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¢&amp;

Alex Colon:
Potential,
The Unknown, A7

Thorn Mollohan:
A Hunger for
More, A6

•

entine

-at
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Unemployment: Decreases in Mason; increases in Gallia, Meigs
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

UNDATED - Mason
County experienced a
slight improvement on the
job front in October.
while Gallia and Meigs
counties each saw their
respective jobless rates
increase slightly That's
according to the latest
data
released
by
WorkForce West Virginia
(WFWV) and the Ohio
Department of Job and
Family Services (DJFS).

0:t.JCr6mo(
1{elw6ilttation Cerzter
· ····· · ~········ · ·· · · ·····

2
Days Left ti I ,
Christmas

Mason County's unemployment rate for October
dipped to 11.8 percent. a
decrease of 0.7 percentage
points
from
September's figure of
12.5 percent. The October
2010 jobless rate for the
county is exactly the same
as it was in October 2009.
according to the report.
Also according to the
WFWV report, a total of
1,11 0 Mason County residents are currently without work. The total civil-

ian labor force for the
county is 9.430.
On the Ohio side of the
tri-county area, Gallia
County" s jobless rate
jumped from 10.1 percent
in September to 10.7 percent
in
October.
According to the DJFS
report, about 1,500 Gallia
County residents are currently unemployea. The
total labor force for the
county is 14,100. Gallia
County's unemployment
rate in October of 2009

was 10 percent.
, The latest unemployment information for
Gallia County does not
reflect the impact of the
57 jobs eliminated from
the Bob Evans Farms,
Inc., plant in Bidwell.
Those jobs were cut in
early November and will
appear on the next county
unemployment
report,
which will be released on
Tuesday, Dec. 21.
In Meigs County, the
unemployment rate also

increased slightly, from
13.3 percent in September
to
13.5 percent in
October. The total numb'er
of Meigs County residents without jobs stands
at I ,300. The total labor
force is 9.500, according
to the DJFS report.
Despite this month's
slight downturn, the
unemployment situation
in Meigs County has
improved a bit from this
time last year. The

See Jobs,A2

Santa arriving in Pomeroy: Christmas parade Sunday
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSEI\TINEL.COM

Immunization
clinic
POMEROY - Meigs
County Health Department
will hold an immtmization
clinic. 9-11 am.. 1-3 p.m.
Children's shot records must
be provided along with medical card or insurance information. Hu shots are also
available to the public during
that time.
1

i

ianO recital
POMEROY
- June
anYranken v.ill present her
students in a Christmas piano
recital at 7 p.m.. Saturday,
Dec. 4 at New Beginnings
United Methodist Church.
Pomeroy.

.

Upward basketball registration

)

MIDDLEPORT. - The
Middleport Chtrreh of Christ
is taking registrations for its
seventh year of Upward
BasketlYJli and Cheerleading.
This is for children ages five
through sixth grade. The last
registration and evaluation
day is from 12:30 p.m.-4:30
p.m., Saturday, Nov. 27 at the
Family Life Center on the
comer of Fifth and Main
Streets. For more infonnation contact the chw-ch at
992T2914 during office hours
or David Schenkelberg at
•
.16-6866. Full or partial
~holarships are available for
those wishing to play.

POMEROY - The fat
man in the red suit (no. not
Burl lves) will be landing
his sleigh in downtown
Pomeroy this Sunday. Nov.
28 during the village's
annual Christmas parade.
The parade line up
begins at 1 p.m. at the
l\..leigs football field along
East Main Street with the
parade stepping off at 2
p.m. Meigs Band Director
Toney Dingess is once
again coordinating the
event and is inviting everyone who :v!sh~s to participate to JOin m the free
event.
.
.
Flo.ats, ma:chmg un.tts,
walkm~ umts. dancm~
troupes. h~rses, pets.
~otorcycles and m?re are
all welcome. Dmgess
stressed he w:dllted ~owe~come equestnan umts thts
year and added pets in
the parade are encouraged though· holiday costumes are
optional.
Those dre?sed in holiday
costumes are eligible for
pet judging which will
be held immediately
after the parade in
front of the Meigs
County
Courthouse.
Peoples
Bank
of
Pomeroy will be doing
the pet judging.

SENTINEL STAFF

POMEROY
- Are
you in the tbp 10?
Leadership '
Meigs
County. a course designed
to stimulate future leadership in the county by
developing the skills of
emerging and potential
leaders from all sectors of
the community. is current, ly taking applications.
The program. organized
by the Meigs County
Office
of Economic
Development, v.ill chal-

High: 38
Low: 26

Community Band will
set up in front of
Anderson
Furniture
and Appliance Store to
play Christmas songs.
The Pomeroy Christmas
parade is sponsored by the
Pomeroy
Merchant's
Association.

File photo
Santa will arrive in Pomeroy during the village's annual Christmas parade which steps off at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 28.

lenge. develop. and educate Meigs County citizens \Vho have demonstrated an interest in county wide issues and community service. The program is designed to be a
series of issue oriented
forums and experiences
which are based on the
belief that knowledge is a
key element and prime
motivator of leadership.
Leadership
Meigs
County is open to all adult
interested
citizens.
Participants are selected
based on ability. demon-

8 p.m. The April 7, 2011,
business session will take
place from noon-5:30
p.m. and a May meeting
will be an all day event at
the state capitol. Classes
are held in a location that
best relates to the topic of
the day.
As a part of the program
the class will also complete a challenging and
worthwhile community
service project. This is
done to enhance the community and to help develop the skills necessary to
create. develop. plan, and

strated interest in their
community, and desire to
be come effective leaders.
An emerging leader can
be of any age or background. The application
process is to provide that a
class consists of members
from
diverse
backgrounds, experiences, and
abilities. Approximately
10 participants will be
chosen.
The course consists of
eight sessions. which convene at approximately 4
p.m.. usually with a meal.
and end at approximately

finish YOlunteer projects
that make Meigs County a
better place.
Each class session will
have time devoted to the
Meigs County topic of the
day, exercises in leadership development and
skills, and time devoted to
v. or king on the group
community service project. As with all worthwhile endeavors this program requires a definite
commitment of time on
the part of each partici-

See Meigs, A2.

Sold out: Toy giveaway in need

INDEX
2 SECHONS -

be picked up the next day.
Several local, downtown
businesses will also have
holiday hours from
noon-S p.m. on Sunday
for customers who
wish to do a little shopping.
Before the parade
begins, the Big Bend

goers in the Clifistmas
mood.
Immediately after the
parade, Santa Claus will
be greeting children inside
Peoples Bank on Court
Street. The bank will provide children with refreshments and an optional picture with Santa which can

A course in leadership: Meigs Co. economic
development to offer program in 2011
MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSErmNELCOM

WEATIIER

Again, the parade steps
off at 2 p.m. at the football
field. travels down Main
Street
to
Butternut
Avenue. Following the
parade.
the
Meigs
Marauder Marching Band
will march on to Court
Street and play a seasonal
song choice to get parade

16 PAGES

STAFF REPORT

Calendars
TUPPERS PLAINS
. lassifieds
Bs-6 - An annual toy givea\vay for needy families
Comics
has recently found itself
in need and unable to
Editorials
meet increased demand.
As-?
Bethel Worship Center
Faith
and its Hearts and
Sports B Section Hands Thrift Shop min© l!mo Ohio Valley Publishing co.

~ .IJIJI,I !I.I. !I!II

4

I

istry will hold their Fifth
Annual
Christmas
Giveaway from 9 a.m.- I
p.m .. Saturday, Dec. 4 at
the
church's
new
Chester
Community
Center. The giveaway

event offers free toys
and gifts to needy children and families and is
open to the public, with
no income qualifications. However. Bethel
Pastor
Rob
Barber
announced this week.
due to extraordinarily
high interest in the event
this year. there is
already a waiting list for
families to pre-register
for a specific appointment time to ·:shop" for
the free toys.
Consequently, Barber
and Hearts and Hands.

(

- - -

-----

emphasized that many
families· dif1icult ceonom· c
circumstances
have resdlted in a !!reater
number of regist;ations
than in years past. which
in turn. has limited the
number of toys available
to give away this year.
Barber noted donations
for the giveaway of new
and like-new. or gently
used toys may be
tlropped off this week
and next at Chester
Community Center or
Bethel Worship Center
(generally between I 0

an outreach ministry of
the church coordinated
by church member Jill
Holter, have requested
immediate help from the
community in providing
additional ' toys and
donations so that all
needy children in the
area may be blessed this
Christmas. Though
Hearts and Hands has
received a number of
donations that will help
put Christmas gifts
under the tree for many
less fortunate children in
the community. Barber

- · -"--'-~----....;_.-,_~-'----~-

' .......
----

.......

a.m.-2 p.m. weekdays,
but call the church in
advance for best drop-off
times). Checks and cash
donations are also v,clcome and appreciated
and are used to purchase
batteries and new toys for
the children (please make •
checks payable to Bethel
Worship Center. and mail
to Hearts and Hands.
Bethel Worship Center.
PO Box 280, Tuppers
Plains, 45783 ). For more
inft)Jmation, call the chtm:h
at 740-667-6793. or visit
v. '' w.bethclwc.org.

__________

.......:..:.........:.:...._.........__

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

..-.~

�~--------!!111"1

Friday, Novem

__. . .,__

.......

~:--------:'!"""

-:--~~.----~..,n-=---~ ·-----:c- -::-~-~---~ - ---- --~ --.

---- - - - - - - - -- --

TI1e Daily Sentinel •

www

26,2010

Jobs

~-

For the

Meigs County ~

Auditor

J.'liday: A chance of light
min before 9 a.m. Cloudy
through mid moming, then
gradual clearing. with a
high ne&lt;u· 38. West wind
betv..ccn 10 &lt;md 14 mph.
Ch&lt;mce of precipitation is
40 percent. New rainfall
amounts of less than a tenth
of an inch possible.
.F riday Night: Partly
cloudy. wllh a low around
26. West wind between 9
and 11 mph.
Saturday: Mostly sunny.
with a high ncar 42. West
wind between 9 and 14
mph.
Saturday Night: Mostly
clem·. with a low around 24.
West wind between 4 and 7
mph becoming calm.
Sunday: Sunny, \\ ith a
high near 49.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy. with a low around
34.

From Page A1
stood at 14.6 percent. 1.1
October 2009 jobless
than the current rate.
percentage points h ·
Micropolitan Statistical Area
The Point Plea
combined labor market infor·
report. which is the
lia counties, shows the jobmation for Mason and
t in October. That figure is
le..;s rate at 11.1
. That report is compiled by
unchanged from
WFWV.
Statewide. West
· \ jobless rate remained at
8.5 percent in Octo
unchanged from the previous
month. Some 66, I00 ountain State residents arc still
looking for work.
to WFWV. The state's
total civilian labor
uv.,7"'"· Clay County posted the highest
ment rate in the state for
October at 14.2 ..,.~ ..,.., flrt
onongalia County boasted ·
the lowest figure at 5
rcent.
Ohio's
rate for October was 9.9 percent. according
DJFS report. That was down
slightly from the '"''' 1 .,.1 "h·~~ figure of I 0 percent. The
total number of
s out of work is 588.000. TI1e
state's total labor
is 5.928,700. Clinton County
has the highest
'ment rate in Ohio at 15.8 percent, while Geauga
lmes counties share the low
rate at 6.8 percent.
rate for October was 9.6
The national u
September.
percent, unchanged
nties adjacent to Mason with
Following is a list of
for October and September:
the unemployment
nt; Sept., 7.3 percent
• Cabell - Oct., 7.3
percent: Sept.. 11.4 percent
• Jackson - Oct., I
• Kanawha - Oct.. .7 percent: Sept., 7.8 percent
• Putnam - Oct.. 7. percent; Sept.. 7.3 percent
: Sept.. 13.2 percent
• Roane - Oct., 13
Sept..
11 .3 percent
• Wirt - Oct.. 9.3
· Sept.. 8.8 percent
• Wood - Oct., 8.4
adjacent to Gallia and
Following 1s a list
oyment
mtes
for October and
Meigs w1th the
September:
• Athens - Oct.. 8. percent~ Sept.. 8.6 percent
• Hocking - Oct..
.1 percent; Sept.. I 0.4 percent
• Jackson - Oct.. I 3 percent: Sept.. I 0 percent
• Lawrence - Oct.. .4 percent; Sept.. 8.6 percent
• Pike- Oct.. 14.3
:Sept.. 13.4 percent
• Ross - Oct., fO.S •n,.e,.,.nt· Sept.. 10.5 percent
• Scioto- Oct. , 12. percent: Sept., 12 percent
• Vinton -- Oct., 12
· Sept.. I I percent
• Washington 8.3 percent; Sept.. 8.1 percent

!

POMEROY
Byer-Hill said 20
will be available
The law require
cost is $8 per dog.
ty doubling the c
A printable appl
available at ww
self-addressed. st
must be provided.
Licenses may be
to 4:30 p.m. at t
also be purchased
Proffitt. Informati
tor's office. 992-2

eigs County Auditor .Mary

1 dog and kennel licenses
. 1.
all dogs to be licensed. The
nd $40 per kennel. A penalt applies after Jan. 3 I.
ation allowing mail order is
meigscountyauditor.org. A
mped envelope for return
purchased through 8:30 a.m.
auditor's office. They may
from the dog warden. Tom
is available from the audi-

98.

ge L. Scott Powell issued
POMEROYthe following mar age licenses:
Jer, 30. Brittany Nicole
• Chad E. S
Harrison. 20. Mid eport.
Anderson. 20, Dianna Lee
• Wesley Du
Evans, 22, Cheshi

Monday: Partly
with a high ncar 57
Mondav
chance of showers.
with a low
Chance of precip•tliiUCm
30 percent.
Tuesday: 'h'""0 ...
Cloudy. with a
54. Chance of
ic; 60 percent.
Tuesday
Showers Jikely.
with a low
Chance of precipi
60 percent.
Wednesday: A
of rain and snow .,.,,,,.,.~c
Cloudy, with a
42. Chance of
tion is 40 percent.
Wednesday
:V1ostly cloudy. wi
around 26.
Thursday:
sunny. with a

4-1-.

Local Stocks
POMEROYfiled tbe followin
record:

Jerk of Courts Diane Lynch
as part of the court's public

Civil
ion filed by City National
• Foreclosure
irginia. against David R.
Bank of West
Stricklen, Pomero and others.
n filed by Century National
• Foreclosure ac
Bank. against Gle Ray Goins, Jr.

Domestic
Jution of marriage filed by
• Action for di
an, Monica Lynn Freeman.
Gary Michael Fre
• Action for dis olution of marriage filed by
, Mark Alan Gillilan.
Cynthia Kay Gilli

Recorder

POMEROY these transfers of
Michael D. Sm
Smith,
Samantha
(Online:
West Virginia, ~vww.workforcewv.org; Ohio
. of Job and Family Ser.·ices, Kent Greer. dee
Andrea
Cleg
jfs.ohio.gm·)
Water District.
Weeks, Jeanie We
Orange; Timoth
Barringer, deed,
Carl Patrick B
Patty L. Powell.
From Page A1
Barbara Barringe
pant. Participants are
to explain the pro- deed. Olive; Je
gram and the time
to their employer. L. Warth to Da
to application. Faithful atten- Warth, deed, Salis
spouse. and others
dance is required in
to complete the program.
Ronnie R. Sp
Upon acceptance,
is a participant fee of $25. All Marilyn J. Spenc
class meals. materials,
fees for the trip to the state Donald Ray Sp
program.
capitol are paid for by
deed, Chester; B
At the end of the
the participant should: have Land Co.. Inc
a better
igs County: have the foun- James
R.
He
dation for future I
in the community; have Robin Hensley.
completed and
ow to mobilize and com- Salem.
plete a community
project.
Sylvia
A.
Classes are
scheduled to begin on Feb. 10 Virgil E. Pric
with discussions on
· on community leadership
and how a commun ...~.,~..,,,., happens. Other tentative Pauline Labonte,
Chester; Doug!
topics for other meet•
mclude: how to organized a
meeting; dealing v.·ith verse opinions and personali- Baker. Tinki M.
to Syracuse
ties: education in M
County: working with the
Regional
media: agricultural i
in Meigs County. etc.
For more infom1at
to pick up an application District,
call the Meigs
Ofticc of Economic Carolyn M. Grah
Development
at
-3034
or
email
at ; Buckingham Coa
release of dower
director@•mei
est. Sutton.
BAC Home
Servici
~~·~'-se
Countrywide
Loans, deed.
Rief Herman.
Herman. to Deu
Bank. sheriff's
Village of Midd
South Korea - South Eleanor R. La
YEONPYEONG
more troops to a front-line Rose Lehner.
Korea's president
Carroll
se minister Thursday as Olive:
island and dumped h
h lapses in its response to a Cleek, decease
the country grappled
Margaret D.
illery strike.
deadly North Korean
affidavit.
Chester.
of
the
Korean
War
60
years
In scenes remin
Yconpyeong island foraged
ago. dazed residents
for pieces of their li\'CS and
th;rough blackened
down eerily deserted streets
lugged their possessi
after Tuesday's hail of artillery.
strewn with bent
The barra2e darkened kies. set off fierce bla~:es. killed
fqur South Koreans
raised fears of an escalation
tftdt could lead to ful
war.
•"It was a sea of fi
resident Lee In-ku said. recallirig the flames that
led through the streets of this
island that is home
itary bases as well as a fishiqg community fa
for its catches of crab. The spit
of land is just seven les ( 11 kilometers) from North
Korea. bui had only
pieces of artillery.
:Despite warnings
m North Korea that any new
p(ovocation would
met with more attacks.
Washington and
pushed ahead with plans for
n)ilitary drills starti
Sunday involving a nuclearpowered U.S. ai
carrier in waters south of this
week's skirmish.
•The exercises will likely anger the North - the
1egime cited South
n drills this week as the
impetus behind its
- but the president said the
South could little
to abandon such preparation
now.
·,"We should not
our sense of crisis in preparation for the possibil
another provocation by North
Kprea." spokesman
ng Sang-pyo quoted President
Lee Myung-bak as
. "A provocation like this can
Jecur any time."
Washington and
I also ratchetcd up pressure on
China, Nm1h
main ally and biggest benefactor. to restrain
g.
Chinese
n Jiabao responded by calling
·mum restraint" and pushed
oo all sides to show
-nation talks aimed at persuadagain to restart the
mantle its nuclear programs in
ing North Korea to
ign Minister Yang J1echi, meanexchange lor aid.
Seoul thi&lt;; week.
w;hile. canceled a tri

·s.

Meigs

S. Korea's
chief
resigns afte N. Korea attack

Sentinel

ecorder Kay Hill reported
I estate:
, Janet Smith. to Marc D.
. Smith, Sabrina D. Greer.
Bedford: Joshua D. Clegg,
to Tuppers Plains-Chester
ht of way. Chester; Dave
s, to TP-CWD. right of way.
D. Clark to Carl Patrick
ve.
ger. Timothy D. Clark.
bert Powell, Carl Barringer.
to Carl Patrick Barringer.
ifer
A.

AEP (NYSE)- 36.02
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 58.00
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 52.44
Big Lots (NYSE)- 30.84
Bob Evans {NASDAQ) - 32.30
Borg Warner {NYSE)- 60.92
Century Alum (NASDAQ) -14.44
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1 16
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City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.22
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�Page.A:J.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26,

2010

ASK DR. BROTHERS

First tickets

Cold feet
or just rational?

Brian J. Reed/photo
Pomeroy Attorney and booster I. Carson Crow (left) is the first to purchase tickets to the Dec. 18 concert by
Phil Dirt and the Dozers, to be held at Southern High School. It will benefit the Racine Downtown Athletic Club,
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy, and the SouthP.rn Athletic Boosters. Norman Price,
Legionnaire, is also pictured. Tickets are $10 and available at Southern schools, the Home National Bnak,
Racine Barber Shop and the legion.

Kanye West, Kung Fu Panda star at NYC parade
BY KAREN MATTHEWS
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK-A highkicking Kung Fu Panda
and a diary-toting Wimpy
Kid joined the giant balloon lineup as the Macy's
Thanksgiving Day Parade
unfolded Thursday, drawing tens of thousands of
spectators to the annual
extravaganza on a chilly,
overcast morning.
Emily Rawlinson, a
rist from London,
tealed and snapped pices with her cell phone
the massive Smurf balloon floated by a packed
sidewalk along the route.
"We don't have anything like this in England,"
she exclaimed. "We have
parades. We don't have
any sort of huge, floating
beasts. It's very cool."
As
millions
more
watched the live broadcast
on television, revelers
gathered nationwide for
other parades in cities
such as Detroit, Chicago
and Philadelphia. The
' parades headline observances across the nation
that also feature football
and family dinners with
too much food on the
table.
In his weekly radio and
Internet address, President
Barack Obama called on
Americans to help each
her through tough times.
'This is not the hardest
anksgiving America

l

has ever faced." Obama was Virginia O'Hanlon,
said. "But as long as many the 8-year-old girl whose
members of our American letter to the editor elicited
response'. "Yes.
family are hurting. we've the
got to ·look out for one Virginia, there is a Santa
·
Claus."
another.''
Santa Claus closed the
He later telephoned ten
U.S. servicemen and parade as always. A cheer
women stationed around erupted as he passed by on
the world to thank them his sleigh. shaking his
for their service and sacri- enormous belly.
Returning
balloons
fice. He wished them and
Pillsbury
their families a happy included
Thanksgiving,
before Doughboy and Spiderjoining his own for the Man - the last with a
new fan in Mayor Michael
holiday.
The Macy's parade fea- Bloomberg. He said in a
tured an eclectic lineup of CBS interview that he
entertainers
including had traditionally favored
Kanye We~t. Gladys Snoopy, but after the
Entertainment
Knight and Colombian Marvel
rocker
Juanes.
The character was involved in
of a recent event promoting
Broadway
casts
''American Idiot" and city services for job-seek"Elf' performed. along ers, "Spidey is my new
with marching bands from favorite.''
Sutveying the scene
across the United States.
Perched on her father's with four of her relatives,
shoulders, 16-month-old Emily Hine confessed
Stella Laracque wriggled that she'd initially been
and danced with excite- loath to come from
ment as SpongeBob Boyertown, Pa., about
SquarePants, Hello Kitty, 100 miles southwest of
Shrek and other beloved Manhattan.
"I was dreading the
figures wafted past her.
"She doesn't really crowds, but I'm enjoying
know the characters, but it more than l anticipatshe's loving it." said her ed," she said. adding that
father, Mike Laracque of the balloons are bigger
than she'd imagined from
Manhattan.
Another new balloon watchi g previous years'

parades on TV. "It's more
up-close and personal."
Other celebrities at the
parade included India
Arie, Jessica Simpson,
Kylie Minogue, Keri
Hilson. Arlo Guthrie and
Miranda Cosgrove.
Standing on a stepladder her family had
brought
from
Mamaroneck, a New
York City suburb, 9-yearold Melissa Machado was
thrilled to spot Victoria
Justice, the star of
Nickelodeon's
"Victorious."
"She's a famous person, and I always see her
shows,"
Melissa
explained
after
the
actress-singer passed by
on the Build-A-Bear
Workshop float.
The Macy 's parade
started in 1924 when
employees from the
department
store
marched in costume from
Harlem to Macy's flagship store on 34th Street.
The parade was suspended from 1942 to 1944
because rubber and helium were needed for
World War 11, making
Thursday's parade the
84th.

Dear Dr. Brothers:
My girlfriend and I plan
to get married next
summer. Maybe. I've
just been thinking it
over. I honestly think
sometimes that the
worst thing we can do
for our relationship is to
get married. I don't
think I know one happily married couple. Both
her parents and mine
are divorced. and from
what I hear, divorce
rates are at an all-time
high. What's the point
of being married aoyway?- S.Y.
Dear S.V.: It is difficult to take a positive
long-term view on a
subject like marriage
when all the evidence
before our eyes seems
to be that it's very
unlikely that any one
marriage will last. or
that it is really the path
to happiness. So with
all the stuff you must
see every day in the various media outlets, it is
very easy to believe that
the future of marriage is
a bleak one. After aiL as
you say, isn't the
divorce
rate
nsmg
alarmingly? Look at all
the Hollywood stars
who are divorcing!
Well, don't believe
everything you read in
the blogs or see on the
entertainment shows. It
ain't necessarily so.
You need to somehow
separate how you feel
about your girlfriend
and your upcoming
nuptials from what you
read online or talk
about at the virtual
water cooler. The fact
that you have a divorce
in your family does
make it tougher to find
the path to a happy marriage - or at least to

Dr. Joyce Brothers
believe there' is one
ahead for you. If it
helps at all to know
this, the divorce rate is
actually down, at a 30year low, according to
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention,
which
keeps
such
records. No, that doesn't mean divorce is a
disease! They say that
at the turn of the century, there were 20,000
more divorces per year
than now. Today many
couples never marry in
the first place, so that
could affect the statistics. I hope this helps
clear things up.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

I

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~

Community
Calendar
Public
meetings
Monday, Nov. 29
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Veterans
Service Office, regular
meeting, 9 p.m., 117
Memorial Drive.
Wednesday, Dec. 1
HARRISONVILLE Scipio
Township
Trustees, 6:30 p.m., fire
station.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
5 p.m., health department conference room .

•

ubs and
org~nizations
Thursday, Dec. 2
f'lOMEROY
Meigs
County
Retired
Teachers Association
luncheon, noon, Trinity
Church. Eastern High
School bell choir to perform holiday music.
Bring gift books for chil-.
dren .· Reservations to
992-3214 by Nov. 30.
j

'·

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

Friday, November 26
Gallipolis Urgent Care

1pm-9pm

Meigs Urgent Care
Jackson Urgent Care
Athens Urgent Care

llam-9prn
llam-9pm
9am-9pm

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

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

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

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

HOLZER
CLINIC

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Page

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26,

A ttack is North
Korean bid for attention

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Bv

J EAN H. LEE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

A frustrated North Korea 1s
lashing out again, this time with a
deadly volley of artillery aimed at
reminding rival South Korea and the world - that it will not be
ignored.
The barrage of shots fired. at a
South Korean island lying within
sight of its shores did not come
out of nowhere. For weeks, North
Korea has been angling for credit
for reaching out to the U.S. and
South Korea, and has warned that
the cool response would come at a
cost.
The. destruction that set homes
·ablaze. sent civilians fleeing for
underground shelters and killed
two South Korean marines may
have been more than Pyongyang
bargained for in its game of chicken with the South.
But it gets attention, which is
what Pyongyang wants as it seeks
to restart negotiations to barter its
nuclear program for much-needed
aid.
It can be hard to remember in
bustling, cosmopolitan :Seoul that
the Korean peninsula remains in a
state of war.
Sixty years after the fighting
began, the U.S.-backed South has
risen to become the world's 15thlargest economy. an example of
industriousness and pluck.
· Two weeks ago, Seoul basked
in the limelight of hosting more
than 30 world leaders for the
Group of 20 summit in what was
seen as the country's diplomatic
debut. Next week, South Korea
will make its case for the right to
hold the 2022 World Cup.
But a rising South Korea does
not sit well with its poorer northern neighbor. Once the richer of
the two Koreas, the North has suffered over the years from the loss
of Soviet aid, economic mismanagement and natural disasters that
destroyed its precious few
resources.
And as the rest of the communist bloc has crumbled, Notth
Korea has remained staunch in its
"juche.. policy of self-reliance.
continuing to build up a nuclear
program that has earned it pariah
status with the West.
Its nuclear bombs and its unpredictability remain North Korea "s
most valuable . assets. and
Pyongyang has played its cards
shrewdly over the decades.
The last two years have been a
particularly delicate time in
Pyongyang. with leader Kim Jong

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establislrmetrt of religiotr, or prohibiting tlu free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of tire people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition tire
Gor,ertrmetrt for a redress of grier,attces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OPINION
•

Missing Michelle
Dear Editor:
On behalf of myself and Pomeroy Mayor John
Musser. we would like to say we'll miss Michelle
Donovan, outgoing director of the Me1gs County
Chamber of Commerce, and we are grateful for all
the help sne gave LIS on the Mulberry Pond
restoration project.
Michelle helped me in conta&lt;:ting people in the
state government and private businesses in my
efforts to raise money for work at the pond site.
Not only do the mayor and I love to fish at the
pond. but the children and adults love to 'as well.
Mayor Musser could only do so much and
Michele came in and helped me with the local
business contacts. She also helped with the fishing
derby that was held in July.

Jim Smith
Co-chairman of Mulberry Pond Project
Middleport

II reportedly suffering a stroke in
2008 and then paving the way to
name his youngest son as his successor.
But Kim Jong Un. still in his
20s and known as the Young
General, won't have the benefit of
decades of preparation that his
father had before taking over
frotn his father. the late North
Korea founder Kim II Sung.
There are at least three things
Kim will want to secure before he
can comfortably hand over the
reins: loyalty to the Young
General, economic stability and
political security ensuring the
• regime's grip on power.
Time may be running out.
Health issues nptwithstanding,
Ktm is likely to want to formally
anomt his heir in 2012, the centennial of Kim II Sung's birth, a
significant milestone that would
cement the family's ruling status.
in ritualistic North Korea.
Winning the military's loyalty
will be key in a society that operates under a "~ilitary first" policy.
The annistice signed in 1953
was designed to keep the peace,
but North Korea has never accepted the maritime border drawn by
the U.N. at the close of the
Korean War, and the western
waters have long been a flashpoint.
They've fought three deadly
skinnishes there smce 1999. The
last one, a year ago, was particularly humiliating, with the North
suffering one death •and more
wounded.
Revenge may have been behind
the plot to take down South
Korea's Cheonan warship, which
investigators say was torn in two ·
by a North Korean torpedo in
March. If the young son wanted to
earn the military's loyalty, it
would have been a prize: 46 South
Koreans died in the worst attack
on Seoul's military since the
Korean War.
Pyong.yang denies involvement.
as it has past provocations.
However, neither nation wants
another war, and both have sought
ways to repair relations without
losing face.
Since taking office in February
2008, South Korea's President
Lee Myung-bak has been sticking
to a hard-line policy of demanding concrete action on denuclearization before offering the
N01th any significant aid.
Yet in recent weeks, he has
shown a limited willingness to
yield, offering North Korea a

shipment of rice and other
humanitarian aid to help with
devastating flooding and backing
off demands that Pyongyang
apologize for the Cheonan sinking.
North Korea, which is suffering
under U.N. economic ~anctions
for its nuclear, defiance. also has
been reaching out, eager to get
back to talks on winning aid in
exchange for nuclear concessions.
Pyongyang has been putting out
feelers in unprecedented fashion,
allowing foreign journalists to
cover a massive 65th anniversary
parade for its ruling Workers'
Party that served as an international debut for his son and heir.
Both sides ago agreed to let
families divided since the Korean
War meet at a North Korean res.
for reunions that inevitably dr
attention to the emotional toll the
peninsula's divisiOn has taken.
There are rumors that top-level
aides were trying to negotiate a
summit between their two leaders.
But Pyongyang has become
frustrated by the slow pace of
restoring relations with Seoul and
eventually the U.S., a key step
toward its goal of securing ~d and
stability. That impatience has
bubbled over into petulance.
The regime wants respect. And
though it increasingly has turned
to neighboring China for political
and financial support - a strategic alliance that has broader
geopolitical consequences - its
sense of being rebuffed by the
U.S. and South Korea still stings.
The decision to show off a new
uranium enrichment plant to a
U.S. scientist recently was a c ~
ploy to pressure Washington ·
Seoul and remind the allies wh·
at risk in putting off disarmame
talks.
Drawing South Korean troops
into a skirmish on an island populated by civilians was a pointed
escalation that emphasized that
Pyongyang, or the Young
General. is prepared to play
tough.
Smoke billowed into the air and
screams
sounded
as
Yeonpyeong's islanders ran from
burning homes WJth shells raining
down upon them.
For those who lived through the
Korean War, the scene recalled
the death and destruction of that
conflict. It was North Korea's
way of reminding the world that
the war is not over and that ignoring it comes with dire consequences.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the ed1tor should be limited to 300 words. All etters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

So111.00ne·s on

thee ~pty'

list' apm
this ye.ar...

------~

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Servia
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories 1s
to be accurate If you know of an
error in a story, call the newsroom
at (740) 992-2156.

Our main number is
(740) 992-2156.
Department extensions are:

News

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published Tuesday through Fnday,
111 Court Street. Pomeroy, Oh10.
Second-class postage pa1d at
Pomeroy.
Member; The Assoc1ated Press
and
the
Ohio
Newspaper
Association.
Postmaster; Send address corrections to The Daily Sentirel. P.O
Box 729 Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13

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IFriday, November 26, 2010

Riv&lt;J"VaU·~

Rlvcr Valle-1 Apost&gt;hc V.Or:lup Cenlet

873 S ,~rd A.e Mul11eprort Rev
Mrhad Braiford. Pas~r. Sullday lv:..
am 'nrs 6 31' pm~ v.1:d 7 pm Btble
Study

Assembly of God
Liberty As:llllmbly of God
Pv Box 467 ['ijd:bng laDe. Maso11.
WVa Pa:tor N~ll Tennllll SUDday
SeM:eS· I'):00 am and 7 p m

E~eq

t&gt; 00 p m

HuUallll tn-...Willllai&gt;ti\1
Salem St l'as\lr Ed Barney Sunday
School I am E•~tUDg 7 p m
v.1:dnesd.7j s~ . l pIll
SECQnd Ba~ist Churdt
R~ • ood. 'NV. SIll 'I 'dt I ' .:m
. M rlllllg • lup " n Evt!Uill1 I pll\
'.lkdllesday 7 9 111
Flrn Bnpti." Clltm'h ofl'ilason. WV
Ondependellt B tr:;tl
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Gr.ly $otnd v st!rlot I 0 \In McrnuJI8
chqrcl, II &lt;lin. Sunday C'\'!"lllllg 6 prn. ',lkd
Blbl St•Jdy J pm

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:o l m b p tn \1.1;- 1;r/ ~~rvre- 1
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A~pleand SewndSts

m Even1ng SerV!cl'$ 6
Wedr::'sdly Sri'= o :JO plt:

Sa~ H\Art Catholic Ounil
It&gt;! Mulberry Ave rv~y 9'l 5898.
P&lt;L&lt;t r Rev W"Jter E H"lnz Sa• Con
4 45-~ 15p.m Ma:s 5 0 p m ~tw
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103011!1. '\lbnhlp !eMU' 10 'lO ~ II 00
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Sunday Sl'l'OOI • Q 'IJam. F!t'.acluiJ&amp;
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1 OOpm 'vled!Jesday Btble Stlll!y 7 'lO ptn.
PI!' tor
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P1111ur Steve ltttl~ AD·36f.l'SOI H
740·992·154l C 740-645 2527 SUDd&lt;rf
Scllool ?'3C am. M, llliiJ&amp; Vbrslup 10 ,arc Youtll &amp; Btble B•rld~ 6 '30 prn.
crorr p!actre 7.:30; Specru da)'1 ot mon1h
I ladie; tlf Guu 7 pm .:Jd Moll&amp;)( 2
Men's Fello ·~lup 7 pm~rd Tues
Hopto&amp;aptist Churdt tSouth~mt
510 GrantS' Muldlepo!1 Surx!a·1 scrool
,9~0 am. 'vllbuhlp • 11 am &lt;!OC,; p m
vedne:day Servre • I p 'tl Pastor Gary
Elbs
Rutland First &amp; !A ist Churdt
SUDdi'iy School • Q 'lO am Vt···hlp ·
1045am
Pom..roy Fh't Baptist
Pactor Jon Brockert Ei&lt;:t Mmn St.
SUDdi'iy Sch 9 30 am. V.Or: lLp I 0 30 am
. First Southdll Baptist
4IS72 Pomeroy Ptlle. Sullday SchOol·
9 30 am. \Mmh1p • 9 45 am &amp;1 nJ p m
V.tdnesday SeMces - 1 00 p.m P- tor
DM:!Br.nard

Fim Bapfut Chlll\'h
Pactor B1lly Zuspan 61h a!Jd Palmer St
Muldlo!port S 11nday School 'liS atn
Wmhtp • 1015 am. 10li pm.
V:Mne:day SeM~· 7 00 p m
Radn(' First Baptist
Pastor Ryan Eat&gt;n. pa:; r C:uulav
Scltool • 9 30 am V.Or:lup • Ill 4() am
6 OC p m ~nesd.l)' Servres 1 00
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Pa!t&gt;r loll!l Swan:on Sunday Scrool lOam v.lmh1p II am 1 on p m
Werlne:day SeMres· 1 00 p m
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Past&gt;r Dennu ~vcr S•mday s~ho:; J.
9 45 am Eveltlng • 6 ~ p m
W~dn~day SeMres • 6 'lOp m
Belhl&gt;h&lt;fll Baptist Churdt
Great Bend Route 124 Racln~ (lH
Pastor Sullday Schoo. ~ 30 a.m
SUIIday ~'or: hlp 10 SO am WedD~:Sdar
Btb.e Study· 700 p m
Okl B;(h~l nw Will Bapfu.1 Chlll\'lt
28601 St Rt 7, M1ckllepor• Sundav
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UlrJ:.' BroWD. ~Vor lup J
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Mt to.lorith Baptist
Fourth &amp; Matll St. M1ckllepor' Sunday
Sc!tDol-~31'am 'oli:lr:hlp·l 4Sam
P~tor Rev Mtch&lt;el AThompson. Sr
Anlrjuity Baptist
SlJilday SChool 9 30 a Ill \!brship •

•nu

Congregational
Trinity Churclt
Pa:lllr· &amp;v Tom John:o11. Secooo &amp;
LynD. Po 1 roy Pa: t&gt;: 'lob slup 10 25

Episcopal
Grao:-e Episoopal C'hUKlt .
E MSilo St Po men y
Holv
i.'ll('ham II ~ am S•mdaj• &amp; 5'3C pm
1Ned Pev ~: Fl-mUufl3
~lb

Holiness
Communi!) Churdt
Past&gt;r &lt;:1~ 'li meK Malll Str~•
Rutland Sullday V.Orshtp-10 00 am
S•nday Se!lo1re-7 p m
Dunill• Holiness Churclt
31057 SU"' Route~~. l..algs\U~ Pas lOr
Br..m Bm~y. Sunda-:· ch;;ol 9 '30 am
Sur..iay ··• rsh1p I(' am &amp; 1 p m
'\liednesday prayerseMce I .P tn

C:Ur:u-y ~im Clta)X'l
Ham:onville Ftocd. Plst&gt;r Charles
WKell:Zle Sunday SChool 9 SO am
Worship II am 700 p m \ikdnc:d&lt;iJ
SeMce • I 00 p rn
Rosoo ofSltarmtlio!inl&amp;'i Churdt
LealmR Cra-1; Rd Rutland. Pa: llr ~v
Dewey '&lt;1118- SunJay s ·1'001· q 30 am
~unday
•-or:h p 7 plll \!ledne. day
p"'a'Jer ~mg~ 7 &gt;m •

nule ,ff R• ~ ~ Pa: m s1mda-;
S 'tOol Q SO a.m \lbrsmp 10 30 a~
p m Vk1lnesc::;r Sc:111Ce 7 00 p m
Well~yan Bib!&lt;' Holin.ss Church

75 Pearl St MtddlepOI' Prt•or Uo118
Cox Su y Sc'too1 l' am '.Mlrslup
1045 prn S•md;r ~'\~ 6'Jf p.m
Wednesday Servre 1 p.m
1-lys•ll Run Communi!) Churdt
Pasllr Rev :.anv .eml•v SU!Jday Schor!
9 '0 am v.brshlp H 45 am 7 p n.
Thu ~dav Btb~ Study &lt;lld You1h -7 p m

!...turdCUff fh"' 1\l!tltodist Churdt
Past&gt;r Glen McC" mg. &lt;:unday S roo!
9 30 am v..l:.rship : ~0 am alld 6
p tn v.lmr:;tlaJ' SeMce 700 p m

Latter-Day Saints
Christ ofLatt~r-Day Saints
St Rt 1.:0. ,u-:.6241
.w;.7486.
SundayS ol : • ,J am R•hef
SoctetviPne: 'hood 11 ...&lt; 12llC noon.
Sacr ~ent SerVIce 9 1r 15 am
Homemaltmg mee'lna 'st Thur: • 7 p m

Lutheran
St john Luthlt'an Churdt
Pine Grow W: •lu) 9 00 a!ll &lt;•Jtidly
Scrool .o 00 .::.m P~~r
Our Savilur Luth~r:an Church
Walnut and .!emy Sts Ra'!len;wood
WVa Pa:lor !:.'1V11 li..use• Sund y
S 1'001 • :00 am 'W:.r:lup II am
St AI ul Lnth•nn Churdt
t m: S·,... .more &amp; S nna St t'cmeroy
Su11. ~chool 9 45 am V'l rsh1p .I am

Umted .Methodist
Gralwn Ullitoo Methodist
',l,'orsh!p II am Pawr Richard Nea;e
s.dttol URitoo M~thod.ist
Ne • Have11. i11ch.lld Ne~e Pas tot
S lJldav ···on hlp 9 ~~~ ! m 1\les ~ ,o
prayer !lid s,ble S•udy
:O.It CTh~ Unitffi M;(hodi\1
Off .24 b~hmd Wur.es"'. !-~tor Rev
R~ph Spllf'S Sunruy Sd!ool 9:.:&gt;~ l.m
V.hr:htp 10:!0 am 1 pm Thur:dav
StM~ 7 p.m
MEifs Coop&lt;nti~e P.lri.•lt
"fonheas• iu: r Alired -lor :iene
Good • 111. Sunday Schoc' ~ ~0 a rn
W'rsh1p II am b 'lO p.m

1-lartfont Church of Christ in

Cm1ian Unim
Ha-tf&lt;rd WVa P;s•or r.:1ke P· ke~
S •mday Sr-rool 9 ~ din IM:rslup
10 S(! am 7 ~0 p m .Wedoe;d".:'
SeM.:t"S 1 p m

Ps:•or Jan La·..endet Sunday School
9'S"am Vhrshlp IC30am ar:dD
pm ~daySeMCtS·7pm

I' tor DenDI NtD. '.Min hlp • o 9(' am
Sunday Scltool 10 it .. m
LonrBottom
Sunda-J S roo! 9 'lO am V.Ouhtp •
IO'lO •un

~ 'tl 1'!1'1

r

r e

Clt\Sl\"rClturdt ofllt~ Nazan-n"
Pas tor Rev w-..rrct. Lukens. Sunday
Sdool· 'l30am V.Onhlp · IOJOatu
SundaJ event ng 6 pm
Rutbnd Chw-dt oftlw Nva~n~
Pasllr George SladieL SlUiday School
Q'3Cam Vbnlllp·I030am 630
pm ~daySeMCtS ·7p m

~,m

'IUppeM&gt; Plains St. Alul
f-,.,llr 'un rbJl S miizj Sci'OOI • Q
am \Vor:lup It am 'i'rsdaySeM:eS
7 &lt;Upm
CmtralClllster
Asbttry ~yracuse). Past• r Bob Robmso11.
Sunday Sclv:lol :&lt; 45 am '.Mlnhtp II
am Wedoe;da-JSeM:eS 7X.p.m

Other Churches

Clt.&gt;st&lt;'~'

P«:tlr fun Cor~tll. 'lllt&gt;n'Up ~am
S•lllda·• &lt;: ·hool I0 a m Thundav
S•Mil."'. 7 pro

Jowa

Church of God

Sullday School· 9 am V.Orship Sern;-e
10 arn 2ul illd 4th Sunday
Cark-ton lntlf'dmominatlimal Ch=h
Y.tng:~bwy Road. Pastor Roben Vance
Sunday Schoo! 9 30 am v.bnhip
Servtce ,o 30 aU&gt;. E~nmg Servre 6
pm
r J\'(dom c;osp.1 M.issim
Bald Koob on C(; Rd. 31 Pa;tor Re·1
Roger Willford Suulay School • 9.30
am Worshlp·7pm
Wltil"'s Chapel WE:SI&lt;yan
CoolVIlle Road Pa:tor Rev Charles
Maruulale S lJil School • 9 30 am
'olbnhtp·IO 30 am Wed ScMre • 7 p m

Common Growul J\,11\mns
Pa:IIJrs DelllllS Moor: &amp;R~kutQe
Swdaj 10 00 a.m
Twnj;,:rus

Fhr~oods

m

Paltlr De~&gt;a)'De Stunler Sml.l&lt;rf School·
10 am Wonlup -II m
¥'oru.1Run
Pa:. r Be b RobtlllOD. S•tnday Sci'OOI 10
am 'Jol;mlup 9 am

n..th tJ\1ildl&lt;portJ
Pa:.tor Bllan C lllharn $unday School
10 00 'l. m V.Onlup I: am

Calrary Bib!eChlll\'h
Pomeroy ~ke. Co Rd Paswr Rev
Black'11ood SU!day School- 9 SO ern
Vobnh1p 10 30 am. 730 p rn
'M!dnesday SerVICe -730 p m

AN~..-~

IThll Go~ptl Cltlll\'hl H;rnsonVIlle.
~tor: Bob and t: •Y Man hall.
Th&gt;m7pm
Amazlnf Grace Community Chlll\'h
P~tor \lkyneDunlaJ. StaeRt 681
T'lppers Plan:. Sun ~nhlp :0 am &amp;
630pm.. v.1:d BlbleSIOOy7 00 pm

A5bury Syr:tcu.OJe

r11•or Brb Rob1n:on. S11nday School
9 'lO am 1,i,brshtp • I. s;: am
FwlChap:-1
Sunday SChoo! ~ ;m V.Orshrp I~ am
N.-.v B"inni.JJS Ch=h
fbm&lt;my
Poll'or B. tan ~unhan. V.Ors hlp • 9 25
am S•mday Scltoof 10 45 am

StiYEf'S"riUr, Communlty Churclt
Sund&lt;tJ School!O:OO am Sunday V.Orslup .
II 00 am Wednesday 1 00 pm Pastor
Br)'lll &amp; M1ssy Daley

O.&gt;i&gt;. cmiian rd.klwsJUp
~lon-de0011lln&lt;tDna

tellc·•·slup)
Mo. nll!l ID the M'-lg: Muldle Scbool
CatetenaPa::t&gt;r Chm Stew&lt;rt ·
10 00 am· Noon Sutday.luformal
V.Or:hrp. Cluldret's mm~try
Comm un.ily of Christ
Portland·Racme Rd, ~tor Jun Proffilt.
Sunday School • 9 30 am 'J.lmh1p •
I 0 30 am . Wednesda) Servtces • 7 00
pm
B;(hl!l Worship Ceuer
~782 Sl Rt 7. 2 m1les south of Tuppers
Plam. OH Non-deoommahonal Nllh
C'Qnteliforuy Pralle &amp; Wmhtp Pa:tor
Rob Bazbet Assoc Prrtll Ka!)'ll Davts
Youth Duector Setty Fulb Sunday
serJtces 10 am \li:trship &amp; 6 pm Fanuly
ltfe Cl~ses. \IM &amp; Thur nl8ht ufe
Gronps at 7 pm. Thurs mom1118 l&lt;Ibe:'
Life Group a: 10 Outer Lun1t Youlh Life
Group on Wed e"oelllll8 irom 6 30 to 83C
Vmt us onbne &lt;t ·vw,... b~heii'.'C.org

Rocl; Springs
Pa!t.r ::' • rtiW Stutl~t Sullday Sclool·
9 a;n Wmlup lOam Youth
f•llcr• ~lup Swda-J 6 p m EartySIIllday
.,,orslup Sam Lenora letfhot

Rutland
P •or lohll Chapm«~~. Sunday Schoc
q ~0 ...m Vtbrsh1p :_ 1 1arn Thw.day
SeM:t&gt;s 1pm
Sa~Centw

l'asbr 'NJ!bam K Mauhall. Sunday
School .J 15 am. v.'orslup 9 15 am
BtbleSt•tdy Mollday7 00 p1n
Sncr.;"''iile
Sundav SChool 10 a Ill. Wmhlp 9 am
B&lt;.nan)'

P...s•or J,lut R= •rz. SlUiday Scltr.
I ~ m Vbr:lup 9 am \lkdnesday
SeM~

failvil:w Bibk- Clturdl
Letarl WVa Rt I. Pas tor Bnill Ma~
SundaySci'OOI· 9 30am V.Ouhtp · 7 00
p m Wedtte;day B1ble Sbtdy 7 00 p m
faith Fd.bru.ip Crusad&lt;' fur Cllrist
Pas tor Rev Franl-J1n Dickens. Servr~
Fnda~ 7 plll

Pastor· Eal.e ~. Sut Wmlup II am
Mochall.r S• Pomeroy
N~w Hope Chlll\'h
Old Amen= i..lgtOn Hall
Fo•IIIhA•..e. Muldleport Sullday5 p m
SyrneusoeCoJMiwtily Churclt
2-IS!:Sew!ldSt Sfl&lt;l'U:~ OH
Sun Scho II 0 am. Swrly rught 6 30 prn
Pa:lor Joe C·•,mn

PineGro~e Bib)(, 1-blin!SS Churdt

: r.

Th~Churdt of j('SUS

Bradbury Churdt vf Christ

Hrknry Hills Churd of Cw1
Hi.Uffi.- Baptist Churdt
St Rt 143 JUSt off R• I Pa::•or Rev
James R Acree. Sr Sunday Un1fted
Servre. 'oltmh1p · 10 30 am 6 p m
V.l!dnesday Serw~ 1p .m

l' m

Churdt of Cod of Pl'ophtcy
Rd ff s• l1t 1~ Pa:tor F J
~nap1,
S·md
S 'tOol
10 an•
Wor :up .I "m W:ofu-sda-; Si'!vn" I
pm

J1

Catholic

Po:llr Rl'v CMJ

R~s 11 Sulldav'Scrool and Worst~p- 10

Church of Christ

Baptist
P.lg~vil.le f'n...-•111 Baptist Chlll\'h

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page ASj

I

In 4~ m &lt;: uuio.'

Emma.nud.ApoSIOiicTalxnllldt Inc
Loop Rd off Ne • Luna Rd Rutland
S ::vres Sun I~ :;J am &amp; 130 pm
Thtm 7 00 p m Pa:tor M.lrt·• R Hutlln

I

----~

www.mydailysentinel.com

F; t&gt;r Don Wlll:er

Ch=h of jesllS Clu-i.1 AJXI'1olic
~dl and W..rd Rd Past• r J&lt;ll~~
Millet SU!day Scrool
1: '30 am
Evelull8 1 30p m

•

---~-

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Ffllowship
j-\.postoll&lt;.'

•

--

Ash Street Chlll\'h
398 Ash S• Mlddleport· P&lt;st&gt;r Mark
Morro~~o·
SlJilday Sci'OOl- 9.30 am
MorruiiiJ Volmh1p • 10 30 am &amp; 6 30 pm
11!1:dnesday SeMCe 6 30 p m . Youth
SeMCe·6 30 p m
ApJX' Ufe Ce~ter
"Full-Gospel Church"', Pa::ton Jolut &amp;
Pany W&lt;rl~ 603 Seroul A·~ Mason. n'35011 SeMce tune Su:tday 10 3C am
Vkrlnesday I pm

lOam

C:umd.Sultl)n
CliD!lel &amp; Ba;han Kds f&lt;:c1nc: Ohlo.
Pas•or J1lut R=vrez. s mday Sdtoc;.
9 4~ am. v.brslup II 00 a111. Btble
Stoovv.1:d 7 30 p m
MDrllil1g Star

Pas•or Jolut Roze" rz Solllday Sdtoo: •
II am Wlll!up-!Oam

faith Full~ Chlll\'h
lllll!l Bottlm. P~t&gt;r St·..e Reed Su!lday
Scrool • 9 30 am. V.O~htp • 9 30 am
and 1 p m. Vi!dttesday · 1 p m Fu:lay •
fellQ •1lup seMre 7 p m

Racin&lt;'
Pa:t&gt;r Rev Wilham Ma!lhall Surx!ay
Sci'OOI
a m . \M:lrs hlp
II
• m V..."'llnesday Serv= 6 pm. Thur Bible
Slud/7pm

liurilunvil.le Community Churdt
Pastor Therou Durham. Sunday· 9 30
a tn. and 7 p m Wedne:day • 1 p m

Coohil.l. UnitEd M"thodist Parish
Pastor Helen r::one Cool&gt;11le Church.
Mam &amp; Flflh St. Sun Sr.ho~l- 10 am
¥1orsh1p ~am 'nrs SeMo:s 1 p m

Middleport Commllllil) Churdt
515 Pe&lt;rl St Mtddlepcrt . Pasbr Sam
Andersrn S•mday Srhool 10 am.
E;elllllg ·1 '30 p m IAA::Inesday Servre •
7 so p.m

Btthd Chlll\'h
Tcr• n:hlp Rd 46SC' ~unday 5\cltool · Q
am. \M:lr: htp
10 am Wednesday
Se"\\re: : a.tn

pro
FUll Gospel Cllurclt
of the Li'rinf Sa•br
Rt33S. Annqwty. P&lt;£tor Jesse Moms,
SeM~ Salluday2 00 p.t11
Sa~ Commwmy Clt=h
Backoi~tColumbta

WVaomllevtQg
Road. P&lt;stor Charles R0111h (304) 6752288. Sunday School 9 30 am. Sunday
even111g servre 7 00 pm. B1bly St•xly
\ltlo:rltle$day servre 700 pm
Hobson Cluistian Fd.kmltip Churclt
Pastor Hc:schel While. Sunday School10 an. SUJrlayCh111thseMoe • 6 30 pm
Vtlo:rlnesday7 pm
RESt011ltim Cluistian f Eiklwmip
9365 Hooper Road. Atheus. Pas t&gt;r
Lonnte Collt. Sunday \o\mhlp 10 00 am.
Wednesd&lt;tJ 1 pm

14.1 Bmgeman St S wac•JSe P1111or •
Re11 RJy Thompson. Su::Jday School I 0
a m. E·,erullg 6 p m ~dnesday SeMce
7 p rn.
Haul. Community Chlll\'h
Off Rt 124. l'a:t&gt;t &amp;bel Hal\ Sunday
Sclool 9 30 am 'Mlrslup • 10 30 am
73£'pm
Dyesville Community Chlll\'h
Suooay School • 9 30 am. \M:lrshtp •
10-SQam. 7pm
MOl"SII.'Chapd Ch=lt
• Sunday school • 10 am V.Orsh1p • II
a rn v.lmesday SeMre 7 p m

R..oomll~f;,Do·•·shlp

Churc of llte Nazare"Je Past r Russel:
Cw n "smday 'scho I 930 1.m.
v.brslup 1. 45 an&gt; 1 p m. \\b:lnl!&lt;day
SeMu~ 1 p m

Faith Gos)X'IChurdt
lllll!l Bot~tn. SUDdav Sdtool 9 30 am
'Mlrsh1p
10 45 a Ill 1 30 p m
\1/ojnesday 730 p m

Synru."' Ch=h of th~ Naza~M
Pdlt Shannon Hutrhlson. Sunday
'J.br::h1p 10 30 ~ m 6 p m VM •
~I'Mces 7p m

33045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Palor Roy
H•mtet Sunday School 10 am. &amp; 7 30
',ij:,jnesda-f E'len!D8 7SOp m..

Pentecostal
1\,ntecosta!Asembly
Pas10r St Rl 124 Raane. Toma:il Rd
Suulay S cltool • I 0 am Eventng • 7
pm ~e:;~ySei'VIces-7pm

Presbyterian
Harrisonviii&lt;~ PNbyt&amp;IIJt Churclt
Pastor Rev Da111d Falllkner. Vobuh1p •
9 00 am Sunday

Seventh-Day Adventist

S)taa~Se ftlkmn

Nazarene

St Rt. U4 La.nJsri!R. OH'
Full Gospel Cl PasiOn Robert &amp; Roberta
.Musser. Su.nday SchOll! 9 30 am. .
\M:Jnlup 10 30 am • 7 00 Pill. Wed
SeMre 100 pm
T - jesus MinistriES
Past&gt;r Ealte Baer. Mce~ 333
Mechantc Streei. Pomeroy OH
SeMree~erySunday II OOam

Mild!IP)rt l'rESb)1erian
Pasllr lame; Snydet Suulay SchoollO
am. ~-ouhrp servre II am

Faith Valley Thbenade C lwrdt
Balev RIIII Road. Pastor Rev Emmen
Rawson Sunday Ev:tung 1 p m
Thur:da-1 Servtee · 1 p Ill

Hockineport Ch=h
Ka!hryn V.'iley S •mday School • 9 3~
am V.Orshtp ·lf'30am. Pa:torPhllbp
Bel!
TorchCh=h
C R 63 Sunday Sdtoo: • q ~am
v.brsh1p 1~ SO am

l\lliddlepot1 Chlll\'h of the !\a z:mn~
P11llr Leonard 1M •ell. Su!lday Scrool
9 30 am \o\brslup 10 30 a Ill. ~ 30 p m
Wellnesday St:M:es 1 p IC

Cliflon TabErnacleChlll\'h
Chfto11. WVa. Sunday School- 10 arn •
'.Mlrslup 1 p m '~day Ser111ce 7

House of H~ W., MiJlinries

Abunda.nt Graa&gt;
92~$ ThlrdSt M1ddl~ort. Pl!ltor'Je~sa
DaVIs Sunday ser.1ce. 10 a rn.
W!dnffiay leflllce. 7 p It

East LE-tart
Pa:•or B1U Mm~all Sundlv School
9am. Vtl:.rsh p : am. 1st Sunda)'
t'l!ry mon'h e\lenmg servt~ 11lC p m
~day
pm

Point Rock Chlll\'h of th&lt;' :&gt;;az:mn"
R ule bl&gt;:i AIM!ly R•v Uoyd Gnm111.
pa:tlt Suooay Sc.1oal : am. ·oorhs1p
s~M&lt;r II am evcwtg servre 1 pm 'M:d
pnjer meetlll8 rpm

R~joidng Uf~ Chlll\'h
500 N 2.nd A~ Mtddleport. Pastor
M1ke ForeruaD. Pastor Ementus Lamere
Foremar:. V.Orslup· 1000 am
Wednesdav Serv1ce~ -7 p m

SE!t'e~t)t.[Jay Ad•entist
M11lberry Ht Rd Pomeroy. Saturday
SeMces Sabbath School · 2 p m
'olbrshlp· 3p m

United Brethren
Mt H&lt;!'JliOn Ud&lt;d BretltMt
tn Christ Church
Texas Communtty 36411 \l.kkham Rd
Pa.t&gt;r Peter M~nndale. Sunday School9 30 am. V.Orshlp • 10 30 am. 700
p m VJ:dnes day Servtce1 • 7 00 p m
Youth group m&lt;:elln3·2ul &amp; 4th Suulays
7p m
Edm lillit&lt;d lltEtltrel in C!tmt.
Stae RQUte 124. betNeell R~s"'lle &amp;
Hoclangporl SUllday School • 1Q am.
Sunday Vbrslup • 11 00 am Wednesday
Servtces 7 00 p m Pastor· M Adam

vnn

tUI.IGospelLth~

PomtrovChlll\'h of th.-1\'azaMI~

Sl

SouthB\'tltd.CommwyCltlll\'h
RW:!
P ·tor Lada Dam ood.

Church announcementS sponsored by these area merchants [
your light so shine before
that they nay see your
•works and glorify your
in heaven."
~Iatthew 5:16

r, ~nbrrnon, :Mcianirl
jfunrral ~omr
,\ildleporl,OH

740-992-5141

.lamts Andmon . Adam 1\lcIJan.Uo 1-

499 RichlandA\~Ute,Athens
740-594-6.\33
l..S00-451-9806

Dimtor.;

1'om~roy,OH

740-992-5444

II

ENnEs Ire

Bill Quickel

~t.llllnA

ct

lnsurar
P·oducts +
F1nanr1a

Services
992-6677

Commit thy works
word~· abide in you. ye shall unto the Lord, and thy
ask 'K'hat _ve wi((, and it shalt
thoughts shall be
be done unto you. •
established.
John15:7
Proverbs 16:3

Matthew :x /6

\:Jittentt 6'AtPil'R

Oavis-Quickei Agency Inc. If ye abille in Me, and My

INSltRANCE

Lr?t your light so shine btfore
men, that they may see vour
guod works and glorify \"Our
Father in ht?tNen."

Prescription Ph. 992-2955

White Funeral Home ..Fot God so loved the
Blessetl are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Smce 1858
world that he gave his one
in heart; for they my conscience clea1 before
9 Fifth Street
GoJ and man."
and only Son .. "
slwll see God.
Coolville, Ohio
John 3:16
Acts 24:1
1l1attlzew 5:8
740-667-311 0

CoolVille, Oh1o
l..ocat.:d less than 30 mmutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Par~.ersburg

1-740-667·3156
''Still small

for God so lo~·ed I he wo

w'"'' ThePharmaq·H• com

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

1/zal he gave his only
begouen son...
Jolm3:!6

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~
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· - •t.ttowjumityMp
pro1Zct 'f'll'famtt(

to tore"

MYtrace is suffident
for thee: for mY
strentth is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9
Thti Lord does not Iooft. at the things
ma 11 loo!t.s at,man ioof...s at the

outward appearance, I he Lord looAs
at tl1c heart.
SuppreSSIOn • Exull8wshers • Spnnklern
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- -- - . ........ -------,.--~~·-___...,----~-----.....-..,.------~~~--.-----

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PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Novemb er 26,

A Hunger for More
As you perhaps settle
down after a hefty
Thanksgiving feast, sinking comfortably into the
folds of a sofa someplace
to watch football, traveling across the countryside
to enjoy visits with
friends and/or family, or
perhaps zipping from
store to store to get ahead
on your Christmas shopping, pause for a moment
and let your mind take
you on a little trip instead.
Imagine for a moment
that you are crammed
into a dank, dark spa:ce,
hardly larger than your
living room, with one
hundred and two other
passengers. The curved
wooden walls around
you are partly screened
by barrels and crates of
food, tools, and various
other supplies. By your
elbow a pair of chickens
are squawking loudly,
and your ears catch the
sounds of some dog
whining and in a far off
comer of the hold, someone sounds very sick.
The little ship, the belly
of which you've been living for nearly two months,
is having a bad time of it.
You can feel the ship
rolling back and forth,
tossed about by angry
walls of water, as howling
winds spin the tiny vessel
about it in a maelstrom of
fear. Then there is strange
sound ... a creaking, tearing, and then a loud pop.
But the tempest still rages
on mercilessly and you're
forced to continue to simply ride out the storm...
literally. Then the winds
seem quieter and the tiny
ship doesn't teeter as
wildly. The teetering
slows even further until it
is nothing more than a
gentle rocking. The hatch
above 'opens and you can
barely make out that it is
the captain who struggles
to climb down into the
hold. There is no light to
speak of, lanterns clearly
being too dangerous to
light in such a storm, so
you can only hear the
worried tone of the captain as he explains that the
main mast was cracked in
the storm. You don't need
to see his face to know
that there is a great weight
of anxiety upon him. With
no mast, how can you go
on? How can your little
band do anything but drift
about in the wide waters

~-o-..;.l____

Thorn Mollohan
of the Atlantic? You can
hear the captain quietly
ask some of the men who
lead your group to pray.
He then climbs back up,
forces open the hatch, and
is gone.
You can hear your
leaders, John Carver,
William Bradford, and
William Brewster. You
can hear their whispered
voices each, in turn,
thank God for the safe
journey thus far, and then
an appeal to Him to
reveal His glory and
achieve His purposes fqr
His people. Then the
voices cease and a near
silence follows. But
William Brewster, a lay
suddenly
minister.
speaks up excitedly. You
can almost make out
what he is S&lt;lying to the
other
two
men.
Something about his
printing press. You're
puzzled, wondering what
on earth a printing press
has to do with a broken
mast, but then you hear
someone climb up and
throw open the hatch. A
faint gray light illuminates the face of John
Carver who quickly disappears onto the deck.
He returns very soon,
accompanied by the captain and another sailor.
Leaving the hatch open
this time, they all climb
down and carefully step
through the crowded
hold, with a hundred sets
of eyes fastened upon
them. They make their
way towards you until
they stand by your side.
Producing a heavy iron
bar, the sailor begins to
pry the lid off of a crate
next to you. William
Brewster steps up and
shoves the lid aside. He
begins to dig through the
straw, pulling out various
parts of the large printing
press he had intended to
set up and use at the
Jamestown Colony in

Virginia. Finally, he
gives an exclamation of
joy and produces a large
iron screw. He holds it
out trium phantly towards
the captain who mutters
something about hoping
that the Pilgrim prayers
had reached the ears of
God. He takes the screw
and hurries again to the
top of the ship. followed
by the sailor and the three
Pilgrim leaders, Carver,
Brewster and Bradford.
You can hear the whisperings of others around
you who are as puzzled
and nervous as are you.
Someone
near
you
remarks that here is a
strange turn of events.
After all, the sailors had
mocked
cruelly
Brewster's insistence on
bringing his printing
press. They had said that
it would be nearly as useless as the Bible the
Pilgrims so dearly loved
and greatly venerated.
They had laughed at the
idea and only grudgingly
agreed to pack it into the
ship's hold. You remember well the surly glances
they threw at Brewster as
they h1bored to bring it on
the ship in the harbor of
Southampton, England.
As you sit and wait, the
sound of sailors shouting
instructions to each other
filters down to your ears.
Then there is a long and
painful pause. And then
there is a joyful shout.
Carver, Bradford, and
Brewster climb excitedly
back down to you and your
companions. They share
that the part that they had
taken from the printing
press was exactly what was
needed to flx the support
beams that hold the main
mast upright. The mast is
restored and the sails are
unfurled. The wind is moving and you are nearing the
end of your destination.
Now... come back to
the present. I've not met
many people who've
heard the account of
Brewster's printing press
and it being the means by
which God saves the
Mayflower's mast (and
hence, the Pilgrims), but
it is an incredible example of God's faithfulness
to a people who had forsaken all to follow Him.
"I will praise you, 0
LORD, among the nations;
I will sing of You among
the peoples. For great is

2010

/

Advent starts

November 28

Your love, higher than the
heavens; You faithfulness
reaches to the skies. Be
The Advent season
exalted, 0 God, above the
heavens, and let Your glory will begin Nov. 28.
be over all the earth"
Although, it may
(Psalm 108:3-5 NIV).
seem that the Christmas
Maybe you're not set- season
has
already
tling comfortably into started as stores and
your
couch
this
shopping malls already
Thanksgiving weekend.
Maybe you do not have had Christmas items on
shelves
when
family and friends with the
Halloween
was
ending.
whom you can spend a
little time. And perhaps However, the season in
zipping from store to which we look forward
Matthew Dotson
store for you looks like to the birth of Jesus
nothing more ·than plain Christ officially starts
and simple "window Nov. 28.
Advent, because we
shopping" because your
This is a familiar time serve a faithful God.
bank account is defunct.
for a lot of people. We We know the end of the
Fortunately, God has a bring our Christmas
Christmas story. The
plan for your life that is a
decorations
down
from
census will be conductwhole lot bigger than
human dreams and ambi- the attic or up from the ed. Mary and Joseph
tions. He has a dream for basement. we make will make the journey
you that, as you seek to Christmas card lists, we to 'Bethlehem. There
walk closely with Him, make a list o( people to wili be no room for
will keep your feet where visit, and goodies to them. God's son will be
they need to be, your make.
There
are born in a manger.
hands doing what they Christmas
programs
There are a lot of
need to be doing, and and school plays to
things
to be done to p
your voice saying and attend. parties in which
pare
our
hearts, o
singing what needs to be we must make appearminds. and our ho
said and sung. Where are
you in your walk with . ances, and family gath- for the coming of the
Him these days? Are you erings we have to plan. baby Jesus, but we are
earnestly seeking Him We do the same things assured that, because
with all your heart? If you year after year. We get we serve a faithful God,
are, then you can count on tired every year and these things will come
His power and love to each year we swear we to pass. We are reminduphold you during diffi- are going to do things
cult times. And if you differently the next ed of the strength and
tmst Him wholeheartedly, year. However, we say knowledge we have
even trivial 'things will these things, but things been given to be the
take on a huge new don't change. It is as if faithful Body of Christ
dimension, and God will
we have been called to
by the time the first
work "behind the scenes"
be.
to help you do His will. Sunday of Advent gets
There are other peoThe bottom line, howev- here, we are already ple who feel the same
er, is that God is in control 1 overloaded with comway as we do. They
and that He has both the mitments, we can't wait
understand the amount
power and the desire to for Christmas Day to
help
His
people. come so we can get of faith it takes to wait
through what seems
Therefore, no matter what some rest.
Is this what we have like forever for Christ
may be going on in your
lif~. right now, tmst His done to Advent? Has to arrive. The key is in
a~thty to. bles.s you. Ob.ey the lighting of the the waiting. It is in the
Hts lead~ng 10 your hfe Advent wreath become waiting that we find the
and the 1mpress10ns that
.
He makes on your herut. a chore _or a checklist to peace in knowing whl
Above all learn His Word make tt through the will come. It is in t
and be able to personally Christmas. season? Are waiting that we find t
take ownership of what we focusmg on hope rest to help us throug
He's showing you as you just to get us through to the end. And it is in
seek to obey Him.
Advent instead of hop- the waiting that we find
(171om Mollohan and his ing for the baby Jesus in we are in community
with those who wait
family have. ministered in a manger?
southem Ohzo the past 15
Paul's words in 1 with us. What better gift
yea:s and is the auJhor oJ.17re Corinthians I: 3-9 gives can we give this Advent
Fmry Tale Parables. He 1s t~e us the encouracrement season than to give our[XlSfor ofPatmvay CommUlllt)'
.
o
Clum:h and mav be reached to .~ake 1t through ~he selves the time and
for convnetUs 0 ; questions by watt!ng .and the hopmg space to wait?
( Re''· Matthew Dotson
email at pastorthom@JXI!h- we te7,1 m A.dvet~t. Pau.~
is pastor of Good
waygallipolis.com.)
says, God ts fatthful.
Copyright© 2010,
This is the reason we Shepherd UMC and St.
Thom Mollohan.
gather
together
in Paul UMC.)

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in ourcommunity

i'he fmal \o'i!YtK .Jf th~ tlesh ~'hich Paul mention~ in h1S erktle to the ~athM l
carousing, whi~h La !ran:latlon •!t~.e Crt~k w.Jrd ko:riiS." F.oJUo~ ong:.Uu.y
ref~red •n a fc1tal prQcessit n m h&lt;HM' cfDionysu~, the Grtek god of w1rte and
later C$le t:o mean any J~Ou m~.1! rr ban qt.~·- By lte h:ne of t!le 'ko~~
'!'es~ment writ en Komos had ~me ro mean e:cce1:Jive f~a.st.lnz .£the snrt that
we might elli'ect at many New Year's E\lerarties or Mardi r.ras in Ne-.v
&lt;Moans. Excessive &lt;!:-inking along" 'llith .t tendency for gltltf.Qny and !lcentiou~
beha·;ior is p.11't and ~e! d these "r.;velri~" il!ld wty they are condemned
re-_2eat~d!y in tht Newfutament. At!..~~ end o:Jf tht$li • of' tks !'{ th. t1e:b
Paul put~" druuken11om, carotking and •.!:e lik~" (C'..a!atim ~:;n; Th"s it ~s
cielll.' that Hli:. l"ng list is not meant to be all-inclusi·;e. The notion of "'w~k1 ,f
the flesh'' ss not ciearty defmed, b11t rather hil: somewhat flfZZy borders, Many
modem dsy scti-;ities wruld oorely be included as wozk~ of tte fiett im'l•Jd.ing
watchmg porntlt11phy Sc-per B&lt;lwi parue~ wnt~ f od and &lt;ll~~h1t are indcl.ged
in excessively, "bump and grind" dancing, political sme.ar carnpaigns and other
form~ of malicious goss1p. We would .!!! do ~11 to conside~ Paul'.s warrung
about these wo-..b of the tlesf: and t reflect 0!1 whether 'lQ1' tms exe:nplif}• the
wotK3 of the fi~:lb !Yt the fru.it of •he ~ptttl.

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

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PageA7.

The Daily _Sentinel

Friday, November 26,

IN CONCERT

2010

Potential:
The Unknown ,.~
'I

The concept and discoveries of potential is
one of the most important
things to be discovered in
God.
Potential
is
reserved power. unused
success, and e\&lt;erything
that you could do but
have not done yet. We
describe God as omnipo~
tent (all-powerful), but
we do not understand
fully what that means.
The concept of omnipotence gives us a revelation of God that is
beyond
our
simple
minds. In fact. a concept
that many argue about
simply because it is not
easily understood by our
simple minds, thus hard
to accept as common
sense or reality: yet a
very true reality.
God is all-powerful
which also makes Him to
be all-potential In the
beginning,
everything
was in God. Think about
it. Before there was anything, there was everything? "But where was
everything?'' You might
ask.
Everything that was
but wasn't, was in God.
The Bible states that God
existed before everything
else (Ps 90:2): Genesis
1: 1 says, ''In the beginning God created the
heavens and the earth .. ,
In the original Hebrew.
this verse is translated,
James and Laura Rainey will bring their New Beginnings Tour to Grace United Methodist Church in Gallipolis "In beginnings .. .'' This is
this Sunday, Nov. 28. The concert begins at 7:15 p.m. James Rainey is a veteran of southern gospel music, important because it
with over 20 years experience playing piano for a variety of groups, including The Hoppers, The Greenes, The implies that God began
Singing Americans, Rusty Goodman, The Stamps and others. Grace United Methodist Church is located at the beginnings. There
was no beginning until
600 Second Avenue in Gallipolis. For information, call 446-0555.
God began it. Meaning,
that everything that came
into existence was before
it existed right in God's
mind and potential, in
other words, everything
was in God.
Sometimes we believe
that God did not begin
when the beginning
began because He is
inside time. God always
was. So everything that
came
in the beginning
ed
personally
my
thanks
tall hinders having a clear
How
was
your
onward came out of Him.
•1ew. Usually twice a for their service.
Thanksgiving celebraJohn
l :3
says.
year. I get out and cut
Words of thanks in the ''Through him all things
tion? For what did you
down the brush. But, I .congregation
give God thanks? Surely
should were made: without him
have long wished that abound in every congre- nothing was made that
you gave God thanks for
when the state road crews gation. Yes, words of has been made." The
His abundant blessings
are mowing through that thanks to God are para- implications are proon our land. You cannot
area that they would mount. But. it is worthy found. God was "preghelp but be thankful
extend the arm of the also to abound in nant" with everything
when you meditatively
brushhog higher to give a thanksgiving for fellow before anything came
itemize the goodness and
good mowing of all those saints, particularly those into being-including you.
providence that God
Potential has nothing to
weeds.
directs our way. Our
who strive hard to spiri- do with things that do not
Ron Branch
Last week the mowing tually keep the brush
nation is great because of
exist. It has to do with
crew on duty in our area and weeds mown down things that do exist, but
the blessings of God's
did just that. As I around and in the min- yet remain unseep. Thjs
tender mercies toward us. thankful for them?
Yet, there is perhaps a
Have you made known descendel the dnveway istry of the local church. is where faith comes into
point of thanksgiving to to others of your congre- 1 noticed the safety
Encouraging
one
arked on the another with words of
God we often fail to con- gation how thankful to truck
sider. We pick up on this God you are for them and other side of the road thanks is oh. most ceroften
unconsidered their service to the Lord with the mowing tractor tainly. a source of powthanksgiving from the through ministry in the just ahead. Then I erful under-girding. A
noticed how clear a line
'ting of Apostle Paul to . church?
well-placed word of•
of
sight we now had. I
church
at
Watching for traffic at
thanks directed toward a
essalonica. He wrote. the bottom of our drive- was elated, and wanted
fellow saint in the con"But. we are bound to way for entrance onto the to say thanks.
gregation often provides
However, the mower
give thanks ahvays to
road can be a tedious
'
the needed impetus for
and safety truck moved
God for you."
affair for us. There is a
one
who may be disout as though heading to
As believers in the
short stretch of open road
couraged
or on the
another location before
Lord Jesus Christ. Paul
•of only about a mile-and- I had opportunity to verge of quitting. After
and his entourage of
sainb wen: citing tltank.s a-half long between the speak to them. I decided aiL people want to
to God for the believing communities of Hartford to follow. I tracked them attend a church where
saints in the church. They and Mason on which through Mason till we they know they are
were saints giving God most drivers quickly came to the stop light at appreciated.
In the mean time.
thanks for the saints. He assume the speed limit Wai-Mart intersection.
made it a point-specific and above. Our house sits We had to stop because maybe the Branches will
matter to communicate to about half-way along that of the red light, but, be able to cut down on
when we did, I jumped incidents in which we
them how thankful he stretch.
The difficulty involves out of my tru(k and inadvertently pull out in
was for them. Can you
not imagine how blessed having a good line of walked hastily to the front of oncoming traffic.
( Re\'. Ron Brunch is
the saints at Thessalonica sight in either direction safety truck. When the
were to know that Paul on our side of the road. driver rolled down his pastor of Faith Baptist
and the others were The brush when grown window. I communicat- Church in Mason, W. ~l.)

Saints should give God
I thanks for the saints

I

-

........--. ...... ·--- ··-- - ............... - '

~

--

. .......... _... __. --- ··- . ._ . . _ .... .

- -

Alex Colon

...................

;,

action. To be able to ::
belief God for something .:
that is not while it doe~ ,
exjst. For ''faith is the
assurance
of things
hoped for, the evidence
(something that does ,..
exjst) of things not seen" .
Hebrews 11: I.
The fact of the matter ,
is that most of us are
going to die with all this
"stuff' (unknown potential) in us. My one desire
in life is to die empty. As
a matter of fact, I want to
give to the grave something that no longer has
any use because I am fin- ,
ished with it.
Paul phrases it this
way, "For I am already •,
being poured out like a
drink offering ... I have .
fought the good fight. I
have finished the race ... ·•
(2 Tim 4:6-7). Paul is ,,
saying that he used up .
everything that was in ,
him. In other words. you •,
have no right to die until .
you are empty. Why? .,
Because there is too
much of God inside of ·
you that needs to be ,
revealed to a world:,
around you that needs it
desperately. '!bat's why · .
God brought you into this.,
world! This is why you
are where you are in this •
time in history - to exer- •'
cise your full potential. .:
You can ask God to reveal
and increase His desires
of your unknown potential inside of you and give .
you the passion to pursue
them with God's help.
I beheve that you have ,
the answer· to many •·
things in someone 's life.
Pray about It think about •.
it and praying about
some more. I believe that .•
the All-powerful one •
inside of you will do •,
amazing things in you ·
and through you.
.:
Make it a great week! '

(Re-.. Alex Coh)n is
pastor of Lighthouse,,
Assembly of God · in ,1
Gallipolis. Ohio. Online:
ar li'WW.lagohio.org.)
~

.,

.........__...........-_ _ _ _ _ _........_ _ _ _......_ _......-......__......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,..

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�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page AS • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26, 201 0

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Buckeye Update, Page B2
Cavs win at buzzer, Page B4

P-ORTS

Friday, November 26,2010

Game Day. Brjng en t:.l"E Tigt:rs

POMEROY - A schedule ol upcom1ng
high school varsity sporting events
1nvolving teams lrom Gallla Mason and
Meigs count1es.

frldqy...No_vember 26
Class A Football

r..v State Sani..f.inals
(4) W11t County vs (1) Wahama at
Point Pleasant JSHS. 7:30p.m
Saturday. tio.Yembe.r.lZ
Girls Basketball
R1ver Valley at Me1gs, 6 30 p.m.
Southern at Rock Hill, TBA
Mond.aY.JiQyem.ber 29 •
Girls Basketball
South Gallia.at Eastern, 6 p.m.
S. Point at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Trimble at Southern, 6 p.m.

Sensational
Sanchez an .
exciting leader
for Jets
•

FLORHAM
PARK.
N.J.
(AP)
Meadowlands Mark has
even Broadway Joe on
his feet cheering these
days.
Joe Namath stood anxiously in front of his TV
- there was no way he
could sit through this at his home in Florida on
Sunday during the Jets'
latest
tension-filled
game. As he watched
Mark Sanchez coolly
lead New York to yet
another stunning victory.
the Hall of Fame quarterback saw shades of himself.
"1 don't think anyone
would hesitate to say.
yeah. this kid, he can be
one of the best.'' Namath
said. "No doubt about it."
From a guy who made
perhaps the most famous
uarantee in sports histori&gt; that's quite an
ndorsement.
Bu.t that's the kind of
reputation Sanchez is
earning with late-game
overtime
comebacks.
victories, clutch performances and levelheaded
leadership for a team tied
for the best record in the
league. It's an exciting
combination the Jets
haven't seen from a
young quarte~back since
Namat_h ~ehvered ~he
franchise Its only title
m~re than 40 years ago. .
Every week..~ark ~as
that confidence, ru~n~ng
back.
. La Damian
Tomlinson said, "that he
can do it week after week
ifwe need him to."
They certainly have the
last few oames, and he's
deliverelin a big way.
"He's a force to be
reckoned with," center
ick Mangold said.
!h~re w~re ~he two
•
wmnmg dnves m overtime on the road at
Detroit and Cleveland.
when Sanchez went into
the huddle each time and
commanded the confidence of his teammates.
"You can see the fire in
his eyes," fullback Tony
Richardson said.
Then
there
was
Sunday's
improbable
vicwry over Houston
when he marched New
York down the field with
less than a minute left.
"My daughter, she
looked at me after
Houston scored and I
said, 'Hey, we've got
enough time here. This is
terrific, .., said Namath.
who still connects with
fans . on
his
site,
BroadwayJoe.tv, as well
as Facebook and Twitter.
"Sanchez and those guys
ave already shown me
lat they can win in the
•
end and play the full 60
minutes and then
some."
Comeback ability was
a knock on Sanchez com·
ing out of the draft, only
because no one saw it.
He benefited from playSouthern
ing
at
California, which rarely
trailed opponents.
"It's always been

Bryan Walters/photo

The Wahama football team rU[lS off the field during Saturday's Class A playoff game against East Hardy in Point Pleasant, W.Va. The No.
1 White Falcons will host No.4 Wirt County tonight at 7:30p.m. at the Point Pleasant Athletic Complex in Point Pleasant, W.Va. in the state
semifinals, with the winner moving on to next week's state championship.

Horribl.e Heinz: Chewed-up turf awaits W.Va.,

l

Please see Jets. Bl
)

1
1

PITTSBURGH (AP)
Several Oakland Raiders players called it a sandpit. By the
time the West Virginia-Pitt
rivalry game kicks off, it might
resemble the fabled Church
Pew bunkers at nearby
Oakmont Country Club.
Large strips of sand were
visible beneath Heinz Field's
notoriously bad grass surface
following Sunday's RaidersSteelers game. especially the
heavily used area at midfield
between the 40-yard lines.
While the field will be covered until game da), more than
an inch of rain is predicted
before the Backyard Brawl
game on Friday that will be
televised nationally by ABC.
A bad field and b'ad weather
can be a terrible combination.
especially in Pittsburgh. But
neither the Mountaineers nor
the Panthers appear overly
worried the field will affect the
outcome of a game that could
determine the Big East
.
~onference s BCS representative.
Pitt (6-4. 4-l) currently leads
the conference. but West
Virginia (7-3. 3-2) remains in
contention.
As West Virginia coach Bill
Stewart said. the weather is
frequently a factor during lateseason games. and it's up to

THE BACKYARD
BRAWL
West Virginia (7-3) at Pitt (6-4)
Friday at noon

the teams to adjust.
''When you play on a wet
field. what do you have to do?''
Stewart said. "You keep your
feet under you .... We work on
this all the time. We put balls
in buckets during summer
camp. It rains. It happens. If
it's cold, it's cold. That's fine."
Friday's forecast is for morning showers and temperatures
in the high 30s, the coldest
weather for a game at Heinz
this season.
The Panthers hope horrible
Heinz proves to be a decided
home-field advantage.
"It's a pretty tough field, but
we love it as a defense at Pitt,"
defensive end Jabaal Sheard
said., "If their guys slip, I'll
take it as a big play for us .... I
want to slow down Noel
Devine and Jock Sanders. If
the field can help us to do that,
it would be a great advantage.''

Heinz's turf has never been
as bad as it was for the
Steelers' 3-0 win over the
Dolphins in 2007, decided by
J eff Reed's last-minute field
goal in the first NFL game in
more than 60 years to last that
long without any scoring.
That night. the turf was
drenched by 2 inches of monsoon-like rain that fell in late
November.
a
rarity for
Pittsburgh. The mud was so
deep, one punt left the ball
stuck in the turf nose-up. not
moving an inch.
However, the field had been
resodded only the day before
and couldn't drain properly
because of the relentless rain.
Since then, Heinz's surface has
been switched to all-grass.
replacing a hybrid surface.
Heinz's grass stood up well
last season. and the turf looked
better in December than it
often did in October in previous seasons. This season. the
layer of sand beneath the grass
already is far more visible than
usual. The sand is for drainage.
Reed blamed the bad field
for a missed 26-yard field goal
attempt against the Patriots on
Nov. 14. two days before the
Steelers cut him. Linebacker
James Harrison agreed the
grass is in,poor condition.
" Heinz Field has been like

~itt

that for ages. and sometimes it
can affect the kicking.'' Pitt
kicker Dan Hutchins said. "But
I don't really worry about it.
We've been able to overcome
it before."
The Steelers customari ly
replace the turf late each sea- ·
son, but they apparently are
waiting for Saturday's four
western Pennsylvania high
school championship games to
be. played. The Steelers play
three home games in a 12-day
span from Dec. 12-23.
The Raiders certainly don't
want to return soon.
" T he field was absolutely
atrocious." Raiders defensive
tackle Tommy Kelly said. "I
don't know what they're doing
out there. That was terrible.
They've got big divots like
we· re playing golf. I mean. rny
shoe came off because my foot
was stuck in the ground.
C'mon. that should be taken
care of.''
The
Steelers
haven't •
installed artificial turf because
their play~rs have repeatedly
urged owner Dan Rooney to
keep the grass. which they
believe minimizes injuries.
Players also disliked the artificial turf at Three Rivers
Stadium. where the Steelers
played from 1970-2000.

QB Jimmy Clausen back
at practice for Panthers;
preparing for Browns
CHARLOTTE. N.C.
(AP) - Just as Jake
Delhomme moved into
posltJOn to possibly
start against Carolina.
his
former
team's
uncertain quarterback
situation took a new
turn on Wednesday.
There was some good
news. some bad and the
frightening
prospect
that
behind rookie
Jimmy Clausen could
be a practice-squad QB
signed this week.
Clausen practiced a
day after being cleared
following a concussion
that knocked him out of
Sunday's
loss
to
Baltimore. But Clausen
was whisked into a
meeting with doctors
after the workout and
must still make steady
cognitive ~ progress
before getting the final
clearance
to
play
Sunday at Cleveland.

'Tm
still
going
through evaluations,"
Clausen said. "I felt
pretty good but there
are still things that we
need to do here for me
to get cleared before I
can play."
If t.he doctors sign off,
he'll regain command
of the NFL's worst
offense for the league's
worst team.
"I think it would be
safe to assume," coach
John Fox said when
asked if Clausen would
start if healthy. ''I
thought he had a good
practice."
Good thing, because
the Brian St. Pierre
experiment has taken a
detour.
St. Pierre is showing
the effects of being a
stay-at-home dad until
the Panthers signed him
10 days before he start-

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�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 26,

2010

Buckeye Update: ·ohio State's Gee: No title· game for TCU, Boise
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - What's
brewing with the 20 I 0 Ohio State
Buckeyes ...
BUCKEYES BUZZ: In case you
were under a rock and missed it, there's
not much doubt what the buzz was
around Ohio State football on
Wednesday.
After OS U President Gordon Gee said
Boise State and TCU didn't deserve to be
in the national championship game even
if they went unbeaten. representatives of
both schools unloaded on Gee. the BCS
and the power conferences.
Gee had called the schedules played by
Big Ten and Southeastern Conferem:e
teams a "murderer's row."
That set everybody off.
Boise State ·President Bob Kustra fired
back that Gee had made "the greatest
exaggeration I think we've heard this
year m college football."
Gee had also said of power conferences' schedules: "We do not play the
Little Sisters of the Poor.''
Kustra had Ohio State's last two schedules in front of him - the Buckeyes have
played Southern California and Miami, in
addition to several mid-majors and directional schools - and said. "If they're not
playing the Little Sisters of the Poor.
they're playing the Little Brothers."
He added. ''Maybe President Gee does
n 't go to the games of the teams that an.
not m his Big Ten. but he's playing some

easy marks."
TCU sports infmmation director Chris
Del Conte also stepped into 'the fray,
defending the Horned frogs· unblemished record.
"We only worry about our house and
what we do at TCU," he said. ''I' II put our
record up against anybody."
The controversy began when Gee
defended the BCS and the cuJTent bowl
:-ystem earlier in the day in an interview
with The AP.
"Well. I don't know enough about the
Xs and Os of college football," said Gee,
formerly the president at West VIrginia,
Colorado. Brown and Vanderbilt. "I do
know, having been both a Southeastern
Conference !?resident and a Big Ten president. that it s like murderer's row every
week for these schools."
Referring to TCU and Boise State, he
added, "I think until a university runs
through that gantlet that there's some reason to believe that they not be the best
teams to (be) in the big ballgame."
That left both TCU and Boise State
angry. And triggered the response.
"We go through the gantlet every single
day,'' Del Conte. said.
THE ODD$MAKERS: The J:&gt;Oint
spread on Saturday's Michigan-Ohio
State game in Columbus is 17 points,
down a point from where it opened.
Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez is
untroubled by being such a big underdog.

"I don't think about point spread~. I
came to Michigan to think about winning
championships and competing for championships and all that. I don't wony about
point spreads," he said. "What do I think
about it? Nothing. How does it affect my
life? Doesn't. My preparation? Nothing. I
want to get to the pomt where we're 18point favor~tes in eve1y game. How about
that? I want us to ~et to that point. I won't
think about that tne,n either - (you've)
still~&amp;ot to play eve!'y game.''
FuR A GOOD CAUSE: Here's WR
Dane Sanzenbacher's take on LeBron's
"What Should 1 Do? Nike ccimmercial.
It's inspired, funny and, at the same tin1e.
serious
business:
http://www.youtube.com/watch'!v=WKz
OEM2RCm Y &amp;sns=tw
STAT OF THE DAY: Ohio State historian Jack Park gets credit for this amazing fact. Over the last 83 Michigan-Ohio
State games dating to 1927, each team
hru! scored exactly 1,309 points.
SWITCHING SIDES: TB Brandon
Saine grew up in Ohio and rooted for
Michigan. DB Aaron Grant was raised in
Michigan but never really took to the
Wolverines. And both ended up at Ohio
State.
Saine said he was a big Michigan fan.
"I mainly think it was to be a rebel. I
don't know why,'' he said. "I wa.;;n't really a rebel, but everyone liked Ohio State
so why not like Michigan? I had a

Dc::.mond Howard jersey that I wore all
the way up to my •;ophomore year in high
school."
About when he started getting recmiting letters from Ohio State. he became a
Buckeyes f~m.
"Everybody was Ohio State fans so
they were thrilled," he said of his con
sion.
Ever reconsider?
"Not at all,'' he said with a laugh. "I
definitely haven't relapsed or went back.
that way. Once I got here I realized I
couldn't think nf any other place to be,"
Gant grew up in Detroit, but despite the
pull of family and friends he never
wam1cd to the Wolverines.
"I watched Michi!!an, but I wasn't really a fan of anybody~· he said. "I watched
Michigan. 1 watched Ohio State. I
watched some teams. I knew a lot of players at Michigan. I had some family at
Mid:igan."
He has a cousin who goes to Michigan
now. His immediate family and best
fnends have become Buckeyes fans
because of him.
Gant said he's never been compared to •
Benedict Arnold when he went home.
"I have close friends that go to
.Michigan. almost like family," he said.
''They wouldn't call me a traitor. You'd
probably hear that from some peoP,Ie in
Michigan that I don't know. but no. '

AP Photo/Bill Kostroun

New York Jets . quarterback Mark Sanchez (6) and teammate Santonio Holmes
(1 0) celebrate after they connected for the game-winning touchdown during the
fourth quarter of an NFL football game against the Houston Texans at New
Meadowlands Stadium, ~unday, Nov. 21, in East Rutherford, N.J. The Jets won 3027.
team a Super Bowl
favorite despite having a
young quarterback.
"Lady Luck will help,
from Page Bl
as well as his continued
growth, but I wouldn't
something that I've kind put any limitations on
of wanted." Sanchez Mark Sanchez." Namath
said. "To me. that was. said. "No way.··
Tomlinson said the
'All right, give me a
chance to come back. I'm thought of playing with
going to win it, not mak- Sanchez helped make up
ing a miraculous play, his mind this offseason
but just making the plays about signing with New
we know how to make., .. York. Ryan calls h.im
Sanchez watched a "Cool Hand Luke," and it
television special with has been particularly fitsome teammates last ting during this recent
week on some of the stretch.
"They know he's the
NFL's top I 0 comeback
wms. That was some- guy and he's the boss out
thing he thought about there.'' Ryan said before
before taking the field for smiling. "The kid doesn't
his own shot a2.ainst the have a whole lot going
for him. to be honest with
Texans.
'"'
"Boom. we're in that you. but we'll settle for
situation," Sanchez satd. him."
Serious in the huddle,
''I'm playing catch on the
sidelines like. 'All right, the kid in Sanchez comes
here we go .. ,.
out after big plays - fist
Sanchez. the AFC pumps, mad dashes down
player of the week. has the field and hugs on the
thrown for an NFL-Iead- sidelines. He has become
ing L206 yards in his last the type of electrifying
four games. But it hasn't player that even oppos,been all about his arm. ing players appreciate.
''We're both Mexican.''
An increased focus on
making plays with his Cincinnati wide receiver
legs has paid off, just as Chad Ochocinco said,
it did for ·one of his laughing. ·'Of course he's
favorites. Hall of Famer exciting."
And, also qJJite the
John Elway.
"One of those guys prankster.
"He's a big kid,"
that's a fighter, just never
dies," Sanchez said. ''He Richardson said. ''I think
always gave his team that's something outside
people don't see."
another chance.''
Like the times he
That's what Sanchez.
who recently turned 24 sneakily covers the black
and is just 25 regular-sea- seats in the &lt;lffensive
son games into his meeting rooms with
career, is doing for the water, so offensive coorBrian ·
Jets. He's already led dinator
them to the AFC champi- Schottenheimer's pants
onship game and coach get soaked when he sits.
Or. like last Saturday,
Rex Ryan hasn't been
Schottenht:imer
hesitant to declare his when

Jets

had a doughnut on a table
and Sanchez came along
and stuck his finger in it.
Disgusted,
Schottenheimer pushed it
aside
and
Sanchez
stuffed it into his mouth.
Punter
Steve
Weatherford has become
close with Sanchez.
hanging out with him
away from football.
''My little boy loves
him," he said. ·•Just a
good dude. He's not like
some guys you play with
where the media portrays
them as a really good
guy, but off the field. he's
not. Mark's the real
deal.''
Just like Namath- in his
prime, everyone always
wants to know what
Sanchez is up to now.
Who's he dating? What
Broadway show is he
seeing next? What kind
of endorsement deals is
he signing off on?
"To be able to come
into that atmosphere, that
environment in New
York, with the monster
that the media is there,"
Ochocinco said. "and to
be successful and to be
able to carry that weight
on your shoulders ... he's
handling it perfect, man."
Namath agrees, saying
Sanchez has proven himself to be a humble guy
who thrives in pressure.
"I see his intensity
when he's playing and
his love for the game and
respect for his teammates,
big-time,"
Namath said. "The spotlight, it can draw him
away from the focus, but
he hasn't allowed that to
happen. He's learning on
his feet and he's doing a
wonderful job of it.''
Win after thrilling win .

•

David T. Foster IIVCharlotte Observer/MCT

Carolina Panthers' Jimmy Clausen (2) gets sacked by Tampa Bay Buccaneers'
Barrett Ruud (51) and Roy Miller (90) in the 1st quarter at Raymond James
Stadium in Tampa, Florida, Sunday, November 14. The Buccaneers won, 31-16.

QB
fromPageBl
ed against tQ.e Ravens.
Pierre could only hand
the
ball
off
in
Wednesday's practice.
saying the level of pain
in his throwing shoulder "on a scale of one to
l 0 is probably a seven."
"On the long throw to
David· Gettis. I think
that was the final
straw," St. Pierre said.
That 88-yard touchdown pass early in the
fourth quarter not only
got the Panthers within
a touchdown. but their
hopes
were dashed
when the 30-year-old
St. Pierre became the
first NFL QB in seven
years to throw interceptions
returned
for
touchdowns on consecutive plays.
St. Pierre all but ruled
himself out against the
Browns.
"Right now the pain
is telling me no way,"
he said.
Behind him is rookie
Tony Pike, the sixthround pick who was
limited
in
practice
Wednesday with what
Fox said was a sore
throwing arm. Fox provided no details on how
he got hurt without
playing, and Pike didn't
speak to reporters.
That leaves Keith
Null, signed to the practice squad Tuesd&lt;ty.
Null started four games

as a rookie for St. Louis
late last season. throw ~
ing three touchdowns
and nine interccpttons.
"They haven't said
anything,'' Null said on
his prospects of being
promoted to the 53-man
roster. "As of right now
I'm on the practice
squad and I'm just out
here doing \Vhat I can
do and trying to get better.''
It says something for
the plight of C&lt;1rolina
( 1-9) that the best QB
scenario is to get back a
rookie who is 0 4 as a
starter, has completed
48.6 percent of his
passes and has one
touchdown pas~ and
four interceptions.
"The nice thing about
Jimmy ts he's been here
all year and he .mderstands the cadence and
the audibles and the
reads and everything a
little bit better than
Bnan did,'' left tackle
Jordan Gross said. ")
thought Brian did an
outstanding job coming
in from the street. as
they say, and starting I 0
days later against the
Ravens. That's as tou!!h
as it gets and he dil a
really nice job with that
role.
"But. yeah. I would
asc;ume it would be
Jimmy (starting) as
long ac; everything
works out fine."
The late,«;t twist in
Carolina's QB saga
came the same day
Delhommc took most of

the snaps with the firs~
team in Cleveland with
Colt McCoy nursing an
ankle injury.
Delhomme. who hasn't started since Week 1
because of his own
ankle problems. was
released in ·the offseason after going 58-40 a.
a seven-year starter for
the Panthers.
But Delhomme insisted he has no satisfaction in ~eeing Carolina
struggle without him.
"It's sad to me. I feel
sorry for Matt (Moore)
having a (shoulder)
injury when I know he
was expecting to do big
things
this
year."
Delhomme said. • "I
don't know Jimmy at
all. Certainly he has had
to play. And then Brian
St. Pierre was called up
and what a situation for
him."
Delhomme. who led.
Carolin.t to the Super
Bowl in the 2003 season, declined to take
any shots at his staggering former employer.
who is paying him
$12.5 1~1illion this sea.
son
111
guarantee
money.
General
manager
Mart) Hurney flew to
Chicago in tv1arch to
tell Dclhomme's agent
he was beino let ••o ~fol~
""
1:1
~owing a. miserable 181
mterccptiOn
season.
Delhomme found out in
a phone call from Fox.
··To
get
fired." .
Delhomme said. "it was
the classiest way."

�F

Friday, November 26 ,
I

The DaHy Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

--ATHLON~ SPORTS----------

BREAK THE SLUMP Little did Carl
Edwards know that when he visited
Victory Lane at Homestead in the
2008 season finale, it would be another 70 races before he returned.
Edwards went without a win in
2009 and the first 34 races of
2010, but made up for lost time,
winning the final two events of the
season. It marked the fifth time in
his Cup career that he notched • •
back-to-back wins.

Surprised? You shouldn't be. Johnson stayed above the fray all afternoon in Homestead, doing' '
exactly what he had to do to bring home Title No. 5.
2. Kevin Harvlck
Surprised Part II? Yeah, Hamlin beat him in the standings, but Harvick kept his composure (except
for that Kyle Busch), finishing third. There wasn't much more he could do.
- 3. Denny-Hamiin"- - Oii. Denny~Qualified poorly, nad to run through the field, spun doing it, damaged car, was n~ '
same the rest of the day. This race answered a lot of questions about Hamlin the Driver.
4. Carl Edwards
Polished off 2010 as well as he could, winning the final two races to end a 70-race winless skid. Carl
doesn't want to hear this, but he could be the guy who gives Johnson a run for his money next year.
5. Greg Biffle
Consistency remains an issue with this team. but Biffle and the boys prove every year that they know
how to find Victory Lane a couple times.
6. Matt Kenseth
The third Roush Fenway driver in the top six, Kenseth's Chase resurgence proves RFR is once again
ready to contend with the big boys.
'
7. Clint Bowyer
Another driver who may be a sexy pick to contend next season, Bowyer showed in his multiple-win
fifth season that he belongs in the conversation next season.
8. Joey Logano
It's tempting to put Logano in the top 12 next year after a strong finish in 2010, but the question is,
who does he replace? And will Juan Pahln Montoya allow it?
9. Kyle Busch
This kid is just the Fourth of July, finding a way to jump into the championship spotlight although he
wasn't even a factor. EnJOy that Nationwide Series owner's title ti12011, Kyle.
10. Jeff Gordon
Gordon's 11 top-5 finishes were fourth-best on the circuit this season. but c'mon Jeff, at some point
you have to win a race again. Right?
11. Mark Martin
Worst finish of the last nine races? Sixteenth at Homestead. Yeah, he'll be back.
12. Tony Stewart
Performance dips again about midway through the Chase. HMS engines, huh? Coincidtmce?
13. Ryan Newman
Newman will never win a title because of the way he races others. And the way they race him in return.
14. Jamie McMurray Big wins this season need to translate into cons1stent performances next.
15. Kasey Kahne
Breaks through for a sixth-place showing with new Red Bull team to wrap up season.
Just off the lead pack: AJ Allmendinger, Jeff Burton, Kurt Busch. Juan Pablo Montoya, David Reutimann

~ FAHRVERGN0GEN NASCARofficials have confirmed that they will
meet with German automaker
Volkswagen in January about joining the series. 1/W is the largest automaker in Europe and would like to
use NASCAR to increase its stake in
the U.S. market.

•

SOUNDS PAINFUL Kasey Kahne
3 underwent
successful double knee

4

surgery on Tuesday. The reason for
the procedure was to relieve inflammation; as Kahne said, "It's inflamed it, and it's just rubbing a
hole in my kneecaps." Kahne is expected to be sidelined for six
weeks.
A RETURN HOME? Ray Evernham,
no longer legally bound to Richard
Petty Motorsports, is exploring his
options. Speculation has swirled
that the current ESPN analyst could
return to Hendrick Motorsports,
where he led Jeff Gordon to three
Cup championships, possibly to assume the crew chief role for Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s No. 88 team. However, Evemham has said he has no
interest in returning to the pit box.

Sprint Cup Standings
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
1o.

DRIVER
Jimmie Johnson
Denny Hamlin
Kevin Harvick
Garl Edwards
Matt Kenseth
Greg Biffle
Tony Stewart
Kyle Busch
Jeff Gordon
Clint BoWYer
Kurt Busch
Jeff Burton

POINTS
6622
6583
6581
6393
6294
6247
6221
6182
6176
6155
6142
6033

BEHIND
-39
-41
·229
-328
-375
-401
-440
;446
-467
-480
·589

Mark Martin
4364
Jamie McMurray 4325
Ryan Newman
4302
Joey Logano
4185
Juan Pablo Montoya 4118
David Reutimann 4024
A.J. Allmendinger 3998
Kasey Kahne
3961

DRIVER
Brad Keselowski
Carl Edwards
Kyle Busch
Justin Allgaier
Paul Menard
Kevin Harvick
Trevor Bayne
Joey Logano
Jason Leffler
Steve Wallace

POINTS
5639
5194
4934
4679
4467
4389
4041
4038
3941
3940

BEHIND
-445
-705
-960
-1172
·1250
-1598
-1601
·1698
-1699

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

DRIVER
Todd Bodine
Aric Almirola
Johnny Sauter
Matt Crafton
AuStin Dillon
nmothy Peters
Ron Hornaday
Mike Skinner
David Starr
Jason White

POINTS
3973
3730
3676
3547
3379
3343
3310
3256
3170
2979

BEHIND
-207
-261
-390
·556
-594
-627
-661
-767
-956

JIMMIE JOHNSON There's only one
driver that qualifies for this spot. Johnson
capped off the most challenging Chase of
his five-year reign with a second-place
finish at Homestead. His five titles
place the 35-year old California na·
live third behind Rich~rd Petty and
Dale Earnhardt on NASCAR's alltime list.
DALE EARNHARDT JR. The
fans' favorite has some soul
searching to do this offseason.
unior's 21st-place showing in the
championship standings is his second straight finish 10 the 20s- not the
performance anyone expected when he
signed at Hendrick Motorsports. By listening to Junior, it sounds as if a new crew
chief is in his future. The question remains, is the crew chief the root problem?

T:

Jimmie Johnson and Kevin Harvlck

ASP. Inc.

..

Classic Championship
Moments

Unbeatable!

November 5, 1967
Richard Petty earns his second championship with a runner-up finish to Bobby AI·
lison in the season finale at
Asheville-Weaverville Speedway. Petty
wins the title by 6,028 points over James
Hylton. Petty runs 48 races. more than anyone else on the circuit, racking up 27 victories.

Johnson wins unprecedented fifth straight Cup
By MATI TALIAFERRO
Athton Sports Racing Editor

Jimmie Johnson and the No. 48
Lowe's team continue to build on the
most dommating streak in NASCAR
history.
Johnson's second-place finish,
combined with Kevin Harvick's
third and Denny Hamlin's 14th, propelled him to a record fifth consecutive Sprint Cup championship at
Homestead-Miami Speedway. And
this one may have been the most impressive yet. ,
Johnson entered the Ford 400 a
slim 15 points behind Hamlin in the
championship standings. And thank.~
to a sixth-place qualifying run, Johnson was able to survive two slow pit
stops to liang in the top I0 through·
out the race. In fact. Friday's qualifying efforts played a major. if not
overlooked. role. With Harvick starting 28th and Hamlin 37th, the two
were placed in a points hole from
which neither could climb out.
Hamlin did himself no favors once
the green fell, eitl1er. His day was
wrought with mistakes. the most
costly being a lap 24 spin that damaged his front splitter and knocked
the toe out. He battled a perpetually
loose condition for the remainder of
the afternoon, cracking the top I 0
briefly, but never mounting a charge
to the top 5 ..
Harvick, who entered the race a
daunting 46 points out of the Chase
lead. staged a more serious threat to
Johnson. While never able to consistently run in the top three, Harvick
wa&lt;&gt; a fifth- to ninth-place challenger.
But as the race drew to its conclusion, Harvick's aggression spiked, as
he spun Hamlin's Joe Gibbs Racing
teammate, Kyle Busch, and got
nabbed for speeding on pit road.
The Harvick/Busch incident occurred while green flag stops cycled
through, and briefly trapped Hamlin
one lap do\\'11. It led to a testy ex-

November 22, 1981
Darrell Waltrip rallies from a 341-point
deficit to win the first of his three Winston
Cup titles with a sixth-place finish at Riverside Raceway in Galifornia. Bobby Allison
wins on the road course en route to a second-place finish in the point standings, the
fourth runner-up fimsh in his career. •

ASP. Inc.

Jimmie Johnson celebrates with his five Sprint Cup Championship trophies.

change between the two in the media
center atler the race.
"lt~ought it was over when the 18
wrecked, for sure," Hamlin said.
"That trapped us a lap down. The 29
and the 48 were actually just a
straightaway ahead, but the way it
timed out to when that caution fell,
it trapped us a lap down. and so they
stayed out and the cars at the back all
came and got tires, so it separated us.
¥/hat was a straightaway turned into
15 spots when that caution flew, and
that really hurt us quite a bit."
''As far as the 18 incident, he raced
me like a clown all day," Harvick explained.
"So·J.llds hke [how] your teammates raced me all day," Hamlin
countered.
"I just parked yours," Harvick
shrugged.
All the while, Johnson and crew
chief Chad Knaus calmly went about
their business, making up positiOns
lost on pit road and staying clear of
any on-track predicaments. And as
the laps clicked off- 30 to go. 20,
10 - the duo exhibited the poise
that has been the hallmark of their
five-year dynasty.
With Carl Edwards clearly m control of the race, Johnson simply
cruised in second, never placing the

• NASCAR CEO Brian France
addressed the media over Cham pi· · News&amp;Notes
onship Week in Homestead, Fla.
Some highlights of his 30-minute
• Despite a move this season to
press conference:
"standardized" start times, a move
• While no decision has been
made to appease fans, France
made as to whether NASCAR will
blamed the drop in television rat·
further tweak its Chase format,
mgs on the start t1mes. as well as
• France said it IS being reviewed, as
an almost exclusive move from ABC
it is every year, and that there Is a to ESPN.
desire for more "Game 7 Moments.•
He also commended the worK
When asked by a reporter what he
done by the ESPN broadcast crew,
thought of many fans' being disensaying, "I think the broadcast has
chanted with the Chase and wantbeen as good as I've seen in a long
ing to do away with it. France asked
time. I think the energy level and
incredulously, "You met someone
the calling of the action, the on air
that's telling you that?"
talent. I think is top no:ch right now
That reaction put many things
on their network."
• Consideration is being given
into context.

car in a compromismg position or seriously mounting a charge to take the
lead, much like the last four years
when Johnson did just enough at
Homestead to capture the title. When
th.: checkers waved. Johnson sat 39
points in front of Hamlin. and 41 up
onHarvick.
"We did everything we could all
year long. especially in the Cha~e,''
Johnson said. "And we had two
teams right on our heels. I would say
it was one of the more difficult
Chases for us speed-wise. So the
heart that it took to win this and the
tough decisions we had to make at
night, on Saturday nights typically
going into a race on Sunday; I'm
proud of how we dug our heels in
and made it happen.
"Even with a ton of pressure and
all of the things going on. I mean, we
had to make a stand, and I'm proud
that we stood up as a unit and did it."
As for an unprecedented sixth
title? The man viewed as the steward
of the 48's five titles, Knaus, has already gotten to work on that.
'The 2010 season ended two hours
ago," he said atler the victory celebration...And the 20 11 season began
two hours ago."
That doesn't bode well for the
competition.

to shortening races.
··we are looking at shortening
races as we go along," France said.
·we shortened Galifomia this time
around. We think that made for a
very good event. So on the margins,
we'll look at when that makes
sonso to shorten certain races that
we thl,lk will get a better competitive product on the track."
• France said no decision has
been made concerning Cup drivers
participating on the Nationwide Se·
ries level, but expect word soon.
"You will be hearing about that in
January,· he said. ·And the idea for
us Is, you know, we want to see the
Nationwide Series have its own
identity, very similar to what college

football does for the NFL. That's a
great analogy for us. And what we
don't want to see is Sunday and
Saturday homogenized.·
• Perhaps most surprising,
France offhandedly mentioned that
NASCAR principals are not monitor·
ing the possibility of a labor stop

page in the NFL next season.
despite the fact that it continues to
pummel NASCAR in the TV ratings
each Sunday.
·we are not monitoring that.
Look, there's all kinds of things that
are out of our control that can
change things around. and our hope
is that all of the leagues do welL because we all share the same television partners."

November 20,1988
The season finale at Atlanta Motor Speedway is the last career start for NASCAR veterans Gale Yarborough and Benny Parsons.
Bill Elliott, in his famous No. 9 CoorsMelting Thunderbird, finishes 11th and
clinches his first and only Winston Cup
Championship by 24 points over race winner Rusty Wallace.
November 18,1990
Morgan Shepherd wins the final race of the
season at Atlanta. visiting Victory Lane for
the third time in his career. Dale Earnhardt
finishes third to complete a come-frombehind title run. He beats Mark Martin, who
finishes sixth in the race, by 24 points to
capture his fourth Cup title.
November 15,1992
In one of the most significant races in
NASCAR's Modern Era, underfinanced Alan
Kulwicki wins the championship over Bill
Elliott by 10 points at Atlanta by virtue of
leading the most laps. This race is also notable in that Richard Petty participates in
his final event. while Jeff Gordon starts his
first.
November 19,2006
Having only to finish 17th or better. Jimmie
Johnson cruises to a ninth-place finish in
the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway to clinch his first of five straight championships. Johnson overcomes a 165-point
deficit by earning one win, four seconds
and the ninth in the final six races.

Looking Ahead
Speedweeks 2011 at Daytona International
Speedway begins with the Budweiser Shootout
on Saturday, Feb. 12, where Kevin Harvick will
defend his win 10 the annual exhibition race.
Qualifying for the Daytona 500 is the following
day. Mark Martin and Dale Earnhardt Jr. locked
themselves onto the front row of the February
classic on the Sunday before the big race last
year.
Thursday, Feb. 17 brings the Gatorade Duels at
Daytona, which set positiollS 3·39 for the Great
American Race. Jimm1e Johnson and Kasey
Kahne won these events In 2010.
The 53rd running of the Daytona 500 happens
on Sunday, Feb. 20. Jamie McMurray (below)
Is the defending winner of the most prestigious
stock car race in the world.

•
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Serving you for over 60 years
740-742-2511
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r

•

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailyscntincl.com

Frid ~y,

November

26, 2010

.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

.~~Williams'

shot at. buzzer lifts Cavs

CLEVELAi'\D (AP)
Mo
Williams
: dropped
a
15-foot
• jumper
over
: Milwaukee's B1nndon
• Jennings
as
time
• expired
to
give
• Cleveland an 83-H I victory over the Bu&lt;.:ks on
WednesdHy night, snap' ping the Cavaliers'
~ three-game
losing
streak.
Willinms, who finished v. ith 25 points.
· drove
left
before
• pulling up and lutting
his step-back jumper as
: the
horn • sounded.
&lt;Williams
ran
and
::jumped up on the scor::er's table to celebrate
: •hitting ·a game-winning
':shot against his fom1er
• :team. However, before
:;it was off1cial, the play
::had to be reviewed by
! •the referees, who ruled
;:williams got the shot
:off in time.
Williams s&lt;.:ored 21
points in the second
half. Anthony Parker
• 1added 14 and Anderson
' Varejao
had
13
rebounds for Cleveland.
Kcyon
Dooling
scored 18 off the bench
:.for the Bucks, who
· _dropped their fourth
straight.
With
a
daunting
schedule · ahead, the
Cavaliers were desperate for a win. They were
embarrassed
on
Tuesday
night
in
' Indiana, a loss that
caused coach Byron
Scott to demand that his
players show more
urgency before their
.season slipped itway.
( It wasn't pretty. but
'' the Cavs found a way.
They can personally
'thank
WJ!liams for
,pulling them through.
Despite playing \Vith
' a sprained right thumb.
Williams
scored
• Cleveland's final eight
. ·points ns the Cavs
avoided dropping to 2-5
at home.
Cleveland's final possession was set up by a
' turnover
by
Milwaukee's
Corey
• Maggette with 23 seconds left. The Ca"s then
set up a play for
"Williams. \Vho was
fouled with 5.3 seconds
,to go. Off the inbounds
play. Williams hdd the
•ball for a moment· near
half-court, prompting
• Cavaliers
fans
to
.scream for him to hurry
.with the clock dwindling quickly.
But Williams knew
exactly what he was
"doing
and
calmly
knocked
down
his
jumper. the biggest one
, Cleveland has made all
season.
It was a brutal allaround
game
for
Jennings. who scored
just three points on 1of-10 shooting. John
Salmons scored 14 and
'"Maggettc
I0
for
' Milwaukee.
' The Bucks were with• out
starting
center
Andrew Bogut. ije sat
out with back spasms
that first flared up last
· weekend. An MRI did
not show any significant damage and coach
Scott Skiles believes his
big man will be b'tck on
the floor by this weekend.
Williams scored 13
points and the Cavs,
who were 0 for 5 from
long range in the first
half, made four 3-pointers in the third quarter
to cut into Milwaukee's
lead, pulling within 6X65 entering the fourth.
, Daniel
"Boobie''
Gibson briefly left in
the fourth with a shoul-

...

MORELOCAL
NEWS.
MORELOCAL
FOLKS. .
. Subscribe
today.
992-2155

der injury that initially

looked serious. but
returned with two minute&lt;; lc fl.
After similarly slow
starts when he was with
New Jersey and i'\ew
Orleans, S&lt;.:ott is staying patient in hJS first
year wJth the Cavaliers,
who are still adjusting
to his system and learning to play ditferent
roles without superstar
LeBron James.
"1
know
it's
a
process." Scott said. "I
know that it takes time.
I know it's going to take
time for us on both ends
of the floor to real·ly
unde1 stand
exactly
what I want done. So I
don't jump the gun
because I know everybody's learning curve is
a little bit different.
Patience is something
very needed in this situation.''
Scott's message to his
players. particularly his

---.--

starters.' was they needReport: No code
ed to start more aggresviolation
in Ohio
sively.
That didn't happen.
raceway fire
The Cavs scored a
season-low 34 points in
LEBANON.
Ohio
the first half. shooting
(AP) Officials
sa"y
38 percent and missing
there's
no
evidence
that
all five 3-pointers.
fire codes were violated
Not es:
Bucks
F
when an Ohio raceway
Carlos Delfino missed
barn . caught fi re in
his seventh straight
December, killing two
game with a neck
1 groomsmen and more
injury. The team said he
than 40 horses.
was
evaluated
Wednesday by a neu 1 In a report released
interim
ropsychologist,
who 1 Wednesday.
State
Fire
Marshal
determined Delfino is
"90 percent free of con- Donald Cooper :.ays he
cussion-like
symp- does not recommend any
tom:.." Without any set- criminal or administrabacks, Delfino could tive charges in the Dec. 5
return to normal basket- fire at the Warren County
ball activity in two fairgrounds in southwest
weeks .... Scott is host- Ohio, home to the
ing Thanksgiving din- Lebanon Racew·ay.
The groomsmen are
ner at his home for
Cleveland's
coaches believed to have been
and some players. So, sleeping at the time of
what's on the menu'? the fire . The fire mar"What's not?'' Scott shal's rep011 says there's
said .... James' return to insu(ficient evidence to
Cleveland is one week find that the barn was
away: The Cavs have occupied in violation of
been inundated with fire codes or that any
media requests on a par violations caused the fire
with what they would or helped it spread.
The report also says
get for the conference
the nature of the fire is
finals.

I

I

Sports Briefs
undetermined and that
there is no indication of
arson.

Ohio State fans
show spirit in
pre-game plunge
COLUM B U~.

O h io
Thouc;ands of
Ohio State fans plunged
into a frigid campus lake
in an &lt;mnual rit.tal ahe;td
of
this
weekend's
Buckeyes football game
against Michigan.
The
Columbus
Dispatch reports about
6,000 people turned out
late Tuesday for the 20th
annual
plunge
into
Mirror Lake.
The mid-30s air temperature didn't ~eep
freshman
Robby
Moreland of Danvi lle
from diving into the dirty
water. Still, he described
the lake as "about fi vc
times &lt;.:older than you
can imagine.''
The tradition is typically
held on
the
Thursday before the
Buckeyes take on the
Wolverines to end the
regular season. The

plunge was moved up
this year because of the
Thanksgivi ng holiday.
The two team s play
each other on Saturday.

Ochocinco bar~
almost everythil•
in anti-fur ad

(AP) -

NEW YORK (AP) Chad Ochocinco is baring it a ll - almost - in
a new anti-fur ad for
People for the Ethical
Treatment of Animals.
Wearing nothing but a
carefully placed foo tball,
the out poken Cincinnati
Bengals wide receiver
has his tattoos on fu ll
display as part of P ETA's
" Ink. Not Mink" campaign. The ad will debut
Friday.
Ochocinco call s him self an avid animal lover.
He's certainly comfortable with exposu re, with
his real ity shows. frequent
tweets
and
" D ancing
With
the
Stars'' appearance.
PETJ.\ says the foot.
in the photo is rna
from synthetic material,
not leather.

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they don't shed, they
make great burglar
alarms &amp; they are
easy to house break.
For more information
on our CKC Reg
Puppies
&amp;
our
Christmas Specials
call740-992·7007

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800537-9528
Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
10KI14KI18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mrnt
sets. diamonds, MTS
Corn Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446·2842

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Apartments/
Townhouses
Twin Rivers Tower IS
accepting applications
lor walling list for HUD
subsidized,
l·BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled,
call
675·6679

For
lease:
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor
apt.
near
Gallia
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required,
maximum occupancy
2, $350 mon. 740446·3936 or 740·
446-4425
2 BR 1BA all alec. in
$450
Kanauga
mon+dep 339 _3224
Redeco. SAM. bath
&amp; laundry, rg &amp; ref.,
turn, in city $400
mon + dep &amp; util. No
pets 441·0596
2nd floor 2 BR
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis
Park,
l.R.,
City
kitchen/dining area, 1
1/2
BA,
washer/dryer. $600.
mon + dep.
740·
446·4425 or 740446·2325
2BR apts. 6 mi. from
Holzer. some utilities
pd. or appliances
avail. $ 450/mo +
dep. 740-418·5288
or988-6130
FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp;3 BRAPTS.
$385 &amp;
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up,
NC, WID hook-up,
tenant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

OFFICE/WAREHOU
Great
SEIRETAIL
Location 749 Third
Ave Gallipolis.1800
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
sq.ft . For more info houses in Pomeroy &amp;
Call 1·404-456-3802 Middleport, NO Pets,
740·992·2218
For Sole By Owner
2
bedroom
6 apts $137.000
apartment available
rent $2030 mo, 740·
in Syracuse. $200
03
•44
,;,6;.,'.;,
• 9;.;0,__ __
deposit. $375 per
Real Estate month rent. Rent
3500
water,
Rentals includes
sewer &amp; trash. No
pets.
Sufficient
Apartments/
income needed to
Townhouses
qualify 740378-6111
2BA APT.Ciose to New renovated 1 br.
Holzer Hospital on SA apt.
Middleport,
160 CIA. (740) 441·
$325+
0194
reference/deposit,
740-416·6622
CONVENIENTLY
&amp;
LOCATED
2 1BR in Pt Pleasant
AFFORDABLE I
all utilities included
Townhouse
apartments,
andfor 593·5169
small houses for rent.
Call 740·441-1111 !or Spring Valley Green
application
&amp; Apartments 1 BR at
Information.
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446·1599.
Free Rent Special
!!I
Commercial
2&amp;3BA apts $395 and
up, Central Atr, WiD Office space for rent
hookup, tenant pays in PI Pleasant 593·
electric. Call between 5169
the hours of 8A·8P
EHO
Houses For Rent
Ellm View Apts.
(304)882·3017
3BR
dble-wide
-~B~e-d~ro_o_m~A-p-t-R~~. furnished, Sr 1431
0
2
Pomeroy. $625 mo.
Grande $ 400 Dep.- incl. most uti. &amp; lawn
$400mth
740·245·
care. 740·591·5174
9060 NO Pets

�www.mydallysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

6000

100

Employment

Jordan Landing, 2
bedroom apartments
available. No pets. Drivers &amp; Delivery
304-610.()776
or A &amp; J Trucking In
304-674·0023
Marietta, Oh is hiring
depos1t required.
COL A Drivers for
&amp; Regional
1&amp;3 BR houses in local
Routes.
Applicants
Syracuse No pet's
HUD app. 675-5332 must be at least 23
yrs have min of 1 yr
Wk end 591·0265
of commercial driving
exp. Clean MVR,
Haz-mat Cert. We
Manufactu~ed
4000
weekend
Housmg feature
home time, Excellent
health
&amp;
dental
Rentals
· insurance.
401 (K),
;;;
2B
;;;A
;;;·;;;
2;;;
B;;;
a;;;
th;;;L;;;
ik;;;e;;;n;;;e;;;
w Vacation,
Bonus
Mobile Home water, pays and
safety
sewer, trash pd. No awards.
Contact
pets, CA. Covered Kenton at 1-800-462Patio
Johnson's 9365 F.O F.
Mob'11e Home Park
Medical
740-446-3160
~==::::;;;;===
Ohio Valley Home
3BA
2BA
$575 Health Inc. acceptmg
mon+dep+u11. 1722B Applications
for
Chatham Ave 740Aides. Apply at 1480
645-1646
Jackson
Pl'ke
3BR 1BA aII eIec. .m Gallipolis
or
on
Pt. Pleasant $450 internet
@
mon+dep 339·3226
www.ovhh.org.
&lt;httpJiwww.ovhh.org
Sales
1&gt; or Phone 740)441Competitive
94 Clayton 14x7o 1393
2BA as is must be wages and Benefits
moved!
740·446· including
health
insurance
and
1271
mileage.
92 or newer 3BA
2BA vinyl siding,
shingle roof, needs Person to fill a part
work, must be moved time position m a
located in Gallipolis professional medical
Ferry. No title asking office.
Medical
$2800 OBO. 540• background helpful,
765•7786 or 740• but will train the right
742-2737
person.
Send
resume
and
2
New
Foreclosure references to: Box
16x80 never been 1oo
c/o
Point
titled Call for an Pleasant
Register
incredible
deal 200 Main St., Pt
740)446-3093
Pleasant, wv 25550
==•Su;;i;p;;i;p;;;lie;;;•==-

Sales
=P•T= / • F•T= s•e•as;;;o;;;
n=
al

Green slag 10.00 a
ton
great
for
driveways. At. 62
above New Haven
• behind
American
Colloid Co. (304)882·
3944.

Sales Person Stop in
@
with
resume
Acquisitions
Fine
Jewerly 151 2nd Ave
(Gallipolis)
NO
Phone
Calls
PLEASE.

---

Legals

100

Legals

ADVERTISEMENT
LEBANON
IS
FOR BIDS Fam1ly TOWNSHIP
Healthcare,
Inc. ACCEPTING
Owner 1049 Western SEALED BIDS FOR
Ave.
Chillicothe, A 5 X 10 SINGLE
Ohio
45601 AXLE
TILT
Address
Separate TRAILER
BIDS
sealed BIDS for the WILL
BE
construction of Meigs ACCEPTED
TILL
County
Health 4PM
ON
Center to provide a NOVEMBER
30,
new
10,714
s.f 2010 MAIL BIDS TO
facility including new LEBANON
lobby,
reception, TOWNSHIP
AT
dental wing, doctors 30220 LOVETT AD,
offices, mechanical, RACINE,OH 45771.
electrical &amp; plumbing • CALL
TOWNSHIP
systems. The proJect GARAGE
FOR
Is located at 41865 QUESTIONS
740Pomeroy
Pike. 843-5404
(11) 12,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 19, 26
Will be received by -W-ood
- la_nd
_ _.....,
S_a_
le
Meigs County Health
p
Athens-Meigs
enter 1n omeroy,
Ohio
at the office Educational Service

c

·

100

Legals

be moved Within 60
days at the buyer's
expense.A
pre-bid
1nspect1on Will be
held at the locat1on
1' :OO on December
10, 2010 The bidS
wll be opened 11 ~00
December 23, 2010
at
the
Bradbury
Learning
Center
39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport,
Ohio 45760.10% of
the b1d will be due 5
days
alter
bid
openmg, w1th the
balance due within
30 days.Piease send
bids to Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center
39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport,
Ohio
45760
Attention·
John Costanzo (11)
19,26

of
Family ;:a~~~ ~:~sb~~~k~~~
Healthcare,
Inc.
f
until
11 00 am
, sale 0
a 1993
modular classroom r--..,.-~...,_--,
(Daylight
Savings umt.The
unit
is
Time)
Monday
December 21
located at 3080 State
2010
, and then ~~ said. Route 160 Gallipoli~.
office
publicly Oh1o 45631. The umt
opened and read is
approximately
aloud.
The 2,000
sq.
ft .
CONTRACT
appliances and heat
DOCUMENTS may pump is included.
be examined at the The modular has to

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
FOR'
BARGAINS

following
locations:Family
Inc.
Healthcare,
Western
1049
Avenue
Ohio
Chillicothe,
45601
Dan
Marsh
Architects.
2713 McVey Blvd
West.
Columbus.
Ohio
43235
the
Copies
of
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS may
be obtained at Key
Blue Prints
Inc.,
located at 195 E.
Livingston Avenue,
Columbus,
Ohio
43215
614 228
• (
)
3285 I (800) 537·
1907, fax: 228·0687
upon
payment
Any BIDDER, upon
returning
the
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS
promptly and in good
condition, will be
refunded
the
payment, and any
non-bidder upon so
returning
the
CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS will be
refunded $
0.00
.(11) 26, (12) 3, 10

_.

Friday, November 26, 201 0

~

Commercial &amp; Residential

Need a
Job Done?

• Room additions • Roofing • ""'"'",.'""
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barn ~ • Yin)· I &amp; Wood Fencing
Foundations
~liKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd .. Long Bottom, OH
740·985-4141
740-416-1834
Full~ in~ured

~

~ n~ l''timall'' ·_\II ~l'al"i rxpe rienn~
•\•tl alfilaotll·cl \'llh \ll~t \l.lhlllll M'"'lin:: .S. l&lt;tl11fN:IthnJ!~

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Shop

Metal Roofs Installed all winter long at
discounted rates.
Specializing in lnsuranre Jobs including.
storm. n ind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, ~e\\ Homes. Siding, Derks.
Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

The

THE
•cLASS I Fl EDS
aren't only 'for
buying or selling
lte"'s, you can use
this 'VVidely read
section to 'VVish
so .... eone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad ••1n IVIe.... ory''
o'f a loved one_
For .... ore in'for.... atlon, contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office_

&lt;!9allipolis 1!Bailp

A4AKE
SOA4EONE'S
DAY.'
'QCrihttt~e

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Se:nt:in.el
(740) 992-2155
~}2toitt.t ~Iea.Sattt

3Register

(304) 675-1 333

(
I

Attention Business Owners

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on

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--

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Upgraded Business Listings.

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to set-up vour

FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

740-992-21 55

The Daily Sentinel
_111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

•

�Friday, November 26, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean YounY,Den_is Lebrun
~~~~~--~~~~--~

ETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk
rr'b tJIC.E -roSE£

50/V\EO~e: ~EO
WJ-10 1~'.,- Nl£.

out

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

The Daily Sentinel• Page 87 ..

CROSSWORIJ
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Cut's
counterpart
6 Ball attire
11 Lucy's pal
12 Time for a
shower
13 British
lockups
14 Word
separator
15 Entreaty
17 Newspaper
page
18 Upper
limits
20 Sylvester's
trademark
22 Flamenco
call
23 Trades in
26 Doorstop
shape
28 Singer
Fisher
29 Sacred
beetles
31 Leaf
litter
32 Hindu
hero
33 Newspaper
section
34 School
near
Windsor
36 Ring of
light
38 Writer
L·Amour
40 Match
setting
43 Dancer's
boss
44 Boredom

JOSEPH
45 Threw 1n
46 Marsh
grass

DOWN
1 Coat-rack
part
2
glance
3 Looked
for
bargains
4 Informs
5 D1fferent
6 Motorist's
need
7 Sayrng
"nay"
8 L1ke
sarongs
9 RIVIOra
resort
10 lditarod

item
16 Heady
brew

grained
rock
30 Scrooge
cry
33 S1ngle
34 Movre lion
35 Swamp
croaker
37 Great
serves
39 Melancholy
41 Weaver's
creation
42 Hitch

~

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 clle('.kfm o) to
Thomas Joseph Oook 1 PO Bo~ r;3G47~
FL 3:?853-6475

...

11

..
11-26

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

FRIDAY

MUTTS

3
••

Todav's Answers
18 lntimidates
19 Baldwin
of "30
Rock"
21 Midmonth
time
23 Paper
buy
24 Gum
chOJce
25 Jaz.l club
units
27 Coarse-

11-26-10

Patrick McDonnell

T11ANKS
C1IVING

ftC~N~k/u~ .:/J1?ar j

,. Mooc~"
II

)

2.4

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKl)

Bil Keane

2-So-so·l-Di{ficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
*****You have an attitude as if
the weekend already has begun. Jf 'ou
can play it out and stay home, all the

by Dave Green

5 .4

better Othem-ise, you m1ght cause
your.'-elf a lot of distn.&gt;sS ultimatclv. Is 11
really worth it? Only you can .1nswer
that questwn. Tonight: I et Y&lt;'llr hair

2
7

1

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Fnday,
i'JO\'. 26, 2010:
This year, many opportunities
appear becau:;e you are .1dvcnturous
enough to make tlwm occur. You will
find a wa); tuning in to your ingenuity.
Your abihtics to revise .1 situ.1tion and
reorganize problems i1llow a grl.'.lt dl'&lt;ll
of 5UCC&lt;'f,•,, L'Spcciilliy if )'OU top into an
e&gt;..pert.lf you ME.' single, you could mtX'I
som('()ne who is fascinating .1nd has
great depth. 1his person comL"&gt; from ,,
different backgmund than }OU. You
could learn and gmw a lot from this
experience. If you are attachL&gt;d, the h\o
of you benefit from planning a spt.'&lt;lal
trip or taking a workshop together. LEO
open.-. doors.
The Stars Show £he Ki111l of Day You'll
Have 5-Dynanuc; 4-Pos tn\', 3-Atrt'l'agc,

down.

t-

TAURUS (April 2();M,ty 20)
***Be aWML' th.1t 111 every ~Jtun­
tion there nrc limita!tons Soi11c nrc
worse than othe~. You can dip into
your ingenuity and sort through nny
issue tf you so choo~. Be honest if you
are too tired to follow through on plan..,.

1

8
3
6 2 3 7 9
4

"Grandma says o lot of her friends
are like the birds: They fly south

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

~

•''iOLI CAN PLA"( 'rnr- II/GI-I NOTE'S, Bul' IM
IN C~ARGE OFlHE' LOW NOTC.S ~ 1 '

~

8

v

6
6
9 8 L
~ 9 L 8 G 9

G
ii"'

~

'I"

Tomght: Happily at home
GEMINI (May 21-Jun&lt;' 20)
***** Keep working ,,t getbng
your point &lt;~erne;~. Not everyone 1s
alway~ in agn_'('ment, nor w1ll they &lt;'Ver
be. Still, you are enough ot ,, mawrick
to head in your own din.'CI.ion Don't
close down m a ~rious talk. rorught
VLo;it with a friend or lo\·cd one
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
*** Be more m touch wtth your
ex-pen~ and S)X'Ilding. A partner has
many -.uggcstions that you rmght fed
are inappropriate Rccogmze wl1&lt;1t vou
really want to do, and don't rover thl'
act with fal'ie expl.liU!bons. Tomght.
Add a new item to your w.1rdrobe.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
***** You w,1kc up knowing
that you have snap, cral kit.: .md pop.
Ask anyone if they '' .1111 t&lt;' tc&lt;;t ymu·
energy, intellect or luck nght 1ww.
Someone might, and though you dl\'
not undefeat&lt;1ble, you'll come up with
unusually dynamic idcJS. lorught. Out

on the town.

HOROSCOPE

*** Pulling back and taking
inventory might be smart. You have
many 1deas; your creativity is unu-.ually high dunng this period. You arc trying to come from a grounded point of
vit'\\". (Jive yuur~'lt the space to absorb
wh&lt;at is happening ,md to center.
lomght· Take a night off.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*****You know what you want
cmd wherE' you are going Honor a
longtime fncndship when m.tking
WL'Ckcnd plan.-.. Still, a meeting today
could be mstrumcntal. )ou are unusually dynamiC m the manner m wluch
Yl'U express yoursdf. Others listen.
1onight. Where the action ~:,
SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21)

.I

..,
"'!

,.
:~

••

::
.,.:
:--

:_;

~
...

:!
•'"
::
:•
..
::

***A must appearance might not :C
lx• llS diffirult as vou thought. Open up ...
to new possibilities, and havE an unportant convers.1tion. Thi&lt;; talk could
changl your mind about many matters.
1~1kc your time before reacting. Tomght
In tlw limelight.
SAGITI'AIUUS (Nov. 22-0...&gt;c 21)
*** ** The urge to go out on '"
limb or try somclhmg \'ery different
&lt;:"ould t.th• ()Ver Yl'U need to pick .md
choose whPn' this lx•h,wior is appropn,,tt• Pl'r inst,mcc, play it con-;cn·,,th·c
hn.mci,,lly;.emotionally, a risk might be
OK 1otl.igh t. Follow th&lt;• mu-.i&lt;:.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***** A sense ot togetherness
follows you bccau'ie ot .1 kev relationship, "hethu you are w1th thL... person
or not. Express contenbnent ell the

appropriate moment A higher-up or
p.m.'l1t might have ,m attitude Ilus, too,
will pa..c.s. Tonight Dinner for h\'O.
AQUARIUS Q,m 20-Feb. 18)
*****Others surround vou, and
m thiS bcvv of people \ ou &lt;;ort through
"hat you must do and ''hat } ou c.m
not do. A friend play-; a rather significant role. paving the wav to make a
goo.! ,, rcahty Torught· Continue wtth
the theme of teamwork.
PISCES (F&lt;•b. 19-M,u'Ch 20)
*** Focus on getting as much
done ,IS pos.s1bk•. You will want to leave
for tht• \H•ekcnd abk to rcl.1x and not
worry Clbout what w,u;n't done. Your
l&gt;l'Jt&lt;;t' of humor cmcrgl's when dl•aling
\\ ith a family member 'lonight: A must
.1ppearanrc.

/ntqudmc B1gar IS 011 the Jntn7Zt'f
at lzttp://lt"'lt"'lujacquelilldngm.n~m

.mvdailvsentinel.com
-.

......

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)

•
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"1
Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

EJ,.,.t

'IqT~ .. •

www.mydailysentinel.com

t' · •' ' -

'

'' . ',I"'
·:·· 'I•'
.

'
•...

NAME: Pepe
Pearson
HOMETOWN:
Euclid
OHIO STATE
YEARS: 1994-1997
HIGHUGHTS:
Pearson followed
He1sman Trophy wmner Edd1e George and rushed for

'i
'

.

.

.

.

'
.

.

.

did Ohio State and Michrgpn
first play football1n the Brg Ten
ag;:ilnst each other?

2; \Ahlen

3: H&lt;m many Ohio State-Michtgpn
games ended in a ue?

osu·s career rushing hst With 3,121
yards.
AFTER OSU: Pearson is an assistant football coach at'oh1o Domintcan
Unrvei'Slty, where former Ohio State
aSSistant coach B1ll Conley is the
head coach. Pearson was a practice
squad player 1n the NFL and played a
year in NFL Europe.

4: How many Heisman troph1es have
Ohio State players won?

"I think the
rivalry was in
its prime when
teams were
;etting beat
that shouldn't
have."

5: How many Heisman trophies have
Michigan players won?

t&gt;h1o S1me ckofcn~i\e Jmeman
I &gt;cxtt'r l.:111morc t.tlklng
ai&gt;Ollllt'IC Ohio SIJIC·,\Ii&lt; higan ril':tJI):

Answef's: 1. MIChigan 34·0; 2.1918;

3. Six times; 4. Six: 5. Three

...

Both teams' quarterbacks - Ohio State's Terrelle Pryor MICHIGA N
and Michigan's Denard Robinson - were early favorites
for the HetSman Trophy, but have fallen behind in that
popularity contest The Similarities don't end there, though.
Pryor (2,331 yards pass1ng, 893 yards rushing) and Robmson (2,229 yards
passing and 1,538 yards rush1ng) are both the mdispens1ble element m the1r
team's offense. Rob1nson has already broken the NCAA record for rush1ng
yards m a season by a quarterback.
lnjunes have knocked Rob1nson out of games at times, but the Wotvennes
have last year's starter, Tate Forcier, as thetr backup.
Advantage: Michigan

Greg McMullen, a JUnior defensrve
end from Akron Hoban watched OhiO
State beat Penn State and talked with
several OhiO State coaches. He also IS
interested 1n Nebraksa, Oregon,
Alabama, Notre Dame and others.
Max Pirman, a sen or linebacker
from Orrv~;:e, was not pursued l7j Oh1o
State, but hiS verbal commnment to
Nebraska IS still Interesting because rt
shows Nebraska coach Oo Pehm
intends to recruit the ~te where he
played college football at OSU.
Akise Teague, a 5·8, 174-pound
runn1ng back/defensiVe back from
Youngstown Ursuline is hop1ng for an
offer from OSU but none has been
made. He has rushed for 1,955 yards
on 181 carries, going 1nto this week's
game aga1nst Uma Central CathOlic.

Dane Sanzenbacher provided quantity (six catches, 102 yards) and quality (a
leap1ng catch to set up the game-winning touchd&lt;Mfl} 1n OSU's 20-17 VIctOrJ at
Iowa. Sanzenbacher (49 catches, 818 yards) leads Oh1o State's recervers. DeVIer
Posey (45 catches, 696 yards) might ha'.'e learned a tough lesson about l~e 1n the
spot!1~t \'tlen he got more attention for dropping a potential touchdown pass
aga1nst Iowa than he has for any of his five touchdown catches thiS season.
Roy Roundtree (58 catches, 839 yards) is M1ch1gan's leading recerver threat.
But Darryt Stonum (35 catches, 493 yards).and Jun10r Hem1ng.vay (28 catch
es, 544 yards) also pose problems for oppoSing defenses.
Advantage: Even

&lt; OFFENSIVE UNE
Lke it has most of the season, Ohio State's line got miXed
reVIews m the Iowa game. Left tackle M1ke Adams got high
mai'Ks for the way he battled Iowa standout Adnan Clayborn.
But not all of the Buckeyes' linemen played up to that standard. Guard Justin Boren, who played his first two seasons at
MiChigan, has been OSU's most consistent lineman.
For Michigan, guard Stephen Schilling (47 career starts) and tackle Perry
Dorreste1n are leaders on the line. Center Dave Molk IS also a veteran presence.
Advantage: Ohio State

&lt; DEFENSIVE UNE
Cameron Heyward and John Simon dom1nated Iowa's
offe'lSIVe line on the Hawkeyes' final two senes last week
wrth the kind of performances many fans had been waiting
most of the season to see. w;u it be more of the same th1s
week aga1nst a MIChigan offense that ranks f:fth nationally 1n
total offense (514 yards a game)?
For Mich gan, the b1g question IS how will rt react to the domination Inflicted
upon tt by Wisconsm last \veek (558 yards total offense). Nose tackle M1ke
Martin IS the standout for M1ch1gan on the line, but has been hampered l7j
lnJUnes to both ankles.
Advantage: Ohio State

&lt; UNEBACKERS
Bnan Rolle, coming off a Big Ten DefensiVe Player of the
Week award, and Ross Homan lead OSU's linebackers. The1r
decision-making will be an important factor aga1nst M1ch1gan
with Denard Robinson's dual threat abilities.
M1ch1gan's Jonas Mo~ton (102 tackles, two InterceptiOns)
IS the Big Ten leader 1n tackles and Kenny Demens has 61 tackles.
Advantage: Ohio State
•
JIM TRESSEL
Before he ever coached a game at Ohto State, Tressel
proMised fans they'd be proud of their Buckeyes aga1nst the
Wolvennes. And they have been. Tressel has \VOn e1ght of
~me games aga1nst Michigan, Including the ast SiX 1n a row.

&lt; DEFENSIVE BACKS

Somet1mes when you're a defensive back, no news 1s good
nEl\vs. Ohio State's defensive backfield - cornerbacks
Ch1md1 Chekwa and Devon Torrence and safeties Jermale
H1nes and Orhian Johnson - don't have spectacular statistics, but they haven't given up lots of b1g plays, either.
MIChigan's defensiVe backfield was depleted by season-end1ng lnjunes to vetRUNNING BACKS
eran co'Tlerbacks Troy Woolfolk and J.T. Royd. The Wolverines rank No. 111
Dan Herron's streak of back-to-back 100-yard rush1ng nationally 1n pass defense. Safety Jordan Kovacs (95 tackles, one mterceptlon)
games ended at Iowa last Saturday, but the jumor tailback has been M1ch1gan's most cons~stent defensive back.
m1ght start a new streak th1s week aga1nst a Michigan
Advantage: Ohio State
defense that allowed 357 yards rushing and two 100-yard
rushers in a 48-28Joss to Wisconsin last week. Herron leads
SPECIAL TEAMS
OSU with 893 yards rushing and 14 touchdowns.
Oh1o State kicker Devin Barc1ay is 16 of 19 on field goals
Vincent Smith (571 ya,rds) is MIChigan's No. 2 rushing option behind
and punter Ben Buchanan averaged 40.9 yards per punt.
Rob1nson, but left last week's game With diZZiness. M1chael Shaw has 331
If Michigan has to win on a field goal, the anxiety level m1gllt
yards rushing but d1d not play last week because of a head 1njury.
be higher on ItS Sideline than on the OSU side. Wolvennes kickAdvantage: Ohio State
I
ers Seth Broekhuisen and Brendan Gibbons are a combined 4
of 13 or field goals. Punter W1ll Hagerup averages 43.6 yards per kick.
Advantage: Ohio State

&lt;

&lt;

·_
Big Ten

Overall

W

L

W

6
6
6

1
1

1

Iowa

4

3

Penn State

4 3

School
Ohio State

M1ch1gan State
WISCOnsin
IllinoiS
Michigan
Northwestem

Purdue
M1nnesota
Indiana

4

4

3
3
2
1
0

4
4

5
6
7

L ·

10 1

10
10
7
7
6
7

7
4
2
4

1
1
4

4
5
4
4
7
9
7

BIG TEN TREND: Ohio State has
appeared 1n the BCS stand1ngs
48 consecutiVe weeks, more
than any other team.

2010

',

.

1: Who won the first Oh1o StateMichrgan football game in 1897?

1,484 yards 1n 1996. He IS si!\Ul un

Friday, November 26,

.OSU LEA.P ~R$ .

Passing Yards
BIG TEN SCHEDULE
Terrellc Pryor ...................... 2331
Saturday
Rushing Yards
Michigan at Ohio State, noon
Dan Herron..............................893
Michigan State at Penn State, noon
Terrelle Pzyor ..........................590
Indiana at Purdue, noon
Northwestern at WISCOnsin, 3:30 p.m. ReceMng Yards
Dane Sanzenbacher ..............818
Iowa at Mrnnesota, 3:30 p.m.
DeVier Posey.............; .............696
Reid Goals
TOP 25 GAMES TO WATCH
Devin Barclay ..................16/19
Friday
Tackles
Auburn at Alabama, 2:30 p.m.
Bnan Rol e.................................62
Arizona at Oregon, 7 p.m.
Ross Homan ...........................55
801se State at Nevada, 10:15 p.m.
Interceptions
Saturday
Ch1md Chekwa .......................3
TCU at New MeXICO, 4 p.m.
Bnan Rolle, .................................2
Oklahoma at Okla. State, 8 p.m.
Devon Torrenoe............................2

Sugar
best bet
for bowl
COLUMBCS - Ohio State
hoped its postseason destination would have them traveling west to the BCS national
championship, but a southern
tnp appears to be in their
•
future.
If the Buckeves beat Michigan and WtSconsin avoids an
upset against Northwe:;tem
on Saturday, the Badgers will
claim the Big Ten's Rose Bowl
slot and it appears very likely
the Sugar Bowl would invite
OSU to play m its game.
OSU went to New Orleans
to play in the BCS title game
after the 2007 season, but the
last tlme it was in the Sugar
Bowl was when it played
Texas A&amp;M after the 1998
season.
Like this year's team, the
1998 Buckeyes had national
championship hopes. But an
upset loss to Michigan State
sent them to the Sugar Bowl.
If OSU ends up in the Sugar
Bowl, it is looking at another
match-up with a Southeastern
Conference team, something
that has not gone well for the
Buckeyes in the past.
On the other hand, Ohio
State could take it as
opportunity to prove
doubters wrong for a
year in a row after last
son's Rose Bowl win over Oregon.
'Who could be waiting for the
Buckeyes in the Su~rdome?
That
question will be
answer(..od over the next couple
weeks.
The Sugar Bowl is obligated
to take the winner of the SEC
title game between Auburn
and South Carolina.
But if Auburn finishes the
season unbeaten, it will play
m the BCS title game. However, if the Tigers would lose
their final regular-season
game against Alabama then
win the SEC championship
game, they would probably
head to New Orleans.
If the Sugar Bowl couldn't
get an OSU-Auburn game, it
might go for a rematch of Ohio
State-LSU from the 2007 title
game, assuming LSG wins the
rest of 1ts games.
Ofcourse, all this is based on
the idea Ohio State is goi.pgt.
beat Michigan. If the Buck
eyes lose, they're headed to
Flotida, probably to the Capital One Bowl in Orlando.

•

OSU .SCHEDULE
Sept. 2 ..................Marshall, w 45-7
Sept 11 ................Miam1 w36·24
Sept. 18 ...................OhiO W 43·7
Sept. 25 ................F. M1ch. W 73·20
Oct. 2 .....................at 11 noJS w 24-13

Oct. 9 .......................Indiana w38 10
Oct. 16 .............at W!SCOilSin L 31-18
Oct. 23 ...................Purdue w49-0
Oct. 30 ........... at M nnesota W 52-10
N~N. 13 ............ Penn State W38 14
Nov. 20 ..... .... .... .at Iowa w20-17
Nw. 27 ..... ....

....MIChlg,:Jn

Content compC!ed by J m ~u and
desq1Jli7J Ross Bishct.: • The Lima New.&gt;
Copynght
2010 The Lma News.
Reproducoon of arrt portJOO of thiS fTkltcr
lal IS prohibited ~ eJipreSS ooosent.

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

1

Days until kickoff

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