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-----------

Obarna honors
veterans at Arlington

PVH celebrates
ational Physical
Therapy onth, A3

~metery,A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Bedford
considering
fire levy

SPORTS

'

• Point, Wahama open
playoffs on the road.
See Page 81

B Y B ETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
· • Valerie Campbell, 44
• Kenneth Dean, 30
• Lawrence Mohr, 90

INSIDE
ry deliberations
•
rway in Stewart
case. See Page A2
• Ohio asks for
federal help to
fight bedbugs.
See Page A2
• Be realistic about
holiday expenses.
See Page A3 ,
• Christmas
give-away deadline
set. See Page A3
• Ariel holding
auditions for musical.
See Page AS
• Welsh History
expert to speak
at Rio Grande.
See Page AS
•. Shooting suspect's
superiors questioned
. avior. See Page AS

WEATHER

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -12 PAGES

Calendars

A3

~~ifieds

B3-4

ffilCS

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

American Legion leads annual
courthouse Veterans tribute

Two arrests,
more pending,
in ATV thefts

Episcopal
churches can
bless same.
sex un1ons

Details on Page A3

'

DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees will gather for a special meeting at 7 p.m., Nov. 17 at the town hall to
read and vote on the third reading of an
ordinance which will pl~e a fire protection levy on the February ballot.
If the third reading passes, the threemill continuous levy for fire protection
will be put to voters in a special election
in February. or possibly May, depending
on election laws. In order to get the levy
on the February ballot the deadline for
filing is Nov. 19.
The levy is estimated to generate
$45,963.36 for fire protection to pay for
maintenance on a new fire station which
is proposed for Bedforfl Township and
will actually be a substation of the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
The Pomeroy Fire Department was one
of only 200 entities in the country which
Brian J. Reed/photos
received a highly competitive federal
Members of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, led by Sargeant at Arms Steve VanMeter, gave a 21- grant to build a new fire station in Bedford
gun salute to conclude yesterday's Veterans Day observance at the county courthouse.
Township. The station will be approximately 7.500 square feet and house one
fire truck. The grant is for $8ll ,750 and
will pay for 100 percent of the construction costs. The award is provided through
the 2009 American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act Assistance to
Firefighters Station Construction Grants
(ARRA-SCG) program as established by
BY BRIAN J. REED
the Federal Emergency Management
BREED @~DAILYSENTINELCOM
Agency
(FEMA)/Department
of
Homeland Security (DHS).
POMEROY The annual tribute to
Once the building is built, it will be
America's veterans living and dead at the Meigs
owned by the Village of Pomeroy
County Courthouse recognized ··ordinary people
' though it will sit on land leased to
doing extraordinary things."
Pomeroy by Bedford Township.
Speakers Wednesday paid particular tribute to
Residents of Bedford Township, not the
those who died and were injured in the recent
shooting at Fort Hood, Tex. , and their families,
Village of Pomeroy. would fund the
maintenance costs which is why the fire
and emphasized the importance of teaching boys
protection levy is being proposed.
and girls living in freedom today how that freeThe cost to hold a special election in
dom is possible.
February is around $1 ,200-$1.500. At
Some of the community's youngsters took an
enthusiastic role in .recognizing America's veterthis week's special meeting of the
ans living and dead. The students at Mid-Valley
Bedford Township Trustees. Pomeroy
Chris•ian School, crisp in their blue and white uniPlease see Bedford, AS
forms, sang patriotic songs as part of the program
yesterday. The Southern High School Marching
Band. led by Chad Dodson. also performed.
Members of Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion.led the service, which included other patriotic musical tributes and remarks by legionnaires.
Post Commander and County Commissioner Tom
Anderson led the service, and Past Commander
Joe Struble also gave an address.
Hal Kneen performed musical tributes, as well.
The program served two purposes. according
B v BRIA N J. REED
to Anderson . It paid tribute to the men and
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
women who have served our country and
defended it, but it abo should educate young
MIDDLEPORT - Tv.•o men were
people about the importance of military personarrested
and charged with the theft of
nel to the American way of life.
two all-terrain vehicles from a Pearl
"We must let our children know how and why Kathleen Johnson, 3, thanked a veteran Wednesday in a
very personal way. Her mother, Major Suzanne Johnson, is Street residence, Middleport Police
we are free today," Anderson said.
A 21-gun salute. and prayers by Rev. James an active member of the U.S. Air Force Reserves, and was Chief Bruce Swift reported.
Swift said the search continues for
Keesee of the Victory Baptist Church. and Rev. one of several active-duty military personnel attending yesThomas Johnson. Trinity Church, were included. terday's Veterans Day tribute. The Johnsons live in Rutland. several other suspects in the thefts, and
that warrants for their arrests have
been issued.
Swift and Patrolman Joel Lynch arrestKathryn Hart on
ed Raymond E. Klein, Park Street, on a
behalf of RACO
charge of felony theft, and Timothy
presents a
Shane, Broadway Street. for receiving
check for $882
stolen property. Both were jailed pending
along with 4 72
an appearance in Meigs County Court.
food items colSwift said the 2007 Honda 400EX and
lected at one of
2002
Honda 400EX were reported stolen
RACO's two
by
Darren
Cox of Pearl Street. The offiannual Parish
BY BETH SERGENT
cers conducted two search warrants in
fund
raisers,
to
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
connection with the report and arrests.
Bob Robinson,
Officers
also recovered an all-terrain
chairpersonPOMEROY Easter,
vehicle
stolen
from Gallia Count)'.
elect of the
known as a time of beginMeanwhile. Christy Fisher. Sycamore
Meigs
nings, . will mark a new
Street. advised that two 2007 Honda 50
Cooperative
beginning for gay couples
motorcycles and a 2006 Alta fourParish.
who wish to have their
wheeler were removed from an outSubmitted photo
unions blessed in the
building, where they were chained up.
Episcopal Church.
Swift asked anyone with information
On
Friday.
Bishop
about their disappearance is asked to
Thomas E. Breidenthal liftcontact the police department or sheraccording to Nancy Thoene who iff's department.
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
eq the prohibition on blessHOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
works there. the numbers in need just
ing
same-sex
unions.
Swift also reported:
keep growing.
the
Rreidcnthal
made
• Emily Sunders. Reedsville. reported
POMEROY
Preparations
are
For the Chlistmas givea\vay the her purse was ~tolen out of her truck on
announcement at the annual
convention of the Episcopal underway for the annual Christmas Parish is preparing for more than 800 No1th Third Avenue. It was recovered
Diocese of Southern Ohio. food give-away of the Meigs people. a sizable increase over last near Foreman and Abbott. and video surThe
diocese
includes Cooperative Parish at the Mulberry year' because of the county's high veillance at TNT Pit Stop. North Second
unemployment. They look to contri- Avenue, led police to a suspect. who was
Columbus and Southeast Community Center in Pomeroy.
For many years the Parish has butions from individuals. the ~ommu­ identified. Investigation continues.
Ohio which consists of
25,000 Episcopalians and taken on the important role of provid- nity, churcl}es, agencies and business• Eugene ~lorrison, Pearl Street. advised
over 80 churches. including ing food for low-income and disad- es to provide the money and food so that someone entered his outbuilding and
vantaged families. The biggest of the
Please see Unions, AS
Please see Parish, AS
Please see Arrests, AS
give-aways comes in December, and

B Section

©2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

. lli.IJIJI,I !I!1.!I!II .

Parish plans Christmas food give-away

0.
v

�~--------~------- ~-----

OH

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2
Thursday, November 12,

2009

Jury deliberations
underway in
Stewart case
BY ELIZABETH

R IGEL

ERIGELC MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALI_IPOUS - Jurors will continue deliberations in
• the capital murder trial of Walter E. Stewart today after fail• ing to reach a verdict Wednesday evening.
• The jury went behind closed doors at approximately
12:20 p.m. Wednesday following closing arguments and
was sequestered shortly before 6 p.m. that night.
Stewart, 77, Wellston, is charged with two counts of
aggravated murder/murder in connection with the shooting
deaths of John Paul Holley and Carolyn Merry on April 28
at the Holley Brothers Stone Yard a~ well as the attempted
• murder of .Merry's brother. David Merry.
The te timony portion of Ste\\,Urt's trial began Friday
~fternoon and wrapped up ~uesday evening. The prosecution opted not to call any Witnesses for rebuttal testimony
Wednesday morning and closing arguments commenced.
• Assistant Special Prosecutor Mindy Kowalski kicked off
· clo.;ing arguments for the state, going through the elements
of aggravated murder point by point and attempting to link
them to Stewart's actions on April 28.
"Walter Stcwnrt took care of everything that day,"
Kowalski said.
She contended that he went to the stone yard to solve
his business problems, adding that he owed $90.000 to the
couple. John Paul Holley and Carolyn Merry are not here
to tell tlu:ir side of the story, she said, he chose who would
\vitness this.
Kowalski disputed Stewat1's testimony from Tuesday,
asking .w~y Nlerry wouldn't .have pulled the trigger if she
were atmmg u .shotgun at h1m when he shot Holley, her
boyfriend and belit friend of 20 years. She showed the jury

· AP photo
Cleveland Police investigators carry evidence. bags from behind the house adjacent to Anthony Sowell's on Imperial •
in Cleveland Wednesday. The remains of 11 bodies were dtscovered at Sowell's home.

~!t~~c!l~:
~~~~~~~~do~:~~~~~~ss~~~~~~~~~ ra~kp~~~
tioned practically in front of his face, according to

Stench returns near Oh.IO property that held bodl·es

.
Stewart's testimony. Kowalski asked why no blood was
been
identified
The 50-year-old Sowell ing of a thermal-energy have
Bv TASSOCIATED
HOMAS J . S HEERAN
found around .the bed of .the truck if Stewart .shot Merry
PRESS
has been charged with five search of the propert) through DNA and dental
through two wmdows. \Vh1ch she added were tmted.
[.
counts of aggravated mur- would be up to city police, records.
She as~ed how Mel!)' even mana~ed to pull up the "cumCLEVELAND _
A der. He was indicted who didn't indicate "hen
Police said Sowell lured
bersome shot~un, wh1ch has a 3~-m~h barrel, m the small stench around the home of a Mondav on one count of that would start.
women - often those who
GMC S-15 wnhout Stewart seemg 1t firsl ~n~ how she suo:. ected serial killer attempted murder, two
Makers of thermal-imag- ''ere homeless or li\ ing
would have be~n abl.e to.get out of the door w1thm a matter rettfrned stronger than ever counts of rape. two counts ing devices say they can alone and who abused drugs
of seconds wh1le totmg 1t.
•
Wed 1esda
as
0 r . , of kidnapping and two
help police find buried bod- or akohol- with liquor and
During his closing argument, Defense Attornev Robert s~ar~hed' ;h ~ h0 s/ IC~ counts of felonious assault ico;; hecause dirt that has attacked them in his home.
\
Krapenc asked juror:-. to follow the law and weigh both d~::, ~01.
l
nex in an alleged attack Sept. been turned over radiates
1
Sowell has asked for a
accounts of the shootings against the physical evide'"'nce. He c~;;.jed ut~ore 0bt ~ ~and 22 that led to the search of heat differently than com- court-appointed attorney,
reiterated that Stewart shot Holley unintentionally - pur"It' 7·k,.
~fs tev'. en:~:
but court records don't
1
pacted !'Oi I.
home.
pose is a key element of the murder charge.
. s22 c t go "· orst: · hisThe
Polil:e discovered the first reflect that one has been
neighborcast-side
He basically said the state's case was built on a "rush to ~?'~.. :year-~ld .~let~h~or
judgment" because the investigation into the matter was 1ell ~mcc Jol~ns&lt;.m. It sm~.lls hood had reeked off anti on two bodies and a freshly chosen for him.
Scott Wilson. an FBI
·nut full or fair. which he deemed inappropriate. Krapenc bad 111 • 1 h~ ~lr, like~ dca~h. _ for several years. and resi- dug gra Vl! Oct. 29 at spokestnan
in Cleveland,
Sowell's hou::-c after offiasked why Stewart would lie about where he was when hi!
F~ut pl&lt;lmclothcs ~fficels dents had blamed the odor cers
came
to
ill\
estigate
a
·
has
said
investipators
are
on
a
broken
sewer
or
a
nearshot Merrv since it was self-defense. He pointed out that earned bags of evtdcnce
natiOnal
datareviewing
its
by
sausage
shop.
Now
most
woman's
report
that
she
had
no gunshot residue test was performed on the passenger from the hou. c ne~t ~oor to
side of Holley's truck to determine if shots were fired Anthony Sowell s early think the smell came from be~.:n raped there. Sowell base of unsolved crimes for
had fled the home and wa~ any clues to possible confrom that locatipn .
Wc~ncs~ay a~te~oon. but decomposing bodies.
nections to Sowell. particuarrested
two days later.
Neighbors
·
blamed
He maintained that Stewart was not involved in creating pohce d1d not mdtcate what
In
all,
the
remains
of
lJ
larlv
at locations where he
Wednesday's
renewed
odor
the situation and he was entitled to be on the property ha~ been remo~ed. The redwomen
have
been
found
in
se..Ved
in the military.
on
increased
activity
near
through the lease agreement. He informed jurors that even pamted, house next to
So\\ell's
house.
Sowell's
home
or
yard.
All
was in •
Sowell
if a person is mistaken that they are in imminent dan!!er of Sowell s appeare~ to be
of
the
owomen
were
black
Marines
from
1978 to 1
111
Tqe
FBI.
which
ha
good
death or great bodily harm , it can still be ruled self-defense. abandon~d but
and
spent
time
in Californ.a,
in
the
Mrnnand
most
had
been
offered
technical
help
As to Stewart taking care of his problems, he ~aid attar- shape, ~. •.de from a broken
gled,
the
coroner
said.
Nine
the
Carolinas
and
Japan.
investigation.
said
the
timneys were already in,olved in the lease dtspute because porch rmhng.
''that' how you take care of problems.''
- - - ----------------------------------------------------------------Krapenc asked the jury to find justice and return not
guiltyverdicbtoallthreecounts.
"Those who seek justice should do justice, that's what
we're here for," Special Prosecutor Paul Scarsella told
world's largest retailer, become a growing problem few pest control companies
jurors during the state's final closing argument.
COLU:VlBL:S (AP) asked
its suppliers in 2006 in recent years. most in the region have provided
He asked if S(cwart was justilied in the shootings and Ohio wants the federal govsaid purpose can he determined through the way a deadly ernment to allow an indu:-.- to phase out products made notubly in dormitories on information about their call
college campu~es. including to deal with bedbugs.
weapon is used. He countered that investigators had con- tnal insecticide to be used with Propoxur.
Ohio State University and
Bedbugs are generally
But
Propoxur
may
be
~idered self-defense - on the behalf of Merry. adding that in homes to fight bedbugs.
controlled by washing
it would be reasonable to infer that she was going for the tiny blootlsw.:king insects worth revisiting because the University of Plorida.
Health
officials • in sheets, thoroughly cleaning
that continue to be a prob- bedbugs are becoming
shotl!un to defend herself.
infested rooms and use a
Franklin
County.
resistant
to
many
products
He said there was no rush to judgment by investigators. len~ here ~~nd in other states: used today, said Ricl)ard includes Columbus.v. hich
powerful
vacuum to remove
say
This was not a tragedy, accident, or self-defense. he said, I 1 ~e Oh10 ~)epar1n:tent ot
v.·hat happened was murder.
1 Agnculture IS see~mg an Pollack. a public health they h&lt;l\ e collected reports bed bugs from cracks and
Jurors were instructed to consider all three charges sepa- 1 emergency exempt tOn thut entomologist at Hurvard of hundreds of infestations crevices. In some cases.
exterminator-. usc pesticide .
in the past year.
rately as well as two specifications to counts one and two, would allow the use of Universitv in Boston.
Tests at the Umversitv of
'•]f used wisely and
About 70 percent of
being a gun specification and a death penalty specification. Propoxur.. whic~ i~ used in
"that
Kentuck)
show
hotels
in
the
county
have
against
the
right
kind
of
though the latter only applies if a guilty verdict is reached commercwl bmldmgs, on
Propoxur
killed
100
percent
had
bedbug
infestation~.
pest.
then
I
think
it
v.
ill
on aggravated murder.
crops and in flea and tick
collars for pets. said Matt probably offer far more ben- said Paul Wenning, special of the bedbugs exposed to it
projects coordinator with within 24 hours and kept on
Beal, the agency's assistant efit than risk,'. he said.
A message seeking com- the Franklin County Board killing after eggs hatched.
chief.
:-aid Susan Jones. an associ"We are in dire straits, and ment wa~ left Wednesday of Health.
··we are rapid)) becoming ate professor of entomolog)
for the EPA in Washington
we need help." he said.
overwhelmed,'' Wenning at Ohio State University.,
The request was filed Oct. D.C.
That compared with a
Bedbul!s are nocturnal said.
23 with U.S. Environmental
percent
kill rate after
His
numbers
are
low.
he
insects
about
the
sile
of
an
Protection
Agency.
COLUMBUS (APJ - Former Attorney General Marc
hours
for
a commonly used
said,
because
manv
infestaPropoxur,
which
can
cause
apple
seed.
Though
the
bugs
Dann 's office was representing a man Gov. Ted
household
insecticide
tion~
go
unreported
by
resito
carry
any
are
not
known
nausea
and
vomiting
if
Strickland's administration later hired, then fired, for sexuagainst
one
strain
found in
dents
concemed
about
the
diseases.
their
bites
leave
swallowed,
was
removed
al harassment at the same time the governor was pressuring
Cincinnati,
und
40 percent
~tigma of having the bugs in
red
bumps.
behind
itchy
from
home
usc
in
the
1990s.
the office on similar allegations.
The
creatures
hnvc their home. Also. he snid. in another strain.
'l'he ironic twist surfaced in documents The Assoc1ated Wal-Mart Stores Inc .. the
Press obtained through a records request.
According to the records. Assistant Attorney General
Christa Metzger was representing John W. Francis and
Columbus State Community College, where Francis
. v.:orked, when a student in his microbiology class accused
h1m of sexual harassment. The attorney general provides
law
firm. of health care m the U.S.,
make a formal re-election Cleveland
legal counsel to state government entities, which includes
announcement.
Cosgrove also said the mea- but he savs the bills in
the publicly funded college.
The survey of 1.123 Ohio sures won't do much to Congress have little to say
But around the same time last year, Strickland led a sucvoters wa~ taken from No\. make America healthier.
about those issues.
cessful charge to force Dann to resign. The governor said
5-9 and has a margin of
The president has praised
Cosgrove
says
controlling
then thnt Dann was rendered so ineffective bv fallout from
error of plus or minus 2.9 smoking and obesity and the Cle\elnnd Clinic as an
a sexual harassment scandal in his office that he must step
COLUMBUS (AP) - A percentage points.
promoting wellness would example of a health care
down or face impeachment.
poll finds Ohio Gov. Ted '
to hold dO\\ n the cost S)~tem that ,,.orks \\ell.
help
Internal investigators in the Dann case found that the Strickland's job approval
Att?mey General's office was rife with inappropriate staff-sub- rating has slipped and puts
ordmate relationships, heavy drinking and harassment and the Democrat even with
threatening behavior by supervisor Anthony Gutierrel. Dann Republican challenger John
also admitted an affa.ir with a staffer. He resigned in May 2008. Kasich.
'
When contacted by e-mail, Dann declined comment on
In
the
Quinnipiac
the Francis case.
University sun cy released
Amid the office scandal, state Health Director Alvin Wednesday. 45 percent of
CLEVELAND (AP) Jackson. a ~trick~&lt;md ~tppoi.ntee. announced Francis' hiring Ohio \'Oters say Strickland
supporte~
two days after h1s rcs1gnatton from the college and while is doing a good job, down 111c head of tm Ohio hospital
Metzger was working with the Columbus State student's from 48 percent in a similar that has impressed President
attomey to avoid a lawsuit, the record~ show. The college had poll rclea~ed in September. Bamck Obama savs health
cleared Francis of wrongdoing in an internal investigation.
legislation • before
Forty-three percent disap- care
Jackson has said he was unaware of the allegations prove of how the governor Congress misses the mark und
will need fixing in a few years.
against Francis when he wus hired.
IS handling thing.:..
Cleveland Clinic CEO Dr.
Fra~cis' student accuser,Adricn Briggs, ultimately filed a
The poll .shows if an eleclaWSUit.
tion for Ohio governor were Delos ·Toby" Cosgrove
· An independent investigation prompted bv a Health held today, 40 percent says the bill that passed the
Department employee complaint substantiated· allegattons would go with Strickland U.S. House and propo als in
that Francis had sexually harassed women at the depart- and 40 percent would vote the Senate won't do enough
to control health care costs.
ment. Francis told investigators, and has repeated to the AP, for Kasich.
The go~ernor has yet to In a speech Tuesday at a
that all the allegations were untrue .
I

Oh1·o asks for federal help to f1·ght bedbugs

Amid Ohio AG scandal,
office defended accused

Ohio News Briefs
Poll: Ohio
gov.'s job
approval slips

Cleveland
Clinic chief
·dismisses
health care bills

Thank you to the Voters of
Letart Township that
me in my
re-election as Trustee.
Thank You

Dave Graham

�~----------------------------

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--

ND

The Daily Sentinel

PageA3
Thursday, Novetnber 12,

2009

Christmas give- PVH celebrates National Physical Therapy Month
.·away deadline set

POMEROY ~ Final date
• for registering to participa~c
• tn
the Bethel Worship
Center's Christmas giveA-•ay next week.
WHours to register at the
church are fron19 a.m. to II
a.m.
Monday
through
: Friday. Those interested ~in
: the give-away can als9 c~ll
:the church at 667-6793 any
:day during that time frame.
~
The church is still collecting new toys and &lt;.:lathing as
; well as gently used pre-

,.

ASK DR.

?wncd toys, and .are acceptmg cash donations to purchase needed items.
According to Jill Holter,
bicycles are needed for the
give-away which will take
place on Dec. 5. Anyone
willing to donate a bicycle
is asked to call the church or
Holter at 949-2603.
Those to pm1icipate in the
Christmas give-away arc
required to pre-register by
the Friday. No\. 20. deadline.

BI~OTHERS

Sister wants total control
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Dear

Dr.

Brothers:

Maybe it is pecause I went to
a small. private high school,
but· 1 never had the experi• ha'S always been a bit con- ence of bad manners. So now
trolling and bossy. And I am· that I am in college, it is very
being kind! She spent most strange to see how some of
of my youth ordering me my fellow students behave in
around and trying to run my class. They seem to have no
life. An) way. I was always respect for the professors,
wary of her ha\ ing kids and they are constantly
cau:.e I was afraid she'd sleeping, eating, texting.
the same thing, and she is talking back to them as
•
now trying to pick my though the professor was stuniece\ friends. not. to men- pid and so on. I was taught to
tion her clothes, activities, respect authority. and I want
etc. This was fine when she to know how to not be so
• wa~ 3. but nov. my niece is 7 upset by this. - G.C.
Dear G.C.: Your question
• and wants to make her own
choices. Advice? - H.T.
implies that you realize you
Dear H.T.: It is difficult would be unable to stop or
being the auntie who can change your fellow stulook at the mother (your sis- dents' behavior in class. and
ter) and see all the flaws that you just want to know how
' were thorns in vour side as to adjust to them so that you
you were growing up. She are not so emotionally
• probably has some very affected. That's sot1 of sad,
good attributes - firstborns but realistic. I doubt that you
tend to bl! take-charge indi- could change a class full of
• vidual&lt;&gt;. and that brings with disrespectful students all by
it some excellent traits when yourself. But at the same
; it comes to responsibility. time. you can make sure that
But it also can put them way you don't lower your high
· over the top when it comes standards in order to "fit in."
to bossiness. as you found You should be able to main, out growing up with her. tain your own relationship
You probably were the with the professor- that is.
younger sister who became one of a traditional teacher
the person she practiced on and pupil - without bringas a little mother! But now ing behavior issues into your
u want more freedom for classroom experience. If it
ur niece. \\ith whom you really bothers you. there is
•
undoubtedly identify.
always an opportunity to
One wav to make a differ- meet privately with the proence for this child is to vol- fessor and express your chaunteer to take her shopping, grin at your classmates'
or out to the playground. boorish behavior. but you
Would your sister relinquish might be mistaken for a
control enough for you to do brownnoser, so be careful!
Any number of· polls and
this? It would take only a few
trips to the mall, in which surveys have found that peoyou gave your niece the free- ple consider others more
dom to choose her own rude now than in previous
, items, for her to get the expe- generations. And much
- rience that wiJ I give her the anecdotal evidence backs up
· motivation to speak up and what you are saying about
, tell her mom that she'd like how college students behave
to be permitted to choose her in class. It is almost as
· own fill-in-the-blank! You though the professor is not as
can start with small items. valuable a source of inforsuch as pens and notebooks. mation as in previous years,
, or a bracelet or pair of flip- since kids get so much of
. flops. This way, sis can't their knowledge through the
· really object. It may take a Internet now. But good man• sit-down with her to talk ners ' are always approptiate,
about what she fears would and if your fellow students
come from her daughter appall you, just wait a few
picking her own friends. but months. Unfortunately. you
that might be a good invest- will get used to it. Just don't
a ent of your time. Just do it join them!
(c) 2009 by King Features
.
a loving, supportive way.
Syndicate
•••

..

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
.. big sister (she'~ 36. I'm 32)

.Meigs County Forecast
.
_ Thursday...
Sunny. Highs
in the upper 50s. Northeast
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night ...Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper
30s.
Northeast
winds
around 5 mph.
Friday...Mostly sunny.
• Highs in the lower 60s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Friday
night ... Partly

cloudv. Lows in the lower
40s. East winds around 5
mph.

Saturday and Saturday
night ...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 60s. Lows in
the lower 40s.
Sunday ...Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Sunday night ...Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE)- 31.70
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 65.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 37.33
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.80
b Evans (NASDAQ)- 27.01
rgWarner (NYSE)- 32.70
. .ntury Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.39
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.72
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.09
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 30.32
Collins (NYSE) - 52.60
DuPont (NYSE)- 34.11
US Bank (NYSE) - 24.40
Gannett (NYSE) - 11.23
General Electric (NYSE)- 15.83
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 26.84
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 44.32
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.62
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 18.38
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 51.96

\I

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 23.12
BBT (NYSE) - 25.20
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.28
Pepsico (NYSE) - 62.60
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.93
Rockwell (NYSE) - 43.79
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 8.61
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.20
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) - 69.83
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 52.97
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.21
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.87
Worthington (NYSE) - 12.18
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 11, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Pleasant Valley
Hospital recently celebrated
National Physical Therapy
Month. which is sponsored
by the American Physical
Therapy Association. a
nationwide event which b
held each October.
The theme of this year is
"Physical Therapy Brings
Motion to Life:· Physical
therapists at PVH strive to
help patients restore and
improve motion, as well as
achieve long-term quality
of life.
··y am extremely proud of
my therapists who positively impact the lives of our
patients.'' praised Debra
Long.
Director
of
Rehabilitation Services.
"They work well as team
and have made considerable
contributions to the 'Family
of Professionals.' They have
placed many individuals on
the road to recovery:·
Freedom of motion and
the ability to move n01mally
is an impot1ant component
of a normal life and people
often take it for granted
until it is lost. Physical therapists are experts in the way
the body moves. so they can
improve people's quality of
life by helping them to
move freely so they can do
the things they want to do
without pain or discomfort.
Physical therapists are
licensed health care professionals who can help
patients restore mobility-in
many cases without expen..
sive surgery or the side
effects of prescription medication. More than 92% of

Submitted photo

Julie A. Durst, physical therapist, left, and Leah Morrow, physical therapy assistant, of the
Middleport Therapy Clinic joined with other personnel from Pleasant Valley Hospital to celebrate National Physical Therapy Month recently.
the 210 accredited academic
institutions
nationwide
offering professional physical therapy educations now
offer OPT (Doctor of
Physical Therapy) degrees.
Physical Therapy Assistants
graduate with an associate's
degree and perform various
treatments.
Physical Therapists provide care for people in a
vast array of settings,
including outpatient clinics, horne health agencies,
nursing homes, private
practices, schools and fi ness facilities.
At
Pleasant
Valley
Hospital, therapists offer

care in a vast array of set- areas of specialties include
tings including outpatient manual therapy. McKenzie
facilities in three counties, approach, wound care.
Mason and Jackson coun- vestibular/balance rehab.
ties in West Virginia and surgical rehab. pediatrics,
Meigs County in Ohio.
work-related injuries. sports
AdditionaiJy, patients are injuries. neurological diagtreated while in the hospital noses and aquatic therapy.
and therapists assist in the
During Physical Therapy
decision if they go home or Month, the rehabilitation
to a rehabilitation or nursing experts at Pleasant Valley
home facility. PVH also Hospital are promoting a
offers physical therapy ser- higher quality of life. It is
vices at Pleasant Valley · suggested that those experiHome Health and rehabili- encing an injury or pain that
tation options through the would warrant physical
Pleasant Valley Nursing and therapy contact their famil)
Rehabilitation Center.
physician or one of the PVH
PVH therapists can treat rehabilitation experts. (740)
patients of all ages. Several 992-1075.

Be realistic about holiday expenses
When I was a kid,
Christmas club savings
accounts were quite common. Like their close
cousin, the layaway plan,
these accounts encouraged
people to start saving far in
advance for expenses they
knew were coming.
In these tough economic
times. a return to savings
methods that worked so
well for our parents might
not be a bad idea. The basic
fundamentals they understood included knowing
what things really cost
(including taxes and finance
charg.es). prioritizing your
expenses, and being willing
to postpone or forgo purchases that will upset your
overall budget.
The holidays are the most
challenging time of year to
curtail spending, thanks to
long gift lists, frantic lastminute shopping and higher-than-usual travel and
entertainment
expenses.
Here are a few tips that can
help you rein in holiday
spending:
Add up expected holidayrelated expenses including
gifts (for family, friends and
coworkers). decorations.

Jason
Aldennan

I

.

new clothes and accessories. gift-wrapping paper.
cards. special meals and
year-end gratuities. Don't
forget travel-related expenses if you plan to leave town,
and try to recall unanticipated expenses from last year
that might recur.
The tlipside - and more
important aspect - of holiday budgeting is to calculate how much you can
actually afford to spend. If
you are deeply in debt. having trouble paying regular
monthly expenses, won·ied
about being laid off or
haven't saved an emergency
fund, this isn't the time to
rack up additional debt.
So. revisit your list and
look for items to trim. A few
thoughts:
• Arrange gift lotteries
with family members and

close friends so each of you some gifts and get your
can concentrate your time. children invoh·ed. Whether
effort and money on getting you· re creating homemade
fewer. nicer gifts.
cards or baking cookies for
• Speak candidly with the
neighbors,
they'll
friends. coworkers and appreciate being able to
extended family about plac- spend more time together.
ing a moratorium on Plus, you can use it as an
exchanging gifts. They· re opportunity to discuss the
probably feeling the pinch need for better budget mantoo.
~gement - and why gifts
• If the gift-giving gesture from the heart are so
is important to you. suggest important.
pooling your resources with
If you need help creating
others to make a sizable a holiday budget. visit
contribution to a charitable Visa's free personal financause you all believe in.
cial management program.
• If you're traveling just Practical Money Skills for
to get away, consider a Life,
(www.practical"staycation" this year.
.
moneyskills .com/holiday)
Give the gift of time. where you'll find easy-toOlder relatives and friends follow budgeting, holiday
don't need another box of entertaining and travel planchocolates. but they could ning tips as well as interacprobably use your help tive calculators to track
with household chores. your spending.
running errands or taking
Take a page from your
them to doctor's appoint- parents' book: There are
ments. Plus. they would plenty of ways to enjoy the
probably appreciate your holidays without breaking
company.
For
hanied the bank .
young parents. offer to
(Jason Aldermnn direcT:.
baby-sit so they can run a \lism finnncial education
few errands or simply programs. Sign up for hi'
recharge their batteries.
free momhly e-Newsletter m
If you need to scale back WWII'.practicafmnneyskil Is .c
on purchases, try making om/newsleTter.)

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Oct. 12
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge, 7:30p.m. business and annual election of
officers. Oyster stew following meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS VFW Post 9053 will meet at
7 p.m. with meal served at
6:30 p.m.
SYRACUSE- Wildwood
Garden Club, 6:30 p.m. at
the Syracuse Community
Center. Janet Bolin to have
workshop on holiday flower
show
arrangements.
Meeting open to everyone
interested in exhibiting at
flower show or joining the
garden club.
POMEROY- Alpha Iota
Masters, 11:30 a.m. at New
Beginnings
Methodist
Church. June VanVranken
and Vera Crow, hostesses.
Friday, Nov. 13
HARRISONVILLEHarrisonville # 255 0. E. S
103rd annual installation at
7:30 p.m. Pot luck after. ·
Monday, Nov. 16
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern Star, will have

installation of officers.
7:30 p.m. Refreshments
following.
Tuesday, Nov. 17
CHESTER Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7 p.m. regular and
friendship meeting. Potluck
at 6 p.m.

on third reading of ordinance to place fire protection levy on February ballot.

sing with "Heaven Rush," 7
p.m., Faith Full Gospel
Church .

Church events

Birthdays

Thursday, Nov. 12
CHESTER- Revival services will be held 7 p.m.
a h
·
N
9 12 t
e c evemng ov. a.
the Mercy Mission at
Chester. There will be spelnQS
cial singing by Pastor Rob
Combs.
Monday, Nov.1 6 .
ALBANY Revival at
ATHEN.~ ~ Commun1ty Point Rock Church of the
Food lntt1at1Ves to host • Nazarene, through Sunday,
Nove.mber Seed Savers 7 p.m. nightly and 11 a.m.
meetmg, 6:30 p.m. at Sunday, with Rev. Jerry and
ACE net •. 94 Columbus .Rd. Mrs. Joyce Boggs. Church is
Emphas1s. on .seed savmg, located on Ohio 689.
cross P?llmat1on and storFriday, Nov. 13
age
1ssues.
Potluck.
LONG BOTTOM_ Hymn
Dinnerware and drinks provided.
For
info
cfi@frognet.net or 740• 593-5971.
Tuesday, Nov. 17
ALFRED- Special meeting of Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m., to
appoint township truste e, at
home of the fistal officer,
Osie Follrod.
DARWIN
Special
meeting
of
Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
town hall, discuss and vote

Pubii"C
t"
mee

S aturday, Nov. 14
POMEROY - Raymond
Donohue will celebrate his
80th birthday at an open
house to be held at 40076
S.R. 684, Pomeroy, from 2
to 4 p.m. Saturday. Friends
and family invited.
Sunday, Nov. 15
LONG
BOTTOM
Ernest Griffin of Long
Bottom will observe his
92nd birthday on Nov. 15.
Cards may be sent to h1m
at 36606 Post Office
Road, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.

�PageA4

Tl]te Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Thursday, November 12,

2009

6ooi&gt; NeWs!
!tA~~09T ~Ne

KeoRG.ANlZlNG

itie f,\eO\ClNe
. CA&amp;INel!

CorzJ:ress shall 11r.1ke tro law respecting a11
establislrmetlt of religion, or prohibiting tire free
exercist• thereof; or abridgin.'! tire freedom t?[ speeclr,
M '!f tire press; or the riglrt of tire people peaceably
''' assemble, and to petitiou tire Gor,ernment
for a redress ofgrievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TC)DAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 12, the 316th day of 2009.
There are 49 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 12, 1942, the World War II naval Battle of
Guadalcanal began. (The Allies ended up winning a
major victory over the Japanese.)
On this date:
In 1815, American suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton
was born in Johnstown, N.Y.
In 1908, Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackrpun was
born in Nashville, Ill
In 1927, Josef Stalin became the undisputed ruler of
the Sov1et Union as Leon Trotsky was expelled from the
Communist Party.
In 1948, former Japanese premier Hideki Tojo and sev·
eral other World War II Japanese leaders were sen·
tenced to death by a war crimes tribunal.
In 1977, the city of New Orleans elected its first black
mayor, Ernest "Dutch" Moria!, the winner of a runoff.
In 1982, Yuri V. Andropov was elected to succeed the
late Leollid I. Brezhnev as general secretary of the
Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee.
In 1984, space shuttle astronauts Dale Gardner and •
Joe Allen snared a wandering satellite in history's first
space salvage; the Palapa B2 satellite was secured in
Discovery's cargo bay for return to Earth.
In 1990, Japanese Emperor Akihito formally assumed
the Chrysanthemum Throne.
In 1996, a Saudi Boeing 747 jetliner collided shortly
after takeoff from New Delhi, India, with a Kazak
llyushm-76 cargo plane, killing 349 people.
In 200i, American Airlines Flight 587, en route from
New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport to the
Domimcan Republic, crashed after takeoff, killing 265
people.
Ten years ago: President Bill Clinton signed a sweeping measure knocking down Depression-era barriers
and allowing banks, investment firms and insurance
companies to sell each other's products. An earthquake
struck western Turkey, killing some 800 people.
Five years ago: A jury in Redwood City, Calif., convict·
ed Scott Peterson of murdering his pregnant wife, Laci,
and dumping her body in San Francisco Bay. (Peterson,
who mamtains his innocence, was later sentenced to
death.) Palestinian leaderYasser Arafat was buned at his
headquarters in the West Bank city of Ramallah, a day
after his death in a French military hospital.
One year ago: Same-sex marriages began in
Connecticut, a month after the state Supreme Court
ruled that gays had the right to wed. Kenny Chesney
took home his fourth entertainer of the year trophy at the
CMA Awards. Mitch Mitchell, the England-born drummer
for the Jimi Hendrix Experience, was found dead in his
hotel room in Portland, Ore.; he was 61.
Today's Birthdays: R&amp;B singer Ruby Nash Curtis
(Ruby and the Romantics) is 70. Actor-playwright
Wallace Shawn is 66. Singer Bnan Hyland is 66. R&amp;B
singer Jimmy Hayes (Persuasions) is 66. Rock musician
Booker T. Jones (Booker T. &amp; the MGs) is 65.
Sportscaster AI Michaels is 65.
Thought for Today: "Were there none who were
discontented with what they have, the world w(Ju/d
never reach anything better."
Florence
Nightingale, English nursing pioneer (1820-1910).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the ed1tor should be hmlted to 300 words. All letters are
subject to editing, must be signed and rnclude address and telephone
• number. No unsigned letters w11i be published Letters should be 1n
good taste, addressing issues. not personalities. "Thank You• letters
will not be accepted for publication

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(UsPs 213·9so&gt;

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our matn concern 1n all stones 1s to Published every mornmg. Monday
be accurate If you know of an error through Fnday, 111 Court Street,
tn a story. call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Oh1o. Second-class postage
992-2156.
pa1d at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc·
(740) 992-2156.
lions to The Daily Sentinel, PO. Box
Department extensions are:
729, Pomeroy. Oh1o 45769.

News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
, Reporter: Bnan Reed, Ext 14
• Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

..

Advertising

• Advertising Director: Pam Caldwell,

740-446·2342. Ext. 17
Retail: M\itt Rodgers, Ext. 15
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: ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext. 10

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•

YOUR OPINION
Disappointed
Dear Editor:
I am a Meigs High School student
disappointed about the Meigs Local
Enrichment Foundation's multi-purpose complex proposed levy coming
up 393 votes short at the polls.
The questions that keep floa!ing
across my mind are ... \\ hy? And now
can so many people be agamst such a
positive thing'! The MLEF and all of
their supporters are only working to
make a positive djffcrcncc in our
community.
I believe that misconceptions
played a huge role in the failure of the
levy. Many things were misconstrued
by those not wanting to pay any more
taxes. Without this levy, humiliation
and embarrassment are two things
that come to mind - visiting teams
sitting on the mud~ly ground in the
pouring ram. flooded locker rooms,
backed up sewers, inadequate lighting and rcstrooms . Whb is going to
explain to our youth ''hat exactly has
happened with not passing the levy
and whv?
This fs not just about a football stadium. a cross country course, track or
e\ en a baseball field ••t is about having mtegrity. Integrity is about adherring to moral and ethical principles,
soundness of moral character. and
honesty. What docs Integrity mean to
you? The MLEF would not only
enrich our Jives as individuals. but
abo a" a commumty as a whole. I
belie,·e this would have aided in the
construction of friendships and everlasting memories.
For those of you that have a pos1·
tive outlook on this, personally I want
to thank you. You realize what it
takes to make a community successful.
So I leave you with this. Next time
when you have an extra $3 dollars
laying around. I want you to thmk
how many lives you could have
enriched with only a few dollar-; a
month'! It would only have taken a

I-lOW DCJES ONE
QAnONAliZE

INVITIN&lt;D A CONVJCTED,
RADJCAL BOMBER
TO SPEAK ON
CAMPUS""

little bit of mone) and etfort from
everyone to make this thing a real it).
May God he wlth )OU.

Austill King
Pomeroy

National Hospice Month
Dear Editor:
As the holidays approach. many of
will gather with family and
fncnds. More often than not. these
gatherings will include reminisl·ences
about lm.ed ones, re-telling of funny
family stories, and the shanng of traditions honored year after year.
This emphasi~ on remembrance. so
\\ elcomed during joyful times. also
plays an important role in dtfficult
times, especially at the end of life. A
hospice memorial ~crvkc- is being
held on Sunday, !'Jovember 15 at 2
p.m. at the Athens Communit)
Church at 219A Columbus Road in
Athens. The public b invited to
attend and honor those loved ones
they have lost.
Studies have shown that. when
faced with a life-limiting illness,
most people are more concerned
about the 1mpact it will have on their
family, not themselves. By. focusing
on the indi\ idual. not the illness, hospice care honors life's final journey,
leaving a legacy of compassion and
caring. Hospice and palliative care
bring comf011, dignity and peace to
help people live every moment of life
to the fullest. leaving loved ones '' ith
memories they can trea . . ure.
Hosp1ce and palhative care professionalo;; and volunteers undero;;tand
that every person they care for is a
unique individual with a lifetime of
experiences, relationships and g1fts to
share.
Novcrnbt.:r
is
National
Hospkc/ Palliative Care Month • .t
time to celebrate those who prO\ ide
hospice and palliative care to those in
our communit) and help raise aw,tre~
ness of quahty care at the end of life.
We are fortunate to have the experillS

enced :-taff and tramed volunteers of
Appalachian Community Hospice
offering care and support during one
of life'..., most ch~tllcnging JOUrneys. I
encourage all tho&lt;;c m our community to thank these dedicated individuab and support the ongoing work of
Appalachian Community Hospice.

Tanmn McGuire, R.N., CHPN
Athens

Tribute to veterans
Dear Editor:
1 would like to give a thank you to
all of the men and women who have
served our great nation through thick
and thin.
I understand there are several different 'iews on the military, but
regardless we should be and are
proud to have it. I realize that things
huve changed dramaticnlly in the last
20 yettrs about Vetcmns Day.
•
I can remember being proud to ~
Ole Glory being raised nt two cemeteries when I \\US in the scouts. The
Amencan Legion would have the
Color Gt-1ard an the \11 nne~ and fire
the 21-gun l)alute to pay the respect to
the fallen solders.
The bugler \\Ould the pia) taps. I
do not believe that there is a person
who reads this paper who has never,
seen. nor have never heard this with
there own ears. I can say if you have
nussed this in life it is like having
someone not even recognize your
birthday. I belie\e thi&lt;; day should be
obsened b) e-vef)one with a simple
thank ) ou to veterans and a moment
of'\Jlence.
I \\Ould sa\ take Easter without the
birth of our Lord Jesus Christ. During
Christmas this would be impossibl;.
Without Veterans Day then~ would
not be Memorial Day it abo would be
impossible. 1 will close and say once
.tgain. Thank )Ou' to all veterans.
National Guard. Resen•es and active
duty. SEMPER fi 1

Tyson Mugrage
Pomeroy

•

W~ENWE'RE

ALL ABOUT
PEACE

AND
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION ?,1'

IXJNT WO~RY/

~E ASSUJ:?EO

US

'-4E'D BE USINC5
~IS

INDOOR

VOICE!

�------..,......--~--- · --,-~-

Thursday, November 12,

_Ob_itu
_an
_·es
_________ l Ariel
Kenneth Allen Dean left thi:-. world early Saturda) morning. Nov. 7. 2009, unexpectedly at 0' Bleness Memorial
Hospital.
He was born in Oroville , Calif.. on July 31, J979. He
was a resident at Echoing Meadows in Athen~. Ohio.
He lea\'cs b·ehind his father and stepmother. James and
aron Dean of Racine, Ohio; his mother. Diana Hall of
okane. Wash.; brothers, Anthony (Mary) Dean and
•
ichacl.lohnson of Salt Lakc City, Utah; grandfather Leroy
Dean of Paradis!!, Calif.; grandmother, Helen Hall of Rough
and Ready, Calif:; aunts Peggy (Gary) Bunch. Chico, Calif.;
Susan (Kevin) Student, Reno, Nev.; Alicia (Chico) Trigo,
Rough and Ready, Calif.: uncles. Larry (Patty) Dean. Crete.
Ill., David (Barbara) Dean, Westwood, Calif.. Dan (Robyn)
Dean, Manteca, Calif., Jerry (Sandy) Dean, Chico. Calif..
Bob (Kim) Dean, Oroville, Calif., Ralph (Nina) Hall and
Steve (Jeri) Hall, ull of Spokane, Wash.
Also surviving are nieces Charlyne Dean and Lilyan
~laizler; nephews, Deacon. A.J. and Bryan Dean all of Salt
Lake City, Utah., Gavin and Ayden Johnson of Opelousas.
La.,andNathanJohnsonofSacramcnto,Calif.:stepbr&lt;?thers Aaron (Courtney) Card, Rob (Brooke) Card of Racme,
John (Dorena) Card of Tuppers Plains; stepsister. Trac)
(Mitch) Hendrick-.on of Marietta. and their children Jamie.
Daniel, Morgan, Dana. I~aac, Syd_neyahna Card and
Cameron and Emma Hendnckson whJch Kenneth thought
of as his nieces and nephews.
He v. ill be sadlv missed by family, many cousins. friends
and co-v.orkers ai Atco in Athens: Meigs Industries. Inc. in
Syracuse; and his housemates and staff at Echoing
Meadows who were like family to him.
He was preceded in death by his grandmother. Ardis
Dean of Paradis!!, Calif.. and grandfather Ralph Hall. Sr.. of
Citrus Heights, Calif.
Visitation will be Saturday. Nov. 14 from 5:30p.m. to 7
. with the services starting at 7 p.m. at the Anderson
Daniel Funl!ral Home in Pomeroy.
•
In lieu of fiowers donations may be made to a memorial fund for a donation in his memory or to your favorite
charity
.

bell
mp

!

t

•

?c

1

Arrests from Page At
stole a chain saw and miscellaneous items.
• Michelle Dor:-;cy, Pomeroy. was arrested and jailed for
disorderly conduct by intoxication. impeding traffic. reasonable control of a motor vehicle after she stopped in the
roadway while having an argument with her passengers.
Dorsey got out of her car and later returned, Swift said.
Also arrested was a passenger in Dorsey's car. Elizabeth
Morgan. Akron, on a charge of disorderly conduct by intoxication, open container and resisting arrest.
• Charles Pennington, Broadway Street. was charged
with domestic violence after his girlfriend. Sara MoonMcKnight, advised police he punched her in the face and
bruised his arms.
• Gregory Knapp. Hud-.on Street. reported someone tried
to pry his door open while he went to pick up his children
from school.
• James Hubbard, Pearl Street. ad\'ised someone took a
air of Oakley glasses, and ATV helmet, white and ::.ilver in
orange and black bag, racing boots, size 10. riding pants
d riding glasses.
• Jonathan Scott, Park Street, reported his motorcycle stolen
after someone came to his house, asking if it was missing. He
advised the subject he bought it from someone earlier. and
after discovering it was stolen, returned it to Scott. He reported from whom he purchased the bike and charges were filed.

Parish from Page At

daytime performances for
schools. Current performance dates are March 2, 5,
6. and 7. Those auditioning
are advised to wear comfor1·
able clothing and shoes that
allow freedom of mO\-cment, and bring a water bottle. Youth under the age of
18 must be accompanied by
a parent or guardian during
the auditions.
The Ariel is also ~eeking
talented musicians for its
upcoming production of
Seussical. Thl)sc who own
their own instrument and ctre
interested in playing in the
orchestra should contact the
Ariel for more information.

a::. well as e~ucat10nal. Tyler
ha~ 1au~~~ m ~alleges and
unn ersJtJes. around th-e
worl.d. a~d ·~ an expert on
Ce}t•c m•gratiOn.
·.It s~oul~ be a fun prescnt~tJon, sa~d Jeanne Jones
Jindra, director of the
Mad?g Center for Welsh
Studtes..
.
Tyler s, speech at Rto
Grande. 'The Desert a~d
The Dr~a~: T~e Welsh !n
Patagoma. Will focus 111
part on how a ~elsh ~olony
form7d and thnved 111 the
provmce
of
Chubut,
Patagonia, Argentina in
1865. He will discuss why
the Welsh settled there, and
will explain how the Welsh
culture is still prevalent in
this part of Argentina today.
Tyler spent a year living
in the Welsh colony of
Patagonia in the 1990s, and
has a great deal of information to share about this historically important and
interesting city.
His thoughts on that settlement will be particularly
relevant to southern Ohio

1

•

•

•

rc~1dents, smce there was
such a large Wel'ih s.ettlement here that also mfiuenced the culture of the
region.
Tyler will answer queslions along with is presentation, and is hoping to be
able to hear from urea residents about the local Welsh
culture.
"Not only is he coming
here to speak, but he is hoping to learn something here
as well,'' Jindra explained.
During his time vbiting Rio
Grande, Jindra is planning
to take him to some important Welsh sites in the
region, such •a&lt;; the WcbhAmerican
Heritage
Museum in Oak Hill, and
she plan" to have him talk
with several of the area resident~ who have a Welsh
heritage.
Tyler was born
in
Casnewydd/Newport in the
.'oOUtheast of Wales. He studied history at the University
College of Wales and
earned a master's degree in
history from the University

•

of Plltsbur~h .. H~ lat~r
taught at mstrt.ut?O~ls !n
Japan and Argentma, and 111
1997 ~as av. arded and
Australia~
Go\ernment
S~holars~1p to&lt; research the
\\elsh . Ill l Jth ~entUJ:Y
Austra!Ja. He d1d lm
res~arc~ , w~rk at .tJ1e
Umverslt) o~ Melbourne.
~nd earned hts Ph.D. th~re
m 2000. He then went ?n to
work for. th~ .:-JatJon~ll
As~embl_y 111 \\ales and the
~mversJty
of
Wales.
~ewport, and. has ~lso had
h1s work publ1shed 111 severaljournah.A book based on
his research work in
Australia is scheduled to be
published &lt;..oon.
Area residents do not
need to kno"' anything
about the Webh histo!) or
culture in order to enjo)
T) Jer 's speech. as his
remarks will be interesting
and informative to all of the
audience
members.
Refreshments will be sened
after the speech.
(On
the
We h.
www.rio.edu)

McCain calls Fort Hood shooting an 'act of terror'

Lawrence Blain Mohr
Lawrence Blain Mohr, 90, Gallipolis, died Wednesday,
Nov. 14,.2009, in St. Mary's Medical Center. Huntington.
W.Va. He is survived by his wife. Dorothy Van Gilder Mohr.
Graveside services will be at 2 p.m .. Saturday, Nov. 14,
"~009, in the Gravel Hill Cemetery. Cheshire. There are no
ling hours. Arrangements arc under the direction of
~emeen Funeral Chapel, Gallipolis.
Military graveside services will be conducted by the
Gallia Count) Veterans Funeral Detail Team.
Expressions of sympathy m~y be sent to the family by
visiting www.cremeensfuncralhomes.com.

mances. The production then
began various national tours.
and has since been produced
by various professional.
semi-professional, school.
and community groups.
Those wishing to audition
do not need to prepare in
advance of the audition.
Hopefuls ~hould plan to
arri\'e approximatclv 15
minutes early to conlplete
paperwork, and be prepared
to provide rehearsal availability through early March.
2010, when the production
performs.
The production will perform three public performan.ces. as well up to four

•
· Grande
weIsh History
expert to speak at Rio

Deaths

a ene

some mo\ ement/dancing
ability.
One principle role will be
cast with a child. The musical also re4uire an ensemble
of performers that play various colorful roles throughout the production.
The production will be
directed By Jo~eph Wright,
Ariel Executive and Artistic
Director. and Tara Lawson,
Assistant to the Executive
Director. Musical direction
will be by Brandon Lawson,
with musical assistance
from Barb White.
The Tony Award Winning
musical opened November 1.
20&lt;Xl and ran for 198 perfor-

"\YJ:

. RIO GRANDE - Welsh
hJst~ry CXJ?er! qr. R~b~rt
1 Lle\\el.lyn l_yl~r w•!l speak at
the_umversJty of RJ() Grande
on ,rhursday. Nov. 19. . .
1ylcr, who has been rnv•t1 ed to sp~ak at conferences
1 and specwl e\ents around
An~enca and myun~, the
~otld .on We.lsh !HstOI) top1~s, will begm _h1s prcsenta!•on at 3 p.m. m_ Room 216
!~ Bob Evan.s hlrms Hall.
, I he event will
free and
op~n to the publ.'c. .
.
1 he presentation ·~ be1!1g
sponsored by the Umvers1ty
of Rio Grande's Madog
Center for Welsh Studies.
' Tyler is currently serving
as the Fulbright-Robertson
I Chair of British History at
---------------------~ Westminster College
in
Fulton, Missouri. In his
work as a visiting scholar
,
.
.
. .
~ there, he has been conduct\alene Campbell, 44. Rock~pnngs ..died .Sunday. Nov. 8, ing research while also trav200?. at Pleasant Va.lley Jlosp!tal. Bun a I Will be at the con- cling around the country to
vemence ~f the fam1.l~. .
.
.
.
make presentations on
There wtll be no VJsJtat1on. A memonal s~rvt~e wrll be at Welsh histOJ)'.
a later date. Arrangements are under the d1rect10n of Deal
At Rio Grande. Tyler will
Fun~~al Horne.
.
.
.
make an informal presentaVJsJI dealfu~er~ll@ suddenlmkmaJI.com to E-mml condo- tion that will be entertainino
lcnces to the larmly.
:='

'U 1 • Ca

---~.,.....

holding auditions for musical

GALLIPOLIS - Local
actors are encouraged to get
in touch with their inner
"Cat in the Hat." muster up
their best "Horton the
Elephant" courage, and
release their best "Ma) zie
La Bird" side, and come to
auditions for the colorful
musical-theatre production,
"Scussical! The Musical.''
Auditions will be held at
The Ariel - Dater I Iall on
Saturday, November 21 at 2
p.m. and Monday. Nov. 23
at 6 p,m, Roles are open for
actors age 8 through adult.
t\lost principle roles will be
cast with adult or teen
actors that sing and act, with

Kenneth Allen Dean

--·-

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

--~-------

1

_

LOUISVILLb, Ky. -:U.S. Sen. John ~lcCm_n sa1d
Wednesday he considered
the Fort Hood shooting an
"act of terror"' and said
1 autharities..s~ould .have been
~Jened to ~Jstu~•.ng behav1or patterns .ex~JbJted by the
Arm~ psychJatn~t accused of
gunnmg down h1s comrades.
''I believe it was an act of
tem)r.'" McCain told a crowd
at the University of Louisville
during a 4uestion-an-answer
session after a Veterans Day
tribute to the military.

I

Presse~ late_r by a reporter

to e~plam h1s . words, the
ranking Republican on the
Senate Armed Services
C:ommittee said: 'The fact
;s that it w?s an act of.t~rror
\vhen you re on a m1htary
base. and you arc ~ trusted
mem~r .of the mihtary. a
commiSSIOned officer, and
you kill your fellow membcrs in the military- motivated obviously by his
views of the extremist interpretation of an honorable
religion."' McCain said.

•

,.

Army MaJ. N•d.al ~asa~.
an Army psychJa!nst, Is
alleged to have kJ!led 13
people at the massive Army
mstallation in Texa" last
week. .
,
M~Cm~. the G~)p-" 20Q8
prestd~ntml no~mee ..sard
that. I!, was
espectally
gallmg that Hasan had volunteered for military service
and received taxpayer-supported training and medical
schooling.
"Tiu: depth of his ingratitude is really remarkable."'

•

Mc&lt;:;am later to.ld rep?t1er~.
Still. McCam smd Ill
remarks to the crO\\d that he
wasn't prepared to reach
any conclu ions about the
s.hoo~ing until the investigau~n ts comJ?lete.
.
.
'But I thmk o.~e thmg .'"
pr~tt). obvJOu~,
McCam
sa1d. · And that IS there were
signs that this indh idunl had
some "ery disturbing beha\ior patterns. which should
ha\'e been alerted to the
proper authorities and action
should have been taken."
A

UrtionSrromPageAl
i those in Meigs and Gallia
counties.
, In his speech. Breidenthal
1 said the Episcopal Church
· "has effectively acknowledged that the godly union
1 of two persons of the same
sex - b) which 1 mean the
union of two persons who
have vowed lifelong fidelity
to one another, and accept
accountability to, the faith
community as a faithful
household- can be blessed
by the church."
Riche lie Thompson, director of communications for
the Episcopal Diocese of
Southern Ohio, was at the
convention
when
Breidenthal
made
his
announcement. Thompson
said lifting of the prohibition
on same-sex unions received
a standin~ ovation though
no~ a ~nammous one.
.
· This wus not somethm.g
an~;one has come to cast1¥,
Tho~pson ~mp.ha­
j s1zed. saymg ~t th1s. u.me
~ th~ c~urch IS defm~ng
gUJdehnes for the bless!ng
ceremony as well as trymg
I

that the Parish can fulfill its mission.
The Christmas give-away is one of two "drive-through"
food give-aways. The other one takes place in June. In the
meantime there is what is called emergency food giveaways where families can come in up to three times a year
for additional food.
"But no one is turned away," explained Thoene. ''If they
come to the Parish requesting food and don't have one of
the pre-qualifying cards or have used their three emergency
times, then they are given froLen food which is provided
free to the Parish by Bellifos of Jackson. The Parish prides
itself on supporting local business by buying all of the
items they need, not contributed by others. at local stores. 1
To deadline to sign up for the Christmas food give-a\vay
is Nov. 20. This is done at the Cooperative Parish for 9 a.m. fire Chief Rick Ulaettnar
to II a.m. Tuesday through Friday. Requirements for sign- addressed the cost of the spcinclude showing a picture ID, a utility bill from cia! election. saying he has
vember to verify address, Social Security number and discussed with Pomeroy
orne proof of income. Once qualified the recipient will Village Council not charging
• receive a card good for one year which they must present Bedford Township for the
when picking up food.
nms the dl!partment made
Last week RACO held one of its two fund and food dri- into tht: township from
ves for the Parish. They raised $882 and collected 472 food December 2008-09. An
items which were delivered to the Mulberry Community unidentified re~ident told the
Center this week. Joining RACO in the project this year was trustees he felt this should
the new Dollar General Store in Racine which had a food more than cover the cost the
township has to pay to file
collection bin inside for customers wanting to contribute.
"We dependent on the generosity of others to help out the election fee. Bedford
with food and money," said Thoene. ''We rely on RACO Township pays n fiat fee of
and the Community Action Agency as good sources for $150 per run that Pomeroy
contributions along with area churches and individuals." ~ makes into their tO\\ nship.

I
!

to "tread gently"' and
"respect the dignity of
every human being.'"
The blessings cannot
begin until Easter 20 I 0 and
Breidenrhal stipulated he be
notified 60 days in advance
of the intent to perform a
blessing. none of which can
take place without his written permission. In addition,
at least one of the people
seeking the same-sex bles~­
ing must be a confinned
member of the Episcopal
church. The same-sex couple asking for the blessing
must also expect to attend
counseling prior to the ceremony. However. bestowing
a blessing on a same-sex
union will be up to the individual priest with no repercussions · for those who
refuse. For those who wish
to perform the blessings,
priests are encouraged to
also involve their congregations in a dialogue about
their decision.
Thompson said the diocese has so far received an
interest in the blessings

from a church in Columbus.
''l su pect some couples
have been '' aiting for this
for
mam
ye.ars ...decadc~ ...then there
are other couple::. for whom
this is not something they
will \\ant to pursue:·
Thompson ~aid.
Thompson acknowledged
not all church members in
the diocese "ill agree with
the recent decision but for
those church members and
priests, their congregations
will not be affected if they
don't wish to participate in
the same-sex blessings.
Thompson also acknowledged there are many interpretations of what the Bible
says about many bsue-.,
including homosexuals, but
added: "In the Epi.scopal
Church, we use tradiuon
and reason to understand
what the Bible is saying to
us today."
As for the struggle to lift
the prohibition on the bles::.ing of same-sex unions.
Thompson stre sed: "This
has been a long com er:sa-

tion. This Bi,hop has
brought in different vie\\
points on the bsue. talked
with them and came to this
conclusion after pra)er and
discussion. He's alwa) s
been clear he feels a lifelong commitment between a
couple of the same sex can
be hoi) and there is a place
for that union ...there hould
be a place for that union to
be blessed in the church."
Thdmp~on went on to
say: "There is a courage
required to be a first. Maybe
that's our call even though it
is painful for us."

Bedford from Page At

I
I

-" -

The majority of the people attending this week\
meeting were in fa\'or of the
levy and fire station. citing
it would lower their homeowner "s insurance significantly and was a sign of
progress. However, despite
the majority in favor of the
station, support for the new
station and levy was not
unanimous at the meeting.
"We just want a chance to
vore on it," Courtney Sim.
township resident in support·
of the levy and fire station,
said.

Call Tony Dingess
740-591-2260
740-992-2054
740-992-7141

Parade li11e
up at1:00

......

�-....

...

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

~he

Daily Sentinel

NATI N

pbama honors veterans at Arlington cenietery
BY JULIE PACE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ARLINGTON. Va. - On
a cold, rain-soaked Veterans
Day. President Burack
Obama walked slowly
through the white. stone
markers at the section of
Arlington
National
Cemetery reserved for
troops killed in Iraq and
Afghanistan, the two wars
he oversees as commander
in chief.
Obama led the nation
Wednesday in observing
Veterans Day with a traditional wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the
Unknowns at Arlington
before an unannounced visit
to the section reserved for
those who fought in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
·•we gather here mindful
that the generation serving
today already deserves a
place alongside previous
generations for the courage
they have shown and the
sacrifices that they have
made." Obama said in a
brief speech following the
wreath-laying.
Obama
pledged he would do right
by all veterans and families.
saying: ..America will not
let you down"
The president spoke one
oay after honoring the victims of a shooting rampage
at Fort Hood. Texas. He said
he was struck by the determination of the soldiers
there . a quality that unites
generations of American
~ervicemen.

"To all of them - to our
veterans, to the fallen and to
their families - there is no
tribute. no commemoration.
no praise that can truly
match the magnitude of
your service and your sacrifice," he said.
The nation observed
Veterans Day from remembrances at the nation's capital to a New York City
parade to ceremonies in
towns and cities across the
nation and overseas.
At Camp Eggers in
Kabul. soldiers observed a
moment of silence for the
p:tore than 800 U.S. service
members have died in
Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Uzbekistan since the 2001
invasion to oust the Taliban
regime.
The Navajo Code Talkers
were special guests at the
New York parade's opening
ceremony. where a wreath
was laid at the World War I
Eternal Light Monument in
Madison Square Park. As
young Marines during
World War II. the Code
:ralkers used secret Navajo
language-encrypted military
terms that the Japanese
were never able to crack.
As the Code Talkers were
introduced, the crowd which included World War
II veteran and actor Tony
Curtis - let out a loud
cheer.
Boston College dedicated
a 70-foot-long granite wall
bearing the names of 209
alumni who lost their lives

PageA6
Thursday, November 12, 2009

Shooting suspect's superiors
questioned behavior

WASHINGTON (AP) encouraged Muslims to kill
A group of doctors oversee- U.S. troops in Iraq. A law
ing Nidal Malik Hasan's enforcement official said
medical training discussed Wednesday that the task force
concerns about his overly did not refer early infonnazealous religious views and tion about Ha-;an to superiors
strange behavior months because it concluded he was.
before the Army major "·as n't linked to terrorism.
The doctors and staff who
accused of a shooting ram~
page at Fort Hood. Texas. discussed concerns about
that left 13 dead and 29 Hasan had several group
conversations about him
wounded.
·Doctors and staff oversee- that started in early 2008
ing Hasan's training viewed during regular monthly
him at times as belligerent. meetings and ended as he
defensive and argumenta- was finishing a fellowship
tive in his frequent discus- in disaster and preventive
sions of his Muslim faith, a psychology this summer.
military official familiar the official familiar with the
with several group discus- discussions said.
They saw no signs of
sions about Hasan said. The
official was not authorized mental problems, no risk
to speak publicly about the factors that would predict
meetings and spoke on con- violent behavior. And the
group discussed other facdition of anonymity.
Hasan was characterized tors that suggested Hasan
in meetings as a mediocre would continue to thrive in
student and lazy worker, a the military, factors that
matter of con~ern among mitigated their concerns, the
the doctors and staff at official said.
According to the official,
Walter Reed Army Medical
Center and the Uniformed records reviewed by Hasan's
Services University of the superiors described nearly 20
Health Sciences, a military years of military service.
medical school in Bethesda, including nearly eight years
as an enlisted soldier: com.
Md .. the official said.
The
concerns
about pletion of three rigorou
Hasan's performance and medical school programs.
religious views were shared albeit as a ~tudent the group
with other military officials characterized in their discusconsidering his assignment sions as mediocre: his
after he finistied his medical resilience after the deaths of
training, and the consensus his parents early in his medwas to send the 39-year-old ical education, and an otherpsychiatrist to Fort Hood. wise polite and gentle nature
AP photo the official said.
when not discussing religion.
The Army has said it has
President Barack Obama places a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns Wednesday durFort Hood, one of the
ing a Veteran's Day ceremony at Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va.
country's largest military no record of enlisted service
installations. was consid- for Hasan. instead noting that
while serving in a war zone. to a particular service mem- the Obamas shook hands ered the best assignment for his military service began
Bells tolled in three sets of ber. Under a Defense and embraced surprised Hasan because other doc- when he started the medical
II from the college's his- Department policy, ordinary family members there to
tors could handle the work- school program in 1997.
toric Gasson Tower. sym- mail addressed to "any sol- pay their respects. pausing
The official said the group
load if he continued to perbolizing the exact time that dier" has to be returned to to speak with them briefly form poorly and his superi- became increasingly conan armistice was declared in the sender. The cards will be beside their loved ones·
ors could document any cerned about Hasan's reliWorld War I. Harvard screened. sorted and distrib- graves.
continued behavior prob- gious views after he comunveiled a plaque on cam- uted to military hospitals
Prior to traveling to lems. the official said.
pleted two research projects
pus to honor the university's and bases nationally and Arlington. the president and
The group saw no evi- that took a decidedly relialumni who have received overseas as well as to veter- first lady, along with Vice
gious tone - one at the end
dence that Hasan was viothe Medal of Honor. The ans and military family President Joe Biden and his
of
his residency at Walter
lent or a threat. It was more
university has 16 winners.
members.
wife, JiJI Biden, hosted a that he repeatedly referred Reed that advocated allowHundreds of Minnesota
The Veteran's Day obser- Veteran's Day breakfast at
to his strong religious views ing Muslim soldier• to be
military veterans and family vances come as Obama is the White House. The
released as conscientious
members filled a communi- on the verge of announcing Bidens later hosted a lunch in discussions with class- objectors instead of fighting
ty center gymnasium in the a revamped war strategy in at the Naval Observatory mates, his superiors and in wars against othe.
even in his research work.
suburbs of St. Paul to hear Afghanistan that is expected for veterans, active duty ser
Muslims, and the other a
the official said. His behav- he pursued his master's
words of thanks from state to include sending thouicemembers and their famior, while at times perceived
political leaders. The cere- sands more troops into that ilies.
degree in public health that
as
intense and combative.
mony drew veterans rang- war zone. The top U.S.
As a military father himdiscussed religious conflicts
ing from young enlisted sol- commander in Afghanistan. self. Biden said he under- was not unlike the zeal of for Muslim U.S. soldiers.
diers to retired generals.
Gen. Stanley McChrystal. stands the difficulty of wait- others with strong religious
Some of those in the
"The title of veteran has asked the president for ing for a loved one to return views. But some doctors group questioned Hasan's
deserves great respect in up to 40,000 more forces.
from deployment. He said and staff were concerned sympathies as an Army
America," Minnesota Gov.
Before returning to the the country has a "sacred that their unfamiliarity with psychiatrist, whether he
Tim · Pawlenty
said. White House to discuss the duty" to provide for service- the Muslim faith would lead would be more aligned
"Veteran stands for a life Afghan strategy with his top members and their families. them to unfairly single out with Muslims fighting U.S.
dedication to our nation's militarv and national securiThe first lady said at a Hasan's behavior, the offi- troops. And there was
greatest cause - the cause ty advisers. Obama walked later event that servicemem- cial said.
some
concern
about
Sharon Willis. a spokes- whether he should continof freedom."
through Arlington's Section bers' commitment to their
Among the dead in the 60. where tall en troops from country doesn't disappear woman for the Uniformed ue to serve in the military,
University. the official said.
Fort Hood shooting ram- Iraq and Afghanistan are after they return to civilian Services
referred
questions
Some in the group shared
life.
page was Pfc. Kham Xiong buried. ,
Wednesday
about
Hasan to their experiences with
of St. Paul. He was menThe president stopped at
"For many of these folks.
tioned in several speeches the grave of Spc. Ross service is the air they his lawyer. The attorney, Hasan, all telling similar
repeated
Wednesday and singled out McGinnis. a Medal of breathe.'' she said at the John GaJJigan of Belton. stories about
for recognition during the Honor recipient who was event at George Washington Texas, did not immediately instances when he made
invocation.
killed in Iraq, before he and University. "It's the reason return a telephone call seek- religion an issue.
An American Red Cross the first lady Michelle they were put here on this ing comment.
The revelations about the
event in Washington kicked Obama walked through the earth. And they don't just
concerns
that Hasan's supeoff the start of a program rows of white headstones want to serve for a certain
Congratulations to
riors
had
before sending
called Holiday Mail for marking the fallen, the first number of years of deployJack &amp; Roger
Heroes. which lets the pub- president to do so while in ment - they want to make him to Fort Hood come
amid
a
growing
debate
over
&amp;
lic send holiday greeting office. according to ceme- their entire life a tour of
what warning signs the milcards that aren't addressed tery staff. Under light rain, duty."
Thank you to all who
itary and Jaw enforcement
officials might have missed
voted for me in the
before last week's massacre.
Bedford Twp.
A joint terrorism task force
Trustees Race.
overseen by the FBI learned
ing too heavily on test forward, we'll have oppor- good teachers. Those kids late last year of Hasan's
KAREN YORK
scores and charter schools tunities to work on that. I are more likely to have repeated contact with a radiPd for bv cand1date
when the administration first think there's more flexibility ·teachers without a degree or cal Muslim cleric who
certification in the subjects
proposed rules for the com- than there was before.
petition.
''I feel good that they they teach.
Their criticism is tem- opened the door a little,"
The rules say poor and
pered now. 'The depa11ment VanRoekel said . "T.hey did- minority students should
worked really hard to find n't open it far enough. but at have equal access to "highly
NOVEMBER 14TH
the right balance," said least it's open, and I appre- effective teachers." which
are defined as those whose
Randi Weingarten, presi- ciate that.''
dent of the I .4 million
While the unions feel bet- students show high rates of
member
American ter about the competition. academic growth.
plenty of criticism remains.
Federation of Teachers.
But it will take time to
Unions had argued that Some education groups say figure out how to measure
student achievement is the rules don't go far that growth. and even then.
(304) 773-5212 • 96 Gander Lane, Mason, 'WV
much more than a score on a enough or miss the mark.
there is no guarantee it will
standardized test. in part
Saying test scores are "sig- work, said Amy Wilkins,
because only about one- nificant" leaves too much to lobbyist for the trust.
third of teachers teach sub- interpretation. said Jeanne Instead. she said. officials
jects and grades that are Allen, president of the non- should use information they
actually tested. •
profit Center for Education have now - which teachers
In
response,
the Reform think tank.
majored or minored in their
Education
Department
"I think you've got the subjects, how they scored
changed the rules to say that right intentions, and you've on state licensure exams,
teachers and principals must got some positive move- how many years of experibe judged on several differ- ment," Allen said. "But ence they have.
ent measures of student unless you're willing to be
All those qualificatiQDS
achievement, but that test strict and firm about your have been shown to make a
scores should play a signifi- expectations and leave difference, she said.
cant role.
nothing up to interpretation,
"They are ignoring those
''I'm disappointed there's a lot of people will get indicators that are within
still a lot of focus on test money without having done reach, that pepple have in
scores tied to individual very much."
their hands,'' she said. ''1bey
teachers," said Dennis Van
The Education Trust, a didn't give poor kids and
Roekel, president of the 3.2 children's advocacy group, kids of color access to strong
million member National said the contest doesn't do teachers. When poor kids are
enough to make sure poor taught by better teachers,
Education Association.
"But I think as time moves and minority kids have they do much better."

•

Obama uses school dollars to prod states to change
BY LIBBY QUAID
ASSOCIATED PRESS

., WASHINGTON
States are jockeying for a
new $5 billion pot of education money even before the
contest has begun.
The Obama administration was opening the competition Thursday for grants
it wants used for ideas like
charter schools or judging
teachers based on student
test scores. Applications are
due in January and the first
round of grants will go out
in April.
Fewer than half the states
are liKely to win the money.
and several already have
rewritten education laws
and cut deals with unions to
boost their chances.
"States have been doing
some things to get in the
ballpark,"
Education
Secretary Arne Duncan said
in an interview with The
Associated Press. "Now
states have to think about
how they win. We're going
to reward excellence here."
President Barack Obama's
agenda is controversial;
national teachers' unions,
typically Democratic allies.
have chastised him for rely-

OPEN HOUSE

Ewe~aMe

ftimitives

-~

�2009 DELINQUENT LAND TAX NOTICE
(TAX YEAR 2008)
. The lands, lots and parts of lots returned delinquent by the County Treasurer of Meigs County, with the taxes, assessments, interest, and penalties, charged
thereupon agreable to law, and contained and described in the following lists.

•

REAL ESTATE
0100055001
0100173000
0100460001
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0100537000
0100599000
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1100025001

•

1100148001
1100234002
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11()()848000
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1200179000

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ROWE TERRY R &amp;/OR DENISE K SEC2S FR34 T3N R13W 3.205A OUT OF 38.50A
CURTIS ALBERT L
FRAC2 T3N R13W NW EX.QUIMBY LOT EX.47.86A EX: 0.106A EX
922.29
3.524A V238 P93
STOTTS CHARLES L&amp;/ORTERRY FRAC1S T3N R13W 24.47AOUTOF 27.95A EX:
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14.1906A V309 P625
650.31
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MOORE JOHN &amp;/OR LENORA
606.43
BALL BETTY J FRAC23 T3N R13W SEC22 17.5A OUT OF 32.95A W SIDE OF 681 EX: 7.25A
SMITH MICHAEL R
SEC26 T3N R13W W 1/2 OF SW 1/4
991.32
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688.34
WHITE JEFFREY A &amp;/OR WHITE DEBORA JEFFERS
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745.73
MARWORTH AMY
SEC3 T3N R12W 1.042A OUT OF 3A
1,177.41
KING NANCY J
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MORA GEORGE
FRAC35 T3N R13W V275 PS53
3,071 .15
HILL FRANCES S
SEC17 T3N R12W S.310AOUT OF 49.6041A
2,090.47
VAIL JAYNE ANN SMITH &amp; HOLTER JAN LOUISE SMITH
SEC2SLOT#16 BAUM'S 1ST SUB.74.09'PLUS 25.72X1SO' 1,22S.27
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1,201 .77
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CREMEANS STEVEN V
SEC23 T9N R15W E1 /2 OF NE1/4 3.50S5A OUT OF 7S.7S2SA.
V337 P459
640.SS
RUNYON STEVEN H
T9N R15W 2.50A PAT OF 90.76AALONG TR.13
1,111 .2S
THOMPSON TERRY 0
SEC1S T9N R15W .882AOUT OF 6.01A
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JORDAN DAN l &amp; KIM
FRAC32 T9N R15W SW COR 5.973 OUT OF 179A V276 P409
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ROSE SHARON ANN c/o Kimberly Rose
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DIXON DENISE RENE
SEC12 T9N R15 NEAR MID OFE LINE E OFTR3 OF 16.50A
859.65
COOPER RANDAL A &amp;/OR DORINDA F
SEC2S T3N R11W SW PART
501.27
BOSOANNA
100A LOT1S2 T2N R11W All EX 6 1/2A N V323 P335
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GREENLEAF ROBERT E B &amp;/OR JOETTA
100A LOT155 T3N R11W LOT 62 49'X126.S' GIBBSADDN. 2,577.S7
HERRERA FERNANDO &amp;/OR SARAH
SEC16 T2N R11W 0.866A OUT OF 2.588A
704.51
SAYRE KIMBERLY
SEC25 T3N R11W 1.2S6AOUT OF 21 .33A
948.93
WILLIAMS DEBORAH l
100A LOT201 T2N R11W 3.0463AOUT OF 2S.25SA
54S.75
ROBINSON MICHAELJ &amp;/OR REBECCA A
SEC26 T3N R11W W SIDE CORD #31
956.66
SMITH ROYR
SEC17100A LOT170 T2N R11W UNO 213 OF 100A
694.05
TEAFORD DALE CLAIR Ill
70A LOT164 T2N R11 W 1.00A OUT OF 23.00A
1,141.97
HARMON WILLIAM &amp;/OR JANELLE 0
SEC33160A LOT1184 T2N R11W MID OF W1/2 OF E1/2
EX COAL V2SS P273
1,462.00
SMECK BRIAN K &amp; LINDA J
34A LOT COMMONS T2N R12W LOT 14 STRIP N PAT OF
RD ONE LINE
737.59
DELLAVALLE MICHAEL
100A LOT249 T1N R12W SECOR OF W 14.4A W OF RD
2.05AEX 1A
775.40
HILLPAULJR
36A LOT246 51 A LOT25D-254100A LOT247-249 T1N R12W
1A OUT OF 2.05A
1,268.93
SHULER STEPHEN &amp;/OR WANDA SEC16 T1N R12W SW PTOF RD NEXT TO SPENCERV265
P601
1,22S.16
BARCUS RICHARD L&amp; MOLLY J
100A LOT221 T1N R11W 4.536AOUT OF 60.124A PAT OF
LOTS
770.37
BARCUS RICHARD l &amp; MOLLY J
1OOA LOT221 T1 N R11 W 6.365A OUT OF 60.124A LOT 9
S06.74
RUCKER JERRY L &amp;/OR EDLA J
SEC8 T4N R11W NEAR MID ON W LINE
1,003.19
JONES PATRICIA ANN
SEC16 T4N R11W NW COR OF 21 .50ATRACT NW COR OF
SW1/4 OF SEC16
1,012.84
MURPHY MARK
SEC35 T4N R11W MID OF SPAT OF SW 1/4 EX 3.5A EX
1,239.38
5.013A
PUTMAN JIM &amp;/OR RUTH
SEC24 T4N R11W NW CORNER
935.04
RIGGS KENNETH R &amp;/OR CHRISTY A 70A LOT122 T3N R11W LOT 11 -24 SPAT OF 19.52A
EX:0.395A V20 P553
85S.9S
HUDSON HEATH &amp;/OR KYLA
30A LOT121 T3N R11W
2,240.54
CLAMPITT RONALD R II
SEC6 T4N R12 MARTINSVILLE LOT 14
723.24
CARLETON SETH
FRAC12 T4N R12W 3.00A OUT OF 93.55A
1,334.97
WITHAM JOHN C &amp;/OR ROBIN l
SEC30 T4N R12W 1.1S5AOUTOF 153.152A
743.50
DAVIS JANICE
SEC5 T4N R12W .92A OF 68.212A
3,335.58
MCDIARMID DUANE M
SEC36 T4N R12W SE PAT
1,220.05
JOHNSON BRENDA S
SEC34 T4N R12W N PT OF NE 1/4 EX: 14.42A NE EX: 1.083A
2,124.68
JOHNSON BRENDA S
SEC34 T4N R12W N PT OF NE1/41.083AOUT OF 63.58A
727.54
DUBOIS CHARLES Ill &amp;/OR LORI SEC5T4N R12W 1.15AOUTOF 40.971SA
734.29
PIERCE DAVID M &amp; DAVIDSON SABRA L
FRAC31, 25, 19T6N R14W NEAR MID N OF SR1241.00A
OUT OF 61.44A
1,479.16
HYSELL DONALD l &amp;/OR DEBRA 0 SEC2 T6N R14W SW1/4 .4557A OUT OF 13.SOA
1,447.84
BECKNER JACKLYN
SEC24 T5N R14W 21.90AOUTOF 64.53A
1,513.58
WILLIS BRIAN K &amp;/OR DAVINA D SEC1S T6N R14W 1.7972AOUTOF73.40A V7 P459
1,25S.70
SALSER MAGIE K
SEC1 T6N R14W NE COR OF 10A .4139A NEW SURVEY
632.06
PRICE MICHAEL WAYNE
FRAC33 T6N R14W W SIDE OF 5SA NW COR V321 P675 2,2S7.68
HYSELL PAUL A
SEC19 T6N R14W 1.237A OUT OF 80.00A
534.72
WALKER RODNEY E &amp;/OR DIANE FRAC36 T6N R14W N PAT OF 61 .62A NW PAT EX: 18A
WV269 P619
1,268.03
TOBIN ARTHUR A &amp;/OR BETHANY l
FRAC1 T6N R14W LOT383' FRONTAGE ON SR 124
1,144.58
MOLDEN JESSE l
FRAC7T6N R14WOUTOF 39.1SANE COR BORDERING ON MAIN ST

1200219000
1200372000
1300157011
1300161002
1300350000
1300558000
1300583000
1300732001
1400086000
14001S5000
1400194000
1400858000
1401052000
1401393001
1401503000
1500619000
1500642000
1501291000
1501527000
1501569000
1501614000
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1601231000
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1601833000
1601849000
1602020000
1602023000
1602092000
1602142000
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1602349000
1602352000
1602457000
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1700158000
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1700350000
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1700519002
1700708000
1700858000
1800096001
1S002S2000
1S00339000
1S00460000
1S00471000
1800576001
1800592000
1S00659000
1S00660000
1S00762000
1S00769000
1800836000
1S01064001

515.30
SORDEN JACK DANIEL JR c/o STEPHEN LUSH
632.73
SEC8 T6N R14W LOT 22 FALLONS ADD 22
650.S7
BING RANDY E &amp;/OR EMILY M
SEC8 T6N R14W ON SR S OF POWERS
HORNER THOMAS EWELL JR &amp;/OR BRENDA SUE
621.71
SEC5 TSN R15W 19.285A OUT OF 41 .53A
BIBLER THEODORE A C/0 JUDY KENT
2,516.07
SEC25 TSN R15W S 1/2 OF SW QTR EX: 5.00A
LAMBERT HAROLD 0 &amp;/OR SHERYL ANN
524.00
SEC31 TSN R15W NEAR NW PT OF SEC
880.15
PEYTON RICHARD A
SEC5 TSN R15W ON W LINE OF NE1/4 V2S6 P613
VAIL JAYNE ANN &amp; HOLTER JAN LOUISE
SEC36 TSN R15W SECOR EX: #4 VEIN COAL V314 P515
670.22
SCHOOLCRAFT CHARLES &amp; MARGARET
SEC25 TSN R15W NE1/4 OF NW1/4 4AOUTOF 2S.329A
846.27
FOWLER JEFFREY E &amp;/OR BRANDEE M
SEC31 T2N R13W ON W LINE OF SEC31 IN NW1/4 EX: .2SA 977.43
BLAZER DEBORAH S
SEC24 T4N R13W NW OF SE1 /4
1,62S.35
CLONCH KATHLEEN G C/O AMY PULLINS
SEC29 T1N R13W NEAR MID ON W LINE OF SECT 29
972.77
KLEIN GROVER &amp; IRENE l C/0 BARBARA FLAISIG
FRAC36 T2N R13W SEND 42 NE OF W112 EX: COAL V292 P525
575.74
EVANS THOMAS 0 &amp;/OR PENNY A LOT305 T1 N R13W PENNY SURV V320 P59
7S1.25
PULLINS STEVE
SEC9 FRAC2&amp;6 T2N R13W
82427
HANING EUGENE &amp;/OR LYDIA V SEC34 T2N R13W E END OF N 12 OF NE 1/4 EX: 1.020A V329 P731
638.04
MITCHELL KATHRYN T
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT 110 PALMER'S 1ST ADD.
796.21
CARD PAUL
64A LOT313 T1N R13W LOT 62 N 112 PT. BEHAN'S 2ND
34'X95' NE COR.
608.0S
TAYLOR GREGORY A
100A LOT312 T1N R13W LOT 2 PALMER ADD 70' N PART V21 P465
523.01
MORRISON NELSON R &amp;/OR VICKI
100ALOT312T1N R13W LOT 111 PALMER'S 1ST ADD. V15 P485
1,331.66
FREEDOM CENTER MINISTF'l ~': JT313 T1N R13W LOT 72 BEHAN ADO EX 1S' OFF S SIDE
1,9S3.69
ERVIN ALLAN
.n LOT312 T1N R13W LOT 117 6"XSO' NW PART P JONES 3RO ADD
4,627.13
DELLAVALLE MICHAEL
FRAC17 T2N R13W EX. LOTS SOLO
2,933.38
AULT KENDA &amp; BRAUN MICHAEL C/0 KENNETH BRAUN
FRAC25 T2N R13W 200'X55' ON W SIDE OF LOTS
916.29
DOERFER DAVID A SR
SEC8T2N R13WTRAINSADD. SUB. 5 D. 50' E OF ENOCH LOT
7,390,01
BOOTH JULIA c/o JASON &amp;JUUALANHAM
SEC8T2N R13W LOT 290 EX. 16' BACK TO CUFF &amp; SE COR.632.39
LUNDY JEFFERY H &amp;/OR ANDREA 0
FRAC10T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
933.32
MOURNING JAMES G
FRAC17T2N R13W LOT 406 V274 P215
7,456.10
CARD PAUL
FRAC17 T2N R13W WEHE SUB 6
523.91
JOHNSON TERRY lll &amp; MELISSA 100A LOT 72N R13W LOT 12 V268 P353
614.50
MILLS SHERMAN W &amp;/OR SHANE KRISTINE l
160ALOT1225 T2N R13W LOT 133 TO 140 INC. D. ADD.
2,290.57
BUTCHER LARRY
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 23 DABNEY ADD
2,59S.01
FISHER JOHN JR
FRAC10T2N R13W LOT9515'
1,094.51
BAER EDWARD T JR &amp;/OR PATRICIA 0
FRAC1 0 T2N R13W LOT 32D-321-322
1,150.15
BUTCHER LARRY
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 25-26-27
1,57323
IMADACLLC
FRAC1 0 T2N R13W LOT 107 E 112
615.47
NORRIS HELEN
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 7 1/4 D. ADD. V234 P861
572.09
SALISBURY ADAM R
71220
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 103 24' FRONT ST. X 42
BUTCHER LARRY
1,081 .03
FRAC1 0 T2N R13W LOT 92 30' W SIDE
CARL BRETT l &amp;/OR CONNIE l
S1S.92
SEC32 T7N R14W SPAT OF SW 1/4 EX: 33 AS
HILL JAMES R C/0 JAMES R. HILL SEC23 T7N R14 E PAT OF N112 OF SW1/4 V313 P757
785.1S
COTTERILL STEVEN 0 &amp;/OR BARBARA C
1,054.20
SEC16 T7N R14LOT {10) V271 P163
PREAST WESLEY 0 &amp;/OR CHRISTINA
SEC3 T7N R14 V274 P741
936.1S
HANING RUSSELL L &amp;/OR TERRIL SEC30 T7N R14 MID ONE LINE OF NW 1/4 EX: 1/01A
41.74A E V336 P275
744.93
HILL JAMES R &amp; HILL RICHARD L SEC23 T7N R14 S PAT OF NW 1/4 V31 0 P657
772.SO
SNOWVILLE CREAMERY LLC
SEC34 T7N R14 0.776A OUT OF 47.648A
3,331.69
CHIN CHONG
SEC5 T7N R14W MID. OF NW 1/4
888.16
BATEMAN TONY &amp;/OR DIANA
SEC17 T7N R14 E PART OF NE1/4 EX: 26.82A E EX:10.00A 959.99
RITCHIE ROBERT L JR &amp;/OR BRIDGET D
SEC10 T2 R12 1.757A OUT OF 2.001A
S20.47
MILLER ROBERT L
1,288.51
SEC11 T2N R12 NE OF NE 1/4 EXCEPT26.1055AC
DURST JOHNC
LOT288 T2N R12W WEND EX: 6A &amp; EX: COAL V20 P423
824.09
SPECIAL PROPERTY VI LLC
SEC16 T2N R12W .39A OF 2.38A SW COR EX .24A
906.49
BARNHARTTHOMASI&amp;/ORDEBORA
1OOA LOT291 T2N R13W SECT4 -5 ~ V305 P793
1,161.53
HENSLER DANIEL C
160A LOT1201 T2N R12W 3.203A OUT OF 30.92A
1,214.22
BUTCHER LARRY 0
LOT301 T2N R13W SUB J
7S7.33
IHLE NICHOLAS R &amp;/OR DIANA L SEC10 T2 R12 NE CORNER OF SW1/4 V283 P637
1,404.55
IMBODEN CALVIN JR
FRAC19 T3N R12W N SIDE 69112A SE COR EX: COAL
EX: 1A EX: SA EX: 1A V257 P845
S92.65
CHAPMAN FAMILY PROPERTY LLC
LOT1201 T2N R12 W PART OF E1/2 43.17A EX 9.606AEX 1.031A
2,855.S1
BROWN MARY M &amp;/OR JEFFREY E FRAC25 T3N R12W SECOR EX: COAL EX: 1.00A
1,153.36
TRACY STEPHEN M A LOT286 T2N R12W E SIDE 72112A N OF MILL LOT EX: COAL
601 .59
LANGUELL JAMES &amp;/OR SINCLAIR-LANGUELL SHELLY
SEC2T3N R12W 1.114AOUTOF2.61A
563.96

�SEC25 T3N R12W 6.6449A EX .655A
SEC16 T2N R12W 40 30FT. EAST END
SEC16 T2N R12W 77
SEC16 T2N R12W UND.1/8 OF 51 /2A IN#5-6W
PHILSON EST
1900291001 EVANS JOSEPH &amp; CARMEL L
100A LOT278 T2N R12W SECT 9 -151.06AOUT OF
4.40A V294 P697
1900339000 SAYRE CLYDE E II
SEC16 T2N R12W #5 N LINE OF POM RD
1900341000 COFFMAN ANDREW B &amp;/OR AMY R SEC16 T2N R12W LOT 10 WELDON ADD
1900433000 JONES CURTIS D &amp;/OR DAWN M
SEC16 T2N R12W .293ANEXTTO OTHER PARCEL
NEXT TO VIL. COR
1801367001 RUCKER JERRY L &amp;/OR EDLA J
1900099000 HALL TRUMAN R
1900172000 GRIFFIN DOLORES
1900239000 COE WILLIAM P

1,367.36
713.12
1,045.02
1,978.27
1,010.48
1,837.66
626.23

744.17
100A LOT298 T1N R13W 298 OUT OF CEN PART OF
100ALOT#298
1,141 .31
2000247000 NEWSOME JENNIFER L
100A LOT297 T2N R12W LOT 55 CARLETONS 2ND ADD
1,092.98
2000257000 HARRIS SHARON RENEE
93A LOT299T1 N R13W (SECT 6 T.2 R.13299) OUT OF .34A 2,498.54
2000498000 PATTERSON BOB J &amp;/OR PROFFITT RACHEL
100A LOT298 T1N R13W LOT61 CARLETONS 2ND ADD LOT 621 /2
LOT 63
932.91
2000527000 WILLIAMS MAC
1OOA LOT295 T2N R12W BRIDGEMAN 885.95
Grand Total for 137 parcels: 172,875.21
2000216000 FREEDOM CENTER MINISTRIES

• Under delinquent tax contract

MANUFACTURE HOME DELINQUENT TAX
(TAX YEAR 2008)
0100029MOO HOUDASHELT RICHARD &amp; MARY LOU WROS
1961 CONCORD 511264
0100099MOO BASHAM KIMBERLY D
1968 WINDSOR 60X12
0100124MOO WHALEY CARLA
1988 CARROLLTON SABRE
0100194MOO REEVES JAMES
1987 FAIRMONT BVW
0100198MOO THOMPSON ROY M
1982 PATRIOT
0100201 MOO MCCLOUD DANIEL R
1996 OAKWOOD FRE
01 00218MOO LEE LARRY R &amp; CHRISTINA J
1997 CLAYTON ASH
0100223MOO MORGAN WILLIAM &amp; RUTHIE COE
1989 PATRIOT REVERE MFG
01 00227MOO VANDERBILT MORTGAGE &amp; FINANCE INC
1997 SKYLINE 402
0100242MOO JONES TERRI L
1999 CLAYTON LAR
0101006MOO REEVES EMILY S
1985 HOLLYPARK
0101022MOO CURTIS ALBERT
1989 FLEETWOOD 266
0101036MOO RICE HARRY &amp; HOUDASHELT BETSY ANNETTE WROS
1995 CLAYTON NOR
0101045MOO CHAFFINS CHARLEY C/0 JUDY CHAFFINS
1977 CLAIRBORNE
0101051MOO FACEMYER MICHELLE
2000 CLAYTON SPIRIT V
0101063MOO DICKENS ROBERT F
1984 Fairmont Homes 9600 SERIES
0101144MOO ASH JOYCE
2008 COMMODO
03001 08MOO TAYLOR VIRGIL E
1972 FLEETWOOD 6C27E
0300114MOO TUTTLE JOHN &amp; GAYA
1971 ELCONA CUSTOM
0300142MOO CLEGG BRENDA SUE &amp; GENE M
SKYLINE SPRUCE RIDGE
0300149MOO WHITE RODNEY K &amp; KIMBERLY J
1977 FESTIVAL CARAVAN
0300242MOO KEEBAUGH JEFFREY L &amp;/OR PATRICIA L
1991 CLAYTON NOR
0300247MOO MCCLOUD DONNA
1978 PACER HT
0300250MOO RITCHIE WAYNE
1971 SKYLINE PSS
0300276MOO MAYLE CALVIN JR &amp;/OR CYNTHIA A
1997 FLEMING 103
0301022MOO GHEEN TIMOTHY I
2000 FORTUNE
0301052MOO DAVIS JOSEPH W JR &amp; BLEVINS MELANIE L
2000
0301114MOO AEIKER PATRICK &amp; AUCIAWROS
2007 CLAYTON
0301131 MOO BAILEY CLINTON J
2009 DESCR OF SCH
0401008MOO WATKINS ROGER JR
1957 SUPERIOR
0401010MOO WATKINS ROGER E &amp; ELOISE WROS
1999 FORTUNE VC
0500027MOO ENTERLINE DOUG L
1993 SKYLINE SPR
0500048MOO BYRD GAIL
1988 NASHUA NXOHCHX870142
0500122MOO LYONS DEBORAH L&amp; LARRY D
1997 FLEETWOOD
0500125MOO PHILLIPS DIANA S
1998 SKYLINE WIN
0500127MOO WHITE AMY B C/0 ALFRED DUFF
1967 HORIZON SUN
0500139MOO HARVEY GERON 0 &amp; REBECCA WROS
1998 WOODFIELD
0500140MOO SMART CLINT
SKYLINE PAL SPRINGS STD
0500152MOO HUDNALL WILLARD E &amp; LINDA M
1973 CHAMPION 60
0500163MOO PETERSON CHRISTINA B
1999 REDMAN EMP
0500167MOO BOND PATRICIA A
1996 PATRIOT QC
0500169MOO HUDNALL SAMUEL R
1968PMCSOV
0500275MOO JORDAN SHEILA
1998 FLEETWOOD
0501017MOO DAWSON CARY M
1998 CLAYTON
0501022MOO SAUNDERS JAMES W &amp; KATHY J
2000LOU
0501044MOO COLLINS WILLIAM L. JR.
1983 HILLCREST JAY
0501057MOO CHEADLE BRADLEY M
2000 LIBERTY NU284426
0501058MOO ANDRUS GERALD A &amp; TAMMY R
2000 FLEETWOOD 6763J
0501061 MOO OLIVER DELLA
1986 JAY
0501087MOO GOIN HUDNELL DAYNA
1997 FLEETWOOD
0600001 MOO BOGGS TROY
1991 CLAYTON NORTHRIDGE
0700004MOO ARTHURS JAMES
1956 AMERICAN
0700022MOO MOORE KAREN
1970 SCHULT 60 X 12
0700025MOO GOOD ARNOLD &amp; LEVA
1968 PRINCESS
0700029MOO HUFFMAN GREGORY A
1975 WESTERN MANOR
0700057MOO MOORE KAREN
1958 PRAIRIESCHOONER 7182W
0700062MOO PROFFITT JOANN C/0 ROGER DURST
1963 CHAMPION
0700087MOO WOLFE DAVID G
1974 NEW MOON GD60T2UOTT
0700088MOO PICKENS CALVIN &amp; SARAH WROS
1988 BREEZEWOOD
0700092MOO BLACK ROBERT OR WILMA
1971 SCHULT HOMESTEAD
0700100MOO EVANS SANDY
1956 RICHARDSON CORONATION
0700113MOO SELLERS DARRELL &amp; WANDA
1965 HOUSE TRAILER L350P
0700121MOO YOUNG CHARLES S
1971 GUE CRESTLINE
0700145MOO EVANS VIRGINIA
1968 ALLEGHENY
0700150MOO SELLERS DARRELL
1974 DH
0700171 MOO SELLERS GREGORY A
1996 REDMAN

634.82
691.08
777.96
945.11
825.41
4,596.42
2,671.67
1,565.18
1,572.17
3,133.04
935.67
2,345.77
1,148.87
683.79
2,142.37
512.99
1,182.63
1,033.81
595.09
1,453.24
1,233.57
2,596.02
555.11
634.82
1,981.54
503.44
723.17
1,125.30
1,111.02
517.20
956.81
858.28
574.77
4,783.47
1,629.79
781.90
9,512.87
714.62
1,395.70
6,524.84
1,574.80
555.00
1,229.59
6,131.08
4,290.21
724.73
4,417.54
3,231.81
1,821.59
1,228.31
940.27
750.82
874.20
555.00
749.16
794.41
634.82
674.69
611.31
1,327.85
714.62
794.41
1,193.41
634.82
555.00
1,457.00

0701 008MOO
0701027MOO
0701033MOO
0701050MOO
0701055MOO
0800028MOO
0800044MOO
0800058MOO
0800120MOO
0801 009MOO
0801019MOO
0801025MOO
0801064MOO
0900008MOO
0900103MOO
0900144MOO
0900152MOO
0900153MOO
0900155MOO
0900163MOO
0900165MOO
0900166MOO
0900167MOO
0900176MOO
0900181MOO
0900188MOO
0900228MOO
0900280MOO
0900281MOO
0900301 MOO
0900305MOO
0900307MOO
0900332MOO
0900333MOO
0900357MOO
0900360MOO
0900367MOO
0900370MOO
0900389MOO
0901010MOO
0901040MOO
0901055MOO
0901062MOO
0901086MOO
0901116MOO
0901122MOO
0901123MOO
0901142MOO
0901158MOO
0901167MOO
0901175MOO
1000023MOO
1000026MOO
1000040MOO
1000122MOO
1000139MOO
1001055MOO
1001058MOO
1001 071 MOO
1001 083MOO
1001102MOO
1100064MOO
11 00088MOO
1100125MOO
11 00126MOO
1100174MOO
1100237MOO
1100281MOO
1100283MOO
1100293MOO
1100300MOO
1100318MOO
1100335MOO
11 00337MOO
1100347MOO
1100355MOO
1100361MOO
1100366MOO
11 00380MOO
1100387MOO
1100412MOO
11 00415MOO
11 00423MOO
1100427MOO
1101 006MOO
1101037MOO
1101102MOO
1101117MOO
1101125MOO
1101134MOO
1101141MOO
1101143MOO
1101146MOO
1101156MOO
1101177MOO
1101193MOO

ALLEN THOMAS E &amp; DEBORAH K
2000 SKYLINE WOO
PROFFITT JAMISON &amp;ANGELA
2002 REDMAN RIDGEDALE
COOPER GARY &amp; MARILYN
1996 OAKWOOD
FITCH THOMAS S
2004 CLAYTON 25C
DOWELLJEFFREY &amp; ERICA WROS 2000 K844/NEW MOON
MAYNARD SAMMY &amp; MELISSA
1965 LIBERTY SP50122BFK
SMITH RICHARD &amp; JOANN
1987 CLAYTON CLAIRBORNE
JARRELLJOEY
1973 NASHUA60X14
BATTON DONNAJ
1996 GILES 310
DURST RALPH L C/0 PATTY
1999 REDMAN EAT
MAYNARD OSCAR
1969 ZIMMER
JARRELLAIMEE
1997 MIRAGE NB7
PIERCE ROY
1993 FRIENDSHIP POINTE WEST
BARRINGER BOBBY J &amp; JOAN
1974 CARRIAGE HOUSE 974545
ROUSH TONY &amp; MECHELE
1970
WESTFALL ROGER A. &amp; SHELIA A
1965 CAPELLA
CRITES BARBARA
1973 LAFAYETTE C573260S4457
CRITES KATHY K
1972 EAGLE
DAVIS JERRY
1986 CLAYTON NEWPORT
GIBBS BRYAN &amp; KENDA
1982 COMMODORE MH3702
HARRIS CHARLES LARRY JR
1973 KIRKWOOD
RUCKER GARY W &amp;/ORTOWANAJ 1971 CHAMPION
HUGHES EDWARD &amp; ESTHER
1992 SABRE NA
LONGENETTE RUTH ANN
1982 REDMAN
SMITH CARLL
1973HICKORYKNOLL 3BR
WEST SANDRA K &amp; MICHAEL W
1992 SKYLINE SPRUCERIDGE
MOODISPAUGH TRACY
1963 NEW MOON 50
COSSIN SHEILA
1996 FAIRMONT
GRIFFIN BRIAN E &amp; MELISSA L
1996 CLAYTON LOU
BAUMAN SHERI J
1973 CONCORD HST
VICTORY TROY E &amp; SNYDER PAUL E 1996 FLEMING
BARTIMUS HARVEY JR
1966 NAMCO E52
COWDERY CLEMENT L
1997 REDMAN NMN
WOLFE MICHAEL E
1976 GOVERNOR 701
REED DONNAJ
1998 CLAYTON
GREENPOINT CREDIT, LLC
1997 FLEETWOOD
BARRINGER DARRYL &amp; CRITES KATHY 1997 NORRIS WND
MILLER LAURETTA
1972 REBEL
GREEN POINT CREDIT CORP
2000 DUCHESS 200
BASIM GEORGE T &amp; BARBARA L
2000 FORTUNE HOMES D40
LAWSON JASON &amp;/OR WOODARD TONYA
1974 FBR
WESTFALL ROGER &amp; SHEILA
2000 SKYLINE 1061 CT
JONES DONALD G JR
2002 HEARTLANDER
WELLS DAVID
1989 FAIRMONT FAN
BAILEY ROY &amp; CRYSTAL
2004 FLEETWOOD STONERIDGE
WATSON LISA &amp; CASHDOLLAR DOROTHY
1996 SKYLINE
PHILLIPS RHONDA S
2003 OAKWOOD OAK
KROEGELJAMES E &amp; DOROTHY R 2003 FREEDOM OAK
CARTER JIMMY
2002 SCHULT
BARTl MUS HARVEY c/o ROGER WESTFALL 1998 SKYLINE
RHODES CHARLES E
2008 GILES
DORST THOMAS L&amp; STANLEY E
1990 CLAYTON COVINGTON
ROBINSON NORA &amp; CHURCHILL PAUL C &amp; EALUM CLARENCE &amp; THELMA
1968 BUDDY 60X12
FRYAR RANDY L
1970 PEERLESS 60X12
HOLLEY BRYAN &amp; KAREN
1979 BUDDY
BURKE CINDY
1968 KIRKWOOD FG6
ROUSH JAMES E
1-964 PARKWOOD 674.69
HARRIS DENNIS &amp; BOBBIE JOE
2004 PAT PATRIOT
WHITE STEVE A
2005 LEGACY 98
WATSON GERALD &amp; RHONDA
2004 VILLA RIDGE
KING NICHOLAS V &amp; DEBORAH K
2007 SKYLINE
HYSELL JAMES F &amp; PATRICIA A
1975 CASTLE 6514
MCKINNEY MARY L &amp;/OR DENNIS
1977 WINDSOR
SCRAGG JOHN C &amp; ESTHER
1973 SCHULT HOMESTEAD
ROBINSON RORY M
1972 HILLCREST 0239319F
GROVER DOUGLAS
1974 KIRKWOOD
CREMANS ROBERT E
1971 COMMUNITY 64X12
ROBINSON DANNY W JR
1985 MANSION
HOUSER FRANK &amp; TERRIE
1980 ELCON
HOUSER FRANK &amp; TERRIE
1971 HILLCREST
HAGGY REX &amp;/OR RHONDA
1987 OAKWOOD
JARVIS FRANKLIN D
1996 SKYLINE WOO
TILLISAPRILJ
1980 CHALLENGER WI
OWENS AARON D
1996 REDMAN NA 7
BRAGG RODNEY R
1997 SKYLINE WIN
SHAMBLIN GARY L &amp; BLAZER DEBORAH S
1974
SNOWDEN ROSALEE LYNN
1973 WINDSOR TCH
WALKER DAN L
1998 CLAYTON DAM
RAMSBURG RICHARD A &amp;/OR CAROL J
1998 FOUR SEASONS
KESSINGER LEROY
1978 FESTIVAL266
MCKNIGHT DEBORAH
1975 VINDALE C26
LONG MIRANDA c/o CHARLES &amp; CHERYL HATFIELD
1985 RIVERVIEW DLX
COUNCIL PAUL D C/0 JOANN COUCIL
1970 KIRKWOOD
RICHARDS RONALD R &amp; KATHRYN
1999 FORTUNE HOUSE OOD
COTTERILL JESSICA &amp; RAYMOND WROS
2000 CLAYTON DIS
KIMESTODDM
1999SCHULT762
YOUNG MINNIE K C/0 JUANITA HARMON 1956 NASHUA
VANMETER LEONARD
1987 REDMAN NR7
MCCLELLAND PATRICIA
2005 GILES LONESTAR
HART JASON&amp;AMBERKWROS
1997PR.EMIER
CARPENTER NATHANIEL&amp; CARPENTER MARLENE· '
2006 446
FIFE AMY
'2000 OAKWOOD
ROUSH HERBERT &amp; ALICIA
2006 CLAYTON 285
FISHER DAVID C &amp; CHERYL A
2005 GILES HERITAGE
AEIKER LESTER
2007 CLAYTON
LEE GREG K
2008 DESCR OF CUT

2,923.11
3,011.93
2,286.45
785.13
3,980.21
555.00
1,968.37
1,113.61
2,307.54
4,780.66
573.23
1,994.19
1,545.24
1,033.81
1,162.78
953.98
1,434.21
1,332.40
1,935.93
958.21
1,330.43
960.01
1,055.59
1,576.90
1,026.86
928.96
953.98
1,488.21
5,264.11
714.62
744.41
785.74
2,310.44
977.69
4,455.87
1,563.73
5,719.98
555.00
1,511.72
1,069.71

•

513.97
5,655.18
1,912.59
761.17
3,382.42
1,377.79
746.88
916.21
3,724.51
3,207.77
576.74
823.91
535.05
555.00
1,709.47
794.41
674.69
1,511.45
698.32
577.43
807.07
517.20
517.20
1,102.63
533.31
1,303.58
886.52
1,904.37
740.70
714.62
1,121.92
8,386.23
697.68
2,826.34
1,879.58

•

707.22
507.41
2,709.98
741.00
600.06
555.00
504.81
555.00
4,639.37
902.30
10,575.75
1,235.21
581•.17
1,340.24
·618.25
753.70
1,081.03
976.95
2,405.62
981.23
1,128.09

•

�1701092MOO
1701095MOO
1701120MOO

1200031 MOO TACKETI FRED L &amp; ATKINS LORETTA L
1200038MOO
1200064MOO
1200069MOO
1201002MOO
1201004MOO

CADE HENRY J &amp; ANNETIE
WALKER SHANNON
LANGDON LORAA
BOGGS MICHAEL
CHAPMAN SHANNON &amp; POWELL TABITHA

1300095MOO
1300119MOO
1300182MOO
13.
00
13
00
130
00
1301029MOO
1301034MOO

ASHBURN LARRY &amp; CATHY
WOOTEN RUSSELL C/0 BOBBY MOORE
NEUTZLING CHARLES L
JONES JEAN ANN
WISE WILLIAM J
JEWELL MENFORD T
RECTOR GLORIAD
FLETCHER LUCY

1301029MOO
1301 034MOO
1301044MOO
1301064MOO
1301 076MOO
1301119MOO
1400015MOO
1400027MOO
1400043MOO
1400054MOO
1400147MOO
1400186MOO
1400187MOO
1400214MOO
1400219MOO
1400245MOO
1400255MOO
1400312MOO
1400321 MOO
1400330MOO
1400345MOO
1400388MOO
1401049MOO
1401055MOO
1401092MOO
1401095MOO
9MOO
3MOO
\
2MOO
15
31MOO
1500053MOO
1500073MOO
1500137MOO
1500155MOO
1500156MOO
1500158MOO
1500178MOO
1500219MOO
1500259MOO
1500273MOO
1501075MOO
1501078MOO
1600011MOO
1600057MOO

r11

1600061MOO
1600125MOO
1600136MOO
1601012MOO
1601026MOO
1700013MOO
1700080MOO
1700082MOO
1700095MOO
1700103MOO
1700108MOO
1700112MOO
1700120MOO
1700123MOO
1700129MOO
1700160MOO
1700182MOO
1700210MOO
1700211MOO
32MOO
33MOO
•
32MOO
1701033MOO
1701036MOO
1701049MOO
1701060MOO

1991 LOUDON CLAYTON
1994 SUNSHINE DEL
1977 WINDSOR
1999 CLAYTON HAM
1997 MANSION

2,753.03
4,164.24
555.00
858.30
2,681 .01

1994 OAKWOOD
1983 COMMODORE
1964 NEW MOON FE5
1974 FLAMINGO GD70F3JOFM
1992 FOR
1972 HOMETIE
1997 OAKWOOD
2001 CLAYTON SATURN
1977 MANSION FLR

1,714.83
714.62
874.20
1,748 .18
820.11
555.00
4,882.62
707.48
637.94

RECTOR GLORIA D
2001 CLAYTON SATURN
FLETCHER LUCY
1977 MANSION FLR
ALDRIDGE CLYDE 1
978 BAYVIEW
COlTRILL DAVID
2003 OAKWOOD OAKIFRE
DUNKLE PENNY &amp; DUNKLE DAVID JR
1996 BROOK
JUDE CHASTITY &amp; STEWART JAMES W II WROS
2007 SKYLINE HOMElTE
BRODERICK FRANCES &amp; LINDA 1981 GOVERNOR 116014 B
CUSTER MICHAEL C C/0 WAYNE &amp; SHARON ROSEBERRY
SKYLINE SPC228
ELAM BILL C/0 DENNIS &amp; CHARLA RACKLER
1966 SCHULT
FRY TIMOTHY &amp; TAMMY
1986 NASHUA 70143CKFRI
1956 STAR
TAYLOR BETTY
BATEY THOMAS E ETAL
1972 HILLCREST70X14
BIGGS WILLIAM
1972 VAN DYKE VD14FL2
MOODISPAUGH ROBERT W &amp; JULIA
1968 SCHULT 60X12
1969 HOLLYPARK
REEVES RANDALL &amp; ANGELA
HOOVER STEVEN R.
1993 CLAYTON LOU
1972 HOMElTE 641
COLBURN APRIL
BARNElT RODGER L &amp; BElTIE
C/0 JERALD MARTIN
1995 FAIRMONT COM
CUNDIFF RALPH C/0 HOBART CUNDIFF
1991 REFLECTION LTD 67
SCHOLDERER SHANNON 1
1991 FAIRMONT MY9
1967 WALKER
WISE RANDY
SMITH JASON &amp; AMY
1999 FLEETWOOD 476
COOK KATHERYN C/0 LORENA PIERCE
1979 OAKWOOD
BAUER ANDREW TROY C/0 EVELYN BAUER
1992 CUTLASS CAR
JENKINS DARRELL G JR
2006 FLEETWOOD CORONADO XTREME
WILLIAMS SARA J
2005 BEACON HILL 2663R
2004 REDMAN RMMR28600
KAUTZ WILLIAM D
2007 CLAYTON
CALDWELL BRUCE
HOOVER DAVID
1997 FOUR SEASONS
DICKENS ROBERT FRANKLIN
1966 VALIANT NA
WHITED RICHARD B &amp;/OR DOROTHY WROS 1992 COMMODORE CL
STEWART JAMES &amp; ANGELA
1969 VAIL 60936912
STRAUSS ARTHUR J
1973 SCHULTZ 65 X 12
ELLIS OREN LOR PEGGY L
1985 FOREST PARK
FISHER DAVID C &amp;/OR CHERYL A 1982 PARKWOOD P19U
GEARY DONALD
1972 PEERLESS PL5012-2BOKRA
1992 PRESTIGE 710
MILLER LINDA L
1996 CLAYTON
KING CLEDITH J
JOHNSON SARAH L
1997 REDMAN NM
LAWSON ROBERT F &amp; TRACY L 1998 CLAYTON EXC
MORRISON JAMES &amp; PIERCE LORI 2006 GILES 446
SETH MARCIA
2000
TAYLOR DALE
1989 SUNRISE 14 X 60
REED BETTY EILEEN c/0 ROBERT ROMINES
1982 CLAYTON
1992 NORRIS RICHMOND
SEYLER NELIA E
1998 CLAYTON
PEYTON JAMES E
JEFFERS TERRESSA L &amp; SMITH RUTH
1998 CLAYTON WIN
HALL MARTHA
1991
BARTON JOEY
1992 INDIES SULTAN
COlTERILL WAYNE R
1988 SKYLINE 4312
HANING CHRISTOPHER D
1976 NEW MOON
HILL HAROLD
19721NDIA 12600746
STOVER TOM
1971 BEVERLY MANOR M7498
PAYNE KEVIN W &amp; LORI E
1993 MANSION
MCLAIN CLAY
1975 NASHUA
HOWARD GERALD W SR
1991 HAPPY HOUSE MFG
HANING JEFFREY E &amp; REBECCA L
1974 BAYVIEW
REEVES DAVID
1961 CONCORD 51X10
KING RODNEY D &amp; MISTY G
1993 REDMAN 761
HAYES TERRY D
1970 HILLCREST FK
GILMORE DONALD M &amp; LINDA G 1994 CLAYTON ASH
GIBBS WILLIAM E &amp;/OR MELINDA A WROS
1998 CLAYTON RVS
PRIDEMORE RONALD L &amp; LINDA 1999 CLAYTON NR
KING THOMAS E
1979 MK
1972 TORCH 1i '
BARNHART KEITH A
PHILLIPS WENDY J
2000 CLAYTON HOMES I SO
1973 BARRON
.
COlTERILL BARBARA
WILL ROLAND E
1970 RICHARDSON ARD
.
CAPEHART CHRIS AND CONNIE 1986 REDMAN GRANDVILLE
SLISHER DAVID
2002 SCHULT 44283084

1701137MOO
1701162MOO
1800040MOO
1800069MOO
1800112MOO
1800130MOO
1800137MOO
1800241 MOO
1800265MOO
1800276MOO

707.48
637.94
1,213.50
1,896.89

1800277MOO
1801031MOO
1801064MOO

1,088.48
1801106MOO
1801133MOO
1801145MOO
1801150MOO
1900034MOO
1900047MOO
2000001MOO

2,108.18
618.91
634.82
714.62
685.33
555.00
634.82
1,069.29

2000005MOO
2000043MOO
2000053MOO
2000091 MOO

794.41
874.20
515.73
1,261.69

2001019MOO

Grand Total for 272 parcels: 456,949.12
2,430.11
2,110.78
2,081.60
714.62
3,717.69
1,738.01
814.09
891.52
1,217.80
787.18
711.88
,645.91
794.41
1,494.81
594.92
532.39
1,005.44
766.12
1,470.15
1,835.86
2,029.84
1,736.67
7,508.81
558.65
3,101.54
1,012.38
1,210.04
973.51
695.34
2,277.24
876.68
587.47
1,809.57
794.41
845.09
1,363.41
3,097.72
634.82
1,845.33
1,087.46
953.98
2,668.75
640.02
3,718.01
1,391.62
4,434.41
626.92
1,178.52
3,822.57
580.47
604.43
1,464.15
4,810.38

&lt;I

l.

METZGER JOHN &amp; CINDY WROS 2003 GILES
LENIGAR STEVE A &amp; EVELYN M 2001 CLAYTON SPIRIT
HOGSElT LORENT &amp; SUSAN WROS
2005 GILES 145
FULAYTER SHERRY &amp; FULAYTER BENHEART M
1994 CLAYTON LOU
WORKMAN DENNIS &amp; CHARLENE 2007 HOMElTE SKYLINE
GRAY ARTHUR W &amp; SANDRA DISTELHORST
1970 KIRKWOOD GJ50T080A
1962 NEW MOON
MAKAO RUBY
MEDLEY DWIGHT P &amp; JOYCE M 1983 SCHULT641451
MILLIRON CHERYL
1968 NEW MOON 124248
REITMIRE PAUL &amp; MARY
1962 FLEETWOOD GE28
JOHNSON BARBARA
1970 CHAMPION
WILSON CARL H JR
1970 VALIANT
GINTHER JOHN &amp;/OR JUANITA WROS
.
1998 CLAYTON CHE
SALSER DORTHA PETAL c/o ROBIN DUlTON
1998 CLAYTON
JOHNSON KAREN L &amp; MARSHALL ROBERT A
2000 FLEETWOOD HERITAGE POINTE
KLEIN KEVIN &amp; MARY C/0 CITI MORTGAGE
2003 OAKWOOD 1008
1997 FLEETWOOD 676
HEMSLEY JAMES D
WARNER MICHAEL E &amp; DARLENE T 1989 WOODBRIDGE
2008 GILES
HAINES NATHAN D
2007 REDMAN
HOLMAN LUKE WROS
CROUCH TONY C
1991 SUNSHINE 14X72
THEISS BETTY L
1973 GRAYWOOD GB65T3KOP
PICKENS EBER 0 JR &amp;/OR VALESSA D
1985 NASHUA 15015
LAVENDER WILLIAM D
1962 ELCONA 55X10
HENDRIX FRANKLIN &amp; PHYLLIS 1981 OAKBROOK OS 147352
HENDRIX ROBERT R
1994 CLAYTON
REITMIRE FLOYD MICHAEL &amp; DENISE D
1999 OAKWOOD
2003 OAKWOOD OAK/FREE
DAVIS WILLIAM D

l'

1,177.94
1,210.90
2,427.58
732.57
3,746.87
714.62
953.98
1,185.49
683.39
953.98
1,046.04
634.82
7,149.32
4,300.23
5,697.13
5,107.36
628.79
2,670.48
527.03
538 .16
1,626.04
880.86
2,086.57
543.32
7,417.86
5,814.37
1,322.41
1,592.05

�r--~ - ~~~---------~w•

TJ:I~e

Inside

Daily Sentinel

Rio gears up for 8evo Weekend, Page 82

Bl

Big Ten Notebook, Pa~e 86
Big East Notebook, Pa~e 86

Thursday, November 12, 2009

·jteelers a
different
team with
Polamalu

Prep Footbal l -

Class AA pl ayoffs

PITTSBURGH (AP) The Pittsburgh Steelers
watched a snow-splattered
Troy Polamalu make a seemingly impossible, .one-handed
scoop mterceptlon on a
m!}shy field against Chargers
quarterback Philip Rivers last
season. That doesn 't mean
they believed it.
· :·Impossible." linebacker
James Farrior said.
Not one quarter into the
ft.rst NFL game of this season.
Polamalu made a climb-theladder, one-handed interception of a pass by Titans quarterback Kerry Collins that the
Steelers believe was comparable to last season's snowball

grpb.

·s one of the all-time
st safeties." safety Ryan
•.
said Wednesday. ''He's
awesome. There's no other
way to say it, he's the best
safety in the NFL. point
blank. period."
Which raises this question:
Does Polamalu and all of his
g?ffie-altering plays m~e the
Steelers the best team m the
league? With Polamalu in the
lineup, the Steelers are 4-0
this season and 13-1 in their
last 14 games. counting the
postseason.
· For all the attention the
unbeaten Colts (8-0) and
Saints (8-0) are getting. it
almost seems as if the Super
Bowl champion Steelers are
being overlooked because of
two last-minute losses that
Polamalu missed with a left
knee injury.
.. With Polarnalu back, the
Steelers (6-2) will C3!f¥ a
five-game winning streak mto
Sunday's pivotal AFC North
game agamst the Bengals (62). Bengals quatterback
n Palmer, Polamalu 's
me
roommate
at
• o em Cal. already knows
what he's getting into.

Please see Polamalu, 86

.

Point Pleasant travels to Keyser in playoff opener
BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

1
1

POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
The Point Pleasant Big Blacks go on
the road Friday night to battle the
Keyser Golden Tornadoes m the
first round of the West Virginia football playoffs. And this road is quite
the long and winding road. With the
emphasis on 1-o-n-g.
Go to Mapquest.com and type-in
Keyser. From Point Pleasant to
Keyser is 250 miles. Route 2 to 1-77
to Route 50 to I-79 to I-68 to
Maryland 658 to Maryland 53 to
Route 220 to West Virginia 46 to
Keyser. It's not a ''you can't get
there from here" place. but you can
see that place from Keyser.
The Golden Tomadoes finished
the regular season with a 7-3 record
and a 7th place finish in the final

Bengals' first·
round CBs form
solid tandem
CINCINNATI (AP) When Joe Fiacco threw
deep down the left side.
Leon Hall was there to intercept. When the Ravens
quarterback tried to go deep
a~ain, Johnathan Joseph
p1cked it off.
Nice symmetry.
The Cincinnati Bengals
first-round draft picks have
grown into one of the better
cornerback tandems in the
NFL, one reason why the
defense is on the rise. Each
em has four intercep.
leaving them tied for
•fi
place in the league.
Much of the focus will be
on them Sunday when they
cover Pittsburgh's Hines
Ward and Santonio Holmes
during a showdown for first
place in the AFC North both teams are 6-2.
':They're
definitely
becoming a great tandem,
especially in the AFC North
as.far as the two corners that
$&lt;tntonio and I face,'' Ward
stlid Wednesday on a conference call. "Both of those
gqys were first rounders ,
ahd they're starting to play
up to their potential."
:.... They're playing the way
the Bengals envisioned
\then they made Joseph
tkeir first pick (24th overall)
iii 2006 and followed that by
making Hall , their top pick
(48th overall) a year later.
Cmcinnati hoped they
~ould grow into bookend
~s defenders.
-:.
ore they did that, they
b o grow into close

fr

Bs.

•: Given their draft stature
imd the high expectations.
the. two of them have developed a bond in their short
time together. They were
side by side as they walked
off the practice field on
Wednesday. and that's not
unusual.
''I do notice," defensive

Please see 8engals, 86

•

File photo

The Point Pleasant High School football team. pictured here in a preseason team photo, will be traveling to Keyser on Friday evening for a first round
tournament matchup. This is the second consecutive playoff appearance for Coach Dave Darst and the Big Blacks.

10. Point Pleasant (7-3)
versus 7. Keyser (7-3)
at Keyser H. S.

Class AA rankings. Their point total
(98) was nine points higher than
Point's (89). The higher. point total
was aided by Keyse~aefeating at
least three AAA schools -Hampshire (28-0). M , selman (2013),
and
Moun in
Ridge.
Maryland(41-14). OtH r wins for the
Golden Tornadoes were over
Northern Garrett. Maryland (34-0).

J
Prep

~ootba ll

-

Allegany,
Maryland
(28-25),
Berkeley Springs (56-16). and
Sha'cly Spring (65-7). Their losses
were to Wayne (22-0), Fort Hill,
Maryland (29-8). and Frankfort (2213).
Many attempts to find stats, a roster, and starters for Keyser failed,
but last week's game was on the
internet. In that contest. Keyser running back David Echartea rushed for
192 yards and 3 touchdowns. Jarell
Ross retumed a punt 71 yards for
another score, and quarterback Tyler
Biser connected with wide receiver
Garland on a 23 yard scoring pass.
Big Black Head Coach Dave
Dar!)t said his staff watched all ten
Keyser games on film and came
away very impressed. ''They are a
tough football team," said Darst.
"'They played a very tough schedule.
They started out 0-2, but bounced

back to win six games in a row.
Then they lost to Frankfort. a playoff' team, before defeating a Class
AAA team from Maryland last
week," continued the third year
mentor.
Coach Darst said local coaches
thought Keyser was almost a mirror
image of the Big Blacks. The basis
for that was the type of plays that
they will run during the game, plus
the fact that they started slowly and
have progressed into a pretty good
football team. "They run a lot of
leads. traps, and power play.s," said
Darst. 'They won't throw the ball
much. probab1y be~ause they
haven't had to. They have good size
and they are pretty physical. If I had
to pick a team on our schedule to
compare them to, it would have to

Please see Point 81

Class A pl ayoffs

/

Submitted photo

The Wahama White Falcons football team, pictured here in a preseason team photo, will be traveling to Nicholas County on Friday evening for a first
round tournament match up agaihst Fayetteville. This is the 1Oth trip to the playoffs for Coach Ed Cromley while at Wahama.

White Falbons battle Pirates in playoff opener
B v B RYAN W~LTERS
BWALTERS OMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

SUMMERSVILLE, W.Va.- For
the seventh time this decade and the
14th time overall in school history.
the Wahama football program will
take to the postseason gridiron this
Friday night when it travels to
Nicholas County High School to
battle Fayetteville in a Class A
opening round playoff matchup in
Nicholas County.
The IOth-seeded Whi.te Falcons
(8-2) will be returning to the postseason after a one-year hiatus and
will be making their first road trip in
the playoffs since 2007 when they
lost to Williamstown in the Class A
quarterfinals.
Current Wahama coach Ed
Cromley. now in his 15th season
with the program, will also be

,

10. Wahama (8-2) versus
7. Fayetteville (8-2)
at Nicholas County H.S.

coaching in his IOth postseason at
the school. Previously. Cromley's
White Falcons have an 8-9 overall
during their collective appearance::.
in 1996. 1997, 1998, 200 I. 2002.
2003, 2004. 2006 and 2007.
Cromley has twice (200 I and
2003) led this program to the Class
A semifinals. the farthest WHS has
ever finished in the toumament. The
White Falcons also own a 6-3 all-

time record under Cromley in opening round playoff contests. including wins in three of the last four.
Wahama. alltime. has a 9-13 postseason record in its previous 22
postseason contests. appea1ing also
in 1987. 1988 and 1991. The White
Falcons are also 7-6 alltime in playoff openers.
Seventh-seeded
and
host
Fayetteville (8-2). on the other hand.
will be making its third consecutive
appearance in the Class A playoffs.
having advanced to the quarterfinals
in each of the last two postseasons.
The Pirates were also the Class A
state runner-up in 1999 and won the
Class A title back in 1992.
The two teams share a lot in common. more than just their matching
records any\vay. Both teams are
averaging over 30 points per game
offensively while ·surrendering

points in the mid-teens. Wahama. on
average. is allowing 17 .l points
defensively and scoring 34.6 points
per outing. Fayetteville is averaging
36 points per game offensively and
surrendering 14.2 points as a
defense.
FHS has 35 players on its roster,
whiJe Wahama cmTies a roster 34strong. Both teams have experienced upperclassmen and a nice balance on offense between their running and passing attacks.
The Pirates - who are unable to
host the game on Friday due to a
tlooded field - have won four
straight entering this weekend and
are also a perfect 6-0 in road contests this fall. while going just 2-2 at
home.
Drew Weis leads the FHS offense

Please see Wahama, 81

�._........_,.._--.--...._ -

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.~ydailysentinel.com

____ _____
._

---~--------...,

Thursday, November 12,

2009

RedStorm volleyball Rio Grande gears up for Bevo Weekend

falls I.n MSC sem ·Is
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE TRIBUNE

FRANKFORT, Ky.
.The University of Rio
Grande RedStorm volley:ball team had its season
come to an end on
Wednesday afternoon in the
semi-finals of the MidSouth
Conference
Tournament. The RedStorm,
the No. 3 seed, fell to No. 2
seed Campbellsville in
straight sets, 17-25. 22-25
and 12-25.
Rio Grande ( 18-19) could
not figure out a way to get
past Campbellsville this season as it lost all three matches that were played between
the two teams.
Freshman middle hitter
Erin
Sherman
(South
Webster, OH) was the only
RedStorrn ·to reach double
figures in kills with 11.
Freshman outside hitter
Whitney Smith (Albany,

OH) was on the verge of
double figures with nine. but
it wasn't enough to lead the
RedStorrn to victory.
Junior libero Jacquie
Whittle (Chillicothe. OH)
led the Rio defensive effort
with 17 digs. Sophomore
defensive specialist Kristen
Cassady (Logan, OH)' added
13 and Smith tallied 12 in
the match.
Junior
setter
Ashley
Bloom (Columbus, OH)
topped the stat sheet for Rio
Grande in assists with 14.
Campbellsville (30-12)
was led by Renee Netherton,
who matched Sherman, with
1 I kills. Caitlin Dresing had
18 digs and Caroline Martin
handed out 38 assists to lead
the Tigers.
Rio ends the season plus
II in wins over last season
and with everybody coming
back. the future looks
extremely bright for the
RedStorm.

Buckeyes sign 6 highly touted recruits
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
six-player recruiting class,
dubbed by some analysts
as the best in the nation,
has signed with No. 16
Ohio State.
The centerpiece is 6foot-9
power forward
Jared
Sullinger
from
' Columbus'
Northland
High School. The brother
of former Ohio State player J .J. Sullinger is joined
by his high school teammate. 6-6 small forward
J.D. Weatherspoon. ·
Deshaun Thomas, a 6-7
native of Ft. Wayne, Ind.;

and Lenzelle Smith, Jr.. a
6-4 guard from Zion, Ill.;
also became Buckeyes on
the first day for the signing
of Division I national letters of intent.
Rounding out the class
are guards Aaron Craft
from Findlay LibertyBenton and 6-4 Jordan
Sibert of Cincinnati.
Coach Thad Matta said
all six are versatile players
who come from winning
programs that have won or
played for state championships.

Point

year. "That has to stop,"
said Darst.
The Big Blacks enter this
week with no major illnesses or injuries. The starters
should be the same ones
that have started the past
couple of weeks. They will
be Eric Robe1ts at quarterback with Nathan Roberts
and J arrod Long in the
backfield along with either
JaWaan Williams, Derek
Pinson,
or
Chris
Blankenship. The split end
is Cody Greathouse with
B
B 11
· h
d
eau e amy at tlg t en ·
Up front, the starters are
Casey Hogg. Gabe Starcher.

from PageBl
be Wayne, although Keyser
lost to Wayne in the first
game of the year. With the
improvements they have
made, I think that •game
would be a little different if
they played now," added
Darst.
The Big Blacks have had
a good week of practice,
according to Darst. One
thing that he and his staff
has stressed this week is

that getting to the playoffs
shouldn't be the goal of this
football team. The goal Brock McClung, Clay
should be to win playoff Krebs, and Derry Osborne.
games. "We haven't won a Darst said the only change
playoff game in 30 years," would be more playing time
said Darst. "We need to for Blankenship . . Others
change that. "Our goal expected to see time on
shouldn't be one playoff offense are Brandon Toler
game, it should be to go far and Oni.n Chason.
into the playoffs;· added
Defensively, the locals
Darst.
will start Long, Trey
Point Pleasant has not Livingston, Krebs, Pinson,
been real successful in the Michael Musgrave, Nathan
post season. Way back in · Roberts, Donovan Powell,
1979, the Big Blacks Williams,
Layne
defeated
George Thompson. Ryan Warner.
Washington in the first and Chauncey McClanahan.
rd'und of the Class AAA Others expected to play are
playoffs. The next round the Josh
Hereford,
Zach
locals were defeated by St. Thomas, and Hogg.
Albans, which marked the
"We would like to pull a
beginning of a six-game Poca this year:' said Darst.
losing streak in the playoffs. ''Twice the Dots were 7-3
Point lost to George going into the playoffs and
Washington in 1985. to St. twice they won the whole
Albans in 1996. to Capital thing. That's weat we are
in 1997. to Morgantown in shooting for,'' said Darst.
Game time is set for 7:30.
1998, and to Magnolia last

Wahama
fromPageBl
as their top runningback,
but Chris Hill and Caleb
O'Neal also bring depth and
talent to the backfield for an
imposing rushing attack.
Quarterback
MichaelAngelo Hernandez
has completed over 50 percent of his passes this season, with those completions
usually going to either Hill
or Hunter Hernandez.
The Green and White's
lone losses this season came
to Richwood, (48-34) and
Man (23-7). The Pirates'
eight wins were against Oak
Hill (47-6), Midland Trail
(51-6), Meadow Bridge
(49-12). Valley (20-12),
Parkersburg Catholic (3513). Mt: Hope (45-0) and
Buffalo
(48-12)
and
Greenbrier West (24-22).
Fayetteville's
overall
schedule combined to go
52-46 in the regular season

Bv MARK WILLIAMS
sPECIALTOTHETRIBuNE

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande is
gearing up for the annual
Bevo Francis Tournament
this weekend. The festivities
will include eight basketball
games, homecoming ceremonies, hall of fame inductions and a chance to re-live
one of the greatest stories in
the history of sport, the
1952-54 Bevo Francis led
Rio Grande College basketball teams.
The women's field of
teams
for
the
Bevo
Tournament has Rio Grande
(2-0) squaring off with
Midway College on Friday
night at 6 p.m. The Eagles
are coached by former Rio
standout Karley Mohler.
Midway ( 1-3) won its opener, 64-59 over St. Catharine,
but has since lost three
straight to Freed-Hardeman
(98-64), Bethel College
(TN), (77-60) and Taylor
(69-56).
··we've got Midway coming in here, which is coached
by one of our ex-players
Karley Mohler, who was an
All-American and who will
be in the hall of fame, I'm
sure, eventually.'' said Rio
Grande head women's basketball
coach
David
Smalley. "She'll have her
kids fired up and they'll

want to play hard for her.
being that she's coming back
home.''
Point Park and Bluefield is
the other first day match-up
on the women's side. They
will tip-off at 2 p.m. Point
Pank. a former foe from the
American
Mideast
Co~ference, has played ~wo
scnmmage~ .to date agm~st
Mt Aloy1sius and PittGre nsburg. Bluefield, out
of the Appalachian.Athletic
Cobference (J\AC) ~s 3-0 on
th~ ~ason w1th wm:-; . over
Hl\.\Qssee College, Asbury
College a.nd B:rea C?ll.e~e.
The Ra'?s lost an ex.h1.b!t10n
game with NCAA DJVtswn I
Tennessee State (75~50). .
"We struggled w1th Pomt
Park last year and Bluefield.
I think is 3-0 and we don't
know much about them at
this point." Smalley said.
"What better way to get better th'\n to do it against good
competition and doing it at
the Be vo.''
"We 're excited about it, all
the festivities, Meghan
Kolcun Miller going into the
hall ot fame, plus we got
recruit coming in," Smalley
added. "It's a great weekend.
it's a eekend of reunions,
it's an exciting time and
we're looking ~forward ,to
hopefu ly getting on roll
here.''
The winners and losers
will tan~le with one another

on Saturday. Saturday's first
game involving Midway
will tip at 11 a.m. Rio will
tip at 3 p .m.
The men's field will have
Rio Grande (1-1) hooking
up with Ohio-Chillicothe.
The Hilltoppers come in
having
defeated
Rio
Grande's .TV squad in its
only game of the season to
d~te. The Red~ton"!l and. the
HJiltoppers Will t1p-off at
approxif!lately 8 p.m. on
Fnday mght.
,
In the fi~st m~n s contc~'&gt;t
of the d~). Umon Colleee
(K':f) ~Ill battle T~yl~r
UniVersity at 4 p.m. Umon. IS
0-2 on the seaso~ wh1le
Ta.ylo~ has. a wm over
Miam1-HamJiton (69-43)
and will play Holy Cross
College on Wednesday
night.
Saturday's slate will have
OU-C
playing
either
Unionffaylor at 1 p.m. antl
Rio Grande will play the
final game, set to tip-off at 5
p.m.
"It's one of the biggest
weekends .. if not the biggest
weekend that we have on
our campus other than graduation," Rio Grande head
men's basketball coach Ken
French said. "It's hul!c for us
to have all those people back
on our campus and basketball'skindofthefocalpoint,
but we get to celebrate not
only homecoming, but hall

of fame and get to celebrate
that team that was so special
to. not only our institution,
but to college basketball
itself.''
"It will be a great weekend.'' French added. ''It will
be some good basketbalL
\ve've got OU-Chillicothe
on Friday and Union ~
­
Taylor play on Friday ·
then hopefully it will be
against whoever wins that

ga~e':·

"You never know what's
going to happen, but it will
be some good basketball."
Homecoming festivities
will take center stage on
Friday at halftime of the
m 's •arne where the king
en · g
.
,.
.
an d qubecn wJII be ciOwned.
1n , etween, games on
?aturd~y, the hall ~f famers.
mclud111g 2009 IJ?ductees
Meghan Kolcun .Mille~ and
Don Vyhnalek. WI~l be mtro.duce,d and at halftime of t~e
mens game the 2098-09 RIO
Grande A.thletes of the Yea;.
Paul N1cholson (~en ~
Soccer) ~nd Sarah Drabms~1
(Women s. Basketball) w11l
be recogm~ed ..
All of this will lead up to
the Hall of Fame Banquet on
Saturday night following the
men's game. A reception
will begin at 7 p.m. with .
dinner at 7:30 p.m.
Conference C of the Dav1s
University Center.

Brady Quinn back in s~ddle for Cleveland
BEREA (AP) - Brady
Quinn and the Cleveland
Browns are right back where
they started.
Benched by coach Eric
Mancrini just 2 1/2 games
and 69 pass attempts into the
season, Quinn will start
Monday
night's
game
against
the
Baltimore
Ravens, the team he was facing on Sept. 27 when the former Notre Dame star was
yanked at halftime.
Quinn's. got his second
chance. Now he must make
the most of it.
''I'm excited to play," he
said. "I'm excited to be part
of Monday night."
Quinn never won·ied about
getting another opportunity.
He was confident it would
come. Patience is the one
thing he has mastered during
his short pro career.
''That's kind of how I've
learned to live life, at least in
the NFL," he said.
Mangini's decision to
switch back from Derek
Anderson to Quinn wasn't
met with overwhelming support in Cleveland's locker
room. Several Browns players
interviewed
on
Wednesday said they were
unaware of Quinn's retum to
the top of the depth chart.
With his team at 1-7 and
showing little progress amid
wowing speculation about
nis future. Mangini may as
well give Quinn another look
to see if he can ~et things
going. Quinn can t do any

worse than Anderson, who
was a disaster in five start .
Anderson
posted
the
NFL's lowest passer rating
(36.2) and was unable to
crank
up
Cleveland's
offense, which to this point
has been outscored by the
New
Orleans
defense.
Mangini said it wasn't all
Anderson's fault, but there
was no way the Browns,
could continue in reverse.
"In fairness to Derek. there
were a lot of things th~t
played a part in this,"
Mangini said. "Were there
throws that he missed? There
were some of those and reads
that could have been better.
But I really like Derek. And I
really like the way he hanJed himself.
·•y don't think by any
~eam. this is some sort of
fi~al statement on who he is.
1 tpink it is an opportunity to
continue to grow and I'm
sure he will."
Afiderson politely declined
an il\terview request before
practrce.
Quinn was hoping that his
l 0 quarters as a starter \VOuld
not deflne his 2009 season.
Since ~eing drafted by
Clevelar¥! in the first round
two yeats ago, Quinn has
had to sit and wait for his
chance t~ take ov.er the
Browns. t e team he has
loved since he was a boy.
But after beating out
Anderson in training camp,
Quinn's first season as a
starter was abruptly inter-

rupted in Week 3. He was
given the hook by Mangini
once, so is he worried about
it happening again?
"No," he said. "I mean.
why should I be concerned?
I've been through it before
and I understand the adversity that comes with that. It's
not something I'm scared
of.''
He's not saying so, but
Quinn may be a little nervous about the Ravens (4-4),
who are coming off a 17-7
loss to Cincinnati and have
dropped four of five after a
3-0 start. Baltimore can't
afford to Jose more ground in
the AFC North and Ray
Lewis, Ed Reed nd the rest
of the Ravens' attacking
defense will be out to make
life impossible for Quinn.
''They're always angry."
Quinn said with a laugh. "at
least when I watch them on
film. They're a solid defense.
We're expecting the same on
Monday night."
Mangini said he'd like to
stick with Quinn for the
remainder of the season.
Man~ini has seen positive
development in Quinn. who
never lost confidence and
worked hard in the weeks he
was behind Ander:-.on.
"I think his overall control
of the offense has gotten better:· Mangini said. ··r think
especially over the last two
to three weeks he's been very
efficient as a passer and I've
liked the things he's done.
There are a lot of tools in this

offense that are available and
I'm looking forward to him
using those.''
It's not clear what ''tools"
Mangini was referring to on
an offense ranked 30th in
scoring. 31st in total yards
and 32nd in passing yards.
Since Quinn's last start, the
Browns traded star wide
receiver Braylon Edwards,
leaving rookies Mohamed
Massaquoi
and
Brian
Robisk1e as the club's primary targets.
Quinn didn't go into
details about his relationship
with first-year offensive
coordinator Brian Daboll.
Despite denials. there have
been rumblings that the two
have not gotten along. Q.
was asked if he and Da
had a heait-to-hcart to patch
up any differences.
"Can you rephrase what
heart-to-heart is?" Quinn
joked. "We've talked. The
past is the past."
Quinn's bencliing may
have been a costly one. If he
had played in 70 percent of
Cleveland's offensive snaps,
escalators in his contract
would have earned him nearly $11 million this season.
That's a near mathematical
impossibilit) now. but Quinn
is more concerned about
adding a win to Cleveland's
paltry~total.
''The
season's
only
halfway over," he said.
"We're going .to do our best
to try to fix thmgs and move
forward."

.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

and the Pirates also have
one shutout this season.
Wahama, on the other
hand, enters Friday on a
one-game winning streak
and has pitched three
shutouts.
The
White
Falcons' lone losses came to
Williamstown (26-7) and
Athens (36-20), both of
which were at home.
Wahama 's wins this year
were against Buckeye Trail
(48-29). Southern (42-12),
Waterford (31-0). South
Gallia (18-0), Eastern (2614), Wirt County (36-32),
Hannan (60-0) and Buffalo
(58:22). The Red and White
were a perfect 5-0 in road
contests this fall and have
faced opponents with an
overall combined record of
46-43.
Friday will be the first
time that these two schools
have met in the playoffs.
Kickoff is scheduled for
7:30p.m.

I

I

I

Sports
correspondent
Gary Clark comributed to
this report.

'

•

�------------w----.~--------~--~--~-------·-----~-----.----~~--------~-----------,~~~~-------

Thursday, November 12, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Your. Ad,· '(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-21 57
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234
O«lriA~t/4

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Monday t hru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5 : 0 0 p.m.
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Wanted

Professional Services

Fall 'pecial sen.di.counl.ltf•
fordable
~~ndyman
pwer
"a'hmg. guile~\. odd JObs.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!
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Announcements

Lost

&amp; Found

3(l.1-X82-3QW

Found· 3 pupptes
Kingsbury, call to
740·591-0894

on

I

30-1-812-_~()().l

ID.

Found: Mid-Sized dog
around baseball field in
Rio. 304·544-6278.

300

Services

3000

Apartments/
Townhouses

2 br. downstatrs klt.
app.,a/c &amp; furnace, WID
hookup S35Q_QQ a mon.
12 Unit Apt. Complex. +
$200.00
dep.
446..()390.
304-675·6375.

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Ron
Mason Co. WV
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

-=======•

CLASSIFIED INDEX

I

I

I

======-

••

Real Estate
Sales

Fo r Sale By Owner

Building Materials
Lost: Deer cup Chihua400
Financial
hua. Seizures_ Last seen Steel Arch Buildings
Big
Wheel
Carryout.
256·6617 or 339-3516
Fall Clearance rcpo'd build·
Money To lend
mgs re;~dy for re,;tle 1!. Save
Notices
thou,and'!
~Ox30~l(h36. NOTICE
Borrow Smart.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY Ask about our display dis· Contact the Ohio Dli11·
counts in your area! call to- sion of Financial InStituPUBLISHING CO. recday I-R66-.151·0-169
tions Office of Consumer
ommends that you do
Affairs BEFORE you rei!·
business with people you
nance your home or ob·
know, and NOT to send
Chi ld / Elderly Care
lain a loan_ BEWARE of
money through the mail
requests lor any large
until you have investigatWill take care of the advance
payments
of
Ing the offering.
elderly in thetr home fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
Gun
Show.
Gallipolis, call 304·675·3264.
toll
free
at
Affiars
Holiday Inn, Nov. 21&amp;22
Adm S4. State Route 7.
1·866-278·0003 to leam
BUY-SELL-TRADE.
6'
if the mortgage broker or
Home Improvements
lender is properly li·
TBLS
$25.
censed. (This is a public
740·667·0412.
service
announcement
Basement
t-'1ctures tnat
from the Ohio Valley ....,....,.....,.....,.....,.....,.....,......., !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Waterproofing
have been
Publishing Company)
Unconditional lifetime
Farm Equipment
500
Education
placed in ads at
guarantee. Local refer·
Have you priced a John
ences furnished. Estab·
the Gallipolis
iished 1975. Cali 24 Hrs.
Deere lately? You'll be
Daily Tribune
Business &amp; Trade
surprised' Check out our
740-446-0870, Rogers
must be picked
used
Basement Waterproofing.
1nventory
at
School
www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
within 30 days.
michael
Equipment
Gallipolis Career
Any pictures
Other Services
College
740-446-2412
that are not
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367 STIHL Sales &amp; Service
picked up will be
Pet
Cremations.
Call
1·800-214·0452
Now Available at Carmidiscarded.
740·446·3745
f gall1pohscareercollege.edu
chael
Equipment
Accred1100 Member Accredit·
740·446·2412
ong Council for Independent
Colleges and Schools 12748
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain
Legals ...........................................................100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
Announcements ..........•..................•...•.......• 200 ATV ........... ._._ ...•...•.._..........._..........._........... 1005
Hay
for 'ale '(j.bale' lsi cur·
600
Animals
Blrthday/Anniversary.................................. 205 Blcycles......................................................1 010
ung
$2.00.
4th
cunmg
Happy Ads ....................................................21 0 Boats/Accessories .......-............................ 1015
S2.65. round balos -lx5 3&amp;4
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215 Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
cuning
S20_00
m bam
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220 Motorcycles ............................................... 1 025
Pets
:&gt;04-675-5086 leave me".
Notices ......................................................... 225 Other ......................._. ._ ....•..._......................1030
2 CKC Reg \filii Dachs·
Persona Is ..................................................... 230 Want to buy ...............................................1 035
Haylage 1500 1b. round
Wanted ........................................................ 235 Automotive ................................................ 2000
hund&gt; Isl 'hots &amp; wormed bales, wrapped in plastic
Services ....................................................... 300 Auto RentaVlease ..................................... 2005
asking S200.00 if intere,ted
$50.00 each
call Don
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302 Autos.-................•.......................................• 201 0
call 30~-593-3820
Lambert 740·992·7603.
Automotive .................................................. 304 , Classic/Antiques ..................._._.............•... 2015
Toy
Poodle
puppies,
Building Materlals ....................................... 306 Commercial/Industrial •....•...................._... 2020
Business ................•..........................•.......... 308 Parts &amp; Accessorles ...............-..................2025
black, white, appricot &amp; 900
Merchandise
Catering .....................-...........-......................31 0 Sports Utlllty.............................................. 2030
choc, vet checked. shots.
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312 Trucks ...................•.....................................2035
tails docked &amp; dewclaws
Computers ................................................... 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
removed by vet, these
Fuel Oil Coal
;o~ttracto'~rs ..................................................316 Vans ..........................•...•.......-.....•................ 2045
are beautiful healthy little
Wood / Gas
~on1estic!vJanltorial ................................... 318
Want to buy .....·--··--··--········--··--·--········--····2050
pupp1es, females $350.
...................................................... 320 Real Estate Sales .................._. ..•.... _. ..... _. .. 3000
males
$300, Seasoned firewood.
Financla1...............................................•.......322 Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
74Q-992· 7007
All Hardwood.
Health ........................................................... 326 Commercial ................................................301 0
740-853·2439
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328 Condomlnlums ....................-.._ •................. 3015
or
5 beautiful kittens. to
740·446·9204.
Home Improvements 330
For Sale by Owner..•..................................3020
home
good
lnsurance •..·-···-···-···········-······...................... 332 Houses for Sale ..............._..... .--................. 3025
304·675·3400 after 6pm
Miscellaneo us
Lawn Service ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage) ........................ .__.... _. •.... -. .. 3030
304·675·6232
Music/Dance!Drama .................................... 336 Lots ............................................................3035
J et A eration Motors
AKC Labrador Retriever
Other Services ............................................ -338 Want to buy.-...•......._..._..............................3040
pups. Blk $250, Choco· repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
Plumbing/Eiectrical ..............•...•.................• 340 Real Estate Rentals--·····--··--·--··--............... 3500
In stock. Cali Ron
Professional Servlces .................................342 Apartments/Townhouses .... _. ...... ._........... 3505
late $300. 740-820-5357
Repairs .........................................................344 Commercial..........•....••. ._ .......-. .. -----·-··········351 0
Evans 1·800·537·9528
or 74Q-352·3060
Roofing ......................................................... 346 Condomlniums .................. .-•._............._..... 3515
AKC miniature Schnau·
Free queen size box
Security .................................................-......348 Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
zers. Parti &amp; Chocolates. springs &amp; mattress set.
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350 Land (Acreage)-··--··-·······........................... 3525
Parents
on
premises. 740·992·7364
Travel/Entertainment ......•..•••.••..•...•..•....••..•352 Storage-··········--···-··--··--······ ........................ 3535
740·441-1657.
Flnanclal.......................................................400 Want to Rent ......-. ...................................... 3540
Bridal set. 14 kt. white
Financial Servlces .......................................405 Manufactured Housing····--··········--··········· 4000
Free Belgian Shepard, gold. 1-5 kt total diamond
Insurance .................................................... 410 Lots............•................................... -.•........ _.4005
male 1 yr. old-good w1th we1ght.
From
Zales.
Money to Lend .............................................415 Movers........................................................401 0
children. (740) 367·0521.
Never worn. Valued at
Educatlon .....................................................500 Rentals ....................................................... 4015
$2,000.
She
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Sales ....................-........ _.............................4020
Free
Kitten,
male over
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ................................. 510
Supplies .....................................•............... 4025
blonde/white
6 weeks dumped me. My loss is
your gain. Asking $1200
Lessons........................................................515 Want to Buy ..... _. ........................................ 4030
old. (740) 441-0145.
Personal ....................................................... 520 Resort Property ................................... ._ .... 5000
OBO.
Call
To good home young (740)248-9439.
Animals ..........: ............................................. 600 Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Animal Supplies .......................................... 605 Resort Property for rent_.......................... 5050
male
Black
l..ab
Horses .......................................................... 610 Employment. ..........................................•.. -6000
304·895-3013.
WantTo Buy
Llvestock......................................................615 Accountlng/Financial ................................6002
I
Pets .............................................................-.620 Adminlstratlve!Professlonal .....................6004
Absolute Top Dollar • sil·
700
Agriculture
Want to buy ..................................................625 Cashler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
ver/gold
cotns.
any
Agriculture ................................................... 700 Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
10KI14KI18K gold jew·
Farm Equipment..........................................705 Clerlcal ....._...•... _.................... -. ..•..•........•...• 601 0
elry. dental gold. pre
Garden &amp; Produce.........-.............................710 Constructlon ..•.....-. .....•...•..........................6012
1935
US
currency,
Farm Equipment
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715 Drivers &amp; Delivery ....... _. ....... _. ................... 6014
prooflm1nt
sets.
dia·
&amp; Land ..........................................-720 Educatlon---····--------····-···························--··6016
EBY,
INTEGRITY, monds, MTS Coin Shop.
buy ..................................................725 Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
151 2nd Avenue, GalliKIEFER BUILT,
IAro~h••~-&lt;II~A••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••oo 900
Employm ent Agencles-......•...................•..6020
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE- polis. 446·2842
Antiques ...............................................__ ...... 905 Entertainment .•. ·--·······-········ .. ····················6022
Appliance ............................................... -..... 910 Food Servlces........................................-...6024
STOCK
TRAILERS,
Yard Sale
Auctlons .......................................................915 Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
Bargain Basement. ......................................920 Help a nted· General ...... .-.......................... 6028
MENT
TRAILERS, ;;;;;;;;;;;;_
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;- Movtng Sale· Sat Nov.
Collectlbles .................................................. 925 Law Enforcement-. ......... .__........................ 6030
HOMESTEADER
14, Sam:4pm, 815 Johns
Computers ............................................... 930 Main tenance/Domestic .........•................... 6032
Equipment/Supplles ....................................935 Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
CARGO/CONCESSION
Rd ' Ractne
Flea Markets ................................................ 940 Mechanics ..•................. .-.., .........................6036
TRAILERS.
B+W
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945 Medlcal ............................................. ,.......•. 6038
GOOSENECK FLATBED
Furniture._.. ._. ._ ............................................. 950 Muslcal ......•................................................ 6040
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport.........................._ ..••..• .-955 Part·Time·Temporaries ............................. 6042
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
Kid's Corner.•.......-.......................................960 Restaurants ............................................... 6044
TORY AT
Mlscellaneous .......... -...•...•....•.• ._ ......_._.••..•...965 Sales ...........................................................6048
WWW CARMICHAEL·
Want to buy.-................................................970 Technical Trades ................................. .-_... 6050
TRAILERS. COM
Yard Sale ............·-•············--·····................... 975 Textiles/Factory .........·--·······················--····6052
740-446·3825
¥

VISA

POUCIES: Ohio valley PubllllhlrG reaervee the right to e&lt;:llt. rejeCt. Of cancel any e4 at any time- EnOft muct be rtpOitecl on the llrtt d&amp;rf ot publ~lon and the
Tr1bl.nloSertlnel..flegllter wtn be reeponelble for no mClfethlln the cott oft hi apece occupied by the error end only the flrlt lneertlon. We ahall no4 be liable 104'
any to.. or .x~ thattesiJIIa from th&amp; pyblicallon or oml•lon of ana1hertleement. CQr~lon will be made In the flrtlt avanabla eaitloo. ·Box number ecla
are alway. confidential. • C~rent rata card appllea. ·AU r•l aetate e&lt;:tvertiMmente are eubjec:1 to the Fe&lt;:leral Fair Houalng Act ol tGeS. • Thll newapeper
~~CC:eptt only help warted 1118 rneetlng EOE lltandard8. 'We will not kno..,tngly acx:.pt any eclv•ntlllng In viOlation of the taw. Will noc De r•llj)OOSibie fOf any
errors In an e4 taken over the phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

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Now you can have border s and graphics
added to your classified ads
_( ~
1
Borders $3.00/ per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

A ll Displ ay: 12 Noon 2
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Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
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• St•rt Your Ad• With A Keyword • Include Complete
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Friday For Sundays Paper

JUST SAY

CHARGE II !

Beautiful
home
and 238 1st Ave. Lg. Upstatrs
hunte(s
dream.
For apt.
overlooking
nver
to Furn. kitchen. 2 persons.
more
details.
go
www.orvb.com
or
call $425+utll. Dep. req. Ref
740-794·1132.
Call 446·4926
Houses Fo r Sal e
3 yr. old 1,152 sq. ft.
ranch home. 2 BR, 2 BA
w/ whirlpool tubs. Lg. LR.
Eat-in kitchen. All electric. Refrig_ Range. Dish·
washer.
Gallipolis City
School
District.
2.99
acres. 6x24 deck. 5 min.
from City Limit $69,500
(740)446-7029.
Madison Ave. Pt. Pleasant, frame house on 2
lots. excellent location for
2 future rentals, $8,000.
7 40· 709-1858

....,....,.....,.....,.....,.....,..............,

1000

Recreational
Vehicles

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
zer Hospital on SR 160
CIA.(740)441-0194
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE! Townhouse apart·
ments,
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call
740·441-1111 for appll·
cation &amp; tnformation.
Free Rent Special !!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WtD
hookup, • tenant
pays
electric.
Call between
the hours of 8A·8P.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882·3017

New 3 bedroom 2 bath
home only $229.62 per
Call Twin Rtvers Tower is ac·
month.
740·385·2434
cepting applications for
1800's farmhouse. 3-4 waitmg list for HUD sub·
bedrooms,
approx.
20 sidized. 1·BR apartment
acres.
740·992·6968 for the elder1y/disabled,
call 675·6679
evenings

G)

1999
Clayton
double
wide 28x44, 3 bedroom,
RV Service at Carmi· 2 bath, $22.500 OBO, 3 room and bath down·
chael
Trailers 740·591·9721
or stalls first months rent &amp;
740·446·3825
740·992-1599
deposit. references re·
Flatwoods Rd Pomeroy. quired, No Pets and
RV
Service at Carmichael 3 bedroom, 2 bath. ga· clean. 740-441-0245
rage, 74Q-992·5989
Trailers
2BR apts. 6 mi. from Hoi·
740-446-3825
Package Deal, 4 br. 2 zer some utilities pd or
ava11.
bth, 2 story, 3/4 base· appliances
Motorcycles
+
dep.
men!, fenced in yard. $400/mo
740-577-6866
or
central
air
&amp;
heat
newer
2007
Suzuki
988·6130
ductwork
&amp;
thermo
con·
DRZ-400-SM. Blk. 2941
trol damper system' fairly 1 &amp; 2 Br. lurntshed apt.
mi. 740-245·0611.
new 92% effictency fur· start $450 &amp; up plus
nance; 1 ·small house. 2 dep., No pets. Aacine,Oh
2000
Automotive br.. 1 car garage, already 740-591·5174
has
tenant;
1 large Middleport Beech St.. 2
80x20 w/15' addon &amp; at· br., furnished apts.. ut11il·
Autos
tic, former boat &amp; mower ties paid, dep. &amp; ref., No
shop; 1 additional lot. Pets (740)992-0165
2001 Dodge Stratus. 4 level &amp; cleared off, ali 4
Door, 134,000 mi. $2300 are conv1ent1y connected Apartment avatlable now
Apts.
New
OBO.
256-6877
or on a city block. take one Riverbend
256·1261
take all will not split up. Haven WV Now accept·
1ng
apphcattons
lor
Reality
2002-Camaro, pwr. win· Cleland
HUD-subsidized,
one
ctrl.
740-992·2259
Cass
Cledowsllocks, crUise
Bedroom Apts. Ut1hties
cd player, 78000 mi. land or James ·Pickens at Included. Based on 30~.
asking
225-810-9927
$5000 080. 256-1147
ot adjusled income. Call
$109,000 OBO
2005 Cavalier, $4200.
304-882-3121,
available
$3900. Used 3 bedroom home for Senior and D•sabfed
2003
Cavalier
Cavalier
$3600. w1th heat pump and de· people
2004
Truck livery. Only $3995 Call
2007
Colorado
740·385·9621
$6850. 256·6169.
Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
2006 Mitsubishi Eclipse. House for sale. 3 BR, 1 son Estates. 52 West·
Silver, 63,000 mi. $7000 BA Ranch on Woodland wood Dr.. from $365 lo
www.orvb_com. $560.
740-446·2568
OBO.
256·6877
or Dr.
740-441-7443.
Equal Housing Opportu·
256·1261
mty. This institution is an
Real Estate
Sports Utility
3500
Equal Opportunity Pro·
Rentals v1der and Employer
2001
Dodge
Durango
Down- statrs apt. for rent
$4,500.
SLT.
Loaded,
in Pt. Pleasant 2 br.,w.l
Apartments/
614·553·7066.
kitchen appliances , AC
Townhouses
gas fumace w/ WD
2001
Dodge Durango.
New
Engine, 1 and 2 bedroom apts .. hook·UP' Lg. front porch
a
mon
+
furnished
and
unfur· $375.00
740·645·7965.
dep.
nished. and houses tn $200.00
or
cell
Pomeroy and M1ddleport, 304·675·6375
Trucks
secunty deposrt requu-ed, S04·6n-s621.
1996 Dodge Ram 2500 no pets. 740·992·2218
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex
144,000
miles
$2900.
in
town,
S4751rno
BA Apt. Tri-.Level.
12x6
mesh
trailer
Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
Close to Holzer Hosp1tat,
$700.00 304·675-6866.
place. 446·1271.
No Pets. Ref + Dep.
1997 Ford F·250 7.3 Req. 740·794·0831
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Power
Stroke
Diesel.
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
1 br. Apt. in Pt. Pleasant,
Ext. cab, white. tool box,
Manor
and
Riverstde
turn.
.
very
clean
has
5th wheel.
New Trans·
Apts. rn M1ddleport from
pets,
washer/dryer,
no
m1ssion.
174,000 miles.
S327
to
$592
non-smokers
call
$8,700. 740·416·0865
740-992·5064.
Equal
304-675-1386.
Housing Opportumty.
2 bedroom, living room, Island Vtew Motel has
Vans
kitchen. bath Apartment. vacanctes
S35.00/N1ght
1992
Ply.
Voyager, Have Central A1r, fur· 74Q-446..()406
nlshed
woth
couch,
$1550, Rebuilt Mtr. 8,500
washer.
dryer, Modem tBR apt Call
M1.
All
Elec. chairs.
stove, miCrowave beds. 74Q-446·0390
740·245·5014.
d1n1ng table and chairs. N1ce 1 BR wash-dry
$400 deposit, S450. a Stove &amp; Fndge. All Uttli·
month.
Call ties. Call 740-446·9585.
304·682·2523
Leave $600/mo.·SSOO dep.
Message and Number tf Sm
e!ftctency 10 Pt
not at Home
Pleasant stove, ref all
Modem
1
BR
apt ulil. pd. $385.00 a mon
446·3736.
dep req. 304·675·7783.

r--- - --------=:::--------,

f

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
Townhouses

Advertise your
business on this page

Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
:S395+2 BR at $470
Month. 740·446-1599.
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments • 2BR, 1.5
bath, back patio, pool,
playground, (trash, sew·
age. water pd.)No pets
allowed.
$450/rent,
.$450/sec.
dep.
Call
•7 40-645-8599

foraslowas

35.00

Commercial
Business space in Gallipolis Ferry for rent, 2 tan·
ning
beds
for
sale
004·593-4654.

per month!

Houses For Rent
.$199/mo! 3 bed, 2 bath.
Bank Repo! (5% down, 15
year... 8% APR) tor h'tings
800-620-4946 e• R027

New log apt-2 SA-Porter
area.
HP/Cent.
Air.
$500/mo. Dep &amp; ref.
446-2801

? BR Mobile Home, No
pets. Water, sewer, trash
included. At Johnson's
Mobile
Home
Park.
740-645-0506.

2
Trailer
Lots
Rent-Addison
Pike-$150/mo
+
dep.
Water
446-3644.

for
sec.
pd.

2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2 people, $300/month,
Refernces. No Pets, NO
CALLS
after
7pm
740-441·0181
2br.in Gallipolis Ferry 4
br. &amp; 2 ba. $675.00 a
mon. + $675.00 dep. call
740·973·8999.

Wiseman Real Estate-4
rentals
available-call
446-3644 for more info.
All
in-town-various Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16"80.
prices-references &amp; sec. Country
Setting.
deposits required.
367-0266 or 339-3366.

W anted
Help
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Help Wanted

fJieartland Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We are looking for someone skilled and
experienced in both page design and copy
editing. This person will need to design

front pages, paginate inside pages, and
write great headlines. Experience with
layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop is a must. Full time position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to:
~alltpohs

Get Paid What You're
Worth I
Our best performers
make up to $12.25 after
six months!
Recruit volunteers for
non-profit organizations
No experience required!
No Credit Card Sales!
No Collect•onsl

6000

Employment

Education
Part-time
instructors
needed during the day
in: mathematics, eco·
nomics, and accounting.
Mathematics and eco·
nomic instructors must
have a master's degree
in the discipline. If interested please email a resume and cover letter to
jdanicki@gallipolisca·
reercollege.edu
Help Wanted· General

YOUNG'S
Full and Part-lime Post·
lions!
All Ma1or Holidays OFF
WITH PAYI
Weekly Pay + Bonus Incentives!
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401K!
Call NOW to start earnIng your potential!
1·888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
1901Apply online:
http://)obs.lnfoclslon.c
om
Medical

Quality Control, earn up
to $15 an hour, evaluate
retail stores, tratntng provided,
call
1·800·901·2694

992-2155

3br,
$475../month
in
Manufactured
Syracuse. Deposit, HUD 4000
Housing
approved.
No
Pets
3&lt;&gt;4·675·5332 weekends ~~~~~~;:;
~
•740-591-0265
Rentals

l-ioouse for rent. 3br,
-1ba, W&amp;D, Stove &amp; Re·
fridge provided, in Galli·
pohs. close to school,
Dep.
&amp;
Rei.
req.
$600/mo. Call 446·7723
btw5·7 p.m.

Help Wanted· General

charge
Part-t•me
RN
nurse · position, Russell
5176
Nursing
Home,
Washington Ad, Albany,
Oh·
45710,
ph
fax
740-698-3631'
Asst
receptionist 740·698·4703
needed for local dentist
office in the PI Pleasant
Get A Jump
area, must have knowl·
on
edge
of
computers,
SAVINGS
Rentals
Sales
phones. and good cus·
~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::; =;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; tomer skills, will train lor
3 BR Mobile Home, 1 1/2
AAA BRANO..NEWJ
position, please send reBA. $450/mo. $450 dep.
HUGE 4 BR
sumes to Dental Office
740·256-6408,
2 Bath SECTIONAL
3984 Indian Creek Rd
256-6718, 441-0583
2xS walls , Large chefs
Elkview, WV 25071
kitchen, 50 year sld•ng.
3 br. trailer for rent on
Carpenters wanted, Call
Otx appliance pkg. Pvt
Pine Grove Rd, Racine,
740-441·9504.
ut•lity rm, Giant walk·ln
Oh, $385 plus deposit,
closets. Pitch ceilings,
you pay all utilities, good
Crushing &amp; sizing operaGiant great room ++++
location in country settion. Shift work. New Ha·
NEW FHA FINANCING!
ling, call &amp; leave mes·
ven, WV. 304-882-3944
sage if no one answer's
$47,651
740-992-2458
MIDWEST HOMES
Customer
,service/order
mymidwesthome.com
dept supervisor. 30-35
Trailer in town Racine, 2
hrs per week. Ideal canbr., 1 bath, all electric,
740.828.2750
didate will possess confi·
carport, large front porch,
close to school, library &amp; ----,_,-~~ dence, be detail oriented,
and computer literate.
park, $425 deposit, $425
OHIO'S
Public Notice
Email
resume,
refer·
per month water &amp; gar·
BEST BUYS
ences. and salary re· NOTICE TO TAXPAY·
bage included, NO Pets,
2010 3BR Doublewide
quirements as a word ERS
Reference:
..
74.;.;0;..-9;..4-.9·..;2.-21.;.;7___ _
$39,977
document to: custom- 5715.17 Ohio Revised
Trailer, 2 br, furnished,
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
erservice.orderdept@ gm
Code
w/d, cable TV, construeFHA $349 mo
ail.com.
The Meigs County
tion workers welcome,
2010 3br/2ba Single
Board of Revision has
$400 month, $200 secufrom $199 mo
rity deposit, two minutes MIDWESTHOMES Do you enjoy helping completed Its work of
from
bridge, mymidwes!homes.com
people? If so, I will give equalization. The tax
740·992·3362
740.828.2750
you FREE RENT AND returns for tax year
FREE UTILITIES plus an 2009 have been reFor rent, Mobile Home-3 - - - - - - - - - income ,·ust for moving in vised and the valuaBR, Fnvate
·
1ot, cean.
I
REDUCED TO $115,000
and helping my 87 year tions completed and
Dep. No pets. $475/mo. 2004 Cla)ton manufactured old mother You Will live are open for public in·
446-7275.
home w/ block foundation , 3 here as if it were your spection in the office
Own a New 3BR, 2 BA br. 2 full baths. lg. kit.,w/ i,. own home, minus the ex· of the Meigs County
Auditor, Second Floor,
w/1 acre. 5% down. $525 land &amp; pantry, 'tove. re- penses. 740-416·3130.
Courthouse, Second
mo. WAC. Near Holzer. fridg., di'h"a'her, onclud..
740-446-3570.
on 7/ 10 acre sepera!e ~arage
Part Time Oayshlft
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio.
24x38, 10 min. from town
Fixed Schedule 28
Complaints against the
Sales
on Oshel Rd
hrs/Wk
valuations, as estab;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_. 304-372-5558.
8:00·1 :30 +weekend
lished for tax.year 2009
1969
14x70
Mobile
day
must be made in acHome, Most appliances
The BIG Sale
Make fundraisin9 calls
cordance with Section
inc. Brand new King
Used Homes &amp; Owner
for conservative organi5715.19 of the Ohio Rewoodbumer. 256-8121.
Financing • New 2010
zations such as the NRA! vised Code. These
complaints must be
Count!)' living- 3·5BR,
Doublewide $37,989
Conducting Interviews
Ask abou! $8,000 ReNow
filed in the County Au2·3 BA on property.
bates
C 1 d h d I
ditor's Office on or beMany floor plans! Easy
a I an sc e u e your
fore March 31. 2010. All
mymidwesthome.com
Interview today!
Financing! We own the
740-828-2750
1·888-IMC-PAYU ex1.
complaints filed with
bank.
Call
today!
the County Auditor will
2311
866-215·5n4
be heard by the Board
"The Proctorville
http://jobs.infocision.c
of Revision in the manAA·Tired of paying rent?
Difference•
om
ner provided by Sec·
We can get you tnto a $1 and a deed is all you
tion 5715.19 of the
new manufactured home need to own your dream Quality Control
for as low as 5% down.
home. Call Now!
EAR:-&lt; up to Sl5.00 an hr.. Ohio Revised Code.
Call to be pre-qualified
Freedom Homes
evaluate retail stores. tram Mary T. Byer-Hill Meigs
County Auditor
866·838·3201
888·565·0167
ing pro\lded 877-766-9507
(11) 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12,
13, 17, 18, 19

The Daily Sentinel

3BR 1 bath home n Le·
Grande Blvd $650 rent
5650 dep. renter pays
utilities. NO PETS. Call
446-3644 for applicaton.

For rent 3 br. brick ranch
on Rt2 N. next to Roose·
velt
Elem.
school
304·895·3129

Sales
Trade 1n your old stngle·
wtde for a new home. 0
money down. 446-3570.

Cosmetologist
needed
for busy local salon call
74()..992-2200

Pomeroy- 2 br, 1 bath,
garage, peaceful, ready
Dec. 1, 740·856·8863

Thursday, November 12, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Datlp {[;nbunr

825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com

Public Notice

Carpenter Service
· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• Naw Garages
• Electr,cal &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
740-591·0195
Pomeroy, Ohoo
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removar
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
[n,ured
WV0421S2

hec

E~tomalt!S

I• I
~I

'

'

~'1

I

~

~1~li1 11-) ~ I

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows.
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

.

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

7:00 am • 8:00 pm

1\IICHAEL'S

J&amp;L
Construction

SERVICE CENTEI{
1555 "'YE A\C.
Pomernv.OH
• Oil &amp; filler change
• Tune Ups
• Rrake Service
• AC Recharge
• Minor exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmtssion Filter
&amp; f·luid Change

• General Mechamc
work
(740) 992-0910

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
• Pole Buildings
• Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

ROBERT
BISSELl
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611
Stop &amp;Compare

Ha?d 1a~d Ca~Jnairy J.lfJd Ftn'lJiture
www.timberenelu:ablnetry.ClOm

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 · Gallipolis

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • .\leta!
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?

We can help!
Call out Toll Free

866·564-8679
LUV HOMES

R.L. Hollon
Trucking
Dump Truck

Senice
We do driveways
Limestone • GraYel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter
Paul Rowe

&amp;

Cell: 740-416·5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

MIKE MARCUM
ROOFING &amp; REMODELIN(i

Co.

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions. Decks. Shingles.
Siding, Windows. Pole Barns, Garages,
Insurance Work, Residential &amp; Commercial
740-245-0437
Licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years
Free Estimates
Experienc·

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Addition5, Remodeling. ~1etal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, ~ew Homes, Siding, Decks.
Bmhroorn Remodeling. Licen~ed &amp; Insured
Rick Price • l7 JTS. Experience
WV#040954 Cell 740-416-2960 740-992-0730

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Classi fieds
~

Placo a newspaper ad

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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given that on Saturday,
November 14, 2009 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
W.
Second
St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Company is
selling for cash in
hand or certified check
the following collateral:
1999 Dodge Dakota
1B7GG22YXXS289217
1991 Ford Mustang
1FACP42E1 MF155156
2001 Olds Bravada
1GHDT13W212222747
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 is-where Is", with
no expressed or im·
plied warranty given.
For further Information, or for an appoint·
ment
to
inspect
collateral, prior to saJe
date contact Cyndie or
Ken at 992-2136.
(11) 11, 12, 13

WI:\'TER STORAGE

Meigs County
Fairgrounds
-\rrhal: '
Oct. 31,2009
9:00 :\m • 11:00 am
Release: Last
Saturda\ in
April, iiuo
A fee of$20 will be
charged for early
armal.latc arri\'al,
early removal, late
r.::mo~al, or an) time
a&lt;:ce"' ts wanted to
fatrgrJunds other than
stated dates. Building
space 's ftrst ,-omc first
serve
Inside Storage. $4.00/lt
Open Space: $2.00/lf
Inside Fence· S1.00/lf
Call 985-4372 for more
information

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal
* Prompt ami Qualil)

Work
*Reasonable Rates
*Insured

*Experienced
References Available!
Call Gary Stanley @

740-591-8044

H&amp;H

BA:'\KS

Guttering

CO~STRUCTION

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Sidtng, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

-~~ &lt;f8«·'1t«d"

No\\ S.:lling:
• Ford &amp; .\1olorcrafl
Parts • Engines.
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions

• Aftermarket
Replacement Shee!
:Vletal &amp; Components
For All ,\lake' of \"chide'
Racine. Ohio
740-949-1956

co.

Pomeroy. Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates
(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings
Building. Remodeling
Gen~ral repair
'' "\\.bank~cclb.com

Free
• Backhoe •
• Brush Hotlllilll
• Portable 11ant1m111

Tree Trinmtng • Se~
Poles i Trusses

Call740-992·9572

eaft Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residelltial

I2.t:. • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • VinYl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER

47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

740-985-4141

740-416-1834

Full) insured &amp; bond in~-: a1 ailahle
Fn•r estinmtcs- 2S+ )ears l''\perit'lll'l'
1'&gt;nt atliliat&lt;·d \1 ith \lik&lt;• \1.1rnono J{unlin~ ,\ R&lt;·nwtldinc I

r-LOoking FoC,
ANew Home?
TrY the

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Fa'\: 740-667-0329
Toll Free: 877-428-8196

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Ponto' requtreil on ad' anc~
Shipmen!' arrive e' cry
other frida~

\

Advertise in
this space for
$35.00 per
month

�Thursday, November 12, 2009 ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

.EETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Thunder
sound
S Brooch
part
10 Beamed·
12 Slow
tempo
13 Hole(golf
feat)
14 Devoured
15 Fellows
16 Gave
away, in a
way
18 Kennel
club
categories
20 Fury
21 Shopping
aid
23 "-the
ramparts

Mort Walker
I JUST GOT 10 THINKING...
POTATO 61&lt;11-16 CONTAIN
VALUABLE NUTRIEHTS
THAT PREVENT DISEASE
AND PROMOTE GOOD

YOU HAVEN'T
EVEN STARTED
PEELING THOS
POTATOES YET!

HEALTH

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

24 Boxer
Tyson
26 Tear
28 Darling of
baseball
29 Disfigure
31 Important
time
32 "Absolutely!"
36 Bewildered
39 Quarterback
Manning
40 Throat
dangler
41 Mystery
award

JOSEPH
43 Fork
features
44 Composer's
creation
45 "- alive!"
46 Bills from
tills
DOWN
1 Scale
2 Cruise
vessel
3 Make
amends
4 Groan
inducer
5 Stqff
symbol
6 Tree part
7 Predatory
insect
region
8 Took the 25 Dewheel
pressed

"yes"
33 Kick off
34 Delight
35 Car
quartet
37 Hightail it
38 Highlands
girl
42 Couple

7

"'V'Nw

Brian and Greg Walker

9

10
13
15

18

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

8

William Hoest

thclockh0rn6 com

..

11-12.

il{¥:sr~

"l&lt;£tt.J~

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

r'M

I

OZZIES

,.WOW! ... ANOTHER ONE!"

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

COLLECTING
LUMPS.

LEAF COL-LECTION.

I

J

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

Bil Keane

by Dave Green
HAPPYBIRTIIDAY for Thursday, 1\ov. 12, 2009:

7

6

5

1 4

2

9 6

6 1

8

3

8
3 1

~

•

~

11-12.

"So they onlY. show up
In the w nter?"

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

~

4

7

4 2

5 9.
E.

4

5
.Difficulty Level
lllll

***

il
e

8

1
I Ill!

cially. \'Veigh a risk ,,;th care, understanding your limits and what t'i going on. The negativity oi muney
stress might not be worth the risk. Tonight: Join a
ceed. If you feel off center, simply look at your priori· friend for dinner.
ties, and you will become comfortable once more.
What works for one person might not for .mother indiVIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** l:se the a.m. to the max, and vou'll c1chiew
vidual. Apply this thought when evaluating emotional
and professional relatioru;hips. If you are single, a
a lot more than you thought possible. By the dftemoon,
hiendc;hip could evoh·e into a lot more. At times you
another issue comes fonl'ard that needs to be dealt
\o\oilh. You have lob; of energy, ,md it might not be
might regret this transformation. Do understand that
ctirected at work. Good ior vou! Tonight: Your treat.
this change was inevitable. M.my of you will opt to
move on and focus on a new person. A real friendship
LIBRA (Sept. 23~cl 225
****Save key matters ior the afternoon, when
will be at the core of that relation'&gt;hip. If you are
attached, the two of you benefit from weekends away
you have enough e~rgy lo complete nearly .my t.lSk
and enough charisma lo mnvinL-e ~meone th&lt;~t the
together. Stoke the fires between you. Play out the old
Earth U. flat! Be mreful about .my sense of negativity.
days of romance. LIBRA makes an excellent healer for
Tonight: 'Ihe world can be your oyster if you proceed
you.
'f11e Stars Show the Kind of Day You11 Have: 5properly.
SCORPIO (CA'!. 23-!\o\·. 21)
Dynamic; 4-Positil'e; 3-Averagc: 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April19)
Schedule meetm&amp;" for the morning. and more
reclusive and/ or reflective work for the p.m. Your spirYour priorities swing midday. Though you
prefer to deal with people, you might wonder about
it soars in the a.m.,· yet !iOme lime for yourself o.;eenlS
extremely import.ml. ·tonight: Get some e\ira R and R.
that choice. Perhaps a mmputer would be eac;ier! An
a.:;sociate becomes reticent at best, and a boss becomes
SAGilTARIUS (:\0\: 22-Dec. 21)
demanding. Remember, you dtm't have the control
****You net'd to taJ.-e a st.md in import.mt meetings or situations. Imestigate new idea-; later in the
you might like here. Tonight: Join iriends. ·
day with like-minded people A brain&lt;.iom1ing situaTAURUS (April 20-May 20)
tion h.1s its own rewMds. Listen to a pal Tonight:
*****Others cannot help but support a good
Where the aLiion i~.
idea, and it JUSt might not be yours. Express a willingCAPRICORI" IDee. 22-J,m. 19)
ness to join in 1\ith others, Md make the right changes
****Attempts to gel more information ea...,ily
and proceed accordingly. Above all, focus on getting
muld bJckfire. Your idea of what you need could
the job done. Tonight It mulct be late by the time you
chMge radically. Stay on top of your vi-.ion, and
get everything done.
understand that others don't have your in..,ight.
GEMINI (rvfay 21-June 20)
1onight: A fon.-e to be dealt with,
****Be sen&lt;&gt;itive to another person's interest~.
AQUARIUS Q.m. 20-Feb. 18)
How you cieal \o\ith somrone might be quite open,
until you discover it muld be c1 distinct problem. Your
How you dec1l with somt'one C\1uld
change radicJlly a'&gt; a result of todc1y. You fmd a person
way of handling an issue is difficult to mimic. Tonight:
Getting into weekend spirit early.
at a dis !it nee negative .md I or difficult. Your que-.lions
hit the m.ll'k. Tonight Oloose something imaginah\ e.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
PISCES (Feb 19-March 20)
**** Keep rommunicalion rolling, a.-; you han~ ,,
***** Dt&gt;fer to others I\ ith the full knowledge ol
lol of ground to t'O\·er. You might wonder where ,,
wh.,t needs to happen. If you want to change gears,
problem begins and ends. Ask more questions, know) ou need to work with a key p.utner. You ask yourwlf
ing your limit.-;. Remain optimistic and positi\e.
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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, November 12,

2009

Big Ten Notebook: Once upon a time, Rose was only Big Ten boWl
Bv RusTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

The 20-somethings and teenagers who 'II
take the field Saturday when No. 15 Iowa
plays at 1Oth-ranked Ohio State don't
remember when the Rose Bowl was every
Big Ten player's fantasy.
From the first conditioning session on a
bleak winter morning until the big rivalry
games of November, the one and only
dream of the sons of fanners and factory
workers from Minnesota and Wisconsin and
Ohio and Michigan was the palm trees, sunshine and the spotlight in Pasadena, Calif.
Once upon a time, the Rose Bowl wasn't
just the greatest bowl game for a Big Ten
team to go to - it was the only one.
Now that computers help decide who 'II
play in the ultimate game - the Bowl
Championship Series national title game.
that is - the Granddaddy of all Bowls has
dropped a notch on the radar of the kids who
play the college game. If they can't get to
the BCS championship game, they have to
"settle" for a whiff of the roses.
But some still remember what it was like
wnen the Big Ten champ went to Pasadena,
and everyone else in the ,Midwest permafrost stayed home and watched.
"Oh, gosh, yeah," Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel said when asked if the Rose Bowl
was special at his house. "January 1st in our
house. two black-and-white TVs set up side
by side, and that old 30-pot coffee maker,
that little silver thing:·
Tressel's dad, Lee, was a Hall of Fame
coach at Baldwin-Wallace College. New
Year's Day was one of the few times when
the Tressel kids could spend the day with
their old man.
;•My dad never got off the couch, man,"
Tressel said. "We were taking him coffee

and switching stations. I mean, that was shoot. you were living on January I st."
For the winner on Saturday. either Iowa or
Ohio State. it'll sort of be like that again.
HE'S NOT LAUGHING: Michigan
freshman QB Tate Forcier has taken a
pounding this season, running Rich
Rodriguez's spread offense that calls for
him to make plays with his feet.
Forcier has hurt his right shoulder, had a
concussion and added a twisted knee in
Saturday's loss to Purdue to his list of ailments.
"I expected it," he said during preparations for this week's hard-hitting affair at
Wisconsin. "It's the Big Ten, and you're
playing against a lot of big people. It's no
joke."
LAST-DITCH HIT: Penn State's Jeremy
Boone had l 0 punts last week against Ohio
State, a reflection of the Nittany Lions'
offensive struggles in their home loss to the
Buckeyes.
It wasn't all that extra work that wore him
out though, but a last-ditch diving tackle on
punt returner Ray Small to save a potential
touchdown.
"The open-field tackle did shake me up a
little physically, just because it's not something I'm used to doing," said the 5-foot-9
Boone. one of the smallest Nittany Lions.
ROAD WORRIERS: Michigan State is
giving up an average of 31.75 points per
game on the road this season, twice as many
as the 15.83 points per game it is allowing at
home. That's cause for concern for the
Spartans, who travel to Purdue this week in
a game that is vital to the bowl hopes of both
programs.
Michigan State's only road victory this
season came at Illinois, 24-14, on Oct. 10.
The Spartans lost at Notre Dame, Wisconsin
and Minnesota pespite scoring at least 30

points in each game.
"When you do look at that, it's obvious to
me we have to make plays on the road,"·
coach Mark Dantonio said. "As a defensive
football team, you have an oppo1tunity to
make a play, you have to make it on a ball in
the air, you've got to come up with ~o~e
tull'!overs .. we playe~ well agams~ Ilhnms.
W,e re hopmg to dupl~~ate that, trymg not to
thmk about the other. '
.
JUMPIN' JACKRABBITS: Mm~esota
hos~s FCS foe South Dakota State, hopmg to
avmd the fate of the 2007 team that lost. to
North Dakota Stat~ 27-21. That year, with
plenty of seats avatlable at the Metrodome,
the crowd ~as half:an~-halffor the GopherF
and the Bt~on. Thts tm~e, ~t sold-out TC
Bank Stadmm, there will hkely only be a
few hundred visiting fans of the Jackrabbits
able to get seats.
"That's the advantage we have now,"
Minnesota LB Lee Campbell said.
"Hopefully the fans will be behind us this
Saturday "
THANKS
BUT NO THANKS:
Michigan c~ch Rich Rodriguez often talks
about recruiting because he says it will take
two or three classes to get the type of players who fit what he's looking for.
Rodriguez, though, said he does not rely
much on what recruiting experts think.
"It's almost become a sport in itself, you
know, with fans and the Internet, people following recruiting." he said. "Most of the
recruiting services do a pretty good job.
They miss quite a bit. as well. We have to be
careful we don't fall into the hype that we
have to recruit this guy because he's a fourstar or five-star, or you don't recruit that guy
because he's only rated a two-star.''
QUOTE OF THE WEEK: KRIWR Ray
Small has been in Tressel's doghouse
throughout his Ohio State career. After cred-

iting Small's leadership as a senior, Tressel
was asked how many shots he has given
Small: "More than LeBron takes." ·~
WAITING GAMES: A month ago, QB
Jacob Charest was third on the Illinois depth
chart, spending a lot more time watching
than playing during practice and looking,
realistically, at next year as his chance.
This week against Northwestern, he's
likely to play and may even start after leading Illinois through most of last week's 35.
32 win at Minnesota.
"It kind of seems like in the past four
weeks time has fast-forwarded about two
years," the redshirt freshman from North
Carolina said. "It's weird.''
Senior Juice Williams' up-and-down final
.
.
.
season m Champat~n .took another dJ~e last
~aturday when ~e mJured an ankle 1~ th.e
frrst quarter agamst the Gophers a.n~ dJdn. t
return,. Coach Ron Zook says Williams IS
questionable for Saturday. Backup QB
Eddie McGee is now lining up at WR.
Charest said people on campus seem to
recognize his face, even if some of them still
aren't quite sure why he's familiar.
"It's sometimes kind of awkward because
people are just looking at me," he said. 'Tm
like, 'Are you gonna say hey? What's up?
I'm a friendly guy.'"
QUICK-HITTERS: Road teams went 50 in Big Ten play last week .... Players of the
week: Purdue QB Joey Ellio~ and Ohio
State DE Cameron Heyward and Small. ...
Illinois and Northwestern had played for the
Sweet Sioux Tomahawk since 1945. Now
they'll play for the renamed Land of Lincoln
Trophy .... Five conference teams are bowl
eligible, the three Ms Michigan .•
Michigan State and Minnesota - need orte
more win and Indiana and Purdue each need
two wins.

Big East Notebook: USF's Daniels winning as he learns on the job
TAMPA (AP) - The rapid development
of quarterback B .J. Daniels may be the
biggest reason South Florida has remained a
Top 25 team after the loss of Big East career
total offense leader Matt Grothe.
Since taking over when Grothe was sidelined for the season with a knee injury, the
redshirt freshman has emerged among the
nation's leaders in average yards per completion ( 17.1 yards), average yards per rush
for a quarterback (5.58) and yards per game
rushing for a QB (64.9).
USF has won three of Daniels· first· five
starts, and he's been one of the most efficient passers in the Big East.
"He's continued to grow each and every
rep that he takes. Even in practice, the more
reps he can get the better he gets.'' offensive
coordinator Mike Canales said.
·'In tenns of his progress, we're extremely
fiappy .... He's played four ranked teams.
That's pretty impressive to go and do that.
He's hungry. He's like a sponge. He's soaking everything up."
Daniels said being able to spend a seasonplus on the bench behind Grothe is one of
the keys to his success.
"I know what to expect. Being here last
year really helped me out a lot. I'm stm
learning, each game and each week," he
said. "I just want to continue to learn and get
oetter."
'Canales is impressed with the way
Daniels has handled the spotlight.
"He just plays the game. When he gets on
the field, he forgets about the cameras, he
forgets about being on TV. I don't think
those things bother him at all," the offensive
coordinator said. "He's very composed and
very mature for a young man."
. LOOKING TO BREAK ONE: Mardy
Gilyard hasn't returned a kickoff for a
touchdown this season - yet.
Last season, Gilyard emerged as one of
the nation's top returners, taking two kickoffs back all the way. The most important
one came in Morgantown, W.Va., where he
returned the opening kick 100 yards - the
first time in 18 years that the Mountaineers
gave up a kickoff return for touchdown.
"We're still working out some things here

·Polamalu
from Page Bl
"Love watching him play,"
Palmer said. "Hate playing
against him."
Statistics don't always
quantify what Polamalu
means to the Steelers - he
was chosen for the Pro Bowl
in 2007 without making a single interception all season but they do illustrate how he
might be having the best season of his seven-year career.
Because of his knee injury,
Polamalu has played in only 3
1/2 games, yet he is tied for
fourth in the AFC with three
interceptions and tied for seventh w1th 10 passes defended.
Polamalu, a Pro Bowl player each of the last five seasons, showed again Monday
in Denver how a dynamic
defensive player - and not
just a quarterback, running
back or wide receiver- can
alter a game. And why his
"43" jerseys are nearly as
ubiquitous in Pittsbur~h as
Terry Bradshaw's "12' once
was.
With the Steelers leading
the Broncos (6-2) by 14-10
early in the fourth quarter,
Polamalu jammed the line of
scrimmage before bursting up
the middle to drop Correll

and there," Gilyard said. "I am anxious to
get one, like I'm anxious to score every
game, to get that first catch every game."
Fifth-ranked Cincinnati would like for
him to get that breakthrough return on
Friday night, when the Bearcats have their
rematch with the Mountaineers.
When they played last year, the Bearcats
were looking for a breakthrough win.
Before the game, coach Brian Kelly and
Gilyard's teammates urged him to do something big on special teams. He ran back the
opening kick, and Cincinnati had the early
confidence. The Bearcats won 26-23 in
overtime, putting themselves in line for their
first Big East championship.
''I can remember cutting across the grain
and it was like, 'There's nobody here. Oh,
my God, I did it."' Gilyard said. "I think that·
was the turning point of the season pretty
much."
Gilyard ranks third ill' the conference in
kick return average at 26.8 yards per try. His
longest return was 75 yards.
Kelly sees teams focused on containing
him whenever he returns a kick.
"Whether he snuck up on people last year
or not. you could argue that," Kelly said.
"Clearly when he's on the field, there's an
attention to him. But he's done great in getting field position for us."
TURNOVER CHAMPIONS: Syracuse
upped its turnover count by three in
Saturday's loss at Pittsburgh. That gives the
Orange 23 for the season - already is six
more than all of last year.
Head coach Doug Marrone says that of
the 14 interceptions thrown by his quarterbacks - 13 by starter Greg Paulus and one
by backup Ryan Nassib - 10 have been on
the plus side of the 50-yard line. The average yard line for those 10 picks is the opponent's 28.
Paulus, just three off the school record for
interceptions in a season set by Dave Warner
in 1980, was intercepted last week with 80
seconds left in the opening half and it was
returned for a touchdown. Pitt scored on the
first possession of the second half to break
open what had been a tight game for 27 minutes.

Buckhalter for no gain at the
9. One play later, Polamalu
dropped into deep coverage
to intercept a Kyle Orton pass
intended
for
Brandon
Marshall, and the Steelers
scored three plays later.
''He didn't just take over
the series. he took over the
game," Farrior said. "He can
do that at any point."
Against the Broncos,
Polamalu once lined up outside the left tackle, only to
streak across the field to tackle a wide receiver in the flat.
"That's what Troy does,"
Farrior said. "It looks like
chaos, but he's definitely
under control and has an idea
what he wants to do.
Sometimes things change
during the play and he '11 go
do it, he'll take over. He's not
afraid to take those chances
and that's what separates him
from other players."
Polamalu, told what his
teammates were saying.
almost seemed embarrassed.
He also refuses to compare
himself to the other top
safeties, such as Baltimore s
Ed Reed.
''I don't know," Polamalu
said. "I'm just doing the
things I'm coached to do. I'm
just one of 11 guys out there."
To the Steelers, he's one of
a kind. Quarterbacks rarely
seem to tat:'$et him, yet he has
made an mterception in all

but one game this season.
"You've got guys who are
irreplaceable, and then
you've got Troy,'' nose tackle
Casey
Hampton
said.
"There's no other Troy - not
just on this team, but in the
league. He's the difference.''
What Farrior disputes is
that Polamalu is a freelancer,
someone who doesn't hesitate
to abandon the defense that's
been called to gamble.
"I think he watches more
tape than anybody else,''
Farrior said. "Whenever he's
out there taking chances, calculated risks, it might have
been something he saw on
tape a few weeks before.
There might have been a
gan1e a couple of years before
where he read something,
saw something. so that he's
not afraid to go and pull the
trigger.''
Th Clark. Polamalu is more
patient and less · improvisational than he was a few seasons ago. He's also better.
"So much is written about
him doing his own thing,"
Clark satd. "I think he's
improved on not doing that ....
Some guys in this. league, y~:m
can make a mtstake w1th
them. You can't do that with
Troy. He capitalizes o~ those
and makes big plays. That's
how he can take over a
game."

"That's where we have to do a better job,"
Marrone said. "Yes, football is a game of
momentum. It's always hard to judge where
you're at in a football game. It's 6-3 and all
of a sudden the next thing you know it's 203. If you hang in there and go, where does
the game go? That's the question I ask
myself all of the time."
The response by the offense after the
interceptions also has troubled the first-year
head coach. Marrone said in 18 offensive
possessions after turnovers, the Orange have
either punted or committed another
turnover.
THREE GOES INTO TWENTYFIVE: Pitt coach Dave Wannstedt didn't
moan about a lack of respect when there
wasn't a single Big East team ranked among
the AP preseason Top 25. His plea at the
time: Be patient. Now. three Big East teams
(No.5 Cincinnati. No.8 Pitt, No. 23 South
Florida) are ranked - two in the Top 10 and West Virginia is just outside the Top 25.
"I have to pull out my quotes from
August," Wannstedt said. ''That's why I said
what I said: Let's wait until December to
see. We have good football teams here, we
know that ... as good as anybody around.
Sometimes things just have to take their
course."
While Pitt's 8-1 start is its best since it had
the same record in 1982, Cincinnati is 9-0
for the first time since 1951, when the
Bearcats finished 10-1. South Florida and
unranked Rutgers both need one more victory to qualify for a bowl game.
DON'T COPY UCONN: Connecticut
picked apart unbeaten Cincinnati's defense
with a 35-point second half last week before
the Bearcats prevailed 47-45. UConn's
Jordan Tedman romped for 162 yards on 26
carries and scored four TDs - three in the
second half - and Cincinnati surrendered a
season high for points.
But West Virginia coach Bill Stewart says
he doesn't plan to copy UConn 's game plan
because the Mountaineers' offensive flow is
different than that of the Huskies and the
offensive line's depth is untested.
"We are not a big, physical, grind-it-out
team. That's not our strong suit," Stewart

Bengals
fromPageBl

said. "We are more of a balanced, spreadthe-wealth football team. I don't know if our
offensive line can go up and down the field
on them.
"We are going to have to do what we do,
try to spread the wealth and get the ball out
on the screen, try the short passing game
with a deep pass every now and then and do
our very best running the football.''
To do that, West Virginia will need a
healthy Noel Devine and Jarrett Brown.
Both tweaked ankles in a 17-9 win over
Louisville on Saturday and Stewart said
they're expected to play against the No. 5
Bearcats.
West Virginia managed just 57 offensive
plays against Louisville.
"If we have 57 snaps against Cincinnati,
it will be a mess." Stewart said.
HOME SWEET HOME: Louisville's
struggles the last three seasons have wo.
thin with the fan base, the evidence coming
in the number of empty seats at Cardinals
Stadium.
A crowd of just over 21 ,000 - a recordlow - watched Louisville beat Arkansas
State two weeks ago. The numbers might
not be much better on Saturday when the
Cardinals host Syracuse, not exactly the
best news for a program that is in the
process of adding around 15 .000 seats to
the stadium in time for next season.
Coach Steve Kragthorpe allows a lack of
enthusiasm for his performance hasn't
helped things. He is I 4-19 with the
Cardinals, and Louisville's home-field
advantage has all but disappeared.
Louisville is 3-5 i{l the Big East under
Kragthorpe and hasn't won a conference
game in more than a year.
Kragthorpe has no problem with people
who don 't like him, but he takes it personally when the negativity shifts to his players .
" I know there's people that don't like me,
don't like way I do things, if they don't
want to come support me, that's fine,"
Kragthorpe said. "But I think they need to
•
come and support these players."

this point.
Joseph moved into the
starting lineup as a rookie.
but had a tendency to drop
potential interceptions. A
foot injury limited him in
his second year, and ankle
and foot injuries cut his
2008 season in half. Hall has
p~ayed in every game dur!ng
h1s two seasons, gomg
through the usual growing
pains for an NFL comerback.
Quarterback
Carson
Palmer has watched them
develop during practices.
''I don't know of a better
tandem." Palmer said. "The
two guys in Green Bay
(Charles Woodson and AI
Harris) are really good. but I
don't think I would take
either of those guys over our

coordinator Mike Zimmer
said. as the cornerbacks
walked past him. "I see a lot
of Leon rubbing off on
Johnathan and vice versa in
other ways. They sit next to
each other in meetings.
Johnathan has become more
physical, like Leon has. I
think they're a good pair of
guys."
Their lockers are next to
each other in the footballshaped dressing room, providing plenty of opportunities to make small chat and
keep up on things. Their
closeness has helped both of
them grow.
"I think probably the gu~s.
'Our guys are young, fast
biggest thing - which real- and physical, and they both
ly goes side by side with have been working on their
how we go off the field - is hands to make big plays.
that we're just real good Johnathan Joseph was
friends," Hall said. "So we always getting his hands on
communicate better on the the ba11, but he worked hard
field. We try to compete in the offseason and he is
against each other out there, ~onvertif!g ti~.ped balls and
and that helps a lot.
mtercept10ns.
"We get along well easily,
The cornerbacks also have
so it's not something we had been very helpful in the runto force. It just naturally ning game. Cincinnati's
defense ranks second in the
happened."
. . Both had to go through lea~ue at stoppin~ the run,
some tough times to get to rignt behind Pittsburgh.

Joseph is third on the team
in tackles, and Hall is tied
for fifth.
Coach Marvin Lewis likes
the way they've been able to
take advantage of their oneon-one matchups consistently.
"They are playing both
fundamentally sound and
smart, and I put a big capital
on 'smart,''' Lewis said.
"That's key to playing cornerback in this league. Both
guys have tremendous athleticism. speed and ability to
play the ball in the air. What
gets you in trouble at that
position is when you try to
do too much."
NOTES: G Evan Mathis
(ankle) and LB Keith Rivers
(calf) didn't practice on
Wednesday. Lewis said their
injuries are not as severe as
originally feared. but "I
don't know if we '11 hav.
their services or not'' i
Pittsburgh . ... FB Jeremi
Johnson also skipped practice with a chest injury....
Palmer said he 'II probably
continue to wear a' brace on
his left thumb for the rest of
the season. He sprained the
thumb - on his non-throwing hand - on Oct. 11 at
Baltimore, but he hasn't
missed a play because of it.
He has been handing off
with his right hand only.

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