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                  <text>•

Prep·basketball
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•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Meigs Co. deputies arrest three men sought in V. 'ai-Mr.
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Three
men, including one from
Portland. were arrested in
Pomeroy Monday night
for allegedly robbing
someone in the parking lot
at the Wal-Mart in Athens.
Drugs and weapons

17
Days
Left til
Christmas

were siezed during the
arrest, Sheriff Robert
Beegle said Tuesday.
Beegle said Gabriel
Hill, 19, Portland, Marco
Delgado, 24, Gallipolis,
and John Wallace, 26,
Butler County, were
arrested without incident
at Pizza Hut in Pomeroy.
Deputies and officers with

the Major Crimes Task
Force, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol and
Pomeroy Police participated in the arrest of the
three men.
Sgt. Robbie Jacks of ~e
OSP first spotted the suspects' vehicle in lower
Middleport, and the car
was stopped at the

Pomeroy
Beegle said.
An unreported a..
of crack cocaine and m.
ijuana were siezed, al( g
with two handguns.
Beegle said the men
were taken into custody
by the Athens Police
Department for charges
relating to the robbery;

nd charges relating to the
.rugs and weapons are
pending here.
Beegle also reported
transportation of Timmy
Ball, Jr., and Russell
Robinson to the Orient
Corrections Reception
Center to begin sentences
imposed in Common
Pleas Court.

Chamber
narrowing
search for
director

Cute Kids and Christmas

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The
Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce has been
without a director for
almost a month though
the search to fill the position is narrowing.
According to Chamber
President Bill Quickel, a
special committee was
formed to review and
interview a pool of candidates which have now
been narrowed down to
three people. Quickel
said the job description
for Chamber director has
changed with an emphasis on combining duties .
The new director will
have the responsibly of
directing not only with.
the
Meigs
County
Chamber of Commerce
but the Meigs County
Convention and Visitor's
Bureau.
Quickel
said
the
Chamber wants a director
who will "raise the bar"
and take on additional
duties such as writing
grants to evolve the
tourism industry in the
county. In addition. the
director will be involved
in Chamber and tourism

Letters to Santa

•

Ohio Valley Publishing's
annual Letters to Santa
special edition will be
released on Wednesday,
Dec. 15 in The Daily
Sentinel. Area children
who would like to have
their letters published in
this year's edition are
invited to e-mail their
letters to Santa to the
following address: mdtnews@mydailytribune.c
om . All letters must be
submitted via e-mail.
o paper copies will be
ccepted. The deadline
to submit letters to
Santa 1s Thursday.
Dec. 9.

Community
Christmas Dinner
SYRACUSE
Beacon Ministries (located in former B &amp;R
Market) will host a free
Community Christmas
Dinner from 1-3 p.m.,
Sunday. Dec. 12 at the
church. The dinner is
open to everyone and
the church is also
extending an invite to
all those who are serving in the military,
EMS. firemen/women.
police. teachers, principals. leaders in the
county.

Brian J. Reed/photo
As much as the brightly-colored lights and holiday music of December remind us that Christmas approaches
so, too, do the expressive faces of children. These youngsters were enjoying the holiday goings-on in
Middleport Saturday, snuggled under a warm blanket in a horse-drawn carriage, representing an angel in a
parade float, or just watching in anticipation for Santa Claus to come along, like cute little Emma Kreseen, 3.
She came along with her parents, Dan and B.J. Smith Kreseen, to take in the parade.

Salvation Army's red kettle back in tow~
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

~BITUARIES
Page AS

• Lloyd Thornton
• Alma A. Vanmeter
• Gordon E. Lambert

.

WEATHER.

High: 25
Low: 14

See Chamber, A5

POMEROY- For the
ftrst time in several years
the red kettles and ringing
bells of the Salvation
Army are back in Meigs
County for the holiday
season .
Ashli Jarrell of Racine
was the volunteer bell
ringer
Saturday
at
Powell's SuperValu where
customers dropped contributions into the red kettle
for services to the underprivileged.
It was a scene to be
repeated several days a
week until Christmas at
locations
across
the
nation. The contributions
arc an indication that
those who have care for

those who have not. The
goal of the Salvation
Army is to bring spiritual
light and love to those it
serves at Christmas time
so that the real meaning of
the season is not forgotten.
It is through the red
kettle project that the
Salvation Army is able to
continue its efforts, year
after year, to help those
most in need. The scene
of the Salvation Army's
red kettles and volunteers ringing bells is a
call to give, one repeated across the country
from Thanksgiving to
Christmas.
The idea of using a red
kettle as a place to put
coins in support of the

Charlene
Hoeflich/photo
Ashli Jarrell of
Racine volunteers
her time to ring
the bell at the
door to Powell's
SupeNalu in
Pomeroy as a call
for donations
to the Salvation
Army's red kettle
fund for the
forgotten.

\

•

See Salvation, A5

The green Grinch: Synthetic pot's days numbered

INDEX

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTlNELCOM

POMEROY
Products known as synClassifieds
thetic marijuana are being
pulled from store shelves
Comics
beginning· Dec. 24 not by
the Grinch but by the gpvEditorials
emment.
'
Sports
B Section
The U.S. Drug Enforcement
Administration has
© 2010 Ohio Vall~y Publishing Co.
announced its seizing control
of five chemicals used to
make the products in
order to study them - the
ban will last for at least

A3
B3-4

Bs
A4

liJJI, !IJ!II

one year. This means
beginning on Christmas
Eve, possessing products
which contain these five
chemicals will be illegal.
Chemicals being targeted
are CP-47,497, JWH01 8, JWH-073, JWH-200,
cannabicyc lohexanol.
However, there are other
chemicals used to produce
that synthetic high whic)1
means this move many not
slow down the sale of other
fake pot products which
aren't using the five chemicals in question.

'·
"

This emergency action
by the DEA places products like K2 and Spice in
Schedule
I
of the
Controlled Substances Act
along with other illegal
drugs like heroin and the
real thing - marijuana.
Products like K2 and Spice
are being sold at convenient and tobacco stores.
Though Meigs County is
known for the "real thing,"
synthetic pot products have
been making their way
into the local culture including the culture of

local children. Meigs
County Juvenile Court
Judge Scott Powell said
back in October. the products were "spreading like
wildfire throughout the
community."
Powell
remarked local children as
young as sixth graders had
been caught smoking the
synthetic products.
Kids, like adults. are
drawn to synthetic marijuana both because it can
be legally purchased and
because there were no
drug screening tests for it

- until lately.
In the wake of synthetic marijuana. synthetic
cocaine has also reared
its head on the national
scene. Synthetic cocaine
is often sold as bath salts.
commonly for $50 per
half-gram. Like its fake
pot counterpart. packages
of fake cocaine state "not
for human consumption.''
Both products have been
linked to severe overdoses by those who paid no
attention to the warning
label.

,.

�- ---

Wednesday, December 8,

-- - ~-

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

· - ~------------------------........-

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

..........-

.....11'1":"'~---

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

Lake-fed storm leaving big snow totals in NY, Pa.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) cially, with some seeing
- Bands of snow blast- even more.
"I think my arm pits are
ing off the Great Lakes
buried one western New higher than that so I'd say
York town under four 4 feet" Town Supervisor
feet of snow and caused Dale Senn told The
a pileup that left Associated Press over the
motorists stranded for phone.
Forecasters say this
hours on a stretch of
Interstate 80 in north- blast isn't over, with
western Pennsylvania. ·
bands of heavy snow
The lake-effect storms expected to continue into
were whipped by gusty Wednesday. The snow
winds, closing schools was being fed by Lake
and disrupting travel as Erie, which borders westfar north as the Lake ern New York, northwestern Pennsylvania and
Ontario shore.
In Randolph, N.Y., a northem Ohio, and Lake
rural town 50 miles south Ontario along New
northwestern
of Buffalo, motorists York's
were banned from driving edge. More was forecast
Tvesday after the area for Thursday, though in
received 40 inches offi- lesser amounts.

Senn said the driving
conditions were made
worse by high winds that
caused poor visibility
along local roads, where
drifting snow pinched
vehicles down to one
Snow-removal
lane.
efforts were hampered
when two of his town's
four snowplows broke
down, he said.
"You can't see over the
banks," he said, "so it's
better if people stay
home."
The snow piled the
highest in the small towns
and sparsely populated
areas south of Buffalo,
N.Y., and Erie, Pa.
In Bradford, Pa., a foot
of snow fell Monday and

at least six inches more
was expected Tuesday.
About eight inches fell
farther south in Somerset,
with more reported in the
Laurel Highlands east of
{&gt;ittsburgh.
Nearly two feet of
snow was dumped on
parts of northeast Ohio,
with more than 20 inches
on the ground by Tuesday
afternoon in Pierpont,
about 70 miles east of
Cleveland. Winds were
gusting up to 25 mph
along Lake Erie, dropping temperatures into
the teens and single digits, according to the
National
Weather
Service.
Pennsylvania
State

Police blamed the weath- of 15 to 25 mph with
er for a Monday after- gusts of up to 35 mph.
noon multi-car crash that
Intense
lake-effect
backed up traffic for sev- snowstorms are typical
eral miles on Interstate 80 for late fall and early
near the Ohio porder, and winter. when cold air
for dozens of other crash- rushes over warmer.
es. There were no reports water. The threat is lessof serious injuries.
ened later in the season
Some
communities when ice forms on the
along Lake Ontario, lakes.
meanwhile. have seen
Lake-effect snow advimore than two feet of sories or warnings were
snow in the last few days. in effect until Tuesday
More than 17 inches had evening in Buffalo,
fallen since Sunday in Niagara Falls, Bradford,
Rochester,
causing Pa., and Batavia, until
dozens of fender-benders Wednesday morning in
during the city's morning Rochester, Olean and
commute
Tuesday. Binghamton and through
Another foot was expect- Wednesday evening in
ed by Wednesday, blown Cattaraugus
and
around by strong winds Chautauqua c.ounties.

Mud activities made tech uncomfortable on BP rig
HOUSTON (AP) -A
technician responsible
for monitoring gas levels
told federal investigators
Thesday he never considered using his authority
to stop work on the
doomed Gulf of Mexico
oil rig even though mudmoving activities in the
hours before the blast
made him uncomfortable.
Joseph Keith, who
works for a unit of
Halliburton, told the joint
U.S.
Coast
GuardBureau of Ocean Energy
Management, Regulation
and Enforcement panel
that the BP wellsite
leader and mud engineers
onboard would have been
in a better position to
assess whether work

should have stopped.
"I just didn't think
about it at the time,"
Keith said when asked
why he didn't pull the
plug on the job if he felt
uncomfortable.
He said there was a lot
of mud being moved
around and other rig
activities going on at the
same time after he came
on duty that evening.
Previous testimony indicated workers had difficulty monitoring key data
during a critical time in
the final hour before the
explosion because· so
many activities were happening at once.
The panel now appears
to be honing in on that
issue, asking pointed
questions about why

work on the rig wasn't
halted.
The panel is nearing
the final stretch in its
quest to assign blame for
the disaster.
This is the panel's sixth
series of hearings, and at
least one more is expected after this one before
the panel issues its
report, which is due by
March 27. The panel is
still awaiting the results
of for~nsic t~sting on a
key piece of evidence the blowout preventer
that failed to stop the
spill. Investigators are
analyzing it at a NASA
facility in New Orleans.
On offshore drilling
rigs, it is common to give
all workers onboard, and
even other passengers

who may be laymen, the
authority to stop work if
they see an unsafe condition.
As a senior mud logger,
Keith's
duties
involved using an assortment of electronic instruments to monitor the drill
bit for traces of oil or gas
and check for concentrations of hydrocarbons in
the drilling mud, and
notifying rig personnel
wh~n l~vels ar~ too high.
Hydrocarbons, a mixture
of hydrogen and carbon,
are found in crude oil.
Keith said that at some
point he felt a vibration
m a control panel,
smelled gas, then a short
time later heard a loud
explosion. He headed for
a lifeboat.

The explosion aboard
the Deepwater Horizon
on April 20 killed 11
men and Jed to more
than 200 million gallons
of oil spewing from BP's
undersea well, according
to the government's latest peer-reviewed tally.
Roughly 34 million gallons were captured at the
wellhead.
BP argues the government's estimate of how
much oil was r~kasc::d is
overstated. The amount
of oil spilled is central to
how much BP and other
companies may be
ordered to pay in fines.
Besides issuing conclusions on the ca.use of
the explosion, the panel
also was expected to
make recommendations

on how to improve regulation, safety and oversight.
Other federal agencies,
commissions,
members of Congress
and
the companies.
involved have been
investigating. However,
this panel's inquiry,
which began in May,
has been among the
most exhaustive and
has included sworn testimony from doz~ns of
key officials, rig workers and contractors.
BP and Transocean
officials also were
expected to testify during this series of hearings, which began
Tuesday and were to
run through Thursday.

Officials: U.S. drops demand for settlement freeze
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The Obama administration has abandoned
attempts to convince
Israel to slow West Bank
settlement activity. officials said Tuesday, in
what appears to be a
major setback for a key
White House foreign
policy initiative.
After months of trying
to broker a formula
under which Israel
would impose a new
freeze in return for U.S.
incentives,
two
American officials said
the administration had
concluded their efforts
were not the best way to
relaunch negotiations.
Talks
stalled
in
September, barely a

month after they started.
An announcement of
the decision will likely
come later Tuesday, one
of the officials said.
Both officials spoke on
condition of anonymity
because they were not
authorized to speak publicly on the matter.
The officials said :he
administration was not
abandoning efforts to
broker a peace deal and
noted that Israeli and
Palestinian negotiators
will visit Washington
next week for consultations.
The U.S. will engage
both sides on key issues
in the coming days, one
of the officials said.
Arab states and other

interested countries also
will be consulted, the
official said.
Israeli and Palestinian
officials refused to comment.
Earlier
Tuesday,
Israel's defense minister
said the U.S. has halted
talks with Israel on settlement activity because
Washington is distracted
by the WikiLeaks release
of secret documents.
State
Department
spokesman P.J. Crowley
denied that the U.S. was
liolding up the talks.
"The process has not
stopped,"
he
told
reporters. "Our efforts
are not suspended." He
said that perhaps Israel
was preoccupied with

putting out a huge forest
fire that burned until
Sunday.
The U.S. has pressed
Israel to renew a moratorium on new settlement
construction in exchange
for security and diplomatic assurances. Israel
wants those in writing,
as well as a pledge that
east Jerusalem will be
exempted from the
moratorium.
Palestinians say they
won't return to stalled
peace talks unless Israel
halts all building in the
West Bank and east
Jerusalem - lands they
want for part of their
future state.
Peace talks began in
September but ground to

a halt three weeks later
after Israel's original
moratorium on new West
Bank
construction
expired.
Prime
Minister
Benjamin
Netanyahu
returned
from
a
November trip to the
U.S. with a list of security and diplomatic guarantees, including 20
next-generation stealth
fighter planes and U.S.
pledges to veto antiIsrael resolutions at the
United
Nations,
according to Israeli
officials. In exchange,
Israel was to renew
limits on settlement
construction
that
expired
in
late
September.

Days later the deal
snagged after members
of Netanyahu's Cabinet
demanded· a written
pledge from the u.s~
that the moratoriu
would exclude east
Jerusalem. Such a
pledge has not materialized.
The U.S. hopes a
renewed moratorium
would allow Israel and
the Palestinians to
work toward a deal on
their future borders.
With borders determined, Israel could
resume building on any
territories it would
expect to keep under a
final peace deal.

se·nate takes up impeachment of Louisiana judge
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The attorney for an
impeached federal judge
on trial before the Senate
argued Tuesday that
Congress is pursuing
unconstitutional charges
against his client and
would be breaking with
two centuries of precedent
by removing him from
office.
Defense
attorney
Jonathan Turley told senators assembled in the
chamber for the historic
trial that some of the allegations against Judge G.
Thomas Porteous are
vague or exaggerated.
Others, he said, involve
conduct that occurred
before Porteous was
appointed to the federal
bench.
"In the history of this
republic, no one has ever
been removed from office
on the basis of pre-federal
conduct," Turley said, urging the senators to dismiss
some of the most serious
charges.
The lead House prosecutor, Rep. Adam Schiff,
D-Calif., responded that
Porteous engaged in a persistent pattern of corruption throughout his career,
before and after his federal service. Schiff said
allowing Porteous, 63, to
remain on the bench
would erode public confidence in the courts and
make a mockery of the
federal judiciary.

"He must be removed,"
Schiff said.
The arguments came as
the Senate began the final
stage of the case against
Porteous, a U.S. district
court
judge
from
Louisiana who could
become just the eighth
federal judge to be
removed from office.
The House voted unanimously in March to bring
four articles of impeachment against him. A twothirds Senate vote is needed to convict. The proceeding is just the 16th
judicial impeachment trial
before the Senate.
House
prosecutors
allege that Porteous was
racking up debt as he
struggled with drinking
and gambling problems.
They say he began accepting cash, meals, trips and
other favors from people
with business before his
court, beginning as a state
judge in the 1980s and
continuing after be was
appointed to the federal
bench by President Bill
Clinton in 1994.
During previous evidence-gathering hearings,
two attorneys who once
worked with Porteous said
they gave him thousands
of dollars in cash, including about $2,000 stuffed
in an envelope in 1999,
just before Porteous
decided a major civil case
10 their client's favor.
They also said they paid

for meals. trips and part of
a bachelor party for one of
Porteous' sons in Las
Vegas, including a lap
dance at a strip club.
"Counsel has taken to
calling it a wedding gift,
as if it were a piece of
china from the Pottery
Bam," Schiff said of the
$2,000 cash gift. "This is
at best defense counsel at
his most creative."
Another witness, New
Orleans bail bondsman
Louis Marcotte, described
a long-standing relationship in which Marcotte
and his employees routinely took Porteous to
lavish meals at French
Quarter
restaurants,
repaired his automobiles,
washed and filled his cars
with gas, and took him on
trips. In return, Porteous
manipulated
bond
amounts for defendants to
give Marcotte the highest
fees
possible,
said
Marcotte, who served 18
months in prison on related corruption charges.
Porteous. who sat with
his attorneys Tuesday
before the chamber, also
stands accused of filing
for bankruptcy under a
false name and lying to
the Senate during his judicial confinnation.
Turley has argued that
Porteous may have
made poor decisions but
that his actions don't
rise to the "high crimes
and misdemeanor" stan-

,.

dard required by the
Constitution
for
impeachment.
He argues, for example,
that the meals, gifts and
favors were business as

usual in the New Orleansarea legal community.
And he says other charges
are exaggerated, including
the bankruptcy filing,
which Porteous maintains

•

he filed under a false
name only to avoid
embarrassing publicity.

•

i

i

�PageA3

'fhe Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 8,

011 Freedom Award nomination
-seaso ends in January
ARLI~GTON,

Va. rd
and
Reserve
bers
have
five
to nominate their
rtivc employers for
the 20 I 1 Secretary of
Defen"e
Employer
Support Freedom Award
hcfore nomination sea-.on doses on January
17. 20 I I. Guard and
Reserve f,unily members
can also nominate their
r.;cn·ice
member's
employer during this
nomination season. The
award is the U.S.
Government's highest
honor given to employers for their outstanding
support of employees
serving in the Guard and
Reserve. N~arly one-half
of the U.S. military is
comprised of the Guard
and Rer.;erve, making the

role of U.S. employers
in support of employees
in the military increasingly important.
At the halfway mark,
nearly 2,500 nominations have been received
from Gmu·d and Reserve
members and their families from across the
nation and around the
world. Currently. the
Army National Guard is
leading among Guard
and Reserve service
branches, with 37 percent of the total nominations.
Guard and Reserve
members and their families are eligible and
encouraged to nominate employers that
have provided exceptional
support
to
Guard and Reserve

employees beyond the across the nation have
federal law require- received this prestigious
ments.
Nominations award. Established in
may be submitted at 1972, ESGR 's mission is
www.FreedomAward.mi to develop and promote
1 through January 17, employer support for
2011. The names of alJ Guard and Reserve sernominated employers vice by advocating relewill be announced in the vant initiatives. recogspring and the 15 nizing outstanding supFreedom Award recipi- port, increasing awareents will be announced ness of applicable laws,
and resolving conflict
in early summer.
The Freedom Award ' between employers and
was instituted in 1996 service members.
under the auspices of
For
information
Employer Support of the regarding the Freedom
Guard and
Reserve Award
nomination
(ESGR), a Department process, please vtslt
of Defense Agency, to www.FreedomAward.mi
recognize exceptional 1 or contact Maj. Melissa
support of Guard and Phillips, ESGR Public
Reserve members from Affairs, at (703) 696the employer communi- 1171, ext. 519 or by
ty. In the past 15 years, email
at
ESGR145 employers from PA@osd.mil.

Holiday Crafts:
* esh and simple gift to make by hand
BY JENNIFER FORKER
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sometimes. a new twist
on an old idea is all it
take!&gt; and a beautiful

handnu1dc gift is born.
If you're inclined
toward making your own
, gifts this holiday season,
look in on the following
live ideas, which stand
out for their simplicity
aml ti·eshness.
SILHOUETIE ON CANVAS

Haile' McCollum of
Thomasville. Ga., is her
family's de l~1cto genealogist, the keeper or heirlooms and ancestral sil-

houette portraits. She also
has a background in
graphic design, and has
reinvented the silhouette
with her own two sonsand the family dog, Amos
- as subjects. Her idea is
featured in ''Crafting a
Meaningful Home" (STC
Craft/Melanie
Falick
Books, 2010).
McCollum simplified
and updated the silhouette using modern technology; silhouettes are
decoupaged onto painted
canvas rather than secreted behind frames.
To make the silhouette,
paint a small ovalstretched canvas with

acrylic paint and let dry.
With a digital camera,
take a profile photo only a head shot- of the
subject. Upload the photo
to a computer and resize.
Print the photo and carefully. cut it out, getting as
many details as possible.
Secure this pattern onto a
sheet of heavyweight
paper and cut it to match.
Adhere profile to canvas
using decoupage glue; Jet
it dry. Paint another thin
layer of decoupage glue
over the entire canvas.
McCollum
recommends
experimenting
with paper and color, perhaps putting a hot-pink

Clturch Notebook
. ld aame dinner
at Livmg Water
Church
BIDWELL- A men's
wild game dinner and servke is scheduled at 6
p.m .. Saturday. Dec. II at
Living Water Church.
located at 8.39 KelT Road
in Bidwell. Those planning to attend a,re asked
to bring a wild g&lt;~me dish.
side ·dish or dessert.
Pastor Tommy 'ntompson
will be the guest speaker.
For information. contact
the church at (740) 446-

9043

New pastor
at Gallipolis
Nazarene church
GALLIPOLIS- Fir'it
Church of the Nazarene
in Gallipolis will hold an
installation service for its
, pastor on Sunday,
,
. 19. Pastor Mark
•
liriuard and his wife,
Cindy. recently accepted
the c&lt;JII from the church
hoard. The installation
service is scheduled for
I 0:40 a.m .. Sunday, Dec.
19. A dinner will he held
following the ~ervice.
First Church of the
Nazarene is located at
Ill 0
First
Avenue,

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Making the most
of job opportunities
Dear Dr. Brothers: I
graduated from a good college a little more than two
years ago, and I've been
unemployed for almost a
year now. I had a job working at a bookstore when I
graduated. but I W&lt;l'i let go
when the store went out of
business. I've !Jeen looking
for jobs and interviewing,
but haven't been successful
yet. I feel like I'm qualified,
but I just am getting so frustrated with the process. Do
you have any tips or suggestions that might help me get
ajob?-L.F.
Dear L.E: In this economic climate, you can't get
too down on yourself for not
having found a job just after
graduation. The main thing
is to keep a positive attitude
and keep looking. and eventually you '11 be in the right
place at the right time for
that job to come along. But
while you're waiting. there
are some things you can do
to make sure you can take
advantage of whatever
opportunities present themselves. Remember that the
qualifications listed in a job
posting are usually the minimum requirements - with
the number of job-sct:kt::P.&gt;
out there, if you don't at least
meet these minimums. you
may not even get a second
look.
•
Another major part of
your job application is your
resume. lf you haven't
updated it lately. it may be
time to take another look
and do some editing. Using
powerful active words and
selling your experiences
with the right vocabulaiy is
important. You also want to
make sure you're looking in

'\/onage·

Gallipolis. For information. call 446-1772.

Children's program
at French City
GALLIPOLIS
French City
Baptist
Church will present the
children·~ Christmas progr\lm. "The Birth of
Jesus," at 11 a.m.,
Sunday, Dec. 12. French
City Baptist Church is
located on Ohio 160
north,
across
from
Brown's Market. Sunday
school begins at 10 a.m.
Pastor Mark WiJliams
invites
everyone
to
attend.

Forever
Blessed in concert
GALLIPOLIS
Forever Blessed from
Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
will be in concert at 6
p.m.• Sunday, Dec. 12 at
Faith Valley Community
Church in Gallipolis.
Rev. Junior Preston will
he preaching. The church
is located on Bulaville
Pike. Gallipolis.

Browders
in concert
ADDISON

silhouette onto a bright
orange background, or
putting brown on blue.
Paper with a tight pattern
may look good, too. Card
stock works best for the
silhouette,
says
McCollum, who owns a
personalized stationery
and gift company called
Fontaine Maury.
The silhouettes needn't
even be paper. For
example, they can be cut
out of fabric and sewn or
glued onto pillow cases.
"In our bedroom, we
have our two sons on
our two pillows on our
bed. It's really cute,''
says McCollum.

The

Dr. Joyce Brothers
the right places. Many jobs

arc posted mainly online.
and social-networking sites
that are geared toward busi-.
ness and professional net- ;
works can provide a gold- : :
mine of potential jobs.
There's no magic bullet that
will get you yow· dream job
tomorrow. though. It also '
might be time to re-evaluate
what you're looking for in a ·
job. and set your sights to
something more realistic.
No matter what. patience
and persistence will go a
long way.

Slgn Up Online' www loglNtl.com
~~

tafiTc.by&amp;Sa'.-'

LocoiNef

740·992-626G

Syracuse

Community

Center. Porluck, then
workshop for shutins.
POMEROY - Alpha
Iota Masters, 11:30 a.m.
fhe New Beginnings
ted
Methodist
urch in Pomeroy.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053, 7 p.m.,
at the Tuppers Plains
hall. Meal at 6:30. p.m.
Monday, Dec. 13
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township
Trustees. 6:30 p.m. at
the home of Manning
Roush.
.
Tuesday, Dec. 14

l

TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers
Plains
Regional Sewer District
board, 7 p.m.
POMEROY The
Meigs County Trustee
and Fiscal Officer meeting, 6 p.m. at the Drew
Webster Post building
(former
Salisbury
Elementary School).
Thursday, Dec. 16
RACINE - A free holiday dinner will be
served at 5 p.m. at the
Racine
United
Methodist
Methodist
Church.

Church events
I

Thursday, Dec. 9
CHESTER- Dwayne

..

Reliable Internet Access S•oce 1994

GET ONE MONTH

Browders will be in concert at 6 p.m., Sunday,
Dec. 12 at Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor
Rick
Barcus
invites the public to
attend.

Cantata at
French City Baptist
Thefl1 onry pay $25.99./mo Witt' 1 vear agme uent
GALLIPOLIS
French City Baptist
Church will present the
Christmas
cantata,
"Worship the King," at 11
a.m. on Sunday, Dec. 19.
French City Baptist
Church is located on
Ohio 160 north, across
from Brown's Market.
Pastor Mark Williams
invites
everyone
to
attend.

U" tax _ Tid f

Throw out yom big bill and start SAVH4G !lith VONAGE U l
ealling to the U.S. and more than 60 countries for OflE lOW PRIDE.

Cantata at First
Church of th
Nazarene

...

GALLIPOLIS- First
Church of the Nazarene
present
the
will
Christmas cantata, ''The
Love
of
God
at
Christmas," at 10:40 a.m.,
Sunday, Dec. 19. First
Church of the Nazarene is
located at 1110 First
Avenue, Gallipolis. For
information, call 4461772.

Community Calendar
Thursday, Dec. 9
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club,
6:30
p.m.
at
the

2010

Bowman
and
his
"Good Tim Band"
will perform at
7
p.m.
at
Mercy's
Mission,
Chester.
Group consists of
Bowman, his wife,
son, daughter and
son-in-law. Gospel,
Christian rock, combined with comedy
will be presented.
Event
is
free.
Everyone welcome.
Friday, Dec. 10
LONG BOTTOM The
Faith
Full
Gospel Church on
Route
124,
Long
Bottom, will have
special
singers,
Brad and Charity
Towe, 7 p.m.

Call: .866.798.0

�-~~~--~-- --~-------

-- - --

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

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 8,

ObamaS contempt if Congress.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make tro law respecting att
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, atJd to petitiott the
Go,ernment for a redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

Let's cut defense spending, America
BY JASON

C. DITZ

ANTIWAR. COM

With the United States facing out of control deficit
spending and staring down the nose of precipitous tax
increases, which themselves won't put a dent in the
deficit, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) has started
something of a controversy in the conservative movement in calling for Congress to at least consider cuts
in military spending.
Clearly many conservatives looking for ways to cut
are more interested in the low hanging fruit that
decades of increased spending have provided. but the
threat of the national debt is far greater than can be
solved by ending a few pet projects. The rest of the
world is already coming to terms with the need to
massively tone down spending, including on their
militaries, and America must follow suit.
In 2001, the Defense Department's budget $307.8
billion, a staggering amount if one considers it, but a
mere fraction of the upcoming 2011 budget, which
the Obama Administration is anticipating to be in the
realm of $750 billion. That's not only far more than
any other nation is spending, it is nearly as much as
the rest of the world combined will spend. Does
America need a military with ten times the budget of
Russia's?
Runaway military spending was the hallmark of the
Bush Administration, and for two terms President
Bush managed to cow Congress into giving him blank
checks with which to fight myriad wars. But 10 years
later, that growth is still continuing, and President
Obama seems every bit as comf01table in funding a
military more expensive than any in human history.
And for what? Not only are most nations looking to
pare away at sub-$1 00 billion military budgets, but
most of the biggest ones are close allies and many are
NATO member states. America's wars are being
fought in tiny central Asian villages against ragtag
insurgencies.
And this sort of out-of-controf spending is exactly
what such insurgencies want. Officials may continue
to tout these wars as the justification for the impossible expenses, but the fact is that the goal of these
insurgencies, and indeed all insurgencies fighting an
overseas occupying force, is to coax the occupying
power into spending so much money that it bankrupts
itself. The Soviet Union did so in Afghanistan and
America looks well on its way to repeating it.
Which is the real reason Congress must not only
consider cuts but drastic ones - we simply can't
afford it. Even for those Congressmen who believe
that accepting such cuts would put America at risk of
deleterious national security side effects there must
come an understanding that not doing so will put
America in bankruptcy, and soon, which is a far
greater threat to not just national security, but national viability going forward.
Not only is it unwise for America to continue to be
the world's policeman, it as demonstrably unsustainable. Just lO short years of overseas adventurism in
earnest has left America's economy in tatters and its
diplomatic reputation in ruins. Those with designs on
keeping the spigot open envision this war of civilizations lasting many decades, possibly centuries - how
much more damage will that do?
(Jason C. Dit::. is news editor at Antiwar.com, a nonpartisan news and opinion site dedicated to the r·auu
of non-interventionism.)

The Daily Sentinel
Reade

.

~

Correction Policy

Circulation

Circulation Manager: 740-4462342, Ext. 11

General Manager
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
mdsnews@mydailysentlnel.com
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Inside Meigs County
12 Weeks . . . . . ..' 35.26
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52 Weeks . . • . .•.' 227.21

Even for a man known
for
his
arrogance,
Barack Obama's treatment of the Senate in
connection with the New
START
Treaty
is
astounding. His demand
that Senators approve
this defective accord
during the few days
remaining in the lameduck session amounts to
contempt of Congress.
It must not be tolerated,
let alone rewarded.
To be sure, Mr. Obama
·is not the first chief
executive to hold the
legislative branch in low
esteem. Still, his highhandedness when it
comes to the constitutional responsibility of
the Senate to play a real
role in treaty-making
seems particularly contemptuous, and contemptible.
The Obama administration's insistence that
Senators accede to his
efforts to relegate them
to rubber-stamps is without precedent. As a
bipartisan group of fifteen former senators
recently observed, never
before in the history of
the U.S. Senate has the
deliberation and vote on
an arms control agreement been truncated by
their being conducted
during a lame-duck session.
The effort to ram the
treaty through before
Christmas is no more
justified than it is precedented. The claim being
made by the administration and its surrogates
that uncertainty about
Russian activities necessitates such haste is
President
laughable.
Obama
himself
is
responsible for allowing
previous
verification
arrangements to lapse.
He did so over a year
ago and seemed untrou- ·
bled until now about
there being no monitoring systems in place.
And the insights this
accord's limited inspection and monitoring
arrangements will afford
are hardly up to the job

Frank Gaffney, Jr.
of
detecting
the
Kremlin's
inveterate
cheating and other
strategically ominous
developments.
It turns out the real
need for verification lies
elsewhere - namely, in
establishing what Team
Obama has given away
with respect to missile
defense in course of
negotiating
New
START, and in the
months since that treaty
was signed. Last week,
the Washington Times·
ace national security
reporter, Bill Gertz,
revealed that the administration had been caught
lying to Senators concerned about yet another
agreement now being
developed with the
Russians. Apparently, it
would go beyond the
undesirable limitations
on U.S. anti-missile systems - both direct and
indirect - that were
incorporated into the
present accord. (In a
marvelous essay at
National Review Online,
fofDler federal prosecutor Andy McCarthy
demonstrates both the
reality and undesirability
of those limitations.)
The Oeama administration has tried to allay
concerns about any new
negotiations by saying
that they are simply
building on talks the
Bush administration had
previously held with
Moscow on missile
defense cooperation. As
former Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Defense
Keith Payne, who headed up the U.S. d~lega- ,
tion to those talks, pointed out to a Capitol Hill

eould bri&lt;¥e
the~p

bet«ee11 us,,

I

audience last week, his
explicit . instructions
were not to discuss (let
alone agree to) limits of
any kind on our antimissile capabilities. It is
hard to imagine a more
different agenda than
that of Mr. Obama whose ideologically driven antipathy to such
defenses seems about as
deep-seated as his disdain for those in
Congress who have
sought
to
protect
Americans against ballistic missile attack.
Such Senators have an
obligation to understand
what the administration
has actually agreed to
with respect to missile
defense. Yet, as was
made plain by the false
official assurances Mr.
Gertz uncovered, legislators cannot possibly do
so ' unless they have
access to the New
START
negotiating
record - which chronicles the evolution of the
treaty over the many
of
parleys
months
between the two sides.
This document would
also reveal how the U.S.
position on issue after
issue unraveled in the
face of Russian opposition and Mr. Obama's
determination to get a
deal, no matter how bad
its terms. It would. in
short, be an embarrassment as well as an
impediment to ratification of the New START
Treaty.
As a result, every
request by Senators for
the negotiating record
has been spurned in
what Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton recently
characterized as a "nohit" game. Presumably,
she is referring to the
success her department
and the rest of the
administration have had
in suppressing opposition witnesses. inconvenient questions and
unhelpful information.
The question is: Will
the Senate allow such
contempt to be tolerated? If so, one thing is

sure. There will be more ,
where that comes from. ,
Senators are on
that New START es
a
Bilatetal .
lishes
C o n s u I t a t i v e1
Commission (BCC) that
can, and surely will,
make deals that affect
the tre&lt;\ty's terms in
material ways - and do ~
so without the Senate's
advice or consent.
and Russian negotiators:
working on restricting
our missile defenses and
still further reductions in
our nuclear deterrent
forces will be embold ~
ened, confident that their·
handiwork will not be '
subjected to serious
quality-control.
And the administra-:
tion will portray the·
Senate as on board with~
its agenda of denu •
clearizing the wo1~
starting with the Uni
States. It is absoh,Jte y·
predictable that any deal
made to secure approval
of New START that is at'1
odds with that agenda-:.
(notably, Sen. Jon Kyl 's ~
laudable
efforts
to I
secure funding for modernization of the nuclear t
weapons complex) will c
soon be over the side.
In short. if the Senate •
ignores the President's ·
contempt for it as a con- '
stitutionally mandated
partner in treaty'making.
if it ignores the lack of •
precedent for lame-duck''
consideration of an anns''
control treaty, if it'
ignores the need to do
due-diligence, if it'
ignores the request of ;
eleven of those new
j
'
elected to serve in
Senate of the II
~
Congress to hold off on
New START until they '
are sworn in. Senators '
will not only get more
contempt. They will '
have earned it.
(Frank J. Gajjlzey. Jr.
ls President of the 1
Center jar Securin·J
.'
Polic.v, a columnist for
the Washington Times
rmd host of the 1wtimwl- ·
ly syndicated program.
Secure Freedom Radio.)

U.s::

J

·I knew I

(USPS 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is Published Tuesday through Friday,
to be accurate. If you know of an 111 Court Street. Pomeroy, Ohio.
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Our main number is
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Department extensions are: Postmaster: Send address corrections to The Daily Sentinel, P.O.
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2010.

�..

'.

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

Wednes day, December 8 ,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2010

Deaths

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

i Meigs County Forecast

Chamber
From Page A1

Lloyd Thornton
Lloyd 'Thunder" Thornton. 71 ..New Haven. W.Va..
died Monday, Dec. 6, 2010, at h1s home. A funeral
service will be held at 2:30 p.m., Thursday. Dec. 9,
0 at the Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven
Rev. Bill Murphy officiating. The family will
friends one hour prior to the funeral service.
An
online
registry
is
available
at
www.andersonfl1.com.

Alma A. Vanmeter
.
Alma A. Vanmeter, 78 , Po!nt Pleasant. W.Va., died
Dec: 6, 20_1 0, at Holzer SeniOr ~are Center. F~neral
services Will be held·at 1 p.~ .. F~Jday, pee. 10. -0.10,
10
at Deal Funeral Home. B,unal ~·!11 b~
the Mantlla
Cemetery, Robert.burg, \\.Va. Fnends may call from
11 a.m.-1 p.m. Fnday at the funeral home.

Gordon E. Lambert
Gordon E. Lambert. 68, Hampton. Va.. died
Monday, Dec. 6, 2010, at the VA Medical Center.
Hampton. Va. Arrangements will be announ~ed by
Willis Funeral Home.

l

activities at both the local and state level. The
Chamber director will also be responsible for evolving the agency 's website as well a.s the one associa~ed
with local tourism. The Chamber 1s CUITently workmg
on providing its members who don't alr.eady have a
webpagc with a page - an offer ~ood tor one year.
Quickel said this new program Will allow all of the
Chamber's membership to have a presence on the
Internet.
Whcn the new director of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce/Convention and Visitor's
Bureau is chosen. a special board meeting of chamber
members will be called to approved the new hire.
Also. this month there will be no business-minded
luncheon for December. The luncheons will resume
on Jan. 11 and a suggestion has been made these luncheons go from monthly to quarterly. There will also
be no board meeting for the Comention and Visitor's
Bureau this month.

Salvation
From Page A1

I
1

Wednesday: A chance
of flurries between I 0
a.m. and 3 p.m. Mostly
cloudy. with a high near
25. West wind around 8
mph.
Wednesday
Night :
Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 14. West wind
around 6 mph becoming
calm.
T hursday:
Mostly
sunny. with a high ncar
32. Calm wind becoming
south around 5 mph.
Thursday Night: A
chance of snow showers.
mainly after 5 a.m. Mostly
cloudy. with a low around
28. Chance of precipitation is 30 percent.

F riday Night : Partly
cloudy. with a low around
28.
Sa turday:
Mostly
cloudy. with a high near
42.
Saturday Night: A
chance of rain and snow.
Cloudy, with a low around
32. Chance of precipitalion is 40 percent.
Sunday: A chance of
rain and snow. Cloudy.
with a high near 41.
Chance of precipitation is
50 percent.
Sunday Nigh t : A
chance of snow showers.
Cloudy, with a low around
t9. Chance of precipitation i!&gt; 30 percent.

F ridav: A chance of
snow showers before 7
a.m. Partly sunny, with a
high near 43. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Monda,·: A chance of
snow showers. Mostly
cloudy, with a high near
25. Chance of precipitation 1s 30 percent.

Salvation Anny\ assistance programs began in 1891.
The story is that Salvation Army Capt~in .J &lt;?seph ~lcFee
was distraught because so many poor mdJv1duals 1~ San
Francisco were going hungry. He resolved to provtde a
' free Christmas dinner for the destitute and povertyOVBC (NASDAQ)- 20.30
stricken. He only had one major hurdle to overcome- AEP (NYSE)- 35.42
Akzo
(NASDAQ)56.65
BBT (NYSE)- 24.70
funding the project.
His thoughts drifted back to the days :-vhe!l he was a Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 50.44
Peoples (NASDAQ) -15.00
sailor and he rememhcred that at a landmg m England Big Lots (NYSE) - 28.46
Pepsico (NYSE) - 64.68
where the boats came in. there was a large, iron kettle Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 23.78
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.20
called ''Simpson 's Pl&gt;t'' into which passers-by tossed a
Rockwell (NYSE)- 69.57
BorgWamer (NYSE)- 65 73
coin or two to help the poor.
The next day Captain McFee placed a similar pot at a Century Alum (NASDAQ) -14.99 Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) -10.00
Royal Dutch Shell- 64.24
landing in San Francisco along with a sign that read Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.22
Sears
Holding (NASDAQ) - 68.06
WASHINGTO"J (AP) - Three pharmaceutical "Keep the Pot Boiling." He soon had the money to see Charming~ (N.ASOAQ) -357
Wai-Mart
(NYSE)- 55.09
that
the
needy
people
of
the
city
were
properly
fed
at
manufacturers ha\&lt;e agreed to pay more than $421
City Holding (NASDAQ) -34.98
Christmas.
Wendy's
(NYSE)
-4.86
million to settle allegations that the companjes
Collins (NYSE)- 58.22
From
that
time
the
kettle
idea
spread
across
the
counWesBanco
(NYSE)
-18.89
reported inflated prices for numerous products,
try and today in the United State_s ~e. Salvation Army DuPont (NYSE)- 'Ul.96
Worthington
(NYSE)
-17.36
the Justice Department announced Tuesday.
ao;sists more than four-and-a-half milhon people from US Bank (NYSE)- 24.37
The government said the companies knew that Thanksgiving to Christma~.
Daily stock reports aro the 4p.m. ET
..
Gen Electric (NYSE) -17.03
federal health care programs relied on the inflated
Captain McFee'&lt;; kettle 1dea launched a traditiOn that Haney-Davidson (NYSE)- 33.59
closing quotes of transactions for
has spread not only throughout this country. but all
Dec. 7. 2010. prrJVIded by Edward
prices to set payment rates.
JP Morgan (NYSE)- 39.25
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills
The Justice Department now has recovered more across the world. Everywhere, contributions in
Kroger (NYSE)- 20.68
fn Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
than $1.8 billion from pharmaceutical companies Salvation Anny kettles enable the organization to continue not only its Christmas tradition of assistance but Ltd Brands (NYSE) - 31.43
Lesley Marrero in Point Pleasant at
arismg from similar unlawful drug-pricing
its year-round effort at helping those who would other- 1 Norfolk So (NYSE) - 62.83
(304) 674.(]1'74. Member SIPC.
schemes, Assistant Attorney General Tony West wise be forgotten.
told a news conference.
The ''miracle" of Christmas is repeated over and over
In the latest settlements. Abbott Laboratories again through the joy of caring and sharing. The. tradiInc. agreed to pay $126.5 million; B. Braun tional red kettle is now an integral part of the Christmas
Medical Inc. will pay just over $14.7 million and scene, with millions of dollru·s donated each year to aid
Roxane Laboratories Inc. agreed to pay $280 mil- needy families and the homeless, in keeping with the
spirit of the season.
lion.
Assistant Attorney General Tony West said the
POrviEROY - Meigs County 911 dispatched
three companies inflated the "average wholesale
these calls for emergency medical assistance:
price" for do.ze.ns. of their products, . i~cluding
Monday
P-Owerful anttbJOtJcs, used by Med1care and
7:17 a.r~l .. East ~1 emorial Drive. fall: 9:58 a.m ..
icaid patients. They reported these inflated , NEW YORK (AP) _ Stocks closed mixed after Cole Street. nausea; 11:37 a.m .. East Main Street.
•
es to publbhed national pricing lists used by enthusiasm over a deal to extend tax cuts faded.
fall; 3:07 p.m., McNickle Road. pain: 4:14 p.m ..
the government to determine what it \Viii pay docBond prices fell sharply as tr~ders anticipated !he
East Main Street, .;yncope; 6:23 p.m .. South Fifth
tors and druggists who pro\'ided those drugs to tax cu.ts would lead to balloo~mg budg~t deficits.
Avenue. Middleport. uncouncious: 6:54 p.m .. East
their Medicare and Medicaid patients, West said. ~ The y1eld on .the .1 0-year Trea.sury note 4~mped to
Memorial Drive. fall.
"Th's
3.13 p~rcent. Its htghest level smce June.--·
1 practice within the pharmaceutical indusThesday
•
• •
President
Barack
Obama
(\nd
Republican
leaders
try was wtdespread - so much so. that 111.ste~d of aoreed to a broad package of tax cuts and an extenI :20 a.m .• South Second Avenue. Middleport.
Average Wholesale Price. 'AWP,' It was JOkmgly sfon of unemployment benefits. The compromise seizure.
said, really stood for: 'Ain't What's Paid.' Indeed, plan helped send stocks higher in the f!!Orning. The
the only purchasers who paid the inflated, report- extensi.on of the Bush-~ra tax cuts. whtch were ~ue
ed drug price were you, the American taxpayers," to exp1re at the ~nd ~~ t~e ye~r. removed a maJor
w t ·d
source of uncertamty I or hnanc~al markets. The deal
es sat :
. .
. announced late Monday also mcluded a one-year
MIDDLEPORT - Police Chief Bruce Swift
By lea~tng the. government to behe'Ve the dr~gs break on payroll taxes which will put money direct- reported the department is seeking information
sold at ~tgherynces, West added, pharm~ceut.tclfl ly in Americans' pockets. The same is t~ue for the
compames gamed market share by offenng sub- extension of unemployment benefits, wh1ch econo- about a breaking and entering on Oct. 4. and the
stantial profits' to pharmacists and doctors who mists see a~ an effective wa¥ to sti~mlate the econo- recovery of tools and specialty items stolen.
Swift said the police department is investigating
dispensed their drugs. The doctors and dr~gg1sts m~ by get~m~ pe?,ple. spcndJ.I~g ag.am. . .. . .
.
leads
in the case, and is seeking information in
were able to obtain the drugs at one pnce, be
The de,tl 111 \\.lsht.n gton Is a btg deal, satd KI!ll
·
·111fl d ·
Caughey Forrest, cqu1ty research analyst at Fort Pttt particular about a Snap-On Salus Pro EESC316
reimbursed by th.e governme~t at a.n
ate pnce Capital Group. "Investors really do like certainty. scanner. red in color with a black leather case. and
and pocket the difference. \\est satd. .
and they really do like certainty around taxes."
several other Snap-On tools.
"This scheme then guaranteed mass1ve profits to
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 3. or 0.03
Information about the property has been providphysicians and pharmacies that administered and percent. to close at 1 1,359. 16. It had .been up as
ed
to authorities in Ohio and West Virginia. Swift
sold Abbott products to their patients," U.S. many as 89 points before turning lower m the aftersaid.
and anyone with informatiOn is asked to conAttorney for South Florida Wilfredo Ferrer said. noon.
.
.
tact
him
at 992-6424.
"And the generous profit margins helped Abbott
The broader Standard &amp; Poor s 500 mdex rose
Swift
a
lso r eported :
· ·
· ·
.
1
k
or
0.05
percent.
to
I
,223
.
75.
The
S&amp;P
closed
w1thm
ntam a.nd gam custo~er~. ~ 0 the way \ve 00
2 points of its 2010 high reached on Nov. 5 .
• Alan Riffle. Hobart Street. charged with
•
, Med1care and MedJcatd Ill essence foot the
The Nasdaq composite index rose 3.6, or 0.1 per- domestic violence.
bill for Abbott's marketing budget."
cent. to 2.598.49.
• James Cochran. T.R. 246, charged with domesThe case against Abbott came to light in 2006
Treasury prices fell sharply, sendmg their yields
tic vioknce.
when the Justice Department intenened in a higher. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose
• Stephanie L. Fetty, Clifton. W.Va .. charged
whistleblower• Jawsuit filed by a South Florida t&lt;? 3.13 percent from 2.93 P.ercent .late Monday. The
with
theft after allegedly shoplifting at Family
A t
y1eld on the I 0-year note IS a wtdely used bench, 1 , Cl ·
f
company u.n d er t he e d eraI Fa se atms c .
mark for interest rates on loans including mortgages. Dollar. She was also charged with posssession of
The Justice Departme~t sued Roxan~. now forCitigroup Inc. rose 3.8 percent to $4.62 after the Clonazepam. possession of drug paraphernalia,
mally known as Boehnnger Ingelhetm Ro~a.ne government said late Monday it reached a d~al. to · and driving under suspcnson.
Inc., in 2007. It is unclear when federal authonttes sell its remaining stake in the bank for a $12 btlhon
• David S. McDaniel, Langsville. and two juvestarted investigating the allegations against B. profit. Nicor Inc. Jun~ped 4.3 per~ent to $48.79 after
niles, charged v. ith burglary in the break-in at the
Braun. a U.S. subsidiary of German pharmaceuti- the natural gas dtstnbutor smd tt had agreed to ~e
residence of Linda Gilkey, Mill Street.
cal company B. Braun Melsungen AG.
~cqu~red by AGL Resources Inc. for about $2.38 btlSe\eral stolen items were recovered.
.
·
·
All three compames
demed
wrongdomg
an d hon m cash and stock.

Local Stocks

U.S. settles with
3 drug compaWies for $421 M

For the Record
911

Stocks end flat as
rally over tax cuts fades

Middleport Police

'
r

0.?.

said they only settled to end \'.'hat each described
as costly litigation with the federal government.
"The company at all times complied with laws.
regulations and customary industry practices."
said Ann Wainright , spokeswoman for Columbus.
Ohio-based Roxane. " Roxane employees can now
focus all their efforts on providing patients with
high quality, low cost medicines that treat important health conditions and improve patients' lives.
It is for these reasons Roxane has chosen to settle."
elle Infante, spokeswoman for Abbott Park.
ased Abbott, said, "We continue to believe
we have complied with all laws and regulations and have entered into this agreement to e liminate the uncertainty associated with continued
litigation."
At B. Braun. of Bethlehem. Pa., spokeswoman
Susan Denby said, the company "complies with
government laws and regulations and operates
under a robust compliance program to ensure continual compliance. As such, B. Braun was not
required to enter into a corporate integrity agreement as part of the settlement."

. Need a Physician?
Please call 8 a.m. to X p.m.

f

WU'W. pw.rllC!.Y· 0 rg

A~fonday

through Friday:

1.304.674.7295 or
1.877.297.2257

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

�.

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Wedn esday, December 8,

-·- _,._ ·- -

.............__

----·-~ --------o:--.---------------

www.m ydailysentinel.com

2010

.. ...

.__._.~

-_..~

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

Pearl Harbor survivors gather 69 years later
"My teeth was chatterPEARL
HARBOR.
Hmvaii (AP) - Aging ing like I was freezing to
Pearl Harbor survivors death. and it was 84
on Tue:-;day heard reas- degrees temperature. It
surances their sacrifice was awful frightful.'' said
~
would be rcmemhl!rcd Resler.
On Tuesday. fighter
and passed on to future
gl!nerations as they gath- jets from the Montana
ered to mark the 69th Air National Guard flew
anniversary of the attack. above Pearl Harbor in
"Long aftl'J' the last missing man formation
veteran of the war in thl! to honor those killed in
Pacific is gone. Wl! will the attack. which sunk
still bl! here tc IIi ng thl!ir the USS Arizona and
stOI)' and honoring thl!ir with it, nearly 1.000
dedication and sac1ifice." sailors and Marines. In
National Park Service all. about 2.400 service
Director Jonathan Jarvis members died.
Sailor:. lined the deck
told about 120 survh ors
who traveled to Hawaii of the USS Chafee and
from around the country saluted as the 2uided
for the event.
• missile destroyer passed
Mer) Resler. 88. of between the sunken hull
1\ewcastle. Calif.. was of the USS Arizona and
among
tho&lt;&gt;e
who the grassy landing where
returned. He rcmcmhcred the remembrance cerefiring shot:-; at Japanese mony was held.
planes from the USS
After the ceremony, the
Maryland and standing in survivors, some in wheelthe blood of a shipmate chairs. passed through a
hit by shrapnl!l during the "Walk of Honor" lined
attack.
by saluting sailors,

Marines, airm~n and soluiers to enter a new $56
million visitor center that
was dedicated ut the ceremony.
''This facility is the fullillmcnt of a promi:-.e that
we will honor the pu.,t,"
Jarvis said.
U.S . Pacific Heel commander At..lm. Patrick
Walsh said the new cl!nter, which has twice the
exhibition space as the
old one, would tell the
story of those who fought
and won the peace.
"This museum $-ivcs a
view into their hves. a
window into the enormity of their task. an a(&gt;preciation of the heavmess
of their burden. the
strength of their resolve."
Walsh said.
Assistant Secretary of
the Interior Thomas
Stickland
said
the
events of Dec. 7, 1941,
were so traumatic and
marked by heroism that
they
had
become

ingrained in the nation's
consciousness.
"That day is now fundamental to who \VC are
as a people. Its stories
must be preserved. They
must be honored and
they must be shared,"
Strickland said.

USS
Penns)lvania
sailor
DeWayne
Chartier was on his way
to church that uay but
never made it: "I got
interrupted someplace
along the line.'' the 93ycar-old recounted.
He returned to Pearl

Harbor from Walnut
Creek, Calif., to mark
the anniversary and see
the dedication of the
new center.
''It is my duty. It is not
just a visit," Chartier
said. "I felt I should be
part of it."

Obama defends tax deal, says he's kept promises.
WASHINGTON (AP)
-With fellow Democrats
balking. President Barack
Obama declared 'IUesday
that a compromise \\ ith
Republicans on tax cuts
was necessary to help the
economy and protect
recession-weary
Americans. He passionately defended his record
against Democrats who
complain he's breaking
campaign promi~cs.
"Take a tally. Look at
what I promised during
the campaign. There's not
a single thing that I
haven't done or tried to
do.'' the president said.
He staunchly defended
hi-; decision to dl!al with
the GOP in order to
extend about-to-expire tax
cuts for all Americans.
"There arc :-.ome who
wuulu ha\e pu:fcued a

protmcted political fight,"
the president said at a
White House news conference a day after the
\\a:.
compromise

announced. "And I understand the desire for a tight.
J' m sympathetic to that."
Many Democrats in
Congress are unhappy
about the agreement
because it continues tax
breaks for the wealthiest
Americans. But Obama
·aid a long political battle
"would be a bad ckal for
the economy. And it
woulu be a bad deal for
the American people:'
lie promised a renewed
tight during 2012 when
the tax cuts would expire
again. making the point
that he still opposes the
Republican position that
high-income
earners
should get the extension,
too.
The agreement
includes individuals making $:200.000 or more a
year and families making
$250,000 or more.
Obama called "tax cuts
for the wealthy" the
Republicans' ''holy grail."
"It seems to be their
economic
doctrine:·

Obama added. previewing
a likely argument during
his expected re-election
race in 2012.
In the agreement. the
president gave up a key
goal. But he said the deal
would stop taxes from dsing for middle class
An1ericans. "which 1:-.
what I promised."
"It's a good deal for the
American
people.''
Obama said.
Obama cast his decision
to accede to the GOP
position on extending the
tax cuts in stark terms.
''It's tempting not to
negotiate with hostage
takers unless the
hostage gets harmed.
Then, people will question
the wisdom of that strategy. In this case, the
hostage was the American
people, and I wa" not willmg to see them get
harmed.''
He made a point to note
that he long has opposed
- and still opposes -

keeping.
strengthen the rc~overy. go down because of the
He said the American That I' m confident about." compromise. although he
people agree with his
Obama called the news would not predict by how
position. but "I haven't conference in the face of much.
persuaded the Republican Democratic criticJsm of
He also said he believes
Party." Reflecting the the agreement. wh1ch still the jobless ntte will recede
newly
increased needs House and Senate beoau~e the economy is
Republican clout in approval.
growing. even if businessIt was part of a full- es haven't yet picked up
Congress. he said: "I
haven't persuaded (Senate scale defense. with the the pace of hiring enough
Republican leader) Mitch White House arguing the to send large numbers of
McConnell and I haven·t deal would pump billions people back to work.
persuaded (House GOP into the economy at a time
Obama spoke as Vice
leader) John Boehner."
it is recovering from the President Joe Biden met
Even though Democrats worst recession in eight at the Capitol with Senate
will control both houses of decades and unemploy- Majority Leader Harry
Congre~s until January.
ment stands at 9.8 pl!rcenl. Reid and then other
Obama insisted the deal
The plan calls for Democratic
senators.
was necessary to ensw·e extending tax cuts from House Democrats were
enough Republican sup- the Bush era that ,trc due holding their own closedp011 in Congress to extend to expire at year's end. door
later
meeting
unemployment benefits 'renewing jobless hcnelits :ruesday.
.
''It's something that's
that also arc about to through the end of 20 II
expire. and he said a long, and granting a one-year not done vet." said Reid,
bloody battle with the cut in Social Security D-i'\cv. ··\ve ·re going to
GOP would be detrimen- taxes. Several officials have to do some more
tal to rec~sion-wearv ,aid the package could work," he ,aid after
Americans.
• add $900 billion or more meeting with Biden
..This isn"t an abstract to the federal deficit mer members
of
Democratic rank-and-file.
debate. This is real money two years.
for real people,'' he said.
Obama said he expects
"This package \\ill help the unemployment rate to

I

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

Gates se~ hard-won proQress in east Afghanistan

FORWARD OPERATING BASE JOYCE,
Afghanistan (AP) - As
the White House prepares
its review of the
Afghanistan war and the
likely start of troop
reductions next year.
senior defcn~e leaders say
they face a critical challenge on the eastern
Afghan border where
Taliban fighters cross at
will from Pakistan.
Gen. David Petraeus.
the top NATO commander in Afghanistan, told
reporters Tuesday that
while there has been
some progress in the cast.
more work must be done
to counter the Haqqani
network, a stubborn aiQaida-linked
Talihan
insurgent group operating
out of Pakistan.
According to a senior
defense official, Petraeus
has already delivered his
assessment of the war's
progress to the White

Houo.;e, which is preparing a major review of its
war strategy.
The
official
said
Petraeus expects the
review to conclude that
the transition of the country's security to the
Afghans will likely begin
next year as planned, but
the pace is still uncertain.
The review is expected
to find that the troop
surge ordered by the president a year ago has
improved Afghan security, the official said. The
rc\ iew i~ also expected to
make recommendations
on the sit.e of the Afghan
security forces. the ofticial said. though no
details were provided.
Standing Tuesday at the
foot of the craggy mountams just four kilometers
from Pakistan. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates
made his own asse~sment
of the eastern region's
security as he met with

U.S. commanders and
troops.
The perils of war were
brought home as he met
with members of a platoon that lost six men late
last month. The soldiers
were gunned dovd1 by an
Afghan border police
officer.
tvlaj.
Gen.
John
Campbell. the top U.S.
commander in the eastern
said
Kunar
region.
Province home to
FOB Joyce - "is probably the most kinetic
province."
Troops
dropped nine bombs on
Monday alone. The level
of\ iolence there. he said.
was so high that ofticcrs
questioned whether it was
safe enough to bring
Gates in.
Speaking to a Cl'owd of
325 troops packed around
him, Gates said he knows
the tight is tough, hut told
the soldiers they arc making a difference.

First chewing tobacco settlement reached
U.S. Smokeless Tobacco agrees to pay $5 million to N.C. family
NEW HAVEN, Conn.
-- The maker of Skoal
and Copenhagen .;;mokeless tobacco has agreed
to pay $5 million to the
family of a man who died
of mouth cancer in what
is believed to be the first
wrongful-death settlement from chewing
tobacco.
U.S.
Smokckss
Tobacco Co. will pay the
award to the family of
Bobby Hill of Canton.
N.C., who began chewing tobacco at 13. He
died in 2003 at 42.
Attorney
Antonio
Ponvert II I, who represented Hill's relatives.
told The Associated
Pres&lt;; about the agreement Tue&lt;&gt;day. The company later confim1cd the

settlement in a re!!ulatory filing.
~
"This company manufactures and sells a dangerous and defective
product that it :nows
causes addiction. disease
and death in comumers
who use it as intended.''
Ponvc11 said.
Steven Callahan, a
spokesman for Altria.
\Vhich acquired U.S.
Smokeless Tobacco last
year. said the company
doc:) not make anv health
claims about its products, and it supports programs and laws to reduce
underage tobacco use.
Mark Gottlieb, director
of the Tobacco Products
Liability Project at
Northeastern Unhersity
in Boston, said he

..

believes it's the first case
of its kind and predicted
more lawsuits tm·o)\•ing
smokeless tobacco.
"I think this is sort of a
wake-up call to the
plaintiff's bar that there
are a lot of v-ictims of
smokeless tobacco usc
out there. und it's possible the:-~e cases can he
successful."
Gottlieb
said.
Smokeless
tobacco
companies managed to
fend off previous lawsuits. In the past.
lawyers focu ... ed more
on cigarette makers
because of stronger evidence to back up their
claims. even though
smokeless tobacco is
harmful
as
well,
Gottlieb said.

"\Ve arc breaking the
momentum of the enemy
and
will eYentually
reverse it," he said. But he
added. "it will be a while
and we will suffer
tougher losses as we go."
The troops face a
durable enemy in the
Haqqani network, an
insurgent faction blamed
for some of the deadliest
attacks on coalition
forces in Afghanistan.
Campbell said the group
is well-financed and
trained. and moves easil)
over the border with
heavy-duty explosives.
Despite the tough foe.
both Gates and Campbell
told a group of accompa-

nying reporters that the
situation is not grim, and
that progress is evident.
,The troops may not sec
the changes day to day.
Campbell said. but statistics over the past several
months show VIOlence
Ic\·els dropping around
key government and
community buildtngs in
key districts. And incidents involving roadside
bombs fell by 40 percent.
Petraeus said there has
been more coo~ration
recently between U.S ..
Afghan and Pakistan
force:.. Soldier&lt;&gt; arc
working together at three
border stations, and a
fourth will soon open.

U.S. officials have
pressed Pakistan to go
after the insurgents, particularly in strongholds
1n North Waziristan. But
so far the Pakistani military has resisted, fueling speculation that
Islamabad pro\·ides protection
for
the
Haqqanis, aimed at
making them useful
allies after coalition
leave
forces
Afghanistan.
Campbell said his
goal is to move his
forces into the more
populated Afghan ar.
trying to stabilize
region and win over the
populace.

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

·~======================================

Hannan opens season with win over Van, 72-36 Waterford

LoCAL SCHEDUI.£

POMEROY- A st11edulo tl upcoming
high school varally spor11n9 evonla ,
1
nvotvong loam~ from Moogs nnd Gallia
countoes

B Y SARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

~®¥. .12§CemtMltl
Wrestling
Tromb!o at Rrvcr Valley. 6 p m
Wahama a• Nolsorv1lle·York, TBA

ASHTO~. W.Va. The Hannan boys basketball team opened it~
season on Tuesday
evening with an impressive 72-36 victory over
Van.
The host Wildcats took
a 19-7 lead at the end of
the first quarter. and led
31-21 at the halftime
intermission.
Hannan
scored 21 and 20 in the
ti nal
two
quarte&gt;rs.
respectively.
For Hannan. the \ ictory matched last season s
winning total and gave

'IIll!wlly, ~et!llm 2
Boys Basketball
Pomt at Rotchre Couroty, 7'30 p "'
Girts Basketball
Me gs at Alexander, 6 p.rr
Wahama at South Galha 6 p m
Buffalo at Hannan, 7 30 p rr.
Rock H II at RIV8r Valley 6 p m
Southern at Fed Hock, 6 p.m.
~.!l.K!:.~L!.2
Boys Basketba I
Fed Hock at Eastern 6 30 p m
Southern at Belpre, 6.30 p.m.
Meogs at Wellston. 6:30 p.m.
Gallra Aca at Chesapeake. 7:30p.m.
Teays Valley at OVCS, 7:30 p"m.
Jackson at Rover Valley. 6 30 p.m.
Glrhl~k_vibllll

Gallia Academy at Logan 6 p.m
Teays Valley at OVCS, 6 p.m.
Wrestling
~- Pleasant at lndoan ClaSSIC, TBA
ahama at Faorland, TBA
Sll!ur9!1Y~

May umu

coach
ct

Larry

v ktm y in his

fir&lt;;t game back at
Hannan.
Senior D.J. Black led
the Wildcats with a 32
point outing. Derrick
Akers had II points.
Daniel Reynolds and

BY SARAH HAWLEY

.

I

I

Bryan Walters
/photos

Ho~king)

took a 204 lead at
the end of
the
first
quarter.
did
not
trai: in the
" Zuspan
remainder
of the contest. The Lady Falcons 1
led 34-16 at the half and
held a 23 point advantage (47-24) after three
quarters.
Ashle) Templeton led
the Lady Falcons '' ith
15 point &lt;;.
Kelsey
uspan and Karista
"erguson each had eight
points. Paige Gardner
~1:tl'kenzie
and
Gab/itsch each had six
points,
Sierra
Carmichael had five
points. Alex Wood and
Katie Davis each added
four points. and Morgan
Nottingham h&lt;td two
points.
Cheyanne Singer led
Federal llockitlg with
15 points. followed by
Alex Putnam \vith eight
points. Ashton Cale
with six points. Kate
Ru ssell
with
five
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
points. and Whitney
SHAWLEY@MYDAILVTRIBUNE COM
Gillian with two poinb.
The Lady Falco ns
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
will travel to South
Gallia on Thursday - The Ohio' Valley
Lady
evening for a 6 p.m. tip- Christian
Defenders
fell
to
off.
unbeaten Rock Hill on
Monday evening by a
W AHAMA 58,
::.core of 63-42.
FEDERAL HOCKING 36
Martin
Crank
Hock 4 12 8 12
36
Rock Hill Jed 14-5 at
20 14 13 11 - 58
the end of the first quar- Schoonover had nim:
FEDERAL HOCKING (0·3, 0·3
ter and led by a score of points, Emily C;mnan
TVC Hockong): Cheyanne Singer 5
I 6-H at the half. Ohio had five points. and
5 15, Alex Putnal"l 2 4 8. Ashton
Cale 3 0 6, Kate Russell 1 2 5,
Valley Christian trailed Jasmine Withrow had
Whrtney Gillian 1 0 2 10TALS 12
4H-27 at the end of the
11 36.
Three·po.'1t goals t
three quarters. and each one point.
(Russell)
i\Iartin
hnd
four
WAHAMA (2·1 2·1 TVC Hock.ng)
tenm scored 15 points
Ashley Templeton 7 t 15. Kelsey
rebounds.
Cannan
and
in the final quarter.
Zuspan 2 3 8, Karosta Ferguson 4
Rachel
Northup
each
0 8, Palgo Gardner 2 2 6,
.Madison Crank had
Mackenzoe Gabrltscl' 3 0 6, Src•ra
17 points to lead the had three. Jasmine
Carmochael 1 2 5, Ale) Wood 1 2
4, Katre Dav1s 2 0 4 Morgan
Lnd) Defenders. fol - Withrow had two, and
Nottrngha"'l 1 0 2 TOTALS 23 10
lowed by Beth Martin Schoonover had one.
58 Throo·poont goals 2 (Zuspan.
~ l artin led the team in
Carmrchael)
with 10 pmnts. Sarah

Taylor

( 1-l. 0- 1
T
V
C

Hocking)
took possession
with
:07
re maining
i
11
Tuesdav s

v· c

H ocking
g a m e
aoainst
Waterford traili~g by one
point. but could not score
m the closing seconds.
The Wildcats~ ( 1-0. 1-0
TVC Hocking) held on
for the 50-49 victory.
The Tornadoes managed only five first quarter
points.
whi le
Waterford scored eight to
take the early lead. Each
team scored 13 points in
the second quarter.
allowing Waterford to
maintain the three point
lead.
Southern outscored the
visitors 15-12 in the third
quarter to tie the game at
33 after 24 minutes of
play. The teams traded
the lead multiple times in
the fourth. before a Levi
McCutcheon three point
shot game Waterford the
lead for good.
Southern was led by
Ryan Taylor \Vith 16
points. followed by Zach
Manuel with nine points,
Ethan Nlartin with three
Andre\\
points.
Roseberry and Dustin
Custer with six points
each. and Marcus Hill
with four points.
Aaron Miller had 12
points to lead Waterford.
followed by Tate Lang
with II point~. Levi
~tcCutcheon with nine
points, Travis Ball with
eight points. Levi Porter

Moore picks up
first win as
GARS boys coach !
First-year Gal lia Academy
boys basketball coach Tom
Moore picked up his first-ever
varsity victory Tuesday night
during a 61-45 decision over
host River Valley in a non-conference matchup in Bidwell.
Ohio.
'
The Blue Devils never trailed
in the contest and led by as many
as 18 points in the second half.
allowing Moore to become the
first GAHS boy~ coach not
named Jim Osborne to earn a
varsity win with the De\ ils in 42
years.
GAHS improved to 1- 1 this
season. while the Raiders fell to
1-2 overall in the home-opening
loss.
Due to time restraints, complete details of this game wi II be
available in the T hursday sports
editions of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune. The Daily Sentinel and
the Point Pleasant Register.

Lady Defenders fall to Rock Hill, 63-42

•

RACli'JE, Ohio - For
the second straight game
it
came
down to the
final setonds
in
Charles W.
H ayma n
G ymnasium
in
R acine.
Ohio.
Southern

T

BELOW: Gallia
Academy senior
Ethan Moore climbs
over the back of
River Valley senior
Dominique Peck (32)
during a rebound
attempt in the second half of Tuesday
night's non-conference basketball contest in Bidwell. Ohio.

(2-1, 2-1
T
V C

•

BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEYOMYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

RIGHT: First·year
Gallia Academy
head coach Tom
Moore, far right,
challenges his team
before the start of
the fourth quarter
Tuesday night
against host River
Valley in Bidwell,
Ohio.

Lady Falcons
soar past Fed
Hock, 58·36
MASON. W.Va. The Wahama Ladv
Fa Icon~...
made
it
two in a
row
on
Monday
evening
with a ss':::
36 'ictory
o v e r
Federa l
Templeton Hocking.
Wahaf9a

head

holds off
Southern

Gallia Academy rises above Raiders

11

Boys Basketball
Eastern at Manchester 12·30 p.m
River Vallo~ .nt Mc1gs. 6·3:&gt; p rn.
Athens at Gatha Aca. 7 30 p m.
Girls Basketba'l
Eastern at Oak Hrll, 9 a m
Po nt at ChapmanVJie 7 30 p m
Trol"lble at South Gallra. 6 p m
Wrestling
Gall :o Academy, Me.gs. Rrver Valley
at Burt Bu ldors lnVJtalional, 10 a.m.
Pt Pleasar"' at lndoan Class1c, TBA

SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIEUN~ COM

Akers

Black

Jacob Taylor added six point.
Hannan returns to the
points each, Coltin
Campbell and Brad court on Dec. 14 at St.
Fannin each scored five Joseph Central.
points. Dakota Campbell
HANNAN 72, VAN 36
had three points. and
van
7 14 9 5 - 36
fre-;hmen Ty Paige and Hannan
t9 12 21 20- 72
Zach Killingsworth each
VAN (0-1): Matt Whrte 5 3·10 13
scored t~vo points.
Doss 2 2·4 7, Nato Perry 1 ().()
Van was led by .Matt Matt
3, Aaron B as 1 ().() 2, Brandon
White with 13 points. ElSWick 0 2-4 2, .klstm Toler 1 0·3 2,
Lambert 1 0.0 2. Matt
followed by Matt Doss Justin
Workman 1 0-2 2, Chase Moore 0
with seven points. and 2·4 2. M1ck.e Valloe 0 1·3 1
Nate Perry with three TOTALS: 12 10-30 36. Three·poont
2 (Doss, Perry)
points. Aaron Bias. goals:
HANNAN (1•0): D.J Bl~ck 14 4·9
Brandon Elswick. Justin 32, Derrick Akers 4 0.0 11 Jacob
2 2·5 6. Danoel Reynolds 3 0·
Toler. Justin Lambert. 0Taylor
6, Colton Campbell 3 0·0 5, Brad
Matt Workman. and Fannin 2 1·2 5, Dakota Campbell 0
Chase
Moore
each 3·3 3. Ty Paige 1 o-1 2, Zach
1 0·0 2. TOTALS: 29
scored two points and Killingsworth
10·20 72. Three·point goals: 4
Mickie Vallie had one (Akers 3, Colton Camptell) .

assists with seven.
Northup had t\VO. and
Carman added one.
~1artin had two steals
and
Carman
and
Schoonover each had
one. Carman had the
terun s lone block.
Tommi Butler led
Rock Hill with 14
points. Chelsea Harper
ll
points.
added
Brittany Thompson had
I 0 points. Courtney
Duncan added seven
points. Nicole Stamper
had si.\ points. ·Brook
Hanshaw
had
five
poinb. Dani Crabtree
added four poi nts. and
Brook Knipp, Kelsey
Blagg.
and
Lind)
Simpson each had two
points.

The Lady Defender...
host Teays Valley on
Friday evemng at 6
p.m.
R OCK HI LL 63,
OHIO VALLEY CHR .

42

Rock Hill 14 16 18 15 - 63
s a 14 15 - 42

eves

ROCK HILL (3·0)' Tommt Butler 7
0·0 14, Chelsea Harper 3 3·7 11
Brittany Thompson 5 0·0 10
Courtney Duncan 2 3·6 7, Nocole
Stamper 2 1·2 6. Brook Hanshaw
2 1·2 5, Dan• Crabtree 2 0·0 4.
Brook Knopp t 0·0 2 Kelsey Blagg
1 0·0 2, Lrndy Sompson 1 0·0 2,
Ashton Neal 0 0·0 0 TOTALS· 26

8· 17 63
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (1·2)
Madoson Crank 7 :!·5 17, Beth
Mart n
3
2·3 10, Sarah
Schoonover 1 7·12 0. Emily
Carman 2 0·1 5 Jasmine Wothro"'
0 1·2 1 Rachel Northup 0 0·1 0,
Santana W1throw 0 0·0 0, Erin
Hatfield 0 0.0 0 TOTALS 13 13·
24 42
Thfee·polnt goals 3
(Martrn 2 Carman)

Please see SHS, Bl

Chesapeake
defeats
Blue Angels
BY SARAH HAWLEY •
SHAWLEY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
- Despite allowing only
four points
in the first
quarter. the
Ga l l in
Academy
B

I

u

e

Angels (03)
could
not hold on
tO earn the
first win of
the season..
on ~t onday
evening.
Chesapeake ( 1-1)
raIIi ed
from the
e a r I y·
deficit to
1
claim a 5039 victor)
1
in the nonLanham
league
g a m e .
Gallia Academ) led 6-4
after the first quarter. but
trailed IS-13 at the half.
The Lady Panthers Jed
Please see Angels, Bl

•

�- - -- .._,.. -

~

-- - - -- - ~-- - --- -- ~-r·~""........~""'·~~"""";:""4~~~-"'!"""~~-~--·--•a...•a~"'a..z...~c•e'-&amp;Cii!II422. .2•&amp;1!211ZZSCII!. .III!. . . . !.
C

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mytlailysentinel.com

Wednesday, December 8 , 2010

Rio honor~ fall sports teams for accomp~ishments Harang, Padres finalize
$~million, 1-year deal
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- The University of Rio
Grande held a celebration on campus lasl
Friday for the men s and
women s soccer teams
and the volleyball team
for the successful campaigns during the fall.
The RedStorm men c;
lioccer team maneuvered
through the regular season unscathed, winning
the
Mid-South
Conference
championship ~nd earning the
No. I ranking nationally.
Rio followed up the
regular season title with
an MSC Tournament
championship and a I Oth
consecutive appearance
in the NAIA National
The
Tournament.
RedStorm knocked off
Bethel (IN) College in
the first round before
falling to Bethel (TN)
University. 2-1 in the

second round.
Rio soccer finished the
year with a 22-1 record.
The women s soccer
team experienced its best
season in school history.
The RedStotm completed their sixth season of
varsity competition and
compiled a record of 7-91. The seven wins are a
high-water mark for the
program since its inception as a varsity sport in
2005. It served as a club
sport in 2004.
The Rio Grande volleyball team finished the
20 I 0 season with a 22-14
overall record. It was the
first plus-.500 season for
Rio Grande since 1998.
The RedStorm finished
2nd in the MSC East
Division and advanced to
the semifinals of the

MSC Tournament.
Phyllis
Mason.
Director of Human
Resources. was one of
the instrumental players
in setting up the celebration. Mason wanted to
honor them for their
accomplishments on the
field and in the arena, but
also in the classroom.
"This celebration was a
time to celebrate not only
the athletic ability of the
players but also the academic ability," Mason
said. "They are good students and very good represent&gt;atives not only in
the local community but
at the different locations
where they play. All of
Rio should be proud of
them."
Doug Dunn, Director
of the Office of Resident

Student
Life
and
Activities, teamed up
with Human Resources
to coordinate this. event.
"Basically what we
wanted to do was make
sure that we recognized
our student-athletes and
all of our fall sports
teams,'' Dunn said. "We
had the reception for
n:m s and women s soccer as well as our volleyball 'teams on their excellent seasons that they
had.
"We just wanted to
make sure that we recognized their hard work and
dedication."
AII three programs
were weB-represented on
Mid-South Conference
post-season teams and
1re1 s soccer had four
players achieve honorable mention NAIA AllAmerican status as well
as Nick Hewison of the·
RedStorm men s soccer
team, earning NAJA
Scholar-Athlete honors.

RedStorm women gaining national recognition
B v MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAl TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- The good start to the
20 I 0-1 l season by the
University of Rio Grande
RedStorm women s basketball team has grabbed
some attention at the
national level as the
RedStorm received three
votes this week in the
NAIA Division I Top 2S
rating. The three votes
place Rio Grande as the
34th team in the national
poll..
Rio opened the season
with six consecutive victories before dropping
two straight games. The
RedStonn snapped the
two-game skid with an
84-60 victory over West
Virginia
Tech
last
Saturday to open up MidSouth Conference play.

Rio Grande head coach
David Smalley is pleased
to get some recognition
but he is also keeping
things in perspective.
"We certainly do feel
good about being recognized and our players
deserve that;· Smalley
said. "They ve worked
hard at this point and the
Mid-South is just a very
solid league, I think the
three big dogs are right
where they need to be in
the Top 25.''
''We re just kind of in
the middle of the pack
and we re just trying to
survive and who knows.
if we stay healthy and
continue to play well, we
have some big games
coming up and if we do
get a couple of upsets
there s a chance that we
could break into the Top
25," Smalley added. "But

that s not our focus,
that s not our goal right
now, our goal is try to
stay in rhythm and keep
doing the things that
we re doing."
"If we re getting this
kind of recognition and
getting close to breaking
into the Top 25 in the
middle of February then
that will be a different
story,'' Smalley said.
"That 11 be worth its
weight in gold. but right
now. we re excited, I m
happy for the players,
happy for the program,
happy for the recognition, but now the weight
is on our shoulders to
stay there or to climb up
that ladder a little higher
and with our schedule
coming up, by January 8
we ll know if we re justifiab1y in the rankings and
we 11 see where we are at

that point."
The
next ranking
comes out January 10,
2011.
The MSC was wellrepresented in the rankings with Campbellsville
(No. 4), Lindsey Wilson
(No.
15)
and
Cumberlands (No. 18)
among the Top 25.
Pikeville College joined
Rio Grande in the receiving votes category. The
Lady Bears garnered one
vote in the poll.
The last time Rio
Grande was ranked
nationally was January
23, 2009, landing at the
No. 19 spot in the NAJA
Division II national poll.
Rio will return to
action on Saturday at
home in the Newt Oliver
Coaches Classic versus
Ohio-Eastern. Tip-off is
set for 3 p.m.

·College Basketball Shorts
Dayton beats
Central
Connecticut
State 63-61
DAYTON. Ohio (AP)
Chris
Johnson
scored 18 points and
grabbed I 0 rebounds to
help Dayton hold off
Central
Connecticut
State 63-61 on Tuesday
mght.
The Flyers
(7-2)
trailed 29-23 at halftime
after shooting just 7 of
22 in the first half (31.8
percent) and trailed by
as many as 8. 52-44,
with 6:23 left to play.
A 9-0 run by the
Flyers gave them a lpoint lead, 53-52. with
4:37 remaining and
they led 61-59 with 52
seconds remaining.
Josh Parker - making his first career start
for Dayton - stepped
to the free-throw line
with 19 seconds left
with a chance to give
the Flyers a two-possession lead.
Parker hit two free
throws and Dayton held
on for the 2-point victory after a missed jumper
from Shemik Thompson

as time expired.
Markeys Deans Jed

Visit us
online at
www.mydailysentinel.com

Your online
source for news

the Blue Devils (4-4)
with 22 points and eight
rebounds.

Miami (Ohio)
routs Saginaw
Valley State
76-57
OXFORD, Ohio (AP)
Julian Mavunga
scored I 7 points and
Nick Winbush had a
double-double wifh 14
points and I 0 rebounds
as Miami (Ohio) defeat-

ed Saginaw Valley State
76-57 on Tuesday night.
The RedHawks (4-5)
stretched a six-point
halftime lead to nine
before going on a 20-5
run to lead 60-36 with
9:36 to play. The· lead
never dipped below 18
points the rest of the
way. Antonio Ballard
added 1 I points for the
RedHawks, who have
won two of their past
three games.
Mavunga, who made
7 of 8 field goal
attempts, paced a hot-

shooting night for the
RedHawks, who were
28 of 51 from the field
(54.9 percent). . The
Redhawks shot 77.8
percent (14 of 18) from
the foul line after averaging 82 percent from
the line in their previous four games.
Patrick 0 Brien led
Saginaw Valley (3-3),
an NCAA Division II
school, with 14 points.
Chris
Webb
and
Michael Fugate added
10 points each for the
Cardinals~

LAKE BUENA VISTA. Fla. (AP) - Right-hander Aaron Harang and the San Diego Padres have
finalized a $4 million. one-year contract.
The deal announced Monday at the winter meetings includes mutual option for 2012 with a buy-.
out.
The 6-fool-7 Harang .spent the past 7? seasons ,
with the Cincinnati Reds. winning 16 games in
2006 and 2007. Bttt he has struggled the past three
years, going 6-7 with a 5.32 ERA last season when
he was bothered by back spasms.
The 32-year-old Harang is from San Diego and
went to college at San Diego State.
Harang said he s healthy and eager to pitch for
the Padres.
''I m excited for this," Harang said Monday
night. "I think it s nice to be able to get a fresh
sta1t. J m looking to get back out there and get back
to my 200-plus innings and help us try to do something."
Harang joined the Padres on the same day they
finalized a deal to send All-Star first baseman
Adrian Gonzalez to the Boston Red Sox for three
prospects and a player to be named.
The Padres finished 90-72 last year, falling one
win short of a playoff berth.
'

a

SHS
fromPageBl
with five points, Alex
McCutcheon with three
points.
and
Chad
Offenberger with two
points.
Taylor
had
five
rebounds
for
the
Tornadoes.
Martin,
Roseberry, and Custer
each had four. and
Manuel had two. Taylor
had two assists and two
steals, Manuel added two
steals,
and
Martin,
Roseberry, and Custer
each had one steal.
Taylor and Manuel each
took a charge.
For Waterford. Ball
had seven rebounds.
Miller had six rebounds.
Porter had four rebounds.
Levi McCutcheon and
Brian Moore each had

Angels
from PageBl
by a score of 38-27 after
three quarters, with each
team adding 12 points in
the final quarter.
Morgan Daniels led
the Blue Angels with 21
points, followed by
Mattie Lanham and
Heather Ward each had
six points, and Samantha
Barnes, Halley Barnes
and Tara Young each had
two points.
Daniels
had
14
rebounds. Lanham and
Halley Barnes each
added four. Young and
Samantha Barnes had
three each. and Ward had
two. Samantha Barnes
had five steals. Lanham

r

and
two
rebounds,
Offenberger had one
rebound.
Levi
McCutcheon and Porter
each had three. assists. •
Waterford had 14
turnovers and Southern
had 10.
The Tornadoes will
travel to Be lpre on
Friday at 6:30 p.m.
WATERFORD 50,
SOUTHERN 49
Waterford
Southern

8
5

13 12 17 13 15 16 -

so
49

WATERFORD (1·0, 1-0 TVC
Hocking): Aaron Miller 4 0-3 12, Tate
Lang 5 1-5 11 . Levi McCut~heon 2
4-4 9, Travis Ball 3 2-2 8, Levi Porter
2 1-1 5. Alex McCutcheon 1 o-o 3,
Chad Offenberger 1 0·0 2, Austin
Shriver 0 0-0 0. TOTALS: 18 8·15
50. Three-point goals: 6 (Miller 4,
Alex
M&lt;!Cutcheon,
Levi
McCutcheon).
SOUTHERN
(H. 0-1 TVC
Hocking): Ryan Taylor 4 6-6 16,
Zach Manuel 4 1-3 9, Ethan Martin
3 2-3 7, Andrew Roseberry 1 4-9 6.
Dustin Custer 1 4-4 6, Marcus Hill 2
0-Q 4, Dyllan Roush 0 0-0 0.
TOTALS: 14 17-25 49. Three-point
goals: 4 (Taylor 3, Martin).

and Ward each had two,
and Young and Halley
Barnes each had one .•
Ward led the team in
assists
with
three,
Samantha Barnes had
two, and Danie ls and
Lanham each had one.
Amanda Ruffner led
Chesapeake with 20
points. Kristen Webb,
Sarah Mayo, and Jackie
Nelson each had eight
points, and Mackenzie
Moore had six points.
CHESAPEAKE 50,
GALLIA ACADEMY 39
Gallla Aca. 6
Ches.
4

7 14 1214 20 12-

39
50

GALLIA ACADEMY (0-3): Morgan
Oaniels 21, Mattie Lanham €!.
Heather Ward 6, Samantha Barnes
2, Halley Barnes 2, Tara Young 2.
CHESAPEAKE {1-1): Amanda
Ruffner 20, Kristen Webb 8, Jackie
Nelson 8, Sarah Mayo 8. Mackenz1e
Moore 6.

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5101
$475 mon +dep, all
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
Spom Utility
alec. 304-674·0023
Now
Available
at
or 304-610-0776
YJJlJAG.E
Carmichael Equipment 04 jeep wrangler
Get One Month
740-446-2412
$7800, 6cyl. auto. 2BR in Gallipolis
FREE! Unlimited
soft top. 256-1618 or area 709-1657 or
Hay, feed, Seed,
local and long
446-1271
256-6200
Grain
distance calling for
2BR ap'ts. 6 m1. from
Want To Buy
only $25.99 per
Good mixed hay, sq.,
Holzer. some utilities
month.
$2.50 4x5, round
pd. or appliances
Call today!
bales $20.00. Stored Oiler's Towing. Now avail. $450/mo +
1-866-798-0692
inside 740-446-2075 buying junk cars dep. 7 40·418-5288
w/motors or w/out. or 988-6130
·=====~= 900
or
Merchandise 740-388-0011
Professional Services
740-441-7870.
No
FIRST MONTH
FREE
Sunday call
2 &amp; 3 BRAPTS.
Fuel I Oil I Coal I
TURNED DOWN ON
$385 &amp;
Wood/Gas
SOCIAL SECURITY
Want to buy Junk
UP, Sec. Dep $300
551
Cars,
call
740-388Boiler
Central
No Fee Unless We
&amp; up,
wood 0884
Outdoor
Wint
AJC, WID hook-up,
1-888-582-3345
Furnaces
tenInstant rebate up
ant pays electric.
Real Estate
3000
Sales
EHO
~----- $1.000 00 740)245SEPTIC
PUMPING 5193
Ellm VIew Apts.
Gallia Co. OH • and
304--882-3017
Miscellaneous
Mason Co. WV. Ron
1 br apt. $325 a mo;
Evans Jackson, OH Jet Aeration Motors
Houses for Sale
3 br house $425 plus
800-537·9528
repaired, new &amp;
dep. &amp; uti!., 3rd St,
rebuilt In stock. Call
740-2471 br garage apt., Racine,
Ron Evana1-800·
Security
$45,000; 2 br. home, 4292
537-9528
$47,500; for more Middleport
Beech
Absolute Top dollar- info, call 740-992- St., 2 br, furnished
silver/gold coins any 3823
AD.T
senior living apt., util.
10K/14K/18K
gold
Free Home
pd, No pets, dep &amp;
jewerly, dental gold,
Security System
ref, 740-992-0165
US 2 story, 3BDR.. 1
1935
with $99 installation pre
Middleport
Beech St.
currency. proof/mint bath. screened BP, 2
and purchase of
sets. diamonds, MTS car detached garage, furnished apt., Senior
alarm monitoring
services I rom ADT Coin Shop. 151 2nd full basement Call living, No pets. dep.
&amp; ref.. Utilities paid.
Gallipolis. 304-812-4202
Avenue.
Security Services
740-992-0165
446-2842
Call1-888-367-2171

300

Services

Appliance Services

Joe's 1V F~epa1r on
most
makes.
&amp;
Models. House Calls
304·675-1724

to

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
/1
Borders$3.00/perad
~
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;l.

POLICIES. Ohio Vtlley PubUihlng reaerves the right to edit. re)ecl. 01 cancel any ld at eny time. Erroo&amp; mUIII be repo&lt;1ed on l'le tlr£1 day ot j)WIIc:allon and the
Trl~rtlnti·Aeglller wtll be responsible tor no mote than the cost ot the epac:e occJpied by the t~ror and only the ru•st tll9efll0n. We aha!! not be llablt IO&lt;
any lot8 or tlQ)tneelt.l results trcwn the publication or om11111on ot an adVtrtleemtnt Corree11on Will bll mldeln thO tlret avaRobl~eanlon. ·Box number ada
' " elwaya connclenlial. • Cll'ltnl rate card appliet. • All real erltllc advertisements are eub)ecl to the Federal Fair Housing Act 01 1S68 • Thl9 RGW~flal* ,
~pta only htlp Wllnted ada mNIIfll EOE lllndardl. We will not knofllngly aceep( any ldvert•llll9 In ~lolltlon ol thO law Will not bll re:tpOnllblct f&lt;lf any
errore tn an ad taken ov111 the phone

lJ:J

Lost &amp; Found

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:E

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •

/)earlliru
HOW TO WRITE AN AD

ctUSTGSAY

Apartments/
Townhouses
;;;;;;;o=o=o=o=o=o=
Nice
2
bedroom
downstairs apt. . with
kitchen appliances,
a.c. gas furnace, and

Houses for Rent

6000

Employment

Medical

Office space for rent
Ohio Valley Home
$500.00 plus deposit ======~ Health Inc. accepting .
and
utilities/
Accounting/
Applications
for, ,
A1des. Apply at 1480
Financial
possibility would sell.
Jackson
Pike,
Good location in
or
on
washer dryer hook- point pleasant near Part time teller, 20-25 Gallipolis
internet
@
County
up. Located in Pt. Mason
hours a week, some
www.ovhh.org.
Pleasant.
375.00 courthouse.
computer knowlege
&lt;http://www.ovhh.org
plus 200.00 deposit.
helpful, send resume
304-675-6375
or Two bedroom garage to Daily Sentinel. PO I&gt; or Phone 740)441·
1393
Competitille
804-677-8621
apartment with living
Box
729-34,
room eat-in kitchen,
wages and Benefits
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
Spring Valley Green and 1 1/2 baths.
including
health
Apartments 1 BR at $400.00 monthly rent
insurance
and
$395+2 BR at $470 plus deposit. Utilities ~=====~ mileage.
Not included,
Help Wanted·
Month. 446·1599.
General
Part lime position for
Houses for Rent
Four bedroom house
professional
off1ce
living room, Full time position
1 BR Cottage for with
available
as
vet Must posses good
room.
family
dining
Rent
Off
street
assistant must be phone skills and
Pkg,Very Clean $300 room, kitchen. and 1 able
to
work client
$400.00
1/2
baths.
mth &amp; Uti. 446-8919
communications
weekends.
Please
monthly rent plus
or446-2074
skills
Be able to
deposit utilities Not drop off resume@
Please
R1verbend
Animal multi-task.
included.
3 BR mobile $475
Clinic 1520 ST AT send resucne with
4Br house $650 +
two references. Box
Contact ERA Town &amp; 160. NO phone calls,
dep. 740-367-7762
100
c/o
Point
Please!
Country Real Estate
Pleasant
Register
Cottage on the river, at 1911 Jefferson
Time 200 Main St. Pt
Part
Point
close to town, 2BR Boulevard,
Merchandiser_Coca Pleasant. WV 25550
WV.
1BA garage w/loft. Pleasant,
Cola
Screened porch over 25550 to fill out Coco Cola is now
' Part304·
looking river, large application.
hiring for a Part Time Time/Temporaries
lawn. Lease. Sec. ck. 675-5548 R L. SteinMerchandiser for the
Super
8
has
ref. $1000 dep. &amp; Broker
Mason, WV area.
$750 mon Ava.Dec
immediate opening
E1tails
stocking
for a PT 3rd shift
5th 446-4922
Manufactu~ed
4000
product in assigned
desk clerk. Must
Housmg
accounts.
Downsizing?llive
apply in person and
Candidates
must
alone? 2 BR near the
No
Phone
Calls
have a good driving
Rentals
Cinema/Hospital
record &amp; the ability to Please
304-657-6378
3BR for rent in repetitively lift 75 lbs.
Servlc~ I Bus.
------9000
Directory
3BR on Chatham, Cheshire. $425 mon To apply visit our
at
Gallipolis, HUD, Rent + dep. 740-441-2707 website
dep &amp; utlilites. 606- 3 bedroom, 2 bath, www.cokeonsolidate
Miscellaneous
d.com job #9542
928-5036
total
electric,
Free Junk Give-away.
Syraqcuse,
$475
740-388-0122 for more
plus
deposit
&amp; Cosmetologist
3BR 2BA walking
wanted,
Pomeroy mformation.
utilties,
740-992distance to South
Gallia High School, 7680,740-416-7703 area, 740-992-2200
Need a place to meet?
Mercerville. Ref $650
Furnished
mobile
Mechanics
St Peter Lutheran
mon + dep req. 740· home for rent. 740- ~-=;;;;;;;;;-=~-=-= Church. has a social '
446-3756 call 5-9 pm 992-6862
Red's Rollen Garage room with kitchen for
IS seeking a qualified rent. Seats about 50.
1 br. garage apt ..
Sales
Automotive
Good for family or
$450; 2 br home,
organizations. For info.
Clayton
x
Technician,
benefits
14 70
$450, No smoking, 94
Call
Betty 304·675-•
BR as is must be offered Ph. 740-3883275
No pets, 740-992- 2
8547
740-446moved!
3823
1271
1 br house, gas &amp;
New
Foreclosure
water included, $400
16x80 never been
a mo., furnished or
titled Call for an
unfurnished, clair &amp;
incredible
deal
heat, 740-992-4163
740)446-3093
leave a message.
3BR
dble-wide
furnished, Sr 143·
Pomeroy. $625 mo.
incl. most uti. &amp; lawn
care. 740-591-5174
Racine area, 1 br.
house. $400 month,
$400 deposit, 740416-3036
bdr. all utilities
paid.
Near
downtown.
HUD
accepted. (304) 3600163
House
for
rent.
Lincoln Ave Pt. Call
304·812-5011
or
740-645-5161.
Nice 2 bdr. House for ,
rent
in
Point
Pleasant.
425.00
month
425.00
deposn.
All new
304appliances.
675·1206. or 304593-4959
1&amp;3 BR houses in
Syracuse No pet's
HUD app. 675-5332
Wk end 591-0265

aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
sedlon to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Tbank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory''
of a loved one.
For more Information, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

®allipolts IDaih! m:nlmnr
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint

{tllrasant

l~rgu~trr

(304) 675-1333

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
100

Legals

NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC HEARING
Village of Pomeroy
intends to apply to
the Ohio Department
of Development for
funding under tho
Community
Development Block
Grant. Water and
Sewer, a federally
funded
program
administered by the
Village of
state.
Pomeroy IS eligible
for an estimated
$500,000.00
for
FISCal Year 2010
CDBG
funding ,
provided the Village
meets
applicable
requirements.The
first of two public
heanngs will be held
on December 20,
2010 at 1:00 PM in
the
Village
Hall
located at 660 East
Marn
Street
to
provide
residents
with
pertinent
rntormat1on about the
CDBG
program.Residents
are encouraged to
attend this meeting
to provide their 1nput
on · the
Vrllage's
CDBG
program. Village
of
PomeroyKathy
Hysell,
Clerk/Treasurer (12)
8
IN THE MATIER OF
SETILEMENTOF
ACCOUNTS,
PROBATE
COURTMEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
Accounts
and
vouchers
of
the
following
named
fiduciary has been
filed in the Probate
Court
of
Meigs
County, Ohio for
approval
and
settlement.
FILE
NO; 20052019 ·The
Filth Annual Account
of Angela Watson
of
the
Guardian
person and estate of
Gifford
Jennings
Reynolds, Sr. , an
incompetent person
Unless
exceptions
are filed thereto, said
account will be set
for hearing before
satd Court on the
1Oth day of January,
2011 , at which time
sa1d account will be
considered
and
contrnued from day
to day until finally
disposed of
Any
person
Interested
may
file
wntten
exception to said
account or to matters
pertaining to the
execution of the
trust, not less than
five days prior to the
date set for heanng
L. SCOTI POWELL
Judge
Common
Pleas
Probate
Court,
Division
Meigs County, Ohio
(12) 8

FIND A JOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

100

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

www.mydailysentinel.com

Legals

COURT OF
COMMON
PLEASMEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
BAC Home Loans
Servicing, LP fka
Countrywide Home
Loans Servicing LP
Plaintiff, -vs- Rolland
et al.
E. Smith
Defendants.
Case
No..
10-CV-110
Fred
W.
Judge·
Crow, Ill
LEGAL
NOTICE IN SUIT
FORFORECLOSUR
E OF MORTGAGE
Rolland E. Smith,
whose last known
address is 32359
Happy Hollow Road,
OH
Middleport,
45760
and
the
unknown
herrs,
dev1sees, legatees.
executors.
administrators,
spouses and ass1gns
and the unknown
guardians of minor
and/or incompetent
herrs ot Rolland E.
Smith, all of whose
residences
are
unknown and cannot
by
reasonable
diligence
be
ascertained, will take
notice that on the
14th day of October,
2010, BAC Home
Loans Servicing. LP
fka
Countrywide
Home
Loans
Servicing LP filed its
Complaint in the
Common
Pleas
Court
of
Meigs
County, Ohio in Case
No. 10-CV-110, on
the docket of the
Court, and the object
and demand for relief
of which pleading is
to foreclose the lien
of plaintiff's mortgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to wit:
Property
Address:
32359 Happy Hollow
Road,
Middleport,
OH
45760,
and
being
more
particularly described
in plaintiff's mortgage
recorded in Mortgage
Book 232, page 45,
of
this
County
Recorder's
Office.
The above named
defendant is required
to answer within
twenty-eight
(28)
days
alter
last
publication January
05, 2011 , WhiCh shall
be published once a
week
for
three
consecutive weeks,
or they might be
denied a hearing 1n
this case. (11) 24,
(12) 1, 8
The State of Ohio,
Meigs County.THE
BANK
OF NEW
YORK,
AS
TRUSTEE
ON
BEHALF OF THE
REGISTERED
CERTIFICATE·
HOLDERS
OF
GSAMP
TRUST
2004·
SEA2,MORTGAGE
PASSTHROUGHCERTIFI
CATES,
SERIES
2004-

100

Legals

100

SEA2PLAINTIFFVs.
Case No. 1O-CV033TINA
MARIE
FRALEY
aka
TINA M FRALEY, et
ai.Defendant
In
pursuant of an Order
of Sale. in the above
entitled action. I will
offer for sale at
public ~ucticn, at the
front door of the
Courthouse steps, in
the above named
County, on Friday,
the
17th day of
December, 2010. at
10:00 o'clock AM.,
the
following
described
real
estate:Situated In the
Township o' Scipio,
County of Meigs and
State of Ohio:Being
a part of a tract of
land described in
Volume 263, Page
847, Meigs County
Deed Records and
being
more
particularly described
as follows:Beginning
at the southeast
ol
the
corner
northeast quarter of
Section 34, thellce
South 03 deg. 47
min. 30 sec. East
149.49 feet along a
fence line to a point
in the right of way of
State Route 143;
thence along said
right of way South 87
deg. 29 min. 46 sec.
West, 149.48 feet to
a point; thence South
80 deg. 49 min. West
309.17 feet to a
point; thence leaving
said right of way
North 02 deg. 14
min. 38 sec. East
201 44 feet t:&gt; an iron
pin set in ;~rantor's
North line passing an
iron pin set at 23.02
feet; thence, along a
fence line North 85
deg. 56 min. 26 sec.
East, 436.07 feet to
the
point
of
beginning
and
containing
1.868
acres.Subject to all
leases, easements
and rights of way of
record.Survey
by
John M. Branner,
Registered
Land
Surveyor,
#6805,
1994.Parcel No. 17·
00290.000Mpre
commonly known as:
32300
SR
143,
Pomeroy,
Oh10
45769Said Premises
Appraised
at
$15,000.00A'ld
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of that amou'lt.Terms
of Sale· 10% down
day of saleAobert E.
BeegleErin
M.
(0075531)
Laurito
SheriffAttorney
for
Plaintiff
County,
Meigs
OhioNovember 24th,
December 1st &amp;
December 8th

Legals

ti_QIIC_E; is hereby
on
given
that
Saturday December
11 at 10:00 a.m. a
public sale wlll be
held at 211 W.
Second , Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company is selling
for cash in hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
1996 Chrysler Cirrus
1C3EJ56H3TN23124
2
2002 Hyundai Accent
KMHCF35G12U2270
14
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The
above
described collateral
will be sold "as iswhere is", with no
expressed or implied
warranty given
For
further
information, or for an
appointment
to
collateral,
inspect
prior to sale date
contact
Cyndie or
Ken at 992-2136
(12) 8, 9, 10.

SHERIFF'S
SALE
OF
REAL
ESTATECASE NO..
10C V0064Fiagstar
Bank,
FSBPiaintiff
vs.Laurie K. Allman,
et
aL,DefendantsCOUR
T OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOin
pursuance of an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said
Court in the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at
public auction to be
held on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on December 17,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.
of said day, the
following described
prem•ses:A copy of
the complete legal
description can be
at
the
obtained
County
Meigs
Recorder's
Office,
OR Book 217, Page
887Permanent
Parcel Number 05·
00501-004 and 05·
00501-005Property
address 27330 Old
State Route 346,
OH
Albany,
4571 OAPPRAISED
AT: $40,000.00 and
cannot be sold for
less than two-thtrds
of
that
amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) of the
purchase price down
at the time the bid is
accepted . Balance
to be pa1d withtn

Wednesday, December 8, 201 0 •

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

100

Legals

100

Tiwty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within
said Thirty (30) days
shall bear 1nterest at
the rate of Ten
Percent (10%) per
annum from the date
of sale.ROBEAT E.
BEEGLE,
ShenffMeigs County,
OhioC
Scott
CasterlineAttorney
for
Plaintiff24755
Chagrin Blvd, Suite
200Cieveland,
OH
44122(216)
360720011/24/10,
12/01/10, 12/08/10

Sheriff's Sale of Real
EstateRevised Code,
Section 2329.25The
State of Ohio, Meigs
County
Deutsche
Bank
National
Trust
Company, as Trustee
NovaStar
for
Mortgage
Funding
Trust. Series 2006-6
vs.
Pla1ntiff
10 cv 028
No.
Marjorie Stone, et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of an
Order of
Sale

SHERIFF'S
SALE
OF
REAL
ESTATECASE NO.:
10CV074Central
Mortgage
CompanyPiaintiff
vs.Robert Norwood,
et
ai.,DefendantsCOUR
T OF COMMON
PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIOin
pursuance ot an
Order of Sale to me
directed from said
Court in the above
entitled action, I will
offer for sale at
public auction to be
held on the Front
Steps of the Meigs
County Courthouse
on December 17,
2010, at 10:00 a.m.
of said day, the
following described
premises:A copy of
the complete legal
description can be
obta•ned
at
the
Meigs
County
Recorder's
Office,
OR Book 141, Page
339 and OR Book
230,
Page
817.Permanent
Parcel
Number
1500402000Property
address 235 Walnut
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760APPRAISED
AT: $22,500.00 and
cannot be sold for
less than two-thirds
of
that
amount.
Terms of Sale: Ten
Percent (10%) of the
purchase price down
at the time the bid is
accepted . Balance
to be paid within
Thirty (30) days. Any
sum not paid within
said Thirty (30) days
shall bear interest at
the rate of Ten
Percent (10%) per
annum from the date
of sale.ROBERT E.
BEEGLE,
SheriffMeigs County,
Oh1oC
Scott
CasterlineAttorney
Plaintlff24755
for
Chagrin Blvd, Suite
OH
200Cieveland,
44122(216)
360720011/24/10,
12/01/10, 12/08/10

_
in
the
above entitled action.
I will offer for sale at
public
auction.
m the second floor
lobby
of
the
In
Courthouse

FIND
BARGAINS
EVERY DAY
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

100

Legals

_ _ _ _ __

in

the above named
county, on
Friday,
the
17th day of
December. 2010 at
10:00AM
the
following described
real estate, situate in
the County of Meigs
and State of Ohio,
and Township of
Orange
to
wit:Situated in the
State
of
Ohio,
Township,
Orange
Meigs County and
be1ng
more
particularly described
as follows: Situated
in Orange Township,
Meigs County, State
of Ohio and being in
Section 16, Town 4
North, Range 12
West of the Oh1o
Company's Purchase
and being described
as follows: Beginning
at an iron pin set,
said iron pin being
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East. a distance
of 1150.58' from an
iron p1pe found at the
assumed Southwest
said
corner
of
Section
16;Thence
South 89 degrees 43'
13" East, a distance
of 366.73' along an
agreed upon line
between Wingrove
and Wingrove to an
iron pin set, passing
the centerline of
Township Read 295
at 52.96' and passing
the centerline of a
newly
created
(currently
used)
20.00' wide right of
way at 68.67' and
passing an iron pin
set at 98.67' for
reference;Thence
South 00 degrees 16'
47" West, a distance
of 139.62' along an
agreed upon line
between
Wingrove
and Wingrove to an
iron pin set;Thence
North 89 degrees 43'
13" West, a distance
of 357.25' along an
agreed upon line
between Watson and
Wingrove to
the
Point of Beginning,
passing an iron pin
set at 305.00' and
passing
the
centerline
of
Township Road 295

·

Legals

at
335.00
said
described
tract
containing
1 16
acres, more or less,
excepting all legal
easements
and
rights
of
way.Excepting and
Reserving
unto
James E. Wingrove,
(grantor on D.V. 232,
Page 341) his he1rs,
successors
or
assigns. a right of
way/easement
for
ingress and egress
purposes to be used
in
common
with
others and all parties
using said nght of
way/easement shall
be responsible to
maintain and care of
same and whereas
the
right
of
way/easement
is
more fully described:
Situated in Orange
Township,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and be1ng in Section
16, Town 4 North,
Range 12 West of
the Ohro Company's
Purchase and being
described as follows:
Beginning a point in
the centerline of
Township Road 295,
said
point
being
South 89 Degrees
43' 13" East, a
distance of 1150.58'
(iron pin set) and
North 03 degrees 36'
18'' West, a distance
of 139.94' along an
agreed upon line
between White and
Wingrove (~ron pin
set) and South 89
degrees 43' 13" East,
a distance of 52.96'
along an agreed
upon line between
Wingrove
and
Wingrove to a point
in the centerline of
Township Road 295
South
04
and
03"
degrees 01 '
West, a distance of
31 .22' along
the
centerline of said
Township Road 295
from an iron pipe
found
at
the
assumed Southwest
corner
of
said
Section 16; Thence
North 29 degrees 56'
37" East, a distance
of 35.85' along the
of
an
centerline
existing
currently
used dnveway to a
pornt on the North
line of the newly
resurveyed Wingrove
1.16 · acre parcel,
O.R.V. 172, Page
481 ; Thence North
39 degrees 41' 46"
East. a distance of
22.01' along
the
centerline
of
an
existing
currently
used driveway to a
point on the South
line on the Eynon
3.07 acre parcel,
O.R.V. 106, Page
781, excepting all
legal easements and
rights
of
way.
are
Bearings
assumed and are for
angle measurement
only. The
above
description is based

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740-91!5·4141
740-416-11!.34
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1

1

100

Legals

on a survey in
January 2006 by E &amp;
E
Borderline
Surveying, Robert A.
Eason, Ohio PS. No.
7
033.Further
Excepting
and
reserving
unto
James E. Wingrove,
tGrantor in D.V. 232,
Page 341) his heirs,
successors
and
ass1gns a right of
way/easement
for
ingress and egress
purposes to be used
1n
common
with
others and all parties
using said right of
way/easement shall
be responsible to
maintain and care of
same and whereas
the
right
of
,way/easement
is
more fully described :
Situated 1n Orange
"'ownship,
Meigs
County, State of Ohio
and being •n Section
'6, Town 4 North,
Range 12 West of
the Ohio Company's
Purchase and being
described as follows:
Beginning a point in
the centerline of
Townsh•p Road 295,
said point being S 89
degrees 43' 13" East,
a
distance
of
' 150.58' (iron pin
set) and N 03
degrees 36'
18"
West, a distance of
139.94 along an
agreed upon line
between White and
Wingrove (iron pin
set) and South 89
degrees 43' 13" East.
a distance of 52.96'
along an agreed
upon line between
Wingrove
and
W1ngrove to a point
in the centerline of
Township Road 295

100

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street , Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

Legals

from an iron pil t
found
at
assumed Southwe
corner
of
said
Section 16; Thence
South 89 degrees 43
13" East, a distance
of 313.78' along the
North line of the
newly
resurveyed
Wingrove 1.16 Acre
Parcel, O.R.V. 172,
Page 481 to an iron
pin set, passing an
iron pin set at 45.71'
for
reference
excepting all legal
easements
and
rights
of
way.
Bearings
are
assumed and are for
angle measurement
only.
The
above
descript1on is based
on a survey in
January 2006 byE &amp;
E
Borderline
Surveying, Robert R ,
Eason. Ohio P.S. No. ·
7033.
Said
Premises Located at
40002 Christy Road,
Reedsville,
•
45772
Premises Appraise
at
$60,000.00
and cannot be sold
for less than two~
th~rds
of
that
amount. TERMS OF
SALE: 10% deposit
Rachel
A
Leier
Attorney Robert E.
Beegle
Sheriff
Meigs
County,
Ohio (11) 24. (12) 1,
8, 201 o •

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�Wednesday, December 8, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLOND IE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

Mort Walker
WeLL, YOU DID
l.II&lt;E THE WA'¥
SAR61!:WA6
DISCIPLINING
THE-MEN

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk
DID L.\?t) 1"URI-J 11-tEM
OIJ I~ "TJ..tE £l&lt;Ac1"0~
··(f..(A'"f :! IOI..D 4bV?

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE
A
AAG~~ z mow 'rOJJ
~VE hit A R.4/6E J..A~-r

Chris Browne

Y6AI? 8lJ7'" NOW :r. l'leE/7
ANO-rHEil ONE/

HI &amp; LOIS
01-1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Creche
depiction '
7 High
cards
11 Strict boss
12 Be thrifty
13 Choice
14 Hearty
dish
15 Radio
nuisance
17 Ailing
20 Theater
worker
23 Nabokov
novel
24 Corporate
drone's
place
26 Drill need
27 Simile
center
28 Bullring
call
29 Boulder
setting
31 Pot cover
32 Patnot
Allen
33Some
poems
34 Lorraine
language
37 Tibet
setting
39 Pencil end
43 Component
44 Venus
Williams'
sister
45 Fencing
weapon
46 Like some
jackets

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Hit show
letters
2 Bar
fixture
3 Quantity:
Abbr.
4 Like many
winter
days
5 Burglar's
take
6 Writer
Ferber
7 St.
Francis'
home
8 Get the
sniffles
9 Holiday
lead-in
10 Stitch
16 Brass
band
members

17 Buffalo
NHLer
18 Blockhead
19 Become lit
21 J.R.'s
mother
22 Oboe
parts
24 "Deathtrap" star
25 Try out
30 Dojo
activity

33 Chicago
airport
35 Egg
setting
36 Ship
staff
37 Big galoot
38 Maple
output
40 Spot
41 Conclusion
42 Singer
Charles

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11
13

Brian and Greg Walker

60v.'FReG~

THELOCKHORNS

Tl-\e:Rels N01'"HING GOZ:leR
II-IAN A WARM 'SOGI&lt;
!?RAWeR.

l..AUNP!&lt;Y, .JL)61 O!Yt'"
OF 11-\Ei. PRYeR.'

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
IT COLO
IN HERE

MUST 6E
THE..
ALTITUDE ..

-OR

WHAT!?
--.

"WE'VE BEEN SEL-ECTED TO PAY ANOTHER
CREOCT CARO BILL."

IIAPPY BDUI IDAY for Wednesday,

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
IM~W~~ouw~

DVR t..OVE: IN E:VE:f&lt;l( Wf&gt;K

EJ(CE.PT W~INGEACH
OTJ..lr;R~ CONTACT~

DW.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green

4

5 2-

1 9

-

6
9

1

2
5

6

4

3
"Does this hat make me look
too old?"

Hank Ketchum

6

7
6 9 5 7

DENNIS THE MENACE

Difficulty Lc\d

·-

7
5
9
3

2

8 3 2 1

***

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.

Dec. 8, 2010:
This year, make a conscious effort to
head in a new direction. Spontaneity
defines your actions, and the end result
· will be greater .security. Interpersonal
relationships change because of a new
scn&lt;;e of self. You are willing to look
within and pemaps see how sometimes you set yourself up. If you arc
single, romance could enter your life
rome 2011. This person could be part
of your life's his to!}' and appear in
your memoirs! If you arc attached, oth·
e.rS watch you as a couple as you start
acting like ne\',·lyweds once more.
AQUARfUS draws out your opinions.
The Stars Shtnt&gt; the Kilui of Dm1 You 'II
Hnve: 5-Dynnmic; 4-P~itn•e:
·

3-At&gt;t&gt;rage; 2-So-so; 1-D~fflcult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
**** Finally, teamwork prevails,
even for just a short moment. You
understand a lot more than you let on.
Good news will come from a stunning
insight. If you are startled, just imagine
your more conservative friends \"v·ith
this nugget. Tonight: Burning the can·
dle at both ends.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
****Keep reaching out for
friends and perhaps an unusual ac;soci·
ate. Though you might not agree with
them, you'll gain another perspective.
Y&lt;.'S, you rould be uncomfortable with
forthroming news. Tonight: Whatever
appeals to your imagination
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
****Break patterns and daJ:'(&gt; to
walk a new path. Other.; are timid and
would rather watch. You'll discover
just how well all this works out for
you. A parent, boss or someone you
t)(..'Cd to answer to surprises you.
Tonight Make togcthem0..s the theme.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
***** G.mtinue to defer, and
suddenly you'll gain tremendous
insight into another person or other
pt.'Ople. Your humor and ability to
move past the inevitable mark a deci·
sion. Listen and be aware of different
associates' thoughts, but draw your
own conclusions. Iimight Midweek
break.
LEO Ouly 23-Aug. 22)
**** Remain level, despite a high
degn.&gt;e of excitement. You could be
wondering what is the best way to
handle a partner. Be direct, ,md I'L'&lt;JU&lt;.'St
the same in n..&gt;tum. You might be over·
whelmed by another person's lack of

organi7..ation and direction. 'lonight:
Beam in what vou want.
Vffi.GO (A~g. 2,_Sept. 22)
***** Allow your imagination
to flow. Creativity spins out from out
of no\vhere. Your abilitv to test other.;'
commitment rould draw diverse reactions. Know that you have m~atcd thb
situation. l Ionor a need to slow dovvn.
lonight: If possible, nm errands on the
\Vayhomc.

LIBRA (Sept. 21-0ct. 22)
*** If you want and feel the need

to slow down, do. Rccogni7.c what is
going on behind the scenes or in your
mind. You have accepted a lot of
change. Everyone, including you,
needs time to process his or her feelings. 1onight: Stay close to home.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-No'~ 21)
***** Keep com'CN&lt;ltiom; moving, preventing getting stuck on one
point or idea. Othe~ expn'Ss &lt;\ thankfulness that you arc there for them.
Good will builds, 0..pccially when you
share one of your wilder ideas. Know
that everything is possible. }(might In
the center of the action.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·1Jcc. 21)
**** Be sensitive to a situation
that is bJ:'(&gt;wing that could ilffcct the
givt.'-and-take of your chccklxx&gt;k.
'
Optimism prevails, pushing you
toward taking a risk- an c.1sy m6ve
for you. Be scn&lt;;itive to another per·
son's needs. Ionight rreat a pal to
mtmchks.
CAPRICOR.'J (Occ. 22-J;m. 19)
**** Br&gt; sensitive to anotht•r r:~r·
son's abilitie:-. and tn1t- cap.lcitics. lhis
person might think he or she c.m do
whatever is net..&gt;ded. Your scn-;itivitY in
handlin9 this matter could detcm1inc
much ot what goes on at a later date.
1\.might: KnO\\ when tu c.11J it a night.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-feb. 18)
*** Continue a low profile, at
least for toda\". Gather mon' infomlation involving a financial ch,mgc or
opportunity. Your sixth sense Ids you
kno" if a risk is simply too much for
your sll\..'ss level-;. I&lt;&gt;night Do for you.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20)
***** !hough you !&gt;&lt;..'1.' otht•r-; as
pushing a project or situation to its cui
mination, vot• an.• the conductor. Your
actions and words count. Pick and
choose your responS(.&gt;s with Guv.
lmpulsivcm.•ss do~-.;n't ~'rYe you.
'Jonight: Wht·n~ your friend'&gt; an'.
jnrqutline B(~m· is 011 the luttmct
at ltttp:l/lr•ww.jncqttdind'i:.:ar.cvnr.

.mvdailvsentinel.com

�Page BC&gt; • The Daily Sentinel

\~-vw.mydailyscntinel.com

\Vedncsday, December 8 ,

2010

Four RedStorm earn honorable
mention All-American honors
added. ''With that said,
i s n case of it is what it
is. F?r the guys, the
KA:'\1SAS CITY, Mo.
selections that
- Four members of the
made. the first-tem
University of Rio Grande
and Luke Holmes (fr
RedStonn men s soccer
Notre Dame) being fue
team have earned honor- very stout back four thAt ond on the team in total national player of the
able mention NAIA All- helped Rio Grande to a points with 53. Lopes year. I couldn t agree
American honors for the regular sem;,on and con- \vas a l'ir~t team All- more.··
tournament Amedcan scb.:tion last
20 I 0 season. The sekc- ference
:vlorrissey believes had
tions were made by the dl:.lmpionship. 0 Hara year. a second team A11- his team made a deeper
(':AlA ,\bl s Soccer All- also had some very solid American as a sopho- run in the tournament,
America
Selection offen..,ive numbers out of more in 200S and made the selections would
the back with three goals honorable mention as a. have been different for
Committee.
his players. ··[ m sure we
Junior defender i':cil and II assists ( 17 points). freshman in 2007.
Thie:-.sen. a :"Jewcastle.
''ror me, a lot of the probably would have
Harries. senior defender
Steven 0 Hara, junior Austraha nati\ e. add~ decisions were made been in a different posimidfielder Joel Tluessen this honor to beine. based on performance in tion had '' e gone deeper
and senior forward named Ali-MSC at the the natjonal tournament."' 111 the tournament. but
Eder:-.on Lopes were all midfielder spot. Thics-,en said Rio Grande head that wasn t the case and
produced fiye goals and coach Scott ;\1orrisse). the players have to live
named to the squad.
Harrie.s. a native of handed out si.\ assists ( 16 "With the perfonnnnce with that." Morrissey
Lancashire.
England. points) for the year and that we tumed m. I don t said.
Rio Grande finished
also earned honorable was a central figure in mean it to be di respectful. but it s probabl) the the season with a 22-1
mention All-~lid-South Rb s success in :20 I 0.
Lopes. a native of Sao right decisions based on record. ranked No.I in
Conference honors this
the tinal NAJA Top 25
-;cason. Itarries wa~ a ke) Paulo. Brazil. closed out performances."
"The pl~tycrs U1at are rating. captured both the
component to the back one of the most prolific
line ot~ the Rio defense. careers in Rio Grande listed on there a~ honor- regular season and tourHe scored live goals ( 10 sot.:cer history. He was an able mention certainly nament championships in.
points) on the season.
All-MSC selection. lead- (udn t play like first. &lt;;cc- the
Mid-South ·
0 Hara, a senior from ing the RedStorm in ond or third team All- Conference and earned a
lOth consecutive bert!.
1 Liverp()OI, England. was goals scored with 21. Americans or we d went
an AII-MSC selection as Lopes also recorded I I a little dci!per in the tour- the NA IA Natio
~ l(lrrissey
Tournament.
well. He was a part of the assists to place him sec- nament...
B Y MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO TilE SENTIN(

.\\ e

Ed Suba JrJAkron Beacon JournaVMCT

Cleveland head coach Eric Mangini shouts encouragement to his players during the Browns' 34-14 victory over the New England Patriots at Cleveland
Browns Stadium on Sunday, November 7, in
Cleveland , Ohio.

Browns building a winner,
moving closer to .500
BEREA. Ohio (AP) Coach Eric Mangini
believes his boss is plea ed
wit~ the progrcs:. the
Cleveland Brown!&gt; are
making.
Team president Mike
Holmgren told him as
much on the flight home
from ~liami .
"h ~ been positive."'
Mangini said Monday of
the ti..~dback he ~ t'e:ei ved
from Holmgren. approaching his one-vcar anniversary in Cle~·eland. ··we
wen:n t high-living and
belly-bopping on the J~lam:
or anything: but it W&lt;L'i a
much better plane ride than
some I ve taken."
r"or the moment. the turbulence has cac;ed in
Cleveland. 1be bumps arc
smoothet:
Slowly.
steadily.
Mangim has the Bro\\ ns
(5-7) climbing tO\\ard .500
and legitimacy.
On Sunday. the) got
their second ~trnight la-stsecond victory. 13-10 over
the Dolphins on Phil
IJd\\SOn s 23-yard field
goal as time expiretl
a
kick set up by safety ~like
Ad::uns mten:eption and
return with one mmute ten.
Last week. the Browns
edged Carolina ~4 -23
when Panthers kickt·r John
Kasay caromed a ball ofT
the left stanchion on the
gmr s final play.
Thirty vears ago with
MVP Briiin Sipc m quartt!rback, the Browth \\ere
nicknamed tht! "Kardiac
Kids" for their knack of
playing - and '~inning dose games. Tht!'! group of
Bro'' ns sends pufses meing. too.
After :-.tarting :-5 in
!!ames decided by seven
points or less. the Hrowns
have won two straight nailbiters.
·t s about time for us to
wm some ~ames like that.''
Adam¥ s&lt;ud. " ' 1\\0 years
ago. or even last year. you
can remember us losing a
game Jike that. Fortunat~ly.
this year. it s turning our
way. So a win is a wii1."
· n~e s no such thing as
an ugly win to an :"ll·L
coa~:h. Mangini sav~ each
one looks like" Miss
America.
"'11tcy rc all beautiful,"
he said, "special i 1 their
own way.''
Man,gini
has been
preachmg the one-gameat-a-time mantra to his
player~. some of the c;ame
ones who tuned out hts
messages last season ''hen
they started 1-11 . Getting
the· Bnm ns to believe has
taken time. Mangini feels
his system has finally
taken root.
He sees it in them
matching their win total
from last season with four
games left. lie sees it in
their intl•nsity at practice
and a selfless al!itudt•
among rookies am, vetcr-•
ans.
''t s all that same singlemindedness." he c;aid.
"And when you have that.
you can make strides.'"
Holmgren wants signillcant ones.
Last month. when the
Browns were 2-5 at their
bye. Holmgren promised

Broncos fire McDaniels, Studesville replaces him

he '' ould wait until filter
the season to evaluate
Mane.ini and decide
whether to brino him back.
Ei\GLEWOOD. C&lt;.1lo.
At the time. Hoft11gren was (AP) - The Denver
excited about Cleveland s Broncos wanted Josh
competith eness.
but ~kDanie].., to brin!$ the
equall) disappointed by :-\ew England Patnots
the team s inabilit\' to \\in winning ways with him to
tight games.
the Rockv Mountains
~~~a~ngini knows thb when they hired Bill
recent -;tretch of success Belichick s brash, young
will onh help his security disciple 22 months ago.
if it continues.
What they got instead
"Really what I \Vant to was the a~h-gray hoodie
do is move the team for- and their very mvn videoward.'' he said. "I want taping scandal to 01•0 with
them to be bt.'tter thi-.. next
·
week than we were the last a pile ol losses and personnel blunders that cost
·
·
week, and the same thing
through the remainder of' hun his JOb not even
the s~ason. All the other halfway through h;s fourstuff'' ill taJ..e care of itself year contract.
McDaniels \\as fired
What I want to do is make
sure 1 do the best job with Monday in the midst of
these guys and the coaches the frnnchise s worst skid
do the best job and collec in four decades.
~tvel) \\e do the be~tjob to
Running backs coach
1mprove.
Eric Studesville \Viii
"I like the "'a). as a serve as interim coach for
group, the coaches and the final month. succeedpla)ers ha\e worked and ing McDaniels. 34.
fielu and I m proud of that. whose hirino by team
~ow I \\ant to see us get- owner Pat Bowlen in
ting rewarded \\ith wins.'' January 2009 is now
If not for a four-game viewed as a big mistake.
winning streak to end last
''M) decision to relil!ve
season. i\lan!!ini might not Josh McDaniels as head
be '!round: Holmgren onl) coach was not taken
rctamed hun because. as a light!)'. 1 will ah,ays he
fonner coach. he understood the difficulty of I appreciative of his passion. enthusiasm and hard
!mpkmenting a system in work. and I thank him for
JUst one &gt;·ear.
Mungtni asked for !lis effot1s," BO\yl.:n_ s~id
patience. Holmoren !.!rant- 111 a stat~ment at.ter fmng
edit.
e
~
~kDanrcls
~vnh
two
Manoini said he docsn t )ears left on hts contract.
spei1d ~ minute woiT)in!.! I ".In_the e.nd, I was not
about his future. If he diJ. sattshed w1th the result~
CIC\cland &lt;; player.:- would and the direction this
rebel by not ltstening or team was headed. The
playing up to their p&lt;}ten- I decbion to make a
tial. Consistency is cmcial. ~ change was extremely
''I '' ould be a hvp- difficult but one that
ocrite." he said ") Ill ask- needed to be made for
ing all these other guy~ to this organization and our
look at one game at a ttme fans," Bowlen added .
&lt;lll~)OUCatl tkllOW\\hat s "Everyone,
myself
gomg to happe.n four included. is aecountabk
weeks fr~llll now. 'loucan t for our disappointing sea~,·nntrol _Jt. What you can son and is now responsi ~ontml ts what ' happen- bk fur restoring the cui Ill~ today a!1.d what we do ture of winning that has
tl~ts week. lo mt!, t~at ~ a been established by this
brg cOJ~liX,),nent of bemg franchise. Our entire
su&lt;:ce~sl~ll.
nruanization is coml&gt;lete
Stattsttcally. the Browns
i·
have impro\·ed in almost 1Y, m:~·~~l1on ret~r~·tur~~· t&lt;~
cverycate•'orvintheirsec- the lt:\t:l. of pt&lt;spcnt)
ond sca·m~ llllder Man!!ini. that our ~ans expect and
One of the most striking deserve '.~om the Denver
changes ic; that throu!!h 11 Broncos.
games last season.~ they
Playe!-s didn ! know of
\\ere outscored 309-14). McDantels finng when
This &lt;;ea_&lt;;on. it s 239-229.
the) left team headquarPro Bowl left tackle Joe ter:, after a t.:ondttioning
Thomas said .Mangini s run ended at 3 p.m.
that.
methods. which angered Shortly. after
some players a )Car ago. .McDamels was called
arc much easier to accept into Bo\\ len " office and
when they re backed by I fired. ~fcDanicls then
wm&lt;;.
met with his assistants.
"When you re sittinu at I The rest of his •Wtff
1-11.'' "Il1on~a" said...~ s 1 including
~lcDnnicls '
hard to l?eheye anythmg , bmther. B~n. who tutors
you re domg. I'here are so the quartt~rbacks, will
many . questtons_. every- stay on for the tina! four
bcxly J\ \Vondenng what games.
the problem is, what s ,
very grateful to
going on. This yccu·. we I Pat"I am
Bowlen
and the
feel we r~? a much better
Broncos
organit.ation
for
team than that. We rc
giving
me
the
oppnrtunikeeping even· game close.
"Guy&lt;; belle\ e in them- t) to be the hend coach of
selves. They believe in the such a proud franchtse."
sy!&gt;tem a lot more than last McDaniels snid in a stateyear. You are what. your ment released b)' the
record says ) ou are m the team. ''I \\ ould ltke to
thank all of the people
Nrl...."
And for the J3rowns, it who helped us over the
last two years. I am espes.ays they rebuilding.
•

I

David Eulitt/Kansas City Star/MCT

Broncos head coach Josh McDaniels is shown on the
sidelines prior to Denver's game against the Kansas
City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City,
Missouri, on Sunday. The Chiefs won, 10-6
cially appreciative of the excited to lead this foot-

efforts ()f every player.
coach and member of the
personnel
department
who worked so hard
every day. I wish Pat
Bov.·len and the Broncos
orgamzation nothing but
the best in the future.''
At his weekh news
conference four hours
before he ''as let go.
McDaniels reiterated that
he \\a&lt;:n t focu~ed on his
job being in jeopardy.
''I m not worried about
that. I m going to coach
as hard as '"'I can because
that is my job and that s
somebody else s decio.;ion.'' McDaniels said.
Studesville anti chief
operating ofticer Joe Ellis
will meet with the media
Tuesday. There was no
word
on
whether
tvtcDanieb would hold. a
farewell news conference.
~1cDuniels
becomes
the third coach fired during the season. all in the
past month. The Dallas
Cowboys fired Wade
Phillips on i':ov. 8 and
promoted Jason Garrett to
mterim coach. and two
weeks
later.
the
Minnesota Vikings fired
Brad Childre's ~md promoted Leslie Frazier to
replace him.
The two new cuache~
have a combined 5-l
record since taking over.
and the Broncos (3':.9) arc
hopmg Studesville can
inject some life into the
team to close out this lost
season.
"I am very appreciative
of the trust that 1\lr.
Bowlen and the entire
Denver Broncos organi7ation have shown in
me," Studewille said in a
~tatement. "Although the
circumstances that this
opportunity resulted from
are unfortunate. I am

ball team. We have a
great group of players
and coaches who arc
committed to finishing
the season on a promising
note and making nur fans
proud of this team."
Studcsville. 43. was in
his fin;t season in Den,·er
after coaching the running backs in Buffalo
from 2004-09 following a
three-year stint (2001 -03)
in that same capacit) "ith
the New 'l ork Giants. He
began his ~FL coaching
career in 1997 with the
Chicago Bear~ after
\\orking six years at the
collegiate level.
The players learned of
McDanieb
firing via
\Vhere
the
Twitter.
Broncos announct•d it.
and te.\t messages.
"Guys are trying to llgure out if it s tn.tc, if it s
not true. what s going
on."
wide
receiver
Brandon Llo)d said on
his weekly radio show on
Sports Radio I04.3 111e
Fan in Denver.
Running back Lance
Ball t\\ eeted: "this the
closest thing to Obama
being elected president!!!"
Others were melan
chol).
''It s tough. He s not
out there playing," \\ide
receiver Eddie Royal
said. ''The guy~ in the
locker room have got to
tee I some'' hat respnnsihlc. We didn t play well
enough to win these
games. We haven t had a
good )Car. We haH~n t
played the way \\C should
have. Our fans are upset.
and I can understand that.
\\'e \ c got a lot better
football team than we ve
shown this )ear.''
E\en
though
the
Broncos arc mired in
their '' on;t stretch since

1971-72, the timing of
McDaniel&lt;, firing cau!!ht.
everyone off guard. ~
"I didn t think it was
going to happen," Llo)d
said. "Come the offseason, yeah. an) thmg can
happen. The) shuftle
players, shuffle coaches.
At this point in the season. I did not see that
coming
McDaniels had nearly
$7 million left on his contract. and Bowlen is still
ltn the hook for millions
more he owes Mike
Shanahan. whom he tired
la-.t vear. That means
he ll ..be paying three head
coaches next season
unless the organiz
decide:- to ~with
McDaniels salaries
20 II and ' 11 based on a
violation of his deal. such
as a 111orals clause.
After winning his first
si:x games his rookie season~~lcDaniels lost 17 of
his last :22 with the
Broncos in his first NFL
head coaching. job.
He had plenty of offthe-field issues. too.
including linebacker D.J.
Willian1s... drunken driving charge that caused
him to get ~tripped of his
captaincy.
Before he \vas fired
Monday, ~lcDaniels said
he was reticent to turn to
ra\\ rookie quat1erback
Tim Tebow even though
the Broncos had been
elim111ated from contentton with a 10-6 loss at
Kan~as Citv. their seventh loss in eight games.
1\1cDaniels made.
serie' of personnel d
sions that backfired.
notably trading away
Pe)ton Hillis. who has
become a power running
back in CJe,·eland. He
also let go of Casey
Wiegmann.
who s
anchoring the league s
tup 1u~hing attack in
Kansas City.
After beefing up both
lines in the offseason. the
Broncos rank 29th in the
league in rushing offense
and next-to-last in run
defense.
His bi!.!!.!est blunder
might havctbeen the hiring of videographer Steve
Scarnecchia. "ho \ iolatcd league mle:- bv \ideotaping' a San Francisco
49er..; practice in London
on Oct. .30. McDaniels
was tined $50.000 b) the
1\:FL for failing to report
the tmn~gression.
\Vith thousands
cmpt) scat~ at their
home game. the Broncos
tU(Ul t announce actual
attendance but only paid
attendance. which at
7'2.7 36 was the lowe:-.t
since
ln\esco Field
openl!d a decade ago. By
the time the Broncos
fourth-quarter rally fell
one drh c short in their
36-33 lo~s to St. Louis.
the stadium was most!)
empt) .

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