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God's Word:
Sustaining,
unchanging, A7

Holiness or
crazine s, A7

•

at

e

entine

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50

CI~NTS • Vol. 6o, No. ~4

Mudfork Blues
Band to present
free show

•

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

Southern
·Fall Carnival
RACINE
The
Southern Fall Camival will
be held from 5-9 p.m..
Saturday, Nov. 13 at the
elementary
school.
Admission is free. M&amp;M
Inflatables will be at the
catJ1.ival with an obstacle
slide, bungy football. joust,
sptder 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. lollir.op
tree. 711 L toilet paper toss.
tic tac toe, cover the spot.
1 bounce, penny pinch.
cket bonanza. bank a
ot, tin pan alley, carnival
jail. Cake walks are every
10 minutes (five tickets)
and there'll be a country
store.
A complete itinerary is
ao; 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. Wal-Mart cards. etc.

1

Appearing
on Opry

•

LUCASVILLE
Emily and Mruilyn Wolfe
will appear on the Southern
Ohio Opry outside of
Lucasville at 6:30 p.m ..
turday. Nov. 13. Also
pearing, former band
members
of
Merle
Haggard, Loretta Lynn and
Connie Smith. Emily will
be singing her own original
songs.
•

WEATHER

16 PAGM

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Sports B Section
© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

li.IJjl,l !I!.!I,II
•

.

.

.,

~

·.~·-}}~~~~!'i~~:~ -~~j;~

$356k approved for.sewer upgrade
Bv BETH SERGEN't
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Spending money on a
federally
mandated
upgrade of a sewer system may stink on some
levels but it has to be
done.
Pomeroy began the
process of upgrading it~
system of Combined
Sewer
Overflows
(CSO's) about four years

ago and has another 16 same pipe. During periyears (20 years total) to ods of heavy rainfall or
complete the federally melting snow the volume
mandated upgrade. The of wastewater going into
upgrade is estimated to 'the pipes can exceed the
cost around $5 million capacity and excess
when completely fin- wastewater
empties
ished.
directly
into
nearby
According to the EPA. streams, rivers, or other
CSO's are typically found water bodies. The Midin older cities and are sys- Atlantic Region has a
tems designed to collect high concentration of
rainwater runoff. domes- these systems - again.
tic sewage, and industrial according to the US EPA.
wastewater all in the
This week. Pomeroy

Village Co~ncil approved
an additional $356,600 in
engineering fees for the
project being engineered
by ME Companies. The
additional engineering
fees will allow ME
Companies to develop a
CSO plan for Lincoln
Hill. Anne St.. Wetzgall
St., Prospect Hill. The
original contract for engineering a CSO upgrade
with ME Companies was
$566.400. With council

VETERA NS DAY, 2010

approving the additional
$356,600. this means
$923.000 will be spent on
engineering fees.
Mayor John Musser
pointed out the village
has received a total of
$750,000 in grants and
loans for the project - a
trend he hopes the village
continues to assist in paying for the project. The
spokesperson for M E

See Sewer, A3

MLEF
on 'track'
according to
backers
B Y B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - T he
Meigs
Local
Enrichment Foundation
is on ''track" to fulfilling its mission state-;
ment.
according
to
Steve
Musser
who
spoke to members of the
Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce this week.
Musst::r. trea::.urer of
MLEF, spoke at the
Chamber's
businessminded luncheon. The
project is literally oi1
track this week with
• work continuing on the
eight-lane
running
track. Musser said a
polyurethane coating
will be poured on the
track to seal it in March.
Construction continues
on the new football field
though at this time
MLEF
is
about
$150.000 short on purchasing
bleachers
Brian J. Reed/photo though Musser said the
Ret. U.S. Air Force Col. John Taylor, Orange Township, recognized and honored veterans attending the annu- organization is looking
al Veterans Day remembr~nce in downtown Pomeroy Thursday. Taylor, the invited guest speaker of Drew at options to raise that
money. The stadium
Webster Post 39, American Legion, is pictured with Legion Commander Tom anderson and Rev. David
will seat 1,500 on the
Brainard, who gave the invocation. Taylor also reflected on technological changes he has observed in home side and 600 on
defending the nation since his days as a pilot in Vietnam. The Meigs High School Band performed at the ceremony, held on East Second and Court streets at the courthouse steps.
See MILEF, A3

Association announces Middleport holiday kickoff
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MIDDLEPORT
Holiday music will fill downtown Middleport on Dec. 4. a
horse.-drawn carriage will
offer free rides through town,
and a Christmas parade with
Santa will kick off the holiday season there.
Middleport
. The
Community
Association
plans an aftemoon and early
evening filled with holiday
activities. using the traditional theme, "The Christmas
Village.'' Debbie Gerlach.
association president. said the
parade will begin at 4:30
p.m.. but a tree lighting,'

.

INDEX
SECriONS -

201()

musical entertainment and
free refreshments are planned
for the afternoon.
Carriage rides will be
offered by Mike Roach at 3
p.m.. beginning at Peoples
Bank.
The
Middleport
Ministetial Association will
light the village Christmas
tree. on the "T," at 3:45p.m.
Following the parade.
Santa will meet with children
at the bank for free photographs and refreshments.
The association will serve
cookies and hot drinks. and
carolers will sing in the
downtown bclsiness district.
The Big Bend Community

See Holiday, A3

Brian J. Reed/photo
Sue Stone and Kathy
Mullins joined other volunteers with the Middleport
Community Association in
dressing faithful snowmen
which have long decorated
downtown Middleport.
Merchants are encouraged
to personalize and display
their own "Rusties" right
away, to turn attention to
the upcoming holiday season. These are now in place
and will remain in the
Farmers Bank's park on
North Second.

Chester Community Center open house Sunday

High:
Low:

er

I&lt;'RJDAY, NOVEMBER 12,

STAFF R EPORT

TUPPERS PLAINS
Bethel
Worship
Center will host an open
house for the public at
its
new
Chester
Community
Cent&lt;1r
Sunday. Nov. 14. from
2-4 p.m.
Community business,
educational and civic
leaders have been invited, and the public is
welcome to join in the
event. which kicks off
with a ribbon cutting by
Bethel's youth pastor.
Kris Butcher. and senior

pastor, Rob Barber, followed by light refreshments and a tour of the
new facilities.
Chester Community
Center. \Vhich is housed
in
the old former
Chester
Elementary
School building just off
Ohio 7 at Chester, features several new programs to benefit the
community.
They
include Upward Sports
basketball and cheerleading programs for
K5-6th grade, a youth
center for teen~ offering
games and concerts,

plus other recreational
and community activities and events.
Bethel's Food Pantry
and Hearts &amp; Hands
Thnft Shop to assist
tnose less fortunate in
the area are also located
in
the
Community
Center.
The new Center was
envisioned by Bethel
Pastor Rob Barber and
made pmsible with the
gracious donation of
materials and usc o f the
building by owner and

See MILEF, A3

Submitted photo
One of many volunteers who assisted in renovating
the old Chester School Building into a community
center. 1
'1

�Friday, November 12,

2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bush honors vets in. Ohio
the support and inspiration he drew from wounded warriors, families of
DAYTON - Former those killed during his
president George W. Bush presidency. and · the milisaid Thursday he's enjoy- tary.
ing being away from poli"America is a magnifitics and won't get cent country that proinvolved
in
current duces patriots." he said.
debates about his succesHe offered thanks to
sor or Washington.
those who have served in
"I will not be criticizing the military, "on behalf of
President
(Barack) a grateful nation," and
Obama," Bush told a smiled as he insisted:
Veterans Day tribute audi- ''I've really come to
ence. "As a matter of fact. praise the veterans, not to
we wish him well. We're sell my book. But if I sell
all Americans. and we a couple of copies. that's
;want to succeed."
OK. too."
i He said he didn't miss
Charlie Crall, a mailWashington, "all the poli- man
from
nearby
tics. all the name calling Medway, Ohio, said he
... the spitballs."
mainly just wanted to see
But he told some 1,500 Bush and hadn't planned
people, many of them vet- to buy the book. But he
erans, at the National said he has decided to buy
Museum of the U.S. Air it after hearing excerpts
Force in southwest Ohio and seeing some of
that he does miss serving Bush's interviews.
as commander in chief.
"From what I'm hearWith interviews and ing, he speaks candidly."
speeches, Bush has been said Crall, 55. "I think it
vigorously promoting his will be good reading."
newly released memoir
Bush was back in a
"Decision Points. He state that was crucial to
tocused
his
speech his presidency. He twice
[fhursday on parts of the carried Ohio, which
book dealing with wars in clinched his re-election in
lraq and Afghanistan, and 2004.
BY DAN SEWELL •
ASSOCIATED P~SS

Pantry Support

Miami
University
political scientist Ryan
Barilleaux says the book
and the Republican rout
in Nov. 2 elections
should help Bush burnish his image two years
after leaving office with
low approval ratings.
"T think President
Bush is setting out to do
as (Jimmy) Carter and
(Richard) Nixon and
other former presidents
have done; trying to
redeem tli.'emselves a little bit," said Barilleaux,
whose books on the
presidency include one
on the term of Bush's
father George H.W.
Bush.
I
"He can explain,
here's the things I did
and here's why 1 did
them," he said. adding
that Bush would want
people to conclude that
"even if we disagree
with the things he did,
we believe that he had
the country's best interests at heart."
Bush also spoke at the
museum as president in
2008, contending in his
speech that the war in
Iraq had made substantive progress.

teller at the National
Storytelling Festival in
Jonesboro, Tenn., this faU
and was described as a
favorite
among
the
tellers.
Included in the lineup
of storytellers are Glen
Ray of Little Hocking
who is very familiar with
Meigs County having
worked at the coal mines
in the county for many
years. He sings old ballads and will tell a story
that comes from deep
underground in the
mines.
Joyce
Geary
of
Worthington who has
been a storyteller since
she could talk will be
relating a family story,
while Bob Hood of
Gallipolis, relatively new
to storytelling, will share
a story or two of his experiences. He is director of
Travel and Tourism for
Gallia County.
Other storytellers will
be Melanie Pratt of

that take place in
Charleston, S.C., and San
Francisco. Kessinger
focused on part one of the
book because that section
introduced the main characters and posed many questions that will be answer in
the other four parts.
The novel alternates
between 1969, when a
group of high school misfits
meet and become linked
through Leo, and 1989
when they meet again.
Even though this group
consist of different races.
culture and socio-economic
status, they bond together
and remain friends for life.
The story draws to a
conclusion after hurricane
Hugo tears through the
south and unearths an
extremely damaging reve-

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 15

LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
r~gular meeting, 5 p.m.,
office building.

Clubs
and organizations
Thursday, Nov. 11

CHESTER - Shade
River Lodge 453 will meet
at 7:30p.m. at the hall for
election of officers. Dues
must be paid. Oyster soup
wlll be served.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,
6:30p.m, at the Syracuse
Community Center. Diane
f.sh to present program

~

paw-paws.

POMEROY - Alpha
a Masters, 11:30 a.m.,
nnity Church, Pomeroy.
June Van Vranken and
Vera Crow, hostesses.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m. at

the post home. Auxiliary to
serve a meal at 6:30 for
members of the post, their
wives and friends in
observance of Veterans
Day.
Friday. Nov. 12

HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
O.E.S. will hold its 104th
annual installation of officers, 7:30 p.m., at the
Harrisonville Masonic hall.
Potluck to be provided by
Chapter members.
Saturday, Nov. 13
POMEROY - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will
meet at 1 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Library. The program will be on the life of
George Washington.
Monday, Nov. 15

HARRISONVILLE Harrisonville
Senior
Citizens, regular meeting,
11 :30
a.m ..
Presbyterian
Church,
blood pressures, ta~en,

GOP senators could block·

lation. Some facts are discovered that explain the
death of Leo's brother and
Leo must struggle to put the
revelation behind him and
try to Jive a norn1allife.
Kessinger stated the she
liked the book even though
the characters and plots
were often a little over the
top. The book will probably
bring back memories of the
readers' high school days
and friends. She also stated
that South of Broad was a
real page-turner and if you
are a fan of Conroy it is a
"must" read.
The next meeting will be
held Nov. 17 at the
Pomeroy Library. Alice
Wamsley will review "Not
My Daughter'' by Barbara
Delinsk.-y, and Pat Holter
will serve as hostess.
pot luck lunch to follow.

Birthdays

The River Bend Arts Council

Columbus who has been
on the Arts Council stage
many times and will be
back to entertain with an
Irish story, and Thomas
Burnett of Athens who
started a storytelling
group of area tellers in
his community, and
at
the
will
be
Middleport event to
share a favorite story of
his own.
Julie McGhee from
Westerville was born.
raised and has lived in
central Ohio all her life.
She will tell a 19th century Ohio story along
with a story about
Odmat. the 1Oth century Irish herb woman.
Also on the program
will be Bill McKell of
Chillicothe who is
founder of the Southern
Ohio
Storytelling
Festival tn that city,
telling stories of his
family life while growing up in Ohio.
Admission is $5.

.

Thursday, Nov. 18

POMEROY
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advisory
Board/S u rvi vo rsh i p
Taskforce, regular meeting; noon, banquet room
at Wild Horse Cafe.

Church events
Friday, Nov. 12

LONG BOTTOM
Faith Full Gospel Church
worship service, 7 p.m.
Special singing.
Monday, Nov. 15

POMEROY - Belles
and Beaus, western
square dance club workshop, 7 p.m., Mulberry·
Community Center.

Other events
Wednesday, Nov. 17

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

•

Strickland's appoin~ments
Faber. David Goodman and
Jim Hughes - made their
statements in interviews
with Gongwer News
Service and The Columbus
Dispatch. Republicans hold
21 of 33 Senate seats.
"The new governor
should have the opportunity
to appoint those people,"
Hughes told the newspaper.
"If those people chose to
resign, they could always
apply to the new governor.
If not, the Senate should
respect the voters' will and
reject them."
But Sen. Kevin Coughlin,
a Republican who made a
brief bid to challenge
Strickland's re-election, said
that would disrespect the
governor's role and the
Senate's integrity.
''Unless there is an extraordinary problem with a
governor's appointnientan ethical breach or a legal
problem- I don't believe
it's our place to deny those
appointments," Coughlin
told the newspaper.
The Senate made no
argument in favor of a new
governor needing flexibility four years ago when
Strickland took over for
Republican Gov. Bob Taft.
After Strickland had won
and before Taft left office,
many of the same senators
serving now approved
numerous appointments
made by Taft.
Taft found state jobs for
outgoing agency heads,
high-level members of his
staff and even legislators
who lost their re-election
bids. He made a point of
installing state school
board members who supported teaching evolution
over intelligent design in
science classes.
While pay for such jobs is
often modest, many of the
positions allow longtime
state employees to remain
eligible for health care and
pension benefits.
St.J.ickland spokeswoman
Amanda Wurst said the
Democratic govemor has

Club members hear review of Conroy book
POMEROY - Dana
Kessinger reviewed "South
of Broad" by Pat Conroy, at
a recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club
held at the Pomeroy
Library.
The book follows the life
of a 17-year old boy,
Leopold Bloom King or
Leo!foad as his friends call
him. At an early age Leo's
family suffers a tragic loss
when their 10-year-old
son/brother dies. After the
death of the beloved child,
nothing is every the same
for this family. Leo will
describe himself as an old
man at age 10 and suffers
from many social and mental problems due to the
event.
The plot of the story is
revealed through five parts

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto

Tina Rees, Pomeroy Peoples Bank manager, piresents a check for $1,000 from
the Peoples Bancorp Foundation to Nancy Thoene, left, Meigs Cooperative Parish
office manager, and Alva Clark, director, to be used in the food pantry operation.
The donations are being given by Peoples Bancorp Foundation in lieu of sending
holiday gifts to clients.

COLUMBUS (AP) Some top Republican Ohio
senators are threatening to
block
the
outgoing
Democratic
governor's
selection of people who
help choose textbooks, set
tuitions, oversee millions of
dollars in investments or
hand out state money.
Gov. Ted Strickland's
party was swept out of
power Nov. 2, but he
remains on the job until Jan.
10, when GOP Gov.-elect
John Kasich takes the helm.
The Senate, led by
Kasich's
fellow
Republicans, is considering
wholesale rejection of
Strickland's appointments
to dozens of state boards
and commissions- taking
away a key power tmditionally allowed lame duck
governors.
The move could affect
about 200 appointments
the governor is authorized
to make before leaving
office and some made
before the election that are
not yet confirmed.
Term-limited Republican
Senate President Bill Hanis
and his heir apparent to lead
the chamber. Tom Niehaus,
say a final decision ha-;n 't
been made. But they said
the chamber wants Ka-;ich
to have maximum flexibility for filling the positions.
Harris said some of
Strickland's appointees may
have different perspectives
on policy than Kac;ich and the Senate would be
looking at other nominees
who would have influence
in policy decisions.
"I think the new governor
deserves the right to have
people that understand him
and understand what he
want&lt;&gt; to do as governor to
be in those critical policy
positions," Harris said.
At least three other
Republicans in the GOP-led
Senate go fwther, saying
they would vote to reject
unconfirmed Strickland
appointees who don't
resign. The three - Keith

Tellabration 201 0 coming Saturday night
MIDDLEPORT - An
evening of storytelling
called Tellabration will
be held in Middleport at 7
p.m. Saturday in the theater of the Riverbend Arts
Council, 290 N. Second
Street.
Middleport's own storyteller Donna Wilson
has produced Tellebration
in Middleport for the past
nine years and has hosted
over 40 different storytellers from Ohio and
She
West Virginia.
describes this year's lineup of performers
as
"excellent.''
Sponsored by the Arts
Council, Tellabration this
year will feature storytellers from across the
area. In the group will be
Suzi Whaples, a national
teller from Dunbar,
W.Va., telling her own
Appalachian family stories which are said to
make you "laugh one
minute and tear up the
next." She was a featured

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2 ·

Monday, Nov. 15

LONG BOTTOM Ernest Griffin will observe
h1s 93rd birthday on
Nov.15. Cards may be
sent to him at 36606 Post
Office
Road,
Long
Bottom, Ohio 45743.
Sunday, Nov. 21

POMEROY- Clarence
Partlow, formerly of Meigs
· County, will celebrate his
1OOth birthday on Nov. 21.
Cards may be sent to him
at Limestone Street,
Jamestown, Ohio 45335.

been careful not to abuse his
appointment power.
He passed up a chance to
replace
three
Taft
apP.?intees to the Public
Utilities Commission of
Ohio, which oversees electric, gas and other utility
companies, after a problem
with the appointment
process was discovered, 8.Qd
kept others on board who
were named by Republican
governors.
"It is hard to believe that
the Senate would turn its
back on tradition and, in an
unprecedented and wrong
approach, reject the
appointments of honorable
Ohioans seeking to serve
thei[ state for purely partisan political reasons,"
Wurst said.
Many appointments
on little-noticed stat
boards and commissions,
such as the Ohio Martin
Luther King Jr. Holiday
Commission.
Others serve pivotal roles
in guiding state policy,
grants and investments.
Those
include
four
unnamed members to the
State Board of Education,
various university trustees,
members of the Ohio
Bureau
of Workers'
Compensation board, and a
Third Frontier Commission
member to help oversee
Ohio's signature high-tech
grant program.

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w1shes to Thank thefollowingjor
their support of.A.rt In the Park in
Middleport
Sponsors

Ohio River Border Initiative
Abbie Warner Stratton Fund
Town of Mason, 'NV
Dept. of Jobs and Family Services
Charitable Foundation
Betty Stiles
Joni Carrington
Dustin Johnson
Scott Needs
George Harris
Charlie Mankin
Mason City Hall
Pomeroy Library
Swingin Seniors
The Daily Sentinel
Chinese Auction Donors

InMemon

E4 \Valter J. HaggJ
I96l·1964

Anny
Vietnam

Lole
Your Wife Brenda

Dairy Queen
,Debbie Burke
Johnson's Variety
Pizza Hut
Wilbur Burke
Bun's Party Barn
Meigs Industries
McDonald's
Locker 219
Valley Lumber
Karen Werry
Weaving Stitches
Family Dollar
Carmen's Pottery

Jannine Petrel ·Alligator Jack's
KFC/Long John Silvers
Radio Shack
Wildhorse Cafe
Farmers Bank
Dettwiller Lumber
Bob Evans Restaurant
Subway
Middleport Flower Shop
Opal Kauff
Nancy Clark
Rhojean McClure
Roscoe Wise

•

�Friday, November 12,2010

Sewer
From Page A1
Companies told council phase one of the project ..yill
cost around $1.1 million and should begin next summer. Phase one will include work at the wastewater
treatment plant.
Also approved at this week's meeting:
Transfer of $5,000 from the general to street fund.
Clerk-Treasurer Kathy Hysell informed council the
A&gt;lice fund, as.it stands, could end up without enough
W oney to make the last payroll of the year.
·
The monthly Mayor's Report was approved with
$16.451 collected in fines and forfeitures. The parking
meter report reflected: 127 tickets issued, $2,060.10
collected from meters, $543 collected from tickets,
$140 from parking permits for a total of$2,743.10 collected.

MILEF
From Page A1
the visitors side. Musser announced the stadium's
press box will be named the Robert Wingett Press
Box- though a graduate of Racine High School, the
late Mr. Wingett covered Pomeroy High School
football when he was a cub reporter before eventually becoming publisher of Ohio Valley Publishing
Company. Musser told Chamber members he was.
"optimistic" the Marauders could play on the new
field next fall.
'The MLEF has also ordered color-coded signs to
be placed along the nature trails which are currently open to the public. The sigsn will denote how far
a person has walked on the trails and where to enter
- the trails can be accessed from the MLEF's
community park as well as behind Meigs Middle
A :hool, Meigs High School and the Universi\y of
W io Grande's Meigs Center. The nature trails,
which double as a cross-country course, was
designed by a former U.S. Olympian hi-athlete.
The MLEF community park and ball field are also
open for public use. All of this sits on 72 acres of
property near Meigs High School and behind the
old Salisbury School.
Other Chamber news:
Dave . George from Frontier Communications
spoke about the company's plans to expand broadband coverage into the Pomeroy, Racine and
Syracuse areas as well as other rural areas which
don't already have the high-speed option. These
plans could take three years to achieve.
A representative from Meigs Industries reported
the organization rece~tly picked up extra work for
its clients recycling old US Air Force cargo nets.
Clients ~ve also built heavy-duty picnic tables for
MLEF and Gold Wings &amp; Ribs Festival.
Bill Barker of Pleasant Valley Hospital introduced Sahana Birchfield of PVH who is a nursing
student working in the business office at the hospital and will be one of the hospital's faces in the
Meigs area. Barker said there has been some reorganization at PVH but Meigs is still considered an
important part of the service area. He added, under
new leadership the hospital plans to focus on qualcoming first.
JOS is currently planning to film segments for
Christmas shows featuring local choirs. Contact
WJOS if your organization is interested in performing.
Jenny Smith, former chamber director,
announced she's now working at K92 The Frog.
Peoples Bank is collecting coats for its Coats for
Kids program - new coats, cash for coats or used
coats in good condition can be dropped off at the
Pomeroy branch.
Home National Bank's Open House was held this
week celebrating the bank's last 100 years and new
$2.2 million facility.
Chamber President Bill Quickel also announced
the Chamber hopes to begin the interviewing
process for a new director.
Crow's KFC catered the lunch, Pomeroy Flower
Shop provided flower arrangements and the
Pomeroy Library provided the meeting space.

Holiday
From Page A1
Band. directed by Toney Dingess, will perform holiday
music from 4 to 4:30p.m. .
.
Gerlach said the parade is open to all entries, and preA gistration is not required. Lineup begins at 4 p.m. at
Queen. Groups with questions may contact her at
992-5877 or Kathy Mullins at 992-7278.

.--airy

MILEF
From Page A1
local businessman Tom Karr of Karr Contracting,
and his wife Diana. along with hundreds of hours
of volunteer labor·by Bethel members, friends and
area youth.
Along with many others, student work teams
from Eastern High School and Ohio University's
medical school volunteered their help on the project this past summer. Overseen by church member Randy Jewell, the on site development of the
new Center has been a work in progress since this
spring. when Karr and Barber collaborated on
breathing new life into the old building, which had
been used as a storage facility for several years and
was in disrepair.
The community caught Barber's vision for a multipurpose facility situated in the eastern part of
Meigs County. and responded with enthusiasm for
the undertaking. pulling together with him and his
&amp;&gt;ngrcgation to donate work and materials to make
-~ Center a reality by fall.
Barber expressed his sincere thanks to the KatTS
and a special appreciation to all those who have
contributed to establishment of the non-profit facility, and added that it will require ongoing assistance to maintain and operate it. To that end, he
remarked that Bethel is very appreciative of any
support offered to help with the expenses and work
involved in running the operation, and noted that
all contributions are I 00 percent tax deductible.
For information about the new Chester
Community Center, or how to help, call Bethel
Worship Center at 740-667-6793. or visit its Web
site at www.bethelwc.org.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page A3

leaders say Meigs County Forecast
cutting deficit will hurt
Friday: Sunny, with a with a high near

Commi~sion

BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHLNGTON - Voters who last week sent
Washington a message to wrestle the spiraling debt
under control have gotten a message back from the
leaders of a White House budget commission: It'll
hurt.
A proposal released Wednesday by the bipartisan
leaders of President Barack Obama's deficit commission suggested cuts to Social Security benefits, deep
reductions in federal spending and higher taxes for
millions of Americans to stem a flood of red ink that
they said threatens the nation's very future.
Interest groups on the right and the left squealed,
predictably, about the plan, which would cut total
deficits by as much as $4 trillion over the next decade
- much of it from programs long considered all but
sacred.
Besides Social Security, Medicare spending would
be curtailed. Tax~ breaks for many health care plans,
too. And the Pentagon's budget as well in a plan that
attaches $3 in spending cuts to every $1 in tax
increases.
For all the pain, the deficit still would approach
$400 billion in 2015 under the proposal, released by
deficit panel's co-chairmen, Democrat Erskine
Bowles, a former Clinton White House chief of staff,
and Republican Alan Simpson, a former senator from
Wyoming.
Obama, in Seoul, South Korea, declined to comment Thursday on the commission's work but said,
"We're going to have to take actions that are difficult
and we're going to have to tell the truth the American
people." He said there was a lot of rhetoric about the
nation's debt and deficits but "a lot of the talk didn't
match up with reality."
··we need to be straight with the American people,"
the president said. "We can't just engage in political
rhetoric."
The plan arrived a week after congressional elections in which voters demanded action on the $1 trillion-plus budget deficit. Bowles and Simpson
acknowledged the plan was dead on arrival but said it
would prompt a more realistic national debate about
what it'll take to solve the nation's huge fiscal woes.
''We have harpooned every whale in the ocean,''
Simpson said. Said Bowles, "This is a starting point."
The entire 18-member commission is supposed to
report a deficit-cutting plan on Dec. 1, but panel
members are unsure whether they'll be able to agree
on anything approaching deficit cuts of the size proposed. And even if they could, any vote in Congress
this year would be nonbinding, Simpson said.
During the campaign, neither political party talked
of spending cuts of the magnitude offered Wednesday,
with Republicans proposing $100 billion in cuts to
domestic programs passed each year by Congress but with no specifics.
The plan would gradually increase the retirement
age for full Social Security benefits- to 69 by 2075
- and current recipients would receive smaller-thananticipated annual increases.
Equally controversial, it would eliminate the current tax deduction that homeowners receive for the
interest they pay on their mortgages and impose a 15
cent-a-gallon tax on gasoline.
It would impose a three-year freeze in the pay of
most federal employees and a 10 percent cut in the
federal work force. Congressional pet spending projects, known as "earmarks," would be eliminated.
No one is expecting quick action on any of the
pieces of the plan. Proposed cuts to Social Security
and Medicare are making liberals recoil. And conservative Republicans are having difficulty wit,h options
suggested for raising taxes. The plan also .calls for
cuts in farm subsidies, foreign aid and the Pentagon's
budget.
Contentious or not, Bowles said serious action was
demanded. "This debt is like a cancer that will truly
destroy this country from within 'if we don't fix it," he
warned.
Current deficits require the government to borrow
37 cents out of every dollar it spends.
Still, the plan was rejected as "simply unacceptable" by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., a top
Obama ally.
The Social Security proposal would change the
inflation measurement used to calculate cost-of-living
adjustments for benefits, reducing annual increases. It
immediately drew a withering assault from advocates
for seniors, who already are upset that there will be no
inflation increase for 2011, the second consecutive
year.
The plan also would raise the regular Social
Security retirement age to 68 by about 2050 and to 69
in 2075. The full retirement age for those retiring now
is 66. For those born in 1960 or after, the full retirement age is now 67.
Better-off · beneficiaries would receive smaller
Social Security payments than those in lower-earning
brackets under the proposal. and the amount of
income subject to Social Security taxes would be
increased.
''The chairmen of the deficit commission just told
working Americans to 'drop dead,"' AFL-CIO
President Richard Trumka said in a statement.
From the right, anti-tax activist Grover Norquist,
whose opinions carry great weight among
Republicans. blasted the plan for its $1 trillion in tax
increases over the coming de~de. But Bowles and
Simpson say eliminating costly tax deductions could
allow income tax rates to be brought way down.
The proposal would leave Obama's new health care
overhaul in place while greatly strengthening its cost-;
control provisions, including a board with the power
to make cuts in Medicare payments to providers.
For most Americans with job-based health coverage, the biggest change would be to limit or eliminate
altogether the tax-free status of employer-provided
health benefits, which would provide a stiff nudge to
force people into cost-conscious insurance plans.
"lfs a . very provocative proposal," said a
Republican panel member, Rep. Jeb Hensarling of
Texas. "Some of it I like. Some of it disturbs me. And
some of it I've got to study."
The plan also calls for a major overhaul of both the
individual income tax and the corporate tax systems,
with the idea of lowering overall tax rates. simplifying the tax code and broadening the taxpayer base.
For individuals and families, the proposal would
eliminate a host of popular tax credits and deductions,
including the child tax credit and the mortgage interest deduction. ·
However, it would significantly reduce income tax
rates. The top rate would drop from 35 percent to 23
percent.
"

53.·
high near 74. Light and Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
variable wind.
Friday Night: Clear,
Monday Night: A
of showers.
with a low around 37. chance
Mostly cloudy, with a low
Calm wind.
Saturday: Sunny, with around 38. Chance of pre- :
a high near 70. Calm wind cipitation is 30 percent.
becoming south around 5
Thesday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,·
mph.
Saturday Night: Partly with a high near 56 ..
cloudy, with a low around Chance of precipitation i~ ·
43. South wind between 3 40 percent.
and 5 mph.
Thesday Night: A
Sunday: A chance of chance of showers.
showers, mainly after 1 Mostly cloudy, with a low
p.m. Partly sunny, with a around 36. Chance of
high near 61. Chance of precipitation is 40 per:..
precipitation is 30 per- cent.
·
Wednesday: A chance ·
cent.
New
rainfall
amounts of less than a of showers. Partly sunny, ·
with a high near 58. ·
tenth of an inch possible.
Sunday Night: A Chance of precipitation is chance of showers before 30 percent.
Wednesday
Night:
9 p.m. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 39. Partly cloudy, with a low
Chane&gt;e of precipit!ltion is around 38.
30 percent.
·
Thursday:
Mostly
Monday: A chance of sunny, with a high neat
showers. Mostly cloudy, 54.

Local Stocks
• I

AEP (NYSE) - 36.54
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 59.67
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 52.86
Big Lots (NYSE) - 30.33
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 30.24
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 58.87
Century Alum (NASDAQ) -14.95
Champion (NASDAQ) -1.16
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)-3.68
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.84
Collins (NYSE)- 57.39
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.19
US Bank (NYSE)- 25.18
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 16.35
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 32.33
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 40.02
Kroger (NYSE)- 22.65
Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 3214
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 61.97
OVBC (NASDAQ) -19 00
BBT (NYSE)- 25.27

Peoples (NASDAQ) -14.86
Pepsico (NYSE)- 64.90
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.67
Rockwell (NYSE) - 65.84
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 9.14
Royal Dutch Shell - 66.34
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 71.42,
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.34
Wendy's (NYSE)- 5.04 ·
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.99
Worthington (NYSE) -16.44 '

Daily stock reports are the 4 ·
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans.-actions for Nov. 11, 2010, provided by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and tesley •·
Marrero in Point Pleasant at ,·
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.,

For the Record
Prosecuting Attorney
POMEROY - Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney Colleen S. Williams reported the follow,.
ing sentences imposed by Judge Fred W. Crow III.•
Common Pleas Court:
• Charles Conkle, 22. Rutland, in August entered
pleas of guilty to two counts of receiving stolen
property and two counts of forgery.
Crow sentenced Conkle to a term of one year for·
receiving stolen property. and placed him on a fiveyear term of community control, which will com=
mence after he completes the one year sentence. •
Conkle was remanded to the custody of th~_.
Sheriff to be transported to prison.
• Timothy Shane, 23, of Middleport. in Augusf
entered a plea of guilty to one count of non-support
of dependents. He was sentenced Monday to a one- ,
year term of imprisonment, and was also remande&lt;J,
to the custody of the Sheriff.
• Lewis G. Bryant. 34. appeared to enter pleas of
guilty to one count of trafficking in crack cocaine,
where the amount of drugs involved was 10 grams .·
or more and less than 15 grams, and one count of
trafficking in crack cocaine, where the amount of .
drugs involved was five or more grams and less than·
10 grams.
The charges resulted from incidents whichoccurred in July, 2010. Bryant is serving a sentenc~ .
for a drug abuse offense in Gallia County.
'·
Crow sentenced Bryant to a term of six years as to the second-degree trafficking charge and four years
as to the third degree charge. With the six year sen- ,
tence ordered to be served consecutive to the Galli&lt;} ·
County sentence.
.
Bryant was remanded to the custody of the Sheriff.
to be re-conveyed to prison.

GOP victory could boost
natural gas drilling

·.

BY MARC LEVY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

HARRISBURG. Pa. - The Republicans' big election victories in Pennsylvania and on Capitol Hill could
be Christmas-come-early for the drilling companies that '
are rushing to exploit the Marcellus Shale. the biggest ··
known deposit of natural gas in the nation.
•
Republican Gov.-elect Tom Corbett is seen as a lot
friendlier toward the industry than outgoing Democrat:
Ed Rendell, who has clashed with natural gas companies over both taxes and tougher new clean-water regulations.
Also, the GOP takeover of the U.S. House will almost .
surely doom efforts in Congress to impose federal reg- .
ulation over gas drilling.
Among many Republicans. there is elation. GO~
strategist Karl Rove told participants in an oil and gas
industry conference in Pittsburgh last week that they .
can now expect "a period of sensible regulations."
"As a signal. is it good? Yes," said a more cautious;
sounding William Garner. a Houston lawyer and former .
investment banker who specializes in the natural ga_s •.
industry. "But will it make a difference'? Time will tell."
The election doesn't affect a web of state and federal.
regulatory bodies that could stand in the way of drilling.
industry analysts said. The EPA. for example. could tl)'
to regulate fracking without congressional approval.
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�I

PageA4

I '

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Novemb er 12,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 ·FAX {740) 992-2157

IM ~Al'PY To

www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

-...-

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

~IDE AREFR£~ER
COURSE IN W~AT A

__-...
........

REAL MISSILE I.AUNC~
!..CQ\5 L!KE.u

Congress shall make 110 law respecting .w
establishment of rel(~ion, or prohibiting the free
exerCise tlrereof; or abridgitt.(! tire freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tire r(~ht of tire people
' peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Gor,ertrment for a redress of grie11auces..
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Trade War looming?
BY JEAN

H.

LEE AND PAUL WISEMAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

The world's economies stand on the brink of a
trade war as leaders of rich and emerging nations
gather in Seoul.
A dispute over whether China and the United
States are manipulating their currencies is threatening to resurrect destruetive protectionist policies like those that worsened the Great
Depression. The biggest fear is that trade barriers
will send the global economy back into recession.
Hopes had been high that the Group of 20.
which includes wealthy nations like Gennanv and
the U.S. and rising giants like China. could. be a
· forum to forge a lasting global economic recovery.
Yet so far, G-20 countries haven't agreed on an
agenda. let alone solutions to the problems that
divide them.
G-20 leaders were expected to issue a communique detailing results of the summit on Friday.
The delegates have clashed in particular over .
the value of their currencies. Some countries, like
the United States, want China to let the value of its
cunency. the yuan. rise. That would make Chinese
exports costlier abroad and make U.S. impo11s
cheaper for the Chinese to buy. It \vould shrink the
United States· trade deficit with China. which is
on track this year to match its 2008 record of $268
billion.
But other countries are irate over the Federal
Reserve's plans to pump $600 billion into the sluogish American economy. They see that move asoa
reckless and .selfish scheme to t1ood markets with
dollars, driving down the value of the U.S. currency and giving American exporters an advantage.
Richard Portes. president of the Center for
Economic Policy Research in London. said the
dim prospect for a substantive agreement "is very
dangerous for the world economy... ,
Portes said he fears "the possibility that currency
wars and global imbalances might lead to severe
trade protectionism over the next year or so."
For now, the G-20 countries are expected to
agree on noncontroversial issi1es, ·like an anti-corruption initiative and the need for oversight by the
International Monetary Fund.
But they're finding no common ground on the
most vexing problem: how to address a global
economy that's long been nourished by huge U.S.
trade deficits with China. Gennany and Japan.
President Barack Obama told fellow leaders that
the U.S. cannot just keep bonowing lavishly and
sending its money overseas. It needs other countries to buy more exports from the United States
and elsewhere so Americans can afford to buy
other countries· goods, he said.
But Brazil's president. Luiz lnacio Lula da
Silva. warned that the world would go '"bankrupt"'
if rich countlies reduced their consumption and
tried to export their way to prosperity.
A failure to agree on currency and trade in Seoul
could intensify countries· eff011s to rig their currencies to gain an advantage. A full-blown trade
war could lead countries to erect punitive barriers
to imports - a replay of what happened in the
1930s.
·

Public mixed on GOP tax) health plan•
B Y ALAN F RAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

People back Republican tax cut
plans but not the GOP campaign
to repeal President Barack
Obama ·s health care overhaul,
according to a poll suggesting that
the Republicans' big Election Day
win was not a mandate for the
party's legislative wish list.
Fifty-three perce.nt say income
tax cuts that soon will expire
should be renewed for all including the highest earners. as
Republicans want - according to
an Associated Press-GfK Poll
conducted just after last week's
elections. But 44 percent would
continue the cuts only for those
earning under $250.000 a year which Obama favors - or Jet
them lapse for everyone.
When it comes to the health
care law Obama signed in March.
JUSt 39 percent back the GOP
effort to repeal it or scale it back.
Fifty-eight percent would rather
make even more changes in the
health care system or ~leave the
measure alone.
Two-thirds want the Senate to
ratify Obama 's nuclear arms
reduction treaty with Russia,
including most Democrats. about
6 in I 0 Republicans and independents - and even about half of
conservative tea party supporters.
Some Republican senators oppose
the treaty. The Obama administration hopes to win Senate approval
in the upcoming lame-duck session of Congress and will need
GOP support to gamer the 67
votes required.
Tax cuts and Obama's health
care law were top-tier issues in
this fall's congressional election
campaign. which ended with the
GOP gaining a majority of seats
in the House and narrowing their
Senate minority. The election was
waged in the shadow of unyieldingly bad job and housing markets that polls show left many
voters
disenchanted
with
Democrats.
·'I think everybody wants
change," said Steven Lamb, 60. a
,Tennessee state government
worker in Nashville who voted
Republican last week despite

opposing the patty's stance on tax
cuts and health care. ''I'm tired of
what's going on, and the only way
to do it is to make a change ...
The preference for cutting
everyone' taxes was a turnabout
from September. when most in an
AP-GfK poll favored omitting the
wealthy from the reductions by 54
percent to 44 percent.
In further evidence that last
week's decisive GOP win was not
an embrace of Republicans. the
poll found that the party is no better likeci' than Democrats. Both
got favorable ratings from about
half in the survey.
The poll also showed support,
though modest, for divided government. More than 4 in I 0 said
the country will benefit from a
Republican-controlled
House
while Democrats run the Senate
and White House, almost twice
the number who say that will be
bad. A third said it doesn't matter.
"Lately. we're not prospering
and one party has been in controL'' said Suzanne Fairchild. 33,
of Pahrump, Nev., who recently
lost her job and likes divided government in Washington. ·'When
they're busy bickering with themselves, the rest of us can get along
with our Jives ...
The poll underscored deep partisan divides on taxes and health
care. About three-quarters of
Republicans want extended tax
cuts to include the wealthiest,
while nearly two-thirds of
Democrats want to exclude the
wealthy. While 61 percent of
Republicans want to repeal
Obama 's health overhaul, 85 percent of Democrats w.ant to expand
it or leave it in place.
Among independents. about
half want the tax cuts to include
those with the highest incomes.
About two-thirds want to preserve
Obama 's health package or
strengthen it.
'"'
Republican pollster Christine
Matthews said GOP leaders have
to avoid reading too much into the
election results.
"They don t want to get into
Obama ·s shoes and over-interpret
their election as a strom?: mandate." she said. " I think ~they're
taking it, and I think wisely, as a

rejection of the general principles,
of overreach, too much government."
With Obama's re-election campaign and the next round of congressional elections two years off.
both parties must decide whether
to seek compromise or clashes.
While Obama and House GOP
leader John Boehner of Ohio have
talked of possible accommodation. Senate Minority Leader
Mitch McConnell .. R-Ky.. has
spoken of blocking Obama in
hopes of fueling his defeat in
2012.
,
Boehner has called last week's
"a
mandate
for
elections
Washington to reduce the size of
government." McConnell has said
that rather than falling in Jove
with Republicans, the public "fell
out of love \vith Democrats ...
Brendan Daly. spokesman for
outgoing House Speaker Nanl
Pelosi, D-Cali f.. said Democr
would work with Republicans
creating jobs and reducing the
federal deficit and oppose efforts
to threaten the health care overhaul, Social Security or other programs.
Neither
Boehner
nor
McConnell can boast much personal support from the public. For
each. about a third view them
favorably. about a quarter unfavorably and about 4 in lO don't
know enough to say.
The poll also found:
• Sixty-three percent rarely or
never worry about being victims
of terrorism.
• Almost two-thirds think
Obama IS handling terrorism
effectively.
• Sixty-two percent don't want
any countries to have nuclear
weapons. while just 6 percent said
any country that develops them
should be able to keep them.
The AP-GfK Poll was conducted Nov. 3-8 by GfK Roper Pubt .
Affairs
&amp;
Corpor·
Communications and involve
landline and cell phone interviews
\vith 1.000 adults chosen randomly from across the U.S. It has a
marg.in of sampling error of plus
or mums 4.1 percentage points.

The Daily Sentinel
]

X berv.LO

Correcti&lt;?n Policy
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to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

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1J

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�IFriday, November 12, 2010
F~Uowship

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am Tues 6 30 pravcr. ~ 7 pm F1ble
StOOy
Enun8Jiuli t\postolie Tab.rnae~ Inc
loop Rd off N.,-.v i.Jma Rd Ru11rud
S~ Sun 10:00 am &amp; no pm
ThUll 7 00 p m Pa:tor MmyR Hlttt)n

I

~

Assembly of God
L!b.11yAs!&gt;emhly ol God
PO Box .c67, Duddi113 i..Sile. M.l.lon.
WVa. Pastor Nell Tenmnl S11~11:
StrW:eS I 0 00 am and 1 p m

Baptist
P.lgevill&lt; r~ Baptist Chwt'h
Pa;tor Flcyd RDss Sw.:laySchool9 30 tl
I 0 30am. Wlrsh1p seNO'! 10 JG tlll ~
am W!d prerlung 6 pm
Cal'}li'Jttl!l' Jnd'i"'nddlt Baptist Ch=h
S'uda:1 ScOO!ll • Q 'lOam Prea:Jung
Servre !0:30am. E· ~nmg Serw:e
7~Opm \lednesday B1ble St~y 7 00 ~m.
Pa:tor
Ch~ Baptist Chu.tdt

Pa;tor St- L·t~e 740-367-iSOl H
740-992-15-Q. C 140·64~·2)2 7. SIOC.r;
Scrool Q 30 a!n. MolDing ¥hiS hip 10 30
am. Youth &amp; Bible FnO:l.JN 6 30 pm.
cron pxactr::e 7 30 Spe:lal days of month
I ladle; of Grace 7 pm 2~ Mo~y 2
Meb's FeUowship 7J•m31dTue;

•

Hop&lt; Baptist Churdl tSouthem l
510 :Jrant St. Ml(kl!epo11. Su~y scrool
• 930 am W:mhip ll am andb p m
V~e;day Servre 7 p mPastor: GaJY

Bbs
Rutland First.Ba~ist Churdt
Sunday Scloool q 30 am. Wlnhip
10 45am
Pomeroy first Baptist
Pator Jon Brock~ Ea;t Man St
Sunday Sch q 30 an. \Qlr&gt;hqll 0 30 am

)

First South~m Baptist
41812 Pomeroy Pib:. So1~ay Scoool
9 30a m v.bnhtp • 9 45 am &amp; 1:00pm
VMD'!Iday St!VI.ces 7 90 p m Pastor
D.M:I Bla1!13ld

rtm Baptist Ch=h
Pa;tor B11ly Z•~p&lt;m 6th aud Palme1 St
MlQileJoOrt. S1urlay School • 9 IS am
\lbrsh1p • 1'::15 am. 71)0 pm,
~esday SeNct· 7 ~ p 1n
Radne First Baptist
Pastor Ryan Eann. pa:tlt SJ~ay
School • 9 '30 am Vobuhlp • IQ 4C am
6 OC p m '.l.l:dlleSda·; Setvre$ • 100
pm

I

:Hs am S•lllday E\emng
Pa:l:lr ::X•n \lblker

~~pendelltBaptlsl)

SR 6'i2 and And-non St Pa:tot Roben
Gr 'liv $ IIW::.ly scoool 1C &amp;m. Mumtr~
churJ\ II mn. Sunday event Ill:~ pm. 'Wc:d
B1ble St•tdy 7 pm

Catholic
Sa&lt;nd HU111 CathoticChlltdl
161 Mulbeuv A•" r meroy QQ. 5S&lt;lS
Pastor Rev Walter"' H~ll7. Sat ~on
4 45-5 15p m Mass· 5 ~~ p m Sllll
Con 8.45-9 :sam. S!ln Mlll Q 30
&lt;l m DallyMd.1s -8 30alll

Church of Christ
~32Z6 f'luldr&lt;'ll s H meR l Pomtw y. OH
Cont.:• U0-992 3S.H S~a-i tnOIIllll8
10 0~. Sun m~ ILllS B1ble :tudv
folio '~118 .•r nhip Sun eve b 00 prn.
Vkd btblest y7 pm

Hi.11\lod; fd'ure Christian Churdt
Mmt:ler :..any Brown. 'Mirship ~ SO
altl Sllllday Srhool • 10 30 am Btble
Slldy -7 p m

Pumauy Chwt'h of Christ
212 W Mmn S• Sunday Srh:;:)J · 9 'lO
a m Vl&gt;r:hip· I0 ~0 m . 6 p m
~dayS~~Ipm

Pum\SOy W&amp;~d~ Ch=h of Cltrut
~3226 Chudren's Home R · S•ntddY
ScJool II am. Vobnh.p !.am. 6 p rn.
Wed!te$day s~ 1 p.m

Vietory Ba~.ist lnd~pdld~nt
525 N 2nd Sl Mtddleyort Pa:tlr lame;
E Kee:ee. \QliShlp lOam 7 p m.
W!dnesday SeNres 1p m
faith Baptist Chwcl!
Railroai St. Masoo. Sunday Sdtoo! • 10
am \Qlrship • ll am 6 pIll
W::dnestby Sellll&lt;&gt;:J • 7 p m

Fore\1 Run Bap.ist- Pomwoy
Rev Joseyh Vbods. S•lllday School· 'v
am l,l,brslup IIJ~am
Mt Moritlt Baptist
FJlurth &amp; Mmn St. M1tillepor• Sunday
Scrool· Cl SO am ¥roll hlp 1· 45 am
Pa; tor Rev Mtch;;el AToomp;on sr
Anti(uity B3ptkt
Slllld3;' School • 9 ~0 am Wln hip •

Syra&lt;'IUl! F'u:SI ChW'&lt;'h of God
Applesnd Second Sts Pa:tlr Rev Dav!d
Rt!$sell S1tnda'1 Scoool and 'Mirslup- ;Q
a.m EYI'ntng SerVI~~- 6 3v p m
Vkdnefdav SeM:es • 6 ~0 p m
Church of God of Prot•hecy
G' White Rd off Sl R• 160 Pa:101 P
Cit;,pm&amp;~. Sw:dav Scb.Jol •• n am
V•lmlup 11 am Vkdnesd:!y Se~vr::es 7
pm

Trinity Churrh

Rev

~a:nr-

• ~nn.
am

i~m

Johnson. Se&gt;.1lnd &amp;
r meroy Pasnr 'Mlrship ·~ 25

Episcopal
Guo, Episoopal Church

~26

E Mam St Pomeroy
Holy
Eocharut 1130 am Sund1/1 &amp; 530 pm
'v1kd Rev Lesl~ Fle.mrruiJ8

Holiness
Conununity Church
Pastor Steve "'omet M&lt;liD Slleet
Rutl~ Sutrlay Vobrshtj)-IC • am·
Sunday SeNc&gt;::-1 p m
Danrill~ Holin~ Churd1
31057 ~late RDute 325 l...algsvile Pa:nr
Bnan Baley Sunday school 9 30 am
Sunday 'A'Orshtp • 10 3C a.m &amp; I p.ll't
~day prayer seNct • 1 p m

l\iliddl.-pol1 Chu~h of Christ

5th and Mrun. Pastor AI Haruon.
.:."hlldren: Duecur Sbarrn Savre. Then
Duector Dodg-•r Vanglt.3D. Sunday Scrool
9 SC arn v.lmh•p 8 15. 10:30 a.m. 1
p m \'tdnesday Se~~nCt:: • 7 p m

Ros.-ofSharon HolineiS Churdl
LeadllliJ Creek Rd. Rlltlat;d, ~t)r Rev
De! ev Kt118- Su~y SCOOol· Q 30 am
S•tnday •'Orshtp .7 p m \lkdltfsday
pra-Jel rreetmg- 1 p m

Kmo C hu.tdt of Christ
\i,tm h1p 9 SO am • S undav Scoool •
1030 am. P~tor-•dl'rey Wallace. .stalid
3id$1JDday

Pin-e Grov-e Bible itllin(SS Church
lfl rrule off Rt 325. Pa:tlr • Stutday
ScOO!l. q SO am Vbnhip • 10 30 arn
6 00 p m . \lledttesd1/{ Se~w:e. 7 c:' p m

B~RmgtChwrehofCrunrt

WE9.~)1all Bible Holin~ Ch.wreh
75 Pearl St Mildlepott Pastor [)oltg
e'er, Su~y ScOO!ll • 10 am '.~Alr;hip ·
1045 pm Sunda-1 E•.e 600 pm.
Vkdnesday Serw:e- I 00 p m

Pastor Bruce Teny Su~y Scbool 9 :&lt;0
am
\Qlrs htp • 10 30 a rn 6 ~0 p m
We~ day SCMre ·6:30pm
Zion Chwt'h of Christ
Pomero'{ Harm DVtl!e Rd (Rt 143).
P;'l:tor Roger Watson S~&lt;rf School
9 30 all\- \ltlmhtp 10 30 am 7 00
p m V·ed!tesday Sel\llCe; 7 p m

Thpp&lt;n Rain Ch=!t of Christ
:DStnunental \Mlrslup Sei\1~ Q am
Conim1nt10n 10 !lm Sunday Sc!tool
IQ I~ am Youth·) 5:1pm SaD;Iay Btble

Br.ulblll) Church ofCrunrt
Mw~t•r l•utUt RD uh 39558 Bradbur:r
Road MtQilepor Sq~a:,· Scrool 9 30
Volmhtp • IC30 a 111
Rutland Ch=lt of Christ
Su!lda-J ScliOol 9 30 am. Vobrshlp w
Commun on • 10 30 am DaVId
Wt::etnall. MaiSter
Br.uUOniChurdtofCJtrist
Cotner of St R• 1.4 .1&lt; BrtdbUIY Rd.
YQ &lt;th Mwtster B11l Amberser. Sun&lt;hy
Sohool 9 30 am. Vobll h.p S 00 am
.030atn 100 pm WednesdaySeiVICe;
• 1.00p.m
Hidrory Hills Churdt of Christ
Toppe~ PlaiDs Pasl:lr M·IZ Mo01e B•b;e
class ~ am S uday. V.'OISh'!• I0 am
Sunday .l'onlup 63r pm S~a-1 B1ble
class 7 pro ~to:

H):&gt;cll Run Community Churdl
Pastlr: Rev Lan-1 Lemley: sunday Scrool
930 am. v.lmhlp 10 45 am 7 pm,
Th11nday Bible Study aod Youth 7 p rn
LaurelCliiJ fi('l' Mttluxl.ist Churdl
Glen McChm~ Sunday ScOO!ll
':...cam \lbulup 10 30 am w 6
p m V.blnesday SeNce 1 00 p m
Pas~r

Latter-Day Saints
TheChurdlof ]\'$US
Christ of latter-Day Saints
St R• :60 446 6241 or 44b 14Sci.
Sunda·,· Scmol 10 ZC. II am Relief
SOCietyiPne: lhood I: 05-12 ~0 ooon.
Sa•:rament SerVIce q 10 .5 am
Hcmemakme mre~ng. :stThurs 1 p rn

Lutheran
St John Luth~an Churdl
Pull': Gro\e, Wlllhip 9 00 am Su~y
ScOO!ll :o 00 am Pa::nr
Our Ssri&gt;ur Luth&lt;&gt;ran Church
\ollaln,tt w Henry Sts Rao,enswood.
WVa P~tor DaVId Russell Sunday
ScOO!ll 10 00 am Volmhlp II am
St P.lul Lutha:8JI Churdl
Coar:: Sycamore &amp; SI'CDnd St. Pommy
Sun Scrool 9 45 am \Qlr&gt;lup -II am

United .Methodist

R~~eChurdtofChrist

Bed!td UnitEd l'lil•thod.ist

Pf!•or Jack Colgro~ Sunday Scoool
9 ~am. Wmhtp Ser\\ce 10 30 am
Bible Stooy. 1/kdne;da)( 6 'l~ p.m

Ne~ Haven. Richard Nease. P~tor,
Sunday .,orsh1p 9 30 am ".'ties 6 ~r
prayer azd Btble Shld;t

Dext...rCh=h of Christ
Sunday school9 :30 am Sunda'f •norship
10 '30am
Th~Clturch ofChri&lt;t of Rml&lt;t'll)'
lntemcuon 1 a!ld lt4 '&lt;. t'\all8e~sl
Denws Saxgenl S•mdl!'l B.ble Stuay •
G 30 am Wllldp 10 30 a.m an(; 630
p 111- \1\ednesday FtbleStoov 7, tn.

Mt Clive UnitEd M~od.ist
Off 124 bel,wd WumVJlle. P~tor Rev.
~ph Spt~ Sunday School q 30 am.
'oQ)nhtp .0 'lOam. 1 p rn. ThU1$d&lt;!'f
SeN~ 7pm

Hartfon!Chu.rc:h of Christ in
Christian Un.iln
H11:tford. WVa Pas•ot Mti.e .nt.:keti.
s und&lt;.y Scoool 9 "'t am \Mnshlp •
10 30 a m 7 0 p m . We:!nesil&lt;f
Ser.1ces I u.. p m

"
Pa:tlr Dewayne ~tuH!et S~;,y Sdlool
:1 am W:lnhip II 1m
forest Run

Pa:t)r Bob Robl!lSOD.
am Wlnlup 9 am

!\.lues Coo~atir~ P.lrish
N)rthe:a:t Clua:r Alfred Pa:tor Gene
G~dwtn. Sllllday Sch:Jol · 9 ~0 am.
Worshtp-I:am 630 p1a
Ch...std
Pa:~r

:tm Corb1~

Volmhip 9 am.
&lt;:unda;; School • 10 a ro . Thursda-f
SeNctS 1 p m

Su~yScOO!ll·lO

Hulth ~'VIDd.l'1J011)
Pastor Brlall Dunham. Sunday School •
lOOOam Wmlup-IIOOam
AsburySynCIL'k
Pastor Bob Rob1nson. Su~y School •
&lt;130 arn \QlnhlJl · 10 30 am
J.W'lChapal
Sunda'; School 9 am 'oQ)rshlJl·IO am

Rlm~roy

Pa:tor Bnan Dunhan. Wltslup • 9 25
am. Sund11J School 10 45 am
Rodi Spr!rtrs
Pastor De1vayne StuUet Su~y ScOO!ll·
9'{)() am . VobiS !up · '0 am. Youth
Fello •-shlp Sunda-; • 6 ~ m EarlySnnday
rors hip Sam. Leoora Leunot
Rutland
Pa:tor John Chap~an. S11~y School·
9 30 alii Vobr:h1p • lu 30 am Thursday
SeNces • 7 p trt
SalemCentl!l'
Pasnr Wilham K Manloall Sw.:lay
ScOO!ll· 10 15 am \Ql~h!p • 9 15 am.
BtbleStudy Mo~y7 00 pr"
Snowri.De
Sunda'j School-10 am. ¥.brslup • 9 am
B•ny
Pastor John Roze·• tez. S!lnday Sdtool·
10 a m \lbrslup • 9 a lll Vol:dnesday
Sernces • 10 am
Cannel-Sutton
Carme! &amp; Bashan. Rds R&lt;etlle. Ohio.
Pastor :ohn R=·mc:z. Sunday School·
945am \Mmhip liOOam.Btble
Stooy~ 730 pm

l't1orninf Star
Pastor Jollll Ro;z·o,'JC:z. S11nday School11 am \QliShip !aam
EastWw1
P"..::tor Btll Man hall Sunday School
9am \Qlrshtp • 10 am 1st Sunday
e\f!ry month e~o~:nmg ser111ce 100 p m
~:d:!y-7pm

Racine
Pastor Rev Wtlham Marshall Sunday
School' • 10 am ~llhlp • II
am W:rlnesdaySeiV!Ces 6 pm. Tbur B1ble
Study7 pm
Coolfilk, Unit&lt;'ll Methodist Parish
Pastor Helen Klu:te. CoolVIlle Churoh.
Mrun &amp; Ftt•n St. Sun ScoooJ • 10 am
\Qlr&gt;hip • 9 am 'Iiles SeMces • 7 p m
Bethei.Ch=h
TO'.&gt;n:hip Rd .c68C, Sunday School· 9
a m. Wln hlp • 10 a m Vol:dne::d~y
SeN~ lOam
Hocldngport Churclt
KabrJn \Wey. Sunday School 9 30
a rn. v.lmhtp • 10 SO a ln. Pa;IOr Phllhp
Bell
Turclt Chwreh
Co Rtl 63. S!lnday School· Q 30 am
V.OO!up · 1:; 90 am

Nazarene
Point Roek ChW'&lt;'h of the Nazar&lt;'!le
Rou~·fiS9 Albany Rev Uoyd ':lnmm
past)! Su~ay School 10 &amp;n worhstp
seNre !lam =me~~ 7 pm ~
prayer meetJ1t8 7 pm
Middleport Chwt'h ofth&lt;&gt;Nazarute
Past)r !..e) nard Po •ell Sundav Scb:lol •
930am.Wlnlup IOSGam.630pm.
'Nedne:aay SerJlCO&lt; .1 p m..

REoerlsvill&lt;&gt; Fellowsltip
Churoh Gf theN azarene. Pastor R11Ssell
Carson . S undav Scoool • 9 30 am
'Mirship 10 45 am. I p m.. 1/ol:dne;day
Sernres. 1 p m
Syna&amp;- Church of th~ Nu:aMI~
Pastelf Shannon Hu•chuon. Sunday
Wlr&gt;hlp :. 30 a rn 6 p n1 W!d
SeNces -7p m

Jon-

Church of God

Pastot 'an

La~o~:Dder

Sunday School •

930&amp;m '\llmhip·l030am
~dnesday Sernces

pm

wb

S11~y

School· 9 am.. \Qlllh!Jl Servr::e

10 am

2~ 6lJi 4t.hSunday

7p m

Canton lntll'dmominational Ck=h
t:111gsbmy Road. Pastor Roben ~
SUllday School • 9 ~0 a ro W&gt;rslup
Ser111ce 10 30 am E\enmg Servr::e 6
prn
•
f!Wiom \,a,pe! Missim
Bald Koob. on Co Rd 31 Pa:tor Rev
Roger VhDford Sucday Saoool • 9 SO
am '.l.biShip-7 p m

Chetocl'Churdt ofthi•Nazll\'JW
Pas IDI Rev Warren l...ui:ell$. Sunday
ScOO!ll 9 30 am \Qlrslup 10 ~0 am
Sund111 eventcg 6 pm
Rutland Clturdt of th~ Nazan-n~
Past)r '1eorge S l&lt;dlet Sunday School
9 30 am WliShip 10 S:: alii. 6 30
p m Wednesday SeNces • 7.P m

Other Churches

While's Chapel Wesleyu
CoolVIlle RoOO. ,Pa:tor Rev Charles
Ma~Jcdalt: ~ •m School • 9 30 am.
Voblshtp-10 30am. Wlrl SeNct· 7 p m

Common Growui l\.1lssilns
Pas ~:in Denms Moore &amp;Rrk [.JtUe
iunday 10.00 am
Twn Jesus
Pastor· Eddte Bao!r, Sun Vol:mlup II atn
333 M~hanic St Pomeroy
New Hope Churdl
Old Amencan l...eg10n Hall
FotuthA~o~: Mukllepon SundayS pm
S)n~Community Ch=h
2&lt;480 Sero~St Syra:use OH
Sun. Scoooi!O am. Sundy wght 6 30 pm
P~or
Gwmn •
ANew &amp;finninr
aoun Go~ Ch=hl H&lt;rnson111De
P-ttoiS &amp;band Kay Marshall.
Thtill I pm
Amazing Chce Community Cltwreh
Pator Wayne Dunlap. Stale Rt 681,
Tuppell Pl&lt;~.ns. Sun VobiS !up :o am &amp;
6 30 pm.. \lied B1ble StOOy 7 00 p.m

fairview Bihle ChiiJ'da
l.etllt WVa Rl I. Pa: lDr Bn&lt;m May.
S!lnday Schoc:l· 9 30 am. \Qlrslup. 7 00
p m wednesday Btble Sbxly. 1DO p m
faith felil.,.·ship CrtiSIIde for Chrilt
Pastor Rev Franklin Dicken:. Servr::e
Fnday. 7 p m

C.alfaey Biblr, Cluardl
Pomeroy Pike. Co Rd. Pasoor Rtv
Blackwood S11!lday School. 9 30 am
\Qlrsbtp 10.30 am. 7 30 p m
Wlrllle$day Se~w:e • 7 30 pm

:oe

Stit'EI'S'fille Commwrlty Chwreh
Sunday SchoollO ~an. Su~y v.brslup
1100 am Wlrlne:day 7 00 pm Pastor.
Bry&lt;m &amp; Mtssy Daley

Ne-.\'~~sC!twreh

Cl\'aham UnitEd 1\l~thodist

'Mirsh1p II ~ m Pastor Richard Nea:~

Christian Union

Past r Denlll Null. 'WOIShip • 9 30 am
Slllld:!y School I~ SO am
LontBotiOm
Sllllda'J Sclool • ~ '30 nm 1Mlrsb1p
Hi "'am
Reldsvi!Jr,
VobiShiJI Q3(' am Sw.:lay scro~l
10 3 alii hutS l!lilv of Month 1 t.....
pm rnceP
•.n
Thpp.;rs PL'tbts St. P.1 u1
Pa::llr. Jun Corbrt\ Sll!ldi-J School • 9
am v.br: hip I 0 alii. Thesday Servr::es
-7'30prn
C uttral C!usttr
Asbury C!)'f.3Cilse). Pa::tor Bob RDbwon.
Sunday School • 9 45 am \Qlrshtp • 11
a~ Wcrlnt::da"/ SeMCCI ·1 'SOp m

Congregational

Calnry ~im Cha}X'l
Hamsonville Roa:l. Pa::tlr Charle;
McKe~. Sunday SChool 9 30 am
WlllhiJI • II am 1 00 p m. \ltl!dne:;day
SeNoe· 7 00 pm

'.!m

l'fillsile Baplist Churdt
St Rt 143 J11Sl off Rt 1 Pastor Rev
James R Acree Sr Sunday Unlfted
Senro.:e. \Qlr&gt;h!p • 10 ~0 am 6 p rn
W:dne;day SeMces -7 p m

Mt Morilh ChW'&lt;'h of God
RacUte P~lor Jame:
S•tetf.eld Sunday School ~ 45 1m
E~o~:mcg 5 p m 'v\ob:lnesda"J Servr::es 7
ptn.
Rutlllnd Churdl of Goo
, Pa::•or lair/ Shieff\~ Su.Jds-; ~onhip
.o ~ n. p m "hiD,..,d "e
pm.

M1i~ Hll R

~~~'II~ Ch=h of Ckrist

Mt Un.iln Baptist
Past)r Denms Weaver Sunday SchMI·
9 45 am Eventng • 6 30 p rn
~esdaySeNctS • 6 '30p rn

OH B~el Fh;e \\'ill Baptist Ch=h
2$601 S t Rt 7 Mut!Jepor~ S UDday
SeMce • 10 am. 6 00 p m Tuesd:J;'
SeM:I': -600

600 p.m

Rutl:uul Free WOI Bapti\1
Salem St P~nr Ed Bamey Sllllday
Scoo , I 0 am Evenmg 7 p m
Vkdnef$r s~ I I' m
St&lt;mu\ Ba)ikt Church
Ra-.n:nswood. WV SUDdaV Scht I 10 amMotiWlg J'O~hip II am fVCllll&amp; 'pm
'W-~da'f lpm
f1nt Baptist Ch=h of Mason. WV

St•xl·l~day7pm

30

•

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Sih'.r RWI Baptist
Pasi&gt;r John S·•. anson Sullday Scmol •
!Oatn \lbrshtp ·!lam 700 pm
.W:dn-::1 y SeNces· 7 00 p.m

&amp;thlehEm .Baptist Churdt
Great Bend Route 124 ,R~1ne. OH
Pastor Su~ay Scoool q 30 am
Sullday W..elup · :J am \\hlne;da-J
Btb!eStudy· 70f'pm

The Daily Sentinel • Page ASj

www.mydailysentinel.com '

Oasis Christian F~wsltip
(Non-denomwa110nal ~Uo'»slup)
Meenlll! 1n the Mags Muklle Scrool
C&lt;tetenaPasnr Chm Stew&lt;11
10 OOam.,Noon Sunday. Informal
'Min hlp. Children'$ mm111Iy
COIIUll unity of Chrilt
Poroand-Racme Rd. Pa:tot lUll Proffitt.
Su~ay School · 9 30 am \Qlrshtp •
I0 31' am . 'We:lnesday SeMCe$ • 1 00
p.m
B~el Wo~Ulp C6tter
39782 St Rt 1 2 mtlt!s south of ToppeiS
Pla~ns. OH Non-deoom!Datwnal •. "h
Coni!mporary Pralle &amp; \IJ:mhiJI Pa:tor
Rob Baber. Assoc PEE t)t Karyn Daw
Youth Duector Betty Fulks S u~ay
ser..'lces 10 am \Qlnhip &amp; 6 pro Farruly
l.Jfe Classes. \!ted &amp; Thur n~ht Ute
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs momJDg laches •
Llfe Group al I0 Outer i.Jm1t Youth Llfe
Group on Wed ~~ from 6'30 to 8 30
V!s11 us onhne al'll'l."'' bettcwc.o~g
Ash StrEet Chwreh
398 Ash St Middleport- P&lt;£tlr Mark
Morrow Sunday School • 9 30 am,
Mormng 'MitshiJI· 10.30 am &amp;6·30 pm.
~dnesda-J SeiVICe • 6:30 p m Youth
SeNtr.e· 6 30 p m
Appe Lif~ C&lt;'!lter
"Full-Gospel Church". PastoiS Joha &amp;
Patty Wale. 603 Seoo~ A~.~: Mason. 773SOli. SeNce tJme Su~ay 1030 am.
Wlrlnelday 1 pm

R~jaiclng Life Ch=h
500 N 2nd Avt Mtdd!epo11. Pastor.
Mtke Foternan. f'EEIDt Ementlll!.u!l!nr.e
Foreman. \Qllllu!&gt;" IOVOam
Wlx!lll'Sd:rj SeM:es - 1p m

CllfQ TabErnacle Cltwreh
Chfton WVa. SllDday School· 10 am
'Mir:hlp • 7 p m Vkdnesday Sen/let 1
pm
fUll Gospel Church
of the Uring SaY ill'
Rt338. AnttqUI~;. Pa;IOr Je:se Moms.
SeNces Satnlday 2 00 p m

Sam Communily Chwreh
BaC'kofV«::tColumbta W\la om We\11118
RO&lt;d Pa~IDr Ch&lt;Ib Roush ('304) 67522$8. S!lnday School 9·30 aJn. Sunday
evcnng serVlce 7 00 ptn. B1bly Stooy
'\lib!D'!Sday S"'M:e 700 pin

Hobson Chrlstia11 r~p Cltudl
PasiDI Herschel Wlute. Sunday Schoo~
10 an. Su~y Chuteh seMct. 6 30 pm
Wlrlne:day 1 pm

Reston tim Christia• felbwlllip
9365 Hooper Road. Athens. Pastlt
l..onxue Coals. S'lDday W&gt;nhlp 1000 am.
Wlrlnesday 1 pm

Abundant Gra~
923 S ThildSt. Muldleport. Pa:tor 'lema
DaVIs, Sunday serVI~e, Hl am
Wednesday setVr::e. 7 p m

House mHmling Min.istries
St Rt. 124 Lanesville. OH
Full Gospel Cl Pas !DIS RDbert &amp; Roberta
MtiSSer. Sunday School 9 30 am, •
\QliShip 10 30 am • 7 00 pro. \lb1
SeNct700pm

faith Full~ Cltwreh
Long Bott)m. Past)! Ste·.e Reed. Su~y
Scoool • 9 30 am. '.Qlnh1p . 9 30 am
and 7 p m Vkdnesday • 7 p m. Frtday •
fellowship seNct 7 p.m

Pasnr Eddte Bao!r. Meeliltg 333
Mt!chamc Stzeet.Pomeroy. OH
SeNcte'-'!tySu~y 11·00 am

Huri!unville Community Church
Pas•or Theron Durhatt, Sunday • 9 30
a tn &lt;md 7 p .m \lb:lne;day. 7 p m
Middleport CORlmunlty Ckurdt
575 Pe&lt;II St. Mddleport. ?astn Sa!n
Andenoa. Suuday School 10 am.
E..enmg. 130 p m ~day Serii!Ce •
730pm
Faith Valley'llbemadeChu.tdt
Baley Run Road. Pa:tot Rev Emntett
Ra• s-n. Sunday Even1ng 1 p m.
ThUll day SeM:e · 1 p m
Sy~ ~1lssiln

1411 Bridgeman St Syracuse. P&lt;£tor
Rev RDy Toompson. S~ay ScOO!ll· I 0
am. E~.~:mcg - 6 p m ~dnesday SeM~
·7pm.
Hazel. Community Ch=h
Oti Rt 124. Pasnr Edsel Hart. Sunday
School· 9 30 am. \Qlrship. 10:30 am,
1 O.Op m
DyeSTill~Community Chwt'll
Sunday Scqool • 9 30 am \Qlnhlp
1030am.7pm
Morse Chapl!l Ch=h
Su~av scrool • 10 am '.IAliSiup
11
am.. 'M:dne;llay SeN~· 1 p m

fiith Gospel Ch.u.tdt

l..oiJ8 &amp;tt)m. S~ay School· &lt;1 30 a rn
Vobrsh1p • 10 45 am
Voblnesday 730 p nt

-._Jesus Ministries

Pentecostal
~tEICOSialARIIIbly

Pastlr Sl Rt 124. Racine. To!naOO Rd
Su~ay School - 10 am. Ewitng • 1
p m. \!ednt$day Sernces • 1 p m

Presbyterian
Hanis1lnrille Pnsbyteriln Chwcl!
PasiOr Rev. David Faulkner. \QliShlJl •
9 00 am Sunday
Mildl~rt Pr&lt;$byterian

Pastlt lame:. Snyder Su~ay SchoollO
am. ll.'Ot:lup :ervtee II an

Seventh-Day Adventist
Setdltlt.[lay Advatist
Mulberry H~ Rd Pomeroy. SatUiday
SeMce: Sabbath School • 2 p m.
\QlnhiJI· 3p m

Uuited Brethren
Mt Hamon UllitEd BrethNn
In Cluist Cltu.rc:h
Texo: Communtt)' 36411 Vl'lckhara Rd
Pa: nr Pei!r Marttndale Sunday Sdlool
9'30 am. \Qlnhip • 1030 am. 700
p m VMne;day Setlllres • 7 00 p m
Youth group meeting 2~ &amp; 4th Su~ays
7pm
Ed~tt United BhfirEit in Cluisl.
Stae Route 124. between Reo:!: lillie &amp;
Hockingport. Sllllday School • 10 am
Sunday ~nhip 11 00 am Wlrlnelday
Ser111ces • 7.00 p m. Pastor· M Adam
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33045 Hd~ RO&lt;d Pomeroy Pa:tor Roy
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0

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 12,

2010

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--------------~----,

A Hunger for More
In time s as challenging as these, it
may be some comfort
to you to know that
God is at lea s t as
interested in your
welJ - being as you
are. When jobs are
lo s t , when health
fails, when ones dear
to us are taken, when
our lives are rocked
by hurt, pain , or
rejection, we often
will give up on God
or we gang up on
Him.
We give up on Him ,
in the sense that we
despair of His loving
us 1ll practical way s
while we gaz e at
Him
through
the
cracked lenses of our
circumstance s .
" Pain is bctd. " we
instincti v el y be g in.
''God ha s allowed
hurt in my life." we
further
rea s on.
Therefore, " He must
not love me if He
lets bad thing s hap pen to me ," we mistakenly
conclude.
And so we become
" victims " in the vers ion of our s tory that
we have authored
and recite for ourselves.
But sometimes we
g ang up on God
instead by striving to
bully Him with a
crowd of demand s
a nd complaints. We
launch mi s siles of

consistently undere stimating Who He is.
"Moses
said
to
God, ·Suppose I go
to the Israelites and
say to them, "The
God of your fathers
has sent me to you,"
and they ask me,
"What is His name?"
Then what shall I tell
them?' God said to
Moses,
'I AM WHO I
Thorn Mollohan
AM. This is what
you are to say to the
accu s ation powered Israelites: "I AM has
by pent up frustra - sent me to you."' ...
tions and suspicions This is My name foras we strive with ever, the name by
God to do things our which I am to be
from
way .. We allow the remembered
generation
to
generadisappointments that
(Exodus 3:13thron g within our tion"'
14, 15b NJV).
hearts to riot before
He
continually
His throne, forget- reminds me that He
tin g that He does is not and never will
indeed sit upon a be just what I want
throne and not a Him to be ... unless I
folding chair in a just want what He
complaint
depart- truly is. God does
ment.
not bow to my limitPerhap s
this
1s ed understanding of
mo s tly because we what He should act ,
are habitually under- say, or do because
estimating Him. Oh, He is in His being
I don't mean under- more than I can cone s timating what He c eive in my own
c an do. While it is thinking or imaginac ertain that we can- tion and He is far
not fathom all or more in His being
e ven the tinie s t por- than I can perceive
tion of what . an on any level, intelomnipotent,
omni- lectually. emotionalscient
and ly
or spiritually.
omnipresent God can Besides , perspective
do, our primary defi- does not make realictency is that we are ty; it' simply shapes

my
c apacity
to
engage it. If I truly
hunger for God, I
want no counterfeit
that my own selfish ness would construct
for me; I want Him
as He really is.
The Lord .tells us in
Exodus 3 that His
"name is, 'I AM
WHO I AM,." What
does this mean? Just
that God is Who He
is. He is Who He is
regardless of one's
refusal to acknowledge Him as such.
He is Who He is in
spite of countless
(and . groundless)
inane theories as to
His
nature
and
attributes. He is Who
He is no matter how
many alternatives to
l:lim the world supplies us. He is Who
He is whether or not
one tries to explain
Him away. He is
Who He is even
though one believes
that we have H'im
figured out. You see,
no one can "figure
God out" because He
is infinitely greater
in being than can be
calculated,
envisioned, or believed.
Personally, I am
grateful for this reali~ation. This means
that I have an anchor
that can withstand
the
most
violent
waves the world can

throw my way. I have and peace that He
a light which guides has set aside for you
my feet no matter as you
learn
to
how tall the shadows delight in His pre
of life become. I am ence. Come to th
given a hope that no God Who has chosen •
despair can conquer to reveal Himself
and no fear can over- through the written
come. He is Who He Word uf Hi:&gt; Bible as
is though discour- He shows you what
agement may hang "amazing
grace"·
upon my shoulders truly is in the Person :
like a deadly weight of His Son, Jesus,,
and
doubts
may
flood my mind. My the Lamb of God.
Turn to Him and .
world may crumble
trust
Him. He is .
down around me, but
He is the "Rock in faithful to receive us .
Whom I take refu g e" if we come wholeheartedly to Him and
. (Psalm 18:2 NIV).
do
so with a singleTherefore, turn to
the One Who does ness of mind and ;
not lie or change His purpose. "Call upon '
mind (from 1 Samuel Me and come and '
15:29.). Come to Him pray to Me, and I
on His terms and let will listen to you. ·
Him show Himself to You will seek Me
you as more than the and find Me when :
"Big Guy upstairs," you seek Me with all ,
more than a kindly your
heart" ~
Old Man to Whom (Jeremiah 29:12-13 .
we send our wish NIV).
lists, and more. than a
(Thorn Mollohan an.
Judge
Who
sits his family have mini,
either in complacent tered in southern Ohio ,
coldness or in fiery
fury. He is so much the past 15 ? years and is .
more than words can the author of The Fairy 1
describe Him that Tale Parables. He is the 1
of Pathway
knowing God is not pastor
Community
Church and'
about just an occasiona I ·• connection" may be reached for com- '
but is instead a jour- ments or questions by
at •
ney of wonder a·nd email
delight.
Come to pastorthom@pathway- :
"
Him through faith in gallipolis.com.)
Copyright ©·2010,
His Son, Jesus, and
see the wealth of joy
Thom MoUohan.
J

Church Notebook

EWINGTON The Ewington
Church of Christ in Christian Union
will host revival services Nov. 8-13.
Rev. Randy Peters ia the guest evangelist. Services begin at 7 p.m. daily. For
information, 3S8-8184.

of Music Rob Neal will lead praise
and worship. The Adoration Dance
Team will present liturgical dance
and drama. The conference will continue at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Nov. 13.
The registration fee is $6. A banquet
will follow the Saturday session.
Tickets are $6. To register, call
Rodney Pike Church of God at 2459518.

Women's conference
at Rodney Pike COG

Choir at Crown City
Wesleyan

RODNEY - Rodney Pike Church
of God will host its 2010 Women 's
Conference on Nov. 12-13. The guest
speaker is Jaqui Smith, a national
evangelist and gifted prophetess. The
conference will kick off at 7 p.m. on
Friday, Nov. 12 with a rally.Minister

CROWN CITY - The God's Bible
School College Choir will present a
concert at 6 p.m. , Saturday, Nov. 20 at
Crown City Wesleyan Church. The
church is located at 26144 Ohio 7,
Crown City. For information. call 2566993.

Revival at Ewington

cccu

Sunday, Nov. 28. Morning worship
begins at 10:45 a.m. Afternoon worship will begin at 3 p.m. Rev Calvin
Minnis, Pastor of Corinth Baptist
Church along with the choir and con- .
gregation will be the afternoon gue'
Dinner will be served following mo
ing worship. Everyone welcome.

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

Operation Christmas
Child
GALLIPOLIS Debbie Drive
Chapel is collecting items for
Operation Christmas Child, a ministry
of Samaritan's Purse. National collection week for the at;mual project is the
third week of November. For information. call the church at 446-3800.
Information is available online at
www.samaritanspurse.org/occ.

Armstrong marks 17
years at Mt. Carmel
BIDWELL
Mt.
Carmel
Missionary Baptist Church will celebrate the 17th pastoral anniversary of
Moderator, Rev Gene A. Armstrong on

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community

BT·eathirlg
Lesso1ts

And tlze Lot d God

if

fonn~d man
the
d ust of tlz~ gt ound,

and b-reathed into his
nostrils the bn:ath of
lif~. and the man
be cam~ a lit.Jing being.
NewKJ.V.
Genesis 2 : 7

•

How much of ycuT 1Jfe JS C&lt;)nsumed
With worrymg about the future or
Tegrettir1g the past? Many 00' us
vrorry excesgJvely about thmgs
which"""' have no control ov'-"r, smre
we cannot ..,hange the past, and mc&gt;st
1?1 our fears of the fu tun: U""""r come
to pass. T he T"&amp;l problem with
Sl'ending time worryjng aho•tt
tomon;cw or n nnmating about the
pa~t is that it sp oils our enJoyment of
the present moment. A g •.:&gt;od way to
bring c&gt;ur Soc us to th" pTesent
moment is to concentrat.. &lt;m our
breathmg-, and simply en' O)' the
sheer sensauon of bre&lt;tthinl;i. m and
breathmg out. o~t mto a
wmfortabl ... pogJtlon, eJth"'r s1ttmg
or lymg dowr, and focu. ?n your
breatlunf:, making a conscJous eff&lt;'~Tt
·~ make Jt slow, rdaxd, and deep.
Breathe m deeply and sloyvly and
ti1en bTeathe out j\tst as slowly. Our
breath 1s truly our life and foc u&lt;-mg
0 r. br,.,athmg 1s o way to savQr that
.:ife. J UJtfocus on the here and U('&gt;W
oobreat}..mg, relaxmg and enJovmg
the moment. P..nd, thank God for the
gift oflife a.."'d the p resent mom ent,
filled WlUl the simple plea,me of JUSt
breathmg in and bTe~thing out a
tru:y dJVUI"' act.

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
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--·-~----_...--~--------------

PageA7_

LY
How will the news be taken?
Holiness or •
craz1ness -Part 4
a

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 12,

I

I do not like it when the
d leads me to bare my
. But, as usual, there
always an applicable
spiritual truth for all to
consider.
The problem has to do
with my driving record
for this year. What complicates matters is th,'lt I
have not informed my
family about it. However,
they will most certainly
know once they read this
week's article . In due
course. I will find out
from them how the news
was taken. They probably will direct various
forms of laughter and
contempt. I am braced
for what they dish out.
You see, I have always
reacted sternly whenever
either of them has
incurred traffic violations
uselessly. Sometimes it
took a while befW'e 1
Andout about their driW g miscues . But, I
never took the news easily in a fatherly, self·right·
eous stance, and. at
times, I still find occasion to goad them about
those incidents.
Once, Jeshua was
caught for speeding in
Maryland. He complicated circumstances for
himself in that he told his
mother, and neither told
me. On top of that,
Jeshua failed to dispense
with the ticket. When 1

f.

Ron Branch
was cleaning out the car
two weeks later. I found
it surreptitiously stuffed
down between the seals. I
was not a happy camper
at the Branch house
about the citation or their
mother/son cover-up!
The truth of the matter
is that I have recently
been stopped for speeding myself. On Tuesday.
an Ohio State Patrolman
stopped me on Route 7
about two miles from the
Routes 50 and 7 split at
Coolville, Ohio. Back in
f\ugust. I was stopped by
a West Virginia State
Patrolman on Route 50
just outside Clarksburg,
WV. At this point in her
reading, Terry is probably agape. My boys are
probably
formulating
their ridicule as they get
on line to fire off an email.
I rue the citations and
this confession about
them primarily for the

above reasons. After hav- point~d, Rarticularly after
ing taken for years rigid having heard me preach
stand concerning their long and hard about the
driving lapses, I know 'importance of distinctly
rather well how each will living the Christian printake the news now that ciples for the Lord's
they know their family honor
and
glory.
patriarch has also faile&lt;i Likewise, their disapin ·observing the traftic pointment would grieve
speed laws.
me.
This. of course, leads
I have long emphasized
us to a vital point to con· to find reasons to not
sider. Like all, I am con- commit grievous sin. My
fronted daily with ways family and church family
in which I could fail spir· and how they would take
itually through the com- the news constitute reamitting of grievous sin. sons that help me steer
The major reason that clear from failing in the
keeps me checked con· expectations of God.
cerns how it will hinder
Our moral lifestyle arid
4my relationship with actions oh, most certainGod. But, there are other ly, affect those around us.
reasons, too.
Those who live just unto
One has to do with my themselves without this
family. How would they acknowledgement leave
take the news if they a legacy of emotional and
found out that I had com- spilitual hurt and harm
mitted grievous sin'? I on others. We are too
already know they would interconnected in life to
be very disappointed to think that what we do
say the least, particularly does not affect others.
after having heard me Recalling the Bible story
give strong instructions of David and Bathsheba
through the years about ought to be a compelling
the importance of per- remembrance.
sonal moral integrity.
There is a positive note
Their
disappointment about my confession on
which to end, however.
would grieve me.
Another has to do with In both incidents, I only
my church family. How received warning tickets.
would they take the news Perhaps that will mitigate
if they found out that my family's responses.
their pastor had commit·
(Rev. Ron Branch is
ted grievous sin? They. pastor of Faith Baptist
too, would be very disap· Church in Mason, WVa.)

God's Word: SuStaining, unchanging
Earlier today I attended
a meeting with other
bers of the local
y: no big deal; we
ogether and chew the
fat once a month. Today's •
- meeting started with
some
"word-association." Our host · would
speak a word, and we
responded with its exact
opposite.
Thomas Johnsoo
Believe it or not, the
life of a minister isn't
• always so stimulating. they no longer come in
Usually we have to find just your standard-issue,
ways to amuse ourselves! pig-skin brown as was
Not so. some of my the case when I was my
wonderful parishioners. daughter's age.
They like to harass me ' You want brown? They
for having attended Penn have it. Want a smaller
State, and derive an size,
but
nothing
almost perverse pleasure ''petite''? "Pee-wee" size.
in keeping me informed perhaps? Wal-Mart's the
about Penn State foot- place. Oh, by the way ball. Should Penn State there's one for every budlose a game. that's topic get.
#1 the following Sunday!
Today's footballs come
While I never played in bright red and black,
school or college blue and white, neon
•
ball, I am very famil- green and black. and who
iar with what a football is knows
what
all!
and looks like. The other Depending upon how
night, however, coortesy into "touchy-feely'' you
of the sports department are, today's footballs can
at our local Wal-Mart, I also be obtained with a
learned a few things softer outer surface about footballs I never less pain on impact, so to
knew before.
speak.
Our older daughter is
I bought twoof the colaway at college, and ored
variety.
Our
recently she texted my younger daughter still
wife to ask how much a lives at home with us,
football costs. She and and she asked me to get
her girlfriend wanted to her one, too. I left Walhave one to throw Mart with them and, miraround; thus the ques- acle of miracles, both
tion.
met with my wife's and
approval!
Now, there are foot- daughter's
balls - and then there (Dare I imagine mine
are footballs! Essentially was
an
"inspired"
the shape is the same, but choice'?)

Some of you wonder
where I'm going with
this. so I'll tell you I want
to :say a bit more about
the Bible - which was
the gist of my last article.
Therein I said God's
Word is our one, true
constant. and it comes in
even mo;e versions than
there are colors of footballs!
I'm intrigued by the
many religions in our
world today, and always
want to learn more about
them. To say the very
least, these other religions are always "the
competition'' and, sometimes, the opposition overtly so. too.
Aside from Judaism,
which is the basis for the
Christian faith (think:
herJ udeo-Christian
itage). don't expect me to
ever endorse any other
religion. I am compelled
to affirm Christianity for
what it is - i.e., the
unique completion of
Old Testament Judaism.
Speaking of religion,
the nightly news isn't
inclined to report on what
happening
to
is
Christians throughout the
world, because the secular media couldn't care
less. Christians in the
Middle East and elsewhere routinely are persecuted, and even executed! Dedicated followers
of Allah (Muslims) are
ob.sessed with doing so,
as are de\•otees of some
other religions.
The Muslims refer to
Jews and Christians alike
as "people of the book,"

referring to The Bible.
They. on t he other hand ·
are guided by their own
" hoi)· book.'' the Koran.
and it is the rare Muslim
who deviates from what
this book advocates and
teaches.
Contrast the strict
adherence of Muslims to
the Koran with people
I've encountered who
rofess to be Christians,
P
yet play fast-and-loose
with the Word of God as
if it was just another,
every-day "disposable"
product. Any passage of
the Bible which doesn't
conform to their mind-set
tends to be ignored, so
infatuated are they with
their own, enlightened
opinions.
How sad and ironic
that they would do so.
because God's Word is
meant · to sustain us
against the influence of
the world in which we
live, and the selfish !
thoughts we think - all
such thinas being in contlict with the good and
the love of God. God has
.
set forth His Word to pr:serve and pr?tect us, His
beloved ch_Ildren; who
are we to th1nk we know
better than Him?!?
God's Word is no football to be played with.
Pass it around share it YES! Read it diligently
and lovingly _ YES!
But ignore it or deny its
relevance - GOD FORBID!
(Re~·. Thomas Johnson
is pastor of Trinity
Church in Pomeroy,
Ohio.)

2 010

•

Last week we dealt
with
the
top
of
tattooing. From a biblical
perspectiv.e, is God in
favor of, or does God
approve of tattooing our
physical bodies, or not? I
think that this is one subject that must be dealt
with in our Christian
communities due to the
fact that such trend is
very expressive in this
day and age. Regardless
of its expressiveness, is it
ok to tattoo our bodies in
the context of holiness?
Everyone has a different opinion about tattooing and body piercing but
nobody wants to address
it from a biblical perspective. Consequently, the
world is feeling the judgment from the church;
meanwhile, the church
does not know what to do
about
it,
really.
Furthermore, let it be on
the record that the biblical position on tattooing
does not provide room
for criticism or false
judgment.
There are a couple of
issues to be understood in
order to comprehend the
validity
of
O.T.
Scriptures in relationship
to its application in our
21st century. It is important to know that the reason so many people have
so much trouble understanding and applying
scriptures is very fundamental. The Bible is a
Kingdom book and it
must be understood and
applied from a Kingdom
perspective, not from a
'democratic' perspective.
In other words, it is not
up for debate, voted on or
weather our agreement
with it will fulfill its
laws. Therefore, it is
vitally important to
understand biblical kingdom system and protocol
in order to make the laws
of God applicable correctly. Otherwise, we run
the chance of having a
misunderstanding of the
scriptures and expect the
bible to be what the book
was not intended to be or
vise versa.
Having said that, let's .
also keep in mind that
there were several laws
in the Old Covenant but
the most popular and
most vital were the big
three: 'rhe Sacrificial
Law. The Moral Law and
the Civil Laws of God.
The only Jaw Jesus finished and replaced was
the Sacrificial Law, as
the Sacrificed Lamb. The
other two laws are still
very much intact. Funny
how most of us can apply
and abide by much of the
Levi.tica_l law, such as
form.catlon.
adultery,
steahng, etc., and also the
Ten Comma~dments, but
h~ve a h~rd time to determme
If
the
Old
Testament laws
are
applicable for today,
assuming and presuming
that Jesus did away with
the law. Truth be known,
Jesus did not do away
with the law - instead,
He fulfilled the law and
became our s~crificed
lamb. But He shll aske~
us to keep the M?r~l La\\
as well as the Civil Law
(found in the Gospels).
With this in mmd, we
must have a clear understanding us to the only
scripture that deals with
tattooing in Leviticus

Alex Colon
19:28. "Never slash your
body to mourn the dead,
and never get a tattoo. I ·
am the Lord."
This scripture deals •
with a lot of historical ·
events and religious cus- ·
toms of the day, particular of the pagans of that .
time. I won't go into all ·
the research therein, but •
suffice it to say that what
God is dealing with here
is part of both the Moral
and the Civil Law of
God. This verse deals
with the care of the
Temple of God-our physical bodies (1 Cor. 3: 16,
17).
In our day and age, tattooing is a decorative
means of self expression
and personal decoration.
But in God's agenda, tattoomg deals with slavery
and idolatry. And since
God, through His Son
Jesus Christ, has set us
free from the curse of the
law of slavery to sin,
desiring that we walk in:
accordance to such freedom (Gal.3: 1), therefore,
tattooing is not ok with
God, according to His
book.
On the other hand, and
from a personal note,
why would anybody
want to participate on
something that deals with
slavery and idol worship
even if it looks cool?
Believers are God's
temple where the Holy
Spirit lives and God does
not promote himself with
slavery marks when His
Temple is holy. God is
holy, and them that worship Him must worship
Him in spirit and in truth.
However, just because
a person has received a
tattoo mark, does not •
mean they are loss forever nor are they non-qualified from coming to
Christ or be called and
used of God because of
their tattoos. Tattoos do
not stand in the way of
the blood of Christ.
Therefore. forgiveness of
heart. and the washing of
the blood makes the
enti,re person clean. After
all, God is more concerned about the heart of
the temple, than the outside of the temple: however, the outward appearance of the temple reveals
the true message and the
condition (holiness) of
the inside of the temple.
Much could be discussed
about this subject, but let us
keep in mind, that God
loves every person. and we
are all still equal in the sight
of God. He wants nothing
but His best for us and all
He wants from us in return
is our best - our entire
being, body. soul(mind,
will and emotions) and
spirit.
Make it your best Day!
(Rev.
Alex Colon
Lighthouse Assembly of
God in Gallipolis, Ohio.
at
Online
www.lagohio.org.)

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(TAX YEAR 2009)

The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County Treasurer of Meigs County, with the taxes, assessments, interest,and penalties ,charged thereupon
agreable to law,and contained and described in the following lists.

•
J ,

0100136000
0100631000
0100632000
0 300068000

STILL CARL &amp;/OR PAULINE
ROSS SIMANIA
ROSS SIMANIA
PARKER LESTER L II

0300105000
0300138000
03003 28002
0300451000
0 300716004
0300933000
0300939004
0400028002

MARKWORTH AMY
KING NANCY J
BAILEY ROY LEE &amp;/OR CRYSTAL J
GILLILAN GEORGE M &amp; LINDA L
DILLARD MARK EDWARD &amp;/OR MARY
SELBE E JOHN F &amp;/OR SHERRY A
NOTIINGHAM JASON &amp;/OR CHRISTINA
WHOBREY LARRY JR &amp;/OR JEAN

0400037000
0 50 0105001
050 0255000
0500326000
0500432000
0500474000
0500501002

ROUSH VICTOR WAYN E &amp; LOUELLA TRUSTE,E
JEWELL TERRY L &amp;/OR CRYSTAL L
GASTON JOSEPH A &amp;/OR PAM ELA A
HESS ALBERT EUGE NE &amp; HESS GEORGE WILLIAM
JO RDAN DAN L
KIN G RO BI N M
MOHR CHARLES &amp;/OR SHAWN A

0500730001
0500736001
0600094000
0700801000
0800061000
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0800242000
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0800414004
0800419000
0800432000
0800785009
0800785011

ROBB WALTER JAMES III &amp;/OR MARS HA MARIE
ASHCRAFT ALISA ANN
COOPER RANDAL A &amp;/OR DORINDA F
SMITH ROY R
MEADOWS RUSSELL E &amp; LAWSON ROBERT F
KELLEY MARY A
GLOECKNER DAVID ERWif\J &amp;/OR SALLY
GLOECKNER DAVID ERWIN &amp;/OR SALLY A
PATIERSON LARRY &amp;/OR SANDRA
LAWSON ROBERT LEE
KIRK JOHN S &amp;/OR CONNIE G
BLANKENSHIP ARNOLD &amp;/OR DOROTHY
EPLING BYRON
JARRELL JOEY L &amp;/OR ASHLI C
THOMAS DEBRA &amp; LEWIS KENNETH
BARCUS RICHARD L &amp;/OR MOLLY J

0900020000
0900090004
0900229015
0900242001
0900554001
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0900915000
0901034000
0901199000
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0901479002
1000020014
1000222001
1000246000
1000311000
1000388000
1000471002
1000732000
1100127000
1100157000

70A LOT119 T4N R11W SEC19 ALL 57 A EX: lOA EX:l.OOA
CLINE EVERETIE LEE
SEC 30 T4N R11W 6.054A OUT OF 22.306A
GILBRIDE RICHARD J JR &amp;/OR BARBARA A
30A LOT 120 T3N R11W BUCKLEY 2ND ADD LOT9
DEJOHN DANTE A
SEC23 T4N R11W NE CORNER 1.00A OUT OF 17.82A
SI11ITH JAI11ES M &amp;/OR MAYNARD AMANDA
PETERSON BOB F
SEC34 FRAC36 T4N R11W 1.967A OUT OF 30.07A PRT OF LOT7
BARBER WILLIAM R J R &amp;/OR SARAH J
100A LOT103 T4N R11W SW COR S OF RD EX: 1.25A
WEBSTER ROBERT A &amp;/OR SUE M
100A LOT127 T3&amp;4N R11W SEC11-13 18 S 1/2 OF 127 16.836A EX 1.827A
BISHOP VERONICA R PULLINS
SEC30 T3N R11W N PRT OF 80A Nl/2 OF NW1/4 V306 P187
BISSELL BRUCE H &amp;/OR ~·JELODIE D
SEC30 T3N R11W NEl/4 PARCEL 1
GREGORY GARY
SEC35 T4N R11W 11UD OF SPT OF SW1/4 EX 5.013 EX3. SOA EX2A EX20A
PERSONS DENNIS A &amp;/OR PAMELA V
SEC36 T3 R11 W 2.6271A OUT OF 7.9992A
COLLINS KEITH A &amp;/OR 1-IARJORIE L
SEC35 T4N R12W 3.283A OUT OF 219.925A LOT13
BARTEE TIIIIOTHY S &amp;/OR TERRI L
SEC14&amp;15 FRAC1 T4N R12W Wl/2 OF Nl/2 1.4A OUT OF 69.5A
HENSLEY GREGORY A
SECS T4N R12 ~1CCUNE 1ST ADDN LOT 119/SSXS 1/2 RODS ~110
KELLEY JMIES M
SEC15 FRAC6 T4N R12 l'viiD ON N LINE
BAILEY LENA &amp; CHARLES
SEC4 T4N R12W NW OF SWi/4
LAMBERT ROBERT A SR &amp;/OR KATHI
SEC 6 T4N R12W OUT OF 28.655A .904A
WATSON GERALD M
SEC16 T4N R12 N PRT OF SEi/4 EX .27 A NE PRT
HENDRICKS WILLIAM TRAVIS &amp;/OR BLACKWELL AMBER SEC3 T6N R14W MID ON NE PT EX 1/2A SW
VANII'IATRE BETTY SUE
SEC1 T6N R14W N PART OF 22.50A W PART OF 59A

''

'.

SEC17 T3N R13W S OF JONES 173A V305 P423
FRAC25 T3N SECT . 20 SW COR. EX. SCHOOL LOT
FRAC19 T3N R13W SECT. 20 WEND EX. 12 3/4A N
FRAC35 LOT9 T3N R12W LT9 BAUMS 1ST SUB 105.25' PLUS
11.48X3X89.85X138.7
SEC3 T3N R12W 1.042A OUT OF 3A
SEC4 T2N R13W 1A OUT OF 51.93A LOT 6 BALL'S SUB
SEC13 T4N R12W 0.54A OUT OF 2.80A
SEC32 T4N R12W SA OUT OF SECOR. OF 52A V269 P545
SEC6 T2N R13W N PRT OF 57A .991AOUT OF 11.69A V321 P603
SEC24 T3 N R12W BLOCK 1 ROUTE 248 E PT EX 10' STRIP E &amp; 15' W SIDE
SEC7 T4N R12W 1.6386A OUT OF 44.648A
FRAC4 T2N R13W SE COR OF LOT # 3 FAIRVIEW HGTS SUB OUT OF
104.482A V 315 P009
SEC11 T2N R13 W W PART OF 97 A
SEC24 T9 N R15W Wi/2 OF NE1/4 EX 12A S OF RD
SEC 18 T9 N R15W SW CORNER 2.493A OUT OF 32.247 A V291 P831
SEC17 T9 N R15W N PRT OF SE1/4 EX 5-1/2A
SEC26 T9 N R15W 5. 7 68 OUT OF 76A V289 P131
SEC29 T9 N R15 N CENT PT OF SE1/4 2.03 1A OUT OF 10.50A
SEC29 T9 R15 N OF TH E SWl/ 4 OF NW1/ 4 OF SWl/ 4 6. 09 4A OUT OF 48
ex:L058a
SEC16 T9N R15W E PRT OF SE PRT OF NWl/ 4 .53A OUT OF 18.29
SEC26 T9N R15W NE1/ 4 OF NE1/4 4.25A OUT OF 42.00A
SEC28 T3N R11 W S PART OF SWl/4
SEC17 100A LOT170 T2N R11W UNO 2/3 OF 100A
SEC16 T1N R12W .25A OF 4A LOT SW SIDE OF lOA LOT
SEC16 T1N R12W STRIP 250'X86'X190'X58'
100A LOT220 T1N R11W W PART OF ALL E SAYRE LINE V266 P67
49A LOT256&amp;254 T1N R.12W 29A E END LOTS 254-256 W END LOT 255
100A LOT247 T1N R12W LOT 19 ON ROAD JOINING VILLAGE V27 P397
160A LOT1221 T2N R12W NW PRT OF 25.83A
160A LOT 1188 T2N R11W L468A OUT OF 8.00A
iOOA LOT220&amp;221 T1N R11W .9992A &amp; .0008A V3 P737
SEC26 T2N R11 W W SIDE 1 1/2 &amp; . 50 TRACT
100A LOT271 T2N R12W ON N LINE E OF RD EX COAL
100A LOT228 T1N R11W 13.907A OUT OF 87.117A PRT OF LOT 20
100A LOT228 T1N R11W 9.795A OUT OF 87.117A PRT OF LOT 22

633. 10
710.37
600.53
1,404.00
1,177.36
1,583 23
71 5.81
1,552. 78
2,033.66
580.42
638 .42
1,279.91
906.21
1,001.28
1,325. 46
623.67
511. 15
655.54
705.56
1,274 72
548 10
708.13
697.39
722.53
654 66
1,543.22
1,274 01
630 72
1,172 93
870 85
641.36
748.36
948 65
519.25
739.97
5.23 90
3,298 70
564 00
1,139 83
1,0?1 63
789 25
688 94
671 68
1,316 49
582 77
1143 82
583 67
1,297 69
580 76
976.92
759.96
657 59
597 38
950 16
694.09

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1100172000
1100198000
1100289000
1100453000
1100519000
1100694000

COLEMAN JERRY l
JUSTIS JACQUELINE &amp;/OR BOGGS BARTHOLOMEW S
FOLDEN CHARLES MARVIN
KEESEE JAMES E II
METHENEY MATTHEW A
MATTHEWS DAVID D &amp;/OR MAXINE

1100735000
1101157000
1101254000
1200128000
1200232000
1200316000
1200389000
1300283000
1300505006
1300537000
1300580000
1300709000
1300868000

KAUFF WILLIAM E &amp;/OR JENNIE M
JACKS GERALD G &amp; JOANN l
LEE GREGORY K
BOGGS MICHAEL D
FIELDS EARL R &amp;/OR MARTEENA D
MCDANIEL DWAINE K
TAYLORJAMES R&amp;/OR VICKI
HART DALE l &amp;/OR SALLY
JUSTICE MATTHEW ALAN &amp;/OR AMANDA SUE
HEMPHILL BETTY LOU
SHULTZ DONALD R &amp; ERNESTINE K
TACKETT TIMOTHY CARL &amp;/OR JUNE
SHAFFER GLEN

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1400916001
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1401152002
1401351009
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1401617001
1500012000
1500123000
1500127000
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1500235000
1500401000
.1500431000
1500458000
1500478000
1506671000
1500783000

INGELS JAMES R JR &amp;/OR DEBRA l
YOUNG CLAIRCY &amp;/OR LARRY W
HYSELL WILLIAM D
EURELL EDWARD &amp;/OR DONNA
PERKINS JAMES W &amp;/OR JUDITH L
SMITH MATTHEW &amp;/OR LISA
MITCHELL ERIC R &amp;/OR CONNIE l
SMITH GREGORY &amp;/OR VICKI
BURKE WILBUR T &amp;/OR DEBRA K
RIDDLE GROVER l &amp;/OR PRISCILLA R
HEIGHTON DAVID
BROOKS SHARLENE MAE &amp;/OR TROY
DILLARD DAVID
ACREE DAVID A &amp; LINDA
HAYES CHARLES E JR
HALL TIMOTHY M &amp;/OR CARA J
BIRCHFIELD MARY l &amp;/OR BIRCHFIELD DEWEY R
CARSEY JACK W
CARPENTER RANDALL R &amp;/OR PEGGY ANN
NEFF ANDREW W
DOWDEN JOYCE J
CARD PAUL
HERMAN RICHARD ALLEN ETAL
JOHNSON CARROLL W

1501306000
-1501481000
1501688000
1501689000
1501968000

LANDERS TAMMY J
CARSEY JACK W
FULTZ JOHN MARCUS
FULTZ JOHN MARCUS
DOWLER DAVID

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1600022000
1600049000
1600057000

MCQUAID ANGELA
PEARSON WESLEY R &amp;/OR CHLOEANNA l
BARNHART WILLIAM &amp;/OR BRENDA S

J

1600165000
1600640000
1600802000
1600962000
1600968000
-1601060000
1601341000
1602024000
1602364000

NORWOOD ROBERT
FISH RHONDA
ALESHIRE WILLIAM H &amp;/OR PAMELA l
KLEIN ROBERT EUGENE
BUCHANAN HENRY R
VIDAL HOWARD ANDREW II
BAER EDWARD T &amp;/OR PATRICIA D
INGELS JAM ES R J R
POMEROY BOWLING CO THE

1602455000
1602470000

RIFFLE RICHARDS ETAL
BUTCHER LARRY

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i•

FRACS T6N R14W 2.022A OUT OF 52.88A
SEC2 T6N R14W 1.50A OF NW COR. OF 3.85AALSO 12'WD RTOFWAY
SEC33 T6N R14W W PART OF 42A SW OF NWl/4 V159 P285
SEC13 T6N R14W N OF MID ONE LINE 6.14A NEW SURVEY V333 P357
SEC! T6N R14W NE OF JESS GARDNER EST EX LOT &amp; COAL
SEC18 T6N R14W SECOR EX : 40A E 71.602A EX: 44.6111A EX:3.7372A
V279 P827
FRAC4 T6N R14W CLAIR-MAR ESTATES
SEC16 T6N R14W ON N LINE EX: 20A N OF E PRT 40A OF 122.32W
SEC8 T6N R14W 1.10A OUT OF 90.82A
SEC8 T6N R14W LOT 17 RAWLINGS ADD
FRAC7 T6N R14W 14 50' FRNTG ON ST RD 124 E SIDE 83A W43.70A
SEC8 T6N R14W LOT 12
FRAC7 T6N R14W SECT 14 (262) W OF HUNTER .28A 99X110
SEC6 T7N R15W NE OF SWl/4 EX: #4 VEIN COAL Vl P521
SEC13 T8N R15W 3.00A OUT OF 54.02A
SEC11 T8N R15W S1/2 EX: #4 VEIN COAL V278 P71
SEC! T8N R15W S OF Nl/2 OF NEl/4 EX: #4 VEIN LN 67.042A
SEC25 T8N R15W W1/2 OF NW1/4 OF NWl/4 EX: #4 VEIN COAL
SEC23 T8N R15W TRACT #21
SEC17 T2N R13W NE OF NE1/4 OF SE1/4 OF SEC17
SEC8 T2N R13W
SEC31 T2N R13W 1.30A OUT OF 66.59A NEAR MID Nl/2 OF N LINE
FRAC18 T2N R13W .1478A OUT OF l .OOA
SEC3 T2N R12W 5A OUT OF 12.71A
SEC32 T2N R13W NW EX: lOA E EX: COAL
SEC25 T2N R13W OF 52.98A MID. N LINE EX: COAL .53A .02A
SEC31 T2N R13W 3.337A OUT OF 17.55A V31 P839
SEC3 T2N R13W LOTS EX: 0.035A
SEC36 T2N R13W SW PRT OF SEl/4 All W OF RD OF 157A TR EX9.30A
SEC24 T1 R13 0.691A OUT OF 1.114A EX: 0.32A
FRAC33 T2N R13W MID OF S 1/3 OF RD EX: COAL EX: 1.50A
FRAC33 T2N R13W 2.0158A OUT OF 3.25A
SEC29 TiN R13W LOT 7 GOEGLEIN SUBDIVISION 110'X100' V272 P671
64A LOT313 T1N R13W LOT 1 HOBART ADD
100A LOT310 T1N R13W LOT 17
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT (77) #77
100A LOT311 T1N R13W LOT 43 36' WEND V26 P847
100A LOT311 T1N R13W DIV JONES EST 22 W SIDE V332 P37
64A LOT313 T1N R13W LOT (64) BEHAN ADD NW 1/4 33X96'
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT DIV JONES EST 1 - EX 35. 7' NE COR
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT (1) JONES ADD 1
100A LOT310 T1N R13W LOT 309 .33A N PART 3.78A .33A
SEC29 T1N R13W LOT SECT 29 ON RIVER BELOW PAGE STRET .87A
.2743A
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT 87 PALMER'S 1ST EX 6' N SIDE V20 P045
SEC29 TiN R13W LOT 3 GOEGLEIN SUBDIV. 110'X100' V321 P289
100A LOT311 T1N R13W LOT 23 BEHAN ADD 25' N SIDE
100A LOT311 T1N R13W LOT 23 Sl/2
SEC29 T1N R13W SECT 29 (640) 119.21A N OF LEADING CR W OF 1.36A
EX:0 .344A V314 P195
100A LOT T2N R13W LOT 5 POM . TERR.
160A LOT T2N R13W LINCOLN HEIGHTS ADD .
100A LOT303 T2N R13W EX.10' STRIP FRONTAGE &amp; GOIN BACK TO OBRIEN
LOT V292 P145
100A LOT306 T1N R13W LOT 111
SEC8 T2N R13W S PART EX LANDING 66' REAR X 130' DEPT
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 36-37 N END
SEC8 T2N R13W LOT 258 SUB 97
100- 303 T2N R13W POM TERR EX STRIP N
FRAC10 T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
FRAC10 T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 95 35' FRONT X 85' V334 P599
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 135 EX. W 10' ALSO LAND BET. 135 TO CLIFF V166
PS21
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 144 W 30' ADJOINING LOT 145
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 24 DABNEY ADD

816.96
1,190.02
757.77
1,792.35
1,087 02
1,086 .00
1,323 .51
533 01
584.99
523.01
846 .94
545 55
591.62
606.12
1,835.47
829 .60
1,384.53
613.28
520.86
1,052.81
609.87
526.13
839.48
910.05
872 .44
1,459 .71
551 .61
1,044.12
525.88
887.52
784.41
607.34
1.058.38
1,504.12
2,413.1 7
959 .20
566.82
514.25
891 .01
77544
806.52
523.24
738 .83
647 77
520.92
860 66
893 .63
1,019 72
856 15
520.34
913.54
7,505 .12
899 66
571 62
797 04
643 02
763 67
843. 15
1,067 41
514.57
838 21
635.94

•

�.

•

20
20

1100194MOO
1301010MOO
1301089MOO
1301135MOO
1400101MOO
1400193MOO
1400234MOO
1400413MOO
1401080MOO
1401112MOO
1500207MOO
1501067MOO
1600002MOO
1601053MOO
1700058MOO
1700127MOO
1700201MOO
1701025MOO
1701151MOO
1701154MOO
1800126MOO
1801066MOO
1801092MOO

RAMSBURG RICHARD &amp; CAROL
SAVAGE DONALD E &amp; LORELEI
MCGHEE MICHAEL &amp; KATRINA
MCKINNEY DENNIS
OLIAN JENNIE
CARUTHERS TRENA
NEECE ROY ROGERS &amp; DONNA
FREEMAN PEGGY
SELLERS LARRY
ARMS ZACHARY L
WALLACE JESSICA N &amp; CALE NANCY WROS
HARRIS JAMES &amp; LULA
BELL SANDRA
MCGINNIS SHARON M
ROBERTS DENZIL L &amp; MILDRED
SWANSON RONDA &amp; DAVID WROS
KING EDWARD
BUTCHER/HIRE BILLIE JO
KENNEDY MARQUITA J
HOPE RONALD A
JUSTIS WILLIAM
LEMLEY JAMES R &amp; DEANNA F
WERRY RANDY

1973
1999
1995
1995
1973
1955
1974
1963
2000
2007
1995
2001
1961
1998
1970
1973
1977
1989
1988
2007
1970
2003
2004

2000088MOO
2001017MOO

t:'ITCHELL GREG
OLIVER DANTE

1975
2000 REDMAN

Grand Total for 46 parcels:

*

•

Under delin"-'ent tax contract

KIRKWOOD
OAKWOOD
LIBERTY
MARIETTA
PONTIAC
SHEFFIELD
VINDALE
SKYLINE
GILES
CLAYTON
FLEETWOOD
ELCONA
OAKWOOD
BUDDY
ROCKWOOD
FREEDOM
CLAYTON HOMES I
STERLING
BUDDY

GC65T3KOA
354
WEX

260SE21 LAS 3868 M

woo
MV
ANNIVERSARY

1015D
UK
ST1-211
PLEASANT VIEW
50X12
RNM328001

CLAYTON

NM

543 .95
565.47
~31..51

1,.450.42
551 .82
543.95
543.95
543.95
679 :88
1,129 88
66536
546 .97
534.51
552.27
543.95
543 .95
. 512.53
604.24
556 .32
1,457.79
543.95
1,340.24
- 500.00

543.95
557.11
32,030.29

"

)

�*"
, 1100194MOO
, '1301010MOO

RAMSBURG RICHARD&amp;. CAROL
SAV/VJE DONALD E &amp;. LORELEI
MCGHEE MICHAEL&amp;. KATRINA

' 1301089MOO
- 130113511f00
(400101MOO
I400193MOO
1400234MOO
1400413MOO
-- -14Q1080MOO
. ·-··

..

1401112r-t00
150&amp;207MOO
1S01067MOO
16o0002MOO

~:16&lt;H053MOO
1700058MOO
'. ~700127Mbo

.-:

17002()1MOO
1701025MOO
, '., , 1101151MOO
,- , t7011.54MOO
1800126MOO
1801066MOO
1001Q92MOO

2000088MOO

2001017MOO

'

MCKINNEY DENNIS
OLIAN JENNIE
CARUTHERS TRENA
NEECE ROY ROGERS &amp;. DONNA
FREEMAN PEGGY
SELLERS LARRY
ARMS ZACHARY L
WALLACE JESSICA N &amp;. CALE NANCY WROS
HARRIS JAMES &amp;. LULA
BELL SANDRA
MCGINNIS SHARON M
ROBERTS DENZIL L &amp;. MILDRED
SWANSON RONDA&amp;. DAVID WROS
KING EDWARD

1973 KIRKWOOD
1999 OAKWOOD
1995 LIBERTY
1995
1973 MARIETTA
1955 PONTIAC
1974 SHEFFIELD
1963 VINDALE
2000
2007
1995
2001
1961
1998
1970
1973
1977
1989

SKYLINE
GlLES
CLAYTON
FLEETWOOD
ELCONA
OAKWOOD
BUDDY
ROCKWOOD
FREEDOM
CLAYTON HOMES I

BUTCHER/HIRE BILLIE JO
KENNEDY MARQUITA J
HOPE RONALD A
JUSTIS WILLIAM
LEMLEY JAMES R &amp;. DEANNA F
WERRY RANDY

1988 STERLING
2007
1970 BUDDY
2003
2004 CLAYTO N

MITCHELL GREG
OLIVER DANTE

1975
2000

Grand Total for 46 parcels:

REDMAN

GC65T3KOA
354
WEX

260SE21 LAS3868M

543,95
565A7
63t.
1,450.
551.82
543,95
543,95
543 .95

woo

'
67988
1,129 88

MV
ANNIVERSARY

6q5 36
546,97
534,51
552 .27
543 .95
543 .95
512 ,53
604.24
556,32
1.457 79
543,95
1,340,24
500,00

1 015D
UK
ST 1-211
PLEASANT VIEW
50X12
RNM328001

NM

'

543.95
557. 11

32,030,29

* Under delinquent tax contrac t

•

�•

•

-

Q

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Braylon returns to Cleveland, Page 83
Pryor talks senior season, Page 83

PORTS

•

Friday, November 12,2010

LocAL SclmDULE.

POMEROY - A schedule of upconong
hogh school varSJiy spor11ng events 1n the
Ohoo Valley Publlshmg c011erago aroa
on\/Qivong teams from Mason. Galf1a and
Me~gs cooniiQS
Erl9~

November
Football

1~

WV S SA'- Class AA plil}tffl;

(9) Roane County at (8) Point
Pleasant. 7 30 p.m.

SB_turd!\Y. NQYtlllll&gt;~
Football
J;VS5AC Cl&lt;= A pla}dfu

(16) Sf. Marys vs (1) Wahama at
Point Pleasant JSHS. 7:30 p.m.

AII-MSC Team
1 decorated with
plenty of Red

r

MQrrissey

I

named MSC
Coach of Year

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- University of Rio
a:;rande head men s so&lt;:•
er
&lt;:oach
S&lt;:ott
Morrissey was named
the
Mid-South
&lt;::onference Coach of
the Year· in an awards
ceremony held at the
University
of
Rio
Da\ is
Grande s
Sarah Hawley/file photo
University Center on
Wahama's
Anthony
Grimm
(35),
Ryan
Lee
(15),
and
Isaac
Lee
(5)
lead
the
White
Falcons
onto the field prior
Wednesday.
regualr
season
finale
against
Buffalo
in
Mason,
W.Va.
The
undefeated
White
Falcons
will host St.
to
Friday's
t s Morrissey first
Marys
on
Saturday
night
in
the
first
round
of
the
WVSSAC
Class
~
playoffs
at
Point
Pleasant
JSHS.
such honor in the MSC.
but he is certainly no
stranger to this award.
Morrissey won
the
American
Mideast
Like Wahama the Blue
regular season action
coa~h Ed Cromley. WHS
BY GARY CLARK
Conference Coach of
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
has compiled an overall who advanced to the Devils feature three qualthe Year award four
9-14 record during play- post-season.
ity running backs in
times ( 1998. 200 l-03)
POINT PLEASANT, off competition and
After advancine: to the ~enior C.D. Cox (6-1
and was the NAIA W.Va. - A perfect 10-0 sports a 6-5 mark when Class A semifinals with 190), junior
Derek
Nattonal Coach of the regular season and a first hosting a post-season an 11 -2 record in 2008 St Renner (5-9 145) and
Year twice. in 200 I and ever
Tri-Valley contest.
Marys suffered through a freshman Noah Spitzer
2003.
.
Conference football title
The Bend Area team 2-8 mark in 2009 with (5-I 0 165). The quarterMorrissey guided the are a couple of impres- has hosted one game at injuries making a huge back will be junior K.D.
RedStorm to their first sive accomplishments to Ravenswood (a \Vin over impact on the Blue Arnett (6-0 180) who
MSC ree:ular season be entered into the 20 I 0 Big Creek in 1996). four Devils grid season a year returns after missing
championship this year. Wahama White Fakon at Point Pleasant (a win ago.
most of his sophomore
s second year in the record books but some over Pineville in I 986
This year St Marys season with an injury.
nference and has them unfinished
business and losses to Tyler once ae:ain has had to
Arnett .s favorite taroised to make another remains for Coach Ed County
( 1986). battle several injuries to gets are his three runnin!!
run at the KAlA Cromley s Bend Area Moorefield (7-30) and key players throughout backs in addition
:"Jational Championship. grid squad when the South Harrison (7-12) in· the season but the Class senior wide receiver
Morrissey was quick locals host visiting St addition to six games at A power persevered to Dylan Brizendine (5-10
to give credit to his staff Marys in the opening Wahama (victories over gain entrance into the 16- 165) and senior tight end
and the players. "'It s a round of the Class A Doddridge
Lo2:an Bowie (5-I 0 190).
County team playoff field.
testament to my team. post-season.
(2003. Mate\van (2003)
The interior line for the
The Blue Devils six
The White Falcons and Pocahontas County wins on the 20 I 0 cam- Little
my
personneL
the
Kanawha
coaching staff. it s a enter its first round play- in 2004 and again in paign have been over Conference
team
much bigger award than off contest as the number 2007.
Class AA Ritchie County includes returning regujust one guy here," one seed in the 16 team
WHS has dropped two (52-35). J I th ranked lars in seniors Nick Ca~to
Morrissey said. "I ve journey field and will decisions \vhen hosting Parkersburg
Catholic (6-2 235) and Hayden
got a great staff. guys .meet 16th rated St Marys contests on its home turf (44-12). Moorefield (34- Ullman (6-1 260) along
that work their tail end on Saturday night at 7:30 at Bat.:htc:l Stadium with 19), Calhoun County with
junior
Ju5tin
off. the G.A. s. Sean p.m. at the Point Pleasant Wheeling Central (2004) (45-22). Gilmer County Nichols (6-3 185) and
(Bray). the volunteer High School Athletic and Notre Dame (2006) (41-18) and Doddridge sophomore
Derek.
assistant. I mean it s col- Complex.
Barnhart
(5-7
185).
County
(51-6)
while
their
turning
the
trick
in
games
The post-season outing
Wahama will begin its
lectively. a great group will be the 15th time played in Mason .
four setbacks have been
and the players make it Wahama has qualified for
The White Falcons to 4th rated Wi1t County post-season challenge
fantastic to come to the playoffs since the opening round opponent. (13-14). 5th ranked against St Marys. after
work every day."'
I986 !!rid campaign St Marys. figures to be Williamstown ( 12-22). to posting a gigarrtic 40-8
''lt s been a really. when the White Falcons one of the most challeng- South Harrison (29-30) triumph over its biggest
really, really good sea- first appeared on the ing 16th seeds considet;- and to top ranked Class rival in 5th ranked
son up to this point. but Class A playoff scene.
ing its 6-4 regular season AA Ravenswood (7-27). Butfalo in the Bend Area
there s still more to play
The Mason County record against some pret- The combined record of teams regular season
for," Morrissey added. team will be making its ty stiff &lt;:ompetition.
the 10 Blue Devil oppo- tinale.
"My team knows that, eighth venture into the
Wahama forced seven
The Blue Devils, nents in 2010 is 51-49.
hey II come out and post-sea!'.on since the &lt;:oa&lt;:hed by Jod1 Mote in
Leading the way for St Bison turnovers in that
• perform
(against tum of the century and its his ninth season at the Maf) s this season is a outing and turned five of
Lindsey Wilson) and it I Ith voyage under the Pleasants County School. couple of seniors. two
Please see Wahama, 84
will be a great game."
tutclagt: of wteran grid met five teams during juniors and a freshman.

Wahama hosts St. Marys in Class A playoffs

I

)

to

RIO GRANDE, Ohio
- Seven members of the
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm men s soccer
team have been selected
to the All-Mid-South
Conference team .
Sophomore goal keeper
Jonathan Yiscosi was the
all-conference goalkeeper. as he manned the net
for the first two-thirds of
the season. ln 15 games.
Viscosi posted 38 saves
and eight shutouts. registering an 0.68 goals
against average.
Sophomore Richard
Isberner and sen1or
Ederson Lopes were
named all-conference at
the forward positions.
Isberner has 17 goals and
17 assists on the season
(51 points). He has been
one of the most consistent players in the country in 2010. Lopes is on a
tear of late. scoring ~even
goals in his last three outings. For the season,
Lopes h&lt;ts 19 goals and
I 1 assists (49 points).
Senior Steven 0 Hara
grabbed one of the allconference
defender
spots with his stellar play
this season. 0 Hara and
the rest of the back four
have been a key component in the success of
RD s team this season.
0 Hara has put up some
offensive numbers as
well \Vith three goals and
11 assists.( I 7 points).
Junior Joel Thiessen
and
senior
Dylan
Williams earned all-conference nods at midfielder. Thiessen has scored
tive goals and distributed
six assists (16 points)
while Williams posted
his best season in a Rio
uniform with three goals
and nine assists ( 15
points).
Junior defender Neil
Harries earned honorable
mention honors. Harries
has scored four goals
(ei~ht points) this season
ancl along with 0 Hara
and Co. have controlled
the last line defense for
the Red~tOim.
Please see MSC, 84

hol4 on, slick
"JoAlre earl~
Thi5 deal starts on

Nov 12, 2010

thanks

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

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

HNtft~

Pltotof!I/'IPIIY

15t51 SA 279
Oak HH~ OH 46666
740-61!2-601 0

Our Holiday Recipe Guide
will be inserted on
Thesday, November 23rd, 2010
in The Daily Sentinel,
m:be ~allipolis 1.l9ailp m:ribune &amp;
~be t)oint t)leasant l\cgister

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Friday, November 12, 2010

- -ATHLON. SPORTS----Four TUrns

1 NO
DESPERATION HERE Chad
Knaus on Tuesday sa1d of the p1t

2

3

'

4

crew swap between the Nos. 24
and 48 teams: "It's like changing a
spring or changing a shock. You
have to put the best components
together to try to win the cham pi·
onship. Unfortunately, we're not m
the s1tuat10n where the 24 can win
the championship right now from
this bulldmg, and that's what It's •
about- this building."
POSITIONS ALLEO Turner Motor·
sports- formerly Braun Rac1ng in
the Nationwide Series- w1ll campaign three cars In ttte Nat10nw1de
Series next season. Justin Allgaier
and Reed Sorenson Wlll drive two
of the NNS Chevys on a full-t1me
bas1s, wh1le the other nde will be
spht among multiple dnvers. Each
nde has lull sponsorship.
COMING ALONG Twenty-year old
Cup driver Joey Logano has pieced
together h1s first four-race top-1 0
streak. It's sa1d that m the NFL,
wide rece1vers blo:;som In their
lh1rd year. Logano's th1rd full sea·
son in Cup will begin 1n February
2011.11 appears he's nght on lime.
NICE START Natoow1de Series
regular Trevor Bayne made his Cup
Series debut at Texas last week·
end m the iconic No. 21 Wood
Brothers Ford. Bayne managed an
1mpresswe 17th-place, lead-lap
finish The 19-year old Knoxville,
Tenn., natwe Wlll compete full t1me
tor Roush Fenway Raang in the
Nationwide Series In 2011

Sprint Cup Standings
DRIVER
1. DellllYHamlln
2. JimT" Johnson
3. Kevin H&lt;vvlck
4. Gar! Edwards
5. Matt Keoseth
6. Jeff Gordon
7. Kyle Busch
8. Tony Stewart
9. Greg Biffle
10. ttSowyer

11.

POINTS
6325
6292
6266

·325
·331
·339
·363
-372
·397
·435
-473

5994
5986
5926
5953
5928

Busch

5890
5852

·33
·59

·317

6008
6000

12 Jeff Btlton

BEHIND

• CHAS£ fOR Tl£ SPRINT CIJ' •

13. Mark Martin

'14. Jamie McM~y
15. RyanNewman
16. Joey Logano
17 Juan Pablo Montoya
18. David Reubmann
'1 9. Dale Earnhardt Jr.
-20. A.J Allmendinger

4107
4091
3986
3974

·2218

·2234
·2351
·2351

3945
3890

·2380
·2435
·2575
·2591

3750
3734

· Nationwide Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.

5.
6.

7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER
Brad Keselowskl'
Carl Ed\vards
Kyle Busch
Justin Allgaier
Paul Menard
Kev1n Harvick
Trevor Bayne
Jason Leffler
Joey Logano
Steve Wallace

POINTS
5314
4849
4619
4102
4205
4044
3765
3743
3717

3688

BEHIND
·465
-695
-912
·1109
·1270
·1549
·1571
·1597
· 1626

• Clin:hed llliO

n-uck Standings
DRIVER
1. Todil Bodine
2. Me Almuola
3. Jolmy Sauter
4. Matt Crafton
5. Austln Oiilon
6. Tunothy Peters
7. Roo Hornaday
B. Mike Skimer
9. David Starr
10. JasCX'I WllitO

POINTS
3645
3415
3341
3237
3153
3107
3059

2964
2898
2813

BEHIND

·230
·304
-408
·492
·538
·586
·681
-747
-832

Highs &amp; Lows
CLINT BOWYER It's been a roller coaster
of a Chase for Bowyer, but the RCR pilot
,has two w1ns (loudon, Talladega) 10 the
eight races and a runner-up (Fontana). Hrs
strong seventh·place showmg tn
Texas vaulled h1m to 1Olh an the
standm!JS despite a 150-pnlnl
penalty from NASCAR after his
car was out of tolerance follow.
lng the Loudon viclory.
KYLE BUSCH Aller a spm in
the AAA Texas 500, Busch was
busted for speed•ng on pit road, an
offense that drew a one-lap penalty.
While servmg sa1d penalty Busch pro·
'ceeded to flip off the NASCAR offlclalm
his pit box, earning hfm an additional two·
lap timeout Busch, who had been running
In the top 10 fmished 32nd, his second
stra ght run of 25th or worse.

The new points leader IS looking prelly stout w1th eight finishes of ninth or better (three wins) in
the last nine'races There·s also that shakeup In the 46 team, too.
2. Jimmie Johnson
3. Kevin Harvick

4. Clint Bowyer
5. Joey Logano
6. Mark Martin

7. Greg Biffle
B. Kyle BU$Ch

9. Jeff Gordon

10. Jeff Burton
11. Matt Kenseth
12. Carl Edwards
13. Tony Stewart
14. David Reutimann
15. Paul Menard
Just off the lead pack:

Speaking of the 48 yes, Johnson •s still second m the Horsepower Rank1ngs and in the official
standings, but that mid·race crew swap With Jeff Gordon's tea:n looked awfully desperate.
Ancllhen there's Harvick, llymg below the radar, but clearly not as consiStenUy strong as Hamlin or
Johnson. He's ready to pounce Should the door open.
follows up the wm at Talladega - Ns second of the Chase -With a seventh-place run at Texas ...
and with Harv~ck's old crew. no less See Jeff, It could wor1&lt; out for you too!
S1nce the televts•on coverage doesn ttollow anyone not In the Chase, It should be noted here that
young Logano hasn t fmiShed worse than seventh 111 a month.
L1ke Logano. Martin •s a non-Chaser and therefore a non-story to some However that"Ctazy Old
Man" hasn't finished outSide ot the top 15 sloce the first playoff race Watch him at Phoenix
Biffle was the man to beat at Texas until he dropped two gears And you know, 11 s kind of hard to
get gomg when you have to start In th rd w1th a snarlmg pack of cars 1n your trunk.
H1s m-car aud1o captured one of the grea1 meltdowns In tJASCAR after gettlng penalized at Texas
Cheer up Kyle, you re gettmg married m a lew weeks
As the picture below Illustrates Gordon had a rough afternoon In Texas. He sure put on a heckuva
show m the process, though
,
"The Mayor" gave a political "the sun was In IT'Y eyes" excuse after taking out Gordon. Yeah, OK,
uh huh we believe you.
Didn't get the win but drove the heck out or hiS car on that !mal restart.
At least he's winn1ng NatiOnwide races aga1n.
Apparently, Stewart has a personal tramer now. Wonder what sponsor Burger Ktng thinks ot that?
Ran up front all day, but disappeared tate. !hanks lor expta1nmg what happened, ESPN.
Three consecutive top 15s that move to RCR nel&lt;l year ts looking more Interesting~by the week.
AJ Allmendinger, Kurt Busch Dale Eamhludt Jr, Jam•e McMurray, Juan Pablo Montoya

- - -•

ASP. Inc

Denny Hamlin

n-acks on Tap

SPRINT CUP SERIES
Race: Kobalt Tools 500
Track: Phoenix International RacettaY
Location: Avondale. Ariz.
When: SUnday, Nav 14

Wild. Wild West

TV:ESPN

Hamlin outduels Johnson
and Harvick in Texas
By MATT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor
There were monkey's selling pro·
grams. an unsportsmanlike conduct
penalty. a fistfight. a\ irtual firing of
an enure team and. at I he end of the
day. a neY.. 1\oo. I. It may ~ound hkc
a mid-1980s version of Saturday
Night Roller Derby that would make
Ralphic Valladares and the L.A. I·
Btrds proud, and in actuaht&gt; it felt
like 11, but it \\as four-v. heeled
ASCAR Sprint Cup Sene!'&gt; action
that put on the show in Texas.
Aficr the smoke cleared and the
tempers cooled. it wa.' Denny Hamlin \\ ho sprinted away from Matt
Ken!'oeth m a three-lap !Shootout at
Tcxa.s Motor Spe~v. ay to win the
AAA lex a~ 500. The \\ m vaulted
Hamlm past Jimmie Johnson and
mto the points lead. a position he
holds by .33 points with tv. o rnees rem;unmg in the 20 I 0 Cha~e for the
SpnntCup.
llamlin. John~on ond Kevin llnrvick entered the event withm 3R
points of one another in the stand·
ing.,, and each had to claw hb \\ay
from deep in the field at the onset.
By the 100-Jap mark the trio had
worked ib way into the top 10. but
the glare of lhc spotlight was set to
shme on another Chase trio
Kyle
Busch, Jeff Burton and JeiT Gordon.
Bu~ch got the antics started \\hen
he'' as spun on lap !59 A licr pitting
for four frc!ooh tires. he was nmled by
NASCAR for speeding on p1t road.
After he W'd'&gt; brought back m the pits
to scr.e h~!oo one-lap penalty. an
I::.SI'N in· car camera caught the mercurial Buseh tlippmg offa f'.:ASC'AR
official m a manncrthat would makeJohnny Cash proud.
After h1s exn. ~ASCAR brought
htm back in to sit for t\\ o addtuonal

ASP.IIIc.
Jeff Gordon's crumpled No. 24 Chevy Is hauled to the garage alter contact with Jeff Bur·
ton ended his day at Texas Motor Speedway.
laps for what the sanct1onmg body
culled "unsportsmanlike conduct "
All the \\ h1lc. a mcltdm\11 ensued on
Busch's in-cur rnd1o between dnvcr
and ere\\ chtef.
Just as Busch v.as at hts trcndmg
peak on the lntcmct, Burton and
Gordon did their best to rc·L'nnl.:t the
1979 Daytona 500. wreckmg under
cautton and tanghng m a phys1cal altcrc.ltion on the backstretch. Burton
claimed he s1mply made a m1stnkc.
us the sun's glare blinded him, caus·
mg the collision v. ith Uordon. "I he
four-lime champion was in no mood
to hem it though, and walked to Burton·~ cur where he took a shot at the
rer.pectcd vetcrun
referred to as
""lllc Mayor" in the garage
before
thi.' two were scpamtcd by ollki;lls.
Addmg to the mayhem was .lqhnson 's CfC\\ cluef, l 'had Knau:-. v. ho
employed Gordon's pit crew to sen.ICC the :So. 48 after the 1\o. 24 enll)
wns climmated. The normally reli·
able 4R crev. cost Johnson spots on
p1t road m two separate slO\\ stops.
"l.ilumatcl&gt; n's my decision. obviously. but \\C needed to do something.:' Knau~ said 11ft1.'T tht.' race
"The 24-48 shop has ah' ays oper-

ntcd as a team and that's the \\II)' that
we sec it. It's sad that'' c ha' c to do
that but )OU ktlO\\, m the mtcrcst of
Hendnck Motor~ports ..nd \\hat
we've got to do, you'\C got to go do
that stuff"
Johnson finished ninth. three spots
behmd fellow Chase competitor liar·
v ick, who finished sixth.
Over:-hadowed m the ehuos of the
first 200 laps \\Us the dominance of
Greg Bi ffie, who kd 224 of:\14 lap~.
only to fade late \\hen he to" second
gear on hi;..Rou~h l·cnway l·urd. I he
failed gear prc\cnh.:d him fmm commg up to ,peed on lwo h1te-racc
n.-starts. although he managed to 1cbound lor a lilih-plaee 'htm.ing.
The cin:uil heads to Phoenix Inter·
national Raccv.ny thi~ Sunday for
the penultimate C\ cnt of the sc.lSon
\\ith Hamlin 33 point up on John·
'on and 59 ahead of Uar.1ck. John·
'on ha-. ruled Phoemx m h1s 14 Cup
~tart:-. a\ cragmg a scncs-bcst 4.9·
place a'crnge finish wh1le notching
tour' ictoncs at the one-m1le O\ al
It should be a good one, but the
extra cumculars that enhanced the
Texa... .,hO\\ may be hard to top.

Banking!Tums 1·2: 11 degrees
Banklng!Tums 3-4:9 degrees
Banking/Fronstretch: 3 degrees
Banking!BackstriiWI: 9 degrees
Aprll2010 Winner. Ryan Newman
Crew Chief's Take: "Rat tracks are probably
anltle less different from ~other. in terms
ol chassis setups, than the tr.r:ks that are bigger and high-banked. On the one hand, I don't
think you get a perfect-handling car, at least
not JUdging from What drivers say. They al·
ways gripe and moan more on tracks like
Phoenix Certain drivers-Tony Stewart and
Kyle Busch come to mind-sort of know the
tricks there. Htakes a pretty talented driver to
be willing to expenment out there, and
Phoemx rewards the ones who find the biCks.
Unfortunately, some drivers wreck when
they're looking for tricks.·
NATIONWIDE SERIES
Race: Wypall 200
Track: Phoenix llltemabonal Raceway
When: Saturday, Nov. 13

I

TV;ESPN2
Aprll2010 Winner. Kyle Busch
CAMPING WOfllD TRUCK SERIES
Race: 1.ocas Oil150
Track: Phoenix International Raceway
When: Friday, Nov. 12
TV; SPEED
Defending Winner: Kewl Harvlck

Classic Moments
Phoenix lntematlonal Raceway
The 1990 Checker 500 at Phoeni~ International Raceway might not be the most excit·
mg race, but the implications are huge. Mark
Martin has held a precarious lead 1n the
standings over Dale Earnhardt since mid-June
and enters Phoemx with a slim 45-poinl ad·
vantage as the circuit hrts rts penultimate race
of the year.
Rustv Wallace runs away With the first 50
laps. However, he loses an engine on the 51st
lap, which hands the lead to Earnhardt Iron·
head never looks back. leading the final 262
laps In dominating fashion to score his ninth
WIO Of the season.
More 1mportant, he takes a miMCUie six·
Jl()lnt edge into the season s final race at At·
lanta where Earnhardt fimshes third and
Martin sixth, giving Earnhardt his fourth ca·
reer Cup title by a 26·point margin.

Athlon Fantasy Stall
• On Monday, Hendnck Motor·
sports announced that the seven·
man pit crews of the Nos. 24 and 48
teams would be switched fOI' the re·
mamder olthe season.
Crew ch1ef for the No. 48 team,
Chad Knaus. employed the No. 24
crew after its driver. Jeff Gordon,
was ellm1nated from the AM Texas
500 on Sunday. The No. 48 team
had e~penenced two slow stops
prior to the SWi1Ch, resulting Ill John·
son losmg valuable track position.
After the event, race·wmmng
crew chief M1ke Ford called the
move one of desperation:
"They removed 1he1r team. Their
team got them to this point and they
pulled them out. So this 1s more

Rutland Bottle Gas
Serving you for over 60 years .
740-742-2511
1-800-837-8217
www.rutlandbottlegas.com
Gallipolis • The Plains • .Jackson
Torch • Logan • McConnelsville • Rutland

has won 12 lndyCar ti1!es.
The champtonshrp IS also a first
about trying lo win a champ1onstup
for the company and not the team •
Both teams share a 1ace shop in
the Hendnck compound and have
worked closely s1nce the No. 48
team's lull-season debut 10 2002.
The team has won the last four
Sprmt Cup t1tles and sits 33 pornts
out of first wrtl1 two races 1emalnrng
• Brad Keselowski clinched ltle
2010 Nation~de Senes tiUe by
virtue of a second-place finish In the
O'Redly Auto Parts Challenge at
Texas Motor Speedway on Saturday.
The NASCAR champiOOSillp is the
first for Pemke Racing, although t

"I th nk when you can bring
somebody with (Sadler's) expenence
to a team 11 bnngsn very Cl'edibleel·

lor Keselowski, who has timshed
ement to the program because he's
third in his two other lull seasons on
a proven winner 1n the Cup, Nation·
the NallonWide circuit
wide and True!\ Senes," Kevu'lllar·
TI1ere ilrtl:&gt;till two 1aces remam·
VICk sa1d ''For us, It'S the f1rst bme
1ng in the Nationwide schedule, wrth
trips to Phoenix and Homestead. His
that we,'ve had a legll•male shot to
make a run at the Natonwide Series
465·point lead over Carl Edwards
championshiP and that's realty ex·
makes It mathematteally •mp()SSible
for anyone to overlake the 26-year citing as team owners •
KHI t&gt;as formed an allla~ce With
old Rochester Hills, Mich.. native
Ricllard Childress Racing, in which
• Spnnt Cup veteran Elliott
RCR Will provide engines, chassis
Sadler wm team up wtth Kevin Har•
and technical support. Along vnth
VICk,lnc to compete tun time m the
NationWide Series m 2011. Sadler Sadler's entry KHI Wlll field ttle No
33 car with an assortment of drlv·
Will pllot the No 2 Cit Anane1al
Chevy lor team owners Kevtn and • ers,lncluding Harvlck. Cl nt Bowyer,
Austin D on and Paul Menard
Delana Harvicl&lt;.

Looking at Checkers: With apolog1es to
Dover and MartinSVIlle, this IS J•mm1e Johnson's llcst track. And that's saying something.
Pretty Solid Pick: Mark Martin always gets
around l'lR well, and h1s results have picked
up of late.
Good Sleeper Pick: Marcos Ambrose hasn'1
been ftashy at PIR, but the results are solid.
Runs on Seven Cylinders:
Kasey Kahne - particularly
now with his new Red Bull

•

bunch
Insider Tip: look·
lng past the
Hendrick duo
of Johnson
and Martin. this
flat track has el·
ways surted the
Childress band.

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
General &amp; Mechanical Contractors
Robert W. McMillan
President

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

•
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--.------------"!"'""'"-----"!'--- -r--~-----::---r--~---.....- - -~ ------

Friday, No\'cmber 12,

2010

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_.

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www.mydailysentinel.com

·rhe Daily Sentinel • Page B3

Bengals RT Smith breaks foot- ·

Chris lee/St. Louis Post·Dlspatch/MCT

Cleveland wide receiver Brayton Edwards takes off his helmet to celebrate. a 19yard gain against the St. Louis Rams in third quarter action. The Browns defeated
the Rams 24·13, at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, Missouri, on Sunday,
2

tfiY~ ~· versus Ryan ·when
Jets visit Cleveland
CLEVELAND (AP)- port.
players. Rob Ryan is no
Born five minutes apart.
Buddy Ryan learned the different. and 1t wasn t
Rex and Rob Ryan arc hard way that the grueling surprising to see the
inseparable.
They. ve hours and constant travel Brown~ dump Gatorade
spent a lifetime together. v-. ould take a toll on his after a recent upset of
playing. laughing, loving personal life. He and his New Orleans.
They are alike and lik~nd fi~hting some- \Vife. Doris. split when
ttmes wllh each other ar,d the boys were young. He able. But they re also
often against anyone f(x)l- wanted his sons to follow demanding. Step out of
ish enough to take them a different path.
line. and there are conseon.
··111ey didn t listen.'' quences. 'fuu s how the
TI1ey nevc'r lost.
Buddy Ryan said over the Ryans were taught.
"I don t think there is phone from his horse
"We"coach m~.:n s football and the best thing to
any pair of brothers closer farm in Kentucky.
than we arc," Rob Ryan
The Ryan brothers do is be yourself with all
said. ''We had our own knew their calling.
the flm.,:s you have," Rob
language \\hen we were . ··we re football coach- said. "People can try to
kids growing up. If you es," Rob said. "At one sugar coat things. but I
fought one of us you had time. my whole goa] was believe what Rex does
to be real tough because just to be able to have my best is he is direct with his
u had to fight both of own trailer. live in that players. He tells them the
. We found a way to and coach football. That truth. not necessarily what
n.''
was my life s ambition. they want to hear but it s
The brothers Ryan. 1blt s how we look at the truth. My father
raised by their famous things. yve ve always always installed that in us,
father Budd\ to be honest, been destmed to be foot- always be honest."
straightfonvard and to ball coaches...
Sunday s game will be
rush the heck out of the
After their parents at least the seventh with
quarterback. will renew divorced. Rob ar.d Rex the Ryans on opposite
their sibling rivalry Jived with their mother in sidelines, with Rob holdSunday when Rex leads Tor{)nto.
where
the ing_a 3-0 lead over Rex in
his New York Jets into Ry.ns rough-around-the- the1r pro head-to-head
Cleveland to take on a edges reputations were !natchups. However, this
Brown·s defense coached developed during bmtal mstallment of the "Buddy
by Rob.
backyard football games Bowl" will be the first
The days leading to the with their older brother, with one of the Ryans as
game will be filled with Jim. now an attorney in an NFL he::~d coach.
meetings. practices, and. St. Louis.
Buddy WJJI be there.
The Ryans played basof course, some serious
·t s going to be a great
trash talking over the ketball. hockey and base- ~arne:• the 76-ycar-old
phone.
ball - all with reckless father said. "lhey rc both
"t s going _to be brutal.'' abandon. Trouble was, great coaches•and I know
Rex Ryan smd. ''I m sure they were not mode] stu- they re going to do everywe II talk about each dents or citizens Thev thing they can to beat the
other :; children. wives. needed discipline. So. ii1 other."
whatever.··
Amid the firings and
seventh grade they were
On Tuesday. Rob R_yan sent to Minnesota to live hirings that come with life
saw a photograph of him- with their dad. then as a coach, Buddy Ryan
self. Browns coach Eric coaching the Vikings
neve~ had to worry about
Mangini and rookie quar- famed ''Purple People uprooting Rex and Rob.
''We had to move a lot;'
back Colt McCoy that Eaters" defense.
d blow dm1s ~t1cking
'"The Ryans were kind the elde~ Ry~n said. ''The
out of their images.
of running roughshod on great thmg 1s that every
"He drew first blood," Canada, so we had to time we moved they
•
Rob said of hi~ t\vin. ''We move." Rob said. "Our knew their best friend was
are soing to have some lives kind of changed coming with them. Rex
retalmtory reactions c&lt;,&gt;m- when we moved in with and Rob were always
ing up lnJcr in the week.'' my father, that: s for sure.'' together:·
Of all the wild stories
They began as ballboys.
But beyond the practical jokes and typical and after playing in col- about the Ryans - and
brother
vs.
brother lese. they began a slow there are dozens - Rob
· shenanigans, the Ryan chrnb up the coaching said one of Rex s
boys have an unbreakable ladder - from the bottom favorites happened on a
bond. They talk daily, rung. Rob s coachin2 baseball diamond.
The Ryans were facing
share a sweet tooth and stops included Western
sufficient stomachs. and Kentucky.
Tennessee a top pitcher. who stmck
are prone to drop an State and Hutchinson out Rex and then hit Rob
Community in the middle of the back.
expleti\e or two into (Kan.)
College. Rex was at
almost any conversation.
"1 hit hi~ dad before
Rex Ryan was criti- Eastern Kentucky, New with a fungo bat, so the
Mexico Highlands and kid paid me back,'' Rob
ciz~d for his profanity
dunng HBO s "Hard Morehead State.
s&lt;tid matter-of-factly.
Sure, they had the
Knocks'' series this sumThe next time up. Rex
mer. While his mother advantaoe of a name fell behind 0-2 m the
threatened to wasn his known throughout coach- count and called timeout.
mouth with soap, his ing, but the Ryans worked
"He \vas only playinr,
hard, were handed noth- with one contact lens. ·
brother 'vasn t offended.
"Never even noticed the ing and arc now regarded Rob said. ''So he goes.
language but then 1 heard as two of the gan1e s best 'Rob give me your left
.
II the criticism.'' Rob minds.
contact I give 1t to him
When Rex Ryan was and he plucks it in his eye
acked. "I rn just glad
•
ey weren t here in hired as the Jets coach and goes up and smashes
Cleveland."
after being passed over a home nm. I think the
Despite their dad s several teams. no one was thing is still going. They
wishes that they pursue prouder than Rob, who found it in Cuba someanother profession, the believes his brothers suc- where.
Ryans followed him into cess may help him land
"He circles the ba&lt;&gt;es
coaching. When Buddy his dream job.
and comes in with a big
Ryan. whose ''46" scheme
"I hope it does:' he smile on his face and
changed the way defense said.
goes, ·Do you want that
is played in the NFL.
Rex Ryru1 doesn t pull contact back'.) I m like,
coached in Philadelphia. any punches, and his Nah, you can keep it. I
he urged his sons to shoot-from-the-hip style think that was our best
accept jobs with n food has endeared him to New story right there."
serv1ce business at the air- Yok s media. fans and
It won t be the last one.

l

CINCii\NATI (AP) Bcngals right tackle
Andre Smith has a broken foot that could end
his season, the latest setback in his star-crossed
career with Cincinnati.
Smith s left foot got
stepped on durin~ a passprotection
dnlJ
on
Wednesday. He went for
tests that detected a broken bone in the foot the same one that he
broke last season as a
rookie.
Coach Marvin Lewis
revealed the test results
on
after
practice
Timrsday and said it s
unclear whether Smith
will
need
surgery.
Dennis Roland will
replace Smith at right
tackle for a game Sunday
at Indianapolis (5-3).
Bengals quarterback
Carson Palmer says he s
returning to practice on a
limited basis. going easy
on his sore passing
shoulder. Palmer hurt the
right shoulder when he
was sacked during a 2721 loss to Pittsburgh on
Monday night.
The Bengals held
Palmer out of practice on
Wednesday. giving the
shoulder time to recover.
He expected to participate in some of practice
on Thursday. but the
shoulder was still sore
and he was held out
again.
He expects to play
against the Colts.
·'I m definitely going
to go. but (I m) just getting a couple days of rest
on it." Palmer said.

Smith
was the
S i X t .h
overall
pick out
()
f

He also was the starter
this year while Smith got
into shape.
::
Lewis pulled Smitti:
from the Joss to thC:
Steelers after he gave up
NOTEBOOK A~abama a sack in the third quar..
last sea- ter. Roland replaced hirrl
son. He briefly. but Smith \\ent
missed most of training back in and finished th&lt;l
camp in a holdout last game. The Bengals gave
season. then broke the up four sacks overall.
foot in practice two days
Palmer hurt his shoullater. sidelining him for der on one of the sacks.
most of the season. lie but stayed in the game •
played in six games last and threw the ball well.
year with one start.
He hit Terrell Owens
He had -;urgery on the with a pair of touchbroken bone in the off- downs and leading a
season. and was out of final drive that ended at
shape when he reported the Pittsburgh J 2-) ard
for training camp. draw- line in the closimz secing Lc\vis wrath. Smith onds.
got into shape and had
"He said. 'I m still a •
started the last three little bit sore and let me ,
not stretch it out too bad
games.
Lewis said the latest yet and then get ready to
fracture is in a di ffercnt go tomorrow. ·· Lewis
bone in the foot. Smith said. "But yeah. the plan .
might have surgery to was for him to go
·
repair the new break and today.''
also treat the older one.
Lewis said that Palmer :
"It s the bone next to will start Sunday in,
(the old injury). which Indianapolis even if he·
will be good because doesn t practice on •
they never really felt Friday. Palmer was con- .
good about the last pro- fident the shoulder will
cedure being totally and be good enough to let
completely mended," him play against the '
Lewis said. "So now Colts.
His
brother.:
there is a chance to go Jordan. is the backup.
back and, if that s the
The loss to Pittsburgh
course of action, to go dropped the ,defending
back and re-fix the orig- AFC North champions .
inal one and then fix this to 2-6. scuttling their
one."
season. They have severSmith and Roland al players restricted in .
have :;hared time at right practice
this
week
tackle the last two sea- because of injuries, •
sons. Roland, a former including defensive line=·
college free agent, start- man Tanl Johnson. who·
ed 12 games last season. has a knee injury.
'

Pryor says no to hoops, yes to senior year ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio
(AP) - Despite saying
earlier this week that
he d like to play basketj ball again. Ohio State
quarterback
Terrelle
I Pryor is committed to
football and has enjoyed
his almost three years
with the Buckeyes.
He s liked it so much,
in fact. he swears he II be
back for his senior year.
"I m a Buckeye until I
break all the records," he
said during preparations
for the eighth-ranked
Buckeyes showdown on
Saturday
at
Ohio
Stadium against Penn
State.
The junior said he had
no intention - at least
right now - of jumpino
into the NFL draft.
eo
"I feel like I want to get
my degree and finish off
strong and maybe have a
better season next year
with no losses," he said.
"I love being here and I
need to develop more
knowledge as a human
being and not worry
about money and stuff
like that.
"My mom works a littie bit so I can use some
of her money. and the
money that we aet here.''
P~yor said. ret~rring to
hts scholarship and
stipends that athletes
receive for expenses. ··r
&lt;in t really have to
worry. I can suffer another year, 1 just want to
gain more knowledge as
a human being before I
leave."
Pryor recognizes that
despite starting for the
Buckeyes (8-1, 4-l Big
Ten) for almost three full
seasons, he still has some
unfinished business.
Plus, he wants to burnish his resume at Ohio
State and have his name
among the Heisman
Trophy winners whose
numbers are placed on
the facade of the upper
deck at Ohio Stadium.
" I want to aet my
degree. so I ca~ finish
that up.'' Pryor said. " I
want to have a legacy
here and maybe someday
get my jersey hung up.
lla s one of my goals
here as well. I think I just
have to develop my
brain, develop my mind
and the way I m thinking
and how I control situations."
Coach Jim Tressel.
who brought Pryor to
Ohio State when the 6foot-6. 235-pound coh
was rated the No. I
recruit in the countrY,
s1 t
surprised
the

Neal C. Lauron/Columbus Dispatch/MCT

Ohio linebacker Jay Edwards (14) trips Ohio State
quarterback Terrelle Pryor (2) near the goal line during the second half of their NCAA football game at
Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio.

Jeannette, Pa., native
feels that way.
" He is a guy that wants
to make a difference for
his team.'' Tressel said.
"If he could do anything
so that his team would
succeed. he would do it."
1lu s why it was such
a shock to some Ohio
State followers earlier
this week when Pryor
sent two curious messages on Twitter.
The two-sport star in
high school, who once
considered playing bo!h
football and basketball 111
college. tweeted that he
missed basketball. Then
he tweeted a note to
Buckeyes
basketball
player David Lighty askm~ if he could say somctlung to hoops coach
Thad Matta about Pryor
trying out for the team.
A day later, Pryor
declined to go into much
detail about his feelings
of also performing on the
court for the fourthranked Buckeyes.
"I m playing football
right now.'' he said
unequivocally. "That s it.
I was just throwing it out
there. I think all the
time."
Some Ohio State f;ns
were critical of him for
even thinking about
another sport when the
Buckeyes are faced with
a huge game against the
Nittany Lions (6-3. 3-2)
and have other big tests
awaiting at Iowa and at
home against archrival
Michigan . .
Penn State s 83-yearold coach. Joe Paterno,
tried hard to keep Pryor
in his home state three
years
ugo.
Perhaps
adding fuel to the fire,
JoePa also mentioned
Pryor s prowess on the
court this week.
"He was a great, great
high -school player - and
not only as a football

player. a heck of a basketball player.'' Paterno '
added. without a wink. •
"We tried everything we :
could to try to get him tn.
come to Penn State...
:~
Pryor has a bit of his to- ·
ry against the massive:
program in his home:
state. A year aao. he·
accounted for alf three :
touchdowns - breaking :
the game open with a 62- ;
yard scoring toss to·
DeVier Posey in the third'
quarter - in Ohio State s.
24-7 victory in Happ)!:
Vallev.
A • vear earlier. the ,
Nittariy Lions stopped.
him on a critical fourth- ·
and- I near midfield late .
in a 13-6 victory over the :
Buckeyes
in
Ohio:
Stadium. That rema ins·
Pryor s only home con- :
ference loss as a starter. :
And it still haunts him. •
"I took the Penn State :
game my freshman yea• :
so (hard) that maybe it :
was like the end of the·
world that we lost.'' he :
said.
"I m
from :
Pennsylvania and I;
thought it was a big deal.
but it s really not. It s the
same game, and we re :
going to ha\·e tho_ e loss-. •
es.
,•
The win a year ago:
helped ease the ache ol.:
the loss in 2008.
,
"Playing there detinite-·:
ly took pressure off m }
chest." Pryor said. "As 1 •
grew up and got older: •
you have time to think a;
lot. I m a big thinker and :
I look back at it as you re ·
playing all these game ~.
nnd if you keep pl ayin~:
this game a long time:
you re going to take a lot·
of losses and I m going:
to win n lot of games.'' :
He added, "I just look:·
at it as you ve got to get:
on to the next one. 1kt s
the way I m going to
view everythi ng~- on to
•
the next thing."
.. .

j.

�~----------------------~----~

~

w

-

J'agc B4 • 111c Daily Sentinel

MSC
from Page BJ
'"I was pleased (with

, the selections).'' said Rio
·Grande head coach Scott
Morrissey. "The Ollt' fnr
•me was D_xlan Wllliamc,.
Dylan \\ ilham.., is a
senior, who for thr~e
,years has played in thL'
shadows or snmebod)
' else and last spring hi.'
, madl.' a big. massive
•statement that it \\a"
'going to be a position
that he was ~oing to hold
mxl he s held it all year
and I think e' erybody
. would agree that he s
Jlrobably been the most

Wahama

www.mydailyscntincl.com

consistent and the most
valuable player."
Morrissey abo lamented the fact that Hanies
onl) achteved honorable
mention. "The onlv other
one that I \\a~ little disappointed in wa:. not seeing Neil Harries again."
he said. "Neil is one of
the best center-halves in
the country. but that s the
wny it goes ...
Rio \Vas also wdl-refJ·
res~nted on the MSC A 1Ac&lt;tdcmlc Team. R10 had
nine
&lt;;tudent/athletes
mnkc the nll ~academic
~quad . lsberner. Viscosi.
sophomore
Roberto
Lope~. freshman (eligible) Orlando Zapata.
sophomore
Oliver
Hewitt-Pisher. sopho-

more Rafael Maccauro.
sophomore
13randon
Tyler. seniors Nick
Hewison and Drew
McCaffery were all on
the list.
''I m probably most
proud of the fact that we
had nine guy~ that got on
the &lt;tll-acndemic award
team," \lorriss~.:y said.
·~Ill&lt;tt s important and
dlill s shows that the guys
take the classroom just a. .
scriou~ as they do the
training and the.: ~ames
down h~.:rc on the p1tch."
I he dJ&lt;;ttnction t"i
rc-.crved for sllldcnt-athlrt~.:s with a ~ophomore
or higher class standing
nnd a 3.25 ,lflcl above
grade point average on a
4.0 sc;ile.

·

2010

URG soccer advances to MSC championship
BY MARK WILLIAMS

Lope&lt;; teamed up with pleased. J think that the
forward last time we played
Richard lsberner to give tho&lt;;e gu) s. not to make
the RcdStorm a 2-nil excusec;. it wns long.
advantage in the 25th long day and I think my
minute with lsberner team. we all agreed that
finishing the Lopes probably of the regular
feed.
season, 18 games. it was
Tht• 2 0 score lasted probably the one ga
until the (l4th minute where collccti vel y a
when the RedStorm put team we had our
the game away on a goal performance
a'i
a
from freshman forward group." Morrissey saict
Orlm~do
Zapata. " Having said that, I was
Sophomore
forward really. really pleased
Scott Bibb) w~·~ credit· with the effort, the
ed with an as~ist.
intem.ity, the ball move~reshman
nmlfield- ment. the tempo. everyer/defender
Mike thing about thi game
Torbert clo ed out the tonight wa&lt;; really. tlie
scoring with an tmas- guys
played
well
-.isted goal in the 80th tonight. really .proud of
minute when he found the effort.''
the back of the net off a
Rio i-; 2-0 on the seadeflection
from son ven.us the Tigers as
Campbellsville goal- the RedStorm defeated
keeper JHmes Clements. Campbellsville on the
Junior
goalkeeper road. 2-0 on September
Jack Mnrchant picked 25 .
up his third shutout of
Rio won the regular
the c;eason for Rio sea~on contcc;t ~with
Grande. Clements post- Lindsey Wilson. 2-1 in
ed seven saves for overtime. October 23.
Campb~~llsvilk ( 15-5).
Lindsey. the No. 2
Rio Grande head seed in the tournament,
coach Scott ~lorrissey advanced to the final
was very pka:-.ed with game with a 2-0 victo.
the way hi~ team played over No.
3 se
in the game.
Cumberlands in tht:
''I was really. really other -.emi.
~ophomore

SPEC.AL TO '&lt;H- SEI-ITINE'i

RIO GRA!':DE, Ohio
- The University of
Rio Grande RedStorm
• 11~1 s soccer team, the
1
No. I ranked team in the
NAJA and the No. I
seed in the Mid-South
c () 11 r e r 1.: 11 c e
Tournament. scored a 40
victory
O\ er
Campbellsville
on
Wednesday night in the
semifinal round. The
tilatch wa$ played at
Rio s Evan Dav1~ Field.
The win set" up a second showdown th1s season with !"AlA No. 5
and defending MSC and
champion
the two teams have met nc1tional
Ltndse)
Wilson
College
10 timec; during regular
on Thursdav night in the
season piny du11ng lht&gt;
tournament- final.
past 21 years.
Rio Grande (~0-0)
Wahama owns a 9 J
scored
a pair of goals in
edge in the cries with
each
half,
starting in the
regular season \ ictorics
second
minute~
when
in IY79, go, X1. ·x2.
senior
midfielder
'98. 2000. ·o 1. ·o2 and
'OJ. !'he lone Blue Devil Ederson Lopes ~cored
win over the White to give.: Rio the only
goa I it needed on the
Falcon~ was in I ':J')I).
Kickoff time for the game. He \\a~ assi~ted
Class
A
pla)off by sophomore midfic!dencountc1 is set for 7:30 er Rafael ~laccauro.
p.m. at th~ Point Pleasant The goal was the sevHigh School Athletic enth in the la:.t three
gnme"i for Lopes.
Complex.

enem) fumbles
with Stewart. Colton
1\lcKinne\. J.R. Jewell
and Anthony Grimm
from Page Bl
coming up with two
each.
tho~e into tOliciH.I&lt;)\\ nc; to
.Juniors
Matthev.
secure its third undefeatStew
at1
and
Zac
Warth
ed season in his tory and
with
sophomore&lt;;
along
:its first e\ a number one .
Zach
Wamsley and
;seed in the playoffs.
Crand:tl
(';cal have also
' The White Fakons are
.averaging an amazing came.: ~'P big for the WHS
412 yards per gamt• in defensive unit this seatotal offc.:n~e with the snn.
local griddcrs averaging
While this is the first
:just under 3!-JO yards per ever
post-season
'contest on the ground encounter
involving
and another 113 yards Wahama and St Marys
·per outing through the
air.
WHS is winning the
tumover battJc by a plus
·~I margin "ith 16 inter
ceptions and 15 enemy
fumble recoveries compared to the White
Falcons offense being
News
intercepted four times
~
. and losing eight fumbles
News
on the year.
6 am
; The ~ mall but gutsy
retch!
7 (Jilg
Wahama offensive line
t
• ·has performed admirably
tABC World Judge Judy l:nterta1nm
8 CU3lit News
1
News
ent Tonight
throughout the season as
News
CBS Evenmg Jeopardy! Wheel of
evidence to the Bend
10 cm;:a
News
Fortune
' Area teams nearIy ""_
,ooo
Smarter-5th.._Forget·
Two
and a
rushing yards in 2010.
11 CI!l.Jl) Grader
• Lyrics
Half Men
t
Toiling in the trenches
Nightly
('Ji[) N{'WS
12
for \Vahama this )Car &lt;ir~
Business
seniors K) an Anderson
""css Fventng 13 News
CE:J:t +NMs
13
News
and Elijah Honaker,
; juniors Jamin Branch,
Jeremy Cundiff and
• .Colton McKinney along
with freshman Tyler
\Ve~ley
Nutter
and
Harri-..on.
Junior Anthony Grimm
is the locab leading
~ ground gainer with 857
vards in I 06 can ies
\vhilc senior R) an Lee
ha..; X35 yards in onl) 92
attempts.
• Junior Isaac Lee has
57
picked up 445 yards in
58
53 tries. Ryan L~e is the f 60
61
teams leadmg s&lt;.:orer with
67
.21 ttHil'hdowns for I~()
64
points whid1 is good for
65
sixth place all-time in
fiT
68
.WHS history.
72
. Grimm has 14 touchdowns and an extra point
-conversion for 86 point-;
while Isaac Lee ha 11
:touchdowns and an extra
point .for 68 points.
Senior Tyler Kitchen has
scored 67 pomtc; on the
season w1th the touchdowns, 31 point after
~icks and a couple of I SATURDAY PRIMETIME
field goals.
· Sophomore quarter·back Trenton Gibhs is
-coming off his btggest
game ol the year in the
:.Falcons huge win over
6
. •Buffalo. Gibbs was ncar
-perfect in connecting on
eight of 12 pac;ses again-;!
· the Bison for I95 yards
and [\\0 SCtli"CS \\ hilc
10
running for another six
11
points to enhance his
sparkling 20 I0 total~ .
The sophomore double
running and passing
13
threat has completed 49
18
of 87 passes on the year
24
for I 013 } ard~ and 10
touchdown'\. He has
· tossed but four intert:eptions. Gibbs I013 pac;sing yards ic; only the sixth
Wahama quarterback to
. throw for more than I000
'yards in a sea~on.
Tyler Kitchen is the
Falcom; leading receiver
with 22 catches for 4 7 I
.yards and five touch'dO\vns. Ryan l...cl.' and
'Isaac Lee each have nine
:'receptions for 2M and
20 l yards respective!)
'.while Elijah Honaker has
, 10 grabs for 15 I yards.
. Defensively Jsnnc Lee
.has picked off six passes
from the opposition \Vith
• Honaker ~tnd Matthew
Stewart collecting three
interceptions
apiece.
Kitchen has recovered
three

14riday, No\·embcr 12,

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

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rootball C. (I) '(OS) NCAA rootball oklc1horn.t Sratl

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�Friday, November 12, 201 0

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

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lost &amp; Found

Financial

Small
Black and
White Dog Beagle
type.
No
Coll~r
Bladen Rd.
area
$REWARD 740)2561399
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wk.
puppies.
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mix.
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ony lo88 or expense th81 results trom the pllbllcatiOn or om I!Ilion of an advertisement Corrett•on will be made In the fil'll available edttiort • Box number Ids
Ire always confidential. • Cl..flent rate card appUea. ·All ml estate advertisements are aubjeel to lilt Faderal Falr Housing Act of 1968 ·This MW~
eccepts only help wanted a® m~1ng EOE stanclards. We J&lt;lll not knoNJngly accept any adwertilllng In voolaiiOo ot tile law Will not be rHpOil!llblt to! any
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r'LGoking

For.,

A New Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Security

700

Agriculture

Miscellaneous

Hay for sale. Square
ADT
and round bales.
Free Home
Farm Equipment
Square $2-3 a bale
Security System
with $99 installation 1997 Martz 3 Horse and round 4x4 $20 a
and purchase of
slant trailer with Tack roll. Barn kept never
wet. Lime fertilizer.
alarm monitoring
740)339-3046
304-562-7397
services from ADT
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Security Services
Now
Available
at Junk give away 304Call 1-888-367-2171
Carmichael Equipment 458-1657
I
74 0 446 24 12
, 400
Financial !!!!!!!!!-!!!!!!!!!.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! John Deer Tractor mHay, Feed, Seed, 1950 4w drive good
condition 86 H.P.
Grain
1998 New Holand 45
Money To lend
200 Square Bales of H.P. 3930-4w Drive
NOT!CE Borrow Smart. Hay $ 2.00 per Bale Excellent shape new
tires.
(304)576g~7~:~ 0 ;heFina~~~ 740)339-3046
2890.
Institutions Office of
Good mixed hay, sq.,
Consumer
Affairs
Yard Sale
BEFORE you refinance $2.50 4x5, round
your home or obtain a bales $20.00. Stored
loan.
BEWARE of inside 7 40-446-2075 Garage sale Sat
1608 Graham School
requests for any large
Rd. 8-5, inside and
advance payments of 900
Merchandise outside
Christmas
fees or insurance.·Call
de~or.
price very
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll free at 1reasonable
Collectibles
866-278-0003 to learn
if the mortgage broker 88 U$ Mint Sets Garage Sale Estate
Items @ 708 Second
9r lender is properly
OGP 1964 thru 2010 Ave. Oct 11, 12, 13
licensed. (This is a
public
service Make Honest Offer 9:30am to 3pm
announcement from the for All 441-9571
Nov 12&amp; 13, 1914 St
Ohio Valley Publishing
Miscellaneous
Rt 141,2 tool stands,
Company)
white
Jet Aeration Motors microwave,
wash stand, table &amp;
repaired, new &amp;
600
Animals
rebuilt in stock. Call 6 chairs, gas heater,
table saw, fish tan&lt;.
Ron Evans 1-800computer.
printer,
537-9528
new computer desk,
Pets
$25,000·$30,000
recliner, lamps.
yearly
income
Found white wlblk potential. Mobil bill Garage sale- S at.
spot on back 30-401b board
8am-5pm,
advertising 13th,
dog. Around Bostic business low start up 36577 Texas Rd.,
car lot. 853-0102
Pomeroy, fiberglass
$2,500.
truck topper, truck
www.2487Now.info
tool box, wall mount
or 740-416-3130
gas heaters, bicycle,
Free beautiful female
Ohev. 305 engine,
. k
kitten with black and Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any f ri dgIstoveIsin
1white markings free 1OK/14KI18K
geld camping unit. DVD's,
to a good home
jewerly, dental gold, furniture, sewing &amp;
pre
1935
US crafts, toys, clothes
currency. proof/mint Garage Sale Friday
GIVEAWAY
PUPPIES. To a good sets, diamonas. MTS 12th At. 2 North
to
Rollins
home
(mom/dad Coin Shop. 151 2nd Close
Gallipolis.
good with kids) 6 Avenue,
Garage 8-?
weeks old- 3 black- 3 446-2842
Garage Sale 3 mi.
white/cream colored. Central
Boiler Sandhill
Road.
Lab/Golden Retriever Outdoor
wood Thursday,
Friday,
Mix Call: 304-675- Furnaces
Saturday. 8·?.
6928
Instant rebate up to
$1,000.00. 740)245- 3 family yard sale.
Nov,
12-13.
5193
Gallipolis Ferry 8-?.
6 cute fluffy black &amp;
white
kittens Kimball
upright Turn out Plymale
and
follow
giveaway 304-675- piano. cherry $400 lane
6355
firm 304-882-2287
signs.

Yard Sole

Apartments/
Townhouses

Yard Sale at Dish
Barn. Fri. and Sat. CONVENIENTLY
9-?.
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLE!
Recreational Townhouse
1000
apartments,
and/or
Vehicles small houses for rent.
Call 740-441-1111 for
application
&amp;
Campers/ RVs &amp;
information.
Trailers
Free Rent Special
2005 Jayco Eagle
I!!
Gooseneck
Hitch, 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
sleeps six. ExceUent up, Central Air, WID
condition.
Asking hookup, tenant pays
$19,900.
See electric. Call between
photos
at the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
www carmjchaeltraile
Ellm View Apts.
~
740-446(304)882-3017
2412
Twin Rivers Tower is
2000
Automotive accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1·BR
apartment
for
the
Autos
elderly/disabled,
call
Quality
Cars
&amp; 675·6679
Trucks wlwarranty all
priced to sell, 16 yrs.
in business. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
lease:
1BR
Gallipolis, OH 740- For
unfurnished 2nd floor
446-0103.
apt.
near
Gallia
1989 Corvette Coupe Academy, no pets.
Excellent Condition ref &amp; dep. required,
96,000 miles. 304- maximum occupancy
2, $350 mon. 740675-3354
446-3936 or 740446-4425
Trucks
2004
Chevy Modern 1BR Apt.
Silverado 4x4 Good 446..()390
Condition
$5,500
740)256-1757
2 BR apt. 6 mi from
Holzer. $400 + dep.
1998
Dodge Some utilities pd.
Cummins Ext. Cab 740-645-7630
or
$3500 Call: 339- 740-988-6130
3046
2BA Washer Dryer
Hookup 2miles from
Want To Buy
hospital Also 1 BR.
Oiler's Towing. Now 7 40-441-3702
or
buying junk cars 740-286-5789
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
No Tara Townhouse Apt.
740•441 •7870.
sunday call
2BR 1.5 BA, back
patio,
pool,
playground. No pets.
$450 rent. 740-367;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; _o5_4_7_ _ _ _ __
Commercial

2BR
apt.
in
Cententary
$325
OFFICE/WAREHOU water &amp; trash pd.
SE/RETAIL
Great 256-1135
Locatton 749 Third
Ave Gallipolis.1800
FIRST MONTH
sq.ft. For more info
FREE
Call 1-404-456-3802
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.
$385 &amp;
UP. Sec. Dep $300
For Sale By Owner
&amp; up,
6 apts $137.000
_ A/C, WID hook-up,
rent $
mo,
740
ten_ 2030
446 0390
ant pays electric,
Houses For Sale
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
Very Nice 213 BR 2
30A882 3017
,...
•
Baths. South Gallia - - - - - - /Fairland School Dist.
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
Owner
Finiancing houses in Pomeroy &amp;
$8 .000
•
down Middleport, NO Pets,
$531 .85 per mth. 740-992-2218
740) 256-1686
Brick house. 4 br, 2
bath, $40,000, land
contract
available

1 br. apt., 3rd St.
Racine. $350 a mo.
pluse
dep.
&amp;
utuilities,
740-24742 92
2
bedroom

w/10% down, 163
Mulberry
Ave,
Pomeroy, 740-380- apartment available
9800
in Syracuse. $200
deposit, $375 per
month rent. Rent
includes
water,
sewer &amp; trash. No
pets.
Sufficient
Apartments/
income needed to
Townhouses
qualify 740-378-6111
2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hosprtal on SR
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194

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

�Apartment./
Townhouses

Houses for Rent

Education

Rentals

Help Wanted General

Business
Instructors Needed Accepting
@ Gallipolis Career applications for part
cashiers,
College.
In time
Economics,
Subway artist &amp; exp
3 bedroom house for
Keyboarding,
and full time ass. store
rent downtown, view
Math. In Economics manager. Apply in
of river, available
and Math instructors person at ParMar
Houses For Rent
November 16, 740·
must
possess #38
15289
590-1900
Mastor's
Degree. Huntington
Rd
4BR 2BA 11 acres,
Send cover letter and Gallipolis Ferry or on
$450 mon+dep, ref 1 bdr. all utilities
Supplies
resume
to: online
req. 388-9009 or paid.
Near
at
740-649-0541
downtown.
HUD Green slag 10.00 a bshirey@gallipoliscar parmarstores.com
great
for eercollege.edu.
accepted. (304) 360- ton
2 BR House for Rent,
driveways. Rt. 62
0163
The
Athens-Meigs
Excellent C~dition,
above New Haven
Educational Service WANTED: Part-time
References
behind
American
Required. NO PETS 4 bdr. 2 ba. 450·0 Colloid Co. (304)882- Center has a position position available to
individuals
month.
· 450.00
_
opening for an ED assist
740-645-1766
3944
deposit. Middleport _______
.....,. Teacher
with developmental
2 BR 1 B $425 Rent OH. (304)675-3753
in
(Elementary)
in disabilities
$400
Dep.
88 362 Lincoln Street.
6000
Employment Athens County tor Galllipolis. Must have
Gartield. Hud OK
2010-2011 high school diploma
the
1-3 bed room house
740-645-1646
School
Year. or GED, valid driver's
for rent in Syracuse
6 Rms &amp; Bath, NO
Applicants
must
be license, three years
pet's
HUD
driving
Administrative/
Appliances
certified/licensed as good
approved call 304and
Furnished,
122 675-5332 Weekends
Professional
an
Intervention experience
Cedar St. Gallipolis, 740-591-0265
be adequate automobile
Specialist or
eligible to get a insurance. $8.97/hr,
NO SMOKING &amp; NO
after training. Send
Assistant Supplemental
Office
PETS $450mth. plus
Manufactu~ed
4000
Housmg Positions ava,labe at License.
This resume to: Buckeye
Deposit
740)645Mason
County position is a 9-month Community Services,
7651
Box
604,
Health
Dept. contract with Board P.O.
2 BA Home with
Rentals
Application can be approved benefits. Jackson, OH 45640.
attached garage WID
for
obtained
at
the Salary will be based Deadline
&amp; Ice Bx New 2BA-2 Bath Like new
applicants: 11/11/10.
health dept.
on
experience
and
Mobile Home water.
Carpet/Paint
Pre-employment
certification
Refer/Dep. required sewer. trash pd No
drug testing.. Equal
according
to
salary
Prefer NO Pets, pets, CA. · Covered
Submit Opportunity
Johnson's Child/Elderly Care schedule.
$675 mth water inc. Patio
letter
of
interest
to Employer.
near
the Mobile Home Park
John D. Costanzo,
7
40-446-3160
Cinema/Hospital
Superintendent,
304-657-6378
Underground
3 BR 2BA $575 Child care provider Athens-Meigs
SurveyorYellowbush
needed
in
my
home
3 Bedroom HUD mon+dep
1722b
Educational Service
Approved NO PETS Chatham Ave 740- after school &amp; on Center, 507 Richland Mining, LLC, located
breaks. Non smoker Avenue, Suite #108, 1n Racine, OH is now
740)256-1634
645-1646
resumes
~~~---..- good driving record Athens, OH 45701. accepting
House for sale or 3BR. Country setting, own reliable trans.
for the position of
rent. Pretty, clean, $450 mon + dep. . send ref. and resume Application Deadline: underground
·
December 1, 2010.
3BR.
Downtown 740•256•6863
to PO Box 255 C/0 The AMESC is an surveyor. Candidates
Gallipolis, close to 2
must posses at least
BR,
2
Bath Gallipolis
Daily
Opportunity
Washington
Elem. Cheshire Area, NO Tribune Po Box 469 Equal
a
high
school
Employer/Provider.
Rent $750, no utlilite. PETS, Ref. Aeq. Ph. Gallipolis Oh 45631
• diploma
or
(11) 12, 14, 16, 17
Sale $99,000 Kelly- 740-367-7025. $400
equivalent;
Jo 645-9096 or 446- mon + dep.
in
experience
4639
underground
coal
Entertainment
Drivers &amp; Delivery
mining preferred but
not
required.
Get Your Message Across
Need Santa. Call Interested applicants
with
surtace
Red's Rollen Garage 740-992-7853
With A Daily Sentinel
surveying
and
Needed Class A COL
BULLETIN BOARD
AutoCAD experience
Driver with Tanker &amp;
Food Services
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
are
strongly
Haz-mat. TWIC a
======;;;;;;;;; encouraged to apply.
740-339-{)034
plus
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
Yellowbush Mining,
9 00 AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
Needed experienced LLC,
offers
a
wait and kitchen competitive benefits
Must be package including.
A &amp; J Trucking in help.
flexable.
Apply on company sponsored
Marietta, Oh s hiring
or
at medical, dental and
COL A Drivers for person
www.
bobevans.com.
vision, 401 (k) with
&amp; Regional
local
company match, paid
Routes. Applicants (304)
vacalion
and
must be at least 23
yrs have min of 1 yr ~~~~~~= holidays and future
23rd Annual Craft Show
professional growth
of commercial driving
Help Wantedexp. Clean MVR, --=•G;;;;e;;;;n;;;;e;;;;ra•l=;;;;;;;;; opportunities.
Qualified applicants
Haz-mat Cert. We may
forward
weekend
feature
Accepting
resumes
to:
home
time,
Excellent
9 am- 4 pm
health
&amp; dental applications for part Yellowbush Mining
insurance,
401(K), time cashiers. Apply Attention HR, P.o:
238,
New
Vacation,
Bonus in person at ParMar• Box
pays
and safety #42 15054 St At 160 Haven, wv 25Z65 or
awards.
Contact Vinton Oh or on fax Attn: HR (304)
at 882-1379.
EOE
Kenton at 1-800-462- online
parmarstores.com
M/F/DN
9365 F.O.F.

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

Friday, November 12, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

2 br. house for rent
on Ann St., Pomeroy
dep. required, 740992-6385

Two bedroom trailer,
unfurnished, except
refrigerator
and
stove,
n1cecountry
setting
in
Harrisonville,
$350/month
J?lus
$350
deposit.
Call?40-985-4372.

°

Eastern High
School

Saturday,
November 13th

Medical

100

Legals

Ohio Valley Home
Health Inc. accepting
Applications
for
Aides. Apply at 1480
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis
or
on
internet
@
www.ovhh.org.
&lt;http://www.ovhh.org
I&gt; or Phone 7110)4411393
Competitive
wages and Benefits
including
health
insurance
and
mileage.

LEBANON
TOWNSHIP
IS
ACCEPTING
SEALED BIDS FOR
A 5 X 10 SINGLE
AXLE
TILT
TRAILER.
BIDS
WILL
BE
ACCEPTED
TILL
4PM
ON
NOVEMBER
30.
2010. MAIL BIDS TO
LEBANON
TOWNSHIP
AT
30220 'LOVETT RD.
RACINE;OH 45771 .
CALL
TOWNSHIP
GARAGE
FOR
100
Legals QUESTIONS
740843·5404.
(11) 12,
Legal Notice Estate 19, 26
of
Ramona
Kay - - - - - - - -....
Compton,
aka NOTICE OF SALE
Ramona Compton, UNDER JUDGMENT
deceased
Written OF FORECLOSURE
sealed bids will be OF
LIENS
FOR
received at the Law DELINQUENT LAND
Offices of Crow and TAXES.IN
THE
Crow,
110 West COMMON
PLEAS
Second
Street, COURT OF MEIGS
Pomeroy,
OH COUNTY,
OHIO,
45769,
for
the CASE NO. 2009 DLT
residence and real 001,
IN
THE
estate of the Estate MATTER
OF
of
Ramona
Kay FORECLOSURE OF
Compton, located at LIENS
FOR
126 lincoln Hill, DELINQUENT LAND
Pomeroy,
Ohio, TAXES,
PEGGY
being real estate YOST, TREASURER
described in Volume OF
MEIGS
163, • Page
557,. COUNTY,
OHIO,
Meigs County Official PLAINTIFF,
VS.
Records,
being PARCELS OF LAND
Meigs
County ENCUMBERED
Auditor's Parcel Nos. WITH DELINQUENT
16·00870.000,
16- TAX
UENS,
00869.000 and 16- AUDITOR'S
00868.000.
Said PARCEL NO. 05sealed bids are to be 00161.000,
AND
received on or before ORON
DUNGEE
noon
Eastern AND
DANA
Standard Time on DUNGEE, ET AL.,
November 19, 2010. DEFENDANTS.Wher
Said real estate is eas, judgment has
available
for been
rendered
inspection
on against
certain
November 16, 2010 parcels
of
real
between the hours of property . for taxes,
10:00 A.M. and 4:00 assessments,
P.M. Said real estate charges, penalties,
is sold "as-is" with no • interest and costs as
implied warranties. follows:AUDITOR'S
I. Carson Crow and PARCEL NO.: 05the
Estate
of 00161.000PAOPER
Ramona
Kay TY
STREET
Compton reserve the ADDRESS:
39410
right to reject any Cone
Road,
and all bids.l. Carson Columbia Township,
CrowCrow
and Meigs County, Ohio
Crow110
West DESCRIPTION:
8
Second
acres, more or less.
real
estate,
StreetPomeroy, OH of
45769 Attorney for situated in Columbia
Meigs
the
Estate
of Township,
Ramona
Kay County, Ohio, • more
Compton ( 11) 11, fully described in
12, 14
deed recorded in
Volume 283, Page
61, Meigs County
Deed
Records.NAME AND
ADDRESS OF LAST
KNOWN
OWNER:
Read your
Oron
Dungee
and
newspaper and learn
Dana
Dungee,
something today!
Addresses Unknown.

Attention Business Owners

Free on-line business Listings
on

AMOUNT
OF
JUDGMENT:
$OO,OOO.OO
And,
Whereas,
such
judgment
orders
such real property to
be sold or otherwise
disposed
of
according to law by
Robert E. Beegle,

Commercial &amp; Residential
• Room additions • Roofing •
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • Vinyl &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141

740-416-1834
in,urtd
Fret· rstimalt·s · _,U ~cars npcrit·m·t·
Full~

1 'ul

.llfih.lh·cl \\ ith

\lt~t·

\l,tn 11111 Rnulill!! ,\

l~t nu~dt 1111:..!'

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

Rick Price - 20

~I!Wiiifl!ii~
"'ell740-416·2960
740-992·0730

Vvvttu'+U::I;;J'+

Young's Carpenter Services
Room Addition- Complete extensive
remodeling • New Garages • Patio &amp; '
Porch Decks • Vinyl Siding &amp; Soffitt
• Roofin~ &amp; Gutters

tW•»IIjW:jW#Mfrll/JJ/1)
Interior &amp; exterior. House Painting,
Electrical &amp; ALL Plumping work
~ncrete walks &amp; dr~e~_m __
VJC YOUNG ill- OWNER
740-992-6215 • 740-591-0195
In business locally for 30 years
Reduced Winter Rates
Pomeroy, OH
WV 036725

100

Legals

the Sheriff of Meigs
County, Ohio, to
the
total
satisfy
amount
of
such
JUdgment;Now.
Therefore,
public
notict~
is hereby
given that Robert E.
Beegle, Sheriff of
Meigs County. Ohio,
will either dispose of
such
property
according to law or
sell
such
real
property at public
auction for cash, to
the highest bidder of
an
amount
that
equals
at
least
$00,000.00, at 10:00
a.m.. on the front
steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on the
OOth
day
of
f
000000000 2010 1
•
·
any parcel does not
receive a sufficient
bid
or
is • not
otherwise disposed
of according to law, it
may be offered for
sale, under the same
terms and conditions
of the first sale .and
at the same time of

100

Legals

day and at the same
place, on the _OOth
day of 000000000,
2010, for an amount
that equals at least
$00.000.00.ALL
SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGI
COL{NTY, OHIO. (1
12, 1S,26

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

READ All ABOUT IT
in the
The Daily Sentinel

ijtbe ~allipolislailp ijtribune ·
ijtbe ~oint ~leasant l\~gister

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 12, 2010

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

Chris Browne

t:::.,

HI &amp; LOIS
IT-S Gwee;- IJ..IA.,.VOIJ A~e(::) ~-Nil
011e~

-ro ~-tet..P

'lOt) 6A6Y'51'1.

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Flag
1 Wild
creator
barker
41 Roll5 Head in
call
the bar
answer
9 Shine
11 Open, as DOWN
a bottle
1 Rocker
13 Square
Bob
one
2 Banishes
TodiV's llswers
14 Explosive 3 Kilauea,
12 It ends
26 Twist
stuff
for one
with a
of
15 Peyton's
4 Trip
show of
fiction
brother
segment
hands
27 Passing
16 Satan
5 Account
17 Wnter
craze
18 Edits
contents
Deighton 28 Salt
6"Come
20.Be a
191nfamous 30 Printer's
contender
-!"
czar
need
21 Common
7 Soldier's 22 Defeat
31 Refinedice roll
state
24 City near
ment
22 Tragic
8 Oldest
Mt.
33 Throws
king
Brady
Rainier
in
23 Big
daughter 25 Stable
37 Fire
truck
10 Relax
mothers
proo!Z__
24 Frank
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (check/mo) to
McCourt
Thomas Josep~ Book 1, RO 13ox 536475, Orlando, fL 32853·6475
book
25 Apollo
target
27 Watch
parts
29Wholly
30 Junk
collector
32 Last
name for
Lucy
34 Through
35 Steer
clear of
36 Posts
38 Posts
39 Fancy
neckwear

Tom Batiuk

.AGAR THE HORRIBLE
WHY 1)0/'1'1 "'''l:JtJ 8fleAK

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

l)()rl/1 AIJO &lt;~~Vi! ~NERT
A /JITE lZ

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

11-12

Brian and Greg Walker
T~ELOCKHORNS

IT·G I&lt;INP OF

William Hoest

ROMAN1iC,At..MOSI
t..u&lt;~ we·~e

PARetJTG,

...

I

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

HALLOWEEN

I

WAS TWO f
WEEKS AGO.

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,., DON'T HAVE TO WISH LORETTA MANY HAPPY
RETURNS ... ~HE RETURNS EVERYTHING I GIVE HER."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
! WAt; ~f'F'&lt;::)%VTO PICK.

MI(I/APVP~~AND

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Hank Ketchum

Have: 5-Dyrumzic; 4-Po~itivc; 3-Avemge;
2-So-so; 1-Diffimlt

7

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1
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"Let'a teach P.J to purr, then he'll
be almost as good as havln'
another pet."

Dav~ Gr~~n

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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, Kov.
12,2010:
This year, you often ft:!el an innate
tension between your personal and
professional commitmenb;. The !'ituation isn't one of a juggling act but
rather of incorporating different elemenb; of your life.l'\ote a tendenry not
to want to be left alone. Deal with your
feelings in these various situalion'i, and
free yourself up. If you are single, you
could meet someone who might be
emotionally unavailable. lime is
always an ally. Date and get to know a
potential significant other for at least a
}ear before making any decisions. If
you are attached, the two of you might
invest more time in your home. Thl&lt;:
downtime together seale: the bond as
you let stress go. AQUARIUS can by
your patience.
The Stars Sl1t110 the J(jnd of Day Yo11'll

B
~

s
L

6
£

v
G
9

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
*****Don't think it's just a
string of ordinary meetings. Some will
prove to be much more important.
Mobilize support; make sure everyone
with a common inlet~ bon lht&gt; :;..unt:
page. Get expert opinions if you feel
you need them. Tonight: Get together
with friends.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***** Your instincts tell you
which way to
with a partner or
close friend. The two of you become f,lr
more powerful as a couple, achieving a
common goal. Relate directly with indi·
\'iduals. Someone might have reason to
get angry. Tonight Doo't push too
nard. Get some R and R.
GE.\tiNI (May 21-June 20)
You easily might fet'l the
need to find an expert in order to get
p~t a situation that could be bothersome. You might actually get too much
advice for your ta&lt;:te. Put a situation on
hold until you have a ftnner grip on
which path to follow. Tonight
Surround yourself with good music
and people.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
*** Listen to what is h&lt;lppening
behind the scenes. How you dec1l with
someone could change radically. You
are coming from an anchored, grounded point of view. Open up to new
opportunities that a key ac;sociate presents. Tonight: Stay centered.
LEO.Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
***** Others keep pre;enling
.lltemative;. You might feel over·
whelmed and not sure which is the

zo

** ***

best way to go. A brainstorming session with friends could be one of many.
A child does whatever he or she needs
to in order to get your attention.
Tonight: li&lt;&gt;ten to what others share.
VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22)
*** Remain dear about your
objectives. You might want to take
some time to ground yourself before
deciding. ~ith weekend tradewinds
heading in your direction.. postpone
any landmark decbioru;. Tonight;
Happily heading home.
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 22)
***** You always seem to have
the right answers at the right time.
Know what is too much' and what you
would like to do. Keep communication
flo\,ing. You could be delighted by an
interesting tidbit Tonight Let the
games begin.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1\'ov. 21)
*** Honor a family member or
personal need. Know when to pull
back and do some reflecting. You nught
not want to make a major purchase or
accept .m unexpected expense, but you
see no way around it. Tonight: Mosey
on home.
SAG11TAR1US (r'.:o\. 22-Dec. 21)
*****No one doubts your intentione;, and you certainly put your best
foot forward. Greet the unusually he\.'tic pace with a smile knowing it is
rrid.ly. Meeting.&lt;&gt; could go quite long,
.tnd one could tum into ,, happening.
Tonight: Out arid about
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
*** Your instincts guide you well
with a money Illcl!ter. You know what
you are doing and why. Don't suppress
your anger if} ou can Sometimes it
comes out in an inappropriate manner.
Stay on top of your game. Tonight
Your treat
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. IS)
*****Your energy remind.;
everyone that the border between
workweek and weekend is about to be
crossed. Meetings might be intense
with ~harp word.; here and there, yet
the letting go of ideac; happens.
'ltmight~ Blaze a trail into the night.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Mann 20)
***You might need to pull back a
litUe more than usual. Slow down
some, be..:ome more retlecti\'e and re.ilize what you ,,re dealing \\;th. Yowinstincts guide you ~itli a supervisor,
boss or authority tigure. Follow this
pe~n. Tonight: S.1y ")-es.''

jacqueline Bigar is on the Jntenlel
at http://nrwu.vacqudincbigar.rom

-

.mvdailvsentinel.com

.....
#0

.::

......

......

..

�--

~~~--~----- ---· --

,~-

All the
comforts
of home

..

SPECIAL TEAMS &gt;

OSU ·~c H_EDULE

ow

OPEN
502 Fifth Sueet

Racine, Ohio#

. COUNTDOV.W

-

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