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                  <text>Hate floats:
Lebron returns to
Cleveland, Bt

All-Ohio Div.
3-4 football
selections, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Meig
Co p ers
(CPU)

"The Computer
Repair Shop"

32354 Happy Hollow Rd.
Middleport, Ohio

740-992-1135

•

COLUMBUS (AP) Rates would be frozen next
year for electric customers
in central and southern
Ohio under an agreement
reached between American
Electric Power, staff of the
state utilities commission
and others.
AEP Ohio says the
agreement
reached
Tuesday indicates that
009 earnings were not
significantly excessive''
for subsidiaries Columbus
Southern Power and Ohio
Power. The state official
who advocates for utility
customers opposes the
agreement
and
says
Columbus
S'outhern
should be required to repay
750,000 customers about
$102 each because its
earnings rate of about 20
percent was too high.
The rate agreement
applies to Columbus
Southern customers. AEP
says it had been authorized
to increase rates up to 6
percent for 2011, and that
the freeze will save residential customers about
$78.
The agreement must be
approved by the board of
the utilities commission.

e OBITU.AiuES
Page AS

• Robert F. Laudermilt
• Carroll Ann Harper
• Margaret E. Brewer

WEATHER

High: 37
Low: 26

INDEX
2 SF.cnONS- 12 PAGES

.

alendars
Classifieds
Bs
Comics
Editorials
A4
Sports B Section
© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishmg Co.

li..IJ ,I !I,I.! !II

I•rintcd on IOOCO
l'ic\\sprinl

Rcc~ded

D.,

Rizer defense granted until Dec. 22 to file appeal brief
Murder conviction nears first anniversary
Bv BRIAN

J.

R EED

BAEED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Paula
Rizer's attorneys have
been granted a second
extension of time to file a
brief in the appeal of her
murder conviction.
It will be a year next
month since the second
jury seated to hear murder charges against Rizer
convicted her. Rizer
killed
her husband,

Kenneth Rizer, Jr., in his
chair, firing multiple
shots from a semi-automatic handgun.
In her
defense,
Rizer claimed physical and mental abuse
from her husband, calling psychologists to the
stand to testify in support
of post-traumatic stress.
Her second trial also
included testimony from
nationally-known forensic pathologist Michael

Baden, who said four of
five bullets that entered
Kenneth Rizer's body
would each have been
fatal.
After months of delays
due to the time required
to prepare thousands of
pages of trial transcripts.
the Fourth District Court
of Appeals granted Rizer
her first extension in
October, until Nov. 22.
That day, the court granted an extension until Dec.

20, allowing Rizer's
defense attorneys, Craig
Jacquith and Melissa
Prendergast, additional
time to file a brief assigning error in the trial court
and arguments in defense
of those assignments of
error.
After that is filed.
Prosecuting
Attorney
Colleen Williams will file
a brief addressing Rizer's
appeal.
The record of Rizer's

two trials includes a
3.400-page transcript of
Rizer's two trials, jury
instructions, bench con~
ferences and motions
hearings - 13 days in
all.
Rizer is imprisoned at
the Ohio Reformatory for
Women,
Marysville,
serving a sentence of 18
years to life as imposed
by Judge Fred W. Crow
lli. She was tmnsported
to prison on Jan. 11.

MHS students embark on learning challenge
BY CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

AEP Ohio agrees
to freeze rates for
some customers

entinel.a

POMEROY - "Stand
Up, Speak Out, Lend a
Hand!"
That was the theme of
the kick-off to a threemonth service learning
challenge project for
Travis Abbott's lOth
grade social studies students and educators at
Meigs High School.
A live kick-off event
held in observance of
Tolerance Day featured a
welcome and mteractive
conversation via high
speed videoconference
with Gerda Weissmann
Klein. Her unique experiences as a human rights
activist, writer. Academy
and
Award
winner
Holocaust survivor, is
geared to engage and
inspire students to launch
their own service learning projects addressing
challenges or issues
unique to their schools
and communities.
The program is geared
to help students understand the past while
encouraging tolerance
and understanding and to
come to a full understanding of the dangers
of hate and extremism.
It is designed to create
a deeper relationship
between students, member schools and their
communities as well as to

present cross-culture and
problem based learning
experiences for teacher
and students.
The students at Meigs
were given the opportunity to participate in the
videoconference ''Stand
Up. Speak Out, Lend a
Hand" presented by
MAGPI and The Gerda
and
Kurt
Klein
Foundation. This is the
fourth and final year for
the presentation which
won Gerda Weissmann
Klein
the
201 0
Presidential Medal of
Freedom Award .
Through the program
Klein has reached out to
thousands of students
across the United States.
Participating
schools
were asked to submit
questions to the Klein
Foundation in advance of
the event. The foundation
selected ten questions to
be answered in the conference. Hannah King's
question was selected
and she had the opportunity to ask Klein "What
was it like trying to deal
with teenage emotions
while having to act and
think as an adult'?''
Her challenge to students is to make a difference in their own communities by developing
projects and initiatives
that will improve the

See MHS,A5

Submitted photo
MHS student Hannah King's
question to Gerda Klein was
selected as one of 10 for discussion on the national teleconference.

Submitted photo
MHS social studies students participate in teleconference with Gerda Klein.

Getting squat: ODOT keeping its outhouse
BY B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.
. DARWIN

- The
Ohio· Department of
Transportation has begun
upgrading 44 of its roadside rests. including one
in Kanauga in neighboring Gallia County, while
the rest area along US 33
in Meigs County remains
a glorified outhouse.
So why does Gallia
County's· modern rest
area get an upgrade but
Meigs County's primitive
rest area get squat? The
answer boils down to one
word - money.
David Rose, spokesperson for ODOT, went on to
explain the federal money
appropriated for the

upgrades were to update
rest areas which don't
meet standards set forth
in the Americans with
Disabilities Act and to
make these areas more
energy
efficient
or
"green." The rest stop on
U.S. 33, despite not having running water and a
sewage treatment option,
does meet the standards
mandated in the ADA and
it's about as "green" as a
rest area can get.
Rose said those 44 rest
recetvmg
the
areas
upgrade are all also of the
same design and cookie
cutter style which means
the upgrades are similar
at each area. ODOT
received around $16 million for the upgrades

which breaks down to
just over $300,000 spent
on each of the 44 rest
areas. Rose said ODOT
has estimated it would
cost $1 million to
upgrade the US 33 rest
area (basically starting
from scratch) with the
biggest hurdles being a
sewage treatment option
and running water for the
facility.
The state of Ohio has
spent hundreds of millions to upgrade US 33
from the Ohio River to
Columbus. Around $100
million was spent on the
Athens to Darwin connector of U.S. 33 and $50
million
on
the
Ravenswood Connector
along U.S. 33. Though all

this money has been
spent on roads traversing
Meigs County, no funds
have been spent to
upgrade the county's only
rest stop from primitive to
modern. So, when ODOT
announced the modernization of rest areas
which were already
modern to begin with,
such as the one in
Kanauga. many in the
community felt something definitely stinks.
Rose said ODOT is
very aware of the community's frustration and
the issue of the rest area
on U.S. 33 is often one of
the first topics brought to
the agency's attention by
local officials. Rose said
ODOT plans to continue

to work with local ofti~
cials to attempt to find
solution during a time
when the state budget is
"maxed out." However.
for now the funding isn 'i
available for Meigs to
step into the Twentieth
Century when it comes
to ridding itself of its
glorified outhouse and
the stigma which comes
along with it.
Of 29 Appalachian
counties in Ohio, 22 of
ODOT's primitive rest
areas can be found to
greet travelers or, in
some cases, prompt travelers to keep driving
until hitting the nearest
county with a modern
rest area- or a secluded
\Vooded area.

a

Meigs Local contracts for special programs
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY - A contract to provide special
and gifted educational
programs for students was
approved and several personnel issues were handled at last week's meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.

The contract for services to the special and
gifted students was
with the Athens-Meigs
Educational
Service
Center at a cost of
$932.520.
Ina Meadows was
hired by the Board for
the 21st Century· AfterSchool
Program
at

Meigs Elementary on the
recommendation
of
Rebecca Zurcher, 21st
Century
Grant
Coordinator. retroactive
to Sept. 21 .
Also hired were Warren
Lukens and Michael
Ramthum as substitute
teachers for the 20 10-11
school year to be used on

an as-needed basis.
The Board acknowledged a gift of $750 from
Exxon/Mobile as applied
for by Steve Ohlinger,
Meigs High School
principal. It will be used
for student awards and
incentives. as recommended by the principal.
School policies which

were revised or new this
year were reviewed during the meeting. The
revised policies dealt
with issues such as bullying and other forms of
aggressive
behavior.
attendance at school
events, homeless students, and educational
options.

.,

�VVednesday,Decernbert,20tO

www.rnydailysentinel.corn

•

J'hc Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Gays won't hurt military; leaders cite troop poll
BY ANNE FLAHERTY AND
ANNE GEARAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Gay troops can serve
openly in the armed
forces without harming
the military's ability to
fight, the Pentagon's top
leaders declared Tuesday,
calling for the 17-yearold ''don't ask. don't tell''
ban to be scrapped and
pointing to a new survey
to show most troops
won't mind.
President
Barack
Obama. citing the troop
poll, urged the Senate to
repeal the ban before
adjourning in the next
few weeks. but there is
still no indication GOP
objections can be overcome with just a few
weeks left in the postelection lame-duck session.
Still, the survey did put
ne\\'
pressure
on
Republican opponents,
led by Sen. John McCain,
who say efforts to repeal
the law are politically
motivated and dangerous
at a time of two wars.
Defense
Secretary
Robert Gates said the ban
on openly gay military
service "requires people
to lie," and he called for
quick Senate action.
''We spend a Jot of time
in the military talking
about integrity and honor
and values. Telling the
truth is a pretty important
value in that scale," Gates
said as he released the
Pentagon study showing
that most people currently in uniform don't care

about the ban.
Senate Democrats plan
to force a vote in
December.
Senate
Republicans were generally silent following
release of the Pentagon
recommendations
for
repealing the ban.
Although
historic,
Thesday's recommenda·tion that the military for
the first time allow o~n­
ly gay people came wtth a
caveat that also frustrates
many
supporters of
repeal. Gates wants an
indefinite grace period
while the Pentagon prepares for the policy
change and phases tt in.
"It would be unwise to
push ahead with full
implementation of repeal
before more can be done
to prepare the force, in
particular those ground
combat specialties and
units. for what could be a
disruptive and disorienting change," Gates said.
Critics led by McCain
say the Pentagon's report
doesn't address risks to
morale and fighting mettle. Gates countered: "I
obviously have a lot of
admiration and respect
for Senator McCain, but
in this respect I think that
he's mistaken."
Obama has called it a
top priority to repeal the
1993 Jaw that bans openly gay service. But gay
rights groups have complained that he and
Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid have done too
little to see it through,
focusing their poste!ection efforts instead on tax
cuts and a nuclear arms

treaty with Russia before
Republicans gain congressional strength when
lawmakers return in
January.
In the report, the
study's
co-chairs,
Pentagon
General
Counsel Jeh Johnson and
Army Gen. Carter Ham,
wrote, "We are both convinced that our military
can do this. even during
this time of war.''
Gates said he didn't
think the Pentagon would
have to rewrite its regulations on housing, benefits
or
fraternization
to
accommodate gays if
they were allowed to
serve openly.
A defense policy bill
that would overturn the
law - pending certification by the Pentagon and
the president that doing
so wouldn't hurt the military's ability to fight has languished in the
Senate since it passed the
House this spring.
In the meantime, a federal judge ordered the
Pentagon to stop enforcing the Jaw because it was
unconstitutional.
The
Obama administration is
appealing that decision.
"Given the present circumstances, those that
choose not to act legislatively are rolling the dice
that this policy will not be
abruptly overturned by
the courts," Gates said.
Obama said in a statement released by the
White House: "Today I
call on the Senate to act
as soon as possible so I
can sign this repeal into
law this year and ensure

that Americans who arc should address most if
willing to risk their lives not all the concerns that
for their country are treat- · they have raised," said
ed fairly and equally."
Aubrey Sarvis, executive
The president noted director
of
the
that the Pentagon survey Servicemembers Legal
had found most service Defense Network, a promembers willing to serve rer.eal advocacy group.
alongside openly gay and
fhe Pentagon survey
lesbian troops, and said: found that some two"I am absolutely confi- thirds of troops don't
dent that they will adapt care if the ban is lifted.
to this change and remain Of the 30 percent who
the best Jed, best trained, objected, most of them
best equipped fighting were in combat units
force the world has ever
Opposition
was
known."
strongest among com bat
White House press sec- troops, with at least 40
retary Robert Gibbs said percent saying repeal
repealing the ban was dis- would be a bad idea. That
cussed during a two-hour number climbed to 58
meeting
Tuesday percent among Marines
between Obama and Jaw- serving in combat roles.
makers and was the sole
A summary of the
focus of a session report said 69 percent of
believed
Monday with the military respondents
service
chiefs.
He they had already served
declined to provide more alongside a gay person.
details.
Of those who believed
Adm. Mike Mullen. that, 92 percent said their
chairman of the Joint units were able to work
Chiefs of Staff, said to~cther and 8 percent
Tuesday he agreed with satd the units functioned
Gates that "this is a policy poorly as a result.
change that we can make
"We have a gay guy.
and we can do it in a rela- He's big, he's mean and
tively low-risk fashion," he kills lots of bad guys.
given time to prepare No one cared that he was
forces and leaders for new gay," the report quotes a
rules and expectations.
member of the special
Advocates for repeal operations force as saysaid Congress was run- ing.
ning out of excuses to
The report says that
changethelawbeforethe many gay troops would
courts do it for them. The be likely to keep their
Ju9tice Department is sexual orientation quiet
fighting the recent feder- even after the ban was
al ruling that the 1993 lifted. That discretion
law is unconstitutional.
would probably be more
"For senators who common in the military
than in the civilian
were on the fence Republicans as well as world.
the
report's
Democrats - this report authors said.

Of tho~e respondents
who said they were gay,
only 15 percent said they
would want that known
to everyone in their unit.
The summary include~
anonymous quotes fro!~ W
gay troops currently
servin~.

"I wtll just be me." one
person said. "I will bring
my family to family
events. I will put family
pictures on my desk. I
am not going to go up to
people and say, ' Hi
there. I'm gay."'
Though some troops
suggested during the
study that there should
be separate bath and living facilities for gay~. the
report
recommended
against it because it
would be a "logistical
nightmare,
expensive
and impossible to administer.''
Further. separate facilities would stigmatize
gays and lesbians in the
way that "separate but
equal" facilittcs did to
blacks before the 1960s,
it said.
The report said com-·
manders could address
individual concerns on a
case-by-case basis.
Reid, D-Nev.. has
promised a vote on the
matter by the end of the
year. after hearings can
be held this week. But if
he fails, the bill's
chances of .survival are
dim as the new Congress
takes ov~r in January.
Republicans have seized
control of the House and
the Democratic majority
in the Senate becomes
even more narrow.

Stocks fall as euro concerns continue
NEW YORK (AP) Stocks ended November
on a down note Tuesday,
notching their first monthly
losses since August.
The Dow Jones industrial average lost 46 points. It
had been down a'\ many a-,
11 0 point-; earlier in the
day. The index pared most
of its losses after President
Barack
Obama
and
Republican
lawmakers
promised to seek a compromise before the end of
the year on extending
Bush-era tax cuts.
Extending the cuts
would motivate investors to
hold stocks since they
wouldn' t be subject to
higher capital gains taxes
next year. It would also
encourage companies to
continue paying dividends.
which are taxed at a more
favomble rate.
The
Dow
ended
November with a loss of 1
percent. It had rallied
through September and
October on hopes that a
bond-buying program by
the Federal Reserve would
boost the economy.
The Dow reached its
highest point of the year on
Nov. 5, two days after the
Fep announced its $600

billion economic stimulus
plan. Stocks have fallen
since then on worries about
Europe's debt troubles.
Ireland on Sunday became
the second European country after Greece to require a
bailout this year.
The euro briefly fell
below $1.30 for the ftn.'l
time since mid-September
after investors sold off government bonds from Spain,
Portugal and Italy. The
bailout of Ireland's banks
hasn'1 been enough to
assuage worries that other
weak European countries
will also need to be rescued.
John Briggs, a ftxed
income analyst at RBS,
said the concerns about
weak members of the euro
zone are spreading faster
than governments can
react.
"It's becoming more of a
system-wide issue and the
currency decline continues
to accelerate day after day."
he said. "Until we get some
kind of systemic response.
it's likely to continue."
The Dow Jones industrial average fel146.47. or 0.4
percent, to close at
11.006.02.
The Standard &amp; Poor's

500 index fell 7.21 or 0.6
percent, to 1.180.55. The
Nasdaq composite index
dropped 26.99, or 1.1 percent, to 2.498.23.
The S&amp;P 500 fell 0.2
P.!rccnt in November, the
Nasdaq 0.4 percent.
Economic
reports
Tuesday did not present a
clear picture of where the
economy was headed. The
Poor's
Standard
&amp;
S&amp;P/Case-Shiller index
showed that home prices
are· falling faster in the
nation's largest cities.
However, the Conference
Board said its index of
consumer
confidence
j~mped to a five-month
high in November.
In corporate news,
Google Inc. fell4.5 percent
after European regulators
launched an antitrust probe
into the online search
giant.
Bank of America Corp.
lost 3.2 percent on fears
that Wtkileaks may release
copies of the bank's internal documents. Julian
Assange, the founder of
Wikileaks, told Forbes
magazine that his group
will release thousands of
documents from a major
U.S. bank early next year.

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�PageA3

The Daily Sentil1el

deer

Wednesday, Decentber 1, 2010

Best dog

ASK DR. BROTHERS
I

Submitted photo
Karlee Norton recently killed her first deer, a sevenpoint buck, on the opening day of youth deer season
..l.hile hunting' with her father. Norton is the daughter
Todd and Anne Norton of Pomeroy.

Submitted photo
Coco (pictured with Santa), a poodle owned by
Connie Rankin of Tuppers Plains, was judged bestdressed dog in the Pomeroy Christmas Parade sponsored by the Pomeroy Merchants Association.

Clark named O'Bieness
VP of medical affairs

Family Medicine: Snow flakes and
flakey skin: both signs of winter

W

ATHENS
Mr~hncl J. Clark.
DO. was recently named vice
president of medical atTain; at
O"Blene s Memmial Hospital.
Clark has heen a member of
0' Blcness' active medical staff
since 2002. and has sen cd as
chief of statf since January 2009.
He is a board·certilied phystcian
with River Ro~&gt;c Ohst~trics and
Gynecology -an afliliate. of the
O'Bicnes~
Health
System ..___ _ _ _ ___.
through its multi-specialty group.
Clark
Athens Medical Associ~t tes , Inc.
He is now a member of O'Bieness' administrative
leadership team and no longer '.'.'ill serve as the chief
of staff. IJe scnes in a coordinati ng role between hospital Jcadersh tp and the medical S!aff. who are i~creas­
mgly dedicated to and tcsponc;1ble for workmg to
improve the patient experience at O'Bieness.
Clark rece1ved his medical degree from the Kan~as
College of Osteopathic Medicine in Kans~s Ctty,
He 1!, an c~ssociate professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at the Ohio Uni,·ersity College of
Q&lt;;teopathic ~1edicme in Athens and a fello'.'. of the
Americ,m College of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

Bv

MARTHA

A.

SIMPSON,

D.O., M.B.A.

OHIO l.NIVFRSITY COl LE'GF OF OSTFOPATHIC MEDIClNf.

Question: I hate. to see ~inter .comin~ bec~use it
mean' my battle wtth dry skm bcgms a&amp;am. Tht~ gets
better in warmer weather and '.'.Orse 111 the wmter.
And, as I get older, it just gets r~ore ~ggravating. Is
there anything new on treatment .Jor th1s?
Answer: Unfortunatclv, there rs not much new for
treating chronic dry skin. As you already said,. it gets
worse as you get older. because of~ decrease m fat~y
acids in the skin caused by the agmg process. Th1s
decrease makes the skin dryer and decreases its "barrier" functions. That means it allows more fluid loss
through the skin.
.
rvlany people just have itchy skin but no rash, wh1~e
others have both. T his condition is most common m
the front of the lower legs, back. sides. abdomen.
waist and anns. Us ually the face. scalp. armpits and
groin arc not invoh·cd. Some p7ople ~r~ b?th~red by
this year-round because of the a1r cond1t1orung m the1r
home or workplace.
In severe dry skin cases, the skin ca~ becom~ reddened and develop cracks. Itchy cracks m the sk1~ put
you at risk for a skin infection because you may ma~­
vertently introduce bacteria ao; you scratch. That IS
v.hy treating this condition is important.

Community Calendar__~-Public meetings
Wednesday, Dec. 1
HARRISONVILLE
Scipio Township Trustees,
6:30 p.m., fire station.
POMEROY - Meigs
Cuu11ty Bu&lt;m.l uf Health, 5
p.m., l1ealth department
conference room.
Monday, Dec. 6
RUTLAND
- The
Rutland
Townshrp
Trustees, 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Statron.

Clubs and
organizations
•

Thursday, Dec. 2
POMEROY - Meigs

County Retired Teachers
Association
luncheon,
noon, Trinity Church.
Eastern High School bell
choir to perform holiday
music. Bring gift.books for
children. neservations to
992-3214 by Nov. 30.
CHESTER
Chester/Shade Historical
Association, 7 p.m.,
Chester Courthouse.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Aux. 9053. 6:30
p.m. at the hall, gift
exchange.
Friday, Dec. 3
POMEROY - Meigs
County PERl Chapter will

meet at noon, Mulberry
Community Center for
potluck meal. Meat and
drinks furnished, members to bring covered
dish. Business meeting
at 1 p.m.. to include
nomination of officers,
group sirtging and $5
gift exchange .
Saturday, Dec. 4
SALEM CENTER Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior Grange
#878,
6:30
p.m .
potluck dinner followed by 7:30 p.m .
meeting.
Tuesday, Dec. 8
HARRISONVILLE

nels

_

- Harrisonville O.E.S.
255, Past Matrons
annual Christmas dinner
and
business
meeting. Harrisonville
Masonic Lodge hall.
All past matrons and
spouses welcome.
Chu rch events
Sunday, Dec. 5
HARRISONVILLE
The Lonnie Welsh family
singers will be at the
Harrrsonville
Presbyterian
Church,
6:30p.m.

The couple that diets
together cheats apart

Dear Dr. Br others:
My husband and I had
planned to go on a diet
together. Overall, it's not
that strict, hut you do
have to monitor how
many carhs you eat in the
1irst two weeks. It's simple- if you don't follow
the rule, you won't begin
to lose weight. My husband somehow thinks
he's getting uway with
something by eatin~ right
at home, then bingmg on
whatever he wants when
be's at work. How can I
get him to follow one
simple rule? He just
doesn't get it!~ K.B.
Dear K.B.: Going on a
diet together is a rather
huge undertaking, no pun
intended. It is almost
impossible for one person to succeed on a diet,
much less two! So, in the
beginning I would say
that you need to cut yotJr
husband a little bit of
slack; many guys in this
situation wouldn't even
go along with the idea of
trying to lose weight with
rules imposed by someone else and his wife!
And when you say he
doesn't get it, you may be
right. Maybe he's not
very invested in this idea.
Who came up with the
dieting together concept?
And who picked out the
diet? It sounds to me as
though your husband
didn't
have
much
involvement upfront, so
he doesn't have mtu.:h
now.
I would be careful
about not turning the
venture into a grim game
of "gotcha." Try your
hardest not to be a policeman, so that coming
home at night doesn't
tum into your husband's
least favorite part of the
1 day. He doesn't need to
• be grilled about his com~ pliance with the diet. nor
made to feel guilty for his
transgressions. As yocfu
start losing weight- an
1 I hope you will he will
have the best kind of
reminder possible of
what can be attained if he
decides to follow the
rules. In the meantime.
encourage him and praise
him when he docs do
something
to
work
toward his goal. Maybe
he'd rather increase his
gym time than fo.llow
dieting rules so stnctly.
Do :-.omc fun things
together on the weekend
using your bodies and
your imagination!
Dear Dr. Brothers:
My husband was on a
game show many years
ago. He answered a question wrong and wound up
losing a great deal of
money. Last month, the
show was rerun on cable,

Dr. Joyce Brothers
and he's been in the
dumps ever since. He
keeps moping about say;
ing how stupid he is an9 .
how our lives would have.
been so much easier if he
just won that money. I
really never cared about
the outcome, but I care .
about him. How do I get ,
him to stop beating him; J
self up'!- G.D.
,
Dear G .D. : The one
that got away is always '
difficult for some people
to cope with - and to '
put to rest. It could be
huge fish that slipped off ,
the hook, a pretty girl
who chose someone else ·
to take to the prom or the . ·
perfect wedding dres~
that
someone
else
snatched at the department-store
basement
sale. But \omehow, it is
the near-attainment of a ~
great deal of money (or
equivalent prizes) that
deals us the greatest blow
when it suddenly slips
through our fingers.
your husband laments,
money is the key to the
kingdom - it represents
so much more; things we
can only dream about. If •
onlv we had that money,
our· lives would be perfect - or at least better.
As a symbol, there's little
to top a large pile of
green bills to take us to
the promised land.
In reality, the money
may have been more of a
curse than a blessing as found money tends to
bring lots of greedy, outstretched hands along
with it. It tends to be wasted on frivolous
things. used mundanely
to pay the mortgage for a
while or just frittered _
away with not much to
show..But it still hurts not '
to have it! Your husband
feels bad because it was
within his control to get'
the cash prize and he ·
"blew it." It wasn't like ,
not wmning the lottery
- it was more like having the winning ticket and burning it by n~is­
take. So he blames htmself. Keep letting him
know how happy he
makes you, with or without his winnings - ang ·
mean it.
·
(c) 2010 by Kim:

a

As

Features Syndicate

.

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishmmt of religiotr, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tire right of the people
peaceably to assemble, attd to petition the
Go11ernmetrt for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

OUTSIDE OPINIONS
The (Youngstown) Vindicator, Nov. 29
It ·s hard to find people who are living high off
the hog on their unemployment benefits.
Typically, they're receiving less than $300 a
we7k. which they spend on food, rent or mortgage
payments. car payments and other bills. And it's
not like the recipients are loafers who are averse
to work; to be eligible for unemployment payments. they first had to be employed - and had to
lose their jobs through no fault of their own.
Which makes it difficult to understand why so
many members of Congress make it difficult to
extend unemployment benefits at a time such as
this. when the nation is still struggling to dig out
of the deepest recession since the Great
Depression.
Nonetheless. as Congress reconvenes in its lame
duck session. one of the challenges facing those
who believe this isn't the time to allow benefits to
expire for millions of long-term unemployed is to
\Vin passage of yet another extension ....
Republicans blocked an extension bill in the
House before Thanksgiving, but they accuse the
Democrats of playing politics and of refusing to
make $ J2.5 billion in cuts elsewhere to cover the
cost. ...
Members of Congress - none of whom could
maintain their standard of living on $300 a week
- should consider helping the unemployed part
of the job.
(Online: http://bit.ly/eCBEUb)

Akron Beacon Journal, Nov. 29
Follow the conversation about the financial crisis in Ireland ... and you will notice one measure
missing from the austeritY'package. Ireland has no
intention of altering its prized corporate tax rate
- at 12.5 percent one of the lowest in Europe and
viewed as ctitical to developing exports and creatingjobs....
Germany. France and others have grumbled
about the Irish policy. But they, too, have lowered
their corporate tax rates the past 20 years ....
One .country that hasn't followed the trend? The
United States, though, th~nkfully, that may soon
change. In discussing ways to deal with this country's fiscal challenges, Erskine Bowles and Alan
Simpson, the co-chairmen of the president's
deficit commission, proposed lowering the corporate tax rate from the current 35 percent to somewhere in the mid-20s ....
Why reduce tax rates if the goal involves plugging a budget hole? This step amounts to sound
policymaking. The corporate tax system suffers
from an array of credits. exemptions, deductions
and loopholes. Broaden the tax base by addressing
such flaws. and the door opens to reducing the
overall rate.
More, the country must take the step as a m::ttter
of competitiveness. A lower corporate tax rate ...
would help to attract foreign investment here, the
t1ow of money leading to increased economy
activity and jobs ....
(Online: http://www.ohio.com/editorial/opinionsl II 0955929.html)

----

....

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

VVednesday,Decennbert,2oto

AP-CNBC POLL

Cut services to balance budget
Bv ALAN FRAM
AND JENNIFER AGIESTA
ASSOCIATED PRESS

panel dominated by former offi- wealthiest to bear the biggest b.
cials has released its own budget- den.
·
balancing plan.
Even. so. the public is not
Asked to choose between two bristling to tackle the deficit.
To ease surging budget deficits,
paths for balancing the budget, 59
Of seven issues tested. the
Americans prefer cutting federal
percent in the AP-CNBC Poll pre- deficit was even with taxes as
services to raising taxes by nearly
ferred cutting unspecified govern- fifth most mentioned, well behind
2-1 in a new poll. Yet there is litment services while 30 percent the economy. Fotty-scven percent
tle consensus on specific, meanpicked unspecified tax increases. said the deficit should be reduced
ingful steps - and a wariness
Republicans leaned heavily with spending cuts even if new
about touching two gargantuan
toward service reductions while education, health and energy pro
programs, Social Security and
Democrats, usually staunch advo- grams were eliminated, while 4(J
Medicare.
cates of federal spending, were percent said those program-;
An Associated Press-CNBC
about evenly split between the should grow even if the red ink
Poll showed widespread anxiety
two alternatives.
expands.
•
about budget shortfalls exceeding
The
results
underscored
the
When it comes to culling sav- •
$1 trillion a year. Eighty-five percent worry that growing red ink political peril legislators face in ings frotn Social Security and :
considering tax boosts, especially Medicare, the ·public mood rune;;
will harm future generations the strongest expression of con- with the struggling economy, from ambivalence to distaste. The
cern since AP polls began asking rampant joblessness and ascen- giant pension and health care
the question in 2008. Fifty-six dant tea party supporters insisting grams for the elderly together .
percent think the shortfalls will Washington is too powerful.
comprise a third of the $3.5 tril"We've got an awfully big gov- lion annual budget.
spark a major economic crisis in
ernment and a lot of waste," said
the coming decade.
People are about evenly divided
Jackie
Hallock, 53, a writer from on whether to reduce Medicare
As for detailed cures, the poll
shows little agreement - a prob- Pawleys Island, S.C. "I think we and Social Security benefits A
lem that has long bedeviled law- should cut taxes, not raise taxes. the best-off seniors and whethP
makers who often speak about They're already too high."
to raise Social Security payroll
In a reversal from last month,
taming federal deficits but seldom
taxes
on
the
wealthiest :
vote to do so. Given more than a most people oppose extending Americans. Nearly ·two-thirds
dozen options for helping balance expiring tax cuts for the richest oppose raising the retirement age
the budget, majorities backed just Americans. Just 34 percent want to 69 for people to receive full ,
four: Reduce the number of feder- to renew tax cuts for everyone; 50 Social Security benefits. Most ·
al workers, trim their salaries, cut percent prefer extending the oppose raising the retirement age ·
overseas military bases and elimi- reductions only for those earning even if done gradually over the·
nate the tax deduction on home under $250,00(} a year; and 14 next 65 years.
mortgage interest in exchange for percent want to end them for all.
Clear majorities oppose elimi
If there's a ray of hope for polilower income tax rates.
nating
the tax credit for children.
"I'm sure there's waste some- cymakers, it's the expectation cutting the number of troops or
where," said Terri Davis, 44, a many have for a broadly aimed their pay and trimming eJucation
travel company employee from deficit-reduction effort.
Asked to consider each budget- and homeland security spending .•
Ashburn, Va. "But I like a lot of
People were split about evenly ·
government programs that keep balancing strategy separately,
over
cutting farm subsidies, while
order in the streets, that do nearly two-thirds said tax increasmore
.opposed reducing Pentagon ~
research about what's dangerous. es will be needed to eliminate
weapons
research. Most opposed .
deficits and almost 8 in 10 said
A lot of things are worthwhile."
raising
the
federal gasoline tax 1
Budget deficits have been win- government services will have to
and
using
the
money for roads. :,
ning increased attention from be cut. 'A large majority of
Illustrating
how peoples' self- •
President Barack Obama and con- Democrats said spending cuts
gressional Republicans, who will were inevitable, while about half interest affects their choices. '
control the House next year and of Republicans said tax increases those with home mortgages sp,'
wield increased clout in the were necessary - positions that about evenly over whether to~
Senate. Despite their midterm are usually anathema for party the tax deduction on mottgag
interest in exchange for lower
election victory. the GOP holds leaders in Congress.
rates.
while those without mort- :
only a slight edge in trust on the
gages
strongly
favor the idea.
Combining
those
responses,
issue, with 1 in 8 saying they trust
The
AP-CNBC
Poll was con~
just
over
half
overall
said
spendneither party, the poll shows.
ducted
by
GfK
Roper Public
Obama announced a pay freeze ing cuts and higher taxes will be
Affairs
&amp;
Corporate
Monday for the government's 2 needed.
Communications
from
Nov. 18- '
"The deficit is so immense, it's
million nonmilitary civil servants,
saying, "Getting this deficit under going .to take a combination of 22 and involved landline and cell
control is going to require some things," said Mark Price, 52, a phone interviews with l ,000 '
adults chosen randomly nationbroad sacrifice." A bipartisan retiree from Roseville, Mich.
Whatever path is chosen, 54 wide. The margin of sampling
deficit commission that Obama
appointed is to issue a report this percent want the burden shared en-or is plus or minus 4.3 percent ·
week, while another bipartisan evenly; 38 percent want the age points.

pro· .

~

CAti t Get

ceNSUReP \N '\l\e
weu. or "Me House
~~~?

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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

www.mydailysentinel.com

U.S. cuts access to files Obituaries
after leak embarrassment
Bv MATTHEW

Carroll Ann Harper

LEE

ASSOCIATED PRESS

. WASHINGTON - The State Department severed
omputer files from the government's classified
ork, officials said Tuesday, as U.S. and world
ers ~ried to clean up from the embarrassing leak
that sptlled America's sensitive documents onto
screens around the globe.
By temporarily pulling the plug, the U.S. significantly reduced the number of government employees who can read important diplomatic messages. It
was a~ extraordinary hunkering down, prompted by
the dtsclosure of hundreds of thousands of those
me~sages this week by WikiLeaks, the self-styled
whtstleblower organization.
The documents revealed that the U.S. is still confounded about North Korea's nuclear military ambitions, that Iran is believed to have received advanced
missiles capable of targeting Western Europe and perhaps most damaging to the U.S.- that the State
Department asked its diplomats to collect DNA samples and other personal information about foreign
leaders.
While the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange,
taunted the U.S. from afar on Tuesday, lawyers from
across the government were investigating whether it
could prosecute him for espionage, a senior defense
official said. The officiaL not authorized to comment
publicly, spoke only on condition of anonymity.
State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley sought
to reassure the world that U.S. diplomats were not
. s, even as he sidestepped questions about why
.were asked to provide DNA samples, iris scans,
•
credtt card numbers, fingerprints and other deeply
personal information about leaders at the United
Nations and in foreign capitals.
Diplomats in the Paraguayan capital of Asuncion,
for mstance. were asked in a secret March 2008
cable t&lt;? provide "biometric data, to include fingerprints. facial images, iris scans, and DNA" for
numerous prominent politicians. They were also
asked to send "identities information'' on terrorist
suspects, including "fingerprints, arrest photos,
DNA and iris scans."
In Burundi, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic
of Congo the requests included information about
political, mHitary and intelligence leaders.
"Data should include e-mail addresses, telephone
and fax numbers, fingerprints, facial images, DNA,
and iris scans," the cable said.
Every year, the intelligence community asks the
State Department for help collecting routine information such as biographical data and other "open
source" data. DNA, fingerprint and other information was included in the request because, in some
countries, foreigners must provide that information
to the U.S. _before entering an embassy or military
base, a U.S. official said, speaking on condition of
ymity to discuss intelligence matters.
e possibility that American diplomats pressed
•
more than "open source" information has drawn
criticism at the U.N. and in other diplomatic circles
over whether U.S. information-gathering blurred the
line between diplomacy and espionage.
"What worries me is the mixing of diplomatic
tasks with downright espionage. You cross a border
... if diplomats are encouraged to gather personal
information about some people," U.N. SecretaryGeneral Ban Ki-moon said.
Crowley said a few diplomatic cables don't change
the role of U.S. diplomats.
"Our diplomats are diplomats. Our diplomats are
not intelligence assets," he repeatedly told reporters.
"They can collect information. If they collect information that is useful. we share it across the government."
World leaders, meanwhile, were fielding questions
about candid U.S. assessments of their countries.
In Kenya, the government was outraged by a
leaked cable, published by the German magazine
Der Spiegel, in which Kenya is described as a
"swamp of flourishing corruption." Kenya's government spokesman called the cable "totally malicious"
and said the State Department called to apologize.
In Brazil, officials declined to answer questions
about U.S. cables that characterized the South
rican co~ntry as priva~ely co?perativ~ in the war
nst terronsm, even as 1t publicly demes terrorist
•
threats domestically.
WikiLeaks has not said how it obtained the documents, but the government's prime suspect is an
Army Pfc., Bradley Manning, who is being held in a
maximum-security military brig on charges of leaking other classified documents to WikiLeaks.
Authorities believe Manning defeated Pentagon
security system.s simply by bringing a homemade
music CD to work, erasing the music, and downloading troves of government secrets onto it.
While world leaders nearly universally condemned the leak, the U.S. and Assange traded barbs
from afar. In an online interview with Time magazine from an undisclosed location, Assange called
on Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to
resign because of the cables asking diplomats to
gather intelligence. "She should resign, if it can be
shown that she was responsible for ordering U.S.
diplomatic figures to engage in espionage in the
United Nations, in violation of the international
covenants to which the U.S. has signed up," he said.
Crowley, at the State Department showed disdain
for Assange.
, "I believe he has been described as an anarchist,"
he said. "His actions seem to substantiate that."
fense Secretary Robert Gates played down the
ut from the leaks, calling them embarrassing
awkward but saying they would not significantly complicate U.S. foreign policy.
"The fact is governments deal with the United
'States because it's in their interest, not because they
like us, not because they trust us and not because
they think we can keep secrets,': Gates said Monday.
Crowley would not say how long the State
pepartment would keep its files off the classified
network.
"We have made some adjustments, and that has
narrowed, for the time being, those who have access
to State Department cables across the government,"
he said.

l

..

Carroll Ann Harper, 63. Middleport, passed away
on Nov. 29, 2010 at Holzer Medical Center.
She was born on Jan. 28, 1947, in Gallipolis,
daughter of the late Anna (Carroll) and Russell
William Lyons. She was the secretary at the
Middleport Presbyterian Church.
She is survived by: husband of 40 years, Guy W.
Harper, Mid~leport; children, Ryan (Jessi) Harper,
Lebanon, Enn (John) Young, Rutland; grandchildre~, Collen Young, Kevin Young, Ashley Harper,
Katle Harper, Sarah Harper; brothers: David Lyons
Gallipolis, Terry Lyons, Lancaster; nephew, Burk~
Lyons.
A funeral service will be held at noon, Thursday,
Dec. 2, 2010, at Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
in Middleport. Officiating will be Pastor Jim
Snyder. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Fnends may call from 10 a.m. until time of service
on Thursday, Dec. 2.
An online registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Margaret E. Brewer
~argaret Ellen (Lieving) Brewer, 79, of Vinton,
Oh10, went to be with her Lord on Tuesday,
November 30, 2010, at Pleasant Valley Nursing and
Rehab C~nter, in Point Pleasant. She had worked at
G.C. Murphy for many years and also had been a
secretary at the W.Va. Training School. She also
attended the AWM Pleasant Region Church.
Margaret was born on March 9, 1931, in Point
Pleasant, a daughter to the late Carl and Vema
(Edwards) Lie_ving. In addition to her parents, she
was preceded m death by her husband, Howard W.
Brewer, Sr.; her daughter. Carol Manuel; her sister,
Dortha Gray and brother, Leland Lieving.
. Margar~t is survived by her daughters and sonsm-law, Dtana and Stephen Adams, of Vinton, and
Martha and Thomas Roush, of Point Pleasant; her
son and daughter-in-law, Howard W. and Carolyn
Brewer, Jr., of Middleport; her son-in-law, Lester
Manuel, of Racine; her grandchildren, Stephen
Adams, II, Sandra Byus, Crystal Myers. Matthew
and Terry Brewer, Janna Michaels, Christi
McGraw, Michael and Zachary Manuel; eleven
great-grandchildren; sister and brother-in-law,
Barbara and Bill Wood, of Point Pleasant, and
brother and sister-in-law, Norman and Cleo
Lieving, of Point Pleasant.
Funeral services will be conducted at 11 a.m.,
Friday, December 3. 2010, at the Crow-Hussell
Fu'neral Home, in Point Pleasant. Burial will follow
in Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Visitation will be
held at the funeral home on Thursday evening,
December 2, 2010, from 5-7 p.m.
Margaret's care has been entrusted to CrowRussell Funeral Home. An online guest registry is
available at: www.crowhussellfh.com.

Deaths
Robert Franklin 'Bobby'
Laudermilt
~obert

Franklin "Bobby" Laudermilt, 48,
Mtddleport, died Sunday, Nov. 28, 2010, at Holzer
Medical Center. A funeral service will be at 1 p.m.,
Thursday, Dec. 2, 2010, at the Letart Falls Cemetery
Chapel. Burial will follow in the Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call from noon until time of
service on Thursday at the Letart Falls Cemetery
Chapel. An online guest registry is available at
waugh-halley-wood.com.

Ohio woman:
Man kepf me in closet
for days for sex
HAMILTON (AP) - A woman who says she was
tied up .in a closet for 10 days and raped repeatedly sa1d her captor told her he had intended to
sell her as a sex slave but decided to keep her as
"a pet."

The 22-year-old woman described her alleged
captivity to The Cincinnati Enquirer and the
Hamilton JournalNews after police on Monday
announced the arrest of William Hobert Manis,
44, on 18 rape charges and a kidnapping count.
A mother of two, the woman acknowledged she
has been a prostitute and went into Manis' home
voluntarily. But she said Manis stuffed a winter
hat in her mouth, assaulted her, then kept her
bound and gagged in the closet.
"He made me his ovv"n little pet," she told the
JournalNews. "He would take me out to bathe
me, feed me, change my clothes, and rape me."
Jail records didn't list an attorney for Manis.
Manis' friend said he and others had visited the
home repeatedly and don't believe the woman's
al1egations. Mike Hamilton, of Milford, Ohio
said supporters are trying to 'post his $200,000
bond.
"There is no way he could've held anybody
hostage without us knowing," Hamilton told The
Enquirer.
The woman said when people were over, she
was gagged and under orders not to move in the
closet.
"He would hog-tie me, and tell me not to move.
When he came back, if he saw I had changed
position at all, he would strip me naked and put
me in the attic. And it was as cold in there as it
was outside," she said. "That was my punishment."
The woman escaped Friday. jumping out a second-story window and getting a neighbor to call
911, when Manis' landlord paid a visit, police
said. She had handcuffs on her wrists and ankles.
authorities said.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Meigs County Forecast
Wednesday: A chance
of snow showers before 2
p.m., then a slight chance
of rain and snow showers.
Cloudy, with a high near
37. West wind between 10
and 13 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 40 percent.
New
precipitation
amounts between a tenth
and quarter of an inch possible.
Wednesday Night: A
slight chance of snow
showers before 11 p.m.
Cloudy, then gradually
becoming partly cloudy,
with a low around 26.
West wind between 8 and
11 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20 percent.
Thursday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near 40.
West wind between 6 and
11 mph.
Thursday
Night:
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 25.
"'

Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 39.
Friday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
28.
Saturday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 44.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Saturday Night: A
chance of rain and snow
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 27.
Chance of precipitation is
30percent
Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 40.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
28.
Monday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 40.
Monday Night: Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
31.
Thesday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 40.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.60
Akzo (NASDAQ)-54.14
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 50.88
Big lots (NYSE) - 30.65
•
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 31.14
BorgWamer (NYSE) - 60.34
Century Alum (NASDAQ) -13.86
Champion (NASDAQ) -1.28
Channing Shops (NASDAQ)-3.81
City Holding (NASDAQ)-32.07
Collins (NYSE)- 56.06
DuPont (NYSE) - 46.99
US Bank (NYSE)- 23.78
Gen Electric (NYSE) -15.83
Harley-Davidson (NYSE)- 31.28
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 37.40
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.55
ltd Brands (NYSE) - 33.67
Norfolk So (NYSE) - 60.17
OVBC (NASDAQ) -19.50

BBT (NYSE)-23.20
Peoples (NASDAQ) -12.99
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.63
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.15
Rockwell (NYSE)-66.12
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 9.16
Royal Dutch Shell- 60.67
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 65.50
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 54.09
Wendy's (NYSE) -4.77
WesBanco (NYSE) -17.43
Worthington (NYSE) -16.02
Daily stock reports are the 4p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for
Nov. 30, 2010, provided by EdwalrJ
Jones financial advisors Isaac MHis
in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero in Point Pfeasant at
(304) 674-G174. Member SIPC.

MHS
From Page A1
quality of life for people of all races, religions, economic conditions, and physical or mental incapacitie~. It is .her belie:f that the ripple effect of student
actwns will result m a greater understanding of their
respective communities and in the world.
The 33 participating schools in the videoconference
~ill, over .the ne~t three months, be working on servtce learrung proJects and then sharing their individual stories in a culminating service project celebration
videoconference event in the spring ..

For the Record
911
POMEROY- Meigs County 911 dispatched these
calls for emergency medical assistance:
Monday
12:27 p.m., Ash Street, unknown medical emergency; 2:44 p.m., Noble Summit Road, fall; 3:49
p.m., Sellers Ridge Road, motor vehicle collision;
9:35p.m., Railroad Street, overdose; 10:09 p.m., Park
Road, fall.
Tuesday
4:45 p.m., Kerr Street, difficulty breathing.

Recorder
POMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported these
transfers in real estate:
• William J. Ellis, Christina L. Ellis, to Eric
Nazareth Priddy, deed, Rebecca H. Christian, F.
Gordon Christian, Jr., Rebeca Meyer, to William J.
Pierson, Martha E. Pierson, release of ftrst refusal;
William J. Pierson, Martha E. Pierson. to Timothy M.
Spencer, deed, Orange.
• Roger W. Stearns to Timothy R. Stearns, deed, ·
Rutland; Marjorie Price to Marilyn S. Price, Norman
Price, LeJean Armstrong, Jewel Smith, Allie Mitchell,
Floyd Burney, Floranell Burney, Fred Burney, certificate of transfer, Salisbury;. Marlyn S. Price, LaJean
Armstrong, Michael Smith, Allie Mitchell, Floyd
Burney, to Norman Price, deed, Salisbury.
• Robert Murphy to Andrea Osborne, deed,
Chester; John Seckman, Louia M. Seckman, to
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District. right of way,
Lebanon; Meigs Local Enrichment Foundation to TPCWD, right of way, Salisbury; Jeffrey A. Jones,
Tamela K. Jones, William M. Jones, Deborah A.
Jones. John R. Jones, to Columbus Southern Power,
American Electric Power, easement Chester.

• Home • Auto
• Health &amp; more
Dooald Vaugban, Jr

740-992-9784 or 877-992-9784
505 Mul
Oh 45769

,

�- -

Wednesday, December 1,

- - - - - - ·.. -- - ....""""':'""-::-------~~-----.....-1111!""....- - -. . . . . . . . . . ., ........_~........._

www. mydailysentincl.com

2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

Earmark ban fails: Senate shuns
push for elimination of pet projeets
BY ANDREW TAYLOR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
The Senate Tuesday
rejected a GOP bid to ban
the practil!e of larding
spending bills with carmarks - those pet projects that lawmakers love
to send home to their
states.
Most Democrats and a
handful of Republicans
combined to defeat the
effort. which would have
effectively forbidden the
Senate from considering
legislation containing earmarks like road and
bridge projects. commumty development fundill!!. grants to local police
dep&lt;u·tments and specialinterest tax breaks.
The 39-56 tally. however. was a better showing

..

~

fo1 earmark opponents, Congress. The reforms
who lost a 29-68 vote ear- include rcqu1ring lawlier this year. Any votes makers to document
next year should be closer every projects they seck
because a band of anti- and receive.
earmark Republicans is
Seven Democrats voted
joining the Senate.
with all hut eight
Earlier this month, Republicans to han the
Republicans bowed to tea practice.
pa11y a~:tivists and passed
"I believe I have an
a party resolution declar- important responsibility
ing GOP senators would to the state of Illinois and
give up earmarks. House the people I represent to
Republicans ha\'e also direct federal dollars into
given up the practice. but projects critically impormost Democrab say ear- tant for our state and its
marks are a legitimate future," Durbin said.
way to direct taxpayer
Cdtics 'iay that peppermoney to their con- ing most spemling hills
stituenb. .
with hundreds or even
thousands of eannark pro1 Sen. Dick Durbm. DIh.. said Tuesday that jects creates a go-alongDemocrats had made the get-along mindsct that·
earmarking proce~s far ensures that Washington
more transparent than it spending goes unchecked.
previously had been
President Obama supunder GOP control or ports a han as well, hut

hasn't fought them in the marks went from more elits just those we
past two years.
than I.300 projects worth sent frorn our
Opposition from Senate nearly $8 billion :n 1994 just those who help us
Republicans
leaves to a peak of nearly 14,000 become senators. All we
Senate Democrats are the projects worth more than have to do is look at
only faction of Congress $27 billion in 2005, campaign contributions
in a position to try to save according to Citizens and earmarks. and there
the practice of earmark- Against
Government is a stinky little secret
ing. But their position Waste, a watchdog group associated with that."
doesn't seem very stroog. that opposes the practice.
Supporters pick.ed up
since it's difficult to see
Democrats cut hack the new
help
from
how House Speaker-in- number and cost of ear- Democrats
Michael
wmting John Boehner, R- marks somewhat. The Bennet and Mark Udall
Ohio,
and
Senate new reforms that made of Colorado. Bill Nelson
~linority Leader Mitch
the process more· trans- of Florida. and Mark
.\1cConnelL R-Ky.. would parent have made it easi- Warner of Virginia. At
allow any earmark-laden er for outsiders to track a the same time. eight
"pay-to-play" system in Republicans who were
hills to pass.
McConnell had long which lobbyists and cor- who opposed the ban in
been a strong supporter of porate executives show- a vote in March now
earmarks - they were a ered lawmaker~ with have joined with earfund:in mark opponents. includbig issue in his 2008 cam- campaign
paign - but reversed exchange for earmarks.
ing Lamar Alexander of
course shortly after the
Ban sponsor Tom Tennessee. Kay Bailey
GOP's big win in the Coburn, R-Okla.. said Hutchison of Texas. and
midterm elections.
they can create "a con- Olympia Snowe of
Estimates vary, but ear- flict of interest that ben- Maine.

•

Optimism for 2011 pushes
consumer confidence higher
Bv ANNE

D'INNOCENZIO

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW
YORK
Americans' confidence in
the economy rose to a
in
five-month
high
November
showino
increased 'optimism Co~
the first half of next yem·.
The report offered
some comfort · to the
nation's retailers during
the holiday shopping season. but shoppers still
remain downbeat a:- they
grapple with a high
unemployment
rate.
Moreover. the latest
report
on
housing.
released Tuesday. showed
that home prices weakened in September.
The
Conference
Board. a private re-;carch
group based in New
York, said Tuesday that
its Consumer Confidence
Index rose to 54.1 in
November, up from a
revised 49.9 in October.
The November reading
is the highest since June,
when the index stood at
54.3 just as the economy's recovery started to
lose
momentum.
Economists surveyed by

Thomson Reuters expected 52.0.
It takes a level of 90 to
indicate a healthy economy. which hasn't been
approached since the
began
in
recession
December 2007~
One component of the
index. how Americans
feel now about the economy. rose to 24.0. up from
23.5. The other gauge.
which measures how
American feel about the
economy over the next
six months, rose to 74.2.
up from 67.5 last month.
"Consumer confidence
is now at its highest level
in five months. a \Velcome sign as we enter the
holiday season:· Lynn
Franco. director of The
Conference
Board
Consumer
Research
Center. said in a state"Consumers'
ment.
asses:-.ment of the current
state of the economy and
JOb market. while only
slightly better than last
month, suggests the economy is still expanding.
albeit slowly. Hopefully.
the improvement in consumers mood will continue 111 the months

months. has recovered fitahead."
Others were less opti- fully since hitting an alltime low of 25.3 in
mistic.
2009.
By
'The tise in consumer February
confidence in November October 2009. it had risen
1s not consistent with a to 48.7 and has since hovsustained acceleration in ered in a tight range
consumptiOn growth at a between the mid-40s and
time
when
income the high 50s. May 2010
growth 1s weak. the was the only month when
unemployment rate is the index topped 60.
Economists watch conhigh and a double dip in
house prices is under- fidence closely becatise
wav," said Paul Dales. consumer
spending
U S. economist at Capital accounts for about 70
percent of U.S. economic
Economics.
He added that the rising activity and is critical to a
stock market appears to strong rebound. The
confidence
offset the increase in gas improved
prices toward $3 a gallon. mirrors an increase m
The Dow Jones indus- spending in November.
trial average fell45 07. or fueled by early discount0.5 percent. to 11.007 42 ing on holiday goods that
in
morning
trading lured shoppers into
Tuesday as investors stores.
Preliminary results for
shru~ged
off
the
Conlldence Report and the Thanksgiving weekfocused on the latest end also showed a solid
housing
data
and start to the holiday shopEurope's debt struggles ping season. Americans.
spreading to Portugal , however. are still cautious
about spending and are
Spain aml Italy.
The
Consumer sticking to budgets amid
Confidence index. which job worries. And the
measures how respon- worry is that shoppers
dents feel about business Will procrastinate even
conditions. the job mar- more this holiday season
ket and the next six compared with last year

U.S. News Briefs
The solution? Put up to take it. The clerk saw
NYC bees turn screens
or provide a closer him gmb it. :-;creamed and
got
him
with
the
of
sweet nectar.
source
red from cherempanadas.
says the man
ry juice
NM clerk foils wa-;Orquiz
covering his head as
he ran away.
NEW YORK (AP)- A robbery with
bunch of Brooklyn bees
have been coming home package of
Teen gunman
looking tlushed.
pastries
New York City beekeepdies from selfer Cerise Mayo was pu;DeMING, N.M. (AP) inflicted
zled when her bees started
Robbers. beware of
showing up with mystericlerks
wielding pastiies.
wound
ous red coloring. Their
honey also turned as red as
cough syrup. She tells The
New York Times a ti·icnd
joked that the bees were
imbibing the runoff at
Dell's
Mara~chino
Cherries Company, in the
Red Hook section of
Brooklyn. Mayo - who:-.e
first name means "cherry"
in French- raises bees in
that neighborhood and
across the water on
Governor's ]&lt;;land.
Tests con tinned the bees
were riddled with Red
Dye No. 40 - the same
food coloring found in the
cherry juice. Bee expe11
Andrew Cote tells the
newspaper that hees had
been creating a big nuisance at the factory.

Police in Deming. N.M ..
say a clerk foiled a robbel)' last week when she
hit the culprit on the back
of the head with a package
of empanadas. a type of
Latin American pastry.
Police say the masked
man didn't sav a word
when he !!:rabbid the cash
regi:-.ter - at
Amigo's
Mexican Food and tried to
flee
Deming police Capt.
Brandon Gigante says the
man dropped the register
when the clerk threw the
pastries &lt;md hit him.
Barbara Orqui~:, who
owns Amigo's with her
husband. Arnold. says the
cash register's cord got
caught when the man tried

MARINETJ'E.
Wis.
(AP) - Authorities say a
15-ycar-old boy who held
23 students and a tc&lt;tchcr
hostage in a Wisconsin
classroom died Tuesday at
a Green Bav ho pttal from
.
It·-· tl'cted 'Unshot
g
a se 111 1
wounc!.
.
. .
Mannette Police Ch1el
J ff Sk &gt; 'k ~;a 'S SO)JilOe
tn
)
.,
more Samuel Hengel thcd
a ·m · Tucsd't)'
••tt I 0·44
.·
· ' ·
Skonk says I le~lgcl. , of
Porterfield.
shot hunscll as
. • ·t . , • • • . .
po )Icc s 01 m~&lt;1 •1 c1'1.ssroom at Mannet.te I hgh
Scl~ool Monday mght.
1 he 24 hostages who
were held for scwnl hours
.
• were
Monday alternoon
. · ,
not lllJurt:d.
·

Keeping Meigs County informed

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe · 992-2155

The
Standard
&amp;
as they wait until the last
minute for the best deal:-.. Poor's/Case-Shiller 20There have been some city home price index fell
encouraging
signs. 0.7 percent in September
Americans' income rose from August. Eighteen of
0.5 percent in October. the
cities
recorded
boosted by a 0.6 percent monthly price declines.
rise in wages and salaries.
The
Conference
according to a govern- Board's index. based on a
ment report released last random survey mailed to
month. That was after 5.000 households from
incomes didn · t rise at all Nov. I to Nov. 19.
showed that worries
in September.
At the same time, the about jobs eased, but
pace of layoffs i.; slow- concern remains high.
Those stating jobs arc
ing. Initial jobless claims
dropped by 34.000 to a "plentiful" increased to
seasonally
adjusted 4.0 percent from 3.5 per407,000 in the week end- cent, while those sa)• .
ing Nov. 20. the Labor jobs are "hard to ~.:
Department said. Claims edged up to 46.5 perc
have full en in four of the Trom 46.3 percent.
Com.umers were also a
past six weeks.
But the housing market little more positive about
is worsenmg, after an future job prospects.
uptick in the spring Those expecting fewer
helped by gm·ernment jobs in the months ahead
subsidies. The r.cport declined to 18.8 percent
from a widely v.atched from 22.3 percent. while
housing price index the percentage expecting
underscored the deterio- more jobs rose to 15.5
ration. as it showed home percent from 14.5 perprices arc falling faster in cent. The proportion of
the nation's largest cities. consumers expecting an
It also said a record num- increase in their incomes
ber of foreclosures arc increased to 10.6 percent
expected to push prices from 9.7 percent.
down through next year.

Police don't see positive
end in search for 3 boys
issues
after " tel.
look about the search.
"He's been forthcom- police· he tried to hang
ing with some informa- himself.
The boys were reporttion. the credibility of
which we cannot verify ed missing Friday by
at this time:· Weeks their mother. Tanya
who
was
said Tuesday of the Skelton.
awarded custody after
father.
Police previously said filing for divorce on
that they don't believe Sept 13. They had been
Tuesday.
Searchers have been John Skelton ·s claim with their father as part
scouring woods. fields that he handed his chil- of court-ordered visita1 an.d . roadsides . in dren over to a woman tion.
Morenci is about 75
I tvllchlgan and ?hto to he met online and had
miles
searching
areas
cre\vs
I look ~or 9-) ear-old in Michigan and along Detroit. southwest of
Andrew,
7-year-old
Alex;~nder a~d 5-year- an Ohio highwa) where
?ld T.mn~r Sk~lton, ~ut the FBI said Skelton's
: 111.formatl~n mcludwg blue minivan had been
us
Thursday
or
statements froJn the seen
I father John Skelton Jed Friday.
to that assessment.
He has not been ruled
.
.
out
as a suspect, Week~
.\lorcnct Pollee Chief
Larry Weeks.
has said. Skelton. 39.
mydallysentlnel.com
"Based on the infor- has been in an Ohio
mation that we have ho:-.pital since Friday.
Your online
we do not anticipate ~ receiving treatm.!nt for
·'t't\',
outco
e
··
source for news
\vhat Weeks earlier
111 .
pos1 c
Weeks told reporters at called "mental health
a news conference.
The boys last were
Th k · ·
~cen ~n
an .-sgtvmg
Taking Applications
1n the1J' .father s· backyard
111
southern
M'IC h'1gan. near the
HUD Subsidized
Ohio state line. Weeks
Etflciency/1 Bedroom
said no decision has
about
SOyrs or qualifying disability
been
made
whether
to
bring
~ ,, ~Ll /;~
Low income priority
charges in the disap: lfllltllfS ~
740-992-7022
pearance,
and
he
" All.f PA1~~
Silverheels
declined to elaborate on
what led investigators . ~/f'\'''"' A Realty Company-EHO
to reach their grim outMORENCI.
Mich.
(AP)- Authorities ''do
not anticipate a positive
outcome" in the search
for three Michigan
brothers who have been
missing since their
father's attempted suicide. a police chief said

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Big 12 Championship, Page B2
US awaits 2022 World Cup, Page 86

PORTS

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

·~~==================================
LocAL SCHEDULE

Four locals named to All-Ohio teams in Division Ill, IV

POMEROY - A scheduln of upcoming
high school varsity sport1ng events
lnvolv1n9 teams from Me1gs. Mason. and
Gallla counties

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWlEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM

W!!dnudJY, December 1

Girls Basketball
Meigs at Warren, 6 p m.
Thur~dgy, De~;ember2

COLOMBtJS. Ohio Ohio
Valley
Publishing area landed
four players on the AllOhio Football teams in
Division JII and IV.
Gallia Academx earned
three all-Ohio selections.
while Meigs had one allOhio honoree.
The Blue Devils· Austin
Wilson was named to the
third team at running
back. The senior running
back compiled nearly
2,500 all-purpose yards in
his final season at Gallia
Academy, and scored 25
touchdowns.
Joining Wilson on the
D-3 all-Ohio list were
teammate Ethan Moore
and Stephen Atkins. who
both earned special mention selections. Atkins is
a jumor offensive lineman. while Moore is a
senior quarterback and

l The

Boys Basketball
Parkersburg Chnst•an at Oh•o
Valley Chnst1an. 7 p.m

Girls Basketball
Eastern at Belpre. 6 p.m
Southern at Wahama, 6 p m
R1ver Valley at Galha Academy, 6
p.m.
Parkersburg Chnstlan at Oh10
Valley Chnstlan. 5:30 p m
Federal Hockmg at South Galha, 6
p.m.
Wrestling
Po.nt Pleasant at Hunt1ngton, TBA
Friday. De~mber 3

Boys Basketball
Meigs at Eastern, 6:30p.m.
River Valley at Southern,.S p m
South Galha at Ironton St Joe. 6:30
p.m .•

Girls Basketball
Hannan ~t Wirt Coun~, 7 p.m.

•

Wahamapep
rally Thursday
MASON, W.Va. - A
community pep rally and
tailgate party will be held
for the Wahama football
team at 6 p.m. Thursday
night at the commons
area (\Val mart side) of
the high school, as the
White Falcons prepare
for their Class A state
championship
playoff
game against Wheeling
Central this weekend. All
fans are encouraged to
come out and support the
boys of fall before
Saturday's
trip
Wheeling.

linebacker.
Meigs junior Jeffrey
Roush was a special mention selection in Division

IV.
In Division Ill. Alliance
Marlington's Alden Hill
was named Offensive
Player of the Year and
Columbus Watter:-oon 's
Matt Redfield was named
Defensive Player of the
Year. Ed Miley (Alliance
Marlington) and Jason
Carpenter (Elida) shared
coach of the year honors.
In
Division
IV,
Kenton's Maty Mauk and
Columbus Hartley's Noah
were
named
Key
Offensive Players of the
Year and Cincmnati Taft's
Adolphus
Washington
was named Defensive
Player of the Year. Mike
Martin (Cincinnati '!11ft),
Mark
lammarino
(Chagrin Falls) and Dave
Carroll (Bellville Clear
Fork) shared coach of the
year honors.

Dave Harris/file photo

Meigs running ba~k Jeffrey Roush carries the ball during the Marauders game at
Nelsonville-York on October 8. Roush was named special mention all-Ohio for the
2010 season.

Miami
Heat'
Dwyane
Wade, left,
LeBron
James,
center, and
Chris Bosh.
right, smile
as they
watch from
the bench
in the fourth
quarter
during an
NBA
basketball
game
against t~e
Phoenix
Suns in
Miami on
Wednesday,
Nov. 17.
The Heat
defeated the
Suns

Robinson
selected Big
Ten offensive
player of year

•

PARK RIDGE. 111.
(AP)
Michigan's
Denard Robmson was
selected the Big Ten's
offensive player of the
year by coaches and
media after becoming
the first quarterback in
1\JCAA history to rush
and pass for more than
1.500 yards in a season.
Purdue defensive end
Ryan Kerrigan was
picked as the conference's defensive player
f the year. Michigan
tate's Mark Dantonio
was selected coach of
the year by the media
with the Spartans earn·
ing a school-record II
wins and a share of
their first Big Ten
Championship
since
1990. And Wisconsin
had a pair of winners,
with
running
back
James White chosen
freshman of the year by
coaches and media and
tackle Gabe Carimi octting offensive line1~an
honors from the coaches.
Robinson's
award
comes at an uncertain
time for Michigan.
h
R· h
o~c
, .
IC
~odn~uez s JOb . status
Is up 111. t~e. &lt;llf. Wtth the
Wolvet mes
&lt;It
7-5.
although . he helped
them qu~~hfy !&lt;&gt;r a. bo":'l
or the first tune 111 .h ts
hree seasons runnmg
c?llege football's winnmgest program.
A big reason was
Robinson, the eighth
Wolverine and first
since Brayton Edwards
in 2004 to take top
offensive honors. The
only other Michigan
quarterback
to
be
selected
wa
Jim
s
Please see Big Ten, 81

c

•

•

123-96.
AP Photo/
Lynne Sladky

Haters, rejoice! Heat struggles delighting many
MIAMI (AP) - When
it comes to the Miami
Heat. it almost seems like
there ·s
no
choice
between Iovin£ ·em or
hating 'em.
~
1\lost hate 'em.
Booing, sure. that's a
given. Happens in every
arena in the league, even
sometimes their own.
Hawkers of "Beat The
Heat" T-shirts in Orlando
were busy when Miami
visited there last week. In
Philadelphia, Dwyane
Wade got jeered more
loudly than ever, getting
no love in the city where
it's allegedly broth~rly.
And the only time
LeBron James draws
1 applause on the road IS
when something 'goes
wrong.
• Which,. to the delig~t
~ of man.Y m the \IBA. Is
h~pp~m~1g far more often
1
than ,m)one expected.
"! want them..to lose all
1
their games.
Dallas
owner Mark Cuban said.
Hey. they're comin!!
closer to that than many
ever imaoined.
A tea~ that expected
magnificence is getting
mediocrity instead - a
9-8
record
enterino
Mond.ay's game against
Washmgton. The Heat
began the day in sixth
place in the Eastern
Conference. a half-game
a~e.ad of the New York
Kmcks. If t~e Heat had
that record m the West,
they'd be barely hangin~.
c~n to the final playoH
spot.
.
And thts week. James
goes back to Cleveland

I

for the tirst time as a visiting player. For as harshly as the Heat have been
received
until
now.
Thursday's trip to a city
scorned by its longtime
hero might prove downri!!ht venomous.
"=·Jf you lose. no one's
going to be hapr,y. nor
should they be, · Heat
coach Erik Spoelstra
said.
Well, actually. plenty
of people are happy
about it - the rest of the
NBA, for starters.
From the moment that
James made his decision
on July 8 to play for
Miami. the Heat knew
this was coming. They
knew they would carry
the biggest bulls-eye in

the NBA. even though
the Los Angeles Lakers
are the defending champions and the Boston
Celtics are the reignin£
kings of the Eastern
Conference.
"As an opposing player, you're going to have
those boos. no matter
what." James said. "1 had
those boos when I was a
Cleveland Cavalier and
I'm having them again as
a fleat."
Taking hits from across
the league, that's one
thing.
Taking hits from one
another. that's the latest
ISSUe.
James
bumped
Spoelstra during a timeout in Dallas on Saturday

night. a shoulder-toshoulder bump that may
have been unintentional,
may have been out of
frustration, n1&lt;1y have
been intended to send a
message. Jan1es reached
back instantly, almost as
if making an apolog). but
no matter - b) the time
that quarter was over. the
play was already on
YouTube
and
the
T",•itterverse wa~ buzzing
that the t\VO·timc NBA
MVP just hit his coach.
"A perfect case of
overspeculation on this
team." Spoelstra said.
Yes. but to thnt tire. the
Heat added plenty of
fuel.
Spoelstra said he will
not change his coaching

style - 'T m going to
demand. push. prod. A lot
of times players don't
know what is needed for
a team to break through."
he said - and. at feast
publicly. none of the
Heat
players
have
demanded change.
are
But
tensions
unquestionably high.
After that game. the
Heat held a players-only
meeting for 40 minutes.
And
on
Monday.
Spoelstra was hardly getting votes of confidence
from players like Wade,
who said no one - not
coaches. not players should feel good about
the state of things in the

Please see Heat. Bl

Need a Physician?
Plea,\'e call Ha.t11. to 8 p.m. Monday thi'Ottgh Friday:

1.304.674.7295 or
1.877.297.2257
Please allow Pleasant Valley Hospital to be your healthcare provider of choice.

'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

VVednesday,Decembert,20lO

· Big 12 title game turns James on Cleveland: 'Lot of thanks to those fans'
longtime friends into foes
NORMAN, Okla. (AP)
- Bob Stoops has never
had any interest in leading
Oklahoma against any of
his brothers who are also
in the coaching profession.
There was one exception, though: It would be
worth it if there was a
championship at stake.
If
Stoops
and
Nebraska's Bo Pelini
aren't brothers, they're the
next best thing. Stoops
grew up playing football
with Pelini's older brother,
Vince,
at
Cardinal
Mooney High School in
Youngstown, Ohio. Pelini
was the teammate of
Stoops' younger brother,
Mark. Stoops' father, Ron,
coached the football team.
Over time, the two large
families became intertwined and it was only
natural that they all got
tangled up on the same
coaching staffs, too.
On Saturday night, the
longtime friends will be
on opposite sidelines as
Stoops coaches No. 10
Oklahoma (10-2, 6-2 Big
12) against Pelini and No.
13 Nebraska (10-2, 6-2) in
the Big 12 championship.
So far, they' ve split two
games against one another
as head coaches. The
Sooners won 62-21 in
Norman two years ago,
then lost 10-3 at Nebraska
last season.
"I never envisioned or
had an idea I would be
here at Oklahoma or how
ironic that Bo would be at
Nebraska," Stoops said.
"No, I didn't growing up
ever think that."
Even in Ohio, Stoops
paid attention as a child to
the Big Red rivalry that
almost always decided the
Big Eight champion.
Now, he and Pelini will
provide its final chapter, at
least for a while.
The Cornhuskers will
head to the Big Ten next
season, dealing the final
blow to a rivalry crippled
whel}. the teams were
placed into opposite divisions in the Big 12 and
played only twice every
four years instead of annually. Both teams took
turns struggling over the
course of a decade, preventing any championship
meetings until 2006.
The rivalry that was
always friendly under
Barry Switzer and Tom
Osborne now finishes
with .two friends in those
roles.
Stoops and his wife

Big Ten
fromPageBl
Harbaugh ( 1986), a
popular
choice
to
replace Rodriguez.
Robinson 's
1,643
yards rushing are a confe~ence record for quarterbacks, and at 136.9
per game, he ranks
fourth nationally and
leads the Big Ten. The
sophomore has also
thrown for 2,316 yards.
Kerrigan, a senior,
joins
tackle
Jeff
Zgonina as the lone
Purdue players to take
the defensive honors
and is also the first
Boilermaker to
be
, selected defensive lineman of the year by the
coaches. He leads the
Big Ten and ranks second nationally in sacks
per game ( 1.04) and has
12.5 this season. He
also leads the country
with 2.17 tackles for
loss per game and has
26: on the year.
White, the second
straight Badger to take
freshman honors after
linebacker
Chris
Borland was selected
1ast season, has 1,029
yards rushing and is
averaging 7.0 per carry.
He's running behind a
line led by Carimi that
has helped Wisconsin
average 43.3 points.
For Dantonio, this
hasn't been an easy season. He suffered a mild
heart
attack
in

MIAMI
(AP)
There's
not
much
James
can
allowed Pelini's brother, LeBron
Carl, to stay with them absolutely say about
while he was a graduate what awaits when he
assistant at Kansas State returns to Cleveland as
- where Stoops was a an opponent on Thursday
defensive assistant coach night.
Fun, weird, tough,
at the time. He now jokes
that his wife considers draining. James cites
Carl
Pelini,
the them all as expectations.
He's likely right on
Cornhuskers' defensive
coordinator, "like a broth- each count, and who
er, and she might be knows how many more
halfway rooting for him" ways the emotional
gamut will swing on
on Saturday night.
Bo Pelini later became Thursday when the
Heat
visit
Stoops' defensive coordi- Miami
nator, taking over for a Cleveland, the city
season after Mike Stoops James scorned on July 8
left Oklahoma to become when he announced in a
Arizona's head coach. nationally televised speMark Stoops is now cial that he was "taking
Florida State's defensive my talents to South
Beach."
coordinator.
It' 11 be James' first
"It's a very unique place
where we grew up," Bo time back as a visitor,
Pelini said. "Regardless of and Cavaliers fans have
age, you get close to peo- been waiting months to
ple and our families have not welcome him home.
"It's going to be tough,
been intertwined for a
but I'm there to win a
long time."
Stoops said growing up basketball game," James
in Youngstown definitely said after Tuesday's Heat
molded him into becom- practice and preparing
ing a coach. Not only did for Wednesday's game
he learn the importance of against Detroit - almost
physicality and defense forgotten given the magfrom his father, but a nitude of what looms
proper mind set from the Thursday. "I understand.
community.
I understand how pas"It's very much a blue- sionate fans are about
collar environment: work sports. I'm ready for
hard for anything you whatever response that
get," Stoops said. "You've I'm going to get. It's
got to earn it- nothing's going to be very emogiven to you - and be tional."
willing to fight for it.
True, for all parties
That's just kind of every- involved.
body's nature back there.
We never had any trouble
fighting for it back then."
Pelini, practically echoing Stoops' sentiments,
added: "You become a
fromPageBl
product of your environment, and we had a good
environment growing up." Heat world. Bosh said in
Stoops said he blames an on-court interview
his father and the other with ESPN after a recent
high school coaches for game that players want to
also passing along the "chill" more than they
fiery sideline demeanor want to practice. Then
that he believes he's final- came James giving
ly growing out of after a Spoelstra the shoulder,
dozen years as a head cold or otherwise.
coach. It's landed his
And on Monday, Wade
brother, Mike, and recent- - who has had a close
ly Pelini in trquble.
relationship
with
But they were doing Spoelstra said he
wouldn't refer to him as
something right, too.
"The good thing, one of "my guy" but rather "our
us is going to win a Big 12 coach."
"When you go through
championship," Stoops
said. "But there's nothing stretches where you're
whatsoever
personal not playing up to your
about it. It's teams, it's capability, there's always
programs, there are so something wrong," Wade
many people involved said. "There's always a
with it that that part of it problem. There's always
a big problem. It's not
doesn'~ enter into play for
anything we're conme."
cerned
with.
Sometimes players and
September, but the coaches get into disSpartans kept their agreements."
Wade said he didn't see
focus and wound up llJames-Spoelstra
1 and 7-1 in conference the
interaction during that
play.

Heat

But the NBA might
have helped James out a
bit with this trip.
Because Miami plays
at home Wednesday
night, the Heat will not
arrive in Cleveland until
early Thursday morning.
The team won't practice
that day, just have meetings and a walkthrough
at its hotel, which will be
teeming with security like always. They'll bus
to the arena, play the
game, head to the airport
and leave for Miami.
No time to visit old
haunts or old friends. A
business trip, nothing
more, nothing less, and
James seems relieved by
that.
"I think it'~ going to be
very
emotional
for
myself," James said.
"I've got a lot of great
memories in that city. So
many times, from ups
and downs, and a lot of
things that I've done in
my life, I give a lot of
thanks to that city, lot of
thanks to those fans for
giving me the opportunity to not only showcase
my talent but grow from
a young boy to a man."
He's
not
from
Cleveland, but Akron,
about 40 miles south.
The Cavaliers' franchise
was reborn when they
won the right to pick
.James No. 1 overall in
the 2003 draft, and
together, they soared.
Cleveland won 349
games during James' .

seven seasons, secondmost in the Eastern
Conference over that
span, and the Cavaliers'
127 wins in 2008-09 and
2009-10 - James' MVP
years - topped the NBA
charts.
So when he became a
free agent, there was
angst in Cleveland,
understandably.
Angst turned to anger
at 9:27 p.m. on July 8,
when James revealed his
decision.
"I think it's going to be
something that none of
us have ever seen
before," Heat guard
Dwyane Wade said of
what's
coming
on
Thursday. "If we can be
a fan and watch it from
afar, we all would, a·nd
not go. I would love to
watch it and see as a fan,
but I'm involved in it.
It's going to be entertainment for everyone to
watch."
Some Heat fans will
gather to watch, at a
team-sponsored event
known as a "road rally."
Of course, it'll happen
at the Clevelander - on
South Beach. At least the
Heat will be cheered
somewhere on Thursday.
"I'm sure a lot of people are going to show
their support for the
Cavaliers in their own
kind of way," Heat forward Chris Bosh said. "I
don't think we know
what to expect, but I'm
sure it's going to be

something like we've
never seen before."
He'll see something
like it on Feb. 16. when
he returns to Toronto, his
former home, for the first
time as an opponent.
•
"I'm glad LeBron
breaks the ice first."
Bosh said.
It's a Cleveland homecoming for former Cavs
center.
Zydrunas
Ilgauskas as well. and
while he said the trip will
be "a unique situation,"
he's almost certain not to
face the level of venom
thafll be directed at
James.
Wade said he 'lJ give
James simple advice
beforehand.
"The only thing I
would say to him is not
try to go out to get 100
points," Wade said.
"Play the game. Let the
game flow to you. I
know he wants to play
great, but sometimes you
can force it too much.
Just pla~ basketball like
LeBron James."
Which is what Jatnes
says he'll do.
He won't break from •
his normal routine for
this game, and doesn't
plan to reach out to fans
in any way, though he
noted that he remains
"very respectful'' of the
people who cheered him
for seven years.
"It's one game." James
said. "I know everyone is
making it a huge deal,
but it's one game."

time-out, which came
during a horrific start to
the second half by
Miami.
"If there was a bump, it
was just two guys walking at the same time, just
happened to bump each
other," Wade said.
There's been no shortage of bumps in the road,
though, for the Heat this
season.
And given the star
power Miami has with
James, Wade and B&lt;;&gt;sh
- not to mention a Hall
of Farner like Pat Riley
overseeing the franchise
- everything the Heat
say and do gets analyzed
like no other team in the
league experiences.
"It's just crazy," Magic
coach Stan Van Gundy
said, looking incredulously around Orlando's
press room. "You play
the Heat and it's like
double the crowd in here.
My God, it's like they're
the only team in the
league."
For their part, the Heat
don't necessarily enjoy
that feeling either.
It's not that they don't
get some support on the

road. When Rudy Gay hit
gamewinner
for
a
Memphis, at home, to
beat Miami on Nov. 20,
he pointed toward a man
in the stands - who just
happened to be wearing .a
Heat jersey.
"I've never understood
people to come into
Memphis and wearing
different people's jerseys
and root for other teams,"·
Gay said. "You can have
favorite players, but I
never understood that.
The guy was heckling
me. I was at home. Why
are you heckling me?"
That's a rarity. \Vhen
the Heat travel, most of
the negativity is directed
their way.
"Sometimes for us it's
one of 82, but for other
teams they circle it on
their calendar," Bosh
said. "We all wanted this
coming in, so we're
going to have to deal
with it and just overcome
it."
Dealing with it when
visiting 28 different
clubs will likely be much
easier than dealing with
what awaits in Cleveland
on Thursday.

The Cavaliers and the
NBA are taking extra
security measures, the
Heat are involved in
some of those decisions,
and James - who said
he was leaving in a critically acclaimed hourlong
special on television
from Greenwich, Ct. acknowledged last week
that it might not be the
best idea for his family.
and friends to attend the
game.
\
"If James,l).ad made the
announcement of his
decision m Cleveland
and explained his reasons
for leaving, fans still
wouldn't have liked it,
but they would have
accepted it better,'' said
Dr. Jack Ramsay, the fo.rmer Heat broadcaster
who will call Thursday's
game in Cleveland for
ESPN Radio. "As it
stands, emotions at this
game will run high."
Hating the Heat could
take on a whole new
meaning.
"We'll deal with that
when we get there,"
Spoelstra said. "Right
now, we have enough to
think about."

WEDNESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

11

�Tuesday, November 30, 201 0

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Evans Jackson OH
800.537-9528

Kittens to Giveaway
Call256·1468
Golden Ret., DOB
$350 ;
9122110
Doberman red m.
9/13/10,
black f,
$ 450 ;
Dachshund,
mil, 9126110 • $300·
Poodle, 2- apricot, or
black males. 9/21/10,
$300; Bichon-frishe.
1 m. 1 f, 9/02/10.
$350;
Mint
Schnauzer mlf sip,
10/16/10, S350; All
AKC Puppies, 740696-1085
near
Shade, Oh1o
------....,.
700
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serv1ces from ADT
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Call t-888·367·2171

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Now
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at
Carmichael Equipment
740·446·2412
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain
Good mtxed hay, sq.,
$2.50 4x5, round
bales S2G 00. Stored
Inside 740-446-2075

Financial
900

Merchandise

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Call
Ron Evans1-800_
537 9528
------Absolute Top dollarsilver/gold coins any
10KI14K/18K
gold
jewerly, dental gold,
1935
pre
US
currency. proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Cotn Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue,
Gallipolis.
446•2842
Want To Buy

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact
the
OhiO
Div1s1on of Financial
lnslituhons Office of
Consumer
Affairs
BEFORE you ref1nance
your home or obtain n
loan.
BEWARE- of
requests lor any large
ad van Ce pay menIs Of
fees or Insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Affiars toll !reo at 1·
866-278·0003 to learn
I! tho mortgage broker
or lender Is properly
licensed. (Th\s is . a
publie
serviCe
announcemontlrom the
Ohio vauoy Publish ng
Company)

Fuel I Oil I Coal I
Wood I Gas

Free Rent Special
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up. Central Air, WID
hookup, tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Tw1n RIVers Tower is
accepting applications.
lor waiting hstlor HUD
subsidized.
t-BR
apartment
tor
the
elderlyld1sabled,
call
675-6679

Buying- guns, old
military items, pocket
kntves.
pocket
watches.
old -F-or--l-ea_s_e_:--1""'B""'R
marbles. old crocks, unfurnished 2nd floor
old
thermometers, apt.
near
Gallia
old
swords,
old
Academy, no pets.
glassware &amp; pottery, ref &amp; dep. required,
&amp; ffiiSC antiques. maximum occupancy
740-379-2160
or 2, $350 mon. 740740·446-2839
44 6·3936 or 740Recreati.onal 446-4425
1000
Vehicles
Ask about how to get
a month free!! 2 BR
$475 mon +dep, all
Campers/ RV1 &amp;
elec. 304·674·0023
Trailers
or 304·610·0776
2005 Jayco Eagle - - - - - - Gooseneck
Hitch, Tara Townhouse Apt
·
1
2BR 1.5 BA, back
sleeps SIX Exce lent patiO,
pool
condition
Asking
layground
No
pets.
$19 900
See P
·
'
photos
at $450 rent. 740-367-

2412

2000
Money To lend

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apanments,
and/or
small houses for rent
Call 740.441-1111 for
apphcat1on
&amp;
inlormatlon.

;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~

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740 "446"
rs.co.m
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ten·
ant pays electric,
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
304-882-3017

:

rent $2030 mo. 740· ------~
446·0390
&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
Real Estate houses in Pomeroy &amp;
3500
Rentals Middleport, NO Pets,
740·992·2218
Apartments/
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Coli 1-404-456-3802

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--n-_,-R-"=-c-·T_V__

Notices

For,

3000

2
bedroom
apartment available
in Syracuse. $200
deposit. S375 per
month rent. Rent
includes
water:
sewer &amp; trash. No
pets.
Sufficient
income needed to '
qualify 740-378-6111
New renovated 1 br.
apt,
Middleport,
$325+
reference/deposit,
740-416-6622
2 1BR in Pt Pleasant
all utilities included
593-5169
-C-Ie-a-n.-N-ic-e-,E""'ff-.--1
BDAM , Ref &amp; Dep.
NO PETS 675·5162
Clean 1 bdr. !urn.
apartment, Dep &amp;
Ref req no smoking,
call
304-593·5125
after 4 pm.
Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+2 BR at $470
Month. 446-1599.
'
Commercial
Office space for rent
in Pt Pleasant 593: •
5169
=~~~~~~
Houses For Rent
Downsizing?/live
alone? 2 BR near the
Cinema/Hospital
304·657·6378

3 -BR......-'"'C-h-at-.ha-m-~W~ill
do HUD Rent dep &amp;' ,
utlilites.
5036

606·928- .

·-3-B_R___d_b-le--w-id-Et
furnished. Sr 143·
Pomeroy. $625 mo.
tncl most uti. &amp; lawn
care. 740-591-5174 •

0547
1&amp;3 BR houses in
_2_B_R_1B-A-al-1e-1-ec-.-in Syracuse No pet's
Kanauga
$450 HUD app. 675-5332
Wk end 591-0265 '
mon+dep 339-3224
2 Bedroom Apt. Rio
Grande $400 Dep.$400mth
740-2459060 NO P t
es
-2-nd--fl-oo_r_2--B-R
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis
City
Park,
L.A.,

2006 Chevy lmpalla
Central
Boiler SS fully equipt. 20 in.
Outdoor
wood chrome
wheels.
61,000
miles.
Furnaces
13,500
304·675·
Instant rebate up to 5101
$1,000.00. 740)245· ~====== kitchen/dining area. 1
5193
Want To Buy
1/2
BA,
washer/dryer $600.
Oiler's Towing. Now mon + dep.
740·
Furniture
buying junk cars 446-4425 or 740·
w/motors or w/out. 446-2325
740 388 0011
------•
•
or 2BR apts. 6 m1.· from
Laz·y-Boy sectional 740-4
No
41 •7870.
has chaise &amp; recliner, Sunday call
Holzer some utilities
pd. or appliances
gold tweed , very
740 want to buy Junk ava11. $450/mo +
• Cars. call 740 -388 • dep
good condition,
740-418-5288
992-0805 or 740- 0884
or 988-6130
508-0988

------Manufactured
4000
Housmg
=;;;;;;;;~~;;

·~

Rentals

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

3BR
2BA
$575
mon+dep+utl. 1722B
Chatham Ave 740-'
645·1646
3BR 1BA all elec. in
Pt. Pleasant $450
mon+dep 339·3226
2 br. mobile home In
Racine, $325 per
mo..
$325 dep.,
years lease. No pets.
No calls after 9pm,
740·992-5097

•'

�¢

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
~~~~~~
100

Legals

SHERIFF'S
SALE
REAL
OF
ESTATECASE NO :
10C V0064Fiagstar
Bank,
FSBPiaintiff
V!'l.Laurie K. Allman.
et
al. DefendantsCOUR
r OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOin
pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
difected from said
Court in the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at
public auction to be
held on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on December 17,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.
of said day, the
following described
premises.A copy of
the complete legal
description can be
obtained
at
the
County
Meigs
Recorder's
Office,
OR Book 217, Page
887Permanent
Parcel Number 0500501-004 and OS00501-005Property '
address 27330 Old
l)tate Route 346,
OH
Albany,
45710APPRAISED
, AT $40,000.00 and
ca'imot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of
that
amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) of the
purchase price down
at the time the bid is
accepted.
Balance
to be paid within
Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid withm
said Thirty (30) days
shall bear tnterest at
the rate of Ten
Percent (10%) per
annum from the date
of sale.ROBERT E.
BEEGLE.
ShenffMeigs County,
OhioC.
Scott
CasterlineAttorney
Plaintiff24755
for
Chagrin Blvd, Suite
OH
200Cieveland,
44122(216)
360720011/24/1 0.
12/01/10, 12/08/10
The State of Ohio.
Meigs County.THE
BANK OF NEW
YORK,
AS
TRUSTEE
ON
BEHALF OF THE
REGISTERED
CERTIFICATEHOLDERS
OF
GSAMP
TRUST
2004SEA2 MORTGAGE
PASSTHROUGHCERTIFI
CATES,
SERIES

100

Legals

2004SEA2PLAINTIFFVs.
Case No
10-CV033TINA
MARIE
FRALE:Y
aka
TINA M. FRALEY, et
In
aLDefendant
pursuant of an Order
of Sale in th~ above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at
public auctior:J, at the
front door of the
Courthouse steps, in
the above named
County, on Friday,
the
17th day of
December, 2010, at
10:00 o'clock A.M.,
the
following
described
real
estate:Situated In the
Township of Scipio,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:Being
a part of a tract of
land described in
Volume 263, Page
847, Meigs County
Deed Records and
being
more
particularly described
as follows:Beginning
at the
southeast
corner
of
the
northeast quarter of
Section 34, thence
South 03 deg. 47
min. 30 sec. East
149.49 feet •along a
fence line to a point
in the right of way of
State Route 143;
thence along said
right of way South 87
deg. 29 min. 46 sec.
West, 149.48 feet to
a point; thence South
80 deg. 49 min. West
309.17 feet to a
point: thence leaving
said right of way
North 02 deg. 14
min. 38 sec. East
201 44 feet to an iron
pin set in grantor's
North line passing an
iron pin set at 23.02
feet; thence, along a
fence ,line North 85
deg. 56 min. 26 sec.
East. 436.07 feet to
the
point
of
beginning
and
containing
1.868
acres.Subject to all
leases, easements
and rights of way of
record.Survey
by
John M. Branner.
Registered
Land
Surveyor,
#6805,
1994.Parcel No. 1700290.000More
commonly known as:
32300
SR
143,
Ohio
Pomeroy,
45769Said Premises
Appraised
at
$15,000.00And
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of that amount.Terms

100

Legals

of Sale: 10% down
day of saleRobert E.
BeegleErin
M.
Laurito
(0075531)
SheriffAttorney
for
Plaintiff
Meigs
County,
OhioNovember 24th,
December 1st &amp;
December 8th
~~~~-~~

SHERIFF'S
SALE
OF
REAL
ESTATECASE NO.:
10CV074Central
Mortgage
CompanyPiaintiff
vs.Robert Norwood,
et
aL,DefendantsCOUR
T OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOin
pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said
Court in the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at
public auction to be
held on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on December 17,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.
of said day, the
following described
premises:A copy of
the complete legal
description can be
obtained
at
the
Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office,
OR Book 141, Page
339 and OR Book
230,
Page
817.Permanent
Parcel
Number
1500402000Property
address 235 Walnut
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760APPRAISED
AT: $22,500.00 and
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of
that
amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) of the
purchase price down
at the time the bid is
accepted.
Balance
to be paid within
Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within
said Thirty (30) days
shall bear interest at
the rate of Ten
Percent (10%) per
annum from the date
of sale.ROBERT E.
BEEGLE,
SheriffMeigs County,
OhioC.
Scott
CasterlineAttorney
for , Plaintiff24755
Chagrin Blvd, Suite
OH
200Cieveland,
44122(216)
360720011/24/10,
12/01/10, 12/08/10

-----------www.mydailysentinel.com

~~~~~~

100

Legals

Sheriff's Sale of Real
EstateRevised Code,
Section 2329.25The
State of Ohio, Meigs
County
Deutsche
Bank
National
Trust
Company, as Trustee
for
NovaStar
Mortgage
Funding
Trust, Series 2006-6
Plaintiff
vs.
No.
10 CV 028
Marjorie Stone, et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of an
Order of
Sale
in
the
above entitled action,
I will offer for sale at
public
auction,
in the second floor
lobby
of
the
Courthouse
in
in
the above named
county, on, Friday,
the
17th day of
December, 2010 at
10:00AM
the
following described
real estate, situate in
the County of Meigs
and State of Ohio,
and Township of
Orange
to
wit:Situated in the
State
of
Ohio,
Township,
Orange
Meigs County and
being
more
particularly described
as follows: Situated
in Orange Township,
Meigs County, State
of Ohio and being in
Section 16, Town 4
North, Range 12
West of the Ohio
Company's Purchase
and being described
as follows: Beginning
at an iron pin set,
said iron pin being
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance
of 1150.58' from an
iron pipe found a1 the
assumed Southwest
corner
of
said
Section 16;Thence
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance
of 366.73' along an
agreed upon line
between
Wingrove
and Wingrove to an
iron pin set, passing
the centerline of
Township Read 295
at 52.96' and passing
the centerline of a
newly
created
(currently
used)
20.00' wide right of
way at 68.67' and
passing an iron pin
set at 98.67' for
reference ;Thence
South 00 degrees 16'
47" West, a distance

100

Legals

100

a,,,

a

- =·

a

·~

----------- Wednesday, December 1, 201 0
100 ·

Legals

of 139.62' along an found
at
the
agreed upon line assumed Southwest
between
Wingrove corner
of
said
and Wingrove to an Section 16, Thence
iron pin set;Thence North 29 degrees 56'
North 89 degrees 43' 37" East, a distance
13" West, a distance of 35.85' along the
of 357.25' along an centerline
of
an
currently
agreed upon line existing
between Watson and used driveway to a
Wingrove
to
the point on the North
Point of Beginning, line of the newly
passing an iron pin resurveyed Wingrove
set at 305 op• and 1.16 acre parcel,
·passing
the O.R.V. 172, Page
centerline
of 481; Thence North
Township Road 295 39 degrees 41' 46"
at
335 00
said East, a distanqe of
described
tract 22.01' along the
containing
1.16 centerline
of
an
acres, more or less, existing
currently
excepting all legal used driveway to a
easements
and point on the South
rights
of line on the Eynon
way.Excepting and 1 3.07 acre parcel,
Reserving
unto O.R.V. 106, Page
James E. Wingrove1781, excepting all
(grantor on D.V. 232 \egal easements and
Page 341) his heirf, kights
of
way.
successors
or ~earings
are
assigns, a right of ~ssumed and are for
way/easement
lor angle measurement
The
above
ingress and egrMs )nly.
purposes to be 1{1\.ed (iescription is based
in common
with 1on a survey in
others and
parties 'January 2006 by E &amp;
using said 1 right of E
Borderline
way/easemEI!nt shall surveying, Robert R.
be resploriis1ble to 1
Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
maintain
d care of 7033.Further
and
same an1 whereas Excepting
1he
r ght
of /reserving
unto
way/easement
is oJames E. Wingrove,
more full~ described: (,Grantor in D,V. 232,
1
Situated in Orange l'age 341) his heirs,
and
Township,
Meigs &gt;uccessors
County, State of Ohio pssigns a right of
and being in Section Way/easement
for
16, Town 4 North, i,1gress and egress
Range 12 West of Jturposes to be used
1he Ohio Company's ill
common
with
Purchase and being others and all parties
described as follows. using :;aid riyht of
Beginning a point in way/easement shall
1he centerline of be responsible to
Township Road 295, maintain and care of
said point being same and whereas
South 89 Degrees the
right
of
43' 13" East, a way/easement
is
distance of 1150.58' more fully described:
liron pin set) and Situated in Orange
North 03 degrees 36' Township,
Meigs
18" West, a distance• County, State of Ohio
of 139.94' along an and being in Section
agreed upon line 16, Town 4 North,
between White and Range 12 West of
Wingrove (iron pin the Ohio Company's
set) and South 89 Purchase and being
degrees 43' 13" East, described as follows:
a distance of 52.96' Beginning a point in
along an agreed the centerline of
upon line between Township Road 295,
Wingrove
and said point beingS 89
Wingrove to a point degrees 43' 13" East,
in the centerline of a
distance
of
Township Road 295 1150.58' (iron pin
and
South
04 set) and N 03
01'
03" degrees 36'
18"
degrees
West, a distance of West, a distance of
31.22' along
the 139.94 along an
centerline of said agreed upon line
Township Road 295 between White and
from an iron pipe Wingrove (iron pin

a

a

••

Legals

set) and South 89
degrees 43' 13" East.
a distance of 52.96'
along an agreed
upon line between
Wingrove
and
Wingrove to a point
in the centerline of
Township Road 295
from an iron pipe
found
at
thtt
assumed Southwest
said
corner
of
Section 16; Thence
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance
of 313.78' along the
North line of the
newly
resurveyed
Wingrove 1.16 Acre
Parcel, O.R.V. 172,
Page 481 to an iron
pin set, passing an
iron pin set at 45.71'
for
reference,
excepting all legal
easements
and
way.
rights
of
Bearings
are
assumed and are for
angle measurement
only.
The
above
description is based
on a survey in
January 2006 by E &amp;
E
Borderline
Surveying, Robert R.
Eason, Ohio P.S. No.
7033.
Said
Premises Located at
40002 Christy Road,
Reedsville,
OH
45772
Said
Premises Appraised
$60,000.00
at
and cannot be sold
for less than twothirds
of
that
amount.TERMS OF
SALE: 10% deposit
A.
Leier
Rachel
Attorney Robert E.
Beegle
Sheriff
County,
Meigs
Ohio (11) 24, (12) 1,
8, 2010
COURT OF
COMMON
PLEASMEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
BAC Home Loans
Servicing, LP fka
Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing LP
Plaintiff, -vs- Rolland
E. Smith, et al.
Defendants.
Case
No.:
10-CV-110
Judge:
Fred
W.
Crow, Ill
LEGAL
NOTICE IN SUIT
FORFORECLOSUR
E OF MORTGAGE
Rolland E. ,Smith,
whose last known
address is 32359
Happy Hollow Road,
Middleport,
OH
45760,
and
the
unknown
heirs,
devisees, legatees,
executors,
acfministrators,

Commercial &amp; Kesidetllial
• • Room additions • ~oofing • (;an•
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse
Barns • YinyJjlf ~\uod Fcndng
J&lt;oundaljons
MIKE W. MARCll~l. 0\\NER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Ilottom, 011
7411-985-4141
7411-416-1834

Fully insured
Free estimates • 30 )'ears experience
i\ui aOilial•·fl "ilh \ like \lan·um R•••fin~ &amp; RomocltlonRI

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Metal Roofs i.nstalled all winter long at
discounted rates.
Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions. Rcmodcling.l\letal &amp;
Shingle Root's, New Homes. Siding. Derks.
Bathroom RemodclinJ.:.
Licdsed &amp; Insured
•

t

I

I

WV#040954 Cell740·416·2960
740-992-0730
100

Legals

spouses and assigns
and the unknown
guardians of minor
and/or incompetent
heirs of Rolland E.
Smith, all of whose
residences
are
unknown arid cannot
by
reasonable
diligence
be
ascertained. Will take
notice that on the
14th day of October,
2010, BAC Home
Loans Servicing, LP
fka
Countrywide
Home
Loans
Servicing LP filed its
complaint in the
Common
Pleas
Court
of
Meigs
County, Ohio in Case
No. 10-CV-110. on
the docket of the
Court, and the object
and demand for relief
of which pleading is
to foreclose the lien
of plaintiff's mortgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to wit:
Property
Address:
32359 Happy Hollow
Road,
Middleport.
OH
45760.
'nd
being
more
particularly described
in plaintiff's mortgage
recorded in Mortgage
Book 232, page 45,

Attention Business Owners

1 00

Legals

of
this
Coui
t t
Recorder's
Offi
The above nam
defendani is required
to answer within
(28)
twenty-eight
days
after
last
publication January
05, 20f1, which shall
be published once a
week
lor
three
consecutive weeks,
or they migh1 b~
denied a hearing in
this case. (11) ?4,
(12) 1, 8
.--------,

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I

'

\

•

�The Daily Sentinel • Page B

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Retain
5 "Cheatin'
Heart"
9 Broadway
orphan
11 Carried
12Was
furious
13 Clear
14 French
friend
15 Made
broader
17 Alley
game
19 Ethane,
for one
20 Inclined
21 Soggy
22Grammar
topic
24Buddy
26 'To
Autumn"
poet
29Siip
preventer
30Appeal
result
32Naive
34 Bastille
Day
season
35Worked,
as a trade
36 Bit of
gossip
38Siow
tempo
39 Prefix
with
surgeon

JOSEPH
40 Peepers
41 Ready for
business
DOWN
1 Gold
measure
2Canine
coat
3 Car part
4 Diner
dessert
5 Days
gone by
6 Marigold
color
7Kick
out of
offtce
8 Marsh
plants
10 Hubble
and
Moses

11 Nap

sacks
16 Gas pipes
18 One of
the Fab
Four
21 Dress in
23 Boards
24 Successfully
exploit
25 Dress

THELOCKHORNS

l. WONPt:R

27 Busy
28 Lampoon
specialty
29 Syrup
choice
30 Make
over
31 Admit
33 Tripod trio
37 ''The
Matrix"
hero

William Hoest

HOWMLJCH
MAIL- HE'L.L.
61v'E U~ 'f'Or&gt;AY?

You SH OLD
HAVE SEE. IHE
SODIUM CO

1

lENT.

I

.

,.ONCE WE GET YOOR WEIGHT, I'LL GIVE YOO
VOOR FORTUNE."

1/:J\
-

~

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borg111an

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Gree n

l
I

1

16 ---+8 2 f -5- 1

1!

8 •

6
5 3

-~

" I like this shirt. It's the same
color as my dirt."

r3
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'

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ANYoNe= INVt"reo.&gt; DE:N N~ ib &lt;?I..EEP OVeR
AGAI N,'TH~V flAVC:ib KEeP HIM 'TIL N\ORNING!"

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DENNIS THE MENACE

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-

HAPPY BIRTHDAY-for Wednesday,
Dec. 1, 2010:
1his y~ you make waves wherever you go. Enjoy the spotligl5t, though
understand with it comes resp&lt;?no;ibilities. Admirers tend to be very obt.ervant. Pressure builds financially. :You
might want to cut back,. revamp your
budget or perltaps con&lt;&gt;ider a second
job. You can create exactly what you
want. If you are single, you'll have
mUltiple suitors. Choosing the one
who -ovill help create the type of relationshi~ou desire also \Vill be important. If ou are attached, look to soci.uizing m
or taking up a key ca~o;e
together. Oiscussi.ons about money
might be a oAt too animated. Count on
LIBRA.

The Stars Sltlnv the Kind of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Azxorage;
2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March21-April 19)
**** All is nor wliat it seem-;, as
you wake up in perhztps an overly :;t..'li·
ous mood. Communi[-ati.on flouri-;hes
with a boss or someon~ you look up to.
You might not need to !agree, but lio;tcn
well. Your instincts serv~ you well
Tonight Where people are.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20)
*** Focus on a matter that is tripping you up. Touch base wit[t a
respecte&lt;L intellectual friend t)r as.&lt;.;Ociate. Consider ways of moving this
boulder from your life once and for all.
There just might be a way. Tonight:
Easy does it.
,
GEMlNI (May 21-Junc 20)
*****Where others hit a rond
block. you move right around it Tap
into your ingenuity more frequently.
You'll get acknowledgment for all that
you shoulder, but perl'laps you might
want to delegate or find ~me other
way to lighten the load. Tonight: Take a
midweek break.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
*** Resist p~..rung so hard. Know
that sometimes taking time off i.; quitl'
necessary for your health and wellbeing. News creates yet another perspective, though you still don't have all
tile facts. Tonight Oase to home.
LEO Ouly ~Aug. 22)
****You can keep conversations
steady and not let emotions plunge to
the "dark side" with ()thers carrying
on. Note a tendency to look at matters
far di.ffezently from in recent years.
How much do you feel that this attitude is coloring your life? Tonight A

dear partner or friend knows how to
entice you into joining him or h&amp;
V,IRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
****Be more tuned in to what is
needed. Trost that you have what it
tak~ if you slow down some and connect on a more meaningful basis. An
argument or a situation in your personal or domestic life could take a lot
of time. 1bnight Treat yourself on the
way home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**** 'Though still serious, you
dmw many into your camp.
Interruption.-; seem like the name of the
game, Be upbeat in how you proceed
with another pen;on Keep asking
questions. There is a meeting point
Tonight: As you like.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-:-..lov. 21)
** Re:;ist trying to get control of a
situation. as uncomfortable as it might
be. Realize what happens when you
~c;h too hard to get your way. Many
people will di-;tance themselves from
you. u~ your intuition with a money
matter. Tonight It is as you like it
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
***** How you see a situation
and what you do with it could change.
Other.-; have firm ideas about what is
workable, which you may or may not
agree with. Look at reorganizing your
finanC\..'S. Tonight: Only where people
are~

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan 19)
****Reach out for new information. The unexpected tosses established
plan&lt;&gt; to the wind. Express your willingnes.&lt;; to find the path through
today's maze. You could be delighted
in the end. Tonight A must appearance
that could go late.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
**** Othero; seek o\lt your persr.ective. The \vise Aquarian will let
~know that your view is nothing
more than that- your view. Trust in
y01li" ability to let go of a barrier or re!atior hip issue that might be causing
probJems. Tonight Let your imagination I~; you follow.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
**** Direct dealings continue to
be the oru,• path that works. How you
handle son one and the choices you
make could • use a change in the dialogue. Go wil 'n associate's or partncr's suggestio.. Tonight Don't delay
making a call.
Jacqueline Bigar fs on the Internet
at http://rmm.v.jtUY{I;e/inebigar.oom.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
-----

�Page B6 • "llie Daily Sentinel

NEW YORK (AP) As American') celcbrntcd
the Fourth of July in
1988. a present arrived
from Zunch: fhe World
Cnp was headed to tht•
United Statt·s for the first
time.
"The richest land in the
world simpl) cannot be
allowed to remain a
blank ~pot on the world
map of soccer any
longer."
Hermann
Neuberger, pre!iident of
We~t German soccer's
governing body, said at
the time.
Since that water&lt;&gt;hed
1994 World Cup the
global game is now very
much a part of the country's sports landscape.
T.here's a national team
that's played in six
strmght World Cups,
three television nct\I.'Ork::.
that are pretty mtu.:h all
soccer, constant additional exposure on ESPN2
and a growing league
preparing for its 16th season - albeit one still
struggling to gain attention m a market dominated by the NFL. MaJor
League Baseball and the
NBA.
Bidders promise another burst of explosive
growth if FIFA's executive committee awards
the 2022 tournament to
the United States when it
Thur~day
in
votes
Zurich. Austraha, Japan, 1
Qatctr and South K01ea
are the competition.
"We· ve got all of the
infrastructure in place.
and it's extraordinary
infrastructure.
which
allows us to focus on
growing the game and
·using the World Cup to
do that lll the United
States and have the U.S.
become an important part
of the global community
in this.'' U.S. Soccer
President
Federation
Sunil Gulati smd in an
intervie\\
with The
Associ:tted Pre s. ''I
think it changes the eco
nomics in a positive way
for FIFA and other associations."
The 1994 World Cup
transformed FIFA's busine!;S side.
Names on the backs ot
players' jerseys?
It stat1eJ in the U.S.
Corporate teuts?

First maae in America.
All-Star t ams and
relentkss promotion?
Ditto.
Much of soccer has
never seen anything like
Dallas
Cowboys
St&lt;ldium. with its 50yard-wide video screen
hovering above field,
10.000 club seats and
300 luxury suites ringing
five levels - the expensive seats alone just
about match the 20.224
total
capacit)
of
Portsmouth's
Fratton
Park.
Hard to compare that
with those in the original
bid presented by the U.S.
22 yenrs ago, which
included such antiques as
Navy-Marme
Corps
Memorial Stadium in
Annapolis, Md .. John F.
Kennedy Stadium in
Philadelphia and Palmer
Stadium in Prinet-ton,
N.J.
FU·'A's technical report
says attendance at a U.S.
World Cup could average
76,000, breaking the
record of 68.991 set in
1994. 1t says there is
risk
medium
legal
because of a lack of government
guarantees.
which \\ ould reqUire federal legislation after a bid
is awarded.
"Clearly for us. there is
nothing that we could do
in the United States.
whether it be our federation or ~ajor I~eague
Soccer. that would be
more important than having the World Cup here
in our country.., MLS
Commissioner
Don
Garber said.
''Hosting the World
Cup in the U.S. is by far
the btggest opportunity
for our league to l:apitalizc on the growing interest for the sport and ultimately convert that interest to a deeper connection \\ ith our league, our
clubs and our players."
Gulati and his delegation have spent months
lobbying the 22 voters.
They'll bring along a
group for the final presentation that mc1u9es
former Pre~tdent ;Bill
Clinton,
~~ ney
General Eric
older,
act01 Morgan reeman,
nntiopal
t~m . star
Landon Donllvan, tonner
\ynmen 's Jeam star Mia

1-!amm and her
(ormer Boston Red
sta Nomar Garci:lparm.
''It'
nn elecfion,"
Gulati said. "And in
some sense, in election~
you never know where
you are until the very last
minute. until th~ vote is
taken. There's not accurate pollmg. per se. So
we'll contmue to work
until the last minute.''
FlFA al&lt;&gt;o is selecting
the 2018 site that day,
picking from among
England, Russia, Sr,ainPortugal and BelgtumNetherland~.

I

:.William:. and Derrick
Rose. Rondo didn't do
anything but reinforce
Scott's opinion of him.
On several trips, he s1mply
blew
through
Cleveland's dcfen~e for
easy layups. set up hi.-..
teammates for ea~) &lt;&gt;ho~
and commanded the floor.
Leading by 11 at h&lt;llf.
the Celtics pulled a\\ay
from the Cavs m the third
qumter.
Garnett, who c;Jiv.htly
rolled his ankle in the penod when he stepoed on
Pierce's foot, con&amp;rted a
three-point play tO make it
77-61. Daniels followed
with one of h1s own, pu.,hing Boston's lead to IY
and deflatin • the hopes of
Cleveland' tans.
There was a buzz in the
buildmo
and lt may not
. 0 ' be b
f
have JU~ts en ecause o
the Cclt1 ·
.
. Witn.dames set to amve
m lq~s th~n 48 .hours,
Cldel~nd IS ra~pt.ng up
for a mght the c.ll)' s fans
h.ave been wattmg for
smce the NBf\ schedule
as anno~nced m August.
At hal~1me, Cavs. owner
Da~1 Gtlbert satd he
~xpects fans to be emoltonal but under control for
the game, . which has
drawn huge mterest. The
t~am .will have extrn secunty 111 plucc to assure
there's no trouble.
The Celtks hadn't
played since Friday and
they ha~ a mini-contro\ ersy dunng the extended
break.
Center
Shaquille
O'Neal missed pmctice on
Mondar. He apolo[ized to
Boston s Big 3- uarnett.
Paul Pierce and Ray Allen
- before the team came

!J

e:.-,n,

USSF officials hope to
one day have a team that
wins World C'ups, a
league ~hat produces
clubs as strong as
Manchester
United,
Barcelona and AC Milan
OHenslve player of the year: Alden H1ll Alliance
likely the tlu~c mo.;t
ngto:s
popular teams in the Ma;J
IDefenslv• player of the year: Matt Redf1eld, Cols
United States.
Watter..on.
This year·~ World Cup
Coechet • 1 the year: Ed Miley. Alliarcc Marhngton.
,2,288,000 J ~n C r~nter, Elida
averaged
households
and
SECOND TEAM
3.261.000 viewers on
E'lds - Tim Szabo. Day. Ct-armnadaEnglish-language U.S.
180, sr Danus Patton Poland Semmary,
television, up from
sr L1remer
- Masor Campbell
1.735,000 homes and
6- 1 255 sr., Kyle Flynn Chardofl Notre
al Lat1n, 6·3, 265, sr Joe Nawalan1ec
2.316,000 four years ago.
e 6-1, 260, Jr. Aaron Hayes, Spnno
The final was seen by
290, sr • Austir Hunter Ttpp Ctty
15.55 million on ABC
9 239 sr Quarterbacks - Marky
E Liverpool, 5-8. 180 11 C.J Myers
and another 8.82 million Thomp
:e S ridan 6-3, 180, sr Trent Toothman
on
Spanish-language Th
sr. Backs - Josten Dear Rayland
Umvision - well above Sa:
Sue ey&amp;L
5-10, 183,Jr NickVanHoose St Pans
the 14 3 million average Graham 6..() 1n. sr. Ben Parks WCH Washington saudience for baseball's • 10, 165, sr~atnck Boggs, Mogadore Fteld 6-o, 195
World Series but a frac- J( Anthon Budka, Vermll•on. 5--9, 170 sr K1cker
Rafter Dover. 5-10, 170 sr
tion of the 106.5 million Zach
'DEFENSE L1re--nen - Hunter Maynard, Cots
that watched this year's INilttAr!on '.l-2 287 sr., LaTroy Lewts Akro, Hoban, 6
4 240, lr. Tyler Smder ThorllVIlle Sheridan. 6·2,' 235,
Super Bowl.
Colin f -erchmske, Parma Padua Franciscan. sr • 6·
"We're no longer sit- 2sr 245
u.,ebackers - Niko Otto. w,nterSVIIle l:"ld an
ting around trying to Creek. 6·:j,
2~5 sr Anthony Marino. Urbana 6·1 170
explain it to tnem,'' said
sr , Blakd Novotny, Hubbard, 6·2. 220. sr; Clayton
Chuck Blaz r. the rtFA Stolb, AI anc:e Marhrgton, 5-11, 180 jr. Joe Kudclla.
~willan&amp; 5·11, 175, jr Backs .., Ronald
executive
committee 1iOberhn
nner
Is Ea5'Tnoor Aced. 6·1, 190. sr.. Roger
member m the U.S.
Wilham ;on, Day. Dunbar, 6·1. 190 sr.. DymoPte
When American soccer Thoma A 1ance Mfrlington, 6.Q 175, soph. Marf.
officials s arted getting Murph Akro SVSM 6·1, 195 sr Purter - James
ready afte t;e 1988 vote. D ' . &gt;ranYl 6·2. 175. .sr
ther~
er n 't proper
THIRD TEAM
~enche~ or occdr teams
_Of El\ISE E~os - Carlton Wat1!1rs. Medma
111 sta IU
: • gr7f$ute
f!~f_ekeye .. 1
$r Sam Borghese Cols DeSa es
score a
lllJttry time 0 J 190 sr u.1emen - Drew Deneher Dove 6-4
J m Cercek. Mogadore Fie d '&amp;- :no sr A.~
\\er&lt;jo ti eign concepts.
IJ lreetsbOfo.-'6-S 285. jr. Ouarterbaat3
"~
"1]i country und6rCa ton So :-t- 5-11 185 s; Kyle S:nith Obe
sta~s the World Cup
1ds 5-10 160 Jr Bat.'ks - D f!IV Prercdergast
-!V&amp;
59
, 70 sr • Landon Me~ rahan
n@ . I'm not sure that
Be efor.• ne BenJarr n Log~ 6..() , 80 sr Aw..tm
was the case back then,''
w son Gal spoUs Gil! a Aced ~9 160. sr Cha e
Gulati said. "The magni
8 own You:lgS Mooney EH&gt;. 200 sr N1ek Deiell' ,
tude of the event h~ .., Otx:.-!'n Ftrelands 5-10 '205. Jr K cker - A J Fox
Youngs Mooney 6.0 200. sr
changed dramatical~ \'
DEFENSE. LJne:nen - Tony DaVIS Cm Wyom1ng, &amp;
Certainly the U.S. '' 1th
4, 265 sr. Ben Duf"a Eaton. 6·2, 290 sr Trevor
MLS and a national team Strlcklsnrl Clyde, 6 6. 235 sr ; N1ck Wagorer Shelby,
that's been quite sucl;ess- 6·2 265 sr Linebackers - Santino Cua Cols.
DeSales. 6-0, 215, sr.; Chris Poore Conneaut. 6-0
ful, all those thin~s are
sr Jimmy Valent1no Cle. Beredicttne 5·10 185
very different in (;hang- 200
sr Vmco Kurtz, T1ffin Columbian. 61 195, sr.. Ross
ing the landscnp of the
11arl"lon, E'ltda, 6-0. 240, sr Backs - Alex Ratp1
j\t

tr

spm1."

Rondo's 23 leaCJs Celtics over Cavs
CLEVELAND (AP) Rajon Rondo scored a seasun-high 23 points with 1,2
assists to lead the Bo,l(&gt;n
Celt1cs to the1r fourth
straight win. 106 7 on
Tuesday night o cr the
Cleveland cavaliers, who
tan now tart concentrating o~ Le.B.ron James'
. _
upconung YtSit.
Rondo nms~d hts. 1~t
three :;~ots before hntmg
II of lus. next !4 to help
the Ce1ttcs. butld ~ 20pomt lead .m the fourth.
Gl~n . Dav1s ~dded . 17
pomts. Ma~quts l)antcls
~ 6 and ~ ev1 ~1 Gamet~ 10
tebounds &lt;IS Boston
av~.n~ed an .early-season
,
loss Ill Clevel,md..
Ar.lden:':m VareJatl ctnd
D~ntel (,lbson s~ored 16
aptece for the Cavs. C?n
Thursda&gt;'· Jame~ ~Ill
make hts first tnp mto
~leve!and since announcmg this summer he would
sign with Miami.
Rondo's playmg .,., ith a
tender left hamstring and
sore foot, but he hardly
seemed to be bothered.
Boston coach Doc Rivers
intends to monitor the
point guard's minutes
going forward, but he lef'
him m for 38 as the Celti .s
handed the Cavs their
enth loss in 10 game•
When he wa&lt;&gt; rr placed
with 4:04 left r&gt;Y Von
Waf~:r.
Rondp
was
applattdl'd by everyone on
Bo:.ton 's bendv and got a
loving slap on the oackside as he \\ alked past
Rivers.
Before jthe
game,
Cavaliere; coach Byron
Scott said ~ ondo belongs
in the conv l;!rsntion when
debatino ttt•.: league's premier ~uu. guards along
with ChftS Pnul, Deron

FIRSTTEAM
OF-FE'IISE Ends- Colton Z
er Dover 6·2. 190,
sr, Jonatho 1Tighe. Cln Wyoml • 6·1 190 sr. Coray
"m :h Akr~n Buchtel 6 1, 1 . 1r Linemen
G111es. Cots Watterson. 6-3
4, sr Caleq GuE.
Cambr1dge Cody Shafer.
6·0 260. £I , J, 1
Bu by Thornv1lle Shendan. 6-«! 265. sr . Zach Hlggt s
AI nee Marhngton, 6·5, 295 Jr Quarterbacks - Dertk
0 ~ llderm ln, Dover, 6-4 180, 1r ·Cole French Eaton.
c &lt; 190.1r Reggie McAdams. Elida, 6-5. 190.1r Backs
~ nck Rudolph, Cols.~astmoor Acad 5-6. 150, sr,
Arthu Jackson, 6·2, 215. sr. XaVIer Means.
p
1 Padua Franc•scan 5-10. 190 sr Alden H1.l,
A
~e Marhngton. 6¥. 220, Jr. K•cker
Nick Lmdner,
t
naf!l Roger Bacon 5·10, 165, sr
DE liiSE Lircrre!l - Dan Terhune. Pepper P1ke
0
6- 4 230. sr Josh Gordon Newark lJclung
~ 225 sr Tom Campbet C•n Wyom1ng, 6·2
8 ad Madleod Spnng. Shawnee 6·2 220 sr
u tn Akron Hoban. 6-4 255. Jr Linebackers
1.
Red' ld Cols Wattersol'! 6-0 218 sr Shaq
PetteWly Ste~obenvtlle, 6·1, 200, sr. Johnl"y
k Carro tOn. 6- 1 195 sr •Ryan Haynes Cin
NichO a l 0 190 sr • Marlo71 Odtn Akrc 1 Buchtel,
1 sr Backs - M ke Jackson St Bernard Roger
0·0 165 sr Troy Swtlt:'llly, Thor'lvllle
erda 6·2 195 sr Jesse Hernandez T1ffm
G&lt;&gt;umn
5-10 170. sr. Doran Grant, Akron SVSM.
e t. Punier - Kyle PIIJnatiello Tlpp C.ty
e 59. 182, sr

to Clevfoand.
O'~eal

said
after
FridaY's game that he misre. d the message on the
grease board in Boston's
locker room and didn't
realize the team was pmc
tieing before it's flight.
"lt was a miscommunication," he said. "11le only
thing I saw on the board
was flioht at 3. That's all. 1
never ~iss pmctice.''
Pierce picked up his second personalfi.)ul with just
over two minutes elapsed
in the ftrst (LllaJ1er and had
to ao to the bench.
The Cavs pounced and
built a 17-8 lead before
Rondo began to do what
Rondo always
docs
against C'leveland.
He scored II ~tnught
points to close the opening
quarter a the Celtics
' s. .
pulled \Vt~m
~1.
Boston finall) passed
Cle\:elan~
on
Nate
Robrnson s JUmper to go
ahead 30-29.
.
Notes: Sco!~ and R1yers
h~ve been 1nends srnce
htgh school. wl.1cn they
faced ~ach other mar~ AllAmencat.l &amp;arne. Rtvers
smd h~ d1dn t see a future
coach 111 Scott. "I nottc~d a
guy who shot all the tunc
and, w~uldn ·~ pass .• t,he
ball, Rtvers JOked. l m
~ure he thougl~t the sm11c
way. l:lc: ~o·ould JW•t shoot. I
was ell\ ious of· tiUlt cannon. I wouldn't have
passed eitht'r." ... Celrics G
I?clonte West had su~ces~
1ul '&gt;urgery to repatr Ius
broken nght wrist. Has a
team ever reported an
unsuccessful
surgery?
Rivers expects West, who
played two full ~easons
with the Cavs, to be out at
least two months.

2?

Newark L1cking Valley. 6·1. 185. sr. Steve Sarvon.
Springfield Shawnee. 6·3, 180. sr. M1ke Lopuchovsky
Hubbard, 6·1 190, sr.• DerJuan Gambrell. Tol. Rogers.
6·2 185 sr Punte( - Selh Rosenbauer Lima
St-awnee 6-5 230, Jr.

SPf( Al MENTION
SPE.CtAl MENTION
Bubba landrum, Jackson: Jacob Parks WCH
Washington, Stephen Allons. 'Gallipolis Ga ha Acad ,
Dylan Ford. Circleville· Relly Kiser. CtrCieVIIIe, t&lt; C
J-lawklns CircleVIlle Camron Cooper. G•eenfleld
W.cCiwn JayTee Eliars ThormnDe She~idan Anthary
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Judge orders delay to
W.Va. AAA title game
CHARLESTON.
W.Va. (AP) - A West
judge
on
Virginia
Tuesday ordered that
this weekend's Class
AAA
championship
football
game
be
delayed over a legal
challenge
involving
players from one of the
teams, a Secondary
Acti' ities
School
Commission
official
said.
Executive
SSAC
Director Gary Ray said
Judge A11hltr Recht in
Ohio County issued a
temporary restraining
order
stopping
Saturday's
game
South
between
Charleston
and
Martinsburg. Ray said
he plans to talk to his
staff, the SSAC's attorney and board of directors before responding
to the order Wednesday.
In separate
legal

action, Kanawha County
Circuit Judge Carne
Webster on Tuesday
cleared the way for four
South Charleston players to compete in the
title game.
Ray said he learned
about both rulings from
the SSAC's attorney,
B1ll Wooten.
Brooke
County
Schools sought Recht's
order until vanm:s legal
chaUenges are completed, assistant cot.nty
prosecutor David Cross
said. Brooke believes

South
CharlesH'III
shouldn't be allowed to
compete for the title.
The SSAC suspended
the four players follow;mg a midfield brawl in
the final seconds of a
Nov. 19 quarterfinal
game with Hurricane
Player" Tyler Harris.
Pierria Henry. Emerson

Gagnon and Trevand
Reese won a court order
allowing them to play in
last weekend s semifinal
game against Brooke.
South Charleston won to
advance to the championship in Wheeling.
The SSAC' wanted the
four suspended for one
game. which would bar
them from the title contest again~t Martinsburg
High School.
Cross said B
wants tim to a
W~bster's d~cision
the state~u reme Court.
"One, fo any player
that plays legally. you
can subtra t from the
score the points that
they ~?ntq1 uted to t~e
game.
Cross satd.
·•secondly, the SSAC
could or~er that the
team that participated
with the illegal players
forfeit the ame."

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