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                  <text>Prep volleyball
action,Bt

Tea party express
kicks off, A6

e
l'rintl'CI on IOO'iG:
Kcl') clt•d (•y, print

Middleport • Pon1eroy, Ohio

Humane
Society
endorses
Strickland

Kasich promises to 'get Ohio moving again'
Bv

CHARLENE
HOEFLICH

HOEFUCti M't'DAlLYSEiffii,EL.COM

COLUMBUS (AP) The political arm Of the
Humane Soc1cty of the
United Stmes has made
its first-ever fo1ay into
the Ohio g&lt;WCI nor's race,
endorsing (Jov. Ted
Strickland
over
Republican
opponent
John Kasich.
The nation's top political organiz.ation for animal rights cited the
Democmt' role in negotmting a June agreement
bet\\ ccn animal-rights
and agriculture interests.
The deal called for the
Humane Societ) to pull
an anti-animal cruelty
mea ure of1the fall ballot
in exchange for tougher
rules governing fann animal care and a host of
other animal protection
measures.
Kasich spokesman Rob
Nichols sny:s Strickt.md
des en cd the endorsement. He s.1ys he placed
the Humane Society
,unong "left-coa~t and
"'ashington-bascd
groupe; th.ll 'W&lt;~ge -war
against Oh10's farmers."

.

Nati. Guard
to build new
ops center

•

aD.,

COLUMBUS CAP) The Ohio Nauonal Guard
plane; to build a ne\\ operations
center
in
Columbu.
The building will be
u~ed to track whereabouts of soldiers and
airmen from Ohio who
arc deployed around the
world and across the
country.
Workers plan to break
ground on .Monday and
the project is scheduled
to be finished next
October.
The ne\\ buildmg costs
about $2 million - most
of which 1s CO\ ered by
federal fundtng. It is
being built next to the
urrent operations center.
.Maj. Eric Kmnt1 s&lt;~ys
the Guard's operation~
needs ha\e outgrown the
current space.

WEATHER

POMEROY - Ohio's
gubernatorial candidate
John Kasich speakmg to
about 200 of the
Republican faithfuls in
Meigs County Saturday
afternoon promised to
"get
Ohio
moving
again'' tf he IS elected in
November.
Kasich described the
state as "being m deep
trouble" and defined hi&lt;&gt;
focus as "wining the
election and then -;ctung
policies to ~pur gro\\ th
in .Ohio. We ha,•e to get
people back to \\ ork..
we ha\e to get go\ernment out of the \\a) so
'' e can fix the problems.
We have to support
small bu'\inesses and
innovative people.''
lie talked about the
natural resources of
~lcigs Count) mentioning natural re!iources
and the river. and the
need to take ad' anlage
of them. "Take coal \\C need to dig it, clean
it. and burn it: and oil
and gas. let's get it out
and use it. l:.et's not
shut dO\\n proJects."

Ka ... tch addres,NI ahc
seventy of the drug
problem und s tel he
would declare war on
dtugs. .md he pledged
:support for broadb.md
expansion m the county
to facilitate commerce.
ll e cnlled for a '\undo"
attitude '' hich he s:ud is
necessary I or change.
and stressed tc~un\\ ork
bet\\een the people and
· government as a mc,111s
tO\\ ard progress ''We
can change the wotld tf
\\e work together. and
it's my goal to make
things better here 111
Ohio.''
"Taxes m Ohio need to
be reduced, the gO\ emment needs cleaned up
(mentioning spectficall)
Charlene Hoeflichlphoto
\\ orkcrs C'ompensallon John Kas1ch, gubernatorial candrdate, gets an
and retraining program enthusiastrc reception from a large crowd gathopportunities). job cre- ered at Republican headquarters m Pomeroy.
ators need to IMve incentt\CS. Ten perccn1 unemployment ts just not
acceptable and we can
bnng change."
c;,,id
Charlene Hoefllchlphoto
Kastch. He s.1id h1s
Auditor
of State Mary Taylor, lieuexperience in both busttenant
governor
candidate, greets
ness and go\crnment
those
attending
the Kasich rally
qualificc; hun to do \\hat
Saturday afternoon.
needs to he done to
bring change of Ohto.

See Kasich, AS

Ohio 'first brother' RV's to Pomeroy on NRA tour
Bv BRIAN

J . REED

BREED MYDAlLYSENTlNaCOM

POMEROY
-As
John Kasich rallied
Republican faithful at
GOP
Headquarters
Saturday. Ohio's unofficial "first brother.'' Roger
Stncklanu. \Va~ vi-.iting
Pomeroy in his camouflaged Sportsmen for
Stnckland RV.
The 1 message: Ted
Strickland is "one hundred percent KRA:'
Gov. Ted Strickland's
brother ha taken to
Ohio's roads to promote
the
National
Rifle
Association's endorsement of the Democratic
has
go\ ernor.
He
appeared in respon:se to
Kasich's visits to other
southern Ohio countie-..,
as well. promoting hts
governor brother's support of gun ownership
I and poking jabs at his
brother'..,
Republican
opponent.
The Scioto County
native is a physical con-

trust to hi politician
brother. characteriZing
him elf, tongue in cheek.
as being closer to Btlly
Carter
than
Ted
Strickland.
The Strickland brother-; appear mural-si1ed
and flannel-clad on the
side of the RV. '' hich was
parked Saturday afternoon on the Pomeroy
parking
lot
dunng
Kasich 's appearance at
the GOP headquarters
just up the strcc: Roger
and his famou brother
.1lso appear in commercials promoting the
sporstman's me &lt;~ge
Roger 1s familiar \\ 1th
campaigning. He has
'Worked on his brother's
campaign for years. dri' ing Ted on camJMign
tours across the S1xth
Congressional Dtstnct. ro.td tlip - RV included
walking in pamdes, and
"hen htc; brother ran
providing a com1c foil to for go' ernor in 2006.
hi&lt;; more scriou' b10thcr
Ohio Hohenwarter. the
- partkularly in thetr 1\:RA'" Ohio limson. has
most fami har territor) been tra,·cling \\ ith Roger
here in southcm Ohio.
Strickland to promote
Roger took ••1 similar Strickland's
standmg

Roger Strickland
with the NRA and \\ ith
gun owners and spOl1Smen in the larger context.
··we ''ant people who
stand up fo1 the Second
Amendment to stand up
for Ted. too." the governor' brother said.

"(Strickland) has been
percent
NRA
throughout hi.., career in
Washington and brought
\\hat he did there back to
Columbus:· Hohenwater
ha!i said during the visih.
100

Utility reconnection, maintenance program. open
A./lows customers to stay warm under payment plan

High: 66
Low: 39

STAFF REPORT

INDEX
2 SEl'TIONS- 12 PA«.llS

Comics

lls

Editorials

A4

Sports
c

2010 Ohi

B Section
Vallt'Y Pubhshmg t..o

li.I.IJ ,I !I!IJI!II .

POMEROY
Effect I\ c l\londa) and
continuing through April
15. the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio has
instructed the state's
investor-owned electric
and natural gas utilities
to reconnect or maintain
serv1ccs for residential
cu tomers either di.,connectcd or threatened
with disconnection.
According to the
PUCO's
Winter
Rcconnectwn
Order.
customers can have their
en ice restored by paying the ,unount o\\ed or
$175. whichever is less.
If

• Percentage
of
plus a $36 reconnectJOn
fcc. This option ts a\nil- Income Pa) ment Plan
,,blc on a one-time bast'&gt; (PlPP Plu&lt;&gt;)
1 he re' ised percentFor Jncomc-ehgthlc
age ot mcome pa) mcnt
hou~eholds. funds pro' idcd
through
the plan (PlPP Plus) goes
Eme1gency
Home mto effect ~o\. I PIPP
Energy
A'lsist,mcc Plus 1~ an income-based
Program (E lll~AP) or pa) mcnt arrangcn1cnt
other energy a'isio;t,mcc where Cthtomcrs ,,t or
belm' ISO percent of the
prog1nm~ may he used to
pa) the $175 ch.ugt·. federal pm erty guJdl'Customers must cntt'r a lines pay a percentage of
payment plan lo1 .111y t hc11· month!\ income
rcm:nninr bal,mcc and to\\ nrds their electric
apply for other n\mlablc ,md/or n.ltuml gas bills.
QuestiOns about the
, public benefits.
PIPP
Plu program and
In nddttion to the "intc:r ICCOnllCCtton p10\ 1- requests for a nC\\
sion, the foliO\\ ing fcd- brochure that dec;cribes
erall) and tate-funded the program c.1n be
oht.tined by calling the
progt.un'\ .1re n-..til,lhlc:

OCC toll free at 1-877742-5622 or 'isiting
\\ '' ".ptd.occ.org.
Encrg)
• Home
As-;istance
Program
(HEAP)
HEAP. administered
b) the Ohio Department
of De,clopmcnt. 1s
designed
to
help
incomc-l.'ligiblc
consumer:! ut or lwhm 200
percent of the fedl·ral
pm crt) guideline!i pay
for their heating costs.
Consume1s can use this
prot;r,un one time per
hc.1t111g season.
The benefit c~mount
nMy \,lf) depending on
indh 1du.ll circumstances
and the .unount of fedcr-

al funding a' ailable.
• Budget Billing
Budget billing allows
consumers to -.preacl
energ) cosh over a 12month period to have
more uniform monthly
payments. Consumers
~hould contact their utility company to learn
more about the program.
• Pavmcnt Plans
Whe;, facing disconncctitm, consumers may
propose to their utility
company n payment
arrangement that works
best for them. Utilities
arc required to provide
one-ninth, one--.ixth and
one-third payment pia~~.

�--

-~-

~-

-----~----~~~--:"""',__

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

_____________....

....

_..__~--------

www .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

2·workers killed in Tenn. post office shootin·g
HENNING,
Tenn.
(AP) Two gunmen
opened fire Monday at a
post office m a rural
West Tennessee town
that was home to
''Roots'' author Alex
Haley. killing two workers during an attempted
robbery.
The shooting happened Monday morning at
the
onestory. brick building in Henning, the
Lauderdale County
Sheriff's Department
said. Officers were
searching for a maroon
Chevrolet Malibu with
two men inside, and no
arrests have been made.
District Attorney Mike
Dunavant said the case
involved
''disturbing
violence" but did not
elaborate.

The post office, which
sits between a self-service car wash and a
coin-operated laundry
called "Mom's" in this
town of about 1,200
people. often has residents coming in to pick
up their mail. Home
delivery isn't provided
in Henning. some 45
miles
northeast
of
M~mphis.

Beth
Barnett.
a
spokeswoman for the
U.S. Postal Service. said
that five people usually
work in the post office
but that she was not sure
how many were there at
the time of the attack.
Post offices are not
immune to crime, but
robberies at post offices
are uncommon, she said.
The American Postal
Workers Union said a

retail clerk and a rural
carrier associate - both
women were slain.
Their names have not
been released.
Mary Hammock, who
works at a nearby market, said Monday afternoon that she had been
in the post office about
8:25 a.m. and noticed it
was not as loud or busy
as normal.
"I knew something
didn't feel right because
it was real quiet," she
said. She returned to the
market and heard police
sirens about 15 minutes
later.
"I migh_t have been
real close probably to
losing my life,'' she said.
Around midday, plainclothes
investigators
were scanning the area
along a railroad track

that sits behind the post
office. Lines of yellow
police tape kept people
away from the building
as a crowd gathered
nearby, some sitting in
chairs, waiting for more
information about what
happened.
. Crime scene investigatiOn trucks were parked
outside, including one
from the Tennessee
Bureau of Investigation.
Ella Holloway, who
lives within walking distance of the post office,
said she knew one of the
women killed. Holloway
said she would be gr~et­
ed by the woman's smile
when she went to the
post office to buy
stamps. Another local
woman said she knew
one of the slain workers
and said she was "nice

•

as can be.''
"When we were outside, she would wave
and smile at us," Wendy
Willis said.
Tony Burns. a state
employee
at
the
Tennessee Capitol in
Nashville. said his sister-in-law is a postal service worker who was
assigned to the Henning
office Monday. She told
him that the shooting
happened during a robbery attempt, but that
she escaped unharmed.
The sheriff's department
also described the incident as a robbery.
Standing on a street
corner near the post
office. city resident
Emmitt Hennings. a 71year-old retiree, said it
was hard to comprehend
what happened.

"I
just
couldn't
believe it, not in this
town," Hennings said.
"It's too quiet."
Postal officials offered
a $25,000 reward
information leading to
an arrest and conviction
in the case.
The post office is less
than a half-mile away
from the museum dedicated to the "Roots"
author Haley, who died
in 1992. The 1976 book
won a Pulitzer Prize and
was the basis for a toprated TV series. The
story chronicled his
family history • from
Africa to slavery and
freedom in the U.S., and
it inspired many people
to research their own
families' roots.

Sold.ier: Fort Hood gunman did not target anyone
FORT HOOD, Texas
(AP)- A gunman who
appeared to be trying to
htt any Army personnel
who moved during a
deadly rampage at Fort
Hood last year fatally
shot a pregnant soldier
who
had
recently
returned (rom Iraq. a military
court
heard
Monday.
Spc . Jonathan Sims
said he had been talking
to a female soldier when
the first volley of gunfire
rang out. She had just
told him she was expecting a baby and was
preparing to go home.
"The female soldier
that was sittin~ next to
me was in the fetal position. She was screaming:
'My baby! My baby!"'
Sim.-; told the Article 32
hearing to determine ' if
Anny psychiatrist Maj.
Nidal Hasan will stand
trial in the Nov. 5 shootings - the worst attack
on an American military
base.
Hasan. a 40-year-old
American-born Muslim.

has been charged with 13
counts of premeditated
murder and 32 counts of
attempted premeditated
murder.
Addressing the hearing
via video link from
Afghanistan. Sims said
he later saw nurses performing first aid on the
woman. but that her eyes
had rolled back and he
knew she was dead.
Pvt. Francheska Velez.
a
21-year-old
from
Chicago, had become
pregnant while serving in
Iraq. She was among the
13 killed in the Fort
Hood attack.
Spc. Dayna Roscoe
testified Monday afternoon that she went to the
medical building Nov. 5
to get the results of a
pregnancy test. The
building was crowded,
and she was waiting in an
overflow area when the
shots started.
"I hear someone saying. 'My baby. my baby.'
Someone saying, 'Get
down,"' Roscoe said.
The gunman carne into

the overflow area and
shot her in the left arm as
she hid in a chair with her
arms wrapped around her
head. she said. He turned
away. fired in another
direction and then came
back and shot her twice
more, hitting her leg.
When the gunman left,
another soldier came to
help her and another
woman who was wounded.
The soldier helping
"was asking for her
name, and she said she'd
been shot in the abdomen
and
was
bleeding,"
Roscoe said. ''She wanted someone to tell her
family that she loved
them and that she wasn't
going to make it."
Ten soldiers testified
Monday, as the second
week of the hearing started. Many had been shot.
Pfc. Justin Johnson
said the shooter opened
fire on a crowded waiting
area and then walked
around the building.
"He was aiming his
weapon on the ground

and he started shooting.
and he was hitting people
that were trying to get
away," Johnson testified
by video link from
Kandahar
in
Afghanistan.
"It didn't seem like he
was targeting a specific
person. sir. He was just
shooting at anybody.''
Johnson. who was shot
three times in the attack
and still has a bullet
wedged in his lungs, said
he saw the shooter for
about five to seven seconds. He was not asked
to identify him in court.
Several witne~ses testified last week that they
made eye contact with
Hasan and identified him
as the Port Hood gunman.
The investigating officer at the hearing, Col.
James L. Pohl. said earlier this year that he wanted to hear from the
almost three dozen people who were wounded
in the attack. The Article
32 hearing is unique to
the military in that Pohl,

along with prosecutors
and defense attorneys.
can call witnesses.
At some point after the
hearing, Pohl will recommend whether Hasan
should go to trial and if
the Army should seek the
death penalty. That recommendation will go to
Col. Morgan Lamb, a
Fort Hood brigade commander appointed •to
oversee judicial matters
in Hasan's case, and then
to the commanding general. who will make the
final decision.
Witnesses last week
told similar stories of
how a balding man in an
Army combat uniform
stood by a front counter.
shouted "AUahu Akbar!"
"God is great!" in
Arabic and started
shooting at unarmed soldiers in a building where
they went for routine
medical' tests before
deploying.
When the shooting
started. some startled
soldiers thought it was a
training exercise.

Sgt. Miguel Valdivia
said he hit the ground but A
became impatient, think- W
ing that whatever drill
was going on seemed to
be taking a long time.
When the shooter carne
toward him, he looked
up.
''We made eye contact.'' Valdivia said. "He
raised his arm, his
weapon. and raised it at
me."
Valdivia. who demonstrated from the witness
stand how the gun was
pointed at him, said he
turned away, exposing
his right side, and got
shot three times, in his
leg. \high and hip.
"When I saw my own
blood. then I realized it
was real," he said.
·
Upcoming witnesses
are expected to include
the two Fort Hood police
officers credited with
taking the gunman
Hasan, who was
lyzed from the chest
down after being shot,
remains jailed.

U.S. studying Australian Internet security program
WASHINGTON (AP)
- The government is
reviewing an Australian
program that will allow
Internet
service
providers to alert customers if their computers are taken over by
hackers and could limit
online access if people
don't fix the problem.
Obama administration
officials have met with
industry leaders and
experts to find ways to
increase online safety
while trying to balance
.securing the Internet and
guarding people's privacy and civil liberties.
Experts and U.S. officials are interested in
portions of the plan, set
to go into effect in
Australia in December.
But any move toward
Internet regulation or
monitoring by the U.S.
government or industry
could trigger fierce
opposition from the
public.
The discussions come
as private. corporate and
government cqmputers
across the U.S. are
increasingly being taken
over and exploited by
hackers and other computer criminals.
White House cybercoordinator
Howard
Schmidt
told
The
Associated Prc:-;s that

the U.S. is looking at a
number of voluntary
ways to help the public
and small businesses
better protect themselves online.
Possibilities include
provisions
tn
the
Australia
plan
that
enable customers to get
warnings from their
Internet. providers if
their computer gets
taken over by hackers
through a botnet.
A botnet is a network
of infected computers
that can number in the
thousands and that network is usually controlled
by
hackers
through a small number
of
scattered
PCs.
Computer owners are
often unaware that their
machine is linked to a
botnet and is being used
to shut down targeted
websites,
distribute
malicious
code
or
spread spam.
If a company is willing to give its customers
better online security.
the American public will
go along with that,
Schmidt said.
"Without sec~rity you
have no privacy. And
many of us that care
deeply about our privacy
look to make sure our
systems are secure,
Schmidt said in an inter-

Keeping
Meigs County
informed

view. Internet service
providers. he added. can
help "make sure our systems are cleaned up if
they're infected and
keep them clean "
But officials are stopping short of advocating
an
option
in
the
Australian plan that
allo,vs
Internet
providers to wall off or
limit online usage by
customers who fail to
clean their infected
computers. saying this
would be technically
difficult and likely run
into opposition.
"In my view. the
United States is probably going to be well
behind other nations in
stepping into a lot of
these new areas," said
Prescott Winter. former
chief technology officer
for the National Security
Agency. who 1s now at
the
California-based
cybersecurity
firm.
ArcSight.
In the U.S .. he said,
the Internet is viewed as
a technological wild
west that should remain
unfenced and unfettered.
But he said this open
range isn't secure, so
"we need to take steps to
make it safe. reliable
and resilient."
"I think that. quite
frankly, there will be

other governments wh&lt;?
will finally say. at least
for their parts of the
Internet.
as
the
Australians have apparently done. we think we
can do better.''
Cybersecurity expert
James Lewis. a senior
fellow at the Center for
Strategic
and
International Studies,
said
that
Internet
providers are nervous
about any increase in
regulations. and they
worry about consumer
reaction to monitoring
or other security controls.
Online customers. he
said, may not want their
service provider to cut
off their Internet access
if their computer is
infected. And they may
balk at being forced to
keep their comp_uters
free of botnets or infec·
tions.
But they may be
amenable to having their
Internet provider warn
them of cyberattacks
and help them clear the
malicious software off
their computers b_&gt; providing
instructiOns.
patches or anti-v1rus
programs.
They may even be
willing to pay a small
price each month for the
service much like

Dale Meyerrose, vice
president and general
manager
of
Cyber
Integrated Solutions at
Harris Corporation.
"There are · people
starting to make the
point that we've gone
about as far as we can
with voluntary kinds of
things. we need to have
things that have more
teeth in them, like standards,'' said Meyerrose.
For example, he said,
coffee shops or airports
might limit their wireless services to laptop~A
equipped with certai:'W
protective technology.
Internet providers might
qualify for specific tax
benefits if they put programs in place. he said.
Unfortunately. he said,
it may take a serious
attack before the government or industry
impose such standards
and programs.
In Australia. Internet
providers will be able to
take a range of actions
to limit the damage from
infected
computers,
from issuing warnings
to restricting outbound
e-mail. They could also
temporarily quarantine
compromised machines
while providing customers with links to help
fix. the problem.

telephone
customers
used to pay a minimal
monthly charge to cover
repairs.
Lewis. who has been
studying the issue for
CSIS.
said
it
is
inevitable that one day
carriers wilJ play a role
in defending online customers from computer
1
attack.
Comcast Corp. is
expanding a Denver
pilot program that alerts
customers whose computers are controlled
through a botnet. The
carrier provides free
antivirus software and
other assistance to clean
the mal\\ are off the
machine, said Cathy
Avgiris. senior vice
president at Comcast.
The program does not
require customers to fix
their computers or limit
the online usage of people who refuse to do the
repairs.
Avgiris said that the
program \\ill roll out
across the country over
the next three months.
"We don't want to panic
customers We \vant to
make sure they are comfortable. Beyond that, I
hope that w~ pave the
way for o~~ers to take
these steps.
Voluntary programs
will not be enough. said

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The Daily Sentinel

l'uesday, October 1 9 ,

Comntunity Calendar
Public
meetings

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Sc1pio Township Fire
Department. Discussion
1ncludes narrow banding,
Reedsville tornado and
Sunday, Oct. 17
Joint-Incident Command
POMEROY - Revival
Thursday, Oct. 21
Structure employed during services at the Calvary
IDDLEPORT
Pilgrim Chapel, 7 p.m.
Association for the NIMS concept.
MIDDLEPORT - The Rev. Paul Bates, evangeImprovement
of
Middleport, 8 p.m.,• at the Middleport Literary Club, 2 list. and singers. Pa$tor is
Rev.
Charles
Bitanga Martial Arts p.m. in the Pomeroy the
Center, 129 Mill St , library. Frankie Hunnel to McKenzie.
Monday, Oct. 18
Middleport
Assoc1aton review "Ford County" by
GALLIPOLIS
'
formed for d1scuss1on on John Grisham. Oleta
Promised Land Church,
employment/economic Heighton, hostess.
Thursday, Oct. 2 1
Clay Chapel Road off Oh1o
opportunities, real estate
POMEROY
Meigs
2 18, camp meetings. 7
values, recreat1on and
other 1ssues of concern. County Retired Teachers p.m. start1ng today though
luncheon, Oct. 23, local preachers
For more lnfonnatlon call Assoc1ation
noon, W1ld Horse Cafe. and singers nightly.
•992-5715.
Karen Butt, president-elect
Thursday, Oct. 21
of Oh1o RTA Guests welRUTLAND - Seventh
come.
annual
Fall Harvest
REEDSVILLE
Gospel Srng Rutland
Riverv~ew Garden Club
Civic Center. No admismeets
at
6:30
p.m.,
SIOn
Thursday and Fnday,
Wednesday, Oct. 20
CHESTER - Pomeroy DaVi01's 1n Williamstown, 6 p.m.; Saturday, 1 p.m.
Thursday Is open talent
Chapter 186 Order of W. Va for d1nner.
Tu~day, Oct. 23
night; Friday and Saturdav
Eastern Star, lnstallat1on of
POMEROY - Meigs featured singers, The
officers,
7:30
pm
County Tea Party meeting, H nsons of Tennessee
Masonic; Hall.
7
p.m.
Mulberry
Sunday, Oct. 24
HARRISONVILLE
Community
Center.
MIDDLEPORT
- The
Meigs County Firefighters
Keffers
of
Nashville,
Ga.
Candidates
to
be
heard.
Association, 7 30 p.m.,

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

Baptist Church, 849 High
St Gary Elhs •s pastor.

Other events
Wednesday, Oct. 27
POMEROY
Free
communlty fe'lowshtp dmner, 4 .30-6 p.m. New
Beginnings
UnitP.d
Methodist Church Roast
beef, mashed potatoes
and gravy on bread salad
dessert.
'
'

Birthdays
Saturday, Oct. 23
POMEROY - Mtdred
Ziegler who will turn 90 on
Oct. 25~ Wlll celebrate her
birthday on Saturday, with
an open house at the
Hemlock Grove Grange
Hall Cards may be
brought to her there or
sent to her at 42654 S.R.
681,
Pomeroy, O,hio
45769 It IS requested that
gifts be omttted.

which included classroom stud) and practical
mstruct10n on na\ al customs. first atd. firefightlllg, water safet) and
sun J\al, and shipboard
and .aircraft safety. An
empha 1&lt;&gt; \\.1s al o
placed on physical fitness.
The cnpstone event of
boot camp is .. Batt!~

Stations." This exercise
gives recruits the skills
and confidence they
need to succeed 111 the
fleet. "'Battle Stations" ic;
designed to gahanue
the basic \\amor attributes of sacrifice, dedication, team\\ ork und
endurance
Ill
each
recruit through the practical application of basic

Na\) sktlls and the core
\a lues
of
Honor.
Courage
and
C'omnutment. )t.., distmctly "Na\y" fla\or
\\as de&lt;;~gned to tak.e into
account \\hat 11 meam to
be a Sa1lor.
Stone is a 2009 graduate of F-ederal Hocking
H1gh School of Stewart.
Oh10.

Club recalls history, hears book review
MID DLEPORT - A
history
of
the
Middleport
Literary
C'lub organized m 1894
and in continuom operation for the p1c;tc 116
ars w,tr;; given b)
Bowen at a
mectmg of the
.oup
It was noted that there
\\as no interruption of
meetings dunng World
:Var J. the Great
Depression. or World
War II. Over the yc&lt;~rs
membersfiip in the club
expanded to included
those living outside ot
Middleport. Tradittons
&lt;;uch .1s servmg chocolate and \\ ater ut each
meeting not \\tthlll 1ts
constitution
have
changed b\ cr the years.
president,
Bowen,
shared the addres&lt;&gt; of
Phyllis Hackett. an
associate member 'I he Villas at St.
There&lt;&gt;a:
Apartment
117: 5253 I~a l Broad
Street, Columbus, 011
43213 . Her phone number is (614) 762-7181.
It '"as reported that
..... nnic Gilkey is chedd for surgery and
•
some changes were
made in ho tess schcd
uies to accommod.1te

s1bling rivalry she experienced w1th two other
sisters who were also
authorc;, to her lifl! in a
rigidly operated boarding chool and her own
day:; &lt;i"&gt; a teu~her Jn the
same boarding school
ac; \\ell a~ her foray mto
teach1ng abroad in a
Brussels'
boarding
school, a sad but C\cntful exploration of the
life of Charlotte Bronte
is described.
Victorian England i c;
depleted as the stt mghtlaced world \\here
women authors .~sed
masculine
nom-deplumes, were not t.1ken
seriously and met man)
more chalknges to their
success than men did
Desp1te many instances
of people abusmg their
power and pnvilcgc in
Charlotte· s li fc, tlus
"plain-Jane" daughter
of a sickly curate did
enjoy some years us ·•
ucccssful
authorcs~
and e\ en married prior
to her death at the age
of 38.
Rutherford sen ed as
hostess.
Men bcr
ans\\ered roll cull by
gl\ ing an example of
~ibling nvalr) in their
O\\ n experience or in a

that. Olita Heighton
t.tlked
about
the
library's strategic plan
for the next several
years and asked for suggco;tions.
BO\\ en,
\\ ho prepared the program
book. announced the
ne\\ slate of officer ,
Charlene Rutherford.
"ice pre&lt;;ident; Norma
Torre&lt;; , secretary. and
Alice Wnmsley, treasurer. Rutherford said the
program
committee
\\ ould \\ elcome suggestions for books to be
reviewed and asked for
lists before March.
Introduced by Frankie
Hunnel
were
two
guests, Julie Hou:-.ton
who operated a bed and
breakfast in Middleport
and
until recently.
Jeanne \V.1rth.
A
revie\\
of
"Becomiog Jane Eyre"
was gh en by Torre&lt;;
who described it as a
ftctJOnaliled biography
by South African \\riter.
Shetla Kohler. She said
the book parallels the
life of Chc~rlotte Bronte.
author of Jane Eyre, and
the protagoni&lt;&gt;t of Jane
Eyre. From the early
los&lt;&gt; of her t\\0 older
siblings and mother. the

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nO\el.
The next meeting Will
occur on Oct. 20 at 2
p.m .. when Hunnel Will
re\ ie\\ "Ford County"
(a collectiOn of short
stories)
by
John
Grisham.

..

Can' san
called a co gar

wl' s1ng at 11 am, Hope

ne completes.Navy basic training
COOLV ILLE
Na\y
Seaman N1cole L. Stone.
daughter of Ronda L.
nd Jack L Stone of
Cool\ nle, Ohio, recently
ompleted t. S ~a' y
basic tr.tinmg at Recrull
Training
Comm.md,
Great Lakes, Ill.
During the eJght-\\eek
~rogr.tm, Stone completed a \ anety of trammg

2010.

1

Dear Dr. Urothers: I'm
a
43-yeaN&gt;Id ~ingle
woman who, out of my circle of fnends, i'&gt; the only
one Without &lt;~ husband and
k1d&lt;.;. Yes. 1 do like to go to
bar&lt;; on Fnday nights to
unwind after a long week
of hell- and I really don't
go out of my \\~Y looking
forcompamonsh1p. l got so
upi&gt;et when one of my
friend~ called me a cougar
that I d1dn't know \\hat to
')ay 1 I don't kno\\ if she
\\as trying to be in'lllting.
but it sure felt hke it! What
the heck is a cougar. any\\a)? I'm not on the prowl!
-S.V.
Dear S.V.: lt's ·• ~·t
time to he a young \\oman
of 43. as 40 used to be the
dividing line between
young and old, and no\\
that milestone seems somewhat ridiculous. l' m sure
you are in grx&gt;d health and
look years younger trum
your age if you are the typical woman of just over 40.
As such, it 1s perfectly natural to look at a wider
rrdllge of ages of men to
date. It\ not a&lt;&gt; though ) ou
were still 111 high school.
and if you \\ere a &lt;;et1ior
girl dating a sorfhomore
boy. you \\Ould be
ridiculed Of cour;e, back
in high ~hool the .;arne
thing didn't apply "ith a
~nior boy and a sophomore girl. There is sull that
'illiTle old prejudice, I am
afraid. when it comes to
women datmg younger
men.
Whether you arc two
years apart like in high
school. or a 43-year-old
\\oman dating a 31-yearold man, tongues are going
to "ag Although talk of
cougar... 1., popular now,
people &lt;;till arc not quite all
right \\ ith 1t So the comments you are gettJn' ha-.e

a bit of a critJcal edge to •
them, ,.,.hether or not the
speaker 1 3\\ are that ymr
are being scrutini.1ro with a ·
different set of standards ·
than a nuu1 your age would
be. I thmk that'c; what
makes the "cougar" label
so hard to t.tke for many
women. The popular image;·
of the courar can be founc~.
.111 O\ er the media
just
go take a look. You even
may end up more upset ,
than you arc now.

~

AlEE 74/7 Lin Technical
i1ed H un, No Contracts!
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Relocbl. Access Sivc• 1994

Our identity.
Our way of life.

�Pagei\4

The Daily Sentinel

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Tl!csday, October 19,

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DROPS 30 ~INTS

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2010-

Tl-tAT'S BY
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

1

w'-f¥ WON TMY

Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

OPPONEHTftDM[
TO~UN INs
BABY SEAtS WJ~

A J.IQWITZER?.~'

Coll_l!ress s/ra/1 makt• 110 law respectiug au
e.stablislmmrt of rt'l((!iorr, or prollibiti"J! tire free
e~:erc:ise tl1ereof; or al,rid,'Jill.(! tlrt• freedom of
speecll, or of tire press; or tire riglrt of tire people
pt•aceahly to assemble, aud to petitiou tile
Go11errrrutut for tl redress of grier•auces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

To grow prosperity, let tax cuts expire
B Y PETER H EEGAARD

Congress should do the responstble th1ng and let tax cuts for
high earners expire at the end or this year.
As someone who has benefited from these tax cuts, I believe
we must restore balance to a federal tax system that has been tilted In favor of the wea'thtest 5 percent for a generation.
I ve had a l.'e!ong mterest In the vital role of social entrepreneurs, the local heroes who take nsks to lead innovative nonprofit orgamzatrons to solve problems at the local level.
I ma big believer 1n the Importance of mentorsh'p, of helping the
next generation of busrness and communrty leaders find their way.
But I also vrew efftcient government and adequate tax revenue
as essential rngredtents rn a fostenng the fertile soil for business
development and healthy communities. Just as a healthy farm or
garden needs a balance of nutnents, our country needs a balanced and fa r tax system.
Yet the overheated anti-tax rhetonc IS alarm ng. There are loud
voices that w11 obJect to any tax and clrum that raistng taxes on hiQh·
er income people wlll destroy economtc growth and punish success.
They argue that we don t need additional revenue, that we can simply reform entttlements, cut spend1ng and root out waste.
We should obvtously press for greater government efficiency
BY Ltz SIDOTI
ASSOCIATED PRESS
and accountability. But it Is Irresponsible to suggest that we can ,
proceed without increasing tax revenue. No gardener or farmer
would expect their crops to grow year after year without regular
President Bantck Obama's winadditions of fertilizer.
ning coalition from 200H has
We have racked up over $13 tnllion in national debt, thanks to
crumbled and his core backers are
borrowing to pay for two wars and a decade of tax cuts. Yet, we
dispirited .. It 's nmv Republicans
have long overdue Investments in education, reducing our depenwho stand to bene lit from an elecdence on foreign oil and public infrastructure. such as roads,
torate
that's again craving change.
bridges, broadband access, and market protections. Where will
Nearly two years after putting
the money come from?
Obama in the White House, oneGenerous tax cuts for the weal!hy, passed by Congress in 2001
quarter of tho e who voted for the
and 2003, are due to expire a! the end of this year. Between 2002
and 2009, households with 1ncomes of over $250,000 received more
Demo~rat are defecting to the
than $700 btlhon mtax cuts, accord ng to the Center on Budget and
GOP Or considering voting
PoliCy Pnoritles nus was essentially added to our natiOnal debt.
against the part) in power this
The htgher ttlCOme people I know d dn't lobby for these original
fall. Ju:.t half of them say they
tax breaks and recognize the need to allow them to exp1re. If we
definitely will show up Nov. 2.
retarn these tax cuts. we'll add another $700 b1llion to the debt
according
to an Associated Pressover the next decade. These are funds better spent in defich
Knowledge
Networks
poll
reduciJon and targeted rnvestments.
released two weeks before
The ret1red business leaders I serve with on community boards
Obama's first midtenn elections.
are thankful for the opportunities we've had to do business and
Yet in a rcflectton of broad &amp;,grow wealth m this remarkable nation and free market economic
system. None of us exist on an Island and no wealth can be cresatisfaction with politics, just as
ated without a society that provtdes a fertile ground of opportunimnny
people
who backed
ty for everyone.
Republican presidential nominee
In the 30 years after World War II, 1947 to 1977, we taxed ourJohn McCain are either supportselves at significantly more progressive tax rates than today. The
ing Democnus nnw or still conhighest earners paid tw1ce as much of their mcome in taxes in
sidering
how to vote.
1960 as they do today, according to a new study by Wealth for the
Still.
McCain
voters - to borCommon Good. Wrth that money we made mvestments m public
row Obama's cmnpaign rallying
infrastructure, affordable homeownersh1p and expanded educacry - are far more '"lired up,
tion at all levels These far-s1ghted leaders supported policies that
read) to go.'' 1\\•o-thirds say they
propelled m..lions of Amencans Into the stable m1ddle class.
Today, young people are graduating from college wtth $100,000
are certain to vote next month.
1n school debt. as undergraduates. We're coasting along on prevrIt's a "'ide enthusiasm gap
ous generat1ons' investments in water treatment faetlitles, bridges
that's buoying Republicans. who
and other essential infrastructure - and we're leaving too many
are poised for big electoral gains.
talented young people behrnd Our failure to make investments
and worrying Democrats. who are
today Will undercut prospenty for the next generation.
seeking
to hang onto majorittes in
Congress wrl be under tremendous pressure to continue provi&lt;flllQ
Congress a well among go' ertax breaks to high income groups. Let's hope they have the fortitude
nors. Obama's party hopes its
to let m·ne expire. The fertility of our econoiTliC soil depends on it
superior get-out-the-vote opera(R1ta' 18::gEIT:J is zet::imj .tion 1:Erldrg ar1 a fi:m£r
tion, updated from his groundHrBJirg Rirr::ipli cf I.ozy Hill, a si:s:idiay cf Wells Earp. Je

Poll: Those craving change
now looking to GOP

is :fi:lrrir cf utm Aiatae.)

•

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breaking campaign, can overcome
Republicans' energized supporters to mitigate e.xpcctcd losses
a~ross the board.
While no president ~an be
expected to fully rally his supporters when he's not on the ballot, the survey illustrates the wide
scope of Obmna voters· di~ap­
pointment with the president and
his policies almost halfway
through his 11rst tenn - and two
years before he's likely to seek
their backing ugnin.
"He's not list&lt;'ning to the maJOrity of the people who elected him.
It's like he's ignoring his base."
said SaraSue Crawford of
J acksonville. Fla.. who points to
Obama 's health care overhaul
law. She's deciding '' hether to
support Republicans in the hopes
of"shaking up the s tatus quo" ami
re!&gt;toring 11 balance of power Ill
Washington. She sa~s !&gt;hC may
back Obama in 20 12 - it' he
changes l'ourst' by listc111ng more.
To find out how the clc~torate's
political vi"" s have ~.·hanged
since the 2008 t•kction, the AP
and Km)wledgc Networks rcinten iew cd the same 1,254 people who were part of a random
sample of American~ surveyed up
to I I llmcs throughout the 2008

n

.I

r

Nearly two years after
putting Barack Obama
in the White House,
one-quarter of those who
voted for the Democrat
are defecting to the GOP
or considering voting
against the party in
power this fall.
campaign by the two organizations and Yahoo 1'\e\-.s. The recent
interviews occurred Sept. I 7 to
Oct. 7.
Disillu!&gt;ionment \\ ith Obama
wa::; evident.
ln a reversal from 2008, the survey found that Ob:una backers
who
expected
chnngc
tn
Washington - 63 pcn:ent - nm\
thmk nothing ever w til happen.
Just 36 percent still think Obamn
can do it. while a majmit) of
~1cCain supporters now
say
thing:-. can change if the right person is elected.
"I was hoping '"e'd get some
more 'Ch ilit) up in go' emment.
That was implicit in his promise.
along with some change. lt turns
out that he was driving more
toward the changes rather than
civilit) :· said Gell) D. Kramer.
70, of Georgetown. Texa . He 's
among the Obama voters who nrc
likely~ to vote Republican. Still,
he's not hot on the GOP either or
politics.
•
Such
pessum:-.m
among
Obama's suppmters is deep else
where.
On the dominant issttt' of th~o.·
20 I0 cru11paign. just 40 pcn:t•nt nl
Obama ba~.:kep, who nre lleeing
Democrats say he ·u he able t~
improve the econom) O\'Cr the
next two ) cars. Those who are
sticking with Democmts arc more
optimistic: 70 per~..·cnt '\a)
Obama's policies will help the
nation recover from the recession.
Like manv other . Aaron
Bonnaure do;sn 't blame Ooamn
for the nation's woe
Bu1 he
wants Congress to keep the prcsi
dent in check. rhat's \\h) this ::?Jyear-old
moderate
from
Pittl)burgh who \otcd for Ob:una
mm is looking at ~{(·publican cun
didate~.

'" lie nul ns a cenlri I. I don "1
think he"s a ~enlri t al nil. .. !Its
whole ceo nom it• plat lor m is l ht'
more govemment -;pcnds, the bet
lt'r things are," Blltlllaure said
··we have a fnr-lcft go' et n111cnt.
The answers are in the nuddlc."'
Among the sun cy's key lmd
ings:
.
• 73 percent of Oh.una \Oteas
now approve of how he's doing
his job. 13 percent don't nppsm c

and 13 pen.:ent have Jmxed feel- ·!
ings. Nearly half have a very 'j
fn'&lt;orable impression of the prcsi- l
dent. down from two years ago. I
when t\\O·thirds felt that \vay.
~
• 40 percent Sa} they're frustrat
ed by his pre&lt;.,idcncy. 20 percent ,
say the) "re excJted, and 26 per- ;
cent o;a) they are proud - n ,
marked turnaround from Election 1
Da) 2008. Sttll. 59 percent sthey remam hopeful
a reast
for optumsm as Obama ~ets ready
for his hkely re election cam ~
paign.
,
• 30 pen:ent of Obama 'oters
sa) he ts li\ in • up to hJS promises
to change \\ashangton while 19 •
percent &lt;.,a} he's ba eakmg those -:
pronmcs. llatf think it ":s too -;oon
to tell.
J
• 76 pen.:cnt of Obama voters ~
:sny the) ''ill support the )
Denwl.l'at 111 their Houo;e distri~t.,)
\'vhile X percent plan to back the 1
ReppbHcan nnd the rest are wade- 1
cided.
• 71 percent of McCain voters :
sa) the) v. ill vote (or the '
Republican in their Hou e district,
\\ htle 9 percent plan to get behind '
Dcmo~;ntt'i and :!0 percent haven't _
chosen a calldtdnte.
1
fo n certain degree. Obama ·s
woe are a con equence of Ius
2008 c.unpai!!n. \\hen he was a
blank late and man~ peopl.
attached thear hope to him. 1'\o
h\O )Cat in. hbcral • moderates
and con er\ats\cs alike who sup "
ported him are disappointed fos
-.nrious reasons.
Hi.; chnllcng~ Ill the ~text two
year" i to l1gure out how to pull ,
the dtsillu-;Joncd back into the ,
fold - '' ith a Jecotd ol governing '
thnt clitics altcrnatiH'I) call tno
libcml m not liberal enough.
Obama 'otcrs who arc voting
for Republkan or me undcddcd
nrc c pccinll) doubtful ;tbout the
Demo r.ttH: P:u1) ·'i .tbiHt) to hnn- )
die the c~.:onomy That "aid. onl)
II pe1~cnt trust Republicans to do
bcttel l\c.trl) h.tlf ':I) that neither '
patty h.ts the answer
They al'\o doubt th&lt;' c~bJiit) of
Rcpublu.::ans and Democmts ahke
on the dcfJ~It. taxes. the em iron
mcnt. health care, immigration, "'
enCtf\ poliq. ga) mmialle and
more
I hl' llltCI\ iC\\o s \\ C.JC
onlme b) 1\n !\\ledge Nct\\OI
ol
~lcnlo
I'm k.
Respondent-. fm the stud) \\ere 1
111 o;;t scle~..·trtl us in!' u·aditwnal
telephone polling 111cthods and
wet e folio\\ ('d "ith online intt·r
"IC\\ s. Pnt tKIJMnts "ithout com- ·
putc1 s 01 lntcanet accc's "ere:- •
pt O\ ~~led '' ith the mean-; to take
online surve) at no cost to them.
The o;un t') has a margin of
~ampling cn:ua uf plus m minu&lt;;
4 4 peh;Cntagc pomts

. ..

�Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

For the Record

Mei~

County Forecast

remember that "while
the polls look good
now, it's not over until
From Page A1
the last vote is counted.''
Friday Night: Mostly
Thesday: A chance of
On site was a televiAlso speaking at the
showers, mainly before 7 clear, with a low around
rally held at Republican sion crew from the Mike
a.m. Cloudy, then gradu- 38.
headquarters
was Huckabee show to tape a
POMEROY - Meigs County Clerk of Courts ally becoming mostly
Saturday:
Mostly
Auditor of State Mary short interview with Diane Lynch filed the following in the court's pub- sunny, with a high near
sunny,
with
a
high
near
or, lieutenant gover- Kasich. It was airea lic record:
•
66. Light north wind. 68.
candidate, who Sunday night. In that
Civil
•
Chance of precipitation is
Saturday Night: A
pledged to join Kasich interview Kasich spoke
• Foreclosure action filed by Beneficial Ohio, 30 percent. New rainfall
chance of showers.
in the "tight to get the of Ohio's plight and also Inc., against Larry D. Gibbs, and others.
amounts of less than a
state fixed."
of President Obama's
• Foreclosure action filed by BAC Home Loans tenth of an inch possible. Mostly cloudy, with a low
"We can't afford to repeated visits to Ohio Servicing, LP. against Roll:md H. Smith, and oth'fuesday Night: Partly around 47. Chance of prelose more jobs," lihe to rev up support for ers.
cloudy, with a low around cipitation is 30 percent.
said. "We have to be Democrat candidates,
Sunday: A chance of
Domestic
39. Light north wind.
more efficient. we have describing Ohio as the
showers. Mostly cloudy.
• Divorce action filed by Michael Lee Conley,
Mostly
Wednesday:
to cut taxes, we have to "tipping
point and Jr., against Melia Richelle Conley.
sunny, with a high near with a high near ·70.
get beaurecates out of
ground
zero"
for
the
•
Divorce
action
filed
by
Roger
A. Balser 68. West wind between 3 Chance of precipitation is
the way if John is to
30 percent.
and 9 mph.
accomplish his mis- 20 I2 presidential elec- against Chasity Balser.
tion.
The
president
was
Wedne.~day
Night:
Sunday Night: A
sion." She encouraged
Ohio
Sunday,
his
II
th
in
cloudy,
with
a
low
Partly
chance
of showers.
the enthusiastic crowd
around 42. Southwest Mostly cloudy, with a low
to not only get out and trip this year to the
vote, but to encourage Buckeye State.
around 48. Chance of prePOMEROY - Recorder Kay Hill reported the wind around 8 mph.
Mostly cipitation is 40 percent.
T hursday:
everyone to vote and to
folJowing real estate transfers:
• Brandon M. Kimes to Anthony D. Defreitas, sunny, with a high near 66.
Monday: A chance of
Thursday
Night: showers. Mostly cloudy.
deed, Bedford Zelda K. Hannum, deceased, to
William Dale Hannum, affidavit, Olive; George Partly cloudy, with a low with a high near 68.
Woodrow Nash, deceased, to Martha F. Nash, affi- around 37.
Friday: Sunny, with a Chance of precipitation is
davit, Pomeroy/Middleport; Jeffrey R. Peal.
40 percent.
high near 61.
''In the universe of Marilyn F. Peal, to Phillip D. Shaw, Susan K.
WASHINGTON (AP)
- Donors to nonprofit 501(c)(4)s. we are a speck Shaw, deed, Orange.
• Virginia L. Pooler, deceased, to Emerson L.
groups that are spending compared to the older and
millions on polit1cal ads much larger groups like Pooler, aftldavit, Chester; Emerson L. Pooler to
election have escaped AARP. the NRA. the Lisa K. Howard, Kathy L. Dyer, Law,rence Lee
BBT (NYSE) - 23.13
lie scrutiny because NAACP or the LCV,'' Pooler, deed, Chester; Donald Keith Wooten to AEP (NYSE) - 36.33
•
Peoples (NASDAQ) -13.16
Akzo
(NASDAQ)62.70
their donations don't have Crossroads spokesman Southern Ohio Coal Co .• easement, Columbia.
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.50
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)- 51.79
to be disclosed. But can Jonathan Colle~io said
• Rhojean McClure to Jon B. Ulbrich, deed, Big Lots (NYSE) - 33.40
Premier (NASDAQ)- 6.21
they escape a hefty tax Sunday, refernng to, Chester; Tony Causey, Frances Causey, to Revna
Rockwell (NYSE) - 62.36
Bob
Evans
(NASDAQ)
29.26
among
others,
the
bite?
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)- 7.76
Jay
Reynolds,
Beanna
M.
Reynolds,
deed,
Chester;
BorgWamer
(NYSE)54.14
National
Rifle
That's a new question
Royal Dutch Shell- 64.16
Price,
deed,
Century
Alum
(NASDAQ)
-13.96
Dorothy
Warner
to
Florence
Marlene
raised by lawyers familiar Association and the
Sears Holding (NASDA0)-75.12
Champion
(NASDAQ)
-1.19
Orange;
Doak
D.
Masters.
deceased,
to
Grover
with nonprofit tax Jaw and League of Conservation
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 53.76
Qmri'yJ
~(fW)OAQ)-l70
Dean
Masters.
affidavit,
Olvie;
Alicia
Kay
Voters.
"Folks
truly
interby at least one group that
advocates for public ested in the implications McDonald to John E. Blake, 'deed, Village of City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.68 Wendy's (NYSE)- 4.77
WesBanco (NYSE) -18.42
Collins (NYSE) - 60.51
of tax law on non-profits Middleport.
financing of elections.
\
Worthtngton (NYSE) -15.37
DuPont (NYSE)- 47.11
At issue is whether con- should be first sending
• WilJiam L. Calaway, Diane L. Calaway,
US
Bank
(NYSE)23.16
tributors to politically their letters in the direc- Dorothy L. Cox, Earl E. Cox, Jerry R. Roofe, Sara
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
active tax-exempt non- tion of older: and bigger Jane Roofe, to Dale E. Miller, deed. Village of Gen Electric (NYSE) - 1625
ET closing quotes of transactions
Harley-DaVidson (NYSE) - 32.50 for October 18, 2010, provided
groups, unless they want
profit organizations many of them donating in this to look like a crass Syracuse; Rex E. Rou!\h, deceased, to Venis G. JP Morgan (NYSE) - 38.20
by Edward Jones financial advi·
six- and seven-figures- partisan stunt two weeks Roush, certificate. Village of Middleport; Kelly Kroger (NYSE)- 22.19
sors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at
Prater, Jason W. Prater, Nancy L. Prater, to Home Ltd Brands (NYSE)- 29.35
have to pay the 35 percent before an election."
(740) 441·9441 and Lesley
Mo"t of the Chamber of National Bnnk, deed, Village of Racine.
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 61.49
gift tax on their donations.
Marrero in Point Pleasant at
It is a murky area of the Commerce donors are
• Fraternal Order of Eagles to Raymond L. OVBC (NASDAQ) - 18.64
(304) 674·0174. Member SIPC.
law and the Internal corporations, which aren't Andrews. Megan Andrews, deed, Village of
Revenue Service has not subject to the gift tax.
Pomeroy; Chantel M. Dearth to Chase Home
"While we don't prooffered any instruction.
Finance, LLC, sheriff's deed, Village of
But the question adds vide tax advice to our
yet another dimen ion to members, it is common Middleport; Shane R. Lauer to Secretary of
what has become a domi- knowledge that members Veterans Affairs. !\heriff's deed, Orange.
nant theme in this elec- of trnde associations norThe name of Margaret Haning, a sister-in-law of
tion: The role of outside mally claim a business
Evelyn
Warner, wa'i unintentionally omitted from Mrs.
mainly allied with deduction,'' said a chamWarner's obituary. Mrs. Warner of Middleport died on
cans, that have ber spokesman, J.P.
POMEROY - Meigs County 91I dispatched Oct. 5 and her services were held at Andersonin with ads Fielder.
the
following emergency medical calls:
McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy on Oct. 9.
Corporate
money
spent
Democrats in
on
lobbying
or
political
Saturday
Senate and House conacti\•ity, however, is not
2:02 p.m., Hill Street, Rutland. nausea; 2:23
tests across the country.
"It's a matter of where deductible.
p.m .. Third Street, Syracuse, pain; 3:55 p.m., Jesse
ALFRED - A wiener roast will be held at 6 p.m.
The burden for paying Creek Road. Bidwell, unknown; 9:53 p.m., East
the absence of guidance
on Nov. 5 at Alfred United ~1ethodist Church. The
from the IRS means more the gift tax does not fall Second Street. Pomeroy, chest pain.
date represents a change..
gasoline on the tire," said on the organizations. but
Sunday
Marcus Owens, former with the donors them3:02 a.m., East Memorial Drive, difficulty
director of the IRS selves.
breathing;
3:05 a.m., Mount Olive Road, pain;
Under the law. individexempt
organi?.ations
9:29
a.m.,
Mulberry
Avenue, difficulty breathing;
POMEROY - New Beginnings United ~1ethodist
ual gifts greater than
division.
$13,000
or
$26,000
2:07
p.m.,
Pine
Grove
Road, abdominal pain; 6:44 Church, Pomeroy, will celebrate its second anniver- .
Democrats and the
Obama administration per couple - are taxable p.m .. South Second Avenue, Middlep~rt. allergic sary on Oct. 31. Rev. John Bryant will preach at the
have pounced on the abil- at a 35 percent rate. That reaction; 8:35 p.m .• T.R. 1004, Pomeroy, chest 9:30 a.m., service, to be followed by a potluck dinner
ity of these groups to keep means a $1 million gift pain.
at 12:30 p.m.
their corporate or individ- carries a $345.450 tax
A program following the dinner will include Mke
Mondav
ual donors out of the pub- with it after deducting the
VanHoose
singing and forn1er pa,tors and families
3:31 a.~ .• Rocksprings Road, difficulty breathlic eye. They've also $13,000 exclusion. Gifts
sharing
remembrances.
questioned whether any to spouses or tuition or ing; 6:01 a.m., Bowles Road. unconscious.
of the money used for medtcal care payments
poli~ical activity is from made on behalf of somefore1gn sources. a sugges- one else are exempt.
The tax also does not
tion the groups adamantly
apply to contributions to
deny.
On Sunday, an Israeli
was the first time an Israeli GlobalSecurity.org.
On Monday, Campaign political partie~ or politiJERUSALEM (AP) airstrike
killed tv. o Gaza
Hama~
has
yet
to
deploy
cal
organizations
known
official
has
openly
said
Money Watch, a pro~ect
Gaza's Hamas rulers ha\e
Public Campa1gn as 527 ~royps, named for obtained anti-aircraft mis- Hama'i also possesses anti- the weapons, but Israeli militants who Israel sav-.
on Fund, planned to the ~ecuon of the tax code siles, Israel's prime minister aircraft weaponry, though pilots fly over Gaza v.ith were preparing to fire rockto five that covers them. Those said Monday. in a potential- intelligence officials have the assumption that the mis- et&lt;; o\·er the Gaza border.
• d letter
Republican-allied groups groups must report their ly game-changing develop- privately suspected that was siles are there, the officials The Ismeli military said
said, speaking on condition more than 165 rockets and
that are incorporated as contributions to the ment that could threaten the the case.
Election Israeli air force's abilit;- to
'The security problem 1s of anonymity according to mortar shells have been
nonprofits under Section Federal
tired at Israel from Gaz.a so
501 (c)(4) of the tax code Commission.
strike at the Islamic mihtant not just the new rockets that military protocol.·
far this year. a significant
Hamas
refused
to
say
Groups
covered
under
will
enter
the
area
and
will
and to the U.S. Chamber
group.
drop from the numbers
of Commerce asking section 501(c)t4) of the
hraeli aircmft have long threaten city centers. I don't whether it has any anti-air- before
the 2009 war.
·
tax
code.
however,
don't
wea?.'ns
and
accused
craft
whether they advise their
dominated the skies over know if you know this, but
Hanms is a not a party to
donors to r.ay the gift tax. have to report their donors Gaza. striking suspected today we are struggling to the Israeli leader of spread"I don t think these to the FEC; they also Hamas military installa- tly near Gaza because they ing propaganda to Justify the newly restarted Israeli-.
Palestinian peace talks.
organizations want to be must dedicate a majority tions and assassinating have anti-aircraft missiles future attacks in Gaza.
'These remarks reflect which are deadlocked over
on record helping their of their activities to non- do7£ns of W&lt;mtcd militants. there," Netanyahu said.
He warned that the mis- the intention of the Zionist Israel's refusal to extend
donors get away with not election related functions. The Israeli air for~e played
The law is opaque a key role in a fierce three- siles could also threaten air enemy to commit more restrictions on Je\\ish set·
paying taxes," David
Donnelly, the director of regarding donors to those week offensive in Gaza traffic at Israel's interna- crimes and more future tlement construction in the
Bank.
Campaign Money Watch, groups. Whether a contri- early last year. which began tional airport. "Israel's aggress!on again'it our pro- West
In a rare interview to an
bution qualifies as a gift with airstrike.-; that killed security needs are real, the pte. taking advantage of the
said Sunday.
station.
The groups targeted by has much to do with a hundreth of Hamas fight- solutions have to be real, American su~ and the Israeli televisionPresident
the letter in addition to the donor's intentions and ers. The air raid~ also not on paper. We need to Arab silence. said Fawzi Palestinian
a
Hamas Mahmoud Abbas appeared
chamber are Crossroads whether the donor gets destroyl&gt;d vast amounts of find long-term solutions Barhoum.
to make a significant gesspokesman
in
Gaza.
of
considerasome
type
Policy
Grassroots
infmstructure and killed that give Israel security:' he
"We emphasize that the ture toward brae!. He said
said.
Strategies. formed this tion in return. If he or she hundreds of civilians.
Palestinian
people have the the Palestinians would be
Netanyahu gave no eviyear with help from GOP does get a consideration.
Speaking to his Likud
willing to end all hi.,1oric
guru Karl Ro,·e; the then the donation might Party. Netanyahu disclosed dence to support his claim, right to defend themselves claims agam't lsmel if a
against
any
future
a~res­
American
Action not qualify as a gift.
that Israel's aerial fret."'dom and aides would not discuss
sion and this is a natmnal Pale.,tinian state is eswb"The issue b whether if has been compromised by details about the nlissiles.
Network; Americans for
1ished on lands captured by
·111e Israeli military and holy duty," he added.
Prosperity; Americans for I give $1 million to Karl the nc\\ weaponry, presumIsrncl in the 1967 Midea.\t
Hamas
leader
Mahmoud
Security. and the Ro\e and tell him to buy ably smuggled mto Gaza refused to comment on
war: the West Bank.
Zahar
said
the
militant
ads
acro'\s
the
country.
is
Netmyahu's
remarks.
erican future Fund.
throu~h tunnels ~onnected
Security officials said group had learned its
by the chamber and that a gift or am I giving to netghboring Egypt. He
Crossroads. the groups him a task and paying him said any future ~tce agree- they have long assum~ lessons from the last battle.
"If they want war, we are
have been raising and · to do it'!" Owens said.
ment would have to include Harnas has smuggled m
That places the dona- securit.Y arrangements to Russian-made Strela anti- ready for it. BuL it will not
spending millions of dolain.:raft missiles, presum- be like the last war in 2009
lars to help defeat tion in something of a deal w1th the threat.
ably
supplied by Iran. in which we realized the·
Democratic candidates. gray zone. If the gift gets
Israel bclie\es that
The chamber has spent nothing in return then it's despite its military offen- Some verstons of the Strela strength and weakness of
the most, devoting some taxable: if it's too specific sive and Egypt's stated ~oal are .shoulder-fired and are our enemy," he said.
Hama" ha" fired thoumoney to helping busi- about where political ads of halting rums smugghng, designed to target planes, sands
of rockets and nusshould
be
placed,
then
it
helicopters
and
drones
at
ness-friendly Democrats.
Ha.mas has managed to
sites
into
Israel in recent
could
trigger
disclosure
to
rdllges
of
around
two
and
n
restock its arsenal with
But most of the chamber
years,
though
has l~ely
money has been spent the Federal Election longcr-rnnge mis iles that half mile.' (four kilometers), refrained from itatulcks
smce
Commission.
accordin~
to
the
military
CWl strike the heart oflsrael.
against Democmtic candiIsrael':&gt; offensive.
infonnauon
website
Netlmyahu':,
assessment
dates.

Kasich

Common Pleas

.

Recorder

Secret donations and gift
tax - a new conundrum

Local Stocks

Local Briefs
Correction

911

Event postponed

Anniversary celebration

Israel says Hamas has anti-aircraft missiles

I

�Tuesday, October 19, 2010

www.mydailyscntinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page A6

Palin i~ Reno: Common sense 'endangered species'
RI·NO, Ne\. (AP)
l•ormer Ala'&gt;ka GO\.
Sat .th Palin launched a
15-d,ty Tea Part) Express
coc~st-to-~.:oast campaign
tou1 Mond.1y m Reno,
hoping to capitalite on
gmcrnment di-;content
.md unity consenativc&lt;;
bcf01c the election.
Headlining

1

.1

rally out

ence to a comedy skit
her qualifications
for 'icc president when
she &lt;;,ud she could see
Russia from Alaska.
Looking to the next
president1.1l election two
yet~rs from now, Palin
said, "I can '\CC 2012
fro111 my house"

0\ er

J'hc Tea Party Express

5-ide county GOP head- tour \\'.ts headed to hlko
quarter'\, Palin told hun- later Monda), then on to
dreds of supporters that l:.ly .md l .t&lt;&gt; Vegas on
common -;ense is an "J uc&lt;;day. It ends No'. I
"endangered species" in in New Hampshire.
Wnshmgton. D.C.. and
Denying Read a tlfth
they should "keep the term is a key goal of
faith" •'" they go to the Republicans. Angle. a
poll-; Nov. 2.
former o;tate assemblyShe
endor~cd
woman,
won
the
Repuhllcan
Sharron endorsement of the Tea
Angle, a tea party-hacked Party Express in the
c.mdidatc locked in a \\Ccko; nmning up to the
tight race 111 Ne\ ada June 3 primary and
agatno;t
Democratic emerged the surpnse vicSenate Majority Leader tor from a 12-candidate
Harry Re1d.
GOP field.
"1 ea Party American&lt;;,
Supporter'\
at
you ,lfC \\inning. you arc Monday's rally waved
turning this country's Amcncan flags and signs
political landscape upside tlhtt read, "Impeach
down ... and the left just Obama. Dump Reid,"
doc5.n't know what to do "Stop spending;· and
with you." Pc~lin said to ''Amcncan are not arrocheers.
gant. GO\ ernmcnt is."
Angle couldn't attend
"I think Reid is toast,''
Monday because the .tid Tom Daly, a retiree
11.1tional tea party com- \\ ho
worked
in
mittee based m Califomia Washington and mo}ed
has nldde independent from
California
to
expenditure" on her Nc\ada five years ago
behalf, and federal laws "He ha led the Obama
proh1bit
coordination agenda that has failed
between campaigns and and people don't want."
independent groups.
Pnul and Lorraine
In a moment of self- Walter made the six-hour
dep•ec,ltion, Palin told lrip from Grants Pass,
the more the 500 people. Ore.. \\here they are
"1 can see 1'\0\ember backlog Republican chalfrom my house." a refer- lenger Art Robinc;on

ne
Sarah Palin, shown dunng a 2008 campaign stop in Gallia County, kicked off a 15-day Tea Party Express
coast-to-coast campaign tour Monday in Reno, Nev.

again-.t
veteran
Democratic Rep. Peter
Dcf·azio.

"We were here real
early in the morning to
see Sarah. " Lorraine

Walter said. "We belie' e
people are so fed up wuh
e\erything
in

Washington, o we going
to go to the polls and
ha'e a big victory.''

Rare political species: Dems who tout health law
WASHINGTON (AP)
It happens so rarely,
it makes news: A fe,,
Democratic candidate&lt;&gt;
ha\ e started to run tele"'ic;ion ads daring to
defend
President
Burack Obama's health
care m erhaul.
Most Democrats are
trying to a\ oid camp.ugning
on
what
should ha\ e been the
part) ·s signature issue,
but the lonely bunch
Y.ho'\c stuck theu
necks out may finally
be hitting on a message.
Some are u-;ing constituents to \ouch for
specific benefits that
only recently took
effect, changes whose
pol.l ~ested popularity
asn t 111 questiOn.
The argument won't
stop
on
NO\.
2.
Democrat&lt;; will ha'e to
keep defending the
health care law in the
next Congress and on
into the 2012 presidl!ntial and congressional
campaign. And the)
badly need to find thear
\oice \dth a message
that can connect with
maddle class \'Oters.
"One
thing
has
helped them," said
Celinda
Lake,
a
Democratic
pollster.
"On Sept. 23 a bunch of
benel'its went
into

•

the disparaging term
"I'm all for letting cost Democrats control Majority Leader Harry
Republicans are fond Democrats pend their of
Con~ress
in Re1d of Ne\ ada and
talk about as opposed of. And Rep. Mike money defending a bill President Bill Clinton's Reps. Dma Titu:-. of
to theorcttcc~l. If they Rosl&gt;, D-Ark.. hal&gt; a most people don t fin.t midterms.
Nc\ ada, Earl Pomeroy
don't talk about It, ne\\ ad that &lt;;ay., "he \\ant.''
said
Glen
Obama challenged of North Dakota they'll get attacked, so stood up to (Speaker Bolger, a GOP polbter. GOP lawmakers to talk Scott Murphy of N
the) might as well put Nancy) Pelo i and "They
are
talking repe,tl.
York.
insiders c;mall-ball~&gt;tuff, and the
out their O\\ n point of Washington
"Go for it," he said in
Murphy' ad directly
viev.-."
and voted against their American people are Joy, a in ~'larch. "If challenges
the
The law's big cover- health care overhaul."
looking at the big pic- these congressmen in Republican call for
age expansion to more
Still. at least seven ture and not likin!! what Washmgton want to repeal \\ ith a selfthan 30 million unin- Democrats have run ads they're seeing." ~
come here Ill Jowa and styled "reality check..
sured people doe~n't in fa\ or of the ne'' Ia\\.
Bolger
says tell
o;mall-bu::.iness
come until 2014, along Mo t are in competitive Republicans don't have O\\ ners that they plan to that implies hh oppow'ith a complete ban on races, .tnd more are to back off their ·•repeal• take a\\ a) their tax nent \\ ould bring back
and replace.. slogan, credits and es ...entially pre-existing condition
Jnsurcrl&gt; turning a\\ ay cropping up.
those \\ ith medtcal
Thev ha\e common e\cn if Democrats are rai e their taxes. be 111) denials, lifetime dollar
limits on coverage and
problems. But people themes. Almost all becoming bolder about gue~&gt;t."
no\\ rene\\ JOg their attempt
to
link the Jc;sue.
Republicans not only copayments for mamplan for next year arc Republican opponents
But Republicans may clamored for repeal, mograms and colon
already starting to sec to the health insurance have to tweak the mes- state attorneys general screenings, while leavsome benefits. includ- indust1y. The) focus on sage. "You have to took the fight to the ing the Medicare premg preventive services benefits ,tlready in make it clear that there federal courts.
scription coverage gap
without
copa) ments effect. such as protec- arc certain elements of
La~ week. a judge in
in place. The law
for
children the bill that would be in Florida allowed a la\\- begins to close the soand coverage for ) oung tion
adults up to age 26 on a again t being denied the Republican plan as suit to ad\ ance. ruling
parent's policy
co,erc~ge becau~e of well,"
said Bolger. that the constitutionali- called doughnut hole
There's no authorita- medical problems And Tran lation: Small-ball ty of the law' require- next year.
Murphy rh al Chri...
for
mo-;t
ti\ e tally of the ads run some use constituent&lt;; can win a clo:-.e game. ment
Gib
on, a retired Army
Americans to carry
too
by Democrats on health in cameo appearances.
has run extencolonel,
A
template
of
sorts
is
It
was
eight
month-.
CO\
eragc
deserve:-.
to
be
care, but u rough count
suggests that those who an ad by embattled Sen. ago that Ob.una and hi.s fully debated. Earlier. a sive ads calling for
voted against the laY. Russell Feingold. D- administration toasted jt1dge in Michigan dis- health care repeal.
arc advertising it more Wis .. first aired around passage of the health mi sed a similar chal''l '\\ouldn't say tt
•
than 1hoc;c \\ ho sup- the beginning of the care bill- with cham- lenge.
.ad
i~
defensi\
Whether ~tanding up re ponded
ported its hard-fought month. Jt hits all the pagne on the Truman
Jos
passage. At least a themes. and finishes balcon) at the White for health care O\ erhaul Sch\\Crin, a ~1urphy
con tituents House
and in the1r ad will help -;pokesman. "It's the
dozen Democrats ha\e \\ ith
taken pains in their ads telling his opponent Democrats boasted that any Democratic candi- other side of the arguRon 'oters would hail the dates remains to be
to remind constituents busine'isman
Johnson: "Hands off Ia\\. The party -.aw at a:-. seen. But se\ era I in ment. It's 'er) importhat they 'otcd "No."
an achievement that competitive race:-. are tant for people to
Rep. Gene Taylor, D- my health care."
~11&lt;;&lt;;., labeled the plan
Bring it on, say had eluded :-cores of gambling that it \\ill. undcr-;tand \\hat repeal
''Obamacare:· adopting Republicans .
presidents, and perhap:-. They include Senate means."
effect. and Democrats
had something real to

Ohio Dems in 4 key U.S. House ahead in campaign cash

TOLE:.DO (AP)- Four ad\antagc in two races
Ohio Democrats running \\here the Democrats'
for the U.S. Hou e in key House campaign commitraces have more money to tee already has canceled
spend in the final weeks advertising for Reps.
leading up to the election Mary Jo Kaln)) and Ste\e
than their Republican Drichaus.
Ktlroy is at a big disadopponents, while two arc
at a findnL'I.ll disadvan- vantnge as campaign
tage, campaign finance finance reports show '\he
had $ I88,000 on hand at
reports show.
It'$ becoming more the end of September.
opponent,
dc,tr that Democrats are Her
focu mg on retammg Republican Ste\e Sti,ers,
l.twnMkcrs m four dis- had nearly $1.3 million.
tracts thnt ,trc m swing
Stavers narrowly lost to
ten itorieo; and conscrva- Kilroy two years ago, and
ti\ c leaninf! areas. Among the GOP has been targetthem a1 e I reshman Rep. ing the scat sin~:e then.
Dril'haus,
another
John Boccic1 i in northc.tst Ohao, ~tlong with frl'shman Democrat. is in
Reps. 7...1ck Space in cast- better shape than Kjl10y
ern Ohm, and Charlie fin,mcially. but still had
\\ llson in southeastern slightly lc c; ca&lt;;h at the
end of September th,m his
Ohw.
former
Republicans need to opponent,
wm 40 scats to regain the Republican congressman
Houo;c majorit) they lost Steve Chabot who lost to
Drichaus two years ago.
four ye,u s ago.
In some races, the
l'he &lt;lOP has the c,t'\h

Democrats· cash ad\ ant,tges are being negated
by both outside group
,tre
backing
that
Republicans and GOP
candidates "ho arc
spending their 0\\ n
money on the races.
Both p;u ties and out-

side groups are pouring
monc) into the race
betY.ccn Space and tate
Sen. Bob Gibbs in what
wa once thought to be a
sak
d1~tnct
for
Democrats.

NQilc.E.. IQ MEI.G£ COUNI.YJiOUS.Et:iO.LD5_
Applications for the CHIP
Home repa1r- Housmg rehabilitationand Homebuyer Assistance w11J be available
to Low/Moderate income households in
Me1gs County on Tuesday. October 26, and
Wednesday, Oct. 27. 2010 from
9:00A.M. to 3;00 P.M. at the
Meigs County Grants Off1ce at
117 E. Memonal Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio
(behind Holzer Clinic)
Applicants should park behind
the Meigs Annex Building
or 1n the lot across from the former
Veterans Hospital. to avoid parking
on Holzer Clinic property. Funding w1ll be
available on a First Come- F1rst Served basis.
CHIP fundmg can address the following:

tlO_ME .BEM.LB

Tho repair of no more than two Items needed
maintain home. Must be owner occupied.
Strmght Grant!
HQ~INQREHAe.tLIIADON:

Deer Feeders 30 Gal.
E-Z Fill $136.00 • ProHunter $120.00

DeerNJJid Game Cameras
0·50 wilh N1ghl Flash $95 00 • 0·55 \'lith lA ~ght Vision $125.00

Rehabilitation of all Items that do not meet
housing rehab code. Must be owner occupied.
Requires a 10 year, no monthly payments/
no interest mortgage on the property.
N1nety percent for91ven after nme years,
leavmg a 10% hen on the property,
payable 1f property IS ever vacated or sold.
HOMEB~YERASS~IANCE­

Payment of down payment and cloSinQ costs
plus rehabilitation of any items not meetmg the
housmg code after purchase. Same no Interest
-no monthly payment mortgage as above.
For more information or questions,
please contact Jean Trussell,
Chip Adminlstrator,ot 740-992-7908.

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�Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Bro\\ ns rl'COH'ring from hits, Pagt· U2

l'IFL mn) SlL';pend for

hit~,

Page H6

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

LocAL SCI
POMEROY A I
d le Ol upcom g
Ng school va111ty aport ng ev n11
nvolvlng leo s from Molg
ncJ G lhn

countoes

ll1Md.u Octob!lrJfl
Volleyball

Wolfe wins CC title
in TVC boys meet

championo;hip
s1111.:e
1986. Wolfe. a Div1sion
II I d1stnct champiOn last
Wednesaoy October 20
ATHE:.NS, Ohio
For fall. posted u winmng
Volleyball
Honn n a• St Joo Centr 6 p m
the fourth time in six mark
of
16·37 47.
years. Meigs County has Brcydon Gates of BeJpre
IllllrntiY ~..2.1
produced the indh idual ''as the 0\ entll runner
Volleyball
bo)c; champion of the up with a tune of
W haMa Chapnle I Potnt
P casant 6 30 p m
·1ri-Valle) Conference 16:50.36.
Wood County at aves 5 p rn
cross countf) meet And
Wolfe .tlo;o Jomcd
Va ey at Hannan e 30 p m
for the second time in o;ome ehte company "1th
Soccer
·wood County at aves 5 p m
three seasons. that win- the ''in. matching the
ner has come from efforts of fonncr Mcags
Southern High School.
Countians
Goode.
O HIO TOURNEY
SHS sophomore Kody Michael Owen (2006)
Wolfe became the latest and Chn~ Dc~vis (2005J.
S CH EDULE
Meigs County resident Both Owen and Davis
ll.lrwlAY. o, "~btr_ Jj
to bring home some sen- attended l•uo;tcrn and all
D-2 Soccer
(7) Galha Acad my ot {2) Wmren 6
ou&lt;; hardware Saturday three former prep stand
pi"Tl
I afternoon following the outs went on to run at
·1 VC Cross · Country the collegiate level .tftcr
~dl)y,..Q~12.llm.20
D-2 Volleyball
Championships held at winning titles a~ -;enwro;.
(5) Wave ly at {4) Ga Ill Acad rrt
the West State Street
Wolfe alo;o became the
6p.m
{7) Me1gs at (21 Wor•on 6 p m
Park n~ar the campus of first sophomore II om
Ohio Unhersit).
Meigs County since
Thu!l!day. ~.2.1
Volleyball
Wolfe. '" ho fmished 1998 to \\in an ind1vid
D-4 Sectional An&amp;!s
third at league a year ago ual cro\'•n in the I\ C.
(6l Fed
Hoclang at (3) Eo r
as
a freshman. JOined Ashle)
1 homao; ot
6pm
(5) South G
t (4 Sou
former Tornado K) le Meags "on three straight
Webs! 6 prn
Goode (2008) as the t1tle
for the I ad)
&lt;n Soutncrrt at 2) Watartord 6
only Southern runners to
pm
Plea se see TVC. 81
wm c~n indi\ iduallengue

•

Po nt Pleasant at W y'le 6 p m

B Y B RYAN W ALTERS

Hannan at Shorm ,.. 6 30 p rn

BW,._ TERS MYDA VTR BUNE COM

Sllll.td.ny, o~n

Volleyball
D-3 Sectional Final
(51 RIV!Ir Va ey at (-4) Ti bl 4
pm

River Valley
stung by
Hornets, 52-6
B Y BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS MYOA.LV!RIBUNE COM

'

to lead the tcnm. Howard
added six kills. Stnnlc)
had three kill . Alaine
J\rnold mlliNI t\\ n k i ll~.
and l•mih Kin nan hnd
one kill. •
Glass had 29 assists lor
the Lad) Mar,tUdero;,
'" htle Baile\ udded ''" o.
.md Gntcscr. \ndcr on.
and Stanlc) cnch had
one.
Ho\\nrd. and l~r0\\11

t'OAL GROVE, Ohio
- The River Valley
football
program
dropped its seventh
straight decasion and
e1ghth straight league
contest overall Friday
night following a 52-6
setback to host Coal
Gro' e in a Week 8 Ohio
Valley
Conference
matchup in Lawrence
Count).
The visitin2 Raiders
(1-7. 0-3 OVC) trailed
only 7..() after one quarter of play, but the
Hornets (7-1. 3-0)
erupted for 37 secondquarter points to take a
comfortable 44-0 cushion into the internlission.
After a scoreless third
period, CGHS entended
it lead to as much as 520 early in the fourth but the Raiders fina lly
cracked the scoring column late in the fi nale
after a 25 yard run by
Billy Brewer concluded
the come t at it' 46point outcome.
RVHS produced six
first downs and 213
yardc; of total offense.
including 135 rushing
) ards. in the setback.
\\ Jule
the
Hornets
amassed I 0 first downs
and 34 7 total ~ ards of
offense, includ-ing 244
rushing yards. CG HS
was also plus-2 in
turDO\ er differential in
the tnumph.
Bubba Wood started
the scoring for Coa l
Grove in the fir!&gt;t quarter after a six-yard run
gave the ho\ls a 7-0
edge Boo Woods then
followed with two
straight TO run~ in the
second quarter from
one and five vard~ out
for a 23-0 lead.
)3oo Woods ·added his
third TD of the night
after an eight-) ard pac;:;
from quarterback A lex
Bare, making it a 30~0
conte t. Bubba Wood
follo\\ed with a five)nrd TD run for a 37-0
edge, then Boo Woods
cored hb fourth and
final T D nf the night
just before the break on
n 40~) ard jaunt to pnyJirt.
~hke ~ance addeJ an
86 yard scoring run in
the fourth to i ncreaq~
Coal Gro\ e ':; advantage
to 52-0.
•
Austin Smith led the
Raiders '' ith 40 ) ard
on six carries. follO\\ed
b) Austin Davie' \\ ith
34 varus on nine tote....
Kde BrO\\ n added 31
\ nrds on I 3 attempt&lt;:,
\.. hile Bre\\ er had ooe
carr) for 25 ) arJ.; and a
kore
Jacob Hefner finished
the night 2-of-12 passmg for n )ards, throwing two interception:; in
the setback. Aust in
Whobrey had one catch
fur 70 ) urds and K) le
Bro\\ n had eight yrlrds
on one reception.
Mike Nance led the
hosts \\ ith 99 rushing
) ard'i on four carries.
\\ hile Bon Woods hnd
79 ) .trd:; on nine
attempts. Greg Bender

Please see Roundup, 81

Please see RVHS, 81

Louise Fish photo/Courtesy ofThe Athens Messenger

Southern s Kody Wolfe competes m the TVC Cross
Country race on Saturday m Athens Ohio. Wolfe took
f1rst place m the boys race.

PltEI&gt; V()LLEYBALL ltOUNl)UP

OU, Oregon
ahead of
Boise St.
in BCS
B Y R ALPH

0.

R usso

ASSOOATED PRESS

-

•

•

1 he tir 1 BCS stand·
angs arc out and Bmsc
State is already chn~111g
a couple of team from
the pO\\er conferences.
Oklahoma \\as f1rst
and Oregon \\a second
Sunda). w1th Boi e
State tn third place nnd
in need of plenty of
help to become the first
team from n conference
without an automatic
Bowl
Championship
Serie~ bid to pin) for
the BCS title.
Jcrr) Palm, who analyzes the BCS standings
at collegebcs.com. smd
despite a better carl)
season sho'' ing in the
polls than ever before.
Bo1se State is a long
shot to play for the
national championship.
"They ju t need too
much to happen to get
·xcited nbout their
.:hances," Palm said.
With 10 undefeated
teams in maJOr college
football, there's serious
potential 'for BCS controversy this season.
e'en be) ond whether
Boise State from the
Wc~tern
Athletic
Conference or ma'ihe a
Mountain
\ve~t
Conference team such
as 'I CU or Utah gets a
chance to play in the
biggest BCS game.
The Sooners from the
Big 12 and Ducks from
the Pac·IO begin thi
race from the front row.
but they can't quite '&gt;HY
the) 're in control of it.
Only once in 12 sen ons
of the BCS hrt\C the
teams that were at the
top of the fir t Mnndings played in the
championship
game.
'hat was 2005 \Vith
• outhern California and
Texa-s.
"We' re going up to
play a () 0 tcum at
Mi'\1\0uri. aml the) 're
not han ding an) thing
no\\,"
out
right
Oklahoma coach Bob
Stoops said. "It means
absolutely nothing."
With the possibility
of undefeated clmmpi·
Please see 8CS, 86

'

Sarah Hawley/photos

Members of the Southern volleyball team stand for the National Anthem prior to Monday evemng's sectional
tournament contest against Ironton St. Joe. The Lady Tornadoes won by scores of 25-6, 26-13, and 25-16 in
the match. Southern will face Waterford on Thursday in the sectaonal final.

Southern, Meigs win sectional openers in 3 sets
B Y SARAH H AWLEY
SHAWLEY I.IYD,._ LYTR BONE COM

RACI 'E. Ohio - I he
Lad)
Southern
fomadocs earned their
first sectional tournament
'ictory in four ) em"i on
Monday C\ ening "ith a
three set victor) mer
Ironton St. Joe.
l he Lad) Tomadoe •
\\no last earned a tourna·
ment victory against
~iller in 2006. defeated
the visiting Lady 1--'l)ers
b) score~ of 25·6, 25-13,
and 25-19.
Stluthern was led in
point~ b) Kelsey Strang
with II points (fi\e
aces). Strang wa~ injured
in pre-game warm-upc;,
but pl:tyed in the firc;t two
set~ of the match.
Courtne)
Thomas
added mne points (six
.tees). Hope Teaford had
e1ght pomts (one ace).
Maggie Cummins had
se\en point (fi'&gt;e aces).
Jordnn Huddleston had
six points (three aces).
Bobbi Harris had six
points, Angie E) non had
two points (two al'es).
nnd Stephanie Herr) mnn
had one point.
Cummins le:td the team
at the net \\ ith sc\'en ki lis
nnd one block. Strang
and J luddlcston each had
live kill-.. Il a1Tis, Amber
ll avman. and l'homa'&gt;
each had three ki.ls. and
l·ynon had one kill.
·1homas had 21 assists,
while Huddleston had
three. rmd Strang had
one.
·1he I ad) Tornadoes
will face Wntcrt'ord in the
f

Me1gs' Chandra Stanley. center, sp1kes the ball during Monday's sectiOnal tournament contest agamst V1nton County Meigs players (from left) Valene Conde,
Emalee Glass, M1randa Grueser, Shelhe Ba1iey, and Ahson Brown prepare for the
return.
scc11onuJ
fmnl
On al tournament opener in I\\O points each.
Alison Bro\\ n and
"I hursdn) C\ ening at 6 three set&lt;; b) &lt;.cores of
p.m. at Wmc11ord High 25-9. 25 U, ami 25-19. B,ulc) c.t~.:h h.lll 12 k1IJ...

School
LADY MARAUDERS WIN
SECTIONAL OPENER
AGAINST VC
R OCKSPR I ~(IS. Ohio
The .\ lcigs I nd)
Marauders m.tde qmck
''ork of Vmton Count)
on Mond.l) C\ en mg. tak
ing just over an hour to
end the Lad) V1kmg
season.
Meags won the cellon-

Meigs is the se\ en seed
in the Di\ is ion II bracket.
'' hik Vinton Count) ''a"
the 10 seed.
&lt; handra Stanle) and
Em.tlee Glnss led the
Lnch ;\1nruuders w1th 13
poi1~ts each in the match.
J01dan Anderson nnd
Shellie B.1ilcy each had
s1 x pomts. Valerie Conde
and Morgan Ho,.,ard had
three points each. .tnd
M1rc~nda Grueser and
Chelsea Pattel"ion had

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

RVHS
from Page 81

www.mydailysentincl.corn

Brow~s recovering from hard hits

RVHS was flagged
five times for 41 yards,
while the Hornets were
pcnalized·four times for
30 yunh. Both teams
also had one fumble in
the contest.
River Valley will
return home for the
final two weeks of the
season, starting Friday
night when it hosts
Rock Hill in a Week l)
OVC matchup at Raider
Field. Kickoff is sched~lled for 7:30p.m.

BEREA. Ohio (AP) The Browns will let the
added five totes for 37
NFL go after James
Harrison's head.
yards and Bubba Wood
If there's going to be
chipped in 17 yards on
retaliation or punishment
four attempts.
a8ainst the Steelers hardBare was 5-of-7 passhitting linebacker, the
ing for I 03 yards and a
league
will have to dish it
touchdown. Boo Woods
out.
had two catches for 56
At least one Cleveland
yards, while Bryan
player hopes any penalty
Steele had two grabs for
1s severe
36 yards.
One day after Harrison
knocked Cleveland wide
receivers Joshua Cribbs
and Mohamed Massaquoi
out of the game with
vicious,
concussioninducing. helmet-to-helmet hits, Browns tight
end Benjamin Watson
said he believes Harrison
should receive the harshest discipline possible.
"I hope the NFL takes
care of him with the max,
whatever the .max is. I
hope they give it to him."
Watson said Monday.
Harrison sent both
Cribbs and Massayuoi off
the field in a sevenminute
stretch
of
Pittsburgh's 28-10 win
over the Browns on
Sunday.
Harrison first drilled
Cribbs in the left side of
the helmet on a running
play. a shot an NFL
SI?Oke:-.man said was technically legal because
1 Cribbs wa'i a runner. but
one that left Cleveland's
best player face down and
unconscious on the turf.
Louise Fish photo/Courtesy ofThe Athens Messenger
Moments
later,
Eastern's Emeri Connery, left, runs beside an Athens Massaquoi caught a short
runner during Saturday's TVC meet in Athens, Ohio. pass before he was blastConnery was the runner-up at the meet.
ed by Harrison. who

I
I

TVC
from Page 81
I

Marauders from 19982000.
Athens won the boys
team cho.mpionship with
51 points. finishing 30
points ahead of runnerup Vinton County (81 ).
Federal Hocking (87)
was
third.
while
Southern ( l 06) and
Meigs (III) rounded out
the
top-five
spots.
Belpre
( 115)
and
Alexander (145) rounded out the seven-team
field that also had 69
competitors .
Zach Manuel followed
Wolfe for Southern by
finishing 28th with a
time of 19:58.29. while
Andrew
Ginther
(20:06.37) was 30th.
Justin
Hettinger
(20: 13.39) and Chris
Yater (21 :39.17) rounded out the team scoring
with respective finishes
of 33rd and 49th.
Chase
Graham
(22:20.17) and Trenton
Cook (24:29.61) also
finished 55th and 65th.
respectively. for the
Tornadoes.
Cody Hanning led
Meigs
by
finishing
fourth overall with a
time of 17:24.43. while
Steven Mahr ( 18:44.31)
and
Brandon
Mahr
( 19:37.24) were next in
13th and 25th. respectively. Jared Williamson
(21 :38.52) and Jacob
Pierce (25:16.16) rounded out the team scoring
with respective efforts of
48th and 67th.
Jeremiah ·
Myers
(25:30.~ l) and Oerik
Hill (32: 12.21 ) also finished 68th and 69th,
·respectively. for the
Marauders.
On the girls side of
things. Athens won the
team . title and Kendra
Lee
(21: 17.74)
of
Alexander came away
with
the
individual
crown. Athens. with 40
points. outlasted runner_.
up Vinton County (44)
by four points. Trimble
(52) and Meigs (81)
rounded out the fourteam field that also had
44 competitors.
Eastern senior Emeri
Connery finished as the
runner-up for the second
straight season after
posting a
time of
20:32.31. Nikki Gilbride
(24:42.59) and Shelby
Smith (24:45.66) also
had respective efforts of
29th and 30th for the
Lady Eagles. Southern's
~

lone female entrant.
sophomore
Jennifer
McCoy. placed fourth
overall with a time of
21:05.07.
Shawnella Patterson
led the Lady Marauders
by tinishing 19th with a
time of 23:48.98. followed by Emma Perrin
(23:53.85) and Maggie
Smith (24:55.43) in 20th
and 31st respectively.
Tess Phelps (25:27 105)
and Tara Walzer-Kuharic
(27: 14.22) rounded Out
the team score with
respective finishes of
33rd and 37th.
Meigs also had finishes from Rachel Bauer
in
(28 :39 _81 )
38 th.
Shannon
WalzerKuharic (29: 18.11) In
40th. Allyson Davis
(30:52.88) in 41st and
Vanessa
Crane
(30:58.33) in 43rd.
The top- I 0 runners
from each race - both
boys and girls - earned
AII-TVC accolades.
Complete results of
the 20 I 0 Tri-Valley
Conference
Cross
Country Championships
are available on the web
at ww.baumspage.com

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

appeared to launch himself at the wideout and
deliver a crushing blow.
Neither play drew a
penalty. And afterward,
Harrison added insult to
injury by saying he
thought Cribbs "was
asleep" and showing no
remorse for the devastating hits that left the
Browns without two
starters for one half and possibly another
week.
Watson feels Harrison's
hit on Massaquoi went
beyond acceptable limits.
"The
one
agaim.t
Mohamed was illegal,"
he said. "I can't judge his
character, I can JUd~e his
conduct. It was an Illegal
hit. He led with his head.
He hit Mo right in the
head. He dove at his
head. It was an illegal
play. Whether he meant
to hurt him or not. I can't
comment on that.
"It was illegal and the
league
. ., should take care of
hlffi.

The two hits came on a
day of seemingly extreme
violence around the
league. with several players
suffering
head
injuries. To combat the
problem and prevent serious injuries. executive
vice president of football
operations Ray Anderson
told The Associated Press
the league is considering
suspending players for
illegal hits.
A few of the Browns
don't believe suspensions
would be a deterrent to
Harrison or any other big

hitters.
"l don't think he should
be suspended," Browns
running back Peyton
Hillis said. ''The fines
they dish out are enough
punishment. Trust me, I
don't think he meant to
hurt two people like
everybody thinks he did.''
Browns coach Eric
Mangini isn't sure when
he'll have Cribbs or
Massaquoi back. Both
players are being treated
for concussioAs, and
depending on the severity
of their injuries. they
could miss another game.
If there was one positive on Sunday, it was
that Cleveland's medical
staff assessed the two
injured players and kept
them from goin&amp; back on
the field. Before the
league raised awareness
on head injuries in light
of studies that showed
concussions can lead to
dementia and brain disease. it's possible Cribbs
and Massaquoi could
have talked their way
back into the game.
" It's the right thing."
Mangini said. "It's hard
from a coaching perspective. It's hard from a compc;titive perspective, but
a·s right from a human
perspective."
Publicly. at least. some
of the Browns are taking
the
hi~h
road
on
Harrison s hits.
Fullback
Lawrence
Vickers. perhaps the
club's hardest hitter, said
"no reply" when asked
about the hits Harrison

put on his teammates.
Hillis and linebacker
Matt Roth, two more of
Cleveland's tough guys,
refused to label the tackles as excessive. chalking.
them up to the sport's
physical nature.
Only Watson was willing to criticize Harrison.
Mangini was asked if
he thought Harrison was
a dirty player.
"James Harrison was
the defensive MVP of the
league," he said. "He's a
good football player. He
plays hard, he's physical,
he's tough agamst the
run, he pass rushes well. I
respect the ~y as a football player.'
One reason for the
Browns' reaction could
be that they don't want to
be deemed hypocrites.
Earlier this season, rookie
safety T.J. Ward was
slapped with a $15,000
fine for his hit on
Cincinnati wide receiver
Jordan Shipley. Ward
appealed the penalty and
the Browns defended his
tackle as "part of the
game."
Bi~ hits are part of the •
NFLs allure, and Watson
knows any attempt to curtail them will be met with
resistance.
"At the end of the day
it's football and it's what
people want to see,"
Watson said. "It's why
the game is so popular,
it's why we get paid great
salaries to play tbis game,
because there ·s a desire in
the American public to
see this type of violence."

Roundup
from PageBl
each had one block in the
match.
The Lady Marauders
will continue sectional
tournament play on
Wednesday as they travel
to face (2) Warren at 6
p.m.

QVCS FALLS TO
CHESAPEAKE IN THREE

I
1
1

CHESAPEAKE, Ohio
The Ohio Valley
Christian volleyball team
fell to I 0-5 on Monday
evening with a three set
loss to Chesapeake.
The Lady Panther~
won by scores of 25-19.
25-12. and 25-18.
Sarah Schoonover and
Dave Harris/photo
Maggie Westfall had 11 Meigs' Morgan Howard (34) spikes the ball ~&gt;Vera Vinton C~unty defen_der duri~g
points each for the Lady Monday's sectional tournament match at Me1gs High Schoolm Rockspnngs, Oh1o.
Defenders, followed by each had two points. had five kills. Cran'k and
Allie Hamilton had
Allie Hamilton with . Maggie Westfall had Allie Hamilton each had nine digs and Crank and
seven. Amy Ours and three aces and Ours. two
kills.
and Schoonover each had
Samantha Westfall each Schoonover,
and Schoonover had one. t\VO. Samantha Westfall
had six points. Bryanne Samantha Westfall each Maggie Westfall had had
eight
assists,
Hamilton
had
four had one.
three
blocks
and Maggie Westfall had
points. and Madison
Samantha Westfall had Samantha Westfall had five. and Allie Hamilton
Crank and Beth Martin six kills. Maggie Westfall one block.
had one.

TUESDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Meigs County, OH

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Oeatllitu
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Monday thru Friday

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HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

Lost &amp; Found
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Approx. 18·201nches
tall Reddish/Brown m
Color Slender. Found
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379·2706
Found
Female
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on
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Call
fnendly
740)367-0150

o.

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

FASTLFlS_

300

Serv1ces

Terrier . found on ======~
Cox Road If no one
S •
App1iance eMces
claims will g1ve to a
good home 740)256·
·
Joe's TV Repair on
1289
&amp;
makes
Lost Male Brindle most
Dog Crown crty Area Models. House Calls
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Financial
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POliCIES Ol'l, Ylllty PubDSIIIf9 rue&lt;vc=ll'le rljjhiiO 1&lt;111. rejecl, or cancel any ad Ill any tliM. Enoro mUll be reponed on~ llrst ~ay of
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tny m. or txp11t1e tl1al rtllllt&amp; from the publication or omlllton of an ei!Yertlsc!mem. Coneellon wi be madtln tho nn11 tva ablt t&lt;lliOII. ·Sox numbtl
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Pockets
Looking
Empty? Need some
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Bad
credit? No creoit? No
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=--====-

OS Hyundai XG 350
grayA:&gt;Ik .nterior Exc
Free Rent Special
Cond. Price to sale
!!I
446·891g or 446 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
2651
up, "'entral A.Jr WID
hookup tonant pay$ '
electriC Call between' •
98 KIA Seph1a LS. 4 tre hours of BA·8P
EHO
cyl, auto trans very
Ellm View Apta.
good tires, 30 mp,
(304)882·3017
runs
very
good.
$800, 740-992-0255 Tw1n R·vers Tower is
92 Ford Explore· accept1ng applications
1
4x4, needs work, •or waiting ist for HUD
Sli!lSidiZed,
1-BR
$600 OBO, 740·992·
apart:nent
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cal~ • •
elderly/dtsabled

Ra/EE
Do you owe over
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garnishments and
bank levies.
Settlo Out Over Due
Taxes for Less
1·888-692·5739
Home Improvements
For
all
your
construction needs.
Also Winterizing• 24
hr service. 304-593·
0859

------~

Want to buy Junk
Cars. call 740-388·
0884
Oiler's Towing. Now
buy•ng
junk cars
w/motors or w/out
740·388·0011
or
740-441·7870.
No
Sunday call

3959/304-812-3004

Basement

Security

Ammals

MJI

Financial Services

CREDIT CARD
BELIEF
Burled In Credit
Card Debt?
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1·877·264-8031

======

Lifelock

With so many
choices, it's easy to
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with our
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in the classifieds!

600

Furniture
Hamilton
Piano-·

Livestodt

Cond1Uon lor a great
of
$500.00
Black Angus Bulls 1 price
&amp; 2 yr olds, call after 740)388·9979
5 pm. 740-288·1460
Miscellaneous
Who Made Who Club
Jet Aeration Motors
Calf. Lead broke
repaired, new &amp;
hatry,
750#. rebuilt In stock. Call
$1500 00 304-857·
Ron Evans 1-8002166
537-9528
Pets
Registered 1yr old
Collie Black &amp; White
Great
with
Kids
$150.00
ph.
740)446·6754

,

'
:
•

1

s

depos1t
refererces
6 apts 137_000
1
Upright rent $2030 mo. 740- required, No Pets'
Great 446·0390
and c ean. 740-441· •

Giveaway a childs
huffy bike &amp; 30
Forsythia
Bushes
(you dig) 740-446·
8896

FIREWOOD &amp; HAY
Free to a good home
FOR SALE 304·882·
- female bassett and
2537
a full blooded male
.D1S1:L
beagle, Good with
Want To Buy
kids I Good hunters
It's Finally FREEl
740·245-9250
Absolute Top dollarFree HD for Life•
Money To Lend
silver/gold coins any
and over 120
8 Beagle/Schnauzer 10K/14KI18K
gold
channels only
mixed pupp1es Call jewerfy, dental gold.
$24.99/month. •
NOTICE Borrow Smart. 740)379·2722
pre
1935
US
·conditions apply,
Contact
the
Ohio
promo code MB45
Division of Financial - - - - - - - currency. proof/mint
Call Dish Network Institutions Office of Free to good home sets, diamonds. MTS
Consumer
Affatrs only! 7 mo. male Coin Shop. 151 2nd
Now
BEFORE you ref1nance (fixed 10/22/10) cat, Avenue.
Gallipolis
1·877·464·3619
your home or obtain a -7-40_·_9_49_·-3-40_8_.___ :44;::6:;:;·,:;2~84;:2;,...._ __
loan.
BEWARE
ol
Re&lt;:reati_onal
requests for any large 700
1 000
Agriculture
Vehicles
Free Document
advance payments of
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Farm Equipment
Campen/ RVs &amp;
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Call Today
Trailers
866-278·0003 to learn STIHL Sales &amp; Service
1·888·758-3029 and
if the mortgage broker Now
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at
use promo code
or lender IS properly CarmiChael Equipment 2005 Jayco Eagle
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at
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local and long
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distance calling for
~
740446•
bales $20 00. Stored 2412
only $25.99 per
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500
Education
month.
Call today!
900
Merchandise 2004 Jayco Camper
1-866·798-0692
31ft. Long $6,400 00
,...._Ph 740-446·6754
Professional Services
Business &amp; Trade
Furniture
School
TURNED DOWN ON
2000
Automotive
Dining room suite,
SOCIAL SECURITY
table w/8 cha1rs w/2
SSI
Gallipolis
Career extra leaves, china
Autos
No Fee Unless We
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(Career's cab1net.
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serving
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1·888·562·3345
buffett. All wood ex. 03Neon standard·atr
CaiiTodayl 740-446· cond Also victonan $3200 OBO 256·
1·800·214· style
secretary 1539
SEPTIC
PUMPING 4367
87 Chrysler
Galha Co. OH and 0452
wlbeveled
glass Lebaron
2
aoor
Accredtted
Member
Mason Co. WV Ron
OBO 256·
Accrediting Couoctl for doors 446·1423 call $1500
Evans Jackson OH Independent College$ Md after 6pm
6002 or 256·1233
800-537·9528
Schools 12748

NEIW.OBK

1 BR and bath first
months
rent
&amp;

For Sale By Owner

Free Home
Security System
w1th S99 installation
Pet Cremations. Call
and purchase of
740·446·3745
alarm momtoring
serv1ces from ADT
Line
Dancing
Securtty Services
Lessons at Merry's Ca111-888-367·2171
Family Winery. Every
Thursday 7-9. 740· 400
Financial
388-0578.

DIBEClV

For
lease:
unfurnished 2nd floor
apt.
near
Gama
Academy, no pets
1
ref &amp; dep required,
maximum occupancy
2, $350 mon. 740Real Estate '
446-3936 or 1'40
SalesJ
4464425

3000

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675-6679

Wont To Buy

Fall
spec1al
sen.discount,afforda
ble handymaf'l power
washing. drive way
sea1 coat1ng .QUtt ers,
odd JO
· b s, 5 04 •882·

Unconditional lifetime
guarantee Local
references furn•shed.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

Apartments/
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Autos

Waterproofing

NOTICE
OHIO
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CO. recommends that
you do busmess with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
you have ,nvestigallng
the offering,

-

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·=====~

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0

-

-

-

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~

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

-

- - ..---~~X~~ 0
__
2 _~----' '
200
Champion
Home Tara Townhouse Apt. •
3 BDRM, 2BA., on 2BR 1 5 BA, bacK

5

28 8 0

45

6ares
close
to patiO,
pools •
corrstalk. 304-675· playground. No pets,
6640
$450 rent. 740-367·
0547
4BCRM, Brick 1 1/2
1 BR ,
BA , Sun Room, 2 Beautiful
the
car garage loc 1n pt apart."Tlent in
fresh!)(
pleasant
304-675- country
pa'nted very clean •
7747
WID hook up nice.
Houses For Sale
cou1try settJng only ,
10 Mins from town. t
see
ta ,
Home in Gallipolis. 2 Must
3BR,
1BA apprec1ate.
Water
story
carport, deck.2 out pd. $375/mo 614·
buildings, 4.5 car 595-7773 or 740;
garage/shop
645-5953
Ask1ng
wtcarport.
$112,000 Call 740· 1BR mcely furnisheq ,
578-6687 or 352· apt. No smoking, No •
pets. $400 mo. + •
817·8652
dep 740-446-4782 • :. :.
35 Hinkle Ave. 2
2BA 2nd f oor 2 BA.
story,
4BR,
forced air &amp; heat, lot apartment,
of renter damage overlooking Galhpohs
$24,900. 446-0822
C;..;
Park,
L.R, •
NG
FOR kttchen/d1mng area, 1
LOOKI
12
BA ·;
DEAL? FIND US washer/dryer $6d0. '
NOWll'
mon + dep. 740-446·
4anoakwoodhome.c 4425 or 740-446:
omf737 &amp; Facebook
2325

--------t

Lots
Mobile home lots to
rent
at
Gallipolis
Fer'Y WV $100.00
monthly.
304-675·
6908

=;;;;;;;;;~~
!!!

Aportmenb/
Town houses

New. :•
Like
Completely
Renovated Inside &amp;
Out t Bed. 1 Bath
Apts at 677 Olivet
st. Middleport, Pn~
Starts
at
$415
Includes
Water,
Sewer
&amp;
Trash,
Reference &amp; Deposit •
fleQUired
740-416·.
6629 or 740-416·, 1
6622

------~---- --------~--·
FIRST MONTH

2BR APT.Ciose to
Holzer Hospita! or SA
160 CiA (740) 441·
0194

·c-0-NV~E""'N..IE""'N--T~LY~LOCATED

&amp;

AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/Qr
small houses for •ent
Call 740-441·1111 lor
app tcalton
&amp;
infor'l'lation.
•2 -B"""R--ap-t-.6..,..m~i~,r001
Holzer s4oo + dep
some utilities pd
Of
740.645-7630
74 0·988·6130

I

FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR APTS.

s

&amp;

385
UP, Sec. Dep $300
&amp; up
AJC W/0 hook-up, ,
ten:
ant pays e ectnc.
EHO
Ellm VIew Apts.
__3_o_4-·88_2_-a_o_1_7"":"""l, 1
Middleport.
senio~ ' :
hv1ng, 2 br, furn1shed 1
apt., dep. &amp; ref, no
pets, utilit1es paid ,
740·992 0165

,,

�-~-----~~-------

.,...-- _,. ._. __ --·- ---.. _. ._._--.-':'""!". . . . . .

Page 84 · The Daily Sentinel
Apartments/
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Houses For Rent

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Rocksprings
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
EOE

Legals

100

Legals

Tuesday, October 19, 2010
100

Legals

Services Offered

1NOTICE
OF 12, and in Fractions. 2010 there wtll be
ELECTION ON TAX 1 31 &amp; 33 Chester subm tted to a vote
LEVY
IN Townshtp, Townshtp of the people of sard
EXCESSOF
THE 3 Range 12 Meigs SUbdiVISIOn aS 0
TEN
MILL County, Ohto The GENERAL
LIMITATIONR C
aroa ts located on ELECTION to be
detached
garage,
acre &amp; 112 land,
3501 11(G) 5705 19 the
Chester 7 held m the Village of
newly
remodeled,
5705 25 Notice Is &amp;frac12,
minute Middleport. Ohto, at
IOClltOd t m1le out
hereby given that tn U S G S. Quadrangle the regular places of
CR 10
of
a map
The permrt voting therein on ltle
pursuance
• Lallgsvllle,
Resolutron of the bemg
located 2nd
day
of
$650 per mo , $650
Musical
Laundry
Facility dep.
No Uttht1es
Board of Township approxtmately
2 November,2010 tho
Water/Sewer &amp; Trash P!IICI, also 3 br 1
of
the miles North of the question of levyrng a Roofs, Remodeling, Garages,
First
Presbytenan Trustees
Included
Rental bnth
furmshed
of corporation limits of tax, rn excess of the
Church in Middleport, Townshtp
Pole Buildings, Siding,
Assistance may be mobile home, water
Columbta,
Ohio Racrne, Ohio. The ten mill hrnltauon, for
pianisVorganist,
available.
Metro &amp; trash paid $ 450
passed
on
the
5th
proposed
permrt
wrll
the
benefit
of
Vtlloge
Decks, Drywall, Additions
Pease call 740·992·
Accepted TDD#419· pAr mn , $450 dep ,
19 9 of Middleport for the
3350 or 740-992- day of July, 2010. encompass
0466
526 and New Homes.
wtll
be acres
and
the purpose of Current
there
This located 1 mile off
7172
lnst1tUt1on 1s an equal Ktngsbury
Ad
tax
submtned to a vote proposed area to be El&lt;penses Sold
InsuredFree Estimates
Partopportunity provider Pomeroy lease &amp;
berng·2 A renewal of
of the people of said undermined
Help Wanted Time/Temporaries subdtvrs1on as a encompasses
a tax of 1 0 mill at o
references reqwred
and employer
General
GfNERAL
4026.9 acres. This rate not exceedtng
No Pets Allowed
HOME
HEALTH Part·Tlme 2days per ElECTION to be coal
mining 1 0 mtll for each one
740-416·2960
AIDE S
NEEDED week
must have he:d In the Townshtp apphcation
will dollar of valuatton
Very nrce home for PAID TRAVEL TIME valid dnvers license of Columbta, Ohio, at remove coal ustng whtch amounts to
rent tn M1ddlepooct, AND
MILEAGE Apply
in
person the regular place of the
underground $0 10 for each one
good netghbOrhood EXPERIENCE
Speclal
Care voting therern, on the mtnrng
methods hundred dollars of
newly
remodeled NECESSARY
Cleantng
1743 2nd
day
of speetfrcally the room valuation, for live
New appliances, 2 APPLy
Rd November 2010, the and p11lar method A years.
@ Centenary
The !)Oils
bedrooms, 1 bath, AESCARE.COM IF :
qu9stron of levying a Road Permit has wrll open at 6 30 11 m
G
~
al~
hpo
~
lt~
s
===~
1 &amp; 2 br apt &amp; large kttchen, sun
ta&gt;, m excess of the been obtruned to and rematn open
Restaurants
houses 1n Pomeroy &amp; room, central air &amp; YOU HAVE ANY
tar m 'I hmrtatron, for conduct
surface untrl 7 30 p m on
QUESTIONS
Mtddleport, NO Pets heat Ntce outdoor
seeking tho
day
benefrt
of minrng
operattons election
PLEASE CALL 1- We are
740-992·2218
spaces No pets non
management
i'ownshtp
of wrthin 100 feet of the Run
2
limos
888·794-4490
smoktng Call 740candttates
19,
26
who Columbta for the outside right-of-way October
992·9784 or 740- COST TECHNICIAN believe
of line but no closer By order of the Board
that purpose
Ciean,
Ntco, 992·5094 for more Immediate opening
Electrons,
'Of
teamwork plays an Matntatntng
and than 0 feet of the of
Efftctency 1BDRM, detailS
for team ongrnated Important part tn their Operating
Meigs
County,
Ohro
traveled
portion
of
Ref., Dep, NO pets - - - - - - - lndlvtdual
Must development
and Cemetenes.Sard tax County Road #29 John
lhiO,
304·675·5162
1-3 bod room house
have excellent basic also the success of berng 2 A renewal of (Bowman's
Run ChMDated Octobo~
for rent tn Syracuse
math skills, proficient the company. Other a tax of 5 mrlls at a Road) as described 5,
2010
NO
pet's
HUD
2br.
stove/tetr approved call 304- in Excel &amp; Word. attnbutes need to be rate not excecdmg .5 below. Located in Lot Rita
D.
SmitH
motivated leadership
furmshed
CIA 675·5332 Weekends Highly
skt:ls. mils for each one 1218, Township 2, Director
wltnng
to
learn. result
$385.00 a mon + 740-591-&lt;&gt;265
onentated dollar of valuatton. Range 12 Sutton Training
provtded. ensunng
dep. 304-675·7783
Meigs
• l'romJlt and Qualit) Wor k
customer wrich amounts to Townshrp,
LA
DR Must be willing to sattsfactton
2BR,1B
and so OS for each one County,
Ohio
• Reasonnble Rntes
OF
K
travel and work OT trarng IS a key part to hundred dollars of Begmning at the 1NOTICE
•
Insured
I•xpericnced
TAX
ELECTION
ON
New gas furnace AC at dtfferent plant sites success We offer va uation, for fiVe mtersection
of
2 br apartment wl 7mlles Rt2N
LEVY
IN
J{efercnces
A' ftilablc!
due to the revolving patd vacations, 401 k years
The polls County Road #29
kit. app ,ale &amp; gas No Smoktng No Pets nature
THE
EXCESSOF
of
the program,
(.oil
Gnr)
Stanlc&gt;
uniform
wil
open
at
6.30
a
m.
(Bowman's
Run
furnace, WID hookup $4 25 m $400 Dep
MILL
constrlplant upgrade and meals If you are and rematn open Road) &amp; Townsh1p TEN
located
rn
Pt
304 75 2381
proJects
Tratmng Interested you can untrl 7 30 p.m on Road #19 (Salser UMITATIONR C
304-675·
-6 "
Pleasant
3501 11(G) 5705 19
wtll require 10 to 12 send an ematl to eleci!On
day Road), thence from
6375 or 804-677- ·=R=
ef=R=eq~=== weeks starting pay
Plense lea\ c message
5705 2 Nolie
IS
BK9771 @an net or Run
2
times said
place
of
8621
hereby g ven that tn
Want to Rent
$16/hr
If qualified call 1-740·446-3400, October
19,
26 begiMing
and
pursuance
of
a
fax
an
updated or you can also apply By order of the Board followmg
County
Famtly
relocating resume to: 614-716Resolution of the
10 person at Burger of
Elections,
of
Road
#29
Sprtng Valley Green lookrng for a Ntce
denoting "Cost
Village CounCil of the
2272
Run
Spedalizing in Insurance Jobs including.
Apartments 1 BR at Home .Condo or Tech" on the cover Krng, 65 Upper Rtver Meigs County Oh1o (Bowman's
Village of Syracuse.
Road,
Gallipolis, John
lhle, Road) In an easterly
$395+2 BR at $470 Large Apt
Prefer
Ohio passed on the
storm. \1 ind &amp; "ater damage.
ChalrDated October d~rection
for
a
Downtown Gallipolis page
Excellent Oh10 EOE.
Month 446·1599
4th day of August,
Room
Additions, Remodelinl!. Mftal &amp;
5,
2010 dtstance
of
Area 1-716-913-2415 company' EOE
2010, there w II be
Very Nice 2 &amp; 3
R1ta
D.
Smtth,
approxtmately
1250
'hlnglr
Roofs. Ne\\ Ho1m•s, Siding. Decks.
BEDROOM APTS. Have References
Mature
worker
submtned to a vote
Orrector
feet to the point of
needed
for
part
time
Legals
100
tlalhroom Remodding.
of the people of satd
Gallipolis
termtnus The Road
City.s 550 _00 &amp; up
Janitor work. Call
subdtvlsion as a
!NOTICE
OF
Lict'usrd &amp; Insured
includes w/alg &amp;
Norma at 304·531- The annual electton ELECTION ON TAX Permit rs valid from GENERAL
7123/09 and shall
IN
Washer &amp;Dryer NO
6868
for of the Board of LEVY
ELECTION to be
remain in effect until
Rentals
appointment.
Must Directors lor the EXCESSOF
THE
held 1n the Vt. Jge of
74 91
coal
min1ng
PETS...
0)5 be 55 or older and Metgs
WV#040954 Cell 740-416·2960
County TEN
MILL
Syracuse, Ohio, at
operations
are
5174
2BR Mob1le Home WV resident.
Agncultural Society UMITATIONR.C
the regular ptace of
740-992·0730
Houses For Rent
water, sower, trash
P
st wtll be held at the 3501.11(G). 5705 19 completed under the voting therein, on the
pd.
No pets. Exp. arson to assi
coal mimng perm1t
Secretary's OffiCe at 5705 2 NOtiCe IS
2nd
day
of
Ntce 1BR house in Johnson's
Mobile w/ milking on modern
issued pursuant to
the farrgrounds, on hereby gtven that 1n
Galhpohs
Walk to Homtl Park
740- dairy farm, hbeouslng &amp;
this
permrt
Thrs November.2010 the
of
a
questron of levy1ng a
a part Monday, November pursuance
_
uttlittes can
everythtng you need 446 3160
of
package
fax 1. 2010. The polls Resolutton of the appltcatron Is on ftle tax, tn excess of the
at
tne
Me~gs
County
3_B_R_ m_o_b,-l ~
S5
""oo
__,
m_o_
n resume wl 3 ref. to wrll be open from 5 Board of Township
Very clean uOII, With _
ten m : lurutatton, for
Courthouse,
p.m. to 9 P m on Trustees
of
the
new patnt S275 per &amp; dep 4BR home 304-675-5074
the benefit of Village
Offrce
Recorder's
mo/StOO sec dep $725 mon &amp; dep on
Election
Day.The Townsh1p of Rutland,
of Syracuse for the
100 East 2nd Street,
Sorry no pets, Call Bulavtlle P1ke 740electton shall be by Ohro passed on the
purpose
of
Mechanics
Fire
Pomeroy,
Oh1o
Wayne
for
Residential • Commercial
ballot. Ballots must, 5th day of July, 2010.
Protection Sard tax
3 67 72 7
45769 for public
Information 404·456· __..,-__.;.~...,..-~~ ADVERTISEMENT:
• Nc\\ Home'&gt; • Additions
be marked wtth an there
will
be
being:2 A renewal of
inspect1on.
Wnnen
3802
3BR
2BA
$575 Searching
for
Rooting • Jnsu ru ncc C laim"
oppos te the subrrutted to a vote
a tax of 1 5 m Its at a
comments,
mo+{lep-wtl 1722 5 Mechanics and Parts
I icense • Insured
rate not e~ceedtng
6 Rms &amp; Bath, Chatham Ave 740- Truck Drivers for our name or 11 wtll not be of the people of satd objecttons
or
subdtVISIOn
as
a
counted.
The
1 5 mtlls lor eac.tl one
Applrances
_1646
requests
for
an
645
Jackson
locatron. casttng of votes for GENERAL
304-882-3637 304-882-2728
dollar of valuatton
Furn1shed,
122
Mechantcs should be dlfectors by proxtes ELECTION to be tnformal conference which amounts to
Cedar St. Gallipolis,
able to troubleshoot, are not permitted held In the Townshtp may be sent to the $0.15 for each one
Sales
NO SMOKING &amp; NO
diagnose and repair Only Mergs County of Rutland, Ohio, at Oh1o Department of hundred dollars of
PETS $550mth. plus ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;;;;
Natural Resources,
CAT
equipment residents
holdtng the regular places of
valuation. for five
Deposit
740)446·
Parts Truck Drivers membersh1p ticl&lt;ets votrng therein, on the Divrston of Mineral years.
The polls
3945
2000 Patnot 14x70
Commercial &amp; Rcsidemial
Resources
will be required to for at least 15 days 2nd
day
of
will open at 6:30 a m
Mobtle
Home
wrth
or· • Room ucldition~ • RoQfing • &lt;;ara)!e
Management,
2045
2BR $450 mon +
obtain a Class A before the date of November.2010, the
Road, and rema1n open
• I ;rnrral Rt•modrling • Pole &amp; Hor;c
Morse
dep. No pets, t 2 Vtnyl siding/shingled COL.
Excellent electron
may qvestton of levying a
H·3, until 7'30 p.m on
$17,000 oo
Building
llarns • \ im I &amp; \\ood Ft·ndng
Cruzet Ave 446·9249 Roof
Beneftt
Package. vote.Membcrs of the tax, tn excess of the
day
Ohio electton
740·645·7306 Must
Columbus,
I o~nctations
EEO
and
USERRA
society must declare ten mtll limitation, for
Run
2
times
Brand new 2BA 1n Move
43229-6693, w1thin
11 1\ 1~ \\, MAJU'UM. OW"'ER
Employer.
Please their candtdacy for the
benefit
of
town, all electnc
October
19
2~
submit your resume the offtce of Duector Township of Rutland (30) thirty days of the By order of the Boar
47239 Riebel Rd" Lo~ Uottom. OH
$550
per
to.
JObs@walker- of the Soctety by for the purpose of last date (November of
740-9854J.n
740-416-l!B..S
year 6000
ElectJons
o
mo. dep..ret.,
Employment
2010)
of
9,
cat.com or mail one filing
wrth
the Fire Protection.Satd
lease No pets 446Metgs County Oh1o
t'ully insul'!d
publication
of
thiS
to.Cectl I. Walker secretary,
Debbie tax betng 2
A
2801
John
lhle,
f'ree estimates - 30 yl'llrs experience
notice (10) 19 26
Machinery Co. P 0. Watson,
42455 re1ewal of a tax of 1
ChaiiDated October l:'iot allllial~ •lib \liu ''•" um R.-..llnl: &amp; Rrmodtlill!l•
3BR. 1 BA STove &amp;
(11)
2,
9
2010
Box
2427 Woods
Road, mHI at a rate not
5,
2010
Refng Fum , Gas Child/Elderly Care Charleston,
WV Coolville,
Ohio e.x;:eedmg 1 mnt for
A1ta
0
Sm1th
heat,
Cantrall
25329ATIN. Human 45723
OF Dtrector
a petilton each one dollar of 1NOTICE
AJC,W/0 hook up
ELECTION ON TAX
ResCare HomeCare Resource
s1gned
by
10
or
more
valuation
wtuch
carport, No Smoking,
IN
Department
members of
the al"lounts to SO 10 tor LEVY
No pets $600 per
EXCESSOF
lliE
society
who
are
eech
one
hundred
Medical
mo. $600 Dep ,105 EnJOY caring for the
TEN
MILL
Bast1an1
Gallipolis Elderly? Careg1vers -====:;;;;;;=;;;:; residents of Metgs dollars of valuation, LIMfTATIONRC.
needed
Pt
Pleasant
Come
Join
the
County
at
least
7
to·
frve
years.
The
Call
446-3667,
days before
the polls will open at 3501.11(G). 570519,
C.\tcnor.
and Leon areas. Fun'Extendicare
Taktng applicattons
l:.le• tn~J.I &amp; ALL Plumpmg \\ ork
Good pay, benefits. Health Services, Inc annual election of 6:30am. and rematn 5705.25 Not1ce IS
hereby
g1ven
that
tn
( 11rwretc wal._-. &amp; dn\CI\:t.)s
exciting dtrectors 1s held open until 7·30 p.m.
Onver's
license has
of
a
In Memory
regularly on
electton
day pursuance
\ I&lt;'\ Ol 1'\( , IIJ- 0 \\ NFR
required
Rex1ble opportunities
at Only
740-1192-(&gt;215 . 740-591·11195
Run
2
t1mes. Resolullon of the
nominated
hours.
1-866-766- Rocksprings
In tm,im· ' ltx::tlb for ~O ) caN
t9,
26 Village Council of the
9832 or 304-766· Rehabtlitatton Center candidates who have October
In loving
Rrduu•d \\ i ntt·r !Rnll's
the
frling By order of the Board Village of Middleport,
9830
1n
Pomeroy. met
Ohto passed on the
l'onll'm). 011
\\\ 0]671.5
memory of my
requirements
w111
be
of
Electtons,
OH LPN/STNA
14th
day
of
June,
fril·ml,
Needed We offer a eligible for election of Metgs County,
competitive
salary, as director. (tO) 12, Ohio.
·Sandra K.
19
Jchn
Ihie,
IUII!On
a
Cha1rDated October
reimbursement
Folmer
2010
5,
comprehensive
on this sad day.
Smith
D.
Art a
beneftts
package,

let us treat you to li
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU mto Valley Vtew
Apartments 800 St
At #325 Thurman Oh
740)245·
45685
9170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
With
Apartments
Appliances
Furnished &amp; Onstto

To place an ad
Call740-992-2155

SUNSET CONSTRUcriON

740-742-3411

*

Ccll740-591-8044

PSI CONSTRUCTION

Rick Price - 211 yrs. Experience

=======·

·x·

ea,ttMarcum Constructior

--!"'--- --····•

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

that you went
aWU).

Love 4 Ever,
Susann

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

O~rector

Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WAN'J ED:

Part-time

position
available to as~ist mdtviduals w1th

development:tl cltsabilrties m Meigs
Mttst have h1gh
school diplom.t or &lt;I I ~ D . v&lt;tlid
driver's license, tlucc years good
dnving cxpt·rience and adeq uate
automobile in .. ur.uH:C. $X.97/hr after
trai ning.
Send resume to

County. 30 lu /wk.

Buc:kc)t' C mnmunit) Scrviccs
P.( ), Box 604
.hu·ksun, 011 456-&amp;11.
Deadli ne lor applicants. 10/2 1/ 10.
Pre employment drug te~t i n g.

Equal Opportunity brnployer

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992-2155
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
;
9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION! :

-

Cancer Suppo rt G roup
M eeting Thursday,
October 2 1
6 pm
HMC Confere nce Room

AB
Guest Speaker· Sharon
Brown
"Living with Breast
Cancer"
Ev eryone Welcome
Fo r more information. call
(740) 446·5679

Gatling Ohto, LLC.,
430 Harper Park
OnvA Beckley, WV
25801 has submrned
an
Underground
Coal M11'1tng and
Reclamatron
(lncludrng
Sur1ace
Operations) Perm1t
Appllcatton
numbered D-2317-5
to
the
Oh1o
Department
of
Natural Resources,
Divtsion of Mmernl
Re$0urces
Management.
The
proposed coal mrmng
and
reclamation
operat1ons wtll be in
Sections
7,13, 19,25,26 &amp; 32
FraCtions· t,7.13, 19
&amp;
25
Sutton
r ownshlp. Township
3, 'Range 12. Lots·
121 7,1218 &amp; 1220
Township,
Sutton
Townshrp 2

Range

-

READ All ABOUT IT
in th e
The J:&gt;aily Sentinel
W::IJ e- ®ni l ipo liS tiD a ih' '(!I::ribun~
\!th e ~Point ~Plt&gt;nnant :!IR~gintcr

L- - - - ---------- - - - - ----------_..

�,.
Tuesday, October 19, 201 o

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

BLONDIE

CROSSWORD

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort W alker

·.

..,
....
,
----FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Bat iuk

AGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Complete
1 -Loa
6 Hooded
DOWN
s na ke
1 Orlando
11 Early
team
M exican
2 S ky
12 Luminous
blue
glows
3 Complete
13Tab loids
4 Butterfly
15 Hot blood
catcher
16 0ve rly
5 Artwork
19 Greek
28 Quartet
17 Cry of
overlay
letters
30 Restauinsight
22 Vampire
6 Poultry
rant
18 Positive
buy
feature
VIPs
20Writer
7 Owned by 23 Salad3 1 Parcel
Follett
us
dressing
out
21 Pac.'s
8 B~rglar's
ingredient 32 Singer
counterentry
24 Generally
Nellie
part
25 Explosive 33 Car of the
9 Most
22 P unch
unit
impulsive
'50s
ingred i10 Actor
26 Typo3 8 Youngster
ent?
Armand
graphical 39 Commo23 U nclear
14 M uddy up
symbol
tion
26 1nferno
c hronicle r NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Sene $4 lS(chetwm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 2. PO . Box !1364/!&gt;, Orlando. Fl 32853·6475
27 H orned
9
10
goddess
28 Shark
feature '
29 Pester
30 Swindle
34 Pitcher's
stat
35 Embrace
36 Went
ahead
37 They miss
the pins
40 Standoffish
41 Pueblo
material
42Holds a
lease
10-

Br ian and Greg Walker

THE LOCKHO.RNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell
J: C~N ' T KNOCK
THAT S ILL':f GRIN
OFF HIS FACE .

(

I

~r-.lZ~

..1 CAN'T LET VOO SLEEP IN ANV LONGER, L.EROV ...
TODAY IS TOESOAY."

.

f~u~ .!..&amp;!?'~ j
ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Tuesday,
Oct. 19,2010:
You often go overboard with spending and other such indulgences. This
year, this tendency will be up for
Change. Look at the long-term ramifi·
cations, and self-discipline might be
more easily called upon. Your daily life
mighl need more ~viving. You are facing a profound tr.msfonnation in your
life. As a result. you will be happierthough the process might not easy.
If you are single, you could meet
someone in your daily travels. Take
your time dating and getting to know
this person. If you are attached, share
more of your free time together or
develoJ&gt; a new mutual ho"bby. Smile,
and both of you will lighten up.
PISCES understands you. Be more
open with this person.

oe

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

h\ D:t\l.' ( li"L'l' ll

6 1
2

3

DENNIS THE MENACE
H ank Ketchum

3 7
4
8 3 6 7 9
3 7
8 2
4
5
5 3
6 1
1 4 5 2 7

" .Jus t eo y ou kn o w - If y o u're n o t
d oln ' any thi ng, I ' m n ot doln'
a n ythin g eithe r ."

9 7
Difficulty Level

**

6
8 5

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v

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9 G ~ 6 L B 9 v 8
~ 8 6 L G 9 v ~ 9 B
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G ~ 6 L 9 8 B 9 v
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10·19

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Tize Stars Show the Kind of Day You'll
Have: 5-Dynmnic: 4-Posilitoe; 3-Avcrage;
2·So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES {Mard\ 21-April 19)
**** You are subject to iru,-piring
thoughts after a meeting. Still. you
might decide not to share any more
until you have a better grasp on what
you think. Consider your options,
though others seem very sure of them·
selves. Tonight Take some personal
time.
TAURUS (April 20..May 20)
* **** Remain upbeat and direct
with others. Someone you count on
who can be feisty at times could push
harder than you mi,id\t like. Use a
meeting as a buffer.l&lt;now what you
want and expect. Tonight: Where people are.
GEMINI {May 21-June 20)
* **** Stay on top of your
responsibilities. A partner presents a
challengin$ opinion. You might want
to weigh the pros and cone;. A brainstorming session mi~t be just what
the doctor ordered. Gear the air quickly, looking to new pos.&lt;;ibilities.
Tonight: Working fate.
,
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
**** Keep reaching for new
ideas and possibilities You nught not
be ac; satisfied when vou hear another
person's point of vie~·. Let your imagination take over. You suddenly see an
unusual path. Tonight Where your
mind can roam.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22)
***** Let your mind wander.
Ideas pop and accomplish what you
need to happen. Listen to advice you
are getting from a partner. Your ere·
ativity flows and draws many to you .

HOROSCOPE

Revise a project \\ith new understanding. Know what you must do. Tonight
Say "yes."
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
11 tit Defer to others, and don't
worry so much about control or who is
right. Creathity will surge in a happier
environment a1lowing greater giveand-take. How you let ~meone know
that you disa&amp;ree could make a big dif·
ference. Tonight Sort through in\'itations.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*****Allow greater flow into a
situation, kno\\ing full well what i&lt;;
going on. You'll ~ someone \·ery differently after you negotiate a truce
where there has been disagreement.
Tonight Squeeze in some exercise.
.
SCORPIO (Oct 23 ·1':0\· 21)
***"* Open up to new ~ibili­
ties. Though someone's idea could
strike vou as unusual, work \\ith il.
Dedicate some quality time to someone you never have enough time for.
Tonight Let the good times roll.
SAGfiTARIUS (1'-:ov 22-Dec. 21)
**** Honor your priorities, but
understand that others might not
agree. Stay on top of a problem and
allow your instincts to play a role.
How you deal with somt&gt;One could
define the qualitv of your relationo;hip.
Tonight At home.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
**** keep reaching oul for others. You ,,.;JJ under.&gt;tand exattly what
IS going to h.1ppen when an issue LS
di~ssed more openly. How 1)1Uch
guidance you want to gh·e is your
Choice. Your fiery ways and style get
you far. Tonight: Hang out \\ith
friends
AQUARIUS (Jan 20..Feb. Hi)
**** You understand a lot more
than in the past, as others seem ready
to revea1 more. Maintain a caring and
open attitude. A strong stand also
might be nece:;sary if )'\'&gt;U are going t~
move forward. Tonight: Treat your.;elt
well
PISCES (Feb.19-M.mh 20)
* *** Your instincts guide you
well, but know that you cannot get
past an issue that a ke.\ •'ssod,lte P"="'·
ents. He or she might put a lot otlogk
and thought behind what is being
said. You'll t"'ome out on top of,, problem because of needed n'."e.treh.
Tonight: Vv'hatewr puts a smile l1n
your face.

** *

Jacquclirze Bigar i.~ tlrl tlrdntemct
111 http://wcL'Tt&gt;.Jacquelincbzsar.mm.

.mvdailvsentinel.com
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Page U6 •

l11e Daily Sentinel

www.m ydailyscntincl.com

NFL may start suspending players for violent hits
Nl \\ 'I ORK ( \P)
Atmtll'' lor the he.td or
lcadinp. \\ tth the helmet
to delt~cr n bhm could
soon cost Nf I, players
game tllllC no.; "ell as
mone).
1 he league is con&lt;;lder
111g suspending player~
lor illeral hits in nn effort
to help ptCVenl &lt;;enuu&lt;.;
injuries. Nf I cxecuthe
'ice president of football
operations Rn) Anderson
told I he A"soct.tted Pre s
on Mond.t). one da) utter
'e' em! sc.tr) colltstuns
m g.une'&gt;
··1 here's "trong tec;tt
mom.tl for looktnp. remli
I) .tt C\alu.ttmg d1sct
plmt;:. espccutlly in the
,trea of e •regtous and
elevated d mgcrou"&gt; lut&lt;'
he &lt;,ntd in ,, phone mter
'te\\. "Gomg for\\ ard
there are ccrtmn htts that
occurred that will be
more susceptible to '&gt;Us
peno;ion.''
Ander'ion, n mcmbct ot
the lengue·~ competition
committee and one of its
loudeo;t \Oices on the
need for enhnnced player
~a1et), smd the Nl L
could make the changes
immedtately.
'' ith
C'ommis toner
Ro er
Goode1l's
apprmal
Len •ue officials ,., ould
cOn'&gt;ult "tth the pin~ er; ·
unton. but he d1dn't
expect an} oppn!&gt;ttJon.
'Ob\ IOUSI)
su pen
ton~ \\ ould be a much
bigger deal th,ut finmg
gu)s:· said Coho; center
Jeft Saturda). the team's
pl.t)er reprc entattve.
"But tf guyo; .tre head
hunting out there to
knock n gu) out of the
g.une, that'~ the only \\UY
to take care of it."
On Sunday. the l·agles'
DcSe.m Jack&lt;;on and the
htlcons' Dunta Robin')Oll
''ere knocked out of their
game after .1 frightening
colli'&gt;ton
111
which
Robin5on launched hunself head fir-;t Both sustamed conl:ussiono;.
R,l\ ens 11 ht end I Odd
Heap took a 'tdous hit
from Pntraots 'lnfet}
Br.mdon Meri" eat her
that Heap c.llled "one of
those hits th&lt;lt shouldn't
happen " 111e team "as
in contact w1th the league
about the tackle.
''The thing '"e try to
coach our piny er'&gt; to do is
basil:all) htt in the trike
zone," Rli\Cns coach
John llarbaugh c;aid.
"1 ry to make an effot1 to
do thnt and keep ) our
head out of it It's not just
the snfety of your oppo
nent. it's s,\Jet) for yourself When }OU thro\\
)OUr head in there like
that )Ott put )Ourself at
risk. It's JUSt not good
football."
Stcelcrs
hnebacker
James H.trri,on idelmed
two Brown players with
head injune'&gt; after jarring
htts An NFI spokc.,man
satd one of the tackles.

•

on Joshua Cribb5. was
legal. fhe Browns were
more
upset
about
Hnrric:,nn's
hit
on
Mohamed Ma&lt;;saquoi.
w luch the ldgue is
rc\ ICWIIl!).
"I he
one again•;t
Mohamed ''a" illegal."
Bro\\ "'
tight
end
BenJamm Watsoh satd. "I
can't judge his character,
I can jud •e hi&lt;; c.ondud
It wciS an illegal htt. He
led with hi-; head He hat
Mo nght in the head. He
do~ e
at his head.
Whether he meant to hun
him ur not. I can't comment on that. It "as illegal and the lc.ague ~hould
lt~kc care of him with the
max. whatever at ic;."'
H a rrb:.on
defended
thm.c hits after the game.
"If I get fined for that.
it's going to be a tra\es
ty," Hamson sa1d. ''Tile)
didn't Lall (a penalty) on
that. !here's no wa\ I
could be f tned for thai. It
wa'&gt; a good. clean legit
hit. .. I didn't hit that
hard, to be hone t '' ith
)OU \\hen )OU get cl guy
on the ground. it's a per
feet t.tckle."
Ander&lt;,on
wouldn't
~peculate on how man)
plnycr'\ would be pun
ishcd for hits from
Sunday's games. Players
also can be ejected from
games for illegal hits, but
that's rare.
It's .llso " pan of the
game the league has outJ,," ed. As far back ns
2007. Nl•L officaals \\ere
told to eject pla)er' for
uch flagrant fouls. The
NFL aid Monda) that 17
pla)eTh ha\e been ejected
mce 2007. 1 he AP
accounted for 14 of those
ejections: nine for thro"ing a punch or fighting.
two for cont.tct with officials. two that fall into
the categor) of helmet
hits. and one tor headbutting.
111erc ha' e been occa
sional '&gt;USpensions in
recent years. including
snlet) Roy Williams.
then '"ith Dallas. for one
game in 2007 for three
horse-collar tackles during that season. Tampa
Ba) cornerback Elbert
Mack and New York Jets
safety l::.ric Smith each
dre" one-game su penions for "flagrant 'iolattons of pla)er c;afet)
rules" b) lat.nl:hmg
themseh es uuo an opponent helmet first.
La;;t "eason. Carolina
delensh e back Dante

We-,le) dre\\. one t•.tme
for launchmg htm-;elf
into " punt returner '"hll
had not cau •ht the b.11l
and was in .1 defen~cle!;s
posttion.
Retired :,ulcty Rodney
!Iarrison, 110\\ nn analyst
for NBC. wns .td,unant
.tbout the need lot sttlf.
swift punishment. He
"as Hncd mm c than
$200.000 dunn
h1o;
c~ueet nnd suspended lor
one •ame in 2002 for a
helmet-to-helmet htt.
"You dtdn't get Ill)
attenuon \\hen you fined
me 5 p.mnd, 10 grand. I 5
grand." he s.ud dunng
the prcg,une broadcast
for
"Sundlt)
1\;ight
l·ootball " ") ou got Ill)
attention when I oot sus
pended and I had to •et
away from my team
matec; and I d1~appomted
my teammate" trom not
being there But you have
to '&gt;uspend these gu) s.
fhese gu) s nrc mnkmg
m1llinns ol dollar5 ...
Jon) Dungy. the for
mer co.tch and Harri"m \
broad~.:n"&gt;t partner. echoed
his senttment~ - somctlung that wasn't loc;t on
Ander on
"When schneone a"
re'&gt;pected as 1ony Dungy
and a pln)er r~pectcd for
ht.., play and knO\\ n for
his htttin prowe~c; suc.h
as Rodney Harrio;on say
that. m fact. fme" do not
ha\ e a deterrent effect
and that suspenc:,tOn!,
might, it ic; '&gt;Obenng.'' he
said.
Not onl) 1s the league
concerned ,., ith defenders turning thermelveo;
into human mis-.ales. but
\\ tth aiminp. for the head
with the forearm. shoul
dcr or .til) other body
pat1.
..., he fundamentnll)
old WH) of wrapptng up
and tal:kling c;cems to
ha' e
tnded
away,''
Anderson aid. "A lot of
the mcreao;e IS from htt-.
to biO\\ •ll) ~up. 'I h.u ha
become a more populc~r
"ay of domg 11. ) es. we
are concerned the) nre
getting aw a) from the
fundamentals of tul:kltn •
and ma)be it has been
coached thc1t \\U). We're
going to have to look into
talking to our coaches."
Dolphins
'&gt;alety
')eremtah Bell wonders it
the Nfl i getting "too
!:rtrict'' about tackles
im oh ing the helmet.
"As a dclcnshc pla)er.
you ha'e to think about
ho\\ )Oll hit c;omebod)
nO\\, \\ htch is tot.tlly
ridiculous to me," Bell
said. "You're trying to
get
n
guy
do\\ n.
Sometime
)Oll
oct
caught leadmg "tth ) our
helmet When )Ou're
going to ta.:kle a gu) full
'&gt;peed. ) ou can't re.lll)
thtnk. ·oh. I have to h1t
thio;; gu) a cen.tin \\II).'
You ha\ e to get h1m
do\\ n ,,, be'&gt;t ) uu can.

Tuesday, Octobe r

BCS

from Page BI
Sometimes 1t's helmet to
helmet, whtch gu)S
arcn 't tr) 111 • to do. but on~ coman • out of the
th.tt's JU'&gt;t the way Jt is. Southea~ter n
It\ pat1 of the game ...
Conference ,md Btg
Eagle-; coach Andy 'I en. Stoops is protJ.ably
Reid saw' the Jackson- ri ght.
·
Robino,on collio;Ion from
Auhurn is fourth 111
close range.
the BCS standings, fol
" I hat was n tough one lowed by l ('t and
there from both side~." LSU. Michigan State
Reid satd l\11)ndny. ··:rhe from the B1g 1cn is sevleague has put a Jot of enth. None of those
emphu'iiS on removing teams have lost &gt;et.
the helmet out of the con
Alnbama '" ei •hth and
tact point, in particular unbeaten Utnh is T'inth
around the chin or neck
LSV and Auburn play
.trea But some of these Saturda).
arc bang-bang. That \\as
"I wouJJ be shocked
a bang-bang deal right if the winner du.Jn't
there. l'hat wasn't c;ome- jump Boise next week
tlung this ktd had m the polls:· Palm satd.
planned. He wasn't going And if the \\tnner
to go m there and knock jumps the Broncoc; m
h1mself out. 'J1tat's nut the pol h. it's u lock to
" hat he was h) ing to do jump tpem in the BC'S
here."
standmgs.
In fact. if one of the
Jeto;
safety
Jim
Leonhard was flagged I 5 SI~C'o;; 1tgers goes 11 0.
yards for a helmet-to-hel- it ,-.ouldn't be the lc,tc;t
met hit on Brandon 1 bit surprising to see that
1.10\ d in a 24-20 win team 111 the BCS tttle
O\e~ the Broncos. Denver game no matter w hnt
conch Josh McDamels Oklahoma and Oregon
called it an example of· do
'I he Sooners took first
how hns often look
viciouo;; on TV, but aren't place b) grndang out
No. l in the computer
really what the) appear.
"I don't think there 'c; rat1ngs.
Ok.lahoma.
an) body that's out there coming off a 52-0 \ tccoachmg helmet-to-hel- tory against low a St.lle.
met hits." McDaniels is No. 3 in the l SA
smd. "I &lt;,ure kno\\ \\e're Todn) conches' poll and
not and I don't believe in 1\o. 4 in the Harri~ poll
Oregon is o. I 111 all
m} he an that there's an)bod) out there trying to the pollc;, including the
AP 1op :25 \\ hich is not
hurt other pla)ers."'
Asked recentl) about used in the BC'S cc~ku­
the league's effort to lations. but rated e1ghth
eliminate helmet hits. Dr in the computer rc~nk­
Hunt Batjer. co-chaimtan. ings.
Boise State is No 2 111
for the NFL's Bram.
Head and Neck ~ledical all the polls and S~\enth
according to the com
Committee. said:
"If it is not getting the puters, but the math
Jea,cs the Bronco&lt;; thtrd
me~ sage out. 1 don "t
in
th BCS standings.
know ho\\ tn do it. It has
"The computers do
been broadcast at even
le\CI not to lead "ith not like this team,''
your he&lt;Id. In the heat of Palm &lt;;aid.
The poll -.oters ltke
b.tttle. things are going to
happen. But the) just Boise State better than
the) e\er ha\e. but ttll
ha\e to be a minimum."

19, 2010

not enough.
1 he
problem. as
always for Boise State,
i'&gt; the c;trength of &lt;:&gt;chedule Larly nonconference -. tctoriec; against
Virglllia Tech
and
Oregon State help the
Broncos. The W~
schedule most!)
them down.
On Saturday. Boise
State beat San Jo5e
State 48-0 and Palm
"&gt;atd the victory actually
pulled the Broncos'
computer rating down.
Because. Boise State
will ulmost always rate
behind the other unde
featcd teams in the
computers. the Broncos
would need to be an
O\erwhe1ming i':o. J in
both polls to ha' e a shot
,,t the national title
game when the final
BCS standing&lt;; come
out Dec. 5. Palm said.
E\en if Boise State
fini!:rhes the season as
the only undefeated
team. Palm is skeptical
of ito; chances to reach
the t1tle game.
"I look at it a~ Boise
has to be almost the
onl) choice.'' Pal.
said. "It would take
umque year for Boise to
be a unanimous No 1 in
the polls."
Oklc~homa . which has
quaht) victories against
Florida State, Air Force
and Texa'i. has a chance
to bolster its resume
Saturday
against
Mi souri . 11th in the
standings. Down the
road the Sooners play at
Oklahoma State. 14th in
the \landings.
Oregon faces UCLA
on Thursday night at
home. then visits USC,
which is not included in
the BCS ~landings
becau'\e the Trojans are
on
probation. The
Ducks finish the season
against Arizona (18th)
and Oregon State.
The toughe'&gt;t opponents left on Boise
St,tte 's schedule •
~e\ada and Hawaii.

d'W

4

Meigs High School
2010
Varsity Cheerleaders

Coming Monday, October 25th
I your friends

save, saVi

•
The Oail) Sentinel
""".Ill) d,ul) ~cnunel.com

'

Varsit) cheerleaders: Destiny Allen, Cassandra Johnson, Surctta Code.
Ro" 2 Jorden E\ans, Christian Woods, Tiffan) Lee, Bethany Spann.
Row 3: Adrianna Rowe, Th)1or Do"ler, 1akenzie \\rhobrey.
Back: Paula VanMeter, Morgan Bell.

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