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                  <text>Southern honors
ocal veterans, AS

Auxiliary do ates

defibrillator, A2

Printed on JOOst
RecJcled Nt·w~&gt;print

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
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NOVEMBER 20, 2009
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LeMaster indicted in alleged.shooting of daughter

SPORTS
• Dislike predates
·football in Ohio-Michigan
rivalry. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

POMEROY

The

Meigs Counly Grand Jury

has indicted a Long Bottom
man for allegedly~-,hooting
his 17 year-old daughter
last month. tampering with
evidence relating to the
shooting. and setting his
mobile home on fire after
the shooting.

Joseph W. Lemaster. 33,
was arraigned before Judge
Fred W. Crow HI on charges
of attempted murder, felonious assault with a
firearms specification. tampering with evidence and
aggnn ated arson. His bond
was set at $250.000, v,:ith 10
percent cash pcrmi!tcd, a
$I ,000 personal rccogn izancc hontl, and a
$100,000 surety hontl. He

has retained counsel. Tracy
Yonkin of Columbus. and
his trial was set for Jan. 19.
LeMaster allegedly shot
his daughter in the back of
the head on Oct. 17 as she
was fleein£! their Bashan
Road mobile home in the
family car. Her name has
not been released because
she is a minor victim,
Sheriff Robert Beegle said
last month. She has been

released
from
the
Huntington. W.Va., hospital
to which she was flown bv
emergency hehcopter and
u-eated her for her mjuries.
Lemaster has been in the
Wa5.hington County Jail in
lieu of a $500,000 bond,
anti has been restrained
from contacting his daughter. I le appeared at a preliminary hearing in the case on
Oct. 19. At that time, he

Mobile Food Pantry
,~s·

,,oo.11'";1

asked for placement in a
mental health facility if he
could not make the bond.
The State Fire Marshal
has-- deter-mined -a fire.,-,- - - t
which caw.ed significant
damage to LeMaster's
mobile horne. \.Vas set intentiomilly. Lemaster fled the
scene following the shooting and was arrested in a
wooded area near his home
later in the day.

Theft at
community
center,
accidents
reported
B Y BETH S ERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INSIDE

• Cheesebrew to
pastor Bidwell,
Kanauga churches.
See Page AS
• O'Bieness offering
health screenings.
See Page A2
• Holiday event Dec. 1.
See Page A2
• Food drive held
at URG-RGCC.
See Page A3
• A Hunger for More.
See Page AS
• Is it Thanksgiving Day
yet? See Page A7

Mobile food
pantry makes
first visit
B Y B RIAN

POMEROY - Yet another program designed to
help feed local families has pitched in to help in
Meigs County.
Lutheran Social Services brought i~ mobile food
pantry to Pomeroy Thursday for the first time ever.
but coordinators said they will likely add Pomeroy
to their regular list of communities needing services.
The Lancaster-based food supplier already visits
Gallipolis. Franklin Furnace and other Ohio River
communities on a regular basis. Its director said
the agency's goal is to get into ~teigs County
more often, at least three times in the next year,
and more the year after if the budget allows.
The program pro" ides 4.4 million pounds of
food across Ohio each ) ear, and 184.000 people.
Food boxes distributed ) esterday were from the
Feed the Children program.
The truck. loaded with 7,500 pounds of food
Please see Pantry. Al

Details on Page AS

INDEX
2 Sf.CTlONS- 16 PAGHS

Calendars

A2

Classifieds

Bs-6

cs

B7

Editorials
Sports

J . R EED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL COM

WEATHER;

Faith
.

POMEROY - The theft of over
from
the
Mulberry
Community Center and traffic acctdents are all currently under investigation by the Pomeroy Police
Department. according to Chief
Mark E. Proffitt.
Recently the Pomeroy Police
Department responded to the
Mulberry Community Center to
speak with volunteer Beth Ann
Clark who reported a theft at the
Parish Shop. Clark told an officer
she came into work at the Parish
Shop in the early afternoon. went to
her cubicle and placed the locked
money bag in the bottom of her
desk. The money bag contained
$1,839.61 and the Parish Shop's
checkbook. Clark then went to work
the cash register and wait on customers along with fellow volunteers
Betty Reibel, Danielle Foley and a
worker from the Meigs County
Department of Job and Family
Services.
Clark returned to her desk for the
money bag about t\\.O hours later to
discover it missin!!. She told an officer sne esfffifa1eo1&gt;et\\.een 10 fol··st:!..-:..---1
customers rnay've been in and out
of the Parish Shop during those two
hours. The monev ba!! has a Farmers
Bank logo on it and was inside a
Wal-Mart shopping bag. Though no
arrests have been made, there is a
pen. on of interest in the ca. e according to the police department.
The following traffic accidents are
currently under investigation:
$1.800

A4

As-7
•

B Section

© 2009 Ohio Valley Publl'il1lng Cu.

li.IJI~,I !I!I. !I!II .

Breaking down Racine's $800k award
B v B ETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

RACINE - Yesterday evening,
residents in Racine stopped by the
municipal building to hear a breakdo\\'n of just how the $800,000 the
village has been approved to
receive in federal stimulus funds
will be spent.
Officials
with
the
Oh10
Oepartrnenl of Transportation's
District 10. which is overseeing the
project. explained these funds \\.ill
go towards the installation of new
side\\. alk. the widening of the
entrance to Star ~1ill Park. the
paving of the walking track and
parking lot in the park as well as

"

fees)\\ ill sell in Febnmry. Assuming
lighting around the \\. alking path.
Saleh A. Eldnbaja. production the bidding process goes smoothly.
administrator for ODOT District construction on the improvements
10, explained around 1,100 feet of could stan in April with the contracnew sidewalk will be installed from tor having until Ot.:tober to finish .
ODOT is also currently assisting
the entrance of Star Mill Park to the
Racine Boat Ramp along Ohio 124. the village with the devclopml'nt of
The sidewalk will be five feet wide, the Fifth and Elm Street Project
A drainage system will also be which will add an extra turning
installed along With the sidewalk. lane of traffic along Ohio 124 and
The lighting around Star Mill Park Tornado Road ncar the new comshould consist of 30-32 lamps mercial business district. The project is still under de"elopment but
when completed.
Eldabaja said the project will be Eldabaja estimated it would sell in
sent to ODOT's central office in Ma) or June.
As for the project discussed last
Columbus on Dec. 1 for approval.
Once approved the project, now esti- night, the 5800,000 is funded from
mated at around $700,000 (a figure the American Recovery and
which doesn't include engineering Reinvestment Act.

Please see Reports. Al

Erwin charged
with unlawful
·sexual conduct
B Y ELIZABETH R IGEL
ERIGELOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

GALLIPOLIS - A bill of information was filed in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court Tuesday
chal1!ine Robert H. En\ in with two
counts of unlawful sexual conduct
with a minor.
A bill o.Linfonnation differ.\&gt; from
an indictment in that it is not
affirmed by a grand jury as a true
bj]). in..,tead it is presented directly
by the prosecutor without consideration bv grand jurors.
Counts one anti two of the bill of
information allege that between
April 22. 2009. through May 22.
2009, he did knowingly engage in
sexual conduct with a 13-year-old
male. the said Envin being I 0 or
more years older than the victim.
Erwin. 67. Gallipolis, was initially
indicted by Galha County grand
jurors in June on charges of unlawful sexual conduct, rape and battery.
The rape and battery charges were
dismissed at the request of the state
to be refiled at a later date, though
none were ever refiled.
Please see Erwin. Al

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PageA2

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 20,

2009

Birth
announced
CHESTER - Beau and
Lace) Bailey of Chester
announce the birth of their
first child, Pevton Riley
Baikv.
·
She \\as born on Friday.
Oct. 2. at the Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis. She is
the first granddaughter ·of
Jane Jennings of Belpre. and
the first grandchild of Joe
and Ka) Bailey of Chester.

•

I

Holid~y event Dec. 1 I
PO!\lEROY - "Have a
Happy Healthy Holiday" is
the theme of the annual holiday happening of the Meigs
Countv Extension Office to
take piace on Dec, I.
The event will be presented twice , the first time at
11 .30 a.m. at the Extension
office. and the second time
at 6 p.m.. at the Mtigs
County Museum annex. The
cost is $10 a pdson.
Both sessions will offer a

variety of activities including making bows and old
fashioned decorations to
take home. learnine about
the history of decorations.
getting food safety ups,
being presented with a book
of ideas. directions and
recipes. and enjoying a
sampling of food made
from the tecipcs.
Pre-registration
is
requested at the Extension
office, 992-6696. ·

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Monday, Nov. 23
RACINE
Southern
lrocal Board of Education,
regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.

Clubs and
organizations

All members and interested
persons are invited.
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 453 will conduct highway trash pickup
beginning at 9 a.m. All
members asked to help.

l

Submitted photo

Volunteer June Nibert, left, and, Naomi Cremeans, show the defibrillator donated by the Pleasant Valley Hospital Auxiliary.
For information about volunteering at Pleasant Valley Hospital call, (304) 675-4340, Ext. 1100.

Auxiliary donates defibrillator
POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va.- The Pleasant Valley
Hospital Auxiliary recently
donated
an
Automated
External Defibrillator (AED)
to the Pleasant Valley
Wellness Center.
The AED is a portable

electronic device that automatically diagnoses the
potentially life threatening
cardiac aJThythmias of ventricular fibrillation and ventricular tachycardia in a
patient, and is able to treat
them through defibrillation,

the application of electrical
therapy which stops the
arrhythmia, allowing the
hea1t to reestablish an effective rhythm.
AEDs are designed to be
simple to use for the Jayman, and the use of AEDs is

Church events

O'Bieness offering health screenings

Saturday, Nov. 21
REEDSVILLE Free
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.

home screening kits and
information can be obtained
on a daily basis at the hospital's patient and visitor
entrance information desks
as well as at the Castrop
Center information desk.
Cholesterol levels typically do not change dramatically in one month so individuals may want to wait
two to three months before
being screened again. Also,

ATHENS - O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital in Athens
will offer blood pressure
screening as well as cholesSaturday, Nov. 21
terol and glucose screening
SALEM CENTER - Star
Wednesday, Dec. 2.
Grange #778 and Star
The free blood pressure
Junior Grange #878 fun
screening will be open to
night and potluck . supper,
the public from 9 a.m. until
6:30 p.m. at the Grange Hall
noon in the . hospital's
located on County Road 1, 3
patient entrance lobby. The
miles North of Salem Center.
cholesterol and glucose
screening, which will be
offered for a $5 fee. will be
available at the same locaASK DR. BROTHERS
tion by appointment only
from 9 a.m. until noon. To
' make an appointment, call
O'Bleness'
Community
Relations office at (740)
Bv DR. JOYCE BROTHERS
Dear Dr. Brothers: I am a 566-4814. Please call as
25-year-old Army veteran.
soon as possible bec.ause
Dear Dr. Brothers: My On a recent deployment appointments are limited.
buddies and I have known overseas. I met and fell in
Pree colon-rectal cancer
each other since high school. love with an officer. Since
We've been through every- we were different ranks and
thing together. and watched would break the law by viaeach
ot1ier erow
up.- lating me Army's no-fraterRecently, we threw a bache- nization regulation. we
lor pa1ty for the last of us to decided not to date until we
get manied. The best man both were home. Now that
seemed to go a bit overboard. both our tours are over. his
and spent way . too much for story has changed. and he
the festivities. Now he's ask- \von't return my phone calls
ing me to kick in $200 more ore-mails. I feel like a fool
' than I originally did to cover and am having trouble movthe bill! I want to tell him to im! on. Please advise. - F.V.
VIENNA. W.Va. (AP) get lost - but I don't want to
bear F.V.: ·I don't know A Civil War-era log cabin
ruin such a longstanding what his ..story" was, but long hidden by additions
friendship. - L.C.
you may need to actually put built onto it has re-emerged
· Deat· L.C.: Well. the good that military discipline to the and has been moved to a
part here is that since you test and see if you can forget former plantation• in Wood
are lifelong friends, you will about this man. Although County.
not have am· trouble antici- there are rules about fraterScott Lamp ·s parents
pating what \Vill happen if nization in the military, I am moved into the structure in
you refuse - and if that sure that there are still many 1958. He says there had
would be ruining a long- couples overseas who man- been so many additions
standing friendship. I don't age to stay connected and that no one could tell from
think you had much of one truly have a relationship to the outside that the cabin
in the first place. This is an follow up on when they was inside.
accounting detail, not a mat- return to the U.S. and their
Lamp dismantled the
ter of ethics or trust or any civilian lives. But your rela- additions after he and his
other earth-shaking matter tionship seemed to be one wife, Shen-y, moved into a
between buddies. So you that was just postponed, new home next to the cabin.
guys should be able to have period. Now that you are They aJTanged to move the
a powwow and figure all home, hearing your potential original log structure to the
this out. Presumably, you all boyfriend's "story," it seems Henderson Hall estate.
are working and have access that ne is ready to explore
Henderson Hall was built
to enough money to cover the options that don't come in 1836 and is now owned
what you spent. Even if the with all the rules and regula- by the Oil and Gas·
best man went overboard, tions. Unless you feel you Museum.
you all enjoyed the party had a very definite commitMuseum director Dave
and what he provided for ment of some sort. you real- McKain says the cabin
you. So it probably is a good ly can't blame him for that.
eventually will be used as a
idea to reimburse him withlt sounds as though your utility building for exhibits ..
QUt a lot of petty grumbling. idea of a relationship was
No one knows who built
On the other hand. since he different from his. You were the cabin.
did give you a figure that you able to put everything on
relied on, he owes it to you to hold, wait it out. obey orders
l;&gt;e flexible in what kmd of and be a mature, patient
~ayment plans you guys can
woman. wanting to do the
&lt;i&gt;ffer. Let him know that you right thing. The fact that he is
RACINE- Reta Hill is a
;lre i!OOd for the extra money, back home now and probabut it may take you a couple bly meeting a lot more single patient at the Cleveland
of weeks or months to pay it. women instead of following Clinic where she is awaiting
Put it in writing so that up on what really was a a heart transplant. Cards
¢vcryone is on the same nonexistent
relationship may be sent to her. c/o of
page. If you really couldn't should not be terribly diffi- the Cleveland Clinic. 9500
afford to sp~nd that extra cult to understand. regardless Euclid Ave.. Cleveland,
money on the bachelor party. of how unhappy the fact Ohio 44195:
give the bride and groom a makes you. You could have a
less-costly item as a wedding talk to clear the air; he may
and be glad this is the be willing to open up now
tast of you to he married off! about how your expcctat10ns
But tlon 't leave your best and his reality don't mesh.
man hudd} holding the hag But be prepared to take
- he'll actually owe you another shot at moving on The Daif.\ Sewinel
one. and you have those life- it may be your best option.
Suh.\cribe rodav • 992-2155
long friendships to preserve.
(c) 2009 by King Featttre,,
n'ltw.mydaitrsenriiref.cvnl

screenings do not take the
place of testing. A screening will indicate whether
an individual's level is
below. at or above normal
ranges; however, for specific readings, an individual may be directed to see a
physician for further testing. The cholesterol and
glucose screening measures total cholesterol,
HDL and glucose levels.

fi.

taught in many first aid,
responder and basic li
support (BLS) level CP
classes.

Internet
~&gt;lSER,ING PO'MERO)' ,

• f'l:!EEN'7Tt&lt;l'ltktlli.I9M
••~.,. ...~~ ·~ ~bdi:lo'~
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• c.m,S;xtF~J» no..llt4itw&amp; -y.:ql

(~-;;::6X k?slflr!J

Bachelor party bailout

--

Civil War-era
cabin moved
to former
W.Va. estate

Hospitalized

gift -

PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.

•••

Syndicate

•

- -- - - - - - ----1----

We ren1ember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

On Thursday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:
~·ou \I ish, select one of the folloning FREE lerses

belon to

1accom~1aoy your tribute.

David C. Andrews
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews
'and family

I. We hold you mour thoughts and memorie, forever.
2 ~lay God cradle you in His am1~. no11 and lor~wr.
3 Forever mis~ed. never forgotten. ~Ia) God hold you in the palm of
His hand.
4. Thank }OU tor the wonderful day' 11c 'hared together ~I) pra}el'&gt;
will be 11ith vou umil we meet again.
5. The day~ we· 'hared were 'weet:l long to see you again in God's
heavenly glol).
6. Your courage and bra1 Cl) still in~pir~ us all. and the memo!) of )OUr
smile fills us with jo) and laughter.
7. Though out of sight, )OU'JI forever be in ffi) heart and mind.
8. The da}s rna) come and go. but the time' we shared 11 til always remain
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for etemit)
10. ~1a) God's angels guid~ you and pro1ect }OU throughout time.
II. You were a light mour life that bums forever mour heart~.
12. Ma) God's graces ~hine om you for all time.
13. You are in our thoughts and pra)ers from morning to night and tram
year to year.
14. We ~end this message with a loving ki'' for eternal rest and happinm.
15. Ma} 1he Lord bless you with His graces and wann.loving hean.

TO RE)IEl1BER YOlR LOVED O~E I~ THIS SPECIAL WAY.
SEND $10.00 PER LISTING • $15 IF PICTl'RE I~CLUDED
Fill out the form below and drop off to:

The Daily Sentin·el
With Fondest )lemories
Ill C01irt St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

DEADLINE: FRIDAY.

DECE~IBER

18TH

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

Please publish my tribute in the specml Memory Page on Thur~da). December 24th.

Name of deceased _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:;!..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I ~umber of selected verse - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
f Date ofbu1h _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Date of pas,in~::.."- - - - - •
I .
1 Pnnt your name here - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
I Address - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone ntllll~~-----1Cit)- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Swte- - - - - Zip- - - - 1
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY SENTI~EL
I

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Friday, November

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www .mydailyscntinel.com

20,2009

Local Briefs
Craft show to
benefit Relay for Life
RIPLEY, W.Va. - The deer Hunter\ Wife Day craft
show will be held Monday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the
Starlight Family Fun Center.
A portion of the proceeds will be donated to the
Jackson Count) Relay for Life in memory of those who
e had cancer.
rafters and vendors will be setting up instde the rink.
·e will be door prizes and give-aways. For more information call 304-372-2008 or 304-273-2008.

For the Record
Divorces
POt-.IEROY - A divorce was granted in Meigs County
Common Pleas Coutt to Amanda Lee Stegall from Jackie
Lee Stegall.
A divorce action has been filed by Brady Huffman, Jr..
Pomeroy. against Terri Lou Brewer, Racine.

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was granted in Meigs
County Common Pleas Comt to Peoples Bank. N .A ..
against Charles Landers and others.

Appointed
POMEROY - Randy Butcher was appointed to a five
year term, beginning Dec. 16, on the Board of Directors of
~ Leading Creek Conservancy District. by Judge Fred W.
.
ow lll.

Ohio community getting
$4.4M for job help
WILMINGTON (AP) - The federal government has
come through with an additional $4.4 million to help workers in southwest Ohio hurt by the relocation of DHl. shippim! operations.
Labor Secretary Hilda Solis said in a statement Thursday
that the funding will provide retraining and re-employment
services for hundreds of people laid off at Wilmington Air
Park.
Package delivery company DHL Expre~s recently 'c losed
its air shipping facility in Wilmington and moved it to the
Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport, more
than 50 miles awa}.

Ohio swine flu deaths now at 30
COLUMBUS (AP) - Health officials say the flu including swine flu - peaked in Ohio in mid-October and
has continued to decline.
ut state health director Dr. Alvin Jackson cautioned &lt;.lura conference call with reporters on Thursday that nu
vity often ebbs and tlows and could easily flare up again.
Jackson says Ohio had seen 30 swine flu-related deaths
as of Tuesday, and that there have been more than 2,500
hospitalizations. He says several of the state's hospitals
report they've seen up to 70 percent increases in emergenC)
room visits for swine flu symptoms.
The state has so far received 1.6 million doses of swine
flu vaccine, and Jackson says he expects Ohio to get 5.3
mill1on more.

l

Pantry from Page At
staples, canned goods, frozen meats, fresh Ohio apples.
also brought personal care boxes with toiletries and even
shoes.
Members of the Meigs High School National Honor
Society, volunteered, as did members of the Sac.red Heart
Catholic and St. Paul Lutheran Churches. and volunteers
with the Meigs Cooperative Parish.
Organizers said those who might benefit from the next
visit of the mobile pantry can contact their local pastor or
the Meigs Cooperative Parish for information.
(Donations earmarked for Pomeroy services can be
made to Lutheran Social Services at ww1r.l.nco.org, by desit for the mobile food pantry/Pomeroy.)

Reports from Page AI
Amy B. Burton, Coolville, was cited for assured clear distance when the vehicle she was driving made contact with
there rear of a vehicle driven by Charles E. Samsel, Mason.
W.Va. The accident took place at 102 East Main Street near
·
the intersection of Court Street. No injuries reported.
A vehicle driven by Cynthia D. King, Pomeroy. was
stopped behind an unknown pickup truck at the stop sign
on Lasley Street and Mulberry Avenue. King said the truck
in front of her rolled back, striking the front end of her
vehicle and then drove off. No injuries reported.

Erwin from Page AI
The unlawful sexual conduct indictment regarded the
same alleged victim as the bill of information filed
Tuesday. Initial allegations of molestation against the former Little League coach dated back to 1987, although the
only charges against him at this time arc from 2009. Other
- - victims claimed to fiave been beTween the ages of 11 an&lt;J 13
at the time the alleged offenses occurred.
A victim's statement was also filed with the bill of informaTuesday. Sgt. Chris A. Gill of the Gallia County Sheriff's
represented the victim in the matter and agreed that if
in pleads guilty to the t~o aforementioned charges. he will
be sentenced to five years of incarceration on each count to run
consecutive to each other and consecutive with the sentence
imposed in the initial indictment brought against him.
Furthermore, in consideration of said plea. the state
agreed not to file any additional charges of a similar nature
on any other alleged victims known to the state and
defense, according to court records.
Envin was scheduled to change his plea to the initial
charge of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor on Monda),
althou~h record of those proceedings had not been published m the court docket as of Wednesday afternoon.
Defense Attorney William N. Eachus is representing Erwin.

------------------~--~~---------------------------:· 1

The Daily Sentinel• P age A3

Ohio public defender starts new innocence project
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

Hurdles high for
Ohio inmates
claiming innocence

ASSOCIATED PRESS

I

COLUMBCS
Ohio's
top public ddender is taking on a rare challenge:
accepting cases gf convicted criminal::. v. ho say
they ·re innocent but don't
hme the DNA to prove it.
The
Ohio
Public
Defender's
Wrongful
Conviction Project is one of
a handful of innocence
efforts nationally dcYoted
full-time to non DNA cases.
Similar projects in New
York ,and Mkhigan handle
I only cases with no biologi1 cnl evidence, such as blood
or other bodily fluids. The
numbers arc small for good
1 reason: Proving the inno\;ence of someone without
clear-cut biological evidence can be an investigative nightmare requiring
months or years of digging
'' ithout the solid proof a
negative DNA test offers.
"DNA cases can be difficult, they can be complex,
but in the end. if it's the right
ca&lt;;e, you come in with the
silver bullet.'' said Keith
Findley. director of the
Wisconsin Innocence Project
and president of a coalition
of innocence
networks
around the country that take
on both kinds of cases.
"In most of these nonDNA cases there is no silver
bullet, so it take a whole lot
of hard work."
Ohio
launched
its
Wrongful
Com iction
Project last month, convinced that the growing
number of DNA exonerations means then! are more
innocent people behind bars.
"If you're going to have a
justice system. then you
strive to always get JUS~
tice.'' :-aid Ohio State
Public
Defender
Tim
Young. ''If there are innocent people in prison - and
there are
then we
hm en 't gotten lhere ·yet.''
The project will revie\\
claims of inmates \Vho
claim they're innocent who
were convicted on evidence
such as bite marks. patterns
in a fire.that alleged!) point
to arson. similarittes in hair
samples dOd fingerprints,
and· eyewitness IDs.

The
Ohio
Public
Defender's
Wrongful
Conviction Project will take
cases of inmates who say
they're innocent but don't
have any DNA ~dance to
prove it. Some of the requirements before the project
accepts an inmate's case:
• Inmate must be indigent and claim total innocence with no involvement
whatsoever in the crime.
• Inmate must be serving
a lengthy prison sentence,
have no pnor history of vio·
lent crimes and no lengthy
prior crimmal record.
• There is no DNA evl·
dance that could exonerate
the inmate, and the inmate
has exhausted the legal
process.
• Inmate must fill out a
21-page
questionnaire,
then faces extensive review
by volunteer law students
reviewing case files.

1

Source: Ohio Public
Defender's Office.

AP photo

In this file photo taken March 7, 2008, Ohio public defender Tim Young talks during an Associated Press interview in
Columbus. Ohio's top public defender is taking on a rare
challenge: accepting cases of convicted criminals who say
they're innocent but don't have the DNA to prove it. The
Ohio Public Defender's Wrongful Conviction Project is one
of just a handful of innocence groups nationally devoted
full-time to non-DNA cas-es.
Prospective
offenders Conviction Project has
must first fill out a 21-page focused mainly on nonquestionnaire looking fo
DNA cases for the past two
detailed information about years using lessons learned
their case and their claim.
from DNA exonerations.
If the project decides to
The Michigan Innocence
look further. volunteer law Clinic at the University of
students· from Ohio State Michigan law school, which
University and Capital started in January, already
University
will
gather has handled three cases that
records.
A
Wrongful saw four convicted defenConviction Project panel dants walk free this year.
In one situation, prosecuhas the fmal say.
Achieving justice is cru- tors in July dropped charges
cial, but there must be a against a man and his uncle
threshold for which cases convicted in a March 2000
are accepted, saict-Warren-shootirrgirr Detroit that tefr
County Prosecutor Rachel the victim a quadriplegic.
Hutzel..
DeShawn Reed and his
"I don't want to see the uncle, Marvin, claimed they
taxpayer foot the bill for a had notQing to with the
lot of inmates who claim attack. But they were conthat they're innocent and victed by the victim's testiaren't," Hutzel said.
many. despite the fact two
In New York, Pace other witnesses saw a differUmversity's
Post- ent person fire the gun.

Charges were dropped after
a judge granted them a new
trial based on the fact they
could be innocent.
''We may· not always
agree on every case, but we
do agree that we· would
never want anyone that was
not guilty to be incarcerated," Matia Miller, spokeswoman for the Wayne
County, Mich., prosecutor's
office, said Thursday.
A congressionally mandated report from the National
Research Council in February
questioned the reliability of a
lot of non-DNA evidence.
The report found no evidence that microscopic hair
analysis can reliably associ.ate a hair with a specific
individual, for example.
And fingerprints, though
they can provide a match,
aren't foolproof.
''We've learned a lot from
~as-es atmurwtrat goes
wrong when innocent people are convicted, and the
things that go wrong are the
same even though the person has not left behind
blood or semen or saliva,"
said Bridget McCormick,
Michigan Innocence Clinic
co-director.

Food drive held at URG-RGCC
RIO GRANDE - A local
food patltt) \\ill be stocked
full of food for the next few
months thanks to a recent
non-perishable food drive at
the University of Rio
Grande.
The food drive was led by
a combined effort from
Sodexo Food Service and
the Students ln free
Enterprise (SIFE) team, and
brought in donations from
students, facultv. staff, several local schools and area
residents.
Sodexo Food Service took
part in the food drive as patt
of the national Helping
Hands Across America
event This one-day event
\\as coordinated b) Sodexo
Food Service .sites all across
the country. Sodexo Food
Service hoped tn break the
world record for the largest
24-hour food drive in multiple location'&gt; by a non-charitable organization.
More than 500 universities and schools served by
Sodexo took part in the pro
ject
this
year..
The
November food drive has
become an annual event for
SoJexo, and It has grown
lqrger ever) year. Two~ years
ago, Sodexo collected more
than 168,000 pounds of
food items across the country. and last year Sodexo
collected more than 327,000
pounds. fhe final figures
are not in yet for this year.
but Sodexo was hoping to
rai~e. the numher of JonatJOns across the country
e\Cil higher this year.
On the Rio Grande cam-

~ itst
\
"';;..;....-

gram at several area schools. constantly growing.
• At
Rio
Grande·
"We have new faces comElementary School, River ing in every week," West
Valley Middle School, said. People of all ages are
Addaville
Elementary coming into the pantry to
School
and
Vinton receive food. and the same
Elementary School, the thing is happening at food
SIFE students organized pantries all across the
contests to see which class region.
could bring in the most food
The food collected from
donations. The winning the Sodexo/SIFE food drive
class at each school was will help to keep the shelves
treated to a pizza party from stocked at the Vinton Baptist
the SIFE students.
Church Food Pantry for the
The SIFE students then next two or three months,
pus, Sodexo collected 400
pounds of food three years turned in all of th~ food and will feed families
ago, 550' pounds two years items they collected from through the Thanksgiving
ago, and more than 2,000 the local schools and and Christmas holidays and
pounds last year. This year, through their own food dri- beyond. West said he greatly
the food dtive collected an ves, to the Sodexo program appreciates the work done
astounding 3 ,563 pounds of on Nov. 12.
by Sodexo Food Service and
The SIFE students are the SIFE students for the
food items, and it was all
donated to the Vinton involved in several commu- food drive, and said it will
Baptist Church Food Pantry. nity service projects each greatly benefit families who
Volunteers
from
the year, and knew that they are in need.
RSVP program helped to wanted to play a strong role
(On
the
Web:
count out the food items for in the food collection pro- &gt;vww.rio.edu)
the food drive, and counted ject this year because it is
a total of 6,312 non-perish- such an important cause.
able food items donated.
All of the food collected
Collection sites were set at Rio Grande is staying in
%ukrson 'MctJJan£tf
up on campus for the food the community, as it all was
'Fumra{ '}{orne
drive, and donations flooded donated to the Vinton
Adam McDuniel
in on Nov. 12. In addition. Baptist Church Food Pantry.
&amp; Jtunes Anderson
D I RECr OR:S
some people donated cash
"We are so thankful to the
instead of donating food, people who donated." said
and then Sodexo representa- David West of the Vinton
tives used the money to go Baptist Church Food Pantry.
out and buy additional food The donations are needed
items for the food drive .
more than ever this year,
SlFE has also done its own because the demand for serfood drives in past years, and vices from the pantry is
this year decided to team up
with Sodexo. The SIFE students
encouraged
Rio
Stii'Pt~rt rfi,· Oitw 11V'P.
Grande students. faculty,
staft ana area resioents tolr.,ftiiit.·.:i1'm IDpartlllillt
contribute, and also set up a
special food donation pro·ni. (l(l\e tfW·P. wiuntm 'fm Vipartm&lt;llt I)
ponsort'l[l ,,Jut~d rcwllt,q_proera mto ~ti;;rm rli..
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izoml's 111 thl artJ wd[ rr.:m&lt; a r.:qucst for 11
n~cHf·m Hl!ltrt6urton.
fJ_)ie wfun~c, r jtrt' ymvfl~ \l"l(li tv r/i,mf ,·wryon(J~r
their d,liUltlvn ~1/JIII'Inq a C•llll)'(lmmtarv Sno coTor &lt;tudta
Jt,Ttntrt tv f!• ttrken at'tlitfm 5tlltiOil. "'iii11 fo,nd nllSttlq
p•Jqram IS lt.jlrtmau dllfrfu Ofhi n·p \'(',1/llttcr 'ftr~
·D&lt;'J'~rrmmt .1H) {or V?lfr Sllfllt1rt. ?f v~·u do not :&lt;ww tht
fire d.:y.trtll!lllt nwiltna. yfia5•. &lt;•tl( Clarmc,· 'A(omonat
740·37S·645l1, l'v:t ca11 a[,~ nhtif.;.:ntrrr6urwns r"
Ba~tist Chutch of
ofnt ·JivP. \\,[utttur fm D&lt;ra!Jnt&lt;ltt. 3S~77
R{lgisttation Dec. 5th
Tl\'•P. ·Rif. ll,.:6, 'Rm{\'iff.&lt; tlltil.l 45771

.

fm .

RacinB

S25.00 ~arn . 10arn

�~----------- - - ---------------------------;-----------~~----~---._...,

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Noventber

20 , 2009

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentinel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Con.~tress slrall make no la11• respecting a11
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the .free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of tire press; or tire right of the people peaceably
to assemble, arrd to petition the Government
for a redress ofgrievances.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUI~

Quit smoking
Dear Editor:
I never realized how much I depended on the strength
of my father until he called in June and told me he had
cancer.
As a boy of 12 in Buffalo he had his first cigarette.
And he continued smokmg through 30 years a~ a construction superintendent and then into retirement.
Cancer put an end to my father's -.making. But thankfully it did not put an end to his life.
No\ ember is National Lung Cancer Awareness
month, and on Nov. 19 we celebrated the 34th Great
American Smokeout.
Tobacco is the single largest preventable cause ~f di~­
ease and premature deaths in the U.S. And smokmg IS
related to 15 type~ of cancer. 30 percent of all cancer
death~. and 87 percent of lung cancer deaths. Each year,
smoking results in an estimated 443,000 premature
deaths, including 49,400 deaths from secondhand
smoke.
For those who quit tobacco there are immediate and
long-lasting benefits. Two weeks after quitting, circulation und lung function increa:-es. After one year, your
risk of heart disease drops by half. And a permanent
quit can add 8 yeurs to your life.
More than half of America's 43 million smokers have
tried to quit at least once. And in 2007 adult smoking
rates dropped 20 percent.
Quitting smoking can be very difficult. But you can
more than double your chances of quitting tobacco by
calling the American Can~er Soc.iety Quit~ine®, a free,
confidential telephone counsehng servtce at (800)
ACS-2345. You can find tips and tools for quitting at
www.cancer.org/GreatAmericans. And the Society also
has mformation about quitting tobacco on Facebook.
Robert Paschen
American Cancer Society
Regional Public Rekltions Director
Central and Southeastern Ohio

TOI)AY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Nov. 20, the 324th day of 2009. There
are 41 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 20, 1947, Britain's future queen. Princess
Elizabeth, married Philip Mountbatten, Duke of
Edinburgh, at Westminster Abbey.
On this date:
In 1789, New Jersey became the first state to ratify the
Bill of Rights.
In 1910, revolution broke out in Mexico, led by
Francisco I. Madero.
In 1925, Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline,
Mass.
In 1992, fire seriously damaged Windsor Castle, the
favorite weekend home of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.

Thought for Today: ''Make haste slowly." - Caesar
Augustus, Roman emperor.(63 B.C.-A.D. 14).

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All fetters are
subtect to editing, must be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned fetters wtlf be published. Letters should be tn
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You" letters
will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
•

Reader Services

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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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Vaccines on lrtorizorz

OPINION

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Bv

LINDA

A. JoHNSON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Malaria. Tuberculosis. Alzheimer·-.
disease. AIDS. Pandemic flu. Genital
herpes. Urinary tract infections.
Grass allergies. Traveler's diarrhea.
You name it, the pharmaceutical
industry is working on a vaccine to
prevent it.
Many could be on the market in
five years or less.
Contrast that with five years ago.
when so many companies had abandoned the vaccine business that half
the U.S. ~upply of flu ~hots was lost
becau~e of contamination at one of
the two manufacturers left.
Vaccines are no longer a sleepy,
low-profit niche in a booming drug
industry. Today. they're starting to
give ailing pharmm:cutical makers a
shot in the am1.
The lure of big profits, advances 111
technology and growing government
support has been drawing in new
companies. from nascent biotechs to
Johnson &amp; Johnson. That means
recent remarkable -;trides tn overcoming dreaded diseases and annoying
afflictions likely will continue.
"Even if a small portion of everything that's going on now is succe~s­
ful in the next 10 years. you put that
together with the Ia t 10 years (and)
it's going to be characterized as a
golden era," says Emilio Emini,
Pfizer Inc.'s head of vaccine re earch.
Vaccines now are viewed as a crucial path to growth. as drugmakers
look for ways to bolster slowing pre:-.cription medicine sales amid intensifying genenc competition and government pressure to cut down prices
under the federal health overhaul.
Unlike medicines that treat diseases, vaccines help prevent infections by revving up the body's natural immune defenses against invaders.
They are made from ,·iru~es. bacteria
or parts of them that have been killed
or weakened so they generally can "t
cause an infection.
In vestment in partnershipS and
other deals to develop and manufacture vaccines has been on a tear and accelerating since the S\\ ine flu
pandemic began. Billions in go,emment grants are bringing better. faster
ways to develop and manufacture
vaccines. Rising worldwide empha,is
on preventive health care. plu-. the
advent of the first multibillion-dollar
vaccine-.. have further boosted their
appeal.
While prescription dnH.! sales are
forecast to ri e by a thTrd in five
year~. vaccine sales should double.
from $1 &lt;) billion last year to $39 billion in 20 13, uccording to market
research firm Kalorama Information.
That':-; five times the $8 billion in vaccine sales in 2004.
That jump is due to a couple of new
blockbuster vaccines nnd rismg use
of existing ones. The government"~

list of recommended vaccines for
children since has more than doublc.:d
since 1985 to 17 .It now alc;n calls for
a half-dozen \ accines for everyone
over 18 and up to four more for -.ome
adults.
The last dec.1clc brought breakthrough \ accmes agmn&lt;.,l pneumococ
cal di ease and rota\ irus
two of
the \\Or1d's top killers
meningitiS.
cervical cancer and more.
Better technolog) to create and
mass produce vaccines IS bnngmg
progress in preventing tropical
dengue fe\er and ne\\ threats like
superbugs MRSA and C. diffic1le,
even ending addiction to cocame and
nicotine. Success on some va~.:cme.-.. in
development,
particular!)
for
Al1.heimer·s and AIDS. likel) would
hnng htllions a year in s.llcs.
Just this fall nnd early next )Car, the
swine flu vaccines nrc. ~xpectcd to
bring their mnkers at least a nmplc
billion extra dollars.
That's tlcspitc the five manufacturers for the t '.S. not bemg able to meet
an optunistic plan to fir'it make seasonal flu shot.-.. and then produce 120
million doses of S\\ ine flu 'accine b)
mid-October - an unprecedented
task. But the) arc steadll) catching up
with demand
l nhke mo-.t 'ac&lt;.:mc'i nmv "manu
f&lt;tctured .. 111 mamm.1l. ) east or other
quH.kl). purely and at high
cells
yields - flu vaccmcc; are still gro'' n
o\er man) \\eel&lt;!- in chicken eggs
because it\ economical and those
ne\\ er. fa.-..ter methods arcn "t L .S apprO\ ed yet. Bccau!;c s\\ ine flu \ accme grew slo\\cr than expected, there
have been sho11ages
and hncs of
anx1ous consumers.
But a horde of biotech cnmpm11cs,
many using multimtllion-dollar government grants, already are tcstmg
state-of-the-art technology for the
next pandemic
Scientists - includmg some at
J&amp;J's ne.,., \accine partner. Holland"s
Cruccll NV - e\en are working to
de\elop the hoi) grail: ,1 uni-.er al flu
vaccme targeting a part ot the varus
that docsn 't change ) ear to 'ear.
And some future ',1ccfnes \\ill
come in patches, pill&lt;\ and na al
sprays. rather than painful o;hots
Jn the last centun. v.1ccines dramaticaH) lengthened "lifespans b) &lt;&gt;topping diseases that killed 01 dio,;ublcd
milhons, from -;mallpox to poho.
After .111 those -;uccesses. many
pharm.tccuiJcal companie~ instead
focused on lucrati.,e dail) pills for
chronic diseases. By the m1tldlc of
thb decade, onl) a handful \\ere stall
mnkmg vatl'ines,.,., h1ch .trc IMrdcr to
produce than chemical-based pills.
making yields unpredictable
That led to the 2004 fiasco when
half the U.S. flu shot suppl) \\as lost
O\ernight, plus continuing penodtc
shortage~ of some k1d•i vacctnel&gt;
Tod&lt;~y, II\ e compameo;, suppl) flu
vaccme
GlaxoSmithKline.

S\\ itzerland ·.,
Novartis
AG,
Australia ·s
CSL
Biotherapies,
Medlmmune. part of 13ritain"s
A straZeneca PLC, and I• ranee's
Sanofi-A,·entis SA.
There\; been more research on flu
'accine.-.. in the last ti\ e years tha.
the previous 20. notes Dr. Willi
Schaffner, Vanderbilt l:ni\ ersit) '&lt;;
head of pre\entive medicine and .1
pokesman for the lnfectiou&lt;;
Diseases SocJet) of America.
No\\ many drugmakers are rethinking vaccines.
Britain's GlaxoSmithKhne is gunnmg to become the world's top \accine manufacturer by re\ enue.
unseating pioneer Merck &amp; Co. This
spring, Glaxo opened a state-of-theart vaccine packaging plant in
Marietta. Pa .. west of Philadelphia. so
it can expand in the U.S . market.
Glaxo. which sold only one vaccine
in the U.S. 13 years ago. now sells 12
here - and 30 worldwitle. It has 20
more m human testing. including
ones for meningitis and malaria.
J&amp;J. which previou,Jy avoided vaccines. plans to build a full vaccine
portfolio. ~tarting with uni\ er~al fll4
and Alzheimer's vaccines. says
research head Dr. Paul Stoffeb.
E\en Pfizer Inc.'s $68 billion
acquisitiOn of Wyeth in October
part!) about getting its 'accinc ex
tisc. now being put to \\Ork aga
Alzheimer·s. Wyeth makes the m
successful 'accine e\ cr, Prevnar.
.,., h1ch protects children from ear
mfes:tions and potentially deadly
pneumonia and blood infections
Prevnar brou2ht in $2.7 billion in
2008 ~ales. and .... ith approval of an
impro-.ed version pending, billions
more a year are expected.
Expe11s call Prevnar the "game
chan~er." lt was the fir~t \accinc to
exceeds 1 billion in annuul sales. followed by Merck"s cervical cancer
shot Garda,il, with $2.3 billion in
2008 sales.
Vaccincli command higher prices
- roughl) $375 for the three-shot
Gardasil series - and so arc more
profitable than in the past. Wath onl)
one or t\\ o makers of most 'accinc
t) pe . price competition is rare in
\\ealth) countries. Plus. the) rarely
face generic competition.
For flu shot makers, the nsk of ha\mg to throw out million of unused
do es here come 'Pring has plunged
as U.S. !luidelines ha'e steadih
\\idened iO include 83 percent.
American,. Use has jumped from
million doses in 1990 to 113 million
last year.
And man) companies are partnering with promi~ing biotechs. the
World Health Organization ami global charities. or setting up dcab with
local drugmakers abroad, 10 inexpcn~lvcl) •m1nufaeture vaccines in developing and middle-tier countries that
increa..;ingl) \\ant them to prevent
much-higher health care costs.

Sarah Pal.i..b's Book Tou.:r

Is

�Friday, November 20, 2009

10 4~ a.m, Sunday L\'Cnmg
Pa: toc Don \\ atkcr

Church of J~11• Cbri•t \llO'tot.c
\ n/'..andl ~ \\ard Rd Pa '"' Jarnc'
~h er, Sunda} Schoo
10 lO a m
E'enm 7 lOp m
Mher \aile)
\Iilley Apo,tohc \\orsl11p Center,
R7J ~ Jrd
A\c ~lid..: ep~m Rc~
fo.l &lt;Mel Bradford, Po tor Sund.l), 10 1\1
am Tu~• ~&gt;·30 Jlfaycr, Wed 7 pm ll1hlc
Study
R~&gt;

I mm.murl,\p"'tulic luhtrnade Iru·,
Lo&lt;&gt;p Md ~&gt;ff "&lt;cw Lm101 Rd Rur,Jnd.
Sen 1cc Su 10 00 aJJt &amp; 7 10 p.m .
1lmn. 7 flU p m l'a&gt;t &gt;r Mart) R Hutt&lt;Jn

Assembly of God
I ibt-rt) •sembl) or God
PO Bo~ 467 D ddm l..lnc M
\\ Va P:lstor l&gt;;c
Tennant &lt;;
&amp;~II.C'&gt; 10:00 Jn and 7 p.m

n.

6:00p.m

MI. Moriah ( hurch of God
Mt : tl II Rd , Racme Pastor Jamel
Sanerfield, Sunday School 9 4S am ,
hvenma • 6 pm , \\ednesday Scrvte~ 7
pm
Rut1klld l hunh or God
Putor Shane M Bowhng, Sunda)
\\onhtp 10 am, 6 p m, \\ednesd.ty
Sentccs 7 pm

Rutland FrH \\Ill Rnptlst
Salem 'it , Pastor E.:d B ne~ , Sunda)
10 am. £:.,enmg
p.m
S hool
\\ron~d.l) Semce&lt;; • 1 p m
~und Raptbt (. hurrh
Ra•e~wood WV, Sunda) Schoo 0 am·
, Momms wor&lt;hlp II nm Evcmns 7 pm
\\cdncsday 7 pJn
HrM ll:~pti't Church of \la~on, \\\
(lnuepend~nt ll"pli•tl
SR 1&gt;52 and AnJerson St Pru.tor Rnbc!1
(irady, Sundn) ~dtool 10 um ~nrnmc
hun:~ II ~m. Sunda) e\emng b pm. Wed
B.'·le s..!udy 7 pm

S)rucu..e tirst l hurch or Gud
t\pplc llld Second Sts , I'Mto• Rev IJJV1d
Ru!~ll. Sunday Sd1ool and \\11r$lup- 10
n m l:vctung Scr1 ICeS· 6 30 p m ,
\\'cdncs•l"Y Sc~ta:s ldO pJn
&lt;'hurrh llf c:nd or l'roph«}
UJ While Rd &lt;Iff St Rl J(J(l, Pasror· PJ
ChJpm3n, Sunday Scllool
10 n m ,
\\onhtp II am Wcd~a) Scme~. 7
pm

Catholic
S:K'n:d llrart Cathulk Church
161 Mulberry Ave Pomeroy, 992-SS98,
Pauo Rev Walter E He :u Sat C'on
4 4S ~ ~p m • Mass· S 30 p m 'iun
C'vn ·8 4S·9 15 a.m .. Sun Mass • 910
m , D.ul) Mru • 8:30 nJD

Carpmtrr lndcpencknt Bapilit Church
'iunda) School
9 iOam, Prcuchln
s.:;, cc
'Sen tee ,oJOam. h'Cntn
7 (XIpm. \\ tilnc.da) B le Study 7 00 pm.
Pd'&gt;tvr
( h••,hlrr Baptt-t ( 'hurth
~tcve Llltk, 740 l67 7801, II
74()..~2 7542, C 740 645 2~27, Sunday
School 'I 30 am. Morrun!! \\••rslup 10 '10
nm, 'I'.Juth &amp;. B "le Ouddt.:s 6 30 pm.
~ 1r prac ce 7,30 Spe.ral da)~ or month
I Ladt ' of Grace 1 rm 2nd \fonda1 l
Men 1 FellmHhtp 7 pm 1rd 1\i
PllSI&lt;Jr

Trlnll) ( burch
l'astOr· Rc• Tom Johnson, Second &amp;
lynn, PonJCro), Pastor , Wor.htp 10 25
am

llopc llapthl Church ( outhem)
S 0 Grant St lll1ddlepon. Sunda) so:':ool
9 30
\\
p II am d 6 p m
\\ edne
ce 1 p P tor Gar)
(:

Rutland Ftrst Baptist Church
Sunda\ Schoo
9 30 a.m \\'of\lup

Episcopal

\\ ~t,i&lt;!r Churrh nf Chrlu
1322() 0:: dreo ·~ Home Rd. Pornero), OH
Contact 74().992 3841 Sunday momtog
10 no, Sun morntng Btble stud).
ro lowtng "Or,hJp Sut: Clc 6 00 pm,
\\til b 'le study 7 pm

326 E Ma!n St~ Pomero)
hch!iris1 II JO a ~ Sunday &amp;
\\cd Mel Lcshc l-1cmrmng

Hemlud. Gro\~ Chrbtlun Church
M.n ter Larry Bro"n, \\orsh1p 11·)0
am Sunda~ S.:hool • 10:30 am., B1ble
Srud) • 7 pn1.

Comrnunlt) Church
Pa\ror .Sie\ c Tomek, Mam Stn:el,
Rurland, Sunday Wor&lt;h1p 10.00 am,
Sunday ~entcc-7 p.m

G raec Episcopal Cburl'b

l'omtro\

Hr~l

l

Sunday S,h 9 '\0 oll'll, \\

nan~lllc llollnl'S'

~1not

oulht m Baptist
4 872 Pomero PtKe, Sunday S,hool
'} \0 am. \\or;hip • 9 4~ am &amp; 7 00 p rn,
\\cdnesda) Serv ccs 7 ()( p m P:utor
l&gt;avtd llramanl

f&gt;a

\\t,r-idr Chur&lt;h of C'hrN
H221J Children\ Hvme Rd 'iunda)
'&gt;chool • II d.m, Worsh1p 10, m 6 pm,
\\ ednesd.ly Semc~ • 7 p m

Cahnr} l'ilvfrn (.'hapel
Ham!oOnl e Road, P tor &lt;.'barles
Mcl\enz e, Sunda~ School 9 30 a.m,
\\orrJup • II a.m , 7 00 p.m , \\edll&lt;"$d.1y
ScNzce 7 00 p.m

\liddlcport Cb11tch of Christ
Srh and Matn, Pastor AI Hanson,
Children~ Dtre.;tor, Sbaron Sayre, Teen
DtrCCtor Dodser Vau&amp;Jlan, Sunday School
9 30 am Worsb1p- 8:15 10:30 a.m, 7
p m, \\Cdnesday Scrvzc~ • 7 PJD

Pine ( .ro1-c lliblc llolint'M Churth
Pasto~ Rev O'Dell
IJ '10 am,
\1anley. Sunday School
\\orshtp
10: ~ am, 6 00 pJD,
\\ ednesday Scmce • 7 00 p m

112 mtle ;,ff Rt l25,

Jlcur..ullo" Ridge Church or Chri't
Pastor Bruc~ Terry. Sunda) School .g 30
a.m
Worship
10:30 a.m. 6 .10 p m,

\\to~lcyun Ill hie Holiness Churrb
75 Pcurl St.. )l,lJddlcport. l'aqor Doug
Cox, SunJa&gt;· Sd10ol 10 a.rn Worshtp.
10:45 p.m., Sunday be. 6:00 pn1.
\\ednesday Service· 7 00 pm

~1tddlcport,
V.Cdne~

Sunday Sc~ool • 9 IS am .
10 I~ d m 7 00 p m
) Sent e 7,00 p m

Radne nrst llaptlst
Pa r: Ryan bnon, pa,trr 'Iunday
School 9 10 am \\Mh1p 10 40 II m
6 00 r m • \\ednesda~ 'len es 7 00

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Hamsoovtlle Rd tRt.l43l.
Pol'tor Roger WatsOn, Su~da) S,hool
910 am, 'l'lorsh1p • 10·30 a.rn, 7 00
p m \\ednesda)' Scrnccs. 7 pm

II) stll Run Community Church
Pastor. Rev Llirry Lcmle), Sunday School
9 .10 a.m, Wotlhtp 10 4S ar 7 p.m,
Th~y B ble Stud~ and Youth • 7 p m.

Tuppci'S Plain Cburch or Christ
Instrumental, Worshtp Servtcc 9 am ,
Commuruon • 10 am, Sunday Scllool
10 1.5 a
Yonlh- '30 pm Sunda), Btble
Study V.l:dnesday 7 pm

l.nun:l Cliff Frre !llethocllst Church
P:wor. Glen McClung, Sunda) School
9 10 m \\orshtp 10 JO a.m and 6
p.m \\edncsd.l) Scmcc 7 00 p.m

Latter-Day Saints

Schoo

II a

00 p m

Bmdbury Church or Christ
ter Tom Runyon, 19S.S8 Bradbury
Rood. M ddlepon. Sunday School 9 JO•
am
\\or\htp 10 30 aJD

The Cburcb or Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day S:tlnls
St Rt 160, 446 6247 or 446 7486,
S :~day Sc"ool 10 20 II am , Re 1.cf
'&gt;octety!Pncsthood II 05 12:00 noon,
Sacramenl Ser\ICe 9-10 IS a.m
Humem:l!.:mg meetlllg. Ist Thun 7 p.m.

~hr.

Mt.l nion llapti•t
P tor Denms \\ea•rr Sunday S,hool
45
m , E•entn • 6 lO p m ,
Wednesday Servtces • 6 lOp.m
lltthl•·hrm Baptht Churdt
Great Bend, Route 124, Ri1c ne, 011,
Pa.r&lt;H , SundD) S,hnol '! )0 n m..
Sunday \\or'h'P . 10•3() o m .. \\cdncsday
lithic Study 7·00 Jl.m
Old llethd htc \\11lllaptlstl'hurdt
286111 St Rt 7 !\hdd pon. &lt;;unda•
Servtce 10 a m 6.00 p.m Thesdav

Rutland Church or Chrbt
Sunda) School • 9:30am., \\onht;&gt; nnd
Commumon • 10:~0 a rn, Davtd
\\ •seman, Mim,ter

~n ·~ &lt;&gt;OO
llilhfde llopll t Churrh
St Rt 14l u t f1 Rt
P tor Rev
J=e~ R A.ree. 'ir. &lt;; day t; 'led
St"'ICt' Wor;htp 10 3U m, 6 p
\\edne&lt;da) Semce~ 7 p.r::

•

\1ctor) llapti•t lndepcndent
525 N 2nd '&gt;t \lzddleport Pa tor James
l Kee ce \\orsh1p lOam, 7 p m
\\edne'.da) 'ic:rv c~
pm
• alth llnptl't Churrh
Rotlrrad St Mason, Sunda) Sc nol 10
am , \\or.hlp
II d m . 6 p m.
Wednesda) Servt .:s 7 p m
l'orr&lt;ot Run llatltht· Ptlm&lt; rrl\
Rc1 Joseph \\iJ&lt;xl&gt;, Sunday Sdmol
om. \\orsl11p I 'Uam

10

Mt. \1orlah llopti.r
lounh &amp; Mal" St Middleport Sunda1
Scl!ool Q 30 am \\o htp I J~ m
• Pastor Rev M1chael A Thompson, Sr
AntiqUil) llapti~t
Sund ) S.:huol 9 lO a m \\or htp

llickol') Hill' Churrh or Christ
1\ippen Platns, Pastor M!l:e Moore, Btb e
class ~ d m. Sunda}, "Otlihtp 10 a m
Sunday, "orshtp 6:30pm Sund.l), Btble
eta.• 7 pm Wed

lkxler Church or Chri&gt;t
Sunday sellool9:30 am , Sund.l) "'orshtp
10.10

m.

The Cburch of Chri't or l'omero&gt;
lnterse•t on 7 and 124 W, bangchst.
Denms Sar~ent, Sunday B1ble ~tudy •
9.30 om .. \\onhtp: 10.30 a.m. and (J;30
p.m .. Wedn~sday Bible Study 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hut ford Chur(h of Chrhtln
Christian l'nion
Hanford, W\a, Pao;tor Mile Pucleu
Sunda) .School 9·10 a.m , \\onhlp
10 10 n m 7 00 p m \\ednc.da)
Sen,,es • 7 00 p CJ

v

Serv1&lt;~

( hl'!\tcr ( hurch or the :\tu.annt
Pastor Rev C'urll R ~dolph. S ,..day
Schoo. !J J(l n.m \\M~htp Ill lO am .
Sunda) elctung b pill
Mulhtnd C'hunh uf till• r\at:trtne
l'ast .. r lienrgc Stadler, Svnd.1y School •
fl 30 a ~ \\or htp
10:30 a!:! 6 lO
p m . \\cdncMby &lt;;en tees 7 p cr.

Other Churches
N,,.. llopc! ('burdt

forest Run
Pas1or: Bob Robuoon, Sllllday 'i.:hool 10
aJD V.omup. 9 om
H~tb (\liddlcport)
Pastor: Bnan Dunham Sunday Schoo •
10:00 a.m.. Wor.;lup II :00 am

Mintnville
Pastor Bob Robuoon Sund;!y School 9
dm, \\'or.;hrp • 10 am

0 dAmmon L:g n H"l.

Pa\lor. Brtan Dunham, \&gt;;onlllp
am .. Sunday School· 11).45 am

Rock Springs
Pastor: De"' D) ne Stutler, Sunda) School •
9 00 a m , \\ors" j)
10 o m , Youth
FeUowslup, Sunda) • 6 p m Earl) 'iunda)
\\ol\lnp 8 am Lc:nora Lcifhat

Pastor John Chapman, Sunda) School
9:30a.m . Womup • 10 :103m Thursda)
Sen1CCS • 7 p.m
~alem Center
Paslor \\ tl!iJ.m K ~lm.h;lll, Sund.t)
School- 10·15 a.m, \\&lt;'rsh1p 9 I~ a.m
Btble Swdy Monday 7 00 pm
Sno""llle
Sund.ty S~bool· 10 a.m \\l&gt;nlup .LJ un
'Bet han}
Pastor. John ROI.eWt.l, Sunda) Sehoul
10 a.m , Worshtp • 9 a .m , Wednesday
Service'· 10 a.m.
Camtei·Suuon
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds Rnc m~ llluo,
Pa,tor· John Rozewtcz Sund~y .S.hool •
9 45 a.m .. Worshtp • II 00 u m Btblc
Stud) Wed. 7:30p.m

Commumt) of ( hrl~l
Ponlaod Racme Rd Pn tor l1m P.rol'in.
Sunday School 9 JO a
\\ rshtp
10 10 a
\\cdne da) SU\ tees 7 00
pm
Bcthd \\o~lp Ct'lllrr
l97~2 St Rt 7 l m
""'th of Tuppers
Platn OH '-o ..lrnonun:u, nal "''b
Contcn por•n Pr~tsc &amp; Worshtp Pastor
Rob B ;ber As'IOC Pa~tor Klr)n D 1 ,
\outh Darector Betty fulh Sunday
sen tees ,o am \\orslup &amp; 6 pm Fan: y
Ltfe Cl c \\ed &amp; fhur n1ght l1fe
mnmtng Ia&lt;! es'
Gruups at pm Th
Lzfc Group ut 10 Outer Lmnt Youth We
Group on \\ed evenm fmm 6 JO to 8·30
V su ~ online at w"'"' be:helw.: OJl
Ash '\trt'Cl Church
198 Ash St , !lhddkport-Pastors Jo,f..:k
\lorro" &amp; Rvdney Wall.cr SundJ)
School • 'i 10 ~ m • \1ormng \\orsh:p
a rn &amp; 7:()11 pm Wednesday Scr\lcc
7 ou I'm, Youth Sen•cc· 700 p.n:
Agup&lt;' I ife Crnltr
"full GO\pel Church" Pa~ton; John &amp;
l'att} \\adc, 603 sc..ond Ale M 'vn, 773·
5017, S~rVJCC lime 'iunda) 10 JO D m,
\\ednesda) 7 pm

W'"'

:\loming~tar

Pastor: lobn Rozewtcz Sunday S.hool
II a.m. \\Orship • 10 am

Ea.t Letart
Pastor. Bt Mm.hsll SundJy School
9a.m . Wonhtp I a m , t Sunday
every monlh e1 en g 5ef\ zce 7 00 p m
\\ednesday 7 p m

921 S Th

\bundanl Grace
St M
ep&lt;lf', Pastor reresa
IU a

faith full Gmpel (1tlll'Ch
Long Bottom, Pa tur Steve Reed. SuQd.ly
S ~I 9 10 m \\o h1p 9 10 a.m
and 7 p . \\ednesday • 7 p.m , Fr day •
tello~~&lt; htp ~n t&lt;.e 7 p

Coolville l 'nill'CI \lethodi•l Pori'h
Pastor Helen Klme, Coohtllc Cln.:rch,
Main &amp; Fiflh St., Sun s,·houl 10 ,, m
Worship· 9 a.m , fue&gt; . .ServM~S I p.n•

l\liddltporl Cnmmunit~ I hurch
Pearl St .. Jo,IJdJiepon . Pasro~ Sam
Anderson . Sund.1y School 10 am ..
l 1cmng ..7· \0 p.m , \\edncsda) Scn1ce

Out Sa•iour l.uthnau {'hot&lt;h
\\alnut and llcnry Sts , Ra1 ens wood,
\\ Va • Pastor Daltd Russe , Sunday
School • 10 00 iiJII , Worshtp II n m.

Bethel Churd1
To"n'h1p Rd, 46bC, Sunday Sdtool 9
a.m. Wor-b1p : 10 u m , \\edncsday
Semccs • 10 aJD.

St.l'aul Luthemn Church
Comer S}camorc &amp; Scrond St, Pomero)
Sun School 9 4S a m , \\orslup. II am

Hockingport Church
Kathryn Wiley. Sunday School 9 10
am~ \\Orslup • 10 30 a m P:i.'ior Pbtlhp
BeU

!Ill. Olht l nlted \h1hod~t
Off 124 bchmd \\ 1lkesv, le. Pastor Rev
Ralph Sptres Sunday School • 9 30 am,
Worsh1p 10.30 om 7 p.m, 'llmr&gt;Jay
:iCf\ lCCS

7pm

MrlR' ('oo1wruthe l'urhh
Nt&gt;rthea't C'lu•rer, Allred, !'astor Jim
C'orbttt, Sunday Scht•ol • 9 30 a.m
\\o1'5ht;&gt; II am. 6.30 p m
t'hestcr
Pastor J ~ Corbtlt, \\orshrp • 9 am,
Sunday School
I0 a m
Thursda)
Scrvtces· 7 p~

Church of God

Torch Church
Co Rd 63, Sunda) s,hool
\\orsh1p • 10:30 am

9 10 ~ m .

Nazarene
Point Rod. Churrh ol the Suzurtne
Route 689 Alban) Rev Llo)d Gnmm
pastur, Sunday School 0 am, worlmp
scmcc II am, e•enmg scrvtee 7 pm \\cd
pra) ~r rneeung 7 pm
\liddltporl Chunh of tht ~»lan·nc
Pa:.tor· Leonard Powell, Sunda) .School •
•UO a.m ..Wor,hlp 10.30 a.rn , h·~O pm ,
\\'edne,.Ja) SerVIce' 7 p m ,

S1~

S) rar11w Church of the Nllllln-ne

\\ hlte 's Chapel \\ r.lc·} on
Cooh•tl e Road Pd tor Me• Ch
\tanJndale. Sunda) School • 9 lC 1 m
\\mlup IC 30 u m \\cdncsda) Sen tcc
7 p.m

Rejoicin&amp; l,irr ( hurch
lOO N 2nd A1e , M -dkpor• P:m r
\like 1-oreman Pastor l~mertu Lawrenc:e
fot'l'rnar. \\ rshtp- , 0:00 m
\\ ednesday Sef\ ICC 7 p m
Clifton 1'abt-mllde ( hurcb
10
\\ormtp 7 p
\\cdn ay Se.!' ce 7
pm
Tht Art.. &lt;.1t11tch
1773 Geoq:es Creek Rood, G ' t&gt;O OH
Pastor. Janue \\ treliWl, S nda) ScmcCJ
10.30 am \\cd~~- 7 p m Thunda)
Prayer &amp; Pr:use at IJ p C
fllf all
a~es ever) Sunda) &amp; \\ednesdav

C: !ton \\ Vo Su tW\ '\•hool

"'""' thear~church
full Gospel Church
or the IJ•Ing Sa1ior
RtJ38. Anuquny Past&gt; Je :IC M rns,
Serv...cs Saturday 2 00 pm
Salem Cummunit} Church
Back ol \\esr Columh1a. \\ \ t.om ltcvtn&amp;

Road, Pa&gt;tor: Charles Roush !3041 67~
2288. Sunda) School 9.!0 am Sun~Jy
e'lemng ser'l,,e 7 00 pm B blv Stucll
\\edne&gt;da) sen tee 7 Oil pm
Hobson Chrlsthm F~lloMhlp Church
Pastor: Herschel \\ btle Sunda) s. ool
10 am. Sunday Church servzcc 6 30 pm
\\tdnesda) pn
Rtstoratlon Chrl&lt;tluo Fello" hlp
H()('pcr Road A• en p, tor
Loorue Coats. S :Ida) \\ rsh p 10:(10 am.
\\l:dnesda) 7 pm

llouse or llealin~: Mlnl•trics
St. Rt, I~ J.anlt''illr, 011
Full Gospe • ( 1 P 'tori R
&amp; Roberta
~lusser Sane! &gt; Sch &gt;OI 9 0
\\orshtp 10 10 dm
7 00 pm \\ed
Semce 7 00 pm
1'tam Jl'SU5 l\linlstri'"
lii«L:ll; 113 Mech fllc Street Pomcro),
OH Pa&gt;tor Eddte Baer Scmec CICJ)
Sunda) 10 110 dJII

Pentecostal

7 30p~
1aith \nile) lillx·rnaclc Churrh

llJJiey Run Ro3d Pastor Rev Em~en
Ra.. son Sunddl E1enm 7 p m •
Thursday Sen ••e 7 p m

S) ruruse :lllssion
14 I Br gcnJan St 'iyracusc Pas! r
Rrl Ro) Thompron. c; 'Ida) School 10
m E1cn ng 6 p V.cdtlt' ) Senzcc
7pm.
tl~ztl Communi!) Cburrh
Off R• 124 ~tor Edsel H rt Sunday
S&lt;hool 9 10 am \\ h p • 10 JO a m
7 j(lp

1-nlth I :u,pd ( hurrh
Botwr1, Sunday Sch@l 9 30 am .
Wouhap
(14~ ~ m . I !0 p m,
\\Cdnc d~v 7 3C: p m
Full Go,~ll.lghthouse
'I&lt; r RO)
Hunter. Sunda) s,bool 10 un E'en•ng
7 J0 p m Tucsda) &amp; Thrm 7 :10 pll&gt;

Presbyterian
Harrison•ille l'rc\hyteriao Church
Pa.sto R ben ~farshall \\ B
9:00
~ .c S::nda'l
'llddi&lt;'POr1 Pre5b~tman
Pa,lor Jarn.:s Sn)der s nd } SchUi I0
a.m. "orsh psen a: I m

Se' enth-Day Adventist

~~~ tS\ ill~ Communlt) Church
Sunda) S&lt;hool 9 10 3 m Worslup •
10 Wum. 7 pm
Mo= (.'hapel Church
Sund~} &lt;cht&gt;&lt;ll
'll n m., \\or~lup
II
il m • \\edncsday Se~ ce 7 pm

' 045 Htland R ad Pomeroy P

Pentt'fostnl A~scrnhl)
St Rt l~ol. Rae ~e. Tornado Rd
Sunda)' School 10 am. hentng 7
p.m . \\~:doe&lt;day Sen...
pm
Pasto~

l..on~

Reed\1llle frl!lmshlp
Church of the Naza."'tne Pastor. Rosse~
Carson Sunday Scho . 9 30 a m ,
\\orship • 10.4~ am 7 pm \\cdnesday
Scrvtccs • 7 p JD

I rtedom l;o~el Ml-.&lt;lun
Ral Knob, on Co R 'I P tor Rev
Roger Willford, Sundav School 9 10
d "'· Wuf\hlp· 7 p m

9~&amp;5

St. .John l .uthtrfln Church
Ptnc (utwc, Wnrshtp 9:00a.m.. Sunda)
SchCKII • IO:()(l om. Pa•t&lt;&gt;r.

Gmham l 'nitt'CI \lrlhodlst
\\ \lf\lup II aJD Pas~or: Richard Nea.~
lltchtrl l nlted Mtthoclist
New Ha-cn, Rtehard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday "&lt; rshtp 9 30 a m Tucs 6 10
prayer and Btble Study

pJII

SthrNIIIt· Communi!} Churd!
Sunt!Dy School 10.0&lt;1 am, Sunday \\or h ,
11.00 am \\ednc da) 7 00 pm Pa tor
Bryan &amp; .\l1s,sy Dade)

Oa,l5 (. hristlan hllon•h1p
(Non-dc'lonmattonallellow h1p,
\kcrmg "'the \letgs t.IJdJic School
&lt;afetcna Pa~tor l'hrt.&lt; Ste" an
IO:IXI am· Noo11 Sund.J). lnronna'
Wol'\lup (. hlldrcn's rrumruy

9 2~

Carleton lnlndcnomlnatlonal Churrh
Ktng ury Rood I'll •
Robert \
e
Sunda) Sc~ool
9 lu .t m \\
p
Serv ce 0 30 m llenm '&gt;e 1 c 6

Cnhury Blhlc Church
Pomero) P ke, Co Rd P t r Rc'
Bladc\\ood, 'iu ) S.: ool 'J 'O '"
\\rr htp 1&lt;- 30
m
10 p
\\ ednesda) Servtte 7 lO p m

\m:ulnR Gmr~ Communlt) Church
Pastor \\a)n.: !&gt;unl p St.lte Rt 681
Tupper; Plato~ ~un \\ r&lt;htp 10 .un &amp;
6 JO pm \\ llt!!l~ Stud) 7:00pm

l'earl Chap..!
.Sunday Scllool .lJ aJn. \\orshtp 10 am

South Btthcl Communh) lhurrh
Sther Rr e Pa t r l nda 0
wood
S nday S,
I 11 •
\\
'H:
c
10 am 2nd
41h S 1111ty

f"ainit" Btblt Church
L:wt, W\ Rt I I' lor Bra 0,1 )
Sunday Schoo 9 301m \\oohtp 7:00
p.m . \\Cdnesda&gt; B1 e Stud• 7 00 p.m
Failh fello"shlp (. rusadcfor ('brist
Pastor: Re~ I r '.1.; m D cl
S ICC
f iday. 7 pJD

FuunbAI'c Mtdd cpon.Sund.ty ~ p.m
S1rucuse Commuult~ Church
24 Second St S) rac~ne OH
Sun Scho&lt;:ol 10 m, Su dy niFht 6 30 p
Pastor Joe Gwtn
A :\r" Bq;nning
&lt;tull Gmpd C'burchl Harruon~dle
Pau
Bob and Kay M shall
Thurs 7pll)

llarri\Onl ill~ Conlmunll) Churth
Pastor Theron D ham. Sunday • 9 10
am and 7 p , \\ronesda) 7 pm

United Methodist

Rffil~ ille Church of Christ
•
Pa&lt;lllr Jac~ Colgro•e, Sunday S'hool
9 J(l ~ m \\ orshtp Semce 10 30 am ,
Btble Stud). \\edne,.day, 6:30 pJD

m. \\.lf\lup

Racine
Pastor RC\ Willilllll \farshall, Sunday
Sdlool • 10 am , \\otmip
II
a.m \\cdnesday Stf'tces 6 pre Thur Btble
Study 7 pm

Lutheran

Bradford Church or Cbri&gt;l
Corner of St. Rt. 124 &amp; llradhury Rd
MtnJSter [)oug Shambhn Yoo1h Mml&lt;t~r
1:1.11 Ahlbcrger. Sunda} School 9 30 nm
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�PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 20,

We are very thankful for the reporter
Three of our sons ( Eran.
Jeshua. and now Micaiah)
have had the privilege of
completing their athletic
days of high school football play at Wahama High
School. Mason. W.Va ..
over the past II seasons.
Every game, whether at
home or at other schools.
White Fakon coaches and
players take sideline positions after the completion
of \Varm-u p .preparations.
My boys have had their
individual days of this routine. Players and fans have
changed. There have been
occasional changes in the
coaching staff. But. for
every game. one thing has
remained a constant - that
is. until recently
Just about game time, a
solitary i ndl vidual has
.always stepped quietly and
unobtrusively onto our sideline with pencil-and-pad in
hand. He has alwavs hccn
the~e regardless, at times. of
a pressing personal schedule to volunteer his time on
behalf of our football team.
He has long been the
reporter from the Point
Pleasant Register co\ ering
and reporting our games so
that the victorieo;; and
defeats of our young men
and cllache:-. may receive
desen ing recognition for
their regular Friday night
and post-season efforts.
Others do not have Wahama
High School at heart like he
ha~. Certain numbers of
Saturday papers arc sold
because people specifically
want to read his report of
the last game played
although they saw the last
game played.
But. recently. a~ one of
our regular season games

A Hunger for More

drawn and have at heart to
raise up thanks to God for
'I hanksgiving is an enoratl th0'-1.! who give of themmously
wonderful time to
"el ves for the sake of
and
intentionally otTer
stop
enriching our :-.chool kids. I
the
praise
of a hca11 full
up
do qot know all of you in
of
gratitude
to
the One Who
Ron
the Nlason, Point Pleasant,
has
not
only
created
us. but
Branch
Gallipoli&lt;&gt;, or Pomeroy
\Vith
an
abunsurrounded
us
areas, but I thank God for
dance
of
blessings.
How
you. You hmc used the rich
is
the
privtremendous
also
abundance gi\ en to you by ilege of honoring our being
Gl1d - whether it involves
was about to start. I time, talenh. or material blessed by GoJ by using our
resources
to enrich kids. abundance to bless others.
notice~ he. was not along
But. ,ts Thanksgiving is as we pour the overflow of
the s1dchncs. No one
seemeJ to know why. given to God for your vol- God's grace into our lives
However. I was eventually untary willingne&lt;&gt;S. thanks into the lives of others
informed that our respect- must also be given to the around us!
On the other hand. if your
ed reporter was very ill. Greatest Volunteer of All
season is characterholiday
The last games of our reg- who has, oh. most certainly.
ized
by
difficulty and loss.
ular season and the first personally enriched all of
Thanksgiving
may seem an
game of our playoff nln us. Jcsuo;; Christ is that vol- especially difficult
occahe could not be there.
unteer. Scripture states that
sion
to
express
thanks.
We }n our ttrea are \cry ''though He was rich, yet for
thank1 ul for the reporter. your sakes He became poor, After all. it isn't easv 111
But there are others in our that you through His pover- your human nature ll; be
grateful whl.!n you arc fruscommunity and your com- tv mi2:ht be rich.''
munity. too. v.ho personally • Chn~t d1d not have to do trated or burdened by your
contribute in varieties of for us what He did. He did circumstances. Nor is it
when the uncertainty
WI.!)'S t9 facilitate the high
not have to leave Heaven easy
of
the
future wheels- over
school experience of our for us the way He did. He
your
head
like a giant bat of
students. There ar\! those did not have to suffer for us
worry
casting
its dark shadwho take pictures of our the way He did. He did not
ow
of
fearfulness
over your
students in action for futur(! have to die for us the Wa)
remembrances. Some pre- He dtd. But, He did so vol- path in life. Neither are we
pare foods for student's untarily with divine love. I quick to be grateful when
activities. Local busmess am thankful to God for pain or loss come to roost
people volunteer goods. ser- many things. but I am most in our homes.
But take heart! It is no
vices. and finance~. There thankful for the voluntary
trite
thing to say and
are volunteers who tutor and 'icarious contribution
believe
that "God is in constudents. Many a~sist the of Jesus Christ to my life.
trol!"
You
have One in your
school. bands. These and and yours.
is bigger than
corner
Who
many others. like the
Gary. the Branches have
the
universe.
cheering for
reporter. ha\ e our kids at one more son, Jamin. to
you
even
if
no
one else is.
heart. ~oping that their per- play out his football career.
In
a
day
when
a
lot of peosonal mvestment may con- Our family prayerfully
ple
felt
forgotten
by Goa,
tribute and prepare young expects you to be back
Jesus
came
along
and
people for their turns of along our sidelines for the
announced
that
"My~Father
leadership in life.
20 10-20 II football seasons
It is because of the cir- to take ) our notes and make is always at his work to this
cum,tanccs of the reporter your Saturday reports. By very day. and I. too, am
5: I 7
working''
(John
whom I have cited that, God ·s !!race. be there
no AMP).
~Human nature hasespecially
duril1g
this one can do it for Wahama
n't changed all that much:
Thanksgiving season. I am like you.
we still v.·re.;tle with that
same doubts. the same
temptation to think that
God has forgotten us. the
same inclination towards
BIDWELL - The Rev. Lany
despair when we've. used
Cheescbrew has been appointed the
up all the liquor of ~elf-suf­
new pastor for Bidwell United
ficiency.
Methodist Church and Kanauga
In the early I 600s a
Fairhaven United Methodist Church.
young man named Squanto
Cheesebrew and his wife. Sharon.
(also called "Tisquantum").
will \Vork as a team with the Bidwell
a member of the Patuxet
and. Kanauga Fairhaven congregation~.
tribe of Native Amerkans
He ts currently studying at the School
along what is now the coast
of Christian Studies in Parkersburg.
of ~Mas~achusetts, was
W.Va., and also with the Methodi;t
trid.ed and k.iJnapped by
Church in the Foothills District.
an English captain named•
Bidwell UMC meets Sunday at 9 a.m.
Thomas Hunt. Along with
for worsh1p and at 10 a.m. for Sunday
23 other Patuxet and
school. The church also meets at 6 p.m.
Nauset Indians, he was crueach Thursday for Bible study.
elly treated and stowed
Kanauga FairhaYeQ UMC meets at
down in the dark and dank
9:30 a.m. for Sunday school and at
hold of a ship and taken to
10:30 a.m. for morning worship each
Maluga. Spain. where Hunt
Sunda). The church hosts Bible study
attempted to sell them all
at 10:30 a.m. each Wednesday.
into slavery. Some local
Rev. Cheesebrcw invites the public
Friars in Maluga, learning
of Hunt's plot. took
attend services at Bidwell and Kanauga
Fairhaven.
""
Rev. Larry and Sharon Cheesebrew
Squanto into their care by

Cheesebrew to pastor Bidwell, Kanauga churches

gray of winter had seemed
so inhospitable. Who would
have guessed that Squanto's
hardships and trials woulci
prepare him to be the
tnstrumcnt of grace thal
would help establish
preserve a new nation?
who could have g
that God would meet
Squanto's own loss and
b!·ok~t.mes' by bringing into
h1s ltte a new people with
whom he could start again?
And who would ~have
thought that this little band
of people would produce
the
first
genuinely
American document in the
''Mayflower
Compact"
which would set the stage
for American democracY,.
that is, ·'govemment BY the
people FOR the people?"
Is God still working
today? Ye5- indeed! The
same God Who aeated the
Cosmos from nothingness
with- just His Wont. is the~
same God Who provided a
helper and preserved the
lives of memberc; of the
Plymouth Colony. Th~
same God Who sent His
own Son into the world to
bear its sin so that thl
who place their faith
Him might be saved is t ,.,
same God Who lives and
works today in the order
the universe. with no pertson too small that He
doesn ·t see them and
ktrow them.
Yes. it is hard to thank
God in all circumstances
(see 1 Thessalonians 5:18-l
but He's the only One Who
can ~a~e great tragedy anQ
turn 1t mto great good. Are
y9u shut up in a lonely and
dark place in life'? Are you
far from the home that H ~~
love is for those who \viii
receive it? Are you deep in a
pit of son·ow and pain? Ha~.
loss and grief beaten you,
down until you feel nearly·
overcome?
. If so. place in your hope
m the One Who "works for
the good of those who love
Him. who have been called
according to }lis purpo:~
, "
for "m all these things
are more than conque
through Him Who loved u
(Rom~ans 8:2g. 37).
,
IThom Mollohan and hi4
family hm·e mini~tered in
wuthem Ohio th, past 14
year.\ and is the author oj
The Fairr Tale Parables
lfe is the i}(lstor of Pathll'a.v'
Communitv Church and
may be reached j(Jr com~
ment.\ or questions bv email
at pastorthom@ pcirhway-·
gal/ipolis.com)
,
Copyright © 2009. Thom,
lvfollolwn.

Pastor
Thom
Mollohan

-which they "disappointed
this
unworthy
fellow
(Captain Hunt) of the hopes
of gain he conceived to
m••ke by this new and devilish project.''
Although far from home
and hi:. loved ones, Squanto
learned about hope in
Christ as he was taught
from the Bible and as he
witnessed the Iovin!! and
selne:.s work of those in
whose care he resided.
Eventually these Christians
found a way to get him
started toward~ home and
sl!cured him a place to 5tay
!11 England. While staying
111 the home of John Slaney
in London. he attended
church and learned the
English language. In 1619.
he returned to 1\'orth
America accompanying an
English trading expedition.
Hut when he arrived. he
found onlv ·the ruins of his
villa!:!c and no signs of his
people
anywhere.
He
learned from neighboring
tribes that a plague had
killed everyone in his tribe:
he was the last of the
Patux.ct.
Meanwhile. an English
ship carr) ing 102 colonisb
(mostly Pilgrims seeking
religious freedom) sailed
for two months from
England. anchoring after a
tumultuous journey in
what's now called Plymouth
Harbor in November of
1620. It was a long. cold
few months for the Pilgrims
whb were not prepared for
the harsh New England
winter. Forty-five colonists
died and eight of the 30
sailors would never retum
home.
What wa:-. their surprise
when an Indian named
Samoset strode out of the
forest to !!rcct them with
halting English phrases!
How much greater was
their astonishment when he
returned a few days later
With Squanto who spoke
nearly perfect English!
Sq~anto chose to remain
\\ ith the Pilgrims, essentially adopting these newcomers who nm\ Jived on the
rums of his old life. He
taught them how to find
food on this land that in the

I

1

The sponsors of this church page do so with prid~ ·in our community

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The second of the spiritual works of mercy is to instruct the
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across as pedantic and pharisaic. There is often also the
further difficult;
presented by one s
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Parents and elders
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And one should
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to

lett he world of Chris! dwell in you richly, os you Ieath ond admonish one another
in all wisdom...

RS.V. Colossians 3:16

2009

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�PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November

'Holy hip-hop' trying to
reak into mainstream
Artist hopes new
venture will boost
·hip-hop gospel scene
Bv LucAs L. JoHNSON II
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Tcrveriu:.
Black believes in hip-hop gospel so
much he sold his first home to get
the money needed to start his
Christtan-themcd
entertainment
company.
It was a riskv move. hut the 34year-old cntreri'reneur believe:-. the
company's diversity, which is producing music. a film. a reality televiS-ion show and a gospel cruise, will
help boost a struggling genre of
Christian music.
Secular hip-hop used radio as a
launching pad, but holy hip-hop gets
little play on regular hip-hop stations
and nearly none on gospel or
istian radio.
t's tough. but we've got to get a
e more creative," said Black. who
started Huntsville, Ala.-ba:-.ed Xist
(pronounced ··exist") Worldwide
Record Label three years ago with
partner Sean Simmonds.
Both men point to hip-hop moguls
like Sean "Dtddy" Combs, Jay-Z and
Russell Simmons. who succeeded
branching outside the music indu..,try.
Even though their message is faithbased, Black and Simmonds believe
they can find the same success.
''We're trying to create our own
blueprint for gospel. but at the same
time, make it so that it's respected
across the board, and can be followed," said Simmonds. 32.
Hip-hop gospel has been around
nearly two decades. but many followers say it didn't .start getting recognized until a few year.s ago. So far
this year, there have been more than
500.000 CD and digital sales of hiphop gospel, according to the
Christian .Music Trade Association.
which operates Christian SoundScan.
~ tpporters also point to an increasnumber of hip-hop gospel fan
sites.
..1 think holy hip-hop music is startm~ to make a move," said Danny
Wtlson, a former road manager for
rapper-actor LL Cool J and the main
organizer of the Holy Hip Hop
Awards in Atlanta. "Look how long it
took regular hip hop to take. You're
talking about 25 to 30 years for it to
really make an impact to the point
that it's a driving culture that's known
all over the world."
Wilson said better air play of hiphop gospel would make it a more
effective tool in reaching the
unchurched. He cites a syndicated
two-hour radio show sponsored by
Holy Hip Hop Awards that airs once a
week 111 about 100 cities.
"We get letters from prison all the
time.'' Wilson said. "One mafl wrote.
'I wish I had this music when I was
out on the street. it might have sa\ed
mv life.'"
joey Elwood. president of Gotee
Records. a small independent label.
agrees hip-hop gospel would benefit
more air play on both gospel
secular outlets, but he believes "a
f the outlets are afraid of offending people."
''If there's any genre where I think
that would not be an issue. it would
be in hip-hop," Elwood said. " I think
hip-hop listeners are Jess likely to
complain about a gospel message in
their song. The radio stations have
got to get a little bit braver."
Xist could create more awareness
and demand for its music with its
other ventures, said Kymberlee
Norsworthy. director of publicity for
Verity Gospel Music Group, a subsidiary of Sony.
"I think only time will tell, but 1
have faith and confidence that it will
be successful," she snid of the company.
Xist's film, "Stand," and its reality
TV show focus on three young hip-

l

I

.

Michael Mercier/AP Photo

Is it Thanksgiving
Day yet?
Have you ever had one of
those moment~ where you
felt you were in one place
while yet standing in :mother place altogether'! One of:
those moment~ where vou
thought you lived that
moment but the moment
had not arrived yet?
Sounds strange doesn't it? I
think most of us have had
moments like that.
It scents like most of us
have been having one of
those moments lately. With
Christmas decorations all
over the place already in
homes, stores. TV commercials, etc. Christmas seem!&gt;
to be right around the corner.
In fact,just the other day I
felt a moment of anxJCtv
wondenng where time had
gom: because I have not
done any Christmas shopping at all and by now we
arl·
usually
done.
Everywhere you go ym1 sec
Chri:.tmas decorations.
I had one of those
moments when I thought
that somehow I totally
mi&lt;;scd Thanksgivmg. We
had company the other day.
and enjoyed a meal with our
company. A few days later
1 \\ hile driving and looking at
Christmas lights J wondered
1
t ~f the-day we ~pent with our
friends wa&lt;; Thank&lt;;giving
Day. Then I remember the
meal - it was hot BBQ
wings I made on the grill. I
was relived.
Americans are celebratm!!
Christmas already and my
question
is:
Is
it
Thanksgiving Day yet'?
I .like Thanksgiving Day.
It 1s one of my favorite
times of the year. Not only
because we get to make
good food but also we get to
enjoy relati vcs and friends
we don't see most of the
year. lsn 't it funny ho\\ they
come for Thanksgtving
Day? Hummm. \\onder
why? (just kidding)
On a serious note. I like
Thanksgiving Da) because
it gives us one day out of the
) ear to remember the foun1 dations of our country. This
week helps us become
aware again that we ought
to be thankful to God for

Sean Simmonds, left, and hip-hop gospel artist Trey Andale Williams perform
in a recording studio in Harvest, Ala. Terverius Black and Simmonds started
Xist Worldwide Record Label, a Christian-themed entertainment company,
three years ago. Williams will appear in a film that is being produced by
Simmonds and Black.

hop gospel artists struggling in the the devtl he don ·r really like that but
industry who refuse to trade their Christ glad I'm waving this here
bright white flag.''
beliefs for fame.
Williams said he believes the
Black said the gospel cruise. which
allows fans to mingle with their mov1e will provide valuable exposure
favorite artists. i!&gt; also an opportunity for hip-hop gospel.
"If people know we're here and
for people to enjoy themselves "and
not ... worry about compromising they know the level of quality we're
presenting then they'll pay attention
what thev believe in."
"We Christians, but we party, too," to it. but the trick is getting them to
pay attention.'' said the 27-year-old
he said.
The key will be staying true to a Williams. "We have to get in their
Christian message, said Vassal face. and a lot of times they just don't
Benford, a top California-based know we ex1st. 1 think th1s film wilJ
record and mo\'ie producer who is help with that."
Hip-hop gospel pioneer Vick1
working on his first gospel album.
Xist needs to clearly distinguish the Mack-Lataillade. whose discovermusic from secular hip hop. whose ies include gospel star Kirk
reputation and lyrics are often "cen- Franklin and a group ·called The
tered around a lot of darkness." :-ouch Gospel Gangstaz.. said she understands the challenges of "doing
as robbing and killing.
''Gospel music has a certain whole- radical music" and applauds comsomeness to it.'' he said. ''And panies like Xist Worldwide for
whether it's a hip-hop beat or whatev- thinking outside the box.
''It's healthy for the industry to
er it is under it, the underl)'inR cause
of it should always be about God and have ... new visions:· she said. "It's
the lifeblood."
... creating a l?ositive influence.''
Onrlze H~b:
Trey Wilhams, also known as
Xisr Worldwide: hrtp:/lwww:dstworldAndale. is a Nash\'ille gospel rapper
starring in Xist Worldwide's film. wide.com
Xisr
Urban
Gospel Cruise:
He said his lyrics focus on humility
and encouragement. rather than neg- hrrp:llu•Wlv.\"istgospe/cmiserom
Trey Williams (also hwu7l as Andale):
ativitY.
on· a track from his latest CD. http://ll'll'll'..Oilda/e~nttzik.com
Holy
Hip-Hop
Awards:
''White Flag:· Williams says: "J'm
surrendering ... sick of lying, &lt;;tck of lmp://uwwJwl)·hiphop.com
Goree Records: http://www.goree .com
stealing ... I'm takmg my life back

.
,

20 , 2009

Pastor
Alex
Colon

His goodness in our lives.
for His provisions and for
. His protection and freedom.
Philippians 4:6 Be anxious for nothing, but in
everythmg by prayer and
supplication. with thanksgiving. let your requests be
made known to God: and
the peace of God, which
surpasses all understanding,
will guard your hca1ts and
minds through Christ Jesus.
I
pray
that
this
Thanksgiving Season will
be a season for you to leave
any anxiety behind, enjoying the peace of God which
rules our minds and hearts
in Christ Jesus, while being
thankful for the answers to
your prayers.
Thanksgiving Day ought
to be evervdav. Jesus has
brought Hi; provisions from
H1s ample supply for every
one of our need:.. H1s purpose and plans. for our h\'CS
are awe-.ome! His love is
awesome! His peace and
jo)· are also awesome! And
the people He puts in our
path arc the best people on
the face of the earth. rm
thankful todav.
I'm glad th~lt in our home
we are taking time to celebrate Thanksgiving Day
with relatives. friends, food,
games. and most importantly. prayer and the Word . The
day after Thanhgiving Day
the Christmas decorations
go up in our house. More
fun times! The dav after
Christmas I wonder if I'll
have one of tho-.e moments
again and ask the question:
Is it Thanksgi\ ing Day yet?
I hope not~
1\lake
it
a
great
Thanksgiving week!
(Pastor Alex Co/6n is pastor of Liglzrlzouse Assembly
of God-Gallipolis. On the
H't&gt;b: Wll'\l'.lagohio.org)

God wants your dirty laund1y
Bv

1

C ORY SULLIVAN

Huh? Say again'! God wants your 'dirty laundry'. Let me
illlfstrate. Say J was to hold a $20 bill in front or you and
ask you if you want it? Of cour:-oe you would say yes. Then
I was to crumple it up. and now knowing it is no longer perfect. would vou still want it? Then I would rub some dirt on
it. step on it~ and rub it into the ground, would you still want
it? Then I would rip it up . .Now it is crumpled. dirty,
stepped on. and tom, do you still want 1t?
In relation to us. the $20 bill represents our lives. We started
out new, crisp, and clean. but then, because of sin. we became
crumpled. diny. stepped on. and tom. I want to tell )OU today
that no matter what. God still wants vou.,.~'\o matter how crumpled up, dirty, stepped on. or tom you arc. God still wants you.
Just like the $20 bill still has worth. even though 1t was a
.mess. you always have great worth in the eyes of God
E\·en though we have sinned and messed up in area-. of our
lives, God still wants us and we are still valuable to him.
We just need to confess before him. and ask for forgiveness. accept his free gift of salvation and lovc, and he will
uncrumple you. clean you off. tape you up. and use you.
The Bible, in' Luke 15:3-7, Jesus discus~es a parable that
if you have a hundred sheep and suppose you lose one.
wouldn't you leave the other ninety- nine who art' safe and
search for the lost one until you find it? Then when you do
find it, rejoice whi le retumin!! from findinl! the lost sheel??
This is how ourlleavenly Father Is to us.~
Scripture in verse 7. ''1 tell you that in the same way there will
be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents thrut
over ninety-nine righteous persons who do not need to repent."
James Hudson Taylor .states, ··Let us never forget that
what we are is more important than \\hat we do:· Knowing
this, I tell you God wants your dirty laundry. He ''ants to
clean you up. make you righteous. reveal his love to you.
and cancel your sin, why? Because you are worth it!
Cory Sullivan is a Youth Pa.\tor at Main Sr. Baptist
Church and a Member of the Mason Coumy Ministerial
Association .

�Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 20,

2009

Meigs County Forecast
Friday...Partly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 50s. West
winds around 5 mph.
Friday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s. Northwest
winds
around 5 mph.
Saturday...~ostly sunny.

Highs in the mid 50s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Saturday night •..Partly
cloudy. l.ows in the upper
30s.
Northea:-.1
winds
around 5 mph.
Sunday... Partly :-.unny in

the morning ...Then becoming mostly cloudy. f. 30 rt:rcent chance of mm. Htghs
in the mid 50s.
Sunday night. .. Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of rain. Lo
around 40.

Gannett (NYSE)- 10.89
General Electric (NYSE)- 15.76
Hartey·Davidson (NYSE) - 21.n
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.38
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.82
Limited Brands (NYSE)- 17.27
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 51.68
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 21.78
BBT (NYSE) - 24.68
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.80
Pepsico (NYSE)- 61.88
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.20
Rockwell (NYSE) - 44.60
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.94

Royal Dutch Shell- 61.78
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 72.95
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 54.54
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.16
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.99
Worthington (NYSE)- 11.87
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for Nov. 19, 2009, provided by Edward Jones finan·
cial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

Local Stocks

Submitted photo

U.S. Army veteran George Lawrence was honored in Veterans Day assemblies at
Southern High and Elementary Schools. With him here are Scott Wolfe, K-4 principal, left,
and Kent Wolfe, 5·8 principal.

Southern honors local veterans

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Akzo (NASDAQ)- 65.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 36.24
Big Lots (NYSE)- 24.72
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BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.92
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-9.75
Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.79
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.81
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.66
Collins (NYSE) - 52.34
DuPont (NYSE) - 34.60
US Bank (NYSE)- 23.13

Ky., for two years in the raphy of Lawrence's miliScout Helicopter Division. tary career. Lawrcnc~.: was
follov,:ed by a three year tour presented ut the podium
in Germany as part of the and thanked the crowd for
the recognition. All ,\'eterSupp&lt;:)lt Maintenance.
In July of 1990. he ans and their families
entered the Sergeant Majors attending were recognized
Academy. Upon completion for the ~cf\·ice that they
at the Academy. he ""as gave to our country.
Deem nnd retired Marine
again assigned to Korea in
the C Co 2nd Aviation Corps veteran Ed Baker
Support read the names of those :-.olBattalion
Maintenance.
Lawrence diers from Mei~s
4'his-ycnrGeo-rge--Lnwrerrcc retired" rn~-ut-1994' US' 'vtm tosr ttreir ~h:.....ve~s.....,;,in~~·'--Ao""'1
Command Sergeant .Major. wars beginning with World
was the honored guest.
Lawrence served in the He has been a continuous War I. As each name was ·
military for 24 years and member of the American read the bell tolled and a
candle was extinguished in
most recently has served as Legion for 24 years.
High School Principal honor of the fallen soldier.
the commander of Racine
At the conclusion of the
American Legion Po~t 602. Daniel Quo served as the
CSM Gene R. Lawrence, or master of ceremonies intro- ceremony members of the
''George" as his family and ducine Chad Dodson and Southern band played TAPS
friends call him, entered the the ~Southern Marching to honor those who made
United States Am1y in July Band for the playing of the the ultimate sacrifice.
A similar program was
2. 1970 at Fort Knox, Ky.
National Anthem. Student
After completion of basic council president Breanna conducted for veterans in
training. he went to Ft. Taylor led the student body grades K-3 at Southern
Rucker, Ala. for advanced grades 4- 12 in the Pledge of Elemcnt&lt;try earlier in the
day. Scott Wolfe and Kent
individual training a~ an OH- Allegiance to the flag.
First graders from the Wolfe read a history of
58A aircraft maintenance
mechanic. In March of 1971, classes of Meg Guinther, Veternns Day and La\\ renee
he was a&lt;&gt;~igned to D Troop. Deborah Harris. and Nicole spoke about the importance
1/10th Cav.. Ankae. Vietnam, Brafford :;ang ..God Bless ofprcservin~ freedom and of
Scout Helicopter Division. the USA'' and ..This Land is the honor ot being a soldier.
In preparation for· the
and later transferred to H HT.. your Land.''
Superintendent
Tony observance, classes in
71717th Cavalry.
After completing a one Deem made the pre:-.enta- gmdes K-12 had on Veterans
year tour in Vietnam. he was tion of the honored ~uest Da) as a part of their o;ocial
again assigned to Ft. Knox , Lawrence and read a biog- studies curriculum.
RACINE - Local veterans were honored by the
Racine American Legion
Post 602. Southern lligh
Southern
School
and
in
'Elementary
School
assemblil!s at the schools on
Veterans Day.
A:, part ol Southern's tmdition. a member of the
community who served in
the anned forces is honored
each year by the school.

KICK OFF

HE HOLI
SEASO"!

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Ohio moderates' budget fix meets immovable forces
COLUMBUS {AP) - A
few moderate Ohio senators
trying to craft a compromise
to fix Ohio's budget gap are
being thwarted by two
opposing forces: the majority of Republican senators
who adamantly oppose any
portion of Gov. Ted
Strickland's tax cut delay,
and the Democratic governor's outright rejection of
the compromise.
1'he immediate rejection
Wednesday by Strickland
and fellow Democrats is likely to further fuel the majority
of Republicans' intran~i1-----.::
gcoe'nce toward liis fax plan.
In an attempt to gain votes
enough
senators
from
opposed to Strickland's 4.2
percent income tax cut
delay, a handful of GOP
moderates propo ed several
~weetcnc1:.-.:..
me&lt;asurc~ to
address Ohio's longer-term
budget instability and other
proposals favored by individual senators.
The proposals - indud-

ing opening up Salt Fork
State Park to oil and gas
drilling,
implementing
prison sentence reforms.
and restoring a chunk of
funding that has been cut
for private and parochial
schools - were coupled
with reducing Strickland's
tax proposal to 2.8 percent.
But it didn't flv. The tax
cut delay. which many
Republicans view as a tax
hike. overshadowed everything else. And on Thursday,
in an illustration of the GOP
dtvide, the Cincinnati-based
Coalition
Opposed
to
AddiTional Spenaing and
Taxes sent out a statement
praising the "renegade" senators
and
questioning
"hethcr Senate President
Bill Harris, a supporter of
the compromise proposal.
\Va~ tit to lead Repub.licans~
Since the Senate GOP
proposal
didn't
have
enough support from its
own members, it needed
help from Democrats. But

they were all opposed, and
the proposal never made it
to a committee vote.
So a compromise designed
to bring supp011 fi·om both
Republicans and Democrats
failed on both counts, leaving Ohio without a fix for its
$850 million budget hole
before Thanksgiving.
Sen. John Carey, a
Wellston Republican who
was one of the few GOP
senators to support the compromise proposal, said he
hoped the Republican offer
would have been greeted
more openly by Strickland.
"If is a politicaf season;"
Carey said. "The more that
there's political posturing
on either side. the harder it's
going to get. That's- why I
think it's important to sit
down ·and be constructive in
the. debate...
"Instead of the governor
releasing statements to the
media, we wanted to sit
down and talk with him,"
Carey said.

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

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

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The Daily Sentinel

Inside
- - Easy a'&gt; 1-l-3 for HendricK, Page Bl
Browns offense beyond bad, Page B4

ORTS

Friday, November 20, 2009

14 named
all-district
in volleyball

..&amp; locals named

W all-district in
cross country
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BY BRYAN WALTERS

A total of eight athletes
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing area were selected to the 2009 Southeast
Ohio
Cross
Country
Coaches district squads for
divisions 1-3 this past fall.
Gallia Academy led the
way with four selections on
the Division II girls list, as
Peyton Adkins, Mckenna
Warner. Samantha Barnes
and Genna Baker were all
honored with first team district recognition.
River Valley also had one
honoree in Division II as
- -'Kalie-'Btotrgm-was- sele-cted
to the first team.
Southern had a pair of
boys honored in Division
District 1 as Kody
lfe
and Dylan Roush
•
were
the
selections.
Eastern's Emeri Connery
was the lone D-3 girls
honoree.
Meigs was the only local
program not to have a runner on the all-district lists.

Browns-Lions blacked
out in Motor City
· DETROIT (AP) - The
Detroit Lions' home game
against
the Cleveland
Browns will be blacked out
6n local TV.
Lions spokesman Bill
Keenist
confirmed
Thursday the team did not
sell 7.000-plus tickets that
were available the previous
- -&lt;faY.
-Detroit has sold out two
of its five games at Ford
· ld this season: its home
and a game against
h in which Steelers
s mtght've outnumbered
Lions fans .

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

AP photo

In this Aug. 7, 2008, file photo, Ohio State offensive lineman Justin Boren {56) and tearrftnates pose for a photo during
the NCAA college football team's media day in Columbus. Boren is from Ohio and starts at left guard for the Buckeyes.
But he used to play for the Wolverines.

Dislike predates football in Ohio-Michigan rivalry
COLUMBUS (AP) The deep and abiding enmity between Ohio and
Michigan is certainly nothing new.
When teams from No. 10
Ohio State and Michigan
meet on Saturday to play
football for the 106th time.
if11 Justoe the 1atest skirmish between two states and
· their residents who have
despised each other for
almost two centuries.
"We understand how
important it is, not only here
as a football· squad. but the

state as a whole, to get that
victory aga.inst Michigan for
the bragging rights for the
year," Ohio State linebacker
Austin Spitler said.
The first offsides call took
place early in the 19th century.
.
A disagreement over
wi&lt;le!y divefgenf surveys
called into question the location of their border. Was
Toledo in the ne'" state of
Ohio? Or in the tenitory of
Michigan?
Ohio Gov. Robert Lucas.
sounding a bit like a certain

grumpy football coach, casualty, when an Ohioan
Two
Stickney
refused to even negotiate the named
line of scrimmage. In defi- stabbed a Michigan sheriff
ance. Lucas named the in a tavern brawl.
county in which Toledo was
Eventually, Michigan was
located after himself and forced to concede Toledo
appointed a sheriff and a was in Ohio, but was pacijudge.
fied by a gift of9,000 square
Michigan's territorial gov- miles of rich mijling and
ernor. 22-year-oTO-srevenstfmberTarurTilftie pper
T. Mason. was outraged. He Peninsula.
assembled a 250-member
A Michigan government
posse and marched south, Web site sniffs, "ln retroinitiating what was called spect, it's obvious who won
the Toledo War.
the War:·
It really wasn't much of a
Please see Rivalry, 84
war. There was only one

A total of 14 people
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing area - 12 athletes and two coaches were selected to the 2009
District 13 Volleyball
Coaches squads for divisions 1-4 this past fall.
Of the dozen athletes
honored, nine were selected to the first team of their
respective divisions while
three more were named
honorable mention.
Starting in Division IV,
the-Eastern Eagles
the ----.
2009 TVC Hocking champion and a regional qualifier - landed four people
on the district list, the
most of any school in the
OVP area.
Jamie Swatzel. Karissa
Connolly and Britney
Morrison were all named
to the first team, with
Connolly being named the
D-4 player of the year.
EHS
coach
Howie
Caldwell was also named
coach of the year in D-4.
South Gallia had three
selections in Division IV,
including a pair of first
teamers in Bailee Swain
and
Tayler
Duncan.
Chandra Canaday was also
named to the honorable
mention squad for the
Lady Rebels.
River Valley - the 2009
OVC champions - had
two players named to the
first team list in seniors
Aubrie
Rice
and
Jacqueline Jacobs. RVHS
coach Sharon Vannoy was
also selected as the D-3
coach of the year.
Both Gallia Academy

Please see Volleyball, 84

Giants' Lincecum wins second
consecutive NL Cy Young
NEW YORK (AP) - San
Francisco Giants ace Tim
Lincecum won the NL Cy
Young Award on Thursday
for the second straight year.
emerging from one of the
tightest votes in the history
of the honor to become the
first repeat winner since
Randy Johnson.
The wiry right-hander,
nicknamed "The Freak" for
his giant stride, needed
only 15 victories to earn the
award - the fewest for a
Cy Young starter over a full
season .
incecum led the NL
•
h 261 strikeouts and tied
for the league lead with
four complete games and
two shutouts.
Only l.O points separatedthe top three vote-getters in
the NL. Chris Carpenter
was second and St. Louis
teammate
Adam
Wainwright finished third
despite getting the most
first-place votes.
: The 2009 honors for
Lincecum and Kansas City
Royals ace Zack Greinke
reflect a recent shift in how
¥oters pick baseball's best
pitchers. Wins. losses and
SRA used to determine the
ty Young Award winner now it's detailed statistics
such as WHIP, FIP and
VORP_
Greinke equaled the previous low of 16 wins when
be won the AL award on
Tuesday.
"The guys I was going up
·nst, Wainwright and
nter, had tremendous
seasons," the 25-year-old
Lincecum ~aid in--a conference call. "It was a lucky
one for me. I'll take them
~s I come I guess."
"' Lincecum received J 1
first -place votes. I 2 .seconds and nine thirds for
100 points in balloting
released by the Baseball
Writers' Association of
America. Carpenter had
nine firsts, 14 seconds and

..

Send or email your favorite recipe to The Daily Sentinel to be
- incluaed in our '"Taste of the iri County~ holiday cookbook.ihe cookbook will be published on Dec. 11. and additional copies will be
available for purchase at your local newspaper office .. Email recipies and
name/address to mdtads @mydailytribune.com or mail or drop off to:

Taste of The Tri-County
Hol,iday Cookbook

AP photo

This is a June 29 file photo showing San Francisco Giants
pitcher Tim Lincecum throwing during the third inning of a
baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, in St.
Louis. Lincecum won the NL Cy Young Award on
Thursday, becoming the first repeat winner in the major
leagues since Randy Johnson was voted the prize four
straight times from 1999-2002.
seven thirds to take second
with 94.
Wainwright. who led the
NL with 19 wins and 233
innin-gs, had 12 first·pffi-t&gt;e
votes. five seconds and 15
thirds for 90 points. Trevor
Hoffman, who finished
behind Tom Glavine in
1998, is the only other
player to get the most firsts
and not win the award.
Two voters. Will Carroll
of Baseball Prospectus and
Keith Law of ESPN.com.
did not include Carpenter

on their ballots. Carroll had
Wainwright in the top spot.
Lincecum
second and
Arizona's Dan Haren third.
Law vQted fer Liflceeum,
Atlanta's Javier Vazquez
and Wainwright in third.
Those were the only votes
in any position for Haren
and Vazquez.
The
six-point
gap
between Lincecum and
Carpenter is tied for the
third-closest in the NL

Please see Lincecum, 84

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�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 20,

2~09

Dungy to lead player
advisory forum
NEW YORK (AP) Tony Dungy is taking a lead
role in improving communication between the NFL and
its players.
.
Dungy will lead a new
NFL player advisory forum
that will meet with players
about league policies. programs and issues that affect
their lives on and off the
field. Those subjects will
include player health and
safety. personal conduct,
game rules and procedures .
career transition and player
development.
Dungy, who retired as
coach of the Indianapolis
Colts after last season, is a
special adviser to commissioner Roger Goodell.
"When I worked on the
AP photo competition committee we
always had meetings with
In this Feb. 7 photo, Hendrick Motorsports NASCAR drivers, from left, Jimmie Johns?n, Jeff Gordon, an.d Mark Martin
players at the NFL combine
pose tor photos during the ceremon!es to mark the Rick Hendrick Motorsports' 25 anniversary of auto rac1ng.
to talk about issues important to them," Dungy said,
"and then the committee
reported back to the commissioner and the league'
CORAL GABLES, Fla. really.
place finish to clinch his tried to get his kid to wear office. I thought that com( AP)
For Hendrick
Buck Baker, Herb Thomas fourth straight title, break- his cap the right way, and munication always was
~1otorsports, this NASCAR and Speedy Thompson fin- ing the record he shares with his son rarely would listen.
imp01tant and commissioner
season might seem easy as ished in the top three spots Cale Yarborough.
to Dad on that point.
Goode11 wanted to broaden
Johnson ofte~ tells the
There's been so much that."
1-2-3 .
in the 1956 standings after a
OK. maybe it only looked 56-race schedule. Baker and story how Hendnck once sat other drama along the way,
Goodell will attend the
easy.
Thompson both raced f?r across th~ table fr?m a team too. A rare form of meetings. and union offiNo matter if Jimmie Carl Kiekhaefer, as d1d of Lowe s executives, con- leukemia. which he beat. A cials have been invited to
Johnson or Mark Martin Thomas for much of that vincing those potential and guilty plea to federal mail attend. Pro Bowl players
leaves Homestead-Miami season.
But
NASCAR eventual sponsors how the fraud, which was eventually Ku1t Warner. Ray Lewis and
on Sunday with the Chase records show Thomas start- driver really would be good pardoned by
President Brian Dawkins are among
for the Sprint Cup champi- ed that season Listed as his enough to win a race some- Clinton. Financial chal- the players who will take
onship.
Hendrick car's owner-driver, plus also day. Johnson never forgot lenges, especially when he part in the meetings. Dungy
1\.lotorsports - which owns spent some time that year the faith Hendrick sh~we~ was beginning to build his envisions as many as 50
both cars - \&gt;..'ill have plen- with Smokey Yunick as his that day. a~d has pa1d tt empire.
players being involved,
back many times.
ty to celebrate. The title. team owner.
Now here he stands, about including a dozen or more
\Vhomever delivers it, will
So
technically,
if
"Somehow, some way, to pull into a tie with Petty before the end of the season.
be Rick Hendrick's ninth in Hendrick pulls this off what he possesses in con- Enterprises for the most He expects they will come
NASCAR. tying him with Sunday. he would stand necting with people. looking titles in the stock-car series. from all age groups.
Petty Enterprises for the alone.
for the right skills, the
"An opportunity to be
''We certainly want to talk
most. And it will be his
'Tm actually living a desire, the drive that an indi- around Mr. Hendrick and all about player safety. the state
record-setting 12th overalL dream." Hendrick said. "I ,·idual may have to perform the fine people, teammates of game, discipline and conjoining three truck titles.
arew up and all I knew was well and do well, there's and people at Hendrick duct. I'm sure the steroid
But there's a piece of his- ~acing and cars and working something that he can see Motors ports, has really issue will come up, and the
tory still out there for on cars. You didn't get paid and recognize,'' Johnson made my Life rich this year Starcaps issue - to make
Hendrick to chase.
to do it. You did it because said. ··1 think it speaks vel- with people and with quality sure it's a level playing field
Johnson. Martin and Jeff you loved it and you take umes to the company and relationships above and for everyone.
Gordon. all of whom race whatever you made to do it. the success of the company.
"Then we will talk about
beyond any other year that I
under the Hendrick flag, So to be able to look back He can pick something up.
can ever remember," Martin off-field issues, in terms of
enter the finale l-2-3 in the and see what we've been pick something out ... piece
said
Thursday.
with post-career, back to school.
standings. If they finish in able to accomplish. I've j_ust everything together."
.
transitioning back to private
Hendrick
sitting
immediatethose
spots,
Hendrick been really fortunate bemg
The respe~t level the dnlife, post-concussion, and
ly
to
his
nght.
Motorsports would become · around a lot of great peo- vers . have 1s clear. Even
Hendrick bowed his head what teams are doing and
the first team in NASCAR pie."
Martm. a venerable elder
a
bit.
hearing those words
histo ry to trulv pull off that
His team is often likened statesman m NASCAR.
Richard
Petty still might
feat.
•
as the Yankees ofNASCAR. calls the owner "Mr.
be The King, and Johnson
" I hate to be greedy when with good reason. .
Hendrick."
you thmk about really wantThe results. espec1ally &lt;?f
Said Hendrick: ''I want to might be on the verge of
ing to be 1-2-3. but we're late, shO\V that whatever tS go on the record. I'm only etching his name on a blank
sittmg there right now with going on. in the Hendrick 10 years older than he is. I page of NASCAR history,
but Sunday night will be as
one race to go." Hendrick garage tops what everyone want it to be Rick."
much
a tribute to Hendrick
CINCINNATI (AP) - A
said Thursday. ··That would else is doing.
His life only seems the
as anyone else on Victory judge warned University of
be so good for the organizaAt 50. Martin is . hav_ing stuff of Hollywood now.
tion. If it happens, it'll be what he calls the happtest
Hendrick's cap will be Lane. His 25th anniversary Cincinnati sophomore quarjust icing on the cake. season of his life. Gordon turned backward in Victory season in NASCAR will be terback Zach Collaros on
·we·,e all thought about it. will likely finish .fourth or Lane on Sunday. a tribute to his best. maybe the best by Thursday that he could spend
the bowl season in jail if he
We' ve .all talked about it. better in the final standings his son Ricky, one of 10 any team ever.
"I would have to say.'' doesn't get his act together
That 's our goal."
for the . 1Oth time .. And people killed when a
Has it happened before?
Johnson 1s on the bnnk of Hendrick plane crashed in Hendrick said. "this is prob- after being accused of showing a fake ID at a bar.
Depends on perspective. history, needing only a 25th- 2004. Rick Hendrick always ably as good as it gets::
Hamilton
County
Municipal Court Judge
Bernie Bouchard scolded
Collaros for failing to begin a
court-ordered program on
PITTSBURGH (AP) - He receivers inside the 20, and he'll never second-guess lost.
the ' dangers of underage
If Roethlisberger was both- drinking. Bouchard told
didn't blame the wide Roethl is berger said he has me." Roethlisberger said. "He
receivers for running incor- long since shifted his focus to wanted to call them and 1 ered by Holmes· comment. Collaros he had until Dec. 7
rect pass routes. even if one Sunday's game in Kansas believed in him and the calls he's not showing it. However, or would face jail time.
and I just had t execute his I 0-minute interview was
of them seemed to be singling City.
''Got it? Are we clear?"
him out. He didn't blame the
"It's being able to look at it them.''
unusual in that nearly all the Bouchard
asked
him.
Following the Steelers · first questions were about a game
special teams for allowing a and move on and not dwell
"You're not going to get
third costly kickoff return on it," Roethlisberger said. "If loss in their last 11 home played four days before and another chance."
touchdown in four games.
you dwell on it. I think it can games. Roethlisberger said few were about Kansas City.
Collaros said through his
He didn't argue with offen- carry over. Just being able to something didn't feel right.
The Chiefs' 2-7 record may attorney that he would begin
sive
coordinator
Bruce put it behind you. learn from mentioning the unseasonably explain that. In Pittsburgh,
Arians · decision to take over the mistakes and say, 'Listen, warm weather and a subdued there seems to be more talk the program right away.
"He knows better;' attorthe play-calling during a don't let this happen again' crowd.
among the fans about ney Dill Mikita ~aid in l:Our t.
hurry-up situation late in the and hopefully it dbesn't.''
Wide receiver Santonio whether injured safety Troy
Roethlisberger didn't feel Holmes later seized on those Polamalu (knee) will be 'The last few weeks have
game,
when
Ben
Roethl is berger often is most right warming up, but initial- remarks. saying if the quarter- ready for Baltimore on Nov. been kind of crazy."
Collaros took over quartereffective while calling his ly believed he could play his back felt that way, it's proba- 29 than there is about
backing for the unbeaten.
way out of it during
own plays.
bly explains why the Steelers Sunday's game.
No, Roethlisberger says the Pittsburgh's first series. He
Steelers· biggest loss of the scrambled for I 5 yards and a
season was his fault, and his first down as the Bengals IS.
alone. The Stcelers (6-3) are but the drive stalled and the
down a game to the Steelers settled for a field
Cincinnati Bengals (7-2) in goal. The pattem for the day
the AFC North after losing to was set.
"I didn't feel great. my arm
Cincinnati 18- 12. and the
quarterback said the reason didn't feel good and that first
was No.7.
drive, we connected a few
"You know what? I had a times. went down the field.
to
scramble."
bad day. Everyone in here's had
had a bad day.... J flat out had Roethlisberger said. "I kind
a bad day and it's going to of thought. 'OK. shut that
oappen
sometimes,'' funk off.· And then it never
~oethlisberger said Thursday, qlllte came m·ound.'"
fhe tirst time he's talked to
Rocthlisberger owns the
~porter::. since Sunday. "It's NfL's second-best winning
j.Jst unfortunate that when the percentage among •qmuterguanerback has a bad game it backs - only Tom Brady is
affects the whole offense. better - but he deferred
That's why you can't afford when Arians decided to call
ro have too many bad the plays during the Steelers'
2ames:·
·
final series. Late in games.
'&lt;' Roethlisberger hasn't had
Rocthlisbcrger is usually at
(nany of them. H.e's been. in his best when calling his own
the top three 111 passmg plays out of no-huddle sets.
This time. Rocthlisbcrger
yarda~e mo.:-.t of the season,
thougn he slipped to No. 7 went 0 for 4 and the Steelers
after going 20 of 40 for 174 never gained a yard after takyards during a second succes- ing over at their 33 v.·ith l :56
remaining. more than enough
sive loss to Cincinnati.
Instead of breaking down time to mount a winning
what he did wrong. or figur- drive.
"It's just something where
Ing out wh&gt;' he could~ 't co~­
nect conststently wtth hts I'll never second-guess Bruce

For Hendrick, a 1-2-3 finish might make history

the league is doing."
Goodell emphasized that
open lines of communication with the players is
essential. With negotiations
under way on a new collective bargaming agreement.
such forums might ev.
help in that proce~s.
"Players continue to be an
invaluable resource in providing direction and insight
into a wide range of programs
and
policies;·
Goodell said. "Tony's experience and expertise in
working with players make
him an ideal leader of the
player advisory forum and
we appreciate his willingness to take on this important role."
Dungy also has advised
Michael Vick during the
quarterback's suspension
and his return to the NFL
with
the
Philadelphia
Eagles.
Since retiring, Dungy also
has worked as a commentator for NBC Sports.
"Who better in the world
today to lead a forum of
NFL play~rs than Tony
Dungy?" said Dick Ebersol.
chairman of NBC Universal
Sports. "Tony is one of tmost respected and admir
men in pro football histo
because he lives his life with
impeccable character. His
influence
deservedly
extends \Veil beyond the
game.''
Goodell conducted similar
meetings with retired players last year. These programs are an outgrowth of
the a player advisory council
formed by Goodell and the
~FL Players Association in
2006.
"This is extremely important and Tony's involvement
is a big factor for me
because he stands for everything that is right about the
NFL," Le\vis said. "This is
an area where we need unity
because it's about players
and the league helping each
other. I truly believe we can
accomplish things that will
carry on \vay beyond us."

I

Cincinnati QB could
face jail in fake ID case

Big Ben accepts blame for loss, must move on

fifth-ranked Bearcats while
senior Tony Pike recovered
from an Oct. 15 arm injury.
Collaros started four games.
Bouchard explained afterward that the diversion program is a chance for firsttime offenders to ''get a
break and learn from their
mistakes."
Collaros was 20 when
cited for presenting a fake lD
to get into a bar near the main
campus. Completing the
diversionary
program,
ordered Oct. 5. would allow
him to have the case dismissed and the record sealed.
Otherwise. he could face as
many as 180 days in jail.
Bouchard told Collaros.
now 21 . that skipping the
program isn't like "blowi.
offa math class" and that
needs to grow up.
"I think he understands
Cf) ~tal-clear what he needs
to do," Bouchard said .
University
spokesman
Ryan Kosten declined to
comment.

DON'Tktl$$
OUT ON OUR EXTRA
MONEY $AVINCi
COUPON$
THI$WEEK
IN$IDE
$UNDA Y'$ PAPER!!!
~unbap

'

\!times ~enttnel

�•

Friday, November 20,2009

-......---

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

www.mydailytsentinel.com

'J!J·fJ.L:S: ·JD..w.2: &gt;

.,... If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

All times Eastern

S_p_!i_!:lt Cui!_ __ _

A

Ford400.
2:30 p,m . Sunday

•

Nationwide Series
Ford 300, 4 p.m.
Saturday

- --

E=ani 2

Truck Series
Ford 200-:-- - - - - - 7:30p.m., Friday

1§611

~ J1mrr1e

Johnson and Mark Mar·
tm have competed in 265 races
together. Martin has scored 108
f'lore potnts (the current margin
separating the two) than Johnson mnine of them. The most
recent, of course, was at Texas
a .onNov. 8.
W": Career victory No. 47 puts Jimmie Johnson one ahead of Buck
Baker and one behind Herb
Thof'las. He's in 13th place all·
time.
~ All Kyle Busch has to do to
wrap up the title ts start the Na·
tionwide Series finale at Homestea&lt;fMiaml Speedway. Ron Hor·
naday Jr. has already wrapped
up his record fourth champt·
onship tn the Camping World
'ruck Senes.
.
~ Johnson won for the fourth
time at Phoenix International
Raceway. No one else has won
at the Desert Mile more than

Camping World Trucks

Nationwide

Sprint Cup
Race: Ford 40J
Where: Homestead·Miami
Speedway, Homestead, Fla. (1 5
mt.), 267 laps/400.5 miles.
When: Sunday. Nov. 22.
Last year's winner: Carl
~ Edwards, Ford.
Qualifying record: Jamie
McMurray, Doege, 181.111
mph, Nov. 14, 2003.
Race record: Tony Stewart, Pon·
tiac, 140.335 mph, Nov. 14,
1999.
Last week: Jimmie Johnson
won for the se1enth time this
season and fourth time in his
career at Phoenix International
Raceway. After the first 50 of
:"'! the 312 laps, Johnson's superiority was cryst3f.clear. He took

the lead on the 53rd lap and
led 238 of the rematnlng 260.
As he crossed the line, John·
son's edge was a comfortable
1.033 seconds A week after
Johnson became an unw1tting
vtctim of a third-lap crash at
Texas Motor Speedway, he dom·
inated the penultimate race of
the Sprint Cup season. By fin·
ish1ng 25th. or better at Homestead - and this is true only if
Mark Mar~in wins the race and
leads the most laps - Johnson
will lock up his record fourth
consecutive Sprint Cup champl·
onship, breaking a record of
three in a row he currently
shares with Cale Yarborough
(1976-78).

JJ

c:
SCOTT SPEED

Race: Ford 300
Where: Homestead-Miami
Speedway, Homestead,
Aa. (1.5 mi.), 200
laps/300 miles.
When: Saturday. Nov. 21.
Last year's winner: Carl
Edwards. Ford.
Qualifying record: Casey
Mears, Dodge, 177.936
mph, Nov. 18, 2004.

Race: Ford 200
Where: Homestead-Miami
Speedway, Homestead,
Fla. (1.5 mi.), 134
laps/201 miles.
When: Friday, Nov. 20.
Last year's winner: Todd
Bodtne, Toyota. ·
Qualifying record: David
Reutimann, Toyota,
173.116 mph, Nov.18,
Race record: Joe Ne2005
mechek, Chevrolet,
Race record: Ron Horna·
132.191 mph, Nov. 11,
day Jr., Chevrolet,
2001.
133.260 mph, Nov. 15.
Last race: Carl Edwards
2002.
Last week: Kevin Harvick ·
drove a Ford to his fifth
victory of the season at
won the Phoenix race, and
Phoenix International
Ron Hornaday Jr., whose
Raceway. narrowly prevent· Chevy is fielded by Kevin
ing Kyle Busch from math· Harvick Inc., locked up a
em~Jtically clinching the
record fourth series cham·
series championship.
pionship.

•

Who's hot: Dis·
...------. card the Texas
disaster and
Jimmie Johnson's average
Chase finish is
3.1, with four
victories... ,
Phoenix runnerup Jeff Burton
.._
Bu
_....RT_O_
N_ ..,. collected his
best finish of
the season.
Who's not: Another rotten finIsh (38th)
dropped Brian
Vickers666
points off John·
son's Chase
pace.... Regular-season
points
leader
STEWART
Tony Stewart
has finished
outside the top 10 four times in
the Chase.

MIAMl

SPfEOWAY

v
No. 82

SPRINT CUP SERIES

E

RED B ULL TOYOTA

R

s

I

· 1

eren

ormu a

twice.

c ;.

HOMEfff

r- r.FJ ::;r=~_p cxfl.J s·d-]-j

~ While

Jeff Burton was closing
n a bit on Johnson late in the
Checker O'Reilly 500, he was re·
alistic afterward. ·we were
catching him, but Johnson has a
way of finding a little extra when
he needs it. I'm sure the final
three or four laps that he knew
the r1argin he had," he said.
~ Th 3 is the third time Johnson
has won four or more races in
tre Chase. His career total of
Chase victories is 18.
~ Ford dr·vers have won the past
five Homestead races. Greg Bif·
fie won three in a row (2004-06),
followed by Matt Kenseth in
2007 and Carl Edwards last
year. Coincidentally, it's billed as
Ford Championship Weekend.
~ Homestead-Miami Speedway is
the only Sprint Cup track where
Jeff Gordon has never won.
~ Kurt Busch led the first 52 laps
at Phoenix. Johnson then led
238 of the remaining 260.
~The Cup season finale is one ·
of three races held in the state
of Florida. NASCAR history is
dotted with the names of Sunshine State natives like Fireball
Roberts. lee Roy Yarbrough,
Marshall Teague, Joe Nemechek
and David Reutimann.

Nov. 22

u

s

Hamlin
Brad Keselowski
vs. Denny Hamiln

Keselowski

There's a htstory between the
two. and Hamlin considered the last
straw a Nationwide Series incident
at Phoenix in which Keselowski's
Chevy tapped his Toyota twice, send·
ing it out of control the latter time.
Hamlin said he was glad he was en·
tered in the Nationwide race this
week in Homestead and suggested
strongly he would return the favor.
NASCAR This Week's Monte Dutton gives his take: "Keselowski, tick·
eted for Sprint Cup stardom and al·
ready a race winner in NASCAR's top
series, is under fire from others besides Hamlin. As for Hamlin, getting
even is one thing, but publicly declaring it in advance is quite another."

(

?u.tJ r~ ·f o.r~J

1~

( BJ.dil J r/JI1 1 'J0is llE;I!J;:;,;•:;l&gt;

Prima domas and pets
NASCAR This Week welcomes let·
ters to the editor. but please be aware
that we have room for only a few each
week. We'll do our best to select the
best, but individual replies are imposs~
ble due to the bulk of mail received.
Please do not send stamped and self·
addressed envelopes with your letters,
which should be addressed to:
NASCAR This Week, The Gaston
Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia,
N.C. 28053 or send e-mails to
mdutton@gastongazette.com.

•

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

With stints in Formula One, Camping World and ARCA racing, Scott Speed is finishing up his first season with Red Bull Racing and Sprint
Cup racing. Speed says the circuit is 'something completely new and very challenging! The driver has one top-10 finish this season.

Speedfinishing
rookie season with
Red Bull Racing
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

Scott SP,eed, once a Formula One
driver, was part of a bold experiment
perpetrated by NASCAR's Team Red
Bull.
After placing Speed in a variety of
races -16 each in the Camping World
Truck and ARCA series- in 2008, the
team cut A.J. Allmendinger loose and
replaced him in the team's No. 82 Toyota with Speed.

Allmendinger took a ride with what
is now Richard Petty Motorsports.
Neither has been particularly impressive this year, though Allmendinger
has performed slightly better, ranking
25th in the Sprint Cup standings with
one top-five and five top-10 finishes.
Speed, 26, is JSth with one top-five
(also his only top-10 finish).
But Speed, from Manteca, Calif., is
gradually adjusting to stock-car racing. Asked what he has learned, he
said, "Probably a lot: how you get the
cars running throughout the practice
and throughout the weekend, and how
you show up with them as far as the
setup is concerned is obviously very
important.
"I'm still learning an enormous
amount of just racing sort of skill.
Racing on an oval in these big, heavy

cars is something completely different than what I've ever done my whole
life. It's amazing, every weekend, as
we get more competitive and start
running in the top 20 and start running in a competitive position, and
how much I'm learning in those situations. I think my 'race craft' and my
feel for the car is what's getting better
and better."
Echoing Juan Pablo Montoya, who
has successfully made a transition
from Formula One to NASCAR, Speed
said this is a whole new world for him.
"It's completely different because,
in Formula One, I went into it just like
(fellow Cup rookie) Joey (Logano),"
said Speed. ''I've done it my whole
life. It was what was natural to me.
"It's something completely new and
very challenging."

Dear NASCAR This Week,
I could pose either a comment or a
question. I didn't realize there were any
real prima donnas on the NASCAR circuit - I could be missing something,
but my past experience in racing has
been a friendship with other
drivers/owners. That's why I can ask:
Who is the leading driver who complains or blames all his problems and
losses on everyone but himself? Yes,
I'm talking about No. 42 (Juan Pablo
Montoya). Does anyone care to point
out just why he's involved in NASCAR?
Plenty of my friends talk about this. It's
really a joke. He could rejoin his friends
of Formula One or the Indy Car circuit;
he's more at home there. Thanks for
the opportunity.
R.J. Sheean
West Union, Ohio
That's the ultimate judgment call,
and tor most tans, it has a lot to do
with whom they like and whom they
don't. We haven't noticed Montoya

blaming others for his problems, at
least not any more than his peers.

Give 'em your votes
Voting in the Chex Most Popular
Driver competitition continues until
Nov. 23. Fans may still register and
vote by going to www.chexmostpoputardriver.com. As of Nov. 16. the top
10 in the balloting were Dale Earnhardt Jr., Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart,
Kasey Kahne, Matt Kenseth, Bobby
Labonte, Michael Waltrip, Jimmie Johnson. Carl Edwards and Kevin Harvick.

•GALLIPOLIS •MIDDLEPORT •PT. PLEASANT •RIPI.Ff •RAVENSWOOD •SPENCER

157 Walnut Street, Middleport, OH • 740-992-2131

.......................................

�Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November 20,

2009

Browns have routine Struggling offense beyond bad for Browns
meeti·ng with NFLPA
BEREA, Ohio (AP) Representatives from the
NFL players union met with
Cleveland players. but it was
not prompted by complaints
about coach Eric Mangini's
pmct ices.
Offensive lineman Hank
Fraley, the Browns' player
said
representative,
Wednesday's meeting centered around a collective bargaining agreement and safety
concerns.
Running back Jamal Lewis
recently criticized Mangini's

.

Rivalry
from Page Bl
The two universities first
met in football in 1897.
They started playing annually in 1918, and since 1935
have i·enewed acquaintances in the final game of·
the season.
The vitriol between the
two states and their two universities was magnified
from 1969-78 when curmudgeonly Woody Hayes
pro" Jed and growled on the
sidelines for the Buckeyes
and Michigan was coached
by the similarly stubborn
and
hardheaded
Bo
Schembechle1 - an Ohio
native and former Hayes
acolyte.
Hayes refused to even
utter the name of "the state
up north." Legend has it although no one doubts it that the petulant. at times
childish Hayes once ran out
of gas in Michigan but
pushed his car over the state
line rather than spend his
money there.
Something akin to that
passion is handed down
from generation to generation even today.
"I went to St. Mary's
down in Lancaster, a little
Catholic school. We had to
wear our (school) uniforms,.
but for the Ohio StateM:i£b.igru! game we .gQt to
dress up in either Ohio State
or Michigan clothes," said
Buckeyes offen ive lineman
Jim Cordle. "That was fun.
We got to cheer into the PA
system and then they'd
measure (which team ·s
fans) had the loudest cheer.
And then every year we
went to an Ohio StateMichigan party to watch the
game."
The two states are so similar yet remain committed in

their distaste for each other.
Columbus drivers scowl at
those behind the wheel of
cars with ?\lichigan plates.
Graduates of the University
of Michigan consider their
riYals to be the Ivy League.
Stanford, Cal - certainly
not the agricultural .school
down in Columbus.
Over the years, the rivalry

Lincecum
from Page Bl
smce the ballot expanded
to three pitchers in 1970.
The 10-point margin from
first to third is the secondclosest for the NL ballot.
Lincecum, who had a
$650.000 salary and could
be headed for a big raise,
did not have any bonus
provision for winning the
award. Carpenter receives
$100,000 for finishing second, Wainwright $100,000
for winding up third and
Vazquez $70,000 for being
voted fourth.
Lincecum teamed with
Matt Cain to give the
Giants a strong 1-2 punch
at the top of their rotation,
helping them stay in contention all year in one of
baseball's biggest surprises. He went 15-7 with a

Volleyball
from PageBl
and Meigs netted two
_pla_yers on the Division II
teams.
The Blue Angels - the
2009 SEOAL champions
- had one first teamer in
Morgan Daniels, while

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - When asked
what he thought about the execution of
his offense, colorful Tampa Bay coach
practices. saying they lasted John McKay once sarcastically said, ..I'm
up to 3 hours and were all in favor 1L."
His Buccaneers of the 1970s were
exhausting the players.
dreadful.
Lewis' comments gained
The Cleveland Browns are \vorsc.
support when practice sqt~d
With just five offensive touchdowns,
lineman Keith Grennan susthe
Browns have eclipsed McKay's
tained a season-ending injury 1976-77
Bucs (7 'IDs)- regarded a-. one
during one of Mangini's of the SOITiest s4uads in NFL history post-practice "opportunity for the fewest points in a IS-game span
periods.'' Earlier this season, since 1950. Cleveland's scoring Sahara is
rookie running back James magnllicd hy the fact no Browns wide
Davis hurt his shoulder in receiver has scored ::;ince Nov. 2, 2008,
post-practice sessions.
and no Browns running back has crosSed
Mangini has said he's the goal line since Nov. 17 of la.-.t vear.
Cleveland's offense isn't very· effeccomfortable with the practice
tive.
It's highly offensive. In the wrong
schedule.
manner.
"It's been a work in pro~ss," tight end
has found been manifested Robert Royal said. ''We ve made small
steps."
in sports.
According to STATS LLC. the
-In the 1940s. the Browns' 8.7 scoring average is the third
Cleveland Indians and lowest since 1950, hehind only Tampa
Detroit Tigers were two of Bay in 1977 (7.4) and Atlanta in 1974
the best teams in the (7.9).
American League. Fans
At least they've got somethin!Z.to shoot
debated who was better, for in this sinking season.
-.. •
Statistically, the Browns have already
Bob
Feller
or
Hal
Newhouser? Lou Boudreau bottomed oul. They arc ranked 32nd in
points scored (78), total yards per game
or Hank Greenberg?
-From 1950 to 1957, the (214.3) and yards passing (116.2).
Cleveland Browns of Otto Incredibly, there are 14 teams averaging
Graham and the Detroit more yards rushing per game than
Lions led by Bobby Layne Cleveland is gaining through the air.
The Browns haven't scored a toucheach won three NFL cham- down
in three straight games. and during
pionships. (These days they Monday night's 16·0 Toss to Baltimore,
are competing for the title they fmlcd to cross the Ravens 45.
of the league's worst team.
Clc\·eland's offense is beyond bad.
That title will be decided on
Still, embattled coach Eric Mangini
Sunday.)
extracted some positives - minuscule as
-The
Cleveland they were - from the most recent defeat,
Cavaliers and
Detroit
Pistons have met in three
physical. chippy 'playoff
series this decade, the
Pistons persevering in seven
games in a second-round
series in 2006. with the
Cavs and LeBron James
winning eight of 10 meetings in series wins in 2007
and last year.
-Last
spring
the
Columbus Blue Jackets
made the Stanley Cup playoffs for the first time, but
the upstarts were no match
for the ll-time champion
Detroit Red Wings. The
Winged Wheels won in a
sweep.
There are plenty of other
ties between the states.
Mark Dantonio. a former
11ssistanr coad1 -ar "Ohio
State. is now coach at
Michigan State. Brian
Kelly, a former head coach
at Central Michigan, is now
coach
at
fifth-ranked
Cincinnati.
Just last week. Bruce
Springsteen performed in
Cleveland on Wednesday
night and in Auburn Hills,
Mich., two nights later.
"The Boss" forgot where he
was for the second gig and
several times said, 'Thank
you. Ohio!" to silent
Michiganders.
John Kerry made a similar gaffe during the 2004
presidential
campaign,
praising Ohio State's football team after he had
crossed into Michigan. Yei
he still won the state in the
general election - and lost
Ohio.

which drop~ the Brown' ( 1-8) lO 0-4 m
the AFC North. He pra1scd quarterbl\ck
Brady Quinn·~ ability to handle a no-huddle attack. which had the Ravens confused during the fiN ha f, Yet it only
re&lt;&gt;ulted in a 0-0 tic at halftime.
But Qlllnn overthrew Royal on his
third pass of 'he third qu.1rter .md the
interception wa~ retumed lor a ID by
Baltimore's Dawan Landi). The '&gt;COre
was all the Kavens would need agmnst "
Browns team that would have to nvcrage
more than 36 points per gaml' the re&lt;.t of
the scm.on ju~t to match New Orleans·
point total (331) so t:·u·.
Tumovers have doomed the Brown~.
and unless they ck.m up thc1r mistakes.
:VIangini\ ftr&lt;&gt;t season in C'lc,cland could
be his last.
•·Nothing affects outcome bigger than
£!h•e-away, take-away ratio." he said.
:-;There's been n bunch of time!'. where
we·,e been on the negati-.c side of.that.lt
affects outcomes. It anccts production. It
:,tops dri\eS, all tho~e things. That's
something that I think \\e should be better at and you have to be better at. You
ha\c to. The differential in pomts based
on turnover; is significant. It's hard to
win that way."
And it's hard to \\in "'hen you don't
have any playmaker-..
Mangini\ decision to tmdc both Kellen
Winslow ami Braylon h.lwards has left
the B1:owns Without an) legitimate offensive weapons. '1\vo years ago. the duo
wa~ in~tnuncntal in Cleveland having
one of the kague ·s most potent offenses.
Their depmture has left the cupboard
bare.
Mangini was not about t&lt;.l admit he was
wrong In trading one. or both, of them.
''When ) ou make the Jeci"'lons, you
make the decisions that ~ou think are
best," he smd. "I thmk \\e \Chad plenty
of opportunities to -;core. I think we''e

No

FuN
LOSIN'

AP photo

Cleveland Browns fans show their diSpleasure with the Browns' 16-0 loss to
the Baltimore Ravens in an NFL football game Monday in Cleveland.

had plenty of opportunities to mO\ e the
football. I don't think those opportunities
will go a"'ay. There haYe been a lot of
different reasons why it hasn't happened,
but the Important thi1~ is addressing
those and !!ettin!! tho~e llxed ."
There rnay be hope Oil the horizon.
This Sunday.· Cleveland visits equally
mcompetent Detroit.
The Bro\\ ns and the Lions ( 1-8). Oh,
my.
Detroit's defense i~ allowing a leaguehigh 29 points per game, which i!&gt; . h
Browns· combined point total in their
five games. Cleveland has !".COred in d
ble digits JUSt three times thi~ season, and
would !leem to have a good chance of
maklng it four inside Ford Field.

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

2.48 ERA in 32 starts and
225 l-3 innings.
Lincecum's
Johnson,
teammate this year in San
Francisco, and Sandy
Koufax are the only other ·
pitcherstowinconsecutive ~~~~~~=J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NL Cy Young Awards.
Johnson won four straight
from 1999-2002 with the
Arizona Diamondbacks
and Koufax was honored
in 1965 and 1966 for the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
San Francisco selected
the 5-foot-11, 170-pound
Lincecum with the I Oth
overall selection in the
2006
draft
out
of
Washington.
and
he
instantly became the organization's . top pitching
prospect smce Hall of
Farner

Juan

Marichal

si~ned

with the New York
G1ants as an amateur free
agent in 1957. He made his
major league debut in 2007
and is 40- 17 with a 2.90
ERA in three seasons.
Amy Noe was named to
the honorable mention
squad.
The
Lady
Marauders were led by
Shellie Bailey on the first
team, with Tricia Smith
being named to the honorable mentiOn team.
Southern was the only
local team not to be repre:&gt;ented on the District
13 list.

�-------------------...-----------~~~.-.~-~~~-=-~~~~----~~--------~-

• Friday, November 20, 2009

,..--~--

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

The Daily Sentinel ·Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune - Sentinel - ~egi~ter
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Meigs County, OH

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or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3ooa

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

All D fsplayt 12 N oon 2
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Display-Ads

• St•rt Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
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Monday-Friday for Insertion
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Sunday 'In-column: 9:00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
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~~ HOW TO WRITE AN AD

~egi1)ter

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'

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How you can hove borders and graphics
_{ ~
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1
Borders$3.00/ perad
1.!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

POLICIES: Ohio llliii'Y P!JbPthl~ re181'VI4 the 11ght to edit. reject. or caoc:etany ad at any lime. Errore must be reported on the fltll day of publle8tlon and the
Trtll~nlinel·Register wUI be reaponsillle for no more than tht colt of the tpeee occuple&lt;llly the error and only the f11'11lnaer1101l. We eta II no1 be liable lor
any loee or expenee !hell rwulttlrom the pub\lca11on or omteeiOn of an adVertleemtnt. Corr~ion Will be made In the ftr• avatiabia adnton. • Box number ads
are aiW~ye confidential • Cu'ftn1 rate card applies. • All reel estate advertisements are subject to the Federal Fair Ho1.111ing Act of 1968. • ThiS newspaper
acc.pts only help wanted ads mMiing EOE etandarcle. We wtll not knowingly a!XOpt any lld~ertl81ng In violation of tne law. Will not be retpONible lor any
erro111ln an ed Ioken over the phont

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Announcements

Lost &amp; Found

300

Services

Home Improvements

$100 Reward for return
Basement
Waterproofing
or info leading to the reUnconditional lifetime
turn of Matthew Outback
guarantee. Local refer· •
Compound Bow &amp; Case,
ences furnished. EstabMissing from turck be·
lished 1975. Ca1124 Hrs.
tween Beacon Par Mar
Statton &amp; Co Rd #19. 740-446-0870, Rogers
Meigs
Co.
Call · Basement Waterproofing.
740·992-0403
ot !!!!!!!!~~~~~~~
740-416-4613
Other Services
Notices

400

Pet
Cremations.
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY 740-446-3745
PUBLISHING CO. rec-

Call

ommends that you do
business with people you
know. and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have Investigating the offering.

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

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories.................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp;Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ...............................................1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automolive ....., ..........................................2000
Auto RentaVLease .....................................2005
Autos ..........................................................2010
Classic/Antiques .......................................2015
Commercialllndustrial .............................. 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 Estale Renlals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial................................................351 0
Condominiums ..........................................3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
lotS--·-·-·-·--...
4005
Movers........................................................401 0
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
Accounlln!Vfinanclal ................................6002
AdmlnistrativeJProfessional .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk.............................................6006
Chll~lderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery..................................... 6014
Educalion...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencies ..............................6020
Entertainment............................................6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General.................................. 6028
law Enforcement...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanlcs..................................................6036
Medlcal .......................................................6038
Musical .......................................................6040
Part·Time-Temporarles.............................6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory .........................................6052

t-\A~t&gt;{ A~Y~~E
1 ~oW ftAS A cAl

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refinance your home or obtain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or insurance. Call
the Office of Consumer
toll
free
at
Affiars
1-866-278-0003 to leam
if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This is a public
service
announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)
_ _ _..__...........,..........,

600

Animals

Pets
1 1/2 yr. old male shih-

poo, free to a good horne
Legals ...........................................................100
• Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary.................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ...............................................215
Memory/Thank You .....................................220
Nollces .........................................................225
Personals..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service.......................................302
Automotive ..................................................304
• Building Materials.......................................306
• Business ......................................................308
• Catering........................................................310
• Chll~lderly Care .......................................312
...................................................314
pnu·actclrs.....................................................~l6
omeslic!i/Jantitorial...................................318
• Electrical ......................................................320
• Financial.......................................................322
Heallh...........................................................326
~ Heating &amp; Cooling .......................................328
Home Improvements 330
• lnsurance.....................................................332
Lawn Service ...............................................334
' Music/Dance/Drama....................................336
Other Services.............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrical.....................................340
Professional Services.................................342
Repairs .........................................................344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security.....................................- ................348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travei/Entertainment ..................................352
• Financial .......................................................400
Financial Services.......................................405
pnliU!]IIJ&lt;iie.----··""""-"'"""'"""""'"410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Educalion.............................~ ......................soo
• Business &amp; Trade School........................... 505
Instruction &amp;Tralning ................................. 510
Lessons .............................................~ ..........515
Personal........................- ............................520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles.......................................... 605
Horses..........................................................610
Livestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
• Want to buy ......................~ ...........................625
Agriculture ...................................................700
' Farm Equipment..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land ........................................... 720
buy ..................................................725
.,.r·enonm•&lt;P,,, ........................................... 900
Antiques .......................................................905
Appliance .....................................................910
Auctions .......................................................915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies....................................935
Flea Markets ..............................~ .................940
Fuel Oil CoaWiood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kld·s Corner.......- ....................................960
Miscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
• Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

racka9e Deal, 4 br. 2
bth, 2 story. 3/4 base·
ment, fenced in yard,
central air &amp; heat newer
ductwork &amp; thermo control damper system fairly
new 92% efficiency furnance; 1 small house. 2
br.. 1 car garage, already
has
tenant:
1. large
80x20 w/15" addon &amp; atlic, former boat &amp; mower
shop; 1 additional lot,
level &amp; cleared off, all 4
are conviently connected
on a city block. take one
up,
take all will not split
Cleland
Reality,

Money To Lend

--------Employment
Wanted-Fundamental
49
yr. old Minister. 27 years
pastorial exp. looking for
PT or FT position, BA &amp;
Education
Masters degree. Strong 500
Gun
S.how,
Gallipolis, preaching,
teaching,
Holiday Inn, Nov. 21&amp;22 leadership &amp; counseling
Adm $4. State Route 7. skills.
Business &amp;Trade
BUY-SELL-TRADE.
6'
School
TBLS
$25.
740-667-0412.
Gallipolis Career
Professional Services
College
-wcturestllaf
(Careers Close To Home)
have been
Call Today! 740-446-4367
placed in ads at
1-800-214-0452
TURNED DOWN ON
gallipohscareercollege.edu
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
the Gallipolis
Accredited Member AccreditNo Fee Unless We Win!
Daily Tribune
Ing Council for Independent
1-888-582-3345
Colleges and Schools 12748

must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Houses For Sole

Fmancial

w/o
small
740-379-2306

children.

AKC boxers 2 Fawns, 4
Black w/ white markings
Dec.
14th
ready by
304-882·2760.
AKC miniature Schnauzers. Parti &amp; Chocolates.
Parents
on
premises.
740-441-1657.

i~M' ~r-JJo'{~
-f~frt~U~JI\Jc'::{ ..

www.comics.com

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

@ 2009

1000

Recreational
Vehicles

by NEA, Inc

Trucks

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

1997 Ford F·250 7.3
Power
Stroke
DieseL
Ext. cab, white. tool box,
ATVs
New Trans5th wheel.
Honda
Four
Wheeler mission.
174,000 m11es.
900
Merchandtse TRX-420 for Sale. TE $8,700. 740-416-0865
Blue, 2 Wheel Drive
truck
single
electric shtft. bought new Dump
Fuel / Oil / Coal /
April 2009. 4 miles - Paid axle.8.3 new clutch &amp;
$6500.
Wood/Gas
$3,975.00 new. Asking parts
$3,000.00. Please call 740-973-8999.
Seasoned Firewood Del. (740) 388·9024
Real Estate
call 304-675-3508
3000
Sales
Campers/ RVs &amp;
Seasoned firewood.
Trailers
All Hardwood.
740.853-2439
Commercial
or RV Service at Carmi740-446·9204.
chael
Trailers
Comm. Space 4 lease
Seasoned firewood.
740-446-3825
(Retail or office).
Prime
All Hardwood.
tcication,
busy.
highly
or RV
740.853-2439
Service at Carmichael visible, dwntwn corner.
740-446-9204.
1400-2000
sq
It
Trailers
$700/mo. 740-709-1960
Hobby Hunt &amp; Sport 740-446-3825
Hay for sale round bales.
bam kept 304-675-1743
or 1·470-339-0143.

~

I

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
EB¥, INT.EGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
MAX
EQUIP·
LOAD
MENT
TRAILERS.
&amp;
CARGO
EXPRESS
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCFSSION
B+W
TRAILERS.
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999. VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVENTORYAT
WWWCARMICHAELTRAILERS.COM
740-446·3825

2BR Apts. Clean renovated dwntwn.
new
appl., lam. flooring, water
incl.
sewer
&amp;
trash
$475/mo. 2BR $575/mo.
740-709·1690
3 room and bath downsta1rs first months rent &amp;
deposit references required, No Pets and
clean . 740·441-0245
1 &amp; 2 Br furnished apl..
start $450 &amp; up plus
dep., No pets. Racine.Oh
740-591-5174
_
_ _ _.__ _ __

Middleport Beech St. 2
br., fum,shed apts., utililties paid, dep. &amp; ref .. No
;.
P;;.;
et;.s~.;,
(7.;,;40.)9;,;;9.;;.
2·.;.
0 .;.;16;.;;.
5_ _
Apartment available now
Riverbend
Apts.
New
Land (Acreage)
Haven WV. Now accepting
applications
for
30 acres of hunting prop- HUD-subsidized,
one
erty in Gallia Co. Call
Bedroom Apts. Ut1hhes
740-379-9887.
mcluded. Based on 30%
of adjusted 1ncome. Call
Real Estate
3500
304·882-3121
available
Rentals
for Senior and D1sabled
people.
740-992-2259 Cass Cleland or James Pickens at
asking
225·810-9927
$l09 ,000 OBO

For sale American Bulldog pups 4 male, 3 fe- Winchester model 70. 270
males
$500~00 cal. ne" in box made in SC.
304-675-8157.
S700000BO.
Free to good home male Pot Thompson Cent~r Omega
Belly Pig 304-675-2156.
50 cal Muzzleloader Blue
brl.. Black ~lock. Simmons
Free Blue Healer I Rat Aetec
2-8., 10x44
scope
Terrier mix pups 6wks. S300.00 or $200.00 w/out
old 304-675·2156. •
scope
304-675·5815
or
304-593-5361
Free Lab mix pups 6
weeks old 304-675-5361
Miscellaneous
or 740-645-5851.
Full Blooded Golden Retnever
pupptes.
1st
shots/wormed.
740-853·1955.

Apartments/
Townhouses

Motorcycles

For Sale By Owner

DRZ
2007
Suzuki
400-Super Motard. Blk.
2941 mi. Always tndoors
and covered. Almost like
new.
740-245-0611.
doguitars@yahoo.com

12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446·0390.
--------Beautiful
home
and
hunter's
dream.
For
to
more
details,
go
www~orvb.com
or
call
740-794-1132.

2000

Houses For Sale

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800-537-9528
Want To Buy

Automotive

Autos

1999 Lin.:oln Town Car
exec. series 9-1,700. miles.
leather 1nter. wry good
cond . ."\04-675·2X21 .
Dodge
Intrepid,
2002
Automatic
Air,
$2000
256-1652
or
OBO.
256-1233.
1998 Dodge Neon. Standard
$1600
OBO.
256-1233.

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins,
any
10KI14KI18K gold jewelry. dental gold, pre
US
currency,
1935
proof/mint
sets,
dia2005
monds. MTS Cotn Shop.
2003
151 2nd Avenue. Galli2004
polis. 446·2842
2007
$6850.

Cavalier,
Cavalier
Cavalier
Colorado
256-6169.

$4200,
$3900,
$3600,
Truck

2008
Pontiac
G6
Yard Sale
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $l4,200. 304-812-0095.
Moving sale, · 39367 SA
143, Pomeroy, Oh, Fri.,
Sun.,
Mon.•
Sat.,
740-992-3080

Car For Sale- 1995 Toyota Tercel-No rust, some
AC
dings
&amp;
flaws.
AM/FMtCD, 4 speed • 40
mpg
160,000
mtles.
Runs
Amazing,
new
tires, struts &amp; four wheel
alignment.
$950
OBO
(740)248-9439 or (740)
490-5661.
-------Honda's, Chevy's, Ford
Chrysler's
ALL
&amp;
CHEAP.
HALF PRICE
SALE. (740) 446-7278

Garage Sale. Fri &amp; Sat.
Generic Round-Up, 41%
Nov. 20 &amp; 21, 9AM-3PM
Glyphosate. 2 1/2 gal
St. Rt. 588, Rio Grande.
S40
Limited
supply.
Bdok Sale, over 1,000
740·256-6038
Books, Author Patterson,
Have you priced a John King.
Cornwell.
Rice,
Deere lately? You'll be Koontz,
and
Grisham.
surprised! Check out our Also 100 children books
used
inventory
at &amp; 100 cook books &amp;
www.CAREQ.com.
Car- many more. Lots of other We have a full tnventory
michael
Equipment things. Phone 645-6509.
of cars &amp; trucks starting
740-446-2412
at
$1700.
Cavaliers.
Sale
STIHL Sales &amp; Servtce Yard
Nov. Sunftres, Buicks, Satums
Now Available at Carmi- 19-20-21, 9-? 6 miles out &amp; morel Cook Motors,
Jackson
Ptke.
Equipment Jerrys Run Rd Apple- 328
chael
(740)446·0103.
740-446-2412
grove 304-576-2635.

3 yr. old 1,152 sq. II
ranch home. 2 BR, 2 BA
w/ whir1pool tubs. Lg. LR.
Eat-in kitchen. All electric~ Refrig. Range. Dishwasher.
Gallipolis City
2 ·99
Distriet.
School
acres. 6x24 deck. 5 min.
from City Limit $69,500
(740)446-7029.

Apartments/
Townhouses
and 2 bedroom apts..
furnished
and
unfurnished. and houses 1n
Pomeroy and Middleport.
security deposit required,
no pets. 740-992-2218

Beautiful Apts. at Jack·
son Estates. 52 West·
wood Dr.. jrom $365 to
$560.
740-446-2568.
Equal Housing Opportunrty. This 1nst,tution 1s an
Equal Opportunity Pro·
vider anct Employer.

BR Apt. Tn-Level,
Close to Holzer Hospital,
No Pets. Ref + Dep.
Req. 740-794-083l

Clean 1 br. fum. apartment, Dep &amp; Ref req. no
smoklng.call
304-675-2970~ after 4pm

For Rent, 2 BR. Duplex
in
town,
$475/mo.
Dep+ref. No pets. Quiet
place. 446 • 1271
Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at VIllage
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts. in Middleport, from
S327
to
S592~
740-992-5064.
Equal
1BR. Stove &amp; Refrig. Hous1ng OpjX&gt;rtunity.
Furn.
Uti!.
pd.
$400/mo+$400 dep. 258 Modern
1
BR
apt.

1 BR Upstairs apt. 720
Second ·Ave. Gallipolis,
New carpet &amp; paint. AIC.
Water, sewer &amp; trash pd.
WID inc. No petsmo
smoking. $375 depJ$375
mo.
Ref.
Day:
740-645·2192. After 6:
740-446-0101 .

37_.3..,
6_. - - - - - - State St. No smoking, no .44_6_·_
pets. 740-446-3667.
Modern 1BR apt. Call
2 bedroom, living room.
kitchen, bath Apartment.
Have Central Air furnished
with
couch.
chairs.
washer.
dryef
stove. microwave, beds.
dining table and chairs.
$400 deposit. $450. a
month.
Call
304-882-2523
leave
Message and Number tf
not at Home.

~:..::..:...:.:::=;....----

740-446·0390
Nice
BR wash-dry.
Stove &amp; Fndge. All Utilrties~ Call 740-446·9585.
S600imo.-S500 dep.
Nice clean efficiency apt.
convemently located ref
&amp; dep. req. no pets
304 675 5162
"
"
·
Pleasant Valley Apart·
t k.
ments IS now a •ng ap·
plications for 2. 3, &amp; 4
Bedroom
HUD
Subs•·
dized Apartments. Apph·
cations are taken Mand
th
h Fd
00
ay
roug
n ay 9 :
am-1 :00 pm Office is lo·
cated at 1151 Evergreen
Dnve.
Point
Pleasant,
WV. {304)675-5800.

2 br. downstairs
kit.
app.,a/c &amp; furnace, WID
hookup $350.00 a mon.
+
$200.00
dep.
304 -675-6375.
•2-..;
38 l ..;
st_A;.v_e"'.-L-g.- U-ps-ta- i-rs
apt
overlooking
river.
Furn. kitchen. 2 persons.
_Madison Ave.. .Pt, .PieJ~s- S425+util. Dep. req. Ref.
ant. frame house on 2 Call 446-4926
Spring
Valley
Green
lots, excellent locatton for 2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi- Apartments
BR at
2 future rentals. $8,000. zer Hospital on SR 160 $395+2 BR at $470
740-709-1858
CIA. (740) 441-0194
Month. 740-446-1599.
New 3 bedroom 2 bath CONVENIENTLY
LO&amp;
AFFORD- Tara
TownhOuse
home only $229.62 per CATED
month.
Call ABLE! Townhouse apart- Apartments - 2BR, 1.5
740 385 2434
and/or
small bath, back patio. pool,
- ;;.;;.;..;...---- ments.
.;.;;;;;.-;;;;;;;;;
playground, (trash, seW·
houses
for
rent.
Call
1800's farmhouse, 3-4
age, water pd.)No pets
740-441-1111
for
appli·
20
bedrooms, approx
allowed.
S4501rent,
acres.
740-992-6968 cation &amp; informat•on.
S4501sec.
dep.
Call
evenings
Free Rent Special !II 740·645-8599
1999
Clayton
double 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=
wide 28x44, 3 bedroom. up, Central A1r, WiD
Houses For Rent
2 bath. $22.500 OBO. hookup,
tenant
pays
_ _
or
9721
740 591
Call between ~l&lt;)&lt;)mo' 3 bed. 2 bath.
electric.
.
•
740 992 1599
the hours of 8A·8P
Bank Repo~ \5't o.lo\\ ::. I~
"EHO
\t'lll'&gt;, 8% APRI lor h&gt;llng&gt;
For Sale or Rent: 5 m1
Ellm VIew Apts.
800 6~0..:1946 e.x R02 7
from
Holzer.
2-Story,
(304)882-3017
3BR, 2BA, LR. FA, 1
1 BR Furn. House on
acre+new roof. windows, Twin Rivers Tower is ac· Raccoon Rd. 5350 +
$54,000
or cepting applications for dep.
siding.
No
pets.
$600/mo. 740·256-1556
waittng list for HUD sub- 740-446·1759.
sidized. 1·BR apartment
Used 3 bedroom home
1 Br. house tn New Hafor the elderly/disabled.
ven WV $300.00 a mon.
with heat pump and de·
call 675·6679
livery. Only $3995 Call
+
dep.
no
pets
304·593-0696.
740-365-9621

®

House for sale. 3 BR, 1
BA Ranch on Woodland Island View Motel has
$35.00/Night.
Dr.
www.orvb.com vacanc•es
740·446-0406
740-441-7443.

1BR Cottage in Gallipolis. No Pets. Dep &amp; Rei.
req.
Call
after
5.
446-2074.

�Friday, November 20, 2009..

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Help Wonted· General

Help Wanted· General

Communications Manager
ResponSible for develop·
ment and execut1on of a
marketing plan to inclue
outreach, public rela·
lions, public speaking.
market1ng the Agency
and ils services Develop
a leg1slat1ve plan that In·
eludes work with lobbyists and legislators and
advocating for serv1ces
for the elderly and dis·
abled. Coordinate SPfl·
c1a1 events.
Bachelor's degree re·
qwed, Master's preferred, in communications, marketing, or re·
lated f1eld. Experience in
public relat1ons. marketing, and proJect managemant, required. Must
have experoerce and ca·
pabiht1es with graph!&lt;: de·
s1gn programs Supervisory experience, pre·
!erred.
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:
jshong@ aaa7.org
Resumes Accepted Un·
til Position is Filled
EEO/AA Employer

varSity.
Substrtu•ion:
Bachelor's degree 1n So·
Clology,
Psychology,
Counseling,
Criminal
Justice behav1ora1 Scil:1terpersona
ence,
Commun1cahons, Human
Serv1ces Education, Special Education. or Ele·
mentary Education from
an accredited college or
umvers1ty may be subst1·
tvted for the degree 1n
Social Work
Special
Requirements.
Eligible
for
temporary
Soc1al Work license. or li·
censed as a Social
Worker, Graduate Social
Worker, or Certified SoCial Worker by tre State
Of West
Virginia Board
of social Work Examln·
ers.
Candidate
must
have successfully completed the Social Service
Worker Ill Civ11 Service
Examinatiof'l.
Salary
range
is
$22,224.00-$41 112.00.
Contact Betty Jo Scarberry at 304-373-2560
ext. 2190

Get Your '.1~~ago Acros• Wm: ADally Senbnel

BULLETIN BOARD
1
13'

column mth weekdays

PERFECT GIFT FOR
CHRISTMAS!

1

22 COI.:mn tnch Sunday
CALL OUR OFFICEAT992·2155

Virginia Beach Getaway

June 3, 201 o
to June 6, 201 0
Pomeroy Eagles
Welcomes

PEAK SEASON
Chartered Coach
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 oan provide
a certificate for presentation
Cash, check, credit cards and
money orders accepted
Passengers of all ages
welcome
To make reservations please
call PVH Community
Relations
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

Southern Accent
Sat.." Nov. 21st &amp;
Sat:, Dec. 5th

Broadside
Friday, Dec. 11th
• &amp; Sat., Dec 12 th

Country Roads
Sat., Dec. 19th

Come Out &amp; Enjoy
the Music
Members

&amp;

Guests Welcome

MIZWAY
Karaoke- Friday
Pool Tournament- Thurs
AMIX -Saturday 9-1
SA 143 Pomeroy, Ohio

=~~~~~~~ !!!!!!!!~~~~~~~

Houses For Rent
3 br house at 407 3rd
St New Haver&gt; 5425.00
$425.00 dep.'
a mon.
•
PETS
NO
304-882-3652.
' br 2 ba. all cb:. o\ef
; 700 sq ft.&amp;: 2 car gar 15
miles I' &lt;'Ill Pt Pte a· S7ll() ll()
nmon.

3()4.593-0205

=~~~~~~~ !!!!!!!!~~~~~~=

Rentals

or

~ 586' 2003 3 br 1 1/2 bath. Langsville
address.
Salem
Township,
$450
per
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.
3BR
house
4
renL
$500/mo. $500 dep. No
pets.
on
At
160.
446-8495.

Sales

Help Wanted· General

for Country liv1ng- 3-5BR,
2·3 BA on property.
sec. Many floor plans! Easy
pd. Financing! We own the
todayl
bank.
Call
866-215-5774
2BR Ideal for 1 or 2 peo- - - - - - - - pie, $300/month,
Re· AA-Tired of paying rent?
fernces, No Pets, NO We can get you into a
CALLS
af1er
7pm new manufactured home
tor as 10w as 5% down.
740-441-0181
Call to be pre-qualified
3 BR Mobile Home, 1 1/2 866-838·3201
BA, $450/mo. $450 dep. - - - - - - - 740-256·6408,
AAA BRAND-NEW!

2
Trailer
Lots
Rent-AddiSOn
P1ke-$ t 50/mo
+
dep.
Water
446-3644.

~25_6,..·6_~_8_,4-4-1·-0...,583
_ _...,

HUGE 4 BR

Trailer 1n town Racine, 2
br., 1 bath, all electric.
carport, large front porch,
close to school, library &amp;
park, 5425 deposit, $425
per month water &amp; garbage 1ncluded. NO Pets,
740-949-2217

2 Bath SECTIONAL
2x6 walls. Large Chefs
kotchen, so year Siding,
Dlx appliance pkg. Pvl
.t1hty rm, Gl8nt walk·in
closels. P1teh ce11 rgs.
Giani great room++++
NEW FHA FINANCINGI

Card of Thanks

I would like to thank the
many people for their
prayers and get well wishes i
expressed to me during my
recent illness.
My health continues to
improve thanks to all those
who remembered me in
prayer.

Position open at Darst
Adult Group Home. call
for
interview
740·992-5023
Wan1~t1

wmcone "' h1e "'

elderly lady 6-7 tll)s l
week. p1,1ate bedHx•m
rc·
fer
elderly
lady

"

1

non-,moKer.

nor ill"nkcr

.:1

R1ple) area 304 372 1858
or J04·5.~;2-3.t9R call atw
7pm. no later lhan 9pm
Education

Part-time
instructors
needed dunng the day
mathematiCS,
eco·
in:
nom1cs, and accountmg.
Mathematics and economic 111structors must
have a master's degree
in the discipline I' •nter·
ested please email a resume and cover letter to
- - - - - - - - jdanicki@gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Help Wanted

Father Walter Heinz
Help Wanted

Help Wanted. General

2/eartwnd Publications
Copy Editor/Page Designer
We 'are looking for someone skilled and
experienced 1n 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:

l''ial!lpohll 'Diltlv U::nbunr
825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpublicatlons.com

Quality Control
bAR'I up to 515.00 an hr.,
~' uh1ah: rc1a1l !Jore.... tram
mg provided S77 •766-9507

C•ushing &amp; sizing operation. Shif1 work. New Ha
ven, WV. 304-882-3944

$47,651

Card of Thanks

Electrician w1th lndust~l&amp;i
Expenenco
Certification
not
needed
304·882-3944
•

Cosmetologist
, neoded
for busy local ·salon call
740-992·2200

Trailer, 2 br, furnished,
MIDWEST HOMES
w/d, cable TV, construcrnymidwesthome.com
tion workers welcome.
740.828.2750
$400 month, $200 security deposit. two minutes
OHIO'S
from
bridge,
For
Rent,
5
Room
740-992-3362
BEST BUYs
House near school &amp;
2010 3BR Doublewide
store.
$275/mo. 4 br &amp; 2 ba. $675.00 a
$39,977
446.0974
mon. + $675.00 dep. call
HUGE 2010 4brl2ba
Hoouse for rent. 3br 740-973-8999.
FHA$349 mo
1ba, W&amp;D, Stove &amp; Re2010 3br/2ba Single
Double Wide. 38R, 2BA,
fndge DrOVIded. ,r. GallifroMS199 mo
$575 rent, $575 dep.
polis, Close to school.
HUD-ok,
1722B
MIDWESTHOMES
Dep.
&amp;
Re!
req.
Chatham Ave,. 645-1646
mymidwesthomes.com
S600/Mo. Call 446·7723
740.828.2750
btw 5·7 p.m
Mobile home for rent,
Hud accept. call before
New log apt-2 BR·Porter
The BIG Sale
9pm 304-675-3423.
area.
HP/Cent.
Air
Used Homes &amp; Owner
$500/mo. Dep &amp; ref Nice 3BR. 2 Bath, 16x80,
Financing • New 201 0
446·2801
Doublewide $37,989
Country
Setting.
Ask about $8,000 ReWisef"lan Real Estate-4 367-0266 or 339-3366.
bates
available-call
rentals
mymidwesthome.com
446-3644 for more info. Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
740-828-2750
All
In-town-various w/1 acre 5% down. $525
pnces-references &amp; sec. mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
"The
Proctorville
740-446·3570.
deposits required.
Difference"
Sales
S1 and a deed IS all you
Manufactu~ed
4000
need to own yot.r dream
Housmg 1995
Sulton
Mobile
home. Call Now!
Home 14x70, 2BR, 2BA.
Freedom HoMes
$8900. Sets on rented
888·565-0167
Rentals
lot. but could be moved
Call
for
more
info:
2 BR Mobile Home, No
(740)645-6476
pets. Water, sewer trash
6000
Employment
mcluded. At Johnson·s
Home
Park. Trade in your old smgleMobile
wide for a new home. 0 =~~~~~~~
740-645-0506.
money down. 446·3570.
Child/Elderly Care,
3br
5475.Jmonth
tn
Syracuse. Deposit, HUD
approved.
No
Pets
304-675 5332 weekends
740-591-0265.

StudiO 100, now hiring
stylists,
busy
location,
call 740-992·2288 eave
message

AVONI All Areas! To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears
304·675-1429
Do you enjoy help1ng
people? If so, 1 will give
you FREE. RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an
income JUSt for moving in
and helping my 87 year
old mother. You will live
here as if it were your
own home, minus the expenses. 740-416-3130.
Quality Control, earn up
to $15 an hour evaluate
retail stores, training provided,
call
1-800-901-2694
Heavy equipment mechanic
and
operator.
New Haven, WV location, 304·882-3944.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: is hereby
given that on Saturday,
November 21, 2009 at
10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 211
Second
St.,
W.
Pomeroy, Ohio. The
Farmers Bank and Savings Company Is selling for cash in hand or
certified check the fol·
lowing collateral:
2001 Olds Bravada
1GHDT13W212222747
2007 Honda Civic Sl
2HGFA55597H700793
The Farmers Bank and
Savings
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right to bid
at this sale, and to withdraw the above collat·
era! prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Sa~ngs
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 lm·
plied warranty given.
For further Information,
or for an appointment
to Inspect collateral,
prior to sale date con·
tact Cyndle or Ken at
992-2136.
(11) 18, 19, 20

SOCIAL
SERVICE
WORKER Ill
West
Virg1nia
Depart·
ment of Healtt"l &amp; Human
Resources mason Distrct Office are seeking
qualif•ed applicart for the
poS111on of Soc1al Serv1ce
Worker 111. Under general
supeiVision performs advanced level professional
social service work in
prov1d1ng services to the
public II' one or multiple
program areas Work re·
quires the use of a personal automobile for local travel. Employee is
subject to on call status
non·bus1ness
during
hours, employee maybe
reqwed
to dear with
situations which are potentially dangerous to client and worker. Emproyee performs related
work ae reqwed. Mim·
mum
Qualifications:
Training bachelor's Degree 1n Social Work from
accredited collage or uni-

Mark E. Rhonemus,
Treasurer
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATION
41765 Pomeroy Pike
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(11) 5, 11, 17, 20
-------Public Notice
-------Notice of Drawing Jurors
Revised Code, Sec.
2313.20
Office of Commissioners of Jurors, Meigs
County, Ohio
November 17, 2009
To All Whotn It May
Concern:
On Wednesday, the
2nd day of, December
2009, at 8:30 o'clock,
am, at the office of the
commissioners of Jurors of Meigs County,
Ohio, Jurors will be
publicly drawn for the
year 2010 for the com·
mon Pleas Court of
said County.
Janice Young
Christopher T. Wolfe
Commissioners of Jurors
Drawing will be held at
the
Meigs
County
Board of Elections-117
East Memorial Drive,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(11) 20
•

-------Public Notice
-------Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Notice is hereby given NOTICE OF PUBLICA·
that the Board of Edu- TION
cation of the Meigs IN
THE
COMMON
Local School District, PLEAS COURT OF
41765 Pomeroy Pike. MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Meigs County Clerk of
will offer for sale by Courts
sealed bid at 1 :00 p.m., P.O. Box 151100 E. 2nd
Tuesday, November 24, St.
2009, the following ve· Pomeroy, OR 45769
hfcles:
United States of Amer·
1995 International Bus ica vs. Scott B. Ander·
son and Elizabeth N.
#23
1997 Ford Bus #31
Anderson, et at Case
No. 09 CV 062
1997 Ford Bus #33
Scott B. Anderson, and
1997 Ford Bus #35
All sealed envelopes if deceased, all heirs,
containing bids are to devisees, legatees, ex·
be rnarked clearly on ecutors, executrixes,
the outside. Terms of administrators. admin·
sale will be cash or istratrlxes and as·
'money order. Said slgnees and Jane Doe,
Board reserves the Unknown Spouse of
right to waive Informal· Scott B. Anderson
ities, to accept or reject whose addresses are
any and all, or parts of unknown, will hereby
any and all bids. Ques- take notice that on May
tion can be answered 14, 2009, United States
by Mr. Paul McElroy, of America, filed Its
Transportation Super· Complaint In Foreclo·
visor at (740) 742-2990. sure and Marshaling of
All bids must be re- Liens In the Common
ceived In, and bid spec· Pleas Court of Meigs
lflcation sheets may be County, Ohio, 100 E.
obtained from, TREA· 2nd St., Pomeroy OH
SURER'S
OFFICE, 45769 being Case No.
41765 Pomeroy Pike, 09 CV 062 against Scott
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, B. Anderson, et al pray·
or by calling (740) 992· ing for judgment In the
5650.
amount of $74,080.59

·. YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
· New Garages
· El&amp;ctrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Patio and Porch Decks
wv 036725

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

'

CO~CRETE

CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement

!:qual
ployer

Opportunity

l:m

St Mary's Medical Center, a 393 bed tert1ary
care teachufg faClllty with
med1cal school affiliation,
!'las immediate opening
tor the following pos1t1on:,
PATIENT ACCESS
NURSE
Spec1al weekend Per
D1em
Responsible for the facili·
tation of patient transfers
and referral processes to
St. Mary's Medical Center. This individual w1ll
answer an calls to the
Referral Center line and
facilitate •apid acceptance and transport of
elig1ble patients by contacting physicians and
obtainmg bed assignments. Critical care
and/or EO nursing expenence is required.Must
be eligible for WV AN li·
censure.

All.l)'pes Of
Concrete Work

to 10' x 30'

740-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00am- 8:00 pm

7 40-367-0536

SERVICE CENTI&lt;:R
1555 NYEA,e.
Pomcro · 011
• Oil &amp; filter change
• Tune Ups
• Brake Sen ice
• AC Recharge
• :O.tinor exhau~t

repair • Tire Repair

David Lewis

• Trnnsmi,sion Filter
&amp; Fluid Change

740-992-6971
fo:Jsured
Free f'..Silrnatcs

• General Meehan it.
work
1740) 992-0910

I
1

J&amp;L
Construction
• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
• Garages
• Pole Buildings
·Room Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742-2332

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

·l~.rd I

ad CaofllWj' llllw FUtllU!ll'e

-.7W"W'.t!mbercreakcab-~.com

74 o446920Q
2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis

Replacement.
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD

Excellent wage and work
family benefits, including
free health insurance for
full-time employees.
Please visit our webs1te
at www.st-marys.org and
apply on-line under Careers &amp; Education.
EOE

with Interest thereon
according to the terms
of the note from April
21, 2009 until paid and
for foreclosure of said
Mortgage Deed on the
following
described
real estate, of which
said Defendants, Scott
B. Anderson and Elizabeth N. Anderson are
the owners of:
Real estate located at
50040 Twp. Rd. 1053,
Tuppers Plains, OH
45783.
as further described in
Plaintiffs
mortgage
recorded on December
11, 2002 in Volume 160
page 11 of the Mort·
gage Records of Meigs
County, Ohio.
and that Defendants,
Scott B. Anderson; and
if deceased, all heirs,
devisees, legatees, executors, executrixes,
administrators, admlnistratrlxes and assignees and Jane Doe,
Unknown Spouse of
Scott B. Anderson, be
required to set up any
interest they may have
'in said premises or be
forayer barred, that
upon failure of said Defendants to pay or to
cause to be paid said
judgment within three
days from its rendition
that an Order of Sale be
issued to the Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio, to
appraise, advertise in
the Dally Sentinel and
sell said real estate,
that the premises be
sold free and clear of
all claims, liens and Interest of any of the parties herein, that the
proceeds from the sale
of said premises be applied to the Plaintiffs
judgment and for such
other relief to which
United States of America Is entitled.
Said Defendants are di·
rected to the Complaint
wherein notice under
the fair debt collection
practice act is given.
Said Defendants are required to answer within
twenty-eight days after
the publication. Said
Defendants will take
notice that you are re·
qulred to answer said
Complaint on or before
the 2nd day of Janu·
ary, 2010 or judgment
will be rendered accordingly.
United States of AmerIca, Plaintiff. Stephen
D. Miles and VIncent A.
Lewis Attorneys for
Plaintiff
18 W. Monument Av·
enue Dayton, Ohio
45402
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www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

M A._WAYS OPeN
TO COMPROMISE \

'(i

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Musical
set in
Argentina
6 Revolting
11 Ore
sources
12 Early
years
13 Some
petty
officers
14 Fashionably
nostalgic
15 Yale fan
16 Sky
saucer
18 Wisconsin
tribe
19 Sunburnt
20- amis
21 Press
need
22 Comic
Wright
24 Throws in
25How
maps are
drawn
27"Das
Kapital"
author
29 Puts up
32 Writer
Tarbell
33Job
34 Sold-out
show
35 Piston
connector
36 Some
37 Get on

' \1--./

Mort Walker

11·;20

~UNKY
1..

WINKERBEAN

00~1 1" B£k1EV£

Tom Batiuk
Al..l RIG~... AlL.. Rl&amp;!-11...
(JJ£'1..1. DRIVG 84' !MDDJE~

At-.ID "fHE. OOk.(,)
IMPRES510N 1 MAD£
WAS IN 11-1£ FROO"T"
GRILl£ OF lY1lt' DAD'S
N£W 51Ai1o~ WAGc»J !

1'!-IIS ... 1 1RI£D 10
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.AGAR THE HORRIBLE
Mf.61(, MIF?.!ZOR, o,V 7He
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W.AL.t.-~o

• FAI~~&amp;i OF Ti45M Al-l.?

6/shf -r'l'i6Y SAY 1tl6
rttJJTH Wil-t. 6Gi
YO/} FRee...

Chris Browne
t

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

9!1-r, IF l 1{'" ... ;!it. GEl BROI'EtJ )1./{J
i5L.L 11-lf
~oMeoNe Wll-1.. HAVG
1Rl11'1-1...
G5VEN Y£Afl...~'E!AO /.}JCK,I

JOSEPH
38 Verdi
pieces
40 ''Sweet
Dreams"
star
42 Book
category
43 Shine
44 Borders
45 Prophets
DOWN
1 Campfire
bits
2 Tiny
flower
3 Illegal
investing
4 Kayo
count
5 Surmises
6 Pita
sandwiches

7 Future
fish
8 Long
shot
9 Leave
high and
dry
10 Appalls
17 Confine
23- populi
24 Pub pints
26 Some
socks

27 Sahara
sight
28 Found
darling
30 Friend of
Eeyore
and Pooh
31 Hardens
33 Argon
and
xenon
391s for two
41 Reduce

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (check/m.o.) to
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10
11
13
15

11-?0

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

l\·l•

HI &amp; LOIS

Brian and Greg Walker

Patrick McDonnell

"WE'D BETTER KEEP IT WARM UNTIL. IT HATCHES."

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

•

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green
HAPPY BfRTHDAY for friday, ~o\·. 20, 2009:

6

This year, you make waves. \Vherever you go, it

4

5

seems your influence is fell. An innate type of aura
marks your actions and gentleness. Your charisma
allrads many more people lhan in the pc1St. Unlike
many other Scorpios, you develop a nice style of saying "no" that takes the edge off your words. If you are
single, trust that you \\ill nave many opportunities to
ch,mge your stc1tus if you so choose. If you are
attached, this ye«r evolves into a special one in which
you ieel more can:&gt;d for than in the past. Be v.illing to
adjust to ch,mge. The real challenge, whether single or
not, is to stay reali.&lt;&gt;tic in your expectation&lt;;. You will
have a tendency to put someone on a pedestal.
CAPRlCORJ'\ tends to be more loquacious ~,ith you.

2 6 5

8
7

9

3
5

1

3

..

.8

3

4

2

71!1! Stars Show th.: Kind of Day )(m'II HmJr: 5Dttnmuic: 4-Po.&lt;tfizor; 1-A&lt;•crage; 2-S(}o,(); 1-Difficrtll

6

• "It's your fault, Billy! You're the oldest
and you should know better!"

ARlES (March 21-Aprill9)
** ** Listen to feedback that romes your \"\ay.
You are now on center stage. Cnderstand that it is
your Wc1}' or the highway. 1\'ew beginnings become
pos~ible. Listen to your sixth sense with c1 partner who
~ght be ,1cting strangely. 'lbnight: Could be a late

8 7 2

DENNIS THE MENACE

1

Hank Ketchum

70

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TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***** Keep reaching out for others. You might
want to know or under-;tand more of what is g~)ing
on. Det,,,·h and explore your option" more carefJJiy.
You could be re&lt;~lly -;urprised by the possibilities.
Tonight: Surf the l':et.
GEMlNl (M1y 21-June 20)
*****The time has come to deal" ith a p.trtner
directly. !"his person doesn't me,m to be &lt;1 problem. He
or she '&lt;impl) looks at life differently than you do.
Give this person sp.1ce to be who he or she i-.-just
like you want space to be who you are. '!(might.
Togetherness.
CANCER Qune 21-July 22)
****Other:-; w.mt to be in control. You ran pretend they are, knowing you c,m rontrol on!) vou~H
and no one el&lt;&gt;e, and it is the s.1me for them. Don't
pu~h so hard to achieve yom goals right now. liming
'r'ill work for you .:~t a later d;1te. '((might (,o wi:h
.mother's suggestions.
LEO Uuly 21-Aug. 22)
*****You might w.mtl,, do something murh
dtfferent from wh.1t you originallv thought. You might
'

not have all the right ideas, but you might have one or
two. Indulge a family member or yourself. Tonight:
Remain nurturing.
•
VIRGO (Aug. 2'3-SepL 22)
*****Express your caring in a manner that
speaks to others. Sometimes words work, and other
times actions count. Be sensitive lo people's different
style~. Your ~reativity s-u_rges in an unprecedented
manner. Tomght: All sm1les.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
.
****Your ability to get past ..1 situation makes a
big difference. Be aware of your financial limitations.
You are building on ~hunger found,, !ions. Investigate
opportunities as they come forward. Seriously cons1d·
era home office. Ttmight: Order in.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-l'\ov. 21)
***** You express yourself with ease. Know
what you want. Reveal more of your ideas, needs and
wi~hes. lm·estigate what someone pre;enls as a projed, idea or solution. A po~ith·e, upbeat attitude will
go far. Tonight: Meet a pal.
SAGITIARlUS (1'\ov. 22·De&lt;·. 21)
***Your possessl\'e !'ide emerg~ when dealing
1\ith those in your liie. Cse your instincts not to feed
insecurih; but to build vour confidence. Learn to trust
voursel( ,md then vou ·";]J be .1ble to trust nearlv an\'one. 'lbnight: Splurge on yourself c11ittle
•
CAPRICOR.l\' (Dec. 22-}an. 19)
***** Your positive persona and stvle will make
all the difference. Be honest \dth voursel( ,,-; to w~t
works .1nd what doesn't. Your w{Jipower will t."lke
you far. Listen to news more openly than you ha\·e in
ihe p.,st. 'Jonight As you like it.
AQUARIUS OM. 20-Feb. 111)
*** Breathe in and tmderst&lt;iJ1d that not e\ eryone
is on the s.1me page .1s you. Investigate altemati,·es
with more care If something feels wmng, it probably
is. Listen to your inslinc~ with a boss, e.pt'P,11l)' right
now. Tonight: V.mish quickly.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
***** lnlrinsimll)~ you know what you ".mt
Md what you desire. Honoring those basics counls
,md m,1kes ,, differenre. A meeting i..; very in1porL.mt
to dis,uver exactly what would be most effedh e.
ronight: l"t.lf "ith your fnends.
Jacque/me B1sar 1&gt; 011 tJ r /trim et
at/•!~1;1/n. •"-J•1C•IIIffm,•btgar.com.

�www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

(t'"
'\;if'

1: What year did Ohio State players first
NAME: Eddie
get Buckeye leaves on their helmets?
George
.HOMETOWN:
2: What year did Mich1gan first ....ear'
Philadelphia
"winged" helmets?
OHIO STATE
YEARS: 1992-95
3 : What year did Ohio State players
HIGHUGHTS: He
first get gold pants charms for
won the 1995
beating Michigan?
Heisman Trophy and
rushed for an Ohio State-record
4: What year did Ohio State's band
1,927 yards that season. His 3, 768
first perform Script Ohio?
career rushing yards are second to
5: What year was Michigan's fismt song
Archie Griffin at OSU.
''The Victors" composed'?
AFTER OSU: George played nine
seasons in the NR.., all but one with
the Trtan~Oilers. He lives in Nashville
and owns EDGE, a landscape archi·
Answers: 1. 1967; 2. 1938; 3. 1934;
tecture and design company and EGX
4. 1936;5. 1898
lifestyle, a fitness company. He is the
host of a Big Ten Network show.

&lt;QUARTERBACKS&gt;
Ohio State sophomore Terrelle Pryor and Michigan freshman Tate Forcier both
have big-play ability and the capability of keeping a play alive with their feet. But
both also .have been inconsistent at times this season.
Pryor has thrown for 1, 761 yards and 15 touchdo~s and leads Ohio State in
rushing with 633 yards and seven touchdowns. Forc1er has thrown for 1,824
yards and 12 touchdowns and has rushed for 230 yard_s and th_ree TDs. Pryor
has not had a turnover in is last three games. Forc1er was 1n coach. R1ch
Rodrigueis doghouse last week but still got the start over Denard Rob1nson
against Wisconsin in a 45-24 loss to the Badgers.

"

·.
'

..

SAY WHAT? .

Cullen Christian, a cornerback
from Pittsburgh Penn Hills, who lists
Michigan, UCLA and West Virginia as
his leaders, but also has Ohio State in
his top five, will go to the OSUMichigan game Saturday. The Top
100 prospect says he will announce
his decision next Tuesday.
Sharrif Aoyd, a 6-3, 310-pound
defensive lineman from Philadelphia
George Washington, plans to visit South
Carolina and North Carolina before
making a decision. He has already viS1ted Ohio State, USC and Florida.
- Ohio Staw linebacker Austin Spitler,
Evan Spencer (Vernon Hills, Ill.), the
wht:n askt:d whether quarte:back
son of former Ohio State running back
Terrelle Pryor or former
and ass1stant coach Tim Spencer, has
\Xblverincjustin Boren will be
drawn interest from Ohio State 1 but
a bigger target for Michigan fans.
more from Wisconsin and Nebraska.
' He is a junior receiver/defensive back.

" It's very
possible Boren
might t ake the
award for
that one."

E RECEIVERS

Ohio State's top two receivers, DeVier Posey (47 catches,
689 yards) and Dane Sanzenbacher (26 C?tches, 495 yards)
have combined for 13 touchdown catches, JUst one fewer than
all of Michigan's receivers combined. Ohio State has dialed
back its passing game in wins over Penn State and Iowa the
last two weeks, throwing only 17 passes in each game.
Michigan's Roy Roundtree (23 catches.-318 yards) has 17 of his catch~s in
the last two games. Greg Mathews (23 catches, 285 yards) and MartaVJous
Odoms (22 catches, 272 yards) are Forcier's other top targets. Odoms has
missed three games because of a knee injury.

&lt; OFFENSIVE UNE

•

••

Michigan lost starting center David Molk for four games
because of a broken foot, then lost him for the season four
plays into the Penn State game with a tom anterior cruciate ligament. That injury forced guard David Moosma~ to move t?
center. Guard Stephen Schilling IS the Wolvennes most expenenced offensive lineman with 35 starts and tackle Mark Ortmann has 23 starts..
Oh1o State's offensive line has been solid lately and guard Justin Boren should be
inspired in his return to Michigan Stadium for the first time since he transferred from
Michigan to Ohio State.

~DEFENSIVE
Ohio State leads the Big Ten in rushing defense. (83. 7 yar~s
a game), total defense, third-down defen~ and 1s .second ~n
scoring defense (12.4 po1nts a game). MJ_chJgan IS_10th 1n
rushing defense, ninth in total defense, sixth 1n th1rd-down
defense and ninth in scoring defense (28.1).
The Wolverines' defensive line is the strength of a struggling defense, though.
End Brandon Graham has 8.5 sacks this season and 26 over the last three years.
Tackle Ryan VanBergen has five sacks. Ohio State's defense got its only sack
against Iowa in overtime but dominated the Hawkeyes' ground game, alloWing
only 67 yards rushing.

&lt; UNEBACKERS
Ross Homan and Brian Rolle could get a \A.Qrkout against
Michigan's spread offense but Austin Spitler migllt be less of a
factor with Ohio State playing in its nickel defense much of the
game on Saturday. Homan took over as ~SU's leading tackler
and also leeds the team with four interceptions after picking off
Iowa quarterback James Vandenberg last week. Stevie Brown is
Michigan's leading tackler and Jonas Mouton can be a big hitter.

&lt; DEFENSIVE BACKS
•

ROSS HOMAN
The 6-foot. 229-pound JUnior linebacker from Coldwater
has turned into a dominating force for the defense. He leads
OSU with four interceptions and 84 tackles. He also has two
sacks, two fumble recoveries and five tackles for loss.

Michigar cornerback Troy Woolfolk sa1d some of the
Wolverines looked "clueless" at tJmes when Wisconsin quarterback Scott Tolzien lit up the secondary for four touchdown
passes last week. The secondary has struggled all season
and has a walk-on starter, safety Jordan Kovacs. Tolzien is ~r
from the first quarterback to have a big day against Michigan's secondary this
season. Notre Dame's Jimmy Clausen threw for 336 yards and three touchdowns. Iowa's Ricky Stanzi had 284 yards and two TDs, Penn State's Daryll Clark
RUNNING BACKS
had 230 yards and four IDs, and Purdue's Joey Elliott got 367 yards and two
Michigan has the highest-scoring offense in the Big Ten (31.3 scores.
points a game) and the 195.8 yards rushing it averages per game
is a big reason for that. The INolverines spread the ball around to
SPECIAL TEAMS
Brandon Minor (502 yards, eigllt touchdowns), Carlos Br&lt;Mfl
Ohio State's Devin Barclay was the toast of Columbus after
(480 yards, four touchdowns) and Vincent Smith. Minor has _bat- his 39-yard field goal beat Iowa in overtime last week. But he
tled a higll ankle sprain for several v.eeks and has played the last tM:&gt; games with a is only 4 of 7 for the season and has never kicked in a~ OSUbruised shoulder.
Michigan game before. Michigan's Jason Olesnavage 1s 10 of
OhiO State's running game has produced more than 200 yards four games in a row. 13 on field goals with a long kick of 51 yards. Michigan punter Zoltan Mesko was
Brandon Saine (610 yards, seven touchdowns) had 103 yards and tM:&gt; touchdowns first-team All-Big Ten last season and is averaging 44.7 yards per punt OSU's Jon
in a 27-24 win aver Iowa last Saturday. Dan Herron (462 yards, seven touchdowns) Thoma averages 37.4 yards per kick.
canied 32 times for 97 yards and scored out of the wildcat formation.

·&lt;

&gt;

.
&lt;.

OSU ILEADERS
Big Ten
W L

School
Ohio State
Iowa
Penn State
Wiscons1n
Northwestem
Michigan State
Minnesota
Purdue
Illinois
Michigan
Indiana

.

6
5
5
5
4
4
4
3

1
2
2
2
3
3
4
4

2

6

1
1

6
6

Overall

W

L

9

2

9

2

9

2

8

2

7

4

6
6

5
5

4

7

3
5

7
6

4

7

BIG TEN TREND: Michigan is a
loss away from haVIng two
straigllt losing seasons for the
first time since 1963.

Friday, November 20,2009

Passing Yards
BIG TEN SCHEDULE
Terrelle Pryor .....................•..1, 761
Ohio State at Michigan, noon
Rushing Yards
Minnesota at Iowa, noon
Penn St. at Michigan St., 3:30p.m. Terrelle Pryor .......................... 633
Receiving Yards
Purdue at Indiana, 3:30 p.m.
Wisconsin at Northwestern, 3:30 p.m. DeVier Posey .......................... 689
Touchdowns
TOP 25 GAMES TO WATCH
Terrelie Pryor................................7
Duke at Miami (Fla.), noon
Dan Herron ................................ 7
Chattanooga at Alabama, 12:21 p.m. DeVier Posey .............................. 7
Florida lntem'l at Ronda, 12:30 p.m. Field Goals
TCU at Vv)'oming, 2 p.m.
Aaron Pettrey ......................13/19
LSU at Mississippi, 3:30 p.m.
Punting
N. Carolina St. at Virginia Tech, 3:30 Jon Thoma ............................37.6
p.m.
Tackles
California at Stanford, 7:30 p.m.
Ross Homan ............................ 84
Kansas at Texas, 8 p.m.
'
Sacks
Oregon at Arizona, 8 p.m.
Cameron Heyward ...................... 5

OSU SCHEDULE
Sept. 5 ......Navy
W, 31-27
Sept 12 .... USC
L, 18-15
Sept. 19 ......Toledo
· w. 38-0
Sept. 26 ...... IllinOIS
W, 30-0
Oct. 3 ..........at Indiana
w. 33-14
Oct. 10 ........ Wisconstn
W, 31-13
Oct. 17 ......at Purdue
L. 26-18
Oct. 24 ........Minnesota
W, 38-7
Oct. 31.. .... ..New Mex. St. W, 45-0
Nov. 7 ........at Penn State W, 24-7
Nov. 14 ...... Iowa
W, 27 ·24
Nov. 21 ......at Mich1gan
Content compiled by J1m Naveau and
desif§l by Ross Bishoff • The uma New.;
Copyright © 2009 The Lima New.&gt;.
Reproduction of any portion of this material IS prohibited Volithout express consent

J im
Naveau
The Uma News
jnaveau@limanews.com
419-993-2087

Rodriguez
similar

to Coop?
Ohio State and Michigan
probably wouldn't admit it,
but they're more alike than
different.
Big stadiums? They've both
got them. Millions of passionate fans? They both have
them.
Tradition? Change even a •
stripe on a uniform at either
school and you're going to
hear about it. Change anything and someone will fmd a
reason to get upset.
Both have huge athletic budgets that depend on filling
those big stadiums seven Saturdays every autumn.
Their recruiting philosophies are similar. They both
start by getting the best players from close to home and try •
to compete for the top players
around the country who are
attracted by their success,
facilities and post-college
opportunities.
The latest similarity is in
how Michigan football coach
Rich Rodriguez has become
John Cooper.
At least, much of the criticism of Rodriguez sounds like
what Cooper heard through- • •

out his 13 seasons at Ohio

I

State.
Maybe the biggest complaint
OSU fans had about Cooper
was that he didn't understand
the Ohio State-Michigan
rivalry.
Two years into his tenure at
Michigan, Rodriguez is still
answering questions about
whether he grasps the importance of that rivalry.
Cooper talked about carrying a lucky buckeye in his
pocket, but that didn't convince the skeptics.
Rodriguez repeated the
story earlier this week about
how someone handed him a
"Beat Ohio State" button the
day he was hired at Michigan.
"Trust me, I understand the
importance of the rivalry," he
said.
Actually, what Rodriguez
probably means is that he
understands the importance
of winning in the rivalry.
Cooper wouldn't have heard
that question so often if he
had beaten Michigan more
than two times.
•
Rodriguez will stop hearing
it if he gets a few wins over
Ohio State. If he lasts that
long.

COUNTDOWN

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

1

Day until kickoff

1111 ....

'

j

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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