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- ...

-~ - · ---------~-~-----

cal student
receives American
~-,:A egree, A6

O'Bleness Guild
plans fund-rai ing
auction,A3

100~

Printed on
Rl'cycled l'lc\\!tprint

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio .

a

D ...

Rizer still jailed after jury deadlock

SPORTS
• Yankees win World
Series. See Page 81

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYDAILYSENT'NEL COM

POMEROY - Paula R1:zer is still
in Washington County Jail. and neil ther side in her murder case ha,
addressed her bond since she was
found not guilty of aggravated murder Tuesday.
·[ Ri1er was in jail Wednesday
afternoon. Sheriff Robert Beegk
said, the day after' a jury acquith.:d
her of aggravated murder and deadlocked on a verdict on a reduced

charge of murder in her trial, which
began a week before
R,izer was accused of shooting her
husband, Kenny Rizer, Sr.. multiple
t1mes at the1r home on Lovett Road
on April 3. The jury found her not
guilty of aggravated murder. but a
lone. holdout prevented the Jury
from reaching a unanimou:. verdict
either way on the charge of murder.
Pro~~.:cuting Attorney Colleen
William~ and Matthew Donahue.
as~istant pro~ecutor. used forensic
testimony from the Ohio Bureau of

Criminal
Identification
and
Investigation in an attempt to pro\ e
Rizer fired the shots at her husband
while he wa'&gt; sitting in his reclining
chair, and called family members to
the stand to refute the defendant',
claim the couple had a increasingly
unhappy marriage.
Rizer told the jury she and her
husband had been arguing the &lt;.Ia)
of the shooting. and that he had
been verbally abu~ivc and physically assaulted her just before the shots
were tired.

The jury does not disclose
whether the lone vote preventing a
unanimous \erdict is one of guilty
or not guilty. so it i!l, not known how
the jury's 'ore camt! out. A jury verdict form repo11ing the not guilty
verdict on the aggravated murder
charge was filed in Rizer's case
Wednesday. It i~ the last document
in the file.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill remanded
Rizer to sheriff's custody after the
Please see Rizer, AS

Health
Dept.
•
rece1ves
•
vacc1ne
shipment
•

Bv CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
P.age AS
• Bonnie Boug, 68

INSIDE
.
'

ghtmare hid in
eland block short on
dreams. See Page A2
• O'Bieness campuses
go tobacco-free.

Submitted photos

A stainless steel sign recognizing Middleport
Masonic Lodge #363, Free and Accepted Masons,

See Page A3

now hangs at the entrance to Mrddleport on Powell
Street, along with signs from other civic organizations and churches. Ed Neutzling offered to design
and construct the 40-pound sign, which he said will
last forever. It was presented to the Lodge, whrch
ultimately decided to place it at the town's entrance.
It also announces the lodge's meeting time. The
Masons repaired the fencing at the village's lower
entrance from Ohio 7, and re-installed the signs that
were already hanging there as part of this community project.

! Stiles birth announced.

See Page A3
• Child has weird eating
habits. See Page A3
• Successin'space
elevator' competition.

See Page AS
• Officials: Swine flu
confirmed in towa cat.

~ct~~~ ~~istmas

•

home tour slated.

See Page As

1

.

• Ohio ponders a
future with. casinos.

Page AS

I

I
I

•

===========
WEATHER

Black Hawk
pilot to speak
about book
R .
aclne man
returns home
BY BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTJNEL.COM

1

RACI~E

-

Robert

1 Deeter. formerly of Racine.

will return home to speak
abut his book. "Bullseye:

Details on Page A6

==========

Journal of a Black Hawk
Pilot."
I Deeter will be speakmg at
, 9:30 a.m.
Frida)
at
j Southern Elementary and at
1 1 p.m. that same day at
Southern High School.
Deeter\\ ill also be !:!iving a
l book reading followed by a
question and answer period
at 2 p.m. on Sunday at the

l

Po~leroy L1~rary.

lhe book 1s a non-fiction
account of Deeter·~ experiences as a Black Hawk pilot
m the Iraq War. Deeter
takes his readers on a trip to
2 St-CTIO:"iS - 12 PAGHS
I the middle east, and grves
Calendars
A3 them a first hand look nt the
life of an Army helicopter
B3-4 pilot in the war. According
. sifieds
to the book's publisher:
the scorching tcmComics
Bs 1 "From
peratures to the grueling
pace of combat. his journal
Editorials
A4 • entries
paint an accurate
picture for the reader of the
B Section day to day life of a mack
Sports
Hawk pi lot in the Iraq "ar.
~ 2009 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
His story of his deplo) ment
to Iraq provides not only an
up close look at the war, but
also a view of th struggles
e
Please see Book, AS
4
8
a
4
9

INDEX

.

I

li

1!1JI 1!1!1 !1!11

Funds to benefit hearing, speech programs
SENTINEL STAFF
MDSNEWSCMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
The
Meig~ Count) Board of
Health recently approved
the transfer of $21,617.19 to
the
Athens
Me1g.
I Educational Service Center
I (AMbSC) with which to
improve learning opportunitiCS and the quality of life
for Meigs Count) preschool and school-aged
children.
The funds were gener.lled
by Medicaid and commercial
insurance
billing
received for services provided by the Meigs County
Speech nnd Hearing Clinic
(MCSHC), which the
Health Department co01·dinated for approximately 25
years. The MCSHC, disbanded in 20~9 ~ h~n C?llaborator OhiO Um,ers•ty
School of Hearin_g. Speech
and Lnnguage Scrences ternunate( 1ts contract citing
economrc concef!ls.
The money \~Ill be usc.d
by .lena Tenogho~, ~upervr­
;~r of Specc~ Language
I herapy S_erv1ces for the
Athens l\~e1gs ESC and he1
teurn lo 1mpl~mt'nt a. new
speech servu.:e cleltvery
model. \\ h1ch offers many
bencf1~s !O chtldren . and
the1r l~muhc . Screemngs.
C\ alu~t rons and ,speech tl~_er­
apy w1JI be pro' 1~ed at 1rny
1.ech, ~cw Honzons nnd
Cam Hall D~ycare for
parental convemence. . ,
~peech related serv1c~&lt;;
wrll be mcluded m
enrollees· curriculum and
I

I

I
I

POMEROY - A new
shipment of H 1N I flu vaccine has been received by
the Meigs County Health
Department.
Larry Marshall, health
commissioner, advises that
late Tue~day afternoon the
health department received
700 additional dose~ of the
vaccine. It arrived just
before the health department be!!an a clinic to
immunize children six
months to 24 years of age
where 120 do~es of the vaccine were administered in
les' than two hour .
Marshall said that currently the health department has on hand 755
do~es. a combination of
nasal mist and injectibles.
··what we ..., ill probably do
is open it up to people on a
walk-in basi~. those 6
months to 24 years of age,
pregnant. health care workers and people who live
with or provide care for
infants under six months,''
~aid ~1arshall.
He said do~a!!e

on hand
nO\\ is not enough to start
ha' ing school clinics yet.
He'did say that he is hopeful
by next \\eek another shipment \\ill be in a large
enough quanti!) to open up
the vaccine to either get into
Please see Vaccine, AS

Fruth
Pharmacy
to honor
veterans
BY HOPE ROUSH
HROUSHOMYDAILYREGISTER COM

PLEASANT,
With
Veteran·~
Jena Tenoglia (left) supervisor of Speech Language
Day
quickly
approaching,
Therapy Servrces for the Athens-Meigs Educational Semce
Center, accepts a check in the amount of $21,617,19 from several events and acthities
Health Commissioner Larry Marshall. The Meigs County are being planned to honor
Board of Health approved the fund transfer to provide des- local veterans.
On Wednesday. Nov. II.
perately needed speech and language services to eligrble
Fmth
Pharmacy will be celMeigs County preschool and school-aged children.
ebrating Veteran·~ Day by
Speech classroom attendance. atti- offering 10 percent dismstruction.
Language Pathologists \\ill tudes and sclf-csteern and counts on store purchases to
demonstrate wa) s that \\ill be given .tn early veterans and active military
preschool teachers and opportunit) to become personnel. IR addition, all
members of the Help 1'vk happ), positive and produc- veterans will recehc a free
Grow staff can assist chil- tive ritizens of the commu- patriotic-themed gift and
will have the opportunrty to
dren in improving their nity.
·1 he AMESC operated register to win a patriotic
speakrng and listening
sk1lls. Professional de\elop- under the direction of gift basket.
According to Lynne
ment and ~upport for inte- Superintendent
Jon
Fruth.
chainnan of the Fruth
grated sen ices, ac;sistive Cost an to and sen es not
board.
this i&lt;: the first time
technolog) and hteracy will only Meigs County, but
Pharmacy has
that
Fruth
also contracts speech therabe pro,ided.
this
t)
pe
of celebration
held
The Meigs County Health py sen ices to numerous
for'
eterans.
and
the Southeastern Oh1o o;chuols.
Department
''Each one of our 25 tore
AMESC anticipate that tu- For more information. conare
doing their own thing.
dento;; will demonstrate tact the· AMESC at 992improved social beha' ior . 3883.
Please see Veterans, A5
Submitted photo

POH\'T

W.Va. -

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

The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

ROS

Thursday, November 5,

2009

Nightmare h~d in Chrysler ai'ms to pump life into struggling lineup
Cleveland block
short on dream·s
B Y DEE-ANN DURBIN
AND T OM KRISHER

'

''

ASSOCIATED PRESS

B v V ICKI SMITH
AND MEGHAN BARR
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - The
, run-down Cleveland neigh, borhood where 50-year-old
Anthony Sowell quietly
carved out an existence is
the t~ pe of place where
women
can disappear
~ aJmost in plain sight.
: Where crack users sneak
• into vacant houses to do
: drugs, have sex, then steal
copper pipes and wiring to
make a few bucks.
· Where no one asks a lot of
questions, even about the
smdl of rotting ~meat that
came when the wmd blew a
certain way. Some likened it
to the smell of death, and it
seemed to foJJow Sowell
around.
No one is sure how long
Sowell, a registered sex
offender who would offer
free barbecue to the neighbors. had been living in his
three-story house with
corpses lying around. many
of them black women who
had been strangled. Police
have now recovered 1·1 bodies from the home on
Imperial Avenue, in the living room, crawl spaces and
backyard graves. There was
even a skull in the basement.
But if Sowell's street is
seed\. it's far from abandoned. Occupied homes are
sandwiched
between
vacant, boarded-up houses
and scattered small businesses with a steady stream
of customers.
"We're not talking about
some desolate area, some
abandoned barn," said
Councilman Zach Reed.
whose mother lives a
block away. ..How did
somebody get away with
this in a residential neighborhood?"
Even residents seemed
unfazed by the disappearances: They say many of the
women were known prostitutes or drug users. But relatives of presumed victims
charge that police ignored
their
missing
person
reports.
"They told us to go horne,
and as soon as the drugs are
gone. she'll show up,'' said
Markiesha
CarmichaelJacobs. whose 53-year-old
mother Tonia, a drug addict,
vanished Nov. 10, 2008.
Police
identified
her
Wednesday as one of the
victims, saying her body
was found buried in the
backyard with marks indicating strangulation.
"It's hard to imagine,"
Carmichael-Jacobs said as
she stood shivering on a
street corner across from
Sowell's
home
Wednesday. "but that's
what they told us to our
face: 'She'll turn up."'
Some wonder whether
police just didn't look for
the women because they
were from the city. Or
because they were black.
"There's this fear that the
neighborhood has been forgotten," said the Rev.
of
Rodney
Maiden
Providence Baptist Church.
Cleveland police don't
take
missing-persons
cases seriously if they
involve people clinging to
the lower rungs of society,
said Judy Martin, a leading local anti-crime advocate.
Reed. the councilman, is
demanding an investigation
·into how crime reports in
the neighborhood have been
handled.
Mayor Frank Jackson
refused to second-guess
officers or their handling of
missing-person reports, but
said he expected the police
chief would evaluate the situation and make adjustments if necessary.
''There is still a lot of
work that needs to be done
and a lot of unanswered
· questions that need to be
addressed," Jackson said.
"Until the family of the
· victims get the closure they
· seek and ultimately the jus• tice they deserve. this case
. will continue to be our
focus."
Police Chief Michael
McGrath said the city takes

about 10 rn1ssmg-person
reports a day but typically
clears at least 90 percent
within 48 hours.
Chuck Cole. a landlord
with rental homes in the
area. said most of the
women who disappeared
went by nicknames. so he
doesn't know who they
really were. He said he
sometimes saw them buying beer at the corner convenience store. or lounging on Sowell's front
porch.
"He reeled them in like
that with the money and,
you know, promises," Cole
said of Sowell.
After a while, though. the
women stopped corning
around.
Residents said that in retrospect the smell alone
should have raised questions. Ir wafted down the
street, sometimes forcing
the sausage-shop employees
who worked near to his
home to abandon the store
on hot summer days.
It smelled like a dead dog.
they say. Like sewage. Like
rotting meat.
"It was smelling so bad,
horrible. putrid," said
Kenneth Broader, a postal
carrier who delivers mail to
Imperial Avenue.
Sewage
lines
were
replaced. Equipment was
scrubbed. City utility officials even came to investigate, on more than one
occasion. But the stench lingered.
Sowell was ordered held
without bond after appearing in court under tight
security Wednesday, wearing a blue paper jumpsuit
that typically identifies
inmates at risk of suicide.
Although authorities initially described Sowell as a
convicted rapist, they said
Wednesday the conviction
was only for attempted
rape.
Assistant
Cuyahoga
County Prosecutor Brian
Murphy called him "an
incredibly dangerous threat
to the public" and said he
could face the death penalty
if convicted of five aggravated murder counts. He
also faces charges of rape,
felonious assault and kidnapping after a Sept. 22
attack on a woman at his
home.
After Sowell's court
appearance, Deputy Police
Chief Ed Tomba said investigators have finished digging through the backyard
and would begin tearing
apart walls inside the house
in search of more evidence
or bodies.
The house is separated
b&gt;' no more than 15 feet on
either side from narrow,
dilapidated homes, all
near small but busy local
shops.
Bess Fawcett, a owner of
Bess Chicken &amp; Pizza
across the street from
Sowell's house, said no one
in the neighborhood could
imagine the crimes Sowell
might have been committing behind his walls.
He was respectful and
polite, always sitting on his
front steps and visiting,
once holding a driveway
cookout and offering free
food to the neighbors.
He walked the streets
with different women all the
time. Fawcett said, but none
appeared to be with him
against their will.
- That changed about
three weeks ago, when
Fawcett spotted Sowell,
naked and on top of a
woman in the bushes next
to his house.
"He was laying over her
and I said, 'Tony, what are
you doing?' He said, 'It's
cool. Mr. Bess. It's cool."'
Bess says he reported it.
By the time an ambulance
arrived, Sowell had gotten
the woman back in his
house. and he ultimately
left with her in the ambulance. Police, Bess said,
didn't show up until hours
later. When they returned
the next morning. Sowell
was gone.
Associated Press writers
Tom Sheeran and John
Seewer contributed to this
report.

AUBURN HILLS. Mich.
- Chrysler hopes to make
billions of dollars to repay
government loans and
revamp all of its cars and
trucks with an ambitious
plan that hinges on doubling
sales in five years.
The plan, which includes
spending $23 billion to overhaul or replace all its
Chrysler. Dodge, Jeep and
Ram models by 2014. is
realistic as demand improves
over the next five years, says
Sergio
Marchionne,
Chrysler's new CEO. who
has turned around Italian
automaker Fiat Group SpA.
Marchionne made his
remarks after a daylong presentation of his five-year
plan to save the ailing 84year-old Chrysler. Much of
the overhaul includes cost
savings from combining
purchasing and engineering
with Fiat, and using Fiat's
smaller, more fuel-efficient
designs to replace aging
Chrysler vehicles.
Marchionne's Fiat, which
now owns 20 percent of
Chrysler with an opportunity
for more. was put in charge of
rescuing the automaker by
the
U.S.
government.
Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy protection in June.
Some industry analysts
say the automaker's goal of
selling 2.8 million vehicles
globally in 2014 is overly
of
ambitious
because
increasing competition. The
company must also fight
public perception of noisy,
poor-performing vehicles,
especially in mid-size
sedans, the biggest segment
of the U.S. car market.
Sedans like the Dodge
Avenger and Chrysler
Sebring. along with many
other models, have flopped.
Chrysler said it will update
these cars t6 make them
more comfortable and quieter, then replace them in
2012 with Fiat designs.
Marchionne says the U.S.
market will expand over the
next five years, pushing up
the company's sales. Chrysler

AP photo

Chrysler Group LLC CEO Sergio Marchionne arrives for a news briefing at the automaker's headquarters in Auburn Hills, Mich., Wednesday.

also will have to regain some
market share, he said.
Rebecca Lindland, an
auto industry analyst for the
consulting firm IHS Global
Insight. said the sales figures may be rosy assumptions.
''Everything needs to go
perfectly" for the plan to
work, she said. Her compan)'s
expectations
for
Chrysler's U.S. market
share is nowhere near the
autornaker's forecast of 13
percent by 2014, up from
the current 9 percent.
The plan depends on the
U.S. market recovering
from this year's sales of 10.5
million cars and light trucks
to 14.5 million in 2014.
The company also has
lowered sticker prices to
boost sales and generate
more cash as it fixes its
struggling lineup, but it
must tackle quality problems to survive. Consumer
Reports recently panned
most Chrysler products.
"We get it," said Doug
Betts, senior vice president
of quality. "We're not in
denial related to the public
record for quality for
Chrysler.''

And it wiJI be tough to
win back skeptical buyers.
The automaker's sales are
down sharply this year as
buyers flee to other brands
and a weak U.S. economy
curbs demand for autos.
Chrysler lost upward of $8
billion last year and would
have run out of cash without
government help.
The U.S. government has
so far has provided roughly
$15 billion in aid. Chrysler
still has around $9 billion of
that
available,
and
Marchionne said it will not
return for more money.
"If we screw this up, it's
over," he said.
A federal report earlier
this week said that Chrysler
and General Motors Co. are
unlikely to pay back their
loans in full. But Chief
Financial Officer Richard
Palmer said the company
aims to pay back U.S. government loans by the end of
2014. He also expects
Chrysler to break even in
2010 and report an operatmg
profit of $5 billion in 2014.
Chrysler's growtn, though,
depends on better cars and
sales. Besides the mid-size
car, Chrysler will introduce

four new Dodges by 2013.
They include a ~even-pas­
senger crossover vehicle, a
mini-car and a compact. By
the end of next year, most
CUITent Dodge models will
receive new exteriors, int.
ors and t1ngines.
Ralph Gilles. Chrysler's
chief designer, said Dodges
will have crisp handling. be
quieter, more fuel-efficient
and have more luxurious
interiors. reflecting consumer complaints about all
those issues.
The Chrysler brand also
will get six new vehicles,
including a Fiat small car
and a new mid-size
crossover in 20 13. The
automaker is also considering adding a mid-size pickup to its Ram truck lineup.
Chrysler had $5.7 billion in
cash at the end of September,
up $I .7 billion since it exited
bankruptcy protection this
June. As recently
as
December. though, the
automaker was practically out
qf c~h. It plans to sell shares
publicly by the end of 2014. ,
Its operations broke even
in September because.
sa\ings from job cuts
factory closings.

Relatives mourn at ND pond Where women found dead
B Y B LAKE N ICHOLSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DICKINSON, N.D. Teammates and family
members threw roses and
softballs Wednesday into
the farm pond where three
North Dakota college softball players were found
dead inside their sunken
sport utility vehicle.
But there were few
answers to their most troublesome questions: How did
the women fmd themselves
trapped in the water? How
long did they suffer after
frantically calling friends
for help?
''I can't believe that my
baby is gone. I miss her terribly. I'm just wondering ...
What went through her
mind while she was still
alive in her last moment?"
said Claire Gemar. of San
Diego, whose 22-year-old
daughter, Kyrstin. was
among the. three Dickinson
State University students
pulled from the small pond
after signals from the phone
calls helped lead authorities
to the farm.
No foul play is suspected
in the deaths Gemar: Afton
Williamson, 20. of Lake
Elsinore, Calif.; and Ashley
Neufeld, 21, of Brandon.
Manitoba. The bodies of the
women and Neufeld's dog
were found inside the SUV
Tuesday.
The
women
were
believed to be on a stargazing trip Sunday night and
authorities said they likely
drove straight into the water
in the dark. The pond is surrounded by high grass and
shrubs off a narrow gravel
road in a pasture n01th of
Dickinson.
"ln our minds, all of us
have been reliving what we
think they probably went
through,'' said Gemar's
father, Lenny.
Senior softball player
Jody Lantz of St.. Walburg,
Saskatchewan, said she and
fellow students came to the
pond Wednesday "to understand it a little more, wrap
our heads around it."

"It's going to be weird
going onto the field and
knowing that they're never
going to be there," Lantz
said.
Stark County Sheriff
Clarence Tuhy said the
women's SUV was found
resting on its wheels
Tuesday in about 10 feet of
water with the doors and
windows closed.
''When you're not familiar with an area like that it
would have been very easy
to drive into" the pond,
Tuhy said. The sheriff said
the students were on private property. He stopped
short of saying they were
trespassing.
The
students
were
believed to be in the 1997
Jeep Cherokee when two of
their friends received telephone calls late Sunday
before the lines quickly
went dead. Police described
the first as a "very scratchy''
call for help in which one of
the students said they were
near water.
Tuhy said the calls, 'hbich
authorities were able to
track to cell phone towers,
were critical in leading
searchers to the vehicle. He
said it wasn't clear if emergency crews might have
been able to reach the
women had they called 911
instead of their friends.
Police Lt. Rod Banyai
said authorities do not
expect autopsy results for a
week or two. The autopsies
will help determine the
exact cause of death and
whether the women were
under the influence of
drugs
or
alcohol.
Authorities have said there
is no indication they were.
The
North
Dakota
Highway Patrol also will
examine the Jeep to determine if the vehicle malfunctioned. Banyai said.
Dickinson
State
University
President
Richard McCallum said
classes wde canceled
Wednesday and a memorial service was scheduled
on the 2.700-student campus
Thursday.
The

Dickinson State staff dis- hear her two friends in the
tributed ribbons in school background. When she
colors - dark blue and sil- told her daughter .goodbye,
ver - in memory of the she remembered. " I said,
'Be safe.' She said. 'I
three students.
The university listed will.'"
Gemar as a senior business
The Gemars said they
major who played third hoped the women's deaths·
base on the softball team. would remind people the
Neufeld was a senior out- importance of knowing
fielder working on a psy- their surroundings and letdegree,
and ting others know where
chology
Williamson, a junior, was a they are. In the meantime,
pitcher rnajorjng in psy- Lenny Gemar said he
chology with a minor in knows where he daughter
.is now.
coaching.
"I have so many unan"We threw out last pitches
swered
questions
and . to each of the girls." he said
thoughts," softball coach of the gathering at the pond.
"That heavenly softball
Kristen Fleury said.
Claire
Gemar
said team someplace where we
Wednesday that she talked hope that they all are. We
to her daughter Sunday know they hit them ou~
afternoon and she could the park."
•

, OH

..
il

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

-- -·-

- ·-- ----~

-- ··--~--~-

ageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5,

2009

ASK DR.. BR.OTHERS

Child has weird
eating habits

'...

.

...

BY DR. JOYCE BROTHERS

ur Dr. Brothers: I have three kids, ,md up until now
) have all hecn what I would call normal and welladjusted. But my oldest has started criticizing my cooking,
and wants to do her ov. n. 1-irst of all, she refuses just about
· everything I niTer. Then. after she pick" out her own rood,
she v. ill cat it only 1f it is :-;eparatcd on the plate. Nothing
• can touch anything ebc. and God forbid if there is a bit of
.. juice mnning aroun~ the plate. Then she eats a hearty meal.
·She is 7. Help! - S.R.
Dear S.R.: It is difficult being the oldest child You are
always the ~umea pig, the p10neer who sets the ~tage for
v.hat is cons1dcred "normal" for the children\\ ho follow.ln
the case of )OUr oldest child. there'&lt;; probably nothing
going on that is indicati\e of a mental or emotional problem . I can't say that for sure, but only you know your
daughter and her nature. It i&lt;; pos~ible that ~he is ::.ening the
stage for an eating disorder. If she is a dri\en perfectionist.
her preoccupation v. ith having total control over her food
and eaung could be an attempt to hm e some a~pect of her
life under her own dominion .
Docs ~he have plenty of outlets where she can choose her
own acth ities, and downtime to cnjov unstructured free
Submitted photo
time? If you are ~urc that your daughter 'is enjoying a stress- O'Bieness Guild members pictured with a filled basket to be auctioned for the Lighting of the Evergreens event are, from
free life and is merely asserting herself in a culinary way. left. Margaret Murrey, first vice-president; Judy Woodall, corresponding secretary: R1ta Snider, president; and Mary Kaye
why not embrace it? She could be a littlc chef in the making Jordan, recording secretary.

.

sen~~~~i~~~"~r~:;~}~~:~~~~t~~~~~~~;~:! :~~~\~i~tl~r'~okiJ.s~dc~~~~~~~

O'Bieness Gu1·ld plans fund-ral·sl·ng auct1·on

class and sec what happens. Be prepared to let her take the
wheel at dinnertime. and then see hov. ..picky'' the rest of the 1
~lily might sc~m! At .the ape of 7. your child may just be
ATHbNS -The Guild of ates of the hospital and
:mg out her \\.mgs a bll - 1t f~eb very good t~ m~ke ome O'Bienes.-; is planning a O'Bleness Health S) stem
. of her own ~h01ces . Ke~p the hnes of comm!-lm.cat•on open silent auction for decorated affiliates. A bake ale v. ill
so you can Judge what 1s nonnal an~ v.hat 1sn t. _You may and/or tilled baskets, which also be held in the hospi~
fin~ your ~aughter to be comfortable m her 0\\ n skm as well will be held at the L1ghting tal's Willow View Cafe
as m the kitchen.
of the Evergreens event at from 2 to 5 p.m. In addi•••
O'Bieness on Frida). Nov. tion. ticket!&gt; are being sold
Dear Dr. Brothers: I live at home m a large family offat 13. from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. in for a drawing forthree $100
people. I hate to be so blunt. but that's what we all are . i\ow o· Bleness'
Willow View Kroger gift cards.
l have found a great program at the universit) that will take Calc.
The tree Jightmg ceremotownies - it is all very \\ell-supcrdscd with diet and exerThe holiday b.tskets are ny will be at 5:30 p.m. and
cise. and I am determined to do it and take off many being decorated by associ- winners of the drawing and
. pounds. What concerns me is that my parents. brother, sister. aunt and uncle all are perfectly fine with their fat bodies. and I don't know hO\\ much support I can expect. I'm
· scared. - L.A.
Dear L.A.: It is a daunting task to lose weight and keep it
off when you arc surrounded hy people who are not only
enablers, but who also may end up being saboteurs or worse
when it comes to your -battle with losing weight. But you
already have shown that ) ou arc strong and detern1ined. as
well as honest about ) our challen!!cs - and being scared is
• a perfectly reasonable reaction to the role your family might
play in your success. or lack thereof. I think there 1s a
~ chance )OU could be misjudging some of them. though- I
fust don't know which one or ones. There's bound to be at
· least one relative who secretlY. isn't so happy with bb or her
size. and who really would hke to join you in the program
, or infonnall) follow the instmctions )OU bring home.
. - : &gt;nee you begin that program. the attitudes of your rela~es surely will be put out there pretty quickly. So you \Vant L.:....:__2_:E_~~~~~~2~!.!1H
to notice the people who say encouraging things. or who ask I
to join you in exercising or shopping for or cooking nutri. tious food. This is who you should be hanging out with!
:Since you know the others are on I) trying to Justify their
O\vn situation of being 0\ erweight. try not to take it too personally when they try to undermine your efforts. It v. ill be
\'ery difficult. but I know )OU can do 11. And you can sho\\
Beginning Nov. 16,
the others hy your example that we1ghtloss is possible. That
· will do more than anything else to bring them around·.
· (c) 2009 by King Femun•.1 Syndicme

•

silent auction will be o· Bleness Development
announced at 6:30 p.m. Council's current major
Piano music b) Neal project is to raise $500.000
Ne~bitt, MD, will be fea- to remodel space and purtured. Refreshments will be chase new equipment for
sened and the pubhc is the emergenc) depanment.
mvitcd to attend.
including new heart moni·
Proceeds from this ) ear's tors and an electromc med
annual event. v. hich is the ical records ~ystem
Guild's largest fundraiser of
For more information.
the year. will benefit the call Pat Vogt at (740) 592emergency department. The 9209

An O'Bieness
Memorial
Hospital employee hangs a banner in the
O'Bieness
Medical Park
announcing that
all O'Bieness
Health System
campuses will be
tobacco free
begmmng
•
Monday, Nov. 16.
Submitted photo

0'8/eness Campuses are

.

2 09

.

·Stiles
birth announced
...

POMEROY
Ja~on and ~lary Beth Stiles of Silver
Springs, Md. announce lhe hirth of the1r first child. a
daughter. ~laircad Catherine, born Sept. 23, 2009.
· Paternal grandparents arc Roger and Linda Stiles of
Pataskala. Ohio, and Vicki and Paul Hutson of Tennessee.
Paternal great-grandfather is Edward Stiles of Middleport,
, and the maternal grandparent are Eileen and John Fritzky
of Nev. Jersey.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Thurs day, Nov. 5
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse Village Council
will meet at 7 p.m. at village
hall.
Saturday, Nov. 7
SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township meeting. 10 a.m.
Syracuse Village Hall.

Clubs and
organizations
Thurs day, Nov. 5
CHESTER - ChesterShade
Historical
Association, 7 p.m at the
Chester Courthouse.
TUPERS PLAINS - The
Ladies Auxiliary, Post 9053,
6 p.m. at the hall.
Friday, Nov. 6
RACINE .!-. Meigs County
mona Grange, 7:30 p.m.
• the Rac1ne Grange hall.
Saturday, Nov. 7
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878, potluck
supper, 6:30 p.m., meeting
7:30p.m.
Monday, Nov. 9
POMEROY
Meigs
B~nd Boosters 6 p.m. in the
high school band room. All
parents, supporters, and

.

d .

. d

?the;s 1nter~ste 1nv1te . t?
J?in m plannmg band act1v1t1es.
.
POMER.OY - B1g Bend
Farm Ant1ques Club, 7:30
p.m. at. the Mulbe.rry
Communlty Center. Electton
to be held.
.
POMEROY .
Metgs
County Repub~1can Party,
7:30 p.m. Me1gs County
Courthouse.
Thursday, Nov. 12
.CHESTER .
Shad~
Rtver Lodge, 7.30 p.m .. bus1ne~s and annual elect1on of
?ff1cers. ~yster stew follow1ng meeting.
TUPPERS PLAINS .
VFW Po~t 9053 Will meet at
7 p.m. With meal served at
6:30 p.m..
Fnday, Nov. 13
H~RRI~ONVILLE
Harns1onv1lle # 255 0_. E. S
103rd annual mstallatJon at
7:30p.m. Pot luck after.

Church events
Saturday, Nov. 7
REEDSVILLE - Youth
rally at Eastern Elementary,
6 p.m.: drama and music.
One way Drama Team
sponsored by Mercy's
Mission Church.
RACINE Southern
UMC
Men's
Charge
Breakfast, 8 a.m. Morning
Star Fellowship room.

O'Bieness campuses go tobacco-free
ATHENS - In order to
protect patient!), visitor and
associate~ lrom the effects
of tobacco usc, all c mpuses
of the O'Bieness Health
System v. iII become tobacco free beginning Monday,

b) James R. Ga kell. MD. cer." Gaskell said. "In order within 50 miles of Atheno;
Athens Count) Health to promote a health~ and in Columbus have
Commis~ioner, and includes
lifestyle
and
protect tobacco-free campu e . A
representati\es of the patients. employees and similar goal has been
O'Biene-.., board. adminis- visitors. many hospitdls m accomplished by more than
tration. employees, Local the United States ha\ e 150 member hospitals of the
1252 -o f the American adopted tobacco-free cam- Oh10 Hospital Associauon
NO\ . 16.
Federation of State. County pus policies:·
- representing ~0 percent
I The week coincides v. ith and Municipal Emplo)ces.
The
U.S.
Surgeon
General
of
the membership.
the
American
Cancer
medical staff and communi- reported in 2006 that there
Signs \\ill be posted .tt
Society's Great American ty.
is no risk-free IC\'el of expo- entrances to the O' Bienc&lt;;s
Smukeout::W, which is NO\.
that
Gaskell
pointed
out
sure
to second-hand smoke.· Medical Park as well as at
19. 'I he dc~ision to become
tohacco-rree was recom- the health consequences of :'\'lore than 3.000 nonsmok- other Health System camnH.'nded by o ·13 leness · tobacco use have been well ers die annually from lung puses a(h is111g that all
medical ·stnf'f and approved documented. "Some health cancer. In addition. higher forms of tobacco use must
by O'Bicnes.s' bo.trd of problems associated with death rates from cardiovas- be discontinued before
tobacco use include cardio- cular disease are reported ~ntering the c,Impusec..
directors carher this year.
By becoming tobacco- vascular disease, emph)se- for nonsmokers due to sec- Parking lots. 'ehtcles nnd
all !!rounds of the Health
free the Hc..1lth System is ma and lung cancer, and ond-hand smoke exposure.
In our region. all hospitals S) -.tem v. ill be tobacco free
promoting health) lifest) Jes man) other t~ pes of canas well as protecting all
tho e v. ho come to Health
System campuses. all of
,, hich .,.. ill be affected by
th.
b
All "
f
c ne\\ ~n. ·
rorms ·0
tob.1cco use will be prolllbAt Wmdstream, we're focused on dehvermg
ited in buildings, parking
MONTHLY RATE OF.
qua'ity services at reasonable rates w thm our
lots. ,ehiclcs and on any
SERVICE CHARGES
serv1ce tern tones Serv1ces are ava Idb eat the
SERVICES
System-owned or -leased
rates hsted m the chart
lDW
HIGH
prope 11y.
ResldontlaiScrvfce
Toll blockmg 1s ava1lable at no charge to low
$21 75
$18.60
O'Blencss associates will
1ncorne customers who quahly Surcharges
-~--··IIO!al
not be allowed to usc tobacand fees c;uch as those for emergency 9 11
Rosldcntlnl Low Income
$510
$8 25
co on neighboring properservices are assessed according to government
ties or to enter budd111gs
guidelmes
Business Scrv•ce
$35.80
$42.05
lln&lt;lu!IM f«Wo15ulltc- llna Clwvo
with an odor ot smoke on
OM.-..,"""""""' COI&gt;ngl
Low·~ncome md1v1duals ehglble for Lifeline
themseh es or their clothand Link Up telephone ass,stance programs
in~. l.:.xisting designated
may be ellg1ble for d1scounts 0'1 !hese basic local serv1ce charges through state·spwf ed
outdonr .Sllltlklllg meas Will
telephone assistance plans
be climmatcd.
Of course Windstream provides a comp 1ete menu of optional serv1ces me udmg bundles at
To assist with the transid1scount pnces Wmdstfeam dlso offers basic sent1ces at the rates, te•fT!s and cond1t1ons
tion to a tobacco-free cam
specified In the company's tanHs
pus, O'Alencss as ociates
and patient~ ha' c been and
If you have any questiOI'IS regard ng Wmdstream servrces resrtcl81Mt~M~
will continue to be offered
should call Windstream at 1 Soo-347 1991 and busmcss customers should c
l.SQ0-843·9214
tobacco-cessation
resources.
O'Bicness' tobacco-free
campus task force is chaired

Reliable service at a sensible price.

~r-.~-.-~~

�PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5,

2009

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

Congress shall make no law respectitrg em
establislmwrt qf religiot1 1 or proltibiti11J! the free
exercise thereof: or abridging the .freedom of speec/1,
or of the press; or tire right of tire people peaceabf)•
to assemble, aud to petition the Go11emment
for a redress of..~rievauces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Thursday, Nov. 5, the 309th day of 2009.
There are 56 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 5. 1605, the "Gunpowder Plot" failed as
Guy Fawkes was seized before he could blow up the
English Parliament.
On this date:
In 1872, suffragist Susan B. Anthony defied the law
by attempting to vote for President Ulysses S. Grant.
(Anthony was convicted by a judge and fined $100,
but never paid the fine.)
In 1895, George B. Selden of Rochester, N.Y.,
received the first U.S. patent for an "improved Road
Engine:·
In 1912, Woodrow Wilson was elected president,
defeating Progressive Party candidate Theodore
Roosevelt and incumbent Republican William Howard
Taft.
In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt won an
unprecedented third term in office as he defeated
Republican challenger Wendell L. Willkie.
In 1946, Republicans captured control of both the
Senate and the House in midterm elections
In 1968, Richard M. Nixon won the presidency,
defeating Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and
American Independent candidate George C. Wallace.
In 1974, Ella T. Grasso was elected governor of
Connecticut, becoming the first woman to win a
gubernatorial office without succeeding her husband.
In 1990, Rabbi Meir Kahane, the Brooklyn-born
Israeli extremist, was shot to death at a New York
hotel. (Egyptian native El Sayyed Nosair was convicted of the slaying in federal court.)
Ten years ago: U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield
Jackson declared Microsoft Corp. a monopoly, saying
the software giant's aggressive actions were "stifling
innovation" and hurting consumers. Jackson later
ordered Microsoft broken up into two companies. but
the Justice Department subsequently said it was no
longer seeking a breakup. Pope John Paul II began
his first visit to India in 13 years.
Five years ago: The Kremlin announced that
Russia had given final approval to the Kyoto Protocol
· • on global warming.
One year ago: President-elect Barack Obama pivoted quickly to begin filling out his new administration, selecting hard-charging Illinois Rep. Rahm
Emanuel to be White House chief of staff. A case of
postelection nerves on Wall Street sent the Dow
industrials plunging nearly 500 points. Two men were
shot to death in St Johns, Ariz.; the 8-year~old son
of one of the victims was arrested. (The boy later
pleaded guilty to negligent homicide in the death of
his father's roommate; prosecutors dropped charges
in the father's death as part of a plea deal.) Literary
critic John Leonard died in New York at age 69.
Bollywood movie director B.A. Chopra died in
Mumbai at age 94.
Thought for Today: "Good tc,ste is better than
bad taste, but bad taste is better than no taste at
all." - Arnold Bennett, English poet, author and
critic (1867-1931).

LETTERS TO THE EDIT0R
•
~

.~

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

~

The Daily Sentinel
:
w

Reader Service'
correction Policy

&lt;usPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

: Our main concern in all stories is to Published every morning, Monday
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street.
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
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the Ohio Newspaper Assoc1ation.
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily ~entinel, PO. Bo~
Department extensions are:
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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. t 2
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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Dems: Elections won't stop healthcare
Bv DAVID

ESPO

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Far from chastened by
off-year election setbacks.
congressional Democrats
vowed no let-up in the drive
to pass controversial health
care Wednesday. arguing
that the way to regain \'Oter
tmst '"as to complete what
they started in more prosperm!~ political times.
Any :-uggestion that "we
ought to run like scalded
dogs from trying to fix
health care for this country
is wrong. I believe the
judgment might be more
punishing if we throw in
the to\vd because it's difficult... said North Dakota
Rep. Earl Pomeroy. a political moderate and supporter of the legislation.
Speaker~ Nancy Pelosi
hopes to ha\'e legislation
on the House tloor for a
vote on Saturday. President
Barack Obama. who has
made a health care overhaul the signature initiative
of his first year in office.
planned to visit the Capitol
on f'riday. according to
congressional
officials.
They spoke on condition of
anonymity because the
mcetmgs have not been
announced.
There is no timetable in
the Senate. where the overhaul's ultimate fate is in
considerably more doubt.
but supporters gave no
indication that the election
results had complicated the
challenge facing Majority
'Leader Han·y Reid.
While Democrats surn::ndered governorships in
,high-profile
ra&lt;.:es
in
Viruinia and New Jcrsev on
Tue.sday, they also heid a
House seat in California
and gained one in New
York that had been in
Republican hands for gen-

erations.
Depending
on
how
quickly the newly elected
lawmakers arc sworn in. it
was possible the most
immediate impact of the
elections would be to
increase suppo11 for the
legislation. "From our
-;tandpoint we picked up
votes last night." said
Pelosi. D-Calif.
· Across the Capitol. there
was e\ idence of incremental progress toward passage
of the bill atop Obama 's
domestic agenda when two
Swing-vote Democrats sent
signals thev would vote to
allow debate to begin over
Republican objections. '
One of them. Sen. Ben
Nelson
of
Nebraska.
described Tuesday's elections as a referendum on
the econom) rather than
health care. H~ said blocking debate on th&lt;; bill would
mean the end of etforts to
control health care costs.
"We're making progress
on health reform.'' said
Reid. 0-Nev.• who had set
off alarms on Tuesday
about the prospects for the
bill\ passage this year.
"We're not going to be
bound by any timelines,"
he said then. although his
office quickly sought to
soften the impact with a
statement saying there was
no reason the bill couldn't
be passed by year's end.
Democrats have said for
months their success as a
pruty in 2010 would hinge
on their ability to implement Obama's legislative
agenda. At the same time. a
president's party almost
always loses House seats in
midterm elections. and
often Senate seats as well.
A bad economy and high
woulc;l
unemployment
make that even more likely.
Inevitably, that means

•

Corker didn't say so. but
some mcumbents will lose
their seats. and forces some Reid needs 60 votes only
of them to make difficult because Republicans, unanchoices in the months lead- imously opposed to the
ing up to the elections.
measure. have threatened a
As for Tuesday's results. filibuster to block its pas"For people who have been sage. Absent their delaying
undecided it either keeps tactics. a simple majority
them undecided or moves would be sufficient.
them to no." said Rep.
One group. the conservaStephanie Herseth Sandlin. tive "American Future
D-S.D .. who has yet to dis- Fund:· readied a print ad
close her position on the that warned Democrats
measure. "The analysis of they risked thejr majority if
what happened with inde- they pursued the health
pendent voters is one where care legislation. "Blue
we have to step back and say Dogs: Vote with Pelosi and
what can we do to regain prepare to color your district red next year." it said.
their support." she said.
But there was at least
Jn the Senate. where Reid
anecdotal evidence to the has struggled for months
with health care. it was
opposite.
·Rep. Tom Perriello. a unclear how the electimls
Virginia freshman. said he would affect a strategy that
had gone from being has been sketched in private
opposed to the legislation by Democratic officials.
to ·being undecided. "I
The majority lea~~
think it·s a :-.trongcr bill." announced last week
he said. adding pointedly would include a gover that the electiou i'n his ment insurance pption in
home state "remi nels us just legislation he would send
how important it is to deli,·- to the floor. That was wideer results."
!) seen as a gesture to liberRepublicans. celebrating als in his caucus and union
their best election night in voters back home in
several years. alternately 1\:evada. where he faces retaunted Democrats and election next year.
sought w :-.hake their confiWithin a fev.· weeks, he
dence on one of the most \\'ill need the 60 votes for
sweeping pieces of legisla- the proposal. and if he is
tion in recent memory.
unable to get them will pre"Let's throw his bill sumablv fall back to a
aside," Sen. Bob Corker. R- weaker- measure. perhaps
Tenn.. said of Reid in one that holds the governremarks on the Senate floor ment option in abeyance
that referred to the election until it is shown that conresults. He said he sensed sumers don't have adequate
hesitation
among choices for affordable
Democrats, and noted Reid insurance.
docs not have 60 votes
According to this sceneeded to pass the overhaul. nario. it would then be up
"You wouldn't vote for to liberab. generally in safe
this bill if we offered it." he seats. to decide whether to
said to the Democrats. yield to the moderates who
.. You shouldn't vote for it often struggle to survive just because your leader- or risk collapse of one.
ship and your president the most ambitious pie
want to see it happen."
of legislation in years.

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

_o b_it_uan
_ ·es_ _ _ _ _
•,

Bonnie Rousey Boug

Bonnie Rouse) Boug. 68.
'' cnt to be with the Lord on
Oct. :20,2009.
Born Nov. R. 1940 in
Pomeroy, she was the
daughter of Hugh Rousey
d Thelma Young Daniels.
c graduated from Racine
• Lgh School in 1959. Later,
she worked at the Varsity
Theatre in Athens and the
federal
government
in
Washington D.C.
She ''as preceded in death
b) her great-gmndparcnts
Norma and Judge C.E.
Peoples,
grandparents
Bonnie Rousey Boug
Katerine Millikan and Jacob
and Celia Young, and her father Hu~h Rousey.
Surviving are her mother. three ststers. Barbara Sims of
Arilona, Dollie (Lany) ~lees of Portland. Ohio. Debra
(Rick) Annis of Wyoming, t\\O brother~. Roland (Su;de)
Rousey of Bloomingdale. Ohio. and Michael (Roxianna)
Daniels nf W)oming: fhe nephews, Tony Sims of Ari:tOna.
~lark and And) Sim of Massachusetts. Kyle and Ryan Mees
of Po11land; five nieces, Juclyn Mccs of Portland. Victoria
Schiller, Rehccca Tacy. ~ l elisa Daniels, and Tammy Olson
ot Wyoming. A memorial service will be held at I p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 7, 2009 &lt;\1 the First Baptist Church, Fifth and
\t1ain Street. Racine. with Pastor Eaton officiating.

Local Briefs

e God's NET hosting music fest
PO:O.tEROY - Blue grass and gospel music will be presented adt 6:30 Saturday at God's NET. ~tulberry
Community Center 6:30 p.m. Saturday. Performing v. ill be
New Jemsalcm, Blue Grass Gentlemen. and Rachael
Jackson . There will be a free will offerin!! taken.
Concession:-. \\ill be sold.
-

Benefit sing planned
SYRACUSE - A benefit sing for Dennis McClelland
will be held on Nov. 21 at 7 p.m. at the S)racu:-,e
Community Church. Singers will include 2 for Jesus. Voices
of Faith. Angela Gibson, Debbie Dodrill. and Joe McCloud.

Implant seminar set
ATHENS - A free educational seminar on dental
implants will be held by Dr. Craig Mathews from 6 to 7
p.m. on No\'. 10 at the Riverwalk Dental Office. 530 W.
Union St., Ste A.
His topic v. ill be "Dental Implants and Decisions About
Missing Teeth." v. ith information on the advantages of dental implants. To make a reservation to attend or further
information call740-592-14R3 or 1800-923-7329.

Officials: Swine flu
confirmed in Iowa cat

•

DES MOI~ES, lm\a (AP) -A 13-year-old Iowa cat has
been infected with swine flu. veterinary and federal officials said Wednesday, and it is belie\'ed to be the first case
of the HI N I virus in a feline.
The domestic shorthaired cat was treated last week at
Iowa State University College of Veterinary Medicine in
Ames and has recovered. officials said. The virus also has
been confirmed in two ferrets - one in Oregon and the
other in Nebraska - but they died.
''We've known certainly it's possible this could happen,"
said Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
spokesman Tom Skinner. ''This may be the first instance
where we have documentation that transmission occurred
involving cats or dogs."
The veterinarian who treated the cat, Dr. Brett Sponseller,
said two of the three people in the eat's Iowa home had flu-like
symptoms before the cat became ill. The case was confirmed
at both Iowa State and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Rizer from Page Al
. ry was dischar~ed. Bond was not addressed after the jury
urned its verdtct.
After Rizer's indictment on the aggravated murder charge.
· her bond was set at $500,000 cash. She has been in jail since
that time, although her attorney, Hern1an Carson. asked the
coun to reduce her bond while the case was pending.
In June, Car~on asked for a modification of Rizer's bond to
a $1 million personal recognizance bond, and a $250,000
appearance bond, and asked that a 10 percent, or $25,000 cash
bond, be permitted in order to facilitate her release from jail.
In a memoradurn in support of the bond modificatioh,
Carson said Rit.er had no past criminal record. and would
stay with her sister in Canal Winchester until the trial was
concluded.
Williams said Tuesday she plans to retry Rizer on the
murder charge as early as next month. The grand jury is
scheduled to convene on Nov. 6, but that session was
ordered prior to the Rizer verdict.

•

Book from Page Al
deployw soldiers endure. both on the battlefield and upon
returning home."
According to Deeter's biography. he started his career
with the US Army in Bremerhaven Germany. where he
served for two years as a Military Policeman. He attended
the US Army's Rotary Wing flight school at the age of 21,
d has been a hclicoptL·r pilot for all of his adult life. He
Ids instructor ratings to include instrument flight instruc. and instrument ground instructor, and holds an ATP (airline transport pilot) helicopter rating.
He has also served as a lead pilot, chief pilot, and company check airman . His flight experience includes everything from helicopter tours in the Grand Canyon. offshore
oil field flying, Emergency Medical Services. and flight
instructing. In his career he has flown in deserts. mountains, swamps. over the ocean, day and night. combat, and
more. and lived to tell about it.
Bom and raised in Meigs Count). his career has taken him
all over the United States and much of the world. He currently resides with his wife and their twin five-year old sons in
Springfield, Mo. where he continues to fly as an EMS pilot.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thurs day, Novembers, 2009

J

---

Success in 'space elevator' competition
B Y J OHN A NTCZAK

AssociATED PREss
EDWARDS AIR FORCE
BASE, Calif. - A robot
powered by a ground-based
Ia cr beam climbed a long
cahle dangling from u helicopter on Wednesday to
qunlify for prize money in a
$2 million competition to
test the pott:ntial reality of
the scit:nce fiction concept
of space elevators.
The highly technical contest brought tt:ams from
Mi~sotll i.
Alaska
and
Seattle to Rogers Dry Lake
in the Mojave De en, most
familiar to the public as a
~pace shuttle landing site.
The contest requires their
machines to climb 2.953
feet (nearly I kilometer) up
a cable slung beneath a helicopter hovering nearly a
mile high.
LaserMothe'.
vehicle
zipped up to the top in ju:-.t
over four minutes and
immediately repeated the
feat, qualifying for at least
a $900.000 second-place
pri1.c.
The device, a squan! of
photo voltaic panels about 2
feet by 2 feet and topped by
a motor structure ami thin
triangle frame, had failed to
respond to the laser three
times before it was lowered.
inspected and then hoisted
back up b} the helicopter
for thc successful tries.
Laser~lotive's two principals. Jordin Karc and
Thomas Nugent, said they
were re lie\ cd after t\\ o
years of work. They said
their real goal IS to develop
a business based on the idea
of beaming power. not the
futuristic idea of accessing
space via an elevator climb':
ing a cable.
"We both are pretty skeptical or its ncar-term
J)rospects,'' Karc said of an
elevator.
The contest, however.
demonstmtcs that beaming
power works, Nugent said.
..Anybody who needs
power in one place and
can't run wires to it- we'd
be able to dcli,er power,"
Kare said.
Earlier out on the lakebed.
team member Nick Burrows
had pointed out hov. it grips
the cable with modified
. kateboard wheels and the
laser is aimed v. ith an X
Box game controller.
It had never climbed
higher than 80 feet previously, he said.
The day's competition
began late after hours of
testing the cable system.
refueling the helicopter and

Team leader
Dav1d
Bashford,
right, prepares the
LaserMoJive
robotic
climber
during the
$2 m1llion
Space
Elevator
Games at
the NASA
Dryden
Flight
Research
Center at
Edwards
Air Force
Base, Calif..
Wednesday.
In a test of
the concept,
robotiC
machines
powered by
laser beams
will try to
climb a
cable suspended from
a helicopter,
on a course
2,953 feet
high.
AP photo

waib for specific time wmdo\\ s in which the lasers
can be fired v. ithout harming satellites passing overhead.
The Kansas City Space
Pirates went first with a
machine
that
imtiall)
balked but eYentunlly began
climbing. It~ speed wa~ too
slow to qualify fOJ' any
prizes but it got \\ithin
about 160 feet of the top
before the laser had to be
shut down for satellite protection. ·
Ben Shelef. CEO of the

he smd. "Now that it's happening I'm actually happ)
alread). It doesn't matter
what the outcome b."
Funded by a NASA program to explore bold technology, the contest is
intended to encourage
developmpnt of a theory
that originated in the 1960s
and was popularized by
Arthur C. Clarke\ 1979
novel "The Fountnins of
Paradise:·
Space elevutors are envisioned as a way to reach
~pace v. ithout the risk and
contest-~ponsoring
expense of rocket .
Spaceward Foundation. said
Instead. electrically powthe Pirates had a minor laser ered vehicles would mn up
tracking problem but the and down a cable anchored
real problem appeared to be to a ground stmcture and
in the mechanical system.
extending thousands of
As the afternoon grew miles up to a mass in geolate. the Universlt) of ~ynchronous orbit
the
Saskatchewan ·s
Space kind of orbit communicaDesign Team had to put off tions satellites are placed in
its attempts until Thursday. to stay over a fixed spot on
All three team::. had funher the Ea11h.
chance~ to qualify through
Electncity would be supFriday.
plted through a concept
The competition wa~ five knov. n as ''power beaming.''
years in the 1miking. Shclcf ~round-based lasers pointsaid.
mg up to photo \'oltaic cells
"A lot of hurdles to cross," on the bottom of the climb-

ing \Chicle omething
like an up~ide-down solar
power s) stem.
The space elevator competition ha!&gt; not produced a
winner in ih previous three
vears. but has become
lncrea:-.ingly difficult.
The vehicle:- must climb
at an a\ crage speed of 16.4
feet (5 meters) per second.
or about 11 miles (I~ kilometers) per hour, to qualify
for the top pritc. A lc:-.ser
prize is a\ ailable for 'chicles that climb at 2 mders
per second.
The rules allow one team
to collect all $2 million or
for :-,urns to be shared
amom! all three teams
depending on their achievements.
While the concept of an
elevator to space ma) seem
Andrew
too
fanciful,
Williams, 26. a mechanical
engineer
on
the
Saskatche\\ an team. said
he has no doubts it will
come about.
"Once we put our minds
to something it's just •• matter of time for us to achieve
it," he said.

Veterans
, from Page AI
This will be a day for veterans
and their families to come
shop," she said. "I think that
this area in both West Vu-ginia
and Ohio has such a historv of
having so many people in· the
military that have faithfully
served the countr). Locally. 1t
is important that we don't forget the sacrifices that they
have made."
During the celebration,
Fruth stores will offer
refreshments as well as have
vmious displays. According
to Fruth. each Fruth
Pharmacy is doing someth111g
different to honor veterans.
"This is our way to reach
out to families who may
have husbands on activit\'
duty. It is an opponunity to
meet other \'eterans and to
have feliO\\ ship."' she liaid.
Hope Roush/photo
The 10 percent discount
does not apply to purchases Fruth Pharmacy will host a Veteran's Day celebration on Wednesday, Nov. 11. All veterans
of pre~criptions, alcohol and as well as active military personnel will receive a 10 percent discount on store items along ·
tobacco products. For more with a free patriotic themed gift. Pictured from left are Bob Caruthers, Post C9mmander of
informatton on the Veteran's the VFW in Mason; lynn Fruth, chairman of the Fruth Board; Frances Fruth; Miles Epling,
D.ty celebration. contact president of the Mason County Comm1sston; Paul Skinner, Point Pleasant Fruth Pharmacy
) our local Fruth Pharmac).
manager; and Ralph Ross, Post Commander of the New Haven American Leg1on.

Vaccine rrom Page Al
thl.! schools or open it up to
everyone who wants it.
"But right now." he said.
"we'll wait for the next
shipment, sec ""hat we get
and then make the decision
on what we'll do."
.\1arshall ~aid that of the
70U doses that came in
Tuesday, 43 were of the
nasal mist and the rest were
the injectible vaccine.
Meanwhile. the focus is
on pre\ention. Health officials suggest the following
guidelines to limit the

spread of swine llu: AH)id
contact with persons who
may be suspected of ha' ing
the tlu: when you cough or
snce;e. cover \OUr nose and
mouth with a tissue or) ou1
sleeve (if no tissues are
available). throw tissues into
a tra~h can: after ) ou cough
or sneeze. v.: a h ) our hand
with soap and \\ater, or u'&gt;e
an alcohol based hand gel: if
you thmk you are ill v. ith the
flu, a\oid close contact" ith
other~ as much as posstble
and see your famil} doctor.

..

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bna I donald o the\ aughanagenc) com

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Pomcro~, OH ~5769

�PageA6

~he Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Gallia 911 director Stephen L. Wilson dies
BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County lost a good man
Wednesday
with
the
untimely death of lJII
Director Stephen L. Wilson.
Wilson. 50, died late

with 911. he worked for the
Cit) of Gallipolis as a
police and fire dispatcher
from 1978 to 1997.
Wilson was .a 1977 gmduate of Gallia Academ} High
School and earned a police
science
degree
from
Hocking College in J978.

Wednesday afternoon after
being transported to Ohio
State University Medical
Center for treatment of an
undisclosed illness.
Wilson served as 911
director from the system·~
inception in 1997 to the
present. Prior to his tenure

Wibon was the son of
Hobart and Beverly Wil on,
Jr. He also leave~ behind a
brother. Keith, and a ~ister,
Brenda. and two nephews.
Arrangements are under
the direction of Cremeens
Funeral
Chapel
m
Gallipolis.
•

Ohio ponders a futur~ with casinos
Bv JuuE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS
Developers of four new
Ohio casinos looked eagerly to the future Wednesday,
even as opponents concocted plans to stymie their
efforts and surrounding
states braced for economic
losses .
Penn National Gamin!!
Inc. president Dan Wilmoit
showed off the site where a
300,000-st~uare-foot

Nicole G. Hill

Local student
receives American
FFA Degree
POMEROY -

i':icole G.

Hill. a 2008 graduate of
Meigs
High
School,
received the American FFA
Degree at the 82nd i'ational
FFA com·ention held Oct.
24 in Indianapolb.
The American Degree i~
the highest degree awarded
by the National rFA
Orgamzation and recognizes demonstrated leadership abilities and outstanding achievements in agriculture business. production,
processing and service programs
_ Less than 154 FI-&lt;"A members advance through their
local chapter and state FFA
degree programs to earn the
national
degree.
Hill.
daughter of Earley and
Laura Hill. graduated from
}Iobart Institute of Welding

in June 2009. She is currently employed with ~orthup
Grumman building Navy
ships in Pascagouls. Miss.
She is a member of the
Meigs FFA Chapter where
her agriculture education
instructor and FFA advisor
was Ronald Vlasak.
At the awarding of the
American Degree. she was
presented a gold American
FFA Degree key atld a certificate in a blue leatherctte
frame to commemorate the
achievement. The recognition program is sponsored
by Case. Farm Credit.
Pioneer H-Bred. a Dupont
Co. and Syngenta. as a special project of the National
rFA Foundation which is
the nation's largest annual
youth recognition program
in the COUntf).

Victorian Christmas
home tour slated
PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
The Julia-Ann Square
Historic District hoi iday
home tour will showcase
five histone homes decorated for the season on Dec. 5
and 6.
On Saturday, the t'Ours
wtll be escorted by guides
in
period
attire.
Homeo\\ ners will share the
hbtory of their homes, and
guests
\\ill
attend
a
¥ictorian tea as part of the
$15 donation. Tour and
teas will begin at the First

United MethodJ~t Church at
lOth and Juliana Streets at I
and 3 p.m. with a candlelight tour at 6 p.m.
On Sunday, the tour will
be self-guided. and there
will he no tea. The cost is
$10. Children ten and under
are admitted free when
accompan'ied by an adult.
Proceeds \\ill go to
improvements
to
the
Hbtoric District.

For

information and
call 304-422986/ or 304-485-7164.
re~en•ations

Meigs County Forecast
Thursday..•Mostly cloud)
in
the
morning ...Then
becoming mostly sunny.
llighs in the lower 50s. West
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Thursday night .•.Partly
cloudy
in
th~.:
evening ...Thcn becoming
mostly clear. Cold \\ ith
lows around 30. Northwest
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
the mid 50s. Southeast
winds around 5 mph.
Friday
night ...Ciear.
Lows in the mid 30s. South
winds around 5 mph.

Saturday
through
Sunday
night •..Mostly
clear. Highs in the mid 60s.
Lows in the lower 40s.
Monday and Monday
night••. Pm1ly cloudy. Highs
in the upper 60s. Lows in
the mid 40s.
~fuesday... Mostly cloudy.
Htgh~ around 60.
Tuesday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of shower:-;. Lows in
the lo\\er 40s.
Veterans Day...Mostly
sunny. Highs in the upper
50.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.75
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 61.05
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 34.14
Big Lots (NYSE) - 24.81
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.51
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.81
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
-8.52
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.86
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.67
City Holding (NASDAQ) 30.14
Collins (NYSE) - 49.63
DuPont (NYSE)- 32.19
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.07
Gannett (NYSE)- 10.14
General Electric (NYSE) 14.19
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 24.92
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 42.21
Kroger (NYSE) - 23.09
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 17.78

.

Norfolk Southern (NYSE) - 49.86
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA5DAQ)- 21.65
BBT (NYSE) - 24.02
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 8.53
Pepsico (NYSE) - 60.38
Premier (NASDAQ) - 6.15
Rockwell (NYSE) - 42.05
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.27
Royal Dutch Shell - 59.37
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 68.12
Wai·Mart (NYSE) - 50.38
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.16
WesBanco (NYSE)- 12.86
Worthington (NYSE) - 11.27
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Nov. 4, 2009,
provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Galllpolls at (740) 441-9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674·0174.
Member SIPC.

· Hollywood
CasinoColumbus employing 2.000
people is expected to materialize bv the end of 2012.
Voters· Tuesday approved
casinos for four Ohio cities.
"1 know there's been a lot
of things said by the opposition, a lot of mistruth~. a lot
of blatant lie~ about what
the casino will bring to the
city of Columbu~. to the
state of Ohio,'' he said. "I
can assure you that \\e're
going to develop here,
we're going to create these
jobs, and we're going to get
people back to \\ ork .''
Republican state lawmakers unhappy with the vote
began work immediately on
a 20 I0 ballot measure. however. State Rep. Clyde
Evans said he plans a constitutional amendment that
makes.changes to the terms
of the casino deal including
increasing the tax rate from
33 percent to 60 percent.
That measure would need
approval by a Legislature
where political control is
mixed.
Ohio
Gov.
Ted
Strickland said he's -disappointed the issue passed.
He said he will work with
lawmakers to assure casino
rules and regulations get
Ohioan~ the best deal possible. noting that revenue
from the plan \\ill lend little help to the state's lingering budget hole.

Ohio GOP
lawmakers:
Execution
process can
be fixed
COLUMBUS (AP)
1\vo Republican lawmakers
advising Ohio's Democratic
governor on changes to the
state's
lethal
injection
process say it shouldn't be
hard to fix the system.
The lawmakers, both proponents of capital punishment, are among state legislators helping Gov. Ted
Strickland find medical personnel willing to help the
state improve its injection
process. Both say they got
involved to make sure
recent problems with lethal
injection don't lead to
attempts to eliminate the
death penalty.
''We want to make sure
our well-established judicial
rights to administer capital
punishment in appropriate
cases are preserved and \\ill
not be defeated bv ne\\ and
ingenious means of dodging
the executioner,'· Sen. Bill
Seitz. of Cincinnati, said
Wednesday.
Seitz said he\ !Hiked to
lawyers and doctors hut has
yet to find anyone \\ illmg to
come forward. But his conversations have suggested
changes Ohio could adopt.
ranging from using a retired
doctor during executions to
re4uiring that inmates drink
enough liquids before an
execution to keep their
veins healthy.
Sen. Tim Grendcll has
contacted current and retired
doctor::. looking for advice.
"J find it difficult to
believe there i~n 't a functional solution to this problem.'' said Grendell, of
Chesterland.

"I think if the economy
was not facing these reccssionary pressures that it
would probably not have
pas::.ed.'' Strickland said.
"But people are hungry for
jobs. and the promise of
jobs was what caused them
to support this.''
Dennis Forst, a gaming
industry
analyst
for
KeyBanc Capital Markets
in Los Angeles. also predicted there will be lawsuits
forthcoming that delay the
plan. He expects casino
operators to tum their sights
now to Kentucky. a lone
casino holdout in the region.
Penn National officials
enthusiastically pushed the
Ohio facilities' benefits.
They pledged to assuage
the concerns of their rivals,
work cooperatively with
restaurant and hotel operators worried about competition, and \\OW city planners with architectural renderings.
Penn National partnered
with Cleveland Cavalier~
owner Dan Gilbert in an
expensive ballot campaign
that touted the jobs casinos
in Columbus. Cleveland.
Cincinnati and Toledo
would bring to a state where
unemployment has topped
10 percent.
After a campaign that
topped 2008's $40 million
1
in presidential campaign
spending. the pro-casino
Ohio Jobs &amp; Growth
Committee turned around
an historically anti-gambling state that had reject-

ed expanded gambling
four times in the past 20
years. The pro-casino campaign spent $21 for every
yes vote.
Victory came despite
warnings from the opposing
TruthPAC. backed by MTR
Gaming Inc . chairman
Jeffrey Jacobs. that the jobs
numbers were exaggerated
and the lengthy con titutional amendment had other
problems.
U.S.
Sen.
George
Voinovich vowed to "be
their conscience'' and hold
casino operators to their
jobs promises. He predicted
casinos would take a particularly
heavy
toll
on
Cleveland. a national poverty leader and a city where he
was once mayor.
"I am terribly disappointed,'' Voinovich said in a
statement. .. As a result of
the passage of Issue 3.
there will be a great deal of
pain and sufferTng in Ohio.
I feel for the families of
those who ''ill experience
casinos for the first time in
their live:- and, once lured
in. will become addicted to
gambling."
KeyBanc's Forst said economic benefits of Ohio casinos will be mixed.
"It'll
certainly
help
Ohio's economy, through
the tax dollars and the jobs
and keeping the money in
the borders of the state:·
Forst said. "On a regional
ba'iis, I'm not sure it does
anything at all, because
whatever is gained by Ohio

is potentially lost to Indiana,
Michigan,
Pennsylvania
and West Virginia.''
A newly released report
by the Indiana Legi lative
Services Agency predicted
that state would be hard hit
by casinos in Ohio. losing
$93 million in gambling
taxes based on revenues in
the first year alone. Analyst
Joseph Greff at J.P. Morgan
categorized the Ohio initiative as a "mild negative'' for
the southern Indiana casino
industf)'.
Michi£!an tourism leaders
were also keeping close
watch on behalf of Detroit,
where casinos bring in $I .3
billion a year with the help
with thousands of Ohio
gamblers.
MTR Gaming Inc ., which .
operates
the
popular
Mountaineer Casino &amp;
Resort over the border in
West Virginia, was a big
loser in Tuesday's election.
Jacobs spent $6 miiJion on
his aggressive campaign
against the ballot measure
in hopes of protecting
MTR 's interests both out of
state and in Columbu~.
where it owns a struggling
horse track.
Gambling industl') expert
Jeffrey Hooke, of Hooke
AssoCiates. said Ohio casino licenses could have commanded from $350 million
in Toledo to $700 million in
Cleveland if they had heen
competitively bid. The constitutional amendment calls
for collecting $50 million
per licen~e.

Heroes
On November 11, our nation will pause to pay tribute to the thousands
of men and women who have .proudly served their country during times of
crises and peace.
This Veteran's Day, the Daily Sentinel will publish a very special tribute
honoring area veterans. You can join in our salute by including the
veteran in your life, living or deceased, who have served or is currently
serving in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces.

Your choice of Two Styles ...
Ad Only $10.00
(shov. n actual size)

r-----------------,
Please Fill Out And Return With
Your Payment to:

In Honor Of

VETERAN SALUTE

Major
Earl Jones

C/0 The Daily Sentinel

1969-1971
Army
VietNam
Love, Your Family
Ad With Photo - $15.00

P.O. Box 799
Pomeroy, OH 45769
In Honor of (name and rank)
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(Shown actual size)
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Photo of
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AD DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOV. 6, 2009
Sentinel ads must be prepaid.
Photos may be picked up after Nov. 11th
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In Honor Of

Corporal
Bob Johnson
1991-1992
Marines Desert Storm
Love, Your Family

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

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
(740) 992-2155

�'

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
t\'latsui wins MVP, Page 82
Steelers walk thin line, Page 86

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Pryor, Clark took different paths tO QB jobs
Friday's Games
Wahama at Buffalo
Point at Champanville
Burch at Hannan

All games start at 7:30p.m.

Gophers' Maresh
returning from
heart surgery
Bv RUSTY MILLER
AP SPORTS WRITER

After
each
victory.
Minnesota
coach
Tim
Brewster announces a series
of team award winners.
Rarely does the scout team
defensive player of the
week get much attention.
Until this week.
wster gave the award
.
Sam Maresh,
ebacker
•
who was the prize recreuit
of Brewster's 2008 class
and missed all of last season
after undergoing open-heart
surgery.
And Brewster could not
be prouder of how far he has
come.
"He's really playing well.
He's flying around. He's
100
percent
healthy."
Brewster said. "It's just
really great to see the way
he 's loving the game of
football and the way he's
helping us prepare every
week."
The surgery and subsequent recovery have done
nothing to diminish the
expectations for Maresh,
whom Brewster compared
to Bears standout Brian
Urlacher on the day he
signed.
"He makes it hard on our
ffi se." Brewster said.
running to the footnd is extremely physie 's going to be a heck
of a player for us.''

SHOPAHOLIC LINEBACKER:. Big Ten tackles
leader Greg Jones has taken
a circuitous
path
to
Mtchigan State.
Spartans coach Mark
Dantonio recruited Jones. a
native of Cincinnati, when
Dantonio was coaching the
hometown Bearcats. Jones
committed to Minnesota.
and Dantonio and most of
his staff moved north to
Michigan State. When former Gophers coach Glen
Mason got fired. Dantonio
decided to go after Jones
again.
Dantonio picks up the
narrative.
"We couldn't understand
why we couldn't get him.
Finally, he said, 'Coach! ...
The Mall of America!· We
said, 'Hey, we've got malls
i.
t Lansing. tool' That
g
mover the top."

LESHOURE THING:
Three months ago, Illinois
running
back
Mikel
LeShoure was sitting out
the Illini 's home opener
against Illinois State, forced
to the bench for a violation
of team rules the coach has
refused to elaborate on.
Last season, he missed
t.(Jne with a broken jaw reportedly the work of an
angry teammate.
Now. LeShoure is looking
like the answer at tailback
for Illinois.
The sophomore, who
played his high school ball
JUSt a couple of miles west
of: Memorial Stadium at
Gb.ampaign Central, has
2..72 yards on 33 carries the
past two games, a loss at
Purdue and last Saturday's
38-13 upset of Michigan.
· LeShoure says that, after
sitting out the Illinois State
g•
• he realized he needed
!
gain his teammates'

ttust.
. "I came back out with a
whoLe different mindset."
he said. ''I just wanted them
to be able to trust me and
know that I'd be there for
them."
· LeShoure had 150 yards
against the·Wolverines, his
best college performance. It
included a 70-yard touch-

Please see Big Ten, 86

STATE COLLEGE. Pa.
(AP) - Lost in the hoopla
over Ohio State quarterback
Ten-clle Pryor's tnp home to
Pennsylvania this weekend
ts the story of how Penn
State found its own signalcaller in the Buckeyes' backyard.
Cool in the pocket and
confident in the locker room.
Younostown, Ohio-native
Darylf Clark has tumed into
a star with the No. 11 Nittany
Lions (8-1, 4-1 B1g Ten).
Pryor's visit Saturday to
Beaver Stadium will be his
first since signing with No.
15 Ohio State (7-2, 4-l)
more than 18 months ago to
end a heated recruiting race.
Still, things have tumed out
just fine in Happy Valley.
'Tve t1ied to say time and
time again ... I think Daryll
Clark has been an outstanding perfom1er for us," Penn
State coach Joe Paterno said
this week before adding his
signature phrase reserved for
his favorite Nittany Lions.
"Daryll Clark is one heck
of a football player."
Penn State is 19-3 since
Ciark took over as the starter
in 2008. Clark's 37 career
touchdown passes are four

shy of tying the . ' ool
record. and his 20 tT
1g
touchdowns ties hi
\ t!h
mentor Michael R 1 r.son
for most TDs on the ground
by a Nittany Lions QB.
And to think. just two
years ago. hardcore Penn
State fans were giddy about
pursuing Pryor. the quarterback
phenom
out
of
Jeannette, Pa.
What was not to love about
Pryor?
A 6-foot-6 phenom from a
western Pennsylvania region
known as the Cradle of
Quarterbacks for producing
the likes of Dan Marino. Joe
Montana and Joe Namath.
Pryor was the only player in
state high school htstory to
ru~h for more than 4,000
yards and throw for more
than 4,000 in a career.
In contrast. Clark was a
mid-level recruit upon graduating from Ursuline High in
Youngstown in 2004.
"Clark was a completelx
under-the-radar kind of guy,·
said Mark Brennan. the editor of FightonS"tate.com.
which covers Penn Stat!!
recruiting. "People knew
about him, but he was not the
kind of five-star. all-every-

thin~. prospect that Pryor
was.
After ::.pending a year in
prep school to brush up on
grades. Clark joined the
Nittany Lions in 2006. the
first of two ::.easons backing
up Anthony MoreiiJ - himself a hi~ly touted QB from
western Pennsylvania.
The
Pryor
recruiting
sweepstakes followed the
next year. Clark helped out
trying to lure a prospect who
could potentially leapfrog
him on the depth chart.
"That was kind of a difficult time for him .... He felt a
little
uncomfortable."
Clark's father. Daryll Clark.
Sr.. said in a phone interview. "But he handled it
well. He played his part.''
The ending is well-known
now in Big Ten circles. Pryor
couldn't make a choice by
the February 2008 date that
opened the fonnal signing
period. and took about
an9ther month before deciding on Ohio State over Penn
State, Michigan and Oregon
But that still didn't clear
the way for Clark in Happy
Valley. Also on the Penn
State roster at the time was
highly touted sophomore Pat

Wahama looks
to secure playoff
spot at Buffalo

Devlin. who had set the
Pennsylvania career prep
passing rc&lt;.:ord with 8.162
yards at Downingtown East.
Bv GARY CLARK
Clark tinally secured the
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
starting job after outplaying
Devlin in 2008 preseason
BUFFALO, W.Va. -The
camp. Clark may not have post-season playoff hopes of
the explosive running ability the Wahama White Falcons
that Robinson had, but he is are teetering on the edge
the more P.Olished passer when the Bend Area football
with the ability. to scramble team travels to Buffalo on
out of trouble and bowl over Friday night for its 2009
defenders if needed.
regular season grid finale.
"Offensively they have the
The White Falcons are
blessing of having a very cun-ently 7-2 on the year and
veteran quarterback who hold down the ninth position
you've seen ~row as each among Class A schools.
year's gone,' Ohio State That ranking would seem to
coach Jim Tressel said.
assure the Falcons of
There have been some extending its season into the
knocks on Clark. as expected playoffs but according to
with the high-profile job of WWVA .coni the Mason
Penn State starting quarter- County team controls its
back.
own destiny as far as getting
Most notably, some critics into the 2009 playoffs.
or columnists will point out What that means is wrn the
that Clark has faltered in finale at Buffalo and remove
some big games. Arguably all doubt while a loss to the
his two worst performances · Bison could jeopardize the
of his career have come in WHS chances of getting into
losses to Iowa in September the final
16 at all.
and last season
WWVA.com has nine teams
He threw two picks in the already having clinched
final three minutes of the with another five controlling
its own destiny.
Please see Pryor, 82
Wahama is in the latter
category along with Iaeger,
Parkersburg
Catholic,
Moorefield. Valley Fayette
and Calhoun County. Of
those
teams
Iaeger,
Moorefield and Valley
Fayette are favorites which
should bring the number of
teams clinching up to 12
which leaves only four positions open. Wahama and
Calhoun County are expected to be in a fight against
Buffalo and St. Marys
respectively
with
Parkersburg Catholic being
the lone team of the squads
that control its own destiny
not expected to win. The
Wirt County against South
Hanison contest could have
a great deal of bearing on
the Falcons' playoff hopes as
will the Calhoun County
against St Marys match-up.
Unfortunately it appears
Wahama will be on the road
for the first round of the
playoffs regardless if they
capture their 2009 regular
season finale or not on
Friday.
Buffalo is in a similar situation as when they met

Yankees win 27th World Series championship
NEW YORK (AP) - Paint
the town in pinstripes! Nearly
a decade after their dyna-;ty
ended on a blooper m the
desert, the New York Yankees
are baseball's best again.
Hideki Matsui tied a World
Series record with six RBis.
Andy Pettitte won on short
rest and New York beat the
Philadelphia Phillies 7-3 in
Game 6 on Wednesday night.
finally seizing that elusive
27th title. It was the team's
first since winning three
straight from 1998-2000.
Matsui powered a quick
rout of old foe Pedro Martinez
- and when Mariano Rivera
~ot the final out it was ecsta&lt;;y
m the Bronx for George
Steinbrenner's go-for-broke
bunch.
What a way for Alex
Rodriguez. Derek Jeter and
crew to christen their $1.5 billion ballpark: One season. one
championshiJ?.
And to thmk it capped a
season that started in turmoil
- a steroids scandal involving A-Rod, followed by hiP.
sutgery that kept him out unt1l
May.
About 100 miles south, disappointment.
For Chase Utley and the
Phillies. it was a fJUstrating
end to another scintillating
season. Philadelphia fell two
wins short of becoming the
first NL team to repeat as
World Series champions since
the 1975-76 Cincinnati Reds.

Please see Wahama, Bl
,

AP photo

The New York Yankees celebrate after winning Game 6 of the Major League Baseball
World Series against the Philadelphia Phillies Wednesday in New York.
Ryan Howard's sixthIn a fitting coincidence, this
New York spent billions
inning homer came too late to championship came eight trying to get back. At long
wipe away his World Series years to the day after the last. it did.
slump. and Phillies pitchers Yankees lost Game 7 of the
Hey Babe and Yogi. Mr.
rarely · managed to slow 200 I World Series in A1iwna October and Joltin · Joe Matsui and the Yankees' on Luis Gonzalez's brokenmachine.
bat single off Rivera.
Please see Champs, 86

Poirit Pleasant travels to Chapmanville
By Rick Simpkins
Sports Correspondent
CHAPMANVILLE.
W.Va. - Out of the frying
pan. into the fire? Well, not
exactly, but the Point
Pleasant Big Blacks' final
game of the regular season is
equally as important as
Herbert Hoover was a week
ago and probably just as
challenging.
Another state newspaper
said
the
Point
Pleasant/Chapman v il I e
game will determine the
whole bottom half of the
Class AA playoff bracket.
The Big Blacks have jumped
to lOth this week after thetr
big win over the Huskies last
Friday night. A win this
week and they probably stay
right there in the final regular season ratings. However,
if all the stars line up just
right for the locals -- there is
a mathematical chance that
they will be home for the
first round of the playoffs.
Chapmanville,
meanwhile. is coming off a 40-17
loss to Wayne and they really need a win this week.
They surely don't want to go
into the playoffs with a two
game losing streak -- something they did a year ago
after dropping their final two

Jan Haddoxlsubmltted photo

Point Pleasant's Eric Roberts ( 17) hands the ball off to Derek Pinson (33) during Friday
evening's contest against Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant High School. Blockers on the
play include Casey Hogg (76) and Beau Bellamy (83).
regular season game::.. also 19). Poca (30-26). Logan PPHS Head Coach Dave
to
Wayne
and
Point (21-14). Man (16-14), Tug Darst. "They have &lt;} good
Pleasant.
Valley (47-0). and Tolsia quarterback and two good
The Tigers come into tpis (33-16). Their losses have running backs. They
the
important grune with a 6-3 come at the hands of Scott ball well and they can throw
record and a I 2th place (32-8). Wayne (40-17). and it. also. And. they need this
ranking in this week\ WVS- Herbert Hoo\'er (30-20). game as badly as we need it.
SAC ratings. Chapmanville "Chapmanville is an impresPlease see Point, 86
has defeated Sissonville (34- sive football team,'' said

run

'

Wildcats .
hosts Burch
BY SARAH HAWLEY
MDSSPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

ASHTON, W.Va. -The
Hannan Wildcats (0-9)
face off against the Burch
Bulldogs (4-5) in a senior
night match~p at Hannan
High School.
The Wildcats look to
improve on last weeks
performance in which they
held
thetr
opponent.
Montcalm. to a season low
26 points.
Hannan has come close
this season. leading at the
half against Williamson.
and a i\vo touchdown loss
to Green.
The Bulldogs have alternated wins and losses this
season, losing their opener
to Betsy Lane (KY). and
then trading wins and
loses for the next eight
games.
If the pattern
holds, Burch would win
their season finale. For
Burch. many of the wins
have been close, winning
three of their four games
by one score or less. while
four of the five losses
ha\'e been by at least two
touchdo\vns.
Hannan is averagine 8.2
points per game on the
season. while they have
allowed nearly 40 per
game.
Burch has been
a\eragmg 14.4 points per
game. \vhile they have
allowed 20.8 points per
game.
Hannan and Burch have

Please see Hannan, Bl

�- -- -- . ~

~

---~----=------.....---,_...,..~--~-~---

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Sports Briefs
2009 football statistics needed
GAU .TPOLIS -All Ohio varsity football coaches in
Gallia and Meigs counties are asked to submit regular season
statistics - both offense and defense - from their respective
teams to the Ohto Valley Publishing sp01ts department for
district considerations.
Along with the stats. please include the heights. weights,
positions and cla'is of each nominee - as well as an order of
recommcndatiOil for possible selections.
Submissions should be mruled to the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune. c/o Btyan Walters, 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631.
Statistics rna) also be emailed to bwalters@mydrulytribune.com or sent via fax to (740) 446-3008.
All statistics and nominations must be received before 5
p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. I 0 for consideration.

Ready for another bowl game?
DALLAS (AP) - The replacement for the Cotton Bowl
game has been lined up.
Dallas city leaders say the Dallas Football Classic is planned
for New Year's Day 2011. The plan calls for using teams from
the Big Ten to play teams from Conference USA and the Big
· 12 on a rotating basis.
The first game will pit the seventh-ranked team from the Big
12 against the sixth-ranked team from the Big Ten. Then on
New Year's Day 2012. it will be the Big Ten vs. Conference
USA. with the order repeated in 2013 and 2014 under a plan
revealed by bowl oraantt.ers this week.
The plan needs NcAA aP,proval.
Should an at-large selection be required. Conference USA
would provide a backup team in 2011 or 2013, and the Big 12
in 2012 and 2014.
The Cotton Bowl game is moving to the new Cowboys
Stadium in Arlington this season. That prompted officials to
come up with a replacement game for the 77-year-old Frur Park
venue.

Marshall renews rivalry with Miami, Ohio
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP) - Marshall will open the
2013 and 2014 football seasons agrunst Miamj, Ohio.
Marshall athletic director Mike Hamrick says Miami will
travel to Huntington on Aug. 31,2013. Marshall will travel to
Oxford, Ohio, on Aug. 30,2014.
Miami leads the series 30-10-1 , although Marshall won six
of eight meetings between 1997 and 2004 when it was a member of the Mid-American Conference.
before breaking il}to the win
column against Sciotoville
Ohio (40-14). A win over
Notre Dame (20-12) was
from Page Bl
followed by a Joss to Tolsia
(18-24). A victory over
Wahama last year with that Clay County (18-14) prebeing the role of a spoiler. ceded consecutive losses to
The
Bison
knocked Fayetteville ( 12-48) and
Wahama from the playoffs a Man (12-42).
year ago following a 38-19
Coach Mike Sawyer is in
triumph and have won two his eighth season at Buffalo
straight against the White with the successful grid
Falcons. During Wahama coach compiling a 51-32-1
coach Ed Cromley's 14 year record at the Putnam County
term as the Falcons head school.
The
Bison
coach Buffalo has emerged returnees include mnning
with victories in eight of backs Matt Moore (5-11
the past 12 meetings.
175). Cameron Jones (6-3
The Bison are an extreme- 210) and Dustin Reed (5-6
ly young team this season 180) along with linemen
with only three offensive Chris Harmon (5-10 200)
starters and two defensive and Daniel Carte (6-0 205).
regulars returning to the
Putnam County fold. Add Freshman Levi Jordan and
that factor to an extremely David Dunn have shared the
difficult Buffalo schedule quarterbacking duties with
and you have the makings of Jordan throwing for over
a 3-6 record on the 2009 400 yards on the year and
campaign. The Bison faced Dunn adding another 300
three Class AA foes this year plus yards. Moore and
and no less than seven teams Jones are the statistical
that have been ranked at one leaders for Buffalo on the
time or another. Buffalo season.
opened the year with a trio
Kickoff time for the allof losses to Gilbert (0-40) important Class A grid conand Parkersburg Catholic test is 7:30pm at Buffalo
(6-47) and Poca (16-56) High School.

Wahama

Instead of tutoring Pryor
as a teammate, Clark will be
facing him Saturday.
Pryor. a sophomore,
fromPageBl
would like nothing better
than to atone for his fourthRose Bowl loss last season quarter fumble last season
against Southern Califomia against the Nittany Lions
as Penn State tried to rally that set up Devlin's score. A
from a back from a 24-point good outing could placate
deficit.
ciitics who blame Pryor for
Clark was mostly ineffec- Ohio State's struggles, as
tive before being knocked well as silence Penn State
out in the third quarter of fans expected to shower him
last season's win at Ohio with taunts.
State because of a concus''I'm sure they're going to
sion. Devlin ran for the go- be ~iving me a lot of stuff,
ahead touchdown in relief.
saymg a lot of things, but I
Recruiting-wise though, won't hear any of it,'' Pryor
Clark's emergence and said last weekend after a 45Devlin's transfer last year 0 rout of New Mexico State.
seems to have made it easier
Clark, a senior, would like.
for Penn State to land dual- to play well in his last game
threat prospects. srud Mike against his home-state
Farrell, ap analyst with rivals. and get his team back
Rivals.com. Touted fresh- to the BCS. His proud father
man Kevin Newsome is will be in the stands to root
now Clark's backup, and him on.
''Peopie in this area, us
Penn State has verbal combeing
from Ohio, a lot of
mitments from two prized
recmits in next year's class. people that know us and our
Depending on how those family, they want the
erospects pan out. "losing Buckeyes to win," Clark's
Pryor might not hurt them at father said. 'but they want
Daryll to do well."
all," Farrell said.

Pryor

Hannan
fromPageBl
each faced Montcalm.
Williamson, and Van in
the 2009 season. Hannan
lost to Van , 12-34,
Williamson 16-44, and
Montcalm 8-26. Burch
defeated
all
three,

www.mydailysentinel.com

2009

Some W.Va. schools struggle to field football team
CHARLESTON. W.Va.
(AP) - Under the lights on a
Friday night, 22 student athletes gather on the high
school gridiron to grind it out
for football glory. On the
sidelines, dozens more wait
for their chance to get in on
the action.
That's true for Class AAA
and even Class AA schools.
But for some schools. like
Hannan High in Mason
County. the sidelines are
sparse.
''The numbers game is
always going to be a disadvantage for us." srud Dave
Barr, head football coach at
Hannan, where enrollment
totals Jess than 150 for grades
nine through 12.
The Hannan Wildcats. who
stand at 0-9, have played
most of this football season
with just 13 or 14 players on
the entire team.
''It makes practice really
difficult because there have
been weeks when I didn't
have anybody to line up
across from." Barr said.
Barr and several other
coaches around West Virginia
say there's a simple solution
for small schools like
Hannan: eight-man football.
Eight-man football is fairly
common in rural areas of
more than a dozen states,
of
the
mostly
west
Mississippi River. It's typically played at high schools
where small enrollment
makes fielding a full team for
traditional 11-man football a
challenge.
Officials with the state
chapter of the National
Football Foundation think the
concept could work well in
areas of the Mountain State
and are asking the West
Virginia Secondary Schools
Activities Commission to
consider it.
Mike Dunlap. president of
the c~apter, sent a leqer
Friday
to
WVSSAC
Executive Director Gary Ray
outlining a proposal that
would grve the state's smallest Class A schools the option
of playing football ~th fewer
athletes.
"It's certainly not intended
for big schools to field an
eight-man team alo!'lg with an

11-man team." Dunlap said.
''The sole purpose is to allow
kids who ru·c not currently
having a chance to be allowed
to compete. to be able to compete."
Of 51 Cl&lt;Ths A Schools in
West Virginia, 18 have fewer
than 150 students available to
play varsity sports. The disparity between the largest
Class A school. Richwood
High in Nicholas County, and
the 'imallest Class A school
that fields a football team,
Notn: Dame High in
Clarksburg. is a difference of
nearly 300 students.
Many schools on the smaller end of the spectrum. such
as Hannan. struggle year after
year to come up with enough
players to limp through a season. Nine Class A schools in
West Virginia don't have a
football program at all.
"What we're trying to do is
offer an alternative to keep
our traditions alive but not
take away from traditions we
already have," said former
MarshalJ University Football
Coach Bob Pruett, who is
involved with the National
Football Foundation and supports the eight-man proposal.
Van High in Boone County
was almost forced to cancel
its football season last summer because of low turnout.
"I was ready to move," said
Steve Price, head football
coach at Van.
Parents and school officials
rallied to recruit enough players to save the season, but
Price admits it's not the first
time Van's team has been put
in jeopardy. However, he isn't
convinced eight-man football
would ever get off the ground
in West Virginia.
"It's going to get to the
point in the next fow· or five
years where they close so
many schools (due to consolidation) that it might not matter anyway," Price said.
This season, West Virginia
has 121 active hiz!t school
football progran1s. 1 nat number is expected to decrease to
117 in the next two years
because of consolidation
plans in both McDowell and
Mingo Counties.
Fred King, athletic director
at Paden City High School in

Wetzel County and a vocal
opponent of school consolidation, said he believes eightman football would go a Ion&amp;
way toward boosting school
spirit and community pride in
small towns. Paden City has
fewer than I 00 students at the
high school level and just 17
players on its football team.
"We think it would really
re-excite the bottom of the
heap,'' King said of eightman football. "It could give
more kids an opportunity to
go to the playoffs. There are
probably 15 to 16 teams that
will never see the playoffs
again at this point."
Consolidation
actually
compounds the problem that
Barr. the Hannan coach. is
facing. Hannan High received
a major facelift just three
years ago, and there are no
cunent plans to merge the
school with any others in
Mason County.
''It's not going anywhere
anytime soon. and I don't see
our numbers going up anytjme soon," Barr sa1d. "We're
running out of teams we can
pla ."
i?'arr srud being constantly
outmatched is taking a toll
mentally and physically on
his squad. For example,
Hannan's closest contest this
season
came
against
Williamson lligh School. The
Hannan Wildcats were leading at halftime 16 to 14, but
eni:ied up losing 44 to 16.
''We got in the middle of
the third quarter and the7 didn't have anything left,' Barr
said. "Seven or eight of my
players never come off the
field."
The Wildcats also lost to
Wahama, a Class A powerhouse in West Virginia, by a
score of 60-0.
"I'm sure when you're a
player and you look across
the field and the opponent has
40 or 50 kids and you look at
your team and there are 12 of
us. that's really hard.'' Barr
said.
Both Barr and King estimate as many as eight West
Vrrginia high schools mjght
be tmrne&lt;tiately interested in
joining an eight-man league.
mcluding those that don't
have football programs right

now.
Dunlap suggests the option
be limited to high schools
wuh enrollments lower than
I50. He adds that more than
100 private schools in the
state also might choose to
join the WVSSAC if eightman football were instituted.
Ray. the WVSSAC executive director. said he hal
yet read the letter from
National Football Foundat
or had a chance to discuss
their ideas. To his knowledge.
this is the first time the concept of eight-man football has
been introduced to the commission.
Ray said it is the
WVSSAC's policy to consider any proposals brought to
its attention but it's too soon
to comment on the prospects
of eight-man football.
"It would be like adding
another spott," he srud. "It's
something we'd really have
to take a hard look at.'
While the rules vary from
state to state, eight-man football is playea with three
fewer players on each side of
the ball than in the traditional
form of the game. The positions most commonly eliminated include two offensive
tackles and a wide receiver as
well as two defensive backs
and a lineman.
Teams sometimes play on a
shorter and narrower
and quarters can be shorte1
or kept on a running clock. s
a result, the tempo of the
game is often noticeably
faster and scores tend to be
higher.
Pruett is somewhat familiar
with the eight-man game
after recruiting a number of
students from schools in other
parts of the country that play
1t. The coach doubts fans or
players themselves would
notice much of a difference.
"You have to block and
tackle just the same." Pruett
said. ''It's still football."
If eight-man football ever
does make its way to the
Mountain State. it may still be
a long way off. But for some
coaches. there will be no hesitation once the option is in
the playbook.
"ffthis happens. we're in,''
Barr said.

fl9

~!Sv~~b~~Om~=ne~ ~!e :~~:i~e!:·~~r~re~?~!~tai~e~a~!:hu~gae~~

Hideki Matsui has the most
curious habit at the plate. He
never takes a practice swing
once he steps into the batter's
box.
He saves all those meaty
cuts for when he needs them.
Matsui did all sorts of dam•
age Wednesday mght setting
a record with six RBis in a
World Series clincher and
leading the New York Yankees
over the Philadelphia Phillies
7-3 Wednesday night.
Matsui became the first
Japanese-born pla¥er to win
the award that started in 1955.
He homered, doubled and singled, highlighting a Series in
which he hit .615 with three
home runs and eight RBis.
His two-run drive off Pedro

----------

put the Yankees ahead for
good. Nicknamed "Godzilla"
back home, Matsui sent a shot
to right field that banged off an
advertisement on the facing of
the second deck - fittingly. it
was a sign for the Japanese
company Komatsu. which
makes mining and construe·
·
tton eqmpment.
.
Ma~ui added a two-run single in the third and lined a
two-run double off the rightcenter field wall in the fifth.
The giant videoboard in ce~ter
field showed fans holding
Japanese signs and while the
sellout crowd roared. he stood
placidly at second base.
Fans cheered when Matsui's
feat.
matching
Bobby
Richardson's 1960 mark for
RBls in any Series game, was

one, however, had ever delivered such a bounty in the
game that wrapped up a championship.
Matsui drew a standing ovation when he came to bat in
the seventh, and chants of
"MVP! MVP!" bounced
around the ballpark.
Watching Game 6 on TV in
1iokyo. Masanon· Murakarnt·
echoed that sentiment. He was
the fu·st Japanese player in the
majors. in 1964 with San
Francisco, and fully appreciated the magnitude of Matsui's
honor.
·'Ichiro Suzukj has had
manr accomplishments. but
they ve all been in the regular
season. As the first Japanese to
win an MVP in the World
Series. this is a great accom-

•.amypda·c·t.'
h •
Murakami srud.
Now strictly a DH and
pinch-hitter because of bad
knees. Matsui accomplished
so much in so little time. llis
13 at-bats tied Baltimore's
Rick Dempsey in 1983 for the
fewest by a Series MVP (nonpitchers only, naturally),
according to STATS.
Matsui became the ll th
Yankees player to win the
award. joinmg teammates
Derek Jeter and Mariano
Rivera, along with the likes of
Reg~ie Jackson and Whitey
Fora. ·
Matsui hit a grand slam in
his frrst $arne at old Yankee
Stadium m 2003. and this year
wrapped up his £52 million.
four-year contract.

THURSDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Montcalm
40-26.
Williamson 6-0, and Van
22-20.
For the Wildcats. it will
be the final football game
for
seniors
Brandon
Waugh, Robert Warth,
Jared Cobb, and Terry
Kauffer.
Kickoff is at 7:30 p.m.
Friday evening at Hannan
Stadium.

-~~r --

Thursday, November 5,

'

�Thursday, November 5, 2009

\!Crilltttte - Sentinel - 3a.egi~tei·
CLASSIFIED

In One Week With Us
nxllclas~if~d:-::)~!n~11ib\m~.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

PJ.U S YOUR AD NOW ONLJNE
Your Ad,

ca II Today...

Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Successful Ads
Should Incl ude These Items
To Help Get Response...

_;;.

~

r

•

'

~

.t_!3-

Meigs County, OH

.

3a.egister

(7 40) 446-2342 (7 40) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

/Jeat!Aire.f'

Word Ads

HOW JO WRITE AN AD

..

Websites;
www.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallysenUnel.com
www.mydatlyreglster.com

Sentinel

\!Cribtttte

~ ~{

.,.

1

To Place

.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydailysentinel.com

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclassifiedads
_s ~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
1.!
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1 .00 for large

Dls_play Ads

Deily In-Column: ihOO a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
ln Next Day's Paper
Sunday ln.Columm 9:00a.m.
Friday For Sundayc Paper

1

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Diaplay: 1:00 p .m .
Thun;.day for Sundays Papct

·All ads must be prepal&lt;r

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
OetcriJ!t•on • Include A Prke • Avoid Abbrc:Vlatlont
• Include Phone Number And Addrcu When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 DIY$

POLICIES: OIVo IIOJltY Publishing ,_,v.. the right to edit. re)oct, Of Cllncoltny ad at any tame. Err010 mullt be reponod on the flrm day of publication end 1111!
Tnbl.llO-Stnllnti·Rtigltrler wltr ~ rMpOI"'IIbltlor no m01etnon tho coct oflho ~ occuplod by the error end only the rutt lnaonlon. We mil rlOI bo liable 101
my Jose or expense the! rolSUIIIIrO&lt;nthe publlc:ollon or ol!lltsiOn of an adven ~~ement Corurcrlon v.1U be mode In tho llrtt available e&lt;ll!lon ·Box!'IIIII!bet 1101
are olwaye co~derrtlal • Cu-rent rate card oppllH. • All r I eslato DdvtnliCIIIctiiO ere llllb.f,l~ to tne Fodera! Folr Hoi.Cing Act of 1QI!IS. •ln newcp:~Pif
eecopte only llclp warlt&lt;lltds meeting EOE lltlndardll. We w111 not knowingly KQ!pt ony tdn!Jitlng In vlolttlon of 1110 In Will nat bo responslblt ror any-

errore In an td ta~en over tne phone.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Security

Other Services

AD.I

DIRECT.Y

Free Home Secu·
rity System
S850 Value
wrth purchase of
alarm f"''OnitOr·
.ngseMces from
ADT Secunty Serv·
ces.
Call 1-888-274-3888

For the best TV
experience, upgrade from cable to
Directv today!
Packages start
at S29.99
1-866-541-0834

Tax

I

Accounting

AMERICAN
TAX BELIE£
Settle IRS Taxes
For a fraclton of
what you owe. If you
owe over $15,000 m
back taxes call now
for a free consulta·
tion 1·877-258·5142
Financial

CREDI[CABD
RELIEE
Burled In Credit
Card Debit?
Call Crecltt Card Re·
lief for yolir
lroo consultation
1-877-264-8031

1IDU
SE.ITLEMENL

USA

We solve debt
problems I
If you have over
$12,000 1n debt
CALL NOW!
1·877·266..0261

DISHNET.¥iQBK
Save up to 40~o off
your cable biii!Call
Dish Network to·
day!
1·877-274·2471

200

Announcements

Lost &amp; Found

•
•
:

Sovf!

Notices
NOTl,CE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rcc·
ommends thai you do
bus1ness w1th people you
know. and NOT 10 send
money through 1he mall
t.Jntll you t-ave tnvostlgat·
tng the offer ng

GUARANTEED
CONSUMER

LIEELOCK
Are You Protected?
An Identity ts stolen
every 3 seconds
Call Ufelock now to
protect your fam1ly
free for 30-days!
1-877-481-4882
Promocode:
FREEMONTH

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..................................205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
MemoryfThank You ..................................... 220
Notices ................... ...................................... 225
Personnls ....-...............................................230
Wanted ......................... ............................... 235
Services ........................ ............................... 300
Appliance Service ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materlals ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catering ........................................................31 0
Jd/Eiderly Care ....................................... 312
rs ................................................... 314
'nnt.Do.-tno•e,.,,,.,.,,..,,.,,.,,.,.,,,,.,..,,.,,.,.,..,.,..,,.316
Domestics/Janltori:t,l ................................... 318
Electrical ...... - .............................................. 320
Flnancial .......................................................322
Health ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama .................................... 336
Other Servlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eiectrical ..................................... 340
Professional Services .................................342
Aepairs .........................................................344
Aoofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................348
Tax/Accounting .....................................- ... 350
TraveVEntertainment ..................................352
Financial.......................................................400
Financial ~rvlces .......................................405
Insurance ....................................................410
Money to Lend .....................-.-.................. 415
Education ............................_. ..................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School ........................... 505.
Instruction &amp; Traming ................................. 510
Lessons .......................................................515
Personal ....................................................... 520
Animals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplios .......................................... 605
Horses .....- .................................................. 610
Llvestock......................................................615
Pets ...............................................................620
Want to buy ..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce.......................................710
Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
&amp; Land ........................................... 720
buy ..................................................725
t..ro•h•onrllaA., .,,........................................... 900
Antlquas ....................................................... 905
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctlons ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectlblos .................................................. 925
Computars ................................................... 930
Equipment/Supplies ....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 Coaltv.'ood/Gas ........................... 945
Furniture ....................... ............................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kid 's Corner.................................................960
Miscellaneous............................................965
want to buy ................................................970
Yard Sale ..................................................... 975

c~t.~orJ of A
r/IAS~r6CE FA!NTutl~
MA~ W11H IASfy

Lost Kodak Easysharc
Camera Ct8 S lver Ae·
ws·d Ca I 578·6605

1c ures a
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Recreational Vehtcles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles .....................................................1010
Boats/Accessorles .................................... 1015
CamperlRVs &amp; Trailers ............................ 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy ............................................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto AentaVLease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
CommercialllnduS1rlal .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories............................. .. 2025
Sports Utility .............................................. 2030
Trucks .........................................................2035
Utility Trallers ............................................ 2040
Vans ...........................................................2045
Want to buy ...............................................2050
Real Estate Sales ...................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots ............................................................ 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
Apartments/Townhouses ........................ 3505
Commercial ................................................351 0
Condominiums ......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ....................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) ......................................... 3525
Storage....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................4000
Lots .....................- ...................................4005
Movers.............................._................. ...40 10
Rentals ......................................................4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies .....................................................4025
Want to Buy ............................................. 4030
Resort Property......................................... sooo
Resort Property for salo ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment...............................................6000
Accounling/Financlal ...............................6002
Administrative/Professional ....................6004
Cashier/Cierk .............................................6006
Child/Elderly Care ....................................6008
Clerical ....................................................... 6010
Construction .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery .....................................6014
Educatlon ...................................................60 16
Electrical Plumbing ................................... 6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertalnment ............................................6022
Food Services ...........................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics.................: ................................6036
Med1cat ......................................................6038
Musical ......................................................6040
Part-Time-Temporarles .............................6042
Restaurants ............................................. 6044
Sales..........................................................6048
Techntcal Trades ....................................... 6050
Textiles/Factory ........................................6052

Jet Aeration Motors

1992
Ply
Voyage
S1550 Aebu • Mtr 8 500
M
Al
E ec
Needs
Panted 740·245-5014

In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1-800·537·9528

I Lo~ f~

Foul'ldM'a ker
Hound In Ao
Please
(740)395-1298

Mol ohan Carpet
Lam nate Sale
20 yr warranty
$1 59 sq It
With attached padd ng
Carpet and v nyt stat1 ng
at S5 95/yd
740-446-7444

Vans

repaired, new &amp; rebuilt

Compuhtrs

Own a computer
for as little as
S29.99 per week!
No credit check I
Guaranteed
Cons.;mer Fundang
1-888·282-3595

Miscellaneo~s

www.comics.com

Notices

500

Pets

Education

Pound hunt for rabb ts &gt;;o,
ACA
reg sterad Pen·
t.:
7 30am sponsored b'
broke Welsh Corg
2
M on Co lkaglc Assoc at
Business &amp; Trade
males
14 weeks old
1\' n Co f.ur Grounds
740,949·2908
School
("" 1 Clu
bid call Robcrt ;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Gallipolis Career
-------\\nm&gt;le} l().I..S93 5tS2 or
'l04 b 5 224~
College
(Careers Close To Homo)
Call Today' 740.446-4367

1·SOD-21 4·0452

Wanted

gaollpohscarcercollcge edu
Accrod~ed Member Accreda·
lng Couoollor Independent

Fall
special
sen dlscount,affordable
Colieg;!S and ScloooiS 12748
t&gt;andyman pwer wash·
Instruction &amp; Training
gutters, odd robs.
lng,
304-882·3959
Overbrook
Center Lo304-812·3004
cated @ 333 Page St
Mrddlepot1,
OhiO
Is
Pleased To Annot.Jnce
To do· Houseclean ng, We W II Be H.old ng An
Expenenced Have refer· STNA Class Scheduled
cnccs. 446-0426. II no "'o Begn November 16
answer leave message.
2009
Hours Wi
Be
SAM-4 30PM If YoLo Are
300
Services Interested In uO n ng O:.~r
Fnendly And Ded cated
Staff P case Stop By
Our Front Offtee Mon.fn
Home Improvements
9AM·5PM And Fi Out
An Appllcat or. Fu lime
Basement
And Par1 lime Posn ons
Waterproofing
Ava table
To
Those
Uncond t1o al ~fetune
Ouahhed
lnd viduals
guarantee ..ocal refer·
Compteung The Class
e:tcos lurrttshed Established 1975 Call 24 Hrs
Applicants Must Be De:
740-446·0870, Rogers
pendable (Attendance Is
Basomenl Waterproofing. A Must) Team PUtyers
With Postlive Attttudos
Other Services
To Join Us In Provldtng
Pot
Cremations.
740-446·3745

Call

Professional Services
TURNED OOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee' Vnless We Win'
1 888·582·3345

Outstandtng
Quality
Care To Our Residents
Overbrook Center Is An
E.O E. and A Pat1 ctpant
Of The Drug Free Work·
Dlace Program
'

600

Animals

Hones
SEPTIC
PUMPING --======~
Gal Jl
Co
OH
and
5 Reg. Manatu·o
Mason Co
WV Ron
horses $750 00 •
Evans
Jackson
OH
S2000 00. Wend ng
Boo-537·9528
Paint $750 00 1 Reg
Georgaan Grande
400
Financial
horse 1/2 saddlo bred
1 yr. old $7000 00
Money To Lend

304·675·2308 or
304·593·3499

NOTICE Borrow Smart. ~~~~=~=~
Contact thO Ohio Drvt·
livestock
slon of Flnanctal 1nst1lU·
lions Olfico of Consumer For sale Angus bulls 1
1/2
yr.
old
call
Alfalfs BEFORE you reft· 74 0·288·146o.
nor,ce your ttome or 0 b•
1a1n a Joan. BEWARE or - - - - - - - requests for &amp;fly large Polled Herefords 2 hell·
ers 5 mon old, 1 bull 6
odvanco
payments
of
roes or Insurance Call 112 man old 1 bu herott&gt;o Office of Consumer ford &amp; angus 18 mon old
Affklrs
toll
free
at 304-882·2774
1-866·278.()()03 to leam
H the ~ongajje broker or
Pets
lender
properly
;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;;;:=:
censcd {ThiS ts a pubftC 2 6 wk. old k ttons free
seMCe
a nouncerrert 1 M &amp; 1 F M o very
rr
the Oho Va ey lght blond Fcrralo light
PubliShing CG'!lpany)
calico 74().441.0145

==--===--=

AKC mtntature Schnau·
zers. Part '&amp; Chocolales
orpremises.
Parents
74().441·1657
Blue Healer/Border Col·
Ie
Cross
6
wks
740.256·6464
·- - - - - - - FOI'
Sale 2 AKC reg
Yorkio Tern rs
cortact
belejoe2340vma com

--------

Real Estate
Free 55' Tosh ba rear 3000
Sales
prOjeeliOn
TV
needs
new
power
SOJpply ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~
740..992·7274
!:!
For Sole By Owner
Estate sale of Balbara
C ne 10316 St A 7 S 12 Unit Apt. Complex.
Ga poliS Nov 6th &amp; 7th 446-039().
8 30 to 5:30. Wall&lt;
~'tome
and
through complete hOuse- Beaut,ful
hurtefs
dream
For
hold. Call446-1211.
more
details,
go
to
or
call
www.orvb com
WantTo Buy
740·794·1132.
Absolute Top Dollar • stl·
Houses For Sale
ver/gold
coins,
any
10KI14Kit8K gold rew·
p'e 3 yr old 1\52 sq It
elry, dental gold
1935
US
currency, ranch home 2 BA 2 BA
proot rt
sets
d a· w wh r'pool tubs Lg LA
monds MTS Cotn Shop. EaHn kitchCf' All e OC·
151 2nd Aven:Je, Ga • tnc Aefrg Range D s ·
waSher
Ga 1p0 IS C ty
polls 446-2842
School
D trict
2 99
acrns 6x24 Cleek S m "
Yard Sole
lrQITI C ty L.m t S69 500
4 r..:n Yam Sale anside (740)446-7029
New Haven Comm Carr
ter 808 3rd Sl Ncv 6-7 MadJSOO Ave Pt Peas9am·3pm. new tuoper· ant. frame hou e on 2
ware reduced g 5 cloth· lots excel ent loca 1()(1 lor
1ng siZe 12·16 coats 2 future re tals S8 000
toys Jots of miSC. new .740.709·1858
Clayton
daub o
gift tems 85cc Motorcy· 1999
ole
wide 28x44 3 bedroom
2 bath S22 500 080
908 Roush lr' illurs &amp; 740.591·9721
o
F'i. g.? G rls &amp; Boys 740-992·1599
Name
Brand
W'!'ter - - - - - - - Clothes pre-school toys Package Deal 4 br 2
ds garr()S, longaberger &amp; btll, 2 story. 314 bas
ment. fenced tn yard
more.
central a~r &amp; lleat newer
Sale ductwork &amp; thermo con·
Rummage
Thur FRI..Sat at
Sacred trol. darrper system fairly
Hoat1 Catrollc
Church new 9~ effrc oncy fur
2222 Jackson Ave. Pt nance 1 sma I ~louse 2
Pleasam 9am-4pm.
br 1 car garage al eady
terart
1
a ge
Yard Sa e by Patnot has
Lodge Sat 9-4 Patriot 80x20 w 15 addon &amp; a•
llC former boat &amp; mowc·
_Ad - - - - - - shop 1 aoo tMa lot
Yard Sa e 1 day only level &amp; cleared oft a 4
Sat 9·5 Too s an!lques are co
t
connectea
rrusc. Too ud' to men· on a ctty block
k one
11on 520Ba RunRc
take a w. 'lOt sp t p
Ac ty
Recreational Celand
1000
740-992·2259 Cass c
Vehicles lclld or James Pickers at
·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 225-81 o-9927
aSI&lt;ing

Free 10 good home neut
male Ma 'le-coon cat 1n·
door outdoor
304-674·0121
·~

I

Campers RVs
Trailers

700

Agriculture

&amp;

RV
Service at
Trailers
740-446·3825
RV ServtCO
chael

S1090000BO
For sa e 3br briCk ranch
&amp; 2 br ranch w
g
car gar ge bolt&gt; on Rt2
N 304·895-3129
Real Estate
Rentals

3500
at

Garmt·
Trailers

.:...74~0=-4~4~6~
·3~82;;5====~
--;:;;;:;:;;;Fo=nn;;:;:;;;E=q:Ou.:ip=m=e=n=t=
=
EBY,
INTEGRITY,
Motorcycles

1

A

portments
Townhouses
o=;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;;===;.;;;;;;
KIEFER BUILT,
1 and 2 bedrOOIT piS
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVE· 2007
SuzuKI furnished
and
nlur
STOCK
TRAILERS. DAZ·4QO-SM B k 2941 n1sred, al"d houses 111
LOAD
MAX
EOU·? ml 74().245-0611
Po.'neroy :1d M dd epo~
MENT
TRAILERS
secu ty depoSit roq ed
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
2000
Automotive no pets 740.992 2218
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED --==A=uto=s===
S3999 VIEW OUR EN· 2002-Camaro pwr WinTIRE TRAILER NVEN· dows/locks cru se ct
TORY AT
cd ptaye
78000 rn
WWW CARM CHAEL·
r
$5000 OBO 256·1147
TRAILERS COM
mo
74().446-Jl' 25
01
PontillC BonneV1 e
Clep
SE 74 000 ong ~ es
or
ex con
55 500 f rm.
Have you pnced
John 740.992•1031
·- - - - - - - Doore
te y? You
be .~;;~~~==~
surp
d Check out our
Sports Utility
used
ventory
at ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;.;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;i;;;;;;;;=
www.CAAEQ com
Car· 2001
Dodge
Durango ...;.;;;....;....;;.._ _ _ __
mlch of
740-446·2412

Equ pment SLt
Loaded
614·553·7066

S4 500

-------- -------STIHL Salas &amp; S rvtce 2001
Dodge Durango.
Eng•ne
Now Aval.lblo at Carmi· New
740 "'5 7965
chael
Eqwpmcnt ~~·..,..
=~~===~
.:.
74;;.;0;..·4.;.;;4;.;;
6-..;;2~
4.;.;12;;.,__ _ _
Trucks
==;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;=
1997 Fol'd F 250 73
Powe
Stroke
Diese .
Ext cab wh•te tOOl boX.
Fuel 1 Oil 1 Cool 1
5th ~
ratt~.
Wood 1 Gos
rr sslon
f+4
'T1 es
====;;;;;;;;===
100 T4Q-416-0865
Seaso d f rewood
Al Hardwood
84 4WD Standard 4x4
740.853 2439
or Sl95
245-56n
01'
740.446 0204
140-645 7400

=

sa

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LO
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&amp;
AFFO"'D·
,
ABL Et liownl10usc
rrer&gt;ts,
ho~o. s

ana.or
lo·

740-441 111
. ;.;...;....;......;;......;;..;..._ _
Free Rent Special Ill
IJII$ $395 and
up
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electriC
C
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•38R

�Apartments/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

Thursday, November 5, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Houses for R~nt

Soles

Rentals

Education

Part-time
instructors
OHIO'S
615 Third Ave. Gallipolis, 2BR, Ideal for 1 or 2 peoneeded during the day
ple, $300/month,
Re·
3
BR,
1
&amp;
1/2
bath,
no
BEST BUYs
Twtn Rivers Tower is ac- Island View Motel has
in·
mathematics,
ecofernces, No Pets, NO
2010 3BR Doublewlde
cepting applications for vacancies
$35.00/Night. trig. $610/mo 5610 dep.
nomics, and accounting.
CALLS
after
7pm
Call446·0555.
S39,9n
waiting list for HUD sub- 740-446-0406
Mathematics and eco·
740-441-0181
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
sidized, 1-BR apartment - - -.....~--~ ~Fo_r_r_e~n,-3~b-r.-b-nc-K-ra-nc-h
nomic mstructors must
FHA $349 mo
for the elderly/disabled, Modem 1BR apt. Call
have a master's degree
call675·6679
740-446-0390
on Rt2 N. next to Roose- 3 br trailer for rent on
2010 3br/2ba Single
tn the discipline. If intervelt
Elem.
school Pine Grove Rd. Racine.
from $199 mo
~
Ntce 1 BR wash·dry. 304·895-3129
ested please email a re~
Stove &amp; Fridge. All Utili- ;.;.,;,.;,;;.;...;;.;.;;;...___ Oh, $385 plus deposit,
MIDWESTHOMES sume and cover letter to
lies. call 740-446-9585. For Rent, 5 Room House you pay all utillttes, good
mymidwesthomes.com
YOUNG'S
jdanicki @gallipolisca3 room and bath down- 5600/mo.-$500 dep.
in Gallipol,s. 446·0794
location In country set·
740.828.2750
reercollege.edu
Carpenter
Service
stairs first months rent &amp; One BR. 2nd floor. unfur- Gallia
Manor
Apart- ttng, call &amp; leave mes• Room Additions &amp;
depostt. references re· nt·shed apt., AC, water in- m&lt;&gt;nts, 138 Buht Morton sage If no one answer's
· ed
N
p t
d
r
740·992-2458
The BIG Sale
Part-time computer inRemodeling
qulr •
o
e s an eluded. corner 2nd and Rd. Gallipolis, ts now acUsed Homes &amp; Owner
structor
needed
for · New Garages
clean. 740·441·0245
Pine. No pets, maximum cepting appHcations for Trailer 1n town Racine, 2
Financ1ng · New 2010
Thursday mornings from ·Electrical &amp; Plumbing
2BR apts. 6 m1. from Hoi- occupancy 2, references waiting list for 1 Bed- br.. 1 bath, all electric,
Doublew1de $37,989
October a-December 17. ·Roofing &amp; Gutters
zer. some utilities pd. or &amp; secunty deposit re- room,
HUD·Substdtzed carport. large front porch,
Ask about $8,000 ReEmail resume and cover · VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
appliances
avail. quired, $300/mo.. 1 yr apartmen· for elderly and close to school. library &amp;
bates
letter to Jdanicki@galh· - Pallo and Porch Decks
$400/mo
+
dep. Lease. Call 446-4425 or handicapped.
park, $425 deposit, $425
wv 036725
mymidwesthome.com
poliscareercollege.edu.
740·577-6866
or 446-3936.
740-446-4652.
per month water &amp; garV.C.
YOUNG Ill
740·828-2750
or
fax
to
740·446-4124.
988-6130
-------bage included, NO Pets,
992-6215
Spring
Valley
Green
740-949-2217
Food Services
"The Proctorville
1 &amp; 2 Br. furnished apt., Apartments 1 BR at
740-591-0195
start $450 &amp; up plus $395+2 BR at $470
For rent-Mobile home,
Difference"
Pomeroy. Ohio
Dairy
Queen
in
Middledep.. No pets, Racine.Oh Month. 740·446-1599.
~
private lot, no pets. dep.
30 Years Local Experience
S1 and a deed is all you
"'" """"
$475/mo. 446-7275.
portcake
decorator
FULLY INSURED
740·591 •5174
Tara
Townhouse - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - need to own your dream needed, pick up applicahome. Call Now!
Middleport Beech St., 2 Apartments - 2BR, 1.5 Mason 2 br.w/ carport. In Centenary 2 BR,
tion Sunday Nov. 8th be·
LEWIS
Freedom Homes
br.• furnished apts.• uttlil- bath, back patio, pool, kit. fum. $385.0° a mon. Range, Ref. AC &amp; WID
tween 1pm-5pm.
888-565-0167
ties paid. dep. &amp; ref .• No playground, (trash. sew- dep. req 304-882-1108 I turn. S350 + dep. No
CO~CRETE
Pets (740)992-0165
age, water pd.)No pets 304-675·7783.
pets. 446·0945.
CONSTRUCTION
Apartment available now allowed.
$450/rent, Newer
log
duplex-2 Nice 3BR, 2 Bath, 16xao, Trade in your old s1ngle- -;;*;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Help Wonted· General
Concrete Removal
BR
Porte
C
II
d
$450/
·verbend
Apts ·
New
sec.
ep.
a HP/C
•
r
Settt·ng. wide for a new home. 0 • 10 Positions need filled
$ area. Country
R1
and Replacement
Haven WV. Now accept-7
.4.;.;0;.;-6;.;4~5.;;·8~599;;.;..____
ent.
Atr.
500/mo.
367-0266
or
339-3366.
•
Dep &amp; rei. 446-2801
money down. 446-3570.
by next week
All Types Of
ing
applications
for Upstairs
Apart.,
1BR ..-:;..;.-.-~;.;..-Soles
Work Full Time
HUD-subsidized.
one SSOO mo. + deposit, all Wiseman Real Estate-4
Concrete Work
$8.80/hr
Bedroom Apts. Utilities utilities
paid. rentals
available-call
Employment
Country living- 3-5BR, 6000
No experience reqUired
29 Years Experience
Included. Based on 30% 740-446-3870
446-3644 for more mfo.
2-3 BA on property.
of adjusted income. Call ~~~~~==~ All
tn-town-various
Recruit volunteers for
304-882-3121,
available
Houses for Rent
prices-references &amp; sec. Many floor plans! Easy
Financtng! We own the ===~===~
maJor non-profit organifor Senior and Disabled ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; depostts required.
740-992-6971
Call
today'
people.
Sl991mo! 3 bed. ~ b;tth, ...;--~---- bank.
Administrative/
zations
ln,ured
Bank Rcpo! (5% d""'" 15
Manufactured 866-215·5774
Professional
l'rce Esumatcs
year.&gt;, 8\'f ,\PRJ for lbting' 4000
WV0421
Professional Call Center
Hous1ng
78 Elcona Trailer 14-70,
Beautiful Apts. at Jack- 800-620 49-16 ex R027
Environment
Good Shape, You Move
son Estates. 52 WestWeekly Pay + Bonus Inwood Dr., from $365 to 2BR Apart. $350 mo. + ~
57000 OBO 635 Paxton. Life Enrichment Coorcentives
dinator
$560.
740-446·2568. depsoit, 1 pet OK with -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Re;;;n;;;to=l=s-=;;;;;;;;;;;; 740-645-1646
or
Medical, Dental, EAP,
Rocksprings
RehabilitaEqual Housing Opportu- additional
deposit •2 BR Mob1le Home. No 740-446-2515.
401K
tion
Center,
36759
nity. This institution is an .;.7~40~-4;;,;4;.;:6;.;·38;:,:.;70:;______
pets Water, sewer, trash ·A-A~-TI~Ir-ed-o~f-p-a-yi-ng-re-n-t? Rockspnngs
30 day paid training
Road,
Equal Opportunity Pro- 2BR House in Town, included. At Johnson's We can get you into
Pomeroy, a skilled nurs- Part time positions avatl·
vider and Employer.
'
$450 mo. + deposit. 1 Mobile
Home
Parle new manufactured home ing
able
·New Homes
and
rehabilitation
Down- stairs apt. for rent Pet OK with additoonal 740·645·0506.
for as low as 5% down. center IS accipting appli·
• Garages
in Pt. Pleasant 2 br.,w/ deposit 740-446-3870
Call TODAY!
br. n Gallipolis Fry Call to be pre·qualified cations for an ~
• Complete
2
kitchen appliances , AC/ 3 br. house at 407 3rd
Interview TOM OR·
866-838-3201
~
Life Enrichment
Remodeling
w/co'lered patio, w/
gas furnace w/ WD St. New Haven $425.00
ROW
I!
Coordinator.
AAA BRAND-NEW!
hook-up Lg. front porch a moo.
$425.00 dep.'
app. hp. $375.00 oo
Work NEXT WEEKI!!
Role: to provide a Life
HUGE 4 BR
$375.00
a
mon.
+ NO
PETS
amon + $300.00 dep.
Enrichment Program to
$200.00
dep. 304-882-3652.
1-888-IMC-PAYU, Ext.
2 Bath SECTIONAL
meet the social. physical,
no pets, no smoking
Stop &amp; Compare
1941
304-675-6375
or
cell Pomeroy- 2 br, 1 bath,
2x6 walls, Large chefs
cultural, spiritual, emoinside HUd approved
_ _
Apply
online:
804 677 8621
k•tchen.
so
year
8ld1ng.
tional
and
recreational
garage, peaceful, ready
304-849-2932.1eave
Dlx appliance pkg, Pvt
needs and interests of http://jobs.lnfocision.c
For Rent, 2 BR, Duplex Dec. 1, 740-856-8863
message.
om
utihty
rm.
G1an1
walk-In
each res·dent
1
Replacement
5475/mo. 3BR 1 bath home n Lein
town,
2
Trailer
Lots
for
cloiets. P•lch ce•llngs.
Successful · applicants _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;
DeP+ref No pets. Quiet Grande Blvd $650 rent Rent-Addison
Windows and
+
G'antgroat room++++
will have a BS in There- Cosmetologtst
needed
place. 446 "1271 ·
$650 dep. renter pays Pike-$150/mo
sec.
NEW FHA FINANCING'
peutic Recreation or re- for busy local salon call
Vinyl Siding
Gracious Living 1 and 2 utilittes. NO PETS. Call dep.
Water
pd.
$47,651
lated field. Activities Di- 740-992-2200
Specialists,
LTD
Bedroom Apts. at Village 446-3644 for applicaton.
446-3644.
MIDWEST HOMES
rector Certtfication and
(740)
742-2563
Manor
and
Riverside 3br,
in 2BR, 1 BA mobile home;
5475.. /month
mymidwesthome.com
experience tn LTC. pre· ·a·ua_h_ty_C_o-nt-ro-1,-ea_m_u_p
Apts. in Middleport. from Syracuse. Deposit, HUD
• Siding • VinyI
all
elect.
Xtra
Ntce.
No
740.828.2750
!erred.
to $15 an hour, evaluate
5327
to
' 5592· approved.
No
Pets pets. $450/mo (inc. water - - - - - - - - To apply: Andi Ayres at retail stores, training proWindows
• .:\tetal
740"992"5064·
Equal 304-675-5332 weekends &amp; trash) 3667 Bulaville For Sale, 1976 Holley aayres@extendicare.co
vided,
call
and Shingle Roofs
, Housing Opportunity.
_
_
740 591 0265
Pike 1740)446-4234 or ParK, 14x70 3BR. 1 m
1-800-901-2694
• Decks • Additions
(740)20S-7861.
Bath,
$5,000
OBO Email to: visit our web·
•Electrical
Help Wanted
740-256-6321
site
-- -helping
-Help Wanted
Do -you
enjoy
2br.in Gallipolis Ferry 4
.
www.exteodi~
? If
Plumbing
•
peope.
1
so,
1
w1
11
give
br. &amp; 2 ba. $675.00 a New 3 BR' 2 Bath. 0
Money Down. for land and submit application you FREE RENT AND
•
Pole
Barns
moo. + $675.00 dep. call
owners. 446-3384.
and resume
FREE UTILITIES plus an
740-973-8999.
~~~===~~ income just tor movmg in
and helping my 87 year
CASH FOR
old mother. You will live
Clerical
Get Your Message Across With ADaily Sentinel
TRACTORS
Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
here as if it were your
own home. minus the exWILL PICK UP
Center currently have openings for
Business Office Assis- pensAs 740-416-3130.
CALL
Certified Nursing Assistants. Must be state
tant
MIKE
NIEKAMP
certified in West Virginia. Must be willing
'13" columfltnch weekdays
Rocksprings
Rehabilita- Housing Director
tion Center a 100 bed fa· for mason County Hometo work 12 hour shifts.
'22'" column inch Sunllay
cility located in Pomeroy less Shelter &amp; Simms
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
For more information, please contact
1s currently seektng a Housing must posses
Angie Cleland, Director of Nursing at (304)
highly quahfie~. self-mo- BAIBS or higher 1n social
;:
BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE:
675-5236.
tivated Business Office work/ counceling or re: : 9:00AM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION!
Assistant.
Responsibili- lated field and 5 yrs. reAA/EOE
ties will include process- lated exp. in Housing I
Dump Truck
tog payroll, • submitting Homeless service. MasService
accounts payable and ters degree and LSW
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
We do drive,\ays
answering
incoming preferred. FT w/ benefits.
Limestone • Grfl\·el
calls. Your opportunity to Team member for Mason
join a leading provider of County Homeless ShelTop Soil • Fill Dirt
quality care with quality ter- minimum
requirestaff members is now! ment of HS Diploma or
Please fotWard your re- GED. temp. part time.
08/PEDS REGISTERED NURSE
sume to Stephanie Cle- Service Coordinator for
land, Administrator at non-profit agency to asPleasant Valley Hospital is currently
sclcland@extendicare.co
Gallia County Fairgrounds
sist low-income clients
accepting
resumes
for
a
full-time
Cell
m or visit the facility at with accress to commuexperienced 08/Peds Registered Nurse.
Dealers Welcome
36759 Rocksprings Rd. nity resources. Minimum
Applicants must have a current West
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 to requirement of HS DiWl'i J'ER STORAGE
Virginia license.
submit your application.
ploma or GED Ftwl
Meigs Count)
Send resumes to:
benefits.
Fairgrounds
Pleasant Valley Hospital
All
positions require a
Arrhal:
c/o Human Resources
valid drivers license, baOct. 31. 2009
sic computer skills and
2520 Valley Dr. Pt Pleasant,. WV 25550
9:00am - 11:00 am
excellent communication
(104) 675-4140
Release: Last
skills.
Or fax: 104-675-6975, or apply on-line
Saturday in
Send resumes, cover letApril, 2010
at www.pvalley.org
ter and 3 letters of ref. to
A fC&lt;: of $20 will be
AA/EOE
SCAC Inc. Attn.. HRD
.:hargcd for eariy
540 5th Ave. Huntington
arri.al,late arrl\al.
WV 25701 by Nov. 6,
early remo,al. late
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
2009
removal. or an} umc
acce's is "ant~d to
NOTICE TO TAXPAY- time opened by the money order. Said
lnfoCislon is hirlngl
fatrg1ounds other than
Board
reserves
the
Treasurer/CFO
of
said
Reference:
Make calls tor the NRA
ERS
stated date,, Building
and other conservative
5715.17 Ohio Revised Board for one (1) new right to waive informal·
space 1- first com.: llrst
ities,
to
accept
or
reject
sixty (60) passenger
organizations.
Code
serve.'
The Meigs County handicapped equipped any and all, or parts of
Professtonal work enviln"de
Storage:
$4.00/lf
NURSE PRACTITIONER
Board of Revision has with lift diesel school any and all bids. Quesronment.
Open Space: $2.00/if
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
completed Its work of bus and one (1) new tion can be answered
Weekly pay and bonus
Inside Fence: $1 :00/lf
equalization. The tax seventy-one (71) pas- by Mr. Paul McElroy,
accepting resumes for a part-time Nurse
oppgrtunities!
Call 985-4372 for more
Transportation
Supersenger
diesel
school
returns for tax year
tnfonnauon.
Practitioner
for the Middleport clinic.
2009 have been revised bus (body and chassis visor at (740) 742-2990.
Stop By and Complete
Position could lead to full-time. Certified
bids
must
be
reAll
and the valuations may be bid separately
Your Application:
as a Family Nurse Practitioner or specialty
completed and are or together as one ceived in, and bid spec·
lnfoCision Management
Discount Auto Body
open for public Inspec- complete bus). Specifi· lflcation sheets may be
as defined. One to two years related
Corporation
cations and Instruc- obtained from, TAEA·
tion
In
the
office
of
the
242 Third Avenue
Repacement Parts
experience and/or training preferred.
OFFICE,
Meigs County Auditor, tions to bidders may be SURER'S
Gallipolis, Ohto
The Auto Doctor
41765
Pomeroy
Pike,
Send resumes to:
obtained
at
the
TreaSecond Floor, CourtPleasant Valley Hospital
house, Second Street, surer's Office, 41765 Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
Or Call and Schedule
Pomeroy
Pike, or by calling (740) 992Pomeroy, Ohio.
c/o Human Resources
Your Interview:
Complaints against the Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 5650.
1-888-IMC-PAYU, ext.
2520 Valley Dr., Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
valuations, as estab- or by calling Mr. Paul Mark E. Ahonemus,
2301
(104) 675-4140
lished for tax year 2009 McElroy, Transporta- Treasurer
http://jobs.infoclslon.c
MEIGS
LOCAL
BOARD
tion
Supervisor
at
(740)
must be made in accorOr fax: 104-675-6975, or apply on-line
om
dance with Section 742-2990. By order of OF EDUCATION
CONSTRUCTION
at www.pvalley.org
41765
Pomeroy
Pike
5715.19 of the Ohio Re- Meigs Local Board of
Local pharmacy seeking
Remodeling,
AA/EOE
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
vised Code. These Education, Mark E.
overnight pharmacist. ofRoofs, Garages,
Trea- (11) 5••11, 17, 20
complaints mus~ be Rhonemus,
fering flextble schedule,
filed in the County Au- surer/CFO.
Pole Buildings,
competitive wages and
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
ditor's Office on or be- (11) 5, 11, 17
benefits.
Call
Siding, Decks,
Public Noti&lt;:e
fore March 31, 2010. All
740-450·7964 for tnlorDrywall, Additions
complaints flied with
malion.
Lebanon Township Is
Public Notice
the County Auditor will
and New Homes.
accepting sealed bids - - - - - - - be heard by the Board
for
the
following
equipQuality
Cllntrol
Insured- Free
of Revision In the man- NOTICE TO BIDDERS ment:
EARN up 1o '&gt;15 00 an hr.
ner provided by Sec- Notice is hereby given
Estimates
Ford
F-350,
1980 e\aluate re1.ul 'tore,, trnontion 5715.19 of the Ohio that the Board of EduMoctel,
4x4,
Simplicity
102 pro\ldeJ 877-766-9507
We are looking for someone skilled and
cation of the Meigs
Revised Code.
experienced in both page design and copy
Medical
Mary T. Byer-HIII Meigs Local School District, Lawnlord DLX Aiding
41765 Pomeroy Pike, Mower, 20HP, 40' Cut.
County Auditor
editing. This person will need to design
• Stanley Tree(11) 4, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Mali sealed bids to: t
front pages, paginate inside pages, and
will offer for sale by Sherry Wilcox, Fiscal Overbrook Center 1s cur13, 17, 18, 19
Trimming
write great headlines. Experience with
sealed bid at 1 :00 p.m., Officer
rently accepting applications for State Tested
Tuesday, November 24, Lebanon Township
layout, knowledge of Quark and
&amp; Removal
2009, the following ve- 30220
Lovett
Ad. Nurstng Assistants for all
Public Notice
PhotoShop is a must. Full time position
*Prompt and Quality
Racine, Ohio 45771
h
hicles:
Deadline for bids is Frl- s ifts. Interested appliwith benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
Wmk
cants can pick up an apNOTICE TO BIDDERS 1995 International Bus
is a must.
day, November 27th.
plicatton or contact Lucy *Reasonable Rates
Sealed proposals will #23
Sherry Wilcox,
Goff, BSN, RN Stall De· ,.,lnstr.:d
, Send a cover letter and resume to:
be received by the 1997 Ford Bus #31
Officer
velopment
Coordinator
Board of Education of 1997 Ford Bus #33
Lebanon
Township @
the Meigs Local School 1997 Ford Bus #35
740 _992 _6472 M-F •F,pcrienccd
~alhpo!ts i),11IP 'O:nbunr
t
Lovett
Ad, 9 5
P
S
lh·fcrences A\ allable!
District of Pomeroy, All sealed envelopes 30220
825 Third Avenue
Racine, Ho 45771
a- P a 333 age t.,
Ohio, at the Treasurer's containing bids are to
Middleport, Oh EOE &amp; a C&lt;11l Gary Stanicy &lt;il
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Office until 11:00 a.m. be marked clearly on (11 ) 5• 6 • 8
participant
of
the
740-591-8044
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
on Tuesday, November the outside. Terms of
Drug-Free
Workplace
Please
lcave messagc
24, 2009, and at that sale will be cash or
Program.
pcaldwell@heartlandpublications.com

1:!:r

~~----"""!"'-

David Lewis

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

a

[fl

' h't
~~I111

I

fHIf

I

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

29625 Bashan Road
Racine OH 45771

740·949-2217
Sizes 5' x 10'
to 10' x 30'

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544

Hours

Free Estimates

7:00 am - 8:00 pm

MICHAEL'S

J&amp;L
Construction

7 40-367-0536

SEit\'ICE CENT EI{
1555 :'lVI': AH~.
l•omero\ OH
• Oil &amp; filter change
• Tune L'p'
• Brake Service
• AC Recharge
• :-.1mor cxhau ... t
repair • Tire Repair
• Tmnsmis~ion Filter
&amp; Fluid Chaoue
• General Mech~nic
work

(740) 992-0910

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

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1671

--·-· BULLETIN BOARD --·
------·

I '

[I

!Hardvo~~ ~a:olneiry An~ ~ufrlitUt~
www.tlm'W':.ocreel:.c:ablnetry.com

740.446.9200
2459 St. Rt. 160 • GallipoUs

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

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

-·-·

0

1-419-925-5208

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

Fri-Sat- Sun
Nqv. 6, 7, 8

French 500
Flea Market

740-985-4422
740-856-2609

-~IJ-If
PUBLIC
NOTICES

304-675-3600
SUNSET

.

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740-653-9657

BANKS
CO~STRLCTIO~

co.
Pomeroy\ Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates

(740) 992-5009
-~tk.Kg 'f4d1ta:d"

1\ov. Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
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�Thursday, 'November 5, 2009

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85'

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE
By T HOMA S J O S EPH

.

EETLE BAILEY

A C ROSS
1 Vats
5 Avoids
1 0 On the
peak of
11 Platter
player
1 2 Road
division
13 Sullies
1 4 Protesters,
at times
16 Constitutions
20 In unison
23 Puppy cry
24 River of
France
25 Segment
27 Superlative
ending
28 Warded
(off)
29 Yaks
3 2 Book
parts
36 Building
workers
3 9 Met song
40 Charm
41 Serengeti
sight
42 Roof
feature
43 "Why
not !"

Mort W alker

I FEEL MY Ll FE 8EGAN
WHEN I. MET 'YOU, DOYOU
KNOW WHAT! MEAN~

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divider
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call
11 Place
15 Quaker's
pronoun
17 Took in
18 Aqueduct
event
19 Went 80
20 Baldwin
of "30
Rock"

21 "Gee

whiz!"
2 2 Meter
ma1d of
song
25 Crime
doer, in
slang
26 Load
28 Banquet
~0 Immune
system
component

count
33 Niagara's
sou rce
34Mob
action
35 Lacking
36 Decline
37 Thurman
of
"Kill
Bill''
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saloon

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" IT WON'T REQUIRE A VERY LARGE POLICY FOR
ME TO MAINTAIN MY CURRENT LIFESTYLE."'

Patrick McDonnell
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by Dave Green

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the past. You recO&lt;.;nize what you can and c.:mnol hold
on to. Be tlWare of olhe~ .1nd their influ~nr~ on your
life. A child or grandchild might be rebellious, upsetting your daily life and c1 relation~hip. Priorili7.e Be
finn with your boundaries. You willleam information
&lt;~bout those in your immediate drde or f,lmily thdt
might be hard to believe. If you are single, you could
meet severdl exciting people. Stability goes hand in
hand with relationship~ this year. So does excitement
If you are attdched, the &lt;;latus quo might l'h,my,e, but
you can make the adjustment a~ partners. Be more
underst.mding and recepliw th,m you ha\·e in the
pa'&gt;l. GEl'vtr.\l re..~ds you cold.
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ARIES (M.1rch 21-Aprilli.J)
***** Keep \\'&lt;Itching what is gomg on around
you. The scene chdl1ges ~quick]~; it's li"e you are
I iewing cl mode. Surprise he,lds your Wclh cldding
suspen-;e into the mix. A meeting pro\' ides a cohesive
plan. ·rbnight: Hang out
TAURUS (Apri120-Ma) 20)
**Curb a need to be possessive, and just listen to
wh.1t b being oftered. Don't act as ii you are in c1 negoticJtion but rather are JUSt hanging out. You might be
quite delighted by wh,,t is offered. 'lbnight: Yo:.~r tr~dt.
GL\1INI (May 21-June 20)
*****Keep re,Khing o111t for others. You will
find that ~me people are highly responsive, while
others drag their h~ls. Be ,man&gt; of your limit' with a
difficult p,1renl or bos.-.. You don't want tn c,\u!-t! yourself a problem. Tonight: Whatewr put.; a smile on
your fdce.
CANCER(]une 21-July 22)
***At this point, you might want to lie bdck and
gain information. 1'\ews could c.1u!'&gt;e man) to regroup
and think. You ,,re ,1ble to gel p.t~t someone who doesn't intend deception but does &lt;.Te.lte confu-;ion.
'Ibnight: Do for you.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
***** Listen to what is being shared in ,. meeting. You might need to break 3Wd}' from an cN&gt;odate cl
little in order to maximize a bu..,ine&gt;s opJX1r!unity or
persondl option..Many people hd\ e unusual creativity
and get-up-and-go. Tonight: Where the action L~.

\'IRGO (Aug. 23-.Sept. 22)
*"*** Othe~ look to you tor leddership and
direction. You are on top of your game, and others
respond. The one exception could be a pdrtner who
feels he or.she ha-. the right lo cre,1te uprrur. Let thi&lt;;
person do what he or .;he ~ds to do. Tonight: A
must appeardl1ce.
LIBRA~Sept. 21-Dct..22}
.
***** K~p reachmg oul tor anoth~r person.
You hc1\ e ,m opportunity to jump on a risk th,1t just
might work The unexpected ocrurs at wor:S: and
rould h.we you(· nen·es fried. U-,e your im&lt;~gin,,tion.
fonight Think about &lt;~dding music into the mix.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1\ov. 21)
***** One-on-one relating emphasiLes ,m
cmchored point of \'it&gt;w. StilL you h.we •'~~' idea that ,
k~ps coming to the forefront of your mind. Perhaps
you need to dda) c1 decis1on until you mn d1!:'1.·k out
thi~ thought. Tonight: Sdy ves to a dtnner invit.1bon.
SAGfiTARit.:S (1\:o,·.i!-Dec. 2tl
**** Defer to other::. dnd understand what is
going on behind the scenes. 'You re,,liLe someone is
withhold in~ key information from \'OU. m&lt;~king you
uncomfortable Lio.;ten !o news, tmder.-;t,mdm~ you
have the t·h~)ice of makmg ,, change ·ri.might· Surt
through your options.
CAPRICORJ\: (Dec. 22·Jdl1. 19)
•
* * * 't1ke it ed"Y and -,"t,l) Ct'nlered. You might not,
''ant to handle a person as you haw. Clear]}~ he or
she has an enormous impact l&gt;tl your daily life. Deal
\\ith people directly, but also remain secure. You hold
the cmds. 'Ionight: Try lt&gt; make it an early night.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11'}
**"*** Your ingenuity and !:&gt;plrit come through •
ior vou more times th,m not. You could be dealing
\\ith someone who i&lt;: a problem or who limils you. If
you want to escape thio,; situation. kno\\ that you c.m.
Tomght: Let olress go ilnd let fun in.
PISCES (feb. 19-1\farch 20}
* ** 'l~1ur unpredictability work-; .1gain~t you.
l;nderstand th,1t m.my people need more stability,
espeoally if they're insecure about the times or their
budget. 1-: there another way of expw;sing yourself?
'!(might Head home
facqllelme Bigar IS 011 the Internet
at htl]•:{/n'lrw.;acquelilldJrgnr.cvm

�·~-----------,.._._..

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Steelers will walk thin
(defensive) line in Denver
PITTSBURGH (AP) The thin air in Denver isn't as
much of a concern to the
Pittsburgh Steelers as their
rapidly thinning defensive
line.
The Steelers (5-2) already
were without defensive end
Aaron Smith. a premier run. stopper who is out for the rest
of the season with a tom ri~ht
rotator cuff. Now they re
missing his replacement,
Travis Kirschke, who has a
tom left calf muscle that could
sideline him another couple of
weeks. He was injured during
a 27-17 victory
over
Minnesota on Oct. 25.
One of the strengths of a
Steelers defense that was the
NFL's best the last two seasons is its depth, but that's all
but vanished now that Smith
and Kirschke are hurt. Now,
the Steelers must depend on
two rookies and a player who
was cut last month.
Welcome to the NFL, Zig~y
Hood and Sunny Hams.
Welcome back, Nick Eason.
· Hood, a first-round draft
pick, won't start against the
Broncos (6-1) on Monday
night but is expected to get
significant playing time
because teams traditionally
rotate linemen in Denver's
high altitude. Eason. a f01mer
Broncos draft pick, will move
from right defensive end,
where he backs up Brett
Keisel, to start at left defensive end. Harris is the other
. backup.
Only a month ago, Eason
was let ~o so the Steelers
could acttvate an extra running back. Suddenly, he is
starting on the defense that
allows the fewest rushing
yards in the NFL.
"I was released the fomth
game and the next thing you
know I'm playing,'' Eason
said Wednesday. "Now I'll be
playing a lot more. My snaps
have doubled in three weeks.
It's amazing, but that's the life
story in the NFL."

Hanis, a sixth-round draft
pick, has a similar story. He
was released after training
camp only to re-sign two
weeks a~o after spending time
on Carolina's practice squad.
Because of the injuries, the
Steelers must go into one of
'their biggest games of the season with only one experienced
backup defensive lineman in
nose tackle Chtis Hoke, who
plays behind Casey Hampton.
Hoke can play defensive end,
but it's likely he'll get more
playing time than usual in the
middle as Hampton takes
some plays off.
"We go through this evety
year," Keisel said~"Last year I
wac; out for a few games and
Aaron missed some games (in
2007). We have a lot of guys
who know how to play."
Or at least the Steelers think
they know how to play.
Hood, a former star at
Missouri, has taken a minimal
number of snaps this sea&lt;&gt;on.
He usually spends his practice
weeks on the scout team that
replicates
the
opposing
defense.
"He's a tough guys to block
on
Wednesdays
and
Thursdays," coach Mike
Tomlin said. "At some point.
he's going to be a tough guy to
block on Sundays. We'll see
when that happens.''
Hood said it's been a lot to
absorb as a rookie, keeping up
on the Steelers ·ever-changing
defense while also learning a
different style each week during practice.
"''ve told a lot of young
guys. 'The only way you can
get prepared to play is to
play:" Eason said. "You can
practice all week, but when
you get in a game it's a different mentality.
"Ifs a lot more pressure,
there's the fans. it's different
- it's 100 miles per hour and
it's full-go tackling. And that's
the only way that guys like
Ziggy and Sunn) can get
playing experience."

~ Big Ten

directional school, dropping
a 29-27 decision to Central
Michigan
at
Spartan
Stadium.
Now. Western Michigan
will make its way to East
l-ansing on Saturday.
The games offer a preview of the "Celebrate the
State" series in which the
Spartans have agreed to
play Eastern, Central and
Western Michigan four
times each between 2011
and 2020.
Michigan State will play
away games against each
team once during that time.
"I would much prefer to
do that than go play at
Florida Atlantic,'' Michigan
State coach Mark Dantonio
said.

fromPageBl
down run.
"That was impressive,
quarterback Juice Williams
said. "You know, you could
see little flashes of Mikel
being a great player."

GLAD TO BE A LION:
With
Stephfon
Green
ipjured, Brandon Beachum
has stepped up to fill the
void as tailback Evan
Royster's understudy at No.
11 Penn State.
While not a speedster like
Green, the 6-foot Beachum
has shown the power and
burst to fight through tackles and dig for extra yards.
He scored the go-ahead
touchdown last week in a
win at Northwestern.
"Now, the Youngstown,
Ohio, native is getting ready
fo face No. 15 Ohio State.
While most of his friends
back home support the
Buckeyes, Beachum said
they'll root for him to do
well.
"You can't ask for much
more than that," the sophomore said.
As
for
recruiting,
B'eachum didn't give seribus thought to wearing scarlet and gray, though he was
a big fan of Ohio State
coach Jim Tressel and the
game day atmosphere.
"But the city atmosphere
never really interested me."
Beachum said. "Columbus
never was a setting I wanted
to be in when I chose my
college."

616 AND COUNTING:
The Ohio State-Penn State
matchup will be the first
regular-season
game
involving two head coaches
with more than 600 wins
combined.
Joe Paterno is 391-128-3
in 44 seasons, all at Penn
State. Jim Tressel is 225-782 in 24 years as a head
coach. He's 90-21 in nine
years at Ohio State, and was
135-57-2 in 15 years at
Division 1-AA (now FCS)
Youngstown State.
When Florida State's
Bobby Bowden (377 wins
• at that time) and Virginia
tech's Frank Beamer (214)
met last Oct. 25, they combined for 591 career wins
between the coaches.

CELEBRATE
THE
STATE: Michigan State got
burned earlier this year
against a so-called in-state

SWOONING
WOLVERINES: After a 40 start, Michigan has fallen
on dismal times.
The ·Wolverines have lost
four of their last five and
two in a row, the latest a
painful
38-13
beating
administered by Illinois last
week.
The lllini 's only win coming into that game was over
a FCS opponent. Illinois
State, way back on Sept. 12.
Then again, Michigan's
only win since edging
Indiana on Sept. 26 to get to
No. 22 in the Top 25 was ·
against an FCS team,
Delaware State.
It could get ugly around
Ann Arbor if the Wolverines
(5-4, l-4) and coach Rich
Rodriguez don't finish
strong. They host Purdue,
play at Wisconsin and then
entertain rival Ohio State,
needing one more win to
make a bowl trip.
Former
players
like
Heisman winner Charles
Woodson have said it's
"hard to watch" Michigan
games right now. Rodriguez
was asked if he's more concerned about his offense or
defense.
"Really, everything," he
said.

QUICK-HITTERS:
Saturday's other games
include Nmthwestern at No.
8
Iowa,
Illinois
at
Minnesota and No. 24
Wisconsin at Indiana. ...
Players of the week:
Minnesota QB Adam Weber
and DT Garrett Brown.
Wisconsin
LB
Chris
Borland and Michigan State
KR Keshawn Martin ....
Illinois has beaten Michigan
in back-to-back seasons for
the first time since 1958.

__ ___
....._.

.,._~~-·--

~

~

Thursday, November's,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Champs
from PageBl
you've got company. Mark
Teixeira, CC Sabathta and a
new generation of Yankees
have procured their place· in
pinstnped lore.
And for the four amigos, it
was ring No.5.
Jorge Posada, Jeter, Pettitte
and Rivera came up together
through the minors and were
cornerstones for those four
titles in five years starting in
1996.
Indeed. a New York Citysized party is next. Nine
years in the making. with all
the glitz and glamour this
tony town can offer.
For Steinbrenner, it was the
seventh championship since
he bought the team in 1973.
The Yankees had talked
about winning another for
their 79-year-old owner. who
has been in declining health.
Though he stayed back
home in Tampa, Fla.. he certainly wasn't forgotten. The
grounds crew wore "Win it

Point
fromPageBl
They are playing at home
for the final time this season
and they will have that
going for them, also. We
will need to be focused and
ready to play football or this
could be a long night for
us,'' added Darst.
The quarterback is Josh
Easterling. a 6'2, 190 pound
junior who is the second
rated passer in the Cardinal
Conference.
Easter! ing
doesn't throw as often as
Jamie Hurd from Hoover,
but is just as effective.
Before last week's match up
with Wayne, the talented
junior had thrown for 1,070
yards, completing 70 of 126
passes. He had thrown 10
touchdown passes and had
been picked off 5 times. His
average completion yardage
was slightly ahead of Hurds
-- 15.2 yards per completion
v~r::.us 15.0 yards pt:r completion. His favorite target
is sophomore Dylan Wiley,
a 5' 10, 155 pound sophomore. Before the contest
with Wayne, Wiley had
caught 22 passes for 428

-

2009

for The Boss'' shirts last
week. which were on sale
outside
the
ballpark
Wednesday.
New York wasted its
chance to wrap things up in
Game 5 at Philadelphia, then
set its sights on clinching the
World Series at home for the
first time since 1999.
While nine years between
titles is hardly a drought for
most teams, it was almost an
eternity in Yankeeland.
New York's eight seasons
without a championship was
the third-longest stretch for
the Yankees since their first
one. following gaps of 17
(1979-95) and 14 ( 1963-76).
Reggie Jackson's three
homers in Game 6 against the
Los Angeles Dodgers made
the Yankees champs in '77.
On this November ni~ht,
Matsui delivered a subbme
performartce at the plate that
must have made Mr. October
proud.
Playing perhaps his final
game with the Yankees,
Matsui hit a two-run homer
off Martinez in the second
inning and a two-run single
on an 0-2 pitch in the third.

A designated hitter with
balky knees, Matsui came off
the bench in all three games
at Philadelphia. StilL he had a
huge Series, going 8 for 13
(.615) with three homers and
eight RBls. His go-ahead
shot off an effective Martinez
in. Game 2 helped the
Yankees tie it 1-all.
Matsui's big hits built a
comfortable cushion for a
feisty Pettitte, who shouted at
plate umpire Joe West while
coming off the field in the
fourth. StilL Pettitte extended
major league records with his
18th postseason win and
sixth to end a series.
The 37-year-old left-bander, pitching on three days'
rest, became the first pitcher
to start and win the clincher
in all three postseason
rounds. He beat Minnesota
and the Los Angeles Angels
in the AL playoffs.
Pettitte lasted 5 2-3
innings, allowing three runs,
four hits and five walks. Joba
Chamberlain and Damaso
Marte combined for 1 2-3
innings of scoreless relief
before Rivera secured the
tinal five outs.

For second-year manager
Joe Girardi, a three-time
Yankees champion as a player, it was the fulfillment of a
mission. When he succeeded
Joe Torre in October 2007.
Girardi chose uniform No.
27. putting his quest on his
back for all to see. His tenure
didn't start out so well, with
New York missing the playoffs in its final season at old
Yankee Stadium following
13 consecutive appearances . •
Steinbrenner's well-paid
players hadn't soaked themselves in bubbly after the season since Berme Wtlhams
gloved Mike Piazza's midnight tlyout at Shea Stadium
to win the 2000 Subway
Series and cap the Yankees'
third straight championship
artd fourth in five years.
A-Rod became a newly
minted champion following a
sordid spring in which he
admitted using steroids from
2001-03 with Texas and then
needed hip surgery.
Maybe now, demanding
fans in the Bronx will consider him a true Yankee.

yards artd four touchdowns.
Another receiver to look for
is senior fullback Todd
Terry (6'3, 225). Heading
into the Wayne game, Terry
had caught 20 passes for
273 yards and a couple of
touchdowns.
Terry and Wiley are also
listed on the conference's
rushing leader list. Through
eight games, Terry rushed
for 802 yards on L50 carries
(5.4 average), while Wiley
had rushed for 483 yards on
85 carries (5.7 average).
Terry had 12 rushing touchdowns before last week and
Wiley had 4.
For the Big Blacks,
Nathan Roberts added 151
yards to his fine season last
week and now stands at
1.361 yards on 166 carries.
That equals a fine 8.2 yard::.
per rush. Junior Chris
Blankenship rushed for 95
yards on J 1 carries a week
ago. and is at 667 yards on
74 carries on the season.
That figures out to a very
fine 9.0 yards per rush average. Sophomore quarterback Eric Roberts played
probably his best game a
week ago, finishing 6 for 10
for 98 yards and a touchdown. On the season,
Roberts is 36 for 76 for 564

yards .. He has thrown for 4
touchdowns, but had two
touchdown passes dropped
a week ago. Nathan Roberts
is the leading receiver for
the locals with 16 grabs- for
263 yards.
The Big Blacks are pretty
healthy heading into this
final regular season game.
The only major contributor
not practicing this week is
senior wide receiver Cody
Greathouse, who has been
absent all week with illness.
Greathouse has caught
seven passes on the year,
but is a very valuable part of
the running game due to his
outstartding blocking ability. "If Cody can't go Friday,
we will certainly miss him,
but we have Orrin Chason
and Brandon Toler ready to
step in,'' said Darst. "Orrin
did a nice job last week and
made a nice catch in the end
zone. Brandon is a very
good athlete with good
hands who will bring a lot
to the wide receiver position. He also made a nice
play a week ago when he
threw that pass to Orrin."
added Darst.
Other than split end, the
Big Blacks won't change
much from a week ago.
Offensively. the starters will

be Eric Roberts at quarterback with Nathan Roberts
and Jerrod Long in the
backfield
along
with
either
Derek
Pinson.
JaWaan Williams. or Chris
Blankenship. All of them, .
though, will see playing
time. The tight end is
Beau Bellamy. Up front
look for Casey Hogg,
Gabe Starcher. Brock
McClung, Clay Krebs, and
Derry
Osborne.
Defensively, the starters
will
be
Long, Trey
Livingston, Krebs, Pinson,
Michael Musgrave, Ryan
Warner,
Chauncey
McClanahan.
Layne
Thompson,
Donovan
Powell, Williams, and
Nathan Roberts.
"This is a big game for
both of us and I'm really
looking forward to Friday
night.'' said Darst. "This
type of game, this atmosphere is what you go
through two-a-days for. We
have had a good week of
practice.
especially
Wednesday. That was a very
spirited practice .. The boys
are ready. the coaches ar~
ready -- let's go!"
., .
Kickoff is set for 7:30 at
Chapmanville.

Paid advertisement

BLACK NOVE BER
Local Car Dealer Bucks Tradition and Offers
''Black Friday'' Deals All Month Long

ATHENS/LOGAN- The area's largest
automotive group b bucking tradition. and
Jeff Wood, president of Don Wood
Automotive is once again creating a surge of
excitement among southeast Ohio residents.
He's offering Day-After-Thanksgiving
specials on scores of new and pre-owned
cars through the month of November.
The day after Thanksgiving hal&gt; long been
the biggest shopping day of the year...and
for good reason. Many retailers offer
irresistible incentives for shoppers to buy on
that day. But Jeff decided to improve on the
1dea. "I don't think it's right to make people
wait until the end of the month and then
have to wake up before sunrise and &amp;tand in
line to get a great deal. So I've decided to
make "Black Friday" deal:; available the
whole month."
Here's bow "Black November" works:
The entire "Black November" inventory
selection is marked down to reflect the
lowest orjces of the year.
These mammoth discounts on new and
pre-owned vehicles arc NOT MARKED ON
TilE VEHICLES. Customers can get their
• "Black ~ovember" dlscqunt sheet at an)
Don Wood Automotive shronoom.
!So payments yntil2010. so you can
keep your money for special things tor the
holidays;
Our dedicated financing group,
DonWoodSaysYes. will go to work to U!
the financing each customer needs;
Because used car:. are in high demand
right new, your trade will be worth $1.000
wr NAPA loan yalue during "Black
November.·• So you can save more on select
new and used vehicles. This means you can
stop makmg remaining loan or lease
payments and may also result in an
additional price reduction on the car you
choose.
Wood says, ''This is one of my favorite
times of the year. I'm excited to help my
neighbors and other people in southeast
Ohio get a nicer, newer vehicle... and get the
BEST DEAL available on new and newer
cars without waiting until after
Thanksgiving or ~.etting the alann for two
hours before sunrise."
He went on to say, "I think people have
other things to do that weekend .. .like
getting started on Christmas shopping or
spending time with family or volunteering to
help others. But I've seen how good people
feel after getting a real steal on Black
Friday... and want them to feel that same
way when they buy a car from Don Wood
Automotive any time this month.
Another Reason To Give Thanks:
Credit Help For Good People
The people ut Don Wood Automotive
undcn;tand that recent financial strdins have
2093597

Jejf Wood. Presidelll of Dun l~vod Automotive announces "Bie~ck Friday·· deals all month
long. The &lt;'ntire "Black November .. inventory selection is marked down to the lowest prices of
the year. ami trade-ins are worth em extra SJ,OOO over NADA \'aft1e. Make 110 payments until
2010and keep more moneyjar the holiday\. l'isit anysho11room to get.vour "Black N01•ember"
disco11nt sheet. To set a private appointment call (7110) 593-6641 (Athens) or (740) 385-5624
(Logan).
.
made it difficult for some people and some
families to keep up with their bills. That's
why we created DonWoodSaysYes to help
meet those challenges.
"The DonWoodSaysYes credit approval
program b about providing extra help to
people who are concerned about their credit.
That means more patience, more
understanding, more approvals, and more

new and pre-owned vehicles people enjoy
driving, to feature for this special sale. The
best selection will go to those who arrive
first. And you ·u get$ 1.000 over 1\A DA
trade-in value tor your old car on select
pre·owned caro; over S8.000 and select new
car)&gt;.
Like they say, "fin;t come. fin,t served."
We purchased extra vehicle&gt;. for the Black

''rhe DonWoodSaysYes credit approval program is
about providing extra help to v.eople who have bad
some trouble with their credtt. That means more
patience, more understanding, more approvals, and
more emphasis on the future instead of the past.
We're helping good people get back on track.,,
emphasis on the future instead of the past
We're helping good people get back on
track. And a fair loan on a nicer. newer car is
just the thmg many people need a hand with
right now. DonWoodSaysYes is dedicated to
get1ing you back on the road with a car
you'll be proud of driving." Wood
explained.
But You Need to Hurr\
"I've personally selected the most popular
vehicles. my personal favorites and tho'c
Paid advertisement

November event. ond shipments are arriving
all the time. But the best selection will go
f.1st with deals like these," said Wood.
Cu~tomcrs can pick up our "Black
November Di~count Sheet'' at any Don
Wood Automoth e showroom.
'J he Black No,·ember event is going on
now, only at Don Wood Automotlw
locations in Athens and Logan. For fnstest
sen·ice, call (740) 593-6641 (Athens) or
(740) 385-5624 (logan).

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