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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com
Issue 192, Volume 64
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 s 50¢
‘Angels’ among us
By Mindy Kearns
Special to The Register
NEW HAVEN — Youth
in the Town of Mason will
benefit from a recent donation made by the New Haven
Road Angels car club.
The car club hosted a successful car and bike show
in October at the Town of
Mason’s Harvest Festival.
More than 70 vehicles were
entered. Mark Clark recently
presented Mason Mayor
Donna Dennis with proceeds
from that show.
The donation of $700 has
been earmarked for use for
the town’s children. A porPhoto by Mindy Kearns
tion of those funds will proMark Clark, right, of the New Haven Road Angels car club, recently donated
vide
snacks and gifts at the
proceeds from a car and bike show to Mason Mayor Donna Dennis. The funds,
town
Christmas celebration.
earmarked for the town’s youth, will be used for the Christmas party, as well as
Dennis said the Christmas
another children’s party this winter.
parade will be noon Dec. 6.
Line-up will begin at 11:30
a.m. at Faith Baptist Church.
Registration is not necessary, the mayor said. Anyone
wishing to be in the parade
should simply show up.
Immediately following the
parade, Santa Claus will be
at the town hall to visit the
youth and hear their wish
lists. Refreshments will be
given to the children, the
mayor said, as well as a
surprise, all of which will
be provided by the car club
donation.
Dennis said she anticipates
there will be money remaining from the donation after
Christmas. She said at least
one additional event is in
the planning. Under consid-
eration is a winter party in
January or February, based
on the Disney movie “Frozen.”
Mason’s Christmas celebration will continue the
following weekend, when
the Mason Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary hosts its
Third Annual Christmas
Bazaar.
The bazaar will be 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. Dec. 13 at the
fire station. There will be
individual crafters, as well
as specialty vendors with
items normally sold through
home parties. The auxiliary
will have the kitchen open,
and will feature homemade
vegetable soup, as well as
hotdogs and other food items
and drinks.
Pomeroy
police
investigate
break-ins
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — The Pomeroy Police Department is
currently investigating three
pharmacy break-ins that
occurred over the Thanksgiving weekend.
The break-ins occurred at
Powell’s Food Fair around 2
a.m. Nov. 28; Rite Aid at 6:41
a.m. Nov. 28; and Swisher and
Lohse Pharmacy at 12:07 p.m.
Nov. 29. The would-be thieves
broke into the pharmacies,
but ran off when the alarm
systems went off.
As of press time, there were
no known items stolen from
either store. There are two
suspects in custody but their
names — and possible charges — have not been released
to the public.
Pomeroy Chief Mark Proffitt
said that break-ins are more
common this time of the year
and that local store owners
should be on the lookout for
anything they deem suspicious.
For anyone with information or those who would like
a walk-though , contact the
Pomeroy Police Department
at 740-992-6411.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155, Ext.
2555. or on Twitter @Donaldlambert22
Association sponsoring holiday contests
Staff report
POMEROY — Again
this year, as a part of
the Christmas celebration, the Pomeroy Merchants Association will
be staging three contests — candy, cookies
and crafts.
The candy contest
will be Saturday at
Peoples Bank; the
— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
cookie contest on
Dec. 13 will be at the
Ohio Valley Bank,
700 W. Main St.,
(Save-O-Lot), and the
homemade crafts or
creations of any kind
contest will be Dec. 20
at Farmer’s Bank.
In each of the three
contests there will be
a first place cash prize
of $50 provided by the
sponsoring bank. The
runner-up will also
receive a prize to be
determined by the bank
hosting the contest.
In the candy and
cookie contests, entries
of five pieces are to be
submitted on paper
plates with the name,
address and phone
number of the person
entering written on the
bottom of the paper
plate, and a copy of the
recipe attached.
Entries in both contests can be brought
in anytime during the
morning. Judging will
take place at noon and
the winners will be
called once the judging
has been completed.
In the homemade
crafts, toys or other
creative items contest,
entries can be taken
to Farmer’s Bank for
display in the lobby
any time during the
week before judging
takes place Dec. 20.
This gives the public
an opportunity to view
the display during the
week. After the bank
closes at noon, a panel
of judges will select the
best from the rest for
first and second prizes
and notify the winners.
Residents are
encouraged to participate in the contests. So
if your candies and
cookies are yummy
and your homemade
crafts and other creations are beautiful or
unusual, the Merchants
Association invites you
to take part in this holiday event.
For additional information on any of the
holiday contests, contact Charlene Hoeflich,
chairman.
Shotgun slug found wedged in car frame
— SPORTS
Soccer: 6
Basketball: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 7
Classified: 8
Comics: 9
Donald Lambert | Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy readies itself for Christmas.
By Donald Lambert
JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
mydailysentinel.
com and visit us on
facebook to share your
thoughts.
elambert@civitasmedia.com
POMEROY — Police say a shotgun slug was found wedged in a
man’s truck on Sunday.
The man, whose name is being
withheld, was driving down West
Main Street when a 12-gauge shotgun slug hit the driver’s truck. The
slug was found wedged between
the window and the window seal
of the back driver’s door.
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Proffitt said there were signs that the
slug hit multiple objects and had
green vegetation and dirt on it.
Investigators believe it came from
someone target practicing in a
nearby wooded area.
Proffitt said it didn’t look to be
intentional, but said the incident
should serve as a reminder to be
extra cautious when it comes to
guns.
“With the way the slug was facing, if the driver’s window was
down, it might’ve hit the driver,”
Proffitt said.
Reach Donald Lambert at 740-992-2155, Ext.
2555. or on Twitter @Donaldlambert22
�LOCAL
2 Wednesday, December 3, 2014
OBITUARIES
Daily Sentinel
DEATH NOTICES
BETTY JEAN SAYRE
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio
— Betty Jean Sayre,
84, of Middleport, Ohio
passed away on Monday,
December 1, 2014 at the
Overbrook Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center
in Middleport. She was
born on July, 20, 1930
in Pomeroy, Ohio to the
late Theodore and Bessie (Tracy) Pullins. Betty
worked at the Middleport
Department Store for
many years. She also
worked as a greeter at
Wal-Mart for over five
years.
She is survived by
her son, Mike (Rhonda)
Sayre, New Haven, W.Va.;
grandchildren, Kylie
(Aaron) Scott, New
Haven, Kameron (Maddison) Sayre, New Haven
and Kayanna Sayre,
Columbus, Ohio; great
grandchildren, Teagan
Scott, Kennedy Sayre
and Carter Scott; brother
James (Crystal) Pullins,
Coolville, Ohio; sister-inlaw, Kathy Pullins, Pomeroy, Ohio and several
nieces and nephews.
She is preceded in
death by her parents,
husband, Don Sayre;
brothers, Tom and Gerald
Pullins
Funeral services will be
held on Friday, December 5, 2014 at 11 a.m. at
the Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in
Middleport with Pastor
Ron Branch officiating.
Burial will follow at the
Meigs Memory Gardens.
Visitation will be held for
family and friends from
6-8 p.m. on Thursday,
December 4, 2014 at the
funeral home.
An online registry is
available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com
CHARLES FRANKLIN “SMITTY” SMITH
MIDDLEPORT —
Charles Franklin “Smitty”
Smith, 78, of Middleport,
passed away in his home
Monday, Dec. 1, 2014.
He was the son of the
late Charles E. Smith
and Elsie Smith Haddox. Smitty was a retired
employee of Kaiser Aluminum. He was a U.S.
Marine Corps veteran, a
member of the V.F.W. Post
9926 in Mason, W.Va.,
and a member of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles
2171 in Pomeroy. He was
a well-regarded coach for
the Little League Middleport Braves and also for
the Mustangs women’s
softball team. He enjoyed
spending time with his
family, doing yard work,
and feeding the neighborhood animals and
wildlife.
He is survived by his
wife of 55 years, Betty
Kloes Smith; two daughters, Debi Gallagher
Honaker, of Pomeroy, and
Mary Kay (Guy Wayne)
Schuler, of Middleport;
a son, David F. (Sharon)
Smith, of Middleport;
four grandchildren, Lisa
(Kyle) Ord, of Pomeroy,
Mark Mills, of Middleport, Michael (Amber)
Honaker, of Pomeroy, and
Steven (Jessica Durham)
Smith, of Middleport;
seven great-grandchildren; two sisters,
Josephine Goodnite, of
Piqua, and Nancy Morris, of Hamden; a brother
George K. Haddox, of
Arizona; and nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will
be 1 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5,
2014, with Pastor Jason
Simpkins officiating at
Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow at
Gravel Hill Cemetery,
where military honors
will be presented by the
V.F.W.
Visiting hours will be
11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday
at the funeral home in
Pomeroy.
A registry is available at
www.andersonmcdaniel.
com.
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BELVILLE
PROCTORVILLE, Ohio — Donnie Joe Belville,
75, of Proctorville, passed away Sunday, Nov. 30,
2014, at The Emogene Dolin Jones Hospice House,
Huntington, W.Va.
A celebration of life service will be Friday, Dec. 5,
2014, at his home 217 Township Road 1107, Proctorville.
GROTENRATH
GALLIPOLIS — Phillip Carl Grotenrath, 70, Gallipolis, passed away Sunday, Nov. 30, 2014, at his
residence.
There are no calling hours or funeral services.
Burial will be in the Lakeview Cemetery in Cleveland. Funeral services are under the direction of
Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
Morrow, 47, of Fraziers Bottom, passed away Monday, Dec. 1, 2014, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At her request there will be no visitation. Memorial services and burial will be at the convenience
of the family. Deal Funeral Home in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., is serving the family.
NEAL
WEST COLUMBIA, W.Va. — Harley Dacel Neal,
74, of Melissa, Texas and formerly of West Columbia, W.Va., died on Dec. 1, 2014 in Melissa, Texas.
A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m., Monday, Dec. 8 at the Christian Community Church in
the old FOP building located behind Krodel Park in
Point Pleasant.
SHOBE
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Ruth Shirley Shobe,
75, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., passed away December
HALLEY
GALLIPOLIS — Gloria “Jean” Halley, 63, of Galli- 1, 2014, at Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral services will be held at the Deal Funeral
polis, died Monday, Dec. 1, 2014, at Holzer Medical
Home in Point Pleasant, December 4, 2014, at 1
Center.
p.m., with Pastor Dan C. Kessinger officiating.
A memorial service will be 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
Burial will follow in the Forest Hills Cemetery in
6, 2014, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
Friends may call at the funeral home Saturday from Flatrock, W.Va. Friends may visit the family at the
funeral home from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. prior to the
2 p.m. until the time of service.
service.
A complete obituary will be published in Thursday’s edition.
THORTON
GALLIPOLIS — Margaret Thorton, 84, of GalliLARGE
GALLIPOLIS — Mary A. Large, 95, of Gallipolis, polis, passed away Monday, Dec. 1, 2014, at Holzer
passed away Monday, Dec. 1, 2014, at Holzer Medi- Medical Center.
Services will be 1 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 4, 2014, at
cal Center in Jackson, Ohio.
Willis Funeral Home with Pastor Alvis Pollard and Dr.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m. Friday, Dec. 5,
Fred Williams officiating. Burial will follow in Cente2014, at McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
nary Cemetery. Friends may call the funeral home from
Chapel, Gallipolis, with the Revs. Michael Lynn,
noon to 1 p.m. Thursday prior to the funeral.
Douglas Downs and Will Luckeydoo officiating.
Burial will follow in Vinton Memorial Park.
UNDERWOOD
Eastern Star Services will be conducted at 1:45
GALLIPOLIS — Jack Leon Underwood, died on
p.m. by Vinton Chapter 374. Family and friends may
Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2014.
call at the funeral homefrom noon until time of serA memorial service will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Dec.
vices Friday.
6, 2014, at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses, 538 Bulaville Pike in Gallipolis, with Joel Davis
MORROW
officiating.
FRAZIERS BOTTOM, W.Va. — Stephanie Lynn
MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 3
SCIPIO TWP — The Scipio
Township Trustee’s regular
monthly meeting will be 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire House.
THURSDAY, DEC. 4
Chapter 74 of P.E.R.I. will meet
at Mulberry Community Center.
Dinner will be served at noon.
Business meeting will be at 1 p.m.
There will be a $5 gift exchange.
The report of nominating committee to be given.
SYRACUSE — The Ugly
Christmas Sweater Thirty-Ones
and Basket Games will take place
at the Syracuse Community Center. Proceeds go toward financing
kIDs Safe Equipment for The
Meigs County Sheriff’s Office,
and to finance their K-9 Mascot
Costume. Doors open and dinner
is available at 5 p.m. Games begin
at 6 p.m., with 20 games for $20.
Food includes homemade chicken
and noodles, taco in a bag, hotdogs and sauce, and more. Basket
games include a $500 retail Longaberger coffee table.
CHESTER TWP — Chester
Shade Historical Association will
hold their monthly meeting at the
academy at 7 p.m.
POMEROY — Meigs County
Retired Teachers will meet at
noon for lunch and a program
at the Trinity Congregational
Church meeting room on 2nd
Street in Pomeroy. Please call
992-3214 by Dec. 2 for lunch reservations. Guests are welcome. A
program for Christmas music will
be presented by the Meigs Middle
School choir. Members are
reminded of the service project
for December fto bring in books
for children and young adults as
Christmas gifts.
SATURDAY, DEC. 6
FRIDAY, DEC. 5
SUNDAY, DEC. 7
POMEROY — The Meigs
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. — The
New Haven Fire Department
Ladies Auxiliary Merry Christmas “Christmas Craft Show” will
be 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. There will
be a Christmas parade at 11 a.m
with Santa Claus at the station
after the parade. Door prizes will
be awarded to visitors. For more
information, contact Shelby Duncan at 304-882-2814.
MIDDLEPORT —Feeney
Bennett Post 128 of the American Legion will be leading the
Middleport Christmas parade.
All veterans wishing to ride the
float in the parade are welcome
and encouraged to participate
and should meet at 4:30 p.m. at
the Middleport Dairy Queen.
Then on Sunday, Dec. 7, the Feeney Bennett Post will be paying
tribute to the casualties of Pearl
Harbor at 7:30 a.m. at the Middleport Levy. All veterans are urged
to attend.
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Minesterial Association will
be providing a live nativity Christmas service after the 4:30 p.m.
Middleport Christmas parade in
the parking lot next to the former
Peoples Bank building.
HEMLOCK GROVE —The
Coolville Community Choir will
be performing at the Christian
Church at 7 p.m.
RACINE — Racine American
Legion Post 602 will be having a
dinner from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
MONDAY, DEC. 8
BEDFORD TWP — Bedford
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m.
at the town hall.
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va —
The Point Pleasant Solid Waste
Authority Board will be holding
a meeting at 10 a.m. at the recycling center in Point Pleasant,
located at 1927 Fairground Rd.
TUESDAY, DEC. 9
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
will have their regular meeting at
7 p.m. at the TPRSD office.
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. — The
Coolville Community Choir will
be performing at the St. Paul’s
Lutheran Church at 7 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 10
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Coolville Community Choir will
be performing at the Bethel Worship Center at 7 p.m.
SUNDAY, DEC. 14
MIDDLEPORT — The Ash
Street Church of Middleport will
have their youth Christmas Program at 6:30 p.m. The program
title is “Angels on Assignment.”
COOLVILLE — The Coolville
Community Choir will be performing at Coolville Elementary
School at 7 p.m.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769
Periodical postage paid at Pomeroy, OH
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, OH, 45769.
MEIGS LOCAL BRIEFS
MHS plans Parent-Teacher
Conferences Dec. 4
Have story ideas
or suggestions?
Call us at:
740.992.2155
MCA Christmas
celebration schedule
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community
Association is having their fourth annual Christmas
Market on Dec. 6 at the Masonic Lodge/Riverbend
Arts Council building on the corner of North Second
Avenue and Walnut Street. The market will be open
from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Concessions will be sold. We
do have some empty spaces and would like to invite
local crafters to join us. Each 8-foot space is $20. Let
us know if you need electricity for your display. Please
contact us as soon as possible if you are interested
(Deb - 992-5877/Texanna - 992-1121.) This is the
day of the Middleport Christmas celebration which
POMEROY —The Title Office will be closed Thurs- includes carriage rides, the Big Bend Community Band
playing from 4-4:30 p.m., a service by the Middleport
day, Dec. 4.
Ministerial Association, Christmas carols, and a parade
with Santa and Mrs. Claus as the Grand Marshals.
There will be time for the kids to visit with Santa and
his Mrs. after the parade. They will be in the same
building as the Christmas Market.
POMEROY — Students will be bringing home a
letter describing the conference scheduling procedure along with information on the conferences. The
school would like to encourage all parents and/or
guardians to attend that we may keep you informed
concerning the progress of your child. Please return
the form attached to the letter to the school or call
740-992-2158 by Dec. 4.
Title Office Closure
www.mydailysentinel.com
�LOCAL/STATE
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 3
Ohio AG offers year-end charitable giving tips
COLUMBUS — Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine’s
office has a few charitable giving tips for Ohioans who will
donate to charity this holiday
season.
“We encourage Ohioans to
give generously to their favorite
charities, and we know that
many will do so,” DeWine said.
“We also want to make sure
that donors’ contributions will
end up in the right hands. Giving directly to a charity you are
familiar with is often the best
way to donate. If you aren’t familiar with an organization, check it
out before you contribute.”
DeWine encourages Ohioans
to determine in advance which
charity or charities to sup-
port. Developing a plan allows
donors to research organizations before making payments
and to respond to unexpected
requests by explaining that
they already have a donation
plan in place.
Most charitable organizations
that operate in Ohio or solicit
Ohioans for donations must
file with the Ohio Attorney
General’s Office, and more than
36,000 organizations have filed.
The Attorney General’s Charitable Law provides oversight
to make sure donations are
not misappropriated and that
charitable proceeds are used
for charitable purposes.
Tips for researching charities
include:Check compliance with
the Ohio Attorney General’s
Office. Visit the Ohio Attorney
General’s website or call 1-800282-0515 for help researching
an organization.
Verify the organization’s taxexempt status with the IRS.
The IRS’s Exempt Organizations Select Check can be used
to verify if an organization has
a valid 501(c)(3) or other taxexempt designation.
View the organization’s IRS
Form 990 through the GuideStar website, www.guidestar.
org. (A free registration process is required.) The 990 will
include information on how the
group raises and uses its funds
and other operational details.
Gather data from private
watchdog groups. National
watchdog groups include the
Better Business Bureau Wise
Giving Alliance, Charity Navigator, and CharityWatch.
Do a basic Internet search to
review a group’s accomplishments or questionable activity.
Contact the organization
itself and find out how your
donation will be used. Get
information in writing. Compare the charity’s written and
web-based materials with the
information you gather from
other sources.
Donors should be skeptical
of:Unexpected calls or emails
seeking donations;
Organizations that sound
similar to other better-
known organizations;
High-pressure tactics;
Refusal to provide written
information;
Requests for checks made
payable to a person instead of a
charity;
Links in text messages or
emails, which may contain
viruses;
Prizes in return for a donation;
Offers to pick up donations
immediately versus in the mail
or online.
Individuals who suspect
questionable charitable activity
should contact the Ohio Attorney General’s Office at www.
OhioAttorneyGeneral.gov or
1-800-282-0515.
Sen. Rob Portman Treasurer takes state’s checkbook online
won’t run for
president in 2016
who aren’t happy about this, but
I don’t care. I’m willing to take
arrows from bureaucrats and poliCOLUMBUS — Ohio’s treasur- ticians if it means doing the right
er launched the state’s first ever
thing.”
online checkbook on Tuesday, a
The site, OhioCheckbook.
searchable website of individual
com, details more than $408
state expenses going back to
billion in state spending from
2008.
2008 to 2014, comprising
About 30 states have gone
about 112 million individual
digital with their spending infortransactions and 3.9 billion
mation, but Republican Josh
pieces of distinct spending
Mandel said he believes the inter- information. It’s equipped to
active nature of Ohio’s site and
conduct what the office terms
the amount of information pro“Google-style searches,” by
vided will make it a model for the keyword, agency, elected offination. He told The Associated
cial, spending category or venPress its functionality is supedor, among other variables.
rior to the U.S. Public Interest
The site’s home page includes
Research Group’s three highestboth pie charts and bar charts of
rated sites in Indiana, Oregon and queried information, and each bar
Florida.
or pie slice can be clicked on to
“My vision is to create this
go deeper into the data. Spreadarmy of citizen watchdogs
sheets of the data can also be
who can hold politicians and
sorted on the site or downloaded
bureaucrats accountable for state to a person’s computer.
spending,” Mandel said. “We’ve
“Investigative journalists are
heard rumors that there are some going to love this,” said Mandel,
a former state legislator and U.S.
people deep in the bureaucracy
Associated Press
By Dan Sewell
and Steve People
Associated Press
CINCINNATI — Two prominent Senate Republicans
announced Tuesday they would seek a second term in
the U.S. Senate, although their announcements had
dramatically different implications for the 2016 presidential contest.
Ohio Sen. Rob Portman declared he would not seek
the presidency, choosing instead to focus on his Senate
re-election. The former White House budget chief and
U.S. trade representative said he can play an important
role as a member of the new Republican majority in the
Senate, where he wants to help break the gridlock that
has largely paralyzed Congress for the past two years.
“I just see so much promise,” Portman said during
an appearance in Washington on Tuesday. “Getting the
majority makes a huge difference. The Senate has been
largely dysfunctional — unable to deal with even the
most basic issues. And now we have a chance.”
At the same time, Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul
announced he would also seek a second term in the
Senate, although his team says he could still run for
president despite a state law that prohibits running for
both offices at the same time.
“There are many options,” Paul senior adviser Doug
Stafford said when asked about the state law. “He
hasn’t decided on a presidential run yet. He will decide
that in the next few months, but in either case he is
running for Senate.”
Portman and Paul are two of four senators considering a presidential run. The others, Sens. Marco Rubio
of Florida and Ted Cruz of Texas, are still weighing a
decision.
In an interview, Portman said he didn’t think he
could be as effective as a senator while at the same time
running for president. Paul does not necessarily agree.
The Kentucky senator and libertarian favorite has
been among the most aggressive potential presidential
candidates in recent months, having already begun to
hire staff in key states in addition to beefing up his policy credentials. In a Tuesday statement announcing his
plans for re-election, Paul highlighted his concerns for
broader issues such as foreign policy and “the assault
on our civil rights and liberties.”
“I have sought to work with any and all who are
eager to find solutions and promote reforms,” Paul
said. “I stand with Kentucky in this fight, and I hope to
continue together in the task of repairing and revitalizing our great nation.”
Given Congress’ low approval ratings, senators face
a tougher road to the White House than the crowd of
Republican governors considering a 2016 bid. The last
sitting senator to win the presidency before President
Barack Obama was John F. Kennedy in 1960.
Portman drew nationwide attention last year when
he announced he had reversed his position on same-sex
marriage and would now support it. He said the change
came after soul-searching on the issue after his son
Will, then in college, told his parents that he was gay.
Portman said his decision not to run didn’t revolve
around that issue, although some conservatives, including leaders of the National Organization for Marriage,
had pledged to oppose his potential bid.
“It really wasn’t a factor,” he said in an interview.
“Some people say it would have hurt me. Some people
say it would have helped me. The country is obviously
moving on that issue.”
National polls have indicated that support for legal
recognition of same-sex marriage is rising, although
they also indicate that many Republicans remain
opposed.
“Truth is, most people are much more focused on
other issues, including jobs and the economy,” Portman
said.
Portman said he sees a “broad field of impressive
candidates” shaping up among the large number
Republicans still considering a run. Portman, who
served in the White Houses of both President Bushes,
said he chatted Monday with former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush at a Washington fundraiser and that Bush indicated he hasn’t decided yet on 2016.
Bush on Monday said he would make up his mind “in
short order.”
Portman, a 58-year-old Cincinnati native, could also
resurface in 2016 presidential campaign as a potential
running mate to the GOP’s eventual nominee. He was
vetted by Romney’s team in 2012 and serves a swing
state that’s been crucial for Republicans.
But Portman said that’s not where he’s headed.
“I have been through it,” Portman said. “It’s obviously not something that you run for. But I’m not interested. I’m interested in staying in the Senate.”
Senate candidate who’s seen his
share of critical press.
The Ohio Newspaper Association was among groups advising
Mandel’s office on the project. It
also responds to calls for transparency from groups as diverse as
liberal Common Cause Ohio and
Ohio PIRG, the Ohio Society of
Certified Public Accountants and
the conservative Buckeye Institute, Mandel said.
The project took about two
years and cost $814,000. Mandel
said outside contractors were
brought in to provide expertise
on creating the database, which
draws already available data from
the state’s central computer system, called OAKS, and to assure
data security.
It is the second effort by Mandel, a second-term treasurer from
suburban Cleveland, to digitize
publicly available financial data
for use by the public. His earlier
public salary database faced initial
criticism over omissions and mistakes, which were later corrected.
Gallipolis Daily Tribune Point Pleasant Register
740-446-2342
304-675-1333
The Daily Sentinel
740-992-2155
60546119
By Julie Carr Smyth
�E ditorial
4 Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Daily Sentinel
THEIR VIEW
In the market
for a
Pentagon chief
While he may not like the analogy much, President Barack Obama’s final days in office are starting to bear an uncanny resemblance to those of his
predecessor, George W. Bush.
Both men saw their popularity decline precipitously in their second terms amid concerns that
the federal government was no longer competent.
Both men suffered stinging rebukes during their
final midterm elections. And both men reacted to
the electoral backlash by removing their top man
at the Pentagon.
Last week, Mr. Obama announced the departure
of Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel.
We voiced our skepticism of Mr. Hagel during
his confirmation hearings nearly two years ago.
Unlike his two immediate predecessors, Leon
Panetta and Robert Gates, Mr. Hagel had no
relevant experience in running complex institutions. That’s a key consideration for a Secretary
of Defense, whose administrative responsibilities
are arguably more complex than those of anyone
in the federal government apart from the president
himself.
As is customary during outbreaks of Washington backbiting, it’s not entirely clear what factors
led to Mr. Hagel’s ouster. Sources close to the
White House are attempting to paint the outgoing secretary as overmatched by the job. Those in
Hagel’s camp, by contrast, blame a White House
intent on micromanaging the Pentagon. We only
note that the two conclusions are not mutually
exclusive.
All of the Beltway drama, however, is overshadowing a more substantive concern: The
United States is currently in the market for a new
Secretary of Defense in the midst of a war. That
means there are two key variables to choosing Mr.
Hagel’s successor: finding someone who is equal
to the task and choosing a candidate who can be
confirmed without a prolonged delay.
It is surely a bad sign for the Obama administration that two of the leading candidates for the
job, former Under Secretary of Defense Michele
Flournoy and Rhode Island Sen. Jack Reed, have
already taken themselves out of the running.
As the White House continues the search for a
replacement, they ought to consider one more parallel with George W. Bush’s tenure.
Mr. Bush’s choice of Robert Gates as Donald
Rumsfeld’s replacement in 2006 provides a worthwhile example. Mr. Gates was competent, experienced and respected by elected officials on both
sides of the aisle. Moreover, he was able to continue his tenure through Mr. Obama’s early years
in office, providing much-needed stability during a
time of transition.
President Obama has repeatedly said that he
expects the conflict with ISIS to outlast his time in
office. The president ought to do his successor the
same favor that Mr. Bush did him: choosing a candidate who commands such universal respect that
he or she can be called on by the next president if
necessary.
That would provide a worthy corrective to Mr.
Hagel’s underwhelming tenure.
Reprinted from the Orange County (Calif.) Register.
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THEIR VIEW
Fires in Ferguson reveal truth
yet the central force of mass
The buildings smoldertrends. It’s the easiest way to
ing in Ferguson, Mo., must
prove that one is “with it,”
be a time of great celebraas it was formerly described,
tion for the extreme right
and brings an often-diswing of the GOP, having
missed complexity to the
perhaps duped the public
individual choice.
to vote against its own
When we look again at the
interest by taking as true
Stanley
fires of Ferguson, we need
the contemporary version
Crouch
of Alzheimer’s so dominant Contributing to think about how easily
manipulated people are when
when it comes to the simColumnist
told by agitators that their
ple and most obvious facts
identity is more that of vicof American life.
tims than individuals with rights
The huckstering of lies through
that should be respected, either by
sheer numbers and market-style
local law enforcement or the fedrepetition, which parallels the
eral government. The agitator is
softening up of an opponent with
fast or slow but repeated jabs until looking to turn human flesh into a
massive tinderbox that can be set
time for the knockout, is the best
off into a roaring fire if scratched
technique of today’s victory prowith a match when it has properly
cess. Once the jab is made legal,
been primed — particularly with
the issue ceases to be the truth,
factoids.
but the literal blood facts.
Factoids are swallowed on both
What wins is the added-up issue
of the the tissue swelling, the clos- sides, benefiting most the troublemakers among us — professional
ing of the eyes, the body punches
and the beating of the limbs them- propagandists masking themselves
as news people or investigative
selves — proving the truth of the
journalists; simple rabble-rousers,
adage of an eventual victory comseeking to see blocks aflame; and
ing by a patient destruction of the
protestors transformed from norbody.
mal and non-violent people into
All attempted comparisons of
destructive and irrational versions
American political fact, in the
of people overwhelmed by their
interest of explaining a dishonest
messy “feelings” brought on by
victory — or what is considered
“injustice.”
dishonest — usually is a futile
There is profit behind the first
move because we tend to think
that our country and its voters are presentations, and mostly delusional egocentric feelings of imporeither too wary or too “smart” to
tance or an identity capable of
swallow some garbage, no matter
moving the masses. This is a melohow attractive and tempting the
drama that can and often is played
spoon serving the particular garout in black-and-white, an ethnic
bage might be.
soap opera, and would be only
The flood of factoids presented
long enough to become — through comic if it were not for all of the
blood left running in the streets by
the oldest foe of the easily bored
hysterics.
by actual facts, repetition — is
Basic to Joe McCarthy’s rise to
power and its misuse — or abuse
— was the fear of our nation being
betrayed by enemies among us, so
many that they had infiltrated the
federal government. At its greatest
extremes, this became organizations like the John Birch Society,
an irrational and tawdry red, white
and blue mill that could accuse
President Dwight D. Eisenhower
of being — or being influenced by
— Russian spies. The version of
the new moves taught by the GOP
are all of the ways that factoids
can fill the air so that they become
interchangeable with the truth —
or another version of it.
Michele Wallace, having experienced Sarah Palin up close, knows
plenty about present problems.
She fears for the victorious Republicans that they will continue to
wave the flag and create more publicity stunts, rather than show the
country that they can now govern,
having majorities in the House and
the Senate. But those who have to
ride the razorback hog with the
redneck painted Day-Glo white,
and all of the colors needed to
pretend that “diversity” might not
be able to win the rodeo, or break
a hog like it is a huge bull that can
be rode to more victories.
Joe Scarborough says that the
American people will only allow
you to make a big mistake ONCE
— like the one Ted Cruz made by
hectoring his party to shut down
the federal government. We will
now see if the GOP can get over
its midterm election, and not
become more delusional.
Stanley Crouch can be reached by e-mail at
crouch.stanley@gmail.com.
TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Wednesday,
Dec. 3, the 337th day of
2014. There are 28 days
left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On Dec. 3, 1984, thousands of people died after
a cloud of methyl isocyanate gas escaped from a
pesticide plant operated
by a Union Carbide subsidiary in Bhopal, India.
On this date:
In 1810, British forces
captured Mauritius from
the French, who had
renamed the island nation
off southeast Africa “Ile de
France.”
In 1818, Illinois was
admitted as the 21st state.
In 1828, Andrew Jackson was elected president
of the United States by the
Electoral College.
In 1833, Oberlin College in Ohio — the first
truly coeducational school
of higher learning in the
United States — began
holding classes.
In 1925, George Gershwin’s Concerto in F had
its world premiere at New
York’s Carnegie Hall, with
Gershwin at the piano.
In 1947, the Tennessee
Williams play “A Streetcar
Named Desire” opened on
Broadway.
In 1960, the Lerner and
Loewe musical “Camelot”
opened on Broadway.
In 1964, police arrested
some 800 students at the
University of California
at Berkeley, a day after
the students stormed the
administration building
and staged a massive sit-in.
In 1967, surgeons in
Cape Town, South Africa,
led by Dr. Christiaan Barnard performed the first
human heart transplant on
Louis Washkansky, who
lived 18 days with the new
heart. The 20th Century
Limited, the famed luxury
train, completed its final
run from New York to
Chicago.
Today’s Birthdays:
Movie director Jean-Luc
Godard is 84. Singer
Jaye P. Morgan is 83.
Actor Nicolas Coster is
81. Actress Mary Alice
is 73. Rock singer Ozzy
Osbourne is 66. Actress
Heather Menzies is 65.
Rock singer Mickey
Thomas is 65. Country
musician Paul Gregg
(Restless Heart) is 60.
Actor Steven Culp is 59.
Actress Daryl Hannah
is 54. Actress Julianne
Moore is 54. Olympic
gold medal figure skater
Katarina Witt is 49. Actor
Brendan Fraser is 46.
Singer Montell Jordan
is 46. Actor Royale Watkins is 45. Actor Bruno
Campos is 41. Actress
Holly Marie Combs is 41.
Actress Liza Lapira is 39.
Actress Lauren Roman is
39. Pop-rock singer Daniel
Bedingfield is 35. Actress
Anna Chlumsky is 34.
Actor Brian Bonsall is 33.
Pop/rock singer-songwriter Andy Grammer is 31.
Actress Amanda Seyfried
is 29. Actor Michael Angarano is 27. Actor Jake T.
Austin is 20.
�LOCAL/NATION
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 5
House approves bill to stop Nazi benefit payments
By Richard Lardner
and Matthew Daly
Associated Press
WASHINGTON — Suspected Nazi war criminals
would be blocked from
receiving Social Security benefits under a bill
unanimously approved
Tuesday by the House.
The measure would
shut a loophole that
allowed suspected Nazis
to be paid millions of dollars in benefits. Under
the bill, benefits would be
terminated for Nazi suspects who have lost their
American citizenship, a
step called denaturalization. U.S. law currently
mandates a higher threshold — a final order of
deportation — before
Social Security benefits
can be stopped.
The legislation was
introduced after an Associated Press investigation
published in October
revealed that Social Secu-
rity benefits have been
paid to dozens of former
Nazis after they were
forced out of the United
States.
AP’s investigation
found that the Justice
Department used a legal
loophole to persuade Nazi
suspects to leave the U.S.
in exchange for Social
Security benefits. If they
agreed to go voluntarily,
or simply fled the country
before being deported,
they could keep their
benefits. The Justice
Department denied using
Social Security payments
as a way to expel former
Nazis.
Rep. Leonard Lance,
R-N.J., said the House
action would “correct an
injustice of two generations and right a terrible
wrong in the name of the
lives that were lost as a
result of the Holocaust.”
The unanimous vote
showed that “our resolve
for justice is unyielding
and our commitment
to pursue what is right
continues even 70 years
after World War II,” said
Lance, a co-sponsor of
the bill and co-chair of
the Republican Israel
Caucus.
“We cannot allow
Social Security benefits
to continue flowing to
those guilty of the worst
atrocities in modern history,” added Rep. Carolyn
Maloney, D-N.Y. Maloney
previously called on the
Obama administration to
investigate the payments,
which she described as a
“gross misuse of taxpayer
dollars.”
The House vote came
as two Republican senators demanded that the
Obama administration
provide Congress with
records explaining how
suspected Nazis received
the payments and the role
the Justice Department
played in the program.
Sens. Chuck Grassley
GOP seeks year-end plan
on funding, immigration
By David Espo
and Erica Werner
ed it, although they intend to mount
a strong anti-deficit campaign next
Associated Press
year, and the White House signaled
that Obama would sign the one-year
WASHINGTON — Year-end holimeasure after threatening to veto a
days beckoning, House Republicans
struggled Tuesday to coalesce behind longer-term version.
Taxes, spending and immigration
a plan that avoids a government shutare
the dominant issues in the final
down next week and simultaneously
few
weeks of a two-year Congress
challenges President Barack Obama’s
that
has been a hothouse for partisan
decision to spare millions of immigridlock
— and that seemed on track
grants from deportation.
for
one
final
showdown if not more.
A separate bipartisan bill to extend
After meeting privately with the
dozens of expiring tax breaks was
on a more certain track for approval, House GOP rank and file, Speaker
even though it would increase federal John Boehner of Ohio said Obama’s
actions on immigration were a “serired ink by an estimated $44 billion
ous breach of our Constitution.”
over a decade. Republicans support-
of Iowa and Orrin Hatch
of Utah cited the AP
investigation in letters
sent to Attorney General
Eric Holder and Carolyn
Colvin, the acting commissioner of the Social
Security Administration.
Grassley and Hatch back
legislation introduced
in the Senate to strip
former Nazis of their
Social Security benefits.
A vote on the Senate bill
is expected in the coming
weeks.
In the new Congress
that begins in January,
Grassley will chair the
Senate Judiciary Committee and Hatch will helm
the Senate Finance Committee.
The Social Security
Administration refused
AP’s request that it provide the total number
of Nazi suspects who
received benefits and
the dollar amounts. AP
appealed the agency’s
denial of the information
through the Freedom of
Information Act.
Former Auschwitz
guard Jakob Denzinger,
who fled the United
States in 1989 and lives
in Croatia, collects a
Social Security payment
of about $1,500 a month,
the AP found.
The White House
and the Social Security
Administration signaled
support for denying benefits to former Nazis following AP’s report. The
Justice Department said
it is open to considering
proposals that would terminate the Social Security payments.
Grassley and Hatch are
seeking broad categories
of data — such as the
total number of Nazis
who received Social
Security benefits and the
dollar amount of those
payments — and details
about specific cases.
For example, they want
to know if a former SS
unit commander named
Michael Karkoc, whom
the AP located last year
in Minnesota, would be
able to retain his benefits
even if removed to another country.
They’re also requesting
copies of communications between the Justice
Department and Social
Security Administration
and the Justice Department and State Department regarding Nazi suspects who left the United
States. AP reported that
the State Department
and the Social Security
Administration voiced
serious concerns over the
methods used by the Justice Department’s Nazihunting unit, the Office of
Special Investigations.
LOCAL STOCKS
AEP (NYSE) — 58.36
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 23.35
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 116.74
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.92
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 55.79
BorgWarner (NYSE) —57.25
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 27.48
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.300
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 43.74
Collins (NYSE) — 84.84
DuPont (NYSE) — 71.69
US Bank (NYSE) — 44.07
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 26.05
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 68.78
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 61.08
Kroger (NYSE) — 59.49
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 81.04
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 109.30
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 24.05
BBT (NYSE) — 37.41
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 24.42
Pepsico (NYSE) — 100.39
Premier (NASDAQ) — 15.75
Rockwell (NYSE) — 115.69
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.86
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.35
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 33.94
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 86.40
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.78
WesBanco (NYSE) — 33.40
Worthington (NYSE) — 37.69
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Dec. 2, 2014, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.
For the best local weather coverage, visit www.mydailysentinel.com
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�Sports
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 s Page 6
Seahawks shock top-seeded Rio
By Randy Payton
URG Sports Information
DELRAY BEACH, Fla. —
Shoval Failer’s goal just under
two minutes into overtime lifted
unseeded Northwood (Fla.)
University to a 3-2 upset win
over the top-seeded University
of Rio Grande, Monday evening,
in the second round of the NAIA
Men’s Soccer National Championship at the Secreast Soccer
Complex.
The Seahawks, who earned
their spot in the Sweet 16 as
the result of being the tourney’s
final site host, improved to
Submitted photo
Rio Grande’s Heitor de Melo heads a ball forward through the fog while 9-4-3 with the victory and will
teammate Patricio Arce and Union’s Jamie McLellan look on during a meeting advance to Wednesday afterat Evan E. Davis Field this season.
noon’s quarterfinal round to face
Texas-Brownsville, a 5-1 winner
of Rio Grande rival Lindsey Wilson College in Monday’s final
game.
The RedStorm, who had also
been the nation’s top-ranked
team in the NAIA coaches poll
for nearly two months, had
an 11-game winning streak
snapped and finished 16-2-2.
Failer’s game-winning score
came on Northwood’s opening
possession of the extra period,
with Theo Stamatopolous earning an assist on the play.
The goal also gave the
Seahawks their first - and only
- lead of the day after earlier rallying from a pair of deficits.
Freshman midfielder Jorge
Guinovart (Barcelona, Spain)
gave Rio a 1-0 lead just 11
minutes into the match when
he found the back of the
net off of a feed from fellow
freshman Joao Paulo Antonio (Sao Paulo, Brazil), but
Northwood got the equalizer
with just over nine minutes
left before the intermission
on a goal by Alan McCann.
Mark Hanlon assisted on the
tying marker.
Rio Grande regained the lead
with lightning-like quickness
after the break when sophomore
forward Willian Paulino (Sao
Paulo, Brazil) scored just 21 seconds into the second stanza off
an assist from Guinovart.
See SEAHAWKS | 7
Defenders sweep
MVCS, 83-28
By Bryan Walters
bwalters@civitasmedia.com
RACINE, Ohio — The
Ohio Valley Christian
boys basketball team
remained unbeaten and
also picked up its first
sweep of the young
season Monday night
following an 83-28 decision over host Mid-Valley
Christian in a non-conference matchup at the
First Baptist Chruch of
Racine in Meigs County.
The visiting Defenders
(6-0) — who defeated
the Lions by a 76-31
count a week ago —
shot 54 percent from
the field and scored the
first 20 points en route
to a 22-4 edge after eight
minutes of play.
The Lions were ultimately never closer than
18 points (24-6) the rest
of the way, as OVCS
went on a 21-6 run in the
second canto on its way
to a comfortable 43-10
cushion at the break.
Ohio Valley Christian
— which had all 11 of
its players score in the
triumph — made a 17-6
run in the third stanza to
secure a 60-16 lead headed into the finale. The
guests closed regulation
with a 23-12 spurt to wrap
up the 55-point outcome.
The Defenders connected on 35-of-62 shot
attempts overall, which
included a 27-of-37 effort
from inside the arc for
73 percent. The guests
were also 8-of-25 from
three-point range for
32 percent and netted
5-of-11 free throws for 45
percent.
MVCS, conversely,
went 11-of-38 overall
from the field for 29 percent, including a 1-of-9
effort from behind the
arc for 11 percent. The
hosts were also 5-of-8
from the charity stripe
for 63 percent and 10-of29 from two-point range
for 34 percent.
Marshall Hood led
OVCS with 15 points,
12 rebounds and four
blocks, followed by
Evan Bowman and Elijah McDonald with 11
markers apiece. Danny
Ballantyne and Justin
Beaver also contributed
nine points each to the
winning cause.
Austin Ragan and
Michael Gruber chipped
in eight points apiece,
followed by Dillon Ragan
with five points and
Zach Long with three
markers. Phil Hollingshead and Josh McDonald rounded out the
winning tally with two
points apiece.
Ballantyne hauled in
seven caroms as well for
the guests, while Elijah
McDonald and Austin
Ragan each led OVCS
with three steals.
Jacob Combs paced
the Lions with 15 points,
followed by Randy Collins with seven points
and Tyler Wilson with
six markers.
Bryan Walters can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2101.
OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Wednesday, Dec. 3
Men’s college basketball
Rio Grande at Shawnee State, 8 p.m.
Women’s college basketball
Rio Grande at Shawnee State, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Dec. 4
Girls Basketball
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 7:30
Winfield at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Hannan at Miller, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Trimble, 7:30
Waterford at Southern, 7:30
Belpre at Eastern, 7:30
Friday, Dec. 5
Boys Basketball
River Valley at Eastern, 7:30
Warren at Meigs, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Calvary Baptist, 7 p.m.
Girls Basketball
Warren at Gallia Academy, 7:30
Ohio Valley Christian at Calvary Baptist, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasant at Chief Duals, TBA
Bryan Walters | OVP Sports
South Gallia junior Mikayla Poling, right, dribbles around Gallia Academy’s Jalea Caldwell during the first half of Saturday’s season
opening girls basketball game in Mercerville, Ohio.
‘The Hoop Project Classic’
By Randy Payton
URG Sports Information
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
— The University of Rio
Grande women’s basketball
program will play host to
The Hoop Project Classic on
Saturday, Dec. 6, at the Newt
Oliver Arena.
The seven-game slate features some of the top girls’
high school basketball programs, players and coaches
in the Tri-State area, with
teams representing all three
states in the region.
Seven of the 14 participating teams won at least 19
games last season and four
NCAA Division I signees
will be among those taking
to the court.
“Having The Hoop Project
Classic is a great way for
us to showcase our campus
at the University of Rio
Grande,” said Rio Grande
assistant coach Brandon
Bias, the director of the
event. “It’s also a way for
us to get a lot of athletes on
campus who might not know
about us. Our main goal is
to give these young ladies
a chance at playing in a
University setting and, hopefully, giving them a chance
to be seen by a college coach
who’s in attendance - even if
it’s not our University.”
The day gets started at
11:30 a.m. with Oak Hill
(OH) squaring off with
Greenup County (Ky.), while
a showdown between South
Gallia (OH) and Symmes
Valley (OH) will follow at
approximately 1 p.m.
Oak Hill returns four start-
ers from last year’s team,
which finished 19-2 on its
way to the Southern Ohio
Conference Division 2 championship. The Oaks are once
again under the direction of
head coach Doug Hale, who
has amassed a career record
of 460-162.
At 2:30 p.m., Manchester
(OH) tangles with North
Adams (OH), which went
19-5 en route to claiming
the Southern Hills Athletic
League championship last
season, before River Valley
(OH) meets Tolsia (WV) at
4 p.m.
River Valley is coached by
former Marshall University
head coach Sarah EvansMoore, while Tolsia head
coach Ric Morrone has
piled up 349 victories in his
21 seasons with the Lady
Rebels.
A pair of West VirginiaKentucky matchups are next
up on the docket, with South
Charleston (WV) meeting
Ashland Paul Blazer (KY) at
5:30 p.m. and Logan (WV)
taking on Boyd County (KY)
at 7 p.m.
South Charleston returns
all five starters from last
year’s Class AAA state tournament team which finished
20-4, while Ashland has four
starters back - including University of Colorado signee
Alexis Robinson - from last
year’s 26-9 squad which lost
in the semifinal round of the
Kentucky Sweet 16.
Logan, the WV Class
AAA runner-up in 2012-13,
returns four starters, including Marshall University
signee Shayna Gore, from
Alex Hawley | OVP Sports
River Valley junior Shelby Brown goes for a layup during the second
half of the Lady Raiders loss at Eastern on Saturday.
last year’s 15-win team. Boyd
County has all five starters
back from last year’s 23-9
team, including a Thundering Herd signee of its own in
Logan Fraley.
The final game of the day
pits Athens (OH) against
Fairland (OH) at approximately 8:30 p.m.
Athens, which finished
25-2 after a loss to eventual
Division II state champion
Millersburg West Holmes in
the regional finals, has three
starters back, including Ohio
University signee Dominique Doseck. Fairland has
three starters back from last
year’s club, which went 22-4,
won the Ohio Valley Conference title and reached the
Division III Final Four.
Admission is $5.
Live video and play-byplay of all seven games will
also be available at www.
team1sports.com/redstorm.
“None of this would
be possible without the
sponsorship of The Hoop
Project,” Bias said. “We
value their support and look
forward to many more The
Hoop Project Classics in the
future.”
Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director for the
University of Rio Grande and can be
reached at (740)245-7213.
�SPORTS
Daily Sentinel
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 7
Gordon set to carry load for Badgers in title game
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — On
the ground at the end of a run,
Melvin Gordon felt the twist.
No. 11 Wisconsin’s star running back hopped back up late
in the fourth quarter of last
week’s win over Minnesota
and started walking gingerly
toward the sideline favoring his
right ankle.
It didn’t seem to slow Gordon down last week. It doesn’t
seem like it will prevent him
from playing Saturday against
No. 6 Ohio State in the Big Ten
title game in Indianapolis.
Coach Gary Andersen,
though, will be keeping close
tabs after a heavy workload the
past few weeks.
“It’s got me on high alert and
the only thing I can do is listen
to Melvin Gordon, because I
know Melvin is going to tell me
what his mindset is — and he
will be 100 percent ready to roll
on Saturday,” Andersen said.
It should help that backup
running back Corey Clement,
who has been bothered by a
right shoulder injury, is getting
better. He ran for 89 yards on
seven carries in the second half
against Minnesota, and Andersen expects Clement to get
more touches.
Gordon, though, remains the
top option for the Badgers (10-2).
“But how I can help him get
to where he is today — so as
good as he can possibly be on
Saturday — I know I’m going
to do everything I can to help
him,” Andersen said.
Gordon had 31 carries for
200 yards on Nov. 22 against
Iowa, and 29 carries for 151
yards the following week
against Minnesota. Both were
physical games against opponents also in the Big Ten West
division title hunt. Tacklers
ganged up trying to bring down
the Heisman Trophy candidate.
In the end, it was the Badgers
who emerged atop the West.
Ohio State (11-1) knows its
first task is stopping the run.
“You stop Melvin Gordon, I
think we’ve got a great chance,”
Buckeyes linebacker Curtis
Grant said.
The teams haven’t met this
season, though the Buckeyes
can draw confidence from last
year’s 31-24 win in Columbus.
Back then, Gordon was held to
74 yards on 15 carries but he
was splitting time with James
White, who is now with the
New England Patriots.
Grant described the effort
last year as the defense bringing “it to them as much as they
brought it to us.”
Sounds like a similar plan is
in place for Saturday.
“In order to stop a running
game, you’ve got to have great
team defense, you’ve got to
surround the ball, you’ve got to
build a wall at the line of scrimmage, you’ve got to swarm
tackles,” defensive coordinator
Luke Fickell said.
And in those occasions when
Gordon has one-on-one matchups — well, look out.
“There’s going to be opportunities in the game where one
man is going to have to bring
him down in open space,”
Fickell said. “And that’s the difference between big plays and
ones that go 6, 7, 8 yards …
What it comes down to is leverage on the ball and tackling.”
It does sound so simple.
Gordon, though, has made
opponents pay. He is also getting better as the season wears
on — he is averaging 241
yards rushing over his last four
games. More than 40 percent of
his Big Ten-record 2,260 yards
this season have come in that
span alone.
He’s breaking tackles, cutting
quickly through holes and making
defenders look silly in the open.
“He’s a very powerful — he
looks like an angry — runner,”
Ohio State linebacker Joshua
Perry said.
Gordon said he twisted his
ankle a couple times last week
on his own against Minnesota.
He was fine, though he hobbled
off with about 3 minutes left in
the game after suspecting that
some Gophers player in the pile
took a shot at the ankle.
“He definitely did that on
purpose,” Gordon said. “They
knew that the game was over,
but you don’t have to do that.”
He said he also sprained the
ankle several times last season.
When it happens, Gordon gets
it taped up and heads back out.
AP source: Coach Brady Funeral set for Ohio
State athlete found dead
Hoke out at Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(AP) — Brady Hoke is
out after four years at
Michigan.
A person close to Hoke
familiar with the situation confirmed the move
to The Associated Press
on Tuesday. The person
spoke on condition of
anonymity because the
school had not announced
it ahead of a late afternoon news conference.
Hoke did not return a
message left seeking comment.
Hired after the tumultuous tenure of Rich Rodriguez, Hoke was supposed
to help Michigan regain
its place among college
football’s elite, and his
familiarity with the program’s culture and tradition — he was a former
Wolverines assistant —
made the initial transition
a successful one.
But after going to the
Sugar Bowl in Hoke’s first
season, the Wolverines
slowly slipped back into
mediocrity and are not
even among the top teams
in the Big Ten. Hoke was
31-20 as the Wolverines’
coach after the team floundered to a 5-7 record this
season and missed out on
bowl eligibility along with
Big Ten also-rans Indiana,
Purdue and Northwestern.
The last two seasons
were characterized by
poor play on the offensive
line that caused the entire
offense to bog down —
ironic since Hoke’s arrival
was supposed to mean a
return to smash-mouth
football after three years
of Rodriguez’s spread
system.
Hoke also stumbled in
September 2014 when
quarterback Shane Morris kept playing despite
receiving what was later
determined to be a concussion, appearing somewhat disconnected with
how to handle injured
players. The school later
apologized for the “confusion” and “lack of communication” as it changed its
protocol to better monitor
potential injuries.
The fallout from the
underperforming Wolverines hit on Oct. 31 as
Dave Brandon resigned
after four years as athletic director. University
President Mark Schlissel
said at the time that the
athletic department was
in great financial condition, but the results at
the Big House have not
measured up. Brandon, a
former CEO of Domino’s
Pizza Inc. and a player
under Michigan coach Bo
Schembechler, was less
than a year on the job
when he made the decision to fire Rodriguez
after three seasons.
Less than two weeks
after Brandon was fired,
Schlissel expressed concerns about the relationship between athletics
and academics at the
university, pointing specifically at the football
program.
“We admit students
who aren’t as qualified,
and it’s probably the kids
that we admit that can’t
honestly, even with lots
of help, do the amount
of work and the quality
of work it takes to make
progression from year
to year,” he said then.
“These past two years
have gotten better, but
before that, the graduation rates were terrible,
with football somewhere
in the 50s and 60s when
our total six-year rate at
the university is somewhere near 90 percent, so
that’s a challenge.”
Schlissel later issued
an apology to Hoke and
the football program via
the university’s website
for not clearly stating that
Seahawks
From Page 6
Again, the Seahawks rallied and forged a tie with
21:58 left in regulation thanks to a goal by Christian
Costilla and an assist by Craig Mooney.
Neither team was able to find the net through the
remainder of regulation, setting up the dramatic
overtime finish - the third straight contest of the day
which needed extra time to decide a winner.
Northwood finished with a 13-9 edge in shots,
including a 7-2 advantage in shots on goal.
Mark Dawson earned the win in goal for the
Seahawks, while senior Jon Dodson (Tiffin, OH)
recorded four saves in a losing cause for the RedStorm.
Dodson was one of four Rio players who played
their final game for the RedStorm on Monday. The
quartet also included senior midfielder Cesar Lopez
(San Salvador, El Salvador), senior defender Logan
Gumbert (Anderson, OH) and junior defender
Romain Terzian (Valence, France).
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director for the University of Rio
Grande and can be reached at (740)245-7213.
the situation has gotten
significantly better since
Hoke replaced Rodriguez.
Hoke was an assistant
at Michigan before turning around San Diego
State and Ball State, his
alma mater, as a head
coach. When he left San
Diego State to take over
the Wolverines, he made
little secret of his excitement about the job. His
habit of referring to rival
Ohio State as simply
“Ohio” quickly caught on,
and Hoke was a hit when
Michigan beat the Buckeyes in his first season —
the only time that’s happened in the last decade.
The Wolverines won the
Sugar Bowl and finished
the 2011 season 11-2,
but that was with some
talented holdovers from
Rodriguez’s teams. Hoke’s
recruits were well regarded, but the results on the
field didn’t measure up.
Michigan went 8-5 in
2012 and 7-6 in 2013.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio
State football players, wrestlers and
other athletes plan to attend the funeral service for a teammate found dead
of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot
wound, the university said Tuesday.
Fellow football players have
described Kosta Karageorge as a hardworking and enthusiastic athlete who
often stayed for extra practice even
though it was unlikely he would ever
play in a game.
The service was scheduled for
Wednesday at Annunciation Greek
Orthodox Cathedral in Columbus,
with a private burial in Athens County.
Athletes from other sports will
also attend, and football teammates
planned to wear a No. 53 helmet sticker — Karageorge’s number — during
Saturday’s Big Ten championship
game against Wisconsin, said Ohio
State spokesman Jerry Emig.
Dr. Anahi Ortiz, the Franklin County coroner, says Karageorge died of a
gunshot wound to the head, but she
hadn’t definitely ruled it a suicide as
of Tuesday afternoon.
Karageorge’s mother says he had
had several concussions, and the coroner says a special examination will be
done of Karageorge’s brain to look for
any traumatic injury.
Columbus police said Sunday, the
day Karageorge’s body was found, that
he died of an apparent self-inflicted
gunshot wound. A handgun was found
in the trash bin with him, police said.
Karageorge, 22, disappeared four
days earlier after sending his parents
an apologetic text message.
The message said, “I am sorry if I
am an embarrassment but these concussions have my head all f——- up.”
His mother, Susan Karageorge,
told police her son had had several
concussions and a few spells of being
extremely confused. Players also knew
of Karageorge’s history of concussions, they said in interviews Monday.
Karageorge was a Buckeyes wrestler
for three years, and the senior defensive tackle joined the football team
as a walk-on this season. He hadn’t
played any games. He was known as
a “scout team” member, meaning he
likely wouldn’t see playing time and
took the role of an opposing team
member during the regular starters’
weekday practices.
His body was found Sunday by a
woman searching trash bins near her
neighborhood for scrap metal to sell.
7
9
WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST
3
(WSAZ)
4
(WTAP)
6
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7
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8
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6:30
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3
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Wheel of
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Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
events.
Judge Judy Entertainment Tonight
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Theory
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13 News at Inside
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Center (N)
The Middle Goldberg (N)
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Best of Birds Enjoy
memorable bird scenes from
Nature's library. (N)
The Middle Goldberg (N)
(N)
Survivor: San Juan "Kind of
Like Cream Cheese" (N)
Hell's Kitchen "Seven Chefs
Compete" (N)
Best of Birds Enjoy
memorable bird scenes from
Nature's library. (N)
Survivor: San Juan "Kind of
Like Cream Cheese" (N)
8
PM
8:30
PM
9:30
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10:30
Saturday Night Live Christmas A compilation of fanfavorite holiday sketches.
Saturday Night Live Christmas A compilation of fanfavorite holiday sketches.
Modern
Black-ish (N) Nashville "Two Sides to
Family (N)
Every Story" (N)
Nova "First Man on the Moon" A portrait Great
of the American hero features interviews
Performawith Armstrong's family and friends. (N)
nces
Modern
Black-ish (N) Nashville "Two Sides to
Family (N)
Every Story" (N)
Survivor: San Juan "Still
Stalker "A Cry for Help" (N)
Holdin' On" (N)
Red Band Society "What I Eyewitness News at 10
Did For Love" (N)
Nova "First Man on the Moon" A portrait Katmai:
of the American hero features interviews
Alaska's Wld
with Armstrong's family and friends. (N)
Survivor: San Juan "Still
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Holdin' On" (N)
9
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9:30
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Funniest Home Videos
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Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother Met Mother
18 (WGN) Funniest Home Videos
Slap Shots
Access
Cavaliers
NCAA Basketball North Texas vs. Oklahoma State (L)
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24 (FXSP) Dodgeball
25 (ESPN) SportsCenter
Valvano
NCAA Basketball ACC/ Big-10 Challenge Ia./UNC (L)
NCAA Basketb. ACC/ Big-10 Challenge (L)
26 (ESPN2) Around Horn Interruption Valvano (N) /(:15) NCAA Basketball Mich. St./N.D. (L)
(:15) NCAA Basketball Virginia vs. Maryland (L)
27 (LIFE)
29
(FAM)
30 (SPIKE)
31 (NICK)
34 (USA)
35 (TBS)
37 (CNN)
38 (TNT)
39
(AMC)
40 (DISC)
42
(A&E)
52 (ANPL)
57
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58
60
61
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
65 (FS1)
67 (HIST)
68 (BRAVO)
72 (BET)
73 (HGTV)
74 (SYFY)
PREMIUM
The Road to Christmas A storm that paralyses the Rocky A Nanny for Christmas An advertising executive loses her Christmas in the City ('13,
Mountains leaves a bride's wedding plans derailed. TVPG job at a powerful firm just before the holidays. TVG
Fam) John Prescott. TVPG
(5:00)
Prancer ('89,
The Santa Clause 3: The Escape Clause Santa Claus
The Polar Express A doubting little boy boards a magical
Fam) Sam Elliott. TVG
prepares for a busy Christmas with his in-laws & Jack Frost. train to visit the North Pole on Christmas Eve. TVPG
Cops
Jail
Cops "Coast Cops "Busted Cops
Cops "Liar, Impact Wrestling Watch high-risk athletic entertainment
to Coast"
#2"
Liar #6"
featuring the most recognizable stars of wrestling.
iCarly
iCarly
iCarly
Max
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
Law&Order: SVU "Mean" Law&O: SVU "Careless"
SVU "Her Negotiation"
SVU "Surrender Benson"
SVU "Imprisoned Lives"
Seinf. 1/2
Seinf. 2/2
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Somebody's Gotta (N)
CNN Tonight
Castle
Castle "Deep in Death"
The Dark Knight Rises ('12, Act) Christian Bale, Anne Hathaway. TVPG
(5:00)
Coach Carter A basketball coach prevents his
The Santa Clause 2 ('02, Fam) Tim Allen. After being Santa Claus for Home Alone
team from playing until they improve their grades. TV14
a few years, Scott Calvin must find a wife and help his son. TVPG
2: Lost in ...
Naked "Playing With Fire" Dude, You're "Death Row" Dude, You're Screwed (N) Dude, You're Screwed (N) Naked and Afraid
Duck
Duck
Duck
Duck Dynasty "Stand by
Duck
Duck
Duck
Country
Country
Dynasty
Dynasty
Mia"
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty
Dynasty (N) Buck$ (N)
Buck$ (N)
River Monsters
River Monsters: Lost
River Monsters: Lost
Monsters "Face Ripper"
To Be Announced
Tia and Tamera "Twerkin' 9 Preachers of L.A. "Sweet
Preachers of L.A. "Preach Preachers of L.A. "Most
Fix My Choir "A Choir With
to 5"
Home Alabama"
L.A."
Memorable Moments" (N) Two Heads"
Law & Order "Hunters"
Law & Order "Haven"
Law & Order "Sideshow"
Law & Order "Disciple"
Law & Order "Harm"
(4:30) Two Weeks Notice
E! News (N)
Live E! (N)
Live From E! Kourtney "Aftershocks"
The Soup (N) The Soup
(5:50) Walker, Texas Ranger Walker, TR "Warriors"
(:20) Family Feud
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hot In (N)
The Exes (N)
Alaska State Troopers
Drugs, Inc. "Rocky
Drugs, Inc. "Super Meth" Drugs, Inc. "Marijuana
Drugs, Inc.: Dealer POV
"High-Speed Chase"
Mountain High"
Mayhem" (N)
Pro FB Talk Football
NHL Live! (L)
NHL Hockey St. Louis Blues at Chicago Blackhawks Site: United Center (L) Overtime
America's Pre-game (L)
UFC Tonight (N)
NCAA Basketball Seton Hall vs. Creighton Women's (L)
TUF 20 (N)
American Pickers
American Pickers "KISS and American Pickers "Let's Be American Pickers "Grudge (:05) Down E. Dicker. "Used
"California Gold Mine"
Sell"
Frank"
Match" (N)
Cars and Old Guitars" (N)
Top Chef "It's War"
Top Chef
Atlanta "All Tea All Shade" Atlanta "Bury the Ratchet" Chef "Restaurant Wars" (N)
The Real (N)
The Cookout ('04, Com) Ja Rule. TVPG
Nellyville "Party Crasher" Nellyville "Nelly's Girls"
Buying "Chris and Jennifer" Buying and Selling
PropBros "The Main House" Property Bros @ Home (N) House Hunt. House
(5:00)
Chernobyl
Babylon A.D. A mercenary is hired to smuggle a
The Wolfman Emily Blunt. A nobleman comes back
Diaries TV14
woman from Eastern Europe to New York City. TV14
to his family's estate and is bitten by a werewolf. TVMA
6
PM
(:15) Making
6:30
7
PM
7:30
8
PM
8:30
9
PM
9:30
10
PM
10:30
Wicker Park (2004, Drama) Rose Byrne, Matthew Real Sports Bernard
The
The Newsroom "Contempt"
400 (HBO) of "Lone
Goldberg goes one-on-one Comeback
Will refuses to reveal his
Lillard, Josh Hartnett. A young executive obsessively
with Mark Cuban.
Survivor"
source of the stolen papers.
pursues a woman he believes is his long-lost love. TV14
(:10)
Bulletproof Monk ('03, Act) Seann William
Serenity (2005, Sci-Fi) Gina Torres, Adam Baldwin,
We're the Millers ('13,
450 (MAX) Scott, Chow Yun-Fat. A Tibetan monk becomes a mentor to Nathan Fillion. A renegade spaceship crew hides a
Com) Jennifer Aniston, Jason
a street kid, whom he teaches to protect a scroll. TVPG
disturbed young woman from a totalitarian regime. TV14 Sudeikis. TV14
(:15)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower ('12, Dra)
Inside the NFL "2014: Week
Crash (2004, Drama) Don Cheadle, Matt Dillon,
500 (SHOW) Emma Watson, Logan Lerman. An outsider gets a look into 14"
Sandra Bullock. A car accident triggers a series of racist
the real world with the help of two popular students. TVPG
confrontations within a 24-hour period. TVM
�CLASSIFIEDS
8 Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Insurance
INSURANCE
740-992-6677
www.114court.com
60545608
MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENTS
LEGALS
N THE MATTER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS, PROBATE COURT MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of the
following named fiduciary has
been filed in the Probate Court,
Meigs County, Ohio for approval and settlement.
FILE NO 20123002 – The First
Trustee s Account of Teresa L.
Houdashelt, Trustee of the
Testamentary Trust Created by
Item III (B) and (C) of the Last
Will and Testament of Barbara
E. VanMeter.
Unless exceptions are filed
thereto, said account will be
set for hearing before said
Court on January 5, 2015 at
which time said account will be
considered and continued from
day to day until finally disposed of.
Any person interested may file
written exception to said account or to matters pertaining
to the execution of the trust,
not less than five days prior to
the date set for hearing.
L. SCOTT POWELL
Judge
Common Pleas Court, Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio 12/3/14
SHERIFF S SALE, CASE NO.
13 CV 112, PEOPLES BANK,
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,
PLAINTIFF, VS. WILLIAM JUNIOR WISE, ET AL., DEFENDANTS, COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS, MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO.
By virtue of an Alias Order of
Sale issued out of said Court in
the above action, Keith Wood,
the Sheriff of Meigs County,
Ohio, will expose to sell at public action on the front steps of
the Meigs County Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs County,
Ohio, on Friday, December 19,
2014, at 10:00 a.m., the following lands and tenements:
Situated in the Township of
Salem, County of Meigs and
State of Ohio and more particularly described as follows:
Also the following tract: Beginning at the Southeast corner of
Lot No. 10 in the Town of Danville; thence along the Main
Street 76 feet and 6 inches to
a cornerstone; thence North 34
degrees East 8 rods to a
cornerstone; thence in a Westerly direction 5 rods to the
Northeast corner of said Lot
No. 10; thence South on the
East line of said Lot No. 10 to
the place of beginning, containing one-fourth (1/4) acre,
more or less.
Being the same real estate
deeded to Essie D. Vance by
Arvel Davis, et. al., and is to include all the real estate in the
above described premises.
EXCEPT from the above described real estate the following:
The following real estate situate in the Township of Salem,
County of Meigs and State of
Ohio, in the S. E. ½ of the S.
E. 1/4 of Section 13, Town 8,
Range 15, Ohio Company s
Purchase. Part of Lot 6 and 10,
Town of Danville.
Beginning at the S. W. corner
of Lot 6 in Danville; thence
Northerly along the West line
of Lot 6, 60 feet; thence Easterly parallel with the South line
of Lot 6, 150 feet; thence
Southerly parallel with the
West line of Lot 6, 60 feet to
the South line of Lot 6; thence
Westerly along the South line
of Lot 6, 150 feet to the place
of beginning.
Being the same real estate
conveyed to Cecil Denver
Price and Goldie Price by
Robert Grate and Hazel Grate
by deed recorded in Deed
Book 178, Page 299 of the
Meigs County Deed Records.
The real estate above described is subject to all leases,
easements and rights of way of
record.
Reference Deed: Volume 100,
Page 141, Meigs County Official Records.
AUDITOR S PARCEL NOS.:
13-00240.000, 13-00241.000,
13-00242.000, 13-00243.000
and 13-00245.001.
Subject to the United States of
America s right of redemption
under 28USC Section 2410(C).
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.
PROPERTY ADDRESS:
31032 State Route 325 Langsville, Ohio 45741.
Being a part of the Southeast
CURRENT OWNER: William
Half of the Southeast Quarter
Junior Wise and Stephanie
of Section 13, Township 8,
Range 15, Ohio Co. Purchase. Lynn Wise.
Lots Nos. 5, 6 and 10 in the
REAL ESTATE VALUE SET
Town of Danville. Also comBY COURT AT: Minimum Bid
mencing at the Northwest
Not Less Than $12,000.00.
corner of Lot No. 5 in Danville
No interior examination has
and running parallel with the
been made of any structures, if
road leading from Vinton to
Rutland and running grids from any, on the real estate.
the above named corner of Lot
Help Wanted General
LEGALS
any, on the real estate.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% (cash
only) down on day of sale, balance (cash or certified check
only) due on confirmation of
sale. ORC 2327.02(C) requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff. Subject to accrued real estate
taxes.
ALL SHERIFF S SALES OPERATE UNDER THE DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT EMPTOR.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS ARE URGED TO
CHECK FOR LIENS IN THE
PUBLIC RECORDS OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
Jennifer L. Sheets, LITTLE,
SHEETS & BARR, LLP, 211213 E. Second Street,
Pomeroy, OH 45769, Telephone: (740) 992-6689.(11)
26, (12) 3,10
Lost & Found
FEMALE DOG WHITE, TAN &
BLACK HUSKY/BEAGLE MIX
W/BLUE EYE.FOUND ON
BRISTER RD, COOLVILLE,
OH.740-591-1192
Notices
GUN & KNIFE SHOW
CHILLICOTHE
December 13th 9-5 &
December 14th 9-3
Ross Co. Fairgrounds
344 Fairgrounds Road
Adm $5
6' TBLS $35
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Front Sight Promotions, LLC
740-667-0412
www.ohiogunshows.net
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.
Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.
*******************
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE
All real estate advertising in
this newspaper is subject to
the Fair Housing Act which
makes it illegal to advertise
“any preference, limitation or
discrimination based on race,
color, religion, sex, handicap,
familial status or national origin, or an intention to make
any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with
parents or legal custodians,
pregnant women and people
securing custody of children
under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in
violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that
all dwellings advertised in this
newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis. To
complain of discrimination call
HUD toll-free at 1-800-6699777. The toll-free telephone
number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.
EMPLOYMENT
OPPORTUNITY
Have you been looking for a position in sales that really rewards you for your efforts? Could any or several of the following words be used to describe you or your personality? Fast
paced, competitive, decisive, persistent, eager, bold, forceful,
and inquisitive. How about assertive? Do you like to meet new
people? Are you good at multi-tasking? Do you work well with
others and with the public? If you answered yes to many of
these questions, you may be the person we are seeking. Civitas Media is looking for Business Development Representative to sell online and print advertising for our Newspapers.
These are full time salary positions with a generous commission program. Benefits include Health insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to Julia Schultz @
jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
individuals. Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY,
VA, WV, OH, IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE
Miscellaneous
Need help with your rent?
the Housing Authority of the
County of Jackson is accepting applications for rental assistance in the Jackson,
Roane, Gilmer and Calhoun
County areas. You can go to
your local DHHR office or stop
by one of our offices to fill out
an application. Should you
have any questions, please
contact us at 304-372-2343.
We will pick up old Stove, Dryer, & Washers, and scrap metal, We Pay old Cars 50/50
scrap payment Call 740-6694240 or 614-989-7341
Miscellaneous
Grave Blankets $5-$30; live
Wreaths $10 & up; Sue's
47310 Morningstar Rd., Racine, Oh 740-949-2115
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime Guarantee. Local References. Established in 1975. Call 24HRS
740-446-0870. Rogers Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com
Apartments/Townhouses
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 & 3 BR apts
$425 mo & up
sec dep $300 & up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528
Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)
Help Wanted General
Applicator
Operate fertilizer or crop protectant application equipment.
CDL required. Includes warehouse duties. Agricultural
background helpful Forklift
Certification preferred but not
required. Able to pass background check, drug screen and
MVR check. To apply please
visit our website at www.southernstates.com and apply to requisition #2517. EOE M/F/D/V
Engineering/Drafting Position: qualification MUST have
degree in engineering/drafting
at least 3 years experience
with Auto Cad. Position is a 40
hour plus overtime. Pay rate is
based on level of degree and
experience. After 90 days
health insurance and life insurance is offered. One week
paid vacation after 1 year of
employment and 4 paid holidays. Please send resume to
70764 State Route 124 Vinton
OH 45686 SERIOUS APPLICANTS ONLY.
Experienced Machinist needed
to run CNC, manual lathes,
mills etc, able to write G codes
and conversational programs,
must be able to work from
CAD drawings, work primarily
with stainless steel, delrin and
UHMW. Send resumes to:
Steelial Construction
70764 St. Rt. 124
Vinton, OH 45686
Jordan Landing Apartments
now have 1 Bdrm, 2 Bdrm, and
3 Bdrm Apts. Available. Water, Sewage + Trash Paid.
Tenannt takes care of Electric.
Security Deposit Accept Section 8 Vouchers.
304-674-0023 or
304-444-4268
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679
Houses For Rent
Home walking distance of
shopping. One small pet . No
smoking. $600/$500. Includes
water. 304-657-6378.
2 bdrm house for rent in Gallipolis. 1 Small dog OK All
Electric. References & security deposit required. 740-4463870 Rent $400/Deposit $400
Lease
Three Bedroom unfurnished,
2nd floor, townhouse on Court
St. Condition excellent. No
pets. Lease application, with
references and security deposit required. $650 per month.
Call 441-7875 or 446-3936 or
446-4425
One bedroom, unfurnished,
2nd floor, recently re-decorated, apt., 2nd ave., Gallipolis.
No pets. Lease application,
with references. Security deposit. $425/mo. Call 4417875, 446-3936 or 446-4425.
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570
Call
Business & Trade School
Miscellaneous
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new & rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B
Commercial
Commercial Building for Sale
or Lease located on State
Route 7 north phone 740-6450559
Houses For Sale
3BR, 2BA
READY TO MOVE IN
740-446-3570
Land (Acreage)
Stereo/TV/Electronics
3-Bdrm - 2 bath - 1997 sectional on 4 acres (Gallia Co.) with
1 outside building, Corner of
St. Rt. 325 and Rowlesville Rd.
asking $65,000 Morning number 8:30 to 5pm 446-0306
Evening # 446-2158
Joe's TV Repair on most
makes & Models. House Calls
304-675-1724
Apartments/Townhouses
1BR, upstairs , All utilities paid.
$450/mo + $450 deposit. No
Pets 740-446-3870
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 & 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Miscellaneous
2-BEDROOM APARTMENT
DOWNTOWN POMEROY,
OH. REFRIGERATOR,
STOVE, CENTRAL AIR.
NICE! $500 PER MO.
CALL 740-591-1630
Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842
Manufactured Homes
Used single wides
3 to choose from
starting at $1500.
freedomhomesohio.com
740-446-3093
Visit us online @ www.mydailysentinel.com
Across From the Court House
114 Court Street, Pomeroy
LEGALS
Rutland and running grids from
the above named corner of Lot
No. 5 in a Northeast direction
parallel with the North line of
said Lots No. 5 and 10 until it
runs opposite the East line of
Lot No. 10; thence South to the
Northeast corner of Lot No. 10.
Daily Sentinel
�COMICS
Daily Sentinel
BLONDIE
Wednesday, December 3, 2014 9
By Dean Young and John Marshall
BEETLE BAILEY
By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer
RETAIL
By Norm Feuti
HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
HI AND LOIS
By Chris Browne
Written By Brian & Greg Walker; Drawn By Chance Browne
THE BRILLIANT MIND OF EDISON LEE
By John Hambrock
BABY BLUES
ZITS
By Jerry Scott & Rick Kirkman
By Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
PARDON MY PLANET
By Vic Lee
CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
5 9
RHYMES WITH ORANGE
3
1
9
By Hilary Price
5
7
3
2 4 8
1
2
9
6 8
1 4 2 7
8
9
5
8
5
4
1
7
5
Difficulty Level
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�LOCAL
10 Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Daily Sentinel
60550309
As part of our commitment to provide the very best cancer care, Holzer
Center for Cancer Care (HCCC) is now a member of The James Cancer
Network at The Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center - James
Cancer Hospital and Solove Research Institute (OSUCCC-James).
Meet our Physicians
HCCC’s affiliation with The James Cancer Network provides:
~� Refined treatment paths between
The James Cancer Center and HCCC
~� Co-management of patients/
collaboration of care planning
~� Access to 200 physicians at the
OSUCCC-James, who each
specialize in one type of cancer
~� Excellent care close to home
Sushil Jain, MD
Medical
Oncology
Khawaja
Hamid, MD
Hematology /
Oncology
Melva PinnBingham, MD
Radiation
Oncology
Scott Mitchell,
MD, CMD
Palliative Care
�
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12. December
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December 3, 2014
belville
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halley
large
morrow
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pullins
sayre
shobe
smith
thornton
underwood