than those made by their
loved ones on the front ,
lines of battle.
So let us agree, on this .
day that we have set
aside to honor our vetcr
ans, that we will never
forget what they have
done OJ1 our behalf and .
that \ve wilLne.ver fail to·
honor and care for the· ·
and their fam11les.
Not on our watch.

AP-GFK POLL

Low hopes for political compromise.:
BY LIZ

SIDOTI

ASSOCIATED PRESS

This is one pessimistic country.
Most Americans harbor doubts
that President Barack Obama and
resurgent Republicans can work
together to solve the nation's
problems, according to the latest
Associated Press-GfK poll. In
fact, many Jack confidence that
last week's elections will change
much of anything in Washington.
People are far more negative
about the ultimate impact of the
first big elections of Obama 's
presidency - in which the GOP
made huge gains across the country - than they were about the
results two years ago when voters
elected the Democrat and padded
his party's House and Senate
majorities.
Hope?
It's more like nope.
"I don't think they're going to
reach any compromise at all on
anything," Dan Dore, a pilot from
Freeland, Mich., said Wednesday.
"They say, 'Yah, we're going to
play nice,' but when it comes time
to get anything done, I just don't
believe it will happen. We hear
the same rhetoric every two years,
every four years, every six years."
"I have faith in the S)Stem. I
have very very little faith in the
people involved in the system,"
regardless of political affiliation,
added Dore, 42 and an independent voter.
Just a week after the GOP benefited from change-craving voters
looking to punish the party in
power, Americans are much less
optimistic thar Republicans in
Congress will be able to implement the policies they promised
than they were about Obama
making good on his campaign
promises in 2008. And only about
half expect that the GOP's policies will improve the economy.
The economy is still by far the
largest issue facing the country,
with the unemployment rate stuck
at 9.6 percent. And it tops the list
of what both Obama and
Republicans said they'll focus on
in the coming year.
Voters could punish everyone
come 2012 - wh~n Obama is up
for re-~ele-ction and whe-n voters
will render a verdict on
Republican rule in the House - if
they don't see progress being
made.
Both Obama· and House
Republican leader John Boehner.
the House speaker-to-be, have
indicated a willingness to try to
work together. But they also have
suggested there are limits to how
far each is willing to bend. On the
other side of Capitol Hill. Senate
GOP Leader Mitch McConnell
has said that his top political priority over the next two years
should be to deny Obama a sec
ond tem1 in office.

.

"When the administration independents say the change
agrees with the American people, won't matter.
we will agree with the administra• Just a third are proud of the I
tion. When it disagrees with the 20 lO results, compared with six in '
American people, we won't,'' 10 expressing pride after the 2008 l
McConnell, R-Ky., said last presidential race. About a quarter i
week.
are excited, compared with half •
Is it any wonder Americans two years ago. And two-thirds are ·;
have little belief that all sides will hopefuL down from three-fourths
after the last election. Americ.a is ..
come together?
StilL some are cautiously opti- more disappointed, with 44 per ;
mistic.
cent expressing this emotion com - 1
"Because of the economy the pared with 31 percent two yearc; ,
way it is and because so many ~0.
•
people are out of work, I'm hop• A narrow majority are or.· · ing both parties put their best foot mistic that the GOP will be ''st
forward and can work together to cessful in bringing about the
get this resolved in a professional changes needed to improve the
way without bickering," said economy," including about half of
Mary Ammon of Cochranville, independents and just over a third
Pa., a 58-year-old receptionist of Democrats.
who just lost her job after 20
• Most - 58 percent - lack
years.
confidence that Obama and
''It's going to be hard,'' she said. Republicans can collaborate to
"Bot~ parties are going to have to solve the nation's woes: 41 perput aside their animosity for each cent are confident, with six per .~
other and take the interests of the cent "very confident." The doubt'&gt;
people to heart because the span the ideological spectrum: ..;
United States is in bad shape."
half or more across pmiy lines J
Overall, just over a third of peo- lack confidence. Repubiicall '&gt; r
ple say Obama deserves all or a express deepest skepticism. fol · 1
great deal of blame for what he lowed by independents and then "
called a Democratic "shellack- Democrats.
"
ing," while the same share say he
The findings are slightly more
deserves some of the blame and · pessimistic than in 2006 afte1 ~
three in 10 say very little or none. Democrats won control of '
His overall standing is holding Congress when President George _.
steady in the wake of the big W. Bush. a Republican, was in the
,t;
Republican victories, with about White House. Back then, 51 per
half the country - 51 percent to cent lacked confidence in all side&lt;&gt; •
47 percent - disapproving of coming together, while 4 7 percent ..
how the president is doing his job. were optimistic that collaborati.
His marks for handling the would occur to fix. the countr)
economy remain low. 41 percent - problems.
approving and 58 percent disapLittle got accomplished in the )
proving.
• two years after that election. Jraq •
Last week, the country fired dominated the national debate and"
more than 60 House and Senate further divided Deinocrats and ·
·Republicans. Proposals including &lt;:
members - most Democrats after one of the busiest congres- immigration reform ilied on
1
sional sessions in decades. The Capitol Hill. And Democrats i
Democratic-controlled House and launched a series of inquires into •
Senate passed and Obama, a the GOP-run White House.
Democratic president, signed into
This year. in a show of comit)
law an $814 billion economic after a caustk election. Obanw
stimulus plan, a sweeping health plans to meet with House and ~
care overhaul. and financial regu- Senate GOP leaders next week. '
latory changes.
On Wednesday, Boehner laid "
But frustrated with one-party out his agenda for that meeting:
control, Americans voted for a "Have a nice conversation. Fit!urc J
divided power structure in out how we make all of the 'Cur ··
Washington. And many people rent tax rates pem1anent so we can
now think a do-nothing Congre-ss help end the uncertainty that':. ,
could be the result.
stopping employers from hiring
Among the survey's findings:
more people. Talk abol~t how we
• A big chunk of people - near~ can reduce spending. J think it's
ly four in 10 - have no opinion imp01tant that we reduce spend- '
of Boehner of Ohio, while 35 per- ing to pre-bailout, pre-stimu.
_.
cent view him positively and 27 levels."
percent view him negatively.
Finding middle ground? He •
• Four in lO people say the out- didn't mention it thts time.
come of last week's elections will
The AP-GfK Poll was conductbe good for the country, while two ed Nov•.J-8 by GfK Roper Public ,
in lO say it will be bad. A third Affairs
and
Corporat-e,.
say
the
new
reality
Communications. It involved ,
Republicans In control of the · landline and cell phone interviews i
House, while Democrats narrowly \Vith 1,000 adults nationwide, and
control the Senate and run the had a margin of sampling error of
White House - won't make a plus or minus 4.1 percenta~~ ~
difference. Also. nearly half of poin~s.

�~----------------~---

Thursday, November 11,2010

Lights

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Local Briefs

Meigs County Forecast

Mudfork Blues Band
to present free show

Veterans Day: Patchy fog
before 8 a.m. Otherwise,

From Page A1
replacement levy is expected to bring in around
$19,000, if it passes, according to Clerk Treasurer
Kathy Hysell.
Hysell reported the village's two mill fire proteclevy will be going off the tax ticket next year
will need placed on the ballot in either the
ch primary or November general election.
Council also approved the third and final reading
of an ordinance which will eliminate the elected
position of clerk treasurer with the appointed position of fiscal officer beginning March 31, 2012 - the
day Hysell's current elected term ends. The fiscal
officer will be a full-time position (40 hours a
week), paid bi-weekly with salary to be determined
by council at a later date. At a council meeting in
October, Village Administrator Paul HeHman said
he assumed the fiscal officer would report to him
and/or the mayor. He also said he or the mayor
would likely write the criteria for the position.
Council would have to approve the pay rate. The
elected position of clerk treasurer pays $19,000 a
year though it's not a full time position.
Council approved the first of three required readings on an ordinance for a one-time wage increase
(Christmas bonuses) for employees. If the ordinance passes, full time employees with the village
will receive $115 and part time employees with the
village will receive $57. Employees must have been
on the village payroll on Oct. 1 to qualify.

.
t:

Upgrade~

em

PageA1

grant to make llibrary facilities more accessible to students. He said that currently the libraries at the high
and middle schools each are remaining open after
school on two different nights.
Dono.a Corsi, district nutrition director, reported
on the $1,500 Walmart Local Community
Contribution grant to be used to increase free breakfast participation district-wide. That grant along
with a Tech Prep Grant of $10,379 from the
Washington State Community College were
acknowledged during the meeting.
In personnel Brian Jimison was hired as a substitute teacher, and Lester Parker as Middle School
wrestling coach for the current school year. A first
reading of the athletic handbook was given and first
readings were also given on updated, rev~ed,
replaced and deleted by-laws and policies as recommended by the superintendent.
Following the meeting the Board moved into
executive session to discuss hiring and compensation of personnel and to continue negotiations with
teachers.
Attending were Superintendent Rusty Bookman,
Treasurer/CFO Rhonemus, and Board members,
k n Mahr, Roger Abbott, Larry Tucker and
. a r a Musser.

House veterans to newcomers:
Sweat the small stuff

POMEROY- The Mudfork Blues Band will present a free show Friday night at the Court Street
Grill in Pomeroy in appreciation for support of the
Foothills Blues and Arts Festival held in late August
on the Sheets family farm. Showtime is 9 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.

Southern Fall Carnival
RACINE - The Southern Fall Carnival will be
held from 5-9 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 13 at the elementary school. Admission is free. M&amp;M lnflatables
will be at the ~arnival with an obstacle slide, bungy
football, joust, spider three-in-one bounce house a $3 wristband will allow children to play on inflatables all evening. Games will be available with tickets at 25 cents each or five for $1 - games include,
duck pond, bottle ring toss, face painting, putt putt
golf, lollipop tree, 7111, toilet paper toss, tic tac toe,
cover the spot, ball bounce, penny pinch, bucket
bonanza, bank a shot, tin pan alley, carnival jail.
Cake walks are every 10 minutes (five tickets) and
there' 11 be a country store.
A complete itinerary is as follows: 5 p.m., concessions open; 6 p.m., auction; 7 p.m., kiss the pig
contest; 7:30 p.m., prince/princess and king/queen
drawing; 8 p.m., prize drawings; 8:30 p.m., pie eating contest; 8:45 p.m., ticket drawing for indoor
game winners with prizes such as bikes, iPods, WalMart cards, etc.

NRCS Local Work Group
meeting
POMEROY - The local work group for the
Meigs County field office of the Natural Resources
Conservation Service will meet Wednesday, Nov. 17,
9:30a.m. at the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation
District office at 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
The purpose of the local work group is to provide
guidance to NRCS field offices concerning the
implementation and delivery of conservation programs by completing a natural resources needs
assessment and developing proposals for priority
areas.
Generally the local work group consists of SWCD,
NRCS, USDA and Extension representatives, but
anyone is invited to attend the meeting.

Pre-registration underway
TUPPERS PLAINS- Pre-registration to participate in the fifth annual Christmas giveaway to be
held at the Bethel Worship Center on Dec. 4 is
·
underway now.
To pre-register to get toys call Jill Holter at 9492603 or the Bethel Worship Center, 667-6793. This
year's give-away will take place at the Chester
Community Center located in the old Chester elementary school building.

BY LAURIE KELLMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

)

WASHINGTON- Be work horses, not show horses. Choose details over drama. The small stuff? Sweat
it. And do it fast.
.
Republicans retaking control of the House in January
are getting lessons from veterans of the past two transitions of power on Capitol Hill- 1994, when the GOP
last took control of Congress, and 2006, when
Democrats grabbed it back. Lesson No. 1: They have a
short window to convince the public they're serious
about changing the way Washington works.
"If we look like we're doing business as usual," says
Rep.-elect Adam Kinzinger, R-ill., "then obviously the
American people will say, 'Well, what was that all
about?"'
"It's about making measurable progress in reasonable time," said Rep.-elect Tim Scott, R-S.C.
A 22-member Republican team is deliberating this
week on how the new GOP majority will tum the popcry to change Washington into operational policy
verything from rules to fiscal matters.
esson No. 2: Details, even private ones, matter.
"Sweat the small stuff," retired House Budget
Committee Chairman Jim Nussle, R-Iowa, told the
team, which includes four incoming freshmen. The
minutiae. of budget-drafting and the morass of billions
and trillions of dollars at issue can get lost on constituents, he said.
"But bouncing checks at the House bank? That connects," Nussle said, referring to various scandals that
have shaken Democrats and Republicans alike.
"Having an improper relationship with a page? That
connects. Having a rent-controlled office? That connects."
So do suppressing vendettas and establishing some
good will - an exceedingly rare commodity on
Capitol Hill in recent years, said another transition veteran.
Rules, for example, that allow for amendments and
debate. Or a committee· chairman sharing staff and
office space with the minority.
Rep. Michael Capuano, D-Mass., who served as
Speaker Nancy Pelosi's transition chief in 2006, said a
few members back then came to him suggesting that
since the Republicans "did this, this and this to us, we
should do that, that and that to them."
Take the long view, Capuano says he advised Rep.
Greg Walden, R-Ore., the GOP's transition chairman.
"You start out on as high a plane as you can find,"
uano said. "Because once the battle begins, it
• omes tougher."
To hear some tell it, the moment Election Day was
over the political battles pivoted from the 2010
midterms to the 2012 presidential cycle. Flush with
victory in the House and a gain of seats in the Senate,
some in the GOP immediately declared that their
party's congressional mission was now to deny
President Barack Obama a second term.
By the end of the week Pelosi had stunned
Washington by announcing she would continue to lead
Democrats even in the minority because she had no ·
intention of allowing Republicans to repeal the health
care overhaul and other laws enacted during
Democratic rule.

1

•

Grangers hear
pilgrim program
HEMLOCK GROVE - Kim Romine, lecturer,
presented a program about the pilgrims at
Plymouth Rock at the recent meeting of Hemlock
Grange.
Rosalie Story conducted the meeting, held at the
Grange hall.
On July 22, 1620. the pilgrims hired a ship, the
Speedwell, to take them from Delfthaven in the
Netherlands to Southhampton, England, to meet up
with the Mayflower. They were to sail together to
Northern Virginia. They started three times and the
Speedwell developed leaks.
Finally, the filed on the Mayflower and left on
Sept. 6, 1620, for America. The voyage took 66
days. There were 102 pilgrims on the ship when
they left England. A baby was born on the way and
a man died aboard ship.
The Mayflower was approximately 80 feet long
and 24 feet wide. On Nov. 9, 1620, land was sighted. They spent the next month and a half exploring
Provincetown Harbor area and on Dec. 25, 1620,
decided to build at Plymouth.
During the first winter, 75 percent of the women,
50 percent of the men, 36 percent of the boys and
18 percent of the girls died. By the first
Thanksgiving, there were only four women left to
take care of the 50 men and children.
Roy Grueser, legislative chairman, distributed
information about colony-collapse disorder, which
has destroyed thousands of bee colonies and billions of bees. Now, scientists believe they have
identified the culprit, a combination of viral and
fungal infections. The virus is only eradicated by
culling infected hives, but the fungus can be controlled with comercially-available antibiotics.
It was noted there are still Hemlock Grange
cookbooks for sale, and the Ohio State Grange has
a new cookbook available.
Members approved an increase in dues.
A Christmas project was selected, with funds
from the money march going toward a charity.
Canned food will also be accepted.
The December meeting will be preceded by a
turkey dinnerfor all Grangers.

suru1y, with a high near 68.
Light east wind.
Thursday Night: Clear,
with a low around 37. Light
north wind.
Friday: Sunny, with a
high near 72. Light and
variable wind.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 39.
Calm wind becoming south
around 5 mph.
Saturday: Sunny, with a
high near 67.
Saturday Night: Mostly
cloudy, a low around 43.
Sunday: Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 58.
Sunday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around 38.

Monday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 56. Chance
of precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance
of showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 38.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.
Thesday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 57. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Thesday Night: A chance
of showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 39.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.
Wednesday:
Mostly
cloudy, with a high near 57.

.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31&gt;.60
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 60.65
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 53.31
Big Lots (NYSE) - 30.18
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 29.97
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 58.66
Century Alum (NASDAQ) -14.48
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.21
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)-3.68
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.8~
Collins (NYSE) - 58.06
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.19
US Bank (NYSE)- 25.51
Gen Electric (NYSE) -16.55
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 32.28
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.62
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.66 •
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 31.80
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 62.10
OVBC (NASDAQ) - 19.00
BBT (NYSE) - 25.36

Peoples (NASDAQ) -14.47
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.25
Premier (NASDAQ)- 6.64
Rockwell (NYSE)- 65.99
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.38
Royal Dutch Shell - 66.1 0
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 71.99
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.51
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.92
WesBanco (NYSE) - 18.06
Worthington (NYSE) -16.59
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Nov. 10, 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.

For the Record
911
POMEROY- Meigs 911 dispatched these calls
for emergency medical assistance:
Monday
8:26 a.m., Devenney Road, unknown medical
emergency; 12:23 p.m., State Street, Pomeroy, chest
pain; 1:24 p.m., Bash an Road, motor vehicle collision; 1:40 p.m., Leading Creek Road, structure fire;
3:54p.m., Kingsbury Road, pain; 8 p.m., Ohio 248,
fracture.
Thesday
12:20 a.m., East Memorial Drive, difficulty
breathing; 9:12 a.m., Bradbury Road, pain; 11:23
a.m., East Second Street, Pomeroy, chest pain;
11:26 a.m., Ash Street, Syracuse, unconscious;
12:23 p.m., Lincoln Street, stroke; 5:40 p.m.,
Pomeroy Pike, weakness; 6:59p.m., Side Hill Road,
cardiac arrest; 7:11 p.m., Ohio 124, Racine, fall;
10:26 p.m., Page Street, Middleport, fall.
Wednesday
5:41 a.m., Union Street, Rutland, pain.

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed

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online at
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�.....- ...
· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .....,

-- -- ~

Thursday, November 11,

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The Daily Sentinel• Page A6

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

_ _ _ _ __

Cut Your Taxes

Submitted photo
The Golden' Corral Restaurant in Gallipolis will host its annual Veterans
Appreciation Dinner on Monday, Nov. 15. All veterans, including U.S. military
retirees, active duty personnel, National Guard and Reserves, will receive a free
dinner. Since the inception of this program, Golden Corral has served more than
2.5 million free meals to veterans and donated more than $4.4 million to the
Disabled American Veterans. Pictured from left to right, Cmdr. Keith Jeffers,
Golden Corral manager Jim Lamb, David McCoy and Frank Hamilton.

Holzer nurse chosen to
help award research grants
GALLJPOUS - Holzer Medical Center Director of the Community Health
and Wellness Department Bonnie McFarland, R.N., B.S. . was selected to
repre sent Ohio as an American Cancer Society research stakeholder.
For nearly 40 years, she has cared for patients and their families in the
Appalachian counties where she was raised.
Mc Farland joins other clinicians, researchers, and scientists for a two-year
term to help decide which of the more than I ,600 applications received each
year are worthy of about $130 million in annual funding.
Stakeholders are recruited from around the United States to be trained and
a ssigned to one or more 18 peer review committees in the Society's
Extramural Grants Division.
"Stakeholders" have been part the Society's grant review process since 1999.
All are laypersons who have a personal connection to the disease, such as having had a family member with cancer, having acted as a caregiver, or having
had a personal battle with the disease.
The research stakeholder role is natural fit for McFarland, who not only has
a family history of cancer and has been a caregiver for family members, but
has actively dedicated thousands of volunteer hours to the American Cancer
Society for more than a decade.
She served on the Society's Division board of directors and as chairperson
for Gallia County Relay For Life and Love Lights a Tree. She was an ambassador for the Gallia County at the 2002 Celebration on the Hill and helped
established the American Cancer Society's Patient Navigation program housed
out of Holzer.
She is also active in the community and recently served as president of the
Gallipolis Rotary.
McFarland received her Diploma Nursing Degree from the Holzer School of
Nursing and Bachelors of Science n Nursing degree Ohio University in
Athens. Ohio.
Ohio ·s other American Cancer Society research stakeholder representative is
Benjamin F. Floyd, Ph.D. of Cincinnati. Nationally, approximately 47 research
stakeholders serve on the Society's 20 peer review committees.
The American Cancer Society has funded more than $3.5 billion in cancer
~ search and health professional training since 1946 and is the largest nongovernmental source of cancer research funding in the United States. This program has led to groundbreaking contributions in cancer diagnosis and treatment. Forty-four Society-funded researchers have gone on to win the Nobel
Prize. Eighty percent of Society grants are funded to beginning investigators,
and targeted research areas include special needs such as cancer in the poor
and underserved.

Community Calendar
of officers, 7:30 p.m., at
the
Harrisonville
Masonic hall. Potluck to
be provided by Chapter
Thursday, Nov. 11
members.
CHESTER - Shade
Saturday, Nov. 13
River Lodge 453 will ·
POMEROY - Return
meet at 7:30 p.m. at the Jonathan Meigs Chapter
hall for election of offi- of the Daughters of the
cers. Dues must be paid. American Revolution will
Oyster soup will be meet at 1 p.m. at the
served.
Pomeroy Library. The
SYRACUSE
'program will be on the
Wildwood Garden Club, life
of
George
6:30
p.m.
at
the Washington.
Syracuse
Community
Thursday, Nov. 18
Center. Diane Ash to prePOMEROY
sent program on paw- American
Cancer
paws .
Society Meigs County
POMEROY - Alpiha
Advisory Board/SurvivorShip
Iota Masters, 11 :30 a.m.,
Taskforce. regular meetTrinity Church, Pomeroy.
ing, noon, banquet room
June Van Vranken and
at Wild Horse Cafe.
Vera Crow, hostesses.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. Church events
at the post home.
Friday, Nov. 12
Auxiliary to serve a meal
LONG BOTTOM
at 6:30 for members of
the post, their wives and Faith Full Gospel Church
friends in observance of worship service, 7 p.m.
Special singing.
Veterans Day.
Monday, Nov. 15
Friday. Nov. 12
POMEROY - Belles
HARRISONVILLE
Chapter and Beaus, western
Harrisonville
255, O.E.S. will hold its square dance club work104th annual installation shop, 7 p.m., Mulberry

Clubs
and organizations

Community Center.

Other events
VVednesday, Nov. 17
MIDDLEPORT
Community
Thanksgiving service, 7
Hope
Baptist
p.m.,
Church, 570 Grant St.
Canned food items collected for area families.
Sponsored by Middleport
Ministerial Association.

Birthdays
Monday, Nov. 15
LONG BOTTOM Ernest
Griffin
will
observe his 93rd birthday on Nov.15. Cards
may be sent to him at
36606 Post Office Road,
Ohio
.Long
Bottom,
45743.
Sunday, Nov. 21
POMEROY
Clarence Partlow, formerly of Meigs County,
will celebrate his 1 OOth
birthday on Nov. 21.
Cards may be sent to
him at Limestone Street,
Jamestown, Ohio 45335.

Visit uS online at
Your online source f or news

use pretax dollars to pay
for eligible expenses. be
sure to spend the full
balance before the planyear deadline (sometimes up to 75 days into
the following year); otherwise, you'll forfeit the
remaining balance.
You can use your
health care FSA for
copayments,
deductibles and medical
devices (e.g., glasses,
contact lenses, braces);
however,
effective
January L 2011, overthe-counter medicines
will only be eligible
with a doctor's prescription (an exception is
made for insulin), so
you ,may want to stock
up now. Read IRS
Publication 502 for a
complete list of allowable and non-allowable
expenses
at
www.irs.gov:
Charitable contributions. If you itemize
deductions this year,
charitable contributions
made to IRS-approved
organizations
by
December 31, 20 I 0, are
generally
taxdeductible. (See IRS
Publication 78 for a
complete list of organizations.) If you've got
extra cash now and want
to lower your 2010
taxes even further. consider moving up donations you would have
made in 2011.
Energy tax credits.
Allo.wable tax credits
for certain energy-efficient improvements to
principal residences will
be
reduced
after
December 31, 2010.
unless Congress votes
to extend 2010 levels.
Until then, you can
claim a tax credit for 30
percent of the total cost
of eligible products purchased in 2009 and

Jason Alderman
2010, up to a maximum
combined credit of
S 1,500 per household.
Eligible
products
include: biomass stoves;
heating, ventilating and
air
conditioning
(HYAC) systems; insulation; roofs (metal and
asphalt); windows and
doors; and non-solar
water heaters. Carefully
review the Energy Star
website (www.energystar.gov/taxcredi ts)
to
make sure your purcbA
es qualify.
Gifts. You're allowed
to bestow a total of $1
million in gifts during
your lifetime before the
federal gift tax kicks in.
One way to exceed that
limit - and avoid having
to file a Gift Tax Return
- is by giving separate, '
annual gifts of up to
$13,000 per year, per
person. (Married couples filing jointly can
give $26.000 per recipient.) Rules for gift and
estate taxes are complex, so read IRS
Publication 950 and
consult your fi'nancial
advisor.

(Jason Aldennan directs
Vtsa's .finandale ducation
pmgrams. To Follow Jason
Alderman on Twitter:
WWl\&lt;: twitte1: com/Practical
Mont'):)

Rocksprings Rehab
receives satisfaction rating

.Visit us online at

Keeping
Meigs
County
informed
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35537 St Rt 7
•
Pomeroy, OH ~S769
(740) 985-3831
shadcri' cr.a " indstrc:un.net

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2010 CAnlEMEN'S CONFER
NOVEMBER 16. 20 10
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-

•

POMEROY - Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center, located at 36759
Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, recently conducted a :-.atisfaction survey for its
residents and family members, in conjunction with My lnnerVie\V, an independent survey, research and data management firm.
The results of the survey indicate that 92 percent of the respondents were satisfied overall with the services offered at the center and 88 percent of respondents would recommend the center to others.
·'These survey results are a true reflection of the quality care we give at
Rocksprings Rehabilitation Center and the people who provide that care to our
residents," said Stephanie Clelacd, Administrator. ''All of our team members are
passionate about patient care and customer service and our survey results are
taken very seriously, " she added.
Current residents are surveyed each year to help both the center and the corporation gain feedback about the care and services residents receive. The information is then used to develop and implement quality improvement plans for
both the center and the organization as a whole. which are designed to enhance
the customers' experience.
''We would like to thank our residents and family members for taking ~~
·
from their busy lives to complete these surveys. The results are vital in hel
.to celebrate and share our achievements with our peers, while providing opp tunities for growth and improvement in each of our centers," stated Tim
Lukenda, President and CEO, Extendicare, Inc.
Rocksprings Rehabililaliun Ct:ult:r'~ patent company i~ Extendil:ate Health
Services, Inc. located in Milwaukee, Wise. Extendicare prides itself on helping
people live better by providing quality, cost-effective health care and rehabilitation. Founded in 1968, Extendicare has a long history of providing quality health
care services to residents throughout the United States and Canada. Its operations include 176 health centers throughout 12 states with the capacity for over
17.300 residents.
·

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740-992-2156

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---- --

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many,
midNovember through New
Year's Day is a blur of
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403(b) or 457 plan
before year's end. Most
people can contribute
up to $16,500 in 2010,
plus
an
additional
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If you make pretax
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which in turn lowers
your taxes. Plus, if your
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(essentially,
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money), be sure to contribute at least enough to
take full advantage of the
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Note: The maximum
2010 contribution to a
regular or Roth IRA is
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Exhaust your FSA
balances. If you participate in employer-sponsored health care or
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·- . •

...... "

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
3 Reds win Gold Gloles, Page 82
Buckeyes young, experien~cd, Pagt• 82
AL Gold Glo, es, Page 86

Thursday; November 11,2010

·======================================~======
LocAL ScHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule of upcommg
h1gh school vars11y sporlong even1s
mvolvmg 1eams from Me1gs. Galha 11nd
Mason counhes.
Er.i.ru!.Y.~~~J2

Football
WVSSAC Class M pl a}d!E
(9) Roane County at (8) Point
Pleasant 7·30 p.m.
Saturday. Novemb~
Football
if V S $ AC" C'.lilss A :"lln }Uf;
(16) St. Marys vs (1) Wahama at
Point Pleasant JSHS. 7:30p.m.

201 0 W. Va; high

school football
playoff pairings
PARKERSBURG. W Va (AP) Painngs for the West Vrrgima h1gh
school football playoffs beginning
Nov. 12. Fnday games are at 7:30
p.m. and Saturday games are at
1:30 p.m., unless otherw1se noted·

CLASS AAA
•

First Round
FRIDAY
No. 16 Logan (6~4) at No. 1 George
Wash1ngton (10-0)
No. 15 Lewis County (7·3) at No.2
Mart,nsburg (10·0)
No. 14 Robert C. Byrd (6-4) at No. 3
Morgantown (9·1)
No. 12 Spring Valley (7·3) at No 5.
Hurricane (9·1)
No. 11 Fairmont Senior (7·3) vs. No.
6 Cap1tal (8·2). at 1.a1dley Field,
Charleston
No. 10 Un1versity (8·2) at No. 7
Bridgeport (9·1)

Bevo Tournament set for this weekend
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO TI&lt;E SENTINE'L

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- This weekend marb
the 28th Annual Bevo
Prancis
Basketball
Tournament
at
the
L:ni\'ersity
of
Rio
Grande. 'fhe tournament
field is strong nnd both
Rio Grande men s and
women s team'\ should
get good tests thb weekend.
The RedStonn men ( II)
will face OhioLancaster at 8 p.m. on
Friday night. Cedarville
will tan2le \Vith Bluefield
College ~in the first men s
game on friday at 4 p.m.
The \Vinners and losers
will play each other on
Saturday. Rio Grande
will play in the 5 p.m .

!!ame
on
Saturday
regardless of the outCOllle of Pridav s contest.
Friday s game will be
the first of the season for
Cedarville. The Yellow
Jackets are ranked No. 14
in the NAJA Division II
presca!-&gt;on Top 25 rating.
Bluefield. out of the
Appalachian
Athletic
Conference
(AAC).
enters the tournament
with a record of 1-1.
Rio Grande head coach
Ken Frt:nch talked about
the significance of the
weekend. "It s every rcason of why we re still

here as an institution."
French said. "It s a
chance for us to give
back to the group of tndividuals that re111lv made
Rio Grande what it is
roday.··
··we may not exist if it
were not thi:-; group of
individuals.'' French said
in speaking about one of
the legacies of the Bevu
team. keeping the univer-;ity solvent. "It s a great
small college basketball
story.it sa great story on
i s own. regardless of
athletics. It s a great
\veek for us to re-live our

tradition and our history
and have all those individuals. Bevo, Newt
Oliver. Wayne Wiseman,
Don Vyhnalck, the list
goes on and on of all
those people that played
a role in Bevo being the
success that he \\-as."
French talked about the
field of teams on the
J1'U1 s side this year. ·-It s
a good ('lpportunity for us
to Jearn a lot about our
team. l11at s the process
that we re in right now,''
French said. "We re not a
finished product. we rc
nowhere near being a finished product and ii gives
us something to play
lor."
·'Friday night, we vc
got a team coming in that

Please see Rio, 82

First Round

Point Pleasant to host Roane
County in Class AA playoff opener

SECOND ROUND-NOV 19 OR 20
Roane County-Point Pleasant w1n·
ner vs. Poca-Ravenswood winner
Chapmanville-PikeView winner vs
Tug Valley-Magnolia wmner
Frankfort-River View winner vs.
Herbert Hoover-Greenbrier West
wmner
Shady Spring-Wayne w1nner vs.
Liberty Harrison-Bluefield winner

POINT PLEASANT.
W. Ya. - For the first
time since J 979. Point
Pleasant H1gh School
will be hosting a playotf
game. as the 8th ranked
Bi!! Blacks entertain the
9th ranked Roane County
Raiders in the tirst round
of the West Virginia
Clas-; AA playoffs.
Under
WYSSAC
guidelines. the top eight
teams in each class host
the first round of the
playoffs, with second
round match ups to be
determined bv the results
of that first weekend.
Point earned the right to
host this game when they

•

CLASS A
First Round

FRIDAY
No. 12 Fayetteville (7·3) at No 5
Williamstown (8·2)
No. 10 Buffalo (7-3) at No. 7
Matewan (8·2)
No. 9 East Hardy (7·3) vs. No. 8
Tucker County (7·3) at Preston
SATURDAY
No. 15 Parkersburg Catholic (7·3)
at No.2 Meadow Bndge (10-0}
No 14 Pocahontas County (6-4) vs
No. 3 Bishop Donahue (10-0), at
John Marshall
No. 13 Madonna (8-2) at No. 4 Wirt
County (8·2)
No. 11 Pendleton County (7·3) vs.
No. 6 Wheeling Central (6-4). at
Wheeling Island Stadium
No. 16 St Marys (6·4) vs. No. 1
Wahama (10·0), at Point Pleasant,
7·30 p.m.

•

Sarah Hawley/file photo

Point Pleasant head coach Dave Darst, center, talks to players during a second half time out on Friday during
Point Pleasant's final regular season game against Chapmanville. The Big Blacks will host Roane County on
Friday in the opening round of the WVSSAC Class AA playoffs.

BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

play the winner of the.
Ravenswood/Poca contest. also being played
Friday night.
These two teams ha\'e
seen each other this 'season. although the results
of that night certamlv
hold little ~vater at this
junction of the season.
The Big Blacks made the
trip to Roane for a scrimmage game prior to the
season and came away
with a lopsided win. but
dn t put too much into
that. The scrimma!!e was
a controlled one ~which
prevented both teams
from opening up too
much on the offensive
side of the ball.
The Raiders opened up
the season with a win

Tressel interviewed with
Paterno 36 years ago

COLCMBUS.
Ohio
(AP) - It was December
of 1974 when Jim
1
Tressel. midway through
SECOND ROUND·NOV 19 OR 20
his senior year at
East Hardy-Tucker County winner
vs. St. Marys-Wahama wmner
Baldwin-Wallace
colBuffalo-Matewan
wmner
vs
lege. hopped into the
Parkersburg
Catholic-Meadow
family car and took a
Bndge winner
road trip out of Ohio.
Pendleton
County-Wheeling
Central w1nner vs Pocahontas
He headed for State
County-Bishop Donahue winner
College. Pa.. where he
ayetteville-Williamstown wmner
had a job interview with
. Madonna-Wirt County winner
Penn State head coach
Joe Paterno. Tressel
wanted to be a graduate
CONTACT US
assistant for the Nittany
Lions.
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Whether he didn t get
Fax- 1·740-446·3008
the job or turned it down
E-mail: mdssports@mydaolysenlmol.com
before it could be
S.IU!rtl. .S.lru.l
offered. Tressel ended up
taking a similar position
Bryan Walters
at the University of
(740) 446-2342, ext. 33
bwalters@ mydailytribune.com
Akron.
Thirty-five years later.
Sarah Hawley
Paterno is still the head
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
coach of the Nittany
shawley@myda•lytnbune.com

._,

~

I.

defeated
the
Chapmanville Tigers in a
wild 35-28 contest last
week .
The Big Blacks finished the ~season with a
fine 7-3 mark and faced
five opponents who are
participatin~ in the Class
AA playofl s. Point finished 3-2 against those
teams. Roane. meanwhile. fashioned an 8-2
mark on the season. losing only to AA playof1
teams Ravenswood (I 06) and Herbert Hoover
(35-34).
The
Raiders
also
defeated Class A Wirt
County ( 19-14 ). who finished fourth in their division. The winner of this
first round game will

SPEC,AL TO THE SE~lNEL

Please see Point, 86

CLASS AA

SATURDAY
No. 11 Frankfort (7-3) vs No. 6
River V•ew (8·1-1 ), at Bluefield

Bv MARK WILLIAMS

O\er Tyler Consolidated,
before losing a home
contest to Ravenswood.
They then we·H oa a five
game winning streak.
before losin!.!: to· Hoover.
Roane finished ,out the
season on a twq-game
winning streak. defeating
Phillip Barbour and
Ritchie County. An interesting fact about the
Raiders is that thev \\'ere
a perfect 5-0 awa)· from
home.
The
Raiders
are
coached
by
Tom
Hardman and they bring
a lot to the table. They
arc led by tailback
Nathan Reynolds (5 I I.
180 jr). who has rushed

Please see 8evo, 82

SECOND ROUND·NOV 19 OR 20
Nicholas County-Brooke winner vs
Logan-George Wash~ngton w1nner
Un1verS11y·Bndgeport winner vs.
Lew1s County-Martinsburg winner
Fairmont Senior-Capital winner vs.
Robert C. Byrd-Morgantown winner
Spring Valley-Hurricane w~nner vs.
Parkersburg-South Charleston winner

FRIDAII
No. 16 Poca (6·4) at No. 1
Ravenswood (10·0)
No. 15 Tug Valley (8·2) at No. 2
Magnolia (10-Q)
No. 14 Herbert Hoover (6·4) vs. No.
3 Greenbrier West (10-0). at
Greenbrier East
No. 13 Liberty Hamson (7-3) at No.
4 Bluefield (9·1)
No. 12 Shady Spring (7·3) at No.5
Wayne (8-2)
No. 10 Chapmanville (7-3) vs. No.7
PikeView (8-2), at Princeton
No. 9 Roane County (8·2) at No. 8
Point Pleasant (7-3)

Red Storm
women win
in overtime

LIMA. Ohio - The
University of Rio Grande
RedStonn women s basketball team \Vent on the
road for the first' time in
the young 20 I 0-11 season and came awav with
a hard-fought, 87-R4 win
in overtime on Tuesday
night at the University of
Northwestern Ohio.
Rio Grande (2-0) had
four players score in double ligures. led by senior
forward Leah Kendro.
who poured in 32 points.
Kendro also corralled
nine rebounds. Junior
guard Kaylee Helton
added 20 poi'nts while
freshman forward Kate
Hammond tossed in 13
points and pulled down
six rebounds off the
bench. Senior point
guard Bre Davis chipped
in I 0 points and dished
out seven assists.
Senior center Ashley
Saunders had a hu:ze
~ game on the glass. hatlling in 13 rebounds to !!O
whh four points. Senit)f
euard Jenna Smith was
limited to six points.
which leaves her 12
points from 1.000 for her
career.
Northwestern Ohio ( 12) was ·led by Amanda
Franc1s with 30 points
\Vhile Ashley Jackson
added 22 points and
dished out 14 assists.
rvtolly French reached
double
figures
in
rebounds with I 0.
The !!ame was close
throughout. Rio Grande
held a 30-27 lead at halftime.
The RedStorm shot the
ball well from the field.
connecting on 32-of-67
shots (47.8 percent) for
the game. including 8-of22 (36.4 percent) 1rom
three-point land. UNOH
countered with 42.3 per, cent (33-of-78) shooting
from the field, including
6-of-18 (33.3 percent)
from long range.
The free throw line
played rok in the outcome as Rio Grande
made 15-of-22 (68.2 percent) and U~OH hit only
12-of-20 ( 60 percent)
attempts.
Rio Grande dominated
the glass. holding a 52-38

SATURDAY
No. 13 Parkersburg (6·4) vs. No 4
South Charleston (9·1), at l.a1dley
Field
No.9 N1cholas County (9·1) at No.
8 Brooke (8-2)

•

1

Lions - with 400 wins
and counting and
Tressel is I 0 years into a
successful tenure at Ohio
State. The teams and the
coaches will meet again
on Saturday.
"I don t know that I
di&lt;.ln t get the job, and
f m not saying here I was
offered the job. but I
knew riding home from
Penn State I wasn t going
there.'' Tressel said on
Tuesday.
His father. Lee Tressel.
a hall of fame coach at
Baldwin-Wallace, had
already made a career
decision for his ::;on.
"My dad told me I wa:.
going to Akron," Jim
l'res~el said. "So. now.
was I offered the job'!
Ma) be my dad knew I

Please see Years, 86

Joe
Paterno of
Penn
State talks
with Jim
Tressel of
Ohio State
before
their game
on
October

27, 2007.
Nabil K.
Mark/Centre
Daily
Tlmes/MCT

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�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

N&lt;?. 4 Buckeyes a blend of youth, experience
COLUMHUS. Ohio
(AP) -After a few years
fighting a prematurely
fading hairline. Ohio
Stat~
power forward
Dallas Lauderdale finally
gave in and just shaved
· off what little remained.
·•tt made me a little
quicker.'' he cra&lt;!ked.
Heading into a senior
season of high expectations and high promise.
the Buckeyes big man
will need every edge he
can get.
Comin!! off a 29-8 sea 4
son in which they shared
the:: Big Ttn s regular4season title then won the
conference tournament
championship
before
advancim! to the NCAA s
round ..of
16. the
Buckeyes have just about
everything they need for
his
Lauderdale
and
shaven pate to be playing
even later in March.
Four ~tarters are back,
buttressed by what some
experts called the best
recruiting class in the
nation. preseason No. 4
Ohio State has all the
pieces - it just needs 20wins-a-year coach Thad
Matta to fit· them all
together.
l s remarkable that the
Buckeyes could lose the
consensus nntional player
of the year, Evan Turner,
who left after his junior
season to go No. 2 in the
NBA draft to the
Philadelphia Sixers. and
still be a powerhouse.
That is attributable to the
persuasive powers of
Matta. who is a sparkling
258-85 - that ~ an average record of 26 49 over his 10 years. ·
"I probably learned a
great lesson many years
ag_D because I had the
player of the year at
Xavier in David West,"
Matta said. "The follow 4
ing year, we struggled at
times because I think
everybody thought, 'Hey,
I ll just be David "
He doesn t see that
happening this time
around, however.
''These guy:- have a
vel)' good understanding
of how good Evan was
and
what
Evan s

strengths and weaknesse
were~· he said. "That was
a tribute to how close that
team was."
This time [\latta will try
to mesh six standout
freshmen
with four
starters who it seems
have been with the program for all of the
coach s seven years in
Columbus.
The returnees include
Lauderdale, a 6-foot-8
physical force on defense
und the boards. 3-point
specialist Jon Diebler. doeverything
swingman
David Lighty and the
team s next big-time
player, William Buford.
Buford av~raged 14.4
points a game last sea~on.
Diebler 13.0, Light) 12.6
and Lauderdale 6.5 point~
and 5.2 rebounds.
''We re very excited
about who "c have coming back and who we
have coming in," Diebler
said. "With the six new
guys who arc going to be
able to play. they re very
talented and they ve been
working really hard this
summer."
Jared Sullinger. the
Naismith Award winner
as the top prep player in
the land last season.
received presea~on All 4
America votes in the
Associated Press ballot4
ing. The surprisingly
nimble 6-9 forward won
Ohio s ;vtr. Basketball
av. ard the past two years.
following cun·ent teammates
Buford
and
Dicbler. (The last two
players before Sullinger
to win the award multiple
times? Current .NBA stars
LeBron James and O.J.
Mayo.)
Aaron Craft, a former
~tandout quarterback in
high school, is perhaps
the only true point guard
on the roster. DeShaun
Thomas is a sweet-shooting lefty \Vho finished as
'one of the highest scoring
schoolboys
ever
in
Indiana. Slasher Jordan
Sibert, guard Lenzelle
Smith Jr. (sidelined with
an injury for at least
another month) and
Sullinger s Columbus
Northland High School

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Rolen, Phillips, Arroyo
give Reds 3 Gold Gloves

NEW YORK (AP) The new version of the Big
Red Machine plays some
pretty ~lick defense, too.
Cincinnati third baseman Scott Rolen won his
eighth Gold Glove on
Wednesdav, one of three
Reds players to be honored
l(&gt;llowing the team s first
playoff appearance in 15
years. Second baseman
Brandon Phillip~ and
pitcher Bronson Anoyo
also were among the
National League redpients
announced by Rawlings.
l s the first time
Cincinnati has had more
than one winner in a season since the days of the
Big Red Machine. when
catcher Johnny Bench,
second baseman Joe
Morgan. shortstop Dave
Concepcion and center
fielder Cesar Geronimo
won four straight years
from 1974477.
"T think our defeme won
a lot of ~ames this year:·
Rolen smd.
St. Louis catcher Yadier
Jonathan Quilter/Columbus Dispatch/MCT
Ohio State's David Lighty (23) gets fouled by• \1olina and Philadelphia
outfielder Shane Victorino
Lipscomb guard Johnny Lee during the second half of each garnered their third
an NCAA men's basketball game at Value City Arena Gold Glove in a row.
on Tuesday, November 24, 2009, in Columbus, Ohio. Colorado shortstop Troy
teammate
J.D. Ohio State has lost six Tulowitzki &lt;Uld outfielder
\Veather:.poon round out standout freshmen - and Carlos Gonzalez joined
the dass.
all went in the first round. Arroyo as first-time winThe biggest question In 2007, it wa:. Gteg ners.
for the Buckeyes is Oden, Mike Conley and
·'It was definitely a
who II play the point. A Daequan Cook. In 2008, shock." An·oyo said.
year ago. Turner shifted it was Kosta Koufos: a "Honestly. it never even
from shooting forward to year later. substitute cen- crossed my mind once
mnning the show and had ter B.J.l\lullens: and then throughout my entire
~
career."
a terrific
season, averag- last year, ·1t was Turner.
Through it all. Ohio
Cardinals first baseman
ing 20.4 points, 9.2
.I
·
·
d to Albertd Pujols
won for the
re bounus
an d 6 ass1sts
a state has contmue
·
game despite mis~ing six stockpile talent and wins. 1 secon ttme (2006). and
.
speedy Houston center
games a f ter brea k·mg
Blending veterans and ftelder .Michael Bourn was
bones in his back from a rookies is nothing
new.
·
~
a repeat wmner.
fall on a dunk attempt.
"It s like I told the six
·'Michael s second Gold
Asked who II handle new ~uys when t~ey g~lt Glove comes as no surthe ball out front, Buford here m June. I said. th1s prise to anyone \\ho has
smiled and said, "I m not program has ov~r the I watched him play," Astros
sure. I m reallv not. 1 m course of the last SIX sea- oeneral manager Ed Wade
really being ht)nest."
sons accomplished a ~aid. "You see the ball
The bonus for the great deal - and you leave the bal. and you say.
Buckeyes is that any haven t had one thing to 'No way that Olie gets
number of people can do with it,'' Matta said. caught, and then Michael
handle the ball and share "You need to make sure runs it down. Some guys
the load: Diebler, Lighty you have great respect make plays look :ougher
and Buford, among oth- and humility. The guys than they are: Micryael
crs.
we are returning. sitting makes the . tmposst~le
Having to replace a top in the room, will tell you catch loo~ routme. It s mce
player is really nothing there s an honor to to see hts hard work get
.
new for the Buckeyes. uphold here. We do it a reco~ni.zed.''
Over the past four drafts. certain way."
Ph1lhps also won 111
·
2008 before Orlando
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HudsontooktheNLaward
Rio Grande has had Smalley added. ··we will at second base last year.
i s my humble and hon 4
Rolen was selected for
est opinion that any one some setbacks health- honor Leah Kendro. who
of the four teams is capa- wise. having to do with- just thb past Saturday the first time since 2006.
ble of winning:· said Rio out senior guard Brandi against Ut Clermont hit His ei~ht Gold Gloves
from Page Bl
rank tlurd at his position
Grande head coach Unger and junior center her l.OOOth point."
behind Hall of Farner~
David
Ediesha
Smalley.
Cole.
"We
te
Senior
guard
Jenna
will play hard . just like
Brooks
Robinson (16) and
Smalley provide:. a down in numbers. but Smith is 12 points shy of
OU-Chilly did (last scouting
report on the what we do have i:. very I ,000 heading
into
week). OU-lancaster s Friday opponent, Point
very dynamic, Tuesday s game at the
going· to come in and Park. ·'They are a veter- solid.
of
very good," Smalley University
play extremely hard and an team, they will have said. ..I think we II be Northwestern Ohio, so it
give us the1r best shot." size a1}d height on the able to run the floor, could be a double celerrench added. "We D inside. They have very· shoot a lot of three s and bration.
from Page Bl
have to play well to win good guard play and be able to defend it a lit4
Saturday s action gets 1
the game. but it s a game, they have a lot of their tic bit. ..
underway at II a.m. advantage in rebounds
on paper we should win. players back from last
"It s going to be a with Point Park vs. while UNOH posted 22
but there are a lot of year." he said.
turnovers to 20 for the
great Bevo weekend." Daemen/Midway.
things we re looking for
execution-wise
to
improve on from last
week and then we re
going to play a quality
opponent, either in
Cedarville or Bluefield
on Saturday:·
OU-Lancaster
\\ill
play the I p.m. on
Saturday
versus
whichever team will not
face Rio.
The RedStonn women
( 1-0) will do battle with
Point Park on Friday at 6
p.m. Rio will be looking
to avenge last year s loss
to Point Park when the
two teams played in
December in Pittsburgh.
Daemen and Midway
College, coached by formt:r Rio Grande standout
Karley ~1ohler. will
begin the basketball
action at 2 p.m. on
Friday. Midway was in
the tournament last season. The winners and
losers will play each
other on Saturday and
like the men, Rio will
play the 3 P..m. contest no
matter what happens in
the first round match-up.
Daemen, a former foe
from
the American
Mideast Conference, will
be opening the season
this
weekend.
The
Wildcats arc picked to
finish second in theAMC
thi'&gt; season. Midway has
a record of 1-2 to this
point on the season.
''The Bevo on the
wonen s side this year is
extremely competitive.

Bevo

Rio

Mike Schmidt {10).
On a conference call
with all three Reds winners. the 35-year4old Rolen
joked that he and general
manaoer Walt Jocketty had.
already discussed a SIX-toeight4year contract exten 4

f~· f~~ ~~n~:~~dc~:
Schmidt and Robinson.
"I think Mike Schmidt
was the best third baseman
to ever play the game,''
Rolen satd. ''To be with
those guys obviously is an
amazing compliment."
Cincinnati tied for the
major league lead with a
club-record .988 fielding
percentage, a big reason
the resurgent Reds won the
NL Central before losing
to Philadelphia in a firstround playoff sweep. They
com.mttted only 72 errors,
17 fewer than the previous
team record set last year.
"Having a great defensive infield is such a
bonus," Arroyo said. "To
have the year that we had
defensively definitely contributed to us making the
playoffs.''
•
Rolen thinks other
Cincinnati players such as
first baseman Joey Yotto, a
leading contender for NL
MVP this year, and out4
fielders Jay Bruce and
Drew Stubbs could be
future Gold, Glove winners, too.
"As we put this team
together," J~ketty said,
'·one of the thmgs that we
emphasized was improv4
ing our defense.
"We are very pleased
and also very proud of
these guys.'' he added. "I
think it s a great accomplishment for our organization and these guys in
particular."
By winning, Phillips
receives a $250,000
increac;e in his salary next
year to $ 11.25 million.
Molina, Pujols, Rolen and
Victorino each ~et $50,000
bonuses. and .tSoum and
Tulowitzki
receive
$25.000 apiece.
•
Molina, who threw out
44 percent of opposing
basestealers,. joined Mike
Matheny (2000. 2003-04)
and Tom Pagnozzi ( 1991 4
92, 1994) as Cardinals
catchers to win three times.
Rawlings has awarded
Gold Gloves since 1957.
Mana~ers and coaches
vote tor players in their
leagues before the end of
the regular season, but they
an t choose members of
their own teams.
RedStorm.
Rio Grande will be
back home this weekend
for the Bevo Francis
Tournament.
The
RedStorm will face Point
Park on Friday at 6 p.m.
at the Newt Oliver Arena.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

..

�'•

I

Thursday, November 11, 201 0

.

.........

;

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

\!Cributte - Sentinel - l\egi~ter
CLASSIFIED

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~

Meigs County, OH

Websites:
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DE

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

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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
·
Should Include These Items
To Help G~t Response ...

200 Announcements
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type
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$REWARD 740)2561399
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financial
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free? Are you trying
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POUCIES: ONo Yloley PubliShing resenes !he r1ghtto edll. rejt&lt;:l ot canoe! any ad at anytime. Errors must bO rtp011ed ontha llrctday of pubfleatlonand
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Other Services

Yard Sale

D.ISH..

Garage Sale 3 mi.
Sandhill
Road
Thursday,
Friday,
Saturday. 8·?.

Very Nice 213 BR 2
Baths. South Gallia
/Farrland School Dist.
Owner
Finianc1ng
$8,000
down
Yard Sale at Dish $531 85 per mth;
Barn. Fri. and Sat. 740) 256·1686
9-?
Brick house, 4 br, 2
Recreational bath, $40,000, land·
1000
available _
Vehicles contract
w/10% down. 163 Mulberry
Ave,
Campers/ RVs &amp;
Pomeroy, 740·380"
Trailers
9800

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NOTICE
OHIO
Do you owe over
Lifelock
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that $10000 to the IRS?
Free Document
Stop wage
you do business with
Shredder for new
garnishments and
people you know. and
Lifelock members.
NOT to send money
bank levies.
Call Today
through the mail until Settle Out Over Due
1-888-758-3029 and
you have investigating
Taxes for Less
use promo code
the offering.
1-888-692-5739
SHREDDER
Giveaway

pallets at 825 3rd
ave @ the Gallipolis
Tribune.

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.

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

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

DIRECTV

2005 Jayco Eagle
Real Estate
Hrtch, 3500
Gooseneck
Rentals
sleeps six Excellent
Askmg
condition.
Apartments/
$19,900.
See
Townhouses
photos
at
~arm1chaeltraile

Limited Time Offer!
Free HD for Life.
Ask how by calling SEPTIC
PUMPING
DirecTV today!
Gallia. Co. OH and
Packages start at Mason Co. WV. Ron
$29.99.
Evans Jackson, OH1·866·541-0834
800·537·9528

2412

Security

Pets

Miscellaneous

ADI

GIVEAWAY
PUPPIES. To a good
home
(mom/dad
good with kids) 6
weeks old- 3 black· 3
white/cream colored.
Lab/Golden Retriever
Mix Call: 304·675·
6928

Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
1OK/14K/18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446-2842

Free Home
Security System
with $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services
Call1-888-367-2171
400

Financial

financial Services

CBED_IT CARD
RELIEF
Buried in Credit
Card Debt?
Call Credit Card
Relief for your
free consultation.
1·877·264-8031

Money To lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affa1rs
BEFORE you refinance
yoClr home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE
of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Afflars toll tree at 1·
866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
service
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

600

READ All .ABOUT IT
in the
The Daily Sentinel

Zlrbe &lt;@allipolis 7!\ailp Z!tribune
Zlrbe ~oint ~Ieasant iRegister

2BR APT.Ciose to
740·446· Holzer Hospital on SR '
160 CIA. (740) 441· ~
0194
07 Brecken Ridge
40' camper. country CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;•
blue &amp; beige. 3 slide
AFFORDABLE!
outs. full size bath &amp; Townhouse
•
kitchen, 2 bedrooms, apartments.
andlor
sliding glass doors. small houses for rent.
exc.
condition, Call 740·441-1111 for'.
&amp;
$20,000 application
beautifull,
rnformation.
740·247·2475
~

VQNAGE

wooden Home Improvements

HousM For Sale

Animals

Pets
Found white wlblk
spot on back 30·401b
dog. Around Bostic
car lot. 853·01 02

1 female and 1 Male
11 week old Kittens
INDOOR ONLY 1st
Shots, Wormed, and
Liter
Trained
740)441-1100.

6 cute fluffy black &amp;
white
kittens Central
Boiler
giveaway 304-675· Outdoor
wood
6355
Furnaces
Instant rebate up to
$1
,000.00. 740)245700
Agriculture
5193

Free Rent Special
!!!
78
. Chevy 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
van/camper. See @ up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
6778 Lincoln
PK electric. Call between
Patriot
the hours of 8A·8P
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
2000
Automotive
(304)882·3017
Other

Autos

&amp;
Quality
Cars
Trucks w/warranty all
priced to sell, 16 yrs.
in business. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
Hay for sale. Square Gallipolis, OH 740·
Farm Equipment
and round bales. 446·0103.
Square
$2·3 a bale
1997 Mortz 3 Horse
slant trailer with Tack and round 4x4 $20 a 1989 Corvette Coupe
roil. Barn kept never Excellent Condition
740)339·3046
wet. Lime fertilizer. 96,000 miles. 304675·3354
Zero turn mower 304·562-7397
John Deere 60 in
Trucks
deck. Moving must Junk give away 304sell. 740·367·0577
458-1657
2004
Chevy
STIHL Sales &amp; Service John Deer Tractor m· Silverado 4x4 Good
$5,500
Now
Available
at 1950 4w drive good Condition
Carmichael Equipment condition 86 H.P. 7 40)256·1757
740·446·2412
1998 New Holand 45
H.P 3930·4w Drive 1998
Dodge
Hay, feed, Seed,
Excellent shape new Cummins Ext. Cab
Grain
tires
(304)576· $3500 Call
339·
2890.
3046
200 Square Bales of

-------

Hay $2.00 per Bale
740)339·3046

~~==~

Yard Sale

Want To Buy

Garage Sale Many Oiler's Towing Now
Good mixed hay. sq.,
Items @245 Oak buying junk cars
$2.50 4x5, round
Drive (Spring Valley) w/motors or w/out.
bales $20.00. Stored
or
Oct 11,12,13 9:30am 7 40-388·00 11
inside 740-446·2075
740-441·7870
No
to 3:30pm
Sunday call
900
Merchandise Garage sale lots of
Real Estate
nice Home Interior, 3000
Sales
clothing, new items
Collectibles
added.
Everything
must go! Low prices.
Commercial
88 U$ Mint Sets
9994 St At 7 S Oct
OGP 1964 thru 2010
11 &amp; 12, 8:30·5
LG Office I Rental
Make Honest Offer
Property 512 2nd
for Air 441-9571
Garage sale· Sat. Ave
Gallipolis.Oh
13th,
8am·5pm asking $85,000 or
Miscellaneous
36577 Texas Rd., make offer 740)710·
Jet Aeration Motors Pomeroy, fiberglass 0007
truck topper, truck
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call tool box, wall mount OFFICEIWAREHOU
Ron Evans 1-800gas heaters, bicycle. SE/RETAIL
Great
537-9528
Chev. 305 engine. Location 749 Third
~~~~.....,.~- fridg/stove/sink
Ave Gallipohs.1800
$25,000·$30,000
camping unit. DVD's,
sq.ft
For more info
yearly
income furniture, sewing &amp;
Call 1·404·456·3802
potential. Mobil bill crafts. toys, clothes
board
advertising
business low start up Garage Sale Friday For Sole By Owner
$2,500.
12th Rt. 2 North 6 apts $137 000
www.2487Now.info
Close
to
Rollins rent $2030 mo. 740·
or 740·416·3130
Garage 8·?
446·0390

Twin R1vers Tower 1s
accept1ng applications
for w8iltng list for HUD •
subsidized
1·BR •
apartment
for
the ,
elderly/disabled,
call
675·6679

For
lease:
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor
apt.
near
Gallia
Academy, no pets.
ref &amp; dep. required;
maximum occupancy
2 $350 mon. 740!
446·3936 or 740·
446·4425
Modern 1BR
446-0390

Apt.

RIVERBEND PLACE
Apts.
1 BR. Hud
subsidize, elderly &amp;
disabled
complex, •
accepting
Applications
304·
882·3121.Equal
Hous1ng Opportunity

2 BR apt. 6 mi frorT) ,
Holzer. $400 + dep.
Some utilities pd
740-645·7630
or •
740-988·6130
2BR
apt.
in
Cententary
$325'
water &amp; trash pd
256·1135

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

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

- ---------~-

-~-

- ----

.....,.

__ -. ----

Houses For Rent

6000

House for sale or
rent. Pretty, clean
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to
Elem
1(/ashington
Rent $750, no ullilite
Sale $99,000. Kelly·
Jo ' 645·9096 or 4462BR Washer Dryer 4539
Hookup 2miles from
hospital. Also 1 BR, 2 br. house for rent
740-4~1-3702
or on Ann St., Pomeroy
740-286-5789
dep. required 740992·6385
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS .
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up.
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

3 bedroom house for
rent downtown, view
of river, available
November 16, 740590-1900

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

for rent in Syracuse
NO
pet's
HUD
approved call 304675-5332 Weekends
740-591-0265

garage
apartment
425.00 month. Ty
304·675-4030

- -b-d-r.- -ba--- ..-.4
2
450 00
450.00
month.
&amp; 2 br apt &amp; deposit. Middleport
houses in Pomeroy &amp; OH. (304)675-3753
Middleport. NO Pets. 362 Lincolf' Street.
740-992-2218
1·3 bed room house

Manufactu~
Spring Valley Green 4000
Housmg
Apartments 1 BR at ~~~~~~;;;;
$395+2 BR at $470 ~
Rentals
Month. 446-1599.

2 BR Home with
attached garage WID
&amp; Ice Bx New
Carpet/Paint
ReferiDep. required
Prefer NO Pets,
$675 mth wateF 1nc.
near
the
Cinema/Hospital
304-657-6378

-.

-...... --------.....,..,.

-----

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

Houses For Rent

,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

-- -~--

2BA-2 Bath Like new
Mobile Home water,
sewer, trash pd. No
pets. CA. Covered
Patio
Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740 _446 •3160
3 BR mobil $500mon
&amp; dep. 4BR home
$725 mon &amp; dep. on
Bulaville Pike 740·
367-7272

4BR 2BA 11 acres.
$450 mon+dep, ref 3 BR 2BA $575
1722b
req. 388-9009 or mon+dep
Chatham Ave 740740-649·0541
645-1646
6 Rms &amp; Bath,
Appliances
2 BR;
2 Bath
Furnished,
122 Cheshire Area, NO
Cedar St. Gallipolis, PETS Ref Aeq. Ph.
NO SMOKING &amp; NO 740-367-7025. $400
PETS $450mth. plus mon + dep.
Deposit
740)6457651
Two bedroom trailer,
2 BR 1 B $425 Rent unfurnished, except
$400
Dep.
88 refrigerator
and
Gartield. Hud OK stove.
nicecountry
740-645-1646
in
setting
Harrisonville,
3 Bedroom HUD
plus
Approved NO PETS $350/month
$350
deposit
740)256·1634
Call?40·985·4372.
2 BR House for Rent,
Excellent Condition,
Supplies
References
Required. NO PETS Green slag 10.00 a
ton
great
for
740-645-1766
driveways. Rt. 62
1 bdr. all utilities above New Haven
paid
Near behind
American
downtown.
HUD Colloid Co. (304)882accepted. (304) 360· 3944
0163

Employment

100

Help Wanted •
General

Help WantedGeneral

Accepting
applications for part
time cashiers Apply
1n person at ParMar
#42 15054 StAt 160
Vinton Oh or on
online
at
parmarstores.com

resumes
to.
Yellowbush M1mng,
Attention HR, P.O
Box
238,
New
Haven, WV 25265 or
fax Attn HR (304)
882-1379.
EOE
MIFIDN

Legals

lQ;QQam

·

Administrative/
Professional

Assistant
Office
Positions availabe at
Mason
County
Health
Dept.
Application can be
obtained
at
the Accepting
health dept
applications for part
cashiers.
Child/Elderly Care time
Subway artist &amp; exp.
Child care provider full time ass. store
needed in my home manager. Apply 1n
after • school &amp; on person at ParMar
breaks. Non smoker #38
15289
good driv1ng record Huntington
Ad
own reliable trans. Gallipolis Ferry or on
send ref and resume online
at
to PO Box 255 C/0 parmarstores.com
Gallipolis
Daily
Tribune Po Box 469
WANTED: Part-time
Gallipolis Oh 45631
pos1tion available to
assist
individuals
Drivers &amp; Delivery with developmental
in
disabilities
Red's Rollen Garage Galllipolis. Must have
Needed Class A COL high school diploma
Driver with Tanker &amp; or GED, valid driv~r's
Haz-mat. TWIC a license, three years
900d
driving
plus 740-339-0034
and
experience
adequate automobile
R &amp; J Trucking in insurance. $8.97/hr,
Marietta. Oh is hiring after training. Send
COL A Drivers for resume to: Buckeye
local
&amp; Regional Community Services,
Routes. Applicants P.O.
Box
604,
must be at least 23 Jackson, OH 45640.
for
yrs have min of 1 yr Deadline
of commercial driv1ng applicants: 11/11/1 0.
exp. Clean MVR, Pre-employment
Haz-mat Cert. We drug testing.. Equal
feature
weekend Opportunity
home time, Excellent Employer.
health
&amp;
dental - - - - - - Underground
1nsurance,
401 (K),
Vacation,
Bonus SurveyorYellowbush
pays and
s.afety Mining, LLC, located
in Racine, OH is now
awards.
Contact
Kenton at 1-800-462- accepting resumes
for the position of
93Q,S F.O.F.
undergroun d

surveyor. Candidates
Education
must posses at least
=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= a
high
school
diploma
or
Business
equivalent;
Instructors Needed experience
in
@ Gallipolis Career underground
coal
College.
In mming preferred but
Economics.
not
required.
Keyboarding,
and Interested applicants
Math. In Economics with
surface
and Math instructors surveying
and
poss6'SS AutoCAD experienee
must
Master's
Degree. are
strongly
Send cover letter and encouraged to apply.
resume
to: Yellowbush Mining,
offers
a
bshirey@gallipoliscar LLC,
eercollege edu.
competitive benefits
package
including:
company sponsored
medical, dental a,nd
Food Services
vision, 401 (k) with
company match, paid
Needed experienced vacation
and
wait and kitchen holidays and future
help.
Must be professional growth
flexable. Apply on opportunities.
person
or
at Qualified applicants
www.bobevans.com. may
fo'rward
(304)

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;M;;;;e;;;;d;;;;ic;;;;a;;;;l;;;;;;;;;=
Abbott Home Care is
currently accepting
Applications
for
Home Health Aides
for Gallia county.
Apply In person @
315
washington
Street, Oak Hill, Ohio

Restaurants

Bob Evans Mason is
now
hiring
expenenced wait and
Call
kitchen staff.
(304)773-6112
or
apply
online
at
www.bobevans.com.
Must be flexable

100

Legals

Notice

To

All

~

Contractors GalliaMeigs
Community
Action Agency IS
seeking
General
Contractors,
Licensed Electricians
and
Licensed
Heating Contractors
to work with our
Weatherization
ALL
Program
contractors
must
and
possess
produce copies of:
Workers
Compensation
Certificate
Commercial General
Insurance
Liability
wllimits not less than
$1,000,000
Commercial
Automobile Liability
Insurance covering
81.L owned, leased,
non-owned and h1re
vehicles wlcombined
single
limits
including
bodily
injury/property
damage not less
than $500•000 each
accident.
Maintain
LEAD
Certification required
by EPA
A
meeting
is
scheduled tor all
interested
contractors
on
November 16, 2010
at
1369
Powell
Street,
Middleport.
Ohio, begmning at

Please call Leann or
Sandy at 740·992·
6629 or 367-7341 to
confirm
your
attendance (11) 7, 9,
10, 11
-L-eg_a_I_N_o_t-IC_e....,E-st-a-te
of
Ramona
Kay
Compton,
aka
Ramona Compton,
deceased
Written
sealed bids will be
received at the Law
Offices of Crow and
Crow,
110 West
Second
Street,
OH
Pomeroy,
45769,
for
the
residence and real
estate of the Estate
of
Ramona
Kay
Compton, located at
126 Lincoln
Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
being real estate
described 1n Volume
163
Page
557,
Meigs County Official
Records,
being
Meigs
County
Auditor's Parcel Nos.
16-00870.000,
1600869.000 and 16Said
00868.000.
sealed bids are to be
rece1ved on or before
noon
Eastern
Standard Time on
November 19, 2010.
Said real estate is
available
for
on
inspection
November 16, 2010
between the hours of
10:00 A.M. and 4:00
P.M Said real estate
is sold "as-is" with no
implied warranties.
I. Carson Crow and
the
Estate
of
Ramona
Kay
Compton reserve the
right to reJect any
and all bids.! Carson
CrowCrow
and
Crow110
West
Second
StreetPomeroy, OH
45769 Attorney for
the
Estate
of
Ramona
Kay
Compton ( 11) 11,
12, 14

Thursday, November 11, 2010
100

Legals

will take notice that
on July 22, 2010, the
Plaintiff
Vanderbilt
Mortgage
and
Finance, Inc., filed its
Complaint in the
Court of Common
Pleas
of
Meigs
County, Ohio, 100
Second Street, Case
No
10-CV-072,
Commercial &amp; Residential
seeking possession
· • Room addition~ • Roofing •
of
its
secur~d
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
property, being one
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
manufactured home,
Foundations
76' X 14' 1998
~liKE\.\". ~JARCl l~J, OWNER
OAKWOOD 0421000
47239 Riehel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
MANUFACTURED
740-985-4141
740··U6-J834
HOME, SERIAL NO.
Fully insured
HONC03315854;
WITH
Free estimates- 30 years c"perience
1:\ot anilial"d "ith Mikt \lart'Uill Hoolin~ &amp; HemodelinJ:I
ACCESSORIES:
AJC
SKIRTING,
UNIT, located at 7
Lincoln
Drive,
Pomeroy,
OH.The
Metal Roofs installed all winter long at
Unknown Defendant.
discounted rates.
being the Unknown
Specializing in Insurance Jobs including.
Occupant of said
storm. \lind &amp; water damage.
manufactured home,
Room
Additions, RemodeUng. ~Mal &amp;
is required to answer
Shingle Roofs, ~ew Homes, Siding, Decks.
the
Plaintiff's
Bathroom Remodeling.
Complaint
within
(28)
twenty-eight
Licensed &amp; lmur~d
days after the last
date (December 8,
2010 )of publication
of this notice. In the
the
event
that
Unknown Defendant
fails to respond in the
allotted
time, •
judgment by default
can
be
entered
against him/her for
the relief requested
lntenor
e\h:nor, Hl)Use Paint111g,
in
the
Plaintiff's
Electrical &amp; ALL Plumpmg work
Complaint.
DIANE
Concrete walks &amp; dri\t!\\'ays
LYNCH,
CLERK
\'JC YOU:&gt;;G Ill- OW:-;ER
MAPOTHER
&amp;
740-992-6215.740-591-0195
MAPOTHER,
In business locall) for 311 JCars
P.S.C Lisa
A.
' Rcduc~d Winter Rate~
Herndon(0074862)Ja
Pomcro). OH
WV 1136725
mes
P.
Dady
(0064152) Attorneys
for Plaintiff815 West
Market Street, Suite
500
Louisville,
Kent4cky
40202
Phone: (502) 587- •
5400 Fax: (502) 5875454 (11) 11, 18 24,
(12) 2, 9, 16,

-LE~G~Ar-l----­

NOTICEMEIGS
COMMON
PLEASVanderbilt
and
Mortgage
Finance,
Inc.,
Plaintiff vs. Unknown

PSioCONSTRUCTION

Rick Price • 20

Find all the
news that
matters
to you.

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on
SAVINGS

Defendant, being the
Unknown Occupant •
of
manufactured
home,
Defendant.
The
Unknown
Defendant, being the
Unknown Occupant
of
manufactured
home located at 7
Lincoln
Drive,
Pomeroy, OH 45769.

®alfipolls Dailv [nbunr
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Thursday, November 11 2010

'

-

•u/WT You'Re ou:~ EJtloutiiH

\\MeN POJ.l'r It/IN!&lt;
L./Kf VloMetJ

TO /..eARN 1H6 ONti EJA-GIC,
/N66GAPABJ.e FAC.i OF 1./Fff,,.

Po/u

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---~~·I

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Nessie's
home
5 Muskrat's
home
10 Barbershop
sight
12 Caravan
critter
13 "Divine
Comedy''
author
14 Bowl
15 Refrain
syllable
16 November 11
honoree
18 Luxurious
fabric
20 Bar cubes
21 "I smell
-!"
23 Acquire
. 24 Single
26 Amorous
archer
28 Preserve
29Thick
slice
31 Justice
Fortas
32 Hedge
used as a
fence ·
36 Presidential act
39 Valuable
rock
40 "Cats"
creator
41 Blazing
43 Musical

JOSEPH
44 Stylist's
spot
45 Lock
46 Old salts
DOWN
1 Bigscreen
buy
2 Chicago
airport
3 Venice
sight
4 Sold-out
show
5 "Get lost!"
6 Merchandise
7 Mapmaker
Vespucci
8 Threats
9 Mercury,
for one

11 Idolizes
17 Greek
vowel
19 Moving
truck
22 Riot
queller
24 Office
gizmo
25 Former
27 Diamond
stat
28 TV host
Dick

30 Hosp.
worker
33 Magician's
cry
34 Blunder
35 Prom
crowd
37 "Clumsy
me!"
38UHow
sweet-!"
42 Diet
no-no

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (check/m.o) to
Thomas
Book 2, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853·6475
9
10

spe~ds

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

Tt-IAT'" GA'/'8

William Hoest

1"1 AL-1-,

l?OeGN'T'"

MUTTS

II"~

Patrick McDonnell
.t: HAD A.
GREA.\

FALL
HARVEST

ZITS

,.W~EN

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

•

4 7

1 3

8

2

1

9

8
9
8 7 5
1
4
3
5
7
3
8
6

"Great! So what are you
microwaving?"

9 1

6 2

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Difficulty Level

***

IIIII

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I SAID I WANTED SOMETHING SL.INt&lt;V,
L.EROV, I MEANT A DRESS."

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Nov. 11, 2010:
This year, you open up to a very
different style and way of approaChing matters. Keep conversations moving at an even clip, and don't get
bogged down in the details. Observe a
tendency not to express your depth
and feelings. Understand that perhaps
this type 6f withholding impacts your
relationships. Jf you are single, you
easily could meet two people of interest simultaneously. One could be more
exciting than the other, who will be
more stable and secure. Take your
time deciding if you want to m~ke
any type of corrunitment and to
whom! If you are attached, the two of
you become more deeply united on
goals and key pastimes. Re-create
your first date or your first few
encounters. Let romance build.
AQUARIUS can be challenging.
Tile Stars ShO'w tlte Kirtd of Day You'll

Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average;
2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**** Opportunities emerge if
you follow your intuition, especially
when dealing with others. A sudden
insight tosses you into thought Take
your time, as all this could be changing your plans and your perspective.
Tonight: Burning the midnigtit oil.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***** It might take quite a bit of
perspective to understand what is
going on. You could be overwhelmed
by everything that drops on your
plate and the unpredictability of others. Learn to flex and wave goodbye
to rigidity. Tonight: Take in new vistas.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
One-on-one relating could
bring forth some startling insights that
might encourage thinking through a
community or professional matter. Be
willing to listen more to a close friend
or loved one. Tonight: A cozy get·
together where there is music.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22)
You discover how difficult
it can be to juggle many different interests. Expert opinions, as well as news
from a distance, could be quite startling. Defer to others who might have
a stronger se~ of direction. Tonight:
Accept an invitation.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
**** Others seem to be the
source of energy and plan-;. Though
you might not feel like you cun put
your feet up, you certainly don't need
to push so hard. Your ability to synthe-

*****

*****

size ideas needs to come into play.
Tonight Consider starting your weekendearly.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
***** Your creativity pinnacles,
as does the ability to intrigue others.
tJse this combo to increase your audience and pull with a key matter. A
child or new friend could play a signif·
icant role in your day. Let go of being
meticulous. Tonight: Head home.
Everyone needs some quiet time.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**** If you can lie back or work
from home, all the better. You will
have the energy to flex with some surprising events or news. You have a soft
and caring manner that intrigues a
loved one. This person cannot get
enough of you! Tonight: Get into
weekend mode.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
***** Keep corrununication
going, even if you have a moment of
feeling shocked and without words.
This situation will encourage greater
ingenuity and creativity. Make calls;
encourage opinions. Be open, and
respect different ideas. Tonight: Make
it early.
SAGITTARIUS (1'\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Curb a need to possess at this
moment. You really don't need to live
like the Joneses. Opportunity strikes
out of the blue. A friendship could take
an interesting tum. Tonight Strut on
out the door.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
*****Tho~ you might need
to negotiate an insight or event,. you
radiate-with happiness and directness.
Someone you care a lot about demonstrates that his or her feelings are
mutual. Learn to relax a little more.
Tonight: Your treat.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
To1ke your time dealing wi~h il
personal matter, especially ~s it is interfering with your daily routine. Your
instincts could be unuc;ually correct
regarding a money matter. Still, curb
wild risking! Tonight You are coming
into vour own element.
PiSCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Note that at present you
are best among groups of people. How
you push your agenda ana the choices
you make might be guided by your .
entourage more thari you realize. A
meeting could evolve into a social happening. Tonight: Only as you like it.

***

*****

Jacqueline Bigar i.s on thr lntemet
at ltttp://ururw.jacquelillebigar.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�Page B6 • 'I he Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November u,

www.nlydailysentin cl.com

2 010

Glo~::~o rg~,SJ~~!~ ~i~': 5th New Jersey slides by Cavaliers, 95-87
f\:EW YORK (t\P) Ichiro Suntki \\on his
I Oth straight Gold Glove
for a full :-.~ason of fielding excelknc~. ~lark
Buehrle won again. perhaps clinching his spot
with an acrobatic play on
op~ninu dav.
Dere~ Jeter. \\ell. his
selection i' like!~ to set
off another loud round of
di&lt;.;pute' over whether the
award is relevant any
llltlre.
Rawlings announced
the Amencan League
honors
Tuesday.
i\1ana!!ers and coaches
vote f'or players in their
lcagu~s and can t pick
players nn their O\\ n
teams.
Also chosen were tirst
baseman ;\1ark Teixeira
and second baseman
Rohinson Cano of the
1\ew York Yankees; third
baseman Evan Longoria
and
outfielder
Carl
Crawford of the Tampa
Bay Rays: Minnesota
catcher Joe Mauer and
Seattle outfielder Franklin
Gutierrez.
The NL awards will be
announced Wednesday.
Suzuki tied the AL
record for Gold Gloves by
an outtielder shared by
Ken Griffev Jr. and AI
Kalinc. The Seattle right
fielder has won every
year he s been in the big

Years

league~.

i 'he ll\ era II record for
outfielders is held by
Willie Mays and Roberto
, Clemente 'vvith 12 each.
The award-; started in
1957. so there s no telling
Mays.
how
many
Clemente or others might
have won before then.
Angels outfielder Torii
Hunter s streak of nine in
a row ended this season.
Jeter won for the tifth
time at shortstop - at 36.
the New York Yankees
captain is the oldest AL
shortstop to win the Gold
Glove since Luis Aparicio
was the same age in 1970.
Only Ozzie Sn1ith. Omar
Vizquel. Aparicio and
Mark Belanger have won
more total G~old Gloves at
shortstop than Jeter.
"It is a tremendous
honor to receive the Gold
Glove award. especially
since thi~ recognition
comes from managers
and coadies for whom l
have a great deal of
respect. It is particularly
gratifyinu to be recoo
nized rotdefense. as it is
something I take a lot of
pride in ru1d am constantly working to improve,"
Jeter said in a statement.
Jeter was charged with
just six errors and had a
career-high .989 fielding
percentage. both best
among full-time AL
shortstops.
But modern fielding
chatts and rankings consistently put Jeter in the
bottom half of their ratings. Two websites that
study glovework
www.fangraphs.com with
its Ultimate Zone Rating

a

n

a

www.fieldingbible.com

CLEVELAND (AP) Ckvdand Cavaliers 95- Iisted Chicago sA lexei
Devin Harris scored R7 on Wednesday night
Kanmez as the top-tklda
season-high
J I. Kris for their first road win.
ing AL shortstop with
Humphries
added
13
Anthony
Morrow
Jeter nowhere close to'
even middle-of-tl~e - pack and I H rebounds in his added 21 points - 15
first start and the New on 3-pointers - as the
status.
.
Jersey
Nets snapped a Nets bounced back after
Ramirez made 20 errors
and had a .974 fielding five-game losing streak losing to the Cavs on
beating
the Tuesday at home. New
by
percentage.
•·J think a lot of erTors
he got were plays that
can inch closer to a
others wouldn t have gotquality bowl game.
ten to." Buehrle said on a
But the subplots arc
conferem:e call. ·'I think
mostly
about the coachfrom
Page
Bl
he was deserving.''
es. It pits the two win"I don t see Derek play
every day." he said. "J wasn t (going to get it). 1 ningest active Division
think there are a lot of (hl t know. But it was I coaches. Paterno. in
guys \.VllO could- ve won the right thing to do his 45th year in Happy
it.''
because I got more Valley. is 400-132-3,
Jeter s range seemed to responsibility where I \.Vhile Tressel is 237-79noticeably decline- he s went. It was probably the 2 in 25 years (including
at
Football
never been the best at get- more glamorous thing to 15
Championship
ting to balls up the mid- (work
for
Paterno)
dle. This season. it because I was all taken S u b d i v i s i o n
seemed more grounders
Youngstown State).
Penn State."
mto the hole got through. '" ith
The
57-year-old
All this time later.
too. with third baseman Tressel still cloesn t Tressel. who would
Alex Rodri!!uez rane:ing
have to win at his curless and less~to his left. ~ know exactly how his rent pace for the next
took the path it
For years. some fans career
17-plus years to hit 400
did.
.
have viewed the Gold
wins, was as surprised
"I
don
t know why I
Gloves as most!) a popuas ariyone to know he
larity contest. even sug- didn t get the job." he was No. 2 to Paterno.
said.
adding
with
a
gesting that a player s
Asked if that distincperformance at the plate chuckle, "Do ) ou know
tion
meant anything to
somethitH!?
Did
Joe
tell
helped draw extra attenyou?"
~
him.
he said. " It means
tion to his ~love. Jeter s
This week s game there s a huge disparity
wins have often served as
a lightning rod for that means so much to No. 8 between one and two.
Ohio State (8- 1. 4-1 ). Where did all those
debate.
Serious questions about which is in a deadlock guys go in between us?"
Paterno ,captured his
the Gold Gloves have with fellow one-loss
stirred for more than a teams Iowa. Wjsconsin landmark 400th victory
decade. growing ever and Michigan State in on Saturday. leading
since Rafael Palmeiro the Big Ten standings. Penn State back from a
won the award at first and to Penn State (6-3. 21-0 deficit to beat
35-21.
base in 1999. He played 3-2). which has won Northwestern
there only 28 games for four of its last five and After the game. the 83Texas that season. spending most of the year as a
designated hitter.
must run the football
Buehrle was an eas)
well," added Darst.
choice for his second
The Big Blacks also
Gold Glove - he became
feature a 1.000 yard rushfromPageBl
the tirst pitcher with muler in fullback JaWaan
tiple no-hitters and Gold
Williams. who eclipsed
Gloves on his resume. He for 1590 yards on the the coveted plateau last•
had a I .000 fielding per- season and quarterback week. On the season.
centae:e in 50 chances this Dylan Cottrell (5 8. 140 Williams has 1.010 yards
year and Jed major league jr). who has rushed for on 183 carries (5.5 averpitchers with a career- 51 0 yards and thrown for age).
high II pickoff's.
another 562.
Chris Blankenship has
The lefty was the leadOthers to watch for out 775 yards on 103 carries
ing candidate from Day of the backfield are full- (7.5 average). Anthony
One. with his pia) in a 6- back John Ash. who has Darst has 46 carries for
0 win over Cleveland. rushed for 409 yards and 304 yards (6.6 average).
Buehrle &lt;;tuck out his leg wingback Josh Wine, Tylun Campbell has 265
and
deflected
Lou who has rushed for 233 on 51 rushes (5.2 averMm.on s hard one-hop- yards.
Cottrell s .age).
and
Michael
per into foul territory favorite targets when he Musgrave has rushed for
beyond the first-base line. thrO\vs are Wine ( 13 I I 6 yards on 19 carries
scrambled off the mound receptions, 249 yards). (6.1 average).
and used his glove to flip and Reynolds ( 13 recepQuarterback
Eric
the ball between his legs tions. 152 yards).
Roberts has completed
to get the out.
"Roane has a nice foot- 57 passes in
I 05
"I had people saying all ball team." said PPHS
attempts
and
8
touchyear that the one play won Head Coach Dave Darst.
downs. Williams is the
it." Buehrle said.
"They have a good tail- leading receiver with 21
Gutierrez. who plays back in Revnolds and a
catches for 204 yards.
center field. Crawford fine
quarterback
in
T he Big Blacks will
and Cano also won for the
Cottrell.
He
runs
\Vel!
start
Roberts at quarterfirst time. Crawford
and
he
throws
well.
But.
back
with Williams and
became a free agent when
the
aspect
of
their
team
Darst
in the backfield
the season ended and is
unlikely to re-sign with that impresses me the with him . The \vingback
most is their offensive is Musgrave. Look for
Tampa Bay.
line.
They are big and Blankenship and Jerrod
Teixeira became a fourtime winner. Mauer won physical and they do a Long to seem time in the
his third Gold Glove and good job. We will have backfield as we ll. T he
Longoria earned his sec- to be ready for a tough. split end is Toler.
physical football game. although Orrin Chason I
ond.~
Gutier:re1. and Suzuki Defensively, they operate and Layne Thompson
each receive $50.000 out of a 4-4 Jcfensc and w ill split time tlicre as
bonuses.
Buehrle. they will play man to well.
The tight end is Toby
Crawford. Longoria and man coverage on our
Mauer
get ~· S25.000 receivers. If we an.! going Martin. Up front. look
to win this game. we for Gabe Starcher at
apiece.

Jersey won despite not
having startincv forward
froy
Murphy
and
shooting just 19 of 35
from the free-throw
line.
J.J. Hickson scored
15 to lead Cleveland.
which led by II in the

third but went cold
down the stretch and
had Its winning streak
stopped at three.
The Cav'S al$o lost
guard Mo Williams· ·
the
third
qua
because of a gro
strain.

year-old icon was lifted
onto the shoulders of a
couple of his' brawny
linemen .
He took a moment to
thank the cheerinu fans
and all of his t~mner
players. then added,
"People ask why 1
stayed here so long. l
say 'Look around. look
around. Now that the
celebration is over. let s
go beat Ohio State!"
Paterno. who is 8-13
against Ohio State. recognizes that a personal
watershed doesn t compare with the task of
knocking off a powerhous~ that has won or
shared the last five Bi!!
Ten titles.
~
"We re not going to
play against a team
that s a&lt;; well organized,
as well discip~ned as
this club with the kind
of talent it has. it will
be a good experience
for
us."
he
said
Tuesday. "Whether we
can play with them or
not. that s debatable.
But I think jmt getting
into a ballgame like
that. on the road .• the

whole bit. will be a
good experience. It wi ll
help Utf in the future.··
He added, " It s going
to be tough to stay with
the:-e guys. I m telling
you. I ve stated if not
the best, they re one of
the three. four best
football teams in the
country."
Tressel
was
just·
relieved that Paterno
wasn t entering this
week s game with 399
wins .
"Sel fish ly, (I was the
guy whq) let him beat
Bear Bryant, if you
remember." he said.
referring
to
Penn
State s 29-27 victorv
over Ohio State and
Tressel in 200 I . T t
was win No. 324
Paterno. allowing ht
to pass the Alabama
great to become the
winningest Division IA coach.
Tressel didn t want to
add being Paterno s
400th victim to his
resume.
''I m not sure I would
have wanted that double play,'' he joked.

•

Point

~

Jan Maddox/file photo

Point Pleasant running back JaWaan Williams (2) carries a Vinton County defender during this file photo of
a Week 5 football game in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

center. Dustin Spencer (6 1 255) at the guards.
and Casey Hogg at The tackles will be Steve
guards. Trey Li vingston Martin (6 3. 230) and
and Matt Weddington at Brier Nichols (6 0 215).
the tackles.
...
The tight end is Wi ll ie
Defensive!). the locals Bowman (6 2, 165).
will start Mus grave and Most of these players
Martin at the ends. with also start on defense.
"The kevs to this
Livingston and Long at
the tackles and Hogg at game \Viii b"e field posinose. The linebackers tion and turnovers.'' said
will be Josh Hereford Darst. "We have to take
and Jason Stouffer. The care of the football and
corners will be Williams we have to have good
and Donovan Powell. fie ld position. We are
with T hompson and praying a pretty good
football team and we
Toler at safetv.
The
Raiders
will net:d a big. vocal crowu
counter with Dylan Craft to help us out. I certa··
(5 10. 235) at tenter. ly hope that is the c
with Clayton Jar\'is (5 X on Friday night." co 180) and R.J. Burdette eluded Darst.

find the111 at.•
www.m~OailJsentinel.etJtll • www.Inydailyregisten.co111
COin

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