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                  <text>Point headed to
state final, Page 4

Dr. Brothers,
Page 3

Printed on
100% recycled
newsprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. 61, No. 189

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Public schools oppose bill expanding voucher program

Briefs

By Charlene Hoeflich

Christmas
celebration

choeflich@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — “Jesus is
the Reason for the Season”
will be theme for the annual
holiday observance being
held Sunday, 3 to 5 p.m.,
at the St. Paul Lutheran
Church, 33441 Pine Grove
Road, where Linea Warmke
is the pastor. Everyone invited for fellowship and fun.
Games, special kids activities, and food, with a gift for
every family.

POMEROY — The Boards of
Education of Meigs County’s three
public school districts have joined
145 other school boards in the
State of Ohio in passing resolutions
of opposition to House Bill 136
School Choice currently under consideration in the Ohio Legislature.
The resolutions of opposition

were passed by Meigs, Southern
and Eastern Boards of Education
following visits by Michael Struble, a former Board member of the
Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center, who explained the legislation and the effect it would have
on public education in the state of
Ohio.
He described the bill as being
designed to increase the availability of vouchers to any public school
student, regardless of the academic

performance of the public school
attended, so the student can attend
any private or parochial school.
The only stipulation is that the family income must be $95,000 or less.
Currently, state vouchers are only
given to children who would otherwise have to attend failing public
schools.
According to the bill, the
amount received would be pegged
to the family income and range
from about $2,300 to $4,500 a year.

The bill, which is backed by School
Choice Ohio, a Central Ohio advocacy group, was approved earlier
this year by the House Education
Committee. The next step comes
when it goes before House of Representatives, which could come at
any time.
The resolutions as passed by the
local school boards contends that
the “proposed program would take

See Bill, 2

Officers
participate
in project

Meigs PERI to meet

POMEROY — Meigs
PERI 74 will have a Christmas celebration at 1 p.m.
Friday, Dec. 2, at the Mulberry Community Center.
There will be a carry-ion
dinner with turkey, ham and
drinks provided by the chapter and members to take the
rest of the meal. There will
be a $5 gift exchange. Group
singing will be held and the
new officers for the coming
year will be installed.

By Charlene
Hoeflich

choeflich@heartlandpublications.com

Deer hunters invited

RACINE — Deer hunters luncheons will be served
every day through Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the
Carmel Fellowship Building. Proceeds from the luncheon project will go to the
church’s mission program.

Auxiliary to celebrate

TUPPERS PLAINS —
The VFW Post 9053 Ladies
Auxiliary will have a meeting followed by a Christmas
party at 6 p.m. Thursday at
the hall in Tuppers Plains.
There will be a gift exchange.

Let no senior go
hungry

POMEROY — The
Meigs County Council on
Aging in an effort to insure
that no senior go without a
hot meal is accepting meal
sponsorships from members
of the community. A gift of
$15 to the program means
one senior will have a hot
and nutritious meal for one
week. To give just call the
center at 992-2161.

Remembering our
loved ones

POMEROY — Residents
can remember or honor
someone close to them this
holiday season by placing
an ornament on the memory
tree at the Senior Citizens
Center. Each ornament will
have written on it the information provided by the donor and as the holidays come
to a close, the ornament can
be picked up and held as a
keepsake. Ornaments are $5
each or three for $10.

Obituaries

Page 2
• Bonnie Lee Cremeans, 69
• Charles R. Barnhouse, 67

Weather

High: 50
Low: 38

Index

1 SECTION — 10 PAGES

Sports
Classifieds
Comics

4-6
7-8
9

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

There wasn’t any snow so Santa had to abandon the idea of coming on his sleigh and instead settle for a
Model T.

Santa comes
to
town
Riding in a Model T
By Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@heartlandpublications.com

POMEROY — Raindrops
kept falling on their heads, but
nobody seemed to mind as participants in Sunday’s Christmas
parade moved down Pomeroy’s
Main Street ushering in the holiday season.
Hundreds of spectators —
many carrying umbrellas, others
standing under store awnings —
lined the street to see the marching units, floats, decorated vehicles, horses, a battalion of fire
trucks from across the county
and, of course, that jolly old man
in the red suit.
Again this year, Santa arrived
in a Model T Ford waving along
the way to the young and the
young at heart. After the parade,
he moved into the Peoples Bank
lobby where children told him
what they wanted for Christmas
and the bank passed out treats.
Charlene Hoeflich/photos
For a time preceding the parade, the bells of Trinity Church Little Claire Howard was one of many children who lined up at
See Town, 2 People’sBank to tell Santa what they want for Christmas.

POMEROY — Two
felony drug cases will be
presented to the December grand jury, one coming
from a traffic stop and the
other a traffic accident, as
a result of Meigs County
Sheriff Robert Beegle’s
officers’ participation in
the U.S. Route 33 Enforcement Corridor Project over
the Thanksgiving holiday.
Beegle said funds from
the Ohio Criminal Justice
Services Grant recently received by his department
were used to pay for the
seven officers who worked
28 hours of overtime in
patrolling the highway. In
addition to the felony drug
cases, one person was arrested on an out-of-county
warrant and 14 warnings
were given — with 34
vehicles being stopped.
Several motorists were
provided assistance, and
15 traffic citations were issued. Beegle said no seat
belt violations were noted.
As required by the grant,
the officers were to focus
on traffic safety in areas of
speeding, restraint use, impaired driving, youth drivers and drug enforcement.
The grant funds were
passed through OCJS from
the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration to support the efforts
of safety partners statewide and focus on highway
safety.
More information on
the role of the Office of
Criminal Justice Services
and the statewide efforts to
improve safety on Ohio’s
roadways can be obtained
by logging on to http://
www.ocjs.ohio.gov.

Coast Guard still investigating barge incident
By Beth Sergent

bsergent@heartlandpublications.com

MASON — The U.S. Coast
Guard is still conducting its investigation into why a rogue barge
struck a pier on the Bridge of Honor
early Saturday morning.
Lt. Jason Coffey with the
U.S. Coast Guard stationed in
Huntington said it appears four
barges, all loaded with coal,
broke loose from American Electric Power’s M/V Buckeye State
on Saturday, but only one barge
struck the pier.
Coffey said despite having coal
inside the barge, no cargo was lost,

and there was no need for any sort
of cleanup. The barge was towed to
shore by another AEP vessel. Coffey said as of Monday afternoon,
the barge was still docked along the
West Virginia side of the riverbank
near the bridge and was undergoing salvage operations, including
offloading cargo.
There were no injuries reported
as a result of the incident, though
the Bridge of Honor was closed for
several hours Saturday morning, allowing teams with the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) to
inspect the structure to ensure it
was structurally sound. As reported
earlier, T. Steve Williams, PE, dep-

uty director with ODOT District
10, said the barge struck a “glancing blow” to the pier which wasn’t
determined to be significant or put
the public safety in jeopardy by reopening the structure. It seemed the
most significant impact on the public were traffic delays on Saturday
morning.
The bridge has never technically changed hands from Ohio to
West Virginia despite a ceremonial
changing of hands back in March
2009 — this means Ohio is still
footing the bill, and the responsibility, for the structure, which is why
ODOT did the inspection before
reopening the bridge to traffic. The

bridge opened in late December
2008.
As for what caused the accident
Saturday morning, Coffey said there
is no official cause as of yet, and his
agency is still conducting an investigation — which includes looking at
river conditions that morning.
The M/V Buckeye State is one
of AEP’s fleet of larger vessels with
some modern amenities for its crew
and some major horsepower (6,000
HP to be exact) to get up and down
the Ohio River, among other waterways. The M/V Buckeye State is a
familiar site to the area and travels
through the region often and without incident.

Southern receives construction grant, contract approval

COLUMBUS — State
Representative Debbie Phillips (D-Athens) announced
© 2011 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Monday afternoon that
the Ohio School Facilities
Commission has received
approval to contract with
Hill International, Inc., for

construction projects in the
Southern Local School District.
The state Controlling
Board also approved over
$500,000 in grants for the
firm’s construction management services.

“Southern Local Schools
have been working hard to
move this project forward,
and this is a welcomed step
along the road to a better
learning environment for
children in the area,” Phillips said. “Needed repairs

include work on the roof
and will help ensure that students and teachers are safe,
warm and dry, so they can
focus on great educational
opportunities for Meigs
County’s young people.”
Based in North Canton in

Stark County, Hill was put
on a short list for the Southern Local project based on
the merit of its application,
and was selected as the primary contractor after an extensive interview process.

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

Death Notices

Weather

Baptist Church.

Charles R.
Barnhouse

Charles R. “Dick” Barnhouse, 67, of Guysville,
Ohio, died Friday, November 25, 2011, at his residence.
Services will be held at
10:30 a.m., Tuesday, November 29, 2011, at Vanderhoof Baptist Church, 23305
Moyis Rd., Coolville, with
Pastor Craig Holler officiating. Burial will be in the
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens, Gallipolis. Friends
may call Monday from
5-8 p.m. at the Vanderhoof

Stocks

Bonnie Lee
Cremeans

Bonnie Lee Cremeans,
69, of Stewart, Ohio died
Sunday, November 27,
2011, at O’Bleness Memorial Hospital, Athens, Ohio.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday,
November 30, 2011, at the
White-Schwarzel Funeral
Home, Coolville, with Rev.
John Butcher officiating.
Friends may call at WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home
Wednesday, from 11-1 p.m.

AEP (NYSE) — 37.79
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Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for November 28, 2011, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740)
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674-0174. Member SIPC.

Bill

From Page 1

dollars directly from the already
financially beleaguered local
public school districts resulting

Tuesday: Showers, mainly before noon. Temperature
falling to around 47 by 4 p.m. East wind around 6 mph becoming west. Chance of precipitation is 100 percent. New
rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Tuesday Night: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with a
low around 38. West wind between 5 and 8 mph. Chance
of precipitation is 50 percent. New rainfall amounts of less
than a tenth of an inch possible.
Wednesday: A chance of showers, mainly before 3 p.m.
Cloudy, with a high near 46. West wind between 9 and 14
mph. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 28.
Thursday: Sunny, with a high near 47.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 25.
Friday: Partly sunny, with a high near 42.
Friday Night: A chance of rain and snow showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 25. Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 44.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 28.
Sunday: A chance of showers. Partly sunny, with a high
near 48. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

Police: Officers shoot
woman stabbing her child
ATLANTA (AP) — Police officers shot and killed
a woman in an Atlanta
home when she didn’t comply with orders to stop stabbing her young daughter,
who also died, authorities
said Monday.
Police and fire rescue
personnel were called to the
home Monday afternoon
and were told an 8-year-old
boy had been assaulted by
his mother and thrown out a
window, said an Atlanta Police spokesman, Maj. Keith
Meadows.
Meadows said witnesses
told officers the mother was
alone inside the home with
her young daughter. He said
officers entered the house

and found the mother sitting in a chair, stabbing the
child.
Two officers drew their
service weapons and ordered the woman to drop a
knife, firing at her when she
did not comply, Meadows
said. He said between 10
and 16 shots were fired.
Police spokesman Carlos Campos said the stabbing victim was dead at the
scene, while the 8-year-old
boy was hospitalized in
stable condition with apparently minor injuries. Police
said they did not know if the
daughter had been struck by
a bullet, and did not know a
motive for the attacks on the
children.

Ohio county takes 200-pound 8-year-old from mother
CLEVELAND (AP) — The case of
an 8-year-old third-grader weighing more
than 200 pounds has renewed a debate on
whether parents should lose custody if a
child is severely obese.
Roughly 2 million U.S. children are
extremely obese — weighing significantly more than what’s considered healthy.
A Cleveland Heights boy was taken
from his family and was placed in foster
care in October after county case workers
said his mother wasn’t doing enough to
control his weight. The boy, at his weight,
is considered at risk for developing such
diseases as diabetes and high blood pressure. Government growth charts say most
boys his age weigh about 60 pounds.
Cuyahoga County removed the boy
because case workers considered the
mother’s inability to get his weight down
a form of medical neglect. The county’s
Children and Family Services agency
said Monday it stood by its custody
move, which was approved by a judge.
“We have worked very hard with this
family for 20 months before it got to this
point,” agency Administrator Patricia
Rideout said.
Rideout said the issue has created a
buzz among agency staff members and
she has heard it was a popular Internet
item. She said she was following state
law in withholding the boy’s name in his
best interest.
There’s no easy answer when it comes
to determining who’s to blame in such
obesity cases, said Dr. Naim Alkhouri,
who works with overweight children and
their families at Cleveland Clinic Chil-

in fewer resources for the education of the remaining students.”
Copies of the local resolutions of
opposition have been forwarded
to members of the Ohio House of
Representatives.
Under the program, students
already enrolled in private schools

dren’s Hospital and leads its pediatric
metabolic clinic.
“It’s not only the parents or the child,”
he said. “Obesity is an epidemic in the
United States. As a society we’re all responsible.”
It’s not enough to just encourage some
children to eat healthier and exercise, he
said, because there’s also “a big psychological component.”
“When it comes to involving the
authorities, I don’t think we have clear
guidelines,” he said. “Starting the debate
is a good thing. We need more guidance
on how to react to the issue.”
The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention’s Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity tries to address
the roles of nutrition and physical activity
in improving public health and preventing and controlling chronic diseases. It
says achieving and maintaining a healthy
weight is part of an ongoing lifestyle that
can be adopted. It offers resources to help
people determine which foods are needed
for a healthy diet and promotes regular
physical activity to reduce the risk for
diseases and control weight.
County workers were alerted to the
boy’s weight early last year after his
mother took him to a hospital for breathing problems. He was diagnosed with
sleep apnea, which is characterized by
pauses in breathing during sleep and can
be weight-related, and he was given a
breathing machine.
Parents have lost custody of obese
children a few times in the United States,
and an opinion piece in the Journal of

over time could also take advantage of the program. According
to reports as of last year Ohio had
about 190,000 students in private
schools. That compares to the 1.8
million in traditional and charter
public schools.
Under the provisions of House

the American Medical Association in
July said putting children temporarily in
foster care is in some cases more ethical
than obesity surgery, which can involve
removing part of the stomach.
Dr. David Ludwig, an obesity specialist at Harvard-affiliated Children’s Hospital Boston, said the point isn’t to blame
parents but rather to act in children’s best
interest and get them help their parents
can’t provide.
Dr. Norman Fost, a medical ethicist at
the University of Wisconsin’s Madison
campus, said Monday that foster care
wouldn’t cure the Ohio boy’s obesity but
might help.
“The goal is to make him less obese,”
he said.
Fost said the boy’s sleep apnea could
be related to his weight and could be imminently dangerous. A target weight of
150 pounds might improve the apnea
problem, he said.
The boy’s mother said she has worked
on the weight issue.
“They are trying to make it seem like I
am unfit, like I don’t love my child,” she
told The Plain Dealer newspaper, which
didn’t reveal her identity because the case
could involve abuse.
A public defender, Sam Amata, said
Monday the custody removal would be
challenged based on the contention that
the boy is not in imminent danger.
“We don’t feel there’s that kind of requisite danger,” he said.

Bill 136, the vouchers would be
funded by deducting a per-pupil
amount from the home district’s
budget, although there are some
stipulations in the bill about how
much money a public school district could lose.
While many public school sys-

tems across the state have voiced
their opposition to House Bill 136,
concerned citizens are now being
encouraged to contact their representatives with their views on
making taxpayer-funded vouchers available for private school
tuition.

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Mini horses pulling decorated carts was a feature of The Meigs Community Band played Christmas carLeading the parade with flags flying were members of the Portland Communty Center’s Horse Association’s ols to entertain the hundreds of people gathered on
DrewWebster Post 39, American Legion.
entry in the parade.
Pomeroy’s Main Street to watch the parade.
Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Gracie Land of Chester came as a Christmas package Members of Gallia-Meigs Performing Arts twirled their Following the parade the Meigs Marauder Band moved
for her Daisy Girl Scouts’ entry in the parade.
pink flags as they moved down Main Street.
to Court Street for a short carol concert.

Town

Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home

From Page 1

Adam McDaniel
&amp; James Anderson
DIRECTORS

Middleport

Pomeroy

992-5141 992-5444

www.andersonmcdaniel.com

60152175

Personalized Funeral Services

chimed and the Meigs Community Band. After
the parade, the Meigs Marauder band moved to
Court Street where they played several selec-

tions. Again this year, downtown stores extended
shopping hours for the day as a part of the holiday observance.
The annual Christmas parade is one of several holiday activities sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association. On three consecutive
Saturdays starting this week, there will the candy, cookie and craft contests sponsored by the

three banks with first place prizes in each of $50,
and a second prize, choice of the bank.
The downtown decorations, including the
stage and two gazebos decorated by the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, New Beginnings United
Methodist, and Trinity Church, are also a part of
the Merchants Association’s efforts to give a festive flavor to the village scene.

Visit us online at www.mydailysentinel.com

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Calendar of Events

Email items to mdrnews@mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, Dec. 1

CHESTER — The Chester-Shade Historical Association
will meet at 7 p.m. at the Chester Courthouse.

Thursday, Dec. 8

WELLSTON — The GJMV Solid Waster District Board
of Directors will meet at 3:30 p.m. at the district office,
1056 S.l New Hampshire Ave. Wellston.

Literary Club hears
Civil War hero story
POMEROY — Julia
Houston reviewed “Widow
of the South,” a historicallybased, first novel, by Robert
Hicks, at a recent meeting
of the Middleport Literary
Club held at the Pomeroy
Library.
The book tells the story
of Carrie, the owner of the
nineteenth century plantation, Carnton House of Williamson county, Tenn., the
site of the Battle of Franklin,
one of the bloodiest of the
American Civil War. There,
22,000 confederate soldiers
attacked 23,000 union men
and more than 9,000 were
killed in approximately five
hours of hand to hand combat. Carrie was not actually
a widow, but she dressed in
black and grieved for the
men who had sacrificed
their lives for their political
beliefs.
She kept a record book
of names and property of
the men who died there and
contacted as many of their

relatives as she could. Rather than let anyone plow over
the field where these young
men had been buried, Carrie dug them up and buried
them in her own personal
cemetery. Her husband donated property for a cemetery for 1,484 men who
died on his land. The driving force behind the preservation and restoration of the
historic Carnton Plantation
in Tennessee, the author,
discovered the unexpected
role that Carrie McGavock
played in and after the Battle of Franklin.
Members answered the
roll call question of, What
personal connection might
you have to the Civil War?
A book exchange was
held following the meting.
Next meeting will be held at
2 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 30,
at the library meting room
with Charlene Rutherford to
review Cleopatra by Stacy
Schiff.

Ringling circus agrees
to $270K fine by USDA

VIENNA, Va. (AP) — The Virginia-based owner of the
Ringling Bros. circus has agreed to pay a $270,000 fine
to settle allegations that it violated federal animal-welfare
laws in its handling of elephants, tigers, zebras and other
exotic animals.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says the civil penalty announced Monday is the largest ever assessed against
an animal exhibitor under the Animal Welfare Act.
Vienna-based Feld Entertainment, which owns the circus and other well-known acts such as Disney on Ice, said it
does not admit to violating the law and agreed to the settlement as a cost of doing business to resolve its differences
with the USDA.
“”We look forward to working with the USDA in a cooperative and transparent manner that meets our shared goal
of ensuring that our animals are healthy and receive the
highest quality care,” said a statement released by Kenneth
Feld, chief executive officer of Feld Entertainment.
In inspection reports from 2007 through this year, inspectors said circus handlers made elephants perform when
they were ill and used the same wheelbarrows to feed meat
to tigers and haul away their waste, among other allegations.
An inspection report from August alleged that a 35-yearold female Asian elephant, Banko, was forced to perform at
a show in Los Angeles despite a diagnosis of sand colic and
observations that she appeared to be suffering abdominal
discomfort. Circus officials told the inspectors that separating Banko from the performing elephants would have been
even more distressing to her.
The inspection reports also cited splintered floors and
rusted cages used to contain big cats such as tigers, and an
incident in March 2008 where two zebras briefly got loose
from their enclosure at 1st Mariner Arena in Baltimore. In
2010, another zebra escaped its enclosures in Atlanta and
had to be captured by area law enforcement, according to
the reports.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Spouse makes her feel like a dumb blonde
Dear Dr. Brothers: Please don’t
tell me to change my hair color. I’m
a natural blonde and proud of it! But I
am aware that my hair color signals to
others that it is perfectly OK to make
insulting jokes about my intelligence.
This is bad enough from comedians or
teasing friends or even perfect strangers, but lately my husband has been
making some cracks when I mess up
in some way. He knows this bothers
me, but he does it anyway. Is it silly to
let this upset me? — E.J.
Dear E.J.: Surely the last person
you want to consider you a “dumb
blonde” is your husband. This stereotype is one that almost every fairhaired maiden has had to endure from
time to time. Most people are able to
laugh it off, or are proud enough of
their intellectual skills that they know
it is nothing personal. If you have any
doubts about your ability to think on
your feet or compete with others of
a different hair color — which is as
silly as it sounds — then you may be
a little more sensitive than other women in your position. By this time in
your life, you should be comfortable
enough in your own skin (and hair) to
have developed a few snappy comebacks to remarks by others — or look
them up online.
But hearing such cracks from your
husband calls for more than just the
latest Googled response. It is especially hurtful to be mocked by a loved one,

and this is sometoughen up the little guy.
thing you need to
At their age, they soon
nip in the bud. Let
will find out whether they
your spouse know
like the rough-and-tumble
that his cracks are
interaction of team sports
hurtful, and point
like football, or whether
out that you don’t
they’d prefer a sport withmake jokes about
out physical contact. But
his nose or his
in no case is it appropriate
lack of patience or
for a parent to try to push
whatever else he
a child beyond his comfort
may feel self-con- Dr. Joyce Brothers zone — be it physical or
scious about that
psychological. In the case
could be a target
of football, it even can
for ridicule. A lack of mutual respect be dangerous if that kind of “suck
is one thing that can sink the most it up” attitude is fostered by a parpromising relationship, and for this ent or coaches, because of what we
reason I wouldn’t just try to adjust.
now know about the dangers of heat,
***
head injuries and other hazards of the
Dear Dr. Brothers: I am worried game.
about how my friend is setting up her
Perhaps you can share some of
little boy to be hurt in football. Our the research on the medical hazards
kids are 7, and hers is already look- of pushing too hard when kids are
ing forward to playing for the local young. I’m sure the parent thinks she
university. When he has a rough time is educating her son properly to handle
during practice, she is there, telling the inevitable hurts and spills that will
him to get up, not cry, suck it up and come his way. But if she knew that
things like that. The coaches are try- she might be encouraging a reckless
ing to treat these little boys carefully, attitude on his part, she may stop. Plan
but some parents like my neighbor are some activities for your sons that are
so over the top. How could I approach not physically demanding, and see
her about this? — L.L.
if they can still have fun while you
Dear L.L.: It sounds as though you parents enjoy them being little boys.
have a little boy playing football, too, That may be a good way to turn things
but at a level that is just for fun and around.
where you are not telling him to “be
(c) 2011 by King Features Syndia man” or any such thing designed to
cate

LA protesters defy eviction efforts, go to court
LOS ANGELES (AP)
— For now, Wall Street protesters camped out on the
Los Angeles City Hall lawn
still have their tent city after
defying a deadline to pack
up and clear out. “Still occupied,” read the sign of a
protester up in a tree.
Hours after emerging
from a possible confrontation with police largely
unscathed Monday, demonstrators turned to the federal courts to keep officers
away.
They are arguing that the
City Council had passed a
resolution in support of Occupy Los Angeles and that
the city’s mayor and police
did not have the authority to
evict them.
The chances that protesters will get an injunction
appear slim, constitutional
experts say.
Until there is a decision,
the tent city’s inhabitants
are left to wonder if and
when police will push them
out — and if there will be
the kind of violence that has
engulfed evictions in other
cities when they do.
City officials said they
will only move in on the
camp when conditions are
safest not just for protesters and officers but also
the roughly 100 homeless
people who had joined the
encampment.
“There is no concrete
deadline,” LAPD Chief
Charlie Beck said after hundreds of officers withdrew
without moving in on the
nearly 2-month-old camp.
The effort should come
“with as little drama as possible,” Beck told reporters.
Police and protesters

have clashed elsewhere in
recent weeks, most notably
in Oakland, Calif., as officers cleared away camps
that officials say have
grown more dangerous for
public health and safety.
Marine Corps veteran
Scott Olsen, who was struck
in the head during an Oct.
25 clash between police and
Occupy Oakland protesters,
said in his first interview
since being injured that he
still has trouble speaking
but expects to recover completely.
In a video interview
posted Monday on Indybay.
org, Olesen said he couldn’t
speak at all in the days after
his skull was fractured.
“I am doing much better
than when I look at myself a
month ago, which was two
days after the attack,” Olsen
said. “I was not doing good.
But now I’m doing a lot better.”
Nine people were arrested in Maine on Monday after protesters at an encampment took down their tents
and packed their camping
gear after being told to get
a permit or move their shelters.
Some of the encampments had been in use almost since the movement
against economic disparity and perceived corporate
greed began with Occupy
Wall Street in Manhattan
two months ago.
With each passing week,
it seems a city moves in to
close a camp. Like Los Angeles, Philadelphia officials
imposed their own deadline
for protesters to move to
make way for a construction project.

On Monday, however,
the camp was still standing.
In Los Angeles, protesters had prepared for police
action since city leaders
announced last week that
the camp would be cleared.
Campers had packed up
about half of the nearly 500
tents.
Some protesters carried
gas masks and one person
had even fashioned one out
of duct tape and a plastic
bottle.
Some activists had built
a tree house out of wooden
pallets in a clump of palm
trees to make it more difficult to be arrested, while
others just sat in a circle
with their tents in the plaza.
“I definitely expected to
be in jail by 3 a.m.,” said
Sean Woodward. “I’m happy we’re still here.”
Protesters chanted “we
won, we won” as police left
after only four arrests during a largely peaceful, sixhour demonstration against
the eviction. The arrests
were on charges of failure
to disperse.
Instead of moving in to
clear the camp, as had been
expected, police concentrated on clearing several
hundred protesters who had
spilled into the street so
morning rush-hour traffic
would not be affected.
Hours later, several
demonstrators asked a federal judge for an injunction
against the city.
The civil rights complaint contends that Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
usurped the City Council’s
authority when he set a
deadline of 12:01 a.m.
Monday for the tent-dwell-

ers to disband.
The council passed a
resolution of support for the
occupiers in October that
effectively allowed them to
remain on the lawn despite
a city ban on overnight
camping, the complaint argued.
“The City Council welcomed them with open arms
and said they could stay as
long as they want,” said Jim
Lafferty, executive director
of the Los Angeles chapter
of the National Lawyers
Guild.
“The mayor simply does
not have the authority to do
this,” he said.
The city attorney’s office
had not been served with
the complaint and could not
comment on it, spokesman
John Franklin said. However, he said the city was
prepared to oppose any injunction.
“We’ll be in court,” he
said.
Constitutional law experts were skeptical of the
injunction’s chances.
The U.S. Supreme Court
has held that while public
parks can be used for protests, they are for the use
of all people, not just one
group, and that governments can restrict how a
park is used for free speech
purposes.
“Parks are open to free
speech, but that’s not a place
they can authorize as their
own home,” said Eugene
Volokh, a First Amendment
expert at the University of
California, Los Angeles,
School of Law.

year, says Sherif Mityas,
partner in the retail practice
of A.T. Kearney, who believes the increase was due
to heavy promotions.
Barneys, for instance,
offered 40 percent off on
its website on Thanksgiving Day, a day before it began its sales in stores. And
Barnes &amp; Noble offered 40
percent to 75 percent off
online products, discounts
that weren’t available in
store.
“Retailers are doing a
good job of creating more
excitement online in ways
they can’t do in store,”
Mityas says. “They’re creating that excitement of,

‘I’ve got to get that special
deal,” that is really spurring
traffic.’”
It won’t be clear how
well retailers will ultimately fare on Cyber Monday
until Tuesday. But last year,
sales on the day topped $1
billion for the first time,
making it the heaviest day
of online spending ever.
Ahead of this week’s
“Cyber Monday,” the NRF
says nearly 80 percent of
retailers plan to offer special promotions. And a
record 122.9 million of
Americans are expected to
shop on the day, up from
106.9 million who shopped
on “Cyber Monday” last

year, according to a survey
conducted for Shop.org.
By early afternoon on
Monday, traffic was up
about 37 percent year-overyear, according to Akamai,
an online content delivery
company. Akamai says it
expects online traffic to
peak at about 9 p.m.
Traffic has been up substantially since the Mon-

day before Thanksgiving
as retailers promoted online deals earlier than ever,
says Lelah Manz, Akamai’s
chief strategist of commerce.
“There has been a huge
volume of promotional activity being driven by daily
deal sites, Facebook and
other social networking
sites,” she says.

Thrifty shoppers are able to snap up Cyber Monday deals

NEW YORK (AP) —
Shoppers seem to be just
as enthusiastic about shopping on their computers
and smartphones on Cyber Monday as they were
about finding deals over the
weekend.
Online sales on Cyber
Monday, which was started
in 2005 by a retail trade
group to encourage Americans to shop online on the
Monday after Thanksgiving, were up mid-afternoon
by 15 percent from a year
ago, according to data from
IBM Benchmark. Meanwhile, sales from mobile
devices were up 7.4 percent. The group did not
give dollar amounts.
The Cyber Monday
numbers point to Americans’ growing comfort with
using their personal computers, tablets and smartphones to shop. Over the
past few years, big chains
like Wal-Mart Stores Inc.,
the world’s largest retailer,
have been offering more
and better incentives like
hourly deals and free shipping, to capitalize on that
trend. It’s important for
retailers to make a good
showing during the holiday
shopping season, a time
when they can make up to
40 percent of their annual
revenue.
On Monday, Amazon.
com offered its bigger,
more expensive Kindle DX
for $259, or $120 off the
regular price. The Express
clothing chain was giv-

ing 30 percent off and free
shipping on all online orders. And Wal-Mart, which
has been calling the holiday “Cyber Week” in ads,
was offering an LG 47-inch
LED TV for $879, or $320
off the regular price.
“Cyber Monday is far
more exciting to me than
Black Friday,” says Jamie
Minoso, a 40-year-old English teacher from Alabama.
“I do not enjoy the traffic and chaos involved in
shopping at a mall.”
To be sure, the strong
start to Cyber Monday, created by a unit of The National Retail Federation,
follows an even stronger
kickoff to the holiday shopping season over the weekend. Americans shopped in
record numbers, driven by
earlier store openings and a
push by retailers for online
sales.
A record 226 million
shoppers visited stores and
websites during the fourday holiday weekend starting on Thanksgiving Day,
up from 212 million last
year, according to the NRF.
And sales on Black Friday,
the day after Thanksgiving, rose 7 percent to $11.4
billion, the largest amount
ever spent, according to
ShopperTrak, which gathers stores’ data.
Online sales were strong
even over the weekend.
Thirty-eight percent of all
purchases were made online this year, up from 31
percent to 32 percent last

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�Sports

Page 4

The Daily Sentinel

Local Schedule
Tuesday, November 29

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Girls Basketball

Rock Hill at Southern, 6
p.m.
South Gallia at Gallia
Academy, 6 p.m.
Wednesday, November 30

Girls Basketball

Warren at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Thursday, December 1

Girls Basketball

Trimble at Eastern, 6
p.m.
Meigs at Fairland, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Southern,
6 p.m.
Bryan Walters/photo
River Valley at Gallia
Point Pleasant junior Andrew Williamson (74) goes for a fumble
Academy, 6 p.m.
recovery during Saturday’s Class AA state semifinal against ChapWrestling
Huntington at Point manville at OVB Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Pleasant, TBA
Friday, December 2

Football

Bryan Walters/photo

Point Pleasant sophomore running back Teran Barnitz (6) looks to
dodge a Chapmanville defender during Saturday’s Class AA state
semifinal at OVB Track and Field in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point tames Tigers, advances to AA state final
Andy Layton

Class AA State ChampiSpecial to OVP
onship
Wayne vs Point Pleasant
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — There’s a first time for
at Wheeling Island Stadium,
everything.
7:30 p.m.
The Point Pleasant Big Blacks knocked off their conference rival, the Chapmanville Tigers, 33-13 on Saturday afBoys Basketball
ternoon to advance to their first state championship football
Eastern at Meigs, 6:30 appearance.
p.m.
“What a ride it has been” said Head Coach Dave Darst.
Southern at River Valley, “We were able to win the Cardinal Conference champion6:30 p.m.
ship, break the school scoring record, earn the number one
Ohio Valley Christian seed in the playoffs, and now, three wins later, we are going
vs Cross Lanes Chritsian at to be playing for a state championship.”
Calvary Classic, 5 p.m.
The Big Blacks, who gave up 40 points last week to the
Oak Glen Golden Bears, were back to their defensive ways
Wrestling
Warren, Fairland at Gal- on Saturday afternoon, giving up just 243 total yards, with
63 of that coming on a big pass play in the final two minutes
lia Academy, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Buffalo, TBA of the game.
The offense, despite putting up big numbers all season
long, did not put up the big yardage totals like they have
Saturday, December 3
consistently done all season. They did still score 33 points,
which was more than enough to hold off the guests from
Girls Basketball
Point Pleasant at Herbert Logan County.
Eric Roberts – the senior signal caller – had his lowest
Hoover, 7:30 p.m.
yardage total of the season with just 73 yards passing on 6
Boys Basketball
of 12 passing. He still connected on two more touchdown
Meigs at Warren, 6:30 passes – one to Brandon Toler and one to Marquez Griffin.
Bryan Walters/photo
p.m.
The rushing attack continued to improve with another
Point
Pleasant
senior
running
back
Anthony
Darst
(36)
takes
a
handoff
during SatRock Hill at Gallia Acad- 100 yard performance from sophomore Teran Barnitz. Baremy, 6 p.m.
nitz ran for 107 yards on 20 carries and scored two touch- urday’s Class AA state semifinal against Chapmanville at OVB Track and Field in
Ohio Valley Christian vs
See Final, 5 Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Beth Haven at Calvary Classic, 5 p.m.

Wrestling

River Valley, Wahama at
Meigs Invitational, 10 a.m.

Swimming

River Valley at Athens
Invitational, 1:30 p.m.

Sports Briefs

WHEELING, W.Va. —
The Point Pleasant football team will be making
its inaugural appearance at
Wheeling Island Stadium
Friday night when it takes on
Wayne in the Class AA state
championship at 7:30 p.m.
Parking for fans is across
the street and is free. All
the same WVSSAC rules
apply for the game. Also,
no outside food, drinks, or
bags are permitted in the
stadium. Tickets at the gate
are $8 and advance tickets
are $8 for adults and $6 for
students. Advanced tickets
will be sold during regular
school hours in the Main
Office at the High School
on Tuesday and Wednesday,
and until noon on Thursday.
Tickets for fan buses can
also be purchased at these
times. Tickets to ride the bus
are $10. These are school
buses and will depart from
the High School parking lot
at 3 p.m. Friday and return
following the game. The
football team will be departing the school on 6 p.m.
Thursday to head to Wheeling so line the streets for a
send off.

Bengals rally
past Browns

CINCINNATI (AP) A.J.
Green did it to the Browns
again.
The rookie receiver made
a leaping catch for a 51-yard
gain in the final minute Sunday, setting up a field goal
that rallied the Cincinnati
Bengals to a 23-20 victory
over self-destructive Cleveland.
The surprising Bengals
(7-4) stayed right behind
Baltimore and Pittsburgh
in the AFC North with another second-half comeback
forged by their rookie bigplay combination.

See BROWNS, 5

Blue Angels fall to Athens in opener, 46-15
Bryan Walters

bwalters@mydailytribune.com

THE PLAINS, Ohio — So much
for starting on a good note.
The Gallia Academy girls basketball team trailed 19-2 after eight minutes of play and never came closer in
its season opener Saturday night following a 46-15 setback to host Athens in a non-conference matchup at
McAfee Gymnasium.
The visiting Blue Angels (0-1)
traded 13 points apiece with the
Lady Bulldogs (2-0) over the final
18 minutes of regulation, but the
hosts stormed out to a comfortable
33-2 cushion with two minutes remaining in the first half — which all
but wrapped up the decision of the
outcome.
GAHS committed 20 turnovers
and made just 14 percent of its shots,
as the Blue Angels connected on just
6-of-43 floor attempts in the contest.

The Blue and White also went 0-for10 from three-point range and 3-of-8
from the free throw line.
Athens, conversely, made 16of-47 shot attempts for 34 percent
— including a 4-of-11 effort from
three-point territory for 36 percent.
AHS also committed 16 turnovers
and made 10-of-13 charity tosses for
77 percent.
Gallia Academy, which trailed
37-6 at halftime, was led by Kassie
Shriver with four points, followed by
Heather Ward, Ciara Jackson, Halley
Barnes and Violet Pelfrey with two
points each. Brittany Lloyd rounded
out the Blue Angel scoring with one
marker.
Jackson also hauled in a gamehigh 10 rebounds for the Angels,
while Shriver had team-bests of
three steals and two assists.
Dominique Doseck paced Athens
with 11 points, followed by Elena
Lein with eight points and Gracie
Staten with six points.

Gallia Academy makes its home
debut Tuesday when it hosts South
Gallia in a non-conference matchup
at 6 p.m.
Athens 46, Gallia Academy 15
GA 2-4-4-5 — 15
A		
19-18-5-4 — 46
GALLIA ACADEMY (0-1):
Heather Ward 1 0-0 2, Ciara Jackson
1 0-2 2, Brittany Lloyd 0 1-4 1, Halley Barnes 1 0-0 2, Mattie Lanham 0
0-0 0, Abby Wiseman 0 0-0 0, Kassie
Shriver 2 0-0 4, Violet Pelfrey 0 2-2
2, Jessica Dotson 0 0-0 0. TOTALS:
6 3-8 15. Three-point goals: None.
ATHENS (2-0): Katie McCullum
1 2-2 5, Gracie Staten 3 0-1 6, Dominique Doseck 3 3-4 11, Emma Stanley 2 1-3 5, Elena Lein 2 4-4 8, Elyse
Lutz 0 0-0 0, Hanna DeBruin 1 0-0 2,
Olivia Harris 1 0-0 2, Mikala Perry 1
0-0 2, Tiffany James 2 0-0 5, Natalie Caschigano 0 0-0 0. TOTALS:
16 10-13 46. Three-point goals: 4
(Doseck 2, McCullum, James).

Steelers’ D holds on for 13-9 win over Chiefs

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
(AP) The way quarterback
Ben Roethlisberger sounded Sunday night, the Steelers not only should have
lost to the Kansas City
Chiefs, they shouldn’t be
allowed to show their faces in Pittsburgh any time
soon.
The Steelers eked out a
13-9 victory over a team
that has now lost four
straight, and if not for an
interception by Keenan
Lewis with 29 seconds remaining, could well have
lost. But the fact remained
that Pittsburgh came out
on top, and is still tied
with Baltimore atop the
AFC North.
“It’s tough,” Roethlisberger said, “because it’s
a mixed feeling type of
thing: You’re happy to get
the win, but you’re disappointed the way the offense played. I think that’s
what team’s all about. The
defense stepped up huge
today.”
Yes, things may have
been miserable for Pittsburgh on offense, but
clearly Big Ben wasn’t
giving enough credit to the
guys on the other side of

the ball.
The Steelers picked off
Chiefs quarterback Tyler
Palko three times and recovered a fumbled snap,
despite playing most of
the way without star safety
Troy Polamalu, who experienced concussion-like
symptoms after banging
his head into the knee of a
Chiefs player while making a tackle.
All those miscues kept
Kansas City out of the
end zone for the second
straight week.
“It was a situation
where we didn’t feel like
Palko could get it over our
heads,” safety Ryan Clark
said. “The play Keenan
made at the end, that’s a
signature play for him and
for our defense.”
Roethlisberger finished
21 of 31 for 193 yards
with a touchdown and an
interception for the Steelers (8-3), despite playing
with a broken thumb on
his throwing hand that hurt
the whole game.
“Absolutely not,” he
said. “It was not comfortable.”
Roethlisberger proved
that he’s better than Palko

with one good hand,
though.
The journeyman quarterback, making his second
consecutive start in place
of the injured Matt Cassel,
fared little better than he
did last week against New
England, when he tossed
three picks in his first NFL
start. Palko finished 18 of
28 for 167 yards and four
big turnovers.
The Chiefs claimed
former Broncos quarterback Kyle Orton off waivers Wednesday with the
intention of having him
compete with Palko for
the starting job, a competition that might already be
over. Orton didn’t arrive
in town until Friday, so he
didn’t have time to learn
the playbook before Sunday night.
“He’ll have a much better chance this week to
compete,” Chiefs coach
Todd Haley said, “and like
I said, Tyler is the starter,
but whatever position we
say, if someone gives us a
better chance to win, that’s
the guideline we generally
follow.”
Kansas City led 3-0 in
the second quarter when

Palko’s first interception,
which Ike Taylor returned
to the Chiefs 8, resulted in
a 21-yard field goal by the
Steelers’ Shaun Suisham.
The second pick was
returned by Ryan Mundy,
who had taken over at
safety for Polamalu, to
the Kansas City 24. The
defense appeared to hold
Pittsburgh when Chiefs
linebacker Tamba Hali
sacked Roethlisberger on
third-and-7, but safety Jon
McGraw was called for
defensive holding to give
the Steelers a first down.
Three plays later, Roethlisberger found Weslye
Saunders in the back of the
end zone.
“He was kind of one of
the last options,” Roethlisberger said. “I saw Wes
coming in the back of the
end zone, he’s kind of a
big target, so I just kind of
threw it up to him.”
Ryan Succop added a
49-yard field goal later
in the second quarter for
Kansas City, his second
of the game, but Suisham
answered with his own
49-yarder on the final play
of the first half.

See Win, 5

Meyer returns
as OSU coach

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
New Ohio State coach Urban Meyer says he would
not have returned to coaching this year for any other
job.
Meyer, the former Florida
coach and native Buckeye,
was officially hired Monday
by Ohio State, a program
with a glittering past that has
suffered through a difficult
year of NCAA violations.
Meyer resigned as Gators coach after last season,
citing health concerns and
a desire to spend more time
with his family.
“A year ago in my mind
I was convinced I was done
coaching,” he said.
He added that he is feeling great.
“I’ve been checked out
and I’m ready to go,” he
said.
Meyer will become one
of the highest paid coaches
in college football. The
school says he will receive
a six-year contract that pays
$4 million annually, plus
another $2.4 million total in
“retention payments.”
Interim coach Luke Fickell, who took over when Jim
Tressel was forced out for
breaking NCAA rules, will
coach the Buckeyes (6-6)
in their bowl game and be
retained by Meyer as an assistant.
Meyer won two national
championships in six years
as the coach at Florida. Now,
the 47-year-old will return to
the place where his college
coaching career began in
1986 after spending a year
as an ESPN game analyst.
Earle Bruce, the head
coach at Ohio State when
Meyer was a graduate assistant, has remained a close
friend and confidant of Meyer through the years. He said
he had no concerns about
Meyer’s health issues.
“Well, if he’d had a heart
attack and his heart was bad,
I’d be worried about that,”
the 80-year-old Bruce said
on Monday. “I’m not worried that he was stressed
out over the game of football because he was thinking too much and not doing

See Coach, 5

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Browns
From Page 4

Andy Dalton threw a
high down-the-middle pass
that Green went way above
the defenders to grab. Green
was run out of bounds at the
2, and the Browns (4-7)
forced Cincinnati to settle
for Mike Nugent’s 26-yard
field goal with 38 seconds
left the Bengals’ first lead
of the game.
Cincinnati’s turnaround
season started in Cleveland,
where the Browns failed to
line up promptly and were
surprised by a quick snap
that led to Green’s uncon-

Final

From Page 4

tested 41-yard touchdown
catch.
That one was easy. This
one was amazing.
Green, who sat out a loss
at Baltimore last Sunday
with a bruised right knee,
set up the winning kick with
his catch-and-run. The firstround draft pick had three
catches for 110 yards. The
Browns and Steelers had
been the only teams in the
NFL that hadn’t allowed a
100-yard receiving game.
For the second time in
three games, a botched snap
cost Cleveland an opportunity to take a late lead. Phil
Dawson was short on a 55yard try with 1:51 left after
the snap skipped along the

downs on the afternoon. Several
backs chipped in with 20+ yard
performances including Chase
Walton, Marquez Griffin, and Anthony Darst, who was making his
return to the lineup.
The Chapmanville Tigers received the ball to start the game
and after one first down, were
forced to punt the ball away.
A pass interference call on the
third play of the series gave the Big
Blacks new life and Teran Barnitz
was able to find two huge holes in
the Chapmanville defense, one for
20 yards and another for a 10 yard
touchdown run. The Josh Parsons
extra point was no good, giving
the locals the 6-0 lead.
The next Chapmanville drive
would be ended quickly when
junior defensive end Andrew Williamson sacked Chapmanville
quarterback Brandon White to
force a punt.
After a nice punt return from
senior wide receiver Layne
Thompson, Eric Roberts would
hook up with senior Brandon Toler on a 30 yard pass to give the
Big Blacks the 12-0 lead early.
The Parsons kick would hit the
bar, leaving the Point lead at 12-0.
The next Chapmanville drive
would finally see some success by
the Tigers on the Big Blacks defense but an eventual sack by junior noseguard Conner Templeton
halted the drive.
The Big Blacks would be
forced to punt on the next drive

Coach
From Page 4

some things (exercising)
that would have kept him
straight. I think he got everything back under control
by sitting out a year. I think
he missed football. And
he’s good at it.”
A team meeting set for
Sunday night was moved
to Monday afternoon before the news conference
to allow Meyer to meet his
players.
Alabama coach Nick
Saban, who played at Kent
State and coached at Toledo
in the Buckeye state, said
he was happy for Meyer.
“I’m sure he’s excited
about it, and I’m excited for
him that he has an opportunity to go back to his home
state and be the head coach
here,” Saban said. “I think
it’s a wonderful opportunity
and I think he’ll do a great
job.”
Meyer takes over a program that is likely facing
NCAA sanctions and was
crippled by the forced resignation of Tressel. The
Buckeyes completed their
only season under Fickell with a 40-34 loss to
Michigan on Saturday that
snapped a seven-game winning streak to their rivals.
Wolverines coach Brady
Hoke underplayed the role
of the head coaches in the
rivalry.
“I’ve known Urban,

he’s a good football coach,
a good guy and I welcome
him in,” Hoke said on Monday. “But it’s still Michigan
and Ohio and neither one
of us is going to play the
game.”
In 10 seasons as a head
coach two at Bowling
Green, two at Utah and
six at Florida Meyer has a
104-23 record. His teams
are 7-1 in bowl games, including the Gators’ 41-14
victory over unbeaten and
top-ranked Ohio State in
the 2007 Bowl Championship Series title game.
Meyer had persistently
denied all the talk surrounding him and Ohio State.
Soon after Tressel stepped
down, Meyer said he wasn’t
interested in leaving ESPN,
where he was a college
football analyst.
The chance to coach
Ohio State changed his
mind, he said.
“He enjoyed what he
was doing, but I think he
also had the bug to start
coaching again,” ESPN
broadcast partner and former Ohio State linebacker
Chris Spielman said. “We
just kind of talked about
the pros and cons of both
throughout the year. He
weighed all the options and
there were jobs out there
that definitely captured his
interest and certainly Ohio
State was one of them. He
decided that it was the best
move. This was just an opportunity that he couldn’t
pass up.”

Succop added a 40-yard field goal with
6:11 left in the fourth quarter.
Polamalu left the game in the first quarter when he tackled 290-pound Chiefs
offensive tackle Steve Maneri, who had
caught a pass in the flat after lining up in
the backfield.
The reigning Defensive Player of the
Year hit his head hit Maneri’s knee and
crumpled to the turf, where he lay while
trainers came out to check on him. Polamalu was a bit wobbly when he stood
up and coach Mike Tomlin said after the
game that he was experiencing “concussion-like symptoms.”
Roethlisberger showed little evidence
of the broken thumb that caused him to
be somewhat limited in practice, hitting
10 different receivers. He got some help
from Rashard Mendenhall, who ran for 57
yards, and a defense that kept giving the
Pittsburgh offense prime field position.
The Steelers squandered a promising
opportunity in the first quarter, driving
inside the Chiefs 10-yard line. Backup

The Daily Sentinel • Page 5

ground, giving Cincinnati
its last chance.
It was a familiar outcome for the intrastate rivalry Cincinnati has won 12
of the past 15 games and six
of seven at Paul Brown Stadium. Only 48,260 showed
up at the 65,500-seat stadium to see a game decided
by a bad snap and a great
catch.
Cleveland was buoyed
by the return of running
back Peyton Hillis, who
missed the past six games
with a strained left hamstring. He carried 19 times
for 65 yards, helping the
Browns put together long
drives.
The Browns scored 20

points for only the second
time this season and were in
position to take the late lead
when the bad snap resulted
in Dawson’s short kick.
He’d already connected
from 32 and 54 yards, his
longest field goal of the season.
It was a stunning gaffe.
The Browns had a chance to
take the late lead two games
ago against St. Louis, but a
bad snap scuttled Dawson’s
22-yard field goal with 2:13
left and sent Cleveland to a
13-12 loss.
Dalton had the challenge of bringing the Bengals back in the second half
against an AFC North opponent for the third week

in a row. They came up just
short against Pittsburgh and
Baltimore, but remained
in the thick of the playoff
competition by pulling one
out against Cleveland.
Down 20-10 late in the
third quarter on Sunday,
Dalton helped the Bengals
get the rematch. He was 21
of 31 for 270 yards and his
16th touchdown pass of the
season, topping Greg Cook
for the Bengals rookie record. Cedric Benson carried 21 times for 106 yards,
his second 100-yard game
against the Browns.
Colt McCoy was 16 of
34 for 151 yards with a pair
of touchdowns. His fourthdown pass was knocked

away at midfield with 10
seconds to go, sealing Cincinnati’s win.
McCoy’s 24-yard pass
to Jordan Norwood capped
Cleveland’s opening drive
and gave the Browns their
first touchdown in the first
quarter all season. They’d
managed a total of nine
points in the opening quarter until then.
McCoy’s
touchdown
pass to Greg Little made
it 17-7 at halftime, more
points than the Browns had
scored in any of their past
five games. Little dropped
numerous passes, including
one on Cleveland’s last possession.

Meyer inherits a program still facing NCAA
sanctions. But he also inherits a young team led by
a freshman quarterback,
Braxton Miller, who would
seem to be a perfect fit for
his spread offense.
A native of Ashtabula,
Ohio, Meyer becomes the
24th head coach at Ohio
State. He succeeds Fickell,
who took over last spring
when Tressel’s 10-year
reign came crashing down.
Tressel was forced out for
knowing but not telling his
superiors that Buckeyes
players had most likely broken NCAA rules by taking
cash and free or discounted
tattoos from the subject of a
federal drug-trafficking investigation.
Missing several top
players because of NCAA
suspensions stemming from
the tattoo mess, the Buckeyes were hit with more
suspensions when three
players accepted $200 in
cash for attending a charity event and others were
forced to sit out or had their
existing suspensions extended for being overpaid
for summer jobs.
Ohio State’s .500 record
marked the most losses at
Ohio State since John Cooper’s 1999 team also went
6-6 overall and 3-5 in the
Big Ten.
The Buckeyes had already lost their string of
six Big Ten titles when the
school was forced to vacate the 2010 season for

the NCAA violations. The
school has also self-imposed two years of NCAA
probation, offered to return
$339,000 in bowl revenue
from 2010 and to give up
five scholarships over the
next three seasons.
Ohio State is awaiting final word from the NCAA’s
committee on infractions.
The committee tagged Ohio
State with a “failure to monitor” label second only to a
lack of institutional control
on the list of most egregious
charges against a university.
The school could still be hit
with a bowl ban, a loss of
more scholarships, or other
penalties.
Meyer, who spent two
years playing minor-league
baseball as a shortstop in
the Atlanta Braves system,

also served as an assistant
at Illinois State, Colorado
State and Notre Dame.
At the urging of Bruce,
he took his first head coaching job at Bowling Green
(2001-2002) where he led
the Falcons to records of
8-3 and 9-3 before jumping to Utah. Using a spread
offense featuring quarterback Alex Smith, the Utes
went 10-2 in his first year.
In 2004, he led Utah to an
11-0 season and a Bowl
Championship Series berth
making the Utes the first
team to ever qualify for a
BCS bowl from a conference (the Mountain West)
that was not an automatic
qualifier. After a bowl win
over Pittsburgh to cap the
12-0 season, he was the top
candidate for the jobs at

both Notre Dame and Florida. He surprised many by
becoming a Gator.
In his second season with
the Gators, No. 2-ranked
Florida beat unbeaten Ohio
State, coached by Tressel,
41-14 to win his first national title.
Two years later, the Gators won another national
title, beating Oklahoma 2414 behind Tim Tebow.
The next year Florida
contended for a repeat, but
after losing the SEC title
game to Alabama, Meyer
said he was retiring from
coaching, citing health
problems. He changed his
mind and was back the next
day, saying he would only
take a leave of absence.
After the 2010 season,
he stepped down again.

and Chapmanville would finally be able to mount a drive and
score. DeShawn Alexander had
some nice runs and scored from
30 yards out and the Max Spradlin kick was good to cut the Point
lead to 12-7.
Despite a big kick return from
sophomore defensive back Chase
Walton into Chapmanville territory, the Big Blacks would be
forced to punt. Eric Roberts was
able to down the ball inside the
Tigers 5 yard line.
The Tigers were forced to go
three and out and give the ball
back to the Big Blacks. Despite
the field position, Point would
also go three and out. Another
great punt from Roberts would
down the ball inside the Tigers 15
yard line.
On the first play of the drive,
Chapmanville would fumble the
ball and Layne Thompson was
able to come up from his safety
position and recover the ball,
which gave Point the ball inside
the Chapmanville 20. Three plays
later, Griffin caught a reception
from Roberts to give Point the
18-7 lead. The Parsons kick was
finally good, giving Point the 19-7
lead with under 2 minutes remaining in the half.
Chapmanville attempted to put
together a drive before the half
but could not get a final pass off
as Conner Templeton and Andrew
Williamson combined on a sack to
send the locals into the half with
the lead.
Despite big runs from Barnitz
and Walton to start the second
half, the Point offense would sputter and be forced to punt inside

Win

From Page 4

www.mydailysentinel.com

Chapmanville territory. The next
Chapmanville drive would be
stopped after nice defensive plays
from Williamson and Toler.
After a Chapmanville punt
downed the Big Blacks inside the
10 yard line, the Big Blacks were
forced to punt right away, giving
the Tigers great field position.
On the third play of the next
drive, senior Jason Stouffer made
perhaps the biggest play of his career when he stripped Tyler Cox
of the ball at midfield and returned
the ball inside Chapmanville territory.
The next drive featured the return of Anthony Darst on the first
play and then featured a steady
dose of Barnitz on 7 of the next 9
runs and Barnitz would eventually push it in from 1 yard out with
less than one minute left in the
half. The Parsons kick was good
again, giving Point the 26-7 lead.
After two plays to end the third
quarter, Tigers quarterback Brandon White would throw his only
interception of the day to Layne
Thompson. Thompson tied a
school record on the interception
with 9 picks, tying Kevin Thompson from the 2001 season.
Good runs from Barnitz and
Walton on the next drive set Point
up for their final drive of the game
to put the final nail in the coffin on the Tigers season. Walton
punched in the score from 8 yards
out with 8 minutes left in the ball
game.
The rest of the game featured
no more notable plays from the
Big Blacks offense. Chapmanville
would score with under 2 minutes
left in the ball game on a big pass

running back Mewelde Moore had the
ball poked out by Hali and it was recovered by Javier Arenas in the end zone for
a touchback.
Kansas City gave the ball right back
when Palko fumbled the snap moments
later.
Pittsburgh also had a decent drive
end midway through the scoreless third
when Roethlisberger underthrew Antonio
Brown down the sideline. Kansas City
safety Travis Daniels swooped in to make
the interception, but the Chiefs’ bumbling
offense couldn’t capitalize.
That wound up being the story of the
game.
“We’re excited about winning and
winning on the road and making the necessary plays,” Tomlin said. “We produced
turnovers tonight, and that was big for
us.”
Notes: Kansas native Martina McBride sang the national anthem. Modern
Family’s Eric Stonestreet, who attended
Kansas State, threw the ceremonial first
pass. … Steelers C Maurkice Pouncey
left in the first half with an illness. … The
Chiefs finished with 252 yards of total offense.

play when White completed a
big pass to Brady Cox. The extra
point was missed, setting the final
score at 33-13.
The Big Blacks – now 13-0 on
the season – will travel to Wheeling Island next Friday night for a
rematch with another conference
rival, the Wayne Pioneers.
“Anyone who has been to a
Point Pleasant-Wayne football
game for the last four years has
gotten their money’s worth and
now we get to play for all the
marbles in front of everyone in the
state” said Darst.
“Our kids and coaches have
worked so hard to be in this moment and here we are with a
chance to win the state championship. That was our goal after we
lost in the first round last year and
it remains our goal going into next
weekend.”
The game will be back at the
regular Friday night time, 7:30
p.m., and will be the final game
for seniors Cody Arnold, Brandon Toler, Layne Thompson,
Eric Roberts, John Kinniard, Jason Stouffer, Gabe Loggins, Josh
Hereford, Anthony Darst, Jerrod
Long, Christian Darst, Dustin
Hart, Steve Hardman, Trey Livingston, Toby Martin, Jacob Gleason, and Zach Thomas.
Point Pleasant 33, Chapmanville 13
Chap 0-7-0-6 — 13
Point 12-7-7-7 — 33
First Quarter
PP: Teran Barnitz 10 run (kick
failed) 8:12
PP: Brandon Toler 30 pass
from Eric Roberts (kick failed)
5:04

Second Quarter
C: DeShawn Alexander 30 run
(Max Spradlin kick) 8:54
PP: Marquez Griffin 12 pass
from Roberts (Josh Parsons kick)
1:53
Third Quarter
PP: Barnitz 1 run (Parsons
kick) 0:32
Fourth Quarter
PP: Chase Walton 8 run (Parsons kick) 8:32
C: Brady Cox 63 pass from
Brandon White (kick failed) 1:49
First Downs: C 12, PP 19.
Rushes-Yds: C 39-125, PP 41183.
Passing Yards: C 118, PP 73.
Total Yards: C 243, PP 256.
Cmp-Att-Int: C 7-16-1, PP
6-12-0.
Fumbles lost: C 2, PP 1.
Penalties-Yds: C 3-25, PP
3-20.
Punts-Avg: C 6-38, PP 4-36
RUSHING
C — DeShawn Alexander 1265, Tyler Cox 13-43, Brandon
White 12-16, Dustin Smith 2-1.
PP — Teran Barnitz 20-107,
Chase Walton 5-23, Anthony
Darst 4-23, Marquez Griffin 4-20,
Jerrod Long 4-9, Eric Roberts 3-4,
Zach Canterbury 1-(-3).
PASSING
C — Brandon White 7-15-1
118, Tyler Cox 0-1-0 0.
PP — Eric Roberts 6-12-0 73.
RECEIVING
C — Brady Cox 2-88, Dustin
Smith 2-19, Tyler Cox 3-11.
PP — Brandon Toler 2-37,
Marquez Griffin 2-23, Chase Walton 2-13.

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 6

Tentative deal moves the NBA lockout closer to end
NEW YORK (AP) With a
Christmas Day tripleheader on everyone’s wish list and a tentative
labor agreement in place, NBA
owners and union officials went
back to work Saturday, relaying
details of the deal with hopes of
cementing it quickly.
After a 149-day lockout that
ultimately will cost the league approximately a half-billion dollars
in losses, a marathon bargaining
session produced a handshake
agreement earlier in the day actually, just a few hours before daybreak.
Commissioner David Stern
still must sell his owners on an
agreement that could change the
way they do business. And the
players, looking beat and beaten,
face a tougher healing process in
approving a pact that significantly
limits their earnings.
But considering everything
owners sought when these negotiations opened with a contentious
meeting at the All-Star break in
February 2010, perhaps they will
feel relieved they got as much as
they did.
Players’ association executives
Derek Fisher and Maurice Evans
hardly looked enthused about
the agreement as they sat next to
executive director Billy Hunter
on the same side of a conference
table with Stern, Deputy Commissioner Adam Silver and Spurs
owner Peter Holt, the chairman of
the league’s labor relations committee.
But at least they weren’t sitting in a courtroom, where they
appeared headed less than two
weeks earlier.
Just 12 days after talks broke
down, Stern and Hunter appeared
together after 3 a.m. Saturday to
announce the 10-year deal, with
either side able to opt out after the
sixth year. It leaves the NBA with

its second shortened season (the
first was the 50-game 1998-99
season), with the hope of getting
in 66 games instead of a full 82game schedule.
Stern said he expects the labor
committee to endorse the deal and
recommend it to the full board for
approval.
The players’ side has revealed
little of its feelings about the deal,
noting the pending antitrust litigation in its desire to keep details
quiet. But players always preferred to be on the court, rather
than in it, and now they finally
have the chance starting Christmas Day.
For the season openers, it
would be Boston at New York,
Miami at Dallas and Chicago at
the Lakers sorry, little guys, the
big markets still rule Christmas.
Now, the regular season would
end one week later and push back
NBA finals a week, potentially
setting up a Game 7 on June 28,
2012.
The deal also calls for no hard
salary cap, no rollbacks of existing salaries and contracts can still
be fully guaranteed. Owners had
called for all of that, seeking a
route to profitability after saying
they lost $300 million last season,
and believing they would create a
level of parity that had been missing.
But players’ annual raises were
trimmed from 10.5 percent for
those re-signing with their own
teams and 8 percent for those leaving to 7.5 percent and 4.5 percent
respectively. Rules implemented
to curb spending by teams over
the luxury tax will limit some of
their options in free agency.
Owners relented slightly on
their previous insistence that players receive no more than 50 percent of basketball-related income
after they were guaranteed 57 per-

cent in the old CBA. The target is
still a 50-50 split, but with a band
from 49 percent to 51 percent that
gives the players a better chance
of reaching the highest limit than
previously proposed.
“I appreciate what Billy and
Derek and the players have compromised on because it will allow
us, as a small market, to be competitive and create more parity
across all 30 teams,” Holt said.
“We are really excited. We are
excited for the fans. We’re excited to start playing basketball
for the players and for everybody
involved.”
Details were provided to owners Saturday afternoon in what
would be described as a largely
congratulatory
teleconference.
A person with knowledge of the
meeting told The Associated
Press that some owners said they
wished certain issues usually ones
specific to smaller markets were
addressed, but many were simply
relieved the process was nearing
an end.
“The way the deal shakes out,
particularly the system issues,
there’s something in there for
every owner to hate,” the person
said, speaking on condition of
anonymity because the pact still
needs to be ratified. “A number of
the small market owners may feel
bad that they were not protected
the way they thought they were
going to be protected. Having said
that, virtually all of them say it’s
better to play than not to play or
lose the season.”
Players filed an amended antitrust lawsuit in Minnesota on
Monday that could have earned
the players billions but surely
would have come at the cost of at
least the entire 2011-12 season.
The sides said all along the
only way to a deal was through
negotiating. They got back to-

gether Tuesday, setting the way
for the pivotal meeting that began
Friday.
“I think we saw a willingness
of both sides to compromise yet
a little more and to reach this
agreement,” Silver said. “We look
forward to opening on Christmas
Day and we are excited to bring
NBA basketball back and that’s
most important.”
Now, players must drop a lawsuit against the league and reform
their disbanded union before they
can vote on the deal. Hunter said
it could take anywhere from three
days to a week to get that completed.
Once the pact is approved, it
would pave the way for training
camps and free agency to open
simultaneously Dec. 9, setting
off a chaotic flurry of activity
that could leave coaches running
practices with different players
arriving each day. There could be
an even larger pool of free agents
if teams use the amnesty clause,
which allows them to waive one
player during the deal and have
100 percent of his salary taken off
the cap and the tax.
President Barack Obama gave
a thumbs-up when told about the
tentative settlement after he finished playing basketball at Fort
McNair in Washington on Saturday morning.
Because the union disbanded,
a new collective bargaining agreement can only be completed once
the union has reformed. Drug testing and other issues still must be
negotiated between the players
and the league, which also must
dismiss its lawsuit regarding the
legality of the lockout.
“We’re very pleased we’ve
come this far,” Stern said. “There’s
still a lot of work to be done.”
A number of minor issues
remain unsettled, such as spon-

sorship patches being added to
jerseys and how the preseason
should work.
Some major matters like revenue sharing, which the NBA has
said it will not really dive into until
a new CBA is complete remain on
the table as well. Meetings on that
issue take place every few days,
and the person briefed on the status of the NBA’s discussions said
many teams are not thrilled by the
notion of paying both a luxury tax
and into a revenue-sharing pool.
When the NBA returns, owners hope to find the type of parity
that exists in the NFL, where the
small-market Green Bay Packers
are the current champions. The
NBA has been dominated in recent years by the biggest spenders, with Boston, Los Angeles and
Dallas winning the last four titles.
“I think it will largely prevent
the high-spending teams from
competing in the free-agent market the way they’ve been able to
in the past. It’s not the system
we sought out to get in terms of
a harder cap, but the luxury tax is
harsher than it was. We hope it’s
effective,” Silver said.
“We feel ultimately it will give
fans in every community hope
that their team can compete for
championships.”
Owners locked out the players
July 1, and the sides spent most of
the summer and fall battling over
the division of revenues and other
changes owners wanted in a new
collective bargaining agreement.
They said they lost hundreds of
millions of dollars in each year of
the former deal, ratified in 2005,
and they wanted a system where
the big-market teams wouldn’t
have the ability to outspend their
smaller counterparts.

Syracuse fires assistant basketball coach Fine
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)
Thirty-six years after he
was hired as an assistant
basketball coach at Syracuse University, Bernie
Fine is out of a job amid an
investigation into child molestation allegations against
him.
Fine was fired Sunday
night after a third man accused him of molesting him
nine years ago.
“At the direction of
Chancellor Cantor, Bernie
Fine’s employment with
Syracuse University has
been terminated, effective immediately,” Kevin
Quinn, the school’s senior
vice president for public affairs, said in a statement.
Fine, who turns 66 in
December, held the longest
active streak of consecutive seasons at one school
among assistant coaches in
Division I. He has denied
the allegations.
Zach Tomaselli, 23, of
Lewiston, Maine, said Sunday that he told police that
Fine molested him in 2002
in a Pittsburgh hotel room.
The third accuser to come
forward, Tomaselli said
Fine touched him “multiple” times in that one incident.
Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said he supported the
university’s decision to fire
his longtime assistant and
expressed regret for his initial statements that might
have been “insensitive to
victims of abuse.”
“The allegations that
have come forth today
are disturbing and deeply
troubling,” Boeheim said
in a statement released by
the school. “I am person-

ally very shocked because
I have never witnessed any
of the activities that have
been alleged. I believe the
university took the appropriate step tonight. What is
most important is that this
matter be fully investigated
and that anyone with information be supported to
come forward so that the
truth can be found. I deeply regret any statements I
made that might have inhibited that from occurring or
been insensitive to victims
of abuse.”
Tomaselli, who faces
sexual assault charges in
Maine involving a 14-yearold boy, said during a telephone interview with The
Associated Press that he
signed an affidavit accusing
Fine following a meeting
with Syracuse police last
week in Albany.
Tomaselli’s
father,
meanwhile, maintains his
son is lying.
Two former Syracuse
ball boys were the first to
accuse Fine, who has called
the allegations “patently
false.”
Bobby Davis, now 39,
told ESPN that Fine molested him beginning in 1984
and that the sexual contact continued until he was
around 27. A ball boy for
six years, Davis told ESPN
that the abuse occurred at
Fine’s home, at Syracuse
basketball facilities and on
team road trips, including
the 1987 Final Four.
Davis’ stepbrother, Mike
Lang, 45, who also was a
ball boy, told ESPN that
Fine began molesting him
while he was in fifth or
sixth grade.

When the accusations
first became public Nov.
17, Boeheim adamantly defended his lifelong friend.
In an interview that day
with the Post-Standard,
Boeheim attacked Davis’
reasons for going public
with his accusations.
“The Penn State thing
came out, and the kid behind this is trying to get
money,” Boeheim said.
“He’s tried before. And now
he’s trying again. If he gets
this, he’s going to sue the
university and Bernie. What
do you think is going to
happen at Penn State? You
know how much money is
going to be involved in civil
suits? I’d say about $50
million. That’s what this is
about. Money.”
No one answered the
door at the Fine home Sunday. Before Fine’s firing, his
attorneys released a statement saying Fine would not
comment beyond his initial
statement.
“Any comment from
him would only invite and
perpetuate ancient and
suspect claims,” attorneys
Donald Martin and Karl
Sleight said. “Mr. Fine remains hopeful of a credible
and expeditious review of
the relevant issues by law
enforcement authorities.”
Tomaselli said the scandal at Penn State involving former assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky
prompted him to come forward. Sandusky is accused
in a grand jury indictment
of sexually abusing eight
boys over a 15-year period.
Amid the child sexabuse scandal, Penn State’s
trustees ousted longtime

football coach Joe Paterno
and university President
Graham Spanier. The trustees said Spanier and Paterno, who is not the target of
any criminal investigation,
failed to act after a graduate assistant claimed he saw
Sandusky sexually abusing
a young boy in a campus
shower in 2002. Former
school administrators Tim
Curley who is on administrative leave and Gary
Schultz are charged with not
properly alerting authorities
to suspected abuse and with
perjury. They maintain their
innocence.
“It was the Sandusky
stuff that came out that really made me think about it,”
Tomaselli said in the phone
interview. “A lot of people
were slamming ESPN and
Bobby for saying anything.
I wanted to come out. …
It made me sick to see all
that support for Fine at that
point. I was positive he was
guilty.”
Tomaselli told the PostStandard that he didn’t ask
Syracuse police or federal
authorities for help in getting the criminal charges
dismissed against him in
Maine.
Tomaselli was arrested
in April on 11 warrants
charging gross sexual assault, tampering with a victim, two counts of unlawful
sexual contact, five counts
of visual sexual aggression
against a child and unlawful
sexual touching and unlawful sexual contact, Lewiston
police said Sunday. They
did not say what led to the
charges. He has pleaded not
guilty.
Tomaselli told the Post-

Standard he met Fine after
he and his father, Fred, attended a Syracuse autograph session on campus in
late 2001.
The newspaper reported that Fine later called
Tomaselli’s parents to arrange for Tomaselli to go to
Pittsburgh with the athletic
department staff on a chartered bus, spend the night
in Fine’s hotel room and
attend the team’s game on
Jan. 22, 2002.
Tomaselli told the PostStandard that he had dinner
with the team, then returned
to the hotel room where
he accused Fine of putting
porn on the TV and fondling him in bed.
Tomaselli attended the
basketball game the next
day, sitting several rows
behind the bench, and rode
the chartered bus back to
Syracuse, the newspaper
reported.
“The one time there was
multiple incidents in that
one night, but there was
only one night that he ever
sexually abused me,” Tomaselli told the AP.
However, during a phone
interview with the AP, Fred
Tomaselli said: “I’m 100
percent sure that Bernie
Fine was never in contact
with Zach. He never went
to Pittsburgh to a game,
never been to that arena.”
“I brought him to a
couple of games in Syracuse. We always sat in the
nosebleed section and left
after the game. He never
stayed for any overnighters
and never even got within
shouting distance of Bernie.”
During his long career

with Syracuse, Fine tutored
the likes of Derrick Coleman, LeRon Ellis and John
Wallace in his role of working with post players. Coleman was the top pick in the
1990 NBA draft, Ellis was
the Clippers’ 22nd overall
choice in 1991, and Wallace
was picked 18th in 1996 by
the New York Knicks.
Boeheim and Fine met
at Syracuse University in
1963, when Fine was student manager of the basketball team. Fine graduated
in 1967 with a degree in
personal and industrial relations and went into business
for himself.
In 1970, Fine was named
basketball and football
coach at Lincoln Junior
High in Syracuse and went
to Henninger High School
the next year as the junior
varsity basketball coach.
He became varsity basketball coach in 1975. When
Boeheim was chosen to
succeed Roy Danforth at
Syracuse in 1976 Boeheim
offered Fine a job as an assistant.
Fine was an integral
part of the staff that guided
Syracuse to the national
championship in 2003.
During his tenure the Orange also made two other
appearances in the NCAA
title game, losing in 1987
to Indiana and in 1996 to
Kentucky. He also guided
the U.S. Maccabiah team to
a silver medal at the 1993
World Maccabiah Games
in Israel and has served as
director of

Michigan ends skid against Buckeyes with 40-34 win
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
Denard Robinson accounted for
five touchdowns, helping No. 17
Michigan beat Ohio State 40-34

on Saturday and snap a schoolrecord, seven-game losing streak
in the rivalry.
The Wolverines (10-2, 6-2 Big

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now?
Advertise your business in
this space, or bigger
Call us at:

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Ten) were forced to settle for a
six-point lead with 1:59 left on
Brendan Gibbons’ career-long 43yard field goal after two apparent
TDs were negated by a video review and then penalties.
The Buckeyes (6-6, 3-5) had a
chance to win the game on their
final drive, but freshman Braxton
Miller sailed a pass over Deviser
Posey’s head on what could’ve
been a 76-yard TD and threw a
loss-sealing interception to Courtney Avery.
Michigan finally beat its archrival because it had a better quarterback than Ohio State for a change.
Robinson was 14 of 17 completing 11 straight passes during
one stretch for 167 yards with
TD passes to Kevin Koger, Junior Hemingway and Martavious
Odoms. He ran 26 times for 170
yards and two more scores and
lost a fumble.
Miller was 14 of 25 for 235
yards with TD passes to Posey and
Corey Brown. He ran 16 times for
100 yards and a score.
The Wolverines also had more

success creating holes for their
featured running back.
Fitzgerald Toussaint had 120
yards rushing, but didn’t score
because video review overturned
his apparent TD late in the game
because he ruled to be down before getting in the end zone. Robinson then had a TD run negated
by a holding penalty and yet another flag after the play pushed
Michigan back to the Ohio State
26, forcing Gibbons to make the
longest field goal of his career to
force the Buckeyes to score a TD
to win.
Ohio State’s Dan Herron was
held to 37 yards rushing and a TD
on 15 carries, but the Wolverines
had trouble slowing down Miller
just as they had previously with
Troy Smith, who started Ohio
State’s winning streak in 2004,
and Terrelle Pryor who extended
it with last year’s win.
Pryor, though, wasn’t around
to win again in The Game because
a cash-for-Buckeyes memorabilia
scandal forced him to leave, Jim
Tressel to resign and several other

players to sit out with suspensions
for multiple games in what became the program’s worst season
on the field since 1999.
The Buckeyes have already
said they will pass up the chance
to go to a bowl game.
Michigan, meanwhile, might
be in a BCS bowl game for the
first time since 2006 under firstyear coach Brady Hoke, who took
many of Rich Rodriguez’s players
and helped them perform much
better this season.
The Big House field was filled
with maize-and-blue clad fans after the Wolverines finally beat the
Buckeyes, ending a drought that
lasted more than 2,900 days as the
players were reminded each day
they stepped into Schembechler
Hall.
The public-address announcer
tried in vain to get the field cleared
for the bands, but they stayed in
a cluster around the block ‘M’
at midfield and were sprinkled
throughout the rest of the field as
they soaked up the moment.

�Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al.,
Defendants. This action has
been assigned Case No. 11
CV 117, and is pending in the
Court of Common Pleas of
Meigs County, Ohio. The obTuesday, November 29, 2011
www.mydailysentinel.com
The Daily Sentinel • Page
ject of the Complaint demands
judgment against the Defendants, The Unknown Heirs,
Next of Kin, Spouses, Devisees, Legatees, Administrators, Executors, Successors
and Assigns of Denver R. Cotterill aka Denver Ray Cotterill,
Deceased, the Estate of Denver R. Cotterill aka Denver
Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al.,
for purposes of foreclosing on
its security, in the sum of
$72,811.55, from October 16,
2011, with interest thereon at
the rate of $11.96 per day from
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
FARMERS BANK AND SAV- October 16, 2011, until fully
INGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, paid, plus any costs advanced
VS. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, or fees accrued, and in the
NEXT OF KIN, SPOUSES, sum of $7,200.09, from OctoDEVISEES, LEGATEES, AD- ber 16, 2011, with interest
MINISTRATORS,
thereon at the rate of $1.26
EXECUTORS, SUCCES- per day from October 16,
SORS AND ASSIGNS, IF 2011, until fully paid, plus any
ANY, OF DENVER R. COT- costs advanced or fees acTERILL AKA DENVER RAY crued, in order to foreclose
COTTERAILL, DECEASED, upon a mortgage upon real esAND THE ESTATE OF DEN- tate located at 33550 Cotterill
VER R. COTTERILL AKA Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769,
DENVER RAY COTTERILL, ( A u d i t o r ʼ s
Parcel
Nos.
DECEASED, ET AL., DEFEN- 1 7 - 0 0 1 7 0 . 0 0 0
and
DANTS, COURT OF COM- 17-00171.001), which is more
MON
PLEAS,
M E I G S fully described in deeds reCOUNTY, OHIO, CASE NO. corded in Volume 183, Page
465 and Volume 105, Page
11 CV 117.
511, Meigs County Official Records,
and costs of this action,
To:
The Unknown Heirs,
Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- that the Plaintiffʼs mortgages
sees, Legatees, Administra- be adjudged the first, second
and best liens upon the real
tors,
Executors, Successors and property, except for real estate
Assigns, if any, of Denver R. taxes; that all of the Defen- LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
dants be required to set up
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
Cotterill aka Denver Ray
FARMERS BANK AND SAV- Cotterill, deceased, and the their respective claims to the In compliance with Village OrINGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, Estate of Denver R. Cotterill real property, if any, or be for- dinance No. 751, the Village of
VS. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, aka Denver Ray Cotterill, De- ever barred therefrom; that the Pomeroy shall offer the followNEXT OF KIN, SPOUSES, ceased, whose names and ad- equity of redemption of all De- ing real property for sale to the
fendants be foreclosed; that highest bidder, to wit:
DEVISEES, LEGATEES, AD- dresses are unknown.
the liens on the real property
MINISTRATORS,
EXECUTORS, SUCCESYou are hereby notified that be marshalled; that the real Being a part of Lot No. 83 as
SORS AND ASSIGNS, IF you have been named Defen- property be sold and that the shown on the County Auditorʼs
ANY, OF DENVER R. COT- dants in the action entitled proceeds of such sale be ap- Tax Map Book, Village of
TERILL AKA DENVER RAY Farmers Bank &amp; Savings plied first in payment of the Pomeroy, Volume 2, Page 36,
COTTERAILL, DECEASED, Company, Plaintiff, vs. The judgment of the Plaintiff; that 1929, and being more fully deAND THE ESTATE OF DEN- Unknown Heirs, Next of Kin, the purchaser at such foreclo- scribed as follows: CommencVER R. COTTERILL AKA Spouses, Devisees, Legatees, sure sale be awarded a writ of ing at a point in the intersecDENVER RAY COTTERILL, Administrators, Executors, possession and all other per- tion of the existing centerline
DECEASED, ET AL., DEFEN- Successors and Assigns, if sons in possession of the real of Sycamore Street and the
DANTS, COURT OF COM- any, of Denver R. Cotterill aka property be evicted; that a re- existing northerly right-of-way
MON
PLEAS,
M E I G S Denver Ray Cotterill, De- ceiver be appointed to take line of Main Street; thence N.
COUNTY, OHIO, CASE NO. ceased, and the Estate of charge of the real property and 61° 00' 00" E. along the exist11 CV 117.
Denver R. Cotterill aka Denver collect rents therefrom; and ing northerly right-of-way line
Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al., that the Plaintiff be given such of Main Street, 553.09 feet to
To:
The Unknown Heirs, Defendants. This action has other relief as the Court deems the real point of beginning for
the land herein described;
Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- been assigned Case No. 11 appropriate.
thence N. 24° 32' 42" west
sees, Legatees, Administra- CV 117, and is pending in the
You are required to answer along a line, 190.01 feet to a
tors,
Court of Common Pleas of
N. 61° 00' 00" E.
C o mLegals
plaint
w i t h i n point; thenceLegals
Executors,
Successors and Meigs County,
Ohio. The ob- t h e
Legals
Legals
Legals
Notices
Assigns, if any, of Denver R. ject of the Complaint demands twenty-eight (28) days after along a line, 125.53 feet to a
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
Cotterill aka Denver Ray
judgment against the Defen- the last publication of this No- point; thence S. 24° 32' 42" E. NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBFARMERS BANK AND SAV- Cotterill, deceased, and the dants, The Unknown Heirs, tice, which will be published along a line, 190.01 feet to a LISHING CO. recommends that
INGS COMPANY, PLAINTIFF, Estate of Denver R. Cotterill Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- once each week for three (3) point in the existing northerly you do business with people you
VS. THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, aka Denver Ray Cotterill, De- sees, Legatees, Administra- successive weeks. The last right-of-way line of Main know, and NOT to send money
the mail until you have inNEXT OF KIN, SPOUSES, ceased, whose names and ad- tors, Executors, Successors publication will be made on the Street; thence S. 61° 00' 00" through
vestigating the offering.
DEVISEES, LEGATEES, AD- dresses are unknown.
and Assigns of Denver R. Cot- 13th day of December, 2011, W. along the existing northerly
MINISTRATORS,
terill aka Denver Ray Cotterill, and the twenty-eight (28) days right-of-way line of Main NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
EXECUTORS, SUCCESYou are hereby notified that Deceased, the Estate of Den- for answer will commence on Street, 125.53 feet to the point
SORS AND ASSIGNS, IF you have been named Defen- ver R. Cotterill aka Denver that date. In the case of your of beginning, and containing Reference: 5715.17 Ohio ReANY, OF DENVER R. COT- dants in the action entitled Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al., failure to answer or otherwise 0.546 acre.
vised Code
TERILL AKA DENVER RAY Farmers Bank &amp; Savings for purposes of foreclosing on respond as requested by the
Subject
to
all
legal
highways
COTTERAILL, DECEASED, Company, Plaintiff, vs. The its security, in the sum of Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure,
The Meigs County Board of
AND THE ESTATE OF DEN- Unknown Heirs, Next of Kin, $72,811.55, from October 16, judgment by default will be and easements of record.
Revision has completed its
VER R. COTTERILL AKA Spouses, Devisees, Legatees, 2011, with interest thereon at rendered against you and for
work of equalization. The tax
Description
of
the
above-deDENVER RAY COTTERILL, Administrators, Executors, the rate of $11.96 per day from the relief demanded in the
returns for tax year 2011 have
scribed tract being the results been revised and the valuaDECEASED, ET AL., DEFEN- Successors and Assigns, if October 16, 2011, until fully Complaint.
of a survey made by Richard tions completed and are open
DANTS, COURT OF COM- any, of Denver R. Cotterill aka paid, plus any costs advanced
MON
PLEAS,
M E I G S Denver Ray Cotterill, De- or fees accrued, and in the ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF: C. Glasgow, R.S. 5161.
for public inspection in the ofCOUNTY, OHIO, CASE NO. ceased, and the Estate of sum of $7,200.09, from Octo- Douglas W. Little, LITTLE &amp;
fice of the Meigs County AudiReference
Deed:
Volume
267,
SHEETS
LLP,
P.O.
Box
686,
11 CV 117.
Denver R. Cotterill aka Denver ber 16, 2011, with interest
tor, Second Floor, Courthouse,
Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al., thereon at the rate of $1.26 Pomeroy, OH 45769, Tele- Page 37, Meigs County Deed Second Street, Pomeroy,
Records.
To:
The Unknown Heirs, Defendants. This action has per day from October 16, phone: (740) 992-6689
Ohio.
Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- been assigned Case No. 11 2011, until fully paid, plus any (11)29, (12) 6, 13
sees, Legatees, Administra- CV 117, and is pending in the costs advanced or fees ac- IN THE COMMON PLEAS Auditorʼs Parcel Number: Complaints against the valuators,
Court of Common Pleas of crued, in order to foreclose COURT, PROBATE DIVISION 16-02545.000
tions, as established for tax
Executors, Successors and Meigs County, Ohio. The ob- upon a mortgage upon real esyear 2011 must be made in
EXCEPTING ANY AND ALL accordance with Section
Assigns, if any, of Denver R. ject of the Complaint demands tate located at 33550 Cotterill MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MINERALS PREVIOUSLY EX- 5715.19 of the Ohio Revised
Cotterill aka Denver Ray
judgment against the Defen- Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769,
SERVICEand
/ BUSINESS
DIRECTORY
Cotterill, deceased,
the dants,
The Unknown Heirs, ( A u d i t o r ʼ s
Parcel
N o s . IN THE MATTER OF SETTLE- CEPTED, CONVEYED, RE- Code. These complaints must
SERVED OR SOLD. HOW- be filed in the County Auditorʼs
Estate of Denver R. Cotterill Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- 1 7 - 0 0 1 7 0 . 0 0 0
a n d MENT
EVER, IT IS THE INTENTION Office on or before the 31st
aka Denver Ray Cotterill, De- sees, Legatees, Administra- 17-00171.001), which is more
OF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE
OF THIS INSTRUMENT TO day of March, 2012. All comceased, whose names and ad- tors, Executors, Successors fully described in deeds reCOURT
CONVEY ANY AND ALL MIN- plaints filed with the County
dresses are unknown.
and Assigns
of Denver R. Cot- corded in Volume 183, Page MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
*Special Winter
Rates*
ERALS HELD BY THE GRAN- Auditor will be heard by the
terill aka Denver Ray Cotterill, 465 and Volume 105, Page
TORS, IF ANY.
YouAcoustical
are hereby notified
that -Deceased,
Estate of Den- 511, Meigs County Official ReBoard of Revision in the manCeilings
Heating the
&amp; Cooling
Accounts and vouchers of
you haveDrywall
been named
Defen- ver
R. Cotterill
aka Denver cords, and costs of this action, the following named fiduciary
ner provided by Section
Finishing
- Concrete
Work
Subject
to
all
legal
highways,
dants in the action entitled Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al., that the Plaintiffʼs mortgages has been
5715.19 of the Ohio Revised
New
Homes
&amp;
Additions
easements,
right
of
ways,
zonFarmers Bank &amp; Savings for purposes of foreclosing on be adjudged the first, second
Code.
ing
ordinances,
restrictions
All
Types
of
Roofi
ng
Company, Plaintiff, vs. The its security, in the sum of and best liens upon the real filed in the Probate Court,
Unknown Heirs, Next of Kin, $72,811.55, from October 16, property, except for real estate Meigs County, Ohio for ap- and conditions of record.
Mary T. Byer-Hill
Spouses, Devisees,
Legatees,
2011,- with
interest thereon at taxes; that all of the Defen- proval and settlement.
Licensed
- Bonded
Insured
Said property is also some- Meigs County Auditor
Administrators, Executors, the rate of $11.96 per day from dants be required to set up
times referred to as the “Old
Successors and Assigns, if October 16, 2011, until fully their respective claims to the
FILE NO 16606 – The Pomeroy High School.”
Grave Blankets $5-$30; live
any, of Denver R. Cotterill aka paid, plus any costs advanced real property, if any, or be forForty-Sixty Annual Account of
Wreaths $10 &amp; up; Sue's
Denver Ray Cotterill, De- or fees accrued, and in the ever barred therefrom; that the the Trust Under the Will of acceased, and the Estate of sum of $7,200.09, from Octo- equity of redemption of all De- count #1055164005 of Tho- TERMS AND CONDITIONS 47310 Morningstar Rd.,
Racine, Oh 740-949-2115
(WV#040954)
Denver R. Cotterill aka Denver
ber 16, 2011, with interest fendants be foreclosed; that mas A. May by Huntington Na- OF SALE:
Ray Cotterill, Deceased, et al., thereon at the rate of $1.26 the liens on the real property tional Bank, Fiduciary of said
The Village of Pomeroy re- A Foster Child For Christmas
Defendants. This action has per day from October 16, be marshalled; that the real trust.
SERVICE
/ BUSINESS
serves the right to reject any Foster homes needed in Athbeen assigned
Case No.
11 2011,DIRECTORY
until fully paid, plus any property be sold and that the
ens and Meigs County Trainand all bids;
CV 117, and is pending in the costs advanced or fees ac- proceeds of such sale be apings are Dec. 1,2,3,7,8,10,14,
Unless exceptions are filed
Court of Common Pleas of crued, in order to foreclose plied first in payment of the thereto, said account will be
from 9-4 at Oasis in Albany.
Meigs County, Ohio. The ob- upon a mortgage upon real es- judgment of the Plaintiff; that set for hearing before said The Village of Pomeroy is sell- Call for more information
ject of the Complaint demands tate located at 33550 Cotterill the purchaser at such foreclo- Court on the 29th day of De- ing said building in “as is” con- 740-698-0340
and General
judgment against
the Defen- Contracting
Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769, sure sale be awarded a writ of cember, 2011, at which time dition, with no warranties eiCARPET SALE- SAVE BIG
dants, The Unknown Heirs, ( A u d i t o r ʼ s
Parcel
N o s . possession and all other per- said account will be consid- ther express or implied;
$$$$
ON
IN
STOCK
Next of Kin, Spouses, Devi- 1 7 - 0 0 1 7 0 . 0 0 0
a n d sons in possession of the real ered and continued from day
Commercial
&amp; Residential
• General Remodeling
sees, •Legatees,
Administra17-00171.001),
which is more property be evicted; that a re- to day until finally disposed of. SEALED BIDS MARKED “VIL- CARPET-FREE
LAGE
HALL
BID”
must
be
reESTIMATES-EASY FINANCtors, Executors,
Successors fully
described in deeds re- ceiver be appointed to take Any person interested may file
• Room Additions
• Roofing
and Assigns of Denver R. Cot- corded in Volume 183, Page charge of the real property and written exception to said ac- ceived by 4:00 pm on the 9th ING-12 MONTHS SAME AS
day
of
December,
at
the
•
Garages
• Pole
Horse Barns
CASH. MOLLOHAN CARPET
terill aka Denver Ray Cotterill, 465
and&amp; Volume
105, Page collect rents therefrom; and count or to
Pomeroy Village Hall, 660 317 ST RT 7 N GALLIPOLIS,
Deceased,
the Estate of Den- 511,
MeigsRepairs
County Official Re- that the Plaintiff be given such
• Foundations
• Home
East
Main
Street,
Suite
A,
OH 740-446-7444
ver R. Cotterill aka Denver cords, and costs of this action, other relief as the Court deems matters pertaining to the exePomeroy, Ohio 45769.
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Ray Cotterill, Deceased,
et al., •that
the Plaintiffʼs mortgages appropriate.
cution of the trust, not less
Estate Tag Sale, 51279 Portfor purposes of
foreclosing
on - Free
be adjudged
the first, second
Fully
Insured
Estimates
than five days prior to the date
Terms of sale: 10% of ac- land Road, Dec 2 &amp; 3,
its security, in the sum of and best liens upon the real
You
are
required
to
answer
30 Years
cepted bid paid within 7 days 9am-5pm, No early arrivals, all
$72,811.55, from October
16, Experience
property, except for real estate t h e
Complaint
w i t h i n set for hearing.
Affiliatedthereon
with MikeatMarcum
Roofing
Remodeling
of bid opening. Balance within home &amp; garage contents,
2011, withNotinterest
taxes;
that &amp;all
of the Defen- twenty-eight (28) days after
30 days thereafter. (11) 1, 8, Cash Only!
the rate of $11.96 per day from dants be required to set up the last publication of this NoL. SCOTT POWELL Judge
15,
22, 29, 2011
Medical
October 16, 2011, until fully their respective claims to the tice, which will be published
Gun Show, Marietta Comfort
paid, plus any costs advanced real property, if any, or be for- once each week for three (3) Common Pleas Court, Probate
Inn, Dec 3 &amp; 4, I-77 Exit 1,
or fees accrued, and in the ever barred therefrom; that the successive weeks. The last Division
Adm $5 6' Tbls $30,
ANNOUNCEMENTS
sum of $7,200.09, from Octo- equity of redemption of all De- publication will be made on the Meigs County, Ohio (11) 29,
740-667-0412
ber 16, 2011, with interest fendants be foreclosed; that 13th day of December, 2011, 2011
Pictures that have been
thereon at the rate of $1.26 the liens on the real property and the twenty-eight (28) days
per day from October 16, be marshalled; that the real for answer will commence on LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT
placed in ads at the
Lost
&amp;
Found
2011, until fully paid, plus any property be sold and that the that date. In the case of your
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
costs advanced or fees ac- proceeds of such sale be ap- failure to answer or otherwise In compliance with Village Ormust be picked within
crued, in order to foreclose plied first in payment of the respond as requested by the dinance No. 751, the Village of
30 days. Any pictures
upon a mortgage upon real es- judgment of the Plaintiff; that Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure, Pomeroy shall offer the followthat are not picked up
tate located at 33550 Cotterill the purchaser at such foreclo- judgment by default will be ing real property for sale to the
will be
discarded.
Road, Pomeroy, OH 45769, sure sale be awarded a writ of rendered against you and for highest bidder, to wit:
FOR lost dog. York(Auditorʼs
Parcel
N o s . possession and all other per- the relief demanded in the
SERVICES
Being a part of Lot No. 83 as s h i r e
17-00170.000
a n d sons in possession of the real Complaint.
Terrier,
shown on the County Auditorʼs
17-00171.001), which is more property be evicted; that a regray/silver.
Docked
fully described in deeds re- ceiver be appointed to take ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF: Tax Map Book, Village of
Heating &amp; Cooling
corded in Volume 183, Page charge of the real property and Douglas W. Little, LITTLE &amp; Pomeroy, Volume 2, Page 36, Tail, Sadley missed.
465 and Volume 105, Page collect rents therefrom; and SHEETS LLP, P.O. Box 686, 1929, and being more fully deFor sale: Nature's Comfort
511, Meigs County Official Re- that the Plaintiff be given such Pomeroy, OH 45769, Tele- scribed as follows: Commenc- Answers to Roy last Shaver Boilers, Bryant Forced
ing at a point in the intersec- seen on 2nd Ave in Air Outdoor Power. 950 Nowcords, and costs of this action, other relief as the Court deems phone: (740) 992-6689
tion of the existing centerline
that the Plaintiffʼs mortgages appropriate.
(11)29, (12) 6, 13
Dr, Applegrove, WV
C a l l lan
of Sycamore Street and the G a l l i p o l i s
be adjudged the first, second
25502. 304-576-3285
existing
northerly
right-of-way
and best liens upon the real
You are required to answer
740)379-9517 or
line of Main Street; thence N.
property, except for real estate t h e
Other Services
Complaint
within
339-0596,
61°
00'
00"
E.
along
the
existtaxes; that all of the Defen- twenty-eight (28) days after
Pet
Cremations.
Call
ing northerly right-of-way line 740-645-3739
dants be required to set up the last publication of this No740-446-3745
of Main Street, 553.09 feet to
their respective claims to the tice, which will be published
the real point of beginning for
real property, if any, or be for- once each week for three (3)
Professional Services
the land herein described;
ever barred therefrom; that the successive weeks. The last
thence N. 24° 32' 42" west Missing Little Maltese dog, last SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
equity of redemption of all De- publication will be made on the
Mason Co. WV. Ron
along a line, 190.01 feet to a seen on Monday 21st on Bear OH and
fendants be foreclosed; that 13th day of December, 2011,
Jackson,
OH
point; thence N. 61° 00' 00" E. Run Rd, REWARD, Child's Pet E v a n s
the liens on the real property and the twenty-eight (28) days
800-537-9528
along a line, 125.53 feet to a 740-645-8067
be marshalled; that the real for answer will commence on
point; thence S. 24° 32' 42" E.
property be sold and that the that date. In the case of your
FINANCIAL
along a line, 190.01 feet to a
proceeds of such sale be ap- failure to answer or otherwise
/ BUSINESS DIRECTORY
point in the SERVICE
existing northerly
plied first in payment of the respond as requested by the
WePlaintiff;
offer competitive
wages
and
employment benefits!
right-of-way line of Main
judgment of the
that Ohio Rules
of Civil
Procedure,
Money To Lend
Street; thence S. 61° 00' 00"
the purchaser at such foreclo- judgment by default will be
NOTICE
Borrow Smart. Contact
W. along the existing northerly
sure sale be awarded a writ of rendered against you and for
the Ohio Division of Financial Ininterested,
please contact
right-of-way line of Main
possession and all other per- If the
relief demanded
in the
stitutions Office of Consumer AfStreet, 125.53 feet to the point
sons in possession of the real Complaint.
fairs BEFORE you refinance your
of beginning, and containing
property be evicted; that a rehome or obtain a loan. BEWARE
0.546 acre.
ceiver be appointed to take ATTORNEY FOR PLAINTIFF:
of requests for any large advance
charge of the real property and Douglas W. Little, LITTLE &amp;
payments of fees or insurance.
Subject to all legal highways
collect rents therefrom; and SHEETS LLP, P.O. Box 686,
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
Or applyOHin 45769,
personTeleat:
and easements of record.
that the Plaintiff be given such Pomeroy,
learn if the mortgage broker or
other relief as the Court deems phone: (740) 992-6689
lender is properly licensed. (This
Description of the above-deappropriate.
(11)29, (12) 6, 13
is a public service announcement
scribed tract being the results
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
of a survey made by Richard
You are required to answer
Company)
C. Glasgow, R.S. 5161.
the
Complaint
within
SNOW
twenty-eight (28) days after
300
SERVICES
REMOVAL
Reference Deed:
Volume 267,
the last publication of this NoPage 37, Meigs County Deed
tice, which will be published
Records.
once each week for three (3)
successive weeks. The last
Auditorʼs Parcel Number:
publication will be made on the
16-02545.000
13th day of December, 2011,
and the twenty-eight (28) days

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Rick Price - 25 Years Experience
740-416-2960 • 740-992-0730

Marcum Construction

60231179

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

LARGE
WARD

Holzer Assisted Living-Jackson
&amp;
Holzer Assisted Living- Gallipolis

LPN

If you are interested in becoming part of our Assisted Living
Community, we are seeking LPN’s. We have openings for
day shift and evening shift.

Jamie Northup
740.441.8052

Holzer Assisted Living- Gallipolis
300 Briarwood Road
Gallipolis, OH 45631

RE-

7

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

Tebow leads Broncos to OT win, 16-13 over Chargers
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) —
Tim Tebow had a better quarterback rating than Philip Rivers.
Tebow also carried 22 times,
the most by an NFL quarterback since at least 1950, and led
the Denver Broncos to a 16-13
comeback win against San Diego in overtime Sunday.
Tebow moved the Broncos
down the field and Matt Prater
kicked a 37-yard field goal with
29 seconds left in OT to beat
the Chargers, who’ve lost six
straight games for the first time
in 10 years.
San Diego’s Nick Novak
missed a 53-yard attempt in
overtime wide right.
The teams narrowly avoided
the first NFL tie since Cincinnati
and Philadelphia ended deadlocked at 13 on Nov. 16, 2008.
Denver has gone 5-1 since
coach John Fox elevated Tebow
to starter in the wake of his performance in a close loss to the
Chargers on Oct. 9 in Denver.
The Broncos (6-5) have won
four straight to trail Oakland by
one game in the AFC West.
“This is a special team, a
special team when you have a
bunch of guys that when things
aren’t going good we get closer
instead of pulling apart,” Tebow
said. “The No. 1 reason we are
like that is because we believe
in each other, we believe in the
coaching staff.”
Tebow led Denver from its
43 after Novak missed with 2:31

left in overtime. Novak made a
53-yarder in the first quarter, a
career-best, and was wide right
on a 48-yard try early in the
fourth quarter.
Tebow had a 12-yard gain and
Willis McGahee ran 24 yards
up the middle to set up Prater’s
winning kick, which was right
down the middle.
Tebow, the talk of the NFL
because he runs the read option and often struggles while
passing, carried 22 times for 67
yards — the most carries by a
quarterback in a game since at
least 1950, according to STATS
LLC.
He also threw for one touchdown and finished with a better
rating than Rivers, 95.4 to 77.1.
Rivers was pressured all day by
Elvis Dumervil, who had two
sacks, and rookie Von Miller,
who had one.
___

RAIDERS 25, BEARS 20

At Oakland, Calif., Sebastian
Janikowski kicked a team-record
six field goals and Oakland took
advantage of three interceptions
from Chicago’s fill-in starter
Caleb Hanie.
Carson Palmer threw for 301
yards and Michael Bush iced
the game with a touchdown
run in the fourth quarter to lead
the Raiders (7-4) to their third
straight win against a Bears team
missing starting quarterback Jay
Cutler.

Business &amp; Trade School

Want To Buy

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

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.

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

Autos

Found- female brown Shepherdlike dog Reedsville area,
call to ID, 740-578-6045
GIVEAWAY
1 1/2 yr old Black Lab, neutered to a good Home.
740-388-7561
Giveaway 2 yellow Canaries
with cage 740-446-4807
AGRICULTURE
Farm Equipment
Round Bale Feeders $110.00
each also 10' All steel Feed
bunk $175.00 @ Jim's Farm
Equip. 740-446-9777.
MERCHANDISE
Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

Want To Buy
Absolute Top dollar- silver/gold
coins, pre 1935 US currency.
proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue, Gallipolis. 446-2842
Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884
Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
Campers / RVs &amp; Trailers
2004 Jayco Eagle Discovery
33ft 5th wheel camper w/2
slide-outs. In perfect condition.
Camped
in
8
times.
740-441-4704

PATRIOTS 38, EAGLES 20

At Philadelphia, Tom Brady
threw for 361 yards and three
touchdowns in a game that all
but ended the Eagles’ playoff
hopes.
Filling in for the injured
Michael Vick for the second
straight game, Vince Young
couldn’t keep the Eagles in contention despite a career-best 400
yards passing. The Eagles fell to
4-7 in a season that began with
Super Bowl expectations.
Angry fans made their feelings known about coach Andy
Reid, chanting “Fire Andy!” in
the second half.
The defending NFC East
champions fell to 1-5 at home
and have lost eight of nine at the
Linc, including a playoff loss to
Green Bay last January.
Down 10-0 early, the AFC
East-leading Patriots (8-3) rallied behind Brady, scoring on
five of their next six possessions.
____

REDSKINS 23,
SEAHAWKS 17

At Seattle, Rex Grossman

600

ANIMALS

Wanted- PASTURELAND with
livable
HOUSING,
505-384-1101
Lots
Empty Lot for sale @ 586 Jay
Dr. Lot #10, 1/2 acre +/-, for
more info call 740-645-8483

AUTOMOTIVE

ANIMALS
Pets

Hanie struggled in his first
career start in place of Cutler,
who broke his right thumb last
week in Chicago’s fifth straight
win to put a major obstacle into
what had been a promising season for the Bears (7-4).
____

1997 Jeep Wrangler Sport 4.0
motor Automatic - Hard Top New Bikini Top Exc. Condition
$7,800 Call: 740-367-0641 or
740-645-5412

REAL ESTATE RENTALS
Apartments/Townhouses

Want To Buy

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218

Paying
Cash
for
junk,Cars,Trucks,Vans,Call
740-388-0011
or
740-441-7870. No Sunday
calls.

3 br apt. $425 a mo. plus util.
&amp; dep; 1 br, $325 a mo., 3rd
St, Racine, Oh, 740-247-4292

REAL ESTATE SALES
Cemetery Plots
2 Cemetery lots at Ohio Valley
Memory Gardens $300 call
Paul 304-634-5551
Houses For Sale
3 BR, 2 BA, new roof, 2 car
garage, on db lot, storage
bldg, above ground pool. New
Haven, WV 304-593-1800
3BR, 2 BA, Ann Dr, Gallipolis,
OH. Asking $125,000. Must
sell. 419-632-1000 to make
appt to view.
4 br, 2 bth, gas fireplace, full
basement, 2 car attached garage w/outbuilding, nestled on
7 1/2 acres of woods in
Racine area. For more information, call 740-949-9023
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
Earth Berm/Energy Efficient
Home On SR 143, 2Bd/2Bath
on 4 acres, newer appliances,
hot tub, pool table, workshop.
Move-in ready, priced for quick
sale at $80,000. Contact
Jackie at 740-590-3596

2BR APT.Close to Holzer Hospital
on SR 160 C/A. (740) 441-0194

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.

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
FIRST MONTH FREE
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3, &amp; 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep
&amp; elec. No pets. 304-610-0776
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

found Anthony Armstrong for a
50-yard touchdown and Washington rallied for 16 fourthquarter points to end a six-game
losing streak.
One play after committing a
grounding penalty, Grossman
stepped up in the pocket on
third-and-19 and found Armstrong in the corner of the end
zone.
The touchdown pass was
Grossman’s second of the game
and followed rookie Roy Helu’s
leaping 28-yard TD run that
pulled the Redskins (4-7) within
17-14.
Grossman finished 26 of 35
for 314 yards
Marshawn Lynch rushed for
111 yards and caught a 20-yard
touchdown pass for the Seahawks (4-7).
___

ing score — a 2-yard TD run
with 10:23 left in the game.
The Colts dropped to 0-11
for the first time since 1986 and
have lost six home games in a
season for the sixth time in the
Indianapolis era.
Curtis Painter was 15 of 29
for 226 yards with one TD for
the Colts and threw two late interceptions in the end zone, ending any hopes of a comeback.
___

FALCONS 24, VIKINGS 14

At Atlanta, Matt Ryan tossed
three touchdown passes and Atlanta held on again.
The Falcons (7-4) were up
17-0 at halftime after allowing
just 97 yards. But as in the previous week’s closer-than-necessary victory over Tennessee,
they let Minnesota (2-9) back in
the game.
Toby Gerhart, filling in for
injured Adrian Peterson, scored
from the 1 late in the third
quarter. Then, after Dominique
Franks inadvertently touched
a punt the Falcons were trying
to avoid to set up a Vikings recovery, Christian Ponder went
to Percy Harvin for a 39-yard
touchdown pass on fourthand-13 to make it 17-14.
But Ryan responded with a
3-yard scoring pass to backup
Michael Palmer, and the Falcons
held on downs after Harvin’s
104-yard kickoff return to the
Atlanta 3.

PANTHERS 27, COLTS 19

At Indianapolis, Cam Newton
threw for 208 yards and ran for
one score and DeAngelo Williams scored twice to help Carolina hold off winless Indianapolis.
The Panthers (3-8) ended a
12-game road losing streak by
winning outside Charlotte, N.C.,
for the first time since Dec. 27,
2009 when they beat the New
York Giants.
Newton was 20 of 27 and
carried nine times for 53 yards.
Williams ran 15 times for 69
yards including the game-seal-

Apartments/Townhouses
Lg 2 BR apt in Pt Pleasant.
Newly painted, kit appl, gas
heat/AC, W/D hook-up. $375
mo
plus
$200
dep.
804-677-8621
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
675-6679
Houses For Rent

MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Rentals
2-BR Near 160 - $390 mo.
Available 12-1 Call 441-5150
or 379-2923
FURNISHED 3 BR DBL WIDE
SR 143, Pomeroy, Oh. Some
Utilities Included. W/D $625
mo. NO PETS. 740-591-5174
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

3 BR house for rent, $475,
Syracuse,
no
pets.
304-675-5332
or
740-591-0265

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

3 BR, 1 BA, det garage on
1+acre. Includes grape orchard &amp; fenced garden area.
Located on Crab Creek. $500
mo plus util. Serious inquires
only. 304-812-0337

RESORT PROPERTY

3 br, 2 bth doublewide w/large
porches, $750 mo., $750 dep.
in country, quiet neighborhood,
behind 33 rest area in
Pomeroy, no pets, no utilities
included, 740-416-2960
3 br, 2 bth doublewide w/large
porches, $675 mo., $675 dep.
in country, quiet neighborhood,
behind 33 rest area in
Pomeroy, no pets, no utilities
included, 740-416-2960
3 br, trailer in country, between
Athens &amp; Pomeroy 1 mile off
33, No pets, utilities not included, $380 mo., $350 dep.,
740-416-2960
Nice 2BR, 2BA, 3 car gar.
$650. mo; Dep. &amp; Ref. req.
Available mid Dec. 446-1079
Nice 3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy, ready December
1st, $600 per month,
740-590-1900
Now available- newly remodeled all electric 3 bedroom
house in Syracuse, Oh. on
very private 1 acre lot
w/heated 20x20 game room &amp;
20x40 garage, $650, $650 deposit, may sell on land contract
w/$3,000 down payment,
740-591-8311

EMPLOYMENT
Accounting / Financial
PT contracted bookkeeper.
For a list of requirements contact: Administrative Officer,
Western Conservation District,
224C First St, Pt Pleasant, WV
25550, 304-675-3054 or email
WCD@WVCA.US. Deadline to
submit app: Dec 1 by noon
Help Wanted- General
$10.11
hr
with
ResCare- FT/PT direct care
staff positions available. No
exp req but must have high
school diploma/GED and current WV drivers license. Also
seeking LPN'S got our Lesage
Campus Location. Walk-in interviews this Wed &amp; Thur (Nov
30-Dec 1) 9 AM to 3 PM at
7830 Ohio River Road,
Lesage, WV. For more info,
304-522-3548. EOE m/f/v/d
DirtBusters has an immediate
opening in Pt Pleasant for a
PT/evening cleaner. This position is scheduled for 6.5 hrs
per week starting at $8.50 hr.
Qualified applicants must have
a valid drivers license and reliable transportation. Background check and drug test
are req. 888-517-2549 or
www.dirtbusterswv.com

Help Wanted- General
Direct Care- Part Time direct
care position for Point Pleasant, WV providing community
skill training with an individual
with MR/DD. Monday, Tuesday
and
Thursday
3:30pm-9pm
Direct Care- Part Time direct
care position for Point Pleasant, WV providing community
skill training with an individual
with MR/DD.
Tuesday and
Thursday 3pm-7:30pm; every
other Saturday 10am-6pm
Direct Care- Part Time direct
care position for Mason, WV
providing community skill training with an individual with
MR/DD.
Monday
7:30am-6:30pm and Friday
12:30pm-6:30pm
Direct Care- Part Time direct
care position for Ripley, WV
providing community skill training with an individual with
MR/DD.
Monday-Friday
10am-2pm
SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Manufactured Homes
2BR, 1BA, Mobile Home for
Rent, NO Pets, All Electric,
Central Air 740-446-4234 or
740-208-7861
3BR, 2BA, $750/month with
utility allowance, 2BR, 1BA,
$550/month with utility allowance, on Farm 540-729-1331
Mobile homes for rent. Pt
Pleasant area. 304-675-3423
or 304-675-0831 before 8:30
pm
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guaranttee. Local references
furnished. Established in 1975.
Call 24hrs (740)446-0870.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing

Tuesday’s TV Guide
TUESDAY 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

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29
7

PM

7:30

8

PM

8:30

9

PM

9:30

10

PM

10:30

11

PM

11:30

Jeopardy!
WSAZ News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Biggest Loser Each player is pampered before
Parenthood "Missing"
WSAZ News (:35) Tonight
News
Fortune
heading off to see a performance. (N)
Max is in danger. (N)
Tonight
Show (N)
WTAP News NBC Nightly Wheel of
The Biggest Loser Each player is pampered before
Parenthood "Missing"
WTAP News (:35) Tonight
Jeopardy!
at Six
News
Fortune
heading off to see a performance. (N)
Max is in danger. (N)
at 11
Show (N)
ABC 6 News ABC World
ABC 6 News (:35) News
Entertainm- Access
Last Man
Man Up! (N) The Middle "Forced Family Body of Proof "Gross
at 6
News
Standing (N)
Fun"
Anatomy" (N)
at 11
Nightline
ent Tonight Hollywood
Global 3000 Nightly
Secrets of the Dead
Frontline "Flying Cheap"
Herbert Hoover:
PBS NewsHour
My
Leading
Business
"Slave Ship Mutiny"
Landslide
Generation Gen
Judge Judy
Man Up! (N) The Middle "Forced Family Body of Proof "Gross
Eyewitness ABC World
Entertainm- Last Man
Eyewitness (:35) News
ent Tonight Standing (N)
News at 6
News
Fun"
Anatomy" (N)
News 11PM Nightline
10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
Wheel of
The Victoria's Secret
Rudolph the Red Nosed
NCIS "Recruited"
10TV News (:35) David
at 6:00 p.m. News
Fortune
Reindeer
Fashion Show (N)
Letterman
The Big
New Girl
Raising "Bro Eyewitness News at 10
Two and a
Two and a
The Big
Glee "I Kissed a Girl" (N)
The
Excused
Bang Theory Half Men
Half Men
Bang Theory
"Bells" (N)
Gurt" (N)
p.m.
Simpsons
Nightly
PBS NewsHour
Charlie Rose
BBC News
Secrets of the Dead
Frontline "Flying Cheap"
Herbert Hoover:
America
Business
"Slave Ship Mutiny"
Landslide
News 13 at CBS Evening 13 News at Inside
The Victoria's Secret
Rudolph the Red Nosed
NCIS "Recruited"
News 13 at (:35) David
6:00 p.m.
News
7:00 p.m.
Edition
Reindeer
Fashion Show (N)
11:00 p.m.
Letterman
30 Rock
30 Rock
Funniest Home Videos
Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother Met-Mother WGN News at Nine
30 Rock
Scrubs
Slap Shots
Access
Celebrity Sports
The Journey Access
Slap Shots
Jackets Live NHL Hockey Columbus vs Vancouver (L)
SportsCenter
NCAA Basketball Big-10/ ACC Challenge Ill./Md. (L)
NCAA Basket. Big-10/ ACC Challenge Duke/Ohio St. (L) SportsCent.
NFL 32 (L)
NCAA Basketball Big-10/ ACC Challenge Mich./Vir. (L) NCAA Basketball Big-10/ ACC Challenge Mia./Purd. (L) SportsCent. NFL Live (N)
Wife Swap
W. Swap "Brown/Holland" Wife Swap
Supernanny (P) (N)
One Born Every Minute
America's Supernanny
Mickey
+++ A Bug's Life ('98, Ani) Dave Foley.
+++ Ratatouille ('07, Fam) Voices of Patton Oswalt, Brad Garrett.
The 700 Club
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction
Auction (N) Flip Men (N) Flip Men
Flip Men
Victorious
Victorious
Brainsurge
iCarly
SpongeBob SpongeBob '70s Show
'70s Show
G. Lopez
G. Lopez
Friends
Friends
Law&amp;O.:SVU "Manhunt"
Law &amp; Order: SVU "PTSD" SVU "Reparations"
Law &amp; Order: SVU "Bang" Covert Affairs (N)
Psych "Last Night Gus"
Queens
Queens
Seinfeld
Seinfeld
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
BigBang
Conan
(5:00) The Situation Room OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
Piers Morgan Tonight
Anderson Cooper 360
OutFront
Bones
Bones "A Boy in a Tree"
Bones
Scott Turow's Innocent ('11, Myst) Bill Pullman. (P)
Rizzoli &amp; Isles
(5:00) +++ A League of Their Own Geena Davis.
++ Scrooged ('88, Fant) Karen Allen, Bill Murray.
++ Scrooged ('88, Fant) Karen Allen, Bill Murray.
To Be Announced
Dirty Jobs
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
To Be Announced
The First 48
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Storage
Untamed and Uncut
I, Predator
Planet Earth "Jungles"
Planet Earth "Deserts"
Earth "Shallow Seas"
Planet Earth "Jungles"
Tori "Homespun Heroes"
Tori &amp; Dean: Home
Tori "Return to the Rue"
Tori &amp; Dean: Home
Tori &amp; Dean: Home (N)
Tori "Taking InvenTORI"
Charmed
Charmed
Ghost Whisperer
Ghost "Threshold"
Ghost "Heart &amp; Soul"
Ghost "Pieces of You"
Kourtney &amp; Kim
E! News
++ Serendipity ('01, Rom) John Cusack.
Kourtney &amp; Kim
C. Lately (N) E! News
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
Married
Married
Married
Married
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Loves Ray
Queens
Rock Stars
State Troop. "Vice Squad" Knights of Mayhem
Knights of Mayhem (N)
RockStar "Deathtrap" (N) Knights of Mayhem
NBC Sports Talk (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Hockey Pittsburgh Penguins vs. New York Rangers (L)
NHL Live!
NHL Overtime (L)
SportsTalk
NASCAR Race Hub
Pass Time
Pass Time
Stunt. (N)
Stunt.
Dumbest
Dumbest
Wrecked
Wrecked
Stunt.
Stunt.
Modern Marvels
Marvels "'80s Tech"
Restoration Restoration The Epic History of Everyday Things (N)
Modern Marvels (N)
Millionaire
Beverly Hills
Millionaire
Millionaire (N)
Fashion (N) Fashion (N) Million "Reunion Part 1"
106 &amp; Park: BET's Top 10 Live "Chanel Iman"
Soul Train Awards R&amp;B music's finest are honored.
Reed (N)
Reed (N)
Reed
Reed
My Place
My Place
House
House Hunt. MyPlace (N) My House
Property
Property
House Hunt. House
House
Property
++ Resident Evil ('01, Act) Milla Jovovich.
WWE Super Smackdown (L)
Sanctuary "Chimera" (N)
++ Red Planet
(5:30) +++ Independence Day ('96, Sci-Fi) Will Smith. +++ Unknown ('06, Cri) James Caviezel.
24/ 7
Enlightened Bored
Boardwa.
(:20) ++ A Nightmare on Elm Street
++ Life as We Know It ('10, Com) Katherine Heigl.
++++ 12 Monkeys ('95, Sci-Fi) Bruce Willis.
(:15) Faster ('10, Act) Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson.
Shameless "Aunt Ginger" Shameless
(:50) Marilyn Dexter
Homeland "Crossfire"

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
Comics

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

MUTTS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHORNS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Tuesday,
Nov. 29, 2011:
You have an unusual amount of
bounce this year. Even in difficult
moments you come back strong.
Knowing what you want is very important. Your resilience is admirable. How
you communicate your desires could
make or break a situation. If you are
single, you have quite a portfolio and
revolving door of admirers. With so
many potential suitors, you might be
quite challenged by the process of
choosing. Summer 2012 on could be
instrumental for romance. If you are
attached, the two of you enjoy your
time together even more. AQUARIUS
draws you out of your shell.
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)
HHHHH Your interactions with
others might make you want to do
something differently. A financial
opportunity might be costly at first,
but ultimately will work out for you. Be
ready to discuss the long-term perspective. A meeting provides an excellent platform for debate. Tonight: Go
for a new experience.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHHH Remain on top of your
game, realizing what you can and
cannot change within a partnership.
Taking charge could be against your
nature right now, but ultimately could
have implications. Understand what is
needed to lock in a deal. Tonight: As
long as need be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHH Understand what someone
expects; you are likely to be able to
deliver. Realize what is happening
within your immediate circle. See
how a situation changes radically if
you relax and take some moments of
solitude. Tonight: Moving through the
moment.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHHH Your ability to move
through issues causes you to rethink a
personal matter. Your happy style and
upbeat manner win friends. Could an
associate, partner or loved one be a bit
jealous? Don’t let that type of thinking
have any place in a key partnership.
Tonight: A discussion could be more
important than you realize.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHH Understand what is happening. Reach out for someone at a
distance. New insights naturally come
when you speak to this person. Think
about the possibilities with relation-

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Horoscope

ships in general, and add in more
fun and creativity. A boss or authority
figure could be very stubborn. Tonight:
Defer to others.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH Pace yourself in order to get
necessary work done. You could be
very tired or exhausted. Maintain a
high profile. Suddenly, you energize.
A partner or someone you have an
investment in could create a new
perspective out of the blue. Put 110
percent into whatever you do. Tonight:
Pace yourself.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH Let your imagination
open up to new potential and understanding. Your ability to grow past an
immediate issue comes out. You gain
through one specific partner or loved
one. Communication remains instrumental. Tonight: Kick up your heels.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHH Stay on top of a situation,
realizing exactly what you need.
Understand what is happening with
close friends. You might not be able
to persuade another person to treat a
family member or key person differently. Tonight: Head home.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH You seem to be able to
jump over a hurdle and barely notice.
Others sit back and admire your
natural energy and enthusiasm. A conversation with someone less upbeat
inspires him or her to a new level.
Follow your sixth sense with a workrelated matter. Tonight: Out and about.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHH Be aware of what might be
going on in your mind as well as in
reality, especially financially. You seem
to feel luckier than you have in a long
time. Is a risk worth it in the long run?
Tonight: Think before you offer.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHHH Know that when you are
on a roll, you could be close to unstoppable. The real issue is when enough
is enough. Your decision to do something differently and to open up breaks
past a barrier. Listen more. Tonight:
Ask, and you just might receive.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHH Know when to pull back.
Understand that people need to hear
your boundaries. Let them know what
you consider too much. Putting your
best face forward might help you
breeze through a period in which you
might not want to share as much.
Tonight: Consider getting extra rest.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Tuesday, November 29, 2011

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

Wishing You and Yours a Happy and
Healthy Holiday Season!
Merry Christmas!

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