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...

CENTS
• Vol. 6n, No. 29
.. c

TUESDAY, NOVEMUER 2;J,
2010
- -

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.

. -

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www;·
ili
~
• - ,.., Ji

Second fire fatality in less than two weeks
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

32
Days
.), Left til
t Christmas
J

Mon·Frl8am-8 m
5 n Closed

C'

LONG BOTTOM Another fatal fire has
claimed the life of a man
who was staying in what
is described as a weekend
cabin in Long Bottom.
According to Shane
Cartmill of the Division
of State Fire Marshal, the
fire occurred around 6:02

p.m .• Sunday, Nov. 21 at
52790 Curtis Hollow
Road. Meigs County
Sheriff Robert Beegle
identified the victim as
William Keith (Pete)
Stanforth,
age
and
address
unreported.
Unconfirmed
reports
state Stanforth was 73
years old and from
Athem
County.
A:n
autopsy was performed

on the victim yesterday
morning. according to
Cartmill.
Cartmill said investigators determined the fire
started in a front bedroom of the home though
at this time the cause of
the fire remains undetermined. No one else was
home at the time of the
fire but it's been reported
a dog also perished

alongside Stanforth. The
structure was completely
destroyed. There were no
smoke alarms found in
the home, Cartmill said.
As of yesterday afternoon, investigators had
completed their scene
examination but additional
interviews
remained to be completed. The investigation b
being conducted by the

Trains and trolleys: A feature display at

Division of State Fire
Marshal. Olive Township
Fire Department, the
Meigs County Coroner's
Office and Meigs County
Sheriff's Office.
This is the !26th firerelated fatality in Ohio
this year. This is the second fire fatality in Meigs
County · in less than two
weeks.

Farm~rs

Bank

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Thanksgiving
seat belt
enforcement
begins

•

COLUMBUS - The
Click It or Ticket mobilization
comes
as
motorists prepare to celebrate
the
four-day
Thanksgiving
holiday
weekend.
According to a relea&lt;;e
from the Highway Traffic
Safety · Administration
police agencies will be
stepping up enforcement
of seat belt and other traffic safety laws during the
weekend in an effort to
save lives.
2008
During
the
Thanksgiving holiday season, which ran from
Monday. Nov. 17 to
Monday. Dec. I. across
the country 1.120 passenger vehicle occupants
were killed in motor vehicle
traffic
crashes.
Tragically. in cases where
restraint use was known
data shows that more than
half of those killed were
not wearing their seat belts
at the time of the crash.

POMEROY - A history of trains and trolleys and the role they
played in the development of Meigs County
was featured in a display by Bob Graham at
Farmers Bank Friday
and Saturday.
Joining him with a
collection of railroad
items were David and
Nathan Robinette. longtime avid model train
collectors. Also included in the display was a
collection of coins
belonging to Graham.
Among the many
items of interest in the
trolley display was an
old coin changer and the
hat worn by Wilber
Logan. motorman on
the trolley line from
Hobson to Racine. The
line shut down on June
30. 1929.
The
Robinettes
· included in their display
a variety of model
trains, small replicas of
train stations they had
constructed. and pictures from the early
days when trains and
trolleys were a popular
way of travel in Meigs
County.

Page AS
• Elmer C. Finlaw
·Jr., Mary E. Ingels
·Helen J. Pickens

WEATHER

BSEAGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

BURLINGHAM
A five-alarm fire yesterday afternoon resulted
in Division of State Fire
Marshal investigators
being called to the
scene.
Investigators with the

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

High: 61

Low: 30

•

DivisiOn of State Fire
Marshal were called to
investigate the fire around 5
p.m. yesterday. according
to Spokesperson Shane
Cartmill. No further details
were available as of press
time. investigators barely
had time to leave the scene
of a fatal fire in Long
Bottom which occurred on

Sunday before they were
summoned to return to
Meigs County for a new
investigation.
The structure fire with
brush frre call came into
Meigs 9-1-1 yesterday
afternoon and wa'i reported
at 42440 Colburn Road in
Bedford Township. There
were no injuries reported as

of press time.
. As of 5 p.m. yesterday.
Scipio
Fire personnel with the Scipio
The
Department was the prima- Fire Department remained
ry responder with assis- on the scene. Again. no fmtance provided by the ther details were being
Pomeroy. Bashan and relea&lt;;ed as of press time in ,
Plains
Fire this developing story
Tuppers
Departments. The Athens though l)le Daily Sentinel
County Richmond Fire will follow up on the invesDepartment also assisted a'i tigation· in Wednesday's
edition.
did Syracuse's Squad 33.

Going creative for Christmas
•

I

2 SECTIO!'JS -

Charlene
Hoeflichlphoto
Nick King (left) looks
over a trolley collection
displayed by Bob
Graham. The last trolley
left the Hobson yards
enroute to Racine in
1929.

Five-alarm fire in Bedford
Bv BETH SERGENT

• OBITUARIES

Charlene
Hoeflich/photo
David Robinette, longtime model train collector, talks to Shirley
Jeffers about his hobby
of preserving memories
of the past for future
generations. In the
1900s taking the train
was the main mode of
travel for Meigs
Countians.

12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports
B Section
© 2010 Ohio \"alley Publishing Co.

liJ!IJI,I !1!1. !1!11

POMEROY - Bringing
in the new and getting out
the old to decorate for the
holidays is what's happening in homes around the
Bend area as preparations
begin to deck the halls for
the best of all times Christmas with the family.
Every year the Meigs
County Extension Service
has a holiday happening
where Christmasy crafts are
created, decorating ideas
are shared, and holiday
foods are prepared' and
served.
" In and Out with the
Holidays" was the theme of
this year's Christmas program which featured workshops on how to prepare
nutritious and delicious holiday meals on a budget. to
create crafts to give as gif1s.
to make attractive holiday
swags from pieces of green-

..

ery. and to form big bright
colored ribbon bows to
adorn them with.
About 40 women turned
out for the program where
Debbie Watson, Extension
office assistance. taught a
session on doll making
from dish towels, Janet
Bolin, master gardener.
had a workshop on making
beautiful bows. Hal Kneen.
Extension educator. shared
his skill on creating swags
from shrubbery cuttings.
and Cassie Turner, '4-H
educator. and Linda King,
family nutrition assistant.
both had programs on
preparing nutritious meals
on a budget.
A luncheon of foods
prepared with recipes from
a holiday cookbook provided each one attending
concluded this year's special Christmas program by
the
Meigs
County
Extension Service.

Charlene
Hoeflichlphoto
Hal Kneen,
Extension educator,
shares his technique for making
holiday swags.

Charlene
Hoeflich/photo
Master gardener
Janet Bolin gives
tips on making
beautiful bows
for holiday decorations.

..

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The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailysentinel.com

'}'uesday, November 23, 2010

Gibbs: Concerns over. body scans will be considered
Bv Juue PACE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
\V1th the Thanksgiving
holiday travel gearing
up, the White !louse
said Monda) the government will take into
account the public's
concerns and complaints
as it evaluates rigtd new
airline boanling security
check:..
President
Bantck
Obama's
spokesman,
Robert Gibbs, said the
government is "desperately'" trying to balance
procedures that maximize security and minimile invasiveness. He
says the Transportation
Security Administration
pn)cedurcs will continue
• to evolve.
''The evolution of the
security will be done
w~th the input of those
wl)o go through the
security,'' Gibbs said.
Gibbs
underscored
that the president's highest priority during the
holiday season, "is to
ensure that when vou or
I or others get ori to an
airplane, that we can
feel reasonably sure that
v. G can travel safely.''
Air
travelers
are
pretesting new Iequirements at some U.S. airporb that they mu&lt;&gt;t pass
through full-body scan-

a

ners that produce vir- to go horne and see their process must submit to a
full pat-down. which
tually naked image. The loved ones."
screener. who sits in a
Pi:-tole had pledged takes much longer. That
different location. does Sunday to review securi- could cause a cascade of
not see the face of the ty procedures in the delays at dozens of
person being screened wake of a public outcry. major airports. includand docs • not know the But he also said the TSA ing those in New York,
traveler's identity.
must balance people's Los Angeles. Chicago
Those who refuse to demand ror privacy with and Atlanta.
go through the scanners the need to protect pasPistole
noted
the
arc subject to thorough sengers from those who alleged attempt by a
pat-downs that include would try to set off Nigerian with explo
agency officials touch- bombs on planes.
sives in his underwear to
A loosely-organized try to bring down an
ing the clothed genital
areas of passengers.
Internet boycott of body Amsterdam-to-Detroit
Earlier
Monday, scans is under way, and night last Christmas.
Transportation Security Pistole said he hoped "We all wish we lived in
Administration
chief people would exercise a world where security
John Pistole urged pas- sound judgment over the procedures at airports
sengers angry over safe- busy Thanhgiving holi- weren't necessary." he
ty procedures not to day. A National Opt-Out said, "but that just isn't
boycott airport body Day is scheduled for the case."'
scans.
Wednesday to coincide
The statement came
He said he under- with the busiest travel just hours after Pistole.
stands public concerns day of the year.
in a TV interview. said
about privacy in the
"Just one or two recal- that while the full-body
wake of the tough new citrant passengers at an scans and pat-downs
security checks. but said airport is all it takes to could be intrusive and
that a relatively small cause huge delays," said uncomfortable. the high
proportion of the 34 mil- Paul
Ruden.
• a threat level required
for
the their use.
lion people who have spokesman
In the Sunday TV
llown since the new pro- American Society of
cedures went into effect Travel Agents, which appearance,
Pistole
have had body pat has warned its more than appeared to shrug off
downs.
8.000 members about statements by Obama
With the Thanksgiving delays resulting from and Secretary of State
travel rush less than 48 the body-scanner boy- Hillary Rodham Clinton
hours away. Pistole cott. "It doesn't take that the TSA wou1d look
implored
passengers much to mess things up for ways to alter screen.M onday not to take anyway - especially if ing techniques that some
delaying actions or someone purposely tries passengers say are invaengage in boycotts of to mess it up."
sions of privacy.
body scans, actions he
Body scans take as litObama said in Lisbon
said would only serve to tle as I 0 seconds. but on Saturday that he had
"tie up people who want people who decline the asked TSA officials

whether there's a Jess
intrusive way to ensure
travel safety. "I understand people's frustrations.'' he said, adding
that he had told the TSA
that "you have to constantly refine and measure whether what we're
doing is the only way to
assure the American
people's safety."
Clinton,
appearing
Sunday on NBC.'s "Meet
the Press," said she
thought
''everyone.
including our security
experts, arc looking for
ways to diminish the
impact on the traveling
public'' and that "stribing the right balance is
what this is about.''
She. for one, wouldn't
like to submit to a security pat-down.
"Not if l could avoid
it. No. I mean. who
would?" Clinton told
CBS' "face the Nation.''
"Clearly it's invasive,
it's not comfortable,"
Pistole said of the scans
and pat-downs during
the interview on CNN's
"State of the Union."
But, he added. "if we are
to detect terrorists, who
have again proven innovative and creative in
their design and implementation of bombs that
are going to blow up airplanes and kill people,
then we have to do

something that prevents
that."
Rep. John Mica. RFla., who is set to
become Transportation
Committee
chairman
when Republicans tak~
over the House in •
January, differed with
the approach.
"I don't think the rollout was good and the
application is even
worse. This does need to
be refined. But he's saying it's the only tool and
I believe that"s wrong,"
Mica, a longtime critic
of the TSA, said on
CNN.
Hou~e
Majority
Leader Steny Hoyer, DMd., appearing on CBS.
said Congress would
hold · hearings on the
"very
controversial''
issue of how to strike the
right balance. Asked
how he would feel about
submitting to a patdown, Hoyer said, "I
don't think any of us
feel that the discomfort
and the delay is something that we like, but
most people understand
that we've got to keep .
airplanes safe."
Pistole was interviewed Monday morning on ABC's "Good
Morning
America,"
CBS's
''The
Early
Show." NBC's "Today"
show and MSNBC.

Spill panel details goofs, hero in ending gusher
Bv SETH BORENSTEIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - A
single picture from a cell
phbnc camera may have
saved the Gulf of Mexico
from a few more weeks
- if not months - of oil
gushing from the BP
well.
A new study from the
presidential oil spill commi sion de cribes the
behind-the-scenes, excruciating tension and mi&lt;&gt;takes behind the threemonth effort to cap the
bu ted well. New details
include the story of a lone
scientist working from a
cell phone photo who

saved the day by convincing the government that a
cap it considered removing was actually working
as designed.
The cap that eventually
stopped the oil from
flowing
was
almost
pulled a day or so after it
was installed in mid-July
because pressure readings looked so low that
they indicated a leak elsewhere in the system. BP
wanted the cap to remain
and the well to stay shut.
but government science
advisers were firm and
near unanimous in wanting the cap removed
because of fear of bigger,
more catastrophic spilL

the report said. One scientist took a cell phone
picture and e-mailed it to
a government researcher
in California for advice.
Just using that cell
phone photo. Paul Hsieh,
a U.S. Geological Survey
scientist. created a model
for what was happening
under the cap. He was
convinced that the containment cap wouldn't
blow. He got more data,
which bolstered hi~ case.
He persuaded the other
scientists to wait a bit.
The government waited
six hours, then a day.
Nothing happened. The
cap held.
Hsieh turned out to be

right.
Hsieh
told
The
Associated Press that he
was . "flattered that I was
portrayed well," but said
others including Energy
Secretary Steven Chu,
who headed the scientific
team. deserve the credit.
The picture Hsieh
examined was "a game
changer," said University
of California at Berkeley
professor Bob Bea. who
analyzed the report for
the AP.
"It also shows how in
disarray we were." Bea
said.
Monday's draft report
said some BP attempts to
stop the gusher - espe-

cially the efforts dubbed experience in logistics.''
Top Kill and Junk Shot sa1d Bea. who wasn't part
probably
were of the spill commission.
doomed from the start.
Also. the oil industry in
That's because BP had general and government
underestimated
how have not spent the money
much oil was spilling. they promised to improve
Both BP and the govern- clean-up equipment and
ment were unprepared for . technique for oil spills, a
commission
capping a blowout well second
and cleaning up the mess report said.
it makes. the report said.
More than anything the
But given how unpre- commission report on
pared they were, both BP containment
didn't
and the government blame or praise, but .
reacted quickly and pulled back the curtain
impressively, the report on what happened during
:.aid: ''BP's efforts to hectic times as 172 mildevelop multiple source lion gallons of oil gushed
control options simulta- into the Gulf from April
neously were Herculean." 20 to July 15.
"It was a marvelous

Health plans must spend premiums on medical care
BY RICARDO ALONSoZALDIVAR AND TOM
MURPHY
ASSOCIATED Pf:lESS

WASHINGTON
Health in:.urance premiums should go for actual
medical care- not insurt:rs' overhead and profit!&gt;
- the Obama administratiop said Monday in rules
that for the first time
reguire the companies to
gi\e consumers a rebate.
The regulation unveiled
by the Health &lt;md Human
Services department calls
foe insurance companies to
spend at lea.,t 80 cents of
the premium dollar on
medical cru\! and quality.
For employer phms covering more than 50 people.
the requirement is 85 cents.
Insurers that t~tll short of
the mark will have to issue

their customers a rebate.
Part of the new health
care law. the rule is meant
to gi\e consumers a better
deaL Administration official~ said it will prevent
insurers from wasting valuable premiums on administration, marketing and
executive bonuses. "'While
some level of administrati'e cost is certainly necessary, we belie\e that they
have gotten out of hand,"
~aid Health and Human
Services
Secretary
Kathleen Sebelius.
Some'insurers have complamed the approach is
heavy handed. and doesn't
take into account costs of
marketing to individuals
and small employers.
Indeed. some are threatening to pull out of the individual market, and four
states - Georgia. Iowa.

Maine and South Carolina
- have already asked for
an exemption from the federal rule. fearing it could
lead to loss of covemge.
But industry watchers
said the final regulations
wound up being more
manageable than investors
initially feared. Analyst Lcs
Funtleyder, who covers the
industry for Miller Tabak.
noted that HHS has wide
latitude to adjus1 the rules
to prevent market dismptions.
"From an expectations
point of view. the.;e are
rules that managed care can
live with in 20 II." he said.
Currently, there is no uniform requirement that
health insurers spend a
minimum share of premiums on medical care.
Consumer groups say
somewhere between 80 to

85 cents on the dollar represents good value, but
many plans spend in the
nmge of 60 to 80 cents.
That will change Jan. 1.
when the rule goes into
effect. Starting in 2012, as
many as 9 million customers could get rebates
averaging $164. officials
estimate. It could be a discount on premi~s or a
payment by ch~k or credit
card.
Consumers shopping for
health insurance in the
future will be able to compare what plans in their
area spend on medical care.
They'll have to learn some
new jargon: the proportion
insw·ers spend on care is
termed the "medical loss
ratio." Overall, the new
requirement applies to
plans that cover about 75
million people.

One major exception
involves large employer
plans. Generally major
companies
pay
their
employees' health care
expenses directly, hiring an
insurance company to act
as an outside administrator.
To employees, it looks like
they are covered by an
insurer. but it's actually
their company that's paying. Because most btg
firms pay up front, they
already have a :.trong
incentive to be as efficient
as possible.
Administration officials
say they don't anticipate
the kinds of dire disruptions that some health
insurance companies have
warned about.
"No one is going to lose
their coverage.'' said Jay
Angoff. head of the HHS
oftice of insurance over-

.

VISit us online at
mydallysentlnel.com

~aby

Boomers:
Apply online for medicare
BY MARCUS GEIGER
SOCIAL SECI..RITY

This January marks a
historic moment: our
N~tion 's
first
haby
boomer:-; arc turning 65.
ror
many
baby
boomers, it's time to hit
the computer. Even if you
have decided to wait until
after you ru·e age 65 to
apply for 1etiremcnt benefit~. most people 'ihould
st'}rt getting Medicare coverage at age 65.
lf you would like to
begin your Medicare CO\erage when you first
become eligible, it's
important that you apply

wtthin three months of
reaching age 65. But don't
worry about the time and
effort it will take to apply
for Medicare - it's fast
and easy! You can do it
online at www.socialsecurity.gov/ medicareonly in
as little as I 0 minutes.
Why apply online for
Medicare? Because it's
fast, easy, and secure.
You don't need an
appointment and you can
avoid waiting in traffic or
in line. As long as you
have ten minutes to
spare, you have time to
complete and submit
your online Medicare
application.

People who started
receiving Social Security
retirement or disability
benefits before age 65 do
not need to apply: they
will be automatically
enrolled in Medicare.
To learn more about
Medicare benefits, visit
www.Medicare.gov.
To Jearn more about
Medicare and the online
application, www.social
security.gov/medicareonly. While you're there,
take a look at lhe Patty
Duke Show reunion
video as they talk about
turkey, pie, and Medicare
online.
And happy birthday to

sight.
Developed in conjunction with state insurance
regulators, the regulation
provides for adjustments
to ease the impact of the
requirements if problems
emerge.
Very small insurers
with fewer than 1.000
enrollees will not be
required
to
provide
rebates. and those with
fewer
than
75.000
enrollees will get an
adjustment. Limited benefit plans popular in low- •
wage industries wiiJ get
more time to comply, and
may also be able to claim
adjustments. States can
apply for a waiver if state
regulators conclude that
the requirement would
destabilize the health
insurance market for individuals.

all the baby boomers
turning 65 in 2011.

(Marcus Geiger is the
district manager for
Social Security
in
Gallipolis.)

Keeping Meigs
County informed

The Daily
Sentinel
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JH[JE

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 23,

'

Teacher needs lesson in gaining respect
Dear Dr. Brothers:
I've been teaching at a
private school in a small
town for 10 years. I
recently moved to the
city and have taken a job
as
a
public-school
teacher. I've heard stories
about how these kids can
be unruly and disrespectful, but I've never expected this. I have literally no
control over my classes.
Dr Joyce Brothers
Sometimes it's all I can
'
do just to keep them from - - - - - - - - •
standing on the desks. I decide to apply for.
feel .. I've become a teaching or not. Right
babysitter more than a now, all you can do is
teacher, and I want ~o , talk to other teachers in
teach. Can I turn thts your school and see if
around?- C.~.
.
any of them have a good
. Dear C.R.. T~ere IS handle on discipline.
httle more frustrat.mg to a Then try to Jearn their
te~cher than havm~ the secrets. It could be that
~kills and the matenal to the students take t:ven
Impart to some young more advantage of a new
people and yet not be teacher, so you have it
a~le to ge.t to first b~se harder
than
most.
~It~ them m terms of dts- Consult with the adminciplme ~o that you can do istration to see what tools
your thm~. Although you are available for your
have switched. from a assistance, and don't
small-to~n envrronJ?e~t think that if you are quiet
to the City, you didn t about it they won't realseem to . expect the ize' things are out of conextreme differences you trol _ they're surely
have .
. encountered. aware of the situation. ·
~actonng m the chan~e
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
m th~ cu~tu~e from a pr!- recently had a great
vate mstttut10n .to pubhc opening reception for my
sch.o?l, you might h.ave paintings. There was this
antlctpate~ t.he very diffi- guy who bought two of
cult tra?sttlon you are them, which made me
now facmg. It s~ems that very happy. He seemed
you were a. b1t unpre- sane enough at first, and
would like to talk about
pared for this m?ve are you sure you dtd your my work and other kinds
of art, but now I'm gethomework? .
1 am not trymg to. make ting a little worried. He's
you feel bad, ,but 1f y~u been showing up every
fi~d you. can t cope m week at my job, asking
this envuonment, you what I'm working on.
may wa?~ to make ~oth- Then I caught him waiter transitiOn. If that s the ing at my bus stop and
case, you really have to pretending it was a
do more to fmd. out wh~t chance encounter. Do I
you are gettmg I~to. This have a stalker? - L.L.
goes for any JOb you
Dear L.L.: I don't

'

POMEROY - Two
area marines, Pvt.
Andrew T. Payne and
Earl T. Mcintyre, graduated recently from the
Marine Corps Basic
Combat
Engineer
Course
at
Marine
Corps
Engineer
SchooL Marine Corps
Base, Camp Lejeune,

Ohio Valley
Home Health
names employee
of the month

N.C.
Payne. a graduate of
Alexander
High
School of Albany in
2009, is the son of
Susan . and Larr T.
Payne
of
Albany.
Mcintyre is the son of
Darcie D. West of
Marietta and John A.
Mcintyre of Coolville.
He graduated from
Federal Hocking High
School of Stewart in
2008. Both Payne and
Mcintyre joined the
Marine
Corps
Reserves in March

:2010. '
During their fiveweek training course,
Payne and Mcintyre
received instruction in
the fundamentals of
engineering support
for
combat
units,
including the procedures for building and
repairing
bridges,
roads and field fortifications.
Both also
received training on
demolition concepts,
land mine warfare and
camouflage
techniques.

Vtsit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

GALLIPOLIS
Christina Cain, CNA, is
e November 2010
hio
Valley
Home
•
Health, Inc. employee of
the month, according to
April Burgett, administrator of Ohio Valley
Home Health, Inc.
Cain joined the team at
Ohio · Valley
Home
Health.

Inc.

.•

know if this fellow is a
stalker or not. I suppose
if you work in the arts,
you will always have fans
who become hooked on ·
your work. Evidence that
they are interested in
what you are doing
would include buying
your paintings, going to
your openings and wondering what you are
working on next. So far,
your guy fits the profile
of a fan. But the same
behavior could apply to
the stalker! The fact that
the guy has turned up at
your bus stop is rather ·
worrying. If he were to
show up at your home,
you definitely would
want to get someone official involved. But there
are some things you can
do in the meantime.
Do you know who this
·person is? Why not run a
background check on
him and see if he has "
anything that would concern you in his past. If he ·
doesn't, that certainly
does not rule him out as a ·
stalker. You don't have to
be friendly when you talk
to him. Let him know
that yol} are a private person. Have someone tell
him that you need your
space to concentrate on
your work. If he's just an
overly enthusiastic fan,
he will respect these ·
boundaries. In any case,
let your colleagues and
friends and family know ..
of your concerns. This •
isn't something you
keep
inside
should
because you are embarrassed. This all may be
innocent, but it is good tq
be on your guard in case
you need to take your , ·
concerns to another level.

(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

Calendar

Military News
e ocal marines
complete basic
engineering
course

2010

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Avoid holiday spending hangover
were made to laws govAt this time of year.
erning these cards. For
many people overindulge,
gift cards sold on or after
whether it's overeating or
August 22, 2010, the
drinking too much at hol· Card
Credit
iday parties or spending
Accountability,
too much on gifts and
Responsibility
and
decorations. You'll regret
Disclosure
(CARD)
Act
e forn1er the next momof
2009
requires
that:
•
g: but with overspend• Money loaded on gift
ing you may not feel the
cards
must not expire for
hangover effect until the
at
least
five years from
bills come due in January.
Jason Alderman
date of purchase or after
Here are a few tips for
funds were last added.
managing
holiday
• If the card expires but
expenses to avoid a holi- and bank statements to
the funds haven't, you can
jog your memory.
day spending hangover:
Budgeting.
Before
• Arrange gift lotteries request a free replacement
spending a dime on holi- with family. friends and card.
• Inactivity and service
day expenses, calculate coworkers so you each
fees may not be charged
how much you can afford buy fewer, nicer gifts.
• Suggest pooling until after 12 months of
relative to your overall
budget. Many financial resources to make a si~e­ inactivity; after that, only
planners
recommend able group charitable con- one such fee may be
spending no more than tribution rather than indi- deducted from the balance each month.
1.5 percent of annual vidual gifts to each other.
• All fees must be clearGet organized. Once
on
holiday
income
ly
disclosed on the card
you've
determined
your
expenses. Consider:
or
its
packaging.
overall
holiday
budget,
• Will your savings
A few additional tips:
cover a few months' make a list or spreadsheet
• Note return policies
expenses in case of a lay- with columns for:
off, unexpected medical
• Everyone you need to for stores and online
relatives, shopping sites. Watch for
bills or another financial shop for friends, coworkers, ser- deadlines, exclusions for
emergency?
sale or clearance items
• Can you pay off all vice providers, etc.
•· Spending limits and and restocking charges.
A:&gt;liday-related bilJs with• Retain receipts. Many
gift alternatives for each
~ a couple of months?
retailers will refund the
• Do you already strug- person.
• How much you actual- price difference if an item
gle to pay your monthly
ly spend on each gift. goes on sale within a few
bills?
• Would you need to (Overspending on one weeks after purchase.
• Check whether your
suspend retirement sav- present means trimming
credit card agreement
somewhere else)
ings to buy gifts?
• What you gave each provides free product
Scale back. Examine
extensions
how much you've spent in person - to avoid giving warranty
past years and look for them the same thing next and/or price protection
(i.e., will reimburse the
areas to trim. Consider: year.
gifts for family, friends
• What each person difference if you find an
gave
you. That way, you identical item for less).
and coworkers; decorations; new clothes/acces- won't accidentally "re(Jason Alderman directs
sories: gift wrap and gift" something to the
Vrsa's financial education
cards; special meals; same person.
year-end gratuities; and
• Other expenses (deco- programs. To Follow Jason
Alderman on Twitter:
travel-related expenses. A rations. etc.)
few tips:
Gift cards: If you give www.twitter. com/Practical
• Review old credit card gift cards. several changes Money.)

-

Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, Nov. 23

CHESTER
Past
Councilors Club, D of A,
7 p.m. at the lodge hall.

Other events
Saturday, Nov. 27

LUCASVILLE
Donnie Boggs, Rutland,
will perform at 7 p.m.,
Ohio Southern Opry,
Lucasville.
~
~

Keeping Meigs County
informed

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The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe • 992-2155

1-877-267-3266
'
www.core.com

Thanksgiving Day
Gallipolis Urgent Care
lpm-6pm
Jackson, Athens, Meigs Urgent Cares
12pm-6pm

January,

2007 as a CNA. She was
born in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.. and resides in
Vinton with her husband, Jason, and three
Jaylynn,
children,
Briana and Jason, Jr.
Cain attended River
Valley High School and
Belford Online School.
Christina enjoys camping, boating and spending time with her family.
Cain stated what she
likes best about working
at Ohio Valley Home
Health is, "I enjoy working with the staff and
Knowing we
making a difference
in the patient's lives by
helping with their everyday needs."
Cain received a check
for $50. a certificate, a
reserved parking spot for
employee of the month.
and her name engraved
on the 20 I0 employee of
the Month plaque.

Friday, November 26
Gallipolis Urgent Care
Meigs Urgent Care
Jackson Urgent Care
Athens Urgent Care

l pm-9pm
11 am-9pm
11am-9pm
9am-9pm

Saturday, November 27
Gallipolis Urgent Care
Meigs Urgent Care
jackson Urgent Care
Athens Urgent Care

HOLZER
CLINIC

l pm-9pm
llam-9pm
11am-9pm
9am-9pm

Sunday, November 28
Gallipolis Urgent Care
Meigs Urgent Care
Jackson Urgent Care
Athens Urgent Care

1pm-9pm
11am-9pm
llam-9pm
9am-9pm

Q

...

'

�:co

-

=

....

c

•

a

a

PageA4

'T he Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 23,

2010 _

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cotrgress sl~all make tto law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prollibititrg tile free
exercise thereof; or abridgiug tile freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govemment for a redress of grievatrces.

/~.1'

(l!ll/l~

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

OUTSIDE· OPINION

T

Intolerance good for
immigration policy

ANALYS I S

Sometimes intolerance can be a genuine expression of love. As an example, the idea of protecting
our borders and tightening 01.1r immigration pol~cy
has a lot of people pointing fingers and ustng
words like ·racist' or 'bigot' at those of us who
take a dim view of our porous borders. But it's not
about that at all. It's the fact that we have tolerated that situation and accepted illegal immigrants
into our nation and our economy that has produced the current crisis. That's why maybe a little
intolerance is what we need to shine a new light
on the issue.
The average amount of time it takes for someone to become an American citizen is several
years. Some people are paying thousands of dollars in government application fees, and several
thousand more if they employ an immigration
attorney. So, how do you think they feel when
they make an effort to h~nor our laws and r~gula-.
tions. but see us toleratmg a vast populatiOn of
illeoa] immigrants just because they're already
her~? It's not fair. and one of the founding principles of this country is fairness and justice ..
Intolerance of illegal immigration is a way of
ensuring justice for those who are going through
the legal process of immigration.
As soon as someone raises their voice about our
borders being as porous as a sieve, that person is
labeled as a racist or a bigot, and that's just tidiculous. ·We have immigration laws already, and we
have people who obey them and those who disobey them. We should reward those who are in the
country legally, and punish those who aren't.
That's what laws are for, and being in favor of a
policies that protect our borders is not an inherently racist or bigoted position. It's about protectina America and Americans. But we have so succu~nbed to this group mentality that we can only
talk about the policy issues that don't offend people of color, when it has nothing to d~ with ethnicities . It has to do with national secunty and the
justice all Americans want for themselves. It's an
example of over-tolerance - tolerance that goes
to such an extreme that it actually undercuts its
orioinal aoals of being fair to everyone. So.
ao~nst th~t landscape. I think a little intolerance is
j~st what we need to set things right again.
(Darrell Ahrens is a former U.S. Marine, Air
Force fighter pilot, high school teacher and pastor. He is the author of "Divine Love/Di\·ine
Intolerance.")

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be stgned and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing tssues. not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted fo~ publication

Assertive Karzai bewilders allie_BY

KATHY GANNON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

With the war at a critical stage,
Afghanistan's president is publicly berating his NATO allies,
criticizing military tactics and
occasionally reminding them that
they are not the only players in his
country.
President Hamid Karzai 's
behavior has left his international
partners bewildered as they try to
decipher his motives - whether
he's trying to provoke them. play
' to a domestic audience or ensure
his long-term survival by portraying himself as no puppet of the
American-led coalition. All this
comes as the NATO alliance prepares to unveil plans that would
keep international soldiers at the
forefront of the combat role until

2014.
In his most recent outburst,
Karzai demanded in an interview
last weekend that NATO reduce
its military operations and stop
what the military believes is its
most successful tactic. night raids
against suspected Taliban leaders.
NATO's senior civilian representative in Afghanistan, Mark
Sedwill, said Karzai's comments
were unproductive, especially
since they came days before a
meeting in Lisbon that is meant to
finalize the 20 14 target date for a
gradual transition of security to
Afghan forces.
"Clearly it is not helpful,"
Sedwill said. "We have different
perspectives, that's natural. It is
much better if we work those different perspectives out in private."
Then, just ahead of a weekend
NATO summit he will attend,
Karzai met Wednesday with the
top U.S. commander and said he
supported NATO's military campaign and, reluctantly, its nighttime special operations raids. a
senior NATO official.
The
hourlong
meeting

Wednesday in Kabul between
Karzai and Gen. David Petraeus.
the senior NATO commander in
Afghanistan, helped smooth over
the controversy that followed the
interview, said the official, who
was among those briefed on the
meeting. The official spoke on
condition of anonymity to
describe the high-level discus-

sion.
It wasn't the first time the mercurial Karzai has raised eyebrows
and befuddled many of his supporters in the West.
Last August, Karzai stood
beside
Iranian
president
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the
Iranian railed against the United
States, and Karzai later admitted
to taking bag:&gt; of money from
Iran. He accused the European
Union and the United States of
manipulating last September's
presidential elections in an
attempt to put his competitor
Abdullah .Abdullah in power.
More 'recently, he accused the
United States of wasting billions
of dollars meant for reconstruction and then announced he was
shutting down private security
firms that guard international aid
orgamzations, forcing them to
scramble for alternative, made-inAfghanistan security.
Sedwill, the NATO representative, said it wasn't clear whether
Karzai 's recent comments were
driven by a desire to pander to
public opmion.
"I don't have a window into
other men's souls," he said.
But Karzai's cnticism is striking a chord among Afghans.
''There is a widespread feeling
that things just don't add up,·· said
Martine van Bijlert, co-founder
and director of the independent
Afghan Analysts Network. Most
Afghans, she said, wonder ·~if the
foreigners really came to fight the
Taliban, with all their troops and
money. why is the insurgency
only getting stronger?"

The Daily Sentinel
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The international community •.
often cites security as their top
priority, yet Afghans see them as a '
source of insecurity. The West
wants to help rebuild Afghanistan.
yet most Afghans bemoan the ·
Jack of reconstruction. NATO
says they are in Afghanistan to
help crush the insurgency, yet it is
burgeoning. Another goal is to .help bring stability and good governance. yet most Afghans see
corruption as runaway and good
governance a distant dream.
"There are a lot of misunderstandings," said van Bijlert. "Both
see the other side as erratic,
duplicitous, not honest about their '
own agenda.··
Andrew Wilder, an analyst from
the U.S. Institute of Peace who • .,
has spent decades in Afghanistan
and Pakistan, said Karza·· ·
attacks on the international co
munity are seen by some as a
attempt to divert attention away
from mounting criticism over cor- ·
ruption in his administration.
"I think Karzai is quite skillful
at using these confrontations over
tactical issues. which end up con- "
suming large amounts of time and ·
energy of top international policy- y.
makers .. . to distract attention
from more important strategic
issues that he does not want the ,
international community dealing
with."
....,
Abdullah Abdullah. who lost to (.
Karzai in the fraud-ridden 2009
presidential elec_tion and an oppo- ,;
nent of Karzai ~s effort to make . "
'l
peace with the Taliban, said :
Karzai's second term in office is .&lt;.\
about his survival.
'•
To survive politically, Abdullah
said Karzai was seeking to ; ..
enhance hts image as a fierce
nationalist.
•
.
"His main aim is to stay i
poweJ;," Abdullah said. "Part of it
is to emerge as a nationalist. He is
trying to show Afghans. 'I am
strong."'

Mail Subscri ption
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�I

Obituaries·
Elmer C. Finlaw, Jr.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 23,. 2010

Expanded Recovery Act tax
credits help homeowners
winterize homes, save energy

STAFF REPORT
Elmer C. Finlaw, Jr., 84, Pomeroy, passed away at
his residence on Nov. 17, 2010. He was born on July
WASHINGTON - People can now weatherize
10, 1926, son of the late Elmer Fin1aw, Sr. and
Carrie Allensworth Finlaw. He was an Army their homes and be rewarded for their efforts.
an of World War ll. He was a retired mail car- According to the Internal Revenue Service, homeand enjoyed the outdoors for most of his life. owners making energy-saving improvements this fall
•
He attended church at Mount Union Church, can cut their winter heating bills and lower their 2010
Carpenter Baptist Church and the Harrisonville tax bill as wen.
Last year's Recovery Act expanded two home
Community Church.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by: 1energy tax credits: the nonbusiness energy property
brothers, Robert Milo Finlaw and Richard Finlaw credit and the residential energy efficient property
and his wife Gertrude; sister, Alice Cappel; and an credit.
infant brother.
He is survived by his wife, Avice Toban Finlaw of Nonbusiness Energy Property Credit
Pomeroy; son and daughter-in-law, Brent and Patty
Finlaw of Pomeroy; sister, Joan Sordan of Florida, a
This credit equals 30 percent of what a homeowner
brother-in-law, Tom Cappel Sr., Ontario, Canada spends on eligible energy-saving improvements, up to
and a nephew, Tommy and Mary Ellen Cappel, Jr., a maximum tax credit of $1 ,500 for the combined
Ontario, Canada and several nieces. nephews and 2009 and 2010 tax years. The cost of certain high-efficousins.
ciency heating and air conditioning systems, water
A memorial service was held at 2 p.m., Monday, heaters and stoves that burn biomass all qualify, along
Nov. 22, 2010 at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral with labor costs for installing these items. In addition,
Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Robert Vance offici- the cost of energy-efficient windows and skylights,
ating.
energy-efficient doors, qualifying insulation and cerAn on-line registry is available at www.andersontain roofs also qualify for the credit, though the cost
mcdaniel.com.
of installing these items does not count.
By spending as little as $5,000 before the end of the
year on eligible energy-saving improvements, a
homeowner can save as much as $1,500 on his or her
Mary Elizabeth Ingels, 84,. New Haven, W.Va., 2010 fe&amp;ral income tax return. Due to limits based
passed away on Nov. 22, 2010.
on tax liability, amounts spent on eligible energy-savwas born on Aug. 31, 1926, daughter of the ing improvements in 2009, other credits claimed by a
,
aul Rose and Virginia (Sebrell) Somerville, Sr. particular taxpayer and other factors, actual tax savwas educated in the Mason County School ings will vary. These tax savings are on top of any
System and was a graduate of Southern Beauty energy savings that may result.
School. She was an avid golfer and was a member
of Hidden Valley Country Club and Riverside Golf Residential
Club.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by Energy Efficient Property Credit
her husband, George Ingels and her son, Zachary T.
Homeowners going green should also check out a
Ingels.
second
tax credit designed to spur investment in alterShe is survived by: sons, Jason (Dianna) Ingels,
native
energy
equipment. The residential energy effiYork (Dee) Ingels; daughter, Candace Ingels; brother, Paul R. Somerville, Jr.; grandsons, Colte Ingels, cient property credit equals 30 percent of what a
Colbe Ingels, Nicholas Ingels, Connor Ingels; homeowner spends on qualifying property such as
granddaughters, Peyton Ingels, Tonya Ervin; great solar electric systems, solar hot water heaters, geotgrandchildren, Colton Ervin, Caden Ervin, Cyan hermal heat pumps, wind turbines, and fuel cell propErvin, Alexa Ingels; nephew, Ty Somerville; niece, erty. Generally, labor costs are included when figuring
Paula Somerville; lifelong friend, Billie June this credit. Also, except for fuel cell property, no cap
exists on the amount of credit available.
Hayes.
Not all energy-efficient improvements qualify for
A graveside service will be conducted at 10:30
a.m., Nov. 24,2010, at Kirkland Memorial Gardens. these tax credits. For that reason, homeowners should
At Mary's request there will be no visitation. In check the manufacturer's tax credit certification statelieu of flowers, contributions may be made to New ment before purchasing or installing any of these
Haven United Methodist Church, 511 5th Street, improvements. The certification statement can usualNew Haven, WV 25265. Arrangements were com- ly be found on the manufacturer's website or with the
pleted by Anderson Funeral Home. An on-line reg- product packaging. Normally, a homeowner can rely
istry is available at www.andersonfb.com
on this certification.
The IRS cautions that the manufacturer's certificais different from the Department of Energy's.
tion
~elen
Energy Star label, and not all Energy Star labeled
Helen Jane "Sam'' Pickens. 80, of Racine passed products qualify for the tax credits.
Eligible homeowners can claim both of these credaway on Nov. 20, 2010 at the Rocksprings
its when they file their 2010 federal income tax return.
Rehabilitation Center.
She was born in Harrisonville on Nov. 24, 1929, Because these are credits, not deductions, they
daughter of the late Ray and Lena Turner Alkire. increase a taxpayer's refund or reduce the tax owed.
She was a member of the Carmel Sutton United An eligible taxpayer can claim these credits, regardMethodist Church. She was also a 50-year member less of whether he or she itemizes deductions on
of the Racine Order of Eastern Star #134, the Schedule A. Use Form 5695, Residential Energy
Racine Grange #2606, and the Ladies Auxilary of Credits, to figur~ and claim these credits.
the Fraternal Order of Eagles Post 2171.
She is survived by: her children. Jane (Mike) Fry
of Columbus, Jimmie (Sharon) Johnson of Racine
and Joe (Brenda) Johnson of Portland; grandchildren, Amy (Frank) Blake, Eric (Kelly) Wagner,
Tasha J. Johnson, Tyler (Tara Rose) Johnson, Adam
Johnson, Dustyn Johnson, Gabriel (Sarah) Edwards, MHS winter sports meeting
Wendy (Joe) Benedetto and Stac~y (Eric)
POMEROY -The OHSAA mandatory winter
Meskimen; great grandchildren, Jayda Hawkins,
Korie Hickel, Nolan Blake, Christian Benedetto, sports meeting for Meigs High School has been
Brianna Benedetto, Carter Benedetto, Andrew scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 23, 6:30 p.m. at
Meskirn,en and Jacob Meskimen; sister, Lena the high school. All athletes who plan to partic(James) Hewitt of Columbus; brother, Bob (Francis) ipate in the winter sports program at the high
Alkire of Harrisonville; sister-in-law, Jean Alkire of·
school must attend with a parent or guardian,
Racine.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in Ron Hill, athletic director announced.
by her brothers and sisters, Charles Alkire,
Alkire,
Virginia Burke and Coelle Campbell.
•
Thanksgiving dinner
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m.,
Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2010, at Anderson McDaniel
RUTLAND- The Rutland Church of God is
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Dwayne
Stutler officiating. The family will receive friends holding its annual Community Thanksgiving
one hour prior to the services. Burial will follow at Dinner beginning at 5 p.m., Wednesday, Nov.
Wells Cemetery near Harrisonville. The Racine 23.
Order of Eastern Star #134 will conduct a service at
11 a.m. prior to the funeral.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be U'pward basketball
made to Carmel Sutton United Methodist Church,
Racine Grange or the Racine Order of Eastern Star registration
#134. A registry is available on-line at www.anderMIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Church of
sonmcdaniel.cotn.
Christ is taking registrations for its seventh
year of Upward Basketball and Cheerleading.
This is for children ages five through sixth
grade. The last registration and evaluation day
is from 12:30 p.m.-4:30p.m., Saturday, Nov. 27
at the Family Life Center on the corner of Fifth
and Main Streets. For more information contact the church at 992-2914 during office hours
or David Schenkelberg at 416-6866.

Mary Elizabeth Ingels

Jane uSamn Pickens

Local Briefs

Keeping
·Meigs
County
informed

Church to
hold holiday bazaar
POMEROY - The New Beginnings United
Methodist Church, Second Street, Pomeroy,
wil1 have a Christmas bazaar at the church 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. on Dec. 2
There will be a variety of handmade gifts and
crafts, along with a bake sale, and soup and
sandwich luncheons. Both eat-in and carry-out
will be available. All proceeds from the bazaar
will be given to mission projects.

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Sentinel
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740-992-2156

~·

Meigs County Forecast
Thesday:
Showers,
mainly before noon. High
near 61. South wind 8 to
10 mph becoming west.
Chance of precipitation is
90 percent. New rainfall
amounts between a quarter and half of an inch
possible.
Tuesday Night: Clear,
with a low around 30.
Northwest wind around 5
mph becoming calm.
Wednesday:
Increasing clouds, with a
high near 52. Calm wind
becoming east between 4
and 7 mph.
Wednesday Night: A
chance of showers, with
thunderstorms also possible after 1 a.m. Cloudy,
with a low around 44.
Southeast wind between 3
and 7 m_ph. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
New'
rainfall
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch,
excer.t higher amounts
possible in thunderstorms.
Thanksgiving Day: A

chance of showers and
thunderstorms,
then
showers likely and possibly a thunderstorm after 4
p.m. Cloudy, with a high
near 59. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent.
New rainfall amounts
between a quarter and
half of an inch possible.
Thursday
Night:
Showers. Low around 36.
Chance of precipitation is
80 percent.
Friday: Showers likely.
Partly sunny, with a high
neat 37. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
Friday Night: Partly
cloudy, with' a low around
25.
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 42.
Saturday
Night:
Mostly clear, with a low
around 24.
Sunday: Sunny, with a
high near 46.
Sunday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around
26.
Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 49.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 35.99
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 59.75
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 52.45
Big Lots (NYSE)- 29.57
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) -32.85
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 60.75
Qlntury Alum (NASDAQ) -14.44
Champion (NASDAQ) -1.16
CtmlilJ~(N.ASDP0)-3.00

City HoldirYJ (NASDAQ)- 32.74
Collins (NYSE)- 54.87
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.80
US Bank (NYSE)- 24.65
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 16.03
HaOOy-DaVdsoo (NYSE)-31.58
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.51
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.13
Ltd Brands (NYSE) -33.23
Norfolk So (NYSE)-61.06
OVBC (NASDAQ) -19.40

BBT (NYSE)- 24.18
Peoples (NASDAQ) -13.32
Pepsico (NYSE) -64.70
Premier (NASDAQ) -6.25
Rockwell (NYSE) - 66.95
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)-9.08
Royal Dutch Shell- 64.32
Seals 1-WoJ (NASDAQ)-64.62
Wal-Mart (NYSE)- 54.38
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.72
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.93
Worthington (NYSE) -15.99

Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 22, 2010, prolAded by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley·
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member S/PC.

Local Briefs
AARP driving class
GALLIPOLIS - A safe driving class sponsored by AARP and the Gallipolis Post of the
Ohio State Highway Patrol will be offered from
8 a.m.-noon on Tuesday, Nov. 30 at the patrol
post, 396 Jackson Pike. Registration forms can
be completed at the post. The deadline to register
is Nov. 24. Classroom size is limited to 25. The
fee is $12 for AARP members and $14 for nonmembers. Checks or money orders should be
made payable to AARP. AARP members must
show proof of membership.

Christmas craft, bake sale
VINTON - The Vinton Volunteer Fire Dept.
Auxiliary will host a Christmas craft and bake
sale from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday. Dec. 4 at
Vinton Town Hall. All proceeds will benefit the
Vinton VFD. Santa Claus will be available for
photos. For information, call 388-8538.

Support group
seeking troop addresses
UNDATED- The River Cities Military Family
Support Group is preparing for the 5th annual holiday mailings to the troops who will not be home
for Christmas. The organization is in the process
of updating troop addresses and seeking to add
new ones. Send addresses to RCMFSC, P.O. Box
1131, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631 or email to kskidmore57@aol.com or mcw2947@yahoo.com.
Include a local contact name and phone number or
email address. Deadline is Tuesday, Nov. 30.

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online at
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Tuesday, November 23, 2~10

The.Daily Sentinel• Page A6

CD Release
Brian J. Reed/photo
Gallipolis-based Magic
Mama Band, fronted by
Jenny Walker and Mark
Ward, debuted the
release of their CD, "Bad
Girl" at a reception and
show last Saturday at
Court Grill. The band
has earned a name
appearing locally and
competing in B[ues competitions, including the
Big Bend Blues
Competition.

Pope seeks to start debate on condoms and AIDS
BY VICTOR SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY ~
Pope Benedict XVI
sought to "kkk-start a
debate" when he said
some condom use may
be justified. Vatican
insiders say, ra1smg
hopes the church may be
starting to back away
from a complete ban and
allow condoms to play a
role in the battle against
AIDS .
Just a year after he
said condoms could be
making the AIDS crisis
worse, Benedict said that
for some people, such as
male prostitutes. using
them could be a step in
assuming moral responsibility because the
. intent is to "reduce the
risk of infection ."
The pope did not suggest using condoms as
birth control. which is
banned by the church, or
mention the use of condoms by married couples where one partner is
infected .
StilL some saw the
pope ' s comments as an
attempt to move the
church forward on the
issue of condoms and
health risks.
For years, divisions in
the Vatican have held up
any effort to reconcile
the church's ban on con-

traception with the need
to help halt the spread of
AIDS. Theologians have
~tudied the possibility of
condoning limited condom use as a lesser evil.
and reports ·years ago
said the Vatican was
considering a document
on the issue, though
opposition apparently
blocked publication.
One senior Vatican
ofticial said Monday he
believed the pope just
·:wanted to kick-start the
debate." He spoke on
condition of anonymity
because of the sensitivity of the issue.
For the deeply conservative
Benedict,
it
seemed like a bold leap
into modernity - and a
nightmare for many at
the Vatican. The pope's
comments sparked a
fierce debate among
Catholics.
politicians
and health workers that
is certain to reverberate
for a long time despite
frantic damage control at.
the Vatican.
In a sign of the tensiOns, the Holy See's
chief spoke~man, the
Rev. Federico Lombardi,
rushed out a statement to
counter any impression
the church might lift its
ban on artificial birth
control.
Lombardi
stressed the pope's comment neither "reforms

nor changes" church of the Times," first
teaching.
appeared Saturday in the
newspaper,
While much of the Vatican
world. hailed Benedict's L' Osservatore Romano.
statement as a major
Luigi Accattoli, a vetshift toward lifting the eran Vatican journalist
church ban, conserva- who will be on a Vatican
tives insisted the pontiff panel launching the
was not ''justifying" book Tuesday,
said
condom usc from a theo- Benedict had taken a
"long-awaited" step that
logical point of view.
Many
Vatican only the highest authoriobservers were struck by ty of the church could
the example ·the pope d 0."
Also on the panel is an
used - that of a male
prostitute - though the influential prelate who
comments clearly were showed his indepennot meant to condone dence last year when he
prostitution or homosex- argued that Brazilian
ual conduct. which the doctors should not be
church condemns as excommunicated
for
"intrinsically
disor- aborting the twin fetuses
dered."
,of a 9-year-old child
And while Benedict who was allegedly raped
made only a tiny open- by
her
stepfather.
Rino
ing, he stepped where no Monsignor
pope has gone since Fisichella argued the
'Pope Paul VI's 1968 doctors were saving the
encyclical "Humanae girl's life and should be
Vitae," which was sup- shown mercy; he was
posed to have closed forced out as head of the
debate on church policy Vatican's bioethics advibarring Catholic;) from sory committee for his
using condoms and other stance.
artificial contra,ception.
Benedict previously
Notably, the pope had shown little sign of
chose to make his state- budging on the issue of
ment in an interview condoms. Last year
with a German journal- while en route to Africa,
ist, Peter Seewald. and the continent hardest hit
not in an official docu- by HIV, he drew critiment.
Excerpts
of cism from many health
Seewald's book, "Light workers by saying conof the World: The Pope, doms not only did not
the Church and the Signs help stop the spread of

AIDS but exacerbated
the problem.
With Benedict prone
to gaffes and crises such as his remarks
likening Jslam to violence that caused a fury
in the Muslin world and
his lifting of the excommunication
of
a
Holocaust-denier
some wondered whether
it was again a communication problem.
However,
Seewald
wrote in the preface that
Benedict had reviewed
the text and made only
small
corrections.
Seewald, who wrote two
other books of interviews with Benedict
while he was a cardinal.
spent six hours over six
days with Benedict at
the papal summer residence
in
Castel
Gandolfo in July.
The
German-born
pope appears comfortable talking with his fellow countrymen. The
only other interview the
pope has given was to
German television in
2006.
Beyond the debate
within
the
Roman
Catholic church on its
condoms policy, it is
unclear how much effect
the shift could have on
health pulky in Africa.
Kevin O'Reilly, a

World
Health
Organization
AIDS
expert in Geneva, said
the pope's comments
"will remove some '
riers in Africa."
"The fact that t e
Vatican is demonstrating
any flexibility at all. and
is considering the realworld use of condoms,
is
encouraging,"
O'Reilly said.
"Some of the churches
there have been actively
campaigning
against
condom use," he added.
"But I don't think there
are a lot of people making decisions about condom use while worrying
about what the Vatican
is up to.''
Still, Sister Christine
Schenk. executive director of FutureChurch. a
liberal church reform
group in the United
States. said the pope
expressed a principle
about the benefits of
using condoms to prevent disease that
apply to women too
"You can proba
take from that example
and extend that to other
examples," Schenk said.
''Clearly. there will be
many women who will
also be prevented from
getting HIV if you look
at the principle of what
he said."

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
Nov. 27 between 9 a.m.
and 3 p.m. Butcher added
that those in need of lim-

ited 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 information on
Upward Sporti~o&gt; or the
new Chester CommunitY:
Center.
call
Bethel
Worship Center at 740667-6793. or visit the
church web site .
www.bethelwc.org.

cl

Church Notebook
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. 27.. 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.

Annstrong
marks 17 years
at Mt. Cannel
BIDWELL
Mt.
Carmel
Missionary
Baptist Church will celebrate the 17th pastoral
anniversary
of
Moderator, Rev Gene A.
Armstrong on Sunday,
Nov. 28. Morning worship begins at 10:45 a.m.
Afternoon worship will
begm at 3 p.m. Rev
Calvin Minnis. Pastor of
Corinth Baptist Church
along with the choir and

congregation will be the
afternoon guests. Dinner
will be served following
morning
worship.
Everyone welcome.

to take advantage of
either service. Visit our
Web site www.chapelhillchurchofchrist.org.

Church
of Christ meets

Bethel Center
extends program
registration

GALLIPOLIS - The
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are as follows: 9:30 a.m., Bible
class; [0:30 a.m., worship: 5 p.m. , evening
assembly. Bill Mead will
be speaking Nov. 28. The
church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for Bible
study. ln 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 arc
Christians who would be
glad to study the Bible
with you personally in
your home. Just .send
your name and postal
address to the address
above. or call 446-1494

ITPPERS PLAINS Kris Butcher, Bethel
Worship Center\ youth
pastor and director of
Bethel's ne\V Upv.•ard
Sports program, noted
that registration for basketball and checrlcading
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 10 a.m. and 3
p.m. Monday through
Friday. and at the Chester

Visit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

Your online source for news

�A Sp.:;aJ Supplmam.t trt

The Gallipolis Daily T.a,......--.
Point Pleasant .llCJDSI'cr
The Daily~·!.&amp;&amp;&amp;,...

•

�PIIE2

Salads
Honeymoon Salad

· 112 pk~ miniature marshmellows
1 c. mmced maraschino cherries
1/3 c. maraschino cherry juice
10 az can marxiarin Oranges (drained)
14 oz can crushed pineapple
(drained)
1/2 pint sour cream
1 c. flaked coconut
Measure all ingredients into a
serving bowl. Gently stir to blend.
Cover and Chill
Kim Code,
Gallipolis

Breads
Easy Potato Rolls
2/3 c. sugar
2 pkgs (1/4 oz. each) active dry
yeast
2/3 c. Crisco
1 c. mashed potatoes
1 1/3 c. warm water (divided)
2 1/2 tsp slat
2 eggs
5 to 5 112 c. flour
In a large mixing bowl, cream
sugar and Crisco. Add potatoes,
slat and eggs. In a small .bowl, dissolve yeast in 2/3 c. water. Add to
creamed mixture. Beat in 2 cups
flour and remaining water. Add
enough remaining flour to fonn a
soft dough. Shape into a ball; do
not knead. Place in a greased
bowl, turning once to grease top.
Cover and let rise in a warm place
until doubled, about 1 hour. Punch
dough down; divide into thirds.
Shape each portion into IS balls
and arrange in 3 greased 9-inch
round baking pans. Cover and ~et
rise, until doubled, about 30 mmutes. Bake at 375 degrees for 20 to
25 minutes. Remove from pans to
cool on wire racks.
Gloria Curry

..

Cherry Coke Salad

•

1 can crushed pineapple (20
ounces)
112 c. water
2 packages cherry gelatin (3
ounces each)
1 can cherry pie filling (21
ounces)
3/4 c. cola
Drain pineapple, reserving juice;
set pineapple aside. In n saucepan
or microwave, bring pineapple
juice and water to a boil. Add gelatin; stir until dissolved. Stir in pie
filling and cola. Pour into a servin~ bowl. Refrigerate until slightly
thickened. Fold in reserved pineapple. Refrigerate until firm. 10-12
servings

Zucchini Cornbread
4 eggs, beaten
1/2 c. sugar
1 c. veg. oil
3 c. shredded zucchini
112 c. flour
I 1/2 c. cotta~e cheese
2 1/2 c. self-nsing
Bake at 425 degrees for
minutes or until golden brown in a
9x 13 inch pan.
Given to Wando Cox by the late
Fra11cis Pinkerman

Refrigerator Rolls
6 c. flour
2 packs yeast
2 eggs
2 c. warm water
1/2 c. shortening (Oil)
112 c. sugar
1 tsp salt
Mix all ingredients together,
then put in refrigerator and let set
overnight. Then roll out on bread
board. Cut and bake at 400
degrees till golden brown.
Sharon Bishop
Jackson, Ohio

•

�PilEI

~ a in

Dishes
Barbecue Chopped Ham
2 lb chopped ham
1 c. ketchup
2 Thsp vinegar
112 c. Brown Sugar
112 c. Chopped onions
1 Thsp Barbecue Seasonino
Fry onions, heat rest of ing~edi­
ents, except for meat. Pour the
onions and other heated
ingredients over the ham and
baked for 3 hours in a slow oven.
Esta Downard
Vinton, Ohio

Wild Loins
4-6 venison tenderloins sliced
'
medium
1/4 tsp. Garlic
tsp. meat t~nderizer
tsp. seasonmg salt
ash of salt
Dash of pepper
Italian dressmg
Rub garlic, meat tenderizer seasonin_g salt, salt and pepper o~ tenderl?ms. Pour ~n Italian dressing.
M.annate ovemtght in sealed contamer. Place on heated grill (add
marinade drippings). Cook to preference.

41

Denise (Co.\) Phillips

Easy Chili
3 Thsps. olive oil

5 lb. ground chuck
2 large onions (diced)
I Thsp. minced garlic
1 (28 oz) can tomatoes
3 c. bottled BBQ sauce
3 Thsp. chili powder
1 Thsp. salt
l Thsp. Cumin
4 (15 1/~ oz) cans kidney beans
Heat oil m l3!~e heavy skillet.
Brown the meat m the oil with
~&gt;nion !Uld garlic. Add remaining
mgredtents and mix well. Cover
and si.mmer for an hour, Stirring
occasiOnally. Serve hot over
cra~~ers or tortilla chips if desired.
Chth tastes best after refrigerating
ovemig_ht and reheating. Makes 810 servmgs. If you want it thinner
add tomato juice to warm and thi~
up.
Options: Can use cubes of beef
instead of ground chuck add fresh
peppers, or add ? cup instant potatoes for last l 0 minutes of cooking
to thin it.
Wanda Cox
Gallipolis, Ohio

Oven Baked Chicken Legs

Salt an~ pepp~r ~hicken legs.
One at a tlm~. dtp m cooking oil.
Then coat wtth flour, arrange in a
shallow baking pan. Bake in preheated oven 350 to 400 degrees
u~til brown. or done. Spray pan
wtth non-sttck spray or lightly
grease to help prevent sticking.
Margaret Reynolds
Continued on Page 4

Red's
Bollen
Garage
tm5i
14727 Statelt.l4 ·
•14
F

Bidwel~biD

740-388-8147 888-tuw-8147
We'U fJ&amp; Mtre !!Ita tl• 94

'W&amp;u

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�PIIE4

Main
Dishes

(continued)
Best Enr Breakfast
4 slices bread
I lb sausage
I c. cheddar cheese shredded
6 eggs
2 c. milk
I tsp mustard
I tsp salt
Dash of pepper
Mushrooms. drained. optional
You can add a little onion when
browning sausage if you want.
Tear bread and place in ureased
13x9'' baking dish. Brm~n and
drain sausage. Spoon sausage over
bread. Sprinkle with cheese. Beat
together eggs, milk, mustard. salt,
and pepper. Pour over other layers
and bake at 350 degrees for one
hour. This can be assembled the
night .before and baked the next
!llornmg. If need be. you can
mcrease the number of eo-o-s and
add a little extra milk and~ couple
extra slices of bread.
Shelby Duncan

Li'l Cheddar Meat Loaves
I egg
3/4 c. milk
I c. (4oz) shredded cheddar
cheese
1/2 c. quick-cooking oats
J tsp salt
1/2 c. chopped onion
2/3 c. ketchup
I lb lean ground beef
I f2 c. packed brown sugar
I l/2 tsp prepared mustard
~n a b~&gt;'";'l, beat the egg and
mtlk. Sttr 111 cheese, oats. onion
and salt. Add beef and mix well.
Shape into eight loaves: place in a
g!eased 13x9x2 baking dish.
Combine ketch!Jp, brown sugar
and mustard; spoon· over loaves.

Bake. uncovered, at 350 degr.
for 45 minutes or until the m
no longer pink and a meat the
mometer reads 160 degrees. Yield:
8 servings.
Shelby Duncan

Sweet Potato Casserole
Ingredients
3 c. cooked and mashed sweet
potatoes**
I c. white sugar
1/2 c. butter
l/2 c. evaporated milk
2 eggs, beaten
l tsp vanilla extract
I /3 c. butter. melted
I c. chopped pecans
l c. packed )ight brown sugar
l/2 c, all-purpose flour
Directions
~ix together sweet potatoes.
whtte sugar. ~/2 cup butter, milk.
eggs and vamlla. Spread into a
grea~ed 9 x 13 bakmg dish.
Mtx together 1/2 cup melted
butter, pecans, brown sugar and
flour. Sp?on over top of sweet
·
potato mtxture.
!3ake at 350 degrees for 25 to 30
mmutes
•
** I mash potatoes with han
ma~her rather than electric mixer.
It gtves a better texture to casserole.
Cind,y Crump-Dunfee
Leon, W.Va.

Ham Loaf
I l/2 lb ground smoked ham
I lb lean pork. ground
2 eggs
I c. bread crumbs
I c. milk
Mix all of the above together
well. fonn into a loaf and place in
a baking pan.
Syrup
1/2 c. water
112 c. vinegar
3/4 c. brown sugar
Punch dry mustard. Heat this.
Pour over loaf and baste once in
awhile or every 20 minutes or
longer. Bake 1 hour or I 1/2 hour
in 350 degree oven.
Helen Brumfield

Continued on Pag.

�PAGE 5
1 1/2 bunch green onions or
sweet pickles
Spread cream cheese.over Ham
Slices place a green omon or
sweet pickle in the cente~ of_each
slice. Roll up ham and slice m
pinwheels . .Chill at least 112 hour
before servmg.
Barbara Skelton
Vinton, Ohio

~a in

Dishes

(continued)

Onion Casserole
5 large Vidalia onions or any
sweet onion
I stick margarine
Parmesan cheese
Cri~py buttery cr~cke~s
.
Peel and slice ontons mto thm
rings. Saute in margarine until
limp or opaque. Pour half of
onions into 1 I /2-quart casserole.
Cover with Parmesan cheese then
crushed crackers. Repeat layers
and bake uncovered in 325 degree
oven until golden brown. about 30
minutes.
Gloria Curry

Onions Au Gratin
5 c. Vidalia onions-chopped
cooked and.drained
5 c. arated cheddar cheese
1/2 ;_self-rising flour
I /4 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp salt
6 T butter
Chop onions. cover with water
and cook until tender (don't overcook). Drain and mix with 4 c.
cheese and remaining ingredients.
Pour into a 2-quart casserole;
sprinkle with remaining I c.
cheese and bake at 350 degrees for
30 minutes.

~ide

Dishes
Ham Roll Ups
l lb boiled Ham
8 oz cream cheese (softened)

'11s ~e

Broccoli Casserole
I or 2 pkgs. frozen chopped
broccoli
I stick margarine
I sm. jar Chcez Whiz
1/2 c. chopped onion
1 can cream of celery soup
2 c. Minute rice. prepared
Mix all ingredients together and
bake in a 9x 13'' baking dish f&lt;?r 40
minutes at 350 degrees. If bakmg
in glass dish, bake at 325 degrees.
Gloria Curry
Continued on Page 6

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Side
Dishes

(co·ntinued)
Potato Casserole
2 lb hash brown (thawed)
8 oz. shredded cheese
1 can cream chicken
.
2 c. sour cream
Mix all, sprinkle chips or com
flakes on top bake 350 degrees for
1 hour, 15 minutes.

Kim Kemp
Hillbilly Baked Beans
1 lb ground chuck (or hamburger)
1 medium onion-chopped
2-24 oz can bushes baked beans
drain one can
I can 15 1/2 oz light kidney
beans, drained
1 can 15 1/2 oz small butter
beans, drained
1 can 15 1/2 oz chili beans,
undrained
1/2 c. chili sauce
113 c. ketchup
3/4 c. firmly packed brown
sugar
3 tbs molasses
2 tbs vinegar
1 tbs worcestershire sauce
1 c. real bacon bits (optional)
Crumble and brown ground,
meat in skillet, mix with all other
ingredients and place into a lightly
greased 3-qt pot or casserole.
Bake at 350 degree for 1/2 hour.
covered, then bat at 350 degrees
for 45 minutes, uncovered.
NancyHamm

Peca, Cheese Ball
8 oz 1 ream cheese (spftened)
1 1/ c. shredded Cheddar
cheese
2 tsp chopped pimentos
2 tsp hopped green pepper
2 tsp ·need onion
1 tsp lemon juice
Das of salt, pepper,garlic salt
1/2 cug of pecans Chopped fine)
In a pixing bowl, combine all
ingredic nts except pecans. Mix
thoroug ly. Shape mto a ball and
roll in cuts, wrap In foil or Plastic
wrap a d refrigerate at least 4
hours.
BettyTw~

Vimon . •
Drie Beef Cheese BaH

2-8 o·~ pkg. cream cheese (softened)
3 oz J: kg. dried beef
2 Tbs. . mayonnaise
2 Tbs mustard
2 Tbs Dry onion soup mix
1 Tbs parsley and chofped nuts
Mix 1 ingredients wei except
parsley d nuts. Shape in a ball.
Roll in :&gt;arsley and nuts.
Serve with a variety of crackers.
Barbara Skelton
\'huon, Ohio

Gloria 's Red Dressing
I I /2 ·. white su~ar

I 1/2 . Crisco oil
2 c. c
3Tw
I tsp
I sm
Mix
speed b

tsup
ite vinegar
alt
onion-chopped
hand or slow mixer
t not for long period.
Gloria Curry

Continued on

I/

P.

�PIIEl

s.&gt;ups,
Beverages
&amp;Misc.
(continued)
Applewood Julep ·
1 c. pineapple juice
1 c. orange juice
114 c. lemon juice
1 quart apple juice
Kim Cape,
Gallipolis

Italian Vegetable Soup
112 c. uncooked small elbow
macaroni
I lb ground beef
I c. sliced celery
2.
es garlic, minced
2
ater
1 T dried parsley flakes
1/2 tsp oregano
1 c. green beans
1 c. diced onion
l c. sliced carrots
1-16 oz. can tomatoes
1-15 oz. can red beans,
undrained
1/2 tsf basil
5 bee bouillon cubes

1 cup bnll~ance
2 tbsp $plllkle
3 partS int~IY
2 partS compa.s5~on
12 oz understanding
\ cuppass100
\ tsptrust
ozknowmB
~~--~!.:'Co- cu~ antlcipa!lon

2 c. snreaclea,~caoollf!e
Brown beef
tie. Add rerrlain.in£
except
macaroni.
heat, cover
simmer 30 minutes. Add cabba ge, green beans
and macaroni, ~ ring to a boil and
simmer until vegetables are tender.
Add more wat r or beef broth if
you prefer a t nner soup. Sprinkle
with Parmesan cheese before serving.
Gloria Curry

Quick Nut dge
1 lb. confecti,oners sugar
1/2 c. cocoa
l/4 tsp. salt
6 lbs. butter
41bs. milk
1 tsp. vanilla
1 c. walnuts
Combine all
except
walnuts in top
boiler.
water and
Place over ·
in walnuts.
stir until ~u•vv''"·
Spread fudge ...-··-n•, in buttered
8x8 pan. Cool
cut into
squares.
2 dozen.
Bonnie Jordan

.

ntinued on Page 8

~
,.

~w

418 Sliver

Bridge Plaza
Gallipolis

740.....6-3484

\

�PAGE 8

Desserts

(continued)

Jolly Apple Santa
1 large red apple raisins
5 large marshmallows cranberries
1 large red gumdrop toothpicks
and cotton
Stick a toothpick throucrh a
marshmallow and into th~ apple
for each of Santa's arms and legs.
For Santa's head, put a marshmallow on a toothpick and add cotton
for hat trim and real red gumdrops
for a hat. Stick the head in the
apple. Poke short pieces of toothpick through raisins to add eyes.
Shape a piece of cotton for
S~nta's beard. Then poke short
p1eces of toothpicks through a
cranberry for a nose. Punch the
toothpick with the cranberry
through the beard and into Santa's
head.
Reindeer Sandwich
Whole Wheat Bread peanut butter
Raisins Red M&amp;M
Pretzel Sticks
Spread peanut butter on bread to
make a sandwich, cut into two triangles. Put pretzel sticks throucrh
the cut edge of the sandwich f;r
antlers, add raisins for eyes and a
red M&amp;M for a red nose.

Cheese Bars
of yellow cake m··
...., ...m '-&lt;111 Hines) or anyone
have pudding.
gg
tick of butter melted
all together. Will be like pie
. Pat_out into a 9x13 inch 1
pan. hght greased, set aside.
4 cups powdered sugar, 2
1 8-oz softened cream
~.,;u~'tiiS'i:. Beat until smooth and
well. Put this mixture on
crust.mix, bake at 350
de~r~~c~s for 35 to 40 minutes or till
comes out clean in center.
and cut in squares.
Given to Kim Cade
l'lllteannle Coconut Cookies
butter
white sugar
brown sugar
crushed pineapple
well beaten
r

soda
salt
vanilla
nuts
coconut
not mix with electric
er.
from a teaspoon on cookie
ake at 350 degrees for 10u na;I!Ull;:s. Yields 4 dozen.
Submitted by Wanda Cox, in
of Hannan Trace School
Cook Gladys Johnson

I

Continued on Page 9

~to 1iom~

~g

&amp; Bakery

your Holidays
pecial!

-992-2161

J

�PAGE9

tDesserts
(continued)

Kim's Oreo Cheesecake
1 Oreo crust
1 8 oz cream cheese
2 8 oz Tub Cool Whip
1 box of cheesecake flavor
instant pudding
1/2 box of French vanilla instant
pudding
1 tsp vanilla
1 Tbsp sugar
1 112 c. milk
1/2 c. crushed pecans
1 c. crushed Oreos
Mix together cream chees~,
Cool Whip, milk, both puddmg
mixes, vanilla, sugar. Put 112 of
pudding mixture in pie shell then
put crushed Oreos on top of pu~­
ding mixture then take the remaming pudding mixture and put on
top of crushed Oreos, then put
Cool Whip on top then sprinkle
th crushed Oreos and pecans,
• en drizzle with caramel. Let set
in refrigerator for approx. 2 hours
before serving.
Kim (Cox) Cade
Turtle Cake
1 German chocolate cake mix
114 c. margarine
J/2 c. evaporated milk
l c. pecans
1-6 oz. pkg chocolate chips

according to package
pour half of batter into
pan. Bake 20 minutes
,,..rr•r.... .,. Melt milk, mar,.,,.,rr,,. s together. Pour
add pecans and
"'"'V"''""'·,• chips on top of caramel
rest of batter over
."'"v""''"' for about 20 minKim Cade,
Gallipolis
Cake
cake mix
"'"'"''""'·- oil
instant pudding
cheese
can of crushed
11 u,,...,a 1J..,,.,,~ (drained)
HU!:~&lt;OII:\..-VVl Whip
hed pecans
mix according to
UHvv•n, ...... Add vegetable oil. and
into a greased broiler or
Bake at 350 degrees
let cool. Mix
pudding, milk, and
. Beat until smooth.
cake. Then spread
over pudding mixture.
Whip on top of
and sprinkle with
pecans.
Kim Cade,
Gallipolis

Continued on Page 10

_
·~
Ellio
.
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_ _,_n•es
We Can Make Holiday

r--s-2-5--ott-1 f-l1

I

I

: A.,. JUala Defbdtloa TV 1 , Ally llllo!litoc:k
1
I I
1
(must present coupon)
1 •
:
Exp 12131/10
: :

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317 St. Rt. 7, tialllJpOJ!fs,
7 40-446-8051 • I ~IJV-,;:t If

,

�PAGE10

Desserts

(continued)

Molasses Cookies
l c. shortening
1 c. sugar
1/4 c. molasses
l egg
Cream first 4 ingredients together. Combine dry ingredients
together and add to wet ingredients
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp salt
2 c. flour
2 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
l tsp ground clove
I tsp ground ginger,
Roll into balls and dip in sugar.
Bake for 12 minutes. These tum
out better if refrigerated for l hour
prior to baking.
Kath\' Gardner,
Poi1it Pleasant
Bread Pudding with Butter
Sauce
I loaf French bread tom apart in
13x9 Baking dish
1 c. toasted chopped pecans
(optional)
Sprinkle with ground cinnamon
as desired
4 oz melted butter
Set aside
Mix together
7-8 large eggs .
4 l/21c. milk or Half &amp; Half
I tsp vanilla
I tsp salt
2 c. sugar
Pour over bread
I press this down with spatula to
make sure the bread absorbs the
egg mixture well. Bake at 350
degrees for I hour or until golden
brown.
Sauce
Mix together 8 oz. melted butter, 2 c. powdered sugar, 2 "Ibs
vanilla or whiskey
!usually make a double batch.
Kathy Gardner
Pvint Pleasant

•

Mile High Triple Layer
Pumpkin !Pie
')_c. pun pki n
3 eggs s r •~htly beaten
l/2 tsp ~au
1 c. evajporated milk
2 tsp p~lnpkin pie spice
2 tbs molasses
1 c. flfllily packed brown sugar
Combin! pumpkin, salt. molasses.
spice and &gt;rown sugar. Add e~s
and milk. 'our into a deep disn 9inch pie sftell. Bake at 425 degrees
for 40 to ~0 minutes until a knife
inserted iq center comes out clean.
Let cool 3.1 d then place in refrigerator for 1 h )ur or more.
Second ~ayer
4 oz. pk g cream cheese softened
1 tbs ~~
1 c. wh'pped topping, thawed
1 tsp sugar
Mix cr~1 flin cheese, milk and
sugar witt wire whisk until
smooth, gently stir in whipped
topping. Spread on first layer of
pie. RefrifPerate at least 2 hours.
Third L~yer
I c. miCk
I 16-oz can pumpkin
2 small boxes (4 serving size)
instant vanilla pudding
•
2 tsp pti mpkin pie spice
Add mi .k to pudding mix and
stir well. Vfixture will be thick.
Stir in pu ppkin and spice. Mix
well; spread on cream cheese layer.
Refrigera Ffor at least 3 hours.

Lucky ~nything Left
Crust
1 c. t1o r
I stick putter
1/2 c. c opped nuts
Mix, m ~d 13x9 pan, bake at 350
degrees t: r 15-20 minutes, cool
for 5 min tes.
Layer~

8 oz.

Cti am cheese
1 c. po\l ·dered sugar
Large Gpol Whip
Mix hal of cool whip with cheese
and sugar pour on top of crust.
Layer
Mix 3 &lt; of milk with 2 instant
lemon pu ding put on layer 2.
Layer~

S{&gt;read est of Cool Whip on top
for tcing ~d sprinkle with nuts.

Kim Kemp

Conti~ued on Page.

�PAGE 11

iesserts

(continued)

Vanilla Refrigerator Cookies
l c. sugar
1 c. softened butter
1 l/2 tsp vanilla
2 eggs
3 c. all-purpose flour
l tsp salt
l/2 tsp baking soda
.
Mix well: sugar, butter, vamlla.
and eggs. Mix remaining ingre~I­
ents. Divide dough and wrap With
plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at
least four hours. May also freeze.
When ready to bake, roll dough to
about 1/4 inch :thickness. Bake
400 degrees just until the edges
are starting to b~own usually .8-10
minutes, accordmg to how thick
you make them.
.
Vanilla Butter Frostmg for
Cookies
3 c. powdered sugar
c softened butter
• /2 vanilla
2 Tbs milk

Katlzv Gardner
Point Pleasant

White Fruitcake
1 lb. butter
3 c. sugar
14 eggs
·
2 tsp. each, vanilla. lemon, and
almond flavoring

5 c. flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 c. rum or fruit juice
2 l/2 lb candied cherries
2 112 lb candied pine apple
2 1/2 lb shelled nuts
Cream butter: add sugar, cream
until light and puffy. Add eggs,
one at a time, beating after each
egg. Fold in flavorings. Sift flour
and baking powder together~
. reserve 1 cup. Altema!e flour a~d
liquid into creamed m1xture. M1x
reserved flour with fruits and .nut&lt;;.
Fold into creamed mixture. Lme
cake pans with brown paper or
two thicknesses of waxed paper;
~rease well. Cake
rise about l
mch. Bake in 250-degree o~en for
about 4 to 5 hours, 2 hours If loaf
pan are used.

will

Ruth Goody
Easy Red Velvet Cooki~s
I box red velvet cake m1x
1/3 c. salad oil
2 eggs
Mix cake mix, oil and lightly
beaten eggs roll o~t and cut out
cookie. Place on hghtly greased
cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees
for about 20 minutes, let cool and
ice with cream cheese icing.
Cream Cheese Icing
4 oz. cream cheese
1/2 stick margarine
l/2 lb powdered sugar
Mix tooether
and spread on
e
.
cooled cookies
Nancy 1/amm
Continued on Page 12

.._ ...
........
Difference

�PAGE12

Desserts

(continued)

Chocolate Ribhon
Prep time: 20 minutes.
Refrigerating time: 4 ~ /4 hou~
35 chocolate sandwtch cookies,
finely cmshed (3 cups)
6 tsp butter or margarine, ~nelted
1 pkg (8 oz) Philadelphia brand
cream cheese, softened
1/4 c. sugar •
2 tbs milk
2 tub (8 oz) Cool Whip whipped
topping, thawed
3 c. cold milk
2 pl&lt;gs (4 :servi!1g size) Jcll:o
chocolate flavor mstant puddmg and
pie filling
1 square baker's semi-s~eet baking chocolate, grate~ (opt10nal) .
Mix cmshed cooktcs and butter m
13x9" pan. Press firmly onto bottom
of pan. Refrigerate 15 minutes. J?eat
cream cheese, su~ar and 2 tbs rrulk
in large bowlunul s!nooth. Ge.ntly
stir m 112 of the whipped toppm&amp;.
spread over cmst. Pour 3 ~ups ~tlk
into large bowl. Add pudd.mg mtxes.
Beat with wire whisk 2 mmutes.
Pour over cream cheese layer.
Refrigerate 4 hours or until ~e.t just
before serving. spread rcma~nmg
whipped topping over puddmg...
Garmsh with grated chocolat~. II
desired. Store leftover desert 111
refrigerator. Makes 16 servings.
Helpful hint: soften cream cheese
in microwave on high 15 to 20 seconds.
Shelby Duncan

Whit ! Texas Sheet Cake
I c. b tter or margarine •
1/2 c. sour cream
1 c. ' ater
1 tsp ~lmond extract
2 c. bur
ltsp s~lt
2 c. s 1gar
1 tsp I aking soda
2 egg.. beaten
Frosti g
.
1/2 c. butter or margannc
lf2 ts almond extract
1/4 c. milk
1 c. c opped walnuts (optional)
4 1/2 . powdered sugar
In a I rae saucepan. bring butter and ~ter to a boil. Remove
from he t; stir in flour, sugar.
eggs. s r cream: almond extract.
salt and soda untll smooth. Pour
into a a eased 15x 1Ox I baking
pan. B~ (e at 375 degrees for 18
to 22 m nutes or until cake is
oolden rown and tests done.
Cool fo · 20 minutes. Meanwhile,
for fros ng, combine butter and
milk in ·ll saucepan. Bring to a
boil. Remove from heat. Add
sugar ar. almond extract and
mix we . Stir in wa~~uts. sp.
over v arm cake.) 1eld: 16
20 servi gs. This is even ~etter if
baked tf e day before servmg.
Gloria Curry

Dash
l/2 c.
1 tsp.
314 c.
Butte
Have c
peratur
bowl.
until s
Pineapph• Angel Food .
fection
1 box angel food cake mtx
stir int
1 20-oz can crushed pineapple
.Add va
and juice
ture int
Using a wood~n or .metal spoon, Cut in
mix both ingredten.ts tn a bowl
ings.
until thoroughly mtxed. (Use only
metal or glass bowl. never plas- ..
tic). Pour into an ungreased 9x 12
cake pan. Bake until golden brown
for about 25 to 30 minutes. Cool.
and serve with fat-free Co?l Whtp.
Kuu Kemp

y Fudge

package cream cheese
nfectioner's sugar
f salt
cocoa
·anilla
chopped nuts
9-inch square pan.
am cheese at room temPlace cheese jn large
ork with wooden spoon
oth and soft. Sift con's ~ugar. salt and cocoa;
cream cheese gradual!Y·
ilia and nuts. Press nuxpan. Chill until firm.
nares. Yield: 24 servRuth Good)'

Continued on P.

3

�PAGE 13

~esserts

(continued)
Tur tles

48 caramels ( 14 oz.)
3 1/2 c. pecans
1/2 c. whipping cream .
Put caramels and cream m top
of double boiler, let melt until
creamy and smooth. Add pecans
and mix well. Butter waxed paper
heavily and drop by spoonfuls
onto waxed paper. Let stand
overnight. Dip in chocolate or put
small amount of chocolate into
candy cup, add spoonful of pecans
and caramel then drizzle chocolate
over the top.

Gloria Curry

Ho Ho Cake
Grease and flour an 18x21 cookie sheet with sides.
Mix I devil's food cake mix
a~ ing to directions and bake
a
degrees for 20 minutes. Let
coo.
Filling
Mix I 1/4 cups m_ilk and 5 tbs of
flour in small saucepan. Cook
over medium heat, stirring until
thick. Set aside to cool.
Mix 1/2 c. margarine, 1/2 c.
shortening. I tsp vanilla and 1 c.
sugar. Beat until smooth.
Mix above mixtures together
until smooth and creamy. Spread

c

l/4 c.

1-7 oz.

1/2 C. CIIUIUIUc:;u pecanS
1-8 oz.
cheese, softened
l-16 oz.
I Whip
2 baked 9 pie shells ·
1-12 oz. · caramel ice cream
sweetened conin a large skillet.
and pecans: cook
, stirring conaside. Cool.
cheese and sweetmilk: beat until
Cool Whip. Layer
se mixture in
I. Drizzle 1/4
•vu·..,......... on each pie.
'""'·"'",,IT mixture
pie. Sprinkle 1/4
re evenly over each
rs with remaining
and freeze until
tand at room tembefore serving.
on Page 14

�PAGE14

Desserts

(continued)
Tiger Butter

1 lb. white chocolate
I lb . semi-sweet chocolate
I 1/3 c. 12-oz jar chunky
peanut butter
Combine white chocolate and
peanut butter in top of double
boiler, bring water to boil.
Reduce heat to low and heat
until chocolate and peanut butter
m~It, stirring constantly. Spread
mixture onto waxed paper lined
l5x! Ox 1 pan. Then pour melted
sem1-sweet chocolate over
peanut butter mixture and swirl
through with a knife. Chill until
firm. Cut into small squares.
Store in refrigerator if weather is
war:m.

Gloria Curry

The Best Sugar Cookies You
E\er Ate or Snitched
I /2 c. butter
1/2 c. margarine
2 c. sugar
2 eggs
I c. vegetable oil
Pinch salt
1 tsp vanilla
5 c. flour

1910

22 tsp
soda of tartar
'
tsp cream
Crea n butter, margarine an
sugar. ~dd next four ingredients.
B~at well. Add dry ingredients,
m1x
Roll into small balls.
Roll
n sugar and smoosh
down
a cookie marker or
b
glass dipped in sugar.
Bake
to 12 minutes in a 350
degree
n or until lightly
brown
edges. Makes 5 to 6
dozen ••v'""'''"'"·
Gloria Curry
Bre:~ldfast

Cheese Cake

cans crescent roll dough
. Pkgs. cream cheese
separated
c. sugar
112 c. chopped nuts
1 can crescent roll dough
pan. Press to seal.
Lomoone cream cheese, I c. sugar.
a~d vanilla; spread on
m pan. Lay the second
on top of cheese
. Beat egg white and
Mix sugar and nuts
'nkle on top. Bake
for 30 minute::.. Cool
in squares.
Gloria Curry

2010

�PAGE15

Jrmn
Q9alltpoli~

ilatlP. ~rtbutte

otnt ileasant 3!e~Ji£iter
wvvvv.tnydailyregister. ootn

The Daily Sentinel
, www.mydailysentinel.rom
Time to Spruce Up Your
Home for the Holidays?
f

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We have 100 New Colors of
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0 •PITTSBURCiW.
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Ask to See The Atmospheric Collection.
Need Back-up Heat this Winter.....
Come in for our VenOess Gas Heaters.
Chnstmas Treats?\\'(' have melting chocolates
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Bring in this ad f'or a discount
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�PAGE16

�r -=-

-

- - &gt;=

---

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---rO" ~~- - ---....--.........--- -----~ -

-- - -- - - ------ - ,-- --

-------"""-_,-""'"'F "-•

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Rio soccer advances, Page B2

•

•

Jimmie Johnson wins 5th straight
NASCAR title, Page B2

PORTS

Thesday, November 23, 2010

• =========================================
LocAL SclmDULE

POMEROY - A sclledukl of upcoming
tngh school vars1ty spor~ng !Mints 1n the
Ohio Valley Publishing coverage area
involving teams from Mason, Gallia and

The scoreboard said it
all Saturday
afternoon following
Wahama's 7338 victory over
East Hardy in
a Class A football quarterfinal at the Point
Pleasant
Junior/Senior
High School
Athletic
Complex in
Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

Me'9S COUOII&amp;S.

f.rl.day..Jio:iemJ)er 2.6
Class A Football

wv State Semif.inals
(4) Wirt County vs (1) Wahama at
Point Pleasant JSHS, 7:30p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

· wahamapep
rally Wednesday
MASON, W.Va. - A
community pep rally and
tailgate party will be held
for the Wahama football
team at 6 p.m. Wednesday
night at the upper parking
lot of the high school. as
the White Falcons prepare
for their third-round Class
A playoff game against
Wirt County this Friday
night. All fans are encouraged to come out and support the boys of fall
before Friday's trip to
Point Pleasant.

Bryan Walters
/photo

Top-seeded Wahama soars past Cougars
White Falcons to face No. 4 Wirt County in Class A semifinals Friday at PPHS
BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Despite allowing nearly 500 yards
through the air and 38
points to visiting East
RACINE, Ohio - The Hardy Saturday afterSouthern High School noon it was the offense
and Junior High winter and special teams play of
sports teams will be host- Coach Ed Cromley's
ing ''Meet the Teams Wahama White Falcon's
Night''
on Tuesday. who prolonged the Bend
November 23, at 7 p.m. in Area teams post-season
the high school gym.
following a wild 73-38
The event will give fans shootout in the quarterfia chance to see the boys nal round of the Class A
and girls basketball teams playoffs at the Point
and cheerleaders for Pleasant High School
grades 7-12. A mandato- Athletic Complex.
Ryan Lee and Anthony
ry OHSAA meeting for
players and parents will Grimm scored three
be held, along with a var- touchdowns apiece while
sity boys scrimmage will Isaac Lee ran 78 yards
for a score and a team
also take place.
high 113 yards on the
ground to lead the White
Falcons charge. Elijah
Honaker added an 82
yard return with a
blocked
field
goal
attempt
and
Tyler
KANSAS CITY, Mo. Kitchen, Clay VanMeter,
(AP) - At West Virginia, Crandal Neal and Zack
Jerry West had the pure Wamsley also figured in
jump shot. At North the scoring parade for
Carolina State, David Wahama.
Thompson dazzled with
The top ranked Bend
his highwire act above Area eleven scored early
the rim. Different styles, and often to bring an end
but the same spectacular to the Cougars season but
results.
East Hardy didn't go
West and Thompson, down without a fight.
who both wore No. 44, Junior quarterback Kolin
highlighted an eight-man Foltz gave his best guncontingent
inducted slinger impersonation by
Sunday night into the riddling the WHS secNational
Collegiate ondary to the tune of a
Basketball Hall of Fame. whopping 473 yards and
Joining
West
and three
touchdowns
Thompson in the 20 l 0 through the air.
class
were
players
Foltz connected on 26
Christian Laettner of of 43 passes in the outing
Duke and Sidney Wicks and utilized the pass
of
UCLA;
coaches catching abilities from a
Davey Whitney and Tex stable
of
capable
Winter and contributors receivers for East Hardy.
Wayne Duke and Tom Foltz, regarded by his
Jernstedt.
head
coach
Chad
Thompson revealed he Williams as "the best
chose No. 44 partially Glass A quarterback in
because he had been so the state'' would get no
inspired by watching argument from the White
West as a player.
"That and the fact that I
had a 44-inch vertical
leap:: Thompson said
with a laugh.
At a basketball clinic
NEW YORK (AP) that he attended toward Joey Votto and Albert
the end of West's career, Pujols had a long converThompson recalled that sation behind the batting
West could not only cage before a game a few
make shot after shot. but xears ago.
actually p,redict how the
"There's
something
ball would go in.
about a star player of that
"He might gay 'this magnitude
.kind
of
shot is~oin~,. to hit the pullin¥ you in and sayfront of the nm and go ing, it s OK. we can talk.
in' or 'this shot will hit ilon t be a::nookie right
the back of the rim and now. we're going to talk
go in'. After that clinic like men,'' Votto said. "I
was over. I decided I had think he made me feel
to work on my shooting:' comfortable and a little
Thompson said.
more confident.''
Before his storied
Lesson learned.
career in the NBA with · Votto was overwhelm~
the Lakers, West was a ingly
elected
the
two-time All-America National League's Most·
Player on
for
his
home-state Valuable
Mountaineers and led Monday, ending the
West Virginia to the 1959 Pujols' two-year reign.
A first baseman who
NCAA title game.
"To this day, I have a helped the Reds reach the
home in West Virginia,'' postseason for tile first
time in 15 years, Votto
Please see HOF, Bl
received 31 of 32 first-

Southern Meet•
the Teams Night

•

West, Thompson
highlight Hall of
Fame induction

•

Tim Tucker/photo

East Hardy fullback Jeremy Kraus (17) is gang-tackled by Wahama defenders Tyler Kitchen, left, Elijah
Honaker (1 0) and Jamin Branch (77) during this first half run Saturday afternoon in a Class A football quarterfinal at the Point Pleasant Junior-Senior High School Athletic Complex in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Fa1cons after the junior
signal caller connected
on a pair of scoring tosses and ran for another in
the opening half. The
Wahama defense stiffened followed the half~
time intermission and
allowed only one Cougar
touchdown over the final
two q.)..larters to seal the
victory as the Falcons
advance to the Class A
semifinals next Friday
night' against fourth
ranked Wirt County (I 02). The Tigers defeated
highly
regarded
Williamstown by a 13- I0
margin on Friday to gain
a semifinal date with the
Falcons.
At least four Class A
records were shattered in
the 111 point shootout
with Wahama breaking

its own Class A playoff
mark of the most points
scored in a game. WHS
held the record after
putting up 71 points
against
Doddridge
County in 2003. Three
individual records were
set with Elijah Honaker
eclipsing the mark of
longest blocked kick
return (82 yards) for a
touchdown while East
Hardy's Kolin Foltz set a
new mark for most passing yards 473 (the old
record was 341) and most
total yards 481 (old
record was 404).
Wahama opened the
post-season affair by
scoring three, lightning
quick touchdowns while
running only one offensive play. After forcing
a punt on the Cougars

opening possession Isaac
Lee raced 78 yards on the
Falcons first play from
scrimmage for a touchdown only to have East
Hardy answer with a 70
yard, five play, drive to
knot the score at 6-6 following a Kolin Foltz to
Korey Foltz 42 yard TD
reception. Both teams
had its point after try
blocked following their
respective early scores.
Ryan Lee regained the
edge for Wahama following the East Hardy, game
tying touchdown, when
Lee
returned
the
Cougar's ensuing kickoff
82 yards to put Wahama
in front for good at 12-6.
··our return team really
gave us a boost all day
long:· Falcon coach Ed
Cromley stated following

the post-season triumph.
Ryan (Lee) ran the ball
hard for us this afternoon
and they had trouble
keeping up with Isaac
(Lee). I thought our
offense played pretty
well and I think we
pounded
on
them
throughou\ the day.
Obviously their west
coast offensive scheme
gave us trouble but we
were able to keep them
off the board for the most
part in the second half."
The White Falcons
increased its lead to 20-6
later in the opening period when Elijah Honaker
provided what may have
been the play of the game
for
Wahama.
East
Hardy was driving for an

Please see Soar, 86

Votto wins NL MVP award

•

.

place votes and 443
points
in
voting
announced
by
the
Writers·
Baseball
Association of America.
Pujols, the St. Louis
Cardinals' first baseman,
was second with the
rema i nin~
first-place
vote and L79 points after
winning the award in
2005, 2b08 and 2009.
"I tried to keep my
head down for almost a
year there. and it was
nice to speak to somebody who ·s been there
and done that when it
comes to everything:'
Votto said. "For him to

give me time of the day
and to talk about defensive stuff and ways to
improve my game was
very generous of him,
and he ce1tainly didn't
have to do that."
Votto was a first-lime
All-Star, finishing second in the NL in batting
average at .324 and third
in homers (37) and RBls
(113). He led the NL in
slugging
percentage
(.600). topped the major
leagues in on-base percentage (.424) and had
16 stolen bases in 21
chances.
Pujols batted .312 and
led the NL in homers
(42) and RBis ( 118).
"After the season.
when 1 looked at my
numbers and at Albert's
numbers, I thought:
'Holy cow! He's beaten

Please see Votto, Bl

Chris Lee/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/MCT

Cincinnati Reds first baseman Joey Votto flips the ball
to the pitcher covering f1rst to retire St. louis
Cardinals' Skip Schumaker in the third inning at
Busch Stadium in St. Louis, Missouri, Sunday, Sept. 5

�,

.~

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-- - · - ..........--

•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Johnson wins 5th straight NASCAR title
hiOMESTEAD,
Fla.
(AP) - Jimmie Johnson
wa~n 't the best all year.
Not even close.
When
it
mattered.
though, he couldn't be
beat.
f.·or the t1fth consecutive

year.
Qenny Hamlin and
Kevin Harvick took the
champion all the way to
the edge this season, waging the most serious threats
yet to Johnson's reign atop
NASCAR. Only the outcome dido 't change. and
Johnson maintained his
ironclad hold on the Sprint
Cup.
Johnson became the t1rst
driver in the seven-year
his~OJY of the Chase for the
Sprint Cup championship
to ; overcome a points
deficit in the season finale,
fmishing second Sunday to
race winner Carl Edwards
while winning his record
fifth consecutive title.
He became only the
third driver to overcome a
points deficit in the season's final race and win the
championship since 1975.
Th!! final margin was 39
points over Hamlin. and 41
over Harvick, who finished third in the race.
$o despite all the wins
- 53 of them over nine
seasons - and all the celebrations. this one at
Homestead-Miami
Speedway was of&gt;viously
very different. Usually so
calm and workmanlike
berund the wheel, Johnson
was exuberant as he
crossed the finish line.
pumping his fists in the car
while screaming "this is
unbelievable!" over and
over.
·!I've always told you the
fir~t championship, the
first win, that stuff has
meant the most to me. This
one, I think this takes the
lead,'' Johnson said. "It's
not that the other Chases

Votto
fromPageBl
me in a lot of them, ...
Votto said. "He beat me
in runs. he beat me in
RBis, home runs, l think
a couple others. I beat
him in a few of the qualitative stats.
''I don't know - I
think it was a tossup. I
think that it was as close
as It can get. I'm not
goin~ to go on a limb and
say, Oh. yeah, I played a
heck of a lot better than
hjm because I beat him in
batting average, but we
all know that batting
average is kind of an
overrated statistic."'
The NL Central standin~J probably were the
dirrerence.
.
"'Most importantly. we
won." Votto said.
Colorado's
Carlos
Gonzalez was third with
240 points after winning
the NL batting title with a
.336
average.
San
Diego's Adrian Gonzalez
( 197) was fourth. followed by Colorado's
Troy Tulowitzki ( 132)
and Philadelphia pitcher
Roy Halladay ( 130),
Balloting was completed before Votto went 1
for 10 with one RBI and
Philadelphia swept the
Reds in the first round of
the playoffs.
Now 27. Votto didn't
become a major league
regular until two years
ago. Following the death
of his father in August
2008, he went on the disabled list and missed 21
games the following year
partly because of depression and anxiety.
"I had a really, really
difficult time I guess getting over the death of my
father," Votto said. ''It's
still difficult for me
sometimes now. It's hard
when you lose someone
in your life that means so
much. Jt was a difficult
20P9 and quite a bit less
difficult in 2010, and I
think that was definitely
a big reason why 1 was
abie to stay on the ballfield every day and succeed and make progress
and feel better about
life."
Votto earned the final
spot on the NL All-Star
roster by beating out
Washington third base-

___ ,_

weren't competitive. We damaged the front of his
were stronger in the previ- car. He..,dropped to 37th by
ous two Chases, at least, the restart and had to work
but this one~ I am just so all day to finish 14th.
proud."
"We had a great year, we
Maybe because for the won the most races that we
first time since his reign 'ever won, we contended
began in 2006, Johnson like we've never contendand the No. 48 Hendrick ed before and just circumMotorsports team seemed stances took us out of this
vulnerable. Harvick was one." Hamlin said.
the most consistent driver
Harvick,
meanwhile,
of the 26-race "regular sea- took the lead on a round of
son,'' and Hanilin, with a pit stops with 80 laps to go,
series-best eight wins this but was flagged for speedyear. was the popular pick ing as he entered pit road.
to dethrone Johnson.
It dropped him to 29th, and
Hamlin carried a 15- he was still upset with the
point lead into the fmale, call after the race.
but struggled the entire
"I don't think that penalrace and turned Sunday ty will ever settle m my
into a battle of which dri- stomach,'' Harvick said,
ver would make the fewest insisting that "only a handmistakes.
ful of people" get to see the
It
ultimately
was pit road S{&gt;Ceds. "I won't
Johnson. who overcame a ever settle for that."
few slow pit stops by a
But he wasn't devastated
team that's been in the by the defeat, pointing to
spotlight since crew chief all the gains made this year
Chad Knaus benched his by Richard Childress
team in the middle of a Racing. A year after failing
race at Texas three weeks to put any cars into the
ago. The next day, the Chase, RCR had three in
crews for Johnson and the field and Harvick. winteammate Jeff Gordon ner of two races, led the
were swapped for the final points for most of the regutwo races of the year.
Iar season.
The No. 48 team rose ,. The fifth title moved
above aU the drama, even Johnson past Hendrick
after a mid-race stop cost Motorsports teammate Jeff
Johnson five spots.
Gordon for most titles
"I think this. year w~ among active drivers. He
showed what this team is now ranks third on the
made of," he said. ''At career list behind seventimes this season we didn't time champions and Hall
have the most speed, but of Famers Richard Petty
we had the most heart."
and Dale Earnhardt
The championship was a
.Hamlin .and his Joe
G1bbs Racmg team felt record lOth for Hendrick
otherwise, especially as MotorsP?rts, which broke
they •
outperformed a tie WJth Petty Enterprise
Johnson during the Chase. for most in NASCAR.
But poor fuel mileage last Johnson and HMS also
week in Phoenix kept it joined three other pro
tight headed into Sunday. teams the Boston
and he had a terrible race Celtics, New York Yankees
when he needed only a and Montreal Canadiens
clean run.
- to win five consecutive
Contact with Greg Biffle titles. The Celtics are the
very early in the race sent all-time leaders with eight
Hamlin into a spin and consecutive NBA titles.
man Ryan Zimmerman,
Carlos Gonzalez and
Atlanta closer Billy
Wafaner in fan voting.
" got there and I saw
my peers,'' Votto said. "I
saw the A-Rods and the
Pujolses and the Jeters.
And I thought, 'Well, I
just got 14 million votes
for the fan voting and
I'm still the small fish in
the big pond.'"
He
joined
Ernie
Lombardi (I 938), Bucky
Walters ( 1939), Frank
McCormick
( 1940),
Frank Robinson ( 1961 ),
Johnny Bench (1970,
1972). Pete Rose (1973),
Joe Morgan ( 1975-76),
George Foster ( 1977)
and Barry Larkin ( 1995)
as Reds to win the
award. The Reds' 12
MVPs are tied with the
Giants for second in the
NL behind the Cardinals
( 17). In the AL. the New
York Yankees have won

20.
The AL winner will be
announced Tuesday. Josh
Hamilton of Texas is the
front-runner.
Pujols has 10 straight
top 10 finishes. His three
wms and four secondplace finishes matched
those of Cardinals Hall
of Farner Stan Musial.
Votto, a bargain with a
$525,000 salary, will be
eligible for arbitration
for the ftrst time. Neither
Votto nor Gonzalez
($406,000) had MVP
bonus erovisions. Pujols
~ets $100,000 for fimshmg second. By finishing
fourth, Adrian Gom:ale7.
gets a $100.000 raise to
$6.3 million next season.
Born in Toronto, Votto
becomes
the
third
Canadian-born
MVP,
following
Colorado's
Larry Walker ( 1997) and
Minnesota's
Justin
Morneau (2006).

E

Y

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

RedStorm advance to NAIA Final
Site
•
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- It was anything but
easy for the NAIA's top
team. the University of
Rio Grande RedStorm.
but they were able to
advance to the NAIA
Men's Soccer National
Championship ftnal site
after an opening round, 21 victory over Bethel (IN)
College on Saturday
afternoon at Rio's Evan
Davis Field.
Rio Grande (22-0), the
top seed in the field,
played well early but had
difficulty
finishing
chances. The RedStorm
finally broke through in
the 31st minute on a goal
from junior defender NeH
Harries. He was assisted
by sophomore forward
Richard Isberner.
Rio carried the 1-nil
lead to halftime. The start
of the second half was
spirited as both teams
ratcheted up the intensity.
The 1-0 lead held up until
the 63rd minute when
Bethel's Zach Ganzberg
tied the game on a penalty kick, shooting it past
Rio junior goalkeeper
Jack Marchant.
The game looked to be

HOF

dest.ined for overtime as • changed and they really
Bethel (14-8) shut off Rio started throwing numbers
attacks throughout the forward and there were
second
half.
The some pretty questionable
RedStorm regained the calls that really changed
lead in the 84th minute on the way the game was
a ~ead~r from sophomore going."
m 1 d f 1e Ide r If or ward
"I just felt like we didOliver
Hewitt-Fisher. n't play a very good secHewitt-Fisher received a ond half and didn't keep
great feed from senior very good composure
midfielder
Dylan about ourselves, but we
Williams from the oppo- still managed to regroup
site side of the box.
and it was a great finish
Rio Grande head coach from Ollie and great
Scott Morrissey knew the delivery from Dylan," he
game would be much dif- said. "We're happy to
ferent from the regular move on."
season result, which was
Rio out-shot Bethel,
a 7-0 victory by the 15-4 and held a 7-1 edge
RedStorm.
"They in shots on goal. Cody
(Bethel) made a great Troyer posted six saves
statement for themselves for the Pilots.
It was third time in
today in how they played
and
battled,"
said NAJA Tournament histoMorrissey. "It was defi- ry that Rio Grande had
nitely going to be a dif- defeated Bethel. Rio is
ferent game than from the now 17-6-2 all-time in
first time we played the national tournament.
them.''
Bethel is 2-10-2 all-time
thought the first. 45 in ~AlA Tourney play.
mmutes our executiOn
R10
Grande
will
was good, the final ball in advance to the second
the box wasn't necessari- round at the Orange
ly the best and I thought Beach Sportsplex in
we had chances that we Orange Beach, Ala.,
could have put them November
29.
The
away in the first half," RedStorm will face the •
Morrissey added. "In the winner of Bethel (TN)
second half. I felt like the and No. 16 seed William
complexion of the game Carey at noon.

:·1

basket," Thompson said.
Laettner, who was presented by coach Mike
Krzyzewski, played ·in
fromPageBl
the Final Four in each of
West said. "I will always his four seasons at Duke.
be a contributor to West Many fans believe his
Virginia University. I've signature moment as a
lived my dream. Trust collegian was when he
me, I have. When you're sank a 17-footer at the
little and growing up in a buzzer to beat Kentucky
small community, the l04-l 03 in the East
only things you have are Regional Final.
But Laettner said his
your dreams and your
imagination. I fell in love fondest memory in colwith a round ball and that lege came when Duke
ball fell in love with me." beat UNLV in the NCAA
Thompson
wasn't semifinals and went on to
allowed to dunk in col- the 1991 championship.
lege, but that didn't stop The Blue Devils repeated
him from becoming a in 1992 with Laettner
three-time All-America leading the way.
"The thing that gives
who led the Wolfpack to
me
the most goose
an NCAA title in 1974.
Thompson finally bent bumps is the fust chamthe rules in the final non- pionship," Laettner said.
conference game of his "Especially that game
career with a dunk which against UNLV because
promptly drew a techni- they had blown us out by
cal. But that dunk sent a 30 the year before. Coach
symbolic message that K did such a great job
slam-jam athleticism was getting us ready. And
the wave of the future in then, to go out two days
college
basketball. later and not blow it all
Thompson and former against Kansas. Just a
Wolfpack point guard remarkable feeling.,.
Wicks spoke warmly
Monty Towe are credited
with inventing the alley- of the late John Wooden,
who was his coilege
oop pass and shot.
Once he moved on to coach and life mentor at
pro
basketball. UCLA. Wicks helped
Thompson could dunk to UCLA win three straight
national championships.
his heart's content.
"Coach
(Wooden)
"That ftrst year that I
went to the ABA, I think always had the saying
I tried to dunk about that after a practice at the
every time I went to the end of the day, you

E I

(
1

should go to the mirror,
look at yourself and ask
·did I do the best I could
pt&gt;ssibly do that day?'
That carried over for me
the rest of my life,"
Wicks said.
The
88-year-old
Winter, architect of the
Triangle offense, has battled health issues since
suffering a stroke last
year. He led Kansas State
to two Final Fours and a
fmal No. 1 ranking in
1959. At the podium on
Sunday, Winter delivered
a simple but powerful
message when he said: "I
love what I've been."
Whitney spent much of
his coaching career at
Alcorn State where his .
Braves became the fust
historically black college
team to win an NIT game
and
an
NCAA
Tournament game.
Duke,
the former
Commissioner of the Big
Eight and Big Ten, is a
former NCAA Division I
Men's
Basketball
Committee Chairman.
Jernstedt worked at the
NCAA national office for
almost 40 years and
presided
over
the
Division
I
Men's
Basketball
Championship.
Both
men are credited with
making significant contributions behind the
scenes which helped the
NCAA tournament a
marquee sporting event.

N UIDE

•

•

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W04U

Q

-·---.. -·-----

c

uoc

-

www.mydallysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 23, 201 0

\ t...,,:,-~. '

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Company)
Fann Equipment

Lifelock

READ All ABOUT IT

House for sale In
Syracuse OH. Three
bedrooms,
double
full
garage,
basement, gas heat
and
central
air
conditioning.
Call
(740) 949-2333

1000
Other Services

D/RECTV

Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
10KI14K/18K
gold
jewer1y, dental gold,
US
pre
1935
currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds. MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446·2842

Buying- guns, old
military items, pocket
knives,
pocket
watches,
old
marbles, old crocks.
old
thermometers,
old
swords,
old
glassware &amp; pottery,
&amp; mise antiques.
740-379·2160
or
740-446-2839

AVON! All Areas! To
Buy or Sell Shirley
Spears
304-675·
1429

Do You have a Limited Time Offerl
Dream of being Debt
Free HO for Life.
free? Are you trying Ask how by calling
to get your credit
DlrecTV today!
cleaned? Call 1-866- Packages start at
995-6887
No
$29.99.
Advance Fees!
1-866-541·0834

Houses For Sale

Real Estate
3500
Rentals
2-Horses, 55 Gallon
complete Fish Tank.
also a HP Computor
Apartments/
20inch flat screen for
Townhouses
or
trade
sale
everything 740-379- 2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hospital on SA
9172
160 CIA. (740) 4410194

Pet Cremations. Cal
740-446-37 45

Financial

Miscellaneous

Free Home
Security System
with $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Security Services
Ca111-888-367-2171

Free to a Good
Home a 2 1/2 yr old
male Tiny Toy Poodle
Call 645-6987

Campers I RVs &amp;
Trailers
2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
'f:J.YiY{ camuchaejtrajle
~
740-4462412
2000

&amp;

Townhou!':e

apartments.
and/or
small houses ror rent.
can 740-441-1111 for
application
&amp;
information.
Free Rent Special

!II
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675·6679

Automot1ve

Autos

For
lease:
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor
near
Gallia
apt.
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required,
maximum occupancy
2, $350 mon. 740446-3936 or 740446-4425

Quality
Cars
&amp;
Trucks wlwarranty all
pnced to sell, 16 yrs.
In business. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
John Deer Tractor m- Gallipolis, OH 740Tara Townhouse Apt.
2950 4w dove good 446-0103.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
condition 86 H.P.
patio,
pool,
Holand
1998 New
Wont To Buy
playground. No pets.
45 H P. 3930-4w
Dnve
Excellent Oiler's Towing. Now $450 rent. 740-367 •
shape
new buying junk cars 0547
tires.(304)576-2890. w/motors or w/out. 2 BR 1BA all elec. in
740-388·0011
or Kanauga
$450
No mon+dep 339-3224
STIHL Sales &amp; Service 740-441-7870.
Now
Avatlable
at Sunday call
Carmichael Equipment
Modem 1BR Apt.
Want to buy Junk 446-0390
740_446_2412
Cars, call 740-388Hay, Feed, Seed,
0884
FIRST MONTH
Grain
""'""'""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~
Real Esta1e
FREE
3000
Sales
2&amp; 3 BRAPTS.
Good mixed hay, sq.,
$385 &amp;
$2.50 4x5, round
UP, Sec. Dep $300
bales $20.00. Stored
Commercial
&amp;up,
inside 740-446·2075
AJC, WID hook-up,
OFFICEIWAREHOU
Mixed
hay,
6x6 SEIRETAIL
tenGreat
round, bam stored Location 749 Third
ant pays electric,
never wet, $30/bale, Ave Gallipolis.1800
EHO
Ellm View A pta.
740-416-1780
sq.ft . For more info
304-882-3017
Call 1-404-456-3802
Merchandtse
900
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
For Sole By Owner houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Middleporr, NO Pets.
Fuel I Oil I Cool I
6 apts $137.000
740-992·2218
Wood I Gas
rent $2030 mo, 740- - - - - - - 2
bedroom
446
Central
Boiler
•0390
apartment available

Free kittens-- 5·6
wks old, call 740985-3762
leave
Outdoor
wood
message
Furnaces
Instant rebate up to
$1,000.00 740)2455193

FIND
EVERYTHING
VOUWANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Recreahonal
Vehicles

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
AFFORDABLEI

in Syracuse. $200
deposit, $375 per
Houses For Sale
month rent. Rent
Includes
water,
sewer &amp; trash. No
SuffiCient
Very Ntce 213 BR 2 pets.
Miscellaneous
Baths, South Gallia mcome needed to
Jet Aeration Motora /Fairland School Dist. qualify 740-378-6111
Owner
Finlancmg Spring Valley Green
repaired, new &amp;
down Apartments 1 BR at
rebuilt In stock. Call $8,000
Ron Evans 1-800·
$531 85 per mth $395+2 BR at $470
537-9528
740) 256-1686
Month. 446-1599.

�Page 84 • The
Apartments/
Townhouses
New renovated 1 br
apt,
Middleport.
$325+
reference/deposit,
740·416-6622
2 1BA in Pt Pleasant
all utilities included
593·5169
2 BR unfurnished·
upstairs. $500 mon
675·2507
Gallia
Apartments,
Buhl Morton
Gallipolis. is
accepting
applications
waiting list
Bedroom,
Subsidized
apartment for elderly
and
handicapped.
740·446·4652.

Rentals

Business
Instructors Needed
@ Gallipolis Career
College
In
Economics,
Keyboarding,
and
Math. In Economics
and Math instructors
must
Master's
Degree
Send cover letter and
resume
to:
mobiles
on bshirey@gallipoliscar
2
Bullaville Pk &amp; 1 in eercollege.edu.
Rodney $500 mon +
dep. 740-367·7762
Help Wanted·
Sales
General

2BA·2 Bath Like new
Mobile Home water,
sewer, trash pd No
pets, CA. Covered
or Patio
Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446-3160
House
2BA
$575
on Bulliville 3BA
$650mth and mon+dep+utl. 17228
Dep. Call 367· Chatham Ave 740·
or 367-7272
645-1646

-

-o4i----, w/carport $450
+dep &amp;
St.,
3rd
74,0-247·

100

Education
is
FT
position
Gallipolis. Oh
Nationally
a plus,
driving record
red. Compet11ive
and Benefits
Uniforms
Please

or

94 Clayton 14x70
2BA as is must be Underground
moved!
740-446- SurveyorYellowbush
1271
Mining. LLC, located
in Racine, OH is now
New
Foreclosure
accepting resumes
16x80 never been
for the position of
titled Call for an
underground
incredible
deal
surveyor. Candidates
740)446-3093
must posses at least
and
a
high
school
Supplies
houses in
to: Box
diploma
No pet's Green slag 10.00 a equivalent;
c/o
Point
app. 675-5332 ton
Pllb."c"'n'
Register
great
for experience
591-0265
St., Pt
driveways. At. 62 underground
coal
Commercial
above New Haven mining preferred but
25550
-~!-----American not
required. ~~=====~
Manufactured behind
0
Housing Colloid Co. (304)882· Interested applicants
Office space for rent
3944.
with
surface -l~=-=-=-=-=-=
in PI Pleasant 593surveying
and
5169
AutoCAD experience
Rentals
6000
Employment are
FINO A JOB
strongly
encouraged to apply.
IN THE
Yellowbush Mining,
CLASSIFIEDS
LLC,
offe.-s
a
Drivers &amp; Delivery competitive benefits
package including:
Get Your Mess
company sponsored ...l~-------.
Red's Rollen Garage medical, dental and
With A Daily
Needed Class A COL vision, 401 (k) with
Driver with Tanker &amp; company match, paid
BULLETIN
CALL OUR OFFIC
Haz-mat. TWIC a vacation
and
plus 740-339-0034
holidays and futuro
BULLETIN BOARD
professional growth
9.00 AM DAY BEFORE
opportunities.
Qualified applicants
A &amp; J Trucking in
forward
Marietta, Oh is hiring may
resumes
to:
COL A Drivers for
Yellowbush Mining,
local
&amp; Regional
Attention HR, P.O.
Routes. Applicants
Box
238,
New
must be at least 23
Haven. WV 25265 or
yrs have min of 1 yr
fax Attn: HA (304)
of commercial driving
882-1379.
EOE
exp Clean MVR,
M/F/DN
Haz-mat Cert. We
feature
weekend
home time. Excellent
&amp; dental Truck driver, tractor
health
401 (K), trailer &amp; tri axle
tnsurance.
Vacation,
Bonus dump, local &amp; some
pays
and
safety travel, hrly. wages
Contact based on exp.. also
awards.
Kenton at 1-800-462- 1 construction labor,
apply at Pullins Exc.
9365 F.O.F.

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Legals

NOTICE
TO
RELOCATE
A
RETAIL
BANKING
OFFICE(for
Ohio
Dtvision of Financial
Institutions
and
Federal
Deposit
Insurance
Corporation)Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company, located at
211 West 2nd Street,
Ohio
Pomeroy,
45769,
has filed
notice/application
with
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions, 77 South
High
Street,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215·6120 and with
Mr. Anthony Lowe,
Regional
Director,
Federal
Deposit
Insurance
Corporation,
500
West Monroe Street,
Suite 3500, Chicago,
Illinois 60661, to
relocate
their
Pomeroy retail office
to 640 East Main
Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Meigs
County. Any person
who
wishes
to
comment on the
proposed
banking

100

Legals

office must do so in
wnting to the Division
within fourteen days
after the date of this
publication and in
writing to the FDIC
within fifteen days
after the date of this
publication
The
non-confidential
portions of the FDIC
application are on file
in the appropriate
FDIC office and are
available for public
inspection
during
regular
business
hours, photocopies
non·
of
the
confidential portion of
the FDIC application
file Will be made
available
upon
request. (11) 23, 30.
2010

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERYDAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Get AJump
On

SAVINGS

Shop the
s!

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USINESS LISTING

2-2155

Th·e Dai y Sentinel
.111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679
\

�-----......

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i~P~'!A"'CW'!"Wt"'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

BLOND IE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Chemists'
places
5 Not taut
10 Blunder
12 Berry of
"X-Men"
13"ABC
World
News"
anchor
15 Supporter's suffix
16Conclude
17 Frodo's
friend
181rritate
20 Italian
wine
region
21 Turkey
neighbor
22Uitimate
23Tibia's,
end
25 Dreary
shade
28Docking
spots
31 Highlands
girl
32 Old Testament book
34 Play a
part
35"You said
it!"
36 Hydrocarbon
suffix
37"Something's
Gotta
Give" star

Mort Walker
TO SEe IF TI-lEY CAN RECYCLE
HIM INTO A SOLDIER

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
40 Consumed
41 Derisive
sound
42 Some
coasters
43 Health
clubs

DOWN
1 Acted the
usher
2 Occurs
3 Spoiled ,
perhaps
4 Junior, to
senior
5 Herring's
kin
6 Bar
topic
7 Milano of
TV
8 Traction
aids

9 Friend of
Fozzie
11 Land, as
a fish
14 Preview
19Waiter's
aids
20Watchful
24 Defeats
25Sylvan
spots
260ne
kind of
equality

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Sene! $&lt;4 ,75 (checklm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2, PO Box !&gt;36475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475
2

3

10

13
15
18

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

27 Ritzy
home
29 Lonely
place, so
they say
30Madrid
matron
33 Holds a
lease
35 Longings
38 Beatty of
film
39 Solution:
Abbr.

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
The hardest anthm~t:ic to master i&amp; that

T H ANKS
G IVING

which enobles u s t o c ount our b6smgs.
- [ .nc

..CHICKEN SOOP? AISLE 7 WITH THE OTHER
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINES."'

t1oH&lt;"r

f~~ ~!?m') HOROSCOPE
ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
hy Da\'c Gree n

6 8
1 7

1

·-·

" ... practlcln' my lines for the play.
They're 'GOBBLE GOBBLE'."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

3 -9 5 7 2
3 8
6
9
7
4
1
6
7 t8
6 5 3 9
5 1
- 8
7 9
2
Difficulty Le-cl * *

11/lJ

£ti ll

9 g B G ~
£ 16 v 9 r-·L
1 - - - - 1- - r-G L ~ 6 £
g 6
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6 G L B 9
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..'{'KNOW WHAT I LIKE" SE"SI ASOUT "DS:NN15~
HG MAKES MY l&lt;ll' LOOK NO~MAL.."

v
B
g
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£
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6

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B L £
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\

HAPPY BIRIHDAY for Tuesday,
Nov. 23, 2010:
This year, others dominate, like it or
not. Your smiling way attracts many
people. You have another side that, if
pushed, could emerge. Realize that it is
normal to have limits. Perhaps you
should integrate your true self with
that sunshine personality. The unex·
pected plays a key role in the next 12
months. Come spring, creativity and a
better quality of life mark your days. H
you are single, you could meet someone quite special. There will be an element of continuous excitement
between you.lf you are attached, the
two of you act like new lovers. Some
~pies might be expecting ~ addi·
tions. GEMINI can be challcngmg..
The Stars Show the J(jnd of Day You7J
Have: 5-Dynmnic; 4-Positire; 3-Average;
2-»so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**** Resist the temptation to let
someone have it early in the day, even
if you feel like it. People have been
pushing you way past your limits.
Your instincts cheer you on in a convcr·
sation. Just be careful. Don't do any·
thing you could regret later. Tonight:
Hang with a friend.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
** Your controlling side emerges
when dealing with a demanding friend
or family member. This person knows,
like everyone else, that when you say
"no," you mean it Use your iru\ate
ingenuity with a project or public
appearance. Tonight Buy a favorite
dessert on the way home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***** When someone ~miles,
almost no one can help themselves they return that smile. Your upbeat and
positive attitude helps compen.o;atc for
an unexpected development. Knowing
you, you will incorporate it in a positive way. Tonight Only what you
wanl
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
***The less said the bettci; at least
during the workday. You could be
overly excited by news heading in your
direction. This news could involvl!
travel or another wonderful opportunity. Tonight Nap, then decide.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
**** Despite confusion.. keep
your focus. You see a lot coming up
from out of nowhere. A partner or
associate pops up with an idea that
seems too good to say "no" to. Use care
before involv.ing others in your financial dealings. Tonight: Slow down.

Head home.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
***** Examine an opportunity
to take the lead. If you don't like what
you must do, then, by all means, back
off. Someone might not agree, but still
tries to enlist your help. Being helpful
-and being the lead player are two dif.
ferent jobs. Tonight: Work turns into
fun.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22)
***** Detach and take an
overview that isn't colored by what
you wish could happen. Be ready to
re-huffle your schedule if another invitation seems more interesting. A child
might be pulling the wool over your
eyes. ToniAAt Tap into a long-term
desire
start making it so.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
****You will work best on an
individuallevcl v.ith those around
you. u~ special care around money
and spendin~. You might not know
when to say 'no." A d\ild or loved, one
could ~urprise you with his or her
actions. Don' t overreact. Tonight Opt
for something different.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
**** Could you possibly be out
of sorts? You might not intentionally be
distorting what you he~ but you also
might have had enough of another's
pressure. Your creativity flows in an
unprecedented manner. Tonight
Socialize a little and relax.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***All work and no play could
make you feelle.s.-; than enthusiastic
.1bout life. You can add humor to any
situation if you so choose. Your positive attitude flows into all interactions,
making for more lightness. Tonight•
What starts out a'i a ~taid talk could
become quite the hoopla.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
*****Just allow your imagination to venture out, "ith you following.
You might be amazed by all the excitement you could trigger out of the blue.
Use caution with money matters, as
they could get way out of whack.
Tonight Plav the night away.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
***Stay close to home if pos.sible.
You dLc;rover that someone finally
want&lt;&gt; to talk after months of holding
back. Your instincts guide you \.,ith a
domestic or family matter. Just be careful not to do something to distance this
key person. Tonight Order in.

ana

Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at http://u'UJW.jacquelinebigar.rom.

.

.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
./

�..., __

p

so so a

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

F

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bryan Walters/photos

Members of the Wahama cheerleading squad lead the crowd in supporting the White Falcons on Saturday during their Class A quarterfinal football contest against East Hardy in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

.....

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

Tuesday, November 23,

2010

Wahama defensive back Elijah Honaker (10) runs up
the sideline following a first half interception Saturday
in a Class A quarterfinal football contest against East
Hardy in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Wahama head football coach Ed Cromley, center, goes over some information with
his team during the first half of Saturday's Class A quarterfinal football contest
against East Hardy in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

East Hardy running back Shawn Skovron (20) fumbles the ball after being hit by a
gang of White Falcon defenders during the first half of Saturday's Class A quarterfinal football contest in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

East Hardy's Kyle Westfall (83} is tackled by a gang of Wahama defenders during
the first half of Saturday's Class A quarterfinal football contest in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

Wahama running back Ryan Lee (15) tries to break away from East Hardy defenders during the second half of Saturday's Class A quarterfinal football contest in
Point Pleasant, W.Va.

WHS-EHHS Boxscore

Soar

PREP FOOTBALL

fromPageBl

Saturday"s Box Scores

Wahama 73, East Hardy 38
East Hardy
Wahama

6 24 8 0 - 38
20 24 14 15 -- 73

Scoring summary
First Quarter
W-lsaac Lee 78 run (kic.k blocked) 8:57
EH-Korey Foltz 42 pass from Kolin Foltz (kick failed) 7:29
W-Ayan Lee 82 kickoff return (pass failed) 7:21
W-Eiijah Honaker 82 blocked FG return (Anthony Grimm run)
4:29
Second Quarter
EH-Jeremy Kraus 1 run (Kolin Foltz run) 9:57
W-Grimm 1 run (Tyler Kitchen pass from Trenton Gibbs) 8:41
W-Ayan Lee 27 run (Grimm run) 7:21
'
EH -Joshua Parker 19 pass from Kolin Foltz (Korey Foltz pass
from Kolin Foltz) 4:43
W-Grimm 6 run (Kitchen pass from Gibbs) 1:20
EH-Kolin Foltz 2 run (Kolin Foltz run) ·24
'
Third Quarter
W-Ayan Lee 30 run (Ryan Lee pass from Gibbs) 11:09
W-Grimm 3 run (pass failed) 6.18
EH-Stephen See 5 pass from Kolin Foltz (Parker pass from
Kolin Foltz) :35
Fourth Quarter
W-Ciay VanMeter 5 run (Crandal Neal run) 9:05
W-Zack Wamsley 1 run (Kitchen kick) 3:34

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att·int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

EH

w

24
36·78
473
551
26-43-1
3·1
3·12

18
40·321
65
386
3·7-1
2-0
5-45

Individual Statistics
Rushing: EH-Jeremy Kraus 16-68, Kolin Foltz 14-6, Kyle
Westfall 2·2, Shawn Skovron 4-2.
W-lsaac Lee 5-113, Ryan Lee 6·71, Crandal Neal 5-59,
Anthony Grimm 10·47, Zack Wamsley 6-37, Clay VanMeter 3·5,
Trenton G1bbs 5·(-11 ).
Passing: EH-Kolin Foltz 26-43-1 473
W- Trenton Gibbs 3·7-1 65.
Receiving: EH-Kyle Westfa119-134, Korey Foltz 3·101, Joshua
Parker 5-97. Lev1 Beck 3·67, Stephen See 4·48, Shawn Skovron
2-26.
W- Tyler Kitchen 1-28. Elijah Honaker 1·23, Isaac Lee 1-14.

apparent
game-tying
touchdown when an illtimed
encroachment
penalty was assessed the
Cougars on a fourth and
one situation at the
Falcon six yard line.
Following the penalty
and faced with a fourth
and six situation from the
II East Hardy elected to
attempt a 28 yard field
goal by Foltz instead of
going for the first down.
The resulting snap on the
field goal try \vas bobble(,! by the holder and
Foltz's boot never got
over the head of the intetior line. The blocked
kick bounded down the
line of scrimmage where
Honaker scooped it up
and after a brief hesitation by everyone on the
field Honaker began racing towards the end zone
for an 82 yard touchdown return with the
blocked field goal try.

, Anthony Grimm ran the
two point conversion following the bizarre turn of
events to give WHS a 206 advantage.
"We simply made too
many mistakes in the
gl!me. especially in the
first half:· a dejected
East Hardy coach Chad
Williams said following
the high scoring setback.
"That penalty in the
opening quarter really
cost us. We were going
to go for the tirst down
on fom1h and one at their
six but the penalty set us
back to the II and we
decided to go for the

field goal and we made
,.another blunder by not
covering the kick. You
simply can't make that
many
mistakes and
expect to win against a
team as good as Wahama
the disappointed coach
added."
Both teams traded
punches during second
quarter action
with
Wahama getting touchdown runs by Grimm of
one and six yards and
another by Ryan Lee
covering
27
yards.
Grimm ran a two-point
conversion with Trenton
Gibbs tossing a pair of
conversion passes to
Tyler Kitchen following
the remaining two second quarter scores for the
White Falcons.
East Hardy received a
Jeremy Kraus one yard
run, a Kolin Foltz two
yard burst and a I9 yard
Foltz to Joshua Parker
pass for its touchdowns
prior to the intermission
break to match the hosts
second quarter point
total. Foltz also ran a
pair of conversions following the Cougar scores
while passing to Korey
Foltz for another to make ·
it a 44-30 score at the
half.
Wahama scored on its
opening possession of
the second half when Lee
traveled 30 yards to
extend the lead to 52-30
before Grimm tacked on
another TD with a three
yard run later in the period. Ryan Lee caught a
pass from Gibbs fo11owing one third period score
while the pass for the
PAT attempt fell incomplete on the second WHS

touchdown.
Defensively WHS kept
East hardy out of the end
zone until the final
minute of the stanza
when Foltz teamed with
Stephen See on a five
yard strike to pull the visitors to 58-38. Parker
grabbed the two point
conversion pass from
Foltz but that would be
the final time ' the
Cougars would dent the
scoring column on the
day.
The White Falcons
turned the game over to
its second team backfield
in the final stanza and the
Bend Area second team
responded with a five
yard run for six points by
Clay VanMeter and a one
yard plunge by Zack
Wamsley. Crandal Neal
added a two point conversion run while Tyler
Kitchen concluded the
scoring with a PAT kick
to make the final count
73-38.
While
the
White
Falcon · running backs
were &lt;;coring ali the
touchdowns it was the
blocking ability of the
offensive line against a
large East Hardy contingent
that
afforded
Wahama its success.
Junior guard Colton
McKinney experienced
an extremely incredible
game
by
providing
numerous key blocks to
allow WHS nmners to
gain huge · chunks of
yardage.
McKinney
was joined by junior linemen Jeremy Cundiff.
Evan Smith and Jamin
Branch
along
with
seniors Ryan Anderson,
Tyler Kitchen and Elijah

Honaker.
The White Falcons finished the day with 321
yards on the ground and
another 65 through the
air for 386 yards of total
offense.
Isaac Lee
picked up 113 yards in
just five carries while
Ryan Lee topped the
1000 yard mark fo~
season with 71 yar
six tries. Trenton G1 s
completed three of seven
passes for 65 yards with
Tyler Kitchen catching
one for 28 yards. Elijah
Honaker one for 23 yards
and Isaac Lee one for 14.
yards.
East Hardy gathered 78
yards on the ground
while throwing for 473
yards for a net total of
551 yards of offense.
Jeremy Kraus led the
Cougars on the ground
with 68 yards in 16
attempts with Kolin Foltz
connecting on 26 of 43
aerials for 473 yards and
two touchdowns. Kyle
Westfall grabbed nine
passes for 134 yards
while
Korey
Foltz
snatched three aerials for
I0 I yards and a score.
Joshua Parker had five
receptions for 97 yards
and a touchdown. ,
;
Beck three catches f
yards. Stephen See our
for 48 and a six-pointer.
and Shawn Skovron two
for 26 yards.
Wahama will prepar&lt;:
for a visit from Wirt
County at 7:30p.m. on
Friday at the Point
Pleasant High School
Athletic Complex as the
Bend Area team is
awarded only its third
appearance in the Class
A semifinals.

I

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