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                  <text>High school
volleyball
page 5

Gospel Sing
page 3

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 179

Briefs
Route open
LONG BOTTOM — Ohio
248 is now open to all traffic
without any restriction.
Plan hymn sing
ROCKSPRINGS — A
hymn sing will be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at Rocksprings
United Methodist Church,
with local talent and refreshments to follow.
Special meeting
POMEROY — Meigs
County Veterans Service Commission will meet at 9 a.m. on
Monday in special session, 117
Memorial Drive.
Veterans Day service
POMEROY — Retired
Army Major Scott Walton,
Pomeroy, will be the speaker
at Friday’s Veterans Day program, to begin at 11 a.m. on
the front steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse. The program is sponsored annually by
Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion.
The Southern High School
Band will perform patriotic
music, and the post’s honor
guard will present a gun salute
to veterans being honored at
the program.Seating will be
provided.
Holiday Bazaar
POMEROY — There will
be a holiday bazaar Friday,
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at The
Maples, 100 E. Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy. Crafts, baked
goods, knick-knacks, and miscellaneous items will be for
sale. Food will be available
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. for a
donation. The public is invited.
Plan gospel sing
RACINE — Carmel Sutton United Methodist Church
will have a gospel sing at 7
p.m. Sunday with the Roush
Family and Truly Saved. The
sing will be held at the Sutton
building.

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Crow orders payment Unofficial
election
results
of
14
staff
‘til
end
of
‘12
Visiting judge freezes funds, protects court files yesterday
By Brian J. Reed

BReed@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — Former
Judge Fred W. Crow III
has ordered county commissioners and the county
auditor to continue paying
more than a dozen employees through the remainder
of his term, although he is
no longer on the bench.
Late Wednesday, a visiting judge signed and filed an
order preventing the auditor
or court staff from disbursing funds from court-controlled line items or disposing of court files. His order
was to be posted in Crow’s
office after it was filed with
the Clerk of Courts.
Crow’s order, filed Friday afternoon, orders the
payment of the employees
at their current rates of pay
through the end of his term,
December, 2012. Dale A.

Crawford, one of several
visiting judges appointed by
the Ohio Supreme Court to
hear cases in the court during Crow’s summer leave of
absence, effectively freezes
funds in the court’s computerized legal fund, computerized research fund,
foreclosure fund, parent
education workshop fund,
county sanctions funds,
special projects funds, felony house arrest funds and
a grant fund for the community corrections program
which operates from the
court.
It does not effect expenditures for salaries and other
costs borne by the county’s
general fund.
Crawford’s order does,
however, state that “no person shall dispose of any file
of the court until further ordered.”
Crow’s staff remains on

the job.
Crow announced his resignation from the Common
Pleas Court bench Monday,
the day his last court entries
were filed. On Friday, he
filed an order requiring that
all personnel be compensated at their current wage and
benefit package, and said
his order would serve as a
budget request for commissioners for next year’s operations.
Crow pays employees
from the general fund and
special revenue funds, representing court sanction
funds and other fees collected through court costs.
Those special revenue
funds include those frozen
by Crawford’s entry yesterday.
The last payroll, issued Wednesday, included
checks to five employees
paid completely from the

general fund. Those employees included his court
administrator, assignment
commissioner, deputy court
reporter and jury commission administrator — one
employee — who was paid
$1,708 in semi-weekly
wages; a court reporter,
assistant assignment commissioners and administrative assistant, $1,216; an
assistant bailiff, probation
and community corrections
officer and work release director, $1,040; an assistant
court reporter, administrative assistant, and assistant
probation and community
corrections officer, $640;
and a full-time work release
officer, $640.
County
commissioners appropriated $132,000
into Crow’s employees line
item, but his staff’s sala-

from Meigs County, Ohio’s
Carleton School arrived at
Gallery 409 to experience
and create art. On a tour of
the gallery, students saw
a massive piece of marble
sculpture designed to look
like an earthquake, a lifesized pony made out of wire,
paintings of vibrant fields as
well as tragic figures, and a
DVD depicting underwater
life which is also shown in
the Smithsonian Museum.
In fact, the class followed
pieces of art all through
downtown Point Pleasant.

After leaving Gallery 409
on Main St., they traveled
to Gunn Park to take in the
Mothman sculpture, followed by a stroll along the
Ohio River to view the floodwall murals depicting Point
Pleasant’s revolutionary history.
The class then stopped
by the Point Pleasant American Legion which hosted
the group, allowing them to
participate in even more art
— this time watching it be
created. Enrico chose a student to pose for an original

sketching. Students watched
as their classmate came to
life on paper. Then, Enrico
gave the students a canvas
and paint to create their own
self portraits. Enrico asked
them to paint not what they
saw in a mirror but how they
saw themselves on the inside.
Many brush strokes of
bright acrylics later and the
students had their own original paintings to take home
after a day of speaking a universal language that knows
no developmental disabilities, only the ability to create.

See Crow, 2

Art is universal
By Beth Sergent

bsergent@heartlandpublications.com

POINT PLEASANT —
Art is a universal language,
according to Gallery 409 Artist in Residence, Gerry Enrico, of Gallipolis.
Enrico explained, if you
were in Russia and needed
a glass of water but didn’t
speak Russian, what would
you do? Likely, you would
draw and therefore create
your desire into reality —
such is the practice of creating art.
On Tuesday, students

Cheerleading clinic
TUPPERS PLAINS —
The Eastern Cheerleaders will
hold a cheer clinic from 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m. on Saturday. Nov. 19
at the Tuppers Plains elementary school gymnasium. The
clinic is open to all girls, 6 to
12 years of age. The cost is
$25 per participant if pre-registering, or $30 for registering
on the day of the clinic. Girls
will receive a t-shirt, water
and snacks. There be dance,
cheers, and a few chants included in the clinic. For more
information or to register call
Dee Cross at 740-590-0140 or Students from Meigs County, Ohio’s Carleton School
Debbie Barber, 740-525-1931. watch a DVD shown in the Smithsonian at Gallery 409
in Point Pleasant. Students were there to learn about
different forms of art.

Obituaries
Page A2
• Thomas Tucker, 65

Weather

Meigs Board expresses opposition
to new voucher program
Threathens financing of public schools

By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — A resolution of opposition
to legislation which would
High: 49
significantly expand the availability of
Low: 31
vouchers for students to attend private
or parochial schools was passed by
ndex
the Meigs Local Board of Education
at Tuesday night’s meeting.
1 SECTION — 10 PAGES
Legislation to expand the voucher
Classifieds
A7-8 program is currently under considComics
A9 eration in the Ohio House of RepreEditorials
A4 sentatives. At the last Board meeting
Michael Struble spoke on the proSports
A5-8 posed legislation and urged the school
board to express opposition to state
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
representatives. Struble contended
that issuing more vouchers would take
money from local schools which are
already struggling.
In the Board’s resolution, it states

I

Students from Carleton School in Meigs County watch
as a classmate is sketched in front of their eyes by
Gallery 409 Artist in Residence Gerry Enrico, of Gallipolis. Students also painted self portraits at the Point
Pleasant American Legion which hosted the group.

that the legislation would grant vouchers to any public school student in
Ohio without regard to the academic
performance of the public school that
the student attends and allow the student to retain any excess funds in cases where the tuition grant is less than
the value of the voucher for use in
any private school or college in Ohio.
Copies of the resolution will be forwarded to members of the Ohio House
of Representatives.
During the meeting, the treasurer
was authorized to advertise for bids
for the purchase of three, 71 passenger, diesel buses. It was also voted to
enter into a contract with McGuire and
Associates, LLC for training and technical assistance services with earlier
grant funding received under the 21st
Century Community Learning Center.
Approval was given for renewal

of the position bonds for the superintendent and board president in the
amount of $20,000 each for the period
of Jan. 2, 2012, to Jan. 1, 2015 at a
pre-paid premium of $262 through the
OSBA Bond Program.
Personnel hired on recommendation of Superintendent Rusty Bookman included Billi Jo Arnott, secretary at the Meigs Intermediate School;
Christina Musser as food service
supervisor replacing Donna Corsi,
resigned; Melissa Lambert as substitute secretary on an as needed basis;
and Melinda J. Chancey as the 21st
Century Grant Coordinator at Meigs
High School at an annual salary of
$28,000 for a 182-day contract basis
to be funded through the 21st Century
Grant. Also approved by the Board
were numerous new, updated, and

See Meigs, 2

posted
Staff report

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Board of
Election posted unofficial
results of Tuesday’s general
election:
Meigs Local Board of
Education (3): Roger Abbott, 1,642, Todd Snowden,
1,314, Larry D. Tucker,
1,701, Ronald Wood, 1,076,
Victor Young III, 1,122.
Southern Local Board
of Education (2): Gary D.
Evans, 784, Dennie E. Hill,
1,014, Dennis Teaford, 599.
State Issue 1, Increase
Judicial Maximum Age:
2,166, yes, 4,598, no; State
Issue 2, Senate Bill 5, Yes,
1,781, No, 5,317; State Issue 3, Health Care Coverage, 4,551, yes, 2,360, no.
Orange Township, fire
protection, renewal, 242 for,
134 against; Rutland Township, cemeteries, renewal,
448 for, 196 against; Meigs
County, health department,
renewal, 4,083 for, 2,918
against; Middleport Village, current expenses, renewal, 295 for, 334 against;
Middleport Village, fire
protection, renewal, 436
for, 205 against; Middleport Village, police protection, additional, 299 for, 342
against; Pomeroy Village,
fire protection, renewal, 303
for, 104 against; Pomeroy
Village, current expenses,
replacement, 223 for, 184
against; Racine Village, current expenses, replacement,
163 for, 61 against; Rutland
Village, police protection,
renewal, 100 for, 56 against;
Rutland Village, current expenses, 105 for, 53 against.
Middleport Mayor: Mike
Gerlach, 257, Julia A. Houston, 182, Write-in, Ianarelli,
187; Middleport Village
Council (2): Penny Hysell
Burge, 292, Jean Craig, 230,
Roger L. Manley, Sr., 321,
Shawn A. Rice, 239.
Pomeroy Mayor: Mary
McAngus, 253, Jackie R.
Welker, 162; Pomeroy
Council (2): Ruth Spaun,
302; Racine Village Council
(1), no candidates; Racine
Village
Clerk-Treasurer:
David H. Spencer, 160; Racine Village Council (2):
Chad Hubbard, 166; Racine Board of Public Affairs
(1): No candidates; Rutland
Mayor: Lowell E. Vance,
93, Ryan L. Bareswilt, 62;
Rutland Village Council
(2): no candidates; Syracuse
Mayor: Eric D. Cunningham, 196, Dencil R. Hudson II, 76; Syracuse Village
Council (2): Bobby Jack
Ord, 228, write-in, 12; Syracuse Board of Public Affairs
(1): no candidates.
Bedford Trustee (1):
John W. Dean, 269, David
A. Doerfer, 54, Rick Price,
110; Bedford fiscal officer:
Barbara J. Grueser, 299;
Chester Trustee (1): Elmer
C. Newell, 698; Chester fiscal officer, Karen R. Smith,
365, Phillip Raymond Werry, 457; Columbia Trustee
(1): Gary Carr, 194, Rexie
Cheadle, 260; Columbia
fiscal officer, Mary Wingo,
346; Lebanon Trustee (1):
James R. Foreman, 171,
Roy E. Rose, 38; Lebanon
fiscal officer, Sherry Beegle
Wilcox, 164; Letart Trustee
(1): Keith White, 73, Christopher Tod Wolfe, 256; Letart fiscal officer: Joey Lee
Jarrell, 161, Elizabeth Lyons
Wolfe, 156; Olive Trustee
(1): Randy Boston, 328,
Jackie L. Westfall, 190.
Olive Trustee, write-in,
238; Orange Trustee (1):
Ernest H. Calaway, 185, Mi-

See Election, 2

�Thursday, November 10, 2011

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

Crow

Obituaries
Thomas G. “Gill” Tucker, 65, of Letart Falls, died
Monday, Nov. 7, 2011, at
the Ohio State University
Memorial Hospital in Columbus.
He was born on March
20, 1946 at Robertsburg,
W.Va., son of the late Clyde
R. Tucker and Icie Marie
Birchfield Tucker. He was a
veteran and a member of the
Mt. Moriah Church of God
in Racine.
He is survived by brothers, Glenn (Annalee) Tucker, Letart Falls, Ohio; and
Rusty (Connie) Tucker,
Jr., Racine, Ohio; sisters:
Anna (Wilson) Wolfe, Racine, Ohio; Christina (Gary)
Hickman, Lucasville, Ohio;
Rebekah Hall, Racine,
Ohio; and Cynthia (Mike)
Capehart, Racine, Ohio; and
several nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in
death by his parents; four
brothers, James, Robert,
Gary and Terry; and sister,
Bonnie Walker.
Funeral services will
be held Saturday, Nov. 12,
2011, at 1 p.m. at the Mt.
Moriah Church of God in
Racine. The Rev. James
Satterfield will officiate and
burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery, Racine.
Friends may visit the
family at the Mt. Moriah
Church of God on Friday,
Nov. 11, from 6 to 8 p.m.
Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, W.Va., is in
charge of funeral arrangements.
Condolences may be
expressed to the family by
email at roush94@yahoo.
com, or on our website at
www.joeroushfuneralhome.
com.

911
Nov. 8
4;13 a.m., Art Lewis
Street, nausea; 10:01 a.m.,
Bashan Road, nausea; 6:13
p.m., Ohio 7, Reedsville,
unconscious; 6:59 p.m.,
Powell Street, difficulty
breathing; 7:26 p.m., Lincoln Hill Street, difficulty
breathing; 7:52 p.m., Mount
Union Road, overdose; 8:19
p.m., Lincoln Hill Street,
difficulty breathing; 9:36
p.m., East Second Street,
overdose;
11:14
p.m.,
Beech Street, chest pain.
Nov. 9
3:01 a.m., Hysell Run
Road, fall; 5:31 a.m., Upper
7, seizure.
Recorder
POMEROY — Recorder Kay Hill reported

the following transfers of
real estate as filed in her
office:Billy G. Combs to
Betty Combs, deed, Lebanon; Eugene C. Johnston
to Paul L. Cremeens, deed,
Salem; Charles B. Wolfe,
Heather L. Wolfe, to Virginia L. Hart, David J. Mullins, deed, Sutton/Village of
Syracuse; Susan S. Swain,
Susan S. White, to Gregory
S. White, Susan S. White,
deed, Chester; Jonathan
E. Sargent to Jonathan E.
Sargent, Robyn S. Sargent,
deed, Bedford; Gilbert W.
Lovsey, deceased, to Heather Allyson Lovsey, Amy
Beth Nicholson, certificate
of transfer, Columbia; Edgar A. Hamm to Shirley
A. Hamm, Elizabeth A.
Hamm, deed, Sutton.

Thomas G. Tucker

www.mydailysentinel.com

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The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

From Page 1

ries are paid from different
funds at different times of
year, according to the county auditor’s office. One of
Crow’s employees, a court
bailiff, has not been paid
yet, as he was only recently
hired. A parent education
coordinator’s salary is paid
from the parent education
workshop fund. The salary of the magistrate, Linda
Warner, is paid twice annually from the general fund.
A mediator’s salary is paid
from a special grant award.

Election
The salary of the director of
community corrections, assistant probation and community corrections officer,
assistant bailiff and director
of pre/post-sentence investigation — again, one employee — is paid through
the special revenue funds.
Three part-time work release officers are employed
on a part-time, as-needed
basis.

Stocks

AEP (NYSE) — 38.43
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 47.94
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 50.04
Big Lots (NYSE) — 40.33
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 33.36
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 66.02
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 10.39
Champion (NASDAQ) — 1.02
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 3.25
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 31.22
Collins (NYSE) — 54.17
DuPont (NYSE) — 47.59
US Bank (NYSE) — 25.11
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 15.85
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 37.63
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 32.54
Kroger (NYSE) — 22.75
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 41.46
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 71.95
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 18.54
BBT (NYSE) — 22.83
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 12.35
Pepsico (NYSE) — 62.28
Premier (NASDAQ) — 5.01
Rockwell (NYSE) — 70.34
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 9.50
Royal Dutch Shell — 68.34
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 73.05
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 58.05
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 5.26
WesBanco (NYSE) — 19.04
Worthington (NYSE) — 16.61
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for November 9, 2011, 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.

Ohio Valley Weather
Thursday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 49. Calm
wind becoming west between 11 and 14 mph.
Thursday Night: A
slight chance of showers
before 8pm. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 31. West
wind between 5 and 9 mph.
Chance of precipitation is
20 percent.
Veterans Day: Mostly
sunny, with a high near 49.
West wind between 3 and
11 mph.
Friday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 30.
Saturday: Sunny, with a

RESIDENTS!
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND
THE MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONERS will be preparing a $300,000
CDBG Neighborhood Revitalization application in the spring of 2012
for submission for funding. This grant is designed to improve residential
communities!
A needs survey form is being circulated in the village of Rutland for
residents’ opinion as to what projects would be of utmost importance
within the Village of Rutland.
SEVERAL PUBLIC HEARINGS WILL BE HELD TO ASCERTAIN THE NEEDS
OF THE VILLAGE.
The following lists some of the areas of need that qualify for funding:
Street Improvements
Fire equipment and facilities
Sidewalk repairs
Demolition of unsightly structures
Historic preservation
Water and sewer improvements
Storm drainage improvements
Parks and recreation
Community centers and facilities Handicap accessibility

DO YOU WANT TO ADD YOUR OPINION?
THERE WILL BE THE FIRST OF THREE PUBLIC INPUT MEETINGS HELD ON
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2011 AT 7:00 P.M. AT THE CIVIC CENTER IN THE
VILLAGE OF RUTLAND.
YOUR ATTENDANCE IS NEEDED IN ORDER TO ENSURE THAT ALL
RESIDENTS CAN SUBMIT OPINIONS!

SUPPORT YOUR VILLAGE!
Thank you
Rutland Village Council and Mayor

high near 59.
Saturday Night: Mostly
clear, with a low around 39.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 63.
Sunday Night: A chance
of showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a low around 46.
Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Monday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 64. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.
Monday
Night:
A
chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a low around
48. Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
Tuesday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 62. Chance
of precipitation is 40 percent.

From Page 1

chael E. Guess, 62, Chester Bruce Hager, 94, James
A. Watson, 29; Orange
Trustee: Jerry Burke, 216,
Charles M. Cleland, Jr.,
139; Orange fiscal officer,
Deborah J. Watson, 202,
Osie M. Follrod, 159; Rutland trustee (1): Joe Bolin,
397, David E. Davis, 250;
Rutland fiscal officer, Opal
L. Dyer, 524; Salem trustee,
Cecil E. Johnston, 234; Salem fiscal officer, Bonnie G.
Scott, 224; Salisbury trustee, John Hood, 1,210; Salis-

Meigs
From Page 1

revised policies and administrative guidelines. It was
noted during the meeting
that all three schools will
observe Veteran’s Day with
special programs on Friday.
Meigs High School
Principal Steve Ohlinger
announced an Ohio Opiate Summit to be held at
the high school on Nov. 17
with high school students
from all three schools in the
district. The summit’s task
force is composed of Meigs
students, Steven Mahr and
Haley Kennedy, who were
introduced, and Emma Perrin, Chase Hayes and Jennifer Robinson, who were not

at the meeting. The summit
will deal with addiction to
drugs, particularly prescription drugs, and opportunities for treatment. The program, new to Meigs County,
will include motivational
speakers.
David Deem, assistant
principal at Meigs Middle
School, spoke on a conference at Ohio University
which the students will attend on Nov. 30.
Board members attending the meeting were Ryan
Mahr, Ron Logan, Roger
Abbott, Larry Tucker and
Barbara Musser.

Public meetings
Thursday, Nov. 10
WELLSTON - The
GJMV Solid Waste Management District Board
of Directors, 3:30 p.m. at
the district office, 1056 S.
New Hampshire Avenue,
Wellston.
Monday, Nov. 14
POMEROY — Special
meeting of Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission, 9 a.m., 117 Memorial
Drive.
Community events
Thursday, Nov. 10
CHESTER — Shade
River Lodge 453 will hold
its monthly stated meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Election of officers. Dues must be paid
prior to voting. Oyster stew
to be served.
TUPPERS PLAINS —
VFW Post 9053, meeting at
6:30 p.m., meal at 6.
POMEROY — Alpha
Iota Masters Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet at 11:30am at the
New Beginnings United
Methodist Church. Hostesses will be Vera Crow and
June VanVranken.
Saturday, Nov. 12
POMEROY — Alpha
Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma teacher’s
honorary society meets at
10:30 a.m., Trinity Church.
Soup, salad and sandwich
luncehone.
Scholarship
basket fundraiser. Music
program. Paper products to
be collected for women’s
shelter. Rosalie Story, Gay

Perrin hostesses.
PORTLAND — The
Portland Community Center end-of-year banquet
will be held at the Portland
Community Center. The
public is invited. Take a
coverd dish, everything else
will be provided. The year’s
accomplishments will be reviewed. Points from horse
shows will be awarded. For
more information call Bruce
McKelvey, 7480-590-9936.
Monday, Nov. 14
POMEROY — Meigs
County Republican Party
Executive Committee will
hold a regular meeting at
7:30 p.m. on Nov. 14 at the
county courthouse. It will
the final meeting of the year.
Tuesday, Nov. 15
RACINE — Southern
Local Board of Education
will meet in special session on Tuesday, Nov. 15
at 9 a.m. during the annual
Ohio School Board Association’s Capital Conference
to discuss board policy. The
meeting will be held at the
University Plaza Hotel on
Olentangy River Road, Columbus, Ohio.
Wednesday, Nov. 16
MARIETTA — An oil
and gas leasing workshop
will be held at the Buckeye
Hills Career Center, 7 to 9
p.m. There is no registration
fee. Presenter will be Dale
Arnold, Director of Energy
Services for Ohio Farm Bureau. Landowners will hear
great information regarding
Marcellus &amp; Utica Shale
and what they should look
for in oil and natural gas
leasing. RSVP to Melissa
Clark, Gallia County Economic Development Director, at 446-4612 ext. 271 or
mclark@gallianet.net.

Meigs County
Community Calendar

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Church events
Friday, Nov. 11
LONG BOTTOM - Gospel sing at the Faith Full
Gospel Church at Long Bottom.Christian Friends will
be singing.

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bury fiscal officer, Marilyn
R. Anderson, 1,136; Scipio
trustee: Randy Butcher,
259; Scipio fiscal officer:
Karen A. Ridenour, 243;
Sutton trustee (1), Larry Ebersbach, 598, Tom Theiss,
405; Sutton fiscal officer,
Roger W. Hysell, 760.
ESC At-Large, no candidate filed; ESC-Alexander,
Phyllis Knowlton, 323;
ESC-Easter, Dana Kessinger, 1,136; ESC-Meigs, no
candidate; ESC-Alexander,
no candidate.

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60253287

Sunday, Nov. 13
LANGSVILLE
—
Evangelist and Musician
Gary Pollard, from Dayton
Tenn. will be ministering at
the House of Healing Ministries, Langsville, 7 p.m.
RACINE — Hymn sing,
7 p.m., Sutton building
of Carmel Sutton United
Methodist Church, with
Roush Family, Truly Saved.
ROCKSPRINGS
—
Hymn sing, 2 p.m., Rocksprings United Methodist
Church. Local performers.
Refreshments follow.
Birthdays
Tuesday, Nov. 15
LONG BOTTOM — Ernest Griffin will be 94 years
old on Nov. 15. Cards may
be sent to him at 36606 P. O.
Road, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Page 3

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Husband struggles with
transition to homemaker
By Dr. Joyce Brothers

Dear Dr. Brothers: I
have three kids, and for the
past five years I’d been a
stay-at-home mom. I just
went back to work because
my husband got laid off, and
now he’s taking care of the
kids. The change has been
hard on both of us, but he’s
taking it much worse than I
am. I’m afraid that he feels
like less of a man now that
he’s not the breadwinner. I
know it’s hard, but how can
I get him to understand that
he’s still an important member of the family? — B.R.
Dear B.R.: This kind of
double blow to the ego —
first being laid off and then
not being able to go back to
providing for his family —
is a huge hurdle for anyone
to get over, so the best thing
to do right now might be to
just give your husband time
to heal. Talk to him about
how he’s feeling, and let
him know that you still need
him for the important role
of being a father to your
children. Without him, yes,
maybe you’d have money
to get by with only your
job, but you’d have no one
to love and raise your family. That job can be the most
important one of all, and
your husband will be able
to see this bright side once
he’s healed from the blow
of being laid off.
You definitely can help
your husband to still feel
worthwhile and useful,
and one thing that’s important is to turn over to him
some control of the household that you had before
you went back to work.

Dr. Joyce Brothers
Give him space to figure
out how best to work the
complicated system of your
household, rather than trying to force him into doing
things your way. Even if he
seems to be floundering, letting him figure out his own
methods can be highly gratifying once he finally gets
things under control. Let
him know that his worth as
a father, husband and man
is not determined by the
money he makes or the job
he does, but by the person
that he truly is. You and
your kids love him for that,
and with your support he’ll
be back to his confident self
in no time.
***
Dear Dr. Brothers: My
daughter is a staunch feminist. She’s had boyfriends
throughout the years, but
no one serious, and I’m
afraid that her liberal views
of women’s rights are scaring off potential husbands.
She’s a smart and lovely
girl, but I think she makes
it harder for herself when
she so stubbornly holds on
to these opinions. What can
I do to convince her that
she’ll never find a husband
if she doesn’t tone down her

feminist views? — A.M.
Dear A.M.: Actually,
you might have the wrong
idea about how feminist
views relate to romance.
Your daughter’s romantic
woes likely aren’t due to her
opinion of women’s rights;
in fact, research has shown
quite the opposite in most
women. A recent study in
the journal Sex Roles shows
that feminism might actually improve the quality of
heterosexual relationships.
While popular opinion
dictates that feminists are
strictly against ideas of romantic love, actually that is
very much not the case. In
this study, men who identified their female partners as
having feminist views were
more likely to be satisfied
and happy in their relationships, and in particular to
report greater sexual satisfaction.
Rather than stigmatizing
your daughter’s feminist
viewpoints, why not have
an honest discussion with
her about her love life? It
may be that you’re missing something important
as to why she’s never had
a serious relationship — or
it may even be that you’ve
discouraged any potentially
serious partners with your
judgment of your daughter’s unsuitability for that
relationship. Rather than
judging your daughter’s
beliefs, try to keep an open
mind and let her figure out
her romantic relationships
for herself. After all, her
feminism might even help
her in the long run.
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndicate

“Senior Saints” recognized at the Bradford Church of Christ were from the left. Nathan Biggs, Eva Milliron, Mack Leighton, Jackie Reed, Jim Reed and Gerry Lightfoot. Honored but unable to attend was Elizabeth Duffy.

Bradford Church observes
“Senior Saints” day

POMEROY — The
Bradford Church of Christ
Senior Saints, members 80
to 92 years old, were recognized at a recent Sunday
morning worship service at
the church.
The committee working
on this project consisted of
Paula Pickens, Charlotte
Hanning, Ruth Durst and
Phyllis Baker. During the
ceremony, to honor the seven special members, Pickens
read a short biography of
those recognized, Elizabeth

Duffy, Mack Leighton, Nathan Biggs, Jim Reed, Jackie
Reed, Gerry Lightfoot and
Eva Milliron. Minister Russ
Moore spoke about what
a blessing it is to be in the
midst of these people and
to have enjoyed the benefit
of their wisdom and service
to the Kingdom. He read the
passage from Psalms 71:518 which is often referred to
as “A song for Old Age.”
After church services, a
special fellowship meal was
served from tables decorated

in autumn colors to honor
the Senior Saints and their
families. Pictures of the honorees in their younger years,
their families and military
service awards were on display.Following the meal a
cake with the inscription
‘Through the Years.
Our Senior Saints at Bradford Church of Christ” was
served. To complete the celebration, pictures were taken
of the honorees and their
families.

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concert at First Baptist
POMEROY — Respected as one of America’s most
distinctive and experienced
gospel music ministries, the
Gospel Harmony Boys will
be visiting First Southern
Baptist Church on Sunday
evening, Nov. 13, for a special Gospel Music concert
starting at 7:00 in the evening. The church is located
at 41872 Pomeroy Pike in
Pomeroy.
The Harmony Boys are
known for their diverse
musical styles, intricate
harmonies and up-to-date
renditions of the old gospel favorites. Since 1952,

they have been presenting concerts all across the
United States and Canada
in churches, auditoriums,
fairs, and festivals. They are
today one of America’s longest existing gospel groups,
celebrating their 60th anniversary in 2012. This highly
acclaimed group was the
first Gospel quartet ever
featured on national network television and in 2008,
they were inducted into the
Christian Music Hall of
Fame in Dallas, Texas.
As a brotherhood of talented men who love the
Lord, the Gospel Harmony

Boys create a unique brand
of Christian music that is
truly a ministry dedicated
to praising and up-lifting
Christ. For them, sharing
the love and hope that they
have found in Him is both
an honor and a mission.
Pastor David Brainard
and the congregation at
First Southern Baptist are
pleased to extend an invitation to you and ask that you
bring a friend to join with
them for this time of praise,
inspiration and and just
plain fun with the Gospel
Harmony Boys.

POMEROY — Sherry
Shamblin, Director of Early
Childhood Programs for
Tri-County Mental Health
and Counseling Services,
and former Chair and current board member for Integrating Professionals for
Appalachian Children, has
been selected for Robert
Wood Johnson’s Evaluation
Fellows Program for Retooling Professionals.
Shamblin is a long-time
resident of Meigs County and is the daughter of
Bob and Bonnie Arnold of
Pomeroy. She is also the
wife of Doug Shamblin,
the Children’s Minister at
the Middleport Church of
Christ.
The goal of the fellowship, which targets midcareer, non-profit professionals who are undeserved
in the evaluation field, is
to increase the capacity of
an organization to conduct
program evaluation and to
become better consumers
of information for decisionmaking. Shamblin will use
this opportunity to refine
the evaluation of Tri-County’s early childhood mental
health (ECMH) model, assess the program’s effectiveness, expand evaluation
efforts to other programs
within Tri-County, and dis-

seminate lessons learned to
advance the field of ECMH
consultation.
“We are thrilled that
Sherry was selected for the
RWl fellowship program,”
said Dr. George Weigly,
CEO of Tri-County Mental Health and Counseling.
“This is a great opportunity for her, but we are also
looking forward to improving the evaluation of our
programs by applying what
she brings back to us,” he
added.
Shamblin, who has been
contributing to the field as a
direct service provider for
15 years, is also a secondyear doctoral student in
Ohio University’s Counselor Education Program. She
made the decision to obtain
a Ph.D. in order to increase
her ability to perform research design and program
evaluation — essential
skills for securing an evidence base for ECMH consultation. She is also interested in community-based
participatory research on
behalf of ECMH programming, training and public
policy.
Through her leadership,
Shamblin has overseen the
expansion of Tri-County’s
ECMH services from a
single provider to a team

of five specialists. For the
last two years, the team has
focused on developing an
ECMH Consultation Program to serve local school
districts. The result is an
innovative ECMH model
that blends consultation
and professional development for teachers and direct
mental health services for
children. The project has
been funded by a HRSA
Outreach grant awarded to
Ohio University’s Heritage
College of Osteopathic
Medicine (OU- HCOM),
under the directorship of Dr.
Jane Hamel-Lambert. Additional support came from an
evaluation team, which included Dr. Victor Heh, also
from OU-HCOM, and Dr.
Holly Raffle, from the Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs. The
program has been expanded
to serve additional schools
through funds from Project LAUNCH, a SAMHSA
grant awarded to the Ohio
Department of Health. The
model has also been customized for Head Start and
Early Head Start with local support from HockingAthens-Perry Community
Action Head Start and the
317 ADAMHS Board of
Athens, Hocking and Vinton Counties.

Meigs County resident
selected for fellowship

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�The Daily Sentinel

Opinion

Page 4

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Bernanke shows Fed’s
An environmental assault
independence with Texas trip disguised as border security
By Martin Crutsinger
AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP)
— A town hall meeting
with Ben Bernanke and a
group of military families
discussing family finances
wouldn’t normally draw
much notice.
But for this particular
event, the Federal Reserve
chairman is venturing into
Texas. And those who
watch the Fed say the visit
sends a message to Bernanke’s critics: The Fed is
independent and won’t be
intimidated.
Three months ago, Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who
is seeking the Republican
presidential nod, had sent
a veiled threat: Bernanke
would be treated “ugly”
in Texas if he continued to
pursue ever-lower interest
rates — a policy that Perry
and some other critics say
is akin to recklessly printing money.
Now, Bernanke is visiting Texas for the first time
since then, to a U.S. Army
fort in El Paso.
His destination may not
be coincidental.
“There has to be a political significance to this
trip, given what presidential candidate Perry said
about the Fed chairman and
about how badly he would
be treated in Texas,” said
David Jones, head of consultant DMJ Advisors and
the author of books on the
central bank. “The Fed sees
Texas as a good place to
make a stand to assert the
Fed’s independence.”
The Fed wouldn’t say
whether the El Paso town
hall meeting was planned
before or after Perry made

his remarks.
Fed officials say only
that Fort Bliss was chosen
because it has a successful financial literacy program that Bernanke wants
to highlight. The town hall
meeting is the latest in a
series of public outreach
efforts Bernanke has made,
they say.
Over the past 2½ years,
Bernanke has attended a
half-dozen informal gatherings in Kansas City, Atlanta, Cleveland and other
cities. This week’s town
hall meeting is his first in
Texas.
David Wyss, an economist and former Fed staffer,
said the site of Thursday’s
event was likely influenced
not just by Perry’s remarks
but also by criticism from
another Texan seeking the
presidency: Rep. Ron Paul,
a Republican congressman
who favors abolishing the
Fed.
“The fact that he is getting a lot of criticism from
the two Texas candidates
is a good reason to go to
Texas,” Wyss said.
Perry’s remarks about
Bernanke drew condemnation, including sharp retorts
from former Vice President Dick Cheney, political adviser Karl Rove and
other members of President
George W. Bush’s administration.
Speaking in Iowa in August, Perry had said:
“If this guy prints more
money between now and
the election, I don’t know
what y’all would do to him
in Iowa, but we would treat
him pretty ugly down in
Texas.”
Perry added that the Fed
chairman’s policymaking

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could be viewed as “treasonous.”
The Perry campaign declined Tuesday to discuss
the governor’s previous remarks.
Bernanke, a Republican, served as Bush’s chief
economist before being
chosen in 2006 to lead the
Fed. He hasn’t responded
publicly to Perry’s remarks.
On Wednesday, Bernanke made welcoming remarks at a Fed conference
in Washington on small
business and entrepreneurship.
Bernanke said small
businesses are still struggling to get loans more than
two years after the recession ended and banks could
help them by easing overly
tight lending standards. He
made no mention of Perry
or his trip to Texas.
Last week, Bernanke
did address criticism from
House Speaker John Boehner and Senate Republican
Leader Mitch McConnell.
In September, McConnell
and Boehner were among
four Republican leaders
who signed a letter urging Bernanke to refrain
from policies that they said
could escalate inflation in
the future.
When asked at a news
conference last week if
that letter had breached the
Fed’s political independence, Bernanke was polite
but firm.
“We listen to everyone’s
input,” he said. “We are going to make our decisions
based on what’s good for
the economy, and we’re not
going to take politics into
account.”

By Scott Nicol

How does waiving the
Endangered Species Act
in Glacier National Park
help secure the border?
Simple. It doesn’t.
But that doesn’t matter to Rep. Rob Bishop of
Utah, author of the National Security and Federal Lands Protection Act
(HR 1505). Bishop claims
that U.S. Customs and
Border Protection (CBP),
which includes the U.S.
Border Patrol, cannot enforce immigration laws
without violating the rest
of our nation’s laws, so
his bill waives 36 important laws on federal lands
within 100 miles of the
U.S. – Mexico and U.S.Canada borders for anything that CBP may want
to do, from carving roads
through wilderness areas
to building Border Patrol
bases in national parks to
erecting walls.
Most of the laws that
HR 1505 tosses aside, including the Endangered
Species Act, Wilderness
Act and Safe Drinking
Water Act, protect the
environment. But the bill
also waives laws like the
Farmland Policy Protection Act and the American
Indian Religious Freedom
Act.
Bishop’s bill is an expansion of the Real ID
Act, a Bush era policy
intended to address federal ID card standards
and certain aspects of
immigration law. Tucked

Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Letters to the Editor
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300
words. All letters are subject to editing, must
be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters
will not be accepted for publication.

into Real ID’s overarching language was Section
102, which gave the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority to waive
local, state and federal
laws to build walls along
the southern border.
The existing Real ID
Act waivers have paved
the way for tremendous
environmental damage. To
build border walls in California’s Otay Mountain
Wilderness Area, 530,000
cubic yards of rock were
blasted from mountainsides; walls have caused
serious flooding in Arizona’s Organ Pipe Cactus
National Monument; and
walls fragment the Lower
Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge in
Texas, which was established for the preservation
of ocelots, an endangered
feline. Without the waivers, those walls would be
illegal.
Would complying with
our nation’s laws really
prevent CBP from securing our borders?
Not according to the
Border Patrol.
The irony is that the
Border Patrol has not
asked for the power to ignore environmental laws,
but instead has sent officials to testify against
Bishop’s bill in Congress.
Last spring, the Government Accountability Office said, “Most agents
reported that land management laws have had no
effect on Border Patrol’s
overall measure of border

security.”
So what is the pressing
need that justifies expanding the Real ID Act’s destructive reach and undermining the rule of law?
Bishop’s targeting of
environmental laws simply fits the current Republican zeitgeist. House
Majority Leader Eric
Cantor has attacked environmental regulations and
the Environmental Protection Agency as “obstacles
to economic growth” that
must be “removed,” and
Mitt Romney says the
Clean Air Act should be
rewritten to exclude the
regulation of greenhouse
gasses.
Environmental
laws
have nothing to do with
our economic crisis, but
the bad economy provides
cover for efforts to repeal
or rewrite them.
The National Security
and Federal Lands Protection Act is just more of the
same.
Waiving environmental laws would not make
our nation any safer, but
then Bishop’s bill isn’t really about protecting our
borders. It is an assault
on federal lands and environmental laws that uses
border security as a convenient Trojan horse.
Scott Nicol co-chairs
the Sierra Club’s Borderlands Team. For more
information, visit www.sierraclub.org/borderlands.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone (740) 992-2156
Fax (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

�Sports

5

The Daily Sentinel

Sports
Briefs
Mason County High
School Football Playoffs
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant
Junior Senior High School
will host Ritchie High
School on Friday, November 11, at 7:30 p.m. Wahama
High School will host Pocahontas County on Saturday,
November 12, at 7:30 p.m..
Both games will be held at
the Point Pleasant JR/SR
High School Athletic Complex. Admission for both
games is $7. No reserved
tickets, reserved parking, or
passes will be accepted with
the exception of C&amp;I cards
issued by the WVSSAC,
which must be presented
upon entry. Gates will open
for entry to both games at
5:30. There is no re-entry
without purchasing a new
ticket. Anyone interested in
tailgating prior to the game
should contact the Athletic
Director at the prospective
schools. Fans are reminded
that air horns, cannons, banners/posters, and lasers are
prohibited. Programs will
be available at the games for
$5.
PPHS Pep Rally and
Presale Tickets
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — Point Pleasant JR/
SR High School will have
presale playoff tickets for
Friday’s game at the school
on Thursday from 8 a.m. -8
p.m. Presale tickets are $7
for adults and $5 for students. All tickets will be $7
at the gate. A community
pep rally will be held in the
Old Gym on Thursday at 7
p.m. following the Veteran’s
Dinner at the school. Those
wishing to attend should enter the school on the Junior
High side of the building.
Both tickets and playoff apparel can be purchased during this time.
Wahama Pep Rally and
Presale Tickets
MASON, W.Va. — Wahama High School will have
presale tickets for Saturday’s game on sale TuesdayFriday during school hours
in the Main Office. Tickets
are $7 for adults and $5 for
students. All tickets will be
$7 at the gate. Wahama will
host a community pep rally
Thursday at 6 p.m. in the
Commons Area.
PPJSHS Softball Booster Meeting
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — The Point Pleasant Jr. Sr. High School Girls
Softball boosters will be
having a meeting at 6 p.m.
on Thursday, November 10,
in the high school commons
area. Officers for the year
will be elected.
GAHS Basketball Reserve Seats
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Reserve seats for the 201112 Gallia Academy Boys and
Girls Basketball season will
go on sale November 14th
for Big Blue Super Boosters.
Parents of varsity and junior varsity basketball players, cheerleaders, and pep
band members may purchase
reserve seats on November
15th.
Reserve seats for the general public will be available
on Wednesday, November
16th. Tickets may be purchased in the Athletic Director’s office at Gallia Academy between the hours of
8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m.
GAHS Fall Sports
Awards Ceremony
CENTENARY,
Ohio
— Gallia Academy High
School will be holding their
2011 Fall Sports Awards
Ceremony at 6:30 p.m. on
November 21. The Sports
Awards Ceremony will be
held in the Holzer Center for
Performing Arts Auditorium
at Gallia Academy High
School.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Talented teams stand in
Lady Eagles’ way at state
By Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

FAIRBORN, Ohio — To
be the best, you have to beat
the best.
For Eastern, Tuscarawas
Central Catholic, St. Henry
and Sycamore Mohawk,
the goal is the same this
weekend … be the last team
standing tall at the Division
IV state volleyball tournament at Wright State University.
These four programs
have a combined 101-7
overall record in match
play this fall, so success has
been common for each of
the teams involved. All four
squads were also ranked in
the top-16 of the final D-4
coaches poll this year.
Two of these programs
— St. Henry and Tuscarawas CC — have been to
the Final Four in volleyball
at least twice before, while
Eastern and Mohawk are
both making their inaugural
appearances at the Ervin J.
Nutter Center. Tuscarawas
CC, however, is the only
team making a repeat trip to
WSU from one year ago.
The Lady Eagles (27-0)
will face the TCC Saints
(23-4) in the first semifinal
Friday at 4 p.m., while the
second semifinal features
the St. Henry Lady Redskins (26-1) and the Mohawk Lady Warriors (25-2)
at 6 p.m.
The two semifinal victors will play at 5 p.m. Saturday in the D-4 championship match.
Here’s a brief look at the
two matchups and the four
programs involved.
TUSCARAWAS CC vs
EASTERN
This will be the second
matchup between these

Bryan Walters/photo

Members of the Eastern volleyball team huddle up for
a quick meeting before the start of Saturday’s Division
IV regional final match against Pike Eastern at Lancaster High School.
two schools in the last three posting team averages of
years, as both teams squared 44.4 kills, 12.8 blocks and
off in a Division IV regional 46.6 service points in the
semifinal in Lancaster back tournament.
in 2009. TCC won in four
Eastern, which finished
games, 25-19, 25-21, 17-25, the season ranked sixth in
25-11, as the Saints went on the D-4 coaches poll, is
to win the regional title that the only undefeated team
year for their first of three headed into the Division IV
straight state appearances to Final Four.
the Nutter Center.
TCC lost in the 2009
That match was also the state semifinals and was
only time that Eastern had also the D-4 runner-up last
won a game at regionals in year. The Saints are 18-0
six previous tries, before in six tournament matches
last week.
this fall and currently own a
The Lady Eagles have seven-match winning streak
won 23 of 27 matches in — all of which have come
straight games this season, in straight games.
and only once (Shekinah)
The Saints’ four losses
was EHS pushed to a deci- have come against Tuscarasive fifth game. Eastern has was Valley (25-18, 25-22),
lost only two games in five Gilmour Academy (25-19,
postseason matches while 32-30, 25-23), Massillon

Jackson (25-13, 21-25, 2517, 25-15) and Sugarcreek
Garaway (25-23, 25-20, 1725, 15-25, 15-8). Garaway
is the only D-4 team that
has defeated TCC this season, but TCC avenged that
loss in the district final.
Gilmour Academy is
currently playing in the D-3
Final Four, while Tuscarawas Valley (D-3) and Massillon Jackson (D-1) were
both eliminated in their respective regionals.
TCC has won 21 of 23
matches this year in straight
games and has also been
more impressive during
the postseason, winning 12
of 18 games by 10 or more
points. For the season, the
Saints are posting team
averages of 35.4 kills, 7.3
blocks and 14.4 aces per
match.
Megan Lawless spearheads the TCC charge, as
the sophomore is averaging 12.6 kills, 1.7 blocks,
8.2 digs and 12.9 assists per
night. Lawless also has a
team-best 121 service aces
this fall.
Senior Briana Neidig
is the No. 2 attacker with
9.2 kills and 1.3 blocks per
match, while Tori Leskovyansky and Sarah Varcolla
are also posting respective
kill averages of 4.3 and 3.7
per match. Anna Thompson
leads the passing game with
a team-high 489 assists,
while Madison Bonamico
and Lesley Teater have 142
and 103 digs, respectively.
TCC finished the season
16th in the final D-4 coaches poll.
ST. HENRY vs MOHAWK
The second match will
be a David versus Goliath
contest of sorts, at least in

See Eagles, 6

Big Blacks open playoffs at home
By Sarah Hawley

shawley@mydailytribune.com

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. — For the ninth
time in school history and
the fourth time in as many
years, the Point Pleasant
football team has made the
playoffs.
This time around, the
Big Blacks (10-0) are the
No. 1 seed — a spot they
have not been in before.
With the top seed in
Class AA, the Big Blacks
would have the chance to
play at home until the title
game on December 2 in
Wheeling, W.Va.
“Being the number one
seed, I think that momentum is definitely on our
side. We have the chance
to be home for a while, and
I think our community is
excited about that as well,”
Darst said. “This football
team is a special group of
young men. These guys
made a real commitment
to football in the offseason,
and one of our biggest goals
was securing a good seeding in the playoffs.
Point Pleasant won it’s
second outright Cardinal
Conference title (2008)
with a 41-18 victory over
Chapmanville last week.
The unbeaten season was
the third in school history.
The Big Blacks will host
No. 16 Ritchie County on
Friday evening at the Point
Pleasant Athletic Complex
in Mason County, W.Va.
This will be the second
straight season that the Big
Blacks will host an opening
round playoff game.
The Big Blacks are 1-8
all time in the postseason, with the lone victory
coming in 1979 — Coach
Darst’s senior season. Darst
is 0-3 as a coach in the playoffs over five seasons.
“In past years we’ve had
to battle just to get in the
playoffs, but this team’s
mindset is a little different
this year. We’ve accom-

Jan Haddox/photo

Point Pleasant quarterback Eric Roberts prepares to take a snap during Friday’s
regular season finale at Chapmanville.
plished a lot to this point, ries for 545 yards and five corp with 14 catches —
but we also know that there scores.
eight for touchdowns — and
is a lot that we have yet to
Teran Barnitz has 494 419 yards. Jason Stouffer
accomplish.”
yards and six touchdowns has added 291 yards in 11
The 2011 Big Blacks of- in 62 carries — most com- catches; Chase Walton has
fense features a balanced ing in the last three games 10 catches for 182 yards;
attack on the ground and in — for PPHS, while Mar- Layne Thompson has 10
the passing game.
quez Griffin has added 314 carries for 164 yards; MarPoint Pleasant has tallied yards and five touchdowns quez Griffin has four catch2,857 yards rushing (285.7 in 51 carries.
es for 92 yards; John Kinyards per game) this season
Other ball carriers this naird has five catches for
and 1,392 yards passing season for the Big Blacks 61 yards; Teran Barnitz has
(139.2 yards per game).
have been Zach Canterbury nine catches for 58 yards;
Senior quarterback Eric (25 carries for 290 yards, Anthony Darst has four
Roberts leads the Point five touchdowns), Jerrod catches for 54 yards; Tylun
Pleasant passing attack Long (58 carries for 257 Campbell has six catches
with 1,357 yards and 21 yards, six touchdowns), for 43 yards; Jerrod Long
touchdowns. Roberts has Cody Marcum (20 carries has one catch for 10 yards;
74 completions in 117 pass- for 153 yards, one touch- and Zach Canterbury has
ing attempts and has thrown down), Chase Walton (18 one catch for three yards.
just three interceptions — carries for 75 yards, one
“If we are going to do
all in the week eight win touchdown), Eric Roberts anything special, we have
over Ravenswood.
(22 carries for 73 yards, to continue to get better
A total of 11 different four touchdowns), Brycen over the next four weeks
players have carried the Reymond (three carries for … starting Friday night,”
ball for the Big Blacks this 13 yards), Brandon Toler Darst said. “If we become
season, led by Anthony (two carries for four yards). complacent and not try to
Darst and Tylun Campbell,
The Big Blacks have improve on the little things,
both of whom have missed also had 11 different receiv- then things might not go so
games this season. Darst er make at least one catch well. We are wearing the
has 61 carries for 599 yards this season.
bull’s-eye, so we are goand eight touchdowns,
Brandon Toler leads the ing to get everybody’s best
while Campbell has 56 car- Point Pleasant receiving
See Blacks, 7

Penn State
coach
Paterno
retiring
at end of
season

STATE
COLLEGE,
Pa. (AP) Joe Paterno, the
Penn State football coach
who preached success with
honor for half a century but
whose legend was shattered
by a child sex abuse scandal,
said Wednesday he will retire at the end of this season.
Paterno said he was “absolutely devastated” by the
case, in which his one-time
heir apparent, Jerry Sandusky, has been charged
with molesting eight boys
over 15 years, including at
the Penn State football complex.
He said he hoped the
team could finish its season
with “dignity and determination.”
The trustees could still
force him to leave immediately. It also could take action against the university
president, Graham Spanier.
He said the school’s
Board of Trustees, which
had been considering his
fate, should “not spend a
single minute discussing my
status” and has more important matters to address.
The beloved 84-year-old
Paterno has been engulfed
by outrage that he did not do
more to stop Sandusky after
a graduate assistant came to
Paterno in 2002 after allegedly having seen the former
assistant coach molesting a
10-year-old boy in the Penn
State showers.
“This is a tragedy,” Paterno said in a statement. “It
is one of the great sorrows
of my life. With the benefit
of hindsight, I wish I had
done more.”
Paterno briefly talked to
players in the auditorium of
the Mildred and Louis Lasch
Football Building. Standing
at a podium, the coach told
them he was leaving, then
broke down in tears.
Players gave him a standing ovation when he walked
out.
The decision to retire
by the man affectionately
known as “Joe Pa” brings to
an end one of the most storied coaching careers, not
just in college football, but
in all sports. Paterno won
409 games, a record for major college football, and is in
the middle of his 46th year
as coach.
His figure patrolling the
sideline thick-rimmed glasses and windbreaker, tie and
khaki pants was as unmistakable at Penn State as its
classic blue and white uniforms and the name Happy
Valley, a place where no one
came close to Paterno’s stature.
The
retirement
announcement came three
days before Penn State hosts
Nebraska in its final home
game of the season, a day
set aside to honor seniors on
the team.
Paterno has been questioned about how he acted
when a graduate assistant,
Mike McQueary, reported
the incident to him in 2002.
Paterno notified Penn
State athletic director Tim
Curley and vice president
Gary Schultz. Curley and
Schultz have since been
charged with failing to report the incident to the authorities.
Paterno hasn’t been accused of legal wrongdoing.
But he has been assailed, in
what the state police commissioner called a lapse of
“moral responsibility,” for
not doing more to stop Sandusky, whose lawyer says he
is innocent.
In the statement, Paterno
said: “I grieve for the children and their families, and

See Penn, 7

�Thursday, November 10, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Eagles
From Page 5

regards to familiarity at the
state tournament. St. Henry
will be aiming for its seventh state title in 13 appearances, while Mohawk had
never qualified for regionals
before this postseason.
The Lady Redskins are
making their first state appearance since winning
the last of their six titles in
2004. SHHS also won the
D-4 title in 1995, 1994,
1990, 1987 and 1985.
St. Henry finished as the
state runner-up three times
(2003, 1996 and 1988) and
also lost in the state semis in
1999, 1998 and 1986.
St. Henry finished the
2011 season as the No. 1
team in the D-4 coaches
poll, and the Lady Red-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 6

Blacks
skins currently possess a
25-match winning streak.
Miami East, a Division III
state qualifier, was the only
team to beat SHHS this year
— doing so by a 25-23, 2125, 26-24 margin.
The Lady Redskins have
won 22 of 26 matches in
straight games, but St. Henry has also been pushed to
a decisive fifth game twice
in the postseason. One
came in the district final
against Marion Local (2125, 25-16, 25-17, 15-25,
15-11) and the other was in
the regional final last week
against Lehman Catholic
(25-13, 25-17, 21-25, 2025, 15-12).
The Lady Warriors, on
the other hand, have posted

a school-record for wins
while claiming the program’s first-ever district and
regional crowns. Mohawk
finished the season 14th in
the final D-4 coaches poll
and enters the weekend
with 18 straight match wins.
Mohawk’s two losses
were to D-3 district finalist Marion Pleasant (18-25,
15-25, 25-14, 25-21, 17-15)
and New Riegel (25-18,
25-15, 26-28, 19-25, 158), who the Lady Warriors
defeated in the regional
semifinals. MHS has won
16 of 25 matches in straight
games and have also been
pushed to a decisive fifth
game six times this year —
including twice in five postseason outings.

From Page 5

shot.”
“With that said, I don’t
think our guys will let that
happen. We have great senior leadership and we are
really a close-knit group
that loves football. This is
where these guys wanted
to be, so I’m sure they’ll
be ready to go this Friday
night.”
Ritchie County is lead by
first year head coach Mike
Dawson.
The Rebels offensive
system includes quarterback Alex Lipscomb, receivers Bryce Powell and
Dylan Frye, and running
backs Darrenger Goff and
Reno Jackson.
The Rebels are averaging26.5 points per game this
season, while allowing 18.7
points per game.
Ritchie County’s opponents are a combined 54-46

this season, with five of the
10 advancing to the postseason. The Rebels are 3-3
against Class AA foes and
3-1 against Class A opponents. Ritchie County is 2-3
against other playoff teams
this season.
“Our guys do a real good
job of preparing week to
week, and Ritchie County
has already caught these
guys attention,” Darst said.
“This Ritchie County team
is a good football team.
They play fast and they
have a really solid defense,
and they have a new coach
that really has that program
and that community excited.
“In film session, our guys
noticed how fast they play
… because we play fast too.
We know that we have to be
ready Friday night, which
has helped with prepara-

tion.”
The Big Blacks have allowed just 88 points total
this season, while averaging
nearly half that per game
(43.7 points per game).
Point Pleasant’s opponents are a combined 39-61
this season. The Big Blacks
are 8-0 against Class AA
opponents, including 4-0
against playoff teams.
Kickoff at Ohio Valley
Bank Track and Field is
set for 7:30 p.m. on Friday
evening. A community pep
rally will be held in the old
gym at the high school on
Thursday evening at 7 p.m.
OVP sports writer Bryan
Walters contributed the interview quotes to this report.

GM Cashman says too early
to determine Yanks’ plan
Beat-up Browns missing
NEW YORK (AP) Searching for
starting pitching, Yankees general manager Brian Cashman said it’s too early
in the offseason to determine whether
he’ll go for a big-name addition to his
rotation.
“I certainly haven’t had one agent
tell me what they want financially, so
no one’s made any demands to me” he
said Wednesday. “So I don’t know what
these current free agents are looking for
yet in terms of years or dollars.”
New York went into spring training
uncertain who would start behind CC
Sabathia, A.J. Burnett and Phil Hughes.
Rookie Ivan Nova and Freddy Garcia won jobs, and Bartolo Colon, like
Garcia at spring training with a minor
league contract, joined the rotation in
April after Hughes went on the DL.
Garcia went 12-8 and Colon 8-10,
combining to make 52 starts. Using an
unusual description, Cashman said the
Yankees again could sign low-cost veterans with uncertain value.
“Over the river and through the woods
to grandmother’s house you go, and you
have no idea whether you’re going to
get there or not other than letting the
season play out,” he said. “Turned out
that other way was a great way for us.”
Prospects such as Hector Noesi, David Phelps, Adam Warren and Dellin
Betances also could be looked at during
spring training.
“There’s obviously more developmental steps necessary for some of those
guys,” Cashman said during an appearance at a Time Square restaurant as part
of the New York Cares coat drive. “I be-

lieve it’s in our best interest if I can continue to reinforce the rotation to get a
little more comfort level there. It might
not be realistic, but we’ll see.”
Free agent pitchers include Mark
Buehrle, Edwin Jackson, C.J. Wilson,
Roy Oswalt and Hiroki Kuroda. Without
identifying any, Cashman said he had
asked agents for medical records as part
of the early negotiating process.
New York was not involved in talks
with San Francisco before the Giants
traded left-hander Jonathan Sanchez to
Kansas City on Monday for outfielder
Melky Cabrera.
Two young Yankees catchers have attracted interest: 21-year-old Jesus Montero and 22-year-old Austin Romine.
Montero hit .328 with four homers and
12 RBIs during a September callup. Romine is regarded as the superior defensive catcher.
“I’ve had a lot of teams express,
‘Hey, if you’re ever going to do something there, mark us down. That type of
thing,’” Cashman said.
NOTES: RHP Nova’s strained right
forearm, which forced him out of Game
5 of the AL division series against Detroit, was examined Tuesday by Dr.
Christopher Ahmad, who determined it
had healed. … Cashman said the team
hopes for a summer return of RHP Joba
Chamberlain, who had elbow-ligament
replacement surgery on June 16. He said
Chamberlain hopes to be back during
the spring. “He wants it yesterday. He’s
working his tail off,” Cashman said.

The Daily Sentinel

several injured players
BEREA, Ohio (AP) The
Cleveland Browns began
their practice week missing two running backs, two
safeties, a wide receiver and
a cornerback.
Coach Pat Shurmur,
whose first season with
Cleveland has been made
more challenging by injuries, said Wednesday that
starting safety T.J. Ward has
a cast on his injured right
foot. Shurmur did not provide specifics about Ward’s
injury, and has not yet ruled
him out of Sunday’s game
against St. Louis.
Ward underwent an MRI
on Monday, one day after
he was injured in the fourth
quarter at Houston. He finished with five tackles.
“He’s in a cast and he’s
getting it settled down,”
Shurmur said of Ward, who
also dislocated a finger in
Sunday’s loss. “We’ll just

see (about Sunday). As we
move forward, I’ll give
more details.”
It would be hard to imagine Ward playing if he’s still
in a cast and unable to practice.
Also, the Browns’ medical staff sent home wide
receiver Mohamed Massaquoi again as he continues to struggle with postconcussion symptoms after
sustaining his second head
injury in 13 months on Oct.
23. Massaquoi missed one
game, returned to practice
last week and played briefly
against the Texans before
leaving when he got “woozy.”
“He didn’t have any specific episode in the game to
make him what we consider
worse,” Shurmur said.
Massaquoi also sustained a concussion last
year when he was hit by

Steelers linebacker James
Harrison, who was fined
$50,000 for the helmet-tohelmet blow.
The Browns began preparing for the Rams without
safety Usama Young (hip)
and cornerback Dimitri Patterson (knee). Right tackle
Tony Pashos was limited in
practice with an ankle injury that has nagged him all
season.
Running backs Peyton
Hillis (hamstring) and Montario Hardesty (calf) will
both miss this week’s game.
Hillis has missed Cleveland’s past three games with
a strained left hamstring he
initially hurt on Oct. 16 and
reinjured last week in practice. Shurmur said earlier
this week that the team is
trying to get Hillis healthy
and there are no immediate
plans to put the beleaguered
back on injured reserve.

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�Thursday, November 10, 2011

Legals
COUNTY : MEIGS
The following applications
and/or verified complaints
were received, and
the following draft, proposed
and final actions were issued,
by the Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency (Ohio EPA) last week.
The complete public
notice including additional instructions for submitting comments,
requesting information or a
public hearing, or filing an appeal may be
o b t a i n e d
a t :
http://www.epa.ohio.gov/actions.aspx or Hearing Clerk,
Ohio EPA, 50 W. Town St.
P.O. Box 1049, Columbus,
Ohio 43216.
Ph: 614-644-2129 email:
HClerk@epa.state.oh.us
APPLICATION RECEIVED
FOR AIR PERMIT
APPLE GROVE PLANT
S.R. 338
RACINE
OH
ACTION DATE :
11/01/2011
FACILITY DESCRIPTION: AIR
IDENTIFICATION NO. :
A0043013
This application proposes to replace the hydraulic
dredge with a
clamshell style dredge,
(1) 6'x20' screen, (4) floating
conveyors
and (1) land-based conveyor. Two existing conveyors
will be
re-built. Two existing
equipment (bucket wheel, and
one field
conveyor) will be removed. Total increase in
equipment will be (3)
conveyors and one
screen. Martin Marietta Materials is also
requesting that the Ohio
EPA issue the General Permit
for Aggregate
Processing Plants. We
need to have this equipment
installed late
December to early
January. (11) 10, 2011
THE HOME NATIONAL BANK
WILL AUCTION THE FOLLOWING ITEMS ON SATURDAY NOVEMBER 12, 2011,
AT 10:00 A.M. THE SALE
WILL BE HELD IN THE
BANK'S PARKING LOT.
2000 PONTIAC GRAND AM
SE
1G2NE12T9YM760733
2008 PONITAC G6
1G2ZH57N784176566
THE HOME NATIONAL
BANK RESERVES THE
RIGHT TO REJECT ANY AND
ALL BIDS. ALL VEHICLES
ARE SOLD, AS IS WHERE IS,
WITH NO WARRANTIES EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED.
FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEE, CALL 949-2210, ASK
FOR SHEILA (11) 9, 10, 11,
2011
ANNOUNCEMENTS

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SERVICES

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 investigating the offering.

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(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

Want To Buy
Will pick up unwanted Appliances&amp; yard sale items also
Will haul or
buy Auto's,
Buses &amp; Scrap metal Ph.
446-3698 ask for Robert.
AUTOMOTIVE
Trucks
07" F-150 Ford Crew Cab FX4
4x4. Very Sharp asking
$22,500 also a 85" Dodge 4x4
asking
$1,000
Call
:
740-367-0641
Want To Buy
Paying
Cash
for
junk,Cars,Trucks,Vans,Call
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.
REAL ESTATE SALES

Pets
5 Chow mix puppies, 8 wks old
304-675-6355
Cocker Spanial Puppies for
sale $75 Full Blooded,
740-388-0401.
FREE TO A GOOD HOME-9
mo old blk/wh kitten with
food and litter. 304-882-2688
AGRICULTURE

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Sunquest Tanning Bed and a
Black Maytag Dishwasher both
items like new, Price to Sale
446-2451.

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$450 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740-988-6130

Twin Rivers Tower is accepting
applications for waiting list for
HUD subsidized, 1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
675-6679

1 Bedroom Efficiency Apartment with Garage-Behind
Farmers Bank $400 per month
Ph: 740-645-5785

Tara Townhouse Apt. 2BR 1.5
BA, back patio, pool, playground.
$450
mth
740-646-8231
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

4 rms &amp; bath/stove &amp; ref. furn.,
washer/dryer hook up. 2nd fl.
3 rms &amp; bath, house,
washer/dryer hook up, stove &amp;
ref, furn. $350 mon &amp; dep. &amp;
utilities, on each 740-441-0596

Apartment for Rent
Upstairs Apt.- Kitchen furnished- 1 or 2 people @ 238
1st Ave. $525 + Utilities &amp; deposit-No Pets 446-4926

Apt. For Rent
1-bedroom, 2nd floor, unfurnished apt. AC,water included,
corner 2nd &amp; pine, No pets,
Maximum occupancy 2, References &amp; security deposit required, $300/mo., 1 yr lease.
Call 446-4425 or 446-3936
Deluxe 1 br apt, open floorplan, stove, ref, w/d hookup,
$350/mo +dep &amp; util, No pets,
740-541-4119
FIRST MONTH FREE
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep
&amp; elec. No pets. 304-610-0776

3- BR brick ranch style home
for rent Please call after 5pm.
446-0722
4 - BR Large Home in Rio
Grande
$1350.00
mo.
www.cedarvalleyestates.net
740-645-5785
4 BR 2BA house on SR 279
near Centerville. 2 car carport
and outbuilding. Security deposit
required.
For more information, call
740-742-2376.
Beautiful 3 BR House in Country, New appliances, New
flooring, Freshly painted, Central Air, Laundry Rm, Water
Pd.
$550
mth.
Ph
740-645-5953
or
614-595-7773
GF
area,
614-491-4850

$500

mo

House for rent very close to
Gallipolis off Rt 7, 3br, 2/bath,
living room, den, eat in
kitchen, basement. Detached
garage, &amp; 1 out building. Deposit $750, Rent $750 you pay
Utilities, No pets inside, Available Nov 15th, Call 388-9003,
lv message
In country, 3BR, 2 BA, full
basement. Located between
Gallipolis &amp; Huntington. $600
mo plus dep. 740-256-6128 or
740-645-2007
Single Home for Rent. Living
Rm, Dining Rm, newly remodeled kitchen. 2 Bdrm, 1 bath.
Beautiful front porch. Upper
2nd Ave. in Gallipolis.
$650/mo. Deposit and References
required.
(740)
446-4474
Very nice home for rent in Middleport (Upstairs portion of the
home). good neighborhood.
Newly remodeled. New appliances, 2 bedrooms, 1 bath.
Central air &amp; heat, large deck
on back, garage available. Call
740-992-9784 for more information.

FIRST MONTH
FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS, $385 &amp;
up. Sec dep $300 &amp; up,
AC, W/D hook-up, tenant pays electric, EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017

Houses For Sale
4 br, 3 ba, close to Gallipolis,
recently remodeled. W &amp; D included. $775 rent, $775 dep.
Ref and BG check req. NO
SMOKING. Call or text
740-339-2494

4 br., 2 bth, 2 story, 1 br rental
house, 80x20 out building, lot,
corner of 5th &amp; Vine, Racine,
$97,000, 304-532-7890

For Sale by Owner, 3103
Kathnor Ln. Pt. Pl. 3BR, 2-1/2
bath, nice neighborhood,
$120,000 (304)675-5403
600

ANIMALS

Wanted- PASTURELAND with
livable
HOUSING,
505-384-1101
REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses
2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

FOR RENT
2-Rm efficiency Apartment in
country setting - 7 miles from
Gallipolis on St Rt 7 S. Furnished , washer &amp; dryer included. All Electric utilities not
included. $300 a mo. NO
PETS. Deposit and 1st Mo.
Rent required. Call 446-4514

2 cemetery plots
@ Sun Crest near
Jackson Ave
Pt Pleasant
$600 ea OBO
304-895-8776

Middleport North 4th Ave, 2 br
furnished apt, No Pets, deposit
&amp; references 740-992-0165

FURNISHED 3 BR DBL WIDE
SR 143, Pomeroy, Oh. Some
Utilities Included. W/D $625
mo. NO PETS. 740-591-5174

Lg 2 BR / 2 Bth Apt on State
Rt 588 - Rent $575 mo. +
$575 dep. Water &amp; Garbage
pd.
NO
PETS
Call:
419-359-1768

Nice 2 br downstairs apt, kit
appl, AC, gas furnace, W/D
hook-up, Pt Pleasant $375
plus $200 dep 304-675-6375
or 804-677-8621
Houses For Rent
16 x 80 2 BR, 2 BA, Rt 2 N,
private setting. 304-895-3129
or 304-675-7770

Lots

Rentals

Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

WOW! Gov't program now available on manufactured homes.
Call
while
funds
last!
740-446-3570

RESORT PROPERTY

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY
EMPLOYMENT

Marcum Construction

Clerical

and General Contracting

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

• Room Additions
• Roofing
• Garages
• Pole &amp; Horse Barns
• Foundations
• Home Repairs
740-985-4141 • 740-416-1834
Fully Insured - Free Estimates
30 Years Experience
Not Affiliated with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Remodeling

60231179

• Commercial &amp; Residential • General Remodeling

SNOW
REMOVAL

3 &amp; 4 BR houses for rent,
Syracuse,
no
pets.
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

MANUFACTURED HOUSING

ANIMALS

MERCHANDISE
Notices

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

FT front office pos, Valley
Health-Gallipolis, Ferry. Must
be HS grad or equivilant, exp
with office machines, excel
comm &amp; org skills &amp; work well
as part of a team. Duties will
include, but not limited to; ans
phones, schedule appts, filing,
data entry, greet patients, typing &amp; gen staff support. Apply
online at www.valleyhealth.org
or send resume to: Front Office, 258 Third Ave, Htgn WV
25703. EOE

Help Wanted- General
Super 8 - Gallipolis is currently
accepting applications and / or
resumes for 2 positions. Must
apply in person. No Phone
Calls Please.
Management / Supervisory
Meigs County Veterans Service Officer, 40 hours per week,
The assigned duties of the position are supervisions of all office staff. This shall also include administrative and management duties. Tha Candidate will promote the services
offered by the Veterans Service Office of Meigs County in
coordination with the Veterans
Service Commission.
Qualifications: Honorably Discharged Veteran; DD214;
Must reside in Meigs County;
High School Graduate (College Preferred); Active Service
Officer Certification Required
in one year; Travel Required.
Ability to deal with difficult
situations; Flexible work
schedule required; Valid Ohio
Driver's License required; Resume required; Salary Negotiable; with Experience.
Deadline for submission of resume is close of business Nov.
10, 2011. Resume may be
Faxed, mailed, or Dropped off
at the Veterans Service Office.
Meigs County Veterans Service Office, 117 E Memorial Dr.
Ste. 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone: 740-992-2820; Fax:
740-992-1398
Medical
Family Medicine offices in in
Gallia &amp; Jackson Co. seek Receptionist/Medical Assistant
FT/PT, skills required,
740-441-9800
Needed HHA, STNA, CNA, All
Shifts. Please APPLY AT 146
3rd Ave Gallipolis, Oh
740-446-3808
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guaranttee. Local references
furnished. Established in 1975.
Call 24hrs (740)446-0870.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

�Thursday, November 10, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

Penn

From Page 5

I pray for their comfort and
relief.”
He went on: “I have
come to work every day for
the last 61 years with one
clear goal in mind: To serve
the best interests of this university and the young men
who have been entrusted to
my care. I have the same
goal today.”
A day earlier, Paterno
had showed up for practice
and adoring crowds rallied
outside his modest home
into the night, chanting his
name.
But Paterno, whose
football program bore the
motto “Success with Honor,” could not withstand
the backlash from a scandal
that goes well beyond the
everyday stories of corruption in college sports.
“If this is true, we were
all fooled, along with scores
of professionals trained in
such things, and we grieve
for the victims and their
families,” Paterno said Sunday, after the news broke, in
a prepared statement. “They
are in our prayers.”
The coach defended his
decision to take the news to
the athletic director. Paterno said it was obvious that
the graduate student, since
identified as McQueary,
was “distraught,” but said
he was not told about the
“very specific actions” in
the grand jury report.
After Paterno reported
the incident to Curley, Sandusky was told to stay away
from the school, but critics
say the coach should have
done more try to identify
and help the victim, for example, or alert authorities.
“Here we are again,”
John Salveson, former
president of the Pennsylvania chapter of the Survivors
Network of those Abused
by Priests, said earlier this
week. “When an institution
discovers abuse of a kid,
their first reaction was to
protect the reputation of the
institution and the perpetrator.”
Paterno’s requirement
that his players not just
achieve success but adhere
to a moral code, that they
win with honor, transcended his sport. Mike Krzyzewski, the Duke basketball
coach, said in June for an
ESPN special on Paterno:
“Values are never compromised. That’s the bottom
line.”
His sudden departure
leaves his fans and detractors wondering who exactly
was the real “Joe Pa.”
Was he a gentle oncein-a-lifetime leader with a
knack for molding champions?
Or was he simply another gridiron pragmatist, a

detached football CEO, his
sense of right and wrong
diluted by decades of coddling from “yes” men paid
to make his problems disappear.
History will decide
whether the enduring image
will be that of Paterno surrounded by all those reporters as he hurried to practice
this week, or his signature
look on the sidelines.
Rolled-up khakis. Jetblack sneakers. Smoky,
thick glasses. That famous
Brooklyn accent that came
off only as whiny as he
wanted it to be.
“Deep down, I feel I’ve
had an impact. I don’t feel
I’ve wasted my career,” Paterno once said. “If I did,
I would have gotten out a
long time ago.”
Along the road to the
wins record, Paterno turned
Penn State into one of the
game’s best-known programs, and the standardbearer for college football
success in the East.
National titles in 1982
and 1986 under defenses
run by Sandusky cemented
him as one of the game’s
greats. In all, Paterno
guided five teams to unbeaten, untied seasons, and
he reached 300 wins faster
than any other coach.
A year after he arrived
at sleepy Penn State in
1966, Paterno began a 300-1 streak fueled by players
such as Jack Ham and Dennis Onkotz.
But the Nittany Lions
fell short in the polls, finishing No. 2 in 1968 and
1969 despite 11-0 records,
and No. 5 in 1973 despite a
12-0 record.
In 1969, Texas edged
out Penn State for the title
with help from an unlikely
source: President Richard
Nixon declared the Longhorns No. 1 after their bowl
game.
“I’d like to know,” Paterno later said, “how could
the president know so little
about Watergate in 1973,
and so much about college
football in 1969?”
Elite status finally arrived in the 1980s. The
Nittany Lions claimed national titles in 1982, with
a 27-23 win over Georgia
at the Sugar Bowl, and in
1986, intercepting Miami’s
Vinny Testaverde five times
in a 14-10 win at the Fiesta
Bowl.
They have made several
title runs since then, including the 2005 run to the
Orange Bowl and an 11-1
regular-season campaign in
2008 that ended with a trip
to the Rose Bowl and a 3723 loss to Southern California.
“He will go down as

the greatest football coach
in the history of the game.
Every young coach, in my
opinion, can take a lesson
from him,” former Florida
coach Urban Meyer said
after his last game with the
Gators, a 37-24 win over
Penn State at the 2011 Outback Bowl. Now Meyer’s
name will be among those
raised as a possible successor.
Paterno’s longevity became all the more remarkable as college football
transformed into a bigmoney business.
The school estimated
there have been at least 888
head coaching changes at
FBS schools since Paterno
took the job. He is the alltime leader in bowl appearances (37) and wins (24).
And he sent more than 250
players to the NFL.
On Oct. 29, Penn State
beat Illinois 10-7, earning
Paterno win No. 409, breaking a tie with Grambling
State’s Eddie Robinson for
most in Division I.
All he wanted to do, he
had said two days earlier,
was “hopefully have a little
luck and have a little fun
doing it. I’ve been lucky
enough to be around some
great athletes.”
He said the success came
because “the good Lord
kept me healthy, not because I’m better than anybody else. It’s because I’ve
been around a lot longer
than anybody else.”
So long, in fact, that it
seemed there was no getting rid of him, even as age
and injuries crept up and his
famous resistance to modern technology — tweeting,
texting and other so-called
must-haves of 21st century
recruiting — turned him
into a dinosaur.
But just as much, it was
a string of mediocre seasons
in the early 2000s that had
fans wondering whether it
was finally time for Paterno
to step aside.
Others questioned how
much actual work Paterno
did in his later years. He always went out of his way to
heap praise on his veteran
assistants, especially if an
injury or ailment kept him
from getting in a player’s
face in practice or demonstrating a technique.
“I’m not where I want to
be, the blazing speed I used
to have,” he said in October, poking fun at himself.
“It’s been tough. … it’s a
pain in the neck, let me put
it that way.”
Paterno cut back on road
trips to see recruits. He
ended his annual summer
caravan across Pennsylvania to exchange handshakes
and smiles with alumni and

donors.
He often said he never
read the newspaper —
though the critical comments got back to him
somehow. Some suspected
his wife, Sue, kept him
abreast of the news.
“You guys write stories
about how I sit around and
don’t do anything,” Paterno said after watching
his 409th victory from the
Beaver Stadium press box.
“I just hope we can help the
team do the things that they
want to do.”
Still, the question persisted: How much longer
was he going to coach?
It was, until this week,
the biggest question to dog
him. That made him no different from the handful of
coaching lifers who stay in
the game into their 70s and
beyond.
“Who knows?” Paterno
said with a straight face
in October, when he was
asked how his latest ailments affected his future.
“Maybe I’ll go 10 years.”
The terms of his departure conflict significantly
with the reputation he built
in nearly a half-century of
turning a quaint program
into a powerhouse with instant name recognition.
He made it to the big
time without losing a sense
of where he was — State
College, population 42,000,
a picturesque college town
smack-dab in the middle of
Pennsylvania.
Paterno and his wife
raised five children in State
College. Anybody could
ring up his modest ranch
home using the number listed in the phone book under
“Paterno, Joseph V.” Anybody could walk up to offer
good luck as he walked to
home games.
Former players would
parade through his living room, especially on a
busy game weekend, for a
chance to say “Hello.”
For the most part, Paterno shunned the spotlight,
though he had a knack for
making a joke that could instantly light up a room.
“You guys have to talk
about something. The fans
have to put something on
those — what do you guys
call those things, twittledo, twittle-dee?” Paterno
cracked at one Big Ten media day.
He was referring, of
course, to the social media
site Twitter — and no, the
technology-averse Paterno
didn’t have his own account.
Paterno had no qualms
mocking himself or the media, with which he could be
abrasive at times. Stubborn
to a fault, Paterno also had

his share of run-ins with
his bosses or administrators, as might be expected
for someone who has spent
decades with the same employer.
His status didn’t make
him immune from external
criticism. As his reputation
grew, so did the spotlight on
his on-field decisions and
program as a whole.
In 2002, following a
stretch of run-ins with officials over controversial
calls, an effigy of a football official, yellow flag in
hand, was seen hanging on
the front door of Paterno’s
home. Though he never
said how the doll got on
the door, Paterno hinted his
wife might be responsible
and it was all done in fun.
After he started the 21st
century with four losing
seasons in five years, Paterno faced growing calls
for his dismissal — once
considered heresy in Happy
Valley — during the 2004
season.
The next year, Penn
State went 11-1 and won
the Big Ten. The Nittany
Lions capped the campaign
with a thrilling 26-23 win
in triple overtime at the Orange Bowl against Florida
State and Paterno’s longtime friend coach Bobby
Bowden.
Following a messy split,
Bowden left the Seminoles
after the 2009 season after
34 years, finishing with 389
wins.
Asked in 2010 whether
any contemporary coach
would stick around as he
and Paterno had, Bowden
said: “Not likely. It doesn’t
seem to be the style nowadays.” He cited high salaries and the demands that
come with the big paycheck
as reasons, along with
the allure of professional
coaching.
“And there doesn’t seem
to be the desire to stay in it
as long as Joe and I have
had,” Bowden said.
To be sure, Paterno has
had other opportunities —
and they didn’t all have to
do with coaching. A 1950
graduate of Brown University, Paterno said his father, Angelo, hoped his son
would someday become
president. Paterno himself had plans to go to law
school.
He also played football
at Brown. A quarterback
and cornerback, Paterno set
a defensive record with 14
career interceptions — a
distinction he boasted about
on occasion to his team.
Law school never materialized. At 23, he was
coaxed by Rip Engle, his
former football coach at
Brown, to work with him

when Engle moved to Penn
State in 1950.
“I had no intention to
coach when I got out of
Brown,” Paterno said in a
2007 interview before being inducted into the Hall of
Fame. “Come to this hick
town? From Brooklyn?”
In 1963, a fellow Brooklyn native, the late Al Davis, became the general
manager-coach of the Oakland Raiders of the AFL
and offered Paterno the job
of offensive coordinator. He
turned Davis down in spite
of an offer to triple his salary to about $18,000 and a
new car.
Three years later, Paterno took over as Penn State’s
head coach after Engle retired. The New England
Patriots offered Paterno the
head-coaching job in the
early 1970, only to be rebuffed.
When Engle and Paterno
arrived, Penn State had seen
three coaches in three years
and had an offense made up
mostly of walk-ons. Engle
never had a losing season
at Penn State, but when Paterno took over in 1966, the
Lions still were considered
“Eastern football” — in
other words, inferior.
As the program turned
into something much bigger than that, Paterno’s fans
always insisted it was more
than simply about football
and winning.
But the program hasn’t
been a perennial Top 10
contender, like it had been
through the 1990s — not
that Paterno measured success entirely by the outcome on the field.
“He teaches us about
really just growing up and
being a man,” former linebacker Paul Posluszny, now
with the NFL’s Jacksonville
Jaguars, once said. “Besides
the football, he’s preparing
us to be good men in life.”
Paterno was a frequent
speaker on ethics in sports,
a conscience for a world often infiltrated by scandal or
shady characters. He made
sure his players went to
class.
As of 2011, Penn State
has had 49 academic AllAmericans — 47 under Paterno — the third-highest
total among FBS institutions.
The team’s graduation
rates consistently ranked
among the best in the Big
Ten. In 2010, Penn State’s
84 percent rate trailed only
Northwestern’s 95, according to the NCAA.
In the ESPN special,
Krzyzewski said Paterno
had been able to “change
how you teach … without
changing the values of how
you teach.”

Thursday’s TV Guide
THURSDAY PRIMETIME
6

3

(WSAZ)

4

(WTAP)

6

(WSYX)

7

(WOUB)

8

(WCHS)

10

(WBNS)

11

(WVAH)

12

(WPBY)

13

(WOWK)

18
24
25
26
27
29
30
31
34
35
37
38
39
40
42
52
57
58
60
61
62
64
65
67
68
72
73
74
400
450
500

(WGN)
(FXSP)
(ESPN)
(ESPN2)
(LIFE)
(FAM)
(SPIKE)
(NICK)
(USA)
(TBS)
(CNN)
(TNT)
(AMC)
(DISC)
(A&amp;E)
(ANPL)
(OXY)
(WE)
(E!)
(TVL)
(NGEO)
(VS)
(SPEED)
(HIST)
(BRAVO)
(BET)
(HGTV)
(SCIFI)
(HBO)
(MAX)
(SHOW)

PM

6:30

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Community Parks "The The Office
Whitney
Prime Suspect (N)
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
News
Fortune
(N)
Treaty" (N)
(N)
Tonight
Show (N)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
Community Parks "The The Office
Whitney
Prime Suspect
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
at Six
News
Fortune
(N)
Treaty" (N)
(N)
at 11
Show (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World Entertainm- Access
Grey's Anatomy "Dark
P. Practice "Don't Stop Till ABC 6 News (:35) News
Charlie's Angels "Royal
at 6
News
Angels" (N)
Was the Night" (N)
You Get Enough" (N)
at 11
Nightline
ent Tonight Hollywood
Euromaxx
Nightly
America's Veterans: A
Street Vets
My
PBS NewsHour
Our Veterans "21st
Leading
Business
Musical Tribute
Century Challenges"
Generation Gen
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm- Charlie's Angels "Royal
Grey's Anatomy "Dark
P. Practice "Don't Stop Till Eyewitness (:35) News
News at 6
News
Was the Night" (N)
You Get Enough" (N)
News 11PM Nightline
ent Tonight Angels" (N)
Big Bang
Rules of
Person of Interest
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
The Mentalist "Red Alert" 10TV News (:35) LateS
at 6:00 p.m. News
Fortune
Theory (N)
Engage. (N) "Ghosts"
(N)
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
The X Factor "Results
The
Excused
The Big
Bones "The Hot Dog in the Eyewitness News at 10
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory Show" (L)
Competition" (N)
p.m.
Simpsons
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
BBC News
Doctors on Law Works Midsomer Murders
Hustle
Charlie Rose
America
Business
Call
"Strangler's Wood" 1/2
Big Bang
Rules of
Person of Interest
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
The Mentalist "Red Alert" News 13 at (:35) LateS
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Theory (N)
Engage. (N) "Ghosts"
11:00 p.m. (N)
Christine
Christine
Funniest Home Videos
Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother WGN News at Nine
30 Rock
Scrubs
Bearcats
Jackets Live NHL Hockey Chicago Blackhawks vs. Columbus Blue Jackets (L)
Jackets Live Bearcats
H.S. Football (L)
SportsCenter
Audibles (L)
NCAA Football Virginia Tech vs. Georgia Tech (L)
SportsCenter
NFL 32 (L)
Interrupt (N) C. Football SportsNation
Poker World Series Final
SportsNation
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
Unsolved Mysteries
Access. "Sole Searching" Accessory "Bling it On"
Accessory "Bling it On"
(4:00) Harry Potter &amp; th... Harry Potter &amp; the Chamber of Secrets Harry Potter returns to Hogwarts only to find the school plagued by mysterious attacks.
The 700 Club
Jail
Jail
Jail
Jail
Jail
Jail
Impact Wrestling (N)
MANswers MANswers
iCarly
Victorious
Big Time R. SpongeBob Brainsurge Wife Kids
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Friends
Friends
'70s Show
'70s Show
SVU "Undercover"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Liberties"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Quickie"
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Savior"
Burn "Breaking Point" (N) Covert Affairs "Uberlin"
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
Family Guy Family Guy BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Conan
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Bones
Bones
CSI: NY "Obsession"
CSI: NY "The Lying Game" CSI: NY
CSI: NY "Heart of Glass"
(5:30) ++ U-571 ('00, War) Matthew McConaughey.
++ Spy Game (2001, Drama) Robert Redford, Catherine McCormack, Brad Pitt.
++ Spy Game Brad Pitt.
Cash Cab
Cash Cab
Chopper "The Settlement" Chopper "Top Ten Bikes" Gold Rush "Twist of Fate" Storm "All Or Nothing"
Gold Rush "Twist of Fate"
The First 48
The First 48
The First 48
The First 48
Bordertown Bordertown The First 48
Riv Monsters: Unhook
Untamed and Uncut
Swamp Wars
Wildman
Wildman
Swamp Wars
Wildman
Wildman
Movie
+++ Kiss the Girls ('97, Susp) Morgan Freeman, Ashley Judd.
Snapped "Karen Tobie"
Snapped "Jane Andrews" Snapped
Movie
Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values (N) Braxton Family Values
Braxton Family Values
Movie
Kendra
E! News (N)
THS "Casey Anthony"
Too Young to Kill: 15 Shocking Crimes
C. Lately (N) E! News
Sanford
Sanford
D. Van Dyke D. Van Dyke Married
Married
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Hot/ Cleve. Hot/ Cleve. Hot/ Cleve. Hot/ Cleve.
Loch Ness Monster
Alaska State Troopers
Amazon Headshrinkers
Salem: The Devil (N)
The Witch Doctor
Amazon Headshrinkers
NBC Sports Talk (L)
3 Gun
Instinct
Territories
Winchester Mixed Martial Arts World Extreme Cagefighting
SportsTalk
SportsTalk
NASCAR Race Hub
Pass Time
Pass Time
Pimp
Pimp
Wrecked
Wrecked
Trucker
Trucker
Pimp
Pimp
Vietnam in HD
Vietnam in HD
Vietnam in HD
Vietnam in HD
Marvels "70's Tech"
Top Chef
Top Chef "The Heat is On" Millionaire
Millionaire
Housewives Atlanta
Beverly Hills
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live (L)
Reed
Reed
The Game
++++ The Five Heartbeats ('91, Mus) Robert Townsend.
Property
Property
House
House Hunt. My Place
My Place
HouseH (N) House
Sell LA (N)
Sell NY (N) House Hunt. House
Star Trek: Next Gen.
30 Days of Night: Dark Days ('10, Hor) Kiele Sanchez. ++ Jeepers Creepers 2 ('03, Hor) Ray Wise.
The Seamstress
Percy Jackson &amp; the Olympians: The Lightning Thief +++ Love and Other Drugs Jake Gyllenhaal.
Bored
Hung
Real Sex
(:45) Face Off
(:15) +++ Dinner for Schmucks Steve Carell.
(:15) + Lottery Ticket ('10, Com) Ice Cube, Bow Wow. ++ Face/ Off ('97, Act) Nicolas Cage, John Travolta.
(5:30) ++ Camp Daniel Letterle.
Thespians (2011, Documentary)
(:05) +++ The Hours ('02, Dra) Nicole Kidman.
Gigolos
Old Porn

�Thursday, November 10, 2011

Thursday, November 10, 2011

BLONDIE

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com
The Daily Sentinel • Page 9
Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Thursday,
Nov. 10, 2011:
This year you can open up to new
changes and greater possibilities.
You see the world more openly. You
sometimes see how opposites can be
the same, at least in their core issues.
You could swing between whether to
do what you want to do and what you
think you would like to do. Another
scenario could be whether to do what
you want or what is right or will work.
You will discover that for you, one path
works better than the others. If you
are single, establishing a new relationship with your birthday on a Full Moon
guarantees suitors, but not necessarily
peaceful relating. If you are attached,
the two of you look to a better year, but
you need to have equality. You might
note your differences more than your
similarities. TAURUS can be extremely
challenging.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHH You suddenly become far
more sedate and caring. How could all
of this have happened? You made a
big splash the past few months. Now
this? We cannot say that others aren’t
wistful for the person of the past, but
they will like your caring even more
now. Tonight: Make it your treat.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHHH The Bull roars. The Full
Moon focuses on you and only you.
Don’t be shy or too patient. Now is the
time to move, especially if you have
been eying a particular goal — that
is, if you want a yes answer. Tonight:
Juggling others’ concerns.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHH Know that sometimes the
less said the greater the impact you
have. Knowing what you want and
being willing to move forward and
make it so are part of the recipe. Now
the best move is to watch and check
out where others are coming from.
Tonight: Vanish.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHHH Zero in on what you
want. Listen to what is being said
between friends, then observe what is
happening. You might be a little tired
of a situation that keeps repeating
itself. Be direct in your conversations.
Tonight: Where the fun is.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Take a stand if you must.
Others always respond to your leadership. You have a sudden concern
about making money. Push comes

to shove faster than you can believe,
especially if you have a different point
of view. Tonight: A must appearance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHHH Display your customary
efficiency. Some people could find
you a little demanding in the next
few weeks. You just have all this
energy and need to keep your focus.
Understanding will evolve. Tonight:
Look beyond the obvious.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHH Rethink a personal matter
with the person involved. A discussion
helps both of you bond more closely,
no matter what. Anger will keep building if you don’t discuss the issue. Do
it sooner rather than later. Tonight:
Togetherness builds.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHHH Defer to your significant
other. No matter how you look at a
situation, it is changeable. Try accepting and opening up. Your ability to
deal with the impossible emerges.
Others are in sync with your thoughts.
Understand where the similarities are
rather than the differences. Tonight:
Let another person choose.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHH Touch base with others’
needs and desires. With that type
of nurturing, people cannot help but
respond. Let defiance go — it is an
immediate reaction, nothing more.
Structure your plans around what
works. Tonight: Put your feet up and
relax.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHHH Allow more creativity into
your ideas, actions and conversations.
Please note the high response to your
ingenuity. You might consider projecting in this manner more often. A friend
would like more attention. Tonight: Let
the good times begin.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHH A key person is on the
bandwagon about a new beginning.
You cannot shut this person down.
Opposing him or her would be a lesson in futility. Why do that to yourself,
or to anyone else? Tonight: Dinner for
two.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHHH You want to understand
what is going on. Not everyone is as
willing to calmly discuss a situation
as you are. Rather than get into a
disagreement, flow with the moment
knowing that anything is changeable.
Tonight: Juggling calls, mail and plans.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Thursday, November 10, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

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