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--___.___,_..____,_____

~----~---,

Reid sets markers
for historic health
care debate, A6

13-point buck killed, A3
•

Printed on 100%
Rec)dcd Ne\\sprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Bedford fire levy vote fails

SPORTS
• Big East Notebook:
Baldwin stepping up
•for No. 8 Pittsburgh.
See Page 81

I
1

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYOAII.YSENTlNELCOM

DARWIN - This week
ordinance
"hich
1 would've placed a fire pro' tectton lev) on the February
, ballot.
for
Bedford
Township failed with a vote
o f 2- 1 in favor of putting
the levy on the ballot for
' residents to decidl!.
Despite the vote being in
favor of placing the levy on
the ballot for a special election, -;ince the vote was
taken as an ememencv measure, the Ohio Revised
Code requires a unanimous

I an

vote for the mea'&gt;ure to pa11c;.
Meigs County Prosecuting
Anorne)
Colleen
S.
Williams, who was at the
mcetmg, cited ORC ~cction
504.1 1 as the source of this
information.
The 1.cction reads &lt;fll fo llows: "the resolution or
motion ~hall not he passed
without concurrence nf a
majority of all mcmbers or
the hoard of township
trustees, except that each
emergency resolution under
that section shall require the
affirmattve vote of all of
the members of the board
for its enactment.''

Thou2h
Bedford
Township Trustees had previously held tY. o reading~
and votes on the ordinance
which passed, those readings wen~ in effect null and
void due to the fact the third
reading.
if
pa5.scd,
would've taken effect in 10
days. Since the third reading was schedu led for
Tuesday of this week and
the ballot issued had to be
filed with the Meigs County
Board of Elections two
days later on Thursday. a
vote by emergenc) measure
was required in order to
meet that deadline.

The three·mill continuous
Ie' y for fi re protection was
eMimated
to
generate
$45.963.36 for fire protection to pa) for maintenance
on a new fi re station which
is pr\.~posed for Bed fo rd
Town~h ip and wi ll nctuall)
be a subs tation of the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Department was o ne o f
only 200 entitie!'. in the
country which received a
high ly competittvc federal
grant to build a new tire station in Bedford Townsh ip.

Please see Bedford, AS

Santa returns to Pomeroy
Parade 1\Jov. 29
B v BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Santa
Claus is once again hitching
a ride through downtown
Pomeroy on Sunday. Nov.
29 during the village's
annual Chnstmas parade.
Line up is at I "p.m. at the
Meigs High School football
field with the parade set to
step off at 2 p.m. with Grand
Marshal George Wright.
Wright, a former councilman for Pomeroy, har:. also
been acttvely mvolved m
decorating the downto\\ n
area for the holidays. Toney
Dingess is once again coordinating the event.
There is no fee to participate in the parade. Floats,
marchi ng units. walking
units. dancing troupes, horses. pets, etc. are all welcome. A nimals in Christmas
costume- participating in the
parade will be judged and
prizes awarded when ~h e
parade conclud es at the
back of Peoples Bank on
Second Street.
Inside Peoples Bank after
the parade will be Santa
who'll meet and greet children and giveaway a fc\\
refreshmenl!s.
Parade goers ..., ill also
notice stores wtll be open
from noon to 4 p.m on Nov.
29 for the convenience of
Christmas shoppers and
browsers \\hile music floats
over the \"illage from the
sound system at Tri nity
Church.
While downtown. onlookers will notice the two ga~:e­
hos and the main stage on
the parking lots have been

INSIDE
• Make charitable
contributions carefully.
See Page A2
• Hayman reunion held.
See Page A2
• Evidence search
at Cleveland
UV\.A''"'" house.
See Page A2
• Ministerial Assn.
sponsors Thanksgiving
dinner. See Page A3
• RACO plans
holiday projects.
. See Page A3
•• SAR to hear more
on Morgan's Raid.
See Page A3
• Pharmacists
present at AMGA
symposium.
See Page A3
• Shuttle docks at
space station, unloads
:parts. See Page AS
• Jobless benefits
could end for
many in January.
Page A6

tte

WEATHER

File photo

Santa Claus will arrive in the Peoples Bank lobby after rid ing through downtown Pomeroy
during the village's a nnual Christmas parade set for 2 p.m., S u nday Nov. 29.
decorated by local ch urches.
the mi ni parks o n Court
Street
feature
holiday
scenes, anti period lamp

posts along Yillage trects
have been wrapped ..., ith
lighted garlands of green
and topped with \Vrenths.

The Pomcrov Chric;tmas
parade is spon~ored by the
Pomeroy
Yte rc hant ':-;
Association.

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHOMYDI\ILYSENTINEL.COM

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Details on Page A2

POMEROY _
Meigs
Medicare beneficiaries who
need assistance in under-

INDEX
2 St:CTIONS- 12 PAGF.S

Calendars

A3

fieds

B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports
:.l009 Ohio

•

B Section
Valley J&gt;ubli.'ihing Co .

!

li)JIJI,I !1!1. 1!11

the
different
standi ng
option~ and assistance
a\ ailable to them are
e ncouraged to attend the
''Medicare Check-up Day"
to be held Tuesday at the
' Senior Citizens Center.
Beginning at 10 a .m. representati ves of the Ohio
Departme nt of Insuram.·c
through its O hio Senior
Health
Insurance
Information Program (O SHlIP) will be at the Center to
help beneficiaries. family
members and caregivers
understand their options and
assist with plan selection.
The program is free and
unbiased and is geared to

!

Please see Medicare, AS

Recount set
in Columbia
trustee race
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The
Meigs County Board of
Elections will conduct
an automatic recount of
votes cast in Columbia
Township in order to
detem1ine which of two
men was elected township trustee there.
01\ly one vote separates Marco Jeffers and
Gary A. Spencer. 172 to
171 . Don Cheadle has
been declared a winner
of one of two seats up
for election . He received
174 votes after the board
of elections conducted
its official count of ballots earlier this week.
The board will conduct
an
automatic
recount of ballots at 8:30
a.m. on Monday for that
race. State law requires a
recount when the difference in votes cast is less
tnan half of one percent.
Only the Columbia
Township ballots are
involved in the recount.
Official results
Official results of the
NO\. 3 general election
include 64 provisiohal
ballots cast on Election
Day and one absentee
ballot received before
the state deadline that
was not counted in the
unofficial
count
of
Election Day.
Meigs County voters
cast 6.765 ballots in the
eJection - 43 percent of
the registered voters.
Middleport
Village
Council (4): Mary Rae
I\·1oore, 270, Sandra F.
Brown. 264. H. Craig
Wehrung, 258, Martha
Jean Craig. 237.

Please see Recount. AS

Medicare
Heritage Trail dedication set for summer
Check-up
Day Tuesday PoMERoY- The John
HOEFLICHOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

.a
D.,

Hu n t Morgan, He n tage
Trail sign marking Hunt 's
move through 20 Ohio
counties, including Meig~
where the famous Ci' il
War Battle of Buffi ngton
Island was foug ht, should
be in place in time for a
dedication ceremony in
July 2010.
That was the report from
Edd Sharp, president of the
B uffi ngto n
Island
Battlefi eld
Preservation
I·oundat ion
Board
of
Trustees at a Foundatio n
meeting he ld at the Meigs
County Museum . ·
It wus a lso noted that a
K iosh (container for mformntional pamphlets) i to
be placed in the Portland
Pa rk . George Kane. site
manager for the Ohio
Historical Society (OHS)
re ported that the Portland
Commun ity Ce nter has

I

Please see Trail, AS

OHSmap

This map shows the marker locations for the John Hunt
Morgan Heritage Trail through Ohio. F1fteen of the markers
will be placed m Meigs County. location of Ohio's only Civil
War ba ttlefreld .

Increase in
autopsies
creates
projected
deficit
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

B=lEEDCMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Meigs
County Commissioners
have seen a dramatic
increase this year in the
cost of autopsies performed in Montgomery
County, and must find at
least $6,800 to make up
for a budget shortfall in
that line item.
Meeting
Thursday,
commissioners tabled a
reque. t for an additional
$6,755 for the cost of
autopsies in their budget.
Commissioners said the
county
has
spent
$28 200 so far this year
on autopsies and transportation costs, and the
budget has fallen short
for those expenses.
Health Commissioner
and
Coroner's
Investigator
Larry
Marshall said the cost of
an autopsy is $1 ,200, not
incJuding the cost of
transportation to and
from Dayton. Funeral
homes provide that
transportation, and bill
the county for the cost,
Marshall said.
So far th1s year, the
count) has ordered and
Please see

Deficit. AS

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--

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1

PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Evidence search resumes at Cleveland bodies house
Make charitable
conhibutionscarefuUy
BY THOMAS

J.

SHEERAN

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Getting the most bang
for yoL!r buck ts a badg~
of honor these days,
\\ hether you're car
shopping, choosing a
college or just comparJason
ing loa\'eS of bread.
Aldennan
One area where vou
really don't want" to
mi,::-.pcnd }OUr hardearned d(,Jiars is charitable donations.
11ltm~ is 110 shortage of non-profit organizations
competing for _cOJ~tributions, but quality and ef~ec­
tivene"s vary s1gmficantly, so Y?U should do a little
research before donating your time or money. Here
are a few suggestions:
Pick the right cause. i\1a~y pc_ople prefer to suppo:t
onwniz.ations that champ1on tssues close to the1r
heart. v.hcther it's feeding the hungry, environmental
protection or working to cure a disease. Al_so :onsider "hcther vnu want to target local orgamzat1ons or
prefer to ha\·e a more nati?nal 01: global i~1pact.
Familiarize yourself .with thc1r operations. ~~~ely
the organization's webs1t~. annual report and mtss1on
statement. Speak to "taf1 members or volunteers, or
volunteer there yourself. Or. if yo_u know. some.one
\\ ho has u"ed their services, ask for 1mpress10ns of the
organization's efficiency and client helpf~lness.
Do vour homework. In these tough times. many
non profit:'&gt; ar~ exper_iencing inc:e~sed den~and. for
their services m the face of declmmg contnbut1ons
and government ~unding. A\:o!d charities t_h~t spend
heavily on salanes, advertlsmg. fund-rmsmg. and
other administrative expenses (sometimes nusreportcd as "program development," "public education" or other euphemisms). Ideally. at least 75 .P?rcent of contributions
should go directly to benef1c1a,
ry programs.
.
Several online rating services can help With your
research:
• Charitv .Nav1oator (www.charitynavigator.org)
rates more· than {400 large charities by financial
stren,rth and revenue spent on programs and services.
Theveoffer helpful "Top 10'' lists and a well-stru~­
tured "Tips and Resources" sectiOJ!. Y~u.can use the1r
ouid'elines to formulate your own mqumes for small~r organizations not included in their ratings.
• GuideStar (www2.guidestar.org) rates more t~an
I .8 million IRS-recognized. tax-exempt orgamzations. Their basic search engine is free; or you can
order more customized research for a fee. The site
also features helpful questions to ask and tips for
choosing.a charity.
• The Better Business Bureau (www.give.org) rates
whether organizations have met its standards of
accountability. including ethical conduct and honest
solicitation practices.
Be tax-smart. Although your kids· little league may
be. a worthy cause, be aware that only contributions
made to oroanizations identified in IRS Publication
78 qualify f~r tax deduc.tions. Visit www.ir~.gov/char­
itJes/contributors for a hnk to a search engme of qualified charities, as well as information on how to report
and ~ubstantiate charitable deductions and other helpful tip'.
Be on fraud alert. Unfortunately, some unscrupulous people and organiLations will take advantage of
your desire to help others - if you let them. A few
tips:
. . ,
• Ask for a copy of the orgamzatton s iRS Form
990, which details how contributions are spent.
• Be suspicious of telemarkeling and email solic_itations. When in doubt. hang up and contact the orgamzation yourself.
• Be aware that scammers often choose names that
are similar to those of legitimate organizations.
• Never give out personal or credit card information
.
.
unless you initiate the contact.
More people than ever need ?Ur ~hantable as.ststance. Just be sure you're contnbutmg to orgamza.
tions that can do the most good.
(Jason Alderman directs Visas financial educatzon
programs. Sign up for his free monthly e-Newsletter
at u uw.practicalmoneyskills .com/newsletter.)

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday ..• Mo s tly
cloudy
in
the
morning .. .Then becoming
partly sunny. A 50 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the upper 50s. Southwest
\vinds 5 to 10 mph.
Thursday night ...Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
showers ·after midnight.
Lows in the upper 30s. West
winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Friday.••Partly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s. West
winds around 5 mph.
Friday
night...Partly
cloudy. Lov.s in the mid
30s. 't\orthwest
winds

around 5 mph.
Saturday and Saturday
night...Partly cloudy. Highs
in the mid 50s. Lows in the
upper 30s
Sunday ... Partly sunny
with a 30 percent chance
of rain. Highs in the mid
50s.
Sunday
night
and
Monday...Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 30s.
Highs in the mid 50s.
Monday night .•.Partly
cloudy. Lows around 40.
Tuesday ...Partly sunny
with a 30 percent chance of
showers. Highs m the
upper 50s.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 31.66
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 65.65
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 38.03
Big Lots (NYSE) - 25.30
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.24
BorgWarner (NYSE)- 31.79
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 10.26
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.97
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.98
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 31.37
Collins (NYSE) - 53.34
DuPont (NYSE) - 35.25
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.61
Gannett (NYSE)- 11.47
General Electric (NYSE) - 16.09
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 28.27
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.38
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.73
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 18.27
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 51.62

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)- 21.78
BBT (NYSE) - 25.09
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 10.30
Pepsico (NYSE) - 62.30
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.21
Rockwell (NYSE) - 45.52
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.95
Royal Dutch Shell - 62.86
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 75.77
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.15
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.29
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.98
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.95
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 17, 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.

CLEVELAND
I nvesligators used shovels.
a sledgehammer and a conAn investigator carries
crete-busting
drill
. out bags of evidence
Wednesday in a renewed
from the home of
search of the home of a
Anthony
Sowell
registered sex. offender
Wednesday
in
where I 0 bod1es and a
Cleveland.
skull have been found. but
Investigators looking
police said no additional
into the discovery of
bodies were found.
10 bodies and a skull
Searchers with plastic
. at the home of Sowell,
gloves.
surgical-style
a registered sex
masks and head-to-toe hazoffender carried a
ardous-materials protective
sledgehammer and
suits concentrated on the
yard. house and seconddrills into the house
floor balconies of Anthony
Wednesday and dug
Sowell's inner-city home
at the scene and an
and an adjacent yard. They
adjacent backyard as
combed the area for much
they pursued clues
of the day before hauling
provided by an FBI
off carpeting and a van full
high-tech sweep.
of evidence bags.
Investigators with the
No additional search is
city police and buildplanned, said police Lt.
ings department, FBI
Thomas Stacho said.
and coroner's office
After five Murs of the
had search warrants td
renewed .search. a coroner's
dig by hand in areas of
office van loaded with eviinterest
identified last
dence bags left the scene
week
by
FBI thermaland retumed within an hour.
imaging and radar
It left again near sundown.
technology.
carrying another half load
AP photo
of evidence bags.
Searchers dug for evidence in the yards and used
the sledgehammer and drill
to rip up concrete under the
rear 'porch. In the front of
the house, a crew drilled
into the ceiling of a second- the initial search of his debris. An agent marked women, have been identitloor open-air balcony as home Oct. 29. He served 1§ locations with orange paint. fied. All were black and
onlookers watched across years in prison for a 1989 apparently for closer inves- many were hori1eless or
the street.
attempted rape.
ti!!ation.
Jiving alone and had drug
They also sawed off a · There has been no
~One day earlier, agents or alcohol addictions.
portion of a porch railing response to an Associated worked at a house next Most apparently had been
that held a sign saying "The Press interview request door to Sowell's. doing strangled.
Sowell's'' and the address.
mailed two weeks ago to thermal imaging, X-rays
Sowell has been accused
Investigators with the city Sowei l at the county jail. and other tests.
of luring women to his
police and buildings depart- His
attorney
in
the
Police discovered the first home with the promise of
ment, FBI and coroner's September case. Brian two bodies and a freshly alcohol
or
drugs.
office had search warrants McGraw, said he couldn't dug grave after officers Authorities say he then
to dig by hand in areas of comment.
came to investigate a strangled them and left their
interest identified last week
On Saturday, FBI agents woman's report that she had bodies in his house or
by FBI thermal-imaging used rakes and shovels in been raped there. Sowell buried in the backyard,
and radar technology.
Sowell's backyard, crawled had fled the home and was apparently creating a recurThermal imaging can beneath the front porch and arrested two days later.
ring stench often blamed on
detect heat sources like removed bricks and other
Ten of the II victims, all a n'earby sausage shop.
decomposing materials and
loosely packed ground that
might indicate a grave. Di1t
that has been turned over
radiates heat differently
than compacted soil.
In
addition,
police
bomb-squad X-ray apparatus and miniature probing
cameras were sent to the
scene to help with a search
inside walls and the like,
Stacho said.
ln front of the neatly
painted house. two investigators removed a wooden
grill from the side of the
porch and crawled under. A
police command post was
On Thursday. December 24, we will publish a spec1al page devoted to those who are gone but not
parked outside the house.
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
..
which has remained taped
off and under 24-hour
police guard as a crime
If JOU wish. select on~ of the following FREE mses below to
scene.
accompany your tribute.
Paul Giannelli, a law
l. \Ve hold you in our thoughts and memones forever
school professor at Case
2..\tav God cradle \OU in His 3rros. now and fore,er.
Western
Reserve 1
3. For~ver missed, never forgotten. Ma} God hold }OU in !he palm of
University. said police often
Kis hand.
David C. Andrews
will seek a new wanant to
4.
Thank
you for the wonderful day~ we shared together. \ty pra)ers
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980
reflect the scope of an
will
be
ll'lth vou until we meet acain.
expanded search. "It's cer5. The days we' shared \\ere sweet..! long to see you again in God's
tainly better to do that. They
heavenly glory
May God's angels
obviously have probable
6. Your courage and bravery still inspire us all. and !he memory of your
cause for a more extensive
guide you and
~mile fills us wnh JOY and laughter. .
.
se·arch." he said.
7. Thou11h out of !iight. }OU·n forever be mm) hean and mmd.
protect
you
Sowell, 50, has been
8. The d·ays rna) come and go. but the times \le ~bared will alway&gt; remam
charged with five counts of
9. \lav !he light of peatt ,bine on your face for eternity.
throughout
time.
aggravated murder and,
10. }.I~} God\ angel' guide you and protect you throughout time.
separately. with rape and
II You 11ere a light in our life !hat bum~ forever in our hean~.
Always in our hearts,
kidnapping in an alleged
12. \litv God'~ eraces shine over vou for all ume.
John and Mona Andrews
Sept. 22 attack that led to
13. Yo~ arc mo~r thought&gt; and p~ayer~ from morning to mght and from~
and family
~ear to year.
.

•

we remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

14. We send this message 11 ith a lo1•ing Ims for eternal rest and happmc''·
15. ~Ia) the Lord bk's you 1\ith H' gram and I\ arm, loving hcan.

Hayman
reunion held
The 51st annual reunion of
the family of George R. and
Mae
Crawford
Vira
Hayman, .held in Racine,
included a 1966 recorded
prayer of George R. Hayman
played before dinner.
Those attending were: Lil
Hart, Don. Donna. Ted and
Keith
Hayman,
Linda
Jewell, Bill and Ginny
Huffman,
Virgil
and
Delorse Ours. Tom and
Isabel Edwards. Sid. Carol
and Ryan Hayman, Trina
Lee, Chaisty Abbott. Isaiah
Day,
Cheryle
Knight.
Rhonda Wolfe. Margaret
Packman, Don. Jean and
David Carpenter, Daniel.
Donna and Bryce Sayre.
Dan. Faith. Kim and
Hannah Hayman. April
Roach, Eric, Tamara and
Paytyn Tucker. Erica and
Kamryn Smith. Gerald R.
Crawford, Robin and Olivia
Hubbard, Ann Cale. Clara
Mae Sargent.

TO RK\IK\IBER YO[R LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY.
SEl\'D 810.00 PER LISTING • $15 IF PICTURE 11\'CLl'D~D
Fill out the form below ami drop off to:

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memorie!"
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
DEADLil'"E: FRIDAY. DECE~IBER 18TH
i

-------------------------------------,
publi~h
~lemOI)
Thur~day
Please

my tribute in the special

Page on

December 2-llh.

1

Name of deceased--------------------~-----:
Numb~r of ~elected verse - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I
I

------1

Date of birth _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Date of pa~sin~::.."

I

Print your name here - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1

I

A d d r e s s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ph1me nurnbc~--------1

City·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - State----~lake Check

Pa)able to THE DAILY SENT~~EL

Zip---~
I

L-------------------------------------~

..

�------· ·-···-

--- ----- · ---------~---·---~~-.

PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, Novembe r 19, 2009

13-point buck killed

Ministerial Assn. sponsors
Thanksgiving dinner
POMEROY -. The Meigs Ministerial Association in
conjunction with the Pomeroy Area Community Youth
1 Group is hosting a free Thanksgiving meal and worship
1
service for the community on Sunday evening in the gymnasium of tltl! Mulberry Community Center.
I The tmditional'l hanksgiving dinner will be served by the
youth beginning at 5:45 p.m. The ministers will lead the
Thanksgiving worship at 7 p.m. It will include special
music and a church choir
Food items for the Meig:-; Cooperative Parish's food
gi\'C-away will he accepted. Especially needed. it was
reported. ure canned soup, macaroni and cheese. sallinc
, crackers and jello. An offering wi ll also be taken to suppot t the ministerial fund in helping people in need. and
' there will be a messa~e by the Rev. John Roze\\ icz. pastor of Bethany, ~lormng Star, and Carmel-Sutton United
1 Methodist Chu rches.
j The Ministerial Association is made up of man) differl ent Christian denominations committed to meeting the
. physical and spiritual needs of ~1eigs County. Anyone
from the community is welcome and encouraged to
attend the free meal and giving of thanks to God for all
His provisions.

ASK DR.. BROT H E l{.S

Raising a
bilingual baby
B Y DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

Johnn1 Welsh recently killed a

Dear Dr. Brothers: I am a native Spanish-speaker. and
my husband has learned Spanish through the years. We
both place a lot of 'alue on being bilingual. but I kno\\
Submitted photo
how hard learning English can be for a nonnative speaker.
13-point buck on her family farm in Scipio Township.
We are due to have our fir&lt;;t child soon, and we are undecided -on whether to raise him with both Spanish and
English. or solely with English. Is there any real benefit or
problem with being a bilingual kid. especially early on in
school? - K .B.
Dear K .B.: There are a lot of reasons to learn languages
as early in life as possible, most notably because the earliHart presided at the er you start learning a language. the eao;ier it is. For examThe Christmas decorating was held No\. 7 and all
conte t will again be held money and food items were meeting with reports being ple, babies being raised to be bilingui.ll will learn two lananJ prizes of $50.$30 and donated to the Meigs given by officers. Several guages in the same time as it would take them to learn one,
$20 \\ill be given for first Cooperative Pari"h. RACO thank you cards were simply by ~peaking to them in both languages. There are
through third places. The also donated $200 toward received . David Zirkle led many myth~ about the drawbacks of raising bilingual chilthe pledge to the flag to dren. including that the child will end up confused or mixpark will ag,1in this year dis- the food drive.
play the Racine Village
Officers elected were close the meeting.
ing languages. Actua lly. bilingual children even have an
Kathryn Hart conducted easier time learning a third language later in life than thctr
buildings which represent Kathryn Hart, president;
the school. churches. and Melanie Weese, vice presi- the meeting with reports monolingual counterparts.
businesses during the holi- dent: Lillian Weese, secre- being given by officer&amp;.
In addition to thi~. if your son identities himself as an
tary. and Kim Romine. Several thank cards were ethnic minority, learning the community language can
day season.
received.
The RACO food drive treasurer.
connect him to a parent culture and strengthen his link
with your family. Being bilingual is - even in monolingual American culture - seen to be contemporary and
co mopolitan. There is a growing interest among multilingual people in "complementary schools,'' which teach in
multiple languages and give students the opportunity to
develop
their academic skills &lt;!cross more than one lanDinner \\ill be served by will be Bng General John been sent to the Sons of
gua~e. If you're interested in finding more information on
Morgan's
raid the Union Veterans of the
the American
Legion Hunt
Women's Auxiliary prior to through Meigs and Athens Civil War. the John raismg multilingual children, try the Multilingual
a talk by William Walker. Counties. kno\\ n as the Townsend Camp # 108 and Children's Association Web site, at ww\\.multilingual63rd
Volunteer childrcn.org. For specific Spanish bilingual infom1ation.
Athens attornev. who i&lt;&gt; a Great Raid o( 1863 or the the
Infantry to attend this &lt;;pe- try \\ ww.spanglishbaby.com ..
member of the Athens Civil Calico Raid.
•••
War Round Table. Hb topic
Spccwl invitations have cial presentation.
Dear Dr. Brothers: ~1 ) son's elementary school1s trying
to get the parents more involved with the school and the
kids' learning. This is a very nice thought. but a lot of the
teachers (and specifically my son ·s teacher) seem very
resistant to the idea. and aren't offering any suggestions for
what the parents can do. I'd li ke to be more involved. and
(PSPC), indication for use. mecha- I certainly think it would help my son succeed better in
Consolidated
Health Collaborative
Systems and Holzer Clinic which is sponsored by nism of action. "important school. so how can I reach out to his teacher without overto improve diabetes care Health
Resources and potential side effects, and stepping my bounds? - TJ.
monitoring parameters used
throughout the region using Services Administration.
Dear T ..J.: In an ideal world. schools and parents would
The affiliation has result- for safety and efficacy.
evidence-based n1edicine,
work together tlawle'&gt;sly to educate children and ensure
·'We are continuously their later success as students tlnd as people. By giving parpatient education. and col ed 111 the addttion of a pharmacist. Angel Beck Kimble. exploring new treatment ents a more active role in making the decisions that can
laborative clinical efforts.
The presenters focu-..ed on to the clinic's diabetes edu- alternatives and oppm1uni- affect their kids, schools can start to bring parents into the
the Clinic's initiati\e to cation team as an experi- ties to improve the quality fold, but a correct balance is quite hard to strike in the real
think outside of the box by ment designed to help of care that we render to our world. This is further complicated by either merbearing or
offering clinical pharmacy tmprove pauent outcomes. patients, especially to those neglectful parents. who may be a part of the problem. Not
services at the Lawrence This mutuall) beneficial with chronic disease:· said parents like you!
County Branch of Holzer arrangement provides the Connors.
A new study by North Carolina .State Uni\ ersit)
The American Medical researchers. published in a recent issue of the journal Child
Clinic through an affiliation college wtth a faculty pracAssociation and Fami l) Social Work. suggests way~ that parents and
with the C"C School of tice location and student Group
(AMGA) represents med- ~chools can work together to give their kids the best chance
Phannacy.
training opportunities.
ical groups and organized at &lt;&gt;uccess. Their strategy re\ olves around building a team
Visit~ with a clinical pharThe affiliation v. as made
possible through in\ olve- macist arc mdivJdualized systems of care, including - with the child and family deciding on the members mcnt
with
Holzer based on patient-specific some of the nation's largest. of mentors and role models not limited to the immediate
Consolidated
Health needs. They range from 15 most prestigious integrated family. but enlarged to potentially include extended family.
Systems, Holzer Joint to 45 minutes in length and healthcare delivery systems social workers. religious leaders or friends. Some teal'hcrs
Venture Pharmacv. Holzer ind ude mull ipie interven- and improves health care are indeed skeptical of this much ..outside" invohement.
Clinic and the uc'School of tions. Patients receive com- for patients by supporting While you t:annot change those people ·s fee lings. you can
medical change your behavior to encourage more interaction
Pharmacy participation in prehensive education about multi-specialty
the Patient Safety and their medication regime, groups and other organized between schools and parents. If you can show teacher:-; that
involving parents may have some benefits, )Oll \\i ll get
Clinical Pharmacy Services including an explanation of systems of care.
more cooperation in the long term from those who may
have been doubtful of the proces~ at first.
(c) 2009 by King Fealtlres Syndicate

RACO plans holiday projects
RACI!'l'E
Holidt~y
· projects of the Racine Area
Community Organization
were planned during a
recent meeting of the
group.
It was noted that caml)
and fruit have b~en ordered
for Chri&lt;&gt;tmas treats to be
given to some nursmg home
resident Jnd other&lt;; in the
Racme area.

•

SAR tO hear more on Morgan's Raid

POMEROY - Ewings
Chapter. Sons of the
Amenc,m Rc' olution \\til
meet at the American
Legion Hall. 520 We&lt;&gt;t
Union Street in Athens 6:30
p.m. tonight (Thursday).

Pharmacists present at AMGA symposium
DlnROIT. Mich.
Members of Holzer Clinic
and the Universit) of
Charleston
School
of
Pharmacy presented at the
American Medical Group
Assoctation's 2009 Diabetes
Best PracticeS) mposium m
Detroit. Mich.
a
The symposium
t\\ o-day shared learning
opportunit) for selected
AMGA members to demonstrate impro\ed clinical outmes. service. and effinC) 111 relation to diates care.
Angel Beck Kimble,
• PharmD, Ambulatory Care
Pharmacist of Hol;cr Clinic
Lav. renee County, and
Connor~.
JD,
Alltson
Quality Coordinator of
Holzer Clinic. highlighted
the extraordinary level of
cooperation between Holzer

"'m.

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Thursday, Nov. 19
Shade
CHESTER
R1ver Lodge 453 spec1al
meeting, 8 p.m. for purpose
of conferring the entered
apprentice degree on one
candidate. Refreshments.
OMEROY
Meigs
nty American Cancer
y Advisory Board,
regular meeting, noon, banquet room, Wild Horse Cafe.
REEDSVILLE The
Riverview Garden Club
will meet at 7.30 p.m. at
the Church of Chnst building, Reedsville. Members
are to take canned goods,
gtfts for nursmg home
patients, and items for an
auction.

Saturday, Nov. 21
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878 fun
night and potluck supper,
6:30 p.m at the Grange Hall
located on County Road 1 , 3
miles North of Salem Center.
All members and tnterested
persons are invited.
Shade
CHESTER
River Lodge 453 will conduct highway trash pickup
beginning at 9 a.m. All
members asked to help.

Park, 4-7 p.m, Ractne
Municipal Building.
POMEROY -The Meigs
and
Water
Soil
Conservation District Board
of Supervisors 11:30 a.m. at
the district off1ce, 33101
Hiland Road, Pomeroy.
Monday, Nov. 23
RACINE
Southern
Local Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.

Public
meetings

Thurs day, Nov. 19
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community ·Thanksgiving
dinner, 4:30·6 p m., Heath
Umted Methodist Church,
dtnner,
drinks,
turkey
desserts.
Saturday, Nov. 21
REEDSVILLE Free

Thu rsday, Nov. 19
RACINE- Public meeting
to discuss $800,000 in federal stimulus money for
improvements to Star Mill

Church events

soup supper with hot dogs
and dessert, followed by
karaoke,
5
p.m., at
Reedsville United Methodist
Church.
Sunday, Nov. 22
SYRACUSE - Singing
by the Grimm Family, guest
pastor Rev. Gene Harmon,
6 p.m., Syracuse Nazarene
Church.

Are Home Heating &amp; Health
Care Costs Giving You the
Shivers?

Contact Us About Budget
Savers Available to Seniors!
• Home Energy Assistance
• Percentage of Income Heating Payment Plans
Home Weatherization Programs

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online at

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(Help w1th premaums, deductibles &amp; co-pays)

Call 1-800-331·2644 or Visit www.areaagencyS.org .

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Servmg Senors '"Athens Hocking, Meigs Monroe
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PageA4

The Daily ·Sentinel

Thursday, Noventber 19,

2009

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
Congress shall make no law respectin.f! an
establishment of religiott, or prollibitittg tire free
exercise thereof; or abridgi11g tlte freedom of specclt,
or af the press; or tire right of tile people peaceably
to assemble, and to petition the Go11ermnent
for a redress ofgrievmtces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTOlZY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 19, the 323rd day of 2009.
There are 42 days lett in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
' On Nov. 19, 1863, President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address as he dedicated a national
cemetery at the site of the Civil War battlefield in
Pennsylvania.
On this date:
In 1600, King Charles I of England was born in
Dunfermline, Fife, Scotland.
In 1794, the United States and Britain signed Jay's
Treaty, which resolved soine issues left over from the
Revolutionary War.
In 1831 , the 20th president of the United States.
James Garfield, was bor in Orange Township, Ohio.
In 1919, the Senate rejected the Treaty of Versailles by
a vote of 55 in favor, 39 against, short of the two-thirds
majority needed for ratification.
In 1942. during World War II, Russian forces launched
their winter offensive against the Germans along the
Don front.
In 1959, Ford Motor Co. announced it was halting production of the unpopular Edsel.
In 1969, Apollo XII astronauts Charles Conrad and
Alan Bean made the second manned landing on the
moon.
In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat became the
first Arab leader to visit Israel.
In 1984, some 500 people died in a firestorm set off by
a series of explosions at a petroleum storage plant on
·
the edge of Mexico City.
In 1985, President Ronald Reagan and Soviet leader
Mikhail S. Gorbachev met for the first time as they began
their summit in Geneva.
Ten years ago: Hundreds of anti-American protesters
battled riot police and set stores and banks ablaze as
President Bill Clinton rode through Athens in a tight.
securrty cocoon and proclaimed a "profound and enduring fnerdship" w1th Greece. World leaders at the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe in
Turkey signed a treaty cutting 1he number of non-nuclear
weapons systems across Europe.
Five years ago: In one of the worst brawls in U.S.
sports history. Ron Artest and Stephen Jackson of the
Indiana Pacers charged into the stands and fought w1th
Detroit Pistons fans, forcing officials to end the Pacers'
97-82 win with 45.9 seconds left.
One year aQO: AI-Qaida's No. 2, Ayman ai-Zawahri,
slurred Barack Obama as a black American who does
the bidding of whites in a new Web message intended to
dent the president-elect's popularity among Arabs and
Muslims. The Dow industrial average closed under 8,000
at 7,997.28 - the lowest close since March 2003.
Drama and dance critic Clive Barnes died in New York at
age 81.
Today's Birthdays; Actor Alan Young is 90. Talk show
host Larry King is 76. Former General Electric CEO Jack
Welch is 74. Talk show host Dick Cavett is 73.
Broadcasting and sports mogul Ted Turner is 71. Singer
Pete Moore (Smokey Robinson and the Miracles) is 70.
Sen.
Thought for Today: "You simply cannot hang a millionaire in America." - Bourke Cockran, American
politician and orator (1854-1923).

Who Vlizs Nels Konnerup?

of the vaccine. applying a "rabbit- allies.
In retirement. Konncrup kept his
adapted attenuated 'accine ." which
he had been employing in Australia. fc1tile mind busy. He wrote letters to
America honors its deceased presi- Jt worked. He established a vaccine editors and columnists who raised his
dents, its fallen troops. its late sena- production laboratory in Nanking.
ire. Somewhat of a curmudgeon .
tors. and even its musicians and
Unfortunately. other factors eventu- • among his pet peeves was the junk
movie stars. But what about its vet- ally triumphed in China, as Mao science and •·f1a"ved sophism" of unerinarians?
emerged victorious. The communists scrutinizing "self-proclaimed ancj
Well, there's one vctcrinanan who kicked out Konnerup and his col- self-anointed environmentalists." He
deserves pause for recognition. His leagues - but kept his vaccine. Of was a man of real science and real
name was Nels Konnerup. He recent- course. they implemented something environmentalism. not given to the
ly passed away at age 92.
far more Jestructive than Rinderpest: bandwagon. He had little patience for
Born in Everett. Wash .. on Dec. 4, Mao's Sinification of 1\l~trxism. the latest "crisis/emergency" treat),
1916. Konnerup was shaped by the Throu!!h collectivism and wealth destined to shut down an industry or
crucible of £he Great Depression. He redistribution - a triumph of igno- economy. He was skeptical of the
survived it the old-fashioned. rance that was the antithesis of Nels newest claims of Armageddon by
American way: faith and family. him- Konnerup's creativity - Red China pa11isan politicians. amateur environ;
self and his parents. hard work, exterminated tens of millions of mentalists, and assorted "nefarioug
rugged individualism. ror the human beings. Communism slaugh- nabobs."
remainder of his life. he would tered what Rinderpest could not '·Let there be integrity in defini.
lament Americ&lt;Uls' slow surrender of by leaps and bountls.
tions!" ·ur~ed a frustrated Nel)
responsibility from the self to the fedKonnerup went ebewhere, serving Konnerup. ~
eral govemmcnt.
the U.S .. government in several
Alas, an•aging Konnerup continued
Konncrup put himself through col- capacitie:-.. He was a secret weapon in
to battle the ctemal, insatiable ·p ·
lege at Washington State Univcrsit). ensuring that Marshall Plan aid to gressive push for centralization
His subsequent contributions \vere Europe, once deli\ ered, \\as not eaten
federal-government dependency t
numerous, with a resume of rich dis- by flies and ticks. Think about it;
had vexed him since the 1930s. A
tinctions, inclutling uniquely valuable Amencan aid saved a stan ing posteulodst at his funeral sa'id: "Nels
service durin!! the Cold War.
World War II Europe. At the political
While many players fought for anti diplomatic le\el. it was the prod- looked forward to the afterlife ...
because he expected to see FOR after
uct of President Hnrry Truman. of
freedom during the Cold War &lt;.lied. and gleefully anticipated
he
ambassadors and admirals, soldiers Secretary of State George ~larshalJ.
poking
him in the backside with his
and secretaries of defense
of an isolationist Republican
pitch
fork."
Konnerup served the way he knew Congress that stepped to the plate and
Nels Konnerup died where he
best: veterinary medicine. Circling cut a badly needed check to our allies:
the globe at a rate of 50.000 miles per all of this not onh fed Western began: in his native Washington state.
year, he developed remarkable meth- Europe but kept it out of the throes of There was no statue erected, no state·
mcnt from the White House, no obit:
ods for pest control that savctl the Soviet communism.
uary in the New York Times, no CNN
And
yet.
once
that
vital
aid
was
crucial livestock that fed billions
headline.
There were, however. a lo)
from Asia to Africa to Central underway. it would have died if the
of
people.
from Berlin to Beijing.
America.
livestock it sought to replete was
owed
their
health to this unher·
who
In China from 1946-47, Konnerup . destroyed by disease. Here. too. Nels
boosted Chiang Kai-Shek\ attempts Konnerup did what he did best: He aided veteran of the veterinarian scito pre\ent Mao Tse-Tung from trans- hat! responsibilit) for the health of ences, who showed that there ar~
forming the world's most populous over 60.000 head of livestock des- many ways to tight the good fight and
nation into a giant killing field. He tined to Europe by steamship. No serve ) our Maker.
(/Jr. Paul Kengor is professor OJ
anived with thousands or &lt;.loses of small task, but one he pulled off.
political
science and executi1·e direct
vaccine for Rinderpest. a cattle disAfter that. Konnerup sctYed
ease with very high mortalit). He Douglas MacArthur and the U.S. mil- tor (~r f'he Center for Vi.\ ion &amp; Value~
quickly discoveretl a fatal problem iwry government in Japan. Like at Grove City College. His books
missed b) the bureaucrats in MacArthur. he also w.ent to the include "Tite Judge: William P.
Washington: the lack of refrigeration Philippines: there. he heiped resolve Clark, Ronald Reagan'&gt; Top 1/and. ~
at Chinese villages and farms. On the the malnutrition wreaked b\ rodent ''God and Ronald Reagan.·· ana
spot, Konnerup developed a clever damage. Both Japan :.1nd the ''The Cmsoder: Ronald Reagan
method for preser\'ation and delivery Philippines were crucial Cold War the Fall of Communism.'')
BY DR. PAUL KENGOR

CENTER FOR VISION AND VALUES

c··

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number. No unsigned letters will be published Letters should be in
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext 14
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�·,
Thursday, November 19,

Local Briefs
Corner Restaurant
serving free dinner
MIDDLEPORT - The Corner Restaurant will host a
free Thanksgiving dinner on Thanksgiving Day for those
who have no special place to go for a holiday meal. John
~ens. owner, said that volunteers are participating in the
W 1er project. Serving will be from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

:It's a boy: Zoo tortoise
reveals mist~ken identity
CLEVELAND (AP) - A tortoise's zookeeper~ in
Cleveland are the ones feeling slow because after more
than SO years. they've discovered "Mary" is' actually a
male.
•
, Officials at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo say it can be
tough to· establish the sex of a giant Aldabra tortoise
because the reproductive organs normally aren't visible.
gut Mary's maleness was unexpectedly revealed earlier
this month during a routine exam.
! Spokesman Tom O'Konowitz said Wednesday that the
~oo has decided to rename the tortoise 'Terry."
· When the 400-pound reptile arrived at the zoo in
~955, it was assumed he was a she because of a flatter
shell. shorter tail and all-around smaller size than most
males .
· The tortoise is estimated to be between 75 and I 00
years old .

e

BedfordfromPageAt

The grant is for $811.750 and will pay for 100 percent of
the construction costs. The award is provided through the
2009 American Recover)' and Reinvestment Act
Assistance to Firefighters Station Construction Grants
(ARRA-SCG) ·program as e'itablished by the Federal
Emergency Management Agency tFEMA)/Department of
Homeland Security (DHS).
Once the building is built, if built. it will be owned by the
Village of Pomeroy though it will sit on land leased to
J:&gt;omeroy by Bedford Township. Residents of Bedford
Township. not the Village of Pomeroy. would fund the
maintenance costs which is why the fire protection levy
was being proposed.
Trustees Robert Hood and Ron Wood voted for the measure at this week's meeting. Trustee John Dean voted
against it. Dean, who has previously voted for placing the
ballot on the levy, said he voted against it because he had
several unanswered questions. Dean said, for example, he
had been told by a representative of the Auditor of State
the township couldn't pay the utilities on a new fire station
the township didn't own. Dean also said he felt a meeting
with Pomeroy Village Council about that and other questions, including those he has about the grant proposal,
should take place
Dean said he knew tliat himself and Fiscal Officer
Barbara Grueser would be attending the next meeting of
eroy Village Councii to discuss some of the issues.
said for him. he felt more information needed to be
•
ned in order for the issue to be brought back to a.vote
for possible placement on the May ballot.

Medicare from Page At
provide people with the information they need to make the
right selection of plan. No appointment is necessary.
OSHIIP is conducting Medicare Check-up Days in each
of Ohio's 88 counties to complement Medicare's annual
'coordinated election" period which started this week and
ends Dec. 31. Coverage secured during this period will
begin Jan. 1. 2010.
During the coordinated election period. people on
Medicare can select one of several coverage options: ·
• Original Medicare for their health coverage needs
paired with a stand-alone Part D prescription drug plan; a
Medicare
• Advantage Plan, which provides comprehensive
health benefits including drug coverage; or determine if
their existing coverage already meets their health insurance needs.
• Plan benefits may change each year, so Ohioans are
encouraged to contact OSIRIP for a plan review. In addition, financial assistance is available to those with limited income.
t each Check-Up Day event OSHHP representatives
discuss changes to Medicare and preventative benefits,
to manage expenses during the Part D coverage
"doughnut hole'' or gap in coverage, share information on
financial assistance available to those with limited income,
' advise beneficiaries if they can coordinate other coverage
and also run comparison reports on variou~ plans. OSHTIP
can help beneficiaries enroll in their Medicare coverage of
ahoice starting Nov. 15.
: Those attending the Check-up Day are asked to take
~tlong a list of their prescriptions drugs. dosages and pret:ened pharmacy. as well as any information on pension. VA
or other medical care benefits they are receiving.

.

Trail from Page At
~een hired to be responsible for maintenance of the Park.
It was also noted that OHS has received an appropriation
t.O work on some Civil War exhibits and that funding for
ct battlefield brochure is still in part of next year's budget process.
• A report from the Civil War Sesquicentennial
Commission was given by Eric Wittenbert who suggested
that planning needs to be started now for the local sesqui~entennial celebrations so that they can be publicized on
the state website. The Interpretation/Education Committee
will begin considering suggestions and planning at the
ary 2010 meeting.
nding has been received for signs for the Grant boy•
l)ood home, Buckeye Furnace and the McCook House, it
was reported during the meeting.
: Tony Ten-Barge advised that the State Legislature has put
some monev aside, but said most of it will go for the War
of I 812 observance.
· The relocation of State Route 124 at Long Bottom was
discussed by AI Tonetti who noted it crosses a place
Morgan traveled following the battle. He suggested the
Foundation contact ODOT for a consultation.
; Treasurer Hal Kneen reported that a donation and
1)1emorial monies have been received by the
Foundation. The next meeting of the group was set for
Jan. 10 at the Museum.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydailysentinel.co~

2009

Shuttle docks at space stati~n, unloads parts
BY MARCIA DUNN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAPE CANAVERAL.
Fla.
Space shuttle
Atlantis arrived at the
International Space Station
on Wednesday for a weeklong stay. and the astronauts quickly unloaded a
huge platform full of spare
pm1s needed to keep the
outpost running for another
decade.
The platforn1 - 16 feet
by 14 feet - contained
pumps. storage tanks and
other equipment weighing
hundreds of pounds each.
Robot am1s did the heavy
lifting. just hours after the
two craft came together 220
miles above the Pacific.
between Australia and
Tasmania.
Astronaut Nicole Stott, a
space station resident for
the past 2 l/2 months, was
thrilled to see her ride
home. She spotted Atlantis
from three miles out.
''I have my ticket all ready
and stamped. waiting for
you guys when you get
here." Stott radioed to shuttle commander Charles
Hobaugh.
"Who is thisT Hobaugh
teased.
''It's your favorite passenger." she repliCfd. "You look
beautiful out there."
Just before docking.
Hobaugh guided Atlantis
through a pirouette for the
space station cameras. for a
final check to make sure
there's no damage to the
thermal tiles on its belly.
So far. all indications are
the shuttle made it through
Monday's liftoff just fine.
NASA officials said. The
astronauts surveyed their
ship Tuesday for any signs
of launch damage. and a
quick look at the laser
images shows everything in
good shape. Experts will
continue to analyze the data,

AP photo

The space shuttle Atlantis lifts off Monday afternoon from Kennedy Space Center's Launch
Pad 39-A in Cape Canaveral, Fla. Six astronauts are headed to the international space
station on an 11-day mission.

on the cheek once the hatches s\vung open. She promptly became a member of the
shuttle crew. The space station staff fell to five.
Besides pumps and tanks.
Atlantis is dropping off
hefty gyroscopes, battery
chargers and extra snares
for the robot arm, as well as
some small. fragile science
experiments. Perhaps the
most delicate are four butterfly larvae, a student
experiment. The plan is for
the larvae to develop into
Painted Lady butterflies
over the next week or two
and return on the next shuttle flight in February.
The first of three spacewalks - to install a spare
antenna and some cables will take place Thursday.
NASA is stockpiling the
space station with as much
equipment as possible. taking advantage of the spacious shuttle payload bay

as well as the approximately
300 digital photos that were
taken Wednesday.
The only shuttle problem
of note - more a nuisance
than anything - involved
the laptops. The astronauts
had to contend with a poky
connection rather than the
usual DSL-type high speed.
which slowed the transmission of pictures. charts and
e-mails between Atlantis
and
Mission
Control.
Critical operations were not
affected, said flight director
Mike Sarafin.
Atlantis. will remain at the
orbiting outpost until the
day before Thanksgiving.
enough time for the two
crews - 12 astronauts total
- to unload nearly 15 tons
of spare parts. Half of that
gear was moved from the
shuttle to·the station shortly
after the docking.
Stott. the only woman.
greeted Hobaugh with a kiss

\Vhile it can. On~.:e the shuttles are retired next fall, the
orbiting complex will lose
its
biggest
supplier.
Officials hope to keep the
station operating until
2015, possibly 2020 if
President Barack Obama
gives the go ahead.
Five shuttle missions
remain after this one.
NASA is still av.·aiting word
from the White House on
what happens after that.
In · a jab at the uncertain
future. Mission Control sent
up a cartoon to Atlantis'
crew that showed an astronaut standing. helmet in
hand. alongside a landed
shuttle. A bureaucrat is
telling the newly returned
spaceman, ''Sorry. Just
because you have 20 million miles on your odometer
and a few loose tiles on your
'74 vehicle, it doesn't make
you eligible for the cash for
clunkers program."

Recount from Page At
Pomeroy Village Council
(4): Jackie R. Welker, 202,
Jim Sisson, 203. Victor C.
Young Ill, 192, George F.
Stewart, Jr., 185, William
A. Barnhart. 116. Joseph
.
B arnha11, 96.
Racine Village Council
(4): No candidates. Racine
Board of Public Affairs ( 1):
No candidates. Rutland
Village Council (4): No
candidates.
Syracuse Village Council
(4): Joy L. Bentley, 172.
Michael S. Jacks. 164,
Michael R. VanMeter.
127, J.P. Varian. 109, Tim
Willis, 69, Katelyn C.
Roberts, 66. Syracuse
Board of Public Affairs (2) :
Gordon Winebrenner, 204,
Floyd A. Graham, 114.
Bedford Trustee (2): Jack
R. Welker, 230, Roger A.
Ziegler.
144.
Matt
McGrath, 120, Brad Knotts.
104. Chester Trustee (2):
Alan Holter. 369. Blair
Windon, 353. Larry E.
Life, 327. Columbia Trustee

(2): Don ' Cheadle. 174. Trustee (2): Jack L. Ervin,
Marco Jeffers, 172, Gary E. 193. H. Dannie Lambert.
Spencer.
171.
Danny I 57, Delmas Goff. 129. B iII
Demko. 96, Thomas A. Cray. 50.
Sa1isbury Trustee (2): Bill
Smith II. 70.
Lebanon Trustee (2): E. Spaun. 758, Manning
Garry Smith. I 16. Donald K. Roush, 570. Bill Morris.
R. Dailey, 105. Letart 451, Roger L. Mowery. 428.
Trustee (2): Bob Morris. Scipio Trustee (2): Roger
164, Dave Graham. 157. Cotterill. 210, Tammy
Robert
Michael Roush, 97. Rusty Andrus. · 178.
Tucker, 40. Keith White, 80. Butcher, 168, Robert Vance.
Olive Trustee (2): Timothy 106. Scipio Fiscal Officer:
S. Epling. 322, Paul Karen A. Ridenour. 294.
Curtis, 255, Jackie L.
Sutton Trustee (2): Jerry
Westfall. 157. William R . • L. Hayman. 508. Larry C.
Osborne, 147. Garry L. Smith. 475. Don P. Smith.
Bowman, Jr .. 79. Olive 277. Sutton Fiscal Officer,
Fiscal Officer: Sari E. Roger Hysell (write-in).
Putman-Suttle,
198, 41. Governing Board.
Kaleen Sue Hayman. 194, Athens-Meigs Educational
Mandy Bush, 139.
Service Center (l): John
Orange Trustee (2): Roger Depoy, 2.743, Jeff Vogt.
Allen Ritchie, 202. David L. 1,523. Athens-Meigs ESC
(Southern):
Patricia
Sheets, 129 (posthumous).
Rutland Trustee (2): Struble, 996.
Alexander Local Board of
Steven R. Lambert. 363.
(3):
Mike
Charles D. Barrett, Jr., Education
353. Mike Roush. 212, Tim Chapman, 214. Fred Davis.
123,
Bruce I 98. Gordon Brooks, 145.
Caldwell.
Postlethwait, 42. Salem Meigs . Local Board of

Education (3): Ron Logan,
1.396. Ryan Mahr. 1.167.
Scott Walton, l J47. Anita
Harmon-Hajivandi. 898.
Todd B. Cullums, 751.
Eastern Local Board of
Education (2): Dennis R.
Eichinger. 945, Mark W.
Hall. 814. Charles Weber.
689. Southern Local Board
of Education (3): Paul B.
Harris, 781. Johnny Bill
Hoback, 557. Peggy S.
Gibbs. 537. Kenneth R.
McFann, 53 1, Richard B.
Hill. 51 J.
State
Issue
1/Compensation
to
Veterans: Yes, 4.744, No,
State
Issue
1.737.
2/Livestock Care: Yes.
4,043. No, 2.466. State
Issue 3/Casinos: Yes, 3.112.
No. 3.510.
The Meigs Local School
District's proposed 1.95
mills. five-year levy. for the
construction of a multi-purpose center. was defeated.
I ,478 for. and 1 ,871
against.

Deficit from Page At
paid for 14 autopsies, at a
total cost of $16,800.
Marshall said Hunter uses
the Dayton facility because.
within reasonable geographic distance. it is the
best forensic program for
the county's purposes.
There have been three
homicides in Meigs County
in 2009, all of which
required autopsies. An
autopsy was also performed
on the body of a prisoner
who died in the Meigs
County Jail after an apparent suicide. Another was
performed recently on the
body of a man whose body
was found in his home in
Middleport several days
after his death .
Marshall said Hunter
makes the decision on \Vhen
an autopsy is perfonned, but
said there are certain circumstances which almost
always warrant one. For
example. an autopsy is
ordered in the deaths of all
children, apparent suicides
' and homicides. and in cases
where the coroner's office is
uncertain as to the manner
of death.
Other business
Dave Glass of the Shade
River State Forest in Olive

a

\,

and possible criminal proseTownship met with com- sioners also:
missioners to present a
• Appointed Chris Shank. cution.
• Scheduled next week's
check for $22.622 for tim- director of the Depattment
ber sales there. The county. of Job and Family Ser;ices. meeting for
10 a.m.
township and the Eastern as chairman for Meigs Wednesday. due to the
Local School District all County's Complete Count Thanksgiving Day holiday.
share revenue from the sale: Committee" for the 20 I0
• Recessed this week's
$5.655 to the county and census.
meeting until 10 a.m .
township, and $11.311 for
• Authorized Shank to Monday. to allow for the
the school district, this year. join the Ohio Child Support approval of bills.
Total sales were $834,000 Enforcement
Present
were
Agencies
from timber sales in Ohio Directors Association. at a Commissioners
Mick
state forests. like Shade cost of $2.125.
Davenport.
Thomas
River.
The
Ohio
• Referred an animal Anderson and Michael
Department of Natural claim to the prosecuting Bartrum. and Clerk Gloria
Resources Division of attorney for investigation Kloes.
Forestry manages more than
$185 .000 acres of state forest, and state foresters conEveryone
duct tin1ber harvest to
The
Vaughan
Agency
improve the overall health
~
~~ ~ hb•to = • needs to
and diversity of the forests.
....._._
save money
Such sales contribute to the
recreational opportunities.
505 Mulberry Hc1ghts
$$$$
soil and water conservation
Pomeroy, Ofill14571J9
and wildlife habitat.
1/H. Jl(d rtf.lllm: rott /l'llltl
Hal:~r ( fml&lt;
Glass told commissioners
the ,local governments can
We can save
expect greater revenue in a
Phone: (740)992-9784
year. due to a large sale just
~:!:::a; you money on
finalized.
Fax.{740)992-7980
Dog Warden Tom Proffitt
your health
met with commissioners to
Email.
insurance!
discuss a grant application
uhl~o~,;o 't•lg$hlna~cn;:y tom
he plans to file through the
(',til ' l11t \'" 11),,111 .\t:l II I h) l;l ,1 ltu: lfllllll
Petco Foundation for a dog
(740 992-9784
spay and neuter program.
In other business, comis-

~~
lt1 .

'-J

.,

�~--------------------------------------------~--------~---------------------

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 19,

BY DAVID

ESPO

Senate Majority
Leader Sen.
Harry Reid, 0Nev., speaks to
the media about
the Democratic
health care bilon Capitol Hill. . ,
Wednesday in
Washington.
Sens. Chris
Dodd, D-Conn.,
AI Franken, DMinn., second
left, and Dick
Durbin, D-111., listen in the back.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BY CHRISTOPHER S.

RUGABER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON - More than I million people will run
out of unemployment benefits in Jan~ary unless Congress
quickly extends federal emergency atd, a nonprofit group
said Wednesday.
.
States typically provide 26 weeks of unemployment msurance for those who lo:-e their jobs through no fault of their
own, with weekly checks averaging abou~ $30q. Congress on
Nov. 6 extended coverage for the fourth ttme smce the recession began, granting 14 to 20 more w~eks to_ try to keep
about 13 million people who have been JObless tor well over
g year from running out of benefits before the end of 2009.
That boosted the total number of weeks a person could
collect unemployment to as much as 99 in the hardest-hit
states. But that legislation didn't address an underlying
problem: The emergency u~e.mployment co~pensation
program, including all 73 addat1onal weeks. exptres at the
end of this year.
.
. .
If the program isn t renewed, after Jan. 1 recapaents who
have used up their 26 wee~s of state benefits won't get ~my
extra coverage. The National Employmen~ Law. ProJect
estimated Wednesday that 450.000 people Will fallmto that
category in January.
An additional 600.000 will run out of extended coverage
that month, the NELP estimates. Since the extra federal
benefits arc provided in stages. recipients won't be able to
continue to the next one after .Jan. I, unless the emergency
program is reinstated.
Under the most recent extension. all states received 14 extra
weeks. States with unemployment rates of 8.5 percent or
above received six more weeks on top of that - 20 in total.
But a group of state a~encies th~t ~dminis~er the benefits noted
this week that few, 1f any, rec1p1ents will be able to access
those additional six weeks if the program ends Dec. 31.
.
House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md .• sa1d
Tuesday that Congress would consider continuing the federal emergency program and othe~ benefits inclu~ed in the
stimulus package. as part of a bill _focused .on JObs. But
Senate Democratic leader Harry Re1d has satd the Senate
will finh.h work on health care before taking up a jobs bill,
which could mean that it won't act until next year.
Congress could face opposition oyer the ~ost of extendino the program mto 20 I0, especially wtth a proposed
he~lth care overhaul bill carrying an $849 billion price tag.
Business groups estimate that extending the stim~l~s package's benefits for another year could cost $70 btlllo~. But
advocates warn that letting the program end or delaymg an
extension would create uncertainty for millions of recipients
and potentially long gaps between benefit checks, making it
difficult for many to make mortgage or rent payments.
About 9 million people are receiving unemploy.m~nt
insurance. 5 million on the state programs and 4.1 mllhon
on the federal extensions.
Maurice Ensellem. the N~LP's policy co-director. said
state agencies will start notif) ing recipients next month that
their benefits will run out, unless Congress acts.
''That's going to create a lot of anxiety," Ensellem said.
"Every interruption in benefits creates real chaos."

AP source: Ex-official to
head Fort Hood review
WASHINGTON (AP) - Defense Secretary Robert
Gates has tapped a former senio~ defense official to lea~ a
broad Pentagon review of the Circumstances surroundmg
the Fort Hood shootings, The Associated Press has learned.
Gates will announce Thursday that it will be a single,
coordinated review, and will call for a quick. short-term
report. followed by a longer. more extensive study, according to an administration official.
Components of the wide-ranging prob~ . cou~d incl~de
self-examinations by the Army and the mthtary s medtcal
community, and likely look at ~rsonnel policies and the
availability of mental health servtce~ for troubled t~oop~.
It would go well beyond the.sp~clfic case of M~J·. Nadal
Malik H~an, the Army psychmtnst accused of.klllmg 13
people and wounding more than 30 in the shootmgs at the
Texas military post on Nov. 5.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity because
announcements have not yet been made. The identity of the
former official leadin~ the review was not reveale~.
Details were still bemg worked out Wedn~sday _mght. ~ut
the review would mirror other department mqumes•dunng
Gates' tenure, including a probe of the Air Force's handling
of nuclear materials.
President Barack Obama already has ordered a review of
all intelligence related to Hasan, including his contacts with
a radical Islamic cleric overseas and concerns about the
major voiced by some medical colleagues, and whethe~ t~e
information was properly shared and acted upon wuhm
government agenci~s:
.
.
:At a Senate Judac1ary Commtttee heanng Wednesday,
Attorney General Eric Holder said he was disturbed to learn
that the Hasan had communicated the radical Islamic cleric.
Investigators have sa!d ~-mails between Hasan and t_he
imam Anwar al-Awlak1, dtd not advocate or threaten VIO·
lence.' After the shootings, al-Awlaki's Web site praised
a hero. Holder said investigators still were gathHasan
ering evidence in the ca-,e.
At the hearing, Holder was a-,ked what he would do to
prevent such an occurrence in the future.
''I think what v.e have to do is understand exactly what
happened that led to that tragedy," Holder said. ''Were their
flags that were mis ed? Were there miscommunications or
was there a lack of communication? And once we have a
handle on that. I think that we can propose and work with
this committee on ways in which we can prevent such a
..
tragedy from occurring agai~."
"I will say that on the basts of what I know so far, 1t ts
disturbing to know that there was th}s interaction between
Hasan and - and other people that is, I find, disturbing,"
Holder said.
As Congress prepared to open oversight hearings into the
massacre, Rep. James Langevin, D-R.I .. said Wednesday
there was no suggestion that Hasan was working with others. "All the information we have is that this is a lone
wolf," Langevin, a member of the Hou~e Armed Services
Committee, said after a closed·door bnefing on the Fort
Hood investigation.
Sens. Susan Collins, R-Maine. and Joe Lieberman. a
Connecticut independent, are investigating whether a
breakdown in communications or poor judgment calls contributed to the shootings. considered the deadliest attack ?n
a military base in th~ U.S. ~e Senate J-!omeland Secunty
Committee that Colhns and Lteberman s1t on was expected
to open hearings in the case Thursday.

as

WASHINGTON
Setting up a historic year·end
health care debate, Senate
Majority Leader Hany Reid
unveiled long-awaited legislation Wednesday night to
extend coverage to all but 6
percent of eligible Americans
and bar private industry from
denying insurance because
of pre-existing medical conditions.
The Democrat's $849 billion measure is designed to
remake the nation's health
care system. relying on cuts
in future Medicare spending
to cover costs - as well as
on higher payroll taxes for
the well-to-do and a new
levy on patients undergoing
elective cosmetic surgery.
Aides said the mammoth,
2.074-page bill would
reduce deficits by $127 billion over a decade and by as
much as $650 billion in the
10 years that follow •. citing
as-yet-unreleased estimates
by
the
Congressional
Budget Office.
''Tonight begins the last
leg of this journey.'' said
Nevada Sen. Reid. less than
two weeks after the House
approved its version of a
sweeping remake of the
health care system- and
nearly 10 months after
President Barack Obama 's
Inauguration Day summons
to action.
Obama welcomed Reid's
action, saying, "Today,
thanks to the Senate's hard
work, we're closer than ever
to enacting solutions to
these problems. I look forward to working with the
Senate and House to get a
finished bill to my desk as
soon as possible." There
was no mention of Obama 's
longtime goal of signing
legislation by year's end.
Republicans vowed a protracted struggle to block the
legislation and deny the
president a victory that
would cap a tumultuous
first year in office.
"This bill has been behind
closed doors for weeks,"
said Sen. Mitch McConnell
of
Kentucky,
the
Republican leader. ''Now,
itts America's turn, and this
will not be a short debate.
Higher premiums, tax
increases and Medicare cuts
to pay for more government. The American people
know that is not reform."
An early showdown on
the Senate floor is expected
by week's end.
Reid's Senate measure
would
require
most
Americans to can·y health
insurance and would provide hundreds of billions of
dollars in subsidies to help
those at lower incomes
afford it. ~tedium and large
companies would not be
required to offer coverage.
but they would be forced to
pay fees if the government
ended up subsidizing their
employees' insurance.
Begmning in 2014, the
bill would set up new insurance marketplaces - called
exchanges - primarily for
those who now have a hard
time getting or keeping coverage. Consumers would
have the choice of purchasing government sold insurance. an attempt to hold
down prices charged by private insurers.
After weeks of secretive
drafting. Reid outlined the
legislation to rank-and-file
Democratic senators at a
closed-door
meeting.
''Everyone was positive,"
said Sen. Amy Klobuchar,
D-Minn.
That didn't mean there
weren't problems- far from
it. At hts news conference,
Reid pointedly refrained
from saying he had the 60
votes necessary to propel the
bill over its first hurdle.
Reid met ptivat{\ly earlier
in the day with Sens. Ben
Nelson of Nebraska, Mary
Landrieu of Louisiana and
Blanche Lincoln of Arkansas,
moderate Democrats who
have expressed concerns
about the measure.
Nelson later issued a statement strongly su~gesting he
would vote wttrr fellow
Democrats on an initial
showdown expected within
days.Aides have said privately that Reid decided to retain
an existing antitrust exemption for the insurance industl)' as a way of satisfying the
Nebraskan's concerns.

2009

AP photo

Landrieu said, "I'm not
ooing to be for anything that
doesn't drive dov. n costs
over time."
Lincoln, the only one of
the three who faces re-election nex.t year, told reporters,
··we'll wait and see.''
With the support of two
independents. Democrats
have 60 seats. the precise
number needed to choke off
any delaying tactics by the
40 Republicans who appear
united in opposition to the
bill in its current fonn.
In general. Reid proposed
an outline that is similar to
the House-pa~sed bill, but
there were Important differences.
He called for an increase
of a half percentage point in
the Medicare payroll tax for
individuals with income
over $200,000 a year.
$250.000 for couples.
He also included a tax on
high-value insurance policies, meant to curb the
appetite for expensive care.
The House bill contains
neither of those two provisions, relying on an income
tax surcharge on the
wealthy to finance an
expansion of coverage.
Reid's measure also calls
for hundreds of billions of
dollars in cuts in future
Medicare spending, an

attempt to satisfy Obama·s
call to curtail the growth of
health care spending that is
fiercely
opposed
by
Republicans.
On another controversial
issue, Sen. John Kerry. DMass., told reporters Reid
had decided to require the
side-by-side sale of insurance policies that cover
abortion services and do
not, an attempt to satisfy
both sides. That is far less
restrictive than a Housepassed provision that left
liberal Democrats angry.
Ahead lie week:- - if not
more - of unpredictable
maneuvering on the Senate
floor. where Reid and his
allies will seek to incorporate changes sought by
Democrats
and
repel
attempts by Republicans to
defeat the legislation and
inflict a significant political
defeat on the president.
Reid released his legislation more than a week after
the House approved its version of the health care bill
on a near party-line vote of
220-215.
According to estimates
from the Congressional
Hudgct Office. that House
bill. with a price tag. of
about $1 .2 trillion. would
result in coverage for tens
of millions of uninsured,

and provide 96 percent of
the eligible population with
insur~nce.

Two Senate committees
approved different version
earlier in the vear, and while
Reid has said he would pro...
duce a blend of the two proposals. in fact he had a virtual free hand to come up
with a plan that could com•
mand the 60 votes needed to
pass.
Anticipating a major
struggle, the White Hout
deputized Interior Secret
Ken Salazar and form
Senate Majority Leader
Tom Daschle to join Vice
President Joe Biden in trying to clear the way for the
bill's approval over the next
several v.-eeks.
Salazar,
a
former
Colorado senator, is viewed
as a bridge to moderate
Democrats who are far outnumbered by liberals inside
the Democratic caucus.
Daschle was Obama 's
first choice for secretary of
health and human services.
a position from which he
was to try and oversee the
administration ·s drive to
enact health care legislation.
He withdrew his nomination when it was disclosed
he had not paid more than
S 120.000 in federal taxes
over several years.

�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
0100461000
0100537000
0100599000
0100725000
0100730001
0100853006
0100861000
0300062003
0300105000
0300138000
0300879000
0300989004
0301186000
0301232000
0500186000
0500254002
0500277000
0500421000
0500433000
0500571004
0500690000
0600093000
0700043000
0700259000
0700282002
0700347001
0700544001
0700748000
0700801000
0700838001
0700975000
0800072000
0800315000
0800315001
0800652000
0800766003
0800766004
0900045000
0900707000
0900910000
0901054000
0901351000
0902013000
1000056000
1000153002
1000159002
1000249000
1000532000
1000654000
1000733000
1000734008
1100025001

•

1100148001
1100234002
1100694001
1100796000
1100848000
1101111001
1101182000
1200091000
1200179000

1,618.03
ROWE TERRY R &amp;/OR DENISE K SEC28 FR34 T3N R13W 3.205A OUT OF 38.50A
FRAC2 T3N R13W NW EX.QUIMBY LOT EX.47.86A EX: 0.106A EX
CURTIS ALBERT L
922.29
3.524A V238 P93
STOTIS CHARLES L &amp;/OR TERRY FRAC18 T3N R13W 24.47A OUT OF 27.95A EX:
1,234.95
14.1906AV309 P625
650.31
STOTIS CHARLES L &amp;/OR TERRY FRAC18 T3N R13W LOT 14 V293 P393
FRAC30 T3N R13W SE COR OF A 9A TRACT V306 P699
1,043.45
MOORE JOHN &amp;/OR LENORA
BALL BETTY J FRAC23 T3N R13W SEC22 17.5A OUT OF 32.95A W SIDE OF 681 EX: 7.25A
606.43
SEC26 T3N R13W W 1/2 OF SW 1/4
991 .32
SMITH MICHAEL R
SEC1 T3N R13W 18.659A OUT OF 48.806A
688.34
SPENCER DON ETAL
WHITE JEFFREY A &amp;/OR WHITE DEBORA JEFFERS
SEC23 T3N R13W 8.87A OUT OF 34.454A
598.52
LAWSON MARK S
SEC17T3N R13W ON S LINE OF SECT 75.63A EX 21 .909A 853.56
SHEPARD DEANNAC &amp;/OR STEVEN FRAC13 T4N R12W 41.771AOUT OF 77.519A
745.73
MARWORTH AMY
1,177.41
SEC3 T3N R12W 1.042A OUT OF 3A
KING NANCY J
SEC4 T2N R13W 1AOUTOF 51.93A LOT 6 BALL'S SUB
1,583.33
MORA GEORGE
FRAC35 T3N R13W V275 P853
3,071 .15
HILL FRANCES S
SEC17 T3N R12W 8.310A OUT OF 49.6041A
2,090.47
VAIL JAYNE ANN SMITH &amp; HOLTER JAN LOUISE SMITH
SEC28 LOT#16 BAUM'S 1ST SUB.74.09'PLUS 25.72X180' 1,228.27
STARCHER COY B
SEC4 T2N R13W 2.65AOUTOF 51 .93AJOINING 1.14A V272 P1031
1,201 .77
EADS KENT ERIC &amp;/OR KATHLEEN SEC1 T9N R15W E OF SE1 /4 EX 2.025A EX .733A
1,455.16
CREMEANS STEVEN V
SEC23 T9N R15W E1 /2 OF NE1/4 3.5085A OUT OF 78.7828A.
V337 P459
640.88
RUNYON STEVEN H
T9N R15W 2.50A PAT OF 90.76AALONG TR.13
1,111 .28
THOMPSON TERRY D
SEC18 T9N R15W .882A OUT OF 6.01A
1,421 .89
JORDAN DAN L &amp; KIM
FRAC32 T9N R15W SW COR 5.973 OUT OF 179A V276 P409
1,891.24
ROSE SHARON ANN rio Kimberly Rose
1,523.73
SEC36 T9N R15W 5.00A OUT OF 9.22A
SEC12 T9N R15 NEAR MID OF E LINE E OF TR3 OF 16.50A
DIXON DENISE RENE
859.65
COOPER RANDAL A &amp;/OR DORINDA F
SEC28 T3N R11W SW PART
501 .27
BOSOANNA
100A LOT182T2N R11W ALL EX 61/2A N V323 P335
889.96
GREENLEAF ROBERT E B &amp;/OR JOETIA
100A LOT155 T3N R11W LOT62 49'X126.8' GIBBSADDN. 2,577.87
HERRERA FERNANDO &amp;/OR SARAH
SEC16 T2N R11W 0.866A OUT OF 2.588A
704.51
SAYRE KIMBERLY
SEC25 T3N R11W 1.286AOUTOF 21 .33A
948.93
100A LOT201 T2N R11W 3.0483A OUT OF 28.258A
WILLIAMS DEBORAH L
548.75
ROBINSON MICHAELJ &amp;/OR REBECCA A
SEC26 T3N R11W W SIDE CORD #31
956.66
SEC17100A LOT170T2N R11W UNO 2/3 OF 100A
694.05
SMITH ROYR
TEAFORD DALE CLAIR Ill
70A LOT164 T2N R11W 1.00AOUT OF 23.00A
1,141.97
HARMON WILLIAM &amp;/OR JANELLE D
SEC33160A LOT1184 T2N R11W MID OF W1 /2 OF E1/2
EX COAL V288 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
2.05A EX 1A
775.40
36A LOT246 51 A LOT250-254 1OOA LOT247-249 T1 N R12W
HILLPAULJR
1A OUT OF 2.05A
1,268.93
SHULER STEPHEN &amp;/OR WANDA SEC16 T1N R12W SW PT OF RD NEXT TO SPENCER V265
P601
1,228.16
BARCUS RICHARD L&amp; MOLLY J
100A LOT221 T1N R11W 4.536AOUT OF 60.124A PAT OF
LOTS
770.37
606.74
BARCUS RICHARD L &amp; MOLLY J
100ALOT221 T1N R11W6.365AOUTOF60.124A LOT9
RUCKER JERRY L &amp;/OR EDLA J
SECB T4N R11W NEAR MID ON W LINE
1,003.19
JONES PATRICIA ANN
SEC16 T4N R11W NW COR OF 21.50A TRACT 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
5.013A
1,239.38
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
858.98
HUDSON HEATH &amp;/OR KYLA
2,240.54
30A LOT121 T3N R11W
CLAMPITI RONALD R II
723.24
SEC6 T4N R12 MARTINSVILLE LOT 14
CARLETON SETH
FRAC12 T4N R12W 3.00A OUT OF 93.55A
1,334.97
WITHAM JOHN C &amp;/OR ROBIN L
SEC30 T4N R12W 1.185A OUT OF 153.152A
743.50
3,335.58
DAVIS JANICE
SEC5 T4N R12W .92A OF 68.212A
MCDIARMID DUANE M
1,220.05
SEC36 T4N R12W SE PAT
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 NE1/4 1.083A OUT OF 63.58A
727.54
DUBOIS CHARLES Ill &amp;/OR LORI SEC5 T4N R12W 1.15A OUT OF 40.9718A
734.29
PIERCE DAVID M &amp; DAVIDSON SABRA L
FRAC31, 25, 19 T6N R14W NEAR MID N OF SR1241.00A
1,479.16
OUT OF 61.44A
HYSELL DONALD L&amp;/OR DEBRA D SEC2 T6N R14W SW1/4 .4557A OUT OF 13.80A
1,447.84
BECKNER JACKLYN
SEC24 T5N R14W 21.90A OUT OF 64.53A
1,513.58
WILLIS BRIAN K &amp;/OR DAVINA D SEC18 T6N R14W 1.7972A OUT OF 73.40A V7 P459
1,258.70
SALSER MAGIE K
SEC1 T6N R14W NE COR OF 10A .4139A NEW SURVEY
632.06
PRICE MICHAEL WAYNE
FRAC33 T6N R14W W SIDE OF 58A NW COR V321 P675 2,287.68
HYSELL PAULA
SEC19 T6N R14W 1.237A OUT OF 80.00A
534.72
WALKER RODNEY E &amp;/OR DIANE FRAC36T6N R14W N PRTOF 61 .62ANW PRTEX: 18A
WV269 P619
1,268.03
TOBIN ARTHUR A &amp;/OR BETHANY L
FRAC1 T6N R14W LOT 383' FRONTAGE ON SR 124
1,144.58
MOLDEN JESSE L
FRAC7 T6N R14W OUT OF 39.18A NE COR BORDERING ON MAIN ST

1200219000
1200372000
1300157011
1300161002
1300350000
1300558000
1300583000
1300732001
1400086000
1400185000
1400194000
1400858000
1401052000
1401393001
1401503000
1500619000
1500642000
1501291000
1501527000
1501569000
1501614000
1600040000
1600156000
1600383000
1600406000
1601061000
1601231000
1601675000
1601833000
1601849000
1602020000
1602023000
1602092000
1602142000
1602319000
1602349000
1602352000
1602457000
1700002000
1700158000
1700178000
1700341000
1700350000
1700372000
1700519002
1700708000
1700858000
1800096001
1800282000
1800339000
1800460000
1800471000
1800576001
1800592000
1800659000
1800660000
1800762000
1800769000
1800836000
1801064001

515.30
SORDEN JACK DANIEL JR rio STEPHEN LUSH
632.73
SEC8 T6N R14W LOT 22 FALLONS ADD 22
650.87
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 TBN R15W 19.285AOUT OF 41 .53A
BIBLER THEODORE A C/0 JUDY KENT
2,516.07
SEC25 TBN R15W S 112 OF SW QTR EX: 5.00A
LAMBERT HAROLD D &amp;/OR SHERYL ANN
524.00
SEC31 TBN R15W NEAR NW PT OF SEC
880.15
PEYTON RICHARD A
SEC5 TBN R15W ON W LINE OF NE1/4 V286 P613
VAILJAYNE ANN &amp; HOLTER JAN LOUISE
SEC36 T8N R15W SECOR EX: #4 VEIN COAL V314 P515
67022
SCHOOLCRAFT CHARLES &amp; MARGARET
SEC25 T8N R15W NE1/4 OF NW1 /4 4A OUT OF 28.329A
846.27
FOWLER JEFFREY E &amp;/OR BRANDEE M
SEC31 T2N R13W ON W LINE OF SEC31 IN NW1 /4 EX: .28A 977.43
1,628.35
BLAZER DEBORAH S
SEC24 T4N R13W NW OF SE1/4
CLONCH KATHLEEN G C/0 AMY PULLINS
972.77
SEC29 T1 N R13W NEAR MID ON W LINE OF SECT 29
KLEIN GROVER &amp; IRENE L C/0 BARBARA FLAISIG
FRAC36 T2N R13W SEND 42 NE OF W112 EX: COAL V292 P525
575.74
781 .25
EVANS THOMAS D &amp;/OR PENNY A LOT305 T1 N R13W PENNY SURV V320 P59
824.27
PULLINS STEVE
SEC9 FRAC2&amp;6 T2N R13W
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
100A LOT312T1N R13W LOT 110 PALMER'S 1ST ADD.
796.21
MITCHELL KATHRYN T
64A LOT313 T1N R13W LOT62 N 112 PT. BEHAN'S 2ND
CARD PAUL
34'X95' NE COR.
608.08
100ALOT312 T1N R13W LOT2 PALMER ADD 70' N PARTV21 P465
TAYLOR GREGORY A
523.01
MORRISON NELSON R &amp;/OR VICKI
100ALOT312 T1N R13W LOT 111 PALMER'S 1ST ADD. V15 P485
1,331.66
FREEDOM CENTER MINISTRIES 1'1/ _OT313T1N R13W LOT72 BEHAN ADD EX 18' OFF S SIDE
1,983.69
:JA LOT312T1N R13W LOT 117 6'X80' NW PART PJONES 3RDADD
ERVIN ALLAN
4,627.13
DELLAVALLE MICHAEL
FRAC17T2N R13W EX. LOTS SOLD
2,933.38
AULT KENDA &amp; BRAUN MICHAEL C/0 KENNETH.BRAUN
FRAC25 T2N R13W 200'X55' ON W SIDE OF LOT 8
916.29
DOERFER DAVID A SR
SEC8 T2N R13W TRAINS ADD. SUB. 5 D. 50' E OF ENOCH LOT
7,390.D1
BOOTH JULIA rio JASON &amp;JULIALANHAM
SEC8 T2N R13W LOT 290 EX. 16' BACK TO CLIFF &amp; SE COR. 632.39
LUNDY JEFFERY H &amp;/OR ANDREA D
933.32
FRAC10 T2N R13W NAYLORS RUN
7,456.10
MOURNING JAMES G
FRAC17T2N R13W LOT 406 V274 P215
523.91
CARD PAUL
FRAC17T2N R13W WEHE SUB 6
614.50
JOHNSON TERRY L II &amp; MELISSA 1OOA LOT 72N R13W LOT 12 V268 P353
MILLS SHERMAN W &amp;/OR SHANE KRISTINE L
160ALOT1225 T2N R13W LOT 133 TO 140 INC. D. ADD.
2,290.57
BUTCHER LARRY
2,598.01
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 23 DABNEY ADD
FISHER JOHN JR
1,094.51
FRAC1 0 T2N R13W LOT 95 15'
BAER EDWARD T JR &amp;/OR PATRICIA D
1,150.15
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 32G-321-322
BUTCHER LARRY
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 25-26-27
1,573.23
IMADAC LLC
615.47
FRAC10T2N R13W LOT 107 E 1/2
NORRIS HELEN
100A LOT303 T2N R13W LOT 7 1/4 D. ADD. V234 P861
572.09
SALISBURY ADAM R
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 103 24' FRONT ST. X 42
71220
BUTCHER LARRY
1,081.03
FRAC10 T2N R13W LOT 92 30' W SIDE
CARL BREIT L &amp;/OR CONNIE L
818.92
SEC32 T7N R14W S PRTOF SW 1/4 EX: 33AS
HILL JAMES R C/0 JAMES R. HILL SEC23 T7N R14 E PAT OF N1/2 OF SW1/4 V313 P757
785.18
COTIERILL STEVEN D &amp;/OR BARBARA C
SEC16 T7N R14 LOT (10) V271 P163
1,054.20
PREAST WESLEY 0 &amp;/OR CHRISTINA
SEC3 T7N R14 V274 P741
936.18
HANING RUSSELL L &amp;/OR TERRI L SEC30 T7N R14 MID ON ELINE OF NW 1/4 EX: 1/01A
744.93
41 .74A E V336 P275
HILL JAMES R &amp; HILL RICHARD L SEC23 T7N R14 S PRT OF NW 1/4 V310 P657
772.80
SNOWVILLE CREAMERY LLC
3,331 .69
SEC34 T7N R14 0.776A OUT OF 47.648A
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
820.47
SEC10T2 R121 .757AOUT OF 2.001A
MILLER ROBERT L
1,288.51
SEC11 T2N R12 NE OF NE 1/4 EXCEPT 26.1055AC
DURST JOHNC
824.09
LOT288 T2N R12W W END EX: 6A &amp; EX: COAL V20 P423
SPECIAL PROPERTY VI LLC
906.49
SEC16 T2N R12W .39AOF 2.38ASW COR EX .24A
BARNHART THOMAS I &amp;/OR DEBORA
1,161.53
100A LOT291 T2N R13W SECT4 -5-6 V305 P793
HENSLER DANIEL C
1,214.22
160A LOT1201 T2N R12W 3.203A OUT OF 30.92A
BUTCHER LARRY D
787.33
LOT301 T2N R13W SUB J
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 691/2A SECOR EX: COAL
EX: 1A EX: 8A EX: 1A V257 P845
892.65
CHAPMAN FAMILY PROPERTY LLC
LOT1201 T2N R12 W PART OF E1/2 43.17A EX 9.606A EX 1.031A
2,855.81
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 721/2A N OF MILL LOT EX: COAL
601 .59
LANGUELL JAMES &amp;/OR SINCLAIR-LANGUELL SHELLY
SEC2 T3N R12W 1.114A OUT OF 2.61A
563.96

�1801367001 RUCKER JERRY L &amp;/OR EDLA J
1900099000 HALL TRUMAN R
1900172000 GRIFFIN DOLORES
1900239000 COE WILLIAM P

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
1OOA LOT278 T2N R12W SECT 9 -15 1.06A OUT OF
1900291001 EVANS JOSEPH &amp; CARMEL L
4.40A V294 P697
SEC16 T2N R12W #5 N LINE OF POM RD
1900339000 SAYRE CLYDE E II
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 .293A NEXTTO OTHER PARCEL
NEXT TO VIL. COR

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
100A LOT #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 PATIERSON BOB J &amp;/OR PROFFITI RACHEL
100A LOT298 T1N R13W LOT61 CARLETONS 2ND ADD LOT621 /2
LOT 63
932.91
2000527000 WILLIAMS MAC
100A 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
0100201MOO MCCLOUD DANIELA
1996 OAKWOOD FRE
0100218MOO LEE LARRY R &amp; CHRISTINAJ
1997 CLAYTON ASH
0100223MOO MORGAN WILLIAM &amp; RUTHIE COE
1989 PATRIOT REVERE MFG
0100227MOO VANDERBILT MORTGAGE &amp; FINANCE INC
1997 SKYLINE 402
0100242MOO JONES TERRIL
1999 CLAYTON LAR
0101006MOO REEVES EMILY S
1985 HOLLYPARK
0101022MOO CURTIS ALBERT
1989 FLEETWOOD 266
0101036MOO RICE HARRY &amp; HOUDASHELT BETSY ANNETIE WROS
1995 CLAYTON NOR
0101045MOO CHAFFINS CHARLEY C/0 JUDY CHAFFINS
1977 CLAIRBORNE
0101051MOO FACEMYER MICHELLE
2000 CLAYTON SPIRIT V
0101063MOO DICKENS ROBERTF
1964 Fairmont Homes 9600 SERIES
01 01144MOO ASH JOYCE
2008 COMMODO
030010BMOO TAYLOR VIRGIL E
1972 FLEETWOOD 6C27E
0300114MOO TUffiE JOHN &amp; GAYA
1971 ELCONACUSTOM
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; ALICIA WROS
2007 CLAYTON
0301131 MOO BAILEY CLINTON J
2009 DESCR OF SCH
040100BMOO WATKINS ROGER JR
1957 SUPERIOR
0401010MOO WATKINS ROGER E &amp; ELOISE WROS
1999 FORTUNE VC
0500027MOO ENTERLINE DOUG L
1993 SKYLINE SPR
050004BMOO BYRD GAIL
1988 NASHUA NXOHCHX870142
0500122MOO LYONS DEBORAH L &amp; LARRY D
1997 FLEETWOOD
0500125MOO PHILLIPS DIANAS
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 PATRIOTQC
0500169MOO HUDNALL SAMUEL R
1968 PMCSOV
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
0501061MOO 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 PROFFITI JOANN C/0 ROGER DURST
1963 CHAMPION
0700087MOO WOLFE DAVID G
1974 NEW MOON GD60T2UOTI
070008BMOO 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
0700121 MOO YOUNG CHARLES S
1971 GUE CRESTLINE
0700145MOO EVANS VIRGINIA
1968ALLEGHENY
0700150MOO SELLERS DARRELL
1974 DH
0700171MOO 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

0701008MOO
0701027MOO
0701033MOO
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090101 OMOO
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1000023MOO
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1001055MOO
1001058MOO
1001 071 MOO
1001083MOO
1001102MOO
1100064MOO
1100088MOO
1100125MOO
1100126MOO
1100174MOO
1100237MOO
1100281MOO
1100283MOO
1100293MOO
1100300MOO
1100318MOO
1100335MOO
1100337MOO
1100347MOO
1100355MOO
1100361MOO
1100366MOO
11 00380MOO
11 00387MOO
1100412MOO
11 00415MOO
11 00423MOO
1100427MOO
1101 006MOO
1101037MOO
1101102MOO
1101117MOO
1101125MOO
11 01134MOO
1101141 MOO
1101143MOO
1101146MOO
1101156MOO
1101177MOO
1101193MOO

ALLEN THOMAS E &amp; DEBORAH K
2000 SKYLINE WOO
PROFFITI JAMISON &amp; ANGELA
2002 REDMAN RIDGEDALE
COOPER GARY &amp; MARILYN
1996 OAKWOOD
FITCH THOMAS S
2004 CLAYTON 25C
DOWELL JEFFREY &amp; ERICA WROS 2000 K844/NEW MOON
MAYNARD SAMMY &amp; MELISSA
1965 LIBERTY SP50122BFK
SMITH RICHARD &amp; JOANN
1987 CLAYTON CLAIRBORNE
JARRELLJOEY
1973 NASHUA 60X14
BATION DONNAJ
1996 GILES 310
DURST RALPH LC/0 PATTY
1999 REDMAN EAT
MAYNARD OSCAR
1969 ZIMMER
JARRELL AIMEE
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 LAFAYETIE 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;/OR TOWANA J 1971 CHAMPION
HUGHES EDWARD &amp; ESTHER
1992 SABRE NA
LONGENETIE RUTH ANN
1982 REDMAN
SMITH CARLL
1973 HICKORY KNOLL 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 PAULE 1996 FLEMING
BARTl MUS HARVEY JR
1966 NAMCO E52
COWDERY CLEMENT L
1997 REDMAN NMN
WOLFE MICHAEL E
1976 GOVERNOR 701
REED DONNAJ
1998 CLAYTON
GREENPOINTCREDIT, LLC
1997 FLEETWOOD
BARRINGER DARRYL &amp; CRITES KATHY 1997 NORRIS WND
MILLER LAUREnA
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 1061CT
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
KROEGEL JAMES 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
DORSTTHOMAS 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
1964 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 DANNYW 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
TILLIS APRILJ
1980 CHALLENGER WI
OWENS AARON D
1996 REDMAN NA7
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 DRM
RAMSBURG RICHARD A &amp;/OR CAROL J
1998 FOUR SEASONS
KESSINGER LEROY
1978 FESTIVAL 266
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
COTIERILL 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; AMBER K WROS
1997 PREMIER
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

•

�1200031MOO 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
13
.
00
1
00
13
, 00
1300208MOO
1301029MOO
1301034MOO

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

1301029MOO
1301034MOO
1301044MOO
1301064MOO
1301076MOO
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
1500031MOO
1500053MOO
1500073MOO
1500137MOO
1500155MOO
1500156MOO
1500158MOO
1500178MOO
1500219MOO
1500259MOO
1500273MOO
1501075MOO
1501078MOO
1600011MOO
1600057MOO
1600061 MOO
1600125MOO
1600136MOO
1601012MOO
1601026MOO
1700013MOO
1700080MOO
1700082MOO
1700095MOO
1700103MOO
1700108MOO
1700112MOO
1700120MOO
1700123MOO
1700129MOO
1700160MOO
1700182MOO
1700210MOO
11MOO
32MOO
33MOO
32MOO
1701033MOO
1701036MOO
1701049MOO
1701060MOO

1

1701092MOO
1701095MOO
1701120MOO

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

1701137MOO

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

1800069MOO
1800112MOO
1800130MOO
1800137MOO
1800241MOO
1800265MOO
1800276MOO

RECTOR GLORIA D
2001 CLAYTON SATURN
FLETCHER LUCY
1977 MANSION FLR
ALDRIDGE CLYDE 1
978 BAYVIEW
COTTRILL DAVID
2003 OAKWOOD OAK/FRE
DUNKLE PENNY &amp; DUNKLE DAVID JR
1996 BROOK
JUDE CHASTITY &amp; STEWART JAMES W II WROS
2007 SKYLINE HOMETTE
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
TAYLOR BETTY
1956 STAR
BATEY THOMAS E ETAL
1972 HILLCREST 70X14
BIGGS WILLIAM
1972 VAN DYKE VD14FL2
MOOD I SPAUGH ROBERT W &amp; JULIA
1968 SCHULT 60X12
REEVES RANDALL &amp; ANGELA
1969 HOLLYPARK
HOOVER STEVEN R.
1993 CLAYTON LOU
COLBURN APRIL
1972 HOMETTE 641
BARNETT RODGER L &amp; BETTIE
C/0 JERALD MARTIN
1995 FAIRMONT COM
CUNDIFF RALPH C/0 HOBART CUNDIFF
1991 REFLECTION LTD 67
SCHOLDERER SHANNON 1
1991 FAIRMONT MY9
WISE RANDY
1967 WALKER
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
KAUTZ WILLIAM D
2004 REDMAN RMMR28600
CALDWELL BRUCE
2007 CLAYTON
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
MILLER LINDA L
1992 PRESTIGE 710
KING CLEDITH J
1996 CLAYTON
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
SEYLER NELIA E
1992 NORRIS RICHMOND
PEYTON JAMES E
1998 CLAYTON
JEFFERS TERRESSA L &amp; SMITH RUTH
1998 CLAYTON WIN
HALL MARTHA
1991
BARTON JOEY
19921NDIES SULTAN
COTTERILL WAYNE R
1988 SKYLINE 4312
HANING CHRISTOPHER D
1976 NEW MOON
HILL HAROLD
1972 INDIA 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
BARNHART KEITH A
1972 TORCH 12
,
PHILLIPS WENDY J
2000 CLAYTON HOjiAES I SO
COTTERILL BARBARA
1973 BARRON
WILL ROLAND E
1970 RICHARDSON ARD
CAPEHART CHRIS AND CONNIE 1986 REDMAN GRANDVILLE
SLISHER DAVID
2002 SCHULT 4428~084

707.48
637.94
1,213.50
1,896 .89

1701162MOO
1800040MOO

1800277MOO
1801031MOO
1801064MOO

1,088.48
2,108.18
618.91
634.82
714.62
685.33
555 .00
634.82
1,069.29
794.41
874.20
515.73
1,261.69

1801106MOO
1801133MOO
1801145MOO
1801150MOO
1900034MOO
1900047MOO
2000001MOO
2000005MOO
2000043MOO
2000053MOO
2000091MOO
2001019MOO

METZGER JOHN &amp; CINDY WROS 2003 GILES
LENIGAR STEVE A &amp; EVELYN M 2001 CLAYTON SPIRIT
HOGSETT LORENT &amp; SUSAN WROS
2005 GILES 145
FULAYTER SHERRY &amp; FULAYTER BEN HEART M
1994 CLAYTON LOU
WORKMAN DENNIS &amp; CHARLENE 2007 HOMETTE SKYLINE
GRAY ARTHUR W &amp; SANDRA DISTELHORST
1970 KIRKWOOD GJ50T080A
MAKAO RUBY
1962 NEW MOON
MEDLEY DWIGHT P &amp; JOYCE M 1983 SCHULT 641451
MILLIRON CHERYL
1968 NEW MOON 124248
REITMIRE PAUL &amp; MARY
1962 FLEETWOOD GE28
JOHNSON BARBARA
1970 CHAMPION
1970 VALIANT
WILSON CARL H JR
GINTHER JOHN &amp;/OR JUANITA WROS
1998 CLAYTON CHE
SALSER DORTHA P ETAL c/o ROBIN DUTTON
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
HAINES NATHAN D
2008GILES
HOLMAN LUKE WROS
2007 REDMAN
1991 SUNSHINE 14X72
CROUCH TONY C
1973 GRAYWOOD GB65T3KOP
THEISS BETTY L
PICKENS EBER 0 JR &amp;/OR VALESSA D
1985 NASHUA 15015
LAVENDER WILLIAM D
1962 ELCONA55X10
HENDRIX FRANKLIN &amp; PHYLLIS 1981 OAKBROOK OS 147352
HENDRIX ROBERT R
1994 CLAYTON
REITMIRE FLOYD MICHAEL &amp; DENISE D
1999 OAKWOOD
DAVIS WILLIAM D
2003 OAKWOOD OAK/FREE

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

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

I I
I.

I.
I

�----· "'liT.......--~~--~--~ ~· - --- - -._------- · -

Bl

The Daily ~Sentinel

Inside
Browns would give LeBron a shot, Page 82
Shaq to miss at least one game, Page B6

~ports Briefs
EHS fall sports
banquet
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High School will be
holding its 2009 fall sports
banquet tonight for all athletes - varsity and junior
high - at the high school
gymnasium. The banquet
will start at 6 p.m.

:Eagles host Meigs in
. Foundation Game
TUPPERS PLAINS ' ~astern High School will
hold its 2009 Foundation
Basketball
Game
on
Tuesday. Nov. 24. in the
high school gymnasium and
will host Meigs in the doubleheader contest.
The varsity girls squads
·u tip-off at 6 p.m., with
boys teams playing one
other at approximately
7:30p.m.
The purpose of the
Foundation Game is to help
raise donations for a local
cause. with this year's donations being sent to the
Bethel Worship Center
Christmas Giveaway.
Collections of food, new
clothes, new or used toys
and monetary donations are
now being accepted at EHS
or MHS from now until 6
p.m. on Tuesday. There will
also be raffles held at the
Foundation Game.

l

PORTS

Big Ten Notebook: Most Big Ten awards still up for grabs
BY RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

And the winner is ...
Each year Big Ten coaches and
media organilations select the Big
Ten's top individual award winners.
This year there are no runaway winners in any category.
Linemen of tlte year: Plenty of
good candidates here. led by tackle
Bryan Bulaga (Iowa) and center
Stefen Wisniewski (Penn State).
along with defensive ends Cameron
Heyward (Ohio State). Ryan
Kerrigan (Purdue), Adrian Clayborn
(Iowa),
O ' Brien
Schofield
(Wisconsin) and Brandon Graham
(Michigan).
.
Any of the defensive linemen
might \Vin a close vote.
Coach of the year: Few expected
Iowa to break out to a 9-0 start, so
Kirk Ferent1 would seem to have the
inside track here. Other possibilities:
Wisconsin ·s Bret Bielema. Ohio
State's Jim Tressel.
Freshman of the year: Iowa running back Ada.m Robmson is fourth
in the· league in rushing. He will
likely get the nod over fellow
Hawkeyes running back Brandon
Wegher. Indiana kicker Nick
Freeland and Wisconsin linebacker
LB Chris Borland. Should Michigan

quarterback ·r .tte Fon."ier engineer
an upset of No 9 Ohio State this
weekend , i' rmght just sweep by
everyone.

Defensire player of the year:
Michigan State linebacker Greg
Jones (leading Big Ten in tackles).
Iowa linebacker Pat Angerer (second in tackles) and Ohio State's
Heyward, Purdue's Kerrigan.Iowa 's
Clayborn. Wisconsin's Schofield
and Michigan's Graham lead the
way. Any deserve it.
Offensive player of the year:
Usually this award is ceded to the
QB or leading rusher for the league
champion.
But John Clay. the bruising tailback for Wisconsin, is averaging 20
yards rushing more than No. 2 on
the list. Penn State's Evan Royster.
That gives Clay the edge.
The preseason player of the year
was Ohio State QB Terrelle Pryor.
He has helped his team win a spot in
the Rose Bowl and at least a share of
its fifth straight Big Ten title.
But Pryor's numbers are average
at best: sixth in rushing. lOth in
passing and fifth in total offense in
the conference.
Asked if Prvor deserved to be the
league's player of the year. his coach
prefen-ed to talk about more important numbers.

AP photo

Ohio State players and fans celebrate after a 27-24 overtime win over Iowa
in an NCAA college football game Saturday in Columbus, Ohio. The victory
assures the Buckeyes a share of the Big Ten title and a trip to the Rose
Bowl.
"Oh. gosh. 1 don't have any idea pool of candidates, you can't leave
about that." Tressel said. "But 1 do out the ones who have helped guide
know this: We always talk about and lead their team."
quarterbacks in terms of where are
MVP: Clay, Pryor or throw a dart.
we in the standings? So with that in
mind, I'm sure as you look at your
Please see Big ! en, Bl

Big East Notebook:
Baldwin stepping up
for No.8 Pittsburgh

Benson
guarded in
reaction to
~ohnson

~NCINNATI

(AP)
Another troubled player trying to . revive his career?
Nothing new for Cincinnati.
Mo ~t Bengals
players
were unruffled Wednesday
by the signing of running
back
Larry
Johnson,
brought in for the rest of the
season in what's been
described as a reserve role
to help the AFC North leaders should they have an
injury.
"We've definitely got a
history with picking up
guys that other teams are
going to shy away from and
having success with them,
so hopefully it will be a success," quarterback Carson
Palmer said, reflecting the
sentiment in the locker
room.
The most telling reaction
~arne from the player who
could be affected most.
Running
back
Cedric ·
•
son didn't have much to
The
Bengals
signed
Johnson for the rest of the
season on Tuesday, giving
them another running back
in case Benson's injury
lingers. He had to leave an
I 8-12 win in Pittsburgh on
Sunday because of sprained
hip muscles. He didn't practice Wednesday.
After a light morning
workout, Benson didn't
have much to say about the
team's decision. Told that
be didn't appear to be
thrilled with the move, he
smiled.
: "Oh, I didn't know I was
~pposed to be jumping out
ef my seat or anything,"
Benson said.
: ''I really have no feelings
about it," he added. ··They
made a move they felt they
needed to do, and that's fine
?lith me, whatever decisions
they make in that area. It's
going to affect me in
kind of way. Whatever
from here on, I can
guarantee you I'll definitely
be making the best of it."
It'll be one of the interesting subplots during their
drive for the playoffs.
: By sweeping the Steelers
and the Baltimore Ravens
- the teams that played in
the AFC title game last sea-

Please see Benson, Bl

Thursday, November 19,2009

AP photo

Cleveland Browns quarterback Brady Quinn passes to tight end Robert Royal in the first
quarter of an NFL football game against the Baltimore Ravens on Monday in Cleveland.

Brady Quinn's second
chance off to slow start
BEREA (AP) - Brady
Quinn's
rebirth
as
Cleveland's starting quarterback is already deeply troubled.
After one game.
Quinn. who lost his job 10
quarters into the season and
got it back five weeks later.
inherited an offense with
few playmakers and no
direction or identity. In his
return on Monday night.
Quinn's seventh career stw1
ended with his sixth loss, a
defeat that left him visibly
shaken afterward.
He w·asn 't upset about losing to Baltimore or his two
interceptions, one of which
was returned for a backbreaking touchdown. Quinn
was distraught by his low hit
on Terrell Suggs, a collision
that injured the linebacker
and led to accusations by
Baltimore linebacker Ray
Lewis that he took a cheap
shot.
That hurt Quinn. Still
does.
''I'm not going to lie to
you," he said Wednesday.
"Definitely, seeing someone
who I've known off the field
happen like that to him.
yeah, it affects you. I'm
never out there to do that.
It's tough to shake off, probably more than anything else
in that game."
Quinn was fined an undisclosed sum by the NFL for
the infraction. which resulted in a 15-yard penalty. He
apologized to Suggs and the
Ravens following the game
and plans to reach out to
them again.
"I wasn't trying to go for
him.'' Quinn said. "I was trying to go for the ball carrier.

•

Unfortunately, a thing like to Edwards and Lewis on
that can happen. I'm praying Tuesday and they assured
for him. Hopefully he"ll be him there was no malice.
all right."
"They reached out to me
Quinn threw an intercep- and let me know that it wastion - a pass that caromed n't on purpose." Cribbs said.
off wide receiver Mike "It happened all so quick
Furrey's hands - to Chris and he (Edwards) thought I
CwT, and while attempting was trying to come block
to bring down Baltimore's him after I pitched the ball.
cornerb~ack. he dived at So they assured me they didSuggs' legs. The Ravens' top n't mean nothing by it and it
pass rusher sprained his wasn't revenge. l'm sure he
right knee and is expected to didn't mean to intentionally
miss several weeks.
hurt me. Hopefully he didn't
Quinn said he didn't see mean it.··
Su~gs and insists he was just
. Cribbs also said that the
trymg
to
stop
Carr. decision to lateral the ball
However, he understands · and try to score despite
why the Ravens might be being down 16-0 in the closmad at him.
ing seconds was not part of
"I can see why they'd be the play sent in by
upset.'' he said. "But again, Cleveland's
coaches.
he wasn't even in my vision. Browns coach Eric Mangini
I was trying to get to the was critici:£ed for having his
ball. He cut across my face team run that play with the.
as I was already trying to game out of reach.
jump down for the tackle."
"It was a call at the line."
Quinn received a letter Cribbs said. "Brady had let
informing him of the fine. us know to keep the ball
He would not divulge the alive. that he was going to
penalty but said it was "a throw the slant to me at the
good amount."
line and to keep the ball
On the final play of the alive. He gave the signal to
game. Browns wide receiver keep it alive. but it wasn't a
Josh Cribbs was flattened by caJI that came in from the
Ravens defensive end Dwan sideline."
Edwards, who delivered a
Cribbs said Mangini apolforearm blow under Cribbs' ogized to the team for callchin. Cribbs was carted off ing a pass on the final play.
the field and spent several Cribbs felt that v.as unnechours in the hospital under- essary and isn't upset about
going tests.
what happened,
Cribbs had pitched the ball
"He told the whole team if
when he was drilled by he had to do it O\'er again. }le
Edwards. The nasty shot led would've made a different
to speculation that it was· decision.'' Cribbs said.
done in retaliation for "They put me in position to
Quinn's hit on Suggs.
make plays and I wouldn't
Cribb!&gt;. who did not prac- want to come out of the
tice on Wednesday because
of a sore neck, said he spoke
Please see Browns, Bl

PITTSBURGH (AP) Jonathan Baldwin was difficult to miss for anyone
watching No. 8 Pitt's 27-22
win over Notre Dame. making five catches - two that
were exceptional - for 142
yards and a touchdown.
That wasn't always the
case during
Baldwin ·s
freshman season last year.
when he was a deep receiving threat and little else.
•·Jonathan is becoming hasn't become. but is
becoming - a more complete player." coach Dave
Wannstedt said. "Whether
he ·s getting the ball or he's
not getting the ball or it's a
run or it's a pass, he's doing
all of those things much better.''
Last season, Wannstedt
said. ''Really was a situation
where we would basically'
throw him the ball deep on
one or two routes. He ·s
learning the game. and I
think he's really matured as
a person. I can't wait to see
him a year or two' from
now."
The 6-foot-5 Baldwin and
6-2 Dorin Dickerson form
one of college football's

best rece1vmg tandems.
Dickerson has 43 catches
for 496 yards and 10 touchdowns. the most of any
major college tight e nd.
Baldwin has 40 catches for
840 yards, a 21 yards per
catch average, and five
touchdowns. He was named
Big East offensive player of
the week for his performance against the Irish.
Bald"""n
played
at
Aliquippa High, the same
Pittsburgh-area school that
sent tight end Mike Ditka
and cornerback Darrelle
Revis to Pitt. Heisman
Trophy
winner
Tony
Dorsett played at Hopewell
High, which is also in
Aliquippa.
Dickerson
starred at nearby West
Allegheny High.

TRULY
ROVING
LINE B A.C K E·R:
Cincinnati
linebacker
Marcus Waugh figures his ·
four seasons at Cincinnati
have been the perfect preparation for coaching. After
all, he's played just about
every position.
The 6-foot, 270-pound

Please see Big East, B&amp;

AP photo

Pittsburgh wide receiver Jonathan Baldwin, right, makes a
catch for a first down over Notre Dame cornerback Darrin
Walls in the second half of an NCAA college football game
in Pittsburgh, Saturday. Pittsburgh won 27-22.

�Page B2 • ·me Daily Sentinel

Browns would give LeBron a shot
BEREA (AP)
1f
LeBron
James
truly
believes he can help the
Cleveland Browns. coach
Eric Mangini has an
orange helmet \Vaiting for
him.
"I think he should come
on down ... Mangini said.
smiling. "I know he's pretty busy right now. but if he
wants to give it a shot. the
guy is gifted. He's compctiti\"c and tough. I'm sure
whatever he applied himself to. he'd probably be
good in baseball or soccer
or swimming."
The NBA superstar. who
was an All-State wide
receiver in high school.
said Tuesday night that if
he put the time ang commitment into it, he could
be a good football player.
Mangini agreed. calling
James "a freak athletically'' and said the 6-foot-8,
260-pounder could be dangerous at tight end. wide
rece1ver or even outside
I inc backer.
When
the
gist
of
Mangini's comments was
relayed to James. he
smiled - but didn't take
the bait.
"I had what I had to say,
and that was it." James
said before his Cavaliers
played at the Washington
\Vizards on Wednesday
night.
Quarterback
Brady
Quinn also heard about
James· football fetish. He

would love to have a target
to thrO\V to like James in
the red zone.
"That'd tie great,'' Quinn
said. "Tell him to suit up
and let us know, we'll get
him working. Obviously
he's an incredibly talented
athlete. If he wants to try
to play a little bit now,
we'd be more than willing
to pick him up:·
Browns
nose
tackle
Shaun Ro£ers isn't convinced James could step
into the NFL and be able to
handle the pounding.
"I heard that comment,"
Rogers said. "I have mixed
emotions about that. A
great athlete? Yes. A football player? No."
Rogers then looked into
TV cameras.
"Yeah LeBron. I said .it,"
he said. "It's a punishing
game. I just don't think
you can step off the basketball court after not
going through this year in
and year out and just play
football. From that standpoint, l just don't think it's
possible. You have to
weather and condition
your body to take this punishment."
So what if James had a
year to train? Could he do
it then?
"Yeah, he might make a
heck of a tight end,"
Rogers said. "I'd like to
see him out there running
down the seam."

Benson

"This is another example
of another really good player that was on the street and
there's a possible need in
the future. if not tight away,
depending upon how Cedric
is," Palmer said.
The players have plenty
of experience at handling a
newcomer with baggage.
The Bengals released and
then brought back receiver
Chris Henry after his fifth
arrest in 2008. He has
~tayed out of trouble and
was a third-down receiver
before he broke his left arm
two weeks ago.
Benson was the most
recent example of players
rehabilitating their careers
in Cincinnati. The Bears
released him after two alcohol-related arrests in Texas.
The cases were dropped
when grand juries declined
to indict, and the Bengals
signed him one month into
last season when they had
only one healthy running
back.
Benson was so impressive
that they offered him another' contract and redesigned
the offense. Now. he's
backed up by a player who
came to the team under similar circumstances - offfield problems in the past, a
one-year contract in hand.
"Most of the time you
hold your fate in your own
hands," Benson said. "I'm
not letting up in any aspect
of what I do. I expect to
continue to be the No. 1 guy
and if not, I'll make it that
way."
Benson has settled in as
one of the locker room stalwarts.
His
teammates
expect Johnson to do the
same.
·'When you come in to a
team that's winning and
things are going welL for
the most part guys don't
want to come in and be a
distraction.'' Palmer said.
"They just want to do what
they're told and do their
role. and I'm sure that's the
type of guy Larry will be."

from Page Bl
son - Cincinnati (7-2) put
itself in control of the division. The Bengals lead the
Steelers by a game. and
have the important tiebreakers in their favor.
Plus. they've made it
through the most challenging part of the schedule. The
next three games are at
Oakland (2-7), then horne
against Cleveland ( 1-8) and
Detroit (1-8). There's also a
home game against Kansas
City (2--_ 7) left~
Why take a chance on
bringing in a player who
\vas released by the Chiefs
after he questioned the head
coach's competence and
used gay slurs on his
Twitter account?
"Once I found out about
him coming here, I knew it
was a good addition,"
receiver Chad Ochocinco
said. "Everyone continues
to look at the things that's
going on off the field with
the Twitter issues. but we're
talking about a great footBall player. a great running
back that can help us. which
adds another weapon to our
offense."
If he stays out of trouble,
Johnson could come in
handy.
Benson has been the focal
point of the Bengals'
renewed commitment to run
the ball this season, one of
the main factors in their rise
to the top of the division.
Benson already has can·ied
an 1\:FL-Ieading 205 times,
nine shy of his career high
tor any season.
His backup is rookie
Bernard Scott, a sixth-round
draft pick from Abilene
Christian.
If Benson's injury lingers.
Johnson could see his role
expand quickly. Coach
Marvin Lewis hasn't ruled
out playing him in Oakland
if Benson is sidelined.

Bro~s
from Page Bl
game. A lot of people say
'Why are you still out when
you have no chance to win
the game?' But I wanted to
be out there. so I can't put
no blame on anyone."
Quinn's only regret is that
he couldn't jumpstart a
Cleveland offense that
needs defibrillator.
The Browns are ranked
last in total yards, last in
points and la~t in passing
yards. They haven't scored
a touchdown in three
straight games and have
only five this season. Quinn
effectively ran a no-huddle
attack against the Ravens.

Thursday, Novembe,r 19, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Holmes disputes Big Ben: Steelers were in sync
PITTSBURGH (AP) Ben Roethlisberger felt out of
sync all day in the Pittsburgh
Sreelers' offense. Santomo
Holmes felt just fine.
Holmes disputed the quarterback's notion that the
Steelers had "something miss
ing" during a 18-12 loss to
Cincinnati that moved the
Bengals (7-2) ahead of the
Steclers (6-3) in the AFC
North race.
Holmes took umbrage on
Wednesday when a reporter
ao;;ked why the Steelers couldn't find their rhythm while
producing the SIXth fewest
yards (226) they've had in a
home garne since moving into
Heinz Field in 200 I .
To Holmes. the problem
was that the Steelers didn't
finish the drives they had, settling four times for field goals,
not that they couldn't find
their game.
"How could we not find a
rhytnm when we drove the
ball all the way down the
field?" Holmes said. ''We just
didn't put up points on the
board.''
Still. the Steelers didn't
exactly mount a lot of long
drives. Eight of their 11 possessions didn't move the ball
more than 26 yards and their
longest was for 49 yards. or
the equivalent of advancing
from a team's own 20 to the
opposing team's 31.
The Steelers' 226 yards
146 passing and 80 rushing were only 19 fewer than their
lowest offensive production at
Heinz Field. 207 yards against
Washington in 2004.

Big Ten
fromPage Bl
Like most of the other categories, a case could be
made for or against just
about anybody.
F E R E N T Z
APPLAUDS: After watching Iowa coach Kirk
Ferentz play for overtime
with the ball at his own 33
and just under a rnim,Ite left
in the regulation last week
at Ohio State, few might
believe that Ferentz would
support New England coach
Bill Belichick's late decision to go for it on fourthand-2 at his own 28 against
Indianapolis on Sunday
night.
Neither Ferentz 's conservative
strategy
nor
Belichick's risky move
worked. as both teams
wound up losing. But
Ferentz - a former assistant under Belichick in
Cleveland - raised some
eyebrows this week by calling Belichick's decision a
''great call:·
"You had two quarterbacks on the field that could
basically do anything."
Ferentz said of the Patriots'
Tom Brady and Colts'
Peyton Manning. "He's got
confidence in his offensive

"There wa-; just something
missing all day. &lt;md I don "t
know
what
it
was,"
Roethlisberger
said.
"Something was weird (\bout
the day. I don't know if it was
the (mid-60s) weather in
November or what it was.
Even the crowd at the be~in­
ning - everything was JUSt
kind of different. No excuse."
Holmes suggested that if
Roethlisberger telt that way. it
explains why the Steelers lost.
"He"s the quarterback. He's
got control over evetything.
who touche!~ the ball,'' Holmes
&lt;&gt;aid. "He dictates where the
ball ~oes, and if he felt that
way. 1t's probably why we didn't win the ballgame."
Of course. Holmes (7 catches, 88 yards) had a much better day than Roethlisberger
(20 of 40, 174 yards, I interception) so the offense's
repeated stalling might not
have seemed as evident to

him.
To Holmes, it would have
helped if the Steelers had run
the ball more. Rashard
Mendenhall was coming off a
!55-yard game in Denver, but
he was limited to 13 carries for
36 yards.
"The last game (in Denver)
those big plays opened up for
us," because the Steelers ran
the ball effectively, Holmes
said.
Holmes, the Super Bowl
MVP, also offered this suggestion: "Get the ball to the playmakers."
Not allowing the third kickoff return touchdown the
Steelers have yielded in four

AP photo

Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger throws
a pass against the Cincinnati Bengals in the second half of
the NFL football game in Pittsburgh, Sunday.
games might have helped
a~ainst Cincinnati. too. But
k1cker Jeff Reed isn't about to
take the blame for being one
of the 11 would-be tacklers
who missed Bernard Scott
during his pivotal 96-yard
return.
. ,
Reed was surprised to be
singled out for not brin~ing
down Scott, especially smce

football team, and with game schedule with no byes
good reason. You know. can wear on players who
same thing. If it would have take a pounding each week
worked, it'd be a great call. in the physical Big Ten.
It didn't work so, 'Why'd
Penn State linebacker
you do that?"'
Sean Lee feels like he's get''If we had Tom Brady I'd ting stronger as the season
probably be considering the winds down.
other way." he said.
Of course. the senior had
GO
GREYHOUND:
the
benefit of getting three
The Minnesota football
weeks
off at midseason
team is taking about a fivehour bus ride to and frqm · after spraining his left knee
Iowa rather than flying this - though Lee would much
weekend. The school made rather have been playing.
StilL the captain is fresher
the decision to save some
money during thest: diffi&lt;:ult than many of his teammates. He played well last
economic times.
The Golden Gophers will week against Indiana. fin watch a movie and make a ishing with I 0 tackles and
lunch stop about halfway to especially helping out on
break up the monotony for a pass coverage.
''It's probably the best
team used to flying the
friendly skies to road I've felt since my injllly,"
Lee said.
games.
The hard-nosed Lee says
Seniors will be allowed to
pick the movies for the trip . the aches and pains that nag
QB Adam Weber says he is a player on Sundays and
lobbying for football-relat- Mondays becomes irreleed flicks like "Remember vant as the week inches
toward game day. ·
the Titans'' and "Rudy.''
''I'm a big believer that by
"This is our first road
trip,'' Weber said. ''I was Saturday you're going to
talking to the hockey team feel fresh," Lee said. "By
to see how they do it and the end of the year is when
they have the freshmen pick you're playing your best
the movies. I don't know if football."
LONE STAR: Michigan
I trust some of the movie
hasn't had a lot to be proud
selections they'll pick."
Coach Tim Brewster of this season - especially
cracked, "I get veto power on defense.
Brandon Graham is an
though."
LEE'S KNEES: An 11- exception. The senior DE

he had to run from one side ~f
the field to the other to try to
make the play.
A
"That was about a 50-yaw
sptint for me. and my job is to .
make him cut back inside and
he went inside of me," Reed
said. "I just look at those people (who were critical) like
they don't know what they're
talking about."
leads the nation with 21
tackles for losses and is the
first Wolverine with at least
20 in consecutive seasons
since Mark Messner did it
two decades ago. He has
had at least orie sack in six
of the last seven games. giving him 27 I /2 for his career
to trail only Messner in
school historv.
Graham. though. can't
take much joy in his success
that has improved his stock
for the NFL draft because
the Wolverines are a loss
away from having two
straight losing seasons for
the first time since 1963 .•
"We all had a bad v
because our goals \veren
fulfilled.'' he said. "It's not
about me. It's about the
team."
QU I CK -HI TTE RS:
Other games Saturday
include Purdue at Indiana
for the Old Oaken Bucket
and Penn State at Michigan
State for the Land Grant
Trophy ... Of course. Iowa
and Minneo;;ota square off
for the 75th time for the precious pig named Floyd of
Rosedale. a bronze. 21-inch
long likeness of a porker. ...
Players of the week:
Wisconsin
QB
Scott
Tolzien. Penn State LB
Navarro Bowman and
Michigan State K Brett
Swenson.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

but it didn't do much good
as Cleveland never crossed
Baltimore's 45.
The Lions' defense is
hardly ferocious. Detroit is
giving up a league-high
29.3 points per game, so if
the Browns are looking for
a breakout, this is the week.
Quinn was only 13 of 31
for 99 yards again:,t the
Ravens and finished with a
23.5 rating, a number similar to the ones that got
Derek Anderson benched.
Quinn remains confident he
can do the job and he's trying to keep his teammates
pushing forward together.
"We're seeing improvements.'' he said. "They may
be small. But we always
have hope and faith that.
we'll get better."
f

I

�-----~~--------.-_..,.-----~-----:---=-~----- --~--

Thursday, November 19, 2009

- ---~

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Lawn Service............................................... 334
Music/DanceJOrama ....................................336
Other Servtces.............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrical.....................................340
Professional Services.................................342
Repairs ....................................................-344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security........................................................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertainment ..................................352
Financial............'.........................................400
Financial Services .......................................405
Insurance ....................................................410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education ....................................................500
Business &amp; Trade School...........................505
Instruction &amp; Training .................................510
Lessons........................................................515
Personal .....................................................520
Animals .......................................................600
Animal Supplies ..........................................605
Horses ..........................................................610
Livestock......................................................615

I

Pets...............................................................620

Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ..........................._ ....................700
Farm Equipment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ...........................................720
to buy..................................................725

................................................ 900
.................................................905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ............:..........................................915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies...................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ......................................................950
Hobby/Hunt &amp;Sport....................................955
Kid"s Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy................................................970
Yard Sale .....................................................975

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ........................................................... 1005
Bicycles...................................................... 101 0
Boats/Accessories .................................. 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles .............................................. 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Renta1/lease ....................................2005
Autos .........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
CommerciaVIndustrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utility.............................................2030
Trucks .......................................................2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ..............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ......................................3000
Cemetery Plots......................................... 3005
Commercial...............................................3010
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ........................................ 3025
Land (Acreage)......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial...............................................3510
Condominiums ..........................................3515
Houses for Rent... ..................................... 3520
Land (Acreage)......................................... 3525
Storage......................................................3535
Want to Rent ..............................................3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers.......................................................4010
Rentals .......................................................4015
Sales.......................................................... 4020
Supplies .....................................................4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property........................................5000
Resort Property for sale ...........................5025
Resort Property for rent... .................:......5050
Employment..............................................6000
Accounting/Financial ...............................6002
Adminlstrative/Professional. ....................6004
Cashier/Cierk............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care .....................................6008
Clerical .......................................................6010
Construction.............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery .....................................6014
Education ..................................................6016
Electrical Plumbing.................................. 6018
Employment Agencies .............................6020
Entertainment ........................................... 6022
Food Services...........................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................. 6026
Help anted· General.................................6028
Law Enforcement ......................................6030
Maintenance10omestic ............................6032
Management/Supervtsory ........................ 6034
Mechanics .................................................6036
Medlcal......................................................6038
Musical .....................................................6040
Part·Time·Temporaries ............................6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales..........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ........................................6052

W~f'J SH~ s

ON A'Die(.

a
0

{')
0

IH'{

~

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today, 740-446-4367
1·800·214·0452
gal pol!scareercullege .edu
Accred1ted Member Accredit·
mg Counc11 for Independent
Coll&amp;ges and Schools t2748

600

w ww. comics.com

© 2009 by NEA, Inc.
Farnt Equipment

Yard Sale

Autos

Generic Round-Up. 41 o/o
Glyphosate. 2 1/2 gal
$40.
Limited
supply.
740-256·6038

Garage Sale, Fri &amp; Sat.
Nov. 20 &amp; 21, 9AM·3PM
St. Rt. 588, Rio Grande.
Book Sale, over 1,000
Books, Author Patterson,
King.
Comwell,
Ric&amp;.
Koontz.
and Grisham.
Also 100 children books
&amp; 1 00 cook books &amp;
many more. Lots of other
things. Phone 645·6509.

2008
Pontiac
G6
$14,200. 304·812·0095.

Animals

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surprised' Check out our
inventory
at
1 112 yr old male shih· used
Carpoo. free to a good home www.CAREO.com.
Equipment
wlo
small
children. michael
740-446-2412
740·379·2306
Yard Sale 164 Ann Dr.,
Gallipolis. Sectional sofa,
AKC boxers 2 Fawns, 4 STIHL Sales &amp; Service
52" HD Color TV &amp; Lots
Black w/ white markings Now Available at Carmi·
of other items. Friday,
ready by
Dec.
14th chael
Equipment Nov. 20 8 am til ??
304-882·2760.
740·446·2412
Yard
Sale
Nov.
AKC Labrador Retriever
pups. Blk 5250. Choco- Hay, Feed, Se~d, Grain 19·20-21, 9-? 6 miles out
Jerrys Run Ad Apple·
late $300, 740·820-5357
Hay for sale round bales, grove 304·576·2635.
or 740·352·3060
barn kept 304·675·1743
AKC mimature Schnau· or 1·470·339·0143.
Recreational
1000
zers. Parti &amp; Chocolates.
Vehicles
Parents
on
premises.
900
Merchandise
7 40-441-1657.
Pets

I

CKC Yorkre Pups $500 F
$450 M. 7 wks old
446-7006.
Shots
&amp;
Wormed.

ATVs
Fuel I Oil/ Coal
Wood I G as

I

Honda
Four
Wheeler
TRX-420 for Sale. TE
Blue. 2 Wheel Drive
For sale Amencan Bull· Seasoned Firewood Del. electric shift. bought new
dog pups 4 male. 3 fe· call 304·675·3508
April 2009. 4 miles • Paid
males
$500.00
$3,975.00 new. Asking
304-675-8157
$3.000.00. Please call
Seasoned firewood.
(740) 388·9024.
hec to good home mak Pnt All Hardwood.
Belly Pig 304-675-2i 'i6.
740·853·2439
or
Campers/ RVs &amp;
Free Blue Healer I Rat 740·446·9204.
Trailers
Terrior mix pups 6wks
Seasoned firewood.
RV
olcJ304·675·2156.
Serv1ce at Carmichael
All Hardwood.
Free Lab mix pups 6 740·853·2439
or Trailers
weeks old 304·675·5361 740·446·9204.
740·446-3825
or 740·645·5851 ,
Furniture
AV s .
t c
.
Free to good home Black
ervtce a
armlLab pups 10 weeks old Nice
r·
ha·r chael
Trailers
lvrngroom
c , . 740·446·3825
304·675·6267
Clean. Not wom. Free. =
~~~~~~~=
Motorcycles
Full Blooded Golden Re· 446·1987.
triever
puppies.
1st
Hobby/ Hunt &amp; Sport 2007
Suzuki
DAZ
shots/wormed.
400-Super Motard. Blk.
7 40·853·1955.
\\ mchc,lcr m&lt;&gt;Jel 70 270 2941 m1• Always indoors
To good home 2 Black cal new m "'-" made tn SC and covered. Almost like
new.
fuzzy kittens&amp; 1 Muli·col· S7l~J.OO OBO.
740•245 •0611 .
ored &amp; 1 female adult cat Thomp,on Center Omega doguitars@yahoo.com
304·675·1310.
'iO ~nl. Mulllclooder Blue
bll ,

700

Apartments/
Townhouses
1999
Clayton
double
wide 28x44, 3 bedroom, CONVENIENTLY
LO·
2 bath, $22.500 090, CATED
&amp;
ArrORD·
740-591-9721
or ABLE• Townhouse apart·
7 40·992·1599
ments.
and/or
small
houses for rent. Call
Package Deal, 4 br. 2 740•44 1-1111 tor applibth, 2 story, 314 base- cation &amp; information.
menl, fenced 1n yard,
central air &amp; heat newer Free Rent Special !I!
ductwork &amp; thermo con· 2&amp;3BA apts $395 and
trol damper system fairly up, Central Air
WID
new 92% efficiency fur· hookup,
tenant
pays
nance; 1 small house, 2 electric.
Call between
br., 1 car garage, already the hours 01 8A. 8P.
has tenant;
1 large
EHO
80x20 w115• addon &amp; at·
Ellm View Apts.
lie. former boat &amp; mower
(304)882·3017
shop; 1 additional lot, _ _...;.....;.._ _ _ __
level &amp; cleared off, all 4 Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
are conviently connected ceptlng applications for
on a city block, take one wailing list for HUD sub·
take all will not split up, sidized. 1-BR apartment
Cleland
Reality. for the elderly/disabled.
740·992·2259 Cass Cle· call675·6679
land or James Pickens at
~
225·810·9927
asking
~

5Hl3 MA~B?
Me- tJERvDJs

PT or FT posi110n, BA &amp; 500
Education
Masters degree. Strong
preaching,
teaching.
leadership &amp; counseling
Business &amp; Trade
skills.
School

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary..................................205
Happy Ads....................................................210
lost &amp; Found............................................... 215
MemoryfTI\ank You ..................................... 220
Notices........................................................ 225
Personals.....................................................230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors..................................................316

Houses For Sale

Financial

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
TAAILERS.COM
740-446-3825

A&lt;tec

Bl.a~,;k

!ll&lt;:l(.k.

2-Xx I Ox+!

Sinm1on.,
scop~

S300 00 or )200.00 wil•ul
SCOjX'
~(J4.675-5K15
or
~04 WJ 5361

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

2000

Automotive

Autos
1999 Lincoln To"n Car
exec ,erie' 94 •700 mile,.
lce~thcr
rntcr ver) good
cond 104-6 7 1.~X2l

2002
Oodge
Intrepid,
AutomatiC
Air,
52000
WantTo Buy
OBO.
256·1652
or
256·1233.
Absolute Top Dollar • sil· 1998 Dodge Neon. Stanver/gold
COinS,
any dard
$1600
OBO.
10KI14K!18K gold jew·
256·1233.
elry. dental gold, pre
1935
US
currency, 2005 Cavalier. s42oo.
$39oo.
proof/mint
sets,
dia· 2003
Cavalier
rnonds. MTS Coin Shop. 2004
Cavalier
$3600.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· 2007
Colorado
Truck
polis. 446·2842
56850. 256·6169.

Car For Sale- 1995 Toyota Tercel-No rust, some
dings
&amp;
flaws.
AC
AM!FM/CD 4 speed , 40
mpg
160,000
miles.
Runs
Amaz1ng.
new
tires, struts &amp; four wheel
alignment. $950 OBO
(740)248·9439 or (740)
490·5661
We have a full Inventory
of cars &amp; trucks starting
at
$1700.
Cavaliers,
Sunfires, Buicks, Saturns
&amp; more! Cook Motors,
328
Ja:kson
Pike.
(740)446·01 03.

$109,000 OBO
Used 3 bedroom home
with heat pump and de·
livery. Only $3995 Call
740·385·9621

For Sale or Rent: 5 m1
1 &amp; 2 Br. fumished apt.,
from
Holzer.
2-Story,
start 5450 &amp; up plus
3BR, 2BA. LA, FA, 1
dep.. No pels. Racine.Oh
:~i~;ew ~~:~•ndow~; .74_0;..·.59·1-·5;..1_7_4 _ _ __
$600/mo. 740·256·1556
Middleport Beech St., 2
br.. fumished apts • utilil·
House tor sale. 3 BR, 1
lies pa1d, dep. &amp; ref . No
BA Ranch on Woodland
Pets (740)992·0165
Dr.
www.orvb.com.
.;.7:!i
40;:·=
44:i1!::i
·7~4:!i
43=·~~~~ Apartment ava1lable now
;;;
Aiverbend
Apts.
New
Land (Acreage)
Haven WV Now accept·
ing
applications
for
30 acres of hunting prop· HUD·subsid,zed.
one
erty in Gallia Co. Call Bedroom Apts. Utilities
740-379-9887
included. Based on 30%
of adjusted income. Call
Real Estate 304-882-3121,
available
3500
Rentals for Semor and Disabled
people.

5

-==;:;:;=;;;:;;:==•

Apartments/
Townhou•es

and 2 bedroom apts.,
fumished
and
unfur·
Trucks
mshed. and houses 1n
Pomeroy 3nd Middleport.
1997 Forj F-250 7.3
security deposit required.
Power
Stroke
Diesel. no pets. 740·992·2218
Ext. cab, white, tool box,
5th wheel. New Trans· 1 BR Apt. Tn·Level,
m1ssron. 174,000 miles. Close to Holzer Hosp1tal.
$8,700. 740·416·0865
No Pets. Ref + Dep.
Req. 740-794·0831
Vans
1 BR Upsta1rs apt. 720
1992
Ply.
Voyager, Second Ave. Gallipolis.
$1550, Rebuilt Mtr. 8.500 New carpet &amp; pamt. AJC.
MI.
All
Elec. Water, sewer &amp; trash pd.
WID 1nc. No pets;no
740·245-5014.
smoking. 5395 dep./$395
Real Estate mo.
Ref.
Day:
3000
Sales 740-645·2192. After 6:
740·446-01 01.
For Sale By Owner
12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446·0390.
Beautiful
hunter's

home
dream.

more details.
www.orvb.com

and
For

go
to
or
call

.;.7!i!i
40~-7~9!=!4!::i·1::13i:ii2~.~~~~

-========
"'

Houses For Sale
•
3 yr. old 1,152 sq. ft.
ranch home. 2 BR. 2 BA
w/ whirlpool tubs. Lg. LR.
Eat-in kttchen. All elec·
lric. Refri9. Range. Dish·
washer. Gallipolis City
School
Distnct.
2.99
acres. 6x24 deck. 5 min.
from City Limit 569,500
(740)446·7029.
-------Madison A&gt;~e. Pt. Pleas·
ant • frame house On 2
lots. excellent location tor
2 future rentals. $8,000.
740·709·1858

1 br. Apt. tn Pt. Pleasant,
fum. ,very clean has
washer/dryer,
no pets.
non·smokers
call
304·675·1386.
--------1BR, Stove &amp; Refrig.
Furn.
Utrl.
pd.
S400/ma+S400 dep. 258
State St. No smoking, no
pets. 740-446·3667
--------2 bedroom. liv1ng room,
kitchen. bath Apartment.
Have Central Air, fur·
nished
w1th
couch,
charrs,
washer,
dryer,
sto e m·c
1 rowave• beds •
v •
dining table and chairs
'
$400 depos't
1 $450 a
·
·
month.
Call
304 882 2523
Lea e
·
·
v
Message and Number if
not at Home
·
2 br. downstairs ktt.
app.,a/c &amp; furnace. W1D
hookup $350.00 a mon.
+
$200.00
dep.
304·675·6375.

New 3 bedroom 2 bath 238 1st Ave. Lg. Upsta1rs
overlooking
river
home only $229.62 per apt.
month.
Call Furn. kitchen. 2 persons.
S425+uhl. Dep. req. Ref
740·385·2434
1800's farmhouse. 3-4 Call 446·4926
bedrooms. approx. 20
acres.
. 740·992-6968
evenmgs
Flatwoods Ad. Pomeroy,
3 bedroom, 2 bath, ga·
rage, 740·992·5989

- - and
--- -down·
-3 room
bath
sta1rs first months rent &amp;
deposit. references re:
quired, No Pets and
clean. 740·441·0245

2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
zer Hosp11a1 on SR 160
C/A. (740) 441-0194
Island V1ew Motet has
vacancies
$35.00Night.
740-446·0406

Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr., from 5365 to
S560.
740·146·2568.
Equal Housing Opportu."
mty. This 1nstltut1on is an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vider and Employer.
Clean 1 br. turn. apart·
ment, Dep &amp; Ref req. no
smoking.call
304-675·2970. after 4pm
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex
1n
town,
5475/mo.
Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
place. 446·1271.
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Vrllage
Manor
and
Riverstde
Apts. 1n, Middleport, from
$327
to
5592.
740-992·5064.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.
Modern
BR
apt.
446-3736.
-------Modem· 1BR apt. Call
740-446-0390
Nice
BR wash-dry.
Stove &amp; Frrdge. ·All Ut1li·
tres Call 740-446·9585.
$600'-- 0 $500 d
'"' ·•
ep.
Nice clean efficiency apt.
conven1ent1y located ref.
&amp; dep. req. no pets
304·675-5162

_____. .;. __
Pleasant Valley Apart·
ments 1s now tak1ng ap·
plications tor 2, 3, &amp; 4
Bedroom HUD Subsi·
drzed Apartments. Appli·
cations are taken Monday through Friday 9:00
am-1:00 pm. Off1ce IS lo·
cated at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve, Point Pleasant.
WV. (304)675·5806.
Spnng
Valley
Green
Apartments 1 BR at
$395+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
740-645-8599

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses For Rent

Rentals
Get Your Message Across W1lh A Dally Sen!lnel

Trailer
Lots
for
!lank Rcpo' (S':f d&lt;•wn. I~ Rent-Addison
1~nr, , !;w ·\I'RI lor hst111g' Pike-$150/mo
+
sec.
~00-620-49~6 e' R027
dep.
Water
pd.
446-3644.
1 BR Furn House on
Raccoon Rd. $350 +
2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2 peodep.
No
pets.
ple, $300/month,
Re740-446-1759.
femces. No Pets, NO
1 Br house in New Ha- CALLS
after
7pm
ven WV $300.00 a mon. 740-441·0181
+
dep.
no
pets --....;,.--------304_593_0696_
3 BR Mobile Home, 1 1/2
BA, $450/mo. $450 dep.
•
_
,
1BR Cottage in Gallipo740 256 6408
lis. No Pets. Dep. &amp; Ref. 256-6718,441-0583
req.
Call
after
5.
446-2074
Trailer in town Rac1ne, 2
28R Home. Stove &amp; br., 1 bath, all electric,
fridge turn. WID hookup carport, large front porch,
'\ 1&lt;J'IIm•&gt;'

3 bed,

2 tmh. 2

2

BULLETIN BOARD
1

June 3, 2010
to June 6, 2010

FOR SPECIAL .
NEEDS
CHILDREN ONLY

Pleasant Valley
Well ness
Center
Thursday,
December 3, 2009
5 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

Light refreshments
will be served

Even though we held you in ou.r
arms just a little while
\Ve hold in ours forever.

Happy Birthday
Grasshopper
Caden Isaiah Day
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

&lt;J-I£artland 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:
f'&gt;alltiiOhs D&lt;111P l!::nbunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpubllcations.com

•

For appointments please

Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16X80,
Country
Setting.
367·0266 or 339-3366.

Happy Ad

PEAK- SEASON
Chartered Coach

. Santa &amp; Mrs. Claus

call304-675-8639

OCEANFRONT rooms at the
Marriott Fairfield Inn &amp; Suites
$415/person (quad)
$445/person (triple)
$51 0/person (double)
$775/person (single)
Limited seats!
No refunds
If purchasing for a Christmas
gift, we can provide
a certificate for presentation
Cash, check, credit cards and
money orders accepted
Passengers of all ages
welcome
To make reseNations please
call PVH Community
Relations
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service

.HI h11 'IIUH I

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
WV036725

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

V.C. YOUNG Ill
g92-6215
740·591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLY INSURED

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544

Hours
7:00am-8:00pm

Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

LEWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

J&amp;L
Construction

MICHAEL'S
SERVICE CEI'\TER

1555l\;\'E A\ c.

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

.on

Pomcro
• 011 &amp; filter change
• Tune Ups
• Brake Service
• AC Recharge
• :\linor exhau't
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmission Filter
&amp; FluiJ Change
• General ~techanic
work

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

All Types Of
Concrete Work
29 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Jn,urcd

(740) 992-0910

l'ree bllmatc~

ROBERT
BISSEll
Sales

Help Wanted. General

Help Wanted· General

Help Wanted· General

The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
Financing • New 2010
Doublewide $37,989
Ask about $8,000 Rebates
mymidwesthome.com
740·828·2750

St. Mary's Medical Center, a 393 bed tertiary
care teaching facility with
med1cal schoo1 affiliation,
has immediate opemng
for the following position:

Increase Your Earning
Potential!
Up to $25,000+ /yearl

subject to on call status
non-business.
during
hours, employee maybe
required
to deal with
situations which are po·
tentially dangerous to client and worker
Employee performs related
work ae reqwed. Mim·
mum
Qualifications:
Training bachelor's Degree 111 Social Work from
accredited collage or un•versity.
Substitution:
Bachelor's degree 1n . Sociology,
Psychology,
Counseling.
Criminal
Justice, behavioral Set·
ence
Interpersonal
Communications, Human
Services Education, SpeCial Education, or Elementary Education from
an accredited college or
university may be substituted for the degree tn
Social Work.
Special
Requirements:
Eligible
for
temporary
Social Work license or licensed as a Social
Worker Graduate Social
Worker, or Certrfied Social Worker by the State
Of West
Virginia Board
of social Work Examiners.
Candidate
must
have successfully completed the Social Service
Worker Ill Civil Service
Exarn~nation.
Salary
range
is
$22.224.00-$41,112.00.
Contact Betty Jo Scarberry at 304-373-2560
ext. 2190

"The Proctorville
Difference"
$1 and a deed Is all you
need to own your dreaM
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888-565-0167
Trade in your old singlewide for a new home. 0
money down. 446-3570.
6000

Employment

Child/Elderly Care
Position open at Darst
Adult Group Home, call
for
interview
740-992-5023

Wanted 'omconc to live in
w 1 elderly lady 6-7 day' ,,
4 br. &amp; 2 ba. $675.00 a
740.828.2750
rT'on. + $675.00 dep. call --"""'!"O_.H,.IO""''~S--- week, private bedroom prefer
elderly
lady
740-973-8999.
BEST BUYs
non-,moker. non-drinker rn
Ripley area 304 372-1 !&gt;58
2010 3BR Doublewide
or 304-532 3498 call •fler
In Memory
S39,9n
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba • 7pm. no later than 9pm.
FHAS349mo
Education
In lovmg memory of
2010 3br/2ba Single
Carl ~ . Gorb) who
from S199mo
Part-time
instructors
pas&gt;cd lmay :\'m. 19.01
MIDWESTHOMES
needed during the day
We m1's }OU so muchmymidwesthomes.com
in: mathematics.
ecoand no one can take your
nomics, and accounting.
740.828.2750
place:. We love you.
Mathematics and ecoLook around you and be RFDLICED TO :)115.000
nomic instructors must
disturbed. Lo~&gt;k within
2004 Clayton munufacturcd have a master's degree
you and be depressed
home " lllo&lt;:k foundation, 3 in the discipline. If interI..ook to Jesus and be at br 2 full balhs, lg. kit..w/ isested please email a re·
rest Dearly loved •md
lanJ &amp; pilnlr)·, \love, rcsume
and cover letter to
sadlv missed.
fndg., dish" '"h~r. indud.,
Wife- Pauline Gorby
on 11 10 acre S&lt;'perate garJge jdanicki@gallipolisca.Son- Ron Gorby
2~x~8.
10 min. from town reercollege.edu
Gmndson- Christopher on Q,hel Rd
Help Wanted· General
Gorbv
3114-372-5558.
Happy Ad

PERFECT GIFT FOR
CHRISTMAS!
Virginia Beach Getaway

2

Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre. 5% down. $525
3BR
house
4
rent.
mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
$500/mo. $500 dep. No
740-446-3570.
pets.
On
Rt.
160.
446-8495.
Sales
3br,
$475. Jmonth
m
Sulton
Mobile
Syracuse. Deposit. HUD 1995
approved.
No
Pets Home 14x70, 2BR, 2BA.
304-675-5332 weekends $8900. Sets on rented
lot, but could be moved.
740-591·0265
Call
for
more
1nfo:
Hoouse for rent. 3br. (740)645-6476
1ba, W&amp;D, Stove &amp; Refridge provided, in Galli- Country living- 3-5BR,
polis, close to school, 2-3 BA on property.
Dep.
&amp;
Ref.
req. Many floor plans! Easy
$600/mo. Call 446-7723 Financing! We own the
btw 5-7 p.m.
bank.
Call
today!
New log apt-2 BR-Porter 866-215-5774
area,
HP/Cent.
Air.
AA·Tired of paying rent?
S500/mo. Dep &amp; ref.
We can get you into a
446-2801
new manufactured home
Wiseman Real Estate-4 for as low as 5% down.
rentals
available-call Call to be pre-qualified
446-3644 for more 1nfo. 866-838-3201
All
in-town-vanous
AAA BRAND-NEW!
pnces-references &amp; sec.
deposits required.
HUGE 4 BR
2 Bath SECTIONAL
Manufactu~ed
4000
2x6 walls, Large Chefs
Housmg
k•tchen, 50 year stdtng,
Dlx appliance pkg, Pvt
ut•lrty nn, Giant walk-In
Rentals
closets. Pitch ceilings.
2 BR Mobile Home, No
Giant great room++++
pets. Water, sewer, trash
NEW FHA FINANCING!
included. At Johnson's
$47,651
Mobile
Home
Park.
MIDWEST HOMES
740-645-0506.
mymtdwesthome.com

13'~columl'l 'nctl weekdays

2l' column inch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155

in unfinished basement. ~~r~~ ~ ~ch:~!ii~.rai',. ~
NO smokers or pets. per month water &amp; garRef. &amp; dep. req. $SOO. bage 1ncluded, NO Pets,
Call
before
9
p.m. 740-949-2217
740-256-9190
Trailer, 2 br, furnished,
3 br . house at 407 3rd w/d, cable TV, construeSt. New Haven $425.00 tion workers welcome,
a mon.
$425.00 dep.• $400 month, $200 secuNO
PETS
•
_ _
_
rity deposit, two minutes
304 882 3652
from
bridge.
3 br 2 ba. all elcc O\·cr 740·992-3362
1700 sq ft.&amp; 2 car gar. 15
Double Wide, 3BR, 2BA,
mtle' lwm Pt Plea $700.00
$575 rent. $575 dep.
amcm
~04-593-0205
or
HUD-ok,
1722B
~04-~86-200.'\
Chatham Ave. 645·1646
3 br. 1 1/2 bath, LangsVllle
address,
Salem Mobile home for rent,
Hud accept call before
Townsh1p,
$450
per 9pm 304-675-3423.
month, 740-742-2628
3BR 1 bath home n LeGrande Blvd $650 rent
$650 dep. renter pays
utilities. NO PETS. Call
446-3644 for applicaton.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

PATIENT ACCESS
NURSE
Special weekend Per
Diem
Responsible for the facili·
tation of patient transfers
and referral processes to
St. Mary·s Medical Center. This individual will
answer all calls to the
Reler'al Center line and
facilitate rap1d acceptance and transport of
eligible patients by contacting physicians and
obtaining bed assignments. Critical care
and/or ED nursing expe·
rience is required. Must
be eligible for WV RN licensure.
Excellent wage and work
family benefits, including
free health 1nsurance for
full-time employees_.
Please visit our website
at www.st-marys.org and
apply on-line under Careers &amp; Education.
EOE
Do you enjoy helping
people? If so, I will give
you . FREE RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an
1ncome just for moving in
and helping my 87 year
old mother. You will live
here as if il were your
own home, minus the ex·
penses. 740-416-3130.
·a-u-al-ity_C_o_n-tr-ol-._e_a_rn_u_p
to $15 an hour, evaluate
retail stores, training provided,
call
1"800 -901 ' 2694

Crushing &amp; sizing opera- Studio 1oo, now hiring
lion. Shift work. New Ha- stylists. busy location,
ven. WV. 304·882-3944
call 740·992-2288 leave
message
Communications Manager
Responsible for development and execution of a
marketing plan to inclue
outreach, public rela·
lions. public speaking,
marketing the Agency
and its services. Develop
a legislative plan that includes work with lobbyists and legislators and
advocating for services
for the elderly and disabled. Coordinate special events.
Bachelor's degree required, Master's preferred. in communications, marketing. or related field. Experience in
public relat1ons. marketing, and project management. required. Must
have experience and capabilities with graphic design programs. Supervisory experience, preferred.
Send Resume and Ref·
erences to
Human Resources
Area Agency on Aging
District 7, Inc.
F32 URG, P.O. Box 500
Rio Grande, Ohio
45674
fax: (740)245·0029
email:
lshong@aaa7.org
Resumes Accepted Until Pbsltion Is Filled
EEO/AA Employer
Help the NRA Protect
Your Gun Rights!
Part Time Dayshlft
Fixed Schedule
8:00am-1:30pm + weekend day
Call and Schedule Your
1
Interview:
1·888-IMC-PAYU ext.
2321
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
om

Choose to work w1th the
world's largest nonprofits
such as the American
Heart Association and St
Jude Children's Research Hospital.
Excellent Benefits
Weekly pay + bonus potential
All Major Holidays OFF
WITH PAY!
Medical, Dental, EAP,
401K!
No Experience Necessary
Paid On-site Training
Call NOW to learn how
you can start earning
your potential!
1-888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
1941
Apply online:
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
om
Electrician with Industrial
Experience.
Certification
needed.
not
304-882-3944.
Heavy equipment mechanic
and
operator.
New Haven, WV location. 304-882·3944.

Quality Control
F-ARN up to 515.00 an hr.
e'~luate retail store,, trarn·
in£ ~rovided 877-766-9507
SOCIAL
SERVICE
WORKER Ill
West
Virginia
Department of Health &amp; Human
Resources mason Dis- Equal Opportunity Emtrict Offtce are seeking ployer
qualified applicant for the r--=,..,...,=--:--o--=-:::o--.
position of Social Service
Worker Ill. Under general
supervision performs ad·
vanced level professional
social service work in
providing services to the
public 111 one or multiple
program areas. Work requires lhe use of a personal automobile for local travel. Employee is

• New Homes
• Garages

740.446.9200

Stop &amp; Compare

2459 St. Rt. 160 • GalllpoUs

Replacement

~c~

Windows and
\'inyl Siding
Specialists. LTD

(740) 742-2563

TATIOX,UC

• Siding • Vinyl
WindO\\S • \leta!
and Shingle Roofs

Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

• Pole Barns

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING 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
Experience

PSI CONSTRUCTION

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

Room Additions. Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Homes, Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured

Dump Truck
Service
We do driveways
Limestone • Gravel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

Rick Price · 17 yrs. Experience
WV#040gs4 Cell740·416·2960 740-992-0730

740-985-4422

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

Cell

H&amp;H
Guttering

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
CosmetologiSt
needed given that on Saturday,
for busy local salon call November 21, 2009 at
10:00 a.m., a public
740-992-2200

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:
2001 Olds Bravada
1GHDT13W212222747
2007 Honda Civic 51
2HGFA55597H700793
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, re·
serves the right to bid
at this sale, and to with·
draw 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 Implied warranty given.
For further information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date contact Cyndle or Ken at
992-2136.
(11) 18, 19, 20
Public Notice
The Board of Trustees
of Letart Twp, Meigs
County will pe accept·
lng sealed bids for excess merchandise and
contents of Letart Ele·
mentary School build·
ing until Dec. 7, 2009,
5:00 pm at which time

bids will be opened. A
list can be obtained
from Clerk Joyce White
(740) 247-3125 or the
Trustees Bob Morris
740-247·3421,
Dave
Graham 740-949-2281,
Chris Wolfe 740-949·
3315.
Board
of
Trustees reserves right
to accept or reject any
and/or all bids.
Board of Trustees
Bob Morris
Dave Graham
Chris Wolfe
(11) 19, 22, 24

*Prompt and Quality
Work
* Rea~onablc Rates
*Insured
*Experiencc.:d
References A\ailablc'
C'all Gary Stanley @
740-59 J -8044
Please leave message

Dietary Aide
Enjoy a new career In
long-term
care'
Rocksprings Rehab Cen-

;;lf/JI11
a..IS.&gt;IC f.Al RI:STOIUnOS &amp; rUTS

"&amp;w,~ f14d1fa4"

Part-time
RN
charge
nurse pos1tion. Russell
Nursing
Home.
5176
PUBLIC NOTICE
Washington Rd, Albany,
NOTICE OF AVAIL· Oh
. 45710,
ph
ABILITY FOR PUBLIC 740-698-3631,
fax
INSPECTION
740-698-4703
Douglas
W.
Little,
Trustee of the Ernest &amp;
Get A Jump
Maxine Wingett Educational Trust, has filed
his annual return of a
prlvf)te
foundation,
Form 990-PF, with the
Internal Revenue Service for tax year begin·
nlng July 1, 2008 and
ending June 30, 2009,
In accordance with In·
ternal Revenue Code
Section (6104(b), this
form Is available for
public Inspection at the
law Office of Douglas
W. Little, Trustee, at
211·213 East Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,
during the 180-day period beginning November 15th, 2009.
(11) 19

on
SAVINGS

co.

Now Selling:
• ford &amp; :'v1otorcraft
Parts • Engines.
Transfer Cases &amp;
Transmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement Sheet
Metal &amp; Components
For All ~lake' of Veh•d•'
Racine. Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates

(740) 992-5009
Cthlom Home Building
Steel Frame Building'
Building, Remodeling
General repair
n ''I\ .bankscclb.com
Free
• Backhoe •
• Brush Hogging
• Portable Bandmll
Trse Trimming • 8ettlng
Poles &amp; TruS$88

CaD 740·992·9572

~=~74;0~-~9~4~9-;1~9~5~6=;~~;;;;;~~~

ter is currently seeking a
Diet9ry Aide to assist 1n •
serving nutritional meals
and snacks to our residents! Apply tn perspn
at:
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Extendicare Health Services. Inc. IS an equal op·
portunity employer that
encourages
workplace
dtversity.

Public Notice

BA:'\KS
CONSTRUCTIO~

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653·965 7

Medical
NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS
Reference:
5715.17 Ohio Revi~;ed
Code
The Melg~ County
Board of Revision has
completed Its work of
equalization. The tax
returns for tax year
2009 have been revised
and the valuations
completed and are
open for public inspec·
tion in the office of the
Meigs County Auditor,
Second Floor, Court·
house, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Complaints against the
valuations, as established for tax year 2009
must be made in accordance with Section
5715.19 of the Ohio Revised Code. These
complaints must be
filed In the County Auditor's Office on or before March 31,2010. All
complaints filed with
the County Auditor will
be heard by the Board
of Revision in the manner provided by Sec·
tlon 5715.19 of the Ohio
Revised Code.
Mary T. Byer-HIII Meigs
County Auditor
(11) 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12,
13, 17, 18, 19

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

MIKE MARCUM

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!
Call out Toll Free
866-564-8679
LUV HOMES

CAREER
IN THE

Puhlic \otices in \el\\pape~.
Your Right to l\no11, Dclilered Right to \our Door.

www.tim'bucftelu:ablnetey.com

140-992-1611

740-856-2609

~~~-~~

M~P6woe~ Cabirletrv An~

• Complete
Remodeling

FIND AJOB
OR A NEW

CLASSIFIEDS

PUBIC
NOTICES

CONSTRUCTION

eat£
Marcum Construction
Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinvl &amp; wood siding
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740·985·4141
740·416-1834
Full~ insured &amp; honding aH1ilahll'
Free estimates- 25+ )Cars C:\IJcrienct•
C\ul affiliatrd "ith \li~t· \lan·um R•••lin~ ,\ Rt·mmld m~:t

New Construction and

~CDN:;;;;';I~;;;;:;;IY

;1

1~1·

&amp; MANUFACTURING, llC
AND SIDING INSTAllAnON

Specwli:e In Rt•placemem
For 0/da Homes

~\:

1~/ndoii'J

Trmlcr:r

No etrra charge to replm·e metal frame

I£0
Richard Smith
Co-O" ncr \Ice Prc,llk!ll
.u~.

Fre:;h :'\orth Carolina
SHRJMP

17-tll) 7-t2-2563
l..atrar. 0('\(f rnucn. hfnd' nn

S10 per lb Ca'h ont)
Pmr t&lt; required rn ad' anee
Shipm~nt' arnve e' c:T)

other Fridnv

·

�~~ ----- -------:-~~---------!""""'--~---:--~-

.·
Thursday, November 19, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

f UNKY WINKERBEAN

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Pocket
beeper
6 From the
Vatican
11 Yucca's
kin
12 Resort off
Venezuela
13 Star
14 Muscular
power
15 Book booboos
17 Brit. fliers
19 lrnpurlanl
time
20 Network
23 Kitchen
come-ons
25 Igloo
shape
26 Military
attack unit
28 Layout
unit
29 M k
a e
horse
sounds
30 Take in
3 1 uso
patrons
32 Tina of
"30 Rock"
33 Rave
music
35 Garnet
unit
38 Usual
values
41 Battle site
of 1836
42 Orlando
attraction
43 T urn red,
maybe
44 Wee

Tom Batiuk

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Ocean off
Cal .
2 Grow
o lder
3 Strong, as
a wind
4 Continually
5 Start a
game of
Todav'sAnswers
pool over 18 Band31 Board
6 Some
leader
33 Unexciting
bow ties
Shaw
34 "Yep"
7 Met
20 Employee
opposite
highlight
group
35 Train
21 TV host
unit
8 Groan
cause
22 Like some 36 Will Smith
9 Playwright
frat parties
biopic
Bu rrows
24 Hamm of 37 Kanye's
10 Bar topic
soccer
music
16 Whodunit 25 Happy
39 Cal.
poison
friend
heading
17 Coarse
27 Stocking 40 Hog
files
type
holder
_
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $475 (checklm.o .) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2, P.O. Box 536475, Orlan~o. rL 32853·6475
10

11

THELOCKHORNS
~I

&amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

UTTS

Patrick McDonnell

.. IT'S FROM M'l WIFE POKING ME IN CHURCH."

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
.Bil
Keane

hy Dave Green

2 5 4

8

8

'I!'

1
5
1

8

.4

6
7

8
8
2

TH E MENACE

4.

~ank Ketchum

Difficulty Level

***

~..

6 7 3
II 19

6 1•[1

B 6 £ L 9- 1~ 9 v G
G ~ 9 6~9 v £ L B
v L 9 BG£ 9 6 ~
6 9 G £ 8 L v ~ 99 £ -~ 17~ 6 tG L ,.. B..... 9·L v B 9 ~ 9 6 G£
9 9 6 Gt-L LB_ ~ £ v
~ G v 9 £ 16 B 9 L
--+- .,. -£ B L ~ 1 V 19 G 9 -6
,_

1

1-

WORRY, JO!;Y, M'I MOM SA'/5 NO MON5T"Sf'
SPEND AJ.J'/ TIM~ UND~MY 6~P-''

.,._

---

-

HAPPY BIRTiiDA'i for lhursda); r\ov. 19, 2009:
This vear. vou will make a difference no matter what
your choices
Your passion runs high; how you
foi"US
.. this inten.sity is, of course, your call. You will want
to change your pattern in your daily life. Sometimes we
simply act instead of choosing our priorities. Events this
year will encourage you. You ea-;ily could wind up
with a lemon. If you are single, the person you might
meet in your day-to-day travels will be very different.
as this year is one oi transformation. Avoid making any
long-term rommitmenb with thi-. change CX'\'I.ming. If
you are attached, the two of you will experience closeness with frequent distancing. Part of the Ciluse is that
you are changing, thus your significant other's reactions will vary. Don't jump to conclusions. Simply give
yourself and others space as changes happen! CAPRICOR!'\ keeps the ball rolling in any ronve~tion.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll Have: 5Dynamic; -i-Positive; 3-Average; 2-&amp;rso; 1-Difficult
ARIES (tv!arch 21 April19)
*****Be adventuresome and open to new possi·
bilities. Listen to your inner voice when trying to
remove an obstacle or figure out a solution. Rid your
mind of preconceived solution.-;. A meeting or gettogether proves to be fruitful. Tbnight: Some mind
candy. How about a movie?
T~URUS (April 2(}.~1ay 20)
****A partnership or friendship is tested frequently. You are coming from a place of security. \'\There
you see opportunities, others might feel jeopardized.
Understanding evolves to a new level. A boss has s~
ldcular dream&lt;&gt;. Tonight: A must appearance.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20)
**"**The unexpected O&lt;..'CUTS when vou least
expect it, imp"'-iing your work ,md relati!)nqhip9. Use
the mood of the moment to dear up the situation and
head in a new direction. Examine your long-tenn
need&lt;&gt;. Tonight Sort through invitation.-&gt;.
CANCER Oune 21 July 22)
*** Don t irritate a situation that might be more
volatile than you reali/.e. A partner will rome through
in multiples and ,11low greater flex.l'\ews from a dis·
lance could shake up the status quo. Tonight: lime to
1isil the gym more often.
LEO (July 2.,_Aug. 22)
*****The need for your problem--oldng technique!&gt; emerges. How you deal with,others relates

:rre.

5

2 9 4

6

~ENNI S

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

7

" The o nly sticks Kittycat w ill
g o afte r are FISHsticks."

William Hoest

...,_.__ -t--

•

directly to how much you can get done. Someone's
\'agueness and creativity pl\)\'e to be entking, drawing
you cla-.er. Tonight Let your hair dovm.
VJRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
*** If you can maintain -orne dist.m~"e from inunediate work demands, you will flow through what must
be done more easily. Seemingly great ide.~s come out of
the blue. You cannot control how someone r6ponds.
Tonight: Stay close to home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0.i. 22)
Keep communication flowing. )Ou have a
way of expressing youn;elf that draws many different
people. Though you have many gre&lt;1t ide&lt;1s, the que~
tion remains whether to in.'itrument them. Try to verify
inform,1tion. Tonight: Rerum calls, ,md then decide.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
* **Be aware of what is possible fin&lt;1ncially,
Sometimes you m ·e~"&gt;pend,. which i.s part of ,, tendency
to go to extremes. Be careful when dealing ,,;th a ~s
who is unu~-uall) hot-tempered and demanding.
Tonight: Spontaneity rules.
SAGITTARIUS (J'\01. 22-Dec. 21}
****Sometimes it is hard to dt'dde which wa\ to
go when you ha\e too many pos!-.ibihties. A dome--tic
matter could be more difficult or demanding lhan you
anticipated. Make calls and seek out those ell,, di'it.mce.
fonight: Hang with friends.
CAPRICOR...'J &lt;Dt.&gt;c. 22-Jan. 19)
***You might like to integr&lt;1!e infonnation that
comes in. A partner rould be quite upset at the lack of
con~"em you express. The unexpet..ied runs riot. Slow
down. think and integr,1te. 1ooight T,lk.e a long -01 er
due break.
AQUARIUS Uan. 20-feb. 18)
***** Where your friend::; cU'e is where the
Aquarian is the happiest. Surfllund your~lf ,,,th
friends. A meeting poinls to more information and
clSSOCialion.&lt;;. Your creativity surges when you're ''ith
others. Tonight: Careful with firiandal risks.
PISCES (feb. 19-March 20)
*** A must apperu-anre tu-;~s you into the limelight. You rrught be unnerved by recent evenl.;, If you
need to pull back. do. Retlect and obser\'e rather than
act or read. right now. Fatig.1e marks your mring.
"Ibnight: li&lt;;len .md think.

*****

jacqueline Bzgans £111 tl:e l'llt'nlcl
at ltttp:/!tc'fC'lUI/ICtjlldir~tlli&gt;;ar.cvm.

�-

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Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

MLB Hall of Farner
to sell cars

Cottrill in this year's recruiting class at
WVU.

MONROE, Ohio (AP) Former
Cincinnati Reds second baseman Joe
Morgan hopes to sell some red machines and plenty of vehicles in other colors - at
his new auto dealership in southwest Ohio.
Morgan took. part in groundbreaking
Tuesday for the future site of Joe Morgan
Honda. He is the majority owner of the
business that will be just off Interstate 75 in
Monroe, roughly midway between
Cincinnati and Dayton.
The baseball "Hall of Farner says he likes
the location and is hopeful the economy will
be stronger when the dealership opens next
summer.
The ESPN analyst and entrepreneur won
back-to-back Most Valuable Player awards
with the dominating "Big Red Machine''
Reds team of 1975-'76.

Steelers' Polamalu wearing
heavy brace
PITISBURGH (AP) - Steelers safety
Troy Polamalu wore a heavy brace on his
reinjured left knee while watching practice
Wednesday and did not take part in any
drills.
. Polarnalu limped off the field about 30
minutes before practice ended and did not
answer questions. He is all but certain to
miss Sunday's game at Kansas City, and he
mi&amp;ht not be ready for Baltimore on Nov.
29. \
Polamalu injured a knee ligament while
tackling Cincinnati's Cedric Benson on
Sunday. He missed four games after hurting
a different ligament during Pittsburgh's
opener.
If he starts in Kansas City, backup Tyrone
Carter would be in the lineup for the sixth
time, compared to five starts for Polamalu.
Carter also started once for safety Ryan
Clark.
Polamalu was injured in the first half of
two of those five starts.

WVU signs recruit
David Nyarsuk
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) - West
Virginia basketball coach Bob Huggins has
announced the signing of 7-foot-1 David
Nyarsuk to a letter of intent for 2010-11.
Nyarsuk attends Mountain State Academy
in Beckley. The Sudan native averaged 10.1
points, 9.5 rebounds and 2.9 blocked shots
per game last year at The Patterson School
in North Carolina.
Nyarsuk came to the United States
through a nonprofit group Lhal provid~s
opportunities in the United States for
African student-athletes who do not have
the means to advance their education in
their home countries.
Nyarsuk joins Logan High guard Noah

Shaq (shoulder) to sit out
at least 1 more game
WASHINGTON (AP) Shaquille
O'Neal could miss the Cleveland Cavaliers'
next couple of games with a strained shoulder.
O'Neal did not travel with the Cavaliers
for their game at the Washington Wizards
on Wednesday night, the third consecutive
time he sat out.
Cleveland coach Mike Brown said
O'Neal also will be out Friday at Indiana,
and the center also might be sidelined for
Saturday's home game against Philadelphia.
''It's early in the year. We all have a better
comfort level than what we had in Game 1,
Game 2, Game 3. And so in my opinion, it's
an opportune time to let him get some rest
and let him get his body back," Brown said.
Asked if it's that he doesn't want O'Neal
to play every game, Brown replied: "I'm not
thinking of, 'He's got to pl~y 'X' amount of
games.' Just like in practice, I'm not thinking, 'He's got to practice 75 percent of the
time."'
Then, pointing to his gut, Brown continued: "It's just right here, and if I feel it, I sit
him down. If I don't, then I won't. If he
feels it, hopefully he'll communicate it with
me, and same with our trainers. We'll just
kind of go from there. But really it's not
. anything I'm doing that's scientific or with
a formula to it. I'm not that smart."
O'Neal is playing about 24 minutes per
game this season, averaging 11.3 points and
6.8 rebounds.
Anderson Varejao has a bruised hip and
also was inactive against Washington.
"If tonight was a playoff game, he would
play," Brown said.
The Cavaliers entered Wednesday on a
five-game winning streak.

Ganassi hires McMurray
to drive No. 1
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP) - Jamie
McMurray has been hired to drive the No. 1
Chevrolet for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing.
The hiring has long been in the works,
and gives one of the last remaining open
seats for 2010 to McMurray. It also reunites
McMurray with car owner Chip Ganassi,
who gave the driver his first Cup ride in
2002.
· McMurray drove 114 races for Ganassi,
but left after the 2005 season to join Roush
Fenway Racing. He is losing that ride
because Roush must drop one team to meet
NASCAR's four-car limit that begins next
season.
McMurray has three career Cup wins,
including his victory at Talladega earlier
this month. He set a NASCAR record by
winning in his second Cup race while driving for Ganassi in 2002.

Thursday, November 19,2009

season. with Cincinnati
moving ahead of Ohio State
in the poll and the BCS
from Page Bl
rankings.
"He kind of takes it with
a
grain of salt," Waugh
linebacker from Toledo
"When we played at
said.
carne to the Bearcats to play
fullback. Since he first Ohio State a few years ago,
stepped on campus, the he was in the Ohio State
Bearcats have changed section with his Cincinnati
coaching staffs and Waugh gear on. He said, Til be a
Ciqcinnati fan until you're
has changed positions six times. He's been a full- done, then I'll go back to
back, offensive lineman, Ohio State."'
NO CRYING OVER
defensive lineman and lineFUMBLE:
West Virginia
backer, bouncing back and
coach
Bill
Stewart
decided
fm;th between roles:
"I've always said to not to make an issue out of
myself, if I ever want to be a controversial call by the
a coach. l should be able to officials that ended up
have all the positions being a key moment in a
down,"
Waugh
said. 24-21 loss at No. 5
"Through the position Cincinnati.
Cincinnati's Isaiah Pead
changes and the coaching
fumbled
while diving over
changes, too. I've found it's
a
pile
and
stretching the
going to help me· grow."
He has fina11y settled in ball toward the goal line in
as a reserve linebacker for the second quarter on
the Bearcats (10-0), who Friday night. West Virginia
are off to the best start in recovered, but the call was
school history and are off overturned on review,
this weekend. Coach Brian which indicated the ball
Kelly has shown an apti- crossed the goal line before
tude for moving players Pead lost control of it.
Instead of West Virgirua
into roles where they can
taking
over at the I leading
excel. At one point, every
one of the starting lineback- 14-7, the score was tied.
"That game is beyond
ers had been an offensive
us," Stewart said. "It's over
player.
"Really that's what our and in the books. It was in
success is built on, seniors Saturday's sports column as
giving themselves up to 24-21 and it can't be
play a role,'' Kelly said. changed.
''I got on the bus and took
"He hasn't liked the role he
my
boxed lunch and did a
has, but he's accepted it. I
of
soul-searching and
lot
think that says a lot about
the kids who dedicate thinking and I'll let it go at
themselves to wins and not that."
The Big East condu~ts
individual stats, and that's
regular
reviews of game
Marcus Waugh."
officiating
but keeps those
Waugh had a different
dream when he came out of specifics private, Big East
high school. His father. spokesman Chuck Sullivan
Thomas. was a center for said.
SPECIAL DELIVERY:
Ohio State and captain of
Louisville
wide
the 1979 team that played
receiver/punt
returner
Trent
in the Rose Bowl. Waugh
wanted to go to Ohio State, Guy has made a habit out of
but the school wasn't inter- bouncing back from adverested. When the teams sity, both on and off the
played in Columbus in field.
Guy was shot numerous
2006. Waugh's father wore
times
following an incident•
Cincinnati gear.
Their discussions have outside a Louisville night
taken a different tum this club in the summer of 2008,

Big East

but recovered in time to
join the Cardinals for the
season-opener
against
Kentucky. He ended up battling nagging injuries but
still returned a kickoff for a
touchdown in a win over
Memphis.
.
This year the bumps have
been limited to the football
field. His late fumble
against the Wildcats helped
Kentucky rally to victo.
and he's had a case of t
drops while playing wide
receiver.
Yet he's also had a hand
in Louisville's two biggest
wins of the season. His late
65-yard kickoff return
against Southern Miss
helped the Cardinals escape
and he added a 45-yard
punt return in the fourth
quarter to set up the gamewinning touchdown last
week against Syracuse just
minutes after a 95-yard
punt return for a score was
called back when officials
ruled his knee hit the
ground as he collected the
ball.
"We knew we needed to
make a big play," Guy said.
"We wanted to get. good
field position and get a
touchdown. I was surprised
they kicked it to me again. I
thought he was going to
kick it out of bounds but .
didn't. It set us up for
good return."
AWARDS:
Louisville
linebacker Chris Campa
was selected as Big East
Defensive Player of the
Week for his play in a 10-9
win over Syracuse. The
senior had a career-high 15
tackles. including two sacks
and a forced fumble as
Louisville's
rapidly
improving defense held the
Orange to 266 yards.
Rutgers
cornerback
Devin McCourty earned
Special Teams Player of the
Week honors after making a
pair of game-turning plays
in a rout of South Florida.
McCourty forced a fumble
on punt coverage, blocked a
punt and had 36 yards on
kickoff returns.

KICK OFF
HE'HOLI
SEfiSOtt!

With your business advertised in
Send or email your favorite recipe to The Daily Sentinel to be
included in our "Taste of the Tri County" holiday cookbook. The
cookbook will be published on Dec.ll. and additional copies will be
available for purchase at your local newspaper office.. Email recipies and
name/address to mdtads @mydailtytribune.com or mail or drop off to:

Taste of The Tri-County
Ho iday Cookbook
111 Court Street •Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

r------------------------------------,I

1 Name:
1~&amp;~:
I

1
I

I Phone Number:
I

*** The above information will be used in the ad. ***
Submitted by:
.h

1 Please return coupon wit

.
recipe.

... and have it
repeated in
Thursday &amp; Fridays
paper of your choice
at a discounted rate.

II
I

I

I
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HURRY!! DEADLINE 15
WEDNESDAY. DEC. 2. 2009!

The Daily Sentinel

Advertising Deadline
Monday, November 23rd
Call the advertising department
at (740) 992-2155

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