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Rangers'
Hamilton wins
ALMVP,Bt

URG basketball
notebook, Bt

•
l'rintl·d on 100rc
Rl't',clcd Nc\\sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Oh io
.... ·f.

7:

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D.,

.

:.DN.ESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2010

www.mydnilysentincl.com

• .-£··,

1

Fir~!

I

still under investigation

BY BETfl S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BURLINGHAM
The cause of a Monday
afternoon
e which
destroyed
home and
then spread~to a brush
tire in Bedforp Township
remains unde{ investiga
. tion. according to Shane
• Cartmill of the Division
of State Fire Marshal.
I Whether o not the
fire was arso has also

not been determined
though Cartmill said
this was one of those
cases which could go
either way in terms of
being able to make a
determination of arson.
or not. Investigators
with the Division of
State Pire Marshal still
have additional interviews to conduct concerning the incident. The
home the fire originated
in
was
completely

destroyed. making it
even more difficult for
the investigator to determine what happened.
Cartmill said the
home, located at 42440
Colburn Road, had not
rece,ntly been occupied
and no one was home at
the time of the fire.
There were no injuries.
The home is described
as a two-story. single
family
residential
dwelling.

The
Scipio
Fire
Department was the primary responder on the
scene which included
mutual aid from the
Pomeroy, Bashan and
Tuppers Plains Fire
Departments. The Athens
County Richmond Fire
Department also assisted
as did Syracuse's Squad
33.
Investigators with the
Division of State Fire
Marshal have been called

to the site of two structure fires in Meigs
County in the last three
days. On Sunday, inves~
tigators were on the
scene of a fatal house
fire in Long Bottom
which claimed the life
of an Athens County
man. Cartmill said at
this time these two fires
don't appear to be connected and are being
treated as two. separate
incidents.

Two more

SHOWTIME!
sentenced in
, Home ~ r the Holidays Christmas show set for Friday church arson
crime

Hawkins denied
Thanksgiving
furlough from jail

BY CHARL
HOEFUCH@MYJ

Forest
officials:
Coal fire
contained,
not out
NELSONVILLE (AP)
·- Officials with Ohio's
Wayne National Forest
:-~ay an underground coal
fire has been contained
nd a contractor is
to extinguish it.
statement released
Tuesday by Wayne
National Forest officials
says that five acres of
forest closed last week
will remain closed to the
public until a contractor
finishes putting out the
fire .
Federal firefighters
located the underground
fire after spotting small
amounts of smoke coming up during a routine
patrol. The five acres
were closed Friday.
Forest officials warn
there could be fume~
and unstable ground in
the area.

MIDDLEPOR
the
beginning when
turned carolers
:UTive until the end when Santa
makes the scene, Friday night's
"Home for the Holi~·ys" Christmas
show of the Riverb dArts Council
is sure to please.
The lineup inc! es plenty of
song and dance rou 11es along with
a reading of 'The 'Night Before
Christmas'' by sto teller Donna
Wi)son, emcee for thctprogram. The
auditorium has been extensi\'cly
decorated with lighted wreaths and
a decorated tree where Santa will be
seated to give treats to the children
at the conclusion of the :show.
Vocalist Sharon Ha\\ ley will open
the show with the theme song and
then will return later on tlic program
to sing "Merry Christma Darling."
Among the other vocalists will be
Holly Delong. Bill Crane, Dave
Warner and Dixie Sayre. Jane and
Harry Tompkins will do a dance
routine, and the Gallia-Meigs
Performing Arts students of Patty
Fellere will present three numbers
in the show.
For a half-hour preceding the 7:30
p.m. showtime, the Big Bend
Community Band directed by
Toney Dingess will present a program of Christmas music. Tickets at
the door are $7 for adults and $5 for
children. Proceeds are used to further the arts in the Bend area.

B Y BRIAN

POMEROY - Joseph
Satterfield and Erin
Hawkins are the latest of
four charged in August's
Hemlock Grove church
arson to be sentenced.
Judge Fred W. Crow III
sentenced them Monday.
and they will appear again
in January for sentencing
on other counts.
Crow denied Ha\\ .kins ·
request for a furlough. a
bond reduction. or any
other consideration that
might allow her out of jail
long enough to take care
of personal business. after
Assistant
Prosecuting
Attorney
Matthew
Donohue objected to any
release other than one
under her current bond
order.
Hawkins'
attorney.
David Baer. said she has
personal business to
attend to. such as explaining to her four year-old

Charlene
Hoeflichlphoto
Pianist Mary
Stewart on the
electric piano,
shown here in a
practice session with vocalist Sharon
Wilson, is the
Christmas show
accompanist

See ~rson, A5

wrl.1I.ng 's on the waII?

some tOO acres .

Alleged Facebook posts cause controversy

-

•

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Page AS

POMEROY . - Posts
allegedly made on the
social networking site
Facebook are being interpreted by members of the
Pomeroy
Police
Department as threats
made against officers in
the department.
Pomeroy Chief of
Police Mark Proffitt told
member::. of Pomeroy
Village Council police

• Margaret K. Bissell

WEATHER

B v B RIAN

J.

R EED

BREED Iii MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

12 PAGES

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports B Section
@ 2010 Ohio \'alley Publishin&amp; Co.

,1
4879 1181

Proffitt said the departmcnt is pursuing charges
against at least one individual though no charges
have been filed. Proftitt
told council charges were
being pursued by an
unnamed law enforcement agency and the
investigation was ongoing. He told council members he had proof of the
alJcged postings for their
review.
Proffitt's discussion was
preceded by a written

statement, read and presented by Patrolman
Dclwon
Laudermilt.
claiming he was one of the
officers who had been
threatened via social networking sites. Laudermilt
asked council to take these
threats seriously. saying
"it puts every public
employee in great danger."
Councilwoman Ruth
Spaun asked the status of
Kulchar \\ho has appealed
hb suspen&lt;:ion with

Proffitt telling her he
remains on indefinite suspension without pay. At
the last meeting of
Pomeroy Village Council
on Nov. 8. Mayor John
Musser told Kulchar and
his father Dale they would
not answer the appeal
until the material the
Kulchars presented were
reviewed by Village
Solicitor Chris Tenoglia.
In other council busi-

See Writings, A5

of existing 'golf cart' ordinance

INDEX

lllllllllllllll

officers (mcluding himself) in the department
started "receiving death
threats via Faccbook and
other avenues'' after the
"dispensation'' of former
Patrolman John Kulchar.
Kulchar was not accused
of making the alleged
threats though others
were. Proffitt said these
"others" were not members of the Pomeroy
Police Department but
were in locaJ law enforcement.

Middlepo~ mayOr calls for clarrfication

High: 51
Low: 42

2 StiC'I"IONS -

J . R EED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM ,

Carolers John
Musser, Dixie
Sayre, Carolyn
Thomas and
Dave Warner
will be a feature
of Friday night's
show "Home for
the Holidays."

They say the fire is
near where an April
brush fire spread over

. OBITUARIES

.

Charlene
Hoeflichlphoto

,

•

MIDDLEPORT -It is
illegal to drive an underspeed · vehicle
on
Middleport
village
streets, and although village council might reconsider an existmg ordinanl:e prohibiting golf
carts, it probably is not a
fast-track issue.
Underspeed vehicles
were the topic of discus-

I :~~~~~~~tr~~~~~h e~~~i~~~~

Brian Conde and Roger

Manley again encour- other requirements. By
aged council to consider state definition. USV:s
joining eight other Ohio are only l~al if they travtowns in inspecting them el a maximum speed of
and permitting them on 20 miles per hour.
village streets.
Beegle said those who
Last week, Sheriff drive their carts on the
Beegle said road without an inspecRobert
underspeed vehicles will tion and tags can be fined
now be inspected as a now that the inspection
requirement for road use program is underway.
outside village limits.
The mspection program
State law allows these does not allow lawful
vehicles to be licensed, operation of underspeed
after inspection. as long vehicles
on
village
if,
like
as they are driven on streets.
roadways with speed Jim- 'Middleport, the village
its of 35 or les~ and under has an ordinance banning

•

them.
Michael
Mayor
Gerlach said Monday he
had reviewed ' the village's codified ordinances and determined
underspccd \'chicles are
not permitted.
While the) are olten
· referred to as golf cru1s.
Conde said the vehicles
passing m&lt;;pection ru·e
better equipped, and .t
safe as conventional
automobiles. in that they
are equipped with lights,
mirrors and other safety
features .

Gerlach said the village
could pass an ordinance
allowing the inspected
underspeed vehicles on
Middleport streets, Q.ut
said a number of issue."
would have to be
addressed in a general
ordinance. such as what
streets \\ ould be di::.allowed for underspeed
vehicle use.
Conde
an~
Councilman Emerson
Heighton said they had
visited Ohio towns where

See Golf Cart, AS

�:w-ednesday, November 24,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

The Oaily Sentinel • Page A2

Economy sees growth,
but unemployment stays high
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The economy grew a
little faster over the summer than the government
first thought. That modest
pickup wasn't nearly
enough to significantly
lower the nation's high
unemployment rate, and
the Federal Reserve doesn't expect the economy to
improve much over the
nej~t couple of years.
The economy expanded
at a 2.5 percent in the
July-September quarter,
th~
Commerce
Department
reported
Tuesday. That was up
from the 2 percent pace
initially estimated, and
better than the 1.7 percent
growth rate il'} the AprilJune quru1er.
Stronger spending by
U.S. shoppers and better
overseas sales of U.S.
goods were the main
forces behind an upward
revision.
Still. the hiring picture
hasn't improved much even with U.S. companies
reporting their best quartedy profits after taxes on
records dating back to

1947. After-tax profits
climbed to $1.22 trillion
in the July-September
quarter, according to the
Commerce Teport.
The nation's unemployment rate has been stuck
at 9.6 percent unemployment rate for the past
three months. The Fed's
latest projections suggest that won't change
much for a few years.
The
Fed
predicts
roughly 2.5 percent
growth and between 9.5
percent and 9.7 percent
unemployment for the
rest of this year. Those
are both downgraded
forecasts from its June
projections.
Growth will strengthen
over the next three years,
but not enough to bring
unemployment
back
down to more normal
levels of around 5.5 percent to 6 percent, according to the Fed's forecasts.
At best, the Fed projects
3.6 percent growth in
2011, and 4.5 percent
growth in 2012 and 2013.
The latest Fed projections also suggest no bet-

ter than 8.9 percent
unemployment next year,
roughly 8 percent in the
2012 presidential election year and, at best, just
under 7 percent for 2013.
Under one rule of
thumb. the economy
would need to grow by 5
percent for a full yeru· to
push down the unemployment rate by a full
percentage point.
The Fed's acknowledged that progress in
reducing unemployment
has been "disappointingly slow."
The housing market
hasn't fared much better.
The
latest
reading
showed sales of previously owned homes
slipped
slightly
in
October.
The
National
Association of Realtors
said existing-home sales
dipped 2.2 percent last
month to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of
4.43 million units. That's
38.9 percent below their
peak of 7.25 million units
set in September 2005
during the height of the

housing boom.
Paul Dales. an econoHigh unemployment mist at Capital Economics,
and tight credit kept buy- said a "meaningful accelers away, even with mort- eration" in consumer
gage rates near the lowest spending seems unlikely
while job growth remains
levels in decades.
The median price for a muted and Americans are
horne sold in October struggling to repair their
was $170,500, down 0. 9 finances at a time when
percent from a year ago. their home values are dropPrices continue to be ping.
On Wall Street. investors
depressed by weak sales
and a huge overhang of looked past the better reading on third-quarter ecounsold homes.
Americans are spend- nomic growth. The Dow
ing a little more. and Jones industrial average
142.21
that has helped give the closed down
economy a boost. In the points, reflecting investors
third quarter, consumer 'concerns about a Korean
spending grew at a 2.8 military conflict and eco- '
percent pace, t}le most in nomic problems in Europe.
nearly four years. That
Sales of U.S. exports to
was a stronger showing foreign customers grew at
than the 2.6 percent pace a 6.3 percent pace in the
third quru1er, another facfirst estimated.
Even
with
the tor in the third-quarter
improvement,
con- bump-up. That compared
sumers would need to with a 5 percent growth
spend more to have a rate first estimated. A
significant impact on the weaker value of the U.S.
jobs market. That's dollar is helping those
because
consumer sales. The falling dollar
spending accounts for
roughly 70 percent of all
national economic output.

makes U.S . goods cheape~
- and thus more attrac- .J
tive -- to foreign buyers.
The housing market,
which Jed the country,
into recession, remains a
weight on the economy.
Builders slashed spending on housing projects
at a pace of nearly 28
percent.

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Fed lowers outlook
for economy through 2011
WASHINGTON (AP) over the next eight
- Federal Reserve offi- months in an effort to
cials have become more lower interest rates and
pessimistic in their eco- spur more spending.
The Fed is slightly
nomic outlook through
next year and have low- more optimistic about
ered their forecast for 2012, in part because
officials expect the bondgrowth.
The economy will buying program to have a
grow only 2.4 percent to positive • impact. The
2.5 percent this year, Fed economy should grow
officials said Tuesday in 3.6 percent to 4.5 percent
an. updated forecast. that year, a tick better
That's down sharply than June's forecast of
from a previous projec- 3.5 percent to 4.5 pertion of 3 percent to 3.5 cent.
The economy will also
percent. Next year, the
economy will expand by grow 3.5 percent to 4.6
3 percent to 3.6 percent, percent in 2013, the centhe Fed said, also much tral bank said, the first
lower than its June fore- time it has issued projections for that year.
cast.
Fed official_s project
The economic outlook
that
unemployment was prepared at the Fed's
won't change much th1s meeting earlier this
year. averaging between month and released
9.5 percent and 9.7 per- Tuesday. It reflects the
cent. The current unem- views of the Fed's board
ployment rate is 9.6 per- of governors and its
cent. Progress in reduc- regional bank presidents.
ing unemployment has
The jobless rate will be
been "disappointingly 8.9 percent to 9.1 percent
slow," the central bank in 2011. Fed officials
said, according to the predict. That's much
minutes of its Nov. 2-3 worse than June's projection of 8.3 percent to 8.7
meeting.
The darker view helps percent.
By
2012,
when
explain why the Fed
decided at its meeting President Barack Obama
earlier this month to · faces the electorate,
launch another round of unemployment will be
stimulus. The central 7.7 percent to 8.2 perbank plans to buy $600 cent. up from the previbillion in Treasury bonds ous forecast of 7.1 per-

cent to 7.5 percent.
The Fed's forecasts of
a slow economy with
only gradual improvement in the job market
are broadly similar to
those by private economists. An Associated
Press survey of 43 leading economists last
month found that they
expect the economy to
expand just 2.7 percent in
2011, after growing only
2.6 percent this year.
The
unemployment
rate will remain at 9 percent qy the end of 2011,
the economists said.
The Fed said that data
reieased since its last projections showed the
economy was weaker in
the first half of this year
than
it
previously
thought. The economy
grew at only a 1. 7 percent
annual pace in the AprilJune period, much lower
than the first quarter's 3.7
percent rate.
'
Consumers are still
holding back on their
spending, the central
bank said, and recent
reports on housing, manufacturing, international
trade and employment
were all weaker than
expected at the June
meeting.
The
central
bank
expects
prices
will
remain
in
check.

Inflation is projected to
rise l.l percent to 1.7
percent in 2011, little
changed from the previous forecast of l.l percent to ·1.6 percent.

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�-

~-

----- -

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Local Briefs

Recorder

Piano recital

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Monday, Nov. 29
POMEROY - MeigS County Veterans Sei'VJCe Office,
regular meeting, 9 p.m., 117 Memorial Drive.

Wednesday, Dec. 1
•

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

For The Record
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the following transfers of real estate:
• Aoyd Hickman to Federal Home Loan Mortgage
rp., sheriff's deed, Salisbury; Joseph C. Sands, Stacey
Sands, to Columbus Southern Power, American
ectric Power, easement, Sutton; Harold Alexander,
Hester Rena Alexander, to Columbus Southern Power,
AEP, easement, Orange.
'
• Kyle D. Ord, Lisa K. Ord. to Columbus Southern
Power, AEP. easement, Chester; Samuel L. Saunders,
Elizabeth l. Saunders, to Brenda L. Proffitt, Terry
Proffitt, deed, Letart; Glen Allen Arnott, George
Richard Amott, to Billy R. Goble, Jr.. Sarah K. Goble,
deed, Village of Middleport.
• Mary McAngus to Martin Alvin McAngus, Jr.,
deed, Village of Pomeroy; Village of Racine to John J.
Proffitt, Martha A. Proffitt, deed, Village of Racine;
Village of Racine to Joann Collins. deed, Village of
Racine; Randy K. Fulks, Betty L. Fulks, to Howard L.
Barber, deed, Olive.

HARRISONVILLE ., fire station.

Scipio Township Trustees, 6:30

Clubs and organizations
Thursday, Dec. 2
POMEROY - Meigs County Retired Teachers·
luncheon, noon, Trinity Church. Eastern High
School bell choir to perform holiday music. Bring gift books
for children. Reservations to 992-3214 by ~v. 30.
~ation

Other events
Saturday, Nov. 'lJ
LUCASVILLE - Donnie Boggs, Rutland, will perform at
7 p.m., Ohio Southern Opry, Lucasville.

- - -- - --~-.,.._.~-~--~-

ASK DR. BROTHERS

.
-June VanVranken wiB present her

POMEROY
students in a Christmas piano recital at 7 p.m., Saturday,
Dec. 4 at New Beginrungs United Methodist Church,
Pomeroy.

Scholarships offered
MIDDLEPORT - Full or partial scholarships are
available for those wishing to play Upward Bound
Basketball and Cheerleading at Middleport Church of
Christ. For more information contact the church at 9922914 during office hours or David Schenkelberg at 4166866.

Upward program registration
deadline Saturday

Don't know what to
say about sickness ·
Dear Dr. Brothers: My
wife has been battling cancer on and off for about
three years now. It's been an
uphill struggle, and just
when it seems she's been in
remission for a few months,
the cancer comes back.
She's an exceptionally
strong-willed woman, and
she wanti to keep her illness private. The thing is, I
keep lying to our friend~
and family and tell them
everything is OK I know
they think something is up.
I don't know how much
longer I can walk this line.

Dr. Joyce Brot~ers

long trip. I knew we completely blew it when our
son a-.;ks us every day when
-J.B.
his grandfather is coming
Dear J.B.: I'm sure this home. We both feel like
illness is the most stressful complete morons and that
thing possible for both you we made a sad situation 10
and your wife. You need to times worse. How can we
respect her wishes about ever tell him the truth now?
keeping it a secret, although -F.V.
if there are a few special
Dear RV.: It is too bad
people who should be told, that you and your wife didyou can certainly find the n't give a bit more thought
courage to talk to her about to preparing your son for
them in particular. Don't his grandfather's eventual
complain about how diffi- death. Even if it was unexcult she is making things, pected, it's always a good
just tell her that you are sure idea to let children know
TUPPERS PLAINS -Pastor Rob Barber of Bethel these few people would
Worship Center announced today that Bethel will want to know because of about the aging process and
serve a free Thanksgiving dinner for the community their love and concern for that their grandparents
Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, from 12 noon until 3 her. I don't know if her won't be with them forever
-especially when they get
p.m. at the new Chester Community Center.
secrecy is due to the fact
The church stressed that the meal is free and open that she thinks she may put to the age that they feel it's
to the public. Reservations are not required for help in it all behind her' without a "drag" to have to go visit
preparing the feast would be appreciated, he said. anyone ever knowing, or Grandma and Grandpa.
Those wishing to attend, or who would like to volun- that she is afraid of having You don't have to do this in
teer by donating, preparing or serving food, should people turn away from her. a guilt or anxiety-producing
way, but it does help a child
contact church members Robert or Margaret Payne at It can and does happen.
to know he ha-; made his
740-818-7736.
Another possibility is that
For more information, contact Bethel Worship she is good-hearted and grandparents' last years
Center at 740-667-6793, or visit its web site at selfless enough to not want pleasant ones by his participation. I don't know how
www.bethelwc.org.
anyone to worry about her close your son was to your
oi: feel they have to take father, but I hope the little
care of her. In any case, one will have some lasting
there may be a bit of super- memories of their time
stition involved the together. Make sure you
fewer people who know remind him of Grandpa as
about her illness. the less the years go by.
"real" it seems. You might
At his age, the idea of his
talk to her about her reasons
major advance" that can ly $140 a year in some for wanting to keep it a grandfather going on a
help curb the epidemic poor countries where secret, just so you know "trip" instead of dying isn't
in gay men, said Dr. they are sold in generic what is going through her all that far-fetched. Your
son is just getting to the
Kevin Fenton, AIDS pre- form .
head. Try to keep her trust
vention chief at the U.S.
Whether insurers or and confidence through stage where he can begin to
understand and accept the
Centers for Disease government health pro- your words and deeds Control and Prevention. grams should pay for she has made a special finality of death. You need
But he warned they may them is one of the tough exception for you, and you · to let him know that
not apply to people issues to be sorted out, wouldn't want to let her Grandpa is not corning
exposed to HIV through said Dr. Anthony Fauci, down. Try to build in some back. If it is too late to have
male-female sex, drug director of the National respite time for yourself a memorial service or if he
use or other ways. Institute of Allergy and when you can relax and missed the funeral, try to
explain what happened in
Studies in those groups Infectious Diseases.
blow off steam; you need to
"This is an exciting be able to stay strong for simple terms. and allow
are under way.
Because Truvada is finding," but it "is only your wife, and a steady diet him the opportunity to visit
already on the market, one study in one specific of stress won't do it for you. the grave or see the urn or
whatever is appropriate for
the CDC is rushing to study population," so its Good luck to both of you.
him in order to say goodbye
develop guidelines for impact on others is
Dear Dr. Brothers: to Grandpa in his own way.
doctors who want to use unknown, Fauci said.
When my father died If he objects to this. don't
it to prevent HIV, and
His institute sponsored recently, my wife and I panurged people to wait the study with the Bill &amp; icked. We didn't give a force him. Let him go when
Melinda
Gates great deal of thought as to he is a bit older. Don't tell
until those are ready.
As a practical matter, Foundation. The find- how we were going to him you lied. but Jet him
price could limit use. ings were published explain Grandpa's death to know the truth from now
The pills cqst $5,000 to online by the New our 5-year-old, so we told on.
(c) 2010 by King
$14,000 a year in the England Journal
of him that Grandpa went on a
Features Syndicate
United States, but rough- Medicine.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Church of
Christ is taking registrations for their seventh year of
Upward basketball and cheerleading.
This is for children age 5 through 6th grade. The
last registration and evaluation day is Saturday, Nov.
27 form 12:30 p.m. to 4:30p.m. in the Family Life
Center at the corner of Fifth and Main Streets.
For more information contact the church at 9922914 during office hours or David Schenkelberg at
7 40-416-6866.

Bethel offering ·
Thanksgiving dinner

·
:

·

3 big developments
make AIDS outlook more hopeful
Bv MARILYNN
MARCHIONE
AP MEDICAL WRITER

n the nearly 30 years
AIDS epidemic has
•
raged, there has never
been a more hopeful day
than this.
Three striking developments took place
Tuesday: u.N. officials
said new HIV cases are
dropping dramatically
worldwide. A study
showed that ~ daily pill
already on pharmacy
shelves could help prevent new infections in
gay men. And the pope
opened the way for the
use of condoms to prevent AIDS .
"I don't know of a day
where so many pieces
are beginning to align
for HIV prevention and
treatment, and frankly
with a view to ending the
epidemic," said Mitchell
Warren, head of the
AIDS Vaccine Advocacy
Coalition, a nonprofit
up that works on HIV
vention
research.
•
"This is an incredibly
opportune moment and
we have to be sure we
seize it."
President
Barack
Obama said the groundbreaking research on the
AIDS drug "could mark
the beginning of a new
era in HIV prevention."
The U.N. report said
that new cases dropped
nearly 20 percent over
the last decade and that
33.3 million people are
living with HIV now.
"We can say with confidence and conviction
that we have broken the
trajectory of the AIDS
pandemic,"
said
UNAJDS
Executive
Director Michel Sidibe
in Geneva.
Health officials credit
part of the decline to
wider condom use, and
Tuesday, in a historic
ift in church teach•
ings, the Vatican said
that using a condom is a
lesser evil than infecting
a sexual partner with
HIV.
Condoms remain the
best weapon against
AIDS. and the new prevention pill is not the
chemical equivalent. But
scientists called it a true

breakthrough. The pill,
Gilead
Science's
Truvada, is already used
to treat people with HIV.
A three-year global
study found that daily
doses cut the risk of
infection in healthy gay
and bisexual men when
given with condoms,
counseling and other
prevention services.
The drug lowered the
chances of infection by
44 percent, and by 73
percent or more among
men who took their pills
most
faithfully.
Researchers had feared
the pills might give a
false sense of security
and make men less likely to use condoms or to
limit their partners, but
the opposite happened
- risky sex declined.
The results are "a

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

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

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

HOLZER

Saturday, November 27
Gallipolis Urgent Care

1pm-9pm

Meigs Urgent Care

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

Jackson Urgent Care
Athens Urgent Care

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

-

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

------------------·-

CLINIC

.
·

·

�---- . ---~-

~

--~-------~ - ~~----~-~~-------or-'"""1

Page

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 24,

The Daily Sentinel

201

... aslol!Las

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

l!il
hail'as
of£ my wallet...

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

}

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Ed1tor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Cotrgress shall make tro law respectitrg an
establishment of religiott, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging tire freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of tire people
peaceably to assemble, atrd to petitiott tire
Govemment fo.r a redress of grievattces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

-

,
I

Party of governor, next president
often not a match
BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

As goes the governor's mansion. so goes the
nation?
Not so much.
Newly compiled research by the University of
Minnesota's Smart Politics blog finds that the commonly held belief that a governor's party holds sway
over a stat 's pick for the White House is largely a
myth.
Republican governors will take &lt;;barge ?f 29 states
in January, following a midterm landshde for the
party. The GOP's ~t~te-level ~ictories ~ere touted ~y
journalists and pohtical pund1ts as a ptvotal strateg~c
benefit to the patty"s hopes of oustmg Democratic
President Barack Obama in 2012.
Eric Ostermeier, a Ph.D. in political science and
author of the blog of the Humphrey Institute of Public
Affairs, said the correlation was referenced so ofteh
during the recent election cycle that he decided to
check it out. His research, posted to t~e blog ~ond~y,
found that Democratic and Republican presidential
nominees have carried more states over the past 40
years where they didn't control the governor's mansion than where they did.
.
·
Ostermeier's analysis found Democratic presidential candidates have won a virtually identical percenta"e
of states - a third - where there was a
b
Democratic governor as where there was . a
Republican governor, going back to 1968. GOP White
House contenders have consistently won two-thirds
of states over that time, regardless of the governor's
party affiliation. Some large popu.lation states su~h ~s
New York and California go routmely Democratic m
presidential races, explaining the lower state total, he
said.
The lack of relationship nationally holds in critical
battleground state Ohio, which has voted f~r the pr~s­
ident whose party controlled the governor s seat five
times since 1968, compared to six times for the party
opposite the governor's.
Years the state went with a different party than the
sitting governor's were 1972, 1976. 1984,.1988, I 992
and 1996. Since 2000. the party of the OhiO governor
has also clinched the White House.
Overall since 1924. Ohio has gone for a different
party than the governor's in 14 of 22 presidential elections.
Ostermeier quipped on . t~e blog ~ond~y ~hat
"while Obama is far from 'slttmg pretty heading mto
the 20 12 presidential election cycle, the fact that
Republicans will be controlling the governor's mansion in many battleground states should not make the
short list of his problems."
He said the basis for the belief that control of a governor's mansion dictates victory in the next White
House election may come from a stronger correlation
that existed in the past.
Between 1924 and 1964, his research found.
Democratic presidential nominees won nearl~ 69 rercent of states with Democratic governors. Ltkewtse,
Republican presidential nominees won nearly 63 per.
cent of states led by a GOP governo_r. .
He attributed the link in part to stra1ght-tlcket voting for Democrats. notably in southern states, during
earlier decades.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader servia
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories IS
to be accurate. If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992·2156.

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Fnday,
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Second-class postage paid at

Taxes and Thanksgiving
BY SALLY JONES
AMERICAN FORUM

"Cut My Taxes!" Americans
have heard this cry for years and we· ve heard it shouted angrily in recent months. We hear that
we pay too much in taxes. that
government makes poor use &lt;?f
our money, and that our prospenty would rise if Qnly taxes would
fall.
But in reality our taxes have
fallen steadily in recent years. In
2001 and 2003 Congress passed
temporary tax cuts which will
expire at the end of 20 I 0. We
must now decide what good or
bad has come of that experiment
and what tax law we want for the
future.
Most of us recognize that one
size doesn't really fit all - and
this holds true for income tax
rates. Maintaining a lower level of
taxation for the vast majority of
Americans makes sense in today's
hard times. But why should we do
the same for the tiny percentage
of citizens - a minority to which
I gratefully belong - whose
annual
earnings
exceed
$250,000? The American people
borrowed $700 billion to give
people like me a tax cut over the
last decade. Why should they borrow an additional $700 billion to
extend the tax breaks?
Congress should let our tax cuts
expire for the sake of the country,
especially in this ecol'l.Omy. Who
would lose by this step toward tax
fairness? Only those among us
who can afford such a loss. Who
would gain? All Americans including those few of us who
would pay more taxes.
We cannot sustain our nation not its defense; not its essential
infrastructure such as roads, rails,

bridges. dams and communications; not its economic place in
the world; not the health and education of its people; not its ability
to respond to natural disaste~s
such as earthquake, flood or humcane; not the protections we
expect it to provide against manmade disasters. toxins (domestic
and imported), buccaneering corporations or hazardous products
- without securing for our government the funding it must have
to accomplish all of these things.
Recognizing our shared.responsibility - in the present mstance
by payment of taxes - we mi&amp;ht
Jive up to the example of earlier
generations who left for us a
remarkable system of institutions
and infrastruct~tre. By abandoning
that responsibility, we would
betray both our predecessors and
our descendants, and we would
gain nothing but a tet_nporary sel.findulgence, at a pnce that wtll
impose itself on present and
future generations.
Do we bear any collective
responsibility? I think so.
Consider the example of the season.
On Thanksgiving Day most of
us will gather with family or
friends or both. We will sit down
to tables crowded with the various
dishes that speak to us of this special occasion. and indulge ourselves more than we usually do.
However much or little else we
feel thankful for on that day, we
will heartily thank the one or
more cooks who toiled in the
kitchen to prepare this dinner for
us.
We thank the cooks because we
have seen their effort first hand.
But how many others have contributed to make our feasts possible - others whom we never

,.

think about or credit? Who taugh
our cooks their skills or created
our recipes? Who grew, harvest ·
ed. preserved or transported tlH
foods? Who built our oven-. •
plumbed our kitchens, and mad •
our utensils, dishes and table-.'!
Those of us with high income
ought to ask similar question
about the plenty we enjoy daily ~
We could hardly enjoy ot1r success without assistance we hardl}
notice: the infrastructure th&lt;
allows businesses to grow an
prosper. the law enforcement th&lt;
protect patents and copyright-..
and the productiveness and pu1
chasing power of publici) -educat
ed fellow citizens. Without
national investments - suppor.
by our taxes - no wealth wo
be sustained in this country a1
those at the top would not haH.
the extraordinary lives they havl.
today. Let us remember to be .
grateful.
Let ·s make sure those outside ot ·
the top two percent of American-...
can live and' thrive. Unless we_ ...
foster prosperity for our countt}
and for every citizen, all of u&lt;&gt; wi I
suffer the consequences of living
in a society of the ailing, the:
untrained and inefficient. and tht
unruly. Let's pay the taxes - ·
those of us who can afford then ..
- to sustain the America thnt ha-.
offered opportunit) since it'
foundina.
Unless we reston
b
strength to its economy. m'&gt;tttu
tions. and structures. our count!)
\viii decline - and ever)nne' •
prospects with it.
•
(Sally Jones is a member (If t
hi~h-income
lwuselwld
11
Minneapolis who support\' Wealtl
For The Common Gu{}(/ o11d it
goal of promoting shared prm
periry and fair taxation.)·
•
0

0

-

't\t\'( DO I
~i\tK ~\T\\ \l.t.R ~
'«ELL, fOR O~E 1"\~,
\T'~ TR/\(:'ITI~\..
10 f'ARPOO 1&gt;..

TURKt.'{ ..,!

Pomeroy~

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and
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..

u

-- -

I Wednesday, November 24,2010

www.myd ailysentinel.com

Obituaries

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

-

.c--......,..-- ...........

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

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Meigs·County Forecast

Arson
From Page A1

Margaret Kathryn Bissell

child where she is going for the next several years, or
signing paperwork required for the child's care. Crow
indicated a willingness to allow a furlough until after the
Thanksgiving holiday, but would not do so because of
Donohue's objection, he said.
Hawkins will begin serving her sentence of five years
on charges of desceration of religious objects and vandalism immediately. She has been unable to make bond
and has been in jail since she was arrested the day of the
church fire.
Satterfield has been out on bond since September, and
his bond was continued. He was represented in court by
Gallipolis Attorney William Eachus. Baer is a public
defender.
Donohue, in outlining the terms of the negotiated plea
agreements, said both agree to testify against their two
co-defendants. and will continue to cooperate with
investigators and prosecutors. The matter is now under
investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Crow sentenced Satterfield yesterday to two years on
two charges of breaking and entering. He sentenced
Hawkins to five years on the counts of descecration and
vandalism.
A third defendant, Christopher Divers, will also come
back to Meigs County for sentencing early next year. He
is now serving two years on charges of breaking and
entering and possessing criminal tools. Sentences
remain tooe imposed on five other counts.
Jeffrey Mullins is the only one of the four co-defendants who has not changed his plea. He has requested a
continuance of his trial, which has now been moved to
Dec. 16.
All four defendants are charged in identical indictments with two counts of breaking and entering, possessing criminal tools. vandalism, arson, desecration,
and tampering with evidence.

Margaret
Kathryn
Bissell, 92, Racine, went
to be with her Lord and
on Nov. 22, 2010,
residence. surby her family.
She
was
born
in
Minersville on March 4.
1918, daughter of the Iate
Henry Guy Singer and Iva
Anna (Deem) Singer. She
was employed as a cook at
the local school district
until her retirement. She
was a charter member of .__......,......_ _....;..;.J.._..-:....:=
Chester
Church
of
Nazarene, she attended the Eagle Ridge Community
Church and played the piano for church services.
She was a loving mother and grandmother and
deeply loved her Savior.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by:
husband, Charles L. Bissell; sons, Roger L. Bissell,
Charles ''Dannie" Bissell, Dwight R. Bissell: son-inlaw, Roy "Frank" Riffle; sisters, Goldie
Krackomberger, Mildred Arnold. Eva Kimes, Mary
Holter, Susan Birch; brother, Artie Singer.
She 1s survived by children: Helen (Sheldon)
Garverick, Lexington, Frona Riffle. Chester, Ada
(Curtis) Randolph, Hillsboro, Delbert (Donna)
BisselL Lithopolis. Douglas (Carolyn) Bissell,
Tuppers Plains, Glen (Melissa) Bissell, Racine,
n (Larry) Bowcott, Gallipolis, Naomi Hawes,
son, David (Nancy) BisselL Bridgeport, W.Va.,
ert (Sally) Bissell, Chester: 41 grandchildren; 81
great grandchildren; 25 great great grandchildren;
sister, Opal Hollon. Chester; daughters-in-law,
Barbara Bissell, Carolyn Bissell; special friend and
caregiver, Venedia McCloud; numerous nieces and
nephews.
Funeral service will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday.
Nov. 27,2010. at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Pomeroy. Officiating will be Rev. Curtis
Randolph and Charlie Bissell (Margaret's grandson).
Burial will follow in Chester Cemetery. Friends may
call from 4-8 p.m .. Friday, Nov. 26 at the funeral
home. An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

I

Writings
From Page A1
ness:
Council approved $4,090.73 to renew software which
enables the water department to read the village's digital water meters. The contract for the software is from
Nov. 17- Nov. 16,2011.
Council approved the second of three required readings to provide village employees with Christmas
bonuses. If the ordinance passes, full time employees
with the village will receive $115 and part time employees with the village will receive $57. Employees must
have been on the village payroll on Oct. 1 to qualify.
Appropriations in the fire department fund were
raised by $5,000 after the department received grant
money.
Council approved $545 for a drug testing program
and $590 for a training day to administer the program to
employees. The program assists in lowering what the
village pays in workers compensation premiums.
Council members present for the meeting were Jackie
Welker, Jim Sisson, Pete Barnhart, Spaun, George
Stewart.

Golf 'Cart
From Page A1
the vehicles are permitted, including Kelly's Island
and Put-In Bay. and had seen no traffic difficulties or
safety issues.
Council Member Julia Houston expressed concerns
with safety, and said if the vehicles are permitted, it
d only be during daylight hours and there should
age limit applied to passengers, a recommendawith which Councilman Shawn Rice agreed.
'Through the inspection program, an underspeed
vehicle must display a license. Everything is regulated in such a manner as to ensure the vehicle is as safe
on the road as any other licensed vehicle,'' Conde
said, noting insurance is also required.
"If the vehicles in question were designed to carry
golf clubs. they would not be legal. but these are modified vehicles considered safe for licensing by the
state and operation by a licensed driver."
Gerlach encouraged council to reconsider the matter in one of two manners. either through an effort to
"clean up" the existing ordinance language to specifically prohibit the vehicles. or a new ordinance that
establishes a clear and complete policy allowing
them.
Council also:
• Approved payment of bills in the amount of
$4,466.
• Approved an increase in refuse rates of 1.75 percent, to reflect the same increase in the village's new
contract with Rumpke, which goes into effect in
January, 2011.
·
Also present were Council President Rae Moore.
Council members Craig Wehrung, and Sandy Brown,
and Fiscal Officer Susan Baker.

i

•

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.68
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 57.90
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.01
Big Lots (NYSE) - 31.13
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 32.12
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 59.91
Ca1b.ly Akrn{t-Vl.SDAQ)- 14.04
Champion (NASDAQ) -1.25
a-amTgSI'q:s(tWlOAQ)-3.78
~ ttiirJ (NASOAQ)-32.00

Collins (NYSE)- 55.20
DuPont (NYSE) - 46.05
US Bank (NYSE)- 24.08
Gen Electric (NYSE) - 15.76
~ (NYSE)-31.14
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 37.63
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.01
Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 32.99
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 59.63
OVBC (f'JASDAQ) -19.17
BBT (NYSE) -23.59

Peoples (NASDAQ) -13.10
Pepsico (NYSE) - 63.89
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.25
Rockwen (NYSE) - 65.86
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)-9.13
Royal Dutch Shell- 62.59
Smrs 1-ti:foJ (N.ASDAQ) -64~
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.67
Wencty's (NYSE)- 4.69
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.70
Worthington (NYSE) -15.68

Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions tor Nov. 23, 2010,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

Korean conflict, European worries weigh on stocks
NEW YORK (AP) Stocks fell Tuesday as a
of
tensions
flare-up
between North and South
Korea combined with
downbeat news on the
economy gave investors
plenty of reasons to sell
ahead of the Thapksgiving
holiday. The dollar and
gold rose as investors
sought safe places to park
money.
North Korea and South
Korea exchanged artillery
fire, killing at least two
South Korean marines.
That came as investors
were already concerned
that a bailout of Ireland
may not be enough to contain Europe's debt crisis.
Borrowing
costs
for
Portugal and Spain rose.
leading Spain to trim the
size of a debt sale.
ln the U.S., sales of previously-owned
houses
dipped 2.2 percent in
October. Also, Federal
Reserve officials became
more pessimistic and low-

VISit us online at
mydailysentinel.com

Over 11

Wednesday: Increasing one inch possible.
F riday: A chance of
clouds, with a high near
51. Calm wind becoming showers, mainly before 11
a.m. Partly sunny, with a
east around 6 mph.
Wednesday
Night: , high near 42. Chance of
Showers likely, mainly precipitation is 40 percent.
between 1 a.m. and 3 a.m. New rainfall amounts of
Cloudy, with a low around less than a tenth of an inch
42. East wind between 6 possible.
and I 0 mph. Chance of
F riday Night: Partly
precipitation is 60 percent. cloudy, with a low around
.
New rainfall amounts 25.
between a quarter and half
Saturday: Sunny, with
a high near 41.
of an inch possible.
Sa turday
T hanksgiving
Day:
Night:
Showers likely, mainly Mostly clear, with a low
after noon. Cloudy, with a around 27.
high near 64. South wind
Sunday: Sunny. with a
between 10 and 16 mph. high near 48.
Chance of precipitation is
Sunday Night: Mostly
60 percent. New rainfall clear, with a low around 29.
amounts between a quarter 1 Monday: Mostly sunny,
and half of an inch possi- with a high near 52.
M onday Night : Mostly
ble.
Thursday
Night: cloudy, with a low around
Showers and possibly a 38.
thunderstorm. Low around
Thesday: A chance of
38. West wind between 8 showers. Mostly cloudy,
and 10 mph. Chance of with a high near 56.
precipitation is 100 per- Chance of precipitation is
cent. New rainfall amounts 30 percent.
between three quarters and

ered their outlook for economic growth for the next
year.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 142.21, or
1.3 percent, to 11,036.37.
The Standard &amp; Poor's
500 lost 17.11, or 1.4 percent, to 1,180.73. The
Nasdaq composite index
fell 37.07, or 1.5 percent,
to 2,494.95
The clash between
North and South Korea
was one of the most dramatic between the two
rivals since the end of the
Korean war. Fifteen South
Korean soldiers and three
civilians were injured in
the artillery exchanges.
The escalating tensions
came shortly after the
reclusive North Korean
regime claimed to have a
new uranium enrichment
facility and six weeks after
the country's leader Kim
Jong Il anointed his

illion Victims

youngest son as his heir
apparent.
The showdown between
the two countries raises
tensions in Asia, but was
seen as less of an immediate danger in the U.S.
Traders said the showdown was seen by many
as an excuse to pare back
exposure to risk ahead of
the Thanksgiving holiday
Thursday. Trading is
expected to be light
Wednesday as people
leave early. Markets will
be open for an abbreviated session on Friday.
· "Investors don't want to
go into the holiday with
any lingering doubts,"
said John Derrick, director of research for U.S.
Global Investors. ''The
tensions in Korea just
gave them another excuse
to sell."
Hewlett-Packard Co.
was the only one among

the 30 stocks that make
up the Dow Jones industrial average to rise.
Shares gained 2.2 percent
after the technology company beat Wall Street's
expectations for revenue
and income thanks to
strong corporate spending.
Energy shares led the
decline as the price of
crude oil fell. Chevron
Corp. fell 2 percent, while
ExxonMobil Corp. lost
1.7 percent.
A widening probe into
insider trading was still
weighing on financial
shares Tuesday. a day
after FBI agents raided
the offices of three hedge
funds. JPMorgan Chase
&amp; Co. was the worst-performing major bank with
a 2.3 percent decline, followed
closely
by
G oldman Sachs Group
Inc. with a 2 percent fall.

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�Wednesday, Novemb er 2 4 ,

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

www.m ydailysentin el.com

2010

TSA: Some government officials
to skip airport security
WASH INGTON (AP)
- Cabinet sl!cretaries.
top congressional kaders
and an exclusive group of
senior U.S. officials are
exempt from toughened
new airport scrl!ening
procedures when they fly
commercially with government-approved federal security details.
Aviation security officials would not name
those who can skip the
controversial screening.
but other officials said
those YIPs range from
top officials like Trea ury
Secretary
Ti mothy
FBI
Geithncr
and
Director Robert Mueller
to congressional leaders
like incoming House
Speaker John Bochner.
R-Ohio. who avoided
security before a recent
flight from Washington':;
Reagan National Airport.

The heightened new
security procedures by
the
Transportation
Security Administration.
which involve either a
scan by a full-body
detector or an intimate
personal pat-down. have
spurred passenger outrage in the lead-up to the
Thanksgiving holiday
airport crush.
But while passengers
have no choice but to
submit to either the
detector or what some
complain is an intrustve
pat-down. some senior
government officials can
opt out if they fly accompanied by government
security guards approved
by the TSA.
"Government officials
traveling with federal law
enforcement
security
details arc screened at
airports under a special-

ized screening protocol, General Eric Holder and ·
Security
which include:-; identity Homeland
vcrilication,"
TSA Secretary
Janet
spokesman
Nicholas Napolitano. travel almost
Kimball said. This allows exclusivelY. on governthe officials to .skip the ment or mtlitary planes.
o(ficials
like
airport security checkTop
points."
Geithncr, Mueller and
The TSA would not Senate Majority Leader
explain why it make'&gt; Harry Reid traYel with
these exceptions. But security details and skip
many of the exempted airport checkpoints. aides
government
officials said. The second-ranking
have gone throut?h sever- Senate Democrat. Sen.
al levels of secuntv clear- Richard
Durbin
of
ances, including FB1 Illinob, and the House
background
check'i. Democratic whip. Rep.
Armed security detail&lt;; James Clyburn of South
eliminate the need for an Carolina. also have secuadditional layer of secu- rity, but they typically
rity at airports.
undergo regular screenSome members of ing with other passenPresident
Burack gers. aides said~
Spokesmen for both
Obama's Cabinet. including Defense Sc..:retary Bochner and current
Robert Gates. Secretary House Speaker Nancy
of State Hillary Rodham Pelosi. D-Calif., would
Clinton.
Allorney not discuss security

arrangements. But under
a policy started hy the
Bush administration after
the Sept. I I, 200 I. terrorist attacks, a mi litary aircraft is made available to
the speaker, third in line
to the pre..,idency. for all
official flight needs.
Spokesmen for Senate
Republican leader Mitch
McConnell
of
Kentucky,
incoming
House Majority Leader
Eric Cantor of Virginia
and outgoing House
Majority Leader Steny
Hoyer of Maryland
said they fly commercia l, but would not
detail :-;ecurity arrangements.
Senate Sergeant-atAnns Terrance Gainer
said the only members
of Congress with protective details arc leaders, , "based upon a

threat analysis"'
ducted by the
Capitol Police. Gainer
added that members
"with sworn protection" arc able to avoi d
security because "the ir
secure
posture
is
affirmed by the law
enforcement proces!&gt;
established by TSA."
The TSA' s adminis•
trator, John Pistole, is
treated like any other
tra\eler when he flies,
waiting in security
I ine
and
wal king
through
X- ray
machines.
incl uding
the full-body imagers,
his pokesman sa id.
Senior Whi te House
officials
Dav id
Axelrod. Valer ie Jarrett
and John Brennan. the
pres ident's homeland
security adviser. do the
same. officials said.

•

U.S. condemns North Korean
attack on South Korea
WASHINGTON (AP)
President Barack
Obama was "outraged''
Tuesday. the White House
said, following North
Korea's artillery attack
against the South Korean
island of Yeonpycong. the
latest in a series of provocations that have r~awak­
ened concerns about the
threat posed by the communist country and its
reclusive leadership.
North Korea fired barrages of artillery onto a
South Korean island near
their disputed westcm
border Tuesday, setting
buildings abh11..C and
killing at least two
marines after warning the:
South to halt military
drills in the area. South
Korean ofticials said.
''It's an outrageous act,"
Obama spokesman Bill
Burton told reporters.
In an earlier statement
released before dawn.
shortly after the attack.
Press
White
House
Secretary Robert Gibbs
called on North Korea to
"to halt its belligerent
action and to fully abide
by the terms of the
armistice agreement," the
1953 pact that ended the
Korean \\'ar.
Gibbs said the White
House "is in close and
continuing contact" \\ ith
the South Korean government.
'The United States is
firmly committed to the
defense of our ally, the
Republic of Korea. and to
of
the
maintenance
regional peace and stability." he said.
Though the White
House had strong words
for North Korea, the
administration was tempering Obama's direct
involvement by planning a
written statement from the
president instead of having him speak publicly.
At least 20 members of
Obama's national se·curity
team were to meet late
Tuesday afternoon to discuss response to the crisis.
including
Defense
Secretary Robert Gates,
Secretary of State Hillary
Rodham Clinton. U.N.
ambassador Susan Rice,
Pacific Commander Adm.
Robert Willard and Adm.
Mike Mullen, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
The president, who was
back
to
traveling
Washington
Tuesday
afternoon after delivering
a speech on the economy
in Indiana, was expected
to be briefed on the meeting and his staff's recommendations. Obama was
also expected to call South
Korea'~ President Lee
Mvung-bak.
The White House said it
would work with its mternational pa11ners to determine the appropriate next
steps.

Pentagon spokesman
Col. Dave Lapan said the
U.S. has not moved any
additional U.S. assets to
the area as a result of the
shelling and declined to
say whether forces there
had been put on any
heightened alert. He said
it was "premature" to say
whether the U.S. is consid~ring any action in
response to the incident or
whether to increase the
deterrent there.
Congressional
Republicans
and
Democrats joined the
admmistffltion in condemning the attack.
"As the people of the
Republic of K&lt;&gt;rea question what new belligerent
action may come from the
North. they should not
have any question that the
people and forces of the
United States stand ready
as a devoted ally conmlitted to the defense of their
nation:· Senate Minority
Leader Mitch McConnell.
R-Ky.. said in a statement.
''I join the president in his
stron~ condemnation of
\\."hat IS sadly just the latest
in a long string of hostile
actions. .North Korea's
neighbors should unite in
condemning this attack."
House Anned Sen·ices
Committee Chairman Ike
Skelton. D-~1o.. called the

----

artillery attacks ''reprehensible" and said it was
"in direct violation of the
Annistice Agreement."
"The North Korean
regime is more dangerous
than most people reali1..e. I
join the administration in
strongly
condemning
North Korea for its
artillery attack against
South Korea." Skelton
said in a statement.
For Obama, the incident
continues a preoccupation
with national security
issues since the !\lov. 2
election
in
which
Repubhcans reclaimed the
House of Representatives
and also narrowed the
Democratic majority in
the Senate. He has been
struggling to get a vote in
the Senate on the New
START nuclear weapons
treaty with Russia and
took a I 0-day Asian tour
and traveled to a NATO
summit last week.
The White I louse said
Obama was woken up
shortly before 4 a.m. by
National Security Adviser
Tom Donilon, who updated the president on the situation. Obama was updated again during his daily
intelligence
briefing
before he tra\eled to
•
Indiana.
Gen. Walter Sharp.
commander of U.S. forces

13

Cl'i!D

18

C\"EID t(unnlest Home Videos

24

25
26
27
29

News

in South' Korea and the
U.S.-Ied U.N. Command.
has been talking with his
South Korean counterparts and Gates was
scheduled to talk to his. as
well. on Tuesday morning, said Lapan, the
Pentagon spokesman.
Pentagon officials said
none of the more than
28.000 U.S. troops stationed in South Korea
were involved in the military drills.
Lap&lt;m said U.S. troops
have participated in the
annual exercise in the
past, but an earlier plan to
have U.S. ~,tarines participate in a landing maneu\er with the South
Koreans this year didn't
work out because of
American
scheduling
issues.
The attack came amid
high tension over North
Korea's claim that it has a
new uranium enrichment
facility and just six weeks
after North Korean leader
Kim Jong II unveiled his
youngest son Kim Jong
Un as his heir apparent.
On Monday, State
Department spokesman
P.J. Crowley told reporters
the administration is
studying the evidence a
of
\ isiting
group
American scientists used
to conclude the North wa...

building the enrichment
facility. which presumably
could be used to produce
fue l for nuclear weapons.
"We will not be drawn
into rewarding North
Korea for bad behavior,''
he said. "They frequently

anttctpate doing something outrageous or
provocative and forcing us
to j ump through hoops as
a result. We're not going
to buy into this cycle."

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside
WVU-Pitt preview, Page B6

PORTS

Wednesday, November 24,2010

•============================================
RedStorm men gain split at Pikeville Tournament
LocAL SCHEDt I.E

POMEROY ~ A schedule of upcom,ng
h1gh school vars11y sporlmg ovenls
1nvolving leams from Gallia , Mason and
Me1gs counlles

BY MARK W ILLIAMS

.Erutay,~4lfllb~1...2§

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Class A Football
WV State Se'nif.imls
(4) Wirt County vs (1) Wahama at
Po1nt Pleasant JSHS, 7:30 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Wahamapep
rally Wednesday
~ASON. W.Va. - A
community pep rally and
tailgate patty 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
~irt County this Friday
mght.
All fans are encouraged
to come out and support
the boys of fall before
Fliday s trip to Point
Pleasant.

•

PIKEVILLE. Ky.
The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm men s
basketball team gained a
split in two games
played over the weekend
at the BB&amp;T Classic at
Pikeville College. Rio
lost on Friday night, 72
65 to Bluefield College
and rebounded for an
impressive 97-78 victory
over
Alice
Lloyd
College on Saturday.
Rio Grande (3-3) lost a
close
game
with
Bluefield
(2-2)
on
Friday night. despite
shooting a better percentage (40 percent to
39.1 percent) from the

Josh Hamilton
waits on deck
in front of former President
George W.
Bush and
Nolan Ryan in
Game 3 of the
World Series
Bv' MARK WILLIAMS
as the Texas
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
• Rangers beat
the San
FORT
VANCOUFrancisco
VER.
Wash.
Giants 4-2 at
University
of
Rio
Rangers
Grande junior Kayla
Ballpark in
Renner competed at the
Arlington,
31st Annual
NAJA
Texas,
Women's
National
Saturday,
Cross Country National
Oct. 30.
Championship
on
Saturday at the Fort
Max Faulkner
ancouver
National /Fort Worth Star
Telegram/MeT
istoric Site.
Renner, a native of
Galloway. Ohio. fin ished the race with a
time of 20:19 in 221st
place. Renner ran at a
6:33 clip for the 3.1 mile race.
NEW YORK (AP) There were 331 runJosh Hamilton thought
ners in the race.
back to the days when his
This was the second career was derailed by
straight season that drugs and alcohol.
Renner competed at the
"I would say a 99 perNAIA National ~eet. cent chance that this
Although she did not would never happen," he
better her finish from said. "I mean. honestly, I
last season ( 172nd) she think a lot of people
dtd knocl{ seven sec- would agree with that."
onds of her 2009 time.
In one of baseball s
Renner will now get most inspirational turnready for the upcoming arounds.
the
Texas
track and field season.
Rangers outfielder was a
runaway winner of the
American League s ~ost
Valuable Player aw.ard
Tuesday. ·
Hamilton
received 22 first-place
votes and 358 points
Baseball
from
the
Writers Association of
BY M ARK WILLIAMS
America.
Former
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL
Cincinnati Reds teammate Joey Votta was
FORT
VANCOU- voted the NL MVP a day
VER,
Wash. earlier.
University
of
Rio
Hamilton
overcame
Grande redshirt sopho- eight trips to rehabilitamore Nick Wilson com- tion for addiction to lead
peted at the 55th
Annual NATA ~en s
National Cross Country
National Championship
on Saturday at the Fort
Vancouver
National
Historic Site.
COLU~BUS,
Ohio
Wilson, a native of
Barlow, Ohio, finished (AP) - Each year, the
the race with a time of players and coaches from
27:09, which was good ~ichigan and Ohio State
enough for !58th place. · talk about how much
Wilson ran at a 5:28 they respect each other.
clip for the 5-mile race. how much they have in
There were 326 run- common and how pure
their rivalry is.
ners in the men s race.
Truth be told. the two
This was the second
sides can t even agree on
straight season that
win s got the most to wtn
Wilson competed at the
and lose in Saturday s
NA JA National ~eet.
I 07th showdown.
He competed with the
No. 8 Ohio State has a
Rio team that finished stadium full of things on
21st in the NAIA last the line, including a share
season.
of a record -tying sixth
Wilson was not able straight Big Ten title and
to better his standing a spot in a Bowl
from a season ago as he Championship
Series
finished 79th overall bowl.
last season at nationals
The Buckeyes say the
with a time of 26:34.
Wolverines would like
Wilson will ;1ow g&lt;:t nothin~ better than to
ready for the track and ruin all of that for them.
field season.
·•Just beating us would

field and out-rebounding
them by a sizeable margin (50-36).
Taking
care of the ball was an
issue as Rio Grande
committed 18 turnovers
to only nine for the
Rams.
Senior center Robbie
Jackson had his best
game in a Rio uniform to
date, scMing 22 points
and pulling down eight
rebounds in 18 minutes
of action. Junior forward Shaun Gunnell
added 13 points and

eight rebounds to the
Rio effort and senior
guard Doug Campbell
tossed in 13 points and
collected five rebounds.
Freshman big man Josh
Birchfield topped the
rebounding chart for the
RedStorm with l 0, to go
along with five points
scored.
Bluefield received a
double-double of 25
points and I 0 rebounds
from Byron Carpenter.
Borgia~ bala added 21
points.

The RedStorm put it
altogether on Saturday
against Alice Lloyd (35). Rio jumped Ot,lt to a
9-2 lead and was never
headed as it blistered the
nets at a 53.7 percent
(22-of-41) clip in the
first half. taking a 53-31
lead to intermission.
Campbell Jed the way
for the RedStorm with
14 points. Birchfield
added l3 points and five
boards. Senior forward
~eau Jones chipped in
I 0 points and pulled
down seven rebounds off
the bench and freshman
guard
Jermaine
Warmack tossed in I 0
points off the bench as
well.
Gunnell just missed a

RedStorm.:;
women spli~·
in NewYork:

Ri&gt; s Renner

B Y M ARK W ILLIAMS • :
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEL - : •

competes at
national meet

Jeff Burroughs (1974).
Juan Gonzalez ( 1996.
1998). Ivan Rodriguez
(I 999)
and
Alex
Rodriguez (2003).
In the NL, Votto helped
the Reds make the postseason for the first time
since 1995. He and
Hamilton
were
Cincinnati teammates in
2007.
"He was just what
everybody expected him
to be:· Hamilton said. " I
knew he was a great
player and knew what he
was capable of, and he
showed people this year
exact! y that."
Selected by Tampa Bay
with the top pick in the
1999 amateur draft.
Hamilton didn t make an
impact in the majors until
2008. when he \VOn the
All-Star Home R un
Derby at Yankee Stadium
and led the AL with 130

ROCHESTER. NY ;.,:
The University of R:iQ
Grande
RedStonh
women s basketball team
split a pair of games t~~
weekend in New York
State, winning in ovet:
time on Friday night ver~
sus Roberts. Wesleyan:
78-71 and losing .t~
Daemen College on
Saturday afternoon by ari
86-80 score. Saturday s
loss was the first of the
season for the RedStorrn
women.
Rio Grande (6-1) was
locked in a close game
throughout
against
Roberts Wesleyan (4-1)
on Friday. Both teams
suffered through cold
shooting first halves.
with Rio ta*ing a 31-27
edge to the JocRer room.
The RedStorm connected
on 9-of-26 (34.6 percent)
from the field in the first
half while the Lady
Raiders nailed 11-of-40
(27.5 percent) attempts.
Rio did not fare much
better after halftime in
shooting the basketball
as it was out-scored 3531 in the second half to
send the game to overtime.
The RedStorm
used a 16-9 run in the
extra session to get the
victory.
Turnovers played a key
role as Rio committed 22
miscues in the game
while RWC tallied 20.
Shooting guard Jenna
Smith continued her outstanding senior season.
leading the way with 24
points, on the strength of
6-of-11 shooting from
beyond the three-point
arc. She also recorded
four steals in the game.
Senior forward Leah
Kendra added 18 points

Please see MVP, 86

Please see Rio, 86

~

Hamilton easily wi·ns AL MVP award

Ri&gt; s Wilson

e

competes at
national meet

double-double, scoring
nine points and pulling
down a game-high, 13
rebounds.
AI ice Lloyd placed
three players in double
figures
with
Van
Ferguson leading the
way with 21 points.
Zack Hurt added 20 and
Daniel Combs chipped
in 12 points.
Rio shot 52.7 percent
(39-of-74) from the fielq
for the game and had
only 12 turnovers on the
night.
Alice Lloyd
countered with 38.6 percent (22-of-57) shooting
and
committed
19
turnovers.
:
Rio Grande won the
rebounding margin (44;
33) as welL

the major leagues in batting average (.359) and
slugging
percentage
(.633) and help the
Rangers reach their first
World Series. He had 32
homers and 00 RBis
despite rmssmg time
nearly all of September
because of two broken
ribs.
After going on the disabled list in 2001 while
in the minors. he became
addicted to alcohol and
cocaine. He diJn . t play
from 2 03-05.
"I do reflect. If I didn t
ret1ect, 'I might start
sneaking in there, a little
ego might start sneaking
in there. and that s one
thing I don t want to happen:· Hamiltor said. "So
I do reflect and I think
about where I was at my
lowest time.''
Teammate say his story
motivates them.
"h s awesome. everybody makes mistakes in

their lives and everybody
deserves
a
second
chance, ·• Rangers teammate David ~urphy said
before
voting
was
announced. "A lot of
people don t take advantage of that second
chance. But he took it
and he ran with it."
After voting was concluded. Hamilton was
selected ~VP of the AL
championship series win
over
the
Yankees.
Overall. he hit .190 in the
postseason with five
homers and nine RBis
"There were other guys
around the league who
had great years, but seeing Josh. what he was
able to do. it s pretty
impressive," team mate
~ichael
Young said.
"You don, t see guys go
three-month
stretches
where they hit .400, it s
just too difficult to do."
Hamilton is the sixth
Rangers MVP. following

Rivalry supercedes all
else for Michigan, OSU

•

t.

J'

make those guys year,"
Ohio State linebacker
Brian Rolle said ~onday.
"That d be like a national
championship for those
guys."
But that s not even
remotely close to being
the case. Michigan nose
tackle Mike ~artin said.
"For us, it s not about
Ohio State - it s about
us and what we do," he
said. "We don t go into
this game to spoil Ohio
State s season. It s all
about us. We re playing
for each other and doing
what we can and what we
can control."
Despite
everything
resting on the outcome
- and its impact on
untold other teams - the
bottom line for both sides

Please see Rivalry. 86

Julian H. Gonzalez/Detroit Free Press/MCT

Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel g reets Michigan he ad coach Rich Rodriguez
after the Buckeyes' 21 -1 0 victory in Ann Arbor. Michigan. o n Saturday,
November 21, 2009.

'

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel
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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

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ony lon or tXI*!IIO thet roeulto from lhe pubjlcatlon or omiiSIOn or on advertloommt Conectlon •1H be mBde In tr. ftrst •••liable edition • Box,...,'* "'"
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glassware &amp; pottery,
&amp; mise antiques.
740-379·2160
or
740-446·2839

Security

Lost White SO Card
Mli
Free Home
@ Walmart Tues. If
Security System
found
or
have
w1th $99 installation
PLEASE return to 300
Services
and purchase of
me
or
Walmart
alarm monitoring
Sentimental Pictures
services from ADT
of family Call Reta
Financial
700
Agriculture
Security Services •
446·1374 or 645· ;;;;;:;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Call 1-888-367-2171
4846
Farm Equipment
Lost· Sammy male
John Deer Tractor mundoor cat, dark gray
600
Animals
2950 4w drive good
w/5ome striping, face
condition 86 H.P.
is lighter, belly white,
1998 New Holand
15·20#, across from
45 H.P. 3930-4w
Livelfock
Meigs
Elementary - - - - - - Dnve
Excellent
School,
Reward
EASLIBS..
shape
new
s1oo. 740·742·2524
BI~LIEF
2 4·H steers for sale tires.(304)576-2890.
Do you owe over
6
wk.
pupp1es. $10000 to the IRS? 740-441·1489 if 00 STIHL Sales &amp; Service
answer
Leave Now
Avarlable
at
BeagleiOashound
Stop wage
Message
Carmichael Equipment
mix.
garnishments and
740-446-2412
5 to 6 year old bench
bank lev1es.
leg beagle 304·675· Settle Out Over Due
Breeding
age
Hay, Feed, Seed,
8635
Taxes for Less
registered Holstein
Grain
1-888-692·5739
bulls. Call Tim 304- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Notices
Good mixed hay, sq.,
675·0209
$2.50 4x5. round
NOTICE
OHIO -;;;;;;;Oth;;;;;;;e;;;;r;;;;S;;;;e;;;;rv;;;;i;;;;ce;;;;s;;;;;;;;
VALLEY PUBLISHING •
niDCI"TII
bales $20.00 Stored
CO. recommends that
l&lt;"~.L
inside 740-446·2075
you do business w1th Limited Time Offerl
Pets
Mixed
hay,
6x6
people you know, and
Free HO for Life.
round, barn stored
NOT to send money Ask how by calling
Free 2 male Rat never wet, $30/bale,
through the mail until
OlrecTV today!
you have investigating Packages start at Terriers 3mths. old 740·416·1780
Call379·9515
the oHenng.
29.99•

s

"Creative
Seamstress" will do
sewing,
mend1ng,
alterations. 40 years
experience,
reasonable
rates,
harmonyfarm04@ya
hoo.com
Grave Blankets $5·
$30; live Wreaths
$10 &amp; up; Sue's
47310 Morntngstar
Ad , Racine, Oh 740·
949·2115
Tire &amp; Automotive
Business, has live
bay garage &amp; office.
Just Busines3 for
sale, Not Building,
740·992·3675
or
740·992·6583

1·866·541-0834

.IJ1Sf1_

l!IEIW.OBK
It's Finally FREEl
Free HO for Life•
and over 120
channels only
$24.99/month.*
'Conditions apply,
promo code MB45
Call Dish Network
Now
1-877-464·3619

900
Free to a Good
Home a 2 1/2 yr old
male Tiny Toy Poodle
Call 645·6987

Golden Ret., .OOB
9/22/10
$350;
Doberman red m,
black f, 9/13/10,
$450;
Dachshund,
mlf, 9/26/10, $300;
Poodle, 2- apricot. or
black males, 9/21/10,
$300; Bichon-frishe,
Lifelock
1 m, 1 f, 9/02/10,
Free Document
Mi~
Shredder for new $350;
Schnauzer
mlf
sip,
Lifelock members.
10/16/10, $350; All
Call Today
1·888-758·3029 and AKC Puppies, 740·
696·1 085
near
use promo code
Shade, Ohio
SHREDDER

Merchandise

Fuel I Oil I Coal
Wood/ Gas

I

Boiler
Central
Outdoor
wood
Furnaces
Instant rebate up to
S1,000.00. 740)245·
5193
Miscellaneous
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Absolute Top dollarsliver/gold coins any
10K/14KI18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis.
446·2842

§ot Something to say
to that Syecia( Someone!

Say it in
rfhe C(assi iedsl

~~~~;;;;~
Campers 1 RVs &amp;
Trailers

2005 Jayco Eagle
Gooseneck
Hitch,
sleeps six. Excellent
condition.
Asking
$19,900.
See
photos
at
www,carmichaeltral~
rs..,cQID

2412

2000

740-446 •
Automotive
Autos

~~;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;~

Quality
Cars
&amp;
Trucks wlwarranty all
pnoed to sell, 16 yrs.
in bustness. Cook
Motors, 328 Jackson
Pike,
Gallipolis. OH 740·

01 0 3
~446
~~·~
~~!!!!·~~~

Want To Buy
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;

2nd floor 2 BR
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis
City
Park,
L.A.,
kitchen/dining area, 1
1/2
BA,
washer/dryer $600.
mon + dep.
740·
446-4425 or 740446-2325
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BAAPTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
A/C, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017
&amp;
2-b-r-._a_p_t__
houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport, NO Pets,
740·992·2218

Redeco. SAM, bath
&amp; laundry, rg &amp; ref ,
turn, In city $400
mon + dep &amp; ut1l. No
pets 441.0596

3BA
dble-Wide
furnished, Sr 143Pomeroy $625 mo.
incl. most uti. &amp; lawn
care. 740·591-5174
Jordan Landing, 2
bedroom apartments
ava:lable No pots.
or
304•610-o776
304•674•0023
deposit reqwed.
1&amp;3 BR houses in
Syracuse No pet's
HUD app. 675·5332
Wk end 591·0265
Manufactured
Housing

4000

Rentals

2BR-2 Bath Uke new
Mobile Home water
sewer, trash pd. No
pets, CA, Covered
2
bedroom Patio
Johnson's
apartment ava1lable Mobile Home Park
in Syracuse $200 740·446-3160
deposit, $375 per
month rent. Rent •3-B-R--2-B-A--$5_7_5
includes
water, mon+dep+utl 1722B
sewer &amp; trash No Chatham Ave 740·
pets.
Sufficient 645·1646
income needed to
qualify 740·378·6111 - - - - - - 2
mob1les
on
New renovated 1 br. Bullaville Pk &amp; 1 in
apt,
Middleport, Rodney $500 mon +
$325+
dep. 740-367·7762
reference/deposit.
740·416·6622
3BR 1BA all elec. in

For Sale By Owner
Spring Valley Green
6 apts $137.000
rent $2030 mo, 740· Apartments 1 BR at
446·0390
$395+2 BR at $470
~~~~~~~ Month 446·1599.
Houses 'For Sale
Commercial
House for sale in ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Syracuse OH. Three Office space for rent
bedrooms,
double 1n Pt Pleasant 593garage,
full 5169
basement, gas heat ~~~~~~~
and
central
atr
Houses For Rent
condrt1onlng.
Call
1 BR Cabin @ Rio
(740) 949-2333
Grande J Thurman
Real Estate area All utilities pa1d.
3 soo
Rentals $500 mth. $300 Dep.
740·286·5789
or
740-441·3702.
Apartments/
4BR 28th House
Townhouses
located on Bulliville
For
1BA Pike $650mth and
lease
unlurnrshed 2nd floor $650 Dep. Call 367Gallia 7762 or 367·7272
apt.
near
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required, - - - - - - maximum occupancy
In Memory
2. $350 mon. 740·
446·3936 or 740
446·4425
2 BR 1BA all elec. in
Kanauga
$450
mon+dep 339·3224

Houses For Rent

--&amp;-

Oiler's Towing. Now
buying junk cars
w/motors or w/out. 2 1BR in Pt Pleasant
or all utilities included
740·388·00 11
740·441-7870.
No 593-5169
Sunday call
Manor
Gallia
138
Want to buy Junk Apartments.
Cars, call 740·388· Buhl Morton Rd.
Gallipolis, is now
0884
....,....,....,..,..______ accepting
Real Estate applications
for
3000
Sales waiting list for 1
HUD;;;;~~~;; Bedroom,
Subsidized
;;;;;;;;~~;;;;o~m;;;;m;;;;e;;;rc:a;;;'a;;:I~­ apartment for elderly
handicapped
OFFICEIWAREHOU and
SEIAETAIL
Great 740-446-4652.
Location 749 Third
Ave Gallipolis.1800
sq.ft . For more info
Call1-404·456-3802

2 BR unfurnished·
upstarrs. $500
675-2507

,

Apartments/
Townhouses

Drivers

Delivery

A &amp; J Trucking in
Marietta, Oh is hinng
COL A Drivers for
local
&amp; Regional
Routes. Applicants
must be at least 23
yrs have min of 1 yr
of commerc1al dnvmg
exp. Clean MVA,
Haz·mat Cert. We
feature
weekend
home time, Excellent
health
&amp; dental
insurance.
401 (K),
Vacation,
Bonus
pays and
safety
awards.
Contact
Kenton at 1·800·462·
9365 F.O.F.
Education
Business
Instructors Needed
@ Gallipolis Career
College·
In
EconomiCS
·
Keyboarding,
and
Math. In Econom1cs
and Math Instructors
must
possess
Master's
Degree.
Send cover letter and
resume
to:
bshlrey@galhpoliscar
eercollege.edu.

Help Wanted·
General

encouraged to apply.
Yellowbush Mimng,
LLC,
offers
a
competitive benefits
package mcluding:
company sponsored
medical, dental anct
vision, 401 (k) with
company match, pa1d
vacation
and
holidays and future
professional growth
opportunities.
Qualified applicants
may
forward
resumes
to;
Yellowbush Mining,
Attention HR, P.O.
Box
238,
New
Haven. WV 25265 or
fax Attn: HR (304)
882·1379.
EOE
MJFIDN

~~~~~~~

Medical
Oh10 Valley Home
Health Inc. acc:eoltina
Applications
Aides. Apply at 1480
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis
or
on
internet
@
www.ovhh.org.
&lt;http://www.ovhh.org
I&gt; or Phone 740)441·
1393
Competitive
wages and Benefits
including
health
insurance
• and
mileage.

Help Wanted·
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;G;;;;e;;;;ne;;;;r;;;;al;;;;;;;;=
•
Truck driver, tractor
trailer &amp; tri axle
dump, local &amp; some
travel, hrly. wages
based on exp;. also Person to fill a part
1 constructron labor, time position in a
Pt. Pleasant $450
apply at Pullins Exc, professional medical
mon+dep 339·3226
off1ce.
Medical
Underground
Sales
SurveyorYellowbush background helpful,
M1ning, LLC located but will train the right
94 Clayton 14x70
Send
In Racine, OH is now person.
2BA as Is must be
and
a
accepting resumes resume
movedl
740-446·
for the position of references to Box
1271
100
c/o
Point
underground
Register
surveyor. Candidates Pleasant
92 or newer 3BA must posses at least 200 Mam St , PI
a
high
school Pleasant. WV 25550
v•:f,
d1ploma
or
Sales
work, must be moved eqUivalent;
located In Gall1polis expenence
in PT I FT Seasonal
Ferry No title asking underground
coal Sales Person Stop
$2800 080. 540- mining preferred but with
resume
@
765·7786 or 740· not
required Acquisitions
Fine
742·2737
Interested applicants Jewerly 151 2nd Ave
with
surface (Gallipolis)
NO
New
Foreclosure surveyrng
and Phone
Calls
16x80 never been AutoCAD experience PLEASE.
tilled Call for an are
strongly
incredible
deal
740)446·3093
LOST

~~~gle

~ ~~~3~

~~~~==~
Supplies

Green slag 10.00 a
ton
great
for
driveways. At. 62
above New Haven
behrnd • Amer(can
Colloid Co. (304)882·
3944
·-..;;..;...;.;.----6000

m
.

L----'------------'

REWARD
for Lost Pet!

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Red's Rollen Garage
Needed Class A COL
Dnver With Tanker &amp;
Haz-mat. TWIC a
plus 740·339·0034

In Memory

$100.00
for Safe Return!
My indoor cat, Sammy is lost
He had been gone since
Saturday, November 13,
in the Meigs Elementary
School vicinity

He is dark gray w/ striping,
light gray on his face and a
white tummy 15 to 20 lbs.
Contact: Mindy Young
Homc-740-742-2524

•

�Wednesday, Nove ber 24, 201 0
~ 00

Legals

l

Legals

100

---

......Legals

--~

r.•

w.mydallysentlnel.com
100

Legals

00

Legals

100

Legals

Village of Middleport, F DINGS
AND bounded
and
OF described as follows,
County of Meigs and 0 DER
State of Ohio·Being A VOCATIONThe
to-witBeginning
at
Lot Numbered Seven S perintendent
of the
south
west
in
Probst's I urance issued a corner of a 9 acre lot
(7)
Addition to Lower N~tice of Opportunity of land belonging to
Pomeroy,
now f
Hearing to each J.W. Wines; Thence
incorporated into and o
the individuals in
a
northerly
The direction
following
a part of the Village li ed below.
of Middleport, Meigs N lice was served the west line of said
County, Ohio. And o
each Individual J.W. Wines land and
being
the
same p rsuant to section the line of J.B.
SHERIFF'S SALE, property conveyed 1 9.07
of
the Torrence to the north
CASE NO. 09 CV by Vesta E. Swisher, R vised Code. More line of said fraction
100,
PEOPLES as Guardian of Jesse t n thirty (30) days number thirty two
Swisher
and h ve elapsed from (32); Thence west
BANK,
NATIONAL A.
William E. Swisher to t date of service or along said north line
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS. A.A. Miller by deed f m the last date of of
said
fraction
ROCKY A. HUPP dated March 1, 1926 pl blicatlon and each number thirty two to
the individuals the north east corner
AND
CAROL J. and recorded in Book o
HUPP,
ET
AL, 127 at Page 632 of li~ted below has not of a 9-1/4 acres lot of
the Deed Records of r uested
a land belonging to
DEFENDANTS,
• County, h aring.After
Catharine Congrove,
COURT
OF Meigs
reviewing the records et. al.; Thence south
COMMON PLEAS, Ohio.Reference
MEIGS
COUNTY, Deed: Volume 158, I these cases, the along the east line of
OHIO. By virtue of Page 821, Meigs
perintendent finds said Congrove land
Official t at:1. Each of the about 10 rods to the
an Alias Order of County
Sale tssued out of RecordsAuditor's
listed center of the public
i ~ividuals
No.:
15· b low is licensed in road; Thence in a
said Court in the Parcel
direction
above action, Robert 00696.00The above t 1s state as an westerly
E. Beegle, the Sheriff described real estate I urance agent.2. . following said public
of Meigs County, is sold "as is" without E ch
of
the road to a stake in the
Ohio. will expose to warranties
listed center of said road,
or i ~ividuals
failed
to also to a point in the
sell at public action covenants.PAOPEA b low
mply
with
the north east corner of a
on the front steps of TY ADDRESS: 1053
the Meigs County Vine
Stree~
ntinulng education 30 acre tract of land
OH r~ qulrements
of belonging to Mary E.
Courthouse
in Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Meigs 45760.CURRENT
~ ction 3905.481 of Balser; Thence south
County, Ohio, on OWNER: Rocky R. 't e Revised Code for following the east
Friday, December 3, Hupp and Carol J. ~e
2007/2008 ~ine of said Mary E.
REAL c mpliance period. IT Balser land to a point
2010. at 10:00 a.m., Hupp.
•
I
THEREFORE in the north line of
the following lands ESTATE
and tenements: The APPRAISED
AT:
RDERED
that the 114.5 acre tract
following real estate $27,500.00. The real p rsuant to section of land belonging to
White;
situated in the Village estate cannot be 3 05.482 of the Fredrick
Thence
in
an
of
Pomeroy, sold for less than
easterly direction on
Township
of 2/3rds the appraised
the north line of said
Salisbury, County of value. The appraisal
Whites's land about
formerly Rena Meigs and State of does not include an
38 rods to the place
and more interior examination
stein's
lot; Ohio.
ce
north 70 particularly described of any structures, rf
of
beginning,
containing
about
ees and 30' east as follows:Being in any, on the real
feet to the 100 Acre Lot 303, estate. TERMS OF
thirty
and
three
heast corner of Town 2, Range 13, SALE: 10% down on
fourths
(30-3/4)
acres
more
or
t was formerly and being Lots No. day of sale, balance
less.Save
and
a Eiselstein's lot; Fifty-six (56), Fifty- due on confirmation
Cash or
excepting
the
ce
south
6 eight(58), Sixty (60), of sale.
rees and 30' west and Sixty-four (64) in certified
foliowing:Situate in
check
the Township of Olive
feet to the place C.W.
Dabney's required.All
beginning, Addition as noted in SHERIFF'S SALES
in the County of
Meigs and the State
co~ aining
20/100 Volume 2. Page 15 OPERATE UNDER
Ohio of Ohio and Fraction
ac
more
or and
16,
Meigs THE DOCTRINE OF
of 32, Town 4, Range
le .Also a former County Plat • Map CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
West 11 and bounded and
gr tee is to have Aecords.Reference
described as follows:
fr
and undisupted Deed·
Book 94, PURCHASERS ARE
Beginning at a point
u
along the north Page 829, Meigs URGED TO CHECK
in the center of the
of what was County
Official FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
number nine (9) road
erly
Rena Aecords.Auditor's
MEIGS
at a point on line with
!stein's lot of a Parcel Nos.: 16- OF
OHIO.
the J.B. Torrence and
t-ot-way as now 01714.000,
16· COUNTY,
FOR
Golda
Smiths
ted to Peacock 01715.000,
16- ATIOANEY
properties: Thence
et.Reference
01716.000 and 16- PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
southwest along said
d: Volume 182, 01717.000.The
road 21 rods: Thence
e 251, Meigs above described real LITILE &amp; SHEETS
nty
Official estate is sold •as is" LLP,
211-213 E.
south along said
ords.Auditor's
without warranties or Second
Street.
road 12 rods to a
corner stake: Thence
P eel
No.
16- covenantsPROPER Pomeroy, OH 45769,
01 86.000Parcel 2: TY ADDRESS: 18 Telephone:
(740)
east 11 rods 6 feet to
a corner stake on
B g a part of Lot West Cave Street, 992-6689(11) 10, 17,
line
with
J.B.
N
500 in Sugar Pomeroy,
Ohio 24
Torrence and Golda
R
in the Lincoln 45769. CURRENT
Smiths
properties:
Annexation to OWNER: Rocky A. SHERIFF'S
SALE
REAL
Thence 32 rods north
and Hupp REAL ESTATE OF
at the APPRAISED
·AT: ESTATECASE NO.:
to the place of
beginning, containing
comer of $5,000.00 The real 1OCV074Central
1 1/2 acres, more or
lot now owned estate cannot be Mortgage
less, this property
a Eiselstein the sold for less than CompanyPlaintiff
lies on the east side
e
being
the 2/3rds ttie appraised vs.Aobert Norwood,
of said number nine
hwest corner of value. The appraisal et
(9) road and is a part
No. 513; thence does not include an ai.,DefendantsCOUR
of the real estate
th 76 degrees 30' interior examination T OF COMMON
owned by Golda M.
t 50 feetthence of any structures, if PLEAS,
MEIGS
OHIOin
Smith and described
n
20 degrees 30' any, on the real COUNTY,
in a deed dated May
W st 140.5 feet, to estate TEAMS OF pursuance of an
1936
and
th
t.lorth line of SALE: 10% down on Order of Sale to me i not a resident of 25,
d has no place of recorded June 11,
R a Eiselstein's lot; day of sale, balance directed from said
siness in Ohio, he 1936 in book of deed
th ce
north 70 due on confirmation Court in the above
she may appeal to Volume 142, Page
d rees 30' East 123 of sale.
Cash or entitled action, I will
Court
of 83 Meigs County,
fe t to the Northeast certified
check offer for sale at t e
public auction to be ommon Pleas of Ohio.EXCEPTING
co er
of
Rena required.ALL
anklin County. The 3.9516 acres more or
Ei !stein's
lot; SHERIFF'S SALES held on the Front
tice of appeal shall less conveyed to
th nee
south
6 OPERATE UNDER Steps of the Meigs
t forth the order Richville
d rees 30' West THE DOCTRINE OF County Courthouse
Club,
pealed from and Sportsmen's
1 feet to the place CAVEAT EMPTOR on December 17,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.
e grounds of the found in Volume 179,
of
beginning PROSPECTIVE
peai.This Order is page 571, Meigs
20/100 PURCHASERS ARE of said day, the
reby entered in the County
Official
e,
mole
or URGED TO CHECK following described
urnal of the Ohio Aecords.EXCEPTIN
.Reference
FOR LIENS IN THE premises:A copy of
of G .332 acres, more
d: Volume 182, PUBLIC RECORDS the complete legal apartment
surance.MARY JO or less conveyed to
e 251, Meigs OF
MEIGS description can be
CASE NO. 09 CV
nty
Official COUNTY,
OHIO. obtained
at
the UDSONSuperinten Betty Hart, unmarried
100,
PEOPLES
ords.Auditor's
ATIOANEY
FOR Meigs
nt of Insurance and Ronald E. Hart,
County
BANK,
NATIONAL
eel
No.
1) 10, 17, 24
unmarried, found in
Recorder's
Office,
16• PLAINTIFF:
ASSOCIATION,
56.000The above Jennifer L Sheets, OR Book 141, Page
Volume 120, page
SALE,
HEAIFF'S
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
UTILE &amp; SHEETS 339 and OR Book
453, Meigs County
ASE NO. 09 CV
LLP,
211·213 E. 230,
ROCKY A. HUPP
Page
Official
,
PEOPLES
AND
CAROL J.
ranties
or Second
Street, 817. Permanent
Records.EXCEPTIN
ANK,
NATIONAL
HUPP,
ET ,AL.,
enants.PAOPEA Pomeroy, OH 45769, Parcel
G 2.8650 acres,
Number
SSOCIATION,
DEFENDANTS,
ADDRESS: 103· Telephone:
(740) 1500402000Property
more
or
less
LAINTIFF,
VS.
gg~~6N PL~;
Peacock 992-6689(11) 10, 17, address 235 Walnut OCKY HUPP AND conveyed to Jason
S. and Tonya l.
Street,
Middleport,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
nue,
Pomeroy, 24
qAROL HUPP, ET lawson,
45769CURAENT ~....,..~..,...--,.. OH
found in
OHIO. By virtue of
SHERIFF'S SALE,
~ L., DEFENDANTS,
Volume 99 Page
an Alias Order of
NER: Rocky R. CASE NO. 09 CV 45760APPAAISED
qoUAT
OF
Sale issued out of
P and Carol J. 100,
PEOPLES AT: $22,500.00 and OMMON PLEAS. 895, Meigs County
cannot be sold for
Official
said Court In the
p
REAL BANK,
NATIONAL
EIGS
COUNTY,
less than two-thirds
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
above action, Robert
ATE
ASSOCIATION,
HIO. By virtue of
G 4.00 acres, more
of
that
amount.
PRAISED
AT:
Alias Order of
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
or less conveyed to
000.00 The real
Terms of Sale: Ten
of Meigs County,
ROCKY A. HUPP
~ ale issued out of
Betty Hart, unmarried
Percent (1 0%) of the
e ate cannot be
c
Ohio, will expose to
AND.
AROL J.
id Court in the
and Ronald Hart,
purchase price down
for less than
ove action, Robert
sell at public action
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
unmarried, found In
at the time the bid is
on the front steps of 21 rds the appraised DEFENDANTS,
. Beegle, the Sheriff
Volume 98, Page
Balance
the Meigs County v e. The appraisal COURT
OF accepted.
Meigs County,
441, Meigs County
to
be
paid
within
d
s
not
include
an
Courthouse
in
COMMON PLEAS,
hlo, will expose to
Official
rior examination MEIGS
c OUNTY, Thirty (30) days. Any
Pomeroy,
Meigs
II at public action
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
sum
not
paid
within
County, Ohio, on
any structures, if OHIO. By virtue of
the front steps of
said
Thirty
(30)
days
G
.3462 acres, more
a , on the real
Friday, December 3,
an A1tas 0 rder of
t e Meigs County
shall bear interest at
or less conveyed to
ate TEAMS OF
ourthouse
In
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
LE. % down on Sale issued out of the rate of Ten
Bryan and Frank
10
the following lands
said Court in the
omeroy,
Meigs
Gilley,
found
in
Percent
(
1
0%)
per
tenements:
of sale, balance above action, Robert
ounty, Ohfo, on
Volume 84, Page
ated
in
the
on confirmation E. Beegle, the Sheriff annum from the date
lday, December 3,
157, Meigs County
Cash or of Meigs County, of sale.ROBERT E.
sale.
age of Pomeroy,
•
10, at 10:00 a.m.,
BEEGLE,
Official
Ohio, County of c ified
check Ohio, will expose to
e following lands
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
· action SherlffMeigs County,
uired.ALL
Meigs and State of
seII at pubhe
d tenements: The
OhioC.
Scott
G 1.5 acre more or
Ohio:Parcel 1: Being
EAIFF'S SALES on the front steps of
t !lowing real estate less to Steven and
CasterlineAttomey
ERATE UNDER
tuate in the State of
a part of Lot No. 500 T E DOCTRINE OF the Meigs County for
Plaintiff24755
Kathy Shaffer, found
in Sugar Run In
Courthouse
In
hlo,
County of
Chagrin
Blvd,
Suite
in Volume 83, Page
Lincoln
Hill C VEAT EMPTOR. Pomeroy,
Meigs
eigs and Township
OH
561, Meigs County
200Cieveland,
P OSPECTIVE
Olive
and
In
Annexation
to P ACHASERS ARE County, Ohio, on 44122(216)
360Official
Pomeroy,
and
Friday, December 3,
raction
Number
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
720011/24/10,
U GED TO CHECK
described as follows:
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
irty Two (32) Town
F R LIENS IN THE
12/01110, 12/08/10
G 1 acre, more or
mber Four (4) and
Beginning at a stake p BLIC RECORDS the following lands
less conveyed to
In the east side of
and
tenements:
Number
Bryan Gilley, found in
0
MEIGS Situated
in
the
Peacock
Street.
(11)
and

The State of Ohio,
Meigs County.THE
BANK OF NEW
YORK,
AS
TRUSTEE
ON
BEHALF OF THE
REGISTERED
CERTIFICATEHOLDERS
OF
GSAMP
TRUST
2004.--I=A2,MORTGAGE
S•
AOUGHCERTIFI
CATES.
SERIES
2004SEA2PLAINTIFFVs.
Case No. 10-CV033TINA
MARIE
FRALEY
aka
TINA M. FRALEY. et
ai.Defendant
In
pursuant of an Order
of Sale in the above
entitled action, 1 will
offer for sale at
public auction, at the
front door of the
Courthouse steps, In
the above named
County, on Friday,
the
17th day of
December, 2010, at
10:00 o'clock AM.,
the
following
described
real
estate:Situated In the
Township of Scipio,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:Being
a part of a tract of
land described in
Volume 263, Page
• Meigs County
d Records and
ng
more
particularly described
as follows:Beginning
at the southeast
corner
of
the
northeast quarte of
Section 34, thence
South 03 deg 47
min. 30 sec. East
149.49 feet along a
fence line to a point
in the right of way of
State Route 143;
thence along said
right of way South 87
deg. 29 min. 46 sec.
West. 149.48 feet to
a point; thence South
80 deg. 49 min. West
309.17 feet to a
point; thence leaving
said right of way
North 02 deg. 14
min. 38 sec. East
201 44 feet to an iron
pin set in grantor's
North line passing an
iron pin set at 23.02
feet; thence, along a
fence line North 85
. 56 min. 26 sec.
t, 436.07 feet to
•
point
of
beginning
and
containing
1.868
acres.Subject to all
leases, easements
and rights of way of
record. Survey
by
John M. Branner,
Registered
Land
Surveyor,
#6805,
1994.Parcel No. 1700290.000More
commonly known as:
32300
SA
143,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
4'5769Said Premises
Appraised
at
$1.5,000.00And
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of that amount.Terms
of Sale: 10% down
day of saleRobert E.
BeegleErin
M.
Laurito
(0075531)
SheriffAttorney
for
Plaintiff
Meigs
County,
OhioNovember 24th,
December 1st &amp;
8th
SALE,

stake lies
h 5 degrees and
west 111.4 feet
the northwest
r of Lot No.
which
was
erly owned by
tine Ebersbach
te; thence along
ock Street south
egrees and 44'
17.6
feet;
ce south 74
ees and 10' east
3 feet to the
west corner of
No. 513; thence
h 6 degrees 10'
190 feet along
west line of Lot
512 to a large
st post; thence
h 70 degrees
289.6 feet to
place
of
ning, containing
00
the
.EXCEPT
from the
described
ises sold to
ond Eiselstein
deed
dated
ruary 24, 1938
inning at the
hwest
theast) corner of
t formerly owned
Rena Eiselstein
same being the
west corner of
No. 513; thence
76 degrees
30' west 50 feet;
north 20

COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATIORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L Sheets,
LITILE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211·213 E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24

~

~

l
~
~

~

~

...

..

100

Legals

Volume 79, Page
529, Meigs County
Official
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
G 1 acre, more or
less conveyed to
Rebecca
Ahlefeld,
found in Volume 79,
Page 523, Meigs
County
Official
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
G 2 acres, more or
less conveyed to
Allyson and Mark
McBenge, found in
Volume 78, Page
111, Meigs County
Official
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
G 1 acre, more or
less conveyed to
Townsend,
Helen
found in Volume 78,
page 115, Meigs
County
Official
Records. EXCEPTIN
G 1.5 acres, more or
less conveyed to
Cecil Dillon, Jr. and
Floss1e Dillon, found
in Volume 187, Page
167, Meigs County
Deed
Records.EXCEPTIN
G 2.4779 acres,
more
or
less
conveyed to Carl
Mark Jones, for and
during his natural
lifetime and upon his
death
to
Robert
Jones, Wilma Jean
Buckley, and Billy
Joe Jones, found In
Volume 226, Page
251, Meigs County
Official
Aecords.EXCEPTIN
G 3.00 acres, more
or less conveyed to
Carlton M. Jones.
found in Volume 239,
Page 943, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Reference
Deed: Volume 77,
Page 651, Meigs
County
Official
Records.Auditor's
Parcel Number: 0901266.000The above
described real estate
is sold Aas is@
without warranties or
covenar:tts.PROPER
TY
ADDRESS:
53475 Number Nine
Road,
Reedsville,
OH 45772CUAAENT
OWNERS: Aocky.·R.
Hupp and Carol J.
HuppREAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$6,250.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does not include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE. 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.
ALL
SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATIORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
UTILE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213 E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10,17,
24
SHERIFF'S SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS.
ROCKY A. HUPP
AND
CAROL J.
HUPP,
ET
Al.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Shenff
of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
. In
Pomeroy,
Metgs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.,
the following lands
and
tenements·
Situated
in
the
Vtllage of Middlep_ort,.
the County of Metgs,
an~ the State . of
Ohto, and betng
known
and
designated as Lot
No. 319 in Lower
Pomeroy now a part
of the Village of
Middleport. in the
County of Meigs, and

the Sate (sic) of •vm•u•t•IJV•
Ohio. This being the
same
premises
conveyed from Lewis hAtwA•~n
0. Cooper to Eunice
A.B. Swift be deed
recorded in Volume
67 on Page No. 128
of the Meigs County
Deed
Records.Reference
Deed: Volume 222,
Page 619, Meigs
County
Official
Records. Auditor's
Parcel
No.:
1500110.000The above
described real estate
is sold "as is" without
warranties
or
covenants PROPER
TY ADDRESS: 545
Park
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760CUAAENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp and Carol J.
Hupp.
REAL
ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$7,500.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
213rds the appraised
value. The appraisal
does include an
interior examination
of any structures, if
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
certified
check
required.ALL
SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATIORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
UTILE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211·213 E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone:
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
SHERIFF'S SALE,
CASE NO. 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF,
VS
ROCKY A. HUPP
AND
CAROL
J.
HUPP,
ET
Al.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS
COUNri,
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs county,
Ohio, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
Courthouse
In
Pomeroy,
Meigs
County, Ohio, on
Friday, December 3,
2010, at 10:00 am.,
the following lands
and tenements: The
following described
premtses, situated in
the
Village
of
Middleport, County of
Metgs al)d State of
Ohio:Being
Lot
Number
Three
Hundred
SeventyFour (374). as per
recorded
plat
of
Lower Pomeroy, now
the
Village
of

AS ARE
CHECK
IN THE
ECORDS
MEIGS
OHIO.
FOR

virtue of
Order of
out of
in the
Robert
Sheriff
County,
to

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 8 4 • The Daily Sentinel
100

Legals

descnbed
as
follows:Bemg at the
said Athens road at
the southeast comer
of a tract of land
owned
by
Mary
Ashworth:
thence
along the south ltne
of sa1d tract owned
by Mary Ashworth
eleven ( 11) chains
and 15 lines to the
west line of said
traction 2; thence
south along the west
line of the aforesaid
89 links; thence east
parallel with the east
line of the above
described
eleven
chams and 15 links
to said Athens Road;
thence along said
Athens Road to the
place of beginmng,
contairting one acre,
more or less.Save
and excepting the 011
and gas and other
minerals,
together
with the nght to m1:1e
the same Reference
1s made to Affidavit of
Transfer from Mary
C. Davis, dec. to
Floyd Dav1s, et al,
Volume 147 page
560 Meigs County
Deed Records, and
Deed from Floyd
Davis, et al to Myrtle
M. Long Volume 148
page
188 Meigs
Coun~
Deed
Records. Reference
Deed. Volume 188,
Page 625, Meigs
Coun~
Official
Records.Aud1tor's
Parcel Number: 1400946.000The above
descnbed real estate
IS sold •as is" without
or
warranties
covenants.PROPER
TY
ADDRESS:
33227 US 33 (aka
833), Pomeroy. OH
45769CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R
Hupp and Carol J.
HuppREAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT:
$15,000.00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
213rds the appra1sed
value The appraisal
an
does
include
)nterior examination
of any structures, If
any, on the real
estate. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% down on
day of sale, balance
du~ on confirmation
Cash or
of sale.
certified
check
reqwed.ALL
SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE

100

Legals

PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF
Jennifer L Sheets,
LITTLE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211·213
E
Second
Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740)
Telephone:
992-6689(11) 10, 17
24
SHERIFF'S
SALE
OF
REAL
ESTATECASE NO.:
10C V0064Fiagstar
Bank,
FSBPiaintiff
vs.Laurle K Allman,
et
al ,DefendantsCOUA
T OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOin
pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
d1rected from sa1d
Court 1n the above
entitled act1on, I will
orrer fo1 saltl at
public auct1on to be
held on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on December 17
2010, at 10;00 a.m
of said day, the
following described
premises.A copy of
the complete legal
description can be
obtained
at
the
Meigs
Coun~
Recorder's
Off1ce,
OR Book 217, Page
887Permanent
Parcel Number 0500501-004 and 0500501-00SProperty
address 27330 Old
State Route 346,
OH
Albany,
4571 OAPPRAISED
AT· $40,000 00 and
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of
that
amount
Terms of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) of the
purchase pnce down
at the t1me the bid IS
accepted.
Balance
to be paid within
Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within
said Thirty (30) days
shall bear interest at
the rate of Ten
Percent (10%) per
annum from the date
of sale.ROBERT E
BEEGLE,
ShenffMeigs Coun~.
OhioC
Scott
Casterl1neAttorney
for
Plamtlff24755
Chagnn Blvd, SUite
200Cieveland,
OH
44122(216)
360720011/24/10,
12/01/10, 12108/10

100

Legals

100

COURT OF
COMMON
PLEASMEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
BAC Home Loans
Serv1cmg, LP fka
Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing LP
Pla1ntiff, -vs- Rolland
E. Sm1th. et al.
Defendants.
Case
10-CV-110
No.:
Judge:
Fred
W.
Crow, Ill
LEGAL
NOTICE IN SUIT
FORFOR6CLOSUR
E OF MORTGAGE
Rolland E. Smith,
whose last known
address is 32359
Happy Hollow Road,
OH
Middleport,
and
the
45760,
unknown
heirs,
devisees, legatees,
executors.
administrators,
spouses and assigns
and the unknown
guard1ans of minor
and/or incompetent
he1rs of Rolland E.
Smith, all of whose
residences
are
unknown and cannot
:Oy
reasonable
diligence
be
ascertained, will take
notice that' on the
14th day of October,
2010, BAC Home
Loans Servicing, LP
fka
Countrywide
Home
Loans
Serv1cing LP filed its
Compla1nt in the
Pleas
Common
Court
of
Me1gs
County, Ohio in Case
No. 10-CV-110, on
the docket of the
Court, and the object
and demand for relief
of which pleading is
to foreclose the lien
of plaintiff's mortgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to Wll'
Property
Address:
32359 Happy Hollow
Road,
Middleport,
OH
45760,
and
being
more
particularly described
in plaintiff's mortgage
recorded in Mortgage
Book 232, page 45,
of
this
County
Recorder's
Office.
The above named
defendant is reqwred
to answer with1n
twen~-e1ght
(28)
days
after
last
publication January
05, 2011, wh1ch shall
be published once a
week
for
three
consecutive weeks,
or they might be
den1ed a hearing In
th1s case. (11) 24,
(12) 1 8

ISHOP CLASSIFIEDSI

Legals

SHERIFF'S SALE.
CASE NO 09 CV
100,
PEOPLES
BANK,
NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF.
VS.
ROCKY R. HUPP
AND
CAROL J.
HUPP,
ET
AL.,
DEFENDANTS,
COURT
OF
COMMON PLEAS,
COUNTY,
MEIGS
OHIO. By virtue of
an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of
said Court in the
above action, Robert
E. Beegle, the Sheriff
of Meigs Coun~.
Oh1o, will expose to
sell at public action
on the front steps of
the Meigs County
In
Courthouse
Me1gs
Pomeroy,
Coun~.
Oh10, on
Friday, December 3.
2010, at 10;00 a.m.,
the follow1ng lands
and tenements: The
following real estate
situated in the Village
of Pomeroy, County
of Meigs and State of
Ohio,
and
more
particularly described
as follows:Situated in
the
Village
of
Pomeroy, Coun~ of
Meigs, and State of
Ohio:Being in the
Village of Pomeroy,
Meigs Coun~. and
State of Oh1o, and 1n
the east half of 100
acres lot number 308
and bounded and
described as follows,
to-wit. Parcel
1:Beginning at the
east
corner
of
Samuel Reynell's lot
on which he resided
in the year 1894;
thence
north 37
degrees west along
said Reynell's hne
two hundred ninety
feet to a stake;
thence
north
54
degrees east 75 feet
to a stake; thence
south 37 degrees
west 75 feet to the
place of beginning
Being
the
same
premises conveyed
from W S. Densmore
and wife to Celinda
Densmore by deed
dated February 6th,
1894, and recorded
rn Vol 77, Page 355,
356 and 357, Record
of Deeds of Me1gs
Coun~, Ohio Except
the coal and other
mmerals there1n and
the right to mine the
same
without
encumbrance to the
surface, and all ways
and rights of way
along any mineral
seam
is
hereby
reserved
to
the
former grantors, their

100

Legals

heirs
and
asslgns.Being
the
same real estate
conveyed to Jessie
Moore from Alma
Reed
by
deed
recorded 1n Deed
Book 152, Page 388
of the Meigs Coun~
Deed Records, and
conveyed by Jessie
Moore to George J
by
deed
Moore
recorded in Deed
Book 160, Page 160
of the Meigs County
Deed Records.Parcel
2.The following real
estate situated in the
Village of Pomeroy,
County of Me1gs and
State of Ohio and in
100
acre
lot
307 Beginning at the
northwest corner of
Charles Hess lot
where he resided in
May 1879, thence
north 36-1/2 degrees
west 283 feet to the
south tltdo of a road;
thence south 51-1/2
degrees west 120
feet along said road,
thence south 36-1/2
degrees west 82 feet
along said
road,
thence south 25
degrees and 31 feet'
west 189 along said
road; thence south
75 degrees east 54112 teet to the
northeast corner of
lot formerly owned by
Mrs Kokes, thence
along said Cornick's
line;
north
54
degrees east 275
feet to the place of
beginning, contarning
1-63/100 acres, more
or
less.Reference
Deed: Volume 132,
Page 191, Metgs
Coun~
Official
Records. Auditor's
Parcel
Nos.
1601111.000 and 1601110.000
The
above described real
estate is sold •as is"
without warranties or
covenants. PROPER
TV ADDRESS: 435
Rutland
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760
CURRENT
OWNER: Rocky R.
Hupp REAL ESTATE
APPRAISED
AT
$8,500 00. The real
estate cannot be
sold for less than
213rds the apprarsed
value. The apprarsal
does Include an
intenor examination
of any structures, if
any, on the rear
estate TERMS OF
SALE~ 10% down on
day of sale, balance
due on confirmation
of sale.
Cash or
cert1fied
check
required.ALL

100

Wednesday, November 24, 201 0
Legals

SHERIFF'S SALES
OPERATE UNDER
THE DOCTRINE OF
CAVEAT EMPTOR
PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS ARE
URGED TO CHECK
FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS
OF
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO.
ATTORNEY
FOR
PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets,
UTILE &amp; SHEETS
LLP,
211-213
E.
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
Telephone.
(740)
992-6689(11) 10, 17,
24
Sheriff's Sale of Real
EstateRevised Code,
Section 2329.25The
State of Oh1o, Meigs
Coun~

Deutsche
Bank
Nalional
Trust
Company, as Trustee
for
NovaStar
Mortgage
Funding
Trust, Series 2006-6
Plaintiff
vs.
No.
10 CV 028
Marjorie Stone et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of an
_
Order of
Sale
in
the
above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at
public
auction,
in the second floor
lobby
of
the
Courthouse
tn
In

the

above named
coun~. on
Fnday,
the
17th day of
December, 2010 at
10;00AM
the
followmg described
real estate, situate in
the Coun~ of Meigs
and State of Ohio,
and Township of
Orange
to
wit:Situated in the
State
of
Ohio,
Township,
Orange
Meigs Coun~ and
being
more
particularly described
as follows; Situated
in Orange Township,
Meigs Coun~. State
of Ohio and be1ng m
Section 16, Town 4
North, Range 12
West of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
and being descnbed
as follows: Beginning
at an iron pin set,
said Iron pin bemg
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance
of 1150.58' from an
1ron pipe found at the
assumed Southwest
corner
of
said
Section 16;Thence
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance

100

100

Legals

of 366 73' along an
agreed upon hne
between Wmgrovo
and Wmgrove to an
1ron pm set pass1ng
the centerline of
Township Read 295
at 52.96' and passing
the centerline of a
newly
created
(currently
used)
20.00' wrde nght of
way at 68.67' and
pass1ng an 1ron pin
set at 98.67' for
reference;Thence
South 00 degrees 16'
47" West, a distance
of 139 62' along an
agreed upon line
between Wmgrove
and Wmgrove to an
iron pin set,Thence
North 89 degrees 43'
13" West, a d1stance
of 357 25' along an
agreed upon hno
between Watson and
Wmgrove to the
Pomt of Begmnmg
pa~~1ng an 11on pm
set at 305 00' and
passing
the
centerline
of
Township Road 295
at
335.00
said
described
tract
contain1ng
1.16
acres, more or less,
excepting all legal
and
easements
rights
of
way Exce!JIIng and
Reserving
unto
James E Wingrove
(grantor on D V 232
Page 341) hiS heirs,
successors
or
aSSigns, a nght Of
way/easement
for
tngress and egress
purposes to be used
m common
w1th
others and all part1es
using said rtght of
way/easement shall
be responsible to
maintain and care of
same and whereas
the
nghf
of
way/easement
is
morq fully descnbed
Situated in Orange
Township,
Me1gs
Coun~. State of Ohio
and being in Section
16, Town 4 North,
Range 12 West of
the Ohio Company's
Purchase and being
described as follows
Beg1nnmg a pomt in
the centerline of
Township Road 295,
sa1d
pomt be1ng
South 89 Degrees
a
43' 13" East
distance of 1150 58'
(1ron pm set) and
North 03 degrees 36'
18" West. a d1stance
of 139.94 along an
agreed upon line
between White and
Wingrove (1ron prn
set) and South 89
degrees 43' 13" East,

Legals

100

a distance of 52 96'
along an agreed
upon hno between
Wmgrove
and
W1ngrove to a point
in the centerline of
Township Road 295
and
South
04
degrees
01'
03"
West, a distance of
31 22' along the
centerline of sa1d
Township Road 295
from an iron pipe
found
at
the
assumed Southwest
corner
of
said
Sect1on 16; Thence
North 29 degrees 56'
37'' East, a distance
of 35.85' along the
centerline
of
an
ex1sbng
currently
used driveway to a
pomt on the North
rme of the newly
resurveyed W1ngrove
1 16 acre parcel,
0 A V 172, Page
481 : Thence North
39

degree~

41' 46"

East a distance of
22.01' along the
centerl1ne
of
an
ex1sting
curr,ently
used driveway to a
po1nt on the South
line on the Eynon
3.07 acre parcel.
O.R V. 106, Page
781
excepting all
legal easements and
way.
rights
of
Beanngs
are
assumed and are for
angle measurement
only
The above
descnption ts based
on a survey 10
January 2006 by E &amp;
E
Borderline
Surveytng, Robert R.
Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
7033.Further
Except1ng
and
reservmg
unto
James E Wmgrove,
(Grantor 1n D V 232,
Page 341) hts heirs.
successors
and
assigns a right of
way/easement
for
Ingress and egress
purposes to be used
1n
common with
others and all parties
using said nght of
way/easement shall
be responsible to
ma1ntatn and care of
same and whereas
the
nght
of
way/easement
is
more fully descnbed·
S1tuated m Orange
Townshtp,
Me1gs
Coun~. State of Ohio
and be1ng 1n Section
16, Town 4 North,
Range 12 West of
the Oh1o Company's
Purchase and being
described as follows.
Beg1nmng a point in
the centerline of
Township Road 295,
sa1d po1nt being S 89

degrees 43' 13" Ea •
d1stance
o
1150 58' (non p1
set) and N 0
degrees 36'
18
West, a distanqe o
139.94 along ar
agreed upon lm
between White an
W1ngrove (1ron p
set) and South 8
degrees 43' 13"
a distance of 52
along an
upon line betweer
W1ngrove
and
Wingrove to a poin
in the centerline o
Township Road 295
from an 1ron pip
found
at
th
assumed Southwe
corner
of
sa
Section 16. Then
South 89 degrees 4
13" Easl a d1stan
of 313.78' along th
North line of tt
newly
resurvey
Wmgrove 1. 16 Ac
Parcel, 0 R V. 17
Page 481 to an lr
pin set, passing c
1ron pin set at .!15 71
for
referenc
excepting all leg
easements
an
rights
of
way
Bearings
ar
assumed and are fa
angle measurement
only.
The abov
descnption is base
on a survey •
January 2006 by •
E
Borden
Surveying Robert R
Eason, Oh1o P.S. No
7033
Sc..
Prem1ses Located
40002 Chns~ Road
ReedsVIlle,.
OH
45772
Sa
Premises Appraise
at
$60,000 00
and cannot be so'
for less than two
thirds
of
th
amount.TERMS 0
SALE. 10% depo
A.
Le
Rachel
Attorney Robert f
Beegle
Sher
Meigs
Coun
Ohio (11) 24, ( 12) 1
8. 2010

a

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Wednesday, November 24, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

(BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
•

Chris Browne

. 60MEONE 6,AJO.''Yoi/
C.AN'T' Cl/006~ )'t;ti)R
PARtNr6, 9J.ll 1-lAR.O
WoPI&lt; WILL OV~C.O/IIe
MYTfii/IKil ''/

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Informal
eatery
5 Long
looks
11 Ellipse
12 Five-time
Derby
winner
13 Peach
centers
14 Blow
one's top
15 Blond
shade
16 Urban
fleet
17 Wipe clear
19 Balloon fill
22 Deserve
24 Dog topper
26 Like the
Sahara
27 To be, to
Balzac
28 Like some
jackets
30"Nonsense!"
31 Race part
32 Ham it up
341t may be
furrowed
35 Hold up
38Fix
41 Arbor
climber
42 Plummer
of film
43 Machu
Picchu
native
44 Thanksgiving
staple
45 L:1ke some
wines

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Nightclub
of song
2 Rara 3 Begetting
4 Golfer
Ernie
5 Long
stories
6 His job's
in "Jeop- .
ardyl"
7 Play
makeup
8 Lamb's
dad
9 Important
time
1 0 Lawn
material
16 Jazz fan
18 Take the
bus
19 Getting
together

20 Mystique
21 Worry
22 Shopping
haven
23 Huron
neighbor
25 Take it
easy
29Mock
30Comics
punch
sound

33Eel
variety
34 Vault
setting
36 In the past
37 Abacus
part
381nformer
39 Outback
bird
40Hole
number
41 By way of

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK I Send $4 75 (checklm o) to
ll1omas Joseph 8ool&lt;., , PO, Box 536475, Orlando, H. 32853-6475
2

3

8

9

10

11
13
15

11-24

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

!&lt;OW 01.17 ARE Y'OtJ,

William Hoest

MR WA\IER tNG ~

MUTTS
T t"1ANK5
GIVING

(J~r~

Patrick McDonnell
I

"he: hc:n rt wttl r~nd the: p:•thwa.':J home

"THE ONLY WAY I CAN KEEP LEROY OOT OF HOT
WATER IS TO POT DIRTY DISHES IN IT.'"

•· Rof'e.RT ''
"2'1

HAPPY BIR'IHDAY for Wednesday,

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CI&lt;M?P, CLEAN AIR AND J~ A FGW
FI.J.JFFI( WH [];: CI..OIJP-; Fl.OATING IN
AN IM~BL-'( Bl-Ur::: £.1(1(!

Nov. 24, 2010:

This year, you discover unusual !&gt;UCcess when relating to people individu·
ally. They respond as you might not
have dreamt possible. A touchy area
will dearly be around funds- yours
and theirs. Stay as dear as hwnanly
possible. Along-term friendship could
become difficult this year. You will
have a choice. If you are single, your
ability to relate closely allows a great
deal of closeness. A powerful relationship' could develop. If you are attached_
the two of you gain from one-on-one
time. CA.'\JCER bottom-lines your
~~.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
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" .. .'cttuse my stomach's gonna have
a big day tomorrow."

DENNIS THE MENACE

Hank Ketchum

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Hm¥?; 5-Dynamic; 4-P~'itit¥?; 3-An~rage;
2-So-50; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
*** You might feel as if you haw
given enough at this point The instinct

by Dave Green
1-

.

The Stars ShoW the J(jnd of Day You'll

9

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to play ostrich might not be too out of
whack. An associate or familv member
could be depres..'ied or difficult. Lt.~ this
person's is.'::ues go, for now. Tonight:
Happiest at home.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***** An adamant disagreementis just that, but it doc:;n't mean
you cannot talk to the other party or
even enjoy him or her. You simply
don't see eye to eye with this person. A•
work-related matter might be exhausting. Use your ability to pace your.;clf.
Tonight Hang out with a friend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
*** Curb a need to be po&amp;..;es.&lt;;ive
or in control. First. it won't work for
vou ultimate!)~ Also, you will note
how much contradiction surrounds a
key io;sue. Trying to resolve it will take
the ability to see the validity in all sug·
gestions. Tonight Your treat.
CA.t'IJCER {June 21-July 22)
****Other.; arc challenging and
controlling. These traits might have
nothing to do With you but with them.
A diffirult issue at home seems heavier
than it really is. Know that it is resolvable, and approach it accordingly.
Tonight W go. The world i.e; your oyster.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
** Knovv when to dose your door
at the office or screen your calls at
.home. Everyone needs some private
time, especially you at thi'i juncture.
Use your ability to sort and distance
yourself. What you arc fl.-cling might
be justified. Do check it out. Tonight:

Vanish while you can.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
***** Zero in on what you
want, and don't allow others to distract
you. You might wonder what to do
with a difficult child or loved one. This
pcr.;(m keeps rebelling. If you sense
nefarious activity, you probably need
to pull back and observe. Tonight
Where the action is.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** It appears responsibilities are
dropped on you out of the blue. You
could have a lot more on your plate
than others realize. Lbten to a family
membe~ even if he or she b on the
warpath. Tonight Burning the candle
at both ends.
SCORPIO (Ocl23-Nov. 21)
**** Keep reaching out for someone at a distance, especially if you
haven't been in contact for a while. You
could be more negative than you need
to be. Re-.ise your thinking, do needed
n...&gt;&lt;:earm and ask pertinent questions.
Tonight Put on a favorite piece of
music.
SAGllTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
***** Fl'ellngs run deep, for better or for worse. Someone feels too
strongly for your taste about a business
dealing. You realize there is an issue
with a financial involvement with this
person. Try to back out gracefully.
Tonight: Dmner for two.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
**** It might be wise to les.-.en
the friction beh.,.een you and another
person. Consider letting a strong need
to be m control of a '&gt;ituation blow
ov&amp; Soon enough you will be chilled
out and able to llandle this matter.
Tonight Defer to someone ebe.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. 18)
*** After hitting enough obstacles
in your daily routine, you might want
to run home. But you will tough it out.
Be carefuL bccau_-;e frustration and
antagoni...,m come forn·ard. You don't
want to expre;s your feelings inappropriate!}: Tonight: Put your feet up.
PISCES (Feb. 19-Man:h 20)
***Much changes far too quickly
for your ta.&lt;;te. Oearl)j you cannot convince others - in a meeting or one on
one- of the rationality in your thinking. Let your creativity flourish in areas
where they arc appreciated. Tonight
Fun and games.

factJueline Btgar IS on the lntmret
at http://tllluw.jactJuelinebigar.com.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

ww·w.myda ilysent inel.com

Rivalry

As WVU awaits, Pitt offense lacks consistency
PITTSBURGH (AP)
- Pitt ]cads the Big East
Conference despite going
nearl) a full season without it" offense living up
to expectations.
The deep passes to Jon
Bald\\ in are missing. and
his sl:ltistil's arc WH)
down. All those long runs
by Dion Lewis arc missing. and his statistics arc
way down. With a couple
of n~~ular sea~on gnmes
rcma1ning. Lewis has
1.138 fewer yards rushing than he ended with
last season, and Baldwin
has nearly 500 fewer
yards reccivino.
Some coaches would
be panicking. Pitt coach
Dave Wannstedt has the
same patience he had
when the season began.
With the conference
title still unclaimed and
rival West Virginia arriving on Friday \\ ith a
defense
that
hasn t
allowed any opponent to
score more than 21
points. this would be a
oood
week
for
Pittsburg, s offense to
begin showing some con~
sistenc; and big-play
capability.
Pitt ranks only 75th
nationallv in total offense
with a j62. I yards per
2ame averaoe. down
trom No. 52 fa~t season.
West Virginia ic; 74th
offensively. but is No. 4
defensively. Pitt is No. 12
defen:.ively.
..We rc still a work in
pro~res:.. but we hav~
maae
progress,
Wannstedt said Mandav.
..If we don t turn the ball
over. if we protect the
football. we hnve n
chance to go out there
and be productive on
offense. I think we need
to let West Virginia know
that Jon Baldwin is capable of breaking the game
open. as are ,\like
Shanahan. Dion Lewis
and Ray Graham. I think
both
offenses
have
enough talent that you
ju-.;t can t let your guard
down.''
Pitt (6-4. 5-l in Big
East) can claim the con-

'\Vcdn csd ay, November 2 4 ,

from Page Bt

David T. Foster IIVCharloHe Observer/MCT

WVU head coach Bitt Stewart reacts after a North
Carolina score in the first quarter in the Meineke Car
Care Bowl on December 27, 2008.
terence title if it beats
·West Virginia (7-3. 3-2)
and Cincmnati (4-6. 2-3)
on Dec. 4. The Panthers
will claim at least a share
of the title if they win
Friday. but won t oet the
accompanying BCS. bid
unless they also wm at
Cincinnati or Connecticut
(6-4. 3-2) loses to
Cincinnati on Friday or at
South rlorida on Dec. 4.
The Panthers mioht be
more confident of finding
a ·eam or two in \\'est
Virginia unconventional
3-3-5 defense if Baldwin
was oetting open downfield Yike he d1d fast season. when he avera!!ed
19.5 yards per catch. This
season. he has a 16.1
average. Or if Lewis was
running like he did when
he gained at least II 0
yards in each of Pitt s last
eight games a year ago.
Lewis has been held to
'two I00-yard games this
season. including a season-high 130 a~ainst
Rutgers on Oct. 2j. He
had 106 yards and a
game-deciding 22-yard
touchdown nm Saturday
as Pitt ed2ed South
Florida 17-JO:
Lewis isn t Pitt ~ leading rusher. as Ray

Graham has gained 804
yards.
!\lost
games,
Wannstedt sorts out
which back is running
better and stays with him.
"We
played
Dinn
Lewis a lot more last
\\ eek.'' Wannstedt said.
"We felt that Dion Lewis
had a little holler hand
and was seeing things
quicker, so we went with
him more."
While quarterback Tino
Sunseri s statistics are up
since early in the season.
s still not as consistent
as Bill Stull was in 2009.
Pitt ~ offensive line also
l'ffi'l t played up to the
level of last sea~on s line.
which was much more
experienced.
"Consistenc) wise. it s
a challenge every week.''
Wannstcdt said. "The
thing that can "ornctimes
make an offense k&gt;ok not
as effective is it could be
that just one guy is off.
All it takes is pressure
from one lineman who
misses his block or doesn t
read
it
rioht.
Everybody else is perfect.
the route b perfect, the
quarterback knows \\here
to throw the ball and you
tlmm it away."

is that they just plain
cb1 t like losmg to the
1 other guys.
' And that s motivation
enough.
"To say that they have
, more at stake than us.
when you look at it from
bowl perspective and Big
Ten championship sure,'' Michigan coach
Rich Rodriguez said on
Monday. "To say it s less
important. no. i'\ever."
' 1 he Buckeyes enter
the storied grudge match
needing a win to match
the mark of si:oi straight
conference titles won by
Woody Hayes
Ohio
State teams of 1972-77.
Heading into the final
weekend of conference
play, the Buckeyes are. in
lockstep with Michigan
State and Wisconsin.
with all three teams I 0-1
overall and 6-1 in the
Big Ten.
Win, and Ohio State
would likely be in the
running for a BCS berth
- either a return trip to
the Rose Bowl. should
Wisconsin lose at home

I

re

from Page Bl
RBJs.
Injuries
limited
Hamilton to 89 games
the following year. when
he hit .268 with I 0
homers and 54 RBis.
Detroit s
Miguel
Cabrera was second with
five first-place votes and
262 points after leading
the AL with 126 RB is

J

to Northwestern. or possibly an at-large bid to
the Sugar or Orange
bowls.
Lose and the Buckeyes
could sag all the wny to
third in the conference
and would end up out of
the BCS mix for the lirst
time since 2004.
Thc Buckeyes nrc al o
hoping to add to their
mastery of their chief
rivals. 'l11cy ve won the
last six meetinos. their
longest string of succes'i
ever in the series.
Some fan~ say that
''Th~ Game'' has lost
some of its luster in
recent years because of
the Buckeye., domination. They Sa) that for it
to remain a tme rivalry,
one team can t win every
time.
But the alternative is
almost unthinkable to
Ohio State.
"Already it means so
much to us that we don t
need to lose a game to
remember how bad it
hurts," said defensive
lineman
Dexter
Larimore.
Michigan (7-4, J-4) is
heading to a bowl game
for the fir~t time in
Rodriguez s three years
in Ann Arbor. The

Wolverines. led by multithreat
quarterback
Denard Robinson. are
hoping for a vict?ry to
prove they ve climbed
out of the dark hole theY.
were m the past couple of
years and are headed for
a brighter future.
A signature win could-"
n t come against any.
better than the Bucke
" I vc got respect for
them,'' Robinson said.
"But I don t like them.'' •
The feeling is mutual ..
Ohio State has no othe~
major
rival
beside~
Michigan.
But
the
Wolverine!&gt; also circle
Michigan
State and
:Notre Dame on their cal~
endars each season.
So this i~ a speciaf.
week for players and fans.
to embrace their dislik~
of the other team.
"1 don t hate them. but
I 001 t like them either
because of the rivalry,'
Ohio State cornerbackDevon Torrence said.:
"Michigan is a great uni~
versity and institution for.
college and college football. T hey do a lot in
term~ of the whole college football spectrum .
''I won t say I hat~
them - but I really , •.
to beat them."

and a .420 on-base percentage. The Yankees
Robinson Cano was next
with
229
points.
TonJnto s Jose Bautista .
who led the major
leagues '' ith 54 home~.
haJ the remaining firstplace vote and 165
points.
Bob Dutton of The
Kansa~ City Star, Tom
Gage of The Detroit
News, Scot Gregor of
The (Arlington Heights)
Daily
Herald.
Jim
Ingraham of T he Port

Clinton
News-Herald
and Steve Kornacki o£
Booth i':ew&lt;.;paper · voted
Cabrera first. Shi Davidi
of The Canadian Press
cast ttfe first-place vote
for Bautista.
Hamilton receives a
S I00.000 bonus. Cabrera
$200,000
and
Paul
Konerko of the Chicago
White Sox $60.000 for
finishing fifth. Tampa:
Bay s Evan Longoria
was sixth. followed by:
teammate Carl Crawford.
and each gets $25.000.

www.mydailysentinel.com J

Rio
from Page Bl
and eight rebounds to the
Rio cause and senior center Ashley Saunders contributed a solid stat line
with II points nnd eight
boards.
Junior guard
Kay lee I felton t:hipped in
13 points. She was a
perfect I 0-for-1 0 from
the free throw line.
Senior guard Bre Davis
was solid at the point
guard spot. scoring seven
point$ and dishing out a
game-high. seven assists.
Roberts Wesleyan \\as
led
by
Brittany
McMillon With 13 points
and nine rebounds \\ hile
'liffany Wilson chipped
in 10 points. pulled down
six rebounds. handed out
five assists and swiped
four steals.

Sarah Soroka, whom the
RedStonn held in check
in the \~in. November 13.
dropped a double-double
on Rio Grande with 19
points and 10 rebounds.
.,\1ar) beth .N ugcnt and
Ellie Allen both contributed identical II
point. six-assist performances in the win for
Dacmen.
Rio Grande again
strugglcd
somc\vhat
from the field, hitting
onl) 39.4 percent (26of-66) for the game.
The Wifdcab hurt the
RedStorm from long
range. connectmg on 11of-19 (57. 9 percent)
attempts from threepoint land.
Rio Grande will travel
to
Huntington (IN)
Universit) for its next
game.
Saturday.
November 27. "I ip-off
i~ set for I p.m.

.

'

.·
On Saturday. Daemen
avenged the los~ to Rio
Grande in the championshit.&gt; game ofthe Bevo
Francts fournament the
week before.
Rio appeared to get
control ot a close 2ame
with an X-3 run to make
the score. 59-51 at the
l4: 17 mark of the second
hal f.
Daemen (4-1)
came !iring back to tic
the game and then put it
away with an I 1-0 run
over a 2 1/2 minute span
to grab an 80-68 lead at
the 5:09 mark.
Helton led the charge
for the RedStonn with 22
points. Smith added 19
and Saunders notched a
double-double with 12
points and lO rebounds.
Davis and Kendra also
reached double figures in
scoring with II each.
Bridoette Burke paced
the \\lildcats with 21
points and nine rebounds.

... !

.

..

)

'

. .. .

.

'

~

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