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                  <text>True
allegiance, A7

AH ger
forMore,A6

•

at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Bodies of
2 women, boy
missing in
found

•

MOUNT
VERNON
(AP) -Authorities in IUf'al
central Ohio say they've
found the bodies of a mother, her young son and a
family friend who disappeared more than a week
go.
Knox County Sheriff
David
Barber
said
Thursday that the bodies
were found in garbage
bags, inside a hollow tree
about 20 miles notthwest of
their home.
The mother's 13-year-old
daughter, who also disappeared,
was
found
Saturday.
bound
and
gagged in the basement of
the home of a 30-year-old
unemployed ·man who
spent six years in a
Colorado prison. He is
charged with kidnapping
the girl. Barber says the
man, Matthew Hoffman,
gave information that led to
the discovery of the bodies
and that no one else is a sus-

Meigs Co. family violence by the numbers
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

COLUMBUS A
recent study released by
The Ohio Family Violence
Prevention Project in conjunction with The Ohio
State University's College
of Public Health, reveals
incidents of family violence are a major problem
in the Buckeye State.
The
report.
which
reviews data from 2007.

shows the number of petitions for civil protection
are increasing in Meigs,
Jackson and Franklin
counties. Not limited to
examining civil protection
orders, the report focuses
on "family violence."
What does this tenn mean
within the confines of this
report'? See below.
Child abuse and neglect:
When a family member or
caretaker neglects basic
needs or inflicts physical,

sexual and/or emotional
abuse. Neglect is the most
common type . of child
maltreatment, followed by
physical and then ~exual
and emotional abuse.
Intimate partner violence: When physical, sexual and/or emotional violence occurs in the context
of a current or former relationship. A perpetrator
often abuses power in
order to control his partner. The most. .serious

injuries and adverse consequences of intimate partner violence are disproportionately experienced by
women.
Elder abuse and neglect:
When a family member or
caretaker neglects basic
needs. financially exploits
an elder, or inflicts physi-·
cal, sexual and/or emotional abuse. Neglect is the
most common type of
elder abuse reported to
adult protective services.

Meigs Marauder Band a winner

.affices closed
POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Health
Department and TB Qffice
will both be closed Nov. 2526 for Thanksgiving.

~BITUARIES
Page A3 .
• Elmer C. Finlaw, Jr.
• James L. Davison

WEATHER

Meigs Marauder Band
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY The
Meigs. Marauder Band
directed by Toney Dingess
returned home with a first
place trophy from the TriState Marching Band
Festival held at Marshall

University in Huntington.
W.Va.
The band, which bas
participated in five competitions this year, took first
place in Class AA in the
Huntington competition
against nine other bands in
the class.
Of the 32 bands per-

forming in the festival. the
Marauders placed fifth.
Title of the 93-member
Meigs band's show was
"Ellington in Motion" featuring the music of Duke
Ellington.
The festival at Marshall
marked the end of the
band competition season.

Dingess noted that at the
recent Marietta contest the
Maurader marchers qualified for state competition.
marking its 21st consecutive year to make the
grade.
"It's been a tremendous
year for the band," he
commented.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
-To
those v. ho use them as a
mode of transportation in
their neighborhoods they
are fuel-efficient golf
carts, but to the Bureau
of Motor Vehicles and
the county sheriff, they
are under-speed vehicles.
and they now must be
inspected for safety
before they can be driven
on public roadways.
Sheriff Robert Beegle
said his office will now

inspect golf carts for
safety and liability insurance. These under speed
vehicles are legally driven on public roadways
with a posted speed limit
. of 35 miles per hour or
less, unless prohibited by
a local ordinance.
The USV classification
includes any four-wheel
mode of transportation,
other than a truck,
designed to travel at a
speed of 20 mph or Jess.
Placing a slow-moving
vehicle sign on a golf
cart no longer makes it

legal to operate on public
roadways. Beegle said.
Beegle said those who
drive their carts on the
road without an inspection and tags can be fined
now that the inspection
program is underway.
Those who drive their
golf carts on the public
roadways must now
arrange for an inspection
by a deputy sheriff and
bring the vehicle to the
sheriff's department to
do so. There are no
"housecall" inspections.
Beegle said. because the

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
•

2 SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith
As-7
Sports B Section
@

2010

•

Oh10 Valley Publishing Co.

li.!!J ,I !I! I~! I!II

POMEROY - Energy
efficient building materi~
als and techniques are
becoming the norm and
contractors and businesses who don't embrace
this change are being left
behind.
To assist these local
contractors, businesses
and even lenders with ~
better understanding o{
what financial incentives
are available for these
energy efficient building
materials and techniques.
a forum has been
planned.
The Meigs County
Economic Development
Office is sponsoring the
Energy
Efficiency
Builder's Forum at noon
on Dec. 8 at the Rio
Grande Fultz Center. A
light lunch will be provided by the Meigs
County
Economic
Development Office.
Besides
providing

See Forum, A3

Beegle: Golf carts require inspection for road use
inspections are free.
They are scheduled
during regular business
hours. at 992-3371.
The inspection, Beegle
said, will include proof
of liability insurance. at
l~ast one ~:ear taillight.
visible from at least 500
feet
two rear-facin&lt;&gt;
retl~ctors. or headlight;:
a rear, white license plate
light, two working headlights capable of illuminating objects up to 74
feet. a working horn. rear
view mirror, windshield
of glass or safety glass.

Feeney-Bennett Post honors two
High: 54
Low: 39

Green energy:
Forum for local
contractors,
businesses
BY BETH SERGENT

Barber says the deaths
are homicides.
Knox
County Prosecutor John
Thatcher says no charges
-~ave been filed.
.

POMEROY
- The
Meigs County Health
Department will conduct a
childhood immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 13 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 23.
Bring child's shot records
and medical cards, if
applicable. A $10 donation
is appreciated but not
required. Influen:t..a vaccinations will also be available for Meigs County residents at no charge.

See Violence, A3

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

pect.

Immunization
clinic

followed by financial
exploitation and then emotional, physical and sexual
abuse. Consistent with the
focus on elders, victims
under 60 years old were
excluded.
So how did the numbers
in Meigs County stack up
in this report which, again.
examined data from 2007?
Estimated coupts (range)
of family violence types

MIDDLEPORT- Feeney-Bennett Post
128. American Legion, honored two outstanding ·Legionnaires at Wednesday
evening's annual Thanksgiving dinner and
award program.
The Legion post auxiliary prepared the
meal. served to members and guests at the
Brian J. ·Reed/photo
Post home in Middleport. Bob Holland is
Feeney-Bennett Post
Post Commander.
128 Adjutant Roscoe
Jim Bailey was honored as Legionnaire
of the Decade. and Homer Tate was honWise presents Homer
ored as Legionnaire of the Year. Bailey will
Tate with the
receive a plaque, and Tate an award jacket ·
Legionnaire of the
with the Legion insignia, his name. and the
Year award. Jim
award recognition.
Bailey,
not pictured,
The busy Legion has other events
was named
upcoming, including a Christmas dinner
Legionnaire of the
next month. and its annual Post
Decade.
Everlasting. a ceremony honoring post
brothers who have died in the past year.
That service will be held in February.
The legion's auxiliary post also works
hard. recently assembling pocket tlags for
men and women serving in con~bat.

•

turn sigr1als. and license
plate brackets on front
and rear.
An inspection certificate is provided for
issuance
of license
plates.
"Now tliat the inspection program is in place.
USV d,rivers who do not
have an inspection will
be cited." Beegle said.
Other counties are also
placing inspection programs in place. because
of high fuel costs, sheriffs say.

�--US

Friday, November 19,

so;

ww--- - - ------,. . . ,. _-

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

Jobless benefits to expire as Congress debates tax
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Jobless benefits will
nin out for 2 million peo:
ple during the holiday
season unless they are
renewed by a Congress
that's focusing more
attention on a quarrel
over preserving tax cuts
for people making more
than $200,000 a year.
It's looking iffy at best
whether Congress will
renew jobless benefits
averaging $310 per week
nationwide
that are
presently claimed by
almost 5 million people
who have been out of
w.ork for more than six
months.
·An extension of jobless
benefits enacted this
summer expires Dec. 1,
and on Thursday, a bill to
extend them for three
n1onths failed in the
House.
Democrats
brought the bill to the
floor under fast-track
rules that required a twothirds ·vote to pass.
Republicans opposed the
legislation because they
were denied a chance to

attach spending cuts, so
the measure fell despite
winning
a
258-154
majority.
In Thursday's vot~. 21
Republicans joined with
Democrats in favor.
Eleven moderate-to-conservative
Democrats
opposed the bill.
House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi,
D-Calif.,
promised to bring the
measure back to the floor
after Thanksgiving to try
to enact an emergency
measure that extend benefits at least through the
holidays. But Senate
Democrats don't have
time; instead, they hope
the jobless benefits issue
gets addressed in yearend negotiations over
taxes and other important
year-end legislation.
However, the dock is
working
against an
extension of benefits,
especially in the notoriously balky Senate,
where prior efforts to
renew them occupied
weeks of the chamber's
time and where GOP

Leader Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky commands
the votes to block any
benefits extension that is
not "paid for" with cuts
to other programs.
Still, the looming expiration of unemployment
benefits
could
put
Republicans on the
defensive since they'll
expire just as debate
peaks in the lame-duck
session over whether to
extend Bush-era tax cuts
on individuals with
income
exceeding
$200,000 or for couples
more
than
making
$250,000. The tax cuts
expire Dec. 31, and
Democrats oppose permanently extending the
upper-bracket tax cuts,
which would cost about
$700 billion over 10
years.
"I don't think we want
to leave here having
fought for tax cuts for
millionai,res and against
unemployment insurance
for those that have lost
their jobs," spokesman
Robert Gibbs said.

"Republicans
in
Congress are eager to
spend lavishly on tax
breaks for the fortunate
few, but stingy when it
comes to helping the
middle c1ass make ends
meet," said Rep. Ed
Markey, D-Mass.
Republicans maintain
they're willing to extend
the benefits but don't
want to add the cost $12.5 billion for three
months- to the nation's
$13.8 trillion national
debt.
"The fact is, we can
both provide this help
and pay for it by cutting
less effective stimulus
spending," said Rep.
Charles Boustany, R-La.
"That's what we should
be debating today."
Added Rep. Mike
Pence,
the No.
3
Republican in the House:
"We're facing a fiscal crisis in this country. If
we're going to choose to
extend unemployment
again we've got to find a
way to pay for it."
Every recession since

1950 has featured an the top 2 percent of wage
extended federal benefits earners in the country at
program financed with the same time that middeficit dollars. That's a dle class families are
precedent
Democrats stru~gling to hold their
refused to break when families
togethe.
battling
with because of prolonge
Republicans for months unemployment,"
said
earlier this year ts:&gt; extend House Education and
the program.
Labor
Committee
Republicans didn't pay Chairman George Miller,
any political price for D-Calif.
stalling efforts earlier this
The additional jobless
year to extend jobless benefits programs began
benefits that provide crit- in 2008 under President
ical help to the unem- George W. Bush but were
ployed - including a made more generous
seven-week stretch over under last year's ecothe summer when jobless nomic recovery act.
benefits were a piece of a Jobless people are now
failed Democratic tax eligible for up to 99
weeks of benefits in most
and jobs bill.
But allowing benefits states. The first 26 weeks
to expire in the holiday of benefits are paid for by
season may draw nega- states. About 3.8 million
tive
attention
to are now drawing those
Republicans, especially state-paid benefits.
when measured against
Democrats argue that
their insistence on renew- the extended benefits
ing tax cuts for upper- should be paid for with
deficit spending because
income taxpayers.
"It's just inconceivable it injects money into the
that in the last gasp of economy. Jobless people
this Congress you would immediately spend the
turn all your attention to cash, they explain.
•

Obama administration defends .use of courts in terror cases
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The Obama administration said Thursday that
it is committed to trying
some terrorism suspects
in civilian courts, even
though a jury in New
York acquitted a bombing
defendant on more than
280 charges while convicting him on just one.
The administration will
use "all the tools at our
disposal''
to
try
Guantanamo
Bay
detamees, White House
press secretary Robert
Gibbs told reporters.
Department
Justice
spokesman
Matthew
Miller described the outcome in the case against
Ahmed
Ghailani
as
"another in a long line of
verdicts where federal
civilian courts have
shown the ability to deliver fair trials and long sentences.''
Ghailani was convicted
of conspiring in alQaida's 1998 bombings
of two U.S. embassies in
Africa and faces a sentence of 20 years to life
behind bars. Miller said
the U.S. government will
seek the maximum pun-

ishment.
The case is significant
because
some
have
viewed it as a test of the
challenges involved in
trying a terrorist suspect
in a civilian court.
Attorney General Eric
Holder's plan to try
avowed 9/ll .mastermind
Khalid
Sheikh
Mohammed and four others in New York was put
on hold and is considered
all but dead because of
opposition in Congress
and in New York based on
security and other concerns. Those five remain
at the U.S. military prison
at Guantanamo Bay in
Cuba while the administration ponders its next
move in their case.
Miller told reporters
that the administration
will continue to rely on a
combination of civilian
courts and military commissions.
''We make those decisions based on facts,
based on the law," he
said. "And we'll continue
to work through tha[ with
the detainees who are still
at Guantanamo." Miller
did not discuss how any

specific detainee would
be handled.
Gibbs said decisions
would have to be made on
Guantanamo detainees.
In Ghailani's case, "there
was a guilty verdict, a
minimum sentence of 20
years that incapacitates
somebody that has comnutted a terrorist act and,
because of that incapacitation, isn't going to
threaten American lives,"
Gibbs said.
Both President Barack
Obaina and Holder avoided discussing detainee triat
appearances
als
Thursday devoted to
other topics. Reporters
were brought in bnefly as
Obama spoke to a meeting on a nuclear weapons
treaty in the White House
Roosevelt Room. Later,
the president came to the
Wh1te House briefing
room to discuss GM's
stock
sale.
When
reporters sought his reaction to the verdict at the
conclusion of his statement, he headed back
into the West Wing without responding.
Holder spoke to Justice
Department employees at

a veterans ceremony
without mentioning the
verdict.
Sen. Lindsey Graham,
a
South
Carolina
Republican who is seen
as key to any deal over
Obama's plan to close
Guantanamo,
was
Holder's guest at the
Justice
Department
event. The senator told
reporters afterward that
top-level al-Qaida suspects should not be tried
in civilian courts. Trying
lower-level operatives in
civilian courts "makes
sense to me," said
Graham.
Graham added: "I'm
going to have my hands
full holding back'' some
fellow Republicans who
want to rule out the use of
civilian courts altogether
to try terrorist suspects.
"That would be a
bridge too far for me,"
said Graham.
As for Guantanamo
Bay, Gibbs said the president remains committed
to closing the prison there
"to ensure that that is no
longer the recruiting
poster that it is right now
for al-Qaida."

Days after his election,
Obarna announced that
he intended to close
Guantanarno within a
year. The administration
came up with a plan to
move detainees to a refurbished old prison in
Thomson, m., which met
opposition.
Congress responded to
the controversy over
closing Guantanamo and
holding civilian trials by
requiring the administration to notify it before
any transfer of inmates
to the United States.
Republicans, set to take
over control of the
House in January, have
said they would block
such efforts.
"They couldn't come
close to getting that
done
when
the
Democrats were in
charge," said Rep. Peter
King, a New York
Republican
who
is
expected to be the next
chairman of the House
Homeland
Security
Committee. "There's no
way they're going to get
it now that Republicans
are in charge."
Administration offi-

cials believe there are
only a handful of
options for closing
Guantanarno Bay:
•
Prosecute
the
detainees. Some, like
Ghailani, could face
criminal trials. Others
could face military commissions. Regardless,
the administration wants
those trials in the U.S.,
not at Guantanamo.
• Transfer some prisoners to other countries.
Many already have been
released or cleared for
release. But Yemeni citizens make up the largest
contingent, and the U.S.
doesn't trust Yemen to
monitor them if they are
sent horne. Two faileairline bombings origit
nating in Yemen in th
past year have made
such release efforts even
more difficult.
•
Hold
prisoners
indefinitely. Top administration officials have
said they don't like the
idea but would consider
it in some form, if the
de[ainees were held
inside the U.S. with
some review by courts.

Censure recommended for New York congressman
WASHINGTON (AP)
The ethics committee, how much longer I have
The House ethics made
up
of five to live."
Facing the committee
committee's chief coun- Democrats and five
sel
recommended Republicans, could opt members, he asked them
Thursday that veteran for lighter punishments, to "see your way dear to
Rep. Charles Rangel of such as a reprimand, fine say, 'This member was
New York be censured or a report deploring not corrupt."'
He continued: "There's
for
financial
and Rangel's behavior.
fundraising misconduct
The full House would no excuse for my behavas lawmakers neared clo- have to vote on a repri- ior and no intent to go
sure on a 21!2-year-long mand or fine, but Rangel beyond what has been
scandal.
would be spared the given to me as a salary. I
The committee deliber- embarrassment of being apologize for any embarated behind closed doors rebuked at the front of rassment I've caused you
Thursday after counsel the chamber, called the individually and collecBlake Chisam made his well. The House also tively as a member of the
recommendation
and could change the recom- greatest institution in the
Rangel pleaded for fair- mended discipline by world."
In the most dramatic
ness, telling the panel he 'making it more serious or
clash of the proceeding,
was not a crooked politi- less serious.
cian.
Rangel, 80, who has Rep. Michael McCaul,
Chisam's recommen- served in the House for R-Texas, questioned the
dation was that Rangel 40 years, ended a sanc- assertion of Rangel receive the most serious tions hearing with an the former chairman of
congressional discipline emotional plea to salvage the tax-writing Ways and
short of expulsion. A his reputation.
'Means Committee censure resolution would
Before speaking, he sat that he wasn't corrupt.
require a vote by the for several minutes trying · "Failure to pay taxes
House
disapproving to compose himself. He for 17 years. What is
Rangel's conduct and the placed his hands over his that?" McCaul asked,
speaker would orally eyes and then his chin, referring to Rangel's
administer an embarrass- before he slowly stood up shortchanging
the
ing rebuke to the 20-term and said in .a gravelly Internal Revenue Service
Democrat in front of his voice that was barely on rental income from his
coUeagues.
audible: ''I don't know villa in the Dominican

Republic.
McCaul also noted the
committee's finding that
Rangel solicited donor-s
for the Charles B. Rangel
Center at City College of
New York from donors
who had business before
the Ways and Means
Committee.
After an investigation
that began in the summer
1998, Rangel was convicted Tuesday by a jury
of his House peers on 11
of 13 charges of rules
violations.
He was found to have
improperly used official
resources congressional letterheads and
staff - to raise funds
from businesses and
foundations
for
the
Rangel
Center.
A
brochure with some of
Rangel's solicitation letters asked for $30 million, or $6 million a year
for five years.
He also was found
guilty of filing a decade's
worth of misleading
annual financial disclosure forms that failed to

list hundreds of thousands of dollars in assets,
and failure to pay taxes
on his Dominican unit.
Chisam said donations
to the Rangel Center
were going poorly, then
spiked after Rangel rose
to the top of the Ways
and Means Committee.
He noted the center
would benefit minority
students and asked,
"What kid of example is
that of what public service ought to be?"
Chisam asked what a
neighbor of Rangel
would think after she was
evicted from her apartment in Harlem's Lennox
Terrace, for violating
terms of her lease - and
then learning Rangel was
allowed to convert a residential-only unit into a
campaign office. Others
were evicted for similar
offenses, the committee
found.
"How would that influence her faith in government?" Chisam asked.
And Chisam asked
how a waitress strug-

gling to pay her taxes on
income and tips would
feel about Rangel not
paying taxes on rental
money from his vacation
villa.
Rangel brought in Rep.
John Lewis, a Georg1a
Democrat, to give a testi.
monial for the congressman to the panel. Lewis
called his colleague "a
good and decent man"
and said Rangel had
worked tirelessly to
advance civil rights.
Before Chisam commenced his remarks,
Rep. Jo Bonner, R-Ala.,
told committee colleagues that Rangel
needed only to "look in
the mirror to know who
to blame" for his
predicament.
Rep. G.K. Butterfield,
D-N.C., a former member of his state's
Supreme Court, said he
believed the facts merited a reprimand, not a
censwe.

Keeping Meigs County informed
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www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 19, 2010

Violence
t

. .- - -- - -. - - . - - --·---

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- ~ ·__..

=.,--=-=-w-=·-~-------~--.

The Daily Sentinel • PageA3.

For the Record

Meigs County Forecast

911

F riday: Sunny, with a
high near 54. Calm wind
becoming south around 6
mph.
Friday Night: Mostly
,clear, with a Jow around
39. Light and variable
wind.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high ncar 6 I. Calm wind
becoming west between 4
and 7 mph.
Saturday
Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 37. Light and variable wind.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 63.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
46.
Monday: A chance of
showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 62.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Monday Night: A
of showers.
chance
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 48. Chance of pre-

From Page A1

were as follows: abused and or neglected children. 70100 counts; physical intimate partner violence among
adults, 180-230 counts; dating violence among females,
15-19 years old, 60-100 counts. By comparison, counts
for Athens County were as follows: abused and or
neglected children, 140-220 counts: physical intimate
8 f tner violence among adults, 530-690 counts: dating
~lencc among females, 15-19 years old. 310-470
counts.
Estimated prevalence (mngc) of abuse, neglected
and/or exploited seniors livin~ in the community and living in long term cm·c facilities in Meigs: living in the
conununity. 210-260 counts; Jiving in long tenn care
facilities. I 0-20 counts. By comparison, counts for
Athens County were as follows: living in the community. 370-480 counts; living in long tcnn care facilities, 2040 counts.
.
Repons of abu-.e and neglect filed with children's services and children in custody in Meigs: repons to children's services. 251; children in custody, 39. By comparison. counts for Athens County were: 564 reports to
children's services. 167 children in custody.

POMEROY - Meigs County 911 dispatched
these calls for emergency medical assistance:
Wednesday
9:04 a.m., Locust Street, Pomeroy. fracture: 2:34
p.m., Ohio 7, Reedsville. hypertension; 3:05 p.m.,
Sycamore Street, Middleport, stroke; 5:28 p.m ..
Ohio 143, sy1H.:ope: 6:04 p.m.. ·Park Street,
Middleport, choking; 6:3 I p.m.. East Memorial
Dnvc, chest pain.
Thursday
3:50p.m .. Bnshan Road, seizure.

Common Pleas
POMEROY- Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch filed
the following as part of the court's public record:
Civil
• Foreclosure action filed by Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., against Joseph P. Roderus. Syracuse,
and others.
·

Forum

Recorder

From Page A1

POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the
following real estate transactions:
• Gene Hudson. Linda Hudson, .Toni M. Hudson,
Toni M. Gruescr, Blondena M. Rainer, Patrick B.
Grueser. to Syracuse Racine Regional Sewer
District; Joseph D. Loftis. Cora A. Loftis. to Barbara
Priddy. Eric Manuel P1:iddy. deed, Rutland.
• Jennifer Lou Machir, Dale S. Machir. Melanie
Marie Stcthcm, Terry M. Stethem, Denise Ann
Payne, John L. Pnyne, to Carrie L. Ihle; Jeremy
David Hartson to American Electric Power, Ohio
Power Co .. casement, Salisbury: Bruner Land Co.,
Inc., to Steve Swallel, Tara Swatzel, deed, Bedford.
• Shawn Arnott. Billi Jo Arnott, to Ohio Power
Co .. :AEP, easement, Salisbury: Danny M. Barber to
Leonard L. Barber, Jr.. Shirley Jean Barber. deed,
Olive; Billie Saxton. Jessica Saxton. to Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Co., sheriff's oeed,
Salisbury/Village of Middleport: Karl Huff to
Federal National Mortgage Corp.. sheriff's deed,
Rutland.

information. the forum is described as a networking opportunity for participants and energy efficiency huilding industry experts.
Beginning at I p.m., the Columbus Green
Builders Forum will provide an overview of
industry trends and emerging opportunities.
Then, representatives from the Corporation
r Ohio Appalachian Development (COAD)
•
will discuss energy efficient building initiatives in Appalachian Ohio. This is followed by
American Electric Power discussing financial
incentives for energy efficiency. And. local
vendors for energy efficiency building materials will be available to discuss their products.
"Our goal with this forum is to proYide local
contractors, lenders and business leaders with
the most up to date information, resources and
techniques related to energy efficient construction," said Perry Varnadoe, director of the
Meigs County Economic Development Office.
The Meigs County Economic Development
Office strives to improve the business climate
in Meigs County by assisting local businesses
and marketing the county's amenities to bring
additional jobs and investment to the county.
. For more information. contact Varnadoe at
992-3034 or email him at director@meigscountyohio.com.

Deaths
, ,

Elmer C. Finlaw, _
Jr.

Elmer C. Finlaw, Jr., 84, Pomeroy. died Tuesday,
Nov. 17, 2010. Arrangements will be announced by
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy. An
online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

James L. Davison
James L. Davison. 90. Gallipolis. died Wednesday,
November 17. 20 I 0. The Mass of Christian Burial
will be conducted at I 0 a.m .. Saturday, Nov. 20, 2010,
at St. Louis Catholic Church, Gallipolis. Officiating
will be Monsignor William R. Myers and Father
Timothy Davison. Burial will be at St. Louis Catholic
Cemetery in Green Township. Friends may call at the
Cremeens Funeral Chapel from 2-6 p.m .• Friday Nov.
19, 2010, at which time the body will be taken to the
St. Louis Catholic Church for a Vigil Service at 7 p.m.
Expressions of sympathy may be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.

cipitation is 30 percent.
1'uesdav: A chance of
showerc;. ·Mostly cloudy,
w1th a high near 60.
Chance of precipitation i~
40 percent.
1 pesd ay
~ight :
Showers and thunderstorms likely. Cloudy~
with a low around 42.
Chance of precipitation is
60 percent.
Wednesday: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Cloudy, with a
high near 55. Chance of
precipitation is 50 percent.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers and
thunderstonns. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
33. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Thanksgiving Day: A
chance of ram and snow
showers. Partly sunny,
with a high near 40.
Chance of precipitation is
40 percent.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 36.06
f*zo (NASDAQ) - 59.93.
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 53.12
Big Lots (NYSE)- 29.57
Bob Evans (NASDA0)-33.19
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 59.46
Century Alum (NASDAQ) -14.00
Champion (NASDA01 -1.17
Channi!VJ Shops (NASDAQ)-3.61
City Holding (NASDAQ)-33.35
Collins (NYSE)- 55.65
DuPont (N'ISE) - 46.53
US Bank (NYSE) - 25.01
Gen Electric (NYSE) -16.04
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 31.74
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 39.66
Kroger (NYSE)- 22.76
Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 33.26
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 61.15
OVBC (NASDAQ) -19.11

Riverby Theatre Guild hosts auditions
for murder-mystery production

BBT (NYSE)~ 24.41
Peoples (NASDAQ) -13.58
PepsiCO (NYSE)- 64.77
Premier (NASDAQ)- 6.40
RockvJell (NYSE)- 65.00
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 9.14 •
Royal Dutch Shell- 65.55
Sears Holdo!VJ (NASDAQ) - 63.70
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.98
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.65
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.00
Worthington (NYSE) -15.97

Daily stock reports are the 4p.m. ET
closmg quotes of transactions tor
Nov. 18,2010, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills
in Gallipolis at (140) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-()174. Member SIPC. '

GALLIPOLIS -The 1-'rench A11 Colony's Riverby
Theatre Guild will hold auditions for the first production of its 2011 season, "Murder by the Book." on
Friday, Nov. 19 at 6 p.m. and Saturday, Nov. 20 at I 1
a.m. Multiple adult roles are available and prior stage
experience is not necessary to audition. No advance
preparations arc required for the audition.
The production is scheduled for February, 2011.
Perfonnances for "Murder By The Book" are planned
to take place in Point Pleasant, W.Va., a-; a dinner-theatre event.
GALLIPOLIS .- The Ariel Bridal Fair will be held
The comedy, murder-mystery is directed by Ron from II a.m.-5 p.m., Saturday, No~. 20 at the Ariel
Siders. ''Murder By The Book'' offers local actors the Dater Hall is located at 426 Second Avenue in downopportunity to bring literature's most recognizable town Gallipolis.
The brides-to-be will receive bridal gift bags and •
authors to life: William Shakespeare. Emily Dickinson.
Mark Twain, Agatha Christie and more.
ha\ e chances to win instant prizes throughout the.
The group plans to produce at lea&lt;&gt;t five additional building. Everything from hotel suites to photograproductions during the 2011 season. Details will be phy will be represented at the fair. An Ariel Bridal
announced at their upcoming 2010 Holiday produc- Guide will given to all attendees and will be available
tions, "Snow Child.'' Dec. 10-12. at the Point Pleasant year-round at the ticket office or any vendors estab ..
HS Wedge Auditorium and ''It's A Wonderful Life." lishments.
Dec. 17-19 at the University of Rio Grande's Berry.
The newly opened Chamber Theatre on the third·
Fine and Pctforming Arts Center.
floor will be on display. It features a beautifully
The Riverby Theatre Guild plans to continue its mis- restored auditorium and stage in the Victorian buildsian of bridging the Ohio and West Virginia communi- ing. The historic facility boasts a separate dressing
ties through the arts by presenting productions on both area for the bride and a groom's room on either side ·
sides of the Ohio River. and by seeking involvement of the stage. The second floor banquet hall is availfrom members'of numerous surrounding communities. able for receptions. dinner and dancing in the adjaMore infmmation regarding the French Art Colony's cent ballroom. More information is available'on the
Riverby Theatre Guild can be obtai~e~. by contacting 1 Ariel Theatre website at arieltheatre.org.
•
the FAC at (740) 446-3834. or by VIsttmg www.fren- 1 For information contact the Ariel at 740-446- ARTS
ch_artcolony.org. The &lt;?hi? Arts. Council helped fund ~ ('2787). Admis.;ion to the 2010 Bridal Fair is $10.
thJ:o. program or or~amzatton wtth st~te tax dollars to And remember: Grooms get in free with the bride-toencourage economtc growth. educatiOnal excellence be. Online registration is available at arielbridaland cultural enrichment for all Ohioans.
1 fair.org.

Ariel Bridal Fair
set for Saturday

r

Community Calendar
ublic
meetings
Monday, Nov. 22
RACINE - Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Library Board,
regular meeting, 3:30
p.m., Pomeroy Library.

Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Nov. 18
POMEROY
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advisory
Board/S u rvivo rsh tp
Taskforce, regular meeting, noon, banquet room
at Wild Horse Cafe.
REEDSVILLE
verview Garden Club
30 p.m., Reedsville
• nited Methodist Church.
Bring gifts for nursing
home, auction items.
Rofl call will be a family

Thanksgiving tradition.
POMEROY The
Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation
District
Board of Supervisors •
11:30 a.m. at the district
office, 33101 Hiland
Road.
Saturday, Nov. 20
SALEM CENTER Star Grange 778 and
Star Junior Grange 878
will hold a fun night and
potluck supper at the
Grange hall located on
County
Road
near
Salem Center.
Monday, Nov. 22
MIDDLEPORT
Citizens Association for
the Improvement of
Middleport, 8:15 p.m.,
Bitanga Martial Arts
Center, 129 Mill St. 992·
5715,
www.middleport123.com for information.
Tuesday, Nov. 23
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club, D of A,
7 p.m. at the lodge hall.

Church events

WASHINGTON (AP)
-The Obama administration said Thursday that it is
committed to trying some
terrorism suspects in civilian courts. even though a
jury in ~ew York acquitted
a bombing defendant on
more than 280 charges
while convicting him on
just one.
The administration will
use ..all the tools at our
disposal"
to
try
Guantanamo
Bay
detainees, White House
Sunday, Nov. 21
POMEROY The press secretary Robert
Meigs County Ministerial Gibbs told reponers.
Justice
Department
Association will host a
Matthew
Thanksgiving dinner and spokesman
Miller
described
the outservices at the Mulberry
come
in
the
case
against
Community
Center.
as
Ahmed 'Ghailani
Dinner will be served at
"m1other in a long line of
6 p.m. and services with
verdicts where federal
Pastor Larry Lemley civilian courts have shown
speaking will be held at the ability to deliver fair
7 p.m. Public invited. A trials and long sentences."
free gift available to all
Ghailani was convicted
after the service.
of conspiring in al-Qaida's
1998 bombings of two
U.S. embassies in Africa
and faces a sentence of 20
years to life behind bars.
Miller said the U.S. government will seek the
maximum punishment.
The case is significant
because some have ,;ewed
it as a test of the challenges involved in trying a
Sunday, Nov. 21
LONG BOTTOM Northeast
Cluster
Thanksgiving
Hymn
Sing, 7 p.m., Long
Bottom United Methodist
Church, bring non perishable food item for the
Meigs
Cooperative
Parish Christmas distribution.

Other events

VISit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

Obama administration defends
use of courts in terror cases

Your online source for news

terrorist suspect in a 'civilian COlll1. ·
Attorney General Eric
Holder's plan to try
avowed 9/1 I mastermind
Sheikh
Khalid
Mohammed and four others in New York was put
on hold and is considered
all but dead because of
opposition in Congr~ss
and in New York based on
security and other concerns. Those five remain at
the U.S. militmy prison 'at
Guantanan10 Ba~'in Cuba
while the adnunistrntion
ponders ib next move m
their case.
Miller told reporters that
the administration will
continue to rely on a combination of civilian courts
and milit;uy commissions.
·•we make those decisions based on fa~.:ts. based
on the law,'' he said. "And
we'll continue to work
through that with the
detainees who nrc still at
Guantanamo:· .~Iiller did
not &amp; ..cuss how any specific detainee would be
handled.
Gibbs s.tid decisions
would have to be mnde on
Guantanamo detainees. In
Ghailani·s case, •'there
was a guilty verdict, a
mimmum c;entencc of 20
years that mcapacitates

somebody that has committed a ten·orist act and.
because of that incapacita~.
tion, isn't going to threaten
American lives," Gibb!-.
said.
Both President Barack:
Obama and Holder avoided discussing detainee tri-'
als
at ~appearances
Thursday devoted to other
topics. Repon ers were
brought in briefly a:-.
Obanm spoke to a meeting
on a nuclear weapons
treaty in the White House
Roosevelt Room. Later.
the president came to the
White House briefing
room to discuss GM'c;
stock ·ale. When reponcrs
sought his reaction to the
verdict at the conclusion of
his statement, he headed
back into the West Wing
without responding.

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 19,

2010

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Calttwell
Advertising Director
CoiiJ!ress shall make 110 illw respecti11g an
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exercise thereof; or abridgiug tire freedom of
$peeclz, or of the press; or the right of tire people
peaceably to assemble, mzd to petitio11 the
Go11emmeut for a redress of,t~rie,,ances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Time for tea party follow-through
Bv J ASON C. D1TZ
The enormous election-night victory enjoyed by the
Republicans has brought renewed attention to foreign
policy matters, and a flurry of speculation regarding
how the party's ha\vkish leadership will tackle the
already hawkish Obama Administration.
But it is not Republican jingoism that drove this
election, rather is the Tea Party, and in particular their
calls for fiscal responsibility. This must therefore
oblige the party. should they wish to retain their credibility. not to merely rubber stamp war spending as
they have for the past decade, but to consider deep
and meaningful cuts, including the ending of the
Afghan War.
The Obama Administration's spending has been
reckless. yet largely in keeping with its predecessors
in the Bush Administration. Truly. it seems expenditures and revenue are totally distinct for recent budget-makers. and the question of where the n:toney will
come from. if it is asked at all. is quickly waved off.
This deficit spending is catching up with the
American economy, and the deleterious effect is
increasingly apparent to the voters. It is this commonsense proposition. that the government can't possibly
keep spending far more than it takes in, that made the
Tea Party such an unstoppable force in the elections.
But the elections are now over and it is time for
rhetoric to give way to policy. In this regard we have
seen a major split between many of the old guard
Republicans, who want to use their new-found majority in the House to shill for even more warfare. and
newcomers like Senator-elect Rand Paul (R - KY)
who realize that the promise of a balanced budget
cannot possibly come with military expenditures
soaring annually.
The 200 I military budget was $307.8 billion. actually only slightly above that of 1980, but still by far
the largest in the world. Ten years later President
Obama is openly talking about a budget which'.
including the " emergency'' spending on the wars. will
approach $750 billion. Tha~ is about ten times what
Russia is spending. Is it any wonder the US is running
such a large deficit'!
It will be natural for the incoming Congress to focus
on more politically expedient cuts first. including a
predictable showdown over Obamacare. But with the
annual deficit well over a trillion dollars. no single cut
will be sufficient. and the military cannot possibly be
excluded.
The Obama-era Pentagon has been giving lip-service to upcoming cuts in its spending. but these have
always come with the assumption of the \vars ending
in the near future, something which the administration
clearly has no stomach for. It h understandable for the
Pentagon to insist that it needs such gaudy spending
in time of war. but this must be a reason to end the
wars. not a reason for runaway deficit spending.
Even if the election wasn't a direct referendum on
the wars themselves, the voters have clearly spoken
out in favor of fiscal responsibility. and this is wholly
incompatible with the current warfare state. America
needs what the voters want: a balanced budget. The
only question remaining is whether the Tea Party will
be brave enough to stand up to the hawks on both
sides of the aisle and end these wars.

(Jason Ditz is news editor aT Antiww:com. a nonprofit news and opinion website dedicated to the
cause of IWII·inten·ention.) '

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21

(Un)welcome to Washington!
President Obama has
set the stage for an
acrimonious relationship with the ne"" ly
elected Senators of the
112th Congress. As
they
come
to
Washington this week
for freshman onentation.
his
welcome
message amounts to:
"I want to disenfranchise you.''
This
unwelcome
applies especially to
those occupying siX
new Republican seats
in the Senate come
January. And it bears
most particularly o'n
two issues that will
affect lJ .S. security
profoundly over the
next six years of these
ne\vly
mintect
Senator:;' terms in
office and far beyond:
the so-called "New
START" Treaty and
the repeal of a statute
prohibiting homosexuals from serving 111 the
armed forces.
New START is a
seriously
defective
bilateral arms control
agreement with the
R ussians. one that
would make dramatic
and ill-advised cuts in
the number of U.S.
strategic weapons and
delivery systems. To
be ratified, such a
treaty needs the aftirmative votes of 67
Senators.
President
Obama believes he
may be able to secure
those votes if he
makes utterly incredible promises to ye::.tcrday's Senate, the one
now running out the
clock in a post-election "lame-duck" session.
Specific;tlly,
Mr.
Obama is reportedly
prepared to pledge to
spend nearly $90 bit
lion ovt•r the ne\t ten
years on long-overdue
improvements to the
nation's
nuclear
weapons
industrial
base. Even if he were
committed to such a
worthy
investment.
much of it would be
made towards the end
of what would be his
second term (should
he' be reelected) or

Frank Gaffney, Jr.
later - hardly a bankable proposition . That
is all the more true
since the President is
determined to rid the
world
of
nuclear
weapons. Does anyone
really think he will
sink vast" sums at a
time of acute fiscal
distress in an enterprise he wants to dismantle, not preserve?
Should Republicans
currently in the Senate
buy
this
pig-in-apoke, they would be
denying an) opportunity to their newly
elected colleagues to
learn about. let alone
seek Improvements to
a treaty that: ""·ill
leave
the
United
States \Vith far fewer
nuclear weapons than
the
Russians
(and
obsolescent ones, at
that); imposes what
amount to new constraints on missile
defenses and prompt
g lobal strike weapons
that are conventionally armed: and is.
according to the Vice
Chairman
of
the
Senate
Intelligence
Committee. outgoing
Senator Kit Bond of
Missouri, inadequately verifiable.
Twelve
former
Senators. led by Rick
Santorum and Jim
Talent.
last
\Vee k
wrote a powerful open
letter
to
M ajority
Leader Harry R eid and
his Republican counterpart,
Mitch
McConnell, pointing
out that the Senate has
never before voted on
a nuclear arms reduction treaty under the
severe
time-constr~ints of a lame-duck
session. They urge
that what has been

called "the world's
greatest deliberative
• body'' not accede to
the Obama admin istration·~
demands. to
break with past. and
sensible. precedent and in the process disenfranchise those new
Senators on whose
watch the repercussions of this deficient
accord will be felt.
The President similarly hopes to jam
through the Senate
during the lame-duck
session what amounts
to a mortal threat to
the Nation's all-volunteer force by elim i nating the law that bars
homosexuals
from
servtng in the armed
forces.
To this end. a
Comprehensive
Working
Group
(CRWG)
in
the
Pentagon has prepared
a report that has been
selectively
leaked.
notably
b)
an
unnamed individual
who
told
the
Washington Post last
week that he did c;o to
prevent opponents of
repeal from "m ischaracterizing"
the
report's findings. In
other words, Sena tors
- and the rest of uc;
- are bei ng "spun":
We are being encouraged to bel ieve that
the
Defense
Department has determined that there will
be no adverse implications
of
the
P1 esident 's
social
experiment.
Yet, according to the
Post, even the cynically manipulative leaks
reveal that a sun ey b)
the CRWG of military
person ne l and fmnilies
fouud that an unspecified number among
the "more than 70 percent" of respondents
to the survey said
repeal wou ld have
''mixed reo;ults." Fully
forty
percent
of
Marines are .. concerned about lifting
the ban." And "n significant mmority" in
the other services
reportedly
oppose
sen ing
alongside

openly gay troops.
Now, the issue h as
never been whether
some in the armed
forces would continue
to do serve if avowed
homosexuals
are
allowed in uniform.
Rather. the question
is whether in time .
war it is prudent.
alone advisable. to
take steps that predictably will result in
the loss of significant
numbers of military
personnel. individuals
who do not want to be
put in positions of
forced intimacy with
people who may find
them sexually attractive.
Shamefully.
the
Pentagon
allowed
such leaks - and the
false impression they
were designed to promote - to go uncontested for days. until
last Friday afternoon
(the news equivalent
of a black-hole) when
the press spokesman
issued a statemea
denouncing
thet.
Secretary Gates. who
strongly
supports
repeal. is "very concerned and extremely
disappointed" (re ad.
"shocked. sh ocke d ")
to discover that some
in his camp a re trying,
in his words. "to shape
perceptions of the
report prior to i ts
release.·· R ound up
the usual suspects !
The United States
Senate is being g i ven
t he bum's rush on Ne ' '
START and the gaysIn-the-military iss u e.
If the newly electe d
Senators do not want
their
"'elcom e
to
Washington to be disenfranchisement
on
such momento us mai lers, they be tter t
President O b a ma
and his allies among
yesterday's Sen a to rs
- to ·•fuggedabout it. ·•

(Frank J. Gaffney.
Jr. iv president of the
Center for Security
Polzcy. a columnist for
the Washington Times
and host of the nationall\' syndicated program, Secure Freedom
Radw.)

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IFriday, November 19 2010
Fpllowsbip
apostofi~

Ch~h of ji.5US Christ AJm10lr
VanZ!IIdl 8lld W&lt;ud Rd Pastor J3111e:
Mdlet Sway scrool
10 30 arn
E'ml!D8 7 30 p rn

•

Riv.s"VaD"'
Valley Apos~hc Wonlup Cenl:t
873 S Srd A• e. Muxlleport. Rev
MIChael Bl3ifurd. P«:~r S•uldav. .:&gt; 30
am ~ 6 SO pra~. W:d. 7 prn Sable
Study
Rl~~t~

EmmiJluElApostol!c TaOO:naclo: In&lt;:
Loop Rd off Ne • Llma Rd Rutlald
Serw.e: Sun 10 00 am &amp; I_,.. p m
Thun 1 00 p 1n Pa:tor MartyR Hut'-lb

Assembly of God
Libt-rty Asllt-mhly of God
PO Box 467 D11~og Lme. Ma:oll.
WVa Pastor Nell Tenmnt. S\IOO&lt;rf
Se1'111Ct:-1000am. md 7 iJ m

Baptist
~f&lt;:rilkl ~.viii BBptisl Ch~h
P;otor Floyd Ro" Sw.day Sd«&gt;~Q 'lO to
I 0 SO am. \l.brshtp stMre IO:SO ~ II 0C
am ~ preaclung 6 pm

Carpent.s" JndEpend\fll Bapti&lt;t Ch~h
Sunday School • 'l 30arn Preadung
S~ 10 SOam.
E\enmg SC'!'W:e
7Jl0pm. \1.edDesday Bible Study 7 00 pm
Pal tor

Ch\'5hire Bapti5t Churdt
Pa:tor Steve Little. 74iJ-3677801 H
74il·992· 75-42. C 74il 645·252 7 Suraiay
Scrool 9 SO am. Mollllll8 Vbnlup 10 SO
am. Youth &amp; Btble B.nlleS 6 SO pm
dl:ltr prnctx:e I 30. Spo:lal day: of month
: I..ad!e; of Grare 7 pm 2od Monday 2
Men's Fellcr·~hip 1 pm SrdlUe;

•

, HOJI(' BBpti&lt;t Clturdt cSouth•m'l
570 Grant St Mtddlepo!1 Sunday school
- 9 30 am v.I:Jnhip • II am 8lld 6 p m
\l~esday S~ • 1 p m Pa-"'or G&lt;lJY

Bhs
Rutland First Ba ~is! Clturdl
Sunday School • 9 31" am V.bnhlp •
!0 45am
Porn~roy First BBptist
P"tor Jon Brockert. Ea:t Man St
SuDdaySch 9 SO am. 'M:lnhtp 10 30 arn
First South~m Baptisl
41872 Pomeroy Ptke. Sllllday School •J
930am \lobnhtp · 9 45 am &amp;700 p m.
v.edne:day SeMces - lJlO p.m Pastor
DM:I Bt11llal'd
First Baptist Church
Pa:tor Btlly ZIISpan 6th aDd Palmer St
MuldJeport. SOliday School • 9 15 am
\lbrshtp · 1015 am. 100 pm
'1\ednesday SeM~· 1 00 p m

Rac:ine first Bapti&lt;t
Pastor Ryan Ea\lll. pas br . Suoday
School • 9 30 ant Won lap • :~ 40 am.
6·00 p m ~nelday SeMCes • 7DO
pm

•

SilviS' Run Bapti5t
Pil!tH John S••·anson, Suoday Sclv:lol •
lOam Wmhtp • Ilatn 7 00 l' m
."Y\ob::nesdaySeNres I 00 p.m
Ml Unmn BBptist
Pa:br Dellllls ~ver Sunday School
9 45 am Eventng
6 30 p m .
v.edne::day SeMces - 6 30p m.
Bethleh611 Bapti&lt;t Clturdl
Great Bend Route :24. Ractne. OH
Pastor . Suoday Sclv:lol - 9 ~ am
Sunday\lolmhlp -1~ 90 am v.l:dneda-:
Btblt: Study-100 p m
Old B((hel ~Will Baptisl Church
28601 St Rt 7 Mtddleporl. Sunday
SeMce • 10 am , 6 00 p m . Ttl!!:&gt;d&lt;rf
SeN~Ce; -~ 00
HillsD• Baptist Clturdl
St Rt !43 JllS' off Rt 7. Pastnr Rev
Jam~ R Acree. Sr . Sunday Unifted
Serroe, Wor.:lup • I 0 3r am 6 p m
~e:;daySeMces -7 p rn

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

faith Baptisl Church

Rallro&lt;d St Masoll. Sunday School 10
am. \lotmhip • .I am. 6 p rn
Voedne::day SeMces • 7 p m
Forest Run Ba ~is!· PornmJY
Rev Joseph V.bod:, S \IOOay School· 10
am '\M:mhtp -II 30 am

10 45 m Suraiay
Pas '-lr [/Qn Walker

E~~

• 6 00 p m

Rutltnd fhoo, WW Bap~1
Salem Sl Pa:\:lr Ed !lamey S•mday
St:Mol • 10 am Evenmg I p m
'\llednC1day SeMCe; 7 p m
S\'l'Oful BB~ist Chrdt
Ravens •';.!Od. WV. Sunday Stll• I 10 dliiMorblllg ''onlup II am Ellt!Uog 7 ptn.
WednC1dav 7p In
nm Baptist Church of \falun. WV
. (lodepCncbtB!JU!'l ,
SR 652 wd Anderson Sl Pa:'-lr Ro~l1
C!n:ly Su!.d&amp;y sclv:lol I0 am MorunJil
church 1. an. Sunday elltlllDg 6 pm v.\:d
Btble Sto:ly 1 p!n

Catholic
Sa&lt;Ni H.-11 Cathotic Chll!'dl
161 M111berrf A~.t Potro-rov QQ2 ~598
Pa:tor Rev \Mllter E Heurz. Sat ~on
4455!5pm. t/a:s- 'i' pm Sun
Con 8 45-9 IS a rn SUL 1/.a:s Q ~
am D.1.1lyMaH ·S SO am

Church of Christ

Antkjuity Baptist
StUlday Schoo!- 9% am VJmlup -

Ml Mm bh Church of God
Mtl• Htll Rd Racme Pa:tcr Jallt~
Sallelfteld Stmd:l;· School- 9 45 , m
E\l!lll~ 6 p m Wtrlne:day Sennces 1
pm
Rutland Church of God
P'l!•or I.Jmy Shreffle7. Suoda-{ "'btslap
t~ rn " pm w~ d 7S M
pm
Syrac119: first Church of God
Apple and Sea:mdSts Pa:l:lr Rev Dava:l
Russell S•tnday School aDd V.Oulur·· 10
am E'vntng S~rvtr~· "~0 p m
Wedrtesday SelV!CeS b 30 p m
Churdt of God of Proph(('~
0; Wlu~ Rd off St Rli~O Pa:t

1 PI
Clqmdll S•mday Scrool
10 m
\Mlrshtl• IJ am. v.kdnesddy Se7'JlCeS I
pm.

Congregational
Trinil y Church
Pa: bl· Rev Tom ; hDsou. Second &amp;
Lvllll. Pomeroy Pastlr Vvbuhlp ,3 ZS
am

Episcopal

~it~ Ch~h ol Christ

~'32U !':luldren's HomeRd

Pomm-)( OH
S•today m:: muJ€:
W JO. Sun morn1n3 Btble study
follo·''l!J8 ·11on lup Sun •ve 6 00 pm.
'\lied btble study 7 1•m

~on•.rt 74a-~92-3S47

Gra(\! Ep.is(opal Church
3Zci E. M411l S1 f'uznCiuy
Holy
Euchan:t IJ SO arn Sunday &amp; 530 pm
\lkd Rev I.e:lte Flemrru!J8

Holiness

Ht'mlotk Gror;&gt; Cnru1Bn Churdt.
Mm.sl:r Larry Brown. Worslup 9 so
am Sunday School· IJ30 am Btlole
Study I pm

Community Churdt
Pastlr St= Tomek Mam Strrel
Rudailll Sunday \lobrshtp-10 T am
Sunday Sel11lre-7 p111

Porn;roy Church of Christ
212 W Mmn St Suoday S~hool 9 30
am V·brshtp ,030 am. 6 pm
Vlednesday Servr e: • 7 ~ m

Danrille Holin(&gt;SS Chi.LI'('h
31057 State Route 325. Lqs\11e. Pa-U&gt;r
Bnan Baley Sundcrj scrool 9 30 am
Sunday •·ordup 10 '31: am &amp; 1 p.ll\
~day prayers eM~· 1 p m

Porn i!'tlY Westside Cltlll('h of Christ
332Z6 Chlldren's Home Rd Sunday
Sdool· II am \ltbnhtp ·IIJam 6 p m
\lkdnC1da'f Serv~.:e • 7 ~ rn
l'&gt;Jidt\k-port Ch~h of Christ
5th &amp;lid Matll. Pastoi A! Hai'son
Cluldt•m Dl.rect:-I Sharoo Sayre. Thtll
Duectoi ~r Varghan Sunday School
·9S0allt ~rshl]l·8l5 J,,30am 1
p Ill V.ed.tle$day Serw:e ·? p m

KEflO C lturdt of Christ
'\Mmhtp - 9 30 am. Snnday Sclv:lol •
I C-10 am. Pa:tor.Jeffrey Vlall;,ce Is' aDd
3rdSunthf
BW"oo':llliw Ri:l&amp;e Chlll('h of Cltmt
Pastor Brtr::e Tell)! Sundisy ScoooJ.Q%
am
\lobrshtp - 10 30 aro 6 30 p m.
~sday Se:MCeS ·~SOp m

Zion Church ofC!trm
Po111eroy Harnso~~1:te Rd (R• 14~).
Pa:tor Roger Watson. Su!lday Sclv:lol •
9 SO am. '111\mhtp • 10 30 am. 1 00
p m. '.11:d.tle$day Sel\llte • 7p m
ThpJM'S Plain Church of Christ
lll$truroental 'J.brslup SeMre • Q am
Commmton·lO am Suoday Scll:lol
10 IS am Youth 5 :iO pm SIIMa-; Btblll
Study Vkdneldav 1 pm
Sradbtll)' Churdt of Christ

Mmtter JllSt.m &amp; JSh. 35~8 Bradbury
Road. Middleport. S 1od&lt;r1 Sclv:lol 9 'll'
am
'J.brshtp lv SO a m.
Rutland Chtm'h o1 Christ
S•tnd:rJ Sclv:lol- 9 30 am Won !up and
Communton
IOSO am ::la'll'
Wisem3lt. Mimsto:

Calnry J&gt;i¥rim Cha~l
Hanuonvtlle Ro'&lt;i. Pas'-lr Chales
McKeiiZIC StUlday s, !tool 9 SO am
'Volmhtp" II 3.tn 7.00 p rn v.l:dnt::day
SeMce 7.00 p m

Ros.-ofSharon Holin~Church
Luting Creek P..d. Rutlaod. Pa:or Rev
De·.,~;· Ktcg. Sunday scOOt&gt;! 9 30 am
Sunda7 wonhtp ·1 p m \M:dne;da;;
PI&lt;!'• er meetmg-7 p m
Pin~ Grove Bibltt.&gt; ltllini!SS Church

Ill rrule off Rt 325. Pas~r Sund&lt;rf
Sclv:lol 9 'lO am Vlmlup. 10 30 am
6::1 pm \lkdnesday Servre 1OOpm
WelfeyiJl Bib!~ t!O!in(&gt;SS Church
Pearl St Mrl:lleporl Pa:tor Do11g
Cox. Sunday School l:l am Vtbrslup
1045 pm S\IOOay Eje 600 pm
Vk~sday SeMCe • 1 00 p m
1~

Hys&lt;-R Run Community Chlll'dt
Pas'-11 Rev Larry 11mley: Stmday Scllool
• 9 30 am 'Mlr:lup • 10 45 am. 1 p m
Thursda-; Btble Study and Yo•tth. 7p m
La ur"J ClifJ Fl"l M« luJdist Churdt
l'asl!• Glen McCIIUlg. Sunday School
9 SO am Wmlup • :f30 am 8lld 6
p m """rlue;my SeMce UJO pm

Latter-Day Saints
The Church ofjesus
Christ of latter-Day Saints
St Rt Ibn. 446-6247 01 4415-7486.
S1mday Sclv:lol 10 20-11 am. Rellef
SoctetyiPitesthood II 05·12 JlO won
Sacrar~el!t Ser111"C 9.10 15 am.
Horomakmg meettng. Is Thurs • 1'jj m

Lutheran
Sl john LuthES"an Church
Pi~ Gro..e, '&amp;nlup • 9 00 am Sunday
School· 10 00 am Pastlr

Bradford Churdt of Christ
Corner of Sl Rt Jl4 &amp; Bradbury Rd
Y •tth Mmut&lt;"f Btll Amterger. Sunday
School • 9 30 am. 'J.br:h.p S 00 am
.030am 7:00pm \iied.oe$daySe~s
-700pm

OurSa.ilu.r Luthmn Church
ar:d Hellly S•: Ra-.ennood.
WVa Pastor DaVId Ru:1ell. Sunday
School- 10 OC' am v.bnlup • I: am

Hiclrory Hils C!turdt of Cnru1

St P.lu1Luth&lt;nn Churdt
'::omer Sycamore &amp; Second St Pomeroy
Sun Srh: ol .q 45 am Won hip- II am

Tupper: Plams. Pa:'-lr Mtke Moore Btble
·lass 9 am Su!.day V/OIS!ttp .0 a rn
Suuda-J 'OJO!Siup 6 v pmSunda-;. Btble
~ws 7I•m Vobl
A

Pa.tor J:u:t Colgrove. Sllllday Sclv:lol
9 SO a !!I V.bo:~htp Sr:r\llce l~ 30 am.
Btble Study v.\:dne;day 6 30 p.m
Dexter Church of Christ
Sunday school Q 30 am. Sllllda:f woulup
10 30 a.m
'Ilt~Citurdt of Christ of Rrm\S'Oy
!ntewctlOn 7 aDd 124 W. E~eh•t
Denl'lll S3IEent S•mday Btble Study
'110am \lbr:lup! 30am aod6'lC
p m v.l:drlesday Bib!• Stooy. 7 p m

Christian Union

Ml Moriah Baptisl
l'ou!1h &amp; Mmn St Mtddlepoll Sunday
Scrooi-9S0am. v.l:lr:lup 10.45am
P&lt;t:tor Rev Mtchrel ATlompson. Sr

Har1furd Churdt of Cltrm in
Chri.-tian Uniln
Ha!'ford WVa. Pastoi M•ke Puckett
S•mdly ScltDol ? 'lO am. Vtbrslup •
10 30 am 1 00 p m 'ltbl.lli!Sday
SeM•~! -7 00 p.m

'Waln~l

United Methodist
Graham United M~thodist
'M&gt;rshtp II am Pastor RtchadNe&amp;e
Bed! tEl United M~tltodist
Ne·, Haven. Rtchard Nea&lt;e. Pa:tllr
Sunday wonhtp 9 ~C a m Thes 6 30
prayer and Btble SttX!y
Mt ilie United MEdtodist
Off 124 behmd Wilkes\lllle Pa:tor Rev
Ralph Spue:. Sunday School- 9 90 am
Woah p • I~~ U!l 7 p m Thursda-J
Se!VI~S 1 p rn
1\ll!gs Coop.t"ativt ~rish

No!1hea:t Clus l:r Alfred Pa:tor Gene
Good•·'ID. Sunday Sch:..oi QSO am
Worshtp II a.111 6 SO p m
Ch""1~r

P"tur Jun Corbtlt. Wor:lup - 9 am
Sunday School • I~ am Thund&lt;rf
SeMces ·1 pm
Jowa

Church of God

Pa:tor Jan La·.l!ndeL Sunday School •
?SOam.\IIJnlup 1030amaod6
p m ~day SeN&lt;:e: 1 p m

P~tor !:,en:ztl'!luQ 'Mlnlup ·' 30 am
S1md&lt;r)• School 1030 nm
Long Bottom
S.lllday ScOOc&gt;l • !d(J am Vtbrsh:.p
, SOam

Cwton Inta-d('JII).mf.natlona.l Chlll'clt
Kl.llgsbmy Road. Pa:IDr Ro~rt Va!tct.
Sanday School • 9 30 am Vtbnlup
Sen~ce 10 30 am E·.l!nmg Serw:c 6
pm

ChiSierChurdt oftlk: Nazmn&lt;•
Pas tor Rev Warren Lukens. St111day
School 9 30 am Won!up 10 30 am.
Sllllda'f elltlllDg 6 pm
Rutkutrl Churdt of tllc l\vaJ\!11~
Pa:\:lr George Stadlet S•mday Sclv:lol
9 30 8111 VOn !up • 10 30 am . 6 30
pm Wednesday SeMces 7 p m

R~DJ..

Wonht!• 9 &gt;~ am Swnay School
• &lt; 1m Fn:t S= v of r.:onth 7 1l
p m seMce l'as'-lr G ~ooch·m
ThPJI('r~PblnsSt. ~ul

Pa:t.r Jun Corbitt StUlda;l Sclv:lol 9
am '.Mtnlup lOam Tlr$day $~
-7'30I·m
C6tlnll Clus1~r
As burt (Syr&lt;r:~lse). Pa-"'or Bob Robmso11.
S.lllda'/ Sclv:lol • 9 45 am 'J.brslitp II
8J!1 Wedltr:;dsy SCM:tS - 1 30 p m

fieWom GospeJ.Missim
Bald K110b. on Co Rd Sl. Pa:tor Rev
Roger \1./illford Sunday Sclv:lol • 9 30
ant \l.bnlup-7 pm

Other Churches

Wltlte's Cllapel. Wtsleyan
Cool111lle Ro&lt;d Pastor Rev Chait~
MaUodale. Sun School • 9:30 am.
Wonhtp-10 SO am. v.l:d Sernre -7 p m

Common Ground Mil.'lilns
~bn DelllllS Moo~e &amp;Rw:k Little
SIIOO&lt;rJ 10 OC am
Twn j('$!1$
Pastor· Eddte Baer. Sun \lobnlup I I am
333 Mo:hani: St Pomeroy
N_,-.v Hope Church
Old AmenCSD 1J110n Hall.
Fourth A~. Muldleport Swnay 5 pm
S)'J"8CU.SeCommllllily Church
2480SeaJndSt SJ!.rllSe. OH
Sun. Scrooll oam. Sundy mght6 so pm
Pastor Joe Gwmn
ANew Beginning
&lt;1\ill Go~ Church) H;rn,onVlll'\
Pa:ton Bob md Kay Marshall.
Thlll'l 1 pm
Alnuinz Grace Community Church
Pal tor Wayne OtUllap Stare Rl 681
Tupper: Plat:JS. SUD Wlnbip 10 am &amp;
6 SO pm.. Vkd Btble Study 1 00 p m

Flatwoods
Pas'-lr Dt'ka'/lle Stu« let Stlllday School
am Vtbtslap II am

for.st Run
BobRobtll$011. SundaySclool·IO
lm '.ll:mlup • 9 am

P~ur

HtSth tMildll1Jlll1J
Pa:;tor Bnan Dunham S•mday Sclv:lol •
1000 am 'M&gt;r:lup ·II 00 am
AsburySynCWR
Pas•or Bob Robtnson. Su!.day Sclv:lol
9 30 nm 'VII:lrshtp -10 'lOam
F.:arlCha~,l

StUltht School 9 am Vtbrshtp 10 am

fab'J~w Bibltt.&gt; Churdt
11tart WVa Rl I. Pas tor Bllill Mal!
Sunday Sci!Ool· 9 SO am. ~rshtp ·1 00
p.m. VtblnesdayBtble Study·7~0 p.m
Faith fE&amp;wsq, C1"11$1de 6Jr Christ
Pastor Rev Ftan~Jtn Dickens. SerlliCe
Fnday 1 pm

Calmy Bible Chvclt
Pomeroy Ptke. Co Rei. Pa:tor Rev
Blackwood Sunday School· 9 SO am.
Worship 1030 am 730 pm,
v.l:dnesday Serw:e • 1 30 p m

Stifi!'S'rille Cornmwdty Ciut.rch
Sunday School 1000 an. Sutday Wonlup
II 00 am. v.\:dne:: day 1 00 pm Pa:tor
Bryan &amp; Mmy Daley

~""' &amp;.tinnilJs Church
Fl&gt;m~ray

Oim Christian F«Dwsltlp

Pastor Bnan Dunham. Wmlup
am Sunday School-1045 am

•
fellowslup)
Meeb!J8ln tle Mogs Mtddle Sclv:lol
C&lt;ietenaPasbr Cltns S~.vat
10 OOam • NoonSUDday Informal
Vtbnhtp. Cluklren's mmtstry
COIIUR unity ol Christ
Por1land-Racme Rd Pa:tor Jun Proffitt.
Sunday School • 9 30 am. Wouhtp •
I0 30 a rn W!dnesday Serroes - 1 00
Plll
B((h&lt;:l Worsltip Cmter
39'182 St Rt 1 2 mtles south of Tuppers
Plarns. OH Non-deoo:ntnattonal wtth
Conl:mporary Pratse &amp; Wmhtp I'a~tor
Rob Bar~! As soc P" or Karyn Da111s
Youth Dtrector Betty Fulks Suoday
seMce: I 0 am Vtbnlup &amp; 6 pm Fanuly
Life Classes. W!d &amp; Thur DJilhl Life
Groups at 1 pm. Thurs monu~ lad!~'
Life Group ar 10 Outer Llnnt Youth Life
Grottp on Vkd e-.emog from 6 30 to 8.30
\lutt llS online ar www.bethelwc.ors.

9 25

(No~t-deoollllllatton&lt;i

Rotk Springs
Pas'-lr De•·ayne Stutlet Su!.day School
9
am Wonlup 10 am Youth
FelltY• ~Iup. Sunday· 6 pm Early Sunday
worship 8 am le110ralelfhest
R11tltnd
Pastor John Chapman Sunda;1 Schoo!
9 30 am 'J.bnhtp · 10 SO am Thursday
SeNres ·1 p m
SalemC~nt'i'

Pasm Wllham K Marshall. Sllllday
School 10 l:i am '.lim hip 9 15 am
BtbleStwly Monday 7 00 pm
Snow'riD.~

Sunday Sdtool· 10 am Wmhip • 9 am
B((hany
Pal tor J~hn Ro:ze \IC7. Stmday School!',; am Wmhip • 9 a m. We:btc;day
SeMres -10 am

Ash s~ra;t nurch
398 Ash St Mtddlepor~ Pa: bl Mart
Morrow Sunday School 9 SO am
Morm~ Worshtp -10 30 am &amp;6 SO pm
~esda:J Servre
6 30 p m You!h

CannEl-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Baslt3ll Rd1 Ra:lne. Ohio.
Pastor John Ro:zet•'I:Z. StUlday Schoo. 9 45 am Worslup • II 00 am.. Bible
Study~d 130 p m
~Star '

Esst l..ktart
Pas•or BtU Marshall Suoday School •
9a m. Wmhtp 10 a tn. I st Sunday
ell!ry month e-.enmg senna: 7 JlO p m

Clfton 'Ill bEntacle Churclt
Chiton WVa Sunday School· 10 am.
Vtbrslup • 7 p m. Wednesday SerVIce · 1
pm

Ji'WJ. Golpei Church
ofth~ UYi.nf Satilr
Rl338. Antiqwty. Pa:IDr Je:se Moms.
SeNoes Salllrday 2 00 p m
Salem CoJIIJilunity Churdl
Back of '.lbt Colurnbta WVa om L.ie\llog
Road P"tor Chales RotiSh {304) 6752288. StUlday School 9.SO am. Sunday
event!J8 ser\IICe 7:00 pm. Blbly Study
v.l:dne:day leM::C 1 00 pm
Hobson Cluistil.n FEill11sldp Clwdt
Pa:tor Herschel Whtte. Sunday School·
10 an. Sunday Church seMre- 6 30 pm
v.l:dnesday 7 pm

Agape Li!~ Cetter
"Full-Gospel Church", Pa:ton John &amp;
Patty 'hale. 603 Second A..e Masoll. 1735017. SeMce tune Sullday 10 SO am.
v.l:dnesday 1 pm

Aburula:nt Grace
923 S Tlurd St Mtddleport. Pal tor 'Jeres a
Da111s Sunday ser\llce. 10 a m
'lltl!dne!day seM:t. 1 p rr.

R.storatiln Cltrlstiln Fel.bw!ldp
9365 Hooper Road. Athen1, Pasbr
Lonnte Co~. StUlday Won !up 10 00 am.
v.l:dnesday 7 pm
Houso!mHEAling Ministries
Sl Rt 124 l.ursrille. OH
Full Gospel Cl PaliDn Robert &amp; Roberta
Musser. Sunday School 9 30 am .
Vtbnlup I0 SO am 1 00 pm, '.lie!
SeMre700pm

Faith Full Gospd Church
Bottlm. Paler St..e Rred Sunday
Sclv:lol - 9 30 am. WotShlp • 9 30 am
aDd 1 p m. W:dnesday • 1 p m Frllay fellov~hlp seNce 1 p m

TeaJR Jesus Ministrl~
Pastlr Eddie Baer. Meellog 333
Mecharuc Street. Pomeroy. OH .
SeMree..erySu!.day II OOam

HtniiJonYi!» Commwlity Churdt
Pa:tor '!'heron Durham SUDday • 9 30
a m and 1 p m 't\ohlnesday - 1 p m

PentECOStalA!Iilelllbly
l'astlr St Rl 124. Raane. Tomado Rd
Sunday School • 10 am. Everu~ - 1
p-.m vednesdaySeMces -7 p m

La~

Racine
Pastor Rev Wllh:~n Marshall Sunday
School
10 am 'J.bnlup
II
am W!dnesday Sern::e ti pm ThUI Btble
Stui!'J 7pm

Cool&lt;IDe Unit(d M~thodis1 Parish
1'-..stor Helen Kbne. CoolVIlle Church.
Mam &amp; Ftfth S• S•m School • 10 am
~nhtp 9 a.m.~ SeMces 1 p m
Bethti Church
To"llllup Rd. 46SC Sunday School· 9
am. Wmhtp
10 am Vte.lne::day
SeM~s -10 am
Hockin~ port Church
\lhley. Sunday School • 9 30
:am 'VII:l!lhtp • 10 'lOam. Pa:tor Phllbp

K3h~{n

B~

R~~ LiieCJnudl
500 N 2nd AV! Mtddleport Pastor
Mtke Foreman I'-d&gt; tor E'menltls la.oreiiCe
Foremat. 'VII:lnlup-IOJlOam
v.l:dnesda'j Sernces • 1 p m

Se~-6SOpm

Pastor John RozewiC7. Sunday School •
II am 'M&gt;nlup · lOam

~~1-7pm

Sutday School· 9 am. Woahtp Serroe
10 am 2nd atd 4th Sunday

Middleport Community Churdl
575 Pea-l St Mtddlepo!1 , Pastor Sam
Anderson. Sunday School 10 am
E..enmg -7 SO p m \lkdnesday Serw:e •
ISOpm
•
faith Valley'Illb;&gt;nudeCiturdt
Batley Run Road Pastor Rev Ernmen
Ra • son. Sunday Evntng 1 p.m
Thursday SeMCe · 7 p.m
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Tore1t Church
"o Rd 63 SUDday School· 9 30 am
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Nazarene
Point Rock Ch~ll ofth~NazaNM
Rou~ 609. Alba11y. Rev Uoyd Gnmm.
Joa!tlt Suwlay Sr·hool 10 am ·••orhs•p
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Middk&gt;port Church of the Nazarute
Pasnr Lronani Po···en. Sunday Sci-Dol 9 'lOam ~r:lu~ ·: 30 am 6:30p.m
WednC1th' SeN~Ce; 7 p m
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':hnrch of the Nazare!te. Pastor Russell
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Pastor Shannon Hntchuon. Sunday
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Pomeroy Church of the N:uarene

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Ott Rt 124. Palbr Edsel Hart. Sunday
ScOC.OI· 930am Worslup-1030am.
1 SOpm
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Su!.day School • 9 30 am Worshtp !330am 7p.m
Mors~c ItapEl Church
Suod&amp;'f sclv:lol • 10 am \lobrshtp • II
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Pentecostal

Presbyterian
Hanisun'fille PrEsbyterian Claurch
Pas10r Rev DaVId Fau!T.ner. Vtbnhtp
9 00 am Sunday
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Pa:br James Sn}Uet Sunday School 10
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Seventh-Day Adventist
Seo-etth-Day Adventist
Ht Rd. Pomeroy. Saturday_
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United Brethren
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Texas Communtty 36411 'Wickham Rd
Pas\:lr Peter Mabodale. Sunday School·
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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 19,

2010

A Hunger for More

Search the
Scriptures
Shortly before His arrest and trial, Jesus prayed,
"Neither pray I for these alone {the 12 apostles}. but for
them also which shall believe on me through their word;
that they all may be one: ... that the world may believe that
thou hast sent me" [John 17:20,21 ]. Earlier in His life,
Jesus said, " .. .I will build my church ... " [Matt. 16: 181.
We know He did so, for in Acts 2:47. "the Lord added to
the church daily such as should be saved." Throughout
the rest of the New Testament, God makes clear His command that the church be "one" [Eph. 1:22,23: " ... and
gave him {Christ} to be the head over all things to the
church. which is his body ... "; Eph. 4:4: "there is one
body ... "; "I beseech you, brethren, by the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ. that ye all speak the same thing, and
that there be no divisions among you: but that ye be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same
judgment" - 1 Cor. 1: 10]. A casual glance at the current
state of "Christianity'' shows man has failed to honor
Jesus' prayer and God's command. The question comes to
mind: how did all this division start? It is the belief of
some who call themselves "Christian'' that division is
good; that it is a fine thing that people can choose the
"church of your choice''; so, one of this mind may not
care how the divisions came about. Those who respect
God and His Word, however, care very much about the
origins of division, for they want to destroy the division,
returning to the Word. Let's begin:
The New Testament history of the church shows each
congregation was self-goveming; there were no regional
or national conferences or governing bodies. The Antioch
church. at the direction of the Holy Spirit. sent out Paul
and Barnabas to spread the gospel in new areas [read Acts
13,14]. Acts 14:21 records the re-tracing of their journey,
for the purpose of "confirming the souls of the disciples,
and exhorting them to continue in the faith ... '' Note
14:23: ''and when they had ordained elders in every
church, ... " Paul instructed Titus to "set in order the
things that are wanting, and ordain elders in every
city, ... ·• [Titus 1:5]. It is clear that each church had a plurality of elders. God gives specific qualifications for one
who wants to be an elder: '' ... blameless, the husband of
one wife, having faithful children, not self-willed, not
soon angry, not given to wine, no striker, not given to
filthy lucre, a lover of hospitality. a lover of good men,
sober. just, holy. temperate, holding fast the faithful
word ... " [Titus l :6-9]; " ... blameless. the husband of one
wife, vigilant, sober, of good behavior, given to hospitality, apt to teach, not given to wine. no striker, not greedy
of filthy lucre, patient, not a brawler, not covetous, one
that rules well his own house; having his children in subjection with all gravity, not a novice, having a good report
of them which are without. .. " ll Timothy 3:2-7]. You
will note, as you study these passages, that the title "bishop" is synonymous with the title "elder," and is not a separate office. Each church was governed by the group of
men whom the local church had appointed "elders.'' The
earliest departure from God's plan came when one elder
in a church was set up as the ''chief elder," rather than all
elders being equal in authority. In his book, "History of
the Christian Church,'' author George P. Fisher writes: "In
the New Testament. as we have seen, there are two classes of officers in each church, called, respectively, elders
or bishops. and deacons ... after we cross the limit of the
first century we find that with each board of elders there
is a person to whom the name 'bishop' is especially
applied, and he is superior to the presbyters" [page 51].
Space restraints will allow for only the introduction of
this one division; more will follow. Readers, are you
beginning to see that man caused the division in the
Lord's church? How can man believe God is pleased with
the alteration of His will? He wasn't pleased with
Jeroboam! Bring your Bible~; search the scriptures with
the Lord's church, which meets at 234 Chapel Drive! The
web address is: www.chapelhillchurchofchrist.org.

The key to real thanksgiving,
faJJ sure and steady along the
paJticularly when one wonders
walk of life, and He is good
about what one has for which
when our strength has fad.
he or she should be thankful. is.
and we fall to our knees
a good dose of reality. On the
weariness. He is good when we •
one hand. I could rehearse the
are surrounded by supporters
fact that I am beset by human
and well-wishers, but He is just
nature, a nature that is in fact
as good when we are surround- .
inclined to revel in sin (disobeed
by ~nemies who are bent on ;
dience to God). I might even be
hurting
and destroying us. God
tempted to despair over the fact
is good.
that, "God looks down from
Thorn Mollohan
Let us be thankful then that ·
heaven on the sons of men to
God
Almighty is greater than ·
see if there are any who understand, any who seek God. on the Cross. I can be given for- our problems: we can depend ·
Everyone has turned away, they giveness if I'll truly turn to Him on His strength and wisdom to ·
have to1 ther become corrupt; in faith! Although I REALLY lead us through them victorithere is &gt;one who does good, deserve punishment, because of 1ously. Let us be thankful that ~
not even one" (Psalm 53:2-3 Jesus' sacrifice, I am given the Everlasting Father (see
NIV). "For all have sinned and grace if I'll truly believe in His Isaiah 9:6) is full of grace and ·
fall short of the glory of God" · name! And although I' REALLY mercy without end: we can deserve to simply reap the con(Romans 3:23 NIV).
depend on His promises to for- ·
These are difficult facts to sequences of my sin, along with
digest, I grant you, but they are all the rest of humanjty, I am give those who will truly place ·
important ones nonetheless for given a new future, a new life, their faith in Him and that He
just on the other side of the and a new identity if I'll simply will meet them with forgive- .
grim truth of these, there are forsake my old ways and follow ness and the gift of eternal life ·
(see Romans 6:23). Let us be
awaiting us beautiful and amaz- Him!
"Jesus Himself bore our sins thankful that He is strong and ·
ing treasures that may not be
ours if we cannot see what it in His body on the 'tree', so that well able to support, encouragA
cost for us to possess them. we might die to sins and live for and guide those who becom'P'
And let's not kid ourselves. righteousness: by His wounds His children through faith in ·
Who do you know that is we have been healed. For we Christ Jesus: we can depend on ,
REALLY perfect? You might were like sheep going astray, His strength and faithfulness :
you know someone who seems but now we have returned to the even when our own blinded :
to be so, but were you to look in Shepherd and Overseer of our
sensibilities deny them (see
their hearts, you'd see that they souls" (from 1 Peter 2:24-25).
Psalm 27:5). God is good . . . .
So
...
ANY
favor
that
God
struggle as even you and I do.
chooses
to
bestow
upon
me
is
and
He is good ALL the time!
But in spite of the fact that we
and
away
beyond
already
far
So
let us begin the holiday
are loaded with sin (even if
my deserved allotment and infi- season with revisiting this
only in the depths of our hearts)
nitely more than I have any heavenly "reality check." Let ,
and in spite of the fact that there
right to expect in of myself and
our hearts be open and soft to .
is no righteousness that we
apart from Christ. What a
might earn or purchase that will
the healing touch of God's for- ·
GOOD God!
satisfy the holy perfection of
If you will trust Him as your giv~ess and grace. Let us ·
God, and that ". . . no one will
Savior and Lord, you' 11 find no ''drink in" the amazing and '
be declared righteous in God's
surer a foundation on which to wonderful truth that God is
sight by observing the Law ... "
build your life than the simple good and let our gift to Him be ·
(Romans 3:20), we may yet be
truth that He is good. "Taste the gift of thankfulness!
set free from sin's awful conand see that the LORD is good;
"You are forgiving and good, ·
demnation and stand in God's
blessed is the man who takes 0 Lord. abounding in love to all
favor through faith in God's refuge in Him" (Psalm 34:8
who call to You. Hear my
work of salvation. " ... A right- NIV).
prayer. b LORD; listen to my
eousness from God, apart from
He is good when the sun cry for mercy. In the day of
the Law, has been made known, shines and flowers bloom, but
to which the Law and the He is just as good when it is trouble I will call to You, f; J a
Prophets testify. This righteous- raining and our skies are gray. You will answer me" (Psaness from God comes through He is good when there is food 86:7 NIV).
faith in Jesus Christ to all who on the table and we have a nice
(Thorn Mollohan and his fambelieve... and are justified full feeling after a meal, but He ily have ministered in southern
freely by His grace through the is just as good when our cup- Ohio the past 15 years and is
redemption that came by Christ boards are bare and we are not the author of The Fairy Tale
Jesus. God presented Him as a sure from where our next meal Parables. He is the pastor of
sacrifice of atonement, through will come. God is good when
Pathway Community Church
faith in His blood" (Romans we are happy and a song of joy
and may be reached for com- •
3:21-22, 24-25a NIV).
is in our hearts, but He is also
What a tremendous truth! good when our sorrow threat- ments or questions by email at ·
What an amazing treasure for ens to swallow us up like a pastorthom@pathwaygallipo- '
·
which to be thankful! Although strangling grave. He is good lis.com.)
Copyright©
2010,
I REALLY deserve judgment1 when we are strong and our feet
Thom Mollohan.
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PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 19, 2010

True allegiance
or the past week or
our Lutheran neighbors have posted the following statement on their
outdoor bulletin board: ...
"People may doubt what
you say, but they will
believe what you do."
Today I propose to build
my message on that, but I
make no promises as to
the end result.
I'm going to start by
reminding everyone of
last week's annual observance of Veterans' Day,
and all the attendant
hoopla that went along
with it. It has been a
long-standing tradition in
this country that we
honor our veterans, and
there's no reason to not
continue the custom.
What isn't necessarily
self-evident, however, is
that behind the scenes
and aside from the men
and women being hond for their bravery,
rage, and/or simple
•
service to America, there
is a contingent of what
we might call, "Sunshine
Soldiers." These people
profess to be patriots and
say they love America,
but tend to stay on the
sidelines and avoid real
commitment and ditect
involvement.
When things are going
well and the sun is shining, so to speak, they wax
eloquent about how wonderful America is and
what they would do, personally, should their services ever be required to
defend it. When it comes
time for the "rubber to
meet the road," though,
they are nowhere to be
•

Thomas Johnson
found!
From this we can draw
the rather obvious conclusion that among our
fellow Americans there
are some who do no more
than talk of patriotic
ideals. Those who walk
their talk, on the other
hand - for example, to
the local recruiter's
office, into the active
and
then
military.
through their enlistment
to their honorable discharge - are those who
make us proud and keep
us free.
The same can be said
about those in the service
of the Lord Jesus Christ.
be they of the ordained
clergy or the laity. When
they're wearing their
respective- unifonn, it's
quite simple to discern a
sailor from a Marine, and
a soldier from someone
in the Air Force.
Not so, Christians: we
haven't been provided
any such uniform, so we
essentially blend in well
with our surroundings .
Sometimes, we do this all
too easily and much too
well. I like what the

French might say in this
regard: ... "vive Ia difference!"
It's rather ironic, given
thetr professed allegiance
to Jesus Christ. that some
Christians consciously
choose to assimilate certain customs and ptactices of the world into
their Jives, so as to "fit
in'' better with those they
associate with. Ideally,
Christians challenge and
oppose the things of the
world which conflict
with
the
Christian
lifestyle.
I'm
Nevertheless.
rather afraid Chnstians in
America have become so
inured to so much of
what is wrong around us
they no longer -care to
confront it. let alone contest it. As 1 see it, the
problem is one of politics
and practicality vis-a-vis
Christianity and the dayto-day, consistent practice of one's faith. The
one being the easier road
to follow, they've opted
out of the other.
Accordingly, I have to
wonder how many people who today call themselves Christians are
merely ''pretenders'" as
regards their being followers of the Lord Jesus
Christ. Think about that
for a moment, and I
believe you 'II agree
that's an intriguing question.
That's take it one step
further: in the wake of
the recent elections, I
dare say many of us
voted for the politician
whose promises dovetailed the most with our

own line of reasoning
and, thus, were easiest to
digest. Hopefully, we
voted for the most ethical
and moral candidates, but
for some any given election always entails a certain sense of expediency.
ln America, even liars
and those without scruples can be elected to
public office! What's
worse, they can likewise
be re-elected - again
and again, no less!
Why is it so many
Americans
prefer
Democrats
over
Republicans, or viceversa - politicians to
preachers, the words of
men to the Word of
God?!? What's wrong
with
this
picture?
(Everything!) Therein,
too, lies the answer to the
problems in America,
today.
Paul
advised
the
Christians of Colosse to
"not let anyone fool them
by using senseless arguments which, although
they may sound wise, are
only human teachings
which come from the
powers of this world but
Christ"
not
from
(Colossians 2:8, TLB).
What neither this world
nor the Church of Jesus
Christ needs any more of
are
"practicing
Christians."
The
Kingdom needs mort'?
real, Christ-centered disciples. Strive to be one
of them.
(Rev. Thomas Johnson
is pastor of Trinithy
Church in Pomeroy,
Ohio.)

· dren "Who once raged against the
ather can find loving reconciliation
Sitting in the study
early Wednesday morning prayerfully contemplating this week's writing, my eyes fell on a
poem that our third son,
Eran, wrote for me. It is
framed; and hangs on
&amp;he wa11 close to my
desk. He titled it ''The
Servant:"
A stout little man with
traces of gra_v.
Takes his place in the
pulpit and bows his
head to pray.
At the start of his message, so humbly he
speaks,
But, you see the tension mounting and the
red in his cheeks.
s he takes off his
t, this man begins
•
walk'n,
You better believe now
that God's doin' the
talk'n.
Now his finger shoots
skyward, and he lets out
a shout,
The sleepy awake, and
skeptics can't doubt
That this man is for
Jesus; he is a tool of the
Lord.
Then he calls the
pianist and she strikes a
Heavenly chord.
There's a gleam in his
eye when a sinner is
saved,
As their life's turned
around and in Christ's
blood they are bathed.

loving
reconciliation broken and spiritually
despite our encounter of hurting lives.
While
rage. His poem verifies there are those who
it.
unfortunately
will
Yet. there is a bit of remain self-alienated
history. too. behind this from God till their
story concerning so dying day, there are
many. It is found in the those who inwardly rue
fact that times are when 'the breakdown in relapeople. for varieties of tionship
with
our
reasons, burst out in Heavenly Father.
rage against God. From
Ron Branch
With the latter in
their perspective God mind, the matter to ·
rages back, too. Angrily remember is that chilAnd, at the close of people stomp out in the dren who once raged
the service, he gil•es a darkness of seeming against the Father can
handshake and smile,
alienation from God.
find loving reconciliaAnd you know God i.~
I know what it is like·. tion.
The
Psalmist
walking by his side I once raged against reported, ''He will not
every single mile.
God. literally shaking keep His anger forev~r."
Although not evident, my fist toward Him with Furthermore. God is
there is a bit of history the deliberate intent of like a father who pities
associated with this lov- unholy defiance. Too be
His children. He is full
ing gesture from Eran. honest. other occasion
of mercy toward us.
It had not been too long there has been in which
This is forever true
before that the two of us I was angry with God.
because at the heart and ·
had badly butted heads.
Yet, the primary point
actions
of God is a manHe had crossed the line of concern involves
ifested
will
to have relawith me, but I had those who remain angritionship
with
all of us.
crossed the line with ly alienated from God to
When
people
return to
him with a fierce this very day. You may
walk
in
the
warmth
of it,
response. At first oppor- be one such person. You
life
is
a
soul-settled
tunity, he exited the have imaged God as
room and ran out of the having been a big disap- experience.
It was early morning
house into the darkness pointment to you. You
when
Eran came home.
of the night. During rebelled against His
I
was
still waiting for
those hours of absence, ways, which you conhim
in
the yard. He
sidered
too
rigid
for
I was broken-hearted
that I may have lost your life. Anger against walked by me without a
word - and then he
relationship with my God has persisted.
But. what is the quali- eventually wrote the
boy.
Thank the Lord, it did ty of life in such a spiri- words of this poem.
(Rev. Ron Branch is
not turn out that way. It tual condition? At the
took a little while, but core of existence for pastor of Faith Baptist
the both of us found many are emotionally Church in Mason, W Va.)

Bethel Center extends
program registration
TUPPERS PLAINS - Kris Butcher, Bethel
Worship Center's youth pastor and director of
Bethel's new Upward Sports program, noted today
that registration for basketball and cheerleading
will remain open through Saturday, Nov, 27.
The program, which will hold. games beginning
in January at the new Chester Community Center,
is open to all area children in K5-6th grade, and is
being offered by Bethel primarily as a convenient
local team sports option for children residing in the
eastern part of Meigs County.
Registration forms will be accepted at the Bethel
church office any time between I 0 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Monday through Friday, and at the Chester
Community Center on Saturdays between 9 a.m.
and 3 p.m. through Nov. 27.
After registering, participants will need to attend
a required evaluation and orientation session at the
Chester Community Center on Saturday. Nov. 20
or on the makeup day on Nov. 27 between 9 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Butcher added that those in need of
limited partial scholarship assistance should contact the church for more information:
Upward Sports is a nationwide youth sports program administered by Upward Unlimited; for more
information, see www.upward.org/parents.
Bethel's new Chester Community Center is
housed in 'the former Chester Elementary School
building, located on Route 248 just off Ohio 7 at
Chester. For more infonnation on Upward Sports
or the new Chester C0mmunity Center, call Bethel
Worship Center at 740-667-6793, or visit the
church web site at www.bethelwc.org.

Divorce topic at
First Presbyterian
GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Timothy J. Luoma will
address the topic of divorce during the 10:30 a.m.
service on Sunday, Nov. 21 at First Presbyterian
Church in Gallipolis. The church will also host a
discussion group about divorce at 7 p.m. on
Tuesday, Nov. 23. For infoqnation, visit
AnswersAndQuestions.org or call at 446-l 030.
First Presbyterian Church is located at 51 State
Street. Off-street parking is available in ~he church
lot off Third Avenue.

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

Choir at Crown City
Wesleyan Church
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 256-6993.

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

Church of Christ meets
GALLIPOLIS - The church of Christ m ;
Gallipolis meets at 234 Chapel Drive. Sunday ;
meeting times are as follows: 9:30 a.m., Bible ;
class; 10:30 a.m .. worship; 5 p.m., evening assem- •
bly. Bill Mead will be speaking Nov. 21. The !
church meets at 7 p.m. Wednesday for Bible study. ;
In keeping with New Testament teaching and '
example, the Lord's Supper is remembered each ,
first day of the week and singing is vocal. with no :
instrumental accompaniment. Free Bible courses •
are offered by mail, and there are Christians who:
would be glad to study the Bible with you person-:
ally in your home. Just send your name and postal:
address to the address above, or call 446-1494 to ·
take advantage of either service. Visit our Web site ;
www.chapelhillchurchofchrist.org.
:

Armstrong marks 17 years
at Mt. Carmel Baptist

'

BIDWELL - Mt. Carmel Missionary Baptist ;
Church will celebrate the 17th pastoral anniversary ;
of Moderator. Rev Gene A. Annstrong on Sunday. :
Nov. 28. Morning worship begins at 10:45 a.m. •
Afternoon worship will begin at 3 p.m. Rev C~lvin :
Minnis, Pastor of Corinth Baptist Church along !
with the choir and congregation will be the after- '
noon guests. Dinner will be served following •
morning worship. Everyone welcome.

j

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 19, 2010

Early Shopper's Specials
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pOOL CENTER
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�Page 1•
2010 DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE (TAX YEAR 2009)

REAL ESTATE

•

0100136000

STILL CARL &amp;/OR PAULINE

0100631000
0100632000
0300068000
0300105000
0300138000

ROSS SIMANIA
ROSS SIMANIA
PARKER LESTER L II
MARKWORTH AMY
KING NANCY J

0300328002
0300716004
0300933000
0300939004
0400037000
0500105001

BAILEY ROY LEE &amp;/OR CRYSTAL J
DILLARD MARK EDWARD &amp;/OR MARY
SELBEE JOHN F &amp;/OR SHERRY A

0500255000
0500326000
0500432000
0500474000
0500501002

•

0500730001
0500736001
0600094000
0800061000
0800065000
0800236000
0800242000
0800250000
0800409000
0800412001
0800414004
0800419000
0800432000
0800785009
0800785011
0900020000
0900090004
0900229015
0900242001
0900554001
0900884000
0900915000
0901034000
0901199000
0901369000
0901479002
1000020014
1000222001

•

The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County Treasurer of Meigs County, with the taxes,
assessments, interest, and penalties, charged 1hereupon agreeable to law, and contained and described in the
following lists.

1000246000
1000311000
1000388000
1000471002
1000732000

NOTTINGHAM JASON &amp;/OR CHRISTINA
ROUSH VICTOR WAYNE &amp; LOUELLA TRUSTEE
JEWELL TERRY L &amp;/OR CRYSTAL L
GASTON JOSEPH A &amp;/OR PAMELA A
HESS ALBERT EUGENE &amp; HESS GEORGE WILLIAM
JORDAN DAN l
KING ROBIN M
MOHR CHARLES &amp;/OR SHAWN A
ROBS WALTER .JAMES III &amp;/OR MARSHA MARIE
ASHCRAFT ALISA ANN
COOPER RANDAL A &amp;/OR DORINDA F
MEADOWS RUSSELL E &amp; lAWSON ROBERT F
KELlEY MARY A
GLOECKNER DAVID ERWIN &amp;/OR SALLY
GLOECKNER DAVID ERWIN &amp;/OR SALLY A
PATTERSON 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 ASHll C
THOMAS DeBRA &amp; LEWIS KENNETH
BARCUS RICHARD L &amp;/OR MOLLY l
CUNE EVERETTE LEE
GILBRIDE RICHARD l JR &amp;/OR BARBARA A
DEJOHN DANTE A
SMITH JAMES M &amp;/OR MAYNARD AMANDA
PETERSON BOB F
BARBER WILLIAM R JR &amp;/OR SARAH .1
WEBSTER ROBERT A &amp;/OR SUE M
BISHOP VERONICA R PULLINS
BISSELL BRUCE .H &amp;/OR MELODIE D
GREGORY GARY
PERSONS DENNIS A &amp;/OR PAt-1ELA V
COLUNS KEITH A &amp;/OR MARJORIE L
BARTEE TIMOTHY S &amp;/OR TERRI L
HENSLEY GREGORY A
KELLEY JAMES M
BAILEY LENA &amp; CHARLES
LAMBERT ROBERT A SR &amp;/OR KATHI
WATSON GERALD M

SEC17 T3N .Rl3W S OF JONES 173A V305 P423
FRAC25 T3N SECT. 20 SW COR. EX. SCHOOL LOT
FRAC19 T3N R13W SECT. 20 W END EX. 12 3/4A N
FRAC35 LOT9 T3N Rl2W LT9 BAUMS 1ST SUB 105.25' PLUS
SEC3 T3N R12W 1.042A OUT OF 3A
SEC4 T2N .R13W lA OUT OF 51.93A LOT 6 BALL'S SUB

633.10
710.37

600..53
1,404,00
1,1n.36
1,583.23
715.81

SEC13 T4N R12W 0.54A OUT OF 2.8-0A
SEC6 T2N R13W N PRT OF 57 A .991A OUT OF 11.69A V321 P603
SEC24 T3N R12W BLOCK 1 ROUTE 248 E PT EX 10' STRIP E &amp; 15' W SIDE
SEC7 T4N R12W L6386A OUT OF 44.648A

2,033.66
580.42
638.42

SECll T2N Rl3W W PART OF 97A
SEC24 T9N R1SW W1/2 OF NEl/4 EX 12A S OF RD
SEC18 T9 N Rl5W SW CORNER 2.493A OUT OF 32..247A V291 P83l

906.21
1,001.28
1,325,46

SEC17 T9N R15W N PRT OF SEl/4 EX 5~ 1/2A
SEC26 T9N RlSW 5.768 OUT OF 76A V289 P131
SEC29 T9N RlS N CENT PT OF SEl/4 2.031A OUT OF lO.SOA
SEC29 T9 R15 N OF THE SW1/4 OF NWl/4 OF SWl/4 6.094A OUT OF 48
SEC16 T9N RlSW E PRT OF SE PRT OF NWl/4 .S3A OUT OF 18.29
SEC26 T9N RlSW NEl/4 OF NE1/4 4.25A OUT OF 42.00A
SEC28 T3N RllW S PART OF SWl/4
SEC16 TlN R12W .25A OF 4A LOT SW SIDE OF lOA LOT
SEC16 TlN R12W STRIP 250'XB6'X190'X58'
lOOA LOT220 TlN RllW W PART Of ALL E SAYRE liNE V266 P67
49A LOT256&amp;254 TlN R12W 29A E END LOTS 254-256 W E.ND LOT 255
lOOA LOT247 T1N R12W LOT 19 ON ROAD JOINING VIlLAGE V27 P397
160A LOT1221 T2N R12W NW PRT OF 25.83A
160A lOT 1188 T2N RllW 1.468A OUT Of S.OOA
100A LOT220&amp;221 T1N R11W .9992A &amp; .OOOSA V3 P737
SEC26 T2N RllW W SIDE 11/2 &amp; .50 TRACT
lOOA LOT27l T2N R12W ON N UNE E OF RD EX COAL
.100A lOT228 T1N RllW 13.907A OUi OF 87.117A PRT OF LOT 20
100A LOT228T1N RllW 9.795A OUT Of 87.117A PRT OF LOT 22
7fiA LOT119 T4N RllW SEC19 ALL 57A EX: lOA EX:l.OOA
SEC 30 T4N Rll.W 6,054A OUT OF 22.306A
30A lOT 120 T3N RllW BUCKLEY 2ND ADO LOT9
SEC23 T4N RllW N.E CORNER LOOA OUT OF 17.82A
SEC34 FRAC36 T4N RllW 1.967A OUT OF 30.07A PRT OF LOT7
100A LOT103 T4N R11W SW COR S OF RD EX: 1.25A
lOOA LOT127 T3&amp;4N RllW SECll-13 18 S 1/2 OF 127 16.836A EX L827A
SEC30 T3N RllW N PRT OF SOA Nl/2 OF NW1/4 V306 Pl87
SEC30 T3N RllW NEl/4 PARCEL 1
SEC35 T4N Rll W MID OF SPT OF SW1/4 EX 5.013A EX3.50A EX2A EX20A
SEC36 T3 R11 W 2 .6271A OUT OF 7.9992A
SEC35 T4N Rl2W 3.283A OUT OF 219.92SA LOT13
SEC14&amp;15 FRACl T4N R12W W1/2 Of Nl/2 1.4A OUT OF 69.SA
SECS T4N R12 MCCUNE 1ST ADDN LOT 1 19/SSXS 1/2 RODS MID
SEC15 FRAC6 T4N R12 MID ON N LINE
SEC4 T4N R12W NW OF SW1/4
SEC 6 T4N Rl2W OUT OF 28.65SA .904A
SEC16 T4N R12 N PRT Of SEl/4 EX .27A NE PRT

...

623.67
511.15
855.54
705.56
1,274.72
548.10
708.13
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
523.90
3,298.70
564.00
1,139.83
1,021.63
789.25
688.94
671.68
1,316.49
582.77
1,143.82
583.67
1,297.69
580.76
97692
759.96
657.59
597.38

�• Page 2
1100127000
1100157000
1100172000
1100198000
1100289000
11004S3000
1100519000
1100694000
1100735000
1101157000
1101254000
12.00128000
1200232000
1200316000
1200389000
1300283000
1300505006
1300537000
1300580000
1300709000
1300868000
1400089000
1400386001
1400688000
1400803001
1400916001
1401102000
1401351009
1401420001
1401545000
1401617001
1500123000
1500127000
1500202000
1500235000
1500401000
1500431000
1500458000

HENDRICKS WILLIAM TRAVIS &amp;/OR BLACKWELL AMBER
VANMATRE BETTY SUE
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
KAUFF WILLIAM E &amp;/OR JENNIE M
JACKS GERALD G &amp; JOANN L
LEE GREGORY K
BOGGS MICHAEL 0
FIELDS EARL R &amp;/OR MARTEENA D
MCDANIEL DWAINE K
TAYLOR JAMES 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 Titv10THY CARL &amp;/OR JUNE
SHAFFER GLEN
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
MITCHELL ERIC R &amp;/OR CONNIE L
BURKE WILBUR T &amp;/OR DEBRA K
HEIGHTON DAVID
BROOKS SHARLENE MAE &amp;/OR TROY
DILLARD DAVID
HAYES CHARLES E JR
HALL TIMOTHY M &amp;/OR CARA J
BIRCHFIELD MARY L &amp;/OR BIRCHFIELD DEWEY R
CARSEY JACK W

1500478000
1500671000
1501306000
1501481000
1501688000
1501689000
1501968000
1600022000
1600049000
1600165000
1600640000

CARPENTER RANDALL R &amp;/OR PEGGY ANN
NEFF ANDREW W
DOWDEN JOYCE J
CARD PAUL
HERMAN RICHARD ALLEN ETAL
LANDERS TAMMY J
CARSEY JACK W
FULTZ JOHN MARCUS
FULTZ JOHN MARCUS
DOWLER DAVID
MCQUAID ANGELA
PEARSON WESLEY R &amp;/OR CHLOEANNA L
NORWOOD ROBERT
FISH RHONDA

1600802000
1600962000
1600968000
1601060000
1601341000
1602024000

ALESHIRE WILLIAM H &amp;/OR PAMELA L
KLEIN ROBERT EUGENE
BUCHANAN HENRY R
VIDAL HOWARD ANDREW Il
BAER EDWARD T &amp;/OR PATRICIA D
INGELS JAMES R JR

SEC3 T6N R14W MID ON NE PT EX 1/2A SW
SECl T6N Rl4W N PART OF 22.50A W PART OF 59A
FRACS T6N R14W 2.022A OUT OF 52.88A
SEC2 T6N R14W l.SOA OF NW COR. OF 3,85A ALSO 12'WD RTOFWAY
SEC33 T6N Rl4W W PART OF 42A SW OF NWl/4 V159 P28S
SEC13 T6N R14W N OF MID ONE LINE 6.14A NEW SURVEY V333 P3S7
SECl T6N. R14W NE OF JESS GARDNER EST EX LOT &amp; COAL
SEC18 T6N R14W SE COR EX: 40A E 71.602A EX: 44.6111A EX:3.7372A
FRAC4 T6N R14W CLAIR-MAR ESTATES
SEC16 T6N R14W ON N LINE EX: 20A N OF E PRT 40A OF 122.32W
S.EC8 T6N R14W 1. 10A OUT OF 90.82A
SECS T6N Rl4W LOT 17 RAWLINGS ADD
FRAC7 T6N R14W 14 SO' FRNTG ON ST RO 12.4 E SIDE 83A W43, 70A
SECB T6N Rl4W LOT 12
FRAC7 T6N R14W SECT 14 (262) W OF HUNTER .28A 99X110
SEC6 T7N. R15W NE OF SWl/4 EX: #4 VEIN COAL V1 P521
SEC13 TSN R15W 3.00A OUT OF 54.02A
SECH T8N R15W S1/2 EX; #4 VEIN COAL V278 P71
SECl TSN R15W S OF Nl/2 OF NEl/4 EX: #4 VEIN lN 67.042A
SEC25 T8N R15W Wl/2 OF NWl/4 OF NWl/4 EX ~ #4 VEIN COAL
SEC23 TBN RlSW TRACT #21
SEC17T2N Rl3W NE OF NEl/4 OF SEl/4 OF SEC17
T2N R13W

sees

SEC31 T2N R13W 1.30A OUT OF 66.59A NEAR MID N1/2 OF N LINE
FRAC18 T2N R13W .1478A OUT OF LOOA
SEC3 T2N R12W SA OUT OF 12.71A
SEC25 T2N R13W OF 52.98A MID. N LINE EX ~ COAL .53A .02A
SEC3 T2N Rl3W LOTS EX: 0.035A
SEC24 Tl R13 0.691A OUT OF 1.114A EX: 0.32A
FRAC33 T2N R13W MID OF S 1/3 OF RO EX: COAL EX: l.SOA
FRAC33 T2N R13W 2.0158A OUT OF 3.25A
64A LOT313 TlN R13W LOT 1 HOBART ADO
lOOA LOT310 TlN R13W LOT 17
lOOA LOT312 TlN R13W LOT (77) #77
lOOA LOT3ll TlN Rl3W LOT 43 36' WEND V26 P847
lOOA LOT311 TlN Rl3W DIV JONES EST 22 W SIDE V332 P37
64A LOT313 TlN R13W LOT (64) BEHAN ADD NW 1/4 33X96'
100A LOT312 TlN R13W LOT DIV JONES EST 1 - EX 35,7' NE COR
100A LOT312 TlN R13W LOT (1) JONES ADO 1
lOOA LOT310 TlN R13W LOT 309 .33A N PART 3.78A .33A
100A LOT312 TlN Rl3W LOT 87 PALMER'S 1ST EX 6' N SIDE V20 P045
SEC29 TlN Rl3W LOT 3 GOEGLEIN SUBDIV. llO'XlOO' V321 P289
lOOA LOT311 TlN R13W LOT 23 BEHAN ADD 25' N SIDE
100A LOT311 TlN R13W LOT 23 Sl/2
SEC29 TlN R13W SECT 29 (640) 119.21A N OF LEADING CR W OF 1.36A
lOOA LOT T2N R13W LOTS POM. TERR.
160A LOT T2N Rl3W LINCOLN HEIGHTS ADO.
100A LOT306 TlN R13W LOT 111
SEC8 T2N R13W S PART EX LANDING 66' REAR X 130' DEPT
FRAClO T2N R13W LOT 36-37 N END
SEC8 T2N R13W LOT 258 SUB 97
100-303 T2N R13W POM TERR EX STRIP N
FRAClO T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
FRAC10 T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 95 35' FRONT X 8S' V334 PS99

950.16
694,09
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
606J2
1,835.47
829.60
1,384.53
613,2.8
520.86
1,052.81
609.87
526J3
839.48
910.05
1,459.71
1,044 .12
887.52
784.41
607.34
1,504.12
2,413,17
959.20
566.82
514.25
891.01

ns.«
800.52
523.24
647.77
520.92
860.66
893.63
1,019.72
856.15
520.34
7,505.12
899.66
571.62
797.04

643.02
763.67
843.15
1,067.41

•

�• Page 3
1602364000
1602455000
1602470000
1602472000
1700285000
. t l00340000
.

00468002
1700646000
1700667000
1700886000
1700894000
1700895000
1700922001
1800124000
1800384000
1800587001
1800705000
1800857000
1801342000

POMEROY BOWLING CO THE
RIFFLE RICHARD S ETAL
BUTCHER LARRY
BUTCHER LARRY
MCLAIN GEORGE V &amp;/OR CLAUDIA SHEPHERD
PREAST WESLEY 0 &amp;/OR CHRISTINA
WELLSPRING RETREAT AND RESOURCE CENTER INC
ANDRUS GERALD A JR &amp;/OR TAMMY R
HILL JAMES R &amp;/OR REGINA E
TAYLOR WARREN &amp;/OR VICTORIA
TAYLOR WARREN &amp;/OR VICTORIA
TAYLOR WARREN &amp;/OR VICTORIA
HILL REGINA &amp;/OR RANDY
WALKER MITCHELL
SHEETS TERRY
BURTON LORI D
JOHNSON JERRY MICHAEL JR &amp;/OR DOROTHY A
BRADFORD MICHAEL K
ARNOTT PAMELA A

FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 135 EX. W 10' ALSO LAND BET. 135 TO CLIFF V166
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 144 W 30' ADJOINING LOT 145
100A LOT303 T2N Rl3W LOT 24 DABNEY ADD
100A LOT303 T2N Rl3W LOT 27 0 ADO COR SALT &amp; B ST
SEC3 T7N R14 E CORNER 40,50A EX: 37 .9978A V253 P997
SEC3 T7N R14 E END OF Sl/2 OF NE1/2 1/4 EX: 14 4/S A
SEC36 MID ON S LINE 10.0998A OUT OF 40.466A
SEC17 T7N R14 IN N PART OF SWl/4
SEC23 T7N R14 SE COR.
SECS T7N R14 N PART OF 97A W SIDE F SEC 2'X22' N VlS P017
SEC11 T7N R14 S PART OF NEl/4 N OF RD V13 P017
SEC11 T7N R14 E PT OF Wl/2 OF El/2 OF NEl/4 &amp; Wl/2 OF SE V13 P017
SEC28 FRAC35 T7N R14W 3.00A OUT OF 13,42A
SEClO T2 R12 NE COR OF SW 1/4 1.5521A OF 13.87A NEW SURVEY
SEClB T2N R12 N OF N 1/2 Of NE1/4 EX .1837A EX: 17.571A
SEC16 T2N R12W 2A OUT OF lO.SOA
SEC22&amp;23 LOT280 T2 R12 .E PT OF 6.30A NW PARTV288 P77
LOT1195 T2N R12W
LOT1208 T2N R12W 8 END .EX.COAL EX.28A EX.1A EX.2.37A EX.1.873A

1900036000

WRITESEL HOWARD JASON

1900042000
1900044000
1900264000
1900291001
1900374000

CRUM ROGER &amp;/OR JAMIE
COLLINS JOANN L
LYONS DOLORES GENE
EVANS JOSEPH &amp; CARMEL L
)ONES CURTIS D

SEC16 T2N R12W 78 40 1/2' PART EX: 10' E 3/4
SEC16 T2N Rl2W 71 #71
SEC16 T2N. Rl2W 10 H. ADO.
SEC16 T2N Rl2W N PART OF ELLIS 1.07A
100A LOT278 T2N R12W SECT 9 -15 1.06A OUT OF 4.40A V294 P697
SEC16 T2N R12W MID #3 E OF YAHAM

1900399000
1900406000
1900421000

RICHARDS DENNIS LEE JR
FISHER LARRY G &amp;/OR RHOJ'JDA R
SMITH JARED

SEC16 T2N R12W .LOT 42 EX COAL
SEC16 T2N R12W LOT 17
SEC16 T2N R12W 28 W ADD PART

2000041001
2000349000
~00607000

SPAUN DONALD R&amp;/OR CLARINDA &amp;/OR THEISS JESSICA LOT 299 Tl Rl3 11,815.53 SQ FT 071 SQ FT OF MID #1
JEFFERS DORLENE
100A LOT296 T2N R12W LOT 2 RUSTIC HILLS SUBDIVISION NO 2 V260 P779
THEISS PAMELA M ETAL
100A LOT298 TlN R13W SW OF COLLEGE RD V295 P895

.

ZWILLING WOODROW T &amp;/OR SHELTON RUSSELL

00787000

100A LOT298 93A LOT299 TlN R13W PT OF LOT 298 OFF E END #1 &amp; 2 EX

Grand Total for 137 parcels:

514.57
838.21
635.94
529.40
781.62
603.15
1,284.96
598.27
550.85
1,194.74
750.70
717.36
618.50
1,372.62
1,433.59
743.19
584.58
586.78
522.45
1,388.19
1,193.97

ns.ss
638.73
1,017.58
708.94
529.47
1,099.05
924.07
1,374.47
1,038.11
758.12
1,442.01
128,946.90

MANUFACTURED HOME DELINQUENT TAX
(TAX YEAR .2009)

&gt;

..

�• Page 4

&lt;.

0801075MOO

VANMETER JON R

2002 SKYJJN.E

0801076MOO

BAUERAUCIA

1996

CLAYTON

0900226MOO

FINJ&lt; CHARLES &amp; LAWSON ROBERT SR &amp; FINK SHERRIE

1971

WINSTON

706

0900287MOO

MOORE DOUGLAS &amp; SANDRA

1996

SKYLINE

SPC

090112SMOO

MASTON SHERRI

2005

OAKWOOD

175

D

2,744.05

1,956.21
543.95

591.91
1,021 .24

1001114MOO

SWAIN MEGAN L

2007

GILES

1001119MOO

HELGENSEN TAWNY

2010

REDMAN

1100194MOO

RAMSBURG RICHARD &amp; CAROL

1973

KIRKWOOD

GC65T3KOA

543.95

1301010MOO

SAVAGE DONALD E &amp; LORELEI

1999

OAKWOOD

354

565.47

l301089MOO

MCGHEE MICHAEL &amp; KATRINA

1995

LIBERTY

WEX

631 .51

130113SMOO

MCKINNEY DENNIS

1995

1400101MOO

OLIAN JENNIE

1973

MARIETTA

551 .82

1400193MOO

CARUTHERS TRENA

1955

PONTIAC

543,95

1400234MOO

NEECE ROY ROGERS &amp; DONNA

1974

SHEFFIELD

1400413MOO

FREEMAN PEGGY

1963

VINDALE

893.16
603.46

1,450.42

260SE21LAS3868M

543.95
543.95

woo

1401080MOO

SELLERS LARRY

2000

SKYLINE

140ll12MOO

ARMS ZACHARY l

2007

GilES

1500207MOO

WALLACE JESSICA N &amp; CALE NANCY WROS

1995

CLAYTON

MV

665.36

1501067MOO

HARRIS JAMES &amp; LULA

2001

FLEETWOOD

ANNiVERSARY

546 .97

1600002MOO

BELL SANDRA

1961

ELCONA

1601053MOO

MCGINNIS SHARON M

1998

OAKWOOD

1700058MOO

ROBERTS DENZIL l

1970

BUDDY

1700127MOO

SWANSON RONDA

1973

ROCKWOOD

1700201MOO

I&lt;ING .EDWARD

1977

FREEDOM

1701025MOO

BUTCHER/HIRE BILLIE JO

1989

CLAYTON HOMES

1701151MOO

KENNEDY MARQUITA J

1988

STERLING

1701154MOO

HOPE RONALD A

2007

1800126M06

JUSTIS WILUAM

1970

1801066MOO

LEMLEY JAMES R &amp; DEANNA F

2003

1801092MOO

WERRY RANDY

2004

f

2000088MOO

MITCHELL GREG

1975

l

2001017MOO

OUV.ER DANTE

2000

Grand Total for 48 parcels:

&amp;. MILDRED
&amp;. DAVID WROS

534.51
552.27
10150

543.95
543.95

UK

l
ST1·211
PLEASANT VIEW

BUDDY

679.88
1,129.88

50X12
RNM328001

CLAYTON

512.53

604.24
556.32
1.457,79
543.95
1,340.24

500.00
543.95

REDMAN

NM

557.11

36,730.55

•

�I,_.____w

-

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

I

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside .
Oden out for another season, Page B2
Boot gave OSU win over Iowa, Page B4

•

PORT_

Friday, November 19, 2010

==========================================
LocAL ScHEDULE

POMEROY - A schedule of upcoming
high school varsily sporting events
lnvolvmg teams from Gallla. Mason and
Meigs counties.

Saturday. N~er 20
Football
Class A Playoffs - Second Round

East Hardy vs Wahama at Point
Pleasant JSHS. 1 :30 p.m.

WVUtops
Davidson
84-70 in
Puerto Rico

SPORTS BRIEFS

MYLyouth
hoops tourney

•

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

Lisa Honaker/submitted photo

From left, Wahama seniors Tyler Kitchen, Elijah Honaker, Tygert Phalin, Ryan Anderson, Jeremiah Hoffman
and Ryan Lee pose for a preseason picture at the start of the 201 0 football season. The seven seniors, Kyle
McCormick was absent the day the picture was taken, will lead the White Falcons into Saturday's Class A second-round playoff contest against East Hardy at the Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Wahama, Cougars to renew acquaintances
Bv GARY

CLARK

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT PLEASANT.
W.Va. - The next obstacle awaiting the top
ranked and undefeated
Wahima White Falcon
( 11-(J) football team as it
SPORTS SHORTS
continues its mission to
the Class A championship in Wheeling will
be a 1:30 p.m. Saturday
afternoon date with the
ninth rated East Hardy
Cougars (8-3).
The Eastern Panhandle
CINCINNATI (AP)- team
of Coach Chad
"'he Cincinnati Bengals Williams will be making
•
have signed fifth-year the lengthy 275 mile trek
N F L to Mason County to batdefensive tle with the Be.nd Area
e n d eleven at the Point
Victor Pleasant High School
Adeyanju Athletic Complex in
( A h quarterfinal round action
DAY'- of
the Class A post-seaNOTEBOOK ahn-joo)
son.
and put
Coach Ed Cromley's
Jonathan Fanene on White Falcons are fresh
injured reserve.
off a 19-0 whitewash of
Fanene hasn't played 16th ranked St Marys
since suffering a ham- while East Hardy defeatstring injury Oct. 24 at
Potomac
Valley
Atlanta, and saw only. ed
League
foe
Tucker
limited action earlier
because of hamstring County 30-12 in an openplayoff
problems. He played in ing ' round
encounter.
every 2009 game for the
Both teams relied on its
Bengals.
Adeyanju was released defense in the first round
Sept. 4 by the St. Louis triumphs with Wahama
Rams. A fourth-round forcing three St Marys
draft pick from Indiana turnovers which ultiUniversity, he played mately were turned into
four seasons for the· WHS points while East
Hardy cashed in on five
~ams, with 26 starts. He
w ad three sacks, four Tucker County mistakes.
The Cougars. normally
fumble recoveries and
an 89-yard fumble return a passing team, came out
running the football
for a touchdown.

Bengals sign
DE Adeyanju,
Fanene to IR .

Tim Tucker/photo

Wahama sophomore running back Crandal Neal (23) runs away from a St. Marys
defender, with the help of a block from offensive lineman Colton McKinney (60),
during this Class A playoff contest Saturday at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
against Tucker County
and scored three times on
the ground in the opening
half before· adding a pair
of touchdown passes in
the final two quarters.
'"We practiced all week
defending tht; pass and
they (East Hardy) came
out running the football,"
Tucker County head
coach A.J. Rapp said following the playoff loss.
East Hardy finished the

contest with 220 yards on
the ground and another
138 yards thro~gh the
airways.
.
The Cougars. a school
of 247 students in grades
nine through 12. captured
top honors in the
Potomac
Valley
Conference during the
20 J0 grid campaign.
Moorefield, Pendleton ·
County,
Pocahontas
County. Tucker County

and Tygarts Valley comprise the PVL conference
with East Hardy finishing with a league best 4-1
record in conference play
and a 7-3 mark overall
during its ten regular sea·
son contests.
East Hardy defeated
Rappahanock CountJ: Va.
(46-6), Clear Spnngs
Md. (27-19), Pocahontas

I

SAN JUAN, Puerto
Rico (AP) Darryl
"Truck" Bryant wants a
championship trophy as
the one souvenir to bring
home from Puerto Rico.
Bryant
scored 22
points, Dan Jennings
grabbed 11 rebounds and
West
Virginia
beat
Davidson
84-70 on
Thursday in the opening
round of the Puerto Rico
Tip-Off.
Bryant's idea of fun in
sunny Puerto Rico isn't
hitting the beach. but
winning it all for the
1.000 or so fans who
made it feel a little like
Morgantown in the spacious Coliseo de Puerto
Rico.
"That's the plan," he
said. "It's not for us. it's
for them. They spept all
that money to come over
here and we just want to
bring the championship
pack to Morgantown."
One win down, two
left.
Casey Mitchell scored
12 points and three others
were in double figures
for the Mountaineers (20), who advanced to play
the winner of VanderbiltNebraska in the second
round of the eight-team
tournament that finishes
Sunday.
"We should be a lot
better,.. West Virginia
coach Bob Huggins said.
"We're not playing much
freshman. The I 0 guys
that we played were all
here a year ago ...
Brendan McKillop and
De'Mon Brooks each
scored 15 points for
Davidson (0-2), which
went 2 for 22 from 3point range to blow its
chance at the win.
The game featured a
whopping 67 personal
fouls, one technical and
lasted nearly 21/2 hours.
Mitchell
hit
two
straight 3-pointers late
in the first half to oive
the Mountaineert a
double-digit lead that
they
eventually
stretched to 19 points.

Please see Renew, 82 ·

Please see WVU, 82

Seattle ace Hernandez wins AL Cy Young

•

NEW YORK (AP) For
once,
Felix
Hernandez got all the
support he needed for a
big win.
The Seattle ace earned
the AL Cy Young Award
on Thursday despite a
modest 13-12 record. His
major
league-leading
2.27 ERA and superior
stats put him far ahead of
Tampa Bay's David Price
and the Yankees' CC
Sabathia ' and
their
impressive
win-los~
numbers.
Victimized by the
Mariners' poor hitting all
season, Hernandez found
mp1e backing with the
oters in this pitchers·
CJuel. They clearly recognized how little the lastplace Mariners helped
him - in l 0 starts, they
were either shut out and
held to one run.
"This confirms the Cy
Young is an award not
only for the pitcher with
the most wins, but the
most dominant," a tearyeyed Hernandez said
while celebratmg with
relatives at the family
home
in
Valencia,
V!)nezuela.

Tim Lincecum set the
record last year with 15
victories
for
San
Francisco.
Fernando Valenzuela
won the NL award in
strike-shortened
1981
King Felix got 21 of after going 13-7. His
the 28 first-place votes mark of six games over
and J67 points in ballot- .500 had been the lowest
ing by the Baseball for any Cy starter until
Writers· Association of Hernandez.
''It's not only the wins,
America. The 24-yearold right-hander led the it's the whole stats,"
league in innings (249 2- Hernandez said.
3), was second in strikeA month after the Allouts (232) and held AL Star break, Hernandez
opponents to the lowest appeared to be a long
batting average (.212).
• shot for the award.
Price, who went 19-6
He was 8-10 on Aug.
with a 2. 72 ERA. was 15 after 26 starts. but a
second with four first- debate had already begun
place votes and 111 to brew about his Cy
points. Sabathia. who Young candidacy. Many
was 21-7 with a 3.18 fans who rely more tradiERA. drew the other tiona! numbers - winthree first-place votes Joss record for pitchers
and finished third at 102. - didn't think he rated at
"Felix is very deserv- the top of the list.
Others who count on
ing of the award," Price
tweeted. ''I don't think baseball's newer math
people understand the pointed at how well
numbers he put up out- Hernandez had done on
the things he could fully
side wins/losses!"
The 13 wins by command. He Jed AI...
Hernandez marked the pitchers in a stat that matfewest for a Cy Young
Please see Felix, 82
starter in a full season
91

boW on. sli~
'Jo/.).~ll. ~

i\'\IS deal~ on
1\10'1 19,20l0

'flntAn\rs

Check Out Our Hot Deal November 19th
At

and

�--

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 19,

2010

Blazers C Oden will have another knee surgery LB Benard better after fainting
two weeks ago when he
experienced some pain
and tluid in the joint. Soon
thereafter,
an
MRI
revealed the damage.
''We sat there and it was
like we'd been kicked in
the stomach," Jensen said,
choking up. "It felt like
hearing someone close to
us had died."
The 22-year-old Oden
has often has been compared to forn1er Portland
center Sam Bowie, whom
the Blazers famously
selected in front of
Michael Jordan 111 the
1984 draft. The Blazers
picked Oden instead of
Kevin Durant, who went
to the Oklahoma City
franchise and has blossomed into one of the
NBA's best players.
Another Portland big
man. Bill Walton, was
selected by the Blazers
with the No. l pick in the
1974 draft, but he was
dogged by a broken nose,
foot, wrist and leg over his
first two seasons before
helping the team to the
NBA chan1pionship in
1977.
Oden has seemingly
been cursed since short! y
before his rookie season,
when trouble in his right
knee prompted surgery
the first time.
He showed promise the
next season when he
played in 61 games, averaging 8.9 points and seven

rebounds.
But he really began to
blossom last season when
he became a starter and
was averaging 11.7 points,
8.8 rebounds and 2.4
blocks in that role. Then
he was hurt in a game
against Houston, crashing
to the t1oor with his
kneecap visibly contorted.
Oden had just started
easing into practices when
the latest knee issue was
discovered. He has played
in only 82 games during
his NBA career, missing
176.
Jensen said it was
unclear what caused the
latest damage.
The Blazers announced
last month they would not
offer Oden a contract
extension. He was the first
No. 1 pick since Kwarne
Brown not to get one at
the end of his rookie contract.
Oden will be a restricted
free agent next summer
and Portland will be able
to match any offers for
him.
Portland's problems at
center are not limited to
Oden.
For the past several
years the Blazers have
relied on veteran Joel
Przybilla, but he also was
injured last December and
required knee surgery.
The Blazers have since
started veteran forward
Marcus Camby in the

middle.
At the start of this season, Jeff Pendergraph,
who was backing up
Camby, injured his knee
and required season-ending surgery. The Blazers
signed six-year veteran
Fabricio Oberto, but he
retired from the NBA just
five games into the season
because of a preexisting
heart condition.
The good news for the
Blazers is that Przybilla
already has returned to
practice and has said he
expects to be back by
Thanksgiving.
. About an hour before
announcing
Oden 's
surgery, the Blazers said
All-Star guard Brandon
Roy would miss the next
two games because of a
sore left knee.
Roy recently underwent an MRI exam and
team doctors determined
there is no immediate
need for surgery. He will
be evaluated again next
week.
The team's top scorer
left the Blazers' game at
New
Orleans
on
Saturday with a pronounced limp after playing 22 minutes. He had
recently expressed concern about his knees after
playing significant minutes early in the season.
The
Blazers
host
Denver on Thursday and
Utah on Saturday.

within 70-60. Bryant,
though. answered with a
3 that pushed the lead to
75-60 and West Virginia
fromPageBl
held on from there.
Coming off a Final
The Wildcats, who
Four.
Virginia is out
don't play at home until of the West
Top 25, but maybe
Nov. 29. made some
short runs to stay close- not for long. Win on
until the end. Clint Mann Friday and it sets up a
rriade two free throws to potential championship
make it a lO-point game, showdown with No. 8
Carolina
on
but Dalton Pepper hit a North
Sunday.
breathing-room 3 for
"We have enough
West Virginia that made.
games
on TV where we
it 53-38 midway through
our talent
can
showcase
the second half.
can
see what
and
people
Hard to believe it was
only two years ago that we can do,'' forward
Stephen Curry hit four 3s Kevin Jones said. "We're
and scored 27 points for not really worried about
Davidson in a win over all that."
The tournament opener
West Virginia in the
dragged
on as the refs
Ji;mmy V Classic. So
much has changed since never put their whistles
....: Davidson slid back away. The crowd of
into mediocrity and West mostly West Virginia
Virginia made a Final fans started humorously
chanting ''No more
Four.
The Wildcats could fouls!'' in the final minMve used Curry's silky utes. West Virginia went
touch. They missed their 31 of 49 from the line,
first 19 3-pointers - yes, Davidson 18 of 29.
19!
until Jordan Seven players fouled out
Downing hit one with - West Virginia's Deniz
Kilicli amazingly did it
3 ~21 left that pulled them

in only 6 minutes.
''That kind of got us
out of our rhythm,'' Jones
said. "It kind of took control of the game at one
point, but the referees
started to do a good job
in the second half. It
calmed down and we
were able to hit some
free throws and get some
clutch baskets at the
end."
Davidson coach Bob
McKillop wanted at least
a few more whistles.
Twice, he loudly complained Bryant was carrying the ball. Each time,
Bryant followed with a
basket.
His biggest concern
was the 3-point shooting.
"We just
haven't
knocked them down at
this point," McKillop
said. "Our confidence is
a little bit fractured right
now. We've just go to
stand up and knock them
down."
Huggins and McKillop
were agitated with the
refs all game.
The tipping point came
late in the first half when

a double foul was called
on each team, and a technical called against West
Virginia's
Cam
Thorou~hman. Huggins
was rea as he screamed
nose-to-nose with a ref,
who patiently let the
coach make his profane
point without another T.
"I was just trying to
help him," Huggins said.
"It's part of my obligation to the game to try
and help them get better.''
Huggins had little else
to complain about in the
first half. Mitchell's 3s
made it 34-20 ifld the
Mountaineers cruised to
a 42-29 halftime lead.
Davidson missed all nine
3-point attempts in the
first half and was 5 for 11
from the free-throw line.
McKillop advocated a
later start to the season
and more practice time
with teams so early season games weren't so
ugly.
"We're putting a product on the court that at
this point in the season is
not where it should be,"
he said.

eighth time Wahama has
advanced to quarterfinal
round action with the
Bend Area team compiling a disappointing 2-6
record in quarterfinal
contests.
The White Falcons
defeated Van by a 40-16
margin in second round
play in 2001 and beat
Matewan 34-20 in 2003
to advance to the Class A
post-season semifinals
with both of those playoff victories coming
when the local eleven
hosted a second round
encounter.
Wahama posted its
sixth shutout win of the
year against St Marys
with the White Falcons
forcing three turnovers
and turning all three mistakes into touchdowns.
Matthew Stewart had a
37 yard interception
return for a score while
Zack Wamsley recovered
a Blue Devil fumble to
set up a 10 yard Anthony
Grimm scoring run.
Issac Lee also picked off
a St Marys pass to set the
stage for a two-yard
quarterback sneak by
Trenton Gibbs.
Sophomores
Zack
Wamsley and Crandal
Neal led the Falcon
defensive effort with
stellar performances by
Stewart
and
Jamin
Branch adding to the
Bend Area teams accomplishments.
Elijah Honaker and
Tyler Kitchen also performed admirably for the
WHS defensive eleven
as di~ Anthony Grimm

and Ryan Anderson.
On the offensive side
Ryan Lee picked up 110
yards in 14. carries while
Trenton Gibbs connected
on five of 12 aerials for
49
yards.
Kitchen
grabbed two receptions
for 27 yards for the
White Falcons.
The WHS offensive
line is deserving much
of the credit for Bend
Area running backs to
run for over 3000 yards
during the 2010 campaign. The interior line
consists of Jamin Branch
at center, juniors Colton
McKinney and Evan
Smith at guards, senior
Ryan Anderson and
junior Jeremy Cundiff at
tackles along with tight
end Elijah Honaker and
wide receiver Tyler
Kitchen.
Saturday afternoon's
Class
A
playoff
encounter will be the
second meeting ever
between East Hardy and
Wahama. The Cougars
dealt the White Falcons
a 40-20 win back in the
1997 post-season in a
game
played
at
Moorefield
High
School.
Ironically that 1991
Cougar playoff triumph
was the last postseason
win for East Hardy until
last weeks conquest of
Tucker County.
Kickoff time
for
Saturday
afternoon's
quarterfinal Class A
playoff contest is 1:30
p.m.
at the Point
Pleasant High School
Athletic Complex.

PORTLAND.
Ore.
(AP) - For the third time
in' four years, Greg Oden 's
knees have betrayed him.
'The Portland Ttail
Blazers hastily called a
press
conference
Wednesday
night to
announce that Oden. the
No. 1 pick in the 2007
draft. will miss the season
after he has microfracture
surgery on his left knee.
Oden ·s rookie year was
postponed because of similar surgery on his right
knee, and last sea-;on he
broke his left kneecap
early in December and
again required s.urgery.
He was still rehabbing
when the latest problem
was discovered.
"As you can expect. this
young man is devastated
about not having the
opportunity to play this
season, being so close to
getting back on the floor
and just all of a sudden.
this situation comes up
and it's like, here we go
again for him," Portland
coach Nate McMillan
said.
Oden 's latest surgery is
scheduled for Friday in
Vail. Colo. The microfracture procedure will repair
damaged cartilage that is
not related to the kneecap
injury. the team said.
Blazers trainer Jay
Jensen said the latest
problem with Oden 's knee
became apparent about

wvu

· Renew
fromPageBl
County (20-14). Tygarts
Valley
(47-16),
Pendleton County (17-0),
Tucker County (43-18)
and Class AA Petersburg
(32-27) during the regular season.
Their lone setbacks
were to Bath County Va.
(7-34), Moorefield (1949)
and
East
Rockingham Va. (14-28).
Fpur Cougar opponents
made the postseason in
Bath County Va., Tucker
County.
Pocahontas
County and Pendleton
County.
·East Hardy returns
seven offensive starters
and eight defensive regulars from a 2-8 team in
2009. The green and gold
of Coach Chad William's
crew are averaging just
over 30 points per game
offensively while giving
up just over 20 points to
the opposition.
The Cougars average
over 200 yards per game
through the air while
gaining another 100
yards on the ground.
Talented junior quarterback Kolin Foltz (5-10
180) is the teams offensive leader with 2047
yards passing and 18
touchdowns. Foltz has
completed 123 of 262
passes on the season with
four East Hardy receivers
accumulating over 375
receiving yards. Foltz's
favorite t'rgets include

sophomore wide receiver
Joshua Parker (6-2 150)
with 508 yards on the
season, senior wide out
Kyle Westfall (5-9 160)
with 400 yards, sophomore receiver Levi Beck
(5-11 150) with 395
yards and senior running
back Stephen See (6-1
200) with 375 yards on
the year.
· The primary running
threat is senior Jeremy
Kraus (6-2 190) who has
picked up 819 yards on
the season. The interior
line averages 240 pounds
per man and consists of
probable starters in
senior tackles Ethan
Fansler (6-3 235) and
Tyler Kerr (6-6 255),
junior guard Shawn
Childers (6-0 235) and
sophomore guard Wyatt
Bayse (6-1 200) with the
center being sophomore
Brady Hinkle (6-4 265).
Defensively
senior
Eric Heflin (6-0 180) is
the Cougars top man
after being credited with
an amazing 155 tackles
in 2010. Tyler Kerr joins
Heflin as a defensive star
after picking off two
passes from his defensive
end position.
ln its win over Tucker
County last week Kraus
ran for 146 yards and two
touchdowns while Foltz
completed 10 of 18 passes for 138 yards and
another two scores.
Parker and Beck caught
the TD tosses with Foltz
also adding a 27 yard
tield goal.
Th~ Saturday afternoon kickoff will be the

BEREA, Ohio (AP) old had fallen ill again.
Marcus Benard now That wasn't the case.
knows that stress can hit
"Nothing happened,"
as hard as he does.
he said. "I had a baby,
On Thursday,
the that's where I rushed off
Browns
linebacker to."
recalled his medical
Benard's son, Ashaj a
scare last week when he Sharoz, which he saicw
collapsed in Cleveland's means "a special gift" in
locker room as he and his Muslim,
was
born
teammates were dressing Monday.
"He's healthy," said
for practice. Benard, who
who
made
was sitting in front of his Benard,
locker when he fainted, Cleveland's roster last
season as an undrafted
was briefly hospitalized.
"It was stress related," free agent. "He's big. He
Benard said. "I've got a kind of fought the doclot going on personally. tors when he came out.
I've just got to take care He's got some good
of my body better with hands on hirn."
Benard said the child's
the things that are going
on."
impending birth was part
Benard underwent a of the stress that led to
battery of tests and said his collapse, which hapdoctors have ruled out pened at the end of the
any heart problems or 45-minute period the
other major medical con- locker room is open to
dition. He was cleared to media members.
"That's life," Benard
play last Sunday, three
days after the fainting said. "Life is hard. If life
episode, but wasn't was easy, everyone
around in the locker would be rich and smilroom after Cleveland's ing all the time. It's defi26-20 overtime loss to. nitely tough, but that's
what comes with having
the New York Jets.
His absence raised con- a family and playing this.
cerns the likable 25-year- game."

Felix
fromPageBl
ters a lot to the sabermatricians of the sport Wins
Above
Replacement.
Once the season ended,
Hernandez started hoping.
"I didn't have the
wins," he said. "But if
you look at all the numbers ... wow!"'
Hernandez thougtlt he
would get the Cy last
year, too, after winning
19 games but finished
second, beaten out by
Zack Greinke's 16 victories and better showing
with other numerology.
But no more sighs for
Hernandez now. In the
Year of the Pitcher, and
in the voting for the
lOOth overall Cy Young
Award, he came out No.
1.
"This is the first of
many," he said. "Now I
have to work even harder
because I'm the best
pitcher in the American
League."
Hernandez said he
started crying when he
got the award and his
family began jumping
around.
"It was a great, great,
great, amazing feeling,"
he said.
The Mariners finished
with anAL-worst 61-101
record and their 513 runs
were by far the fewest in
the majors. They gave
him barely more than
three runs to work with
each game and weren't
too sharp in the field,
either - in his 34 starts,
he got saddled with 17
unearned runs.
"They tried to do too
much for me. I love my
teammates," he said.
"They would tell me,
'You did your job."'
'
Hernandez might've
ranked even higher overall had the Mariners
decided not to skip his
regular start on the final
day of the regular season.
He needed one more
inning to match NL Cy
Young
winner Roy
Halladay for most in the
majors. and he fmished
one strikeout behind AL
leader Jered Weaver of
the Angels.
Halladay unanimously
won his award in a year
he led the NL with 21

• Home
•Auto
• Health&amp;
more

wins, pitched a perfect
game and a no-hitter, and
topped the majors in
shutouts and complete
games.
"Obviously,
Felix's
numbers are very, very
impressive," Halladay
said earlier this week
when asked about the AL
Cy
Young
vote.
"Ultimately, you look at
how guys are able to win
games. Sometimes, you
find a way to win
games," he said.
Hernandez said he felt
vindicated that wins are
only part of the equation.
"This is the proof," he
said.
Hernandez went 7-4
against playoff teams and
was at his best against
the
high-scoring
Yankees, going 3-0 while.
holding them to one run
in 26 innings with 31
strikeouts.
Sabathia and Price
each led strong staffs that
pitched their teams into
the playoffs. Both aces
went 3-2 against teams
that reached the postseason. Sabathia was listed
on all 28 ballots, Price on
27.
Sabathia won the 2007
Cy with Cleveland. The
big lefty went 10-1 this
season against Seattle,
Baltimore and Kansas
City, the three last-place
teams in the AL.
Hernandez became the
second Seattle pitcher to
win the Cy Young, joining Randy Johnson in
1995. This was the third
time the award went to a
Venezuelan pitcher, with
Johan Santana having
won twice.
As for next year, ...
don't have to change
anything," he said.
By
winning,
Hernandez received an
automatic $1 million
raise in salary next year
to $11 million. He also
earned annual $500,000
raises after that to $ 19
million in 20 12, $20
million in 20 13 and
$20.5 million in 20 14.
Price received $80,000
for finishing second.
Boston's Jon Lester
came in fourth. Weaver
got a $50,000 bonus for
finishing fifth.
The next BBWAA
award will be the NL
Most Valuable Player, to
be announced Monday.
The AL MVP will be
Tuesday.

Ashlee Enslen

140-992-9784 or an-992-9784
505 Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, OH 45789

--

�..
Friday, November 19,

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

--ATHLON~ SPORTS~--

COMING ON STRONG Sophomore
driver Joey Logano recorded his
ftfth consecutive top-1 0 run with a
third at Phoenix. Previously, the Joe
Gibbs Racing pilot had not pieced
together more than two-straight
top-1 0 runs in 69 Cup starts.

2

3

4

WHAT ABOUT THE BACKFLIP?
Carl Edwards found yet another way
to celebrate a win two weeks ago
when he won the NatiOnwide Series
race in Texas: He climbed into the
grandstand to party with the fans.
He couldn't get into the stands via
the track after Saturday's Nationwide win in Phoenix, but track offi·
cials were ready for him on Sunday,
when they opened a portion of the
catchfence to access the waiting
crowd following his Cup triumph.
NICE REBOUND Richard Petty Motorsports haulers did not leave
Texas for Phoenix until late
Wednesday, waiting for a check to
clear that would ensure the four-car
outfit could continue. Despite his
admitted uncertainty over whether
he would even race, AJ All·
mendinger drove to a smooth top20 finish, his third in four races.
HOMESTEAD HISTORY Denny
Hamlin owns one win, three top-5
and three top-1 0 finishes in five
Homestead starts; Jimmie Johnson
has zero wins, three top-5 and six
top-1 0 showings in nine starts;
Kevin Harvlck has zero wins, four
top-5 and seven top-1 0 runs in nine
starts. The bet is one of these three
bags the victory on Sunday.

Sprint Cup Standings

..

1.
, 2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11 .
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17

18.
19.
20.

DRIVER
Denny Hamlin
Jimmie Johnson
Kevtn Harvick
Carl Edwards
Matt Kenseth
Jeff Gordon
Kyle Busch
Greg Biffle
Tony Stewart
Kurt Busch
Clint Bowyer
Jeff Burton
Mark Martin
Jamie McMurray
Ryan ~ewman
Joey Lagana
Juan Pablo Montoya
David Reutimann
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
A.J. Allmendinger

DRIVER
Brad Keselowski •
Carl Edwards
Kyle Busch
Justin Allgaier
Paul Menard
Kevin Harvick
Joey Logano
8. Trevor Bayne
9. Steve Wallace
10. Jason Leffler
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

POINTS
6462
6447
6416
6198
6151
6124
6115
6113 .
6074
6033
6028
5958

BEHIND
·15
-46
·264
-311
-338
-347
·349
-388
·429
-434
-504

4249
4225
4156
4139
4060
3975
3871
3843

POINTS
5474
5044
4739
4544
4329
4214
3887
3886
3822
3807

BEHIND
-430
-735
·930
-1145
·1260
·1587
-1588
·1652
·1667

• Chnched lltle

Truck Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.

DRIVER
Todd Bodine•
Aric Almirola
Johnny Sauter
Matt Crafton
Austin Dillon
Timothy Peters
Ron Hornaday
Mike Skinner
David Starr
JasonWhite

POINTS

BEHIND

3n2
3570
3506
3397
3304
3231
3135
3114
3040
2880

·202
·266
-375
-468
-541
-637
·658
-732
·892
• Clinched bile

Highs&amp; Lows
CARL EDWARDS Cousin Carl enjoyed a
bountiful weekend in Phoenix, qualifying
second and winning Saturday's Nationwide race. He also won the pole for the
Cup Series event and played the fuel
game to perfection, leading 93 laps
iJ..~ en route to his first victory on the
-circuit in nearly two years.
DENNY HAMUN Yes, he's still
the points leader. but a fuelmileage decision gone bad
dropped Hamlin from second to
19th (although he raced his way
back to 12th) and allowed Jimmie
Johnson and Kevin Harvtck to tighten the
championship battle with one race remaining. What could have been a 45-point
advantage over Johnson going into the
season finale now is only 15.

,.

5. Greg BHfle

6. Mark Martin
7. Carl Edwards

8. Matt Kensett!
9. Clint Bowyer

10. Jeff Gordon
11. Ryan Newman
12. Kyle Busch
13. Tony Stewart
14. Jeff Burton
15. Jamie McMurray
Just off the lead pack:
Kevin Harvick

Held onto that top spot in the standings despite a move that could've burned him at Phoenix. This
title is truly his to lose now.
Of course, Jimmie is still keepmg pace. 15 points behind Hamlin and still very much alive. If only we'
knew exactly how good he was at Homestead ...
Title Contender No. fiald via Twitterthls week that his team has received no respect from ]
this media throughout the Chase, so "to heck with them all." Focus on the drivers, Kevin.
Has improved his finish each of the lasthVeWeekSfrom seventh to sixth tofifth to fourth to third.
Unfortunately, he's going to run out of weeks. Unless the streak carries over to Daytona.
Consecutive top-5 runs in the bag for Biffle with Homestead, a track he's won on more than any other
In the Cup Series, on tap.
When you can say that you expected more out of a guy after an eighth-place run. it should tell you •
how good a team like Martin's No. 5 bunch is running as the season winds down.
With Edwards' long-overdue win now out of the way, all eyes are on Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Jeff·
Gordon to get off the schnide.
Who would have thought a team like Kenseth's, which limped into the Chase, would be ranked filth
going Into the final race?
Ana then there·s Bowyer, w1th two Chase wtns ana a hetty NASCAR penalty, who finds himself
hopelessly mired in 11th.
The results of the now-infamous ptt crew swap between Johnson and Gordon? Johnson finished
fifth, Gordon 11th. That's not much different than before.
Averaged a 22.6-place finish at Phoenix ~ntil this season, when he finished first and second.
Another trip to Homestead, another mall-it-In performance from Kyle.
Hasn't finisped in the top 1osince his win in California over a mt!nth ago.
Let's hope Harvick respectfully declines if Burton offers to share his notes.
Would be cool to see JMac cap off a comeback season for the ages with a win in Homestead.
'
A.J Allmendinger. Kurt Busch, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Juan Pablo Montoya, David Reutimann

.

ASP. Inc.

--Tracks on Tap

PhliPping for Phuel in Phoenix
Edwards wins, Hamlin's
points lead shrinks
By MAlT TALIAFERRO
Athlon Sports Racing Editor
Denny Hamlin said the strategy
was to keep the points leader in his
sights through the first half of the
Chase and then turn it on in the second - and he's done just that, having won two of the previous three
heading into the Kobalt Tools 500 at
Phoenix International Raceway.
And Hamlin was within 50 laps of
making it three-for-four when the
plan hit a snag. That snag came in
two forms: Carl Edwards and fuel
mileage.
Edwards, winless since the 2008
season finale at Homestead-Miami
Speedway. dueled door-to-door with
Hamlin
who had led a race-high
190 laps to that point
for a number of laps before securing the top
spot and driving off. That's when, 40
laps from the finish, Concern No. 2
began creeping onto the radar of
Hamlin's No. II pit box.
The leaders had not hit pit road in
nearly 50 laps, and trying to stretch
fuel mileage another 40 miles was
going to be tight. They needed a caution flag.
Unfortunately (poetically, almost)
for Hamlin, the debris cautions he so
vocally decried earlier in the season
never came, and with a thin points
advantage over seventh-place Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick,
who was running 12th. crew chief
Mike Ford was forced to play it conservatively.
Not believing Hamlin's No. II
Toyota ~ould make it to the checkers, Ford called his driver down pit·
road with 141aps remaining. Hamlin
emerged 19th and quickly began
picking off spots. However, the majority of the leaders rolled the dice.
betting they had enough fuel to get
them home - and it was a winning
gamble.
Edwards held on for his 17th career
Cup win, although Ryan Newman,

• Travis Pastrana Is coming to
NASCAR in 2011. After mining gold
medals in the X Games. shattering
jump records on both motorcycles
and automobiles and starring as a
cultural icon for the action sporls
world, the star of MlV's Nitro Circus
Is ready to tum his attention to ovaltrack racing.

Michael Waltrip Racing, Gary and
Blake &amp;echtel and Pastrana announced last week the creation of
Pastrana-Waltrip Racing that will
field cars in the NASCAR Nationwl'tle
Series beginning in 2011.
ln1t1al plans are for Pastrana to
compete in seven NASCAR Nationwide races in 2011 and 20 races in
2012.

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

AS!-! Inc.

Carl Edwards performs his race-winning back-flip after capturing the win In Sunday's
Kobalt Tools 500 from Phoenix International Raceway.
Joey Logano and Greg Biffle were
hot on h1s tracks until the finish.
And most notably, just behind
them • finishing fifth and sixth. respectively- were Hamlin's chief rivals, Johnson and Harvick. With
Hamlin slicing through the field to
finish 12th, his points advantage
stands at 15 over Johnson and 46
over Harvick with one race remaining in the 20 I 0 season.
And one week after Ford had
trumpeted his team as the best on the
circuit, his driver showed a mix of
disappointment, worry and frustration that they couldn't put a vice lock
on the title.
"There were a ton of guys that
made it that pitted at the same time
we did," Hamlin said. "Usually we
have'the best fuel mileage. That part
I just don't understand. I can save
fuel pretty welL but r was never
alerted to save fuel. So I assumed
that everyone was going to have to
pit. I didn't even think it was a question ... Like I said, I did my job."
The missed opportunity aside,
Hamlin still heads to the season finale as the points leader, able to ignore what's in his rear-view mirror.
"I won't need a pep talk," he said
of next week's race. "Of course. I'm
going to be disappointed for the next

"I've been following NASCAR
Closely for years as a tan of the sport
with competing in the sport a life·
long dream," Pastrana says. "I decided it was time to try and turn that
aream tnto reality ana with the help
of the Bechtel family, Michael Wal·
trip Ractng and Wasserman Media
Group. I'm now one step closer."
• Joe Gibbs Racing driver Kyle
Busch was fined $25,000 last week
for what NASCAR described as an
"inappropriate gesture and verbal
abuse to NASCAR officials" during
the AM Texas 500 from Texas
Motor Speedway on Nov. 7.

couple hours, but trust me. when I
get home, I'm done with 1t."
Johnson ran half throttle for the
final I 0 laps to assure he would
make it the distance. Harvick took
advantage of a pit-road miscue that
occurred with 88 laps to go. With the
leaders- many getting what would
prove to be their final stop- getting
service under caution. Harvick's
crew left a lug nut off of his No. 29
Chevrolet. Forced to come back in.
he fell from fifth to 19th on the
restart with 83 laps to go.
When the race's final caution was
thrown four laps later, Harvick.
along with Newman, Logano. and
others, drove back onto pit road to
top off the tanks, allowing them to
nm hard to the finish.
As for next weekend's deciding
race, Johnson said it best:
"A good day isn't going to get it
done (at Homestead). You gotta have
a great day. I know what my mind&lt;&gt;et
is and I hope the pressure ofus being
on his (Hamlin's) heels really works
on his mind throughout the course of
the week - he and his crew. Those
guys better be on their toe;.
"Not only do they have the 48 to
worry about. but they have the 29
and (a) one-race, winner-take-all it's going to be one hell of a show."

Busch gave a·NASCAR pit-road
official the finger while serving a
one-tap penalty for speeding on pit
road. When an ESPN in-car camera
caught the salute. NASCAR black .
flagged Busch for two additional
laps, at which point he suffered
what could only be described as a
meltdown on his team radio, railing
against the call amid a stream of
obscenities.
The actions dropped him from his
top-1 0 running position to a 32ndplace finishing position. JGR issued
the following statement for Busch
regarding the incident
"I accept NASCAR's penalty and
realize what I did during Sunday's
race at Texas was Inappropriate.

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

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

Even in my relatively short time here
in NASCAR, it's pretty obvious to
everyone that I wear my emotions
on my sleeve. ·sometimes that passion has allowed me to lind that lit·
tte something extra t needed to win.
and other times it's made me cross
the line. Sunday at Texas was one of
those days. I lost my cool, plain and
simple. It's not acceptable. and I
know that. I apologize to NASCAR.
its fans, all the partners who support
Joe Gibbs Racing, and all the people who work so hard to give me a
racecar that's capable of winning
races every week. All of those people deserve better from me. and I
owe it to them to keep my emotions
in check."

SPRINT CUP SERIES
·
Race: Ford 400
Track: Homeslfad-Miami Speedway
Location: Homestead. Fla.
When: Sunday, Nov. 21
TV:ESPN
Banking/Turns: Variable (18-20 degrees)
Banking/Straightaways: 4 degrees
2009 Winner: Denny Hamlin
Crew Chief's Take: "I think the racing at
Homestead is as good as anywhere now. My
God. that track was such a disaster when it
opened. They shaped it like Indianapolis. only
smaller, but they didn't realize that squaredoff corners are just dangerous on a track
that's a mile and half, not two. So they
rounded the corners. and then stage three
was tapering the banking in the turns. It took
a bunch of money and revamping, but they
got it right. It's a lot like Atlanta back before
Bruton (Smith) rebuilt it, but It's really unique
because it doesn't have those old, sweeping
Atlanta turns."
NATIONWIDE SERIES
Race: Ford 300
Track: Homestead-Miami Speedway
When: Saturday, Nov. 20
TV:ESPN2
2009 Winner: Kyle Busch

,

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK SERIES
Race: Ford 200
Track: Homestead-Miami Speedway
When: Friday, Nov. 19
TV: SPEED
Defending Winner: Kevin Harvick

'

Classic Moments
Homestead-Miami Speedway
Bill Ellion catches his 21-year old Evemham
Motorsports teammate, Casey Atwood, with
four laps to go and earns his first win in 227
races in the 2001 Pennzoil Freedom 400 at
Homestead-Miami Speedway.
Atwood, a young upstart from Nashville.
Tenn .. leaels 52 laps m the Ray Evernham·
owned No. 19 Dodge but can't hold off the veteran Elliott. whose previous win had come in
the 1994 Southern 500.
Elliott wins three more races with Evemham
-including the 2002 Brickyard 400- before
parting ways after the '03 season. Atwood is
not so fortunate, as Evemham replaces him in
the No. 19 the following season with Jeremy
Mayfield. Atwood. in tum, is placed in the Jim
Smith/Evemham-owned No. 7 car, more Of less
an R&amp;D vehicle. Atwood is out of the Cup ranks
a little over a year later.

Athlon Fantasy Stall
looking at Checkers: It's hard not to assume
the three title contenders - Denny Hamlin.
Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvick-won't
decide it among themselves.
Pretty Solid Pick: Gar! Edwards leads the circuit with a 6.5-place average finish in the
Keys.
Good Sleeper Pick: Johnson hasn't had to
race for a win here in live years, so it's hard to
say exactly how good he'll
be.
Runs on Seven Cylinders: This is one of
only two tracks where
Dale Earnhardt Jr. has not
recorded a top-1 0 finish.
Insider Tip:
Roush-Fenway had
won five in a row
here until Hamlin ,'
broke up the
party in 2009.

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Fl"iday, November 19,

2 0 10

!Fateful boot gave Ohio State win over Iowa in 200~
: COLUMBUS. Ohio
=&lt;AP)
Ohio State
:wide receiver DeVicr
:Posey
thought
his
:Prayers
had
been
•answered. Long-snap;per Jake McQuaide
:worried a bout an earlier
"miss that would have
:eliminated the need for
:this overtime field goal.
: Linebackl'r
Ross
:Homan
was
just
:relieved that a long. di f:ficult day was finally
'OVer.
: Devin Barclay's 39:yard field goal in over:time gave the 1Oth:ranked Buckeyes a dra;matic 27-24 victory
'Over ~o. 15 Iowa a year
~'lgo
to
boot
the
!Buckeyes all the way to
)he Rose Bowl.
: The two teams meet
&gt;again on Saturday. with
"the stakes just as high.
:No one has forgotten
'the nail-biter in the
:,gathenng darkness in
:Ohio Stadium on Nov.
•14. 2009.
.
Ohio State, needtng a
~victory to clinch at least
Big Ten title tie and a
:tJerth in the Rose Bowl.
;built a 24-10 leAd on
r:touchdown runs by Dan

.
:a

_Pop Warner:
. Doctor's OK
needed for
·concussed kids

"Boom'' Herron and
Brandon Saine early in
the fourth quarter. The
celebration in the stands
had already begun.
Iowa, despite being
\vithout starting quarterback Ricky Stanzi.
refused to buckle.
"Man, it was a really
a fight. It was a fourplus-quarter
fight."
Homan said. "It was
back and forth. They
make a play. we make a
play. You couldn't Jet
down for a play. You
had to play every play
l 00 percent or else you
were going to lose the
game."
Ahead by two touchdowns with under 11
minutes left. fan:&gt; started chanting. "Rose
Bowl!'" •
The Hawkeyes would
have none of that.
"We kind of thought
we had the game sealed
up.'' said defensive
lineman
Dexter
Larimore. "And then all
of a sudden - boom!
- they return a kick
and we get a three-andout and they" ve got the
ball back and they·re
ty111g the score up.··

on this night.
With 7: II left. he
missed the kick.
Iowa got the ball back
and, with freshman fillin qua rterback James
Vandenberg acting like
a senior. moved right
down
the
field.
Vandenberg
hit
Marvin
After Saim:'s touchdown. lo\\a's Dcrrell McNutt for a I 0-yard
Johnson Koulianos score with 2:42 left. and
returned the kickoff 99 Daniel Murray's pointafter conversion tied it
yards.
With a crowd of at 24.
After the Buckeyes
I 05.455 howling on
failed
to score in reguevery
snap,
the
lation, Iowa had the ball
Buckeyes picked up a
frrst 111 overtime. On
first down and set up
senior night. two veterfor a 47-yard field goal
ans made perhaps the
by Barclay, in JUSt his
biggest play:s of their
second game ns the lives.
kicker. Starter Aaron
On third and long,
Pettrey had hurt his Doug
Worthington
right knee after a kick- sacked
Vandenberg.
off two weeks earlier.
Then on fourth down.
Barclay was a former Vandenberg's pass was
prt'&gt;fessional
soccer picked off by Anderson
player who had once Russell.
played
for
the
It was Ohio State's
Columbus Crew of turn to get the ball and
Major League Soccer. coach Jim Tressel took
He kicked a field goal · no chances, running it
the following week in a three times to get to the
victory over Penn State, 22. and then summonbut had never really ing Barclay.
been in the crucible of
"I remember thinking
pressure he was facing that we had one earlier

in the game that we
could have prevented
overtime
with."
McQuaide said. "Devin
was thinking the same
thing. That's just the
way you think a-. a specialist. You put those
behind you aJHl you say,
' Here we go.'''
The snap was crisp.
backup quarterback Joe
Bauserman's hold was
good, the kick was true.
''I just thought my
prayers were answered
that night." Po&lt;;ey said.
"Barclay, that kick is
like a lay-up for him.
He'd made it a hundred
times during camp. And
then J just remember
storming the field.''
Larimore remembers
mobbing Barclay. who
was 2o at the time.
"You don't want to
hurt the old guy," he
said with a laugh.
''Besides the
two

Michigan wins and
besides the Rose Bowl,
I' d say it's up there at
the top," center Mike
Brewster said. " You
always want to be a part
of a team that has
ove1'time win and
crowd rushes the fie!
It's pretty neat.··
Iowa
coach
Ki rk
Ferentz
has
talked
about the loss to his
players
to
provide
incentive for this year's
meeting.
"The) took that ball
and jammed it right
down our throats last
year that second half,"
he said. "We better
strap it up and be
ready."
Barclay has the game
filed away in his memory. Others need visual
proof.
"I think my mom
probably watches it
every day,"' he said.

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FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
FRIDAY PRIMETIME

• Pop
Warner,
the
::nation ·s
oldest
and
'largest youth football
organization, is requiring a note from a doctor
before letting anyone
who's suffered a head
)njury back on the field.
.. It take:s all the prcs.sure off a coach," said
.Jon Butler, Pop Warner's
executive
director.
"There is no decision lhe child is out until
being signed off by a
trained medical profes'sional."
The organization also
announced Thursday the
creation of a national
.medical advisory board.
The chairman is Dr.
·:Julian Bailes. who works
with the NFL Players
Association on concussion-related issues and is
-chairman of neuro'surgery at West Virginia
.University's
medical
·school.
''The NFL, NCAA and
'national federation for
high schools have all
made changes, and we
want to carry that down
to
youth
football,''
. Bailes said. "We want to
be
responsible
and
'responsive.''
· Bailes said there are
,fe\ver
concussions
among youths than at
.higher
levels
"just
because the athletes arc ,
smaller and they don't
· generate the. high-velocity impacts."
.. But sometimes,'' he
-added, ''the recognition
4
'of the occurrence of a
concussion can be more
6
difficult in a youngster, 1---7
and we worry about the
vulnerability of the
8
;younger brain."
Another board mem10 crn1l
o.ber is Dr. Stan Herring
of Seattle, a leading
Cl'Z.1ll
advocate for a law
17
requiring clearance by a
doctor before kids who
13
have suffered a head
injury can return to
sports.
It's called the Lystedt
Law, named for one of
Herring's patients who
returned to a middleschopl football game
shortly after sustaining a
. concussiOn, then suffered
&lt;another
head
injury. I Jc went into a
coma for three months
and remains unable to
care for himself.
' Butler
said
Pop
'Warner based its written,consent rule on the
Lystedt Law, then added
.provisions for situations
.common to their organization.
Pop Warner officials
·estimate more
than
280,000 kids play in
their football leagues
across 43 states.

,,

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TCnmmal Mtnds 10Sohtary
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www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 19, 2010
l'lt:

,~~
...

•

r, lL

it.;~

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

\!Cributte - Sentinel - l\egi~tet'
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Meigs County, OH

Websites;
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To Place
\!Cribttne
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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~~~--------------------------~--r-----------------~------------~

Word Ads

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

200 Announcements
Lost &amp; Found
Lost White SO Card
@ Walmart Tues. If
found
or
have
PLEASE return to
or
Walmart.
me
Sentimental Pictures
of family Call Reta
446-1374 or 6454846
Lost, Sammy male
cat, across from
Meigs
Elementary
School,
Reward,
$100 740-742-2524
6
wk.
puppies.
Beagle/Dashound
mix.
5 to 6 year old bench
leg beagle 304-6758635.
Notices

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

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Business Days Prior To
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sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads Wrth A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • A~·oid Abbre\1ations
• Include Phone Number And Addr~s When Needed
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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POLICIES· Ohio valley PubOIIhrng rHeJves the right to edit, rejed, or cancel any ad at any time. Error• mutt be reported on tr. ftr• clay of pl.flllcltlon and tr.
Trlb~ntoScr'lllnel-Rcglate&lt; wlll be responsible lor no mO&lt;e than the cost of the space occupied by the error and only the nrw~ Insertion. We ar.H not be liable lor
any 1088 or tJ&lt;peose that reG!Jits 110&lt;11 the pUbllallion or om lesion of an advertraemet'll. Correction will be made In lhe flf11 avaOable e&lt;llt•on ·Box numb« liCit
are always confldemial • C~.rrent rille card applies ·All real estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fair Houmg Act of 11168. • Thlt IWWIPII*
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Notices

Financial

Miscellaneous

Houses For Sale

Tire &amp; Automotive
Business. has five
bay garage &amp; office.
Just Business for
sale, No: Building,
740-992-3675
or
740-992-6583

FAST IRS
BELIEF

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

Very Nice 213 BR 2
Baths, South Galfia
/Fairland School Dist.
Owner
Finiancing
$8,000
down
$531 .85 per mth.
740) 256-1686

Yard Sale

Apartments/
Townhouses

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

NOTICE
OHIO
VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO. recommends that
Services
you do business with 300
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
you have investigating
Financial
the offering.
"Creative
Seamstress" will do
sewing.
mending,
alterations, 40 years
experience,
reasonable
rates,
harmonyfarm04@ ya
hoo.com

!JearllirU'

Do you owe over
S10000 to the IRS?
Stop wage
garnishments and
bank levies.
Settle Out Over Due
Taxes for Less
1-888-692-5739
Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

There's

Something
For

Everyone
In
The•••

Big Sale: Nov 19th &amp;
20th at the Rodney
Comm.
Building,
State At 850 from
9am - 5pm. New
Wood Crafts &amp; Hair
Bows
Lots of
collectibles
and
glassware, Tools Etc.
Something
for
everyone

Other Services
Pet Cremations. Call
740-446-3745
AVONI All Areas' To
Buy or Sell Shirley
304-675Spears
1429

Do You have a Limited Time Offer!
Dream of being Debt
Free HD for Life.
free? Are you trying Ask how by calling
to get your credit
DirecTV today!
cleaned? Call 1-866Packages start at
995-6887
No
$29.99.
Advance Fees!
1·866-541.0834

400

Financial

DJS1:J...

NETWORK

Money To Lend

It's Finally FREE!
Free HD for Life*
and over 120
channels only
$24.99/month.•
'Conditions apply,
promo code MB45
Call Dish Network
Now
1-8n-464-3619

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtain a
loan.
BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Lifelock
Affiars toll free at 1Free Document
866-278-0003 to learn
Shredder for new rf the mortgage broker
Lifelock members. or lender is properly
Call Today
licensed. (This is a
1-888-758-3029 and public
service
announcement from the
use promo code
Ohio Valley Publishing
SHREDDER
Company)

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• Hometown News
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~allipolis ~ailp

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The Daily Sentinel
~unbap \ltitnes -~entinel

Real Estate
Rentals

2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hospital on SR
160 CIA. (740) 441·
0194
CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or
small houses for rent.
Call 740-441-1111 for

&amp;
Moving
sale
50 application
Texas Ad Furniture, _in-fo_rm_a_ti-on_._ _ __
Kids toys, strollers, Free Rent Special
ect. Sat &amp; Sun
!!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
Nov 19 &amp; 20 9am- up, Central Air, WID
4pm
@
1120 hookup. tenant pays
Buckridge Rd. off electric. Call between
160 side. Int. to Adts the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
Clothing, Household
Pets
Ellm View Apts.
items, Baby Furn. &amp;
(304)882-3017
Toy Poodles- Buy a Toys
Pet This Christmas
Twin Rivers Tower is
Season
thats Yard Sale 906 27th accepting applications
SpecialWhy St. Big size clothes for waiting list for HUD
subsidize&lt;:!,
1-BR
Poodles are Special cheap 8-?
apartment
for
the
thay rank at the top
Recreati_onal elderly/disabled,
call
in intelligence, thay 1000
Vehtcles 675-6679
are
non-allergenic,
they don't shed, they
make great burglar
Campers/ RVs &amp;
alarms &amp; they are
Trailers
easy to house break.
For more information 2005 Jayco Eagle
lease:
1BR
Hitch, For
on our CKC Reg. Gooseneck
unfurnished 2nd floor
sleeps
six
Excellent
Puppies
&amp; our
near
Gallia
Asking apt.
Christmas Specials condition
Academy, no pets,
$19,900.
See
call740-992-7007
photos
at ref &amp; dep. required,
www carmjchaeltraile maximum occupancy
Agriculture rs..com
700
7 40-446- 2. $350 mon. 740446-3936 or 7402412
446-4425
Farm Equipment
2000
Automotive Modern 1BR Apt.

CLASSIFIEDS!!
Other Services

DIRECTV

3500

Get One Month
600
Animals
FREE! Unlimited
local and long
distance calling for
only $25.99 per
Livestock
month.
Call today!
1-866-798-0692
Breeding
age
registered
Holstein
Profeuional Services bulls. Call Tim 304TURNED DOWN ON 675-0209
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
Pets
No Fee Unless We
Win'
1-888-582-3345
Registered 1 Yr old
SEPTIC
PUMPING male collie pups for
Gallia Co. OH and sale. 1 black &amp; white
Mason Co. WV Ron
and 1 tan &amp; white, up
Evans Jackson. OH
to date shots. $250
800·537-9528
each. Call 339-0978
Security

John Deer Tractor m2950 4w drive go·:&gt;d
condition 86 H.P.
1998 New Holand
45 H.P. . 3930-4w
Drive
Excellent
shape
new
tires.(304)576-2890.

446-0390
Autos

Quality
Cars
&amp;
Trucks w/warranty all
priced to sell, 16 yrs.
in business. Cook
Motors. 328 Jackson
Pike,
STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1ce Gallipolis, OH 740·
Now
Available
at ~46·0103.
Carmichael Equrpment -----~--.
740-446-2412
1972
Plymouth
Valiant, 6 cyl. std. 4
door $800. 304-675Hay, Feed, Seed,
6628
Grain

Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BA 1.5 BA, back
patio,
pool,
playground. No pets.
$450 rent. 740-3670547
2 BR apt. 6 mi from
Holzer. $400 + dep.
Some utilities pd.
7 40-645-7630
or
7 40-988-6130
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

Good mixed hay, sq.,
WantTo Buy
$2.50 4x5, round
bales $20.00. Stored Oiler's Towing. Now
inside 740-446-2075 buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out.
740-388-0011
or
Mixed
hay,
6K6 740-441·7870
No
round, barn stored
12 wk. old Border never wet, $30/bale, Sunday call
Mli
Col[ie Pups, Shots, 740-416-1780
Free Home
Want to buy Junk
$100 call245-9880
Security System
Cars, call 740-388&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
with $99 installation
houses in Pomeroy &amp;
900
Merchandise 0884
and purchase of
Free kittens-- 5·6
Real Estate Middleport, NO Pets.
alarm monitoring
3000
Sales 740-992-2218
services from ADT wks old call 740Miscellaneous
985-3762
leave
Security Servrces
2
bedroom
Call1-888-367-2171 message
apartment available
Jet Aeration Motors
Commercial
in Syracuse. $200
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call OFFICEIWAAEHOU deposit, $375 pElf
Ron Evans1-800·
Great month rent. Rent
SEIRETAIL
537-9528
water.
Location 749 Third includes
Ave Gallipolis.1800 sewer &amp; trash. No
pets.
Sufficient
2-Horses, 55 Gallon sq.ft . For more info
income needed to
complete Fish Tank. Call 1-404-456-3802
qualify 740-378-6111
also a HP Computer
For Sale By Owner
Spring Valley Green
20inch flat screen for
Apartments 1 BR at
or
trade 6 apts $137.000
sale
everY1hing 740-379- rent $2030 mo. 740- $395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.
9172
446-0390

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses
Middleport Beech St.
furnished apt. , Senior
living, No pets, dep.
&amp; ref., Utilities paid,
7 40-992·0165

Houses For Rent

Houses for Rent

Drivers &amp; Delivery

3BR gas heat, nice
lot, near hospital.
$550 mo + dep. Also
3BR
large lawn,
carport,
all
elec.
$550 mon + dep
446·2 ~ 58 ev. 446·

Jordan Landing, 2
bedroom apartments
available
No pets.
304·610-0776
or
304·674·0023
deposit required.

A &amp; J Trucking in
Marietta, Oh is hiring
COL A Drivers for
local
&amp; Regional
Routes. Applicants
must be at least 23
yrs have min of 1 yr
of commercial driving
exp. Clean MVR,
Haz-mat Cert. We
feature
weekend
home time, Excellent
health
&amp; dental
Insurance,
401 (K),
Vacation,
Bonus
pays and
safety
awards.
Contact
Kenton at 1·800·462·
9365 FO.F.

-----------Gallia
Manor ~3
Apartments.
138
Buhl Morton Rd.
Gallipolis, is · now
accepting
for
applications
waiting list for 1
Bedroom,
HUD·
Subsidized
apartment for elderly
and
handicapped.
740-446-4652.

,r l,
if

~

--

~

Houses For Rent
BR Cabin @ Rio
Grande I Thurman
area All utilities paid.
$500 mth. $300 Dep,
740-286-5789
or
740·441·3702.

1 bdr. all utilities
pa1d.
Near
downtown,
HUO
4BR 28th House
located on Bulliville accepted. (304) 360·
Pike $650mth and 0163
$650 Dep. Call 367·
7762 or 367•7272
Manufactu~ed
4000
Housmg
------------House for sale or
rent. Pretty, clean, ~
Rentals
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to
2BR·2 Bath Like new
Elem.
Washington
Mobile Home water,
Rent $750, no utlilite
sewer, trash pd. No
Sale $99,000. Kellypets, CA, Covered
Jo 645-9096 or 446- Patio
Johnson's
4639
Mobile Home Park

=;;;;;;;;;;;;

3 br., wlcarport $450
per Q10. +dep &amp;
utilities,
3rd
St..
Racine,
740-247·
4292

740-446·3160
-----------mobiles
on
2
Bullaville Pk &amp; 1 in
Rodney $500 mon +
dep. 740 _367 _7762

-3-BR------d-bl-e--w-id-e
furnished, Sr 143·
Pomeroy. $625 mo.
incl. most uti. &amp; lawn
care. 740·591·5174

2 br. w/expando,
total electric
No
pets, $400 p~r mo.
$200
dep,

Get Your Message Across
With ADaily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
Holiday Vendor
Expo
Sat., Nov. 20
f'Jieigs High School
10:00 A.M. -~ 4 P.M.

Pomeroy Eagles 2171
Welcomes

"The Wild Ride"
Saturday, Nov. 20
8:00 pm-Midnight
Members &amp; Guests
Welcome!

992-1171

~~~~~~=

Education
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Business
Instructors Needed
@ Gallipolis Career
College.
In
Economics,
Keyboarding,
and
Math, In Economics
and Math insJructors
must
possess
Master's
Degree
.Send cover letter and
resume
to:
bshirey@gallipoliscar
eercollege.edu.

Help Wanted·
General

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=

Underground
SurveyorYellowbush
Mining, LLC, located
in Racine, OH is now
accepting resumes
for the position of
underground
surveyor. Candidates
must pos~ • at least
a
high
school
diploma
or
equivalent;
experience
in
underground
coal
mining preferred but
not
required.
Interested applicants
with
surface
surveying
and
AutoCAD experience
are
strongly
encouraged to apply.
Yellowbush Mining,
LLC,
offers
a
competitive benefits
package including:
company sponsored
medical, dental and
vision, 401 (k) with
company match, paid
vacation
and
holidays and future
professional growth
opportunities.
Qualified applicants

Middleport, 740-992·
Entertainment
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;
2394
Need Santa, Call
740-992·7853
Sales

Friday, November 19, 2010
100

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

100

Legals

NOTICE
PUBLIC
NOTICE: is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday November
20 at 10:00 a.m., a
public sale w111 be
held at 211
W.
Second , Pomeroy,
Ohio, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following
collateral:2005 Scion
JTLKT32435019916
8The Farmers Bank
Savings
and
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or
all
bids
submitted.The above
described collateral
will be sold "as iswhere is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given.For
further information,
or for an appointment
to inspect collateral,
prior to sale date
contact Cyndie or
Ken at 992·2136.
WEDNESDAY
17,
NOVEMBER
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 18, and
FRIDAY
19,
NOVEMBER
2010
-A---se-c-on-d---p-u..
bl-ic
hearing will be held
at Syracuse Cowicil
chambe~s at 7 PM
Dec. 2, 2010 tor the
purpose
of
discussing
the

may
forward
resumes
to:
Yellowbush Mining,
Attention HR, P.O.
Box
238,
New
New
Foreclosure
Food Services
Haven, WV 25265 or
16x80 never been ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-=-== fax Attn: HR (304)
EOE
titled Call for an Needed experienced 882 _1379.
incredible
deal wait and kitchen MIFIDN
help.
Must be
740)446-3093
flexable. Apply on
~~~~~~~ person
or
at
Medical
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Su;;;i;p;;i;;p;;;;lie;;;;s;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; www.bobevans.com.
(304)
Ohio Valley Home
Green slag 10.00 a
Health Inc. accepting
ton
great
for
Help Wanted.
Applications
for
General
Aides .•Apply at 1480
driveways. AI. 62
above New Haven ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= Jackson
Pike
behind
Arrerican
Gallipolis
or
on
Colloid Co. (304)882- Accepting
internet '
@
3944.
applications for part www.ovhh.org.
time
cashiers, &lt;http:llwww.ovhh.org
Subway artist &amp; exp. I&gt; or Phone 740)441·
full time ass. store 1393
Competitive
6000
Employment manager. Apply in wages and Benefits
person at ParMar including
health
15289 insurance
and
Drivers &amp; DetJVery #38
Huntington
Rd mileage.
Red's Rollen Garage Gallipolis Ferry or on
Needed Class A COL online
at
Driver with Tanker &amp; parmarstores.com
-M-e-dC_o_r_p__E_M_S---is
Haz-mat. TWIC a
FT submission of an
seeking
a
plus 740-339·0034
Paramedic position application for funds
for its Gallipolis. Oh under the CDBG
Accepting
Station.
Nationally Water and Sewer
In Memory
applications for part registered a plus, program. The public
time cashiers. Apply Clean driving record is
invited
to
person at ParMar required. Competitive attend.Fred
L.
In Memory ofour ~a~ &amp; in
#42 15054 St At 160 salary and Benefits HoffmanGrants
Vinton Oh or on also
Uniforms AdministratorVillage
hwhwJoe Fostet on
online
at provided
Please of Syracuse (11) 19
parmarstores.com
forward your resume
"&amp;JIIr' B·~ay
with a copy of your

~is

·lm &amp;Mi~! r~u ilwa~
~i~~~~ n~~ ~~~~
~~~~~!~, &amp;J~~~~~

Truck driver, tractor
trailer &amp; tri axle
dump, local &amp; some
travel, hrly. wages
based on exp;. also
1 construction labor,
apply at Pullins Exc.

driver's license and
certifications to
MedCorp, Inc. Fax
419·726·7845
or
Email
jghesqulere@medco
rpinc.com
EOE

...---:f=-:I,.,..N""'D,....---,
BARGAINS
EVERY DAV
''
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Legals

Woodland
Sale
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center will be taking
sealed bids for the
sale of a 1993
modular classroom
unit.The
unit
is
located at 3080 State
Route 160 Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. The unit
is
approximately
2,000
sq.
ft.
appliances and heat
pump is included.
The modular has to
be moved within 60
days at the buyer's
expense.A
pre-bid
inspection will be
held at the location
11 :00 on December
10, 2010.The -bids
will be opened 11 :00
December 23, 2010
at
the
Bradbury
Learning
Center
39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport,
Ohio 45760.10% of
the bid will be due 5
days
after
bid
opening, with the
balance due within
30 days.Piease send
b1ds to Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
39105
Center
Bradbury
Road
Ohio
Middleport,
45760
Attention:
John Costanzo (11)
19,26
To All Whom It May
Concern:
On Friday, the 3rd
day of December
2010, at 8:30 o'clock,
AM., at the office
ofthe Commissioners
of Jurors of Meigs
County, Ohio, Jurors
will be publicly drawn
forthe year 2011 for
the Common Pleas
Court of said County.
Young
Janice
Commissioners
Christopher T. Wolfe
Of
Jurors
Drawing will be held
at the Meigs County
Board of Elections117 E.
Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 (11) 19

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Metal Roofs installed all winter long at
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------------- - - - - - - - - - - - 100
100
Legals
Legals

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 LOVETI AD,
RACINE,OH 45771.

PUBLIC
NOTICE 211·213
East
OF Second
Street,
NOTICE
AVAILABILITY
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
FOR PUBLIC
during the 180-day
beginning
INSPECTIONDougla period
15th.,
s W Little. Trustee of November
the Ernest &amp; Maxine 2010. (11) 19
Wingett ·Educational
Trust, has filed his
annual return of a
private
foundation,
Form 990-PF, with
the Internal Revenue
Service for tax year
beginning July 1.
2009 aod ending
June 30, 2010, in
accordance
with
Internal
Revenue
Code
Section
6104(b), this form is
available for public
inspection at the law
office of Douglas W. ·
Little, Trustee, at

CALL
TOWNSHIP
GARAGE
FOR
QUESTIONS
74011 12
404
&lt; &gt; '

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Friday, November 19, 2010

Dean Young!Denis Lebru·n

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker

FUNKY. WINKERBEAN

Torn Batiuk

Chris Browne

.AGAR THE HORRIBLE
y~~ ~ Pe5&gt;P6RATf!.LY tleEP6

A SAT/I, 1/rf c;oop A-iAV,/

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 ..

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Union
chapter
6 Implied
11 Kitchen
come-on
12 Massey
of T V
13 M uffles
14 End-table
items
15 Tea
coole r
16 Movie
computer
18 Have a
bite
19 Yale fan
2 0 Harvest
goddess
21 Hot blood
22 Parody
24 Colony
membe rs
25 Champion
2 7 Field
yield
2 9 Sneaker
feature
32 D ress line
33 Soup
sphe re
34 Supporting
35 In the
past
36 Queue
after Q
37 Some
gametes
38 Reporter
Ellerbee
40 Track
events

JOSEPH
42 Work
dough
43 K een
44 Authority
45 Nuisances
DOWN
1 Gents'
dates
2 Answer
source
3 Inherit,
perhaps
4 Band
blaster
5 Make a
harsh
a ttack
6 Cash
drawers
7 1n
the style
of

TodiV'S llllwers
8 Become
clear
9 Somewhat
1 0 Samples
17 Is
relevant
23 Dance
maneuver
24 Burro
26 Caught
27 Readies ,
as a

pool c ue
28 Saskatchewan's
capital
30 Singer
Lyle
31 Clears
33 Madrid
museum
39 German
artic le
41 Superb
serve

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4 75 (checklm.o.) to
Thomas Joscp~ Book 1, P.O. Box 53&amp;475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475

11-19

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

WH E N I GET MY

William Hoest

DRiveRS t.tC ENGE:

I 'M GOING 1"0 FINO
AN Ot..c&gt; GR?RT5 CAR

"TO Fl')( UP.

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

,.YOO NEVER BOY ANYTHING FOR YO
HOW ABOOT MY LIFE INSURANCE POLCCY? ..

cfo&lt;~l~fhl£ -~9''"'.1' .~

-.
ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Frid,l)~ ~ov.
19,2010:
This year, you become more mellow
and easygoing. Others oflen ~k you
out ·•vith many idea-;, wanting your support. Learn to carefuJly weigh the pros
and cons, not eliminating .my choice
until you are ready. Often, olhen; seem
to be challenging. They simply have different points of\ iew. If you ,\re single,
you have a kaleidoscope of suitors.
real issue is who, what and when? From
late spring on rould be qu1tc promi&lt;.ing.
If you are attached_ your pcirtner could
become more buoyant and demanding
at the ~e time. let him or her c"tS!.'Ume
a larger role in your relationship. 'Jnis
person b simply exprt&gt;$ing him- or her
self. TAL""RCS'can be challenging but
hao; ~ilar bsues.

·me

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

The Stars SIWlv II~ K~nd of Day Yo11 'll
Have: ~Dvnmmc; 4-Posztive;
J-Avcrage; 2-5(}-50; 1-Diffiatlt
1

hy Dave G ree n

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" I fo r get, a r e t h ese my GOOD pants
or my PLAY p ants?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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ARIES (March 21-Apri119)
***'** You wake up on the right
side of the b&amp;l. As a result, ytlU are
naturally indulgent of those ,\round
you. A boss, though aggr&lt;~valing,
responds to your ,,tutude. Complett&gt;
rather than begin uny new projects.
Tonight: Out -your tre.lt.
TAUR US (April 20-M,ly 20)
***'** You c.mnot believe the
difference a few days or a few hours
make. Reach out for someone at ,, dislance who means a lot to you. You
note an easy flow, which IS new. Be
ready to update your opimonc; about a
situation. Tonight All smiles.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
**'*' You don't need to let others
know how you feel. Your general
demeanor expre;-,e; your feelings.
•
i':e\ertheless, you could be somewh&lt;lt
e.xhausted by the past few d.1ys. Don't
feel as if you need to push so hard.
Tonight: ·othing is obl~atory.
CANCER Uune 21 July 22)
***"*' A meeting rou ld pro\ e to
be your passport to a new darection.
You discover many different ideas to
get to the same end rt"Slllt, but every·
one wants to get to thi.; point. !'\ole a
change in a partnt&gt;r or de.u friend .
Tonight: Only where people ,1re.
LEO Ouly 2.'3-Aug. 22)
**** Complete as mu rh .ls you
can, freeing yourself u p to relax tor the
next few days. Con'&gt;ider reorgani1.mg
your plans or moving,\ nweting .1s
need be. Be willing to acrepl ,\rompletely foreign approach l&lt;l ,1 pnl)l'&lt;'t. It
JU'it might work belter. lunight: A fort'e
to be dealt with.

HOROSCOPE

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** * Exp],&gt;re options with confidt&gt;nce th,lt up till now you had not
dared to look at. Jnv~tigate different
Jde,ls. Understand those around you
better by walking in their shoes. Your
newfound empathy increases your
ease in reJ,lting. Tonight follow the
music
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct.. 22)
* "*** * Let a partner play the
stronger 1\lle he or she has aJ wa~ s
wanted to play. Realize what i.; hap
~ing between \OU and .mother person. You nught need to re\ t&lt;oe your
opinions about thb person and what
you want Tonight Go along with a
p.1l's l&gt;'Uggestion
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-~o\. 21)
* *"*'* Other; appear to be more
confident than they have been for a
substantial period Listen to suggestions. 'l11e more you incorporate oth
ers' 1deas, the more you gain the1r support A change in rommuni~·ation
slyIt'S nught be strangeh• more effective. Tonight: Jusl don't be alone.
SAGIITARI US (1'\ov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** A level, eas-y appro.1ch worl-...'&gt;
t"&gt;e&gt;·ond your e&gt;.pt'&lt;.'t.ltiono;. Apply new
information and perspectives as to
how to h.mdle your finances. Make
more time for ,-i hobby or some pastime you enjoy. Relaxed and centered.
you w1ll do bt&gt;Uer work. Tonight.
finally, some free time.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
* *'** *' Your perspecth e about &lt;l
project or k~y person in your life keeps
updating. You know the matter m
question won't be boring. and will be
worthwhile to pursue. Share more of
tho.&lt;;e wild idea.~ you generally keep to
yourself. Tonight Let your h,1ir down.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. IS)
* *'* Your \ iew keeps updating,
though) ou might be eXh.1usted b)
e\ erything that you need to take in. A
famlly situation, though difficult,
rould be worked through, if vou so
Dont get caugnt up In c1 power
struggle Tonight Your home is your

:
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moose

PISCES (Feb. JQ·Mul'\."h 20)
***** Fin,11ly, you feel more
upbeat ,md relawd. Cnderst.md wh.\l
is h.1ppening between you and ~
friend. Perhaps some dist.mce and per
specthe cou ld make d difference. You
amnot alw.1y.; hold people in the same
place. They ch.mge. Tonight. TGIF.
Meet friends.
}aC''JIIclmc 81gar IS on the lulm~et
at1Ittp://rt'Wi.t'.)aC'quclmd11grzr.rom.

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Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 19,

2010

•
NAME: Andy
1: Who did Woody Hayes beat 1n his
first game as Oh1o State's coach 1n
Groom
1951?
HOMETOWN:
Columbus
2: Who did Ear1e Bruce beat in his first
OHIO STATE
game as Ohio State's coach in 1979?
YEARS: ..L::n:•o·.&lt;,vv..:.('
HIGHUGKTS:
3: Who did John Cooper beat in his
Groom, a former
first game as Ohio State's coach in 1988?
walk-on, averaged
45.0 yards per punt over the last
4: What two NFL teams did Iowa
two years of his career. He was a
coach Kirl&lt; Ferentz worl&lt; for as an assistant coach?
first-team All-American in 2002 and
averaged 4 7. 7 yards per punt in the
5: How many times has an Iowa player
nat1onal championship game.
AFTER OSU: Groom punted 1n two been runner-up in the Heisman Trophy
voting?
games for the Washington Redskins
in 2005 and had tryouts with several
Answers: 1. Southern Methodist;
other NFL teams. He is an account
2.Syracuse; 3. Syracuse; 4. Cleveland
manager for Stryker Medical in
Browns and Baltimore Ravens; 5. Three
Columbus.
times.

Iowa's R1cky Stanzi (2,482 yards, 22 TDs) has dramatically improved his
accuracy th1s season. The Mentor Lake Catholic graduate has completed 66
percent of his passes and has thrown only four interceptions after hitting 56
percent of h1s throws and having 15 interceptions in 2009. He did not play
because of an injury when Ohio State beat Iowa 27-24 in overtime last season.
Terrelle Pryor (2,136 yards, 22 TDs) ran the ball nearly as often (nine times)
as he threw it (13 times) in a 38-14 Wln over Penn State last week. Last year,
Pryor did not throw the ball more than 17 times in a game in November.
Advantage: Even

"I was on my
knees on the
sidelines.
Praying."

- Oh1o Staw defensive IY.tck
)ermale Hines, talking about W3tching
Devin Barclay kick the winning field goal
Ill mertimc against Iowa last year.

Evan Spencer, a wide receiver commitment in the 2011 recruiting class,
caught seven passes for 121 yards
and ran for a touchdown, but his
Vernon Hills (Ill.) team lost 27-21 to
Kaneland in a playoff game last Friday.
Braxton Miller, a quarterback commitment 1n the 2011 recruiting class,
passed for two touchdowns and ran for
two, includmg the game-winner in double overtime, when Huber Heights
Wayne beat Centerville 1n a DMsion I
playoff game.
Miller was 14 of 23 passing for 223
yards and rushed for 80 yards.
Kyle Kalis, a 6-5, 300-pound jUnior
offensive lineman from Lakeood St.
Edward High School is on OSU's radar.
Assistant coach Jim Bollman went to
watch a recent St. Edward game.

DeVier Posey has caught a pass in 24 consecutive
games, the longest active streak in the Big Ten. Posey
has 43 catches for 664 yards. Dane Sanzenbacher (43
catches, 716 yards) had only one catch against Penn
State, but it was memorable when he scored on a pass that bounced off Posey.
Derrell Johnson-f&lt;Dulianos (41 catches, 673 yards, nine TDs) and Marvin
McNutt (41 catches, 660 yards, 6 TDs) have been Iowa's top receivers.
Johnson-f&lt;Dulianos, a sen1or from Youngstown Mooney, has been Iowa's leading
receiver each of the last three years. Tight end Allen Reisner has 35 catches.
Advantage: Iowa

..

&lt; OFFENS

While nearly every other area of the team has been hit by
injuries, Ohio State's starters on the offensive line have not
missed a start. Center Michael Brewster said OSU's coaches told him he played the best game of h1s career against
Penn State.
Iowa's offense has struggled in its last two games. The Hawkeyes have
scored 18 po~r"'ts in a w1n over Indiana and 17 in a loss to Northwestern after
averagirg 34 points a game in their first eight games. Julian Vandevelde, a
three-year starter at guard, and tackle Riley Reiff are the most experienced
offensive linemen for the Hawkeyes.
Advantage: Ohio State

DEFENSIVE U
Neither team's defensive line has lived up to its preseason hype, though it's tough to complam about ranking No. 1 and No. 2 in the Big Ten in scoring defense
and rush defense as OSU and Iowa do.
Iowa defensive end Adrian Clayborn- came into the season expected to produce another monster season like last year, when he had
11.5 sacks and forced four fumbles. But the three-year starter has only 3.5
sacks and ranks mnth on the team in tackles. Defensive tackle Mike Damels
has four sacks and 11 tackles for losses.
Advantage: Iowa

&lt; UNEBACKERS

JAKE STONEBURNER
The 6-foot-5, 245-pound sophomore tight end from Dublin
has emerged as solid target for quarterback Terrell Pryor.
Stoneburner has 12 catches for 124 yards and two touchdowns in eight games this season.

&lt; DEFENSIVE BACKS &gt;

Ohio State's defensive backs go from facing a quarterback with two career
starts against Penn State to one with 32 starts this week. The Buckeyes
returnee two Interceptions for touchdowns last week.
Come'back Shaun Prater (three interceptions, 52 tackles) and safeties Brett
Greenwood (four interceptions) and Tyler Sash (two interceptions, 58 tackles)
BACKS
lead an experienced secondary for Iowa. The Hawkeyes' 15 interceptions are
Dan Herron's career-best 190' yards against Penn State second only to Ohio State's 17 in the Big Ten.
was the biggest game by an OSU running back since Chris
Advantage: Even
Wells got 222 yards against Michigan in 2007. Herron (824
yards) hasn't done anything fancy but has had back-to-back
100-yard games after previously having none in his career.
SPECIAL TEAMS
Iowa thought it would have depth at running back, but Adam
Devin Barclay's game-winning kick last year against
Robinson (962 yards, 10 TDs) is the on1y survivor of that group. Jewel (iampton Iowa m1ght have been the turning point of his career.
suffered a season-ending knee injury for the second year in a row and Brandon He was only 2 of 5 on field goals before that. He is 14
Wegher, who gained 641 yards as a freshman last season, left the team for of 17 this season, with a long of 42 yards.
unspecified personal reasons. Freshman Marcus Coker gained 129 yards
Iowa ~.icker Mike Meyer is 10 of 12 on field goals, with a long of 42 yards.
against Indiana, but that is more than half his season total of 243 yards.
Derrell Johnson-Koulianos' 99-yard kickoff return for a touchdown last year was
Advantage: Ohio State
the start of kick coverage problems OSU didn't correct until late this season.
Advantage: Iowa

&lt; RUNNiNG

&gt;

.
School
Ohio State
Mich1gan State
WISCOnsin
Iowa

M1ch1gan
Northwestem
Penn State
IllinOIS

Purdue
Mmnesota
Indiana

Big Ten
w l

5
5
5

1
1
1

4

2.

3

3

3
3

3
3
4

3

Overall

w
9

l

1

9 1
9 1
7 3
7 3
7 3
6 4

2 4

4

5

5

1
0

2

9

6
6

4

6
6

BIG TEN TREND: College football
returns to Wrigley Field for the
first time since 1938 when
Illinois plays Northwestern.

Big Ten
searches
for names
With the Big Ten splitting
into two divisions in football
next fall, it has to come up
with something to call tho.
divisions.
Commissioner Jim Delany
says he expects to have an
announcement on what they
will be named by next month.
In case you've forgotten,
here's how the Big Ten will be
divided in 2011:
'
Division A: Iowa, Michigan,
Michigan State, Minnesota,
Nebraska and Northwestern.
Division B: Illinois, Indiana,
Ohio State, Penn State, Purdue and Wisconsin.
Personally, my favorite for
Division A would be the "How
come they got both Chicago
and Minneapolis?" Division.
For Division B, it might be
the "We've got some of the Big
Ten's most boring towns"
division.
So far, I haven't found any
suggestions, including my
own, that sound great.
The Big Ten says it will not
put geographic names like
East or West on the divisions
because they are not truly
divided by geography.
,
It's not logical' to call ther
East and West or North an
South, the Big Ten says. This
is from a league which still
calls itself the Big Ten with 11
members and will continue to
do so with 12 teams.
Some have suggested nam)ng them the Hayes and
Schembechler divisions in
honor of the Ohio State and
Michigan coaching legends.
Don't bet on that. I can think
of 10 reasons it won't happen.
Here are some of the other
suggestions being thrown out,
most of which deserve to be
thrown out, as in discarded:
Black and Blue Divisions.
Great Lakes and Great Plains
Divisions. Grange and Griffm
Divisions. Prairie and Valley
, Divisions. Corn and Cars
Divisions. Plains and Heartland Divisions.
And then there was this suggestion, presumably from a
Southeastern Conference fan.
He wanted to call them the
Over and Rated Divisions.
In the end, ,geographic desiA
nations are the way I'd su~
gest going.
Some of the others might
seem OK now but would they
still hold up in 10 years?

'COUNTDOWN

OSU LEADERS

Passing Yards
BIG TEN SCHEDULE
Terre lie Pryor ......................... 2136
Ohio State at Iowa, 3:30 p.m.
Rushing Yards
Penn State at Indiana, noon
Dan Herron ..............................824
Purdue at Michigan State, noon
Terre lie Pryor ..........................512
Wisconsm at Michigan, noon
Receiving Yards
Illinois at Northwestern, 3:30p.m.
Dane Sanzenbacher ................ 716
TOP 25 GAMES TO WATCH
DeVier Posey............................664
Oklahoma State at Kansas, noon
Field Goals
Troy at South Carolina, 12:21 p.m.
Dev1n Barclay ............•.......... 14/17
Mississippi at LSU, 3:30 p.m.
Tackles
Stanford at California, 3:30 p.m.
Bnan Rolle................................. 52
Virginia Tech at Miami, 3:30 p.m.
Ross Homan ............................48
Arkansas at Miss1ss1ppi State, 7 p.m. Interceptions
Missouri at Iowa State, 7 p.m.
Chimd Chekwa ..........................3
Oklahoma at Baylor, 8 p.m.
Brian Rolle, .................................2
Devon Torrence............................2
Ne~raska at Texas A&amp;M, 8 p.m.

•

Sept. 2 ...................:.Marshall, W 45-7
Sept. 11 ..................M1ami W 36·24
Sept. 18 ...................Oh10 W 43-7
Sept. 25 .................E. Mich. w 73-20
Oct. 2 .....................at Illinois W 24·13
Oct. 9 .......................lnd1ana W 38-10
Oct. 16 ..............at Wisconsin L 31-18
Oct. 23 .....................Purdue W 49·0
Oct. 30 .............at Minnesota W 52-10
Nov. 13 ...............Penn State W38-14
Nov. 20 .....................at Iowa
Nov. 27 ....................:M1ch1gan
Content comp1led by J1m Naveau and
dest@'l by Ross Bishoff • The l.Jma News
Copyngtlt © 2010 The I..Jma News.
Reproduction of any portiOn of th1s material is prohibited withOut express consent.

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

8

Days until kickoff

Providing Quality Nursing Care for Over 20 Years
Rehabilitation:· Physical Therapy· Occupational Therapy· Speech Therapy

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