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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Ohio
Valley
Publishing invites you
to contribute your stories of faith to the 20 I 0
edition of Faith and
Family magazine.
Share with your friends
and nei!!hbors around the
·-coUJlty area what God
doing in your life.
•
We're looking for testimonies of salvation.
revival, miracles. healing
and much more.
E-mail your stories of
faith to Andrew Carter at
mdtnews@mydailytribune.com. Be sure to
write "ATTN: AndrewFaith and Family.. in the
subject line. For information. call (740) 4462342, ext. 18.
The submission deadline for stories to be
included in the 2010
edition of Ohio Valley
Publishing's Faith and
Family magazine is
Friday. Dec. 31 .

...,...---,.....- - ... .......--

-

Cincinnati riverfront
wo k picks·up , As

Parade Wmner, A3

Faith and
Family 2010:
Tell us your
stories of faith

.

____

.

- -, - ,_ .. - ,. --- . . . . - ________,____________________.._._.,_"""'!"_____,______'1":""'_
•

.a
D.,

Higher water bills spill into February
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Beginning
in February. water customers in Pomeroy will pay
more for their water after
the third and final reading
of an ordinance raising the
rates passed last night at
Pomeroy Village Council.
The vote was unanimous
and will rai&lt;;e the base
charge for water by $5.
Currently, water customers
in Pomeroy pay a base
charge of $13 which means
customers will now pay
$18. The rates go into effect
in January but customers
won't actually be billed at

the new rates until their
February statement.
According to Mayor John
Musser. it has been six years
since the base water rates
were increased , not to be
confused with the sewer
rates which have increased
in the last three years. The
raise in water fees will go
into the water department's
operating expenses fund
because the department
can't keep up with those
expenses. including increases in items such as chemicals at the water plant and
utility bills.
Co unci I also approved the
second reading of an ordinance which will rezone a_

piece of property owned by
the
Community
Improvement Corporation
along West Main in the
Monkey Run area. The
property is across from
Pizza Hut and is cutrently
zoned as ''open space."
Council. by unanimous
vote, approved the second
reading meant to rezone the
5.5 acres as "commercial
space.'' Musser said the CIC
had received a grant to pave
the road that rests in the area
in question.
Also, Councilman David
Deem turned in his resignation to council effective
last night due to obligations that made him unable

to devote what he felt was
adequate time to his position. Musser commended
Deem for serving and
council reluctantly accepted the resignation. Musser
then suggested outgoing
Councilman Pete Barnhart
be nominated for Deem's
seat. Barnhart·s current
term is to expire in two
days so he resigned his
seat at last night's meeting
and council unanimously
voted him into Deem's
position. Musser recommended Barnhart. citing
his prior service to council
and the fact he received
the next highest amount of
votes among candidates

who ran for village council
seats in November.
Harry Davidson and
Ronnie Casto of Pomeroy,
represented the Meigs
County
Scottish
Rite
Freemasons who wish to
purchase two benches and
place them at the Mulberry
Pond. Council gave the men
their permission to pursue
the donation.
Council also approved purchasing culverts for Wehe
Terrace, Anne Street and
Osborne Street to fix drainage
and slippage problems.
Council adjourned into
executive session to discuss
personnel matters in the
water department.

New faces
in leadership
greet start
of 2009
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

(Editor's Note: The following is the first in three
stories looking back at local
news of2009, as reported in
The Daily Sentinel.)

SPORTS
~arshall beats

~U at Pizza Bowl.

POMEROY
The
:vieigs County community
began 2009 with a new
slate of county officials,
taking their places in office
just in time for a major
snow and ice storm.

See Page 81

January

OBnuARIES
Page AS
• Charles Cartwright, 80
• Cecil J. "C.J." Hill, 77

~ar~Hudson,66
• Linda Jarrell, 61

Brandon Carpenter and Randy Carpenter, Jr.

Brother soldiers enjoy
Christmas reunion in Baghdad
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT Two Meigs
County brothers serving in Iraq
enjoyed a sweet Christmas reunion, far.
far away from the comfo1ts of home.
Randy Carpenter, Jr. and his ''little"
brother, Brandon Carpenter. were able
to meet up at the Sather Airbase
U.S.O. Center in the Baghdad Airport

WEATHER

and enjoy a coupie of days holiday
resp1te together.
Randy, Jr. is the son of Randall
Carpenter. Sr.. Middleport, and Linda
Will of Pomeroy. Brandon is the son
of Randall, Sr. and Peg Carpenter of
Middleport. Both are Meigs High
School graduates.
It took a couple of months to coordinate the meeting between the two soldiers, according to their father. Both

worked with their respective commands in Iraq, while Dad Carpenter. a
veteran himself. worked the Stars and
Stripes and the Army Times news
organizations to help make it happen.
Randall. Jr. is a sergeant with the
!!50th West Virginia Army National
Guard, and Brandon an active duty
soldier in the U.S. Army, based in Ft.
Benning, Ga. Brandon's wife. Bobbi
Jo, is a native of Hartford. W.Va.

Support for domestic violence
Serenity House meets in Meigs

Details on Page A3

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENHI MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

~lendars
assifieds

A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

tc; 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

li.IJIJI,I !I!IJI!II

POMEROY - Serenity
House, which has a shelter
in Gallipolis, has organized
a support group which
meets 4-5 p.m ., every
Wednesday (starting Jan. 6)
at the Pomeroy Library.
The group is free and
open to anyone affected by
domestic violence in marriages. relationships and
families. Teens may attend
but must have a parent's
permission.
Melissa
Kimmel
of
Serenity
House
in
Gallipolis, said the support
groups are a place for people to talk about their experiences with others who

have been through and survived similar circumstances
to provide emotional support. The group also helps
combat a marker of domestic abuse which is isolation
from society. The group is
open to both men and
women.
Kimmel said there are
many myths about domestic
violence including .. the
woman deserved it" or "if it
was that bad she should've
already gotten out."
.. Not true." Kimmel said
about those two pervasive
misconceptions. "People
never deserves to be hit.
they deserve to be treated
with respect. Women stay
in abusive rdationships for
multiple reasons. Offenders

often isolate women socially and financially ...offenders often even control the
vehicle."
Kimmel said leaving
behind
their
homes.
finances and vehicles and
all the other things that consist of their lives is hard and
can feel overwhelming.
"It's difficult for them to
do that 'and there has to be
planning put into place so if
a woman leaves she will be
supported," Kimmel said.
Serenity House attempts
to support the efforts of not
only women but men who
wish to leave abusive rdationships. These abusive
relationships often contain
physical. verbal. financial.
psychological abuse at the
hands of the abuser. The
abuser will often use any
kind of controlling behavior

to keep the victim isolated
and dependent.
Kimmel said she has
seen abuse victims appear
in all ages, from kids to
those in their 70's . Kimmel
said dome_stic violence
occurs not JUSt between a
man and woman but samese~ couples.
.
. .
It can ~appe!l 111 any tnt.tmate.relatl?,nshtp, not .Just 111
marnagcs, .
Km11n7l
stressed. addmg domesttc
abuse also happens between
parents ~nd children.
. Ser~n1ty. Hou~~. n~ns a
s~el.tet f01 dol~l~.:sttc. ~bu~e
Vtctt!ns ~nd the1r fmm!Jes m
9alllpohs though the shel.tcr
IS open to tho~e fn?m Metgs
County. To tnqLme abl)ut
the shelter. its programs and
SUpport groups, call 4466752 or toll free at 1-800942-9577.

..Out with the old. in with
the new'' became an unofficial slogan in the halls of
government. as new county
officials and district legislators took their posts.
Two
new
County
Commissioners. Michael
Bartrum
and
Thomas
Anderson, joined veteran
Mick Davenport on the
board. It is a political first
for the three-member board:
Republicans, Democrats
and Independents are represented equally.
Peggy Yost assumed the
position
of
County
Treasurer. Diane Lynch that
Please see Review, AS

Committee holds
first meeting
on local2010
census support
Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@ MYDAILYSENTIN EL. COM

POMEROY - A local
committee has begun to
meet in order to prepare and
educate the community
about participation in the
2010 census.
The Complete Count
Committee is the informationa! and educational arm
• of the census. a &lt;&gt;"rassroots
committee designed to
inform the public about the
importance of the census
and \vhy it is important to
complete the form. Chris
Shank. director of the
Department of Job and
Family Services. has been
named chairman of the
committee.
Census questionnaires are
to be mailed to all households in America in
February and Ma ·ch
d
are to be retun;ed 'bv 'Aan. 1
Ce
. , . ·. P,~
h1· . ~s~~ "'orkers. \\tll
.egm \'ISitll1g homes 1D ~he
summer months. collectmg
Please see Census, A S

..

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Tuesday, December 29,

Stimulus spending in Ohio ramps up in 2010
BY MAn LEINGANG
ASSOCIATED PRESS

In this June 22
file photo, construction workers
build a new
bridge that runs
over the
Cleveland
Metroparks Zoo
in Cleveland.
The state will
give rebates to
people who buy
new, energy-efficient appliances,
begin work on a
massive new
bridge for downtown Cleveland
and finish highprofile projects
to improve drinking water in rural
areas.
AP photo

trains running.
Obama's $787 billion
stimulus package, signed in
February, gave Ohio $8.2
billion to spend through
2011. Gov. Ted Strickland
used much of it - about
$5.8 billion - to help
replace declining tax revenue and balance the state's
20 10-20 II budget. The rest
was spread out across state
agencies, including millions
for health. transportation
and education programs.
Ohio had spent $2.1 billion in stimulus money
through Nov. 30, the latest
data available.
So far the stimulus pack-

age has created or saved
about 650.000 jobs nationwide, including 17.000 in
Ohio. according to an independent federal board monitoring the program. The
figures are based on filings
from businesses, contractors. nonprofits and state
and local governments that
received stimulus money.
Job creation - a key
measure of the stimulus
program's success - will
get flllther scrutiny as more
programs ramp up in 2010.
And with the nation's
unemployment rate at 10
percent, Democrats in
Congress will debate anoth-

er jobs bill early next year
that calls for more public
works projects.
"I don't think we've seen
the last of the government's
stimulus efforts," said Jason
Seligman, an assistant professor who teaches public
finance at Ohio State
University.
Ohio has about 240 stimulus-funded highway projects, and payouts should
peak in 2010, said Chris
Runyan. president of the
Ohio
Contractors
Association, a trade group.
The state's largest stimulus project - a $400 million bridge for Interstate 90

in Cleveland - goes out to
bid in September. The project is getting $85 million in
stimulus funds.
Other public works projects include a new drinking
water system for the village
of Buckeye Lake. about 30
miles east of Columbus.
Construction should wrap
up in July. The village.
which has a population of
about 3,000, is one of the
largest in Ohio that doesn't
have a public system.
Statewide. the stimulus
package is funding 267
water pollution control projects and 65 drinking water
projects.
Appliance sellers, such as
Lowe's Cos. and Best Buy
Co .. figure to get a boost in
20 10 when states roll out a
stimulus rebate system
modeled after the ''Cash for
Clunkers" program for the
auto industry.
Ohio's $11 million program will provide about
90,000 rebates to consumers
who replace old appliances
with Energy Star certified
refrigerators, clothes washers,
dishwashers.
gas
heaters and electric heat
pump water heaters.
The rebates will range
from $100 to $250. depending on the appliance.
Elsewhere,
stimulus
money in 20 10 will accelerate the clean up of the former Portsmouth Gaseous
Diffusion Plant. a Cold
War-era nuclear weapons
facility in Piketon.
The $1 18 million project
- funded by the U.S.
Department of Energy - is
the largest stimulus award
to a private contractor in
Ohio.
The
contractor.
LATA/Parallax Portsmouth
LLC. has hired about 180
people to remove contaminated soil, demolish buildings and dispose of uranium
material.

Ohio blind marching band heads to Rose parade
Bv JENNIFER
SMITH RICHARDS
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

COLUMBUS (AP) - "I
used to have an old car that
sounded like that when it
started," the marching
band director says. "Urr.
UIT, urr, blatt."
The players crack up,
throwing their heads back
and having a good laugh at
themselves.
Dan Kelley is always
saying things like that to
his players. They sound
like an Amtrak train going
off a cliff. they sound like a
car engine dying, that note
sounded like a giant. wet
splat when it should sound
like the surf rolling onto
the beach.
"It's audio imagery," he
says. "I wanna keep it loose,
too. r ve got .kind of a stern
voice. If I say, 'I want this,l
want that' all the time, l feel
like I lose them because
they feel like they're not
doing it right."
The 32 blind players, 36
volunteer marching assistants, two band directors
and one music assistant
really, really want to do it
right. The Ohio State
School for the Blind
Marching Panthers are
going to Pasadena, Calif.. to
march in the Tournament of
Roses Parade on New
Year's Day. They'll be the
parade's first blind marching band. The smallest
band, too.
The invitation to march
came more than a year ago.
giving plenty of time to
practice. It's also plenty of
time to ponder a tough
question: Are we OK with
being famous because
we're blind?
Kelley believes in gentle
honesty,
but
honesty
nonetheless.
This is going to be hard.
Six miles is a long way,
longer than the parades
they've marched in to prepare for Pasadena. In the
past year. they've been
playing and playing and
playing. Performances in
Lancaster, at churches, in
Cincinnati. at the Ohio State
University skull session and
in the Circleville Pumpkin
Festival parade.
Practice bas not made

,.

perfect. That's the honest
truth.
Eleven band members
have perfect pitch (hearing
them hum during marchingonly practice is beautiful
enough to make you hold
your breath).
But when they pick up
their tattered and battered
and borrowed instruments,
not every note is hit just-so.
Having perfect pitch
"doesn't mean you have
the finesse you need. It
doesn't mean you have the
articulation skills you
need," says Carol Agler.
the blind school's music
director and co-director of
the band. She turns no one
away who signs up to play
at the beginning of the
year. No auditions are
required. just desire.
It hasn't made a lick of
difference to the audiences
who have heard the blind
band play.
The typical response:
They leap to their feet, clapping wildly. some with tears
in their eyes. Amazing!
Unbelievable! Inspiring!
For the players. though.
the experience is different.
They want perfection, or
near it. They are teenagers,
after all. and they occasionally have bad attitudes and
bicker at one another. Soand-so shouldn't get to go to
Pasadena; he hasn't tried
hard enough. He's playing
the wrong notes. She's
spreading rumors.
They have a lot of questions. Practices sound like a
bustling cocktail party. with
everyone lining up with the
marching assistants who
will guide them through the
5.5-mile parade route and a
12-minute halftime show in
which they 'II perform their
signature: Script Ohio. in
Braille. The twice-weekly
practices after school and
three-a-week band classes
go too fast.
By the time Kelley scoots
all the players through the
side door at the school and
into marching formation,
the sun has set and the air is
sharp with cold. His whistle
tweets. and the band comes
to attention. At his signal,
they honk out Military
Escort. one of two songs
they'll play in the first mile
of the parade.

• ---

-· --

-

..-.-~

Pa eA2

The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS Ohio
has plenty of President
Barack Obama's economic
stimulus package left to
spend in 2010, but it's the
big prize that hangs in the
balance: the prospects of
landing funds for a marquee
train project.
For now. the state. will
give rebates to people who
buy new. energy-efficient
appliances; it will begin
work on a massive new
bridge
for
downtown
Cleveland; and it plans to
finish high-profile projects
to improve drinking water
in rural areas
Still up for grabs is $8 billion in stimulus mane} that
Obama has set aside for
high-speed passenger rai I
projects. By late January.
the
Federal
Rail
Administration will decide
if Ohio gets $564 million
for a 79-mph, startup train
s~rvice
connecting
Cleveland ,
Columbus.
Dayton and Cincinnati.
The agency reviewing
bids from 24 states. Should
Ohio win. it would be one
of the state's signature
transportation projects.
"This would restore passenger rail to Ohio and
would serve as the first step
of implementing high speed
rail," said Amanda Wurst,
spokeswoman for Gov. Ted
Strickland. a Democrat.
Wurst noted that the corridor from Cincinnati to
Dayton to Columbus and to
Cleveland is one of the most
densely populated routes in
the country without passenger rail service.
Republicans. however.
have been less supportive of
the project and have showed
they may be reluctant to
provide annual subs1dies
from the state to keep the

.._,. -__,....__..,.., _ _ r-t-,

The other is Superstition
by Stevie Wonder.
Some of the marching
assistants - they can see,
because, as Kelley points
out. keeping straight Jines
is a "visual thing'' - stand
beside their student and
sling an arm across his or
her shoulders. Others prefer to guide from behind,
walking
like
Frankenstein's
monster
with one hand on each of
the student's shoulders.
This is seriously taxing
work. A few of the students
have limited sight; they
can see shapes or figures or
have some light perception. Many see nothing. So,
once
the
Marching
Panthers make their way
onto the school track for a
mock parade route, the
workout begins for the
assistants.
Pushing,
pulling, steering.
This ts why there are
more assistants than band
members. You wear out
after a while.
The two songs sound over
and over as the band makes
five or six laps. In the pitch
dark.
There are no floodlights
around the track and field.
Why bother with something
you don't really need?
The farthest the band has
marched is 4 miles. The students won't make it to 6
until they're in uniform and
in California.
''If you can march 4
miles, you can march six,"
Kelley says.
Excitement (and a heap
of nerves) has been building in the weeks leading up
to the trip. Hotel rooms and
chaperones have been
assigned; someone donated
cool sunglasses. and those
have been passed out. Rules
and travel tips - keep a
firm grip on your belongings. mind your mannershave been laid out.
Kelley has reminded
everyone, more than once.
that they're representing the
Ohio State School for the
Blind, the Ohio School for
the Deaf, and the entire
darned state of Ohio while
they· rc out west. People are
about to see exactly what
blind musicians can do.
"Even if they don't want
to admit it. one of the rea-

sons people say it's amazing is because we· re
blind."
says Whitney
Hammond, a 15-year-old
who plays bass drum.
It's fair to say there ·s been
a bit of discord among players as the band has become
a public phenomenon. They
put on their red-white-andblue uniforms and march
on. but the question of why
they're so well-received
really gnawed at some of
the kids.
News crews from CBS, a
Los Angeles CW network
affiliate and local TV stations have stopped in with
their cameras. Writers from
national magazines and just
about every local paper
have hung around.
"It's really easy to say
we're a unique story. a
human-interest story. We're
all that,'' Kelley says.
At the beginning of this
school year, with the Rose
Bowl months away and
months of sweat and tears
and bickering well behind
them, something happened.
The players started to make
peace with the why.
"Now, we think it's
because we're doing something good," Hammond
explains at the last practice
before the trip. Every player
and marching assistant is on
deck to. as Kelley says,
make the practice count.
"We said, 'No, we're
actually doing work. We're
working.· We have style,"
she says.
"There's nothing amazing
about a blind person walking and playin~ an instrument with a gmde," Kelley

The Vaughan Agency
1\o-"":• ..tll·ld&gt;..~·-..

505 Mulberry Hctghts
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

says. "I ask the kids to
reflect on that kind of thing.
and what they want to get
out of it. And not focus on
'They're just taking us
because we're a blind
band."'
Macy McClain, a 19year-old who has played
piccolo and flute for the
band, thinks it is doing good
by sending a message.
"I just think there arc
some people who don't
understand what truly blind
people can do. Blind people
go to college. have jobs do things sighted people can
do," she says.
That's the right thinking.
Kelley says.
"My philosophy is there's
never been a bigger audience than what we're going
to go out and pia) for. For
me, it's getting people
around the country to see
that these kids have talent. I
don't care about abilities
and disabilities. blindness
or whatever. They're out
here marching."
The 32 musicians. 36
marching assistants·, two
directors and music assistant were scheduled to
march onto a
plane
Monday. Then, they'll do
exhibition shows. the halftime show and 2 112 hours
of marching.
Kelley will boom, ''We
proudly present the Ohio
State School for the Blind
Marching Panthers!" and
the banner with their name
in Braille will start moving.
The players won't see the
crowd, but its reaction will
be easy to read. Amazing.
Unbelievable. Inspmng.

2009

New Ohio
laws and their
punishments
in 2010
COLUMBUS (AP) The new year will bring
\\ ith it more opportunities
for Ohioans to be ticketed
and fined. but also some
new benefits.
Starting Friday. Ohioans
can be ticketed and fined
S 100 for failing to turn on
their lights when their windshield wipers are on. Law
enforcement has only been
issuing wamings in the first
six months since the law
took effect.
Lt. Anthony Bradshaw of
the Ohio State Highway
Patrol said the motorists
must turn on their headlights
"anytime when the windshield wipers of the vehicle
are in use because of precipitation." including rain,
mist, snow, ice and fog.
"You want to make sure
people coming down the
road
can
see
you."
Bradshaw said.
The law is a seconda
offense.
meaning
tha
motorists cannot be pulled
over solely for failing to
obey the new law. They
must first be pulled over for
something else. such as
speeding. before they can be
ticketed and fined for not
having their headlights on.
Abo. starting Friday. a
new law goes into effect to
make health insurance
coverage more affordable
for Ohioans with pre-existing conditions and chronic
diseases.
The new law caps the
rates that insurance companies can charge during the
open enrollment period.
Ohio
Department
of
Insurance Director Mary Jo
Hudson says the change will
enable about 52.000 more
Ohioans to buy coverage.
Beginning July 1. parents
can purchase insurance for
their children. as long •
they are younger than
through their employe .
Current Jaw prohibits children from being covered
through
their parents·
employer policies once they
turn 22.
Other changes in the new
year include:
• Tickets and fines for
booster seat violations.
Beginning April 7. drivers in
Ohio can be fined up to $75
if they don't put children
ages four through seven. or
shorter than 4 feet 9 inches
taJI. in a booster seat. Like
the headlights law. it is a
secondary offense.
• Starting Friday. Ohioans
can compare the state's hospitals with one another by
using a computer. The Web
site will compare prices and
procedures, and will have
J00 different \v'ays to measure the comparison. including infection and death rates.

.. .

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"

LENND~

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Phone: (740)992-9784
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ASK DR. BROTHERS

.

Dear Dr. Brothers: My
wife JUSt got out of college
and is puttmg her degree to
good usc by being a counselor for battered women.
When she first started her
new job. it was great. She
was ver) happy to be mak
ing a difference. and she
seemed well suited to the
work. But now. after a year
and a half. her per~onalit)
seems to be changing. Her
moods
have
certain!)
become darker. and she is
les~ willing to talk about it.
Can bringing this kind of
\\Ork home with her have
bad side effects? - L.R.
Dear L.R.: Stepping into
a job involving the worst
aspecls of human behavior
can be a minefit!ld for young
social workers, counselors
or therapists, as well as for
those who volunteer as fJist
responders and other caregivers. While your wife is
;xpected to be a strong, givg professional. she probay also is unable to tum to
others for comfort when the
job gets to be too much for
her. The system doesn't
always allow for people \vho
are caregivers to take care of
themselves. and that ts
unfortunate. Since privacy
considerations probably prevent your wife from unloading her feelings on you
when she gets home. so that
you can provide her with
some comfort. she probably
is can·ying around a pretty
heavy burden.
What can you do? Without
prying into the particulars of
her work. you can take your
insight about it impacting her
moods and make sure her life
outside of work is filled with
satisfying and meaningful
activities and moments for
her. A healthy lifestyle
should provi.de her with
some resilience as well. But
these feeling&amp; persist. there
no shame in her taking a
eak from her work or
changing the focus so that
she is not subjected to the
constant barrage of bad vibes
and bad karma. She may be
suffering from "vicarious
trauma." which attacks man)
different kinds of caregivers
working with victims, and
simply needing some respite.

4

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Parade Winner

Bringing home tragedy
BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

PageA3

JHliE

The Daily Sentinel

__ ------

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: I'm
not one to complain. but I've
never really had it too easy.
I've never had an opportunity to go to college. and have
been pa)ing for it ever since
with years of dead-end jobs.
I've long since gotten used
to it. but I desperately don't
want my daughter to go
through the same ringer I
did. I'm vef) worried that
she might share the same
fate: we· re not Yery well off
at all. It's so depressing.
What steps, if any, can I take
to provide her with a better
future? - VM.
Dear V.M.: It is great that
you want to help your
daughter move forward and
have some of the opportunities that vou missed out on.
If you have any way of saving for college. I hope you
will consult a financial
expert to set up one of the
simple college savings plans
that can mean a big difference over the years. even if
it's not much money statting
out. But the best thing you
can do is help your daughter
become comfortable with
the idea of going to college,
and be part of the culture in
her school that values higher
education. She may~ be
tempted to hang out with the
high-school-dropout crowd
or the kids who have babies
or just find any job after
graduation. but that would
put a lot of batTiers between
her and a college education.
The National Longitudinal
Study of Adolescent Health
points out another road to
college for disadvantaged
youth: mentors. When they
have mentoring by an adult,
or especially a teacher. young
people who nom1ally wouldn't go to college partly
because of the social environment were actually able to
double their chances of
attending an institute of higher leaning. The study. based
on following 14.000 students.
points out that the teachers or
other adult mentors didn't
have to do anything in particular to aid the student academically; just the fact that the
students were treated seriously was enough to set them on
the right path.
(c) 2009 by King Features
Syndicate

Submitted photo

Holzer Medical Center and Holzer Clinic are proud to announce that the Holzer float entered in the 2009 Gallipolis
Christmas Parade won best theme with "Holzer, Delivering Great Healthcare Every Day of the Year." Pictured are a few of
the participants for the Holzer Medical Center and Holzer Clinic Christmas parade float entry. Back row, left to right: Dr.
Fred Williams. HCHS Chaplain, Ron Saunders, HMC Respiratory Therapy, Tim Yeager, HMC Transport, Stacey Call, HMC
Emergency Department, and Jeff Harrison, HMC Maintenance. Middle row, left to right, Lisa Halley, HCHS Human
Resources, Lisa Mitchell, HMC Performance Improvement Patient Safety, Dr. Jon Sullivan, Holzer Clinic Vice President,
Bonnie McFarland, HMC Community Health and Wellness, Dawn Halstead, HMC Volunteer Services, and Bryan Long,
HCHS Marketing. Front row, left to right: MarJean Kennedy, Holzer Clinic (HC) Marketing, Chella Price, Holzer Medical
Center (HMC) Health Information Management, Brent Saunders, CEO, Holzer Consolidated Health Systems (HCHS),
John Quidor, HMC Maintenance, Shayne Gay, HMC Emergency Department, and Tim Gillepsie, HMC Maintenance.

Nursing
Students
Presentation
Students enrolled in the
required Nursing Research
course at the University of
Rio Grande and Rio
Grande Community College
Holzer School of Nursing
presented posters with
research proposals that
could provide a starting
point for a project to be further refined in graduate
school. Donna Mitchell,
director of the Holzer
School of Nursing, said all
of the students in this
course have expressed an
interest in graduate school
and many have already
applied. Mitchell said she
was extremely pleased with
the quality of the students'
work. Mitchell stated that
when the semester began
they were not knowledgeable about nursing
research at all and did not
even understand the language of research. Now,
according to Mitchell, they
are not only able to understand it, but apply it as well.

Community Calendar
Public meetings
Tuesday, Dec. 29
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. to
transact year-end business.
at Syracuse Village Hall
ALFRED
Orange
Township Trustees, year-end
meeting, 7:30p.m. home of
fiscal officer, Osie Follrod.
DARWIN Bedford
wnship
Trustees,
end-of•
year meeting, 6 p.m., town
hall.
REEDSVILLE Olive
Township Trustees end-ofyear meeting, 6:30 p.m.,
township garage.
VVednesda~Dec.30

RUTLAND Rutland
Township Trustees, yearend and reorganizational
meeting, 5 p.m. at the
Rutland Fire Station.
HARRISONVILLE
Scipio Township Trustees
year-end meeting, 6:30p.m.,
Harrisonville fire station.
Thursday, Dec. 31
LETART FALLS - Yearend meeting of Letart
Township Trustees, 10 a.m.,
followed by organizational
meeting.
Saturday, Jan. 2
CHESTER Chester
Township Trustees year-end
and organizational meeting,
9 a.m. , town hall.

e organizations
Clubs and

Tuesday, Dec. 29
MIDDLEPORT- Special
meeting
of
Middleport
Masonic Lodge, 7 p.m., for
work in Master Mason
degree. Bring non-perishable food item for food bank.

Other events
Saturday, Jan. 2
POMEROY
Meigs
County 1-:iumane Society will

distribute bags of free straw,
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Pomeroy
parking lot.

Church events
Thursday, Dec. 31
POMEROY - New Year's
Eve Mass, 7 p.m., Sacred
Heart Church.
SYRACUSE - New Year's
Eve service, 8 p.m., Syracuse
Community Church, with Dan
Hayman and the Country
Hymntimers, and preaching
by Rev. Norman Taylor.
RUTLAND - New Year's
service. 7 p.m., Li'l Patch of
Heaven Church.
RACINE - New Year's
Eve Service, 7 p.m., Bethany
United Methodist Church,
Tornado Road. "Truly Saved"
and nationally-known gospel
group, ''The Concords:•
LONG BOTIOM - New
Year's Eve service at Faith
Full Gospel Church, Ohio
124, Long Bottom, 9 p.m.
Refreshments.
Friday, Jan. 1
POMEROY - New Year's
Day Mass, 9:30 a.m.,
Sacred Heart Church.
Saturday, Jan. 2
POMEROY - Bluegrass
gospel concert, 6:30 p.m.,
God's NET, with Lonesome
Meadow and Hanging Rock
Junction.
Concessions
available. Freewill offering.

Birthdays
Thursday, Dec. 31
SYRACUSE
Jane
Teaford will celebrate her
90th birthday with a card
shower. Cards may be sent
to P.O. Box 261, Syracuse,
Ohio 45779.
Saturday, Jan. 2
POMEROY
Shirley
Robert (Bob) Mills, celebrates his 80th birthday
today, cards can be brought
to an opef) house celebration, 2 p.m., Pomeroy Library.

Photo courtesy
Univ. of Rio Grande

Meigs County Forecast
Tuesday •..Sunny. Highs
in the lower 30s. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Tuesday night ...Mostl)
clear. Cold with lows
around 20. Northeast winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
Wednesday •.• Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
30s.
Southeast
winds
around 5 mph.
Wednesday
night ...
Cloudy with a chance of rain
and 1.now. Not as cool with
lows in the lower 30s. South
winds mmmd 5 mph. Chance
of precipitation 40 percent.

Thursday and Thursday
night ...Cioudy
with
a
chance of rain and snow.
Highs in the upper 30s.
Lows in the upper 20s.
Chance of precipitation 40
)l.ercent.
New Years Day...Cioudy.
A chance of snow in the
morning ...Thcn a chance of
snow showers in the afternoon. Colder. Near steady
temperature in the upper
20s. Chance of snow 40 percent.
Friday night ••.Cioudy
with a 40 percent chance of
snow showers. Cold with
lows around 20.

FAlVIILY
"":;..~.:::_ HEARflANO PUBLICATIONS ;;;-'-

''Publishing for the Heart''

Reach the Lost &amp;
Hurting Families

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.03
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 66.10
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 39.63
Big Lots (NYSE) - 29.05
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 29.81
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 34.08
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 16.34
Champion {NASDAQ) - 1.55
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.46
City Holding {NASDAQ) - 32.82
Collins (NYSE) - 55.99
DuPont (NYSE) - 33.70
US Bank {NYSE) - 22.47
Gannet1 (NYSE) - 15.23
General Electric (NYSE) - 15.34
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) - 25.45
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.72
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.73
Limited Brands (NYSE)- 19.54
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 53.59

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ)- 22.50
BBT (NYSE) - 25.55
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 9.68
Pepsico (NYSE)- 61.16
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.45
Rockwell (NYSE) - 47.40
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 7.99
Royal Dutch Shell - 60.86
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 85.44
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.98
Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.71
WesBanco (NYSE) - 12.18
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.51
Daily stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Dec. 28, 2009, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC. ~

Invite them to your church
Touch their souls with God's Word.
God said: ''They do not need to go awa)'.
You give them something to eat." Matthew ..J:l6

m;IJC

~allipolis

li}ailp ~ribunr
740-446-2342 ext. 17

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PageA4J

The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 29,2009

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
Cou.~ress slaall make no law respecting att
establishment of rel(stiott, or prohibiting tlze free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of the press; or tlw right of the people peaceabl)•
to assemble, attd to petitiott tire Govermuettt
for cl redress ofgrier,attces.

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 29, the 363rd day of 2009.
There are 2 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Dec. 29. 1170, Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of
Canterbury, was murdered in Canterbury Cathedral by
knights loyal to King Henry II.
On this date:
In 1808, the 17th president of the United States,
Andrew Johnson, was born in Raleigh, N.C.
In 1845, Texas was admitted as the 28th state.
In 1851, the first YMCA in the U.S. was organized, in
Boston.
In 1890, the Wounded Knee massacre took place in
South Dakota as an estimated 300 Sioux Indians were
killed by U.S. troops sent to disarm them.
In 1916, Grigory Rasputin, the so-called "Mad Monk"
who'd wielded great influence with Czar Nicholas II, was
murdered by a group of Russian noblemen in St.
Petersburg , Russia.
In 1934, Japan formally renounced the Washington
Naval Treaty of 1922.
In 1940, during World War II, Germany dropped incendiary bombs on London, setting off what came to be
known as "The Second Great Fire of London."
In 1957, singers Steve Lawrence and Eydie Germe
were wed in Las Vegas.
In 1975, a bomb exploded in the main terminal of New
York's LaGuardia Airport, killing 11 people.
In 1986, former British Prime Minister Harold
Macmillan died at his home in Sussex, England, at age
92.
Ten years ago: The Nasdaq composite index closed
above 4,000 for the first time, ending the day at
4,041.46.
Five years ago: President George W. Bush assembled
a four-nation coalition to organize humanitarian relief for
Asia and made clear the United States would help
bankroll long-term rebuilding in the region leveled by a
massive earthquake and tsunamis. Bush denounced
Osama bin Laden's call to boycott the Iraqi elections,
saying that the balloting would mark a crossroads for
Iraq.
One year ago: Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich's lawyer
responded to impeachment charges, saying a vague
array of charges and evidence did not merit remoying his
client from office. Somali President Abdullah! Yusuf
resigned, saying he had lost control of the country to
Islamic insurgents. The African Union suspended
Guinea after a coup in the West African nation. Grammywinning jazz musician Freddie Hubbard died in Sherman
Oaks, Calif., at age 70. French fashion designer Ted
Lapidus died in Cannes at age 79.
Today's Birthdays: Actress lnga Swenson is 77. ABC
newscaster Tom Jarriel is 75. Actress Mary Tyler Moore
IS 73. Actor Jon Voight is 71. Country singer Ed Bruce is
70. Rock musician Ray Thomas is 68. Singer Marianne
Faithfull is 63. Jockey Laffit Pincay Jr. is 63. Actor Ted
Danson Is 62. Actor Jon Polito is 59. Singer-actress
Yvonne Elliman Is 58. Actress Patricia Clarkson is 50.
Comedian Paula Poundstone is 50. Rock singer-musician Jim Reid (The Jesus and Mary Chain) is 48.
'
Thought for Today: "The wise man must be wise
before, not after." - Eplcharmus, Sicilian Greek
comic poet(?- c.450 B.C.)

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
1

Letters to the editor should be hmited to 300 words. All letters are
subject to editing, must be signed and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addresstng tssues, not personalities. ''Thank You" letters
will not be accepted for publication.

Combating recessions: Search for
the right macroeconomic policy
What :.hould governments do to
combat recessions'? In the United
States. before the Great Depression of
the 1930s. the answer wa&lt;; "very little." Of course, the federal government was much smaller then compared to the si1e of the private sector.
so its options were limited.
The Depression changed a11 of that.
In the mid-1930s. the British economist John Maynard Keynes developed a new paradigm: "The economy" was reified: that is, it was
regarded as an entity in itself, sort of
like a mechanism that could be
repaired and fine-tuned. thereby
"smoothing ouf' the booms and busts
of the business cycle. Keynes shifted
the focus of attention from individual
economic behavior ("microeconomics") to collective statistics such as
"aggregate demand," "price levels."
etc.
"unemployment
rates:·
"Macroeconomics'" was born.
The two primary "tools" of macroeconomic mechanics are fiscal and
monetary policy. In the decades
immediately after the Keynesian revolution. governments embraced ··contracyclical'' fiscal policy - responding to recessions by increasing deficit
spending.
After the horrible stagflation
(simultaneous economic sluggishness, high unemployment. and high
inflation) of the I 970s. monetarism
- Milton Friedman's theory that
monetary policy was of primary
importance in keeping "the economy'" on a steady growth path gained popularity.
Fast forward to today. and we find
our c&lt;:onomy mired in its worst
downturn since the Great Depression.
Fiscal and monetary policies have not
prevented the CUITCnt mess. and in
fact have produced it (detailing how
would require a book). What macroeconomic policy is government
employing'?
Chairman Ben Bernanke's Federal
Resene has decided on an easymoney policy. holding short-term
interest rates ncar zero percent. doubling the monetary base. and continually purchasing all sorts of dubious
financial assets from banks and government agencies.
Presidents Bush and Obama both
pushed "stimulus .. spending bills
through Congress. Keynesian deficitspending is still being used as a
macroeconomic tool against recession (as usual. without notable sue-

Mark W.
Hendrickson

cess). Where do we go from here'?
One macroeconomic viewpoint
cunently gaming traction is Richard
Koo 's "balance sheet recession .. theory. Dr. Koo, chief economist of
Nomura Research Institute in Japan.
sees today·s post-bubble U.S. economic predicament ns being imilar
to Japan's po,t-bubble situution in the
early '90s: Because hanb' balance
sheets are so weak. bank lending is
declining, desp1te the. Fed supplying
masstve amounts of reserves. The
Fed is ··pushing on a string·· - i.e.
powerless to compel hanks to issue
loans or customers from borrowing
funds.
American banks arc emulating the
Japanese strategy: borro\\ from the
central bank at miniscule interest
rates and purchase safe. higher-yielding longer-term government bonds,
slowly repairing their balance sheets
wJth this risk-free interest-rate
spread. Because this mending process
takes many years. Koo asserts that
Uncle Sam should continue running
large deficits - in other words. use
fiscal policy to compensate for the
lack ot lending. thereby preventing a
deflationary collapse featuring a
chain reaction of bank failures and
debt liquidation. It worked in Japan
and can woti.: here. too. he maintains.
Prominent economic commentators
like Martin Wolf and Paul Krugman
have jumped on th1s bandwagon.
They agree that the United States
should not reduce fiscal deficits until
a recovery is firmly established.
Unfortunately. nobod) is askmg the
crucial 4uestion: Arc the costs of such
a policy wmth it?
True, Japan has a\ oided a financial
wipeout and the sweeping economic
adjustments and restructuring that
would have followed . The price has
been nearly two dct.:adcs nt' economic
stagnation. The Japanese economy
remains subdued. and is now saddled
with an accumulated debt of 200 percent of GDP. a burden that will retard
economic activity for additional

.

•

decades unless an economic cataclvsm forces the needed restructurinl!. Also. because Japanese banks
ha'\·e financed gm·ernments instead of
pri' ate firms, '·)apan ·s public sector
hao,; grown at the expense of its private sector, another formula for eco- ·
nomic stagnation.
'
In short. Japan has won the battle
a!.!ainst a deflation a!) collapse. but,
lost the war for economic prosperity.
Do we want to follow Japan down the. ,
dreary road of decades-long stagna- 1
tion?
,
Unfmtunately. there is no pain-free, ,:
alternative. Decades of govemment ,
intervention have prevented needed'
adjustments, resulting in a gargantuan. rotten financial house of cards
looming over us. Whenever the
inevitable collapse happens. GDP
will plunge. It will be like the econo· .
mv has been hit by a financial neut
bomb. The problem is. the longer
wait for this to happen. the larger
more painful the collapse.
What is the "ri!.!ht" macroeconomic
policy? I reject ~the macroeconomic
premise that the economy is a mechanism that can be mastered by government. Macroeconomics is an epistemological absurdity undergirding
economic fallacies used to justify
political frauds.
The right public policy is summa- .
riLed in one word: f-reedom. Abolish
the central bank. scrap legal tender ~
laws. and limit government to its
original constitutional function ot
protecting individual rights.
If. by some miracle. free markets
were allowed to function. we would
pass through a couple of years of
wrenching adju:-tments and ec~momic
hell that would produce a solJd, eco·
nomicallv rational foundation leadine
to a prolonged period of strong. sus:
tainable economic growth. But then
our children then ~would inherit a
much niore economicall) health)
future.
There is no econom1c pain-fr.
utopia. but free market:- will optim1
\\ealth creation and minimize the jarring disruptions of inflation, detla-,..
tion. recession. booms and busts that••
government intervention invariably
produces.
(Mark W. Hendrichon is an
adjunct faculty member, economist,
and comributing scholar with The.
Cemerfor Vision and Values m Grm·e.
City College.)

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(UsPs 21a-sso&gt;
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our mai[l concern tn all stories Is to Published every morning, Monday
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday. 111 Court Street,
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Our main number Is
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Department extensions are:
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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent. Ext. 13

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�r-_,_ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,.'!'P"'__,_ _':""""'_________

Tuesday, December 29,

2009

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The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Obituaries
CecillcJ: Hill
.Cecil J. "CJ." Hill. 77. New Albany, passed away unexpectedly on Monday. Dec . 21, 20~9.
;He \Vas bom ~1arch 16. 1932, 111 Letart Falls. to the late
Julian and Inez Hill. and grew up farming. He was a 1950
uate of Racine Southern High School. and was a gradof Columbu~ Busine~s College.
e enjoyed 54 years of marriage to his sweetheart.
Marlene Clark Hill. .,., ho preceded him in death on May
30, 2009.
C.J. was an active member of New Albany United
Methodist Church. where he served as an usher and successfully completed Disci~ Bible Study I and II. which
gave him great personal ~atisfaction.
He retired from NCR Corp. with 40 years of service and
then enjoyed many years of driving a school bus for the
Plain Local School District in New Albany. He was very
clbse to all of his co-workers and appreciated their friendships. Others \\ ho made his life very special were his
n&lt;;ighbors and his Lo::.t Hollow campground friends.
C.J. will be remembered as a proud Republican. a classic
car enthusiast and a gardener. Most importantly. it was his
\\ ife. daughters and grand.;ons, and his two dear dogs.
Precious and Lindsie, that were his pride and joy and
brought him great happiness.
tJ. is sun ived by his daughters. Teri (Randy) Duncan
and Robin (Jeff) Horch; £randsons, Cameron and Casey
Horch: brothers and sisters: Grace Griffin, Don (Mary)
Hill. Dennie (Janl!t) Hill. Shirley (Roger) Johnson. Tommy
(Sally) Hill. Henry (Kay) Hill, and Roger (Jane Ann) Hill;
si~ter-in-law, Maxine O'Brien; and many nieces. nephews.
cousins and other relatives and friends.
Funeral was held Monday. Dec. 28.2009, at New Albany
United Methodist Church. with Rev. Nancy Goulet officig. Interment was in Maplewood Cemetery.
1ose who wish to do so may contribute to the American
rt Association or the New Albany United Methodist
Church. 20 S. Third St .. New Albany. Ohio 43054.
Visit www.schoedinger.com to share memories or extend
condolence..

.
I

Linda Jarrell
Linda Carole Jarrell. 61. Racine. passed away on Dec.

27. 2009, at Holzer Medical Center. Gallipolis.
She was born Aug. 29. 1948. in Pomeroy. daughter of the
late Charles Russell Findley, Sr. and Clella Fern
Bauchmoyer Findley. She was a homemaker and a member
of the Hillside Bapti'&gt;t Church.
She is ~;uf\ i\'ed b) her children: Mark (Norma) Jarrell,
Ravenswood, W.Va .. Marshall (Shiho) Jarrell. Bristow. Va..
and Michael (Shelly) Jarrell, Jackson: grandchildren: Wyatt,
Connor. and Kiley Jarrell: brothers: Charles (Ann) Findley.
Jr.. Racine; Donald (Nadine) Findley, Reynoldsburg. and Ed
Findley, Racine: sisters, Shirley Schultz and Mary Findley.
both of Racine: aunt. Ethel "Babe" Koffman. Columbus;
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was preceded by her sister,
Patricia Michael.
I'J'he family woul&lt;.l like to express a special thanks to
Mary Findley. Ed FindiC) and Jen)' Rowe.
Funeral will be at 1_1 a.f!l. on Wednesd~y. Dec. 30. 2~9.
at Anderson :\IcDantcl f·unera1 Home 111 Pomeroy With
James Acree. Sr. officiating.
will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
may call from 6-8 p.m. on Tuesday at the funeral home . An on-line registry is available at ww.....andersonmcdaniel .com.

Larry Hudson
Larry Joe Hud on, 66.Pomeroy, passed away on Dec. 26,
2009. at St. Joseph's Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Va.
He was born on Oct. 30, 1943. in Parkersburg, son of the
late Walter and Irene Hudson. He was employed by
Thomas Rental Center in Middleport. He was formerly
employed by the Pomeroy Police Department for 13 years.
lie was with the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department for
si:x years and was a member of the West Virginia National
Guard for six years.
He is survived by his wife. Linda Hudson: granddaughters. Tiffany (Justin) Gilmore and Brittni Hensley: great
!!r'andsons: Rohwan nnd Blaise Gilmore and Easton \\'hite;
and a son-in-Jaw, Ronnie Hensley.
He was preceded in death by his parents and his daughter. Lori Hensle).
Funeml service will be held at 11 a.m. on Thursday. Dec.
31. 2009, at Anderson ~1cDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomero) with Linda DamC\\OOd officiating.
Burial "ill be in i\leigs ~temory Gardens.
Friends may call from 4-9 p.m. on Wednesday at the
funeral home. An on-line registry is available at
.
v.andersonm&lt;.:daniel.com.

Deaths
Cha~esL.Ca~ght
Charles L. "Muddy Duck" Cartwright, 80. went to be
with the Lord on Monday. Dec. 28. 2009 as witnessed by
his family.
A graveside service will be held at 1 p.m .• Wednesday.
Dec. 30 at Sunrise ~lemorial Gardens. Letart. W.Va. with
Pastor Gregory Collins officiating. Clifton Lodge #23 will
perform Masonic graveside rites. Foglesong-Tucker
Funeral Home is handling arrangements.

Local Briefs
Offices closed
POMEROY - :\leigs County Health Department and
tuberculosis clinic will be closed Friday for New Year's Day.

•

Straw giveaway

AP photo

Construction continues at The Banks. Friday, Dec. 11, in Cincinnati. The year 2010 is expected to be pivotal in an ambi·
tious effort to revitalize downtown Cincinnati's riverfront.

Cincinnati riverfront work picks up
Railroad said. ·'But \\e're not going
CINCINNATI (AP) city's economy and draw- t..:nderground
to do !)omething just to do
The year 20 I 0 is expected ing, and keeping. more Freedom Center attraction.
"It's the kind of activity it. We're goin!:! to do it
to be pivotal in an ambitiou. downtown residents. But
effort to re' italize down- years of planning and that people have really been when it -makes sense
town Cincinnati'&lt;; ri\ er- development negotiations thinking about at The Banks because we want to get the
that fell apart clouded their for more than I 0 years:· right match.''
front.
!'laid Trent Germano of
The fir:-t phase of The
After a decade of delay. dream.
construction on The Banks
:\ow. besides the ::.tore- Atlanta-based Carter Real Banks should have at least
riverfront project begins in fronts and residential space. Estate. teaming on the pro- three to four restaurants in
January. Crews will start on construction plans in the ject with another Atlanta spring 2011, developers say.
"The project is going to
300 apartments and 70.000 coming year call for a 45- firm, the Daw::.on Co.
square feet of retail space in acre public park and a secThe
companies
are be a lot easier to sell when
the effort to create a focal ond underground parking behind the apartments and people see the buildings
point for living. shopping, garage near Paul Brown retail space going up in going up and see just how
working and playing.
Stadium.
2010. The goal is a grand well it's going to fit in,"
The initial construction
Eventually, developers opening in early 20 II, but Germano said.
will be work estimated at hope to have hotel rooms. the recession remains an
Other riverfront projects
more than S70 million in a office space and a total issue. So far, no tenants are expected to begin conmainly privately funded I .800 residential units as signed up.
struction in the coming
• effort expected to e\'cntual- downtown
Cincinnati
"There arc challenges in months are work on a
!ly total hundreds of mil- expands south to the Ohio the retail market today that grand fountain and stairlions more.
River on land adjacent to haven't existed in 15 or 20 case. along with a visitor
1 Local leaders have long the football stadium, base- years. and we're working as center. bike center. and a
considered a vibmnt river- ball's Great American Ball hard as we can to overcome ''lager house" with an outfront a kev to boosting the Park and the National those is.,ues.·· Germano door beer garden.
•
-------------------------------------------

Review from Page At
of Clerk of Courts and
Colleen
Williams,
Prosecuting Attorney. State
Rep. Debbie Philhps. DAthens. \\Us S\\Om in as
State Representative for
Ohio's 94th district, and her
predecessor.
Jimmy
Stewart, R-Albany. became
the first Ohio senator since
the mid-20th century to call
Meigs County home.
Health care took &lt;.:enter
stage in preliminary Ji~ctl'-o·
sions of how federal economic stimulus funds might
benefit the communit\ .~A
study completed by Ohio
Unhersity s Institute for
Local Government and
Rural Dc\elopment examined the possibilit) of a
free-standing Emergency
Room and how that might
hcst serve the community's
health care needs.
The first federal stimulus
funds began to appl!ar in the
headlines. as Meigs County
officials learned of their
share of a $1 .2 million program designed to eliminate
the blight of abandoned,
foreclosed homes.
In Racine. village officials began preliminary discussions on developing a
new retail area in the town,
which
will
ultimately
include a Dollar General
Store and a new home for
the Racine-based Home
National Bank.
American
Municipal
Power signed a contract
with the Bechtel firm, the
general contractor for the
$3.25 billion power plant it
planned to build in Meigs
Count). B) year's end. the
entire project \vould be dead
in the water.
A winter sno\\ and ice
storm crippled the commu-

POMEROY - Meigs County Jlumane Society will distnbute bags of free straw from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday
on the Pomeroy parking lot.

nity, putting more than
8.000 people out of electricitv including all of
t\1iddleport. The storm
would cost local governments more than $1 00,000.
February
Years after people here
decided coal mining was an
industry of the past, the
Gatling coal company made
Meigs County a coal-producing Ohio county once
again with the opening of
its Racine-area mining
operation.
T\\ o disappointing economic ne\\ s items came
nearh back to back.
American Electric Power
decided to shelve plans to
build a clean-coal electricit)
generating plant in Meigs
Count).
and
Century
Aluminum announced 1t
would
close
its
Ravenswood. W.Va. plant
and lay off 650 workers
remaining there. Many were
from Meigs County.
Speed was an issue in
Pomeroy, where village
officials dropped the speed
limit on 35 mile per-hour
streets to 25, leading some
to claim safety considerations while others decried
the decision as a speed trap.
Doris Jackson. an 83
year-old Tuppers Plains resident. was found murdered
in her home in the Arbaugh
Addition. days after she and
her vehicle were reported
missing. A Wood County,
W.Va.
man,
Charles
Williams. later pleaded
guilt) to killing her during a
robbery gone a\\ f).
March
Local communities began
to reap the benefits of
President Barack Obama 's
economic stimulus pro-

!!ram. ~early 60 proposals
from Meigs County's local
govemmcnts and pri\atc
businesses were submitted
to a state website for funding consideration.
Mid-Valley
Christian
School in Middleport was
nearing completion on converting unused space in its
church building. the fonner
RC Bottling Co .. into a new
school facility for its growing student body.
Bu) ers
of
~1eigs
ChamberBucks, a gift certificate program of the
i\1eigs Countv Chamber of
Commerce. (ound the certificates useless after the
compan) issuing them,
CertifiChecks,. filed for
bankruptcy.
People
Bancorp
announced it '' ould close
the Rutland branch of
People::. Bank at the end of
June. It was one of t\\O
branches closed bv the
bank.
•
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland,
West Virginia Gov. Joe
Manchin and other dignitarie::. dedicated Pomeroy's
new Bridge
of Honor.
Meanwhile.
the
old
PomerO) -Mason
Bridge
was demolished.
Meigs
Board
of
Developmental Disabilities
announced it would seek
bids on a reduced con.,truction project, realizing longheld plans to expand the
Carleton School and Meigs
Industries in Syracuse.
Meigs
County
Commissioners took action
to cap fees paid to defense
counsel in capital murder
cases at ::&gt;25.000 per case.
just day~ after Charles S.
Williams.
Parkersburg.
W.Va., was clmrged in the

strangulation death of Doris
Jackson, Tuppers Plains. in
February.
April
As federal stimulus funding began to trickle into
local communities. Family
Health Care. the non-profit
general medical practice
based
in
Chillicothe.
announced it would expand
its staff in ~liddleport \\ ith a
stimulus a\van.l.
Paula RiLer .,., a!:&gt; charged
with aggravated murder
after her husband. Kenny
Rizer. Sr . was found dead
in his recliner at the couple ·s LO\ ett Road home.
~Ieigs
Countv
Comnlissioners announced
plans to seek funding for a
free-standing 24-hour emergency room at property
O\\ ned by the ~teigs Count)
Community Improvement
Corporation near .Meigl)
High School.
A Middleport police officer, Steven Koebel, was
placed on leave, and James
Gray IV was hospitalized
after Koebel shot him in the
face after a high-speed
chase from Middleport to
Pomeroy.
Gray later admitted he
had been drinking, and \\aS
sent to prison. Koebel
resiened, and is now a codefendant, along with the
'illage he worked for, m a
civil suit filed by Gray.
After several weatherrelated
del a) s.
the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge,
built 81 \ears a!!o. fell into
the Ohio.River after its center ~ection was detonated.
Stephanie English and
Robert Harrison II. passengers in separate vehicles.
were killed in a four-vehicle
car crash on Ohio 143.

Census rrom Page AI
data from tho::.e homes
which did not return the
questionnaire.
According to Shank. the
questionnaire takes I0 minutes to complete. Those
who complete and, return
their cen:-.us material, ''ill
not be visited by census per-

sonnel. Information collected b) the U.S. Census
Bureau cannot be shared
.,., ith any other governmental agencies, and is completely confidential.
Virtually all federal funding is based on census data.
It is estimated that between

$300-$400 billion dollars a
)Car arc allocated based on
cen us data. Census data
also detennines the number
of representnth e:::. to the
U.S. House a igned to
each state.
Jt also determines hov.
many U.S. Representatives

each state gets. Sh,mk aid.
Shank emphasized that
member~ of the Complete
Count Committee will not
be conducting the census.
That '' ork will be completed through the que tionnaire and by trained
census workers.

�-----·------------------------~~--~·----------------~~--~~----~---------------

Tuesday. Dcccmher 29. 2009

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The Daily Sentinel

Blue Dc,ils \\in GAllS lmitc,l'nge 82
Holmgren to take time on dedsion, Page 82

Tuesday, December 29,2009

Marshall holds on to beat Ohio 21·17 in Pizza Bowl Meigs County

!cAL SCHEDUIJl
POMEROY - A &amp;choduto ot upcoming high
echoot var&amp;tty &amp;porting ovonts 1nvotvmg
teams lrom Meigs and Galha counlios,

Tuesday, December 29
Boys Basketball
Eastern nt Athens, 6 p.M
Gallla Academy at Chllhcotho, 6 p m.
Atver Valley at Feet Hock, 6 p rn
Wahama at Meigs, 6 p m
South Gallta at Sciotovll e East, 6 p. rn
Point Pleasant at Roane County, 6 p m
OVCS. Hannan at Wellston Tournament,

TBA

Wahama at ChapmanvUio Tournament.
TBA
Girls Basketball
Eastern at Park. Catholic tourney, TBA
W1rt Coul"ty at Point Pleasant, 5·45
We.d.~.~cember 30
Boys Basketball
Southern at Meigs 6 p m
Girls Basketball
~astern at Park. Catholic tourney, TBA
Gallta Academy at Portsmouth, 6 p m
Tnmble at AIVor Valley, 6 p.ll'
Southern at Hannan, 6 p.m
Wrestling
Galha Academy at Potnt Pleasant, TBA

Saturday, January 2
Boys Basketball
Gatlia Academy at Metgs, 5 p.m.
Gtrla Basketball
Wahama Tournament
Southern vs Hannan, 6 p.m.
Pleasant:' Wahama, 8 p.m
•

Mooday. Janua.~ 4
Boys Basketball
Teays Valley Chnsttan at OVCS, 7 30
p.m
Girls Basketball
Me~gs at Eastern 6 p.m.
Atver Valley at Galt a Academy, 6 p.m
South Galha at Symmes Valley, 6 p m .
Teays Valley Christian al OVCS 6 p m

Monday's Results
BOYS BASKETBALL

Wellston 76, Hannan 25
Grandville 56, OVCS 36
GIRLS BASKETBALL

S. Gallia 64, East 39
OVCS 46, Buffalo 44

DETROIT
(AP)
tvtartin Ward's tackle-break! ing run and powerful plunge
along with a punt return
gave Marshall a big leud
over Ohio in the Little
Caesars Pizza Bowl.
Did Ward think it \\as
going to be easy?
"Yeah. pretty much." he
acknowledged.
Not 4uite.
The Bobcats rallied to
pull \\ ithin four points late
Hl the third quarter and had
chances to complete the
comeback in the fourth,
missing a\\ ide-open receiver on a trick play and failing
to take advantage of their
last two drives before losing
21-17 to Marshall on
Saturday.
DeQuan Bembry's interception with 40 seconds left
'\ealed the victory for the
Thundering Herd (7-6).
"It was just a relief."
Bembrv said.
The Bobcats (9-5) rallied
with Shannon Ballard\ 75yard return off a fumble in
the second quarter. Terrence
~lcCrae's TD catch and
Matt Weller's field ~oal.
"Our players played hard
throughout the course of the
second half:' said Ohio
coach Frank Solich. the former Nebraska coach. "But
for whatever reason. \Ve
were not readv to go at the
beginning of the game."
The name looked like it
\\as go~lg to be a rout when
Ward's 2-yard run put

Please see Pina, Bl

native, Dave
Diles, passes
away at age 78

DETROIT
(AP)
Former ABC-TV sport~
broadcaster and longtime
"Prudential
College
Football
Scorehoard
Show·· ho:.t Dave Diles ha:-.
died at his home in Athens.
1 Ohio. He was 78.
Detroit's
WXYZ-TV
said Monday he'd been in
failim! health since a stroke
in Ap'fil and died Saturday
night. Diles wa:-. the ABC
affiliate's sports director in
1961-72 and 1979-82.
Diles also worked for
several newspapers and
reported
for
The
Associated
Press
in
Columbus. Ohio. and
Detroit in 1951-61.
In two decades with
ABC Sports, Diles COVff~d
the Olympics, the Indf'600
and hosted "Wide World.'of
Sports.. and the ''Prudtfulftal
Colle2e
Football
Scoreboard Show."
The Michigan Sports
Hall of Fame inducted him
in 2006.
Diles
grew
up
in
Middleport. Ohio, and
attended Ohio University.

AP photo

Ohto quarterback Theo Scott (3) tries to avoid Marshall defensive back Ashton Hall during
the second half of the Little Caesars Pizza Bowl NCAA college football game Saturday in
Detroit. Marshall defeated Ohio 21-17

Browns win Struggling Bengals clinch AFC North title
ifd straight,
roll Raiders
Cll':CINNATI (AP) - t\o
dousing the head coach. No
donning championship cap~.
The Cincinnati Bengab celebrated their AFC 1\:orth title
by leaving the field with
raised arm:; and heavv
hearts.
·
A week of tears and eulogies will do that.
The Bengals reached the
playoffs for only the second
time in the past 19 years on
Sunday. beating the Kansas
City Chiefs 17-10 on a day
when they remembered wide
receiver Chris Henry from
start to finish.
Five days after they buried
their teammate in New
Orleans. the Bengals (10-5)
had hb number on their helmets and in their hearts.
which might ha\'e had sornething to do with the way
they played. They looked
like a team that had just
returned from a funeral.
"It was tou!!h,.. said defensive lineman~Domata Peko.
who \\as a close friend.
"During these tough time::.,
that's what the good teams

CLEVELAND (AP) Dressed smartly in a suit,
Jerome Harrison walked
into the postgame interview room Jugging around
a duffel bag.
Told he should Jet someone help him with his
•
- d
sate h e I· }-I arnson smt 1e ·
"No · he said. "I got
th · ..
IS.

.

..

.•

.

,

Afte1 39. c.tr11es. one
more c~uldn t hurt.
Hamson.
broke
Cleveland s team record
for attempts ~nd ru~hed for
148 yards With one touchdown as the ~leveland
~rowns. sh~wmg both
f1ght and tmprovem~~t
under embattled coach Er.c
Mangini, beat the Oakland
Raider~ 23-9 on Sunday
for their third straight win.
ehind Harrison's legs
•
an
opportunistic
defense, the Browns (4-11)
posted their first threegame winning streak since
2007 and third since their
expansion rebirth in 1999.
The late-season surge came
at the perfect time for
Mangini. whose fate will
be determined in the
upcoming days by new
team
president
Mike
Holmgren.
Mangini appeared on his
way to a one-and-done first
season in Cleveland a fev.
weeks ago. But with the
Browns showing legitimacy of late. Holmgren could
have a much tougher decision than when he shook
hands v. ith O\\ ncr Randy
Lerner to take over the
team's football operations.
The Browns had been
expected to introduce
Holmgren at a news connee
this
week.
ver, those plans arc
on
hold.
Following
Sunday's game. the team
announced that Holmgren
would he availahlc to the
media only via conference
call on Monday.
Holmgren may be waiting until the conclusion of
the season or the holidays
before arriving from his
home in Arizona. And
while speculation has cen-

Please see Browns, Bl

I

do - they get through it and
are able to battle back from
it. That's what we did."
They put together only
two drive::. all day against
the Chiefs (3-12). who came
into the game with one of
the league· softest defen es.
Tho~c two were enough.
After picking up only
three first downs and 53
yards in the first half, the
Bengals scored on their
opening drive of the second
half. With the score tied at
10, they got the ball hack at
their 2-yard line midway
through the fourth 4ua11er
and played like champs
when it mattered.
They went 98 ) ards in 14
plays. Carson Palmer's 6yard touchdown pass to
Chad Ochocinco \\ ith 2:03
left put the title in hand and
gave the Bengals one more
chance to honor Henr). who
died last week during what
police describe as a domestic disturbance in North
Carolina.
Ochocinco made a diving
catch in the end zone, got up

and held up both am1s. One
finger \\as raised on one of
his hands, all fhe on the
other. signifying Henry's
unifom1 No. 15. Then. he
walked over to a poster of
Henry. re\ erently put his
hand on it and prayed for
him.
''I'm not jumping for joy
or glee. just thinking about
15 once that clock hits zero,''
Ochocinco said. "That was

everybody's mindset, to !!O
out and win this one fur
him."
The offense did very little
the rest of the time. Palmer
threw for a total of 19 yards
in the fir t half an
a~toundingly smalJ number
for one of the league's top
quarterbacks. In the second
half, he v.as 13 of 16 for 120

Please see Bengals, Bl

Ebanks named Big
East player of week
MORGANTOWN,
W.Va. ( AP)
West
Virginia forward De\ in
Ebanks has been namea
the Big East basketbaJJ
player of the week.
Ebanb averaged IS
points and 15 rebounds in
\\ins over !\lis~i~ tppi an~
Seton Hall that kept West
Virginia ( 10-0) among sil
unbeaten teams in th~
nation.
Syracu e's
Brandon
Triche. who scored 2¥
points in a win over,
Oakland. was named the
conference rookie of the
week Monday.

''In Go
1
1

1

j

I
•

I'JI!!I!I-!11!1

1

I1
Invite thern o your church.
1~ouch their souls

1

:
1

"ll'e •viii shout(or joy when we are
ictorious and lift up our ba1u1ers in the

1

nanze of God."
AP photo

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Carson Palmer (9) is pursued by Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Mike Vrabel (50) in
the first half of an NFL football game Sunday.

'

Cal

[::()~

Psab11 20:5

&lt;Balltpolts nlailp ~rihunc
740-446-2342

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Tuesday, December 29,

2009

Blue Devils take first at Gallia Academy Invitational Ducks vs. Bucks vs.
Mouse at Disneyland
BY SARAH HAWLEY

SHAWI..EYOMYOAILYTRIBUN[ COM

CENTE~ARY The
Blue
Gallia Academy
Devils wrestling team took
first place at Saturdav's
Gallia
Acadciny
(nvitational.
The Blue Devils had
seven wrestlers with perfect
records for the day, with
Christophrr
McDermitt
~152) and Jared Gravely
(215) each winning three
matches against Meigs.
River Valley, and Vinton
eounty.
• Joel Craft ( 119). John
Caldwell ( 130), ~1att Watts
135).
Brandon Tavlor
145). and Zack Tac"kctt
17 I) all going undefeated
on the da). with some victooes coming by forfeit.

~

McDermitt

Little

Gallia Academy won all
three pairings for the day.
defeating River Valley 60-9,
Vinton County 5R-20. and
Meigs 49-9.
The Blue Devils defeated
Vinton Count) 58-20 "ith
three wrestlers. Benjamin
Bush (125). Caldwell ( 130),
and Trey Porter (145). winning b) forfeit. Craft, Watts,
.McDcm1itt. Taylor, Tackett,

and Scott Warren (2SS) all
\\on b) falls, with Jared
Gravely winning by major
decision .
Gallia Academy faced
River Valley. winning b) a
total of 60-9. Winning by
fall were Caldwell against
Jon Campbell ( 130). Watts
against Paul Reynolds
(I 35 ), Porter against Gage
Hickman
( 145),
McDermitt against Matt
Mulford ( 152). Russell
Denni!'on against Trevor
Baker ( 189), and Gravely
against Dustin Reynolds
(215) .
Valley's
Nick
River
Watson C125) defeated Bush
by 8-6 dec1sion, and the
Raiders Zane Carroll (285)
defeated Warren by a fall.
In their finul pairing of the
day. the Blue Devils faced

off against Meigs. Gallia
had
three
Academy
wrestlers. Tavlor over
Jeffrev Roush, Tackett over
Christopher Jones. and
Gravely over Charles Hayes.
win by falL Faro won by a 62 decision over Billy Duvall
and McDermitt won by
major decision over Nick
Hudson.
Meigs' Cody Williams
defeated Porter by a 4-2
decision, Michael Little
defeated Dennison by 7-0
decision. and Zachary
Sheets defeated Warren by
major decision.
Full results for River
Valley and Meigs were not
available at press time.
Gallia Academy returns to
action on Wednesday as they
travel to Point Pleasant for a
tri-match.

Holmgren will take time on Mangini decision
BEREA, Ohio (AP) :-.1ew Cleveland Browns
Rresident Mike Holmgren
has not decided if coach
f:ric Mangini will be hack
next season.
Holmgren. who signed a
~ve-year contract to try and
fix the Browns. said he will
~·ait until he arrives 111
&lt;!:le\clanu next week before
making
any
changes.
Holmgren plans to meet
with Mangrni after the
Browns (4- 11) complete
their season. He ~aid it
would not be fair to di::.cuss
Mangini's ~tat us \\ ith one
game left.
"He's at the end of finishine. his first season. the team
is ~doing \\CII and responding to him," !'laid Holmgren.
who was in Arizona on
Monday and spoke to
reporters on a conference
call.
Holmgren did not provide
any clues as to which way
he's leaning. He appreciates
how toul.!h it can be for a
coach to transform a team in
one :,cason.
''I'm not a big fan of the
quick hook,.. he said. "I
ne\'er did that \\ ith quarterbach when they played for
me and I really don't think
one year is cnou~h to prove
what ) ou · re trymg to get

Browns
from Page Bl
tered on Holmgren hiring
his own coach. Mangini
may be making a strong
case that he deserves a
longer look.
The man under fire rs
exuding a coolness.
"I· m happy with the way
things arc going," he said.
''I've seen progress from
this group . 1'\ow they're
being rewarded for their
hard work. They're being
rewarded for the good
things that have been happening ,
that
always
weren't very apparent. To
see this, it 's real positive.''
If the Browns can beat
Jacksonville at home next
Sunday, they would have
their first four-game winning streak since returning
to the NFL.
"Thrs shows the character of the guys we have in
this locker room." said
Brmvns
quarterback

Pizza
from PagcBl
Marshall ahead 21-0 with
7:21 left in the first half. He
scored on a 12-yard run
through more than a few
defen~ders
and
Andre
Booker had 58-)ard punt
return for a touchdown at
Q'le end of the quarter.
Just when it appeared to
be over. Ballard returned a
fumble 75 yard~ to give
Ohio a much-needed spark.
The Bobcuts carried the
momentum into the second
half, when Thco Scott connected with McCrae on an
&amp;-yard
pass
midway
through the third quarter.
Weller·~ 46-yard field
goal made it 21- I 7 with
4:38 left in the third .
Ohio drove to the
Marshall 12
taking
advantage of two late-hit
penalties against the Herd
- but stalled and missed a

done.! wouldn't be a big fan
of just allowing a guy to
coach just one year and out.
But having said that. I
haven't made any decisions
yet."
The
61-ycar-nld
Holmgren said he "ill evalof
uate
the
entiretv
.\1angini's first season Ill
Cle\eland,and won't decide
based solelv on the team's
current thre-e-game winning
streak .
"I feel! ha\ e some time to
think about this and I want
to do ''hat is right for the
organization
and
the
Cleveland Browns." he !'aid.
"That'!' rnv charge.l want to
see the team ·s record better.
I want the organization to be
functioning properly. I want
the fans to be very proud of
their team.
"That's the decision I
have to make and that rs
going to take a little time.
Not a lot of time. but a little
time."
Holmgren said. he has no
plans to coach "m the near
future,'' leaving open the
chance he could return to
the sideline.
Holmgren did not reveal
hb intentions to reconfigure
Cleveland's front-office, but
the former Green Bay and
Seattle coach said he plans

to hire a generul manager.
The
Browns
host
Jacksonville on Sunday.
llolmgren said he and
Mangini already have had
product ivc discussions and
that any philosophical differences could be worked
Olll.

"He want~ the same things
I do.'' llolrngren said. ''We

want the team to he better.
"e want to\\ in. we want the
fan~ to feel good. we're
going after the same thing. I
think \\hen &gt;ou have guy..,
- their vis1on 's the same
and you're pulling in the
same direction - .some of
the other stuff. you can get it
done. you can come to an
agreement and make it
\'v'Ork.''
Holm~ren said the chance
to reburld a once-pround
franchise is what drew him
to the Browns, who have
made one playoff appearance since their expansion
return in 1999.
"I took the job because
there is sornethmg inside of
me that enjoys the challenge
of fixing something. tweaking something to get it back
on track again.'' he said.
Holmgren joked that he
might not be ready to take
on ~uch a big project.
"I have way too much

responsibility," he said with
a laugh. "But I'm really
looking forward to it. It's
quite different from what
I'm used to."
When he stepped down as
Seattle's coach after last
season. Holmgren went into
semiretlrement to spend
more time with his family.
He wasn't anticipating such
a quick return to the NFL.
but said his desire to work in
Cleveland grew as he
learned more about owner
Randy Lerner.
''I know a lot of owners, I
call some my friends.'' he
said. ·-rd never really met
Randy or spent any time
with him. I will tell you this.
it was very. very refreshing.
Clearly, he wants his football team to do well. When
he presented the job to me
and what it would entail and
the type of access I would
have to him, and his vision
for the team and the fans
and the city of Cleveland, as
far as I was concerned he hit
a home run.
"Obviously the job's a
great job. I really took this
job because of the owner. l
think he cares that much and
I don't v. ant to let him
down:·

Derek Anderson. "ho fin- tice hard every week,'' onto the field.
ished 8 of 17 for 121 yards Harrison said. "If my
Janikowski's kick has
with one TO pass and did- number is called. I try to only been bettered by New
n't throw an interception make the best of it. Orleans' Tom Dempsey
in his first start since Nov. "hcthcr it it's running. (1970) and Denver's Jason
I. "Nobody is going to blocking. catching what- Elam (1998). who share
quit.''
ever it may be. I'm pre- the record of 63 yards, and
There's no denying the pared to help the team win Tampa Bay's Matt Bryant
Browns have improved. in all ways necessary."
(2006), who hit from 62
They've cut down on
The Raiders (5-1 0) were yards.
turnovers.
penalties, reckless. They committed
"That's one of the best
showed imagination on 13 penult tcs for 126 yards. kicks I've ever had." said
offense and had backups had two players ejected Janikowski, who made
emerge as playrnakcrs, and failed for the fifth two other tries. "In these
none more so than time this season to win conditions with the snow
Harrison. who followed two ~traight games.
and "ind. I'm proud of it.
up a 286-yard game last
"Some of it is uncalled- In warmups. we kicked it
week against Kansas City for stuff," Oakland coach 60 yards going in that
by scoring the second time Tom Cable said. "We've direction. I hit it hard. I
he touched the ball and got to see what's going on, thought it was short at
breaking Lee Suggs' team but that's 130 yards. first and it barelv e:ot in
- ~
mark for attempts.
That's not like us. That's there."
Harrison was barelv disappointing.''
Phil Dawson kicked
used earlier this season a~...
One posith e for the field goals of 42, 33 and
the Browns were reluctant Raiders was Sebastian 34 yards for Cleveland.
to play him on passing Janikowski. who kicked a
Oakland's Charlie Frye
downs because the 5-foot- 61-yard field goal - the had a rough homecoming.
9, 205-pounder struggled fourth longest in league The former Browns QB
to block blitzers. But he's history - on the final went 26 of 45 for a careerbecome a better practice pl.ty of the first half. high 333 yards. but was
player and is showing that Janikowski's low line sacked four times and
he might become an drive barely cleared the threw three interceptions,
every-down back.
cmssbar. hitting the sup- including one on his first
"I just line up and prac- port and bouncing back pass.
field goal that would'\e
pulled the Bobcats within a
point early in the fourth
quarter.
During the dri\e. wide
receiver LaVon Brazill
badly overthrew Taylor
Price on a pia) that fooled
the Herd.
··we practice that a lot,
and LaVon usually puts it
right on the mone) ," Price
said. "I guess he overestimated my speed or something."
The Bobcats stayed in the
game despite just 123 yards
of offense.
Marshall didn't exactly
move up and down the field
at will. but it scored enough
early in the game to win.
The schools. located 82
miles apart. played 52
times between 1905 and
2004 in "The Battle for the
Bell,'' with the trophy ~) mbolizin{! the Oh10 River
separating Ohio and West
Virginia. They hadn't
played since ~tarshall left
the
Mid-American

Conference for Conference according to a Little
USA in 2005.
Caesars Bowl spokesman.
The Herd was led by She was the first woman to
interim coach Rick .\1inter. be an official for a major
Mark Snyder resigned at college football {!arne in
Marshall after the season 2007~ and is on the .KFL':,
and will be replaced by list of officiating prospects.
West Virginia assi~tant
"It was an honor."
coach
John
''Doc .. Thomas said while running
Holliday, who was an assis- off the field "ith her coltant to Urban Mever on leagues after Marshall's
Florida's 2006 n~ttional 21-17 \ictory at Ford Field.
championship team.
Not many people saw the
"Probably, not many game at Ford Field.
gu)s from our staff will be
The bowl. which was
asked hack." Minter said. known as the Motor Cit)
''That's part of the busi- Bowl in its tirst 12 years.
ness. We're not shedding drew a record-low 30.3 II
tears."
fans. Just two years ago,
Martin is excited about more than twice as many
the team's future.
people watched Purdue
"To do this, after \\hat beat Central Michigan m
we've been through in the Detroit. The game attracted
last month. that show~ you fewer than 40.000 only
what this program is once before when Marshall
about," he said. "We did beat Louis\ illc in 1998 at
this for the seniors. but we the Pontiac Silverdome.
can't stop here."
Michigan-based Little
Sarah Thomas made his- Caesars Pizza signed a onetor) during the game, year contract to spon!'or the
becoming the first woman bo\\ 1 after General .\1otors
to officiate a bowl game, and Chrysler cut ties.

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) Chip Kelly walked to the
JX)&lt;.Irum in front of Sleeping
l3eauty's C&lt;t-;tle and cast a
doleful look at the welldres~ed mouse standing to his
left.
''I'm a Duck fan. Sorry.
Mickey,'' the Oregon head
coach said. "If you could ~et
your hoy Donald up here ... ·
A few minutes later, in a
moment that even Disneyland
probably couldn't en~rneer,
two actual ducks flew m tan·
dem over Saturday's ceremony to kick off the week's fe~­
tivities for the 96th Rose
Bowl, matching Kelly's bigger Ducks against Oh1o State.
Both teams already had hit
the practice field and the
weight room in the 24 hours
before
their
trip
to
Disnevland. the traditional
post-Christrru.a-:. ~top for the
Big 'len and Pac-10 champions. Even if it's daunting to
squeeze their ample fralnes
into teacups or Matterhorn
bobsleds, the eighth-mnked
Buckeyes ( 10-2) particularly
seemed eager for a week in
sunny southern California
before their school's first Rose
Bowl since 1997.
"We've heard so much
about it. hut the Rose Bowl
really is awesome," Buckeyes
linebacker Au!&gt;tin Spitler !'aid,
momen!s after a spray of redand·\\ hrte-and-grecn-and-veiJow confetti ended the ceremony. "We're IO?king forward to evcrythrng we're
doing this week, top to bottom.!"~

The trip is more of a hornecorning for the large tlock of
Ducks who largelv hail from
both ends of California. No. 7
Oregon ( 10-2) is in the Rose
Bowl for the first time since
1995. yet many players expect
Pasadena to resemble Autzen
Stadium back in Eugene.
''I've been to Disneyland
maybe three or four times, but
I'm bigger now." said Oregon
cornerback Walter Thurmond
Ill, a West Covina native

Bengals
from PageBl
yards with two touchdo\\ ns.
On the last throw, the
Chiefs blitLed and Palmer
~aw Ochocinco break free
from cornerback Brandon
Flowers, adjusting his route.
"It was one-on-one with a
blitz coming,'' Flowers said.
"Chad won that matchup.
He broke his route off well
and made a good play for
the ball."
When Leon Hall intercepted Matt Cassel's pass
less than a minute later. the
Bengals could begin their
muted celebration. The
crowd of 64,333 - many of
them wearing No. IS decals
handed out at the gates broke into a "Who De'!''
chant.
·
It many ways. it \\as a

whose senior season ended
with a ri2ht knee injUI)' in late
September. "We'll sec if I can
fit on the rides .... We're definitely treating this like a ho
oame. It 's imJX&gt;rtant to ho
down for the We:,t Coast."
Ohio State coach Jim
Tressel had four fewer players
on the Buckeyes' Christmas
night flight than he hoped
after the suspensions of kick
returner and receiver Ray
Small, defensive lineman Rob
Rose. receiver Duron Caner
and runnin!! back Bo
DeLande, apparently for violating team rules.
biggest loss likely is
Small. the top backup behind
starting receivers De Vier
Posev
and
Dane
Sanzenbacher. the top two
candidates to as ume Small's
punt retum duties as well.
"I'm most dbappointcd
obviously for the two older
kids,.. Tressel said of seniors
Rose and Small. ''This could
have been a 2reat end of a
career. but life-goes on."
.. Having Terrelie (Pryor) b
a pretty good ouy to practice
against," Buck~yes defensive
lineman Doug Wor1hingtt. r
said. "(Masnli's) • burst
ridiculous. You mis~ one tac
le. and he's gone. He's a very
talented gu}:·
The Disneyland jaunt
kicked off a week that
includes the bountiful meal
known a... the Beef Bowl. a
54-vear-old tradition at a landmark Bcverlv Hills restaurant
where the teams consume several hundred pounds of prime
rib. The pla~ ers also "rll get
free time tn Los Angele~
between pq~cuces leading up
to Fridav ~ game.
"It's L.A.;' ~lasoli said wtth
a grin. ju..-,t a~ the '&gt;Un emerged
from behind a cloud. "The
whole atmosphere is different.
This
L.A.,
Hollywood,
Disneyland atmosphere is
great. We don't get that all the
time. especially where we live
in Oregon."

The

relief. The Bengab had a
chance to win the title in
their two previous
but lost in Minnesota
San Diego. In-betwee
they dealt with Henry's
death.
"It\ an exhale becau!'e
we got one of the goals
accomplished,"
coach
Marvin Lewis ~md. ''But
again, there's more to be
!!ained. You want to take a
de!!ree of satisfaction and I don't \\ant to rain on
their parade too much but there's more to gain."
Players slipped gray
·'Division Champions'' caps
onto their heads as they left
their dressing room, walking past Henry's unchanged
locker. His shoulder pads
still rest on the top shelf. his
helmet ham.!s from a hook
on the side. his shoes are
ali!med on the bottom rack.
Almost as though he wa~
still there.

�...

~_,_-~-----------

---.-""-!-------"'!'-------..----~--:"'1"----.:--~_,_-~~ c~

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

:

~rtbune

'' ·,fit

&gt;. ~i ,~j;

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

."""

-

-

- Sentinel - l\egigter

CLASSIFIED

Meigs County, OH

Websites:
In One Week With Us
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E-mail
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydailysentinel.com
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c~~crt~,
Your Ad, (7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333 •
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44&amp;-3008
• or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

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Word Ads

Mon d a y th ru Friday
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Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

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GET YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD NOIJCED

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Dally In-Column: 9a00 a.m.
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• All ads must be prepaid"

• Start Your 1\d$ With A K~ord • Tn&lt;:lllde Complete
Oelcription • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviation•
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Now you can have borders and graphics
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POLICIES: Ohio Yaney Publlehlng reaervee the right to edll. reJOC!. or cancel any ad at any time. Errore must~ reported on the first day of publlc!11on and the
Trlb~ntlnei.Reglster will bt responsible lor no more than the C06t or the space occupied by the enor and only the nrst lnoortlon. We shaU 001 be liable lor
any 10118 or expente tn&amp;1 rt«~ltslrom the publication or omteelon otan advenleement Co~CIIon will be made In the flret eve liable aditlon. · Box number acfe
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errors In an ec:lt&amp;ken over the phone

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
200

Announcements

300

Services

lost &amp; Found

Home Improvements

Found on Gibbstown Rd.
on Tuesday adult Bas·
sett Hound no collar call
304-674-0822.

Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local refer·
ences fum1shed. Estab·
lished 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446-0870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Found set of car keys in
Gallipolis Walmart lot on
Wed. call to identify
304·576-2345
Notices
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
ommends that you do
business w1th people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail
until you have investigat·
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Pictures tnat
have been
placed in ads at
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must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Financial

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Money To lend

NOTICE Borrow Smart
Contact the Ohio D1vi·
sion of Financial lnstitu·
tions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
tain a loan. BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance
payments
of
fees or insurance. Call
Otner Services
the Office of Consumer
toll
free
at
Pet
Cremations.
Call Affiars
1·866-278-0003 to learn
740_446 •3745
1f the mortgage broker or
is properly li·
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lender
censed. (Th1s 1s a public
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announcement
from the Ohio Valley
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI Publish1ng Company)
No Fee Unless We Win!
1-888-582-3345
500
Education
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537·9528
Masonry
work,
brick.
block. stone, custom or
flat
concrete.
Call
Wayne. 740·843·5273

\1' 'S M'l ~t..TH

\NSO~NCE PlAN. I
'WA~I '"f" ~ ~I D
0 '/DV S.D 'lou
~~ Gt\Vt; MG"

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740-446·4367
1·800-214·0452
gal pof•scareercollege.edu
Accred•tec:l Member Accred•t'"9 Councillor Independent
Colleges and Schools 1274B
600

Animals

Pets

Pets
4 Black Kittens. 8 wks
old. Free to a good
home. 740.256·9346.
AKC miniature Schnau·
zers. Parti &amp; Chocolates.
Parents
on
premises.
740-441-1657

2 Cute Kittens to g1ve
away.
litter
trained. Boxer pups. Reg. Tails
done,
Family
raised.
74 446.8017
740-379-2639.

o.

CLASSIFIED INDEX
legals........................................................... 100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank You ..................................... 220
Notices ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 306
Business ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors..................................................316
Domestlcs/Janltorial ...................................318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
lnsurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Music/Dance/Drama ....................................336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumbing/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Services ................................. 342

~~~!i:7~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::JE

Tax/Accounting ............, .............................. 350
TraveVEntertainment ..................................352
Financlal .........- ............................................400
Financial Servlces ..................................... ..405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade Sch ool ........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Training ................................. 510
Lessons ........................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 61 0
livestock......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equipment.......................................... 705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy..................................................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antiques ....................................................... 905
Appliance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement.......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Supplies....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel Oil Coal/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ...................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport .................................... 955
Kid's Corner .................................................960
Mlscellaneous..............................................965
Want to buy ..................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles ......................................................101 0
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trallers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1 025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto Rentalllease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 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 ................................................ 301 0
Condominiums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner..................................... 3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................ 3510
Condominiums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
Lots ............................................................. 4005
Movers........................................................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
Accountlng!Financial ................................6002
Administratlve/Professlonal .....................6004
Cashler/Cierk............................................. 6006
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ....................................................... 601 0
Construction ..............................................6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Education ...................................................6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencles ..............................6020
Entertalnment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces ............................................6024
Governmen t &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General.................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics..................................................6036
Medical .......................................................6038
Musical ....................................................... 6040
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurant s ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ......................................... 6052

I

..

-

~

~

-

~
-

--

CKC Maltese Pups. F
$450 M $400. AKC Mini
Dachshund .
$350.
740·256·1498
Reg. 6 Lhasa Apso pup·
p1es. 6 wks old Vet
checked. 1st Shots &amp;
wormed. 446·2432.
700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
EBY,

INTEGRITY.

KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE·
STOCK
TRAILERS.
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
TIRE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CARMICHAELTRAILERS. COM
740·446-3825
Have you pnced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
surpnsed! Check out our
used
anventory
al
www.CAREO.com.
Car·
michael
740-446·2412

Equipment

2 BR Completely Furn.
$600/mo
+
elec.
$500/dep. Call 446·9585
or 446·9595.

For Rent, 2 BR. Duplex
town,
$475/mo.
DeP+ref. No pets. Quiet
place. 446-1271 .

an

Gracious Living 1 and 2
Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apts. in Middleport. from
$327
to
$592.
740-992-5064.
Equal
2BR APT.Ciose to Hoi·
Housing Opportunity.
~fl/\c?.
zer Hospilal on SR 160
Island V1ew Motel has
CIA. (740) 441-0194
$35.001Night.
vacancies
CONVENIENTLY
LO740-446-0406
•
CATED
&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLE! Townhouse apart· Modern 1BR apt. Call
ments,
and/or
small 740-446.()390
houses for rent. Call
BR wash·dry.
740-441-1111 for appii· Nice
Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili·
cation &amp; information.
ties. Call 740-446·9585.
Free Rent Special !!!
$600/mo.·$500 dep.
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and Nice 3 BR Apt for rent:
up. Central Air, WID stove. refridg. &amp; water
hookup.
tenant
pays 1nc. WID hookup, Close
Call between to hospital. Centenary
eleclric.
the hours of 8A·8P
Rd. Gallipolis. OH. no
EHO
pets. 446-9442 after 5pm
Ellm VIew Apts.
Recently built, 2BR, 1SA
(304)882·3017
www.comics.com
Apls.
WfO
Hookups,
Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
Dishwasher,
Gartlage
cepting applications for
Disposal, Great location,
wailing list for HUD subbtw. Rio Grande and
Miscellaneous
V ans
sidized, 1-BR apartment
Jackson, overlooking US
for
the
elderly/disabled,
1993 Chevy Cargo Van
35.
$525/mO+dep.
Jet Aeration Motors
call 675-6679
73.500
m1les.
740-645-1286
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt G20,
$1900.00
one owner.
in stock. Call Ron
Valley
Green
Spnng
Evans H!00·537-9528 740·992· 7667
Apartments 1 BR at
Real Estate 1 BR and bath. first S395+2 BR at $470
3000
x
Round
Bale
of
Hay.
Sales months rent &amp; deposit. Month. 740·446·1599.
4 5
references required, No Tara
_
•
.
.
Townhouse
515 740 367 0166
Pets
and
clean. Apartments - 2BR. 1 5
740-441·0245
Fo r Sale By O wner
bath, back patio. pool,
Sale-Berber carpet $5.95
2
bedroom
apartment playground. (trash, sew·
yd. Also, specials on vi· 12 Unit Apt. Complex.
available in Syracuse. age, water pd.)No pets
nyf &amp; laminate 1n stock. 446-0390.
• $450/rent,
$200 deposit. $375 per allowed.
Mollohan Carpet 2212
5450/sec.
dep.
Call
month
rent.
Rent
in·
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
Lots
eludes water. sewer, and 740·645·8599
OH (740) 446·7444
trash. No pets. Sufficient
For Sale: 46.679 acres of
Houses For Rent
income needed to qualWant To Buy
land 1n Walnut Township
Ify, 740·378·6111
of Gallia County. Is
3BR. 1BA. Kerr Rd. Gas
Absolute Top Dollar • sil· fenced. has sheller bam MIDDLPORT,
1
BED- heat. drilled water wells,
vertgold
co1ns.
any &amp; creek. Approx 65~o ROOM
APARTMENT, no pets, drugs, smoking.
10KJ14K/18K gold jew- wooded. Sells with or APPLIANCES
FUR- $450/mo+dep. 245·5064
elry, dental gold. pre without portable cab1n. NISHED,
NO
PETS.
1935
US
currency, $95,000 Mail your phone NON SMOKING, NICE, 4 Rms + Sa. Stove &amp;
proof/mint
sets,
dia· number and I will get 740·856·8863
fridge. 50 Olive St. No
monds, MTS Coin Shop. back with you. Ammon
pets. $450fmo + dep.
151 2nd Avenue, Galli- Troyer, 171 Lakin Rd .. Apartment available now 446·3945.
New
Riverbend
Apts.
polis. 446·2842
Gallipolis. OH 45631 .
Haven WV. Now accept- Wiseman Real Eslate·4
renlals
available-call
Recreational
applications
for
Real Estate tng
1000
446-3644 for more 1nfo.
3500
• one
Vehicles
Rentals HUD-subsidized.
All
in·town·various
~;;;;;;;;;;;;; : ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; Bedroom Apts. Utilities pnces·references &amp; sec.
~
~
includect. Based on 30%
deposits required
Campers / RVs &amp;
of adjusted income. Call
Apartments/
304·882·3121,
available
Trailers
Townhouses
Manulactu~ed
for Senior and Disabled 4000
Housmg
RV Service at Carmi·
br.gmund-le\'el
ncar people.
chael
Trailers d\1 ntwn Pt Plea..a~u
uul
740·446·3825
pd. Hl D accpt.'\o peb .all
Beautiful 2 BR apt. for
Rentals
~._160-11163
highly qualified person or -;;;;:;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;
couple. WID hookup &amp; 2 BR Mobile Home. No
RV
Service at Carmtchael 1 and 2 bedroom apts., dishwasher. inc. water, pets. Water, sewer, trash
furnished
and
unfur- sewage &amp; trash. Central Included. At Johnson's
Trailers
Home
Park.
nlshed. and houses 1n healing &amp; air. No pets. Mobil&amp;
740-446·3825
Pomeroy and Middleport, 5560/mo.
Kelly 740·645·0506.
64..;5.·6;.;3.;.7.;.
8._ _ _ _ ~~~-----2000
Automotive security deposit requtred, .7.4;.0o.·o.
no pets. 740·992·2218
2
Trailer
Lots
for
Beautiful Apts. at Jack- Rent·Add•son
son Estates. 52 West· Pike·$ 150/mo
+
sec.
1 BR apt. by Walmart. wood Dr.. from $365 to dep.
Water
pd.
--=-=•A;;;;u;;;;t;;;;
o;;;;s-=-== WID hookup, ref &amp; stove
$560.
740·446·2568. 446·3644.
mel.
Ref.
req Equal Housing Opportu06 Eclipse. S4,000 mi. 4 Util.
nity. This inslitutton is an For rent 3 br. &amp; 2 br.
cyl.
Aulomatic
Silver, $525/mo.f$150/dep.
Ask1ng $6500. 256·6877 740-245·5555
or Equal Opportunity Pro- trailer
call
or
•
441·5105.
256 1261
vtder and Employer
304-812-0397

STIHL Sales &amp; Serv1ce
Now Available at Carm1·
chael
Equipment
740·446·2412
900

Merchandise

Fuel I Oil I Coal I
Wood/Gas
Seasoned firewood.
All Hardwood.
740-853-2439
740·446·9204.

or

Hobby / Hunt &amp; Sp ort
For Sale 01 trade Crafts·
man router, table &amp; ac·
cessor. new never used
$400. invested $300. or
lrade for double·barrel
shot-gun prefer 410 ga
304·675·6411

__......__....._______ __ _____

..:..__~
-~
.....__

Apartments/
Townhouses

2BR Apt. In Kanauga
OH. $450/mo $450 dep
Total Elect
1BR Apt.
Porter
Total
Elect.
740·339·3224

r

Business &amp; Trade
School

Apartments/
Townhouses

..;.,..;;

..;;..

.......

__

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

_____

_...._......:..

~

_

~

~

~

�Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Rentals

Sales

2BR Mobile Home in
Racine.
$325/mo+$325
dep. 1 yr lease. No Pets.
No calls after 9PM.
740·992·5097.

AAA New 2010
4BR Doublewide
Only $47,651
2010 Singlewide

2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2
pie, $300/month,
lemces, No Pets,
CALLS
after
740·441·0181

peo·
Re·
NO
7pm

Trailer in town Racine. 2
br., 1 bath, all electric,
carport, large front porch,
close to school, library &amp;
park, $425 deposit, S425
per month water &amp; gar·
bage included, NO Pets,
740·949·2217
Nice 2BR 1 BA all etec·
llic, 160 near Holzer.
Sec deposit + references
needed.
446·6865 or
441_5141
Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre. 5% down. $525
mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
740-446·3570.
Sales

6000

Resort Properly

Employment

Drivers &amp; Delivery

CONTRACT DRIVERS
Earn extra income dehv·
erlng packages to nurs·
lng homes using your
OHIO'S
own
vehicle
on
a
BEST BUYs
part-time basis. Great
2010 3BR Doublewide
supplemental
1ncome.
$39,977
great tax benefits. Great
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
Company to wo11&lt;. for!
FHA$349 mo
Fuel -surcharge protec·
2010 3br/2ba Single
tion as fuel costs rise.
from S199 mo
Routes are round trip
MIDWESTHOMES from PI Pleasant WV.
mymldWesthomes.com
You must have a winning
attitude,
appearance,
740.828.2750
and
fuel-efficient
- - - - - - - - mlni·van,SUV or small
The BIG Sale
Used Homes &amp; Owner
pick-up w/cap.
Rnancing ·New 2010
call 800·818·7958 for a
Doublewide $37,989
personal
Interview!
Ask about $8,000 Re·
www.networkexpresslnc.
bates
com
mymidwesthome.com
740..828·2750

Country living- 3-5BR,
2-3 BA on property.
Many floor plans! Easy
Financing! We own the
bank.
Call
todayl
866·215·5774

"The Proctorville
Difference•
$1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream
home. Call Now!
Freedom Homes
888·565·0 167
Doublewide,
Flatwoods - - - - - - - Rd., Pomeroy, 3 br., 2 Trade 1n your old single·
bth,
1 acre, ask1ng wide for a new home. 0
$65,000, 740..992·5989
money down. 446·3570.

PUBLIC
NOTICES
The Meigs County
Department of Job
and Family Services
("Meigs DJFS") is
seeking
proposals
from
a
qualified
Attorney licensed to
practice law In the
State of Ohio, to
preside over certain
Child
Support
Administrative
matters where the
Agency Attorney may
have a conflict of
Interest.
The
Administrative
Hearing Officer will
be required to hold
the
Initial
administrative
hearing, make the
administrative
recommendation and
represent the Meigs
DJFS In Court, If
necessary,
and
complete all required
paperwork.
Proposer's
response must be on
their letterhead and
must include a price
for
Administrative
Hearings that do not
require
a
court
hearing and a mice
for
Administrative
Hearings that require
a
court
hearing.
Proposer must also
submit
a
current
resume. Contract not
to exceed $3,000.00
for
the
contract
period of January 10,
through
2010
December
31,2010.
Interested
parties
shall
respond
to
Meigs Department of
Job
and
Family
Services: Attn: Jane
Banks, P.O. Box 191,
175
Race
Street,
Middleport,
OH
45760, no later than

5000

~bltl19.99li

ONLY at MIDWEST
mymldwesthome.com
740.828.2750

Read your
newspaper and learn
something today!

Public t\otices in Nfw~nel'\.1

\our Right to Kno11,DeliHred Right to \our

January 6, 2010 at
10:00 a.m.
All
submissions
must be received by
mail
or
hand
by
the
delivered
above date and time.
No materials received
after that date will be
included In previous
submissions nor be
considered.
The
department reserves
the right to reject any
or all proposals. The
County
Meigs
Department of Job
and Family Services
is prohibited from
discrimination on the
basis of race, color,
national orig, sex,
age, religion political
belief or disability.
(12) 22, 29, (1) 5
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The
Village
of
Syracuse is offering
for sale a 1975 LA
FRANCE fire truck.
The truck has been
declared
surplus,
obsolete or otherwise
unneeded.
Truck will be sold
"AS IS" "WHERE IS"
with no expressed or
written warranties to
the "highest and best
bidder."
Council
reserves the right to
reject any and/or all
bids. To view the
vehicle call 740·992-

7777.
Bids
should
be
sealed and marked
"1975 LA FRANCE
truck bid" and either
mailed to P.O. Box
266, Syracuse, Ohio
45n9 or dropped off
at
the
Clerk-

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Treasurer's Office In
Viflage Hall at 2581
Third
Street,
Syracuse, Ohio.
All bids must be
received on or before
January 7, 2010 when
the bids will be
opened
at
the
Council meeting.
(12) 2.2 29 (1) 3
'
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, January 2,
2010 at 10:00 a.m., a
publlc sale will be
held at 211
W.
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company Is selling
for cash In hand or
certified check the
following collateral:
2005
Ford
F150
1FTPZ14565FA10459
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, reserves the
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company
reserves
the right to reject any
or all bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be sold
"
·
h
1 " lth
as tS·W ere s w
no
expressed
or
lmplled
warranty
given.
For
further
lnformatlon, or for an
to
appointment
Inspect
collateral,
prior to sale date
contact Cyndle or
Ken at 992-2136.
(12) 29, 30, 31

Education

Help Wanted· General

Part·time
instructors
needed during the day
1n: mathematics, economiCS, and accounting.
Mathematics and economic instructors must
have a master's degree
1n the discipline. If inter·
ested please email a re·
sume and cover letter to
jdanicki@gallipohsca·
reercollege.edu

Is a new career your
New Year's resolution?
Call us today1
Make calls for leading
Conservative organiza·
lions such as the NRA.
Weekly pay and great
benefitsI
Bonus Opportunities!
Great wol1&lt;. environment!

Help Wanted· General

Call today and schedule
your interview.

Are you ready to change
HI88·1MC·PAYU ext.
2341
your future In 201 0? If so
then join us Tue. January http://jobs.lnfoclslon.c
5th @ 1:30pm at the
om
Racine, OH library or
6:30pm at the Pomeroy,
OH library. For more Info Planters I Laborers
email startiiVIngthegood· needed for local green
house in Mason WV
life@gmail.com.
$7.25 I hr. call Kelly
Services
at
Do you enjoy helping 800-295-9470
people? If so, I will give
you FREE RENT AND
FREE UTILITIES plus an Qualily Control
Income just for moving in EARl'\ up to $15.00 an hr..
and helping my 87 year evaluate retail 'tore,, truinold mother. You will live tng proYided 877-766-9507
here as if it were your
own home, m1nus the expenses. 740-416-3130.
The Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center
has a posit1on opening
GKN Sinter Metals, Inc., as
Speech-Language
in Gallipolis, Ohio is cur· Pathologist for the Meigs
rentty accepting applicaCounty Schools, for the
tions for the position of remainder
of
the
Quality Engineer. The 2009·2010 School Year.
successful candidate will
Applicants must have a
possess a BS degree in Master's Degree and a
Engineering, Science or current license to prac·
related field (required). tice as a speech patholoCMM
Programm1ng
gist Issued by the Ohio
knowledge, past experiBoard of Speech·Lan·
ence is powered metal· guage Pathology and
lurgy and LEAN Manu· Audiology. Salary will be
factunng are preferred. based on experience and
This position will be re·
certification according to
sponsible for all quality
the salary schedule. This
related
program/procposition will have Board
esses regarding launch approved benefits. Sub·
of a new product representing a shift 1n techno!· mit letter of interest and
ogy for the customer. resume to John D. Co·
Superintendent,
Successful launch with stanzo,
.
.
.
Athens-Meigs
Educa·
little or no disruptiOn to tional
Service Center,
the customer 1s lmpera- 507 Richland Avenue,
live. Manufactunng an_d Suite #108, Athens, OH
control processes Will 45701. Application Dead·
need to be sound and line: Friday, January 8,
wor1d class. Roubnely, 2010 at 4:00 p.m., or unthe successful candidate
til position is filled. The
will be responsible for
AMESC is an equal op·
designing,
implementing
portunity
Employer/Pro·
and maintaining product vider.
assurance systems and
activities in numerous
ar~a such as. documen·
tatlon, Inspection, proc- The Athens·Me1gs Eduess validation, product cational Serv1ce Center
qualification,
calibration has a pos1tion opening
and reliability.
as
Part-Time
School
GKN Sinter Metals, Inc. Psychologist
for
the
offers competition salary Meigs County Schools,
and benefits package. tor the rema1nder of the
Resumes can be elec· 2009·2010 School Year.
Ironically
sent
to Applicants must hold a
Salem.HR@gknsinter·
certificate or license that
metals.com or mailed to:
allows them to serve as
GKN Sinter Metals, Inc.
a School Psycholog1st.
Attention: Sherry Gor· Salary will be based on
don, HR Administrator
experience and certilica2160 Eastem Avenue
tion accordir.g to the sal·
Gallipolis, OH 45631
ary schedule. This post·
tion does not have bene·
GKN is an EOEIAA em· fits. Submit •etter of Interplayer.
est and resume to John
D Costanzo, Supennten·
~~---.---- dent, Athens-Meigs Edu·
Great part time oppor· cational Service Center
tunlty. A fast growing 507 Richland Avenue,
textile
company
ur- Suite #108, Athens, OH
gently require the serv· 45701 _ Application Deadices of part time Ac·
count/Payroll Office. In- line: Friday, January 8.
d
2010 at 4:00 p.m., or untereste
persons til position 1s filled. The
should contact us lm· AMESC is an equal opmediately via
email. portunity
Employer/Pro·
Please note that Phone vider.
inquiries will not be accepted. Forward your
resume to Jensen Ed·
win
@
jensen.edwln@live.co
Servic~ I Bus.
m. Do include your 9000
Otrectory
phone number when
forwarding the resume.

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

YOUNG'S
Carpenter Service
· Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
· New Garages
·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
· VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
· Pallo and Porch Decks
WV036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
740·591·0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
30 Years Local Experience
FULLV INSURED

Hill's Self
Storage

j-,'tfl

II]
I

lliI~

~11 i

I

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

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

740-949-2217

Sizes s· X 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

Hardwood CahJtJ2tf1 Arld Furllii!Jre

We can help.

wvrw.ti.rnbe.rc::reekeablnetry.com

Call or e-mail us.

740.446.9200
2A59 St. Rt. 160 • Galllpolls
CALL OR FREE ES1lMATES

SUNSET
CONSTRUCTION
Remodeling,
Roofs, Garages,

304-773-1111

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

Pole Buildings,
Siding, Decks,

• New Homes
• Garages

Drywall, Additions
and New Homes.
Insured- Free

• Complete
Remodeling

Estimates

740-742-3411

Baer
Builders
• New Homes
• Complete
Remodeling
• Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Hometown Insurance Center
'--Ohornetownl~.com

740-992-1671
Stop &amp; Compare

Replacement
Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563
• Siding • Vinl I
Windows • :\letal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical

740-416-1568

FA~
Erie
~Insurance"
Total Construction
One Call to Do It All
Pole Barns/Metal Roofs
Fire &amp; Water Damage
Drywall/Repair

'"

~

IORSI
Racine, Ohio 740-247-2019

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-5047

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS
R.L. Hollon
Trucking
Dump Truck
Service
We do driveways
Limestone • Gravel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Room Additions, Remodel mg. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. Ne\\ Homes. Siding. Decks.
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
Rick Price • 17 yrs. Experience
WV/1040954 Cell 740-416·2960 740·992·0730

740-985-4422
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• Oil &amp; filter change
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repair • Tire Rep:m
• Tran,mission Filter
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work

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•

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'Fax: 740-667-0329
Toll Free: 877-428-8196

�Tuesday, December 29, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD
By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Online
icon
7 Island east
of Java
11 Deli buy
12 Hymn
ender
13 Response
provoker
15 Mosque
faith
16 Satisfactory
18 "Doggone!''
21 Drawn out
2 2 Seattle
cagers
24 Paintings
and prints
25 Family
26 Bill stamp
27 Cruise
accountant
29 Red-ink
amount
30 With 3 1Across,
Louvre
painting
31 See 30Across
32 Polygon
corner
34 Legal condition
40 Pageantry
41 Hilary
Swank
movie
42 Not at
home
4 31n a
sinister
manner

Mort Walker
BUT IT WAS
YOUR IDEA TO
START WEARING
THAT UNIFORM
LI I&lt;E MINE !

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne
W;/AT OO

you Po FOR
A UVI!k;,
51~€R

~

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Burro
2 Big tub
3 Boxing
great
4 Job for
Petruchio
5 Entertain
6 Small
stream
7 Gotham
City
hero
8 French
friend
9 S ummer
zodiac
sign
1 0 Roadhouse
14 S inger
Neville
16 Open
d iscussion
17 Prologue

Todav's Answers
19 Ocean
motions
20 Cousteau's
gear
21 Napkin
site
22 Knight title
23 Fixed
25 Reeves of
"The
Matrix''
28 Neat
29 Would-be
loser

31 Andes
beast
33 Delighted
34 M assage
setting
35 Pull
along
36 " Believe r"
37 Sort
38 Gusher's
g ush
39 Yea
opposer

NEW C ROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checklm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2. PO Box 536475, Orlando. Fl 328!&gt;3-6415

THELOCKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

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

Brian and Greg Walker

·i'PON"T 'l14MC r.M ~ n&gt; MY" YOUR
'ROll 41 ON IN DaNt.AL.

Patrick McDo nnell

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

by Dave Green
HAPPY BIRI1IDAY for Tuesday, Dec 29, 2009:

6

3

2 8
5
7 1
6
2

·JOOt·"0...

3 9
8

8

2

3

9

.,.o,. r-..-~t;ote

" Mommy's dressin' up her ears.
That means we' re not going."

4 2

1
5

7 5

3

9
Difficulty Level

2
**
• •

G9 9
B 8 6
~ L v
v.B L
f6 9 G
8 ~ 9
9 v B
L 6 8
9 G. ~
f-

MOM GAIN~D AVE' fouNPS OVE'I&lt;il-11: HOLIPA~5,

SO \W{;R'ff;OPY ATM'{ HOUSE IS ON A Vl61."

...

.5

4 7

8

Wt~W!~&gt;c:ut.oom

DENNIS THE MENACE

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
This year, others find you to be Unusually mercurial

Hank Ketchum

•

pA;r I ,\ljRJijjlQ

8 v LI ~
L ~ Gv
G6 B 8
9 8 9 G
v ~ L 8 9
G9 B v 6
8- 6 9- ~ L
~ B G 9 9
L v 9 6 B
B
9
9
6

6
9
9
~

B
L
G

v
8

and changeable. You do accomplbh more, as you are
lighter, ea'&gt;ier to communicate \\;lh and don't neOO the
same answers and commitments as others. You could
feel as if you have too many respon&lt;;ibilities. That mighl
be true, bul you handle them well. In the near future, a
pay raise or promotion could be possible because of
your hard work this year. If you are single, you often
feel at odds \\ith your responsibilities and what you
would like to do. Become more playful. If you are
attached, the two of you simply need lo lighten up and
enjoy more. A relative could be demanding of both of
you. SAGITIARil:S reads you cold.
Tire Stars Show Ull' Kind of Day You'll Have; 5-Dynamic:
4-Positive; 3-APemge; 2-So-so; 1-Diffimlt
ARIES (March 21-April19)
****The lime has come lo clear the air with a
partner. You might have some trepidation, but you also
know that il is more than na--essarv. Your words fall on
another's ears perhaps differently from how you
intended them lo. Be ready to revamp your conmlunication Tonight: Find a friend lo hang oul \\ith.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***Stay sensiti,·e to expenditures, whether you
wanl to or not. You areal a poinl where a lol could happen quickly, especially involving your day-to-day life.
You have an unusual C.lpadly lo understand more than
many think. Tonight: Buy a 1'\ew Year'&lt;; item for yourself.
GEMINI (lvfay 21 -June 20)
You are all ~miles and ready for a different
or more dynamic approach. How you handle a situation and what evolves could transform radicalh. Your
pe~nalily Cc1n change how you appro.1m matters.
veering from a classic fashion. Tonight: WJSh-upon-astar time.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
*** Know when to pull back and keep your own
counsel. You could be out of sorts. Stay mum for a
while, knowing that there are other solutions. Don't
show your h,1nd or s.1y something vou could regret
later. Tonight Squeeze in as mud\ Rand R a-; pos.-;ible.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
***** You might w,1nl to rethink a situation thal
emerges oul of the blue. Your way or style i~ \'ery different from how il h&lt;IS been in the p,l.&lt;;l. Other.; might
need to pull back some. You certainly get your message

*****

through. Tonight: Where the action is.
vmGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
**** Through a&lt;Xepling more responsibility,
you'll gain ,,n even stronger foothold in a professional
and I or emotional situation. Through asking more
questions, you'll see and understand someone's fiscal
response. Tonight: A must appearance.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
Keep reaching oul and attempting to get the
big picture. You might be trying loo hard to make what
is nece;sary happen. Let go, and you could be delighted by what comes in. At this present point, you could
be more uptight than in the past. Tonight: Go for a
drive to relax. Try a mo\'ie ifyou want.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-l'\ov. il)
**** Relate to other; individually, and )OU'IJ
make headway in a key relationship. Sometimes you
doubt yourself or don'l believe in the innate power that
draw~ m.my dow to you. Talk thmugh ,1 prol&gt;IPm.
Tonight: Togetherness is the theme.
SAGfiTARIUS (r-:o,-. 22-Dec. 21)
You want to do something \'ery differently
from in the pa&lt;&gt;l. Avoid getting stuck You need to trust
your instincts more, understanding which way to go.
Listen lo what is being sh,1red by a partner or dear
friend. Tonight: Express what you want.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
*** Focus on getting the job done. You could be
O\'erly tired and worn out by recent e\·enls. Listen more
to what is being shared. !'\ot e\·erything is a~ you
would like it to be or how you see it right now. Tonight:
Do something just for yourself.
AQUARIUS Qan. 20-Feb. 18)
Your creativity ea~ilr ge~ stirred up. You
might wonder what your limils reall~· are under the circumstances. Loosen up and realize that \'ery few people can e\'en under.;t.md how you think much les.s go
along with it. Tonight Laugh and enjoy the one you are
with.
PISCES (reb. 19-M.uch 20)
Sometimes too much is going on for your
Wsle. LOOSt!n up and relax. You don't need to carry others' responsibilities or worries. allei!sl for now. Be open
loa family member who cares a lol. Tonight: H,1ppy
close lo home.

****

*****

*****

*****

/•l&lt;'tpJelint' Rrgar i; on tlte ln/t'Tilrl
at hlt]•:ll&lt;t'il'l'.~JCquelflk111g•1T.WIII.

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

www .mydailysentinel.com

I

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--

-------~--~

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